In Dallas, I swung by the Bush Native Texas Park before sunset to see the wildflower show I’d been hearing about. I was not disappointed.… Read More

The post Prairie wildflower oasis at Native Texas Park in Dallas appeared first on Digging.

May 30, 2024
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On a mid-May trip up to Dallas, I swung by the Laura W. Bush Native Texas Park just before sunset to see the big wildflower show I’d been hearing about this spring. I was not disappointed.

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Red-and-yellow firewheel, purple horsemint, rusty Mexican hat, and lilac American basketflower were quilting the 15-acre park with color. Vying with the hum of traffic from nearby (but invisible) North Central Expressway, insects were buzzing in the wildflowers and birds were trilling in the trees. As the sun dipped to the horizon, the orange haze of the flowering prairie deepened. It was magical!

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Native Texas Park unfolds via walking trails behind the George W. Bush Presidential Center on the Southern Methodist University campus. Open daily — and free to visit — from sunrise until sunset, the park “reflects what the site might have looked like centuries ago,” according to SMU.edu. “Native trees, plants, and water-conserving features make the park drought resistant, minimize the need for irrigation through municipal water sources, and helps [sic] important pollinators like butterflies, birds, and bees thrive.”

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Designed by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, the park sits below the brick-and-limestone presidential library and slopes downhill toward a wet-weather creek and retention pond. A native-blend lawn similar to Habiturf provides a green negative space surrounded by native gardens. Kids were having a blast running the trails and dashing across the lawn. What a great place to get outdoors in the middle of Dallas.

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American basketflower in fringey lavender-and-cream bloom

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Pokeweed in flower, later to make berries beloved by birds

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The layout of the park, in a bowl edged with trees, offers a secluded oasis amid glass office towers on one side and the SMU campus on the other.

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From the lawn you look out over a large meadow, hazed with orange at this time of year thanks to all the firewheel. A curving boardwalk bridges the wet-weather creek.

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Bicyclists and walkers were exploring the paths among the wildflowers.

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The light was beautiful in the late afternoon.

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I was intrigued by this ivory horsemint, which Jay at NewTexasGardens ID’d as spotted beebalm (Monarda punctata).

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Spotted beebalm colonizing the slope…

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…and glowing in the late-afternoon light

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It was a good time of day to photograph the garden and people enjoying it.

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Firewheel on fire

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Below, the kids and their moms had staked out an idyllic conversation spot under a live oak.

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That oak is a picturesque presence in the background of several of my photos.

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More firewheel

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I love a shaggy native-grass lawn.

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So tranquil

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Winecup and lantana aglow

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Along a side path following a drainage swale…

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