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Wednesday, March 23, 2022

Where the wild things are part 6

"There should be a place where only the things you want to happen, happen"

                                Maurice Sendak.....Where the Wild things are

One of my all time favorite botanical exploration areas the Kalmiopsis


 I got back out on an adventure, this spring break, the kind of adventure I have been needing for a long time. This past year, I've been chained mostly to a desk, doing farm subsidy work for a soil and water conservation district. A good job, helping farmers try to be better stewards of the land, but not one for a person whose soul is in the wild places and his hands need to be in the dirt. To kick off a new chapter in life, I hit the road to explore the wild places and see if I could find one of the illusive Fritillaria's I've been hoping to encounter in the wild. If I can make it happen I'm gonna make it happen now. 

I suspect these might be hybrids between Fritillaria affinis and Fritillaria glauca, 
They are super variable, but all short statured flowering at around 6". Highly
mottled in a mix of gold and brownish red. 



Some plants blooming at the lowest elevations of the Eight Dollar mountain area, were almost 
All yellow, but still none of those solid yellow bells that I've seen of F. glauca

My partner,  and botany exploration companion Joleen demonstrating the size of the blooming 
Fritillaria we encountered. 

If these were straight affinis they are some of the best forms I've come across 
With the patterning and yellow on brown tones.


The kalmiopsis is one of the riches botanical areas in Oregon, and since I started out my 
career plant hunting in this area many years ago collecting Seed for the Berry Botanic Garden, 
It means a lot to me to have the time to go back and explore.  Stay tuned for some more posts on a flower and plant filled day in the kalmiopsis, including the biggest "serpentine river" of Cobra lilies spilling down a seepy hillside that I have ever seen.


If that doesn't have some F. glauca genetics in it I would be surprised. 



Some of the more golden and less brown mottled selections, but still
Seeming to look more like some affinis populations I have seen. 

We ran into snow at the highest elevations and none of the scree spots we checked had the typical F. glauca plants I was looking to photograph. But we did run into some great swaths of Trillium rivale, Some awesome forms of Eythronium howelii including an eight petaled bifurcated version that I've never seen the likes of in cultivation. 

Stay tuned for part 7 and 8 of the Wild things series where we look at a Darlingtonia fen, Trilliums, Fawn lilies and a host of great rock garden plants that were blooming in this early season visit to a place I'll be coming back to a lot now that I'm not chained to a desk anymore. 

Cheers, 

Mark

1 comment:

  1. I've also been going down here every spring/summer for the better part of two decades. I bet that we've driven past each other on more than one occasion. That being said, I've never actually made it down early enough to see the Erythronium citrinum! The odd Trillium rivale (now Pseudotrillium?) has been in bloom later when we've visited, but I've only ever seen pods on the plethora of Erythronium when we get there.

    I did manage, thanks to your post reminding me, to get down a bit earlier than usual this year to see the Fritillaria recurva and gentneri, not to mention the Kalmiopsis fragrans up north a bit. These have been on my list for a very long time and I've never made it in time. Thanks for the push.

    I've been up to Babyfoot even at the end of May and the road has been snowed in, and this year has been cold and wet. It is absolutely stunning up there at the top, when one can make it at the right time!

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