© 2024 SDPB Radio
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Hell Canyon Flaunts Flower Power

Prairie smoke.

Sometimes you're cruising through the apocalyptic burn scar seared into the beautiful Black Hills by the Jasper fire and you start sobbing uncontrollably. (At least if you're anything like your SDPB correspondent. In that case, if you happen to have Nico's "Afraid" on the radio as you come around the bend — forget about it, you're done).

But take heart, tree lover! There really is more to see here than just a timber boneyard. Those noble ponderosa didn't perish for naught. As their bodies lie a-mouldering on a montane open grave, the sun that sustained them now sustains a vast, kaleidoscopic wildflower riot — as varied in form as in color. You just have to get a little closer to see them.

Image - waitingtoidentify.jpeg
Image -  early cinquefoil2.JPG
Image - box elder flowers4.JPG
Image - alyssum leaf phlox.JPG

The Hell Canyon trail, just west of Jewel Cave National Monument (on Black Hill National Forest land) will get you there. The five-plus mile (difficulty rated "moderate") loop explores sunny slopes where the inferno raged, and low-lying bottomlands that were mostly spared.

"Hell Canyon is a good place to see early-blooming plants because it has a lot of exposure," says Cheryl Mayer, a Forest Service Botany Technician who rock climbs in her spare time.

"And you get a variety of habitat types. You get your upper canyon, which [after the fire] is now grassland, prairie-type habitats. Then when you turn the corner and come into the canyon bottom you get some different plant communities. The fire didn't burn as hot in the bottom, so there's still the overstory of pine — and you see some communities that are dominated with more deciduous types of overstory, like box elder and chokecherry. You get a lot of variety of vegetation types in a pretty short, accessible loop."

May is a good time to visit our ephemeral floral friends.

Image - shooting star.JPG
Image - pasque.JPG
Image - buttercup2.JPG
Image - rock clematis2.JPG

With Mayer as a guide, your correspondent encountered lanceleaf bluebell, some late-blooming pasque (as well as others gone to seed), Wyoming kitten-tail, sand lily, Nuttall's violet, hairy puccoon, Rocky Mountain iris (not quite bloomed yet), wild blue flax, Missouri milkvetch, silver bladderpod, longspur violet, rock clematis, Western red currant, golden sweetpea, serviceberry, alyssum-leaf phlox, shooting star, mouse-ear chickweed, pincushion cactus, prairie smoke, wild strawberry, bastard toadflax, rock cress, tufted milkvetch, kinnikinnick, slender lip ferns thriving in rock crevices, buttercup, heartleaf alexander, Canada violet, early cinquefoil, box elder in flower, larkspur and valerian.

Later in the season: "You'll get a different assortment," says Mayer. "There will be some different flowering shrubs, like chokecherry. You'll see more rock mountain iris in bloom. You'll see death camas on the higher, more barren slopes."

So there you have it. If you've been looking for ways to make wildflower-watching sound more badass, just say you're going to spot some death camas on a barren Hell Canyon slope.
----------------------------

Want to tag along with some botanically-trained eyes? The Forest Service hosts a botany-focused moon walk this summer (on July 28) as part of their annual moon walk series. Stay tuned.