Death Valley doesn’t look so dead after all in these stunning new images of the desert in bloom

This year’s Death Valley flower bloom is the greatest since 2016, according to the U.S. National Park Service. See it for yourself

A close-up of flowers.

Flowers blooming on March 3, 2026, in California’s Death Valley.

Eric Thayer/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

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Death Valley is called that for a reason. Incredibly hot and largely devoid of water, it is practically inhospitable to life. But right now swaths of the desert are transformed, carpeted in a thick blanket of golden and violet flora. The valley is teeming with wildflowers in what the U.S. National Park Service (NPS) says is the best blooming event the site has seen since 2016.

Every year wildflowers of this Californian valley bloom. Among the most common are the bright yellow desert gold, wavyleaf desert paintbrush, grape soda lupine and desert star. And every so often, there is a “superbloom,” a massive show of riotous color that occurs about once every 10 years on average. The last one was in 2016; Death Valley also experienced superblooms in 2005 and 1998.

yellow flowers at a distance

Eric Thayer/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images


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A superbloom occurs in years in which annual rains have been “well-spaced,” according NPS, and manifests when winter gives way to spring and warmer weather. Flower sprouts are able to grow to maturity when there is an absence of strong winds that would be able to tear down the budding flora. Last year high temperatures and low rainfall resulted in an especially weak wildflower bloom.

Purple flowers at a distance

Eric Thayer/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

In low elevations of the valley, the flowers are expected to be on display through mid- to late March, according to NPS, while at higher elevations, the bloom is set to begin in earnest in April. As beautiful as the flowers are, NPS urges visitors not to pick them—that way, we can all enjoy the display.

Jackie Flynn Mogensen is a breaking news reporter at Scientific American. Before joining SciAm, she was a science reporter at Mother Jones, where she received a National Academies Eric and Wendy Schmidt Award for Excellence in Science Communications in 2024. Mogensen holds a master’s degree in environmental communication and a bachelor’s degree in earth sciences from Stanford University. She is based in New York City.

More by Jackie Flynn Mogensen

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