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Texas photos for SKScreamer
Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 11:44 am
by ravyrn
This is a "weed" that grows in my yard (East TX)

The road in front of my house (East TX)

A couple of Texas sunsets (N. of Dallas)

This one was really neat, it had been storming and dark all day. Then I noticed a red haze on the top of the houses and ran to the hill near my old house to snag this photo, also north of Dallas. There was a very thin break in the clouds on the horizon that made for a neat view

And a big fissure in the ground from the intense drought (N. of Dallas)

All taken w/ my Iphone, so not the best of photos, but there you go.
Re: Texas photos for SKScreamer
Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 1:22 pm
by Kalrany
Here are a few more....

This night show shows a monument to the victims of the 1900 storm that hit Galveston Island. It sits near the midpoint of the Galveston Seawall.

Our "alien." Our plam was seeding during a rare Gavleston frost.


A storm was comming in -- here the clouds are rolling in over the bayou.

The construction phase of the all new Galveston Pleasure Pier. I do believe this photo is a one-of-a-kind, as the Pier has been open for over a year now.

A plane "waits for takeoff" at the Glaveston Island Flight Museum.

A fishing pier in the Gulf of Mexico at dawn. There are many little jetties along the Seawall in Galveston.

Here is the historic main street, The Strand, at dawn.

We witnessed history as the Shuttle Endeavour stopped at NASA overnight in Houston.

The Hotel Galvez on the Seawall Blvd on Galveston Island.
Here are a few from around Galveston Island. We have many more both from here and around the state...
Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 3:19 pm
by SaskatchewanScreamer
Re:
Posted: Thu Sep 12, 2013 6:49 pm
by ravyrn
SaskatchewanScreamer wrote:The only thing we have in common is the *weed*...here it is an exotic plant!
My great grandfather grew them when he went down to California for the winter (he'd bring back bags of his fruit every spring).
Yeah, it's a beautiful flower. I've got a vine growing on a portion of my fence and on my workshop. I didn't plant it, but I don't imagine I'll pull the vine up anytime soon

Re: Re:
Posted: Mon Sep 16, 2013 2:32 pm
by Hurricane_Luis
ravyrn wrote:SaskatchewanScreamer wrote:The only thing we have in common is the *weed*...here it is an exotic plant!
My great grandfather grew them when he went down to California for the winter (he'd bring back bags of his fruit every spring).
Yeah, it's a beautiful flower. I've got a vine growing on a portion of my fence and on my workshop. I didn't plant it, but I don't imagine I'll pull the vine up anytime soon

Looks like a type of passion flower. I have them growing in my garden. That one you have ravyrn, is called Passiflora incarnata.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passiflora
Re: Texas photos for SKScreamer
Posted: Mon Sep 16, 2013 2:41 pm
by wxman57
Can't have a Texas pictures thread without bluebonnets. This is a shot I took last spring from on of our bike trails just north of downtown. My house would be about 12 miles behind those downtown buildings.

Here is a wider view looking a little left of the image above. The bluebonnets lined the sides of White Oak Bayou and were quite fragrant.

Posted: Mon Sep 16, 2013 6:55 pm
by SaskatchewanScreamer
They are gorgeous Wxman57!

I keep coming back here to peek at the pics above. I love the road with all the greenery in front of Ravryn's yard, the sunsets and all the pics from Galveston (beaches/water are few and far between here and certainly nothing like the above!
Wonderful as well to see Endeavor so close and personal.
Thank you! Please don't be shy about uploading more!!!

Posted: Mon Sep 16, 2013 7:02 pm
by Tireman4
We can send some heat pictures too....100+ heat pictures and we have attachments of heat with them.

Posted: Mon Sep 16, 2013 8:42 pm
by SaskatchewanScreamer
well I'm sure some farmers here would appreciate that heat still but after going through what brought this on (been this way for about a month and 1/2):

and dryness so bad that my skin is screaming so I think I'll skip your offer thanks Tireman4.
our grass is brown and crispy now and we also have deep fissure cracks
Re: Texas photos for SKScreamer
Posted: Tue Sep 17, 2013 2:29 pm
by ravyrn
Yeah, due to the cold weather lingering in March, we didn't have many bluebonnets this Spring. Here's a hill near my house north of Dallas from 2012 tho.

Posted: Tue Sep 17, 2013 10:43 pm
by SaskatchewanScreamer
I can certainly see why Texans are so proud of their Bluebonnets!
What a gorgeous sight!

Re:
Posted: Fri Sep 20, 2013 8:42 am
by vbhoutex
SaskatchewanScreamer wrote:I can certainly see why Texans are so proud of their Bluebonnets!
What a gorgeous sight!

I NEVER tire of going out and seeing the bluebonnet fields. Makes for some gorgeous pictures, especially with little grand children running around and playing in them.
Re: Texas photos for SKScreamer
Posted: Sun Oct 27, 2013 6:46 pm
by ravyrn
Re: Texas photos for SKScreamer
Posted: Sun Oct 27, 2013 6:51 pm
by ravyrn
Re: Texas photos for SKScreamer
Posted: Sun Oct 27, 2013 6:53 pm
by ravyrn
Re: Texas photos for SKScreamer
Posted: Sun Oct 27, 2013 6:54 pm
by ravyrn
Woods pics:


Posted: Sun Oct 27, 2013 8:44 pm
by SaskatchewanScreamer
Your grass is as green as mine now Ravyrn!

(mine however may be white sometime very soon

). Love seeing your (?) yard and the tree pictures (what a treat for these prairie eyes)!
My plants are still in my greenhouse (have a heavy duty warmth tarp now over it as well as a heater going). This week I'll be contacting a local greenhouse that has advertised that they will take in plants over the winter (mine isn't made to do that).
Posted: Sun Oct 27, 2013 8:46 pm
by SaskatchewanScreamer
And the mushrooms!

Are they the edible horse mushrooms???
Posted: Sun Oct 27, 2013 8:48 pm
by SaskatchewanScreamer
Oh and what variety of tree is the really red leaf from?
Re: Texas photos for SKScreamer
Posted: Sun Oct 27, 2013 11:34 pm
by ravyrn
Housesitting for my mother while she's vacationing -- her yard. I believe it's a maple? I'm not really sure, I got some leaf guides when I was in FFA I can check if you'd like. No clue on the mushrooms. I don't bother picking in ETX as I'm unfamiliar with what's edible. Used to always go pick mushrooms when I'd spend my summers in Colorado. We'd get lots of yummies on some old logging roads.
EDIT: Thanks to Kennethb, the leaf is from the vine. It's a Virginia Creeper.