Photograph by Claire Curran

Desert sand verbenas (purple) and evening primroses (white and yellow) blanket a sand dune at Havasu National Wildlife Refuge in Western Arizona. Operated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the refuge protects 17,600 acres along the Colorado River in Arizona and California. 

Claire Curran

FUJIFILM GFX100S, 1/20 SEC, F/20, ISO 100, 24 MM LENS

 

Photograph by Gurinder Singh

A desert chicory bloom greets the rising sun at Picacho Peak State Park. Native to the Sonoran and Mojave deserts, desert chicory grows in sandy or gravelly soil in the American Southwest and parts of northern Mexico. 

Gurinder Singh

NIKON D800, 1/320 SEC, F/6.3, ISO 320, 100 MM LENS

 

Photograph by Claire Curran

Flowering brittlebushes (yellow) and globemallows (orange) surround mature saguaros on a hillside near Theodore Roosevelt Lake, east of the Phoenix area. Both of these desert plants typically bloom in late winter and early spring. 

Claire Curran

CANON EOS 5DS R, 1/8 SEC, F/18, ISO 100, 148 MM LENS

 

Photograph by Jonathan Buford

Cholla cactuses rise from a sea of Mexican goldpoppies and lupines in the Mount Nutt Wilderness, part of Western Arizona’s Black Mountains. Established in 1990, this 28,000-acre wilderness area protects a carved volcanic landscape that’s a haven for backpackers, rock climbers and photographers. 

Jonathan Buford

FUJIFILM GFX 50R, 1/15 SEC, F/29, ISO 250, 23 MM LENS

 

Photograph by Jack Dykinga

Delicate globemallow blooms contrast with the spines of a prickly pear cactus at Ironwood Forest National Monument, near Tucson. Starting around early May, prickly pears produce colorful blooms of their own. 

Jack Dykinga

FUJIFILM GFX100S, 1/80 SEC, F/8, ISO 400, 120 MM LENS

 

Photograph by Eirini Pajak

Purple lupine petals complement the yellow blooms of fiddlenecks in the Florence area, southeast of Phoenix. In the Sonoran Desert, these colorful flowers usually bloom around the same time — between March and May. 

Eirini Pajak

CANON EOS R5, 1/800 SEC, F/2.8, ISO 100, 100 MM LENS

 

Photograph by Guy Schmickle

Brittlebushes thrive beneath one of the namesakes of Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument in Southern Arizona. The monument’s size (516 square miles) and varied terrain mean wildflower blooms of some kind can be found from February to May. 

Guy Schmickle

FUJIFILM GFX100S, 1/75 SEC, F/8, ISO 100, 27 MM LENS

 

Photograph by Jack Dykinga

Delicate yellow wildflowers proliferate beneath the Kaiparowits Plateau, a landform on Arizona’s state line with Utah. This particular location is in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, which straddles the state line. 

Jack Dykinga

FUJIFILM GFX100S, 1/25 SEC, F/22, ISO 1250, 120 MM LENS

 

Photograph by Colleen Miniuk

A lone scorpionweed blooms in the Tonto National Forest, which covers nearly 3 million acres in Central Arizona. Typically found along desert washes and on hillsides, scorpionweed blooms usually appear between February and May. 

Colleen Miniuk

OLYMPUS E-M1 MARK II, 1/125 SEC, F/9, ISO 400, 60 MM LENS

 

Photograph by Guy Schmickle

Owl’s clover (purple) and creamcups (white) carpet a meadow beneath the Sedona area’s Bear Mountain. Generally, March through May is the best time of year to see wildflowers in Red Rock Country.

Guy Schmickle

NIKON D850, 0.4 SEC, F/11, ISO 64, 31 MM LENS

 

Photograph by Joel Hazelton

Globemallows and other flowers — possibly blackfoot daisies — anchor a sunset view of the namesake waterway of the Salt River Canyon Wilderness. This remote, rugged wilderness area has no maintained trails but is known for river running. 

Joel Hazelton

CANON EOS 5DS R, 1/6 SEC, F/18, ISO 320, 16 MM LENS 

 

Photograph by Guy Schmickle

Saguaro cactuses loom over Mexican goldpoppies in a field at Picacho Peak State Park, northwest of Tucson. Perhaps Arizona’s best-known desert wildflower, the Mexican goldpoppy is a subspecies of the California poppy.

Guy Schmickle

FUJIFILM GFX100S, 1/10 SEC, F/11, ISO 100, 22.4 MM LENS