Showing posts with label Texas bluebonnets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas bluebonnets. Show all posts

Saturday, March 31, 2012

On The Texas Bluebonnet Trail

Bluebonnets are now in full bloom in Texas. Yesterday Dean and I went on a road trip to Round Top and Warrenton. We saw some beautiful displays of bluebonnets along the highways.

It is really hard to imagine the beauty of the Bluebonnets and the orange Indian Paintbrushes until you really see them with your own eyes. A picture does not do them justice. We found this field on the outskirts of Round Top.

Bluebonnets have been loved since man first trod the vast prairies of Texas. Indians wove fascinating folk tales around them. The early-day Spanish priests gathered the seeds and grew them around their missions. This practice gave rise to the myth that the padres had brought the plant from Spain, but this cannot be true since the two predominant species of bluebonnets are found growing naturally only in Texas and at no other location in the world.

As historian Jack Maguire so aptly wrote, "It's not only the state flower but also a kind of floral trademark almost as well known to outsiders as cowboy boots and the Stetson hat." He goes on to affirm that "The bluebonnet is to Texas what the shamrock is to Ireland, the cherry blossom to Japan, the lily to France, the rose to England and the tulip to Holland."

 

The ballad of our singing governor, the late W. Lee O'Daniel, tells us you may be on the plains or the mountains or down where the sea breezes blow, but bluebonnets are one of the prime factors that make the state the most beautiful land that we know.

BEAUTIFUL TEXAS W. Lee O'Daniel

You've all read the beautiful stories
Of the countries far over the sea,
From whence came our ancestors
To establish this land of the free.
There are some folks who still like to travel,
To see what they have over there,
But when they go look,
It's not like the book,
And they find there is none to compare—

CHORUS:

To beautiful, beautiful Texas,
Where the beautiful bluebonnets grow.
We're proud of our forefathers
Who fought at the Alamo.
You can live on the plains or the mountains,
Or down where the sea breezes blow,
And you're still in beautiful Texas,
The most beautiful place that I know.





 Please share your thoughts in the Comments Section below.
  

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Friday, July 22, 2011

Golden Oldies Friday ~ Miss Rumphius by Barbara Cooney

Welcome to Golden Oldies Friday! Each Friday I choose one book from my collection of vintage children's books to share with you.

Today, I chose a book that is one of my all-time favorite children's book. Miss Rumphius, by Barbara Cooney, is a beautiful story about living life to the fullest and leaving the world a better place when you leave. This is a picutre of my well-worn and well-loved copy of "Miss Rumphius".

About The Author
Barbara Cooney was born in 1917 and became a prolific children's book illustrator. In the later part of her career, Ms. Cooney focused on writing and illustrating more books of her own. Miss Rumphius, for which the author won both the American Book Award and a New York Times citation in 1982, was inspired by the true story of a woman who planted lupines to make the world a more beautiful place.

Texas Bluebonnets ~ A species of lupine
I discovered this book in the mid-1980s when I was an elementary school librarian in Pasadena, Texas. This book was in the biography section of the library because it is based on a true story.  I was attracted to this book because the Texas Bluebonnet is the state flower. Each spring I would read the children "Miss Rumphius" and we would talk about the beautiful blue flowers.
I also liked this book because Miss Rumphius just happened to work as a librarian and she loved books. This is truly the best "librarian story" that I have ever read.

The Lupine Lady
The story begins with a little girl telling the story of her great-aunt, Miss Alice Rumphius. Alice lived in a big house near the sea when she was a child. Alice would often sit on her grandfather's knee and listen to stories of faraway places. She also loved to watch him paint pictures of the sea. One day, her grandfather told her, "You must do something to make the world more beautiful". Alice agreed but she had no idea what she could do.
When she grew older, Miss Rumphius worked as a librarian in a large public library. She loved to read books about far-away places. She eventually traveled the world and experienced many different adventures.

On one of her adventures, she hurt her back while getting off of a camel. She decided it was time to go back home and take it easy. She found a little house near the sea that was almost perfect...but she remembered that she promised her grandfather to make the world more beautiful. She planted some lupines in her yard and the next spring her yard was full of beautiful blooming flowers.
All the next summer, Miss Rumphius ordered more lupine seeds and walked around spreading the seeds everywhere she went. The next spring there were lupines everywhere. She was known as the "Lupine Lady" and continued to spread seeds until she was very old.

The end of the book shows Miss Rumphius as a very old lady. She is sitting among her great-nieces and great-nephews. She is telling them that there is one thing that they MUST remember....Do somthing to make the world more beautiful.

Here is a video that I made a couple of years ago when the bluebonnets were in full bloom.




Please share your thoughts in the Comments Section below.
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