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South Dakota Magazine, Yankton, SD
Tulips in South Dakota
May 8, 2009
We asked our readers to submit their favorite South Dakota tulip photos. Here's what we got!
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Here's one from our publisher, Bernie Hunhoff.
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"No winter lasts forever; no spring skips its turn." - Hal Borland.
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According to buzzle.com, the tulip is the third most popular flower in the world after rose and chrysanthemum. They originated in central and western Asia. Photo by Carol Klein
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"Oh Lord, I never lived where churches grow. I like creation better as it stood that day you finished it so long ago." -Badger Clark. Photo by Carol Klein
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Charlotte Mickelson shot this photo of some tulips she made herself on a stained glass panel.
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"Dakota comes! What varied wealth of mount and plains she brings." - H.N. Maquire, pioneer editor. Photo by Craig Wollman
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"Nourish it, then, that it may leaf and bloom and fill with singing birds." - Black Elk.
Photo by Craig Wollman
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"There was beauty in this plain, delicate beauty and a weird charm." -Hamlin Garland.
Photo by Bernie Hunhoff
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"The Dakota people believe the pasque's appearance awakened other plants from winter sleep and reminded them to emerge from the heart of the Earth." - Jerry Wilson. Photo by Anne Galante
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"So vast is the extent the eye takes in ... a far-spreading verdue, relieved by a profusion of variously colored flowers." - Joseph Nicollet. Photo by Rebecca Terk
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"Mountain plain or prairie fields, summer heat or snows, South Dakota's people are the grandest crop she grows." -Badger Clark. Photo by Terry VanDeWalle
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"Mother, you stand guard against the prairie flowers ... your arm held back (as a hen protecting her chicks) protecting these young children ..." - Darla Bielfeldt. Photo by Terry VanDeWalle
Wildflowers are adding a splash of color to the granite and pines of the rugged Black Hills.
Sunset at the Meridian Bridge in Yankton. Photo by Jacob Doyle
South Dakota provides the perfect backdrop for toy photography.
The annual Dakota Marker game brought thousands to Brookings.
Fall color is at its peak in the Black Hills. Photo by John Mitchell
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