21 Hikes to America’s Most Chromatic Wildflowers from Outside magazine POM Administrator

21 Hikes to America’s Most Chromatic Wildflowers

Sure, snowy trails are beautiful in the winter, but months of barren, black-and-white scenery have us dreaming of color. This time of year is synonymous with budding flowers, but peak blooms vary throughout the country. Where should you start — and most importantly, when? We dug through the archives to find our favorite wildflower hikes plus current information on when you should expect to see the bulbs at their most chromatic. — Emma Veidt, Associate Editor

See the Wilderness in Color on These 10 Perfect Wildflower Hikes

Fringed Phacelia, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee
(Photo: Gerald Corsi via Getty Images)

Featured Hike: Porters Creek Trail, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, TN

Now is the best time to see wildflowers in the Smokies at their peak bloom. These flowers—delicate, white trillium and fringed phacelia—are much more gentle on the eyes than the showy posies out West. That doesn’t mean they aren’t impactful. When you reach tree cover on the Porters Creek Trail, look down. From the forest floor, they make a beautiful contrast against the hunter green old-growth forest. Find the trail on Gaia GPS here.

Low angle view of a man hiking Dog Mountain trail. Yellow balsamroot wildflowers cover the mountain side. Washington State.
(Photo: Janice Chen via Getty Images)

Featured Hike: Dog Mountain, Columbia River Gorge, WA

With over 3,000 feet of vert in less than 3.5 miles, this hike up Dog Mountain is a steep one, but luckily you’ll have to take it slow to see all the blooms. You’ll climb to the top of a meadow and look down over panoramic views of bright wildflowers, the Columbia River Gorge, and off in the distance, Mt. Hood. When the balsamroot peaks (which tends to be early to mid May), the hills are blanketed in golden yellow. Bonus buds that time of year include lupine, Indian paintbrush, and chocolate lily. Find the trail on Gaia GPS here.

A hiking trail leads through a wildflower meadow at Cedar Breaks National Monument, nearby Cedar City, Utah.
(Photo: Maria Jeffs via Getty Images)

Featured Hike: Alpine Pond Nature Trail, Cedar Breaks National Monument, UT

This 2-mile hike between colorful corridors of columbine, desert globemallow, mariposa lilies, and more gives you the most bang for your buck this wildflower season. Plus, Cedar Breaks National Monument has such a diverse biome that you don’t only get fields of wildflowers, you also get views of the badlands, ancient volcanic deposits, and mixed spruce, fir, and aspen forests. Catch the florals at their brightest between late June and early July — or join the festivities during this year’s 20th annual Cedar Breaks Wildflower Festival, dates TBD.

Flint Hills, Kansas
The prairie landscape has lots of wildflowers. (Photo: John Elk via Getty Images)

America’s Best Wildflower Hikes

Featured Hike: Scenic Overlook to Davis Trail, Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve, KS

The Sunflower State lives up to its name in Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve. The preserve, an 11,000-acre oasis of never-plowed prairie, is home to poppy mallow, wild bergamot, narrow-leaf bluets, and wild sunflowers. The Scenic Overlook to Davis Trail is the best place to see it all. Plan your trip for early July through late August for peak bloom.

Summer bloom in the Trinity Alps Wilderness. Northern California
(Photo: CampPhoto via Getty Images)

See Natural Fireworks on These Alpine Wildflower Hikes

Featured Hike: Four Lakes Loop, Trinity Alps Wilderness, CA

If your spring and summer are already booked, you still have a chance to see high-altitude blooms come September. On the Four Lakes Loop, catch white Solomon’s seal, pink monkeyflower, and bright purple and blue fringed gentian. The loop itself is only 5.2 miles long (although tough, with 2,500 feet of gain), but you won’t want the show to stop there. You can turn the loop into an 18.4-mile-long lollipop backpacking trail by tacking on the Long Canyon Trail from the Long Canyon Trailhead. Find the trail on Gaia GPS here.

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