On March 2, 1903, the California poppy became the official state flower of our Golden State. On Feb. 23, almost 123 years later, the first-known bloom from the Great Altadena Poppy Project was sighted on Calaveras Street in that burn-ravaged town.
âMy property was among the very first âpoppifiedâ as a proof-of-concept for the project,â said founder RenĂ© Amy, who led the scattering of 250,000,000 (yes, six zeroes) poppy seeds beginning in November. He found many plants on his cleared lot the week before spying this orange-hued beauty among them. A moment to celebrate.
The seeds were watered only by each of the seasonâs rains, Amy added, declaring himself a âparticularly proud poppy papi.â
To date, the Great Altadena Poppy Project has served more than 750 fire-impacted properties that signed up for the free âpoppifyingâ and more than 8,000 poppy seed packets were distributed, some to folks from out of state and around the globe.
The renowned ArtCenter College of Design, symbolized by a similarly poppy-colored dot, threw a sowing community gathering to mark the first anniversary of the Eaton fire. Other local spots this âpoppifiedâ include the hillside home of the Star of Palawoo, several acres of Nuccioâs Nurseries, the campus of St. Markâs School, and High Point Academy in Pasadena.
âPoppifiedâ properties were located throughout the burn area, from several adjacent to the Arroyo Seco on the west to upper Upper Hastings Ranch on the east. The southernmost property was down on east Orange Grove in Pasadena yy
For now, Amy, 65, is done sowing seeds for this labor of love, his way of continuing his annual wildflower seed distribution interrupted by the Eaton fire. That he remains displaced nearby hasnât stopped him from the poppy project, working with the nonprofit Amigos de los Rios to save Altadenaâs legacy trees and volunteering with every group from the Altadena Rotary Club, the Pasadena Jaycees and the disaster relief nonprofit Shelterbox.
He funded the great poppy plan to the tune of $20,000, so strongly did he want the flowers to spread tangible hope in the community. Of course, in low-key Altadena style, others stepped in: Realtex Homes in Pasadena, the Altadena Rotary Club, and Altadena Grocery Outlet, each of which donated or pledged donations of $1,000.
âEach of these helps make an appreciable dent in (what) Iâve spent on seed, equipment, and limited promo materials for the project,â Amy said.
But the biggest boost of all came on Feb. 27, when Arturo Lopez, owner of Altadena-based Lopez Tree & Landscape, Inc., delivered a check for $10,000, double what he had pledged at the soggy end of the Altadena Forever Run on Jan. 4.
âWeâve been a part of Altadena for more than 35 years, and the Great Altadena Poppy Project resonates with me, my family, and my team more deeply than I can put into words,â Lopez said. âMy family is now in its third generation of providing discerning tree lovers with the service they seek, and even with the loss of so many trees, we want to help bring back as much of Altadenaâs natural beauty as possible.â
Amy said the business has been his go-to when he still had what he called âThe Forestâ on his property, before the Eaton fire razed the myriad trees, and everything else, on it. Getting this much support from his âtree guyâ means the mission was accomplished in great style.
âEach property âpoppifiedâ told a tale of loss, and each seed sown â through each crank of the spreaderâs handleâ became a symbol of hope and love for the Altadena community,â Amy said.
For now, the Great Altadena Poppy Watch commences, as a second spring comes to Altadena.