Human Flower Project


Orrington, MAINE USA

flag flower bed
Murrieta, CALIFORNIA USA

parker basket thumb
Princeton, MAINE USA

Monday, April 06, 2009

Back Up for Poppy Day


California’s state flower has its own day, April 6. But climate change doesn’t abide by what’s law in the Golden State.


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Eschscholzia californica and more at Antelope Valley Park (3/28/09)

Photo: Dan Pierce

In the land of propositions, California,  April 6 is Poppy Day, a celebration of the state flower by legislative decree (1973).

Californians, understandably, cleave to their state flower with more ardor than Kentuckians do to goldenrod or Massachusetts-ites do to Trailing Arbutus.  Eschscholzia befits “the Golden State” and from we can tell, abounds in many parts of this huge, and climatologically diverse part of the world.

There’s even a 1700 acre state park—Antelope Valley California Poppy State Reserve – with optimal conditions, environmental protection, and seven miles of trails through poppy fields. Terrific (though past its peak, we understand). Could it be that with global warming, spring’s Poppy Day will need to “fall back” by a week or so? Consider also the findings of Conservation International: that “the California floristic province is today only a quarter of its original extent, due to commercial farming and (sub)urbanization.”

This we learned from the University of British Columbia’s dazzling Botany Photo of the Day. Daniel Mosquin got a jump on Poppy Day by featuring Eschscholzia californica on April 3. Don’t miss the links to Eric’s glorious photos of the bloom along California 140, near the entrance to Yosemite.


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Posted by Julie on 04/06 at 11:39 AM
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