This all changed a couple weeks ago. I was struck by a difference I didn’t realize could rattle me so much. For the first time in my life, I’m missing out on Texas wildflowers.
People who aren’t from Texas often don’t understand why Texans are so wild about wildflowers. Many Americans don’t know what the state flower of their home state is. Every Texas knows. Even people who aren’t from Texas probably know that it’s the Bluebonnet. If you want a picture that’s as Texan as it can be, it has to have bluebonnets.
But the Texas wildflowers aren’t limited to bluebonnets. Texas is huge, and it has a lot of different climates, which means lots of different flowers. But what makes the wildflowers so meaningful, I think is the vastness of Texas.
If you want to go anywhere in Texas, you have to drive. You have to drive a long time. Sometimes you have to stop and get a hotel for the night, and then drive some more the next day. It can get absurd. For most of the year, this driving is boring. The fields and hills and mountains and cows and oil rigs are monotonously black, brown, and beige. Miles and miles and hours and hours of tedious, torturous banality interrupted only by the flashing blue and red of a state trooper.
The one time of year this changes is spring. The grass, dead and browned by winter, slowly changes to brilliant green. As the wildflowers come into bloom, the fields, and hills come alive with vibrant patches of blue, red, yellow, and purple. Suddenly, touring the vast emptiness of Texas is a joy. Every mile becomes exciting as beautiful new swaths of color come into view. The speed of Texas highways blurs the flowers into intoxicating impressionist artworks.