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24 Glorious Ways to Experience Spring at Its Peak, from Mountain Biking to Wildflower Viewing

Blow the dust off winter with blooms gone wild, bike trips, gushing falls, and more

Sunset
1 /24 Thomas J. Story

Yosemite: Feel the Mist on Your Skin

Even if you’ve been to Yosemite National Park a thousand times, visit in spring and it feels like the first time all over again. The valley blooms with dogwood, the rushing falls reach out to you with their cold mist, the sun-warmed meadows beckon with a hundred different shades of green, and there’s always the towering granite. We recommend a hike up the Mist Trail to Vernal and Nevada Falls. The cold mist is perfect on a warm day, and you can’t beat the view. Looking for a drier way to take in the landscape? Go on a ranger walk for a primer on the park’s history and geology, plus a few (or 10) gnarly bear tales.

2 /24 Creative Commons photo by AJ Schroetlin is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Fort Collins, CO: Get a Sustainable Ride

Tooling along the 10-mile Poudre River Trail is a rite of spring in the bike-crazed town of Fort Collins, known for its progressive two-wheeled attitude.

3 /24 Creative Commons photo by EmilyStAubert is licensed under CC BY 2.0

New Mexico: Hoof It on a Hoodoo Trek

If Alice slid down the rabbit hole in New Mexico, she might land at Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument. About halfway between Santa Fe and Albuquerque, it’s an enormous wonderland of narrow slot canyons and hoodoos. Go and wander around the base of the monument for an up-close look at geology at work. Of course, you still have to sweat for the best views: namely, hiking the steep 1.5-mile (one-way) Canyon Trail for a panorama of the Sangre de Cristo, Jemez, and Sandia Mountains.

4 /24 rebeccakellyw / Getty Images

Anza-Borrego, CA: Experience Wildflower Wow Factor

Whether it’s a super bloom year or not, you’re bound to see one heck of a spring show at Anza-Borrego, California’s largest state park. First-timers can’t miss the Borrego Palm Canyon Trail, a 3-mile round-trip flowering with brittlebush, desert lavender, and ocotillo. For a hike twice as long, there’s the 6- mile round-trip into Hellhole Canyon for blooming barrel cactus, lupine, and phacelia, plus Maidenhair Falls. Four-wheeling flower fans, scope out the sand verbena and dune evening primrose on the 20-mile Coyote Canyon Jeep Trail.

5 /24 Thomas J. Story

Capay Valley, CA: Frolic in a Flurry of Almond Blossoms

Spring in the Capay Valley, west of Sacramento, means a snowfall of frilly pink peach blossoms and lingering white almond blooms. Hit the five-town Almond Festival to make the most of it.

6 /24 Peter Olsen Photography/ Getty

Grand Canyon: Tour the Park on Two Wheels

We’ve moved on from pack trips and crammed shuttle buses. Bright Angel Bicycles is your bike-rental spot, with comfy geared cruisers for pedaling along the rim’s paved roads and greenway paths. Keep an eye out for spring wildflowers—and, if you’re lucky, a condor soaring across the canyon.

7 /24 Cavan Images/ Getty

Tomales Bay, CA: Spend a Day in Cheese Country

The Giacomini family makes its tangy, creamy Point Reyes Original Blue cheese on 700 rolling green acres on Marin County’s Tomales Bay. And at their cooking school, the Fork, you’re all invited to take part. The day starts not in the kitchen but with a tour of the family farm, usually led by patriarch and dairyman Bob Giacomini. The family credits their happy cows and the fog drifting in off the Pacific for the cheeses’ flavor, but as the master cheesemaker walks you through a tasting, you’ll see that aging and enzymes are at play too. The day’s capper is a cooking demo by a local celebrity chef who serves a multicourse lunch that makes local wines and those cheeses truly shine.

8 /24 Flickr Creative Commons

Moab, UT: Find the Sweet Spot on Skinny Tires

Daytime highs reach the 60s in March in Moab, making it the perfect time for two-wheeling through the surrounding area’s wonderfully alien landscapes. The Moab Skinny Tire Festival spans four days of 40 to 60 miles (the less-supercharged can peel off early) on knockout routes like the Colorado River corridor, Dead Horse Point State Park, and Arches National Park (pictured). The revelry kicks off with an outdoor barbecue ’n’ brew party. Or stop in for post-ride carbo replenishment at one of our faves, Moab Brewery.

9 /24 David Fenton

Palm Desert, CA: Go on a Desert Safari

Near Palm Springs, you’ll be happy enough tromping along the wildflower-dotted trails at the Living Desert—part 1,200-acre wilderness preserve; part zoo, botanical garden, and nursery. But prepare yourself: The minute you lay eyes on the knobby-kneed, all-legs giraffes using their long tongues and expressive lips to snuffle up lettuce, you’re a goner. Let’s just say that your camera battery should have a full charge. Late afternoon is especially gorgeous as the sun begins setting behind the snowcapped peaks, and the place feels like yours.

10 /24 J.R. McCausland

Near Tacoma, WA: Hang Out by the Sea

A park meets a beach, and we call that a love connection. Take deep breaths of salty air on the bluffs and dunes of the 3-mile loop trail at Chambers Creek Park near Tacoma, which hooks you up with Puget Sound shoreline. Cross the footbridge at Central Meadow (a kite flyer’s heaven) and walk south for primo sandcastle building. After you build your masterpiece, the A-list fish and chips—and a killer view—are waiting for you at Chambers Bay Grill, where you can watch squally March weather make rainbows over the Sound.

11 /24 Courtesy Butchart Gardens

Victoria, B.C.: Explore a 55-Acre Blooming Wonderland

It’s hard not to feel a bit like Alice when strolling through Butchart Gardens in April. Turn in any direction and discover towering trees—evergreens, magnolias, and cherry trees raining pink—and green grass studded with Technicolor tulips and tiny narcissus. This classic garden is also more progressive than you might think: Butchart’s 50-plus gardeners repurpose green waste into compost, recycle as much water as possible, and use organic mulches—even the kids’ carousel has a living roof.

12 /24 Creative Commons photo by Stanislav Sedov is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Pinnacles National Park, CA: Achieve Peak Moments

Part of the “wow” moment of rolling up at Pinnacles National Park, about two hours south of San Francisco, is the unexpected contrast. One minute you’re on a grassy country road, then suddenly: a shambling sky-high rock castle. In 2013, Congress upgraded Pinnacles from national monument to national park, in part because of the park’s condor recovery program and the talus caves and rock spires that beckon climbers. From March into May, poppies and purple bush lupine create a colorful backdrop for hikers and bird-watchers who ascend the spires for views that stretch forever.

13 /24 Getty Images / Thomas Roche

Oregon Coast: Watch the Return of the Whales

The Oregon Coast is a rugged land of contrasts: tidepools fat with delicate, touchable creatures, spring buds nudging out of fungus-happy soil, and tumultuous waves slapping basalt headlands. Now’s the time to watch for gray whales; some 20,000 begin passing Depoe Bay on their northward migration to Alaska in March from breeding grounds in Baja California. “There are very few places along the Western coastline where you can see whales as close as you can here,” says marine biologist Carrie Newell, who also runs Whale Research EcoExcursions whale-watching trips. The best vantage point? Pretty much any rocky outcropping, including those at Devil’s Punch Bowl, Cape Foulweather, and Boiler Bay scenic viewpoint.

14 /24 Thomas J. Story

Maui: Bask in Tropical Blooms

In March and April, Upcountry Maui is a feast for the eyes. That periwinkle haze you experience on the drive through Kula is spring’s annual explosion of jacaranda blossoms. For even more floral abundance, visit the 8-acre Kula Botanical Garden, which showcases orchids, proteas (pictured), and other subtropical blooms.

15 /24 Chris Leschinsky

Santa Margarita, CA: Do a Petal Drive-By Along the Coast

For some of the best blooms on the Central California Coast, cruise along Shell Creek Road in Santa Margarita, where meadows are carpeted with baby blue eyes, goldfields, and tidytips. Petal peepers park in roadside pullouts for photo ops and picnics. From Santa Margarita, take State 58 east 20 miles and turn left on Shell Creek Rd.

16 /24 Courtesy of Napa Valley Aloft

Sonoma County, CA: Taste Bubbly after a Balloon Ride

Spring takes its sweet time in wine country. The hills hold their winter green, and some years snow lingers atop Mount St. Helena. The big crowds are months away, but the mustard and lupine are blooming, and nowhere is the display more gorgeous than from the air. “Flying in the springtime,” says Sonoma County balloonist Mike Kijak, “you have all the greens and then, bam, that contrast with the yellow mustard. It’s like somebody took a paintbrush to the land.” After a Sonoma flight, people always ask Mike, a former balloon pilot, which winery they should visit. “There are so many you can’t pick just one,” he says, “so I send them to Korbel Champagne Cellars. They have tours and you can see how Champagne is made, which is a whole different process than winemaking. And the gardens are gorgeous.” But it’s not all wine here. Sonoma County Farm Trails has guides to more than 90 local creameries, orchards, and farms.

17 /24 Getty Images

Near Portland: Behold Waterfall Wonders in the Forest

Multnomah Falls is only a half-hour from Portland—and you don’t even need to get out of your car to check out this 620-foot tiered stunner. More than 2 million people a year make the trip—it’s Oregon’s most popular outdoor spectacle. Take the short hike to the stone footbridge. Look up. Look down. Now you know why. Be sure to grab a spot in the smaller lot across from Bridal Veil Falls (also worth a look) and walk to the main event.

18 /24 Creative Commons photo by Jim Culp is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Olympia, WA: Explore the Wild Side

To kick-start spring, may we recommend a breath of salt air? The stretch of boardwalk at Olympia’s Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge crosses over mudflats and salt-marsh plants—chances are good for a bald eagle or otter sighting—to the tidal edge as it washes in marine life like chinook and grebes. Another 2 miles out-and-back brings you into the restored Puget Sound estuary. The 762-acre delta has some of the best birding right now, as winter’s buffleheads and mergansers linger alongside the arrivals: Wilson’s and yellow-rumped warblers.

19 /24 David Fenton

Near Grand Junction, CO: Say No to Snow

With March being the snowiest month in much of Colorado, cure your cabin fever with a spring fling along Colorado National Monument’s Monument Canyon Trail, a 12-mile out-and-back near Grand Junction. From the Coke Ovens Trailhead, a 1-mile round-trip will get you big-gun geological wonders—the Coke Ovens domes, the 400-foot sandstone Kissing Couple, and the 450-foot Independence Monument monolith—and wildflowers like milk vetch, barrel cactus, and canyon primrose. Look east toward Grand Mesa (pictured) still entombed in snow—hey, you’ve cheated winter for a day.

20 /24 Courtesy of Superstition Farm

Mesa, AZ: Have Fun on the Farm

At Superstition Farm in Mesa, not only can you meet and greet the cows, you can hop a hayride around 55 acres that include an all-rescue petting zoo, ice cream at the Milk Bar, and a farm store with fresh eggs, cheese, and butter.

21 /24 Courtesy of Aramark Parks and Destinations

Olympic Peninsula, WA: Chase Hidden Cascades

The 26 natural falls dotting Washington’s Olympic Peninsula Waterfall Trail—one of the state’s best-kept secrets—are at their roaring best this time of year. Spanning the 3,600-square-mile peninsula west of Seattle, the trail’s breadth means there’s a cascade for everyone from day-trippers to backpackers. Sol Duc Falls (pictured), near Port Angeles, is one of the easiest to catch: A 0.8-mile trail leads to a misty footbridge, where you can peer down at the falls crashing onto mossy rocks. For more serious awe, and even less effort, try Vincent Creek Falls, a 125-foot chute visible from the High Steel Bridge near Hoodsport.

22 /24 Chris Leschinsky

Near Paso Robles, CA: Zip and Sip in Wine Country

Wineries are the new amusement parks of the West. Ancient Peaks Winery, on the historic Santa Margarita Ranch, has tours that zoom you down six ziplines with views of vineyards and the Santa Lucia Mountains. The first ride is a bit of a heart-stopper, but after zipping 1,300 feet across a lush valley, you’ll appreciate that first sip of wine even more. The nearly three-hour tour ends in the tasting room, where you can refuel with a glass of Merlot, cheese, and other nibbles.

23 /24 Creative Commons photo by Al_HikesAZ is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Sonoran Desert, AZ: Listen for the Rush of Desert Cascades

Along the margin where the city and the Sonoran Desert converge east of Phoenix, spring reveals the desert not as a parched wasteland of bleached cow skulls, but as an ephemeral garden. When rains come, the Superstitions brighten—if briefly—with the vivid orange and yellow of desert wildflowers and flow with waterfalls. “Reavis Falls is actually one of the tallest waterfalls in Arizona—nearly 196 feet,” says Jon Colby, a local hiking and mountain biking guide. “Some take long and tough hikes to reach. But right off State 88 at Fish Creek, there are small and pretty cascades. A few minutes and you’re there.” Catch them before they disappear. For a quintessential desert experience, hike the Peralta Trail (pictured) past saguaros and dramatic boulder stacks to Fremont Saddle, 5 miles round-trip.

24 /24 Dave Lauridsen

Ojai, CA: Smell the Fruit Blossoms

The Topa Topa Mountains frame a valley filled with citrus groves heavy with lemons. In midafternoon, a sweet breeze flows in and freshens Ojai with a hint of ocean air. So by the time Ojai’s pink moment arrives at sunset, get ready to swoon. Drive through the upper valley on State 150, a narrow farm road through the orchards. “What I love is the smell of the stone fruit blossoms—apricots, peaches, and plums,” says Kerry Clasby, a professional forager who scours California farms, forests, and markets to supply chefs in Los Angeles and beyond. “The Blenheim apricots at the K.B. Hall Ranch are the first to bloom. That’s when I know it’s spring.” These fruits might not be market-ready yet, but other local goodies from olive oil to seafood make the Ojai Farmers’ Market a one-stop food adventure.