The Sierras Chicas are known for their rolling hills, fresh mountain air, and peaceful landscapes but for those who slow down and look closely, they also reveal one of their most beautiful secrets: an extraordinary variety of wildflowers and seasonal blooms.
Throughout the year, the hillsides change colour with the seasons. Spring and summer bring bursts of yellow, purple, white, and red across the fields, along walking trails, and beside quiet streams. Native flowers thrive alongside cultivated garden species, creating a landscape that feels both wild and welcoming.
Among the most cheerful and eye-catching flowers found in and around the estancia are the zinnias. Known for their bright colours and long-lasting blooms, zinnias bring life to gardens, pathways, and sunny open spaces. Their vivid pinks, oranges, reds, and yellows stand out beautifully against the softer greens and browns of the Sierra landscape.
Zinnias are more than just beautiful they also attract butterflies, bees, and small pollinators that help keep the local ecosystem thriving. Their resilience in warm climates makes them especially well suited to the region, flourishing even during the hotter summer months when other flowers begin to fade.
Alongside zinnias, visitors may also notice native daisies, verbena, salvias, and seasonal wild herbs that bloom naturally across the hills. Each flower adds something different: colour, fragrance, movement, and a quiet reminder of how rich the landscape truly is.
Walking through the Sierras Chicas in bloom is an experience that changes with every season. Some mornings begin with soft wildflowers opening in the early light; evenings end with golden sunlight falling across fields of colour. It is this gentle beauty that makes the region feel so alive.
The flowers of the Sierras Chicas are not only part of the scenery—they are part of the identity of the land itself. From wild mountain blooms to the bright joy of zinnias, they tell the story of a landscape that is always growing, changing, and quietly flourishing.

