Showing posts with label Dixie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dixie. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Southern Grace ...




“The South …
Our tea is sweet
Words are long
Days are warm
And faith is strong.”
       ~ Unknown

The warm sun of late October shines on Mt. Calvary Missionary Baptist Church on Squire Pope Road, Hilton Head Island on a gorgeous autumn day in the Lowcountry of South Carolina.

Monday, April 10, 2017

Tides Of Dixie ...



“I stood face to face with the moon and the ocean and the future that spread out with all its bewildering immensity before me.”
                     ~ Pat Conroy
                           ~ 1945-2016

An autumn tide of the Atlantic Ocean rolls majestically into Coligny Beach, Hilton Head Island in the Lowcountry of South Carolina on a beautiful late October afternoon.

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Confederate Rose ...



“Memory believes before knowing remembers. Believes longer than recollects, longer than knowing even wonders.”
                     ~ William Faulkner
                           ~ 1897-1962
     ~ Southern American author,
                  Nobel Prize Laureate

The grace, beauty and memory of The Old South dreamily bloom in this beautiful pink Confederate Rose on an October morning in the Lowcountry of Beaufort County, South Carolina.

The Legend Of The Confederate Rose

Once the Confederate Rose was pure white. During the Civil War, a soldier was fatally wounded in battle. He fell upon the rose as he lay dying. During the course of the two days he took to die, he bled more and more on the flower, till at last bloom was covered with his blood. When he died, the flower died with him. Thereafter, the Confederate Rose (or Cotton Rose), opens white, and over the course of the two days the bloom lasts, they turn gradually from white to pink to almost red, when the flower finally falls from the bush.

The Confederate Rose or hibiscus mutablis is actually a Chinese import. Brought into English gardens in the 1600’s, it is said to have gained favor in the South due to its ease of cultivation during the hard financial times after the Civil War. The hibiscus mutablis is a member of the hibiscus family which includes both the tropical hibiscus and the hardier Rose of Sharon. It is considered a large bush or a small multi-stemmed tree. The plant roots easily from cuttings and grows vigorously during the summer. Once established it is drought resistant. The blooms appear in the fall.