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Daughter of the South Wind

        There are days in early summer when Kansas is almost as beautiful as Scotland; and our history-although much younger than Scotland's-sings in my spirit  Today was one of those days~ I drove nearly 250 miles to a small town up near the Nebraska border. It was an amazing journey! 

 

 

This is historic country with lots of ancestors speaking to me all the way. I imagined myself back in the days when the Native American and European cultures still lived in relative harmony up in these parts....

 

 

 

The French trappers and traders understood the prairie. They came and lived on the land, not trying to dominate or tame it. They also adapted to the native ways of life, didn't try to force change upon them. For a long time the French were the only immigrants who could live here comfortably.

 

The Spaniards came with their swagger and gold lust; but they were driven back by the fierce, wild Kansa tribe and a land that held only spiritual riches.

 

Coronado couldn't understand that the seven cities of Cibola were indeed cities of gold- but not the kind he craved. The gold of this land was the endless sea of golden prairie grass that held a fire he would never understand.  The riches were the amazingly productive cultivation of the Wichita tribe. Even the bountiful harvest they offered in peace did not impress his greedy soul beyond the sustenance it provided.

 

On the way home, I drove along the backside of a line of towering summer thunderheads. That is by far the most amazing scenery in Kansas- our changing skies:). I saw rainbows, mushrooming cumulonimbus heads, fierce looking scud clouds, and eventually the wild and sensual mammatus clouds billowing out of the underside of the anvil of a mature storm.

 

As I turned east toward home, I chased the rain back into Topeka. I watched the sunset splash amazing colours on the still wet landscape~deep greens with glittering silver and gold drops everywhere~and paint the sky vivid sun-god colours of gold and orange.

 

Once the darkness fell, I was treated to the light show.  This line of storms was riding the cool front across Kansas and stretched from as far north to as far south as I could see. There were pockets of lightening dancing everywhere across the front. The chain lightening that seemed to fly from the ground up into the clouds and dance from storm to storm illuminated my path homeward....

 

There are days when I am in awe of the privilege of being a 5th generation native Kansan and am proud to call my self a daughter of the south wind~today was one of the best!

COMMENTS
Thyme2dream said at 5:41 p.m. on Jun 7, 2008:
My apologies to my friends who are not native English speakers, although you all probably speak English much better than I speak another language:) This was actually an article I wrote last year and I was reminded of it this week when I took another longm stormy drive through my native land.
Wildthing said at 5:55 p.m. on Jun 7, 2008:
Your words overwhelm the picture. So descriptive. I would be surprised if you haven't written a book, or are in the process of writing one. You paint a wonderful picture with your storytelling ability.
21-gramm said at 5:56 p.m. on Jun 7, 2008:
great words <...>with glittering silver and gold drops everywhere<...>!
great shot!
100% AIR ART!
))
Eduardo.affonso said at 5:58 p.m. on Jun 7, 2008:
I became devoted to Saint Google and Saint Babelfish as soon as I joined Tabblo and thank to these powerful saints my ignorance is not an unbridgeable problem anymore. Now I understand why you call yourself "daughter of the south wind". Loved your text - and the photo you chose to go with it.
Jigs said at 2:58 a.m. on Jun 8, 2008:
I was intrigued at first by the title, which I thought was such a romantic sobriquet. Then from the first photo and the first word onward, I was captivated. Thank you very much for this well-written and most enlightening tabblo. You made me appreciate your culture and history all the more deeply. Perhaps someday, this essay will give rise to a published coffeetable book dedicated to your beautiful land and amazing heritage... with your lovely photos, of course, as well.
Mirella said at 4:05 a.m. on Jun 8, 2008:
A great love for your country and for nature: this is what appears in your words. Thanks.
Marcif said at 10:36 a.m. on Jun 8, 2008:
I love this photo and your article is beautifully written.
Ira said at 12:36 p.m. on Jun 8, 2008:
Very beautiful photo.
Maz2001 said at 4:50 p.m. on Jun 8, 2008:
Wonderful.
Jantass said at 10:47 p.m. on Jun 8, 2008:
Spectacular image and History of your trip .. Beautiful Tabblo !!!
SterlingGray said at 12:23 p.m. on Jun 9, 2008:
Wonderful photo, the cloud formations are very beautiful. The article is also wonderful; it is very well written and provides for such description, that you can easily see what you were observing that day. Great Tabblo!!!
Pattymaryclare said at 5:25 p.m. on Jun 9, 2008:
Just beautiful simplicity and beauty of the capture and the incredible storytelling! thank you Thyme and Marcif too...both very talented sisters. luv, Pattypixie (sometimes also gnome, elf, faerie! lol)
Chiloedream said at 9:37 p.m. on Jun 12, 2008:
C'est très beau Karla, merci mon amie.
Tigerdba74 said at 6:31 a.m. on Jun 23, 2008:
Well written...along with that amazin shot!
Tanglewire said at 11:08 p.m. on Jun 25, 2008:
Really great tabblo...well written
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