Growing in middle of gravel road near walnut orchard. Plant was prostrate, over 8 inches in diameter. Not much in the way of basal leaves, and certainly no red veins or red staining. Three to four nutlets.
We caught the very tail end of the fall super bloom to see one of the last of the Woollystars. Link to confirmed observation nearby yesterday: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/193901460 and
Link to better photos of it blooming last December: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/143891605
Giant Woollystar (Eriastrum densifolium) Native or perennial plant in the Phlox (Polemoniaceae) family. Stems are erect or spreading, +- glabrous to woolly. Leaves are glabrous to woolly and tipped with bristles. Corolla is funnel-shaped, blue, lavender, or white. White stamens are equal in length and exserted.
Jepson eFlora https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=24589
Anza-Borrego Desert Wildflowers https://borregowildflowers.org/?type=album&genus=Eriastrum&specific=densifolium&class=elongatum (Common name: Giant Woolly Star)
Jepson eFlora Key to Eriastrum https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_keys.php?key=8865
Anza-Borrego Desert Wildflowers https://borregowildflowers.org/?type=search&searchtype=S&family=&name=Eriastrum#/
California Desert Wildflowers, Philip A. Munz, 1975, p. 85.
(only lists Eriastrum eremicum)
Baja California Plant Field Guide, Jon P. Rebman, Norman C. Roberts, 3rd. ed, 2012, pp.342-243.
(Desert Woollystar (only lists Eriastrum eremicum ssp. eremicum)
Flora of North America http://beta.floranorthamerica.org/Main_Page
Southern California Plant Communities: http://www.calflora.net/botanicalnames/plantcommunities.html
Leaf Shape and Arrangement diagrams: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e8/Leaf_morphology.svg
Native American Ethnobotany: A database of plants used as drugs, foods, dyes, fibers, and more by Native People of North America http://naeb.brit.org/
Temalpakh: Cahuilla Indian Knowledge and Usage of Plants, Lowell John Bean and K. Saubel, Malki Museum Press, 1972
Plants For A Future: A resource and information center for edible and otherwise useful plants: https://pfaf.org/User/cmspage.aspx?pageid=305
Plants of Southern California: Regional Floras http://tchester.org/plants/floras/#abdsp (comprehensive website)
Native and Introduced Plants of Southern California by Tom Chester http://tchester.org/plants/index.html
MISC "Eriastrum johnsonii, a new species: https://www.phytoneuron.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/20PhytoN-Eriastrumjohnsonii.pdf" per INat dagowen
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INaturalist Project: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/pioneertown-mountains-preserve-inaturalist-notebook
"The 25,500-acre Pioneertown Mountains Preserve descends from the high piney 7,800-foot ridges into the Pioneertown Valley. The small community of Pioneertown is surrounded by conservancy-owned volcanic mesas, the Sawtooth Mountains, and preserve lands leading to the San Bernardino National Forest. The preserve has year-round riparian corridors in Pipes Canyon and Little Morongo Canyons. It is an important landscape linkage between Joshua Tree National Park, San Bernardino National Forest, and the Big Horn Mountains Bureau of Land Management Wilderness.
In 2006, the vast majority of the Joshua trees, pinyon pines and junipers at Pioneertown Mountains Preserve were killed in a 70,000-acre lightning-caused fire of unprecedented magnitude. Today, much of the preserve is going through natural vegetation succession. Some scientists predict that fire succession and climate change will favor scrub oak and Joshua tree plant communities that may replace the pinyon forests. The fire laid bare the region’s rich geological backbone."