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Saguaro National Park - East Unit


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"Wildflowers Saguaro National Park, East Unit Tucson, ARIZONA April 1, 1998 I visited Saguaro National Park, East and found lots of bladder pods and wild heliotrope. Fairy duster is past its prime. Odora still is in bloom there as is tackstem. Now is the time for Encelia , brittlebush. Ocotillo is beginning to flower out and there is a fairly good showing of Desert Zinnia ( Z. acerosa ). Among the smaller flowers is Eriastrum diffusum , the blue miniature wool stem; Salvia columbariae or Chia, and Dyssodia pentachaetia , the five needle fetid marigold are all in bloom. Trixis californicus is beginning to bloom and so is Menodora scabra (yellow menodora ) with the reddish sepals and yellow flowers. Menodora scabra bloomed only for one week last July after one of the rains. It is interesting to see the difference that rain makes in the temporal composition of flowers on the landscape. Reported by Susan Carmody Milkweed Vine, Sarcostemma cyanchoides , a woody vine with thin, wiry stems supported by trees, shrubs, or very often fences. Milky sap exudes from any broken stem. Distinctive flowers are s"
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