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Conditions look good for Texas bluebonnets

Drought followed by rain likely to lead to banner bloom for wildflower

By Sarah Bahari, The Dallas Morning News
Published: March 9, 2024, 5:59am

DALLAS — Millions of bluebonnets will soon bloom across Texas, blanketing parks, pastures and highway shoulders in that most recognizable hue.

This year will likely be an excellent year for bluebonnets and other wildflowers across the state, according to a forecast from the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center at the University of Texas Austin.

“On a scale from one to 10, this year looks like it could be an eight, for bluebonnets in particular, if not even better,” said Andrea DeLong-Amaya, the center’s horticulture director.

Why the optimism? Last summer’s drought followed by recent rains have created ideal bloom conditions.

During a drought, some plants die off, reducing competition in the soil and creating plenty of space for spring blooms, DeLong-Amaya explained. The drought was followed by adequate and well-spaced rainfall in the fall and winter, which is key to wildflower development.

A spate of warm days this month means the blooms, which typically peak in April, will likely start appearing soon. In fact, bluebonnets have already begun blooming in Austin, said Scott Simons, a spokesman for the wildflower center.

North Texas is typically two weeks behind Austin, so bluebonnets could start showing up in early or mid-March. If March is warm, bluebonnets will quickly pop up. If the month cools down, blooms will slow down.

“Wildflowers are all about the weather,” DeLong-Amaya said. “And they are both difficult to predict.”

Bluebonnets were named the state flower in 1901, beating out the cotton boll and the cactus. More than a century later, they have become an emblem of the state, and Texans flock to fields and highway shoulders to snap pictures with the blooms every spring.

“There aren’t that many places you can see oceans and oceans of bluebonnents. It’s really captivating,” DeLong-Amaya said.

The flowers grow particularly well near roadways, which are home to gravelly soil with good drainage.

It’s not illegal to pick bluebonnets, although trespassing to pick the flowers certainly is. The flowers have a short period of time to leave seeds for next year, so it’s important not to disrupt their lifecycle.

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