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Call to Colors

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

If you need extra motivation to pull on your hiking shoes and head for the hills, here it is: Spring wildflowers are blooming.

So far, the headliner in the annual show of colors is coreopsis, the daisy-like shrub that now dots the coastal hillsides in a blaze of yellow, especially visible from Pacific Coast Highway.

Inland, the curtain is rising a little more slowly, but by late March the wildflower season, which extends through April, will peak. You’ll see everything from the orange-red Indian paintbrush to the vivid purple nightshade to that dazzling showstopper the California poppy.

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But suppose you don’t know a poppy from a Popsicle. Don’t despair. You can sign up for a slew of wildflower hikes this spring with flower experts who can identify anything in bloom and just about anything that isn’t.

One of the most celebrated local experts, Milt McAuley, is leading four wildflower hikes in the Santa Monica Mountains through a program offered later this spring by the Learning Tree University in Chatsworth. On March 30, you can join him for a free wildflower hike at Chatsworth Park South.

If you can’t hike with McAuley, pick up his book, “Wildflowers of the Santa Monica Mountains” (Canyon Publishing Co., $19.95). Written 10 years ago and revised last year, it has 496 color photos of what blooms here.

At 77, McAuley, who lives in Canoga Park, is a walking encyclopedia when it comes to the Santa Monica Mountains. He hits the trail often, averaging 20 miles of walking a week.

On a blustery morning late last month, he led the way up La Jolla Canyon in Point Mugu State Park to scout out early wildflower blooms. The trail just off Pacific Coast Highway is one of his favorite haunts, and that morning he wasn’t disappointed.

Coreopsis was everywhere. This native shrub grows primarily along the coast, between Point Dume just above Malibu and Point Conception in Santa Barbara County, and on the Channel Islands. Three years ago, fire devastated much of the coreopsis in the state park.

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“It’s a great season for coreopsis,” McAuley said. Although it’s past its peak, some coreopsis should be in bloom a few more weeks.

It may be a good season for other bloomers too. The wildflowers here are still feeling some beneficial effects of the fire, which burned away chaparral and gave them space to proliferate. And, of course, the chaparral is on the rebound.

Tapia Park, south of Agoura Hills, may hold great promise for wildflowers this season because of the fire there last fall. But you won’t be disappointed elsewhere.

“It’s a good year,” McAuley said. The early heavy rains followed by a spell of warm weather helped move things along, so the wildflowers are blooming a bit earlier than usual this year. As he strolled up the La Jolla Canyon Trail, he pointed out yellow deer weed, morning glories, blue dicks, purple nightshade, to name a few. He spotted a lush spread of what looked like coreopsis to the untrained eye. Canyon sunflower, he said, pointing to the leaf pattern.

A waterfall spilled over boulders next to the trail and McAuley hopped nimbly over. He talked of the Chumash, the canyon’s first residents, and how decades ago rock was stripped from here to build PCH.

Around the next bend we would find marine fossils embedded in the rock, he said. Sure enough, there they were, plain as day, but probably unnoticed by the thousands of hikers who traipse through here.

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At one point, the trail was almost canopied by pale blue California lilacs.

“It’s a rather stunning plant,” he said with characteristic understatement.

But it was shooting stars and the elusive chocolate lily that were on his mind that day and he was determined to find them. After two miles or so, the trail opened onto a grassy meadow and he spotted a scattering of white and lavender shooting stars.

“Where you find shooting stars you find chocolate lilies,” he said, scanning the meadow. Sure enough, moments later he spotted a single bronze-colored chocolate lily, and then a few others here and there. “A lot of people would go by here without noticing,” he said triumphantly.

In fact, a lot of people, accustomed to cultivated gardens, anticipate they will be bowled over by vast fields of colorful wildflowers when they hit the trail in the spring. But it’s a more subtle experience.

(If you’re headed for the California Poppy Reserve in Lancaster, don’t get your hopes up. The poppies got little rain, bloomed early and the displays are disappointing.)

When McAuley leads one of his wildflower walks, he gives them his standard line: “Don’t expect too much--and be patient.” Flowers reach their peak bloom at different times, and if you’ve missed the shooting stars and chocolate lilies, other varieties have come along.

He decided to write a book about hiking in the mountains 18 years ago, but a publisher who had encouraged him ended up rejecting his manuscript. Undeterred, McAuley published the book “Hiking Trails of the Santa Monica Mountains” himself, forming his home-based Canyon Publishing Co.

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He has sold about 50,000 copies of the book. Six other books about the local mountains followed. He also works regularly with volunteer trail maintenance crews. “Every year the hills get a little steeper,” he said with a sigh.

BE THERE

Upcoming organized wildflower hikes:

March 30, Sierra Club Easter hike led by Milt McAuley, Chatsworth Park South; 9 a.m.-1 p.m. (818) 347-6433.

Beginning May 4, four Sunday outings in Santa Monicas led by McAuley; through Learning Tree University; $49. (818) 882-5599.

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