Just starting off on the Sierra Norte Trail |
Some of the rocky outcroppings in the Organ Mountains |
Scouting the territory |
Anybody coming up behind us? |
Sotol (left) |
Yellow flowers of the Turpentine Bush |
Looking back the way we've come, toward Soledad Canyon Road |
Pausing before descending into a very deep valley |
Not a dinosaur |
An area where the hiking conditions are rugged |
An idea of how high the grass is growing |
Barrel Cactus and the Organ Mountains |
We headed down this way to get a look at . . . |
these flowers growing on a rocky outcrop |
They were Sacred Datura (aka Southwestern Thorn Apple) |
Sacred Datura (Datura wrightii) flowers are large: 6" to 10" |
This large mass was growing out of the arroyo beneath the rock |
A highly-toxic plant to humans and animals alike |
I liken it to lichen |
Sacred Datura is also a powerful hallucinogen |
Purple flower on vine |
Stingleaf flowers |
Another Barrel Cactus with fruit on top |
Send in the clones |
Trail toward the Organs |
Chihuahuan Desert scene |
Heading back |
Just a mile or so from the parking lot |
This black grasshopper (Arphia pseudontoniana) has a bright red underside |
Rainbow Hedgehog Cactus |
Soledad Rocks |
Was this the grasshopper responsible for the noisy racket? |
I believe this is a Horse Lubber Grasshopper (no, they don't adore equines) |
3 comments:
It was amazing how the datura was growing right out of the rocks.
Some great images from this hike. Lots of nice plants with interesting flowers.
I was tempted to "experiment" with sacred datura (also called jimson weed) when I was an undergraduate, but was afraid that I'd poison myself in the process.
I'm glad you didn't experiment, Scott. Every few summers here, it seems, there's a story about high-school kids poisoning themselves with datura.
I remember reading somewhere that some Native American tribes (in California, I think) would give their boys datura for rites-of-passage ceremonies; some boys died from the toxin.
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