Green berry with flower still attached |
Hiking a 4.5 mile loop that hovered between 5,400 and 6,400 feet elevation, we find a little snow in the shady ravines on northern exposures, tons of wildflowers on sunny southern slopes, and just a handful of scattered berries in between.
One branch, three levels of ripeness |
Most of the huckleberries are still green, with a few having just set fruit - in late August. Most years, this area would be loaded with plump, purple berries. Our cold/wet spring and summer appears to have slowed the plant growth and reduced pollination. This year, ripe berries are hard to come by.
Wildflowers, however, are at their peak. The balsamroot are long gone and the lupine are waning, but just about everything else is coming on strong. Subalpine spirea, gooseberry, thimbleberry, mountain ash, cowparsnip, glacier lily, yellow columbine, Indian paintbrush, harebell, pasqueflower - even some beargrass. Meadowrue, which finished blooming a month ago at the end of the road, has just set flower here at elevation. There are purple asters and fleabanes galore, while the fireweed and butterflies are found in mutual multitudes.
But alas, only the teasing taste of a few ripe huckleberries. The wildflowers are nice enough, but winter will seem a little colder without a stash of wild huckleberries to help us through to next summer.