Coastal Mississippi is home to some of the most spectacular spring flowers to be found anywhere, with pink and white being a common theme this time of year. Finding them is as easy as finding your way to the east side of Ocean Springs and the Fontainebleau Nature Trail. The trail is part of the Mississippi Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge, operated by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. And the flowering is in full swing. If you want to view one of the most striking of our spring flowers, make your way to the edges of the bluffs overlooking Davis Bayou (about a quarter mile in) to see this year’s showing of our Pink Honeysuckle Azalea, Rhododendron canescens. Known also as Piedmont or Mountain Azalea, this species is the first of our three native azaleas to bloom.
Along the way to these bluffs and along the rest of the trail it is hard to miss the numerous white blossoms of Red Chokecherry, Aronia arbutifolia. This plant stands two to three feet in height and is best noticed this time of the year because of its flowers – another example of aspect dominance (a characteristic of an organism that makes it stand out in the landscape). As you make your way back toward the trailhead, look also for the white and pink blossoms of Buckwheat Tree, Cliftonia monophyla. The pink-flowered plants are locally known as “Vancleave” because of where this color variant was first reported. And this is just the beginning of the flowering season that will explode in the coming weeks as pitcher plants, orchids, and many other species that are found here make their appearance.
And this is but one of many of my “favorite” trails in south Mississippi. Stay tuned!
Hope to see you all in our great outdoors!!!