Thursday, January 27, 2011

Photo walk . . .

Frost on what I think is Mexican hat (Ratibida columnifera) out on the septic field.
My daughter and I call frost "Texas snow," as the real thing is so rare for us!

Flame-leaf sumac bark (Rhus lanceolata).

Scary, eh? Prickly pear
(I think Opuntia engelmannii var. lindheimeri)
grows here and there on our acreage.

5 comments:

  1. Dear Cynthia, What strangely beautiful images you capture here. I love the idea of frost being referred to as Texas Snow and find it hard to believe that you are not, as I write, gripped by the snowstorms of which we read so much at present in the UK.

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  2. Thanks, Edith! We are located too far south for snow, to my daughter's chagrin. We get some once every three or four years!

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  3. Ratibida columnifera is beautiful.... with a faint glimpse of snow...

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  4. I am feeling strangely comfortable in the knowledge that I live in NC where I would not accidentally stumble and impale myself up a prickly pear.

    Being a natural born klutz, I have to look out for natural hazards where ever they may be.

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  5. @Bangchik - It's even prettier in the summer when it blooms. Oh, and we have a chance of real snow later this week!

    @lifeshighway - Ha! We had a German foreign exchange student a few years' back who had to spend several hours picking those thorns out. The worst are the tiny ones you can't see, but can certainly feel!

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