The brilliant blooms along the highway are, at least in part, the result of the Arkansas Department of Transportation seeding the native wildflowers along state highways as a part of its wildflower program.
Randy Moll/Westside Eagle Observer
Lance-leaved coreopsis blooms along Arkansas Highway 59 on the south side of Gentry. The native wildflower is also called by the common name of tickseed. The brilliant blooms along the highway are, at least in part, the result of the Arkansas Department of Transportation seeding the native wildflowers along state highways as a part of its wildflower program.
Randy Moll/Westside Eagle Observer
Fleabane, also known as Erigeron, blooms along Arkansas Highway 59 on the south side of Gentry. The small but showy clusters of blooms along the highway are, at least in part, the result of the Arkansas Department of Transportation seeding the native wildflowers along state highways as a part of its wildflower program.
Randy Moll/Westside Eagle Observer
Pinkladies, also known as evening primrose, bloom along Arkansas Highway 59 on the south side of Gentry. The pink blooms along the highway are, at least in part, the result of the Arkansas Department of Transportation's wildflower program.