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Wild for flowers: Spring blooming season finally arrives in Pittsburgh region

Renatta Signorini
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Renatta Signorini | Tribune-Review
A white trillium blooms along Meadow Run Trail at Ohiopyle State Park on April 27, 2018.
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Sean Stipp | Tribune-Review
Dicentra eximia, commonly called bleeding heart, on the wildflower trail at the Powdermill Nature Reserve in Rector.
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Tribune-Review
The red trillium, or Wake-robin, in a field of blue-eyed Mary wildflowers at Braddock’s Trail Park in North Huntingdon.
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Sean Stipp | Tribune-Review
Mertensia virginica, commonly called bluebell on the wildflower trail at the Powdermill Nature Reserve in Rector.
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Tribune-Review
Blue-eyed Mary wildflowers in North Huntingdon’s Braddock’s Trail Park.
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Sean Stipp | Tribune-Review
Stylophorum diphyllum, commonly called wood poppy on a wildflower trail at the Powdermill Nature Reserve in Rector.
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Tribune-Review
Squirrel corn at Braddock’s Trail Park in North Huntingdon.

Wildflower season is arriving in Southwestern Pennsylvania.

With warmer temperatures comes nature’s wonders springing from the earth in a variety of colors and shapes.

Some wildflowers have already started blooming in lower elevations, and this week would be a good time to check out the early types, said Rachael Mahony, environmental education specialist at the Forbes State Forest’s Laughlintown office.

“When we get those warmer stretches, that helps out a lot,” Mahony said.

Wildflowers in some places won’t bloom until early May, said Angela Yuele, horticulturist with the Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy. For spring wildflowers — look down and take your time, she said. Summer wildflowers, which are much taller, bloom in Pittsburgh’s Frick and Schenley parks from July to October.

Yuele suggested taking weekly hikes toward the end of April to catch the best blooms.

“That way, they’ll really get the most joy out of it,” she said. “They’re fleeting; they’re something you have to enjoy right now.”

Different plants will bloom over the next several weeks in a “natural succession,” Mahony said.

Typically, the first wildflower to bloom is skunk cabbage, followed by coltsfoot which looks similar to a dandelion, she said.

Both women said other wildflowers common in the area include trillium, bloodroot, wild geraniums, cutleaf toothwort, Jack in the pulpit, spring beauty, hepatica and squirrel corn.

“Trillium is one of those signs of spring for us,” Mahony said.

Several spots across the region are worth checking out for wildflowers, including:

Westmoreland County

Linn Run State Park, Cook and Ligonier townships

• Grove Run Trail, near Linn Run and Forbes State Forest

Duff Park, Murrysville

Pleasant Valley Park, Murrysville

• By vehicle on the hillsides through Loyalhanna Gorge between Latrobe and Ligonier

Cedar Creek Park, Cedar Creek Gorge, Rostraver

Braddock’s Trail Park, North Huntingdon

Allegheny County

Fall Run Park, Shaler

Trillium Trail, Fox Chapel

Indian Hill Meadow, Boyce Park, Monroeville

Frick Park, Squirrel Hill and Regent Square, Pittsburgh

Schenley Park, Oakland, Pittsburgh

Elsewhere

• Raccoon Creek State Park wildflower reserve, Hanover Township, Beaver

• Meadow Run Trail and others, Ohiopyle State Park, Fayette

Fallingwater, near Ohiopyle, Fayette

Flight 93 National Memorial, Stonycreek, Somerset

Wolf Creek Narrows Natural Area, near Slippery Rock, Butler

Mingo Creek County Park, near Finleyville, Washington

Renatta Signorini is a TribLive reporter covering breaking news, crime, courts and Jeannette. She has been working at the Trib since 2005. She can be reached at rsignorini@triblive.com.

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Categories: Local | Regional | Westmoreland
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