SMELL GOOD 👃 😊 👍
Pedicel 4-5mm. Banner ~1.2x1.2. Flr ~1.5cm.
Very pleasant fragrance
Lobed keels
Unnamed tributary of Coal Canyon
Blue Jay Campground - Long Canyon Dr
Grape soda smell to the extreme.
Wrightwood, San Gabriel Mountains
North Ridge Trail, Chino Hills State Park
The lupine that looks like a mini tree.
sweet grape odor
sweet grape odor
Very silky leaves, previous season’s senesced flower stalks visible (originally thought this pointed to albifrons rather than excubitus)
var. clokeyanus, maybe var. grandiflorus
lacking the characteristic grape soda fragrance of Lupinus excubitus, yet this population is previously years had that fragrance.
or var. johnstonii
Elevation 2,124 meters; height +- 10 dm; stem hairs appressed; stipules +- 6-7 mm; 6-8 leaflets, appressed hairs abaxially and adaxially; petiole length 6 cm; peduncle height 25 cm; inflorescence 30-35 cm; flower 15 mm; hairy fringes absent on wings; keel upper margin ciliate middle to tip.
The first two pix show the typical hairs on the top edge of the keel for L.excubitus hallii.
Generally longer racemes within this grouping make me lean var. austromontanus over var. johnstonii, but ID is tentative. Unsure if color is a reliable indicator but these do seem more pink than other pictures I've seen of austromontanus.
Lighter pink flowers and generally shorter stature make me lean var. johnstonii over var. austromontanus, tentatively. Jepson key distinguishes johnstonii from austromontanus by length of raceme (johnstonii 3-14cm & austromontanus 14-40cm) but there is introgression between the two.
Some type of hawks have built a nest on the columns of the LA Coliseum across the street from the Natural History Museum
Keel hairy from base to tip
Faint grape scent; shrub with persistent infl. stems.
The small-leaved phase about to switch over to producing the larger 10--25 mm leaflets on the leaves .
Jepson: Leaf: cauline; stipules 8--10 mm; petiole 1--3.5 cm; leaflets 5--9, 10--25 mm.
The final photo (#6) shows a field with both common species of shrubby lupine found on Ft Ord... the glaucus Lupinus chamissonis on the right and middle, and the green Lupinus arboreus on the left.
Syd Magner 0029
Plant collected by California State Parks (Colorado Desert District) botany staff.
Coastal Tree Lupine is a better name perhaps, as not all forms are yellow.
Leaf: palmately compound, cauline; stipules fused to petiole. Inflorescence is a raceme, flowers spiraled or whorled. Flower: 9--16 mm; calyx upper lip 6--8 mm, deeply divided, lower 6--10 mm, entire to 3-toothed; petals violet to lavender, banner back generally hairy, spot generally yellow (to white) turning purple, keel generally unlobed near base, upper margins generally ciliate middle to tip, lower glabrous. Fruit: 3--5 cm, hairy.
U.S. 101 northbound off ramp at Union Valley Parkway, Orcutt CA
Limestone Canyon, Irvine Ranch Conservancy
I don't know if this is excubitus, but it's a perennial shrub lupine of some kind
My mom’s pictures - according to her there is also a mother who brought this one food at some point.
A duplicate of this specimen was labeled as the holotype: https://www.cch2.org/portal/collections/individual/index.php?occid=787865&clid=undefined
Original description: https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/290980#page/544/mode/1up
Maybe Willis Jepson wrote the description after looking at specimens annotated by CP Smith, similar to how Amos Heller published L. elongatus Greene.
Specimens from Bear Valley, 6500 ft annotated by CP Smith 2 years before publication:
https://webapps.cspace.berkeley.edu/ucjeps/imageserver/blobs/dd9f5b4f-b487-42ba-9379/derivatives/OriginalJpeg/content
https://webapps.cspace.berkeley.edu/ucjeps/imageserver/blobs/1084cb34-e94a-4b36-9b1c/derivatives/OriginalJpeg/content
A specimen of this plant was identified as L. elatus by Teresa Sholars, co-author of the Lupinus treatment in the Jepson eFlora.