Ephemeral beauty on a winter forest floor: a native wildflower, the trout lily, blooms on Arabia Mountain.
After a 13-kilometer hike on the mountain, I was less than half a kilometer from my parked car when I stumbled upon this cluster of trout lilies blooming on the side of the Mile Rock Trail. To say that I was delighted AND surprised would be an understatement.
This is a close-up. The blossom appears larger in the image than it did in 'real life.'
DeKalb County, Georgia, USA.
28 February 2026.
***************
About the Dimpled Trout Lily
— North Carolina Cooperative Extension.Erythronium umbilicatum — commonly known as the dimpled trout lily — is a species of perennial flowering plant in the lily family (Liliaceae), native to the southeastern United States, primarily in the piedmont and southern Appalachian areas. It is a spring ephemeral [i.e., short-lived] and its preferred habitat is forests.
Erythronium umbilicatum has green, mottled leaves that are up to 8 inches long (20 cm). The scape [i.e., long, leafless flowering stem] is up to 8 inches long (20 cm), bearing a single, nodding, lily-like flower on a 5 to 8-inch stalk (12-20 cm) with 6 petals, yellow on the inside and streaked brownish-purple on the outside, that recurve backward. The conspicuous stamens are brownish-purple in color. The flower blooms in late winter/early spring before the surrounding trees leaf out and cast shade.
— Wikipedia.
***************
Clifford Brown: Sandu
Album: Study in Brown (Label: EmArcy, 1955)









