Spring has Sprung: Enjoy the View on a Wine Wrangler Adventure Tour |
It may not have been the wet winter that we were looking for
on California’s Central Coast, but when it comes to the landscape of Paso
Robles Wine Country, the wildflowers are starting to bloom. These colorful pops
of color are set against a backdrop of velvety green hills. A feast for the
eyes and when combined with one of The Wine Wrangler’s Adventure Wine TastingTours—your palate will enjoy the experience, too.
This is the time of the year when our state flower, the
California poppy paints the landscape with a vibrant orange tapestry, and while
most people can easily recognize it when they see it, there are several other
common wildflowers native to our area that you may not recognize.
Keep your eyes peeled for these 5 common wildflowers:
Sweet Fennel:
Yes, the same fennel that gives Italian sausage an anise, or licorice,
flavoring, grows wild throughout the Central Coast and California. Sweet Fennel
has feathery fronds and yellow flowers and grows in tall clumps.
Yellow
Dandelion: In the backyard, these vibrant yellow flowers are a pest, but on
the vibrant green hillsides, they’re but added jewels on the vibrant green
hillsides.
Shooting Stars:
These flowers are easily recognized by their star-shaped blooms and bright red
flowers.
Sweet Pea:
Delightful in the early spring garden, but seriously magnificent climbing up
the rocking cliffs. These beauties have butterfly-shaped petals and come in an
array of colors from pale lavender to deep red.
Lupine:
Vibrant hues of purple, these slender flowers (they look like a cross between
hyacinth and lavender) also have an intense fragrance that depending on your
sense of smell, can be either pleasurably intoxicating, or repulsive. No
matter, they’re beautiful and add depth to the tapestry of wildflowers.
The wildflowers are seasonal eye-candy and well-worth
enjoying, but we think you’ll enjoy them more when you combine a bit of
sight-seeing with a Wine Wrangler Adventure Tour. Besides, what goes better
with Paso Robles Wine country scenery, than a local Central Coast wine from one
of the 12 AVA’s that make up the Paso Robles Wine region?
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