Bluebonnets and Other Texas Wildflowers
March 29, 2011
We saw our first Texas bluebonnets in a ditch from the windows of the car rental shuttle at the Houston airport, but we couldn’t stop for photos. That first sighting whetted my appetite, so the hunt was on. I next saw some at a nursery in Chappell Hill. Chappell Hill is on the “Bluebonnet Trail,” and I had read that one could sometimes find early blooms along the trail at Old Baylor Park in Independence, so we made a point to stop there. We were in luck.
After Independence, bluebonnets proved elusive until later in our trip when we drove south of San Antonio. Suddenly we saw bluebonnets growing in profusion in huge patches along I-37.
We saw plenty of other wildflowers along the roadsides of Texas.
What Nature Reveals
August 1, 2010

"Benedictine prayer is designed to enable people to realize that God is in the world around them." Joan Chittister
“Morning and evening, season by season, year after year we watch the sun rise and set, death and resurrection daily come and go, beginnings and endings follow one another without terror and without woe. We come to realize that we are simply small parts of a continuing creation, and we take hope and comfort and perspective from that.”
— from Wisdom Distilled from the Daily: Living the Rule of St. Benedict Today by Joan Chittister, OSB
Nature can be another catalyst for contemplation. Here are some photos taken during my contemplative walks around the grounds of St. John’s University:

"Faith sees a beautiful blossom in a bulb, a lovely garden in a seed, and a giant oak in an acorn." William Arthur Ward
“We have to learn to be mindful that creation belongs to God and we have only been put here as its keepers.”
— from Wisdom Distilled from the Daily by Joan Chittister, OSB
Tending Roses
June 10, 2009

Blooming rose with two rosebuds

Red rosebud
“Where you tend a rose, my lad, a thistle cannot grow.”
— Frances Hodgson Burnett, The Secret Garden