Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Blue Palo Verde with Beans

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This unusual tree found in California, Nevada, Arizona and parts of Mexico is named after its blue-green trunk and branches, and it's name in Spanish means "green stick". Historically, the dried beans were an important food source for both wildlife and local indigenous native American tribes, the wood of the tree was important for making cooking utensils It also happens to be the State Tree of Arizona. I found this one in full blossom in the Colorado Desert, and it was swarming with bees, flies and other insects on a hot, dry spring morning just outside of Mecca, California.

Copyright
©2015
Image Size
4000x6000 / 10.4MB
Keywords
Angiosperms, Caesalpinieae, Caesalpinioideae, California, Cercidium floridum, Colorado Desert, Eudicots, Fabaceae, Fabales, Mecca, P. florida, Palo Verde, Parkinsonia, Parkinsonia florida, Plantae, Riverside County, Rosids, beautiful, beauty, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, blue palo verde, botany, bud, color, desert, dicot, flora, flower, flowers, fresh, green, native, natural, nature, paloverde, perennial, plant, plants, shrub, southwest, spring, tree, wild, wildflower, wildflowers, yellow
Contained in galleries
Fabaceae (Peas and Legumes), Yellow Wildflowers
This unusual tree found in California, Nevada, Arizona and parts of Mexico is named after its blue-green trunk and branches, and it's name in Spanish means "green  stick". Historically, the dried beans were an important food source for both wildlife and local indigenous native American tribes, the wood of the tree was important for making cooking utensils It also happens to be the State Tree of Arizona. I found this one in full blossom in the Colorado Desert, and it was swarming with bees, flies and other insects on a hot, dry spring morning just outside of Mecca, California.