The most recent Texas wildflower forecast might name for sparser bluebonnets this spring, however San Antonio will nonetheless be blossoming because of a brand new citywide initiative. Bexar Blooms is planting the long-lasting state flower in underused plots all through the town.
The thought sprang from the design of Texas Backbone Care Heart’s 2026 Fiesta medal that includes a La Catrina sporting a bluebonnet-adorned gown. Scott Chidgey, the apply’s director of selling and communications, had an even bigger concept.
“I spotted these blooms shouldn’t dwell on a medal alone — they belong in our public locations,” says Chidgey. “Bexar Blooms is about deliberately bringing pleasure and sweetness into the guts of our metropolis, all through our county, and past.”
Chidgey says the flower holds particular which means to him. His mother would usually take him and his sister to search out bluebonnets after church, later utilizing the photographs for Christmas playing cards and yearbooks.
“The possibility to assist carry bluebonnets into public areas throughout San Antonio so different households can create those self same recollections — that’s a dream come true,” he provides.

To carry his imaginative and prescient to life, Chidgey recruited native companies, Centro San Antonio, and native establishments just like the San Antonio Zoo and San Antonio Museum of Artwork. Actions are deliberate at Travis Park, Hops and Hounds, Elsewhere Backyard Bar & Kitchen, and different websites throughout city.
Locals can even submit websites by way of the web site, though they should be the land proprietor or the group’s chief.Though the venture will definitely make for some gorgeous selfies, organizers say that the venture is about greater than appears to be like.
“Whereas bluebonnets are undoubtedly about beautifying downtown, the initiative can also be about contributing to an much more hospitable atmosphere for our bee inhabitants, that are crucial to the ecosystem as pollinators,” says Trish DeBarry, CEO of Centro.
Although launched in tandem with the one hundred and twenty fifth anniversary of the bluebonnet turning into a state flower, Bexar Blooms will turn into an annual custom. A nonprofit group has been launched to deal with logistics, care, and donations.
“That is just the start,” says Chidgey. “And we’ve got a number of enjoyable additions already within the works for subsequent 12 months.”
