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Wildflowers blooming in Death Valley now

I added 15 wildflower photos from our Spring in Death Valley photography workshop to the front of my Spring in Death Valley album.  

The variety of wildflowers is pretty good this year, but due to low and poorly timed rain, the density is low in most places. Then again, the park is huge and rainfall varies from place to place, so there are decent patches if you know where to look or you search hard enough off the beaten path.

People restricted to the small subset of the park's roads which are paved will not have the best luck, since the majority of the park's roads are unpaved.

I originally assembled this album to collect Death Valley wildflower photos in once place to provide examples to draw from as I finish my guide book to landscape photography locations in Southern California (www.PhotoTripUSA.com).

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20 thoughts on “Wildflowers blooming in Death Valley now”

  1. Rattlesnakes are the most common poisonous snakes in the United States +Francis Almendro Villegas. They are pit vipers which can sense heat, and they have rattles at the end of their tails, which they shake to make noise when they are nervous.  Last Thursday we saw fresh rattlesnake tracks in Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes, one of the most popular places in Death Valley for photographers.

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