Cenizo Journal Summer 2014 | Page 4

Clockwise from top: Copper Globe Mallow (Sphaeralcea angustifo lia) resembles a mini-Hollyhock plant. Eye-catching, Skyrocket (Ipo mo psis aggregata) near McDonald Observatory. A perky Trans-Pecos variety of Verbena. Its cousin grows at Tandy Hills. Keep It Like It Was Story and photographs by Don Young “Help me to be in the world for no purpose at all except for the joy of sunlight and rain. Keep me close to the edge, where every- thing wild begins.” ~ Tom Hennen 4 M y home for the past 62 years has been Fort Worth, Texas. Once upon a time (maybe 200 years ago) it wasn’t such a bad place to live. In recent decades as the population, industri- al activity and dirty air have increased dra- Cenizo Third Quarter 2014 matically, my wife Debora and I have felt the insistent pull of the land of big blue sky, the Trans-Pecos region of far West Texas. One thing we like about Fort Worth, which has helped make living here tolera- ble, is theTandy Hills Natural Area, a 160- acre native prairie, a postage stamp-sized remnant of what once defined the entire region. Last August, as Fort Worth and Tandy Hills were looking raggedy, we decided to push the inspiration restart button  and continued on page 26