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Southern Living  Article 2003 Wildflowers  - Page 2
Beeville Area

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Photos of 2005 Wildflowers > START  1  2 3 4 5 6 > First Bluebonnet

Report of Wildflowers in Bee County of 2005-March-09

  • Blue Bonnets are beginning to bloom along many road ways

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 Wildflowers Start | ClassicsFirst Bluebonnet | Resources
  2004 - Very  lean year for wildflowers
  2003> 1 2 3 | Rail Road Right of Way: 1 2 | Greenwood Cemetery
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  2001
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Beeville & Bee County
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The following is portions of an article in Southern Living March 1999 Volume 38 No 3

 

Teresa Holland’s eyebrows crinkle in thought, and tiny frown lines pull at her lips. “Well, no,” she says in answer to a question. “We don’t have wildflower trails around Beeville. I mean, in this part of Texas, the flowers are just everywhere!”

Teresa, who serves as manager for Bee County Chamber of Com­merce and who has lived in Beeville for 30 years, says this as she drives along a winding, flower-dusted country lane, one of many such roads in this mostly rural area north­west of Corpus Christi.

“There’s no one particular place I go to see them,” she says as we approach a lemon-yellow field with a dreamy lavender shawl thrown around its shoulders. “They’re just a part of our lives. We protect and re­spect wildflowers around here.

“You drive through the neighbor­hoods in Beeville and you’ll see a patch of wildflowers where people have mowed around it to save it,” she continues as we drift around a gentle curve and encounter a mead­ow as red as a sunset. “We have so many flowers here, and yet everyone wants their own”

That doesn’t mean they don’t share their flowers, for the good people of Bee County are happy to point visitors along this lane and that, bragging about one field of Indian paintbrush, another of prim­rose. They’ll tell you where the lantana blooms, and the prickly pear, and they’ll whisper that if you take a right at the old iron fence and a left at the big live oak, you’ll see a field of wine-cups that are as burgundy as the best French wine. There are blue­bonnets too, but the real show in Bee County is red and purple, orange and salmon, lemon and lime.

All through the great wildflower regions of Texas-from Corpus Christi up to Austin, particularly- March and April spread colorful in­vitations in the fields.

If you’d like to venture into the rainbow of Texas blossoms this year, here’s a triple dip of our favorite pot-of-gold roadways. These three routes are not as well known as the Hill Country bluebonnet trails, but all are guaranteed to take you into Koda­chrome fields and lasting memories.

Bee County

Bee County was buzzin’ last year when-thanks to generous winter rains-wildflowers were at their absolute best. Weathered fence posts trailed through fields bursting with yellow, pink, and purple. The lime-green foliage of gnarled mes­quite waved like long, lacy fingers above deep pools of color that en­couraged exploration. It was a time of incredible bounty and un­ending beauty.

One of our favorite routes begins right in Beeville, the county seat. Take U.S. 181 south 10 miles toward Corpus Christi, and turn right on Farm Road 797 in Skid­more, which loops into Farm Road 1349 back to Beeville. This drive will takeyou past an extraordinary array of wildflowers-tall scarlet spikes of skyrocket burst beside waist-high purple thistles backed by the canary blooms of prickly pear cactus. Just down the road showy primrose bloom near white prairie larkspur, stiff-stem flax, wine-cups, and a graceful patch of Queen Anne’s lace. The variety and depth of the colors are remarkable. Take at least an hour to do this drive justice. Beeville is about an hour northwest of Corpus, 1½ hours southeast of San Antonio.

 

 

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