Look for the tender dark reddish purple leaves of the canyon big-leaf maples as their foliage begins to fill back in for a new season. Even the white alders are pushing out a myriad of their bright green leaflets, replacing that smokey look of dormancy with new life. View looking ...
including scrub oak and a number of pines. Despite this, plants are coming back. There are hardly any places to duck out of the bright sun, so bring a good sun hat and plenty of water. You’ll pass by clumps of Poodle Dog Bush, recognized by its’ ragged leaf margins and pungent sc...
Looking down from the road that drops down from Chantry into the canyon, you can make out the gray, smokey canopy of the leafless alders hugging the boisterous mountain creek. Looking straight out (east) from San Olene Canyon, about half way down to Roberts’ Camp, the Pagoda Tree welcomes...
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Sizable areas of single-leaf pion pine exist in the Kings Canyon Gorge, both within Kings Canyon National Park and Sequoia National Forest. This predominantly Great Basin species is uncommon on the west slope of the Sierra Nevada but occurs as disjunct stands on steep, rocky, xeric substrates ...
Big Leaf Canyon maple is backlit in the Winter Creek. Big Santa Anita Canyon. One of the memorable sides to fall in our canyons is the wonderful, earthy scent of the maple leaves mingling with the damp soils. Like so many of our long-term memories, scent is a trigger for reliving event...