The meadows at Sunrise change color with the changing season. The blooming of Mount Rainier's gorgeous wildflower meadows is inextricably tied to the amount of snow on the ground. When snow melts earlier, some flowers bloom earlier. As the climate warms, impacting snowmelt, “peak bloom”, when a large variety of wildflowers bloom simultaneously, could also change in the future. Wildflower season may stretch out throughout spring and summer, moving away from a time in which you could capture 20 species blooming in one photo. The yellow glacier lily and white pasqueflower bloom early in the season. Blue lupine and purple Cascade aster (pictured) provide most of the color in midsummer. In late summer, the pasqueflower forms a seedhead (pictured) and the ripening red berries of Sitka mountain ash bring new color to the area. How many species do you see in bloom today? Ask the park staff at the Sunrise Visitor Center for a free wildflower identification brochure to learn more about the wildflowers of Mount Rainier.
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Itineraries across USA
Acadia
Arches National Park
Badlands
Big Bend
Biscayne
Black Canyon Of The Gunnison
Bryce Canyon
Canyonlands
Capitol Reef
Carlsbad Caverns
Channel Islands
Congaree
Crater Lake
Cuyahoga Valley
Death Valley
Dry Tortugas
Everglades
Gateway Arch
Glacier
Grand Canyon
Grand Teton
Great Basin
Great Smoky Mountains
Guadalupe Mountains
Haleakalā
Hawaiʻi Volcanoes
Hot Springs
Indiana Dunes
Isle Royale
Joshua Tree
Kenai Fjords
Kobuk Valley
Lassen Volcanic
Mammoth Cave
Mesa Verde
Mount Rainier
North Cascades
Olympic
Petrified Forest
Pinnacles
Rocky Mountain
Saguaro
Shenandoah
Theodore Roosevelt
Virgin Islands
Voyageurs
White Sands
Wind Cave
Yellowstone
Yosemite
Zion