Today is feeling like it is being the hottest day of the new year. It was definitely the hottest day of the new year on the Tandy Hills today. I think it was almost 80.
I entered the Tandy Hills from the top of Mount Tandy today. As I was walking along I thought to myself that I should be seeing wildflowers. Thinking that by this point in time, a few days before the start of spring, in years past, there would already be wildflowers.
But, all I'd seen, so far, this year has been a purple flower I saw for the first time a couple weeks ago, on the Tandy Hills and a bright yellow flower at Oakland Lake Park.
As I was hiking the currently mostly colorless Tandy Hills I wondered if maybe the harsh winter had dealt a death blow to the Texas wildflowers this year. A time of year which is my favorite part of the year in North Texas. The usually drab landscape puts on a show of color for several months, usually with some colorful thunderstorms to add a soundtrack.
Well, on the way back up Mount Tandy today I saw the blue beauty you see above, which I'd walked right by without noticing on my way down Mount Tandy.
A bluebonnet. The State Flower of Texas. The harbinger of spring and the start of wildflower season.
You may be wondering what that is on the left.
Well, that is me. The underside of my right arm to be more precise, with the narrow part being my wrist, which is connected to my right hand.
See the red bumps?
Well. To take the picture of the bluebonnet I had to get real close. With the camera set in macro mode. I pretty much got down on the ground, on my knees, leaning on my arms to take the picture.
It is not a wise thing to get on the ground in Texas without first carefully examining the ground you are are getting down on.
Today I was not wise, which is not the first time I have been un-wise in Texas.
I had kneeled down over a fire ant nest. I quickly had dozens of the little beasts on me. I thought I'd brushed them off before they could do their burning thing. I thought wrong.
I felt no stinging, I saw no signs I'd been stung. But by the time I got back here both arms had developed dozens of fire ant hot spots.
I am almost sure I will recover from this latest attack by Mother Nature. I am willing to do some suffering to get a good picture.