.
At left see one example species (click
on the image to enlarge it). No leaves
can be seen here -- the entire visible structure is the inflorescence
of the plant. Typically, one inflorescence arises out of an inconspicuous
basal rosette of leaves, and then it branches several times. These
florescent stems bear flowers at each node.

Here,
to the right, a somewhat better view of the flowers may be had -- again,
click on the image to enlarge it. You can
see that the skeleton has an inverted-cone shape, and that some of the flowers
have already ripened to a rusty brown color. The whole plant (minus its basal
leaf-rosette, which withers as the inflorescence grows) will remain as a skeleton
for up to a year or more.
Below, a close view
of the flowers, some young, some drying out. While the particular plants photographed
here come from the flanks of our Red Tank, we have seen Skeleton Weed in its greatest
profusion in the floodplains of Hot Springs Canyon. There, after good Fall flow
downstream, Skeleton Weed seeds germinate in the fall with the other winter annuals,
but the flowers only appear in the summertime (mid-July, in the photographs seen
here). When a large crop flowers and then dries out, a diffuse but memorable rusty
glow covers the ground of the flood plain.

In August of 2004, we encountered a second species in lower
Hot Springs Canyon, when a substantial flooding in the small side-wash
just downstream from the Windmill carried an array of seeds which
produced this sudden explosion of plants, below -- the skeleton
Weeds stand out here by virtue of their pale gray color (a product
mainly of the flowers):


These plants, detailed at left, are definitely
a different species from the ones at the top. They branch out from
the base, have a narrower inverted-conical profile, and much more
extensive leafing from the base on up the stems. (Click
on the image for a close-up of the leaves.)
The flowers of this species are
also distributed rather differently from
those
of the first, as shown in the image to the right; (Click
on the image for a close-up of flowers)
We encountered a third species
on December 30, 2004, while driving in Lower Pool Wash. This one
presented a strikingly red aspect, as evident in the photo
below: (click on the image to enlarge
it)


This stand had not been evident in early October. At
left, you can see its dried-up basal leaves (click
on the image to enlarge it).

Here is a view of its flowers/seedlings. (click
on the image for a close-up.) These
are very tiny seedlings -- you'll have to use the close-up view to
get much of any sense of them at all.