In some parts of the country, cold weather is threatening crops. Meanwhile, California has been so unseasonably wet that its deserts are experiencing what's called a "super bloom." After years of drought, the normally arid desert is lush.
In some parts of the country, cold weather is threatening crops. Meanwhile, California has been so unseasonably wet that its deserts are experiencing what's called a "super bloom." After years of drought, the normally arid desert is lush.
"It just looks like a sea of flowers," says Janet Gordon, a geologist from Los Angeles.
"You got purple, red, yellows and blues," adds Joe Sheidness, visiting from San Diego.
"It's fantastic," says Dennis Brian, from Reno, Nev., who says he was a flower child in the 1960s. "You don't see this very often. The little flowers look so delicate, but yet they're prolific. They're everywhere."
Read more at NPR Topics
Photo credit: National Park Service via Wikimedia Commons