Is the Texas Wildflower Season a Bust?
Dirt Roads & Day Trips April 11th, 2008With the current price of fuel I can hardly afford unnecessary road trips. After the previous photo safari produced so little in the way of wildflowers, I’m hesitant to go exploring again. There are a few bluebonnets but they are sparse and spindly. Bluebonnets usually predict the quality of other wildflowers, Indian paintbrush, black-eyed susan, Indian blanket, winecups, etc. Unless we get a lot of rain soon there will be little to photograph along our highways, byways and meadows in coming months.
I have a few wildflower pictures scrolling across the homepage. They are from previous years and even from places other than the Texas Hill Country. I enjoy my Big Bend Bluebonnets and the Lake Buchanan Lighthouse but would much rather be photographing huge fields of well saturated local bluebonnets to scroll across a computer screen. It’s not just the photographers being disappointed. The lack of wildflowers in the area is a bust for tourism, photographers and the local business people. The weekend is due to be a large infusion of money into the Texas Hill Country and the Highland Lakes Area especially. Even the Burnet Bluebonnet Festival is likely to suffer. Maybe the nice weather will attract crowds to the local air show.
We had some rain this week. Hopefully, a little more will give us something to look forward to as the wildflowers change from blue to red to yellow. Perhaps the cactus and yucca will produce some photogenic blossoms. I hope we don’t have to wait all the way into June for sunflowers. Keep your fingers crossed.

