Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 27, 1996
Wandering Through Wildflowers
By Peter Zika
The hiking trails at Crater Lake National Park will take you to
elegant floral displays as the snows recede and spring seeps up the
caldera walls. Botanists have found roughly 700 species of flowers,
ferns, and conifers in the park. You can sample a rich diversity of
plants by simply stretching your legs and setting out from the macadam.

Drawing by Amelia Bruno.
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While snow drifts still surround Park Headquarters, western flowering
dogwood, Cornus nuttallii,
Shelton's violet, Viola sheltonii,
and pink fairy slippers, Calypso bulbosa, are luring bees in the
warmer depths of Red Blanket Canyon, on the lower trail to Stuart Falls.
Legions of lupines, Lupinus latifolius, and scarlet paintbrushes,
Castilleja miniata, greet you when summer's heat has opened the
footpaths along Annie Creek and into the Castle Crest Wildflower Garden.

Drawing by Amelia Bruno.
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You might be pleased by a walk on the south-facing Garfield Peak
Trail, located east of Crater Lake Lodge. Melting snowfields water a
delightful mix of plants through the summer. As you pause for yet
another splendid view of the lake, you can admire the blue blossoms of
squaw carpet, Ceanothus prostratus, or later in the season see
shocking purple and pink beardtongues, Penstamon davidsonii and
rupicola.
Midsummer brings monkeyflowers into bloom on wet ledges and
streamsides. Pink and yellow monkeyflowers,
Mimulus lewisii and
M. guttatus, form festive natural bouquets on the shores of
Crater Lake and even in roadside ditches. The relentless sunshine sears
the well-drained treeless expanses at high elevations. Graded paths up
Mount Scott and Crater Peak take you to pumice fields tinted red with
the fading and drying leaves of fleeceflower, Polygonum newberryi.
When fleeceflower is conspicuous on the caldera and in Pumice Desert,
brilliant yellow-flowering shrubs beckon butterflies along the eastern
side of Rim Drive. This is rabbitbrush, Chrysothamnus nauseosus,
a cousin to the locally rare sagebrush, Artemisia tridentata.
Rabbitbrush draws on reserves in its deep root system to flower so late
in the year. In doing so, it seems to defy drought conditions common to
the upper slopes of Mount Mazama during summer and early autumn.

Drawing by Amelia Bruno.
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Frost and early snow withers vegetation on the rim in September, but
pearly everlasting, Anaphalis margaritacea, holds persistent
white flowers at lower elevations until later in the year. Cold nights
finally leach the pink from loose mist- like masses of ticklegrass,
Agrostis hyemalis, at Spruce Lake which is located due west of Llao
Rock near the park boundary. By November, new snow drifts end another
season of wandering through the wildflowers.
Peter Zika recently updated checklists of plants at Crater
Lake and Oregon Caves. He is a professor of botany at Oregon State
University in Corvallis. Oregon.

Even the seemingly barren Pumice Desert has
wildflowers in June and July. Photo by Glen Kaye.