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© 1998 Linda Saxon Nix - All Rights Reserved
Welcome
to my web site featuring the magnificent
Magnolia Grandiflora,
The State Flower Of Mississippi.
| To
view magnolia fine art photography and stock photgraphy images, please visit my "Southern Creations Web Site" |
| Through
my home page and connected pages, I will endeavor to show you a part of my world.
I love magnolias, pelicans, my husband, my children and life itself. My interests
include photography, painting, writing, travel, reading, flower and water gardening
and feeding the birds in our backyard. As you travel through my site, you will be able to visit many pages that contain photos and pages about magnolias. But first, a little bit about where I live and where the magnolias grow.
I live on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, where a twenty-six mile beach displays an ever-changing array of sunsets, sailboats, shrimp boats and shore birds.
Yes, we have Sea Oats, too.
Here,
huge live oak trees flourish close to the water, and Spanish Moss
cascades from their branches, casting an eerie spell as the winter fog sets in
and giving an aura of beauty and peace in the sumertime. Magnificent
magnolia trees are abundant, gracing the entire area with their beauty and their
rich prefumed fragrance. They provide luscious blossoms during the late spring
and early summer, and striking red pods in the fall. Since the theme of this site
is magnolias, and you will see pages and pages about them, plus pages of my magnolia
photographs. One of my passions is photographing magnolias. I never tire of the many faces and facets of the blossoms.
Breathtaking
sunsets sink over Biloxi's Back Bay near our home.
You can frequently see white and Blue Herons perched on driftwood emerging from the water as well as many snowy egrets. In Winter of 2003 , the resident white heron had four babies. Fish and shrimp abound in the bay; mullet (called Biloxi Bacon) jump continuously. Skimmers and seagulls glide over Popps Ferry Bridge ever so gracefully. Pelicans (becoming more and more abundant) perch on the boat piers, and they, too, soar over the bridge and along the beach.
Along
Front Beach (the 26-mile beach along the Mississippi Sound of the Gulf of Mexico),
sea oats blow in the breeze as flocks of laughing gulls flit about overhead. Least
Terns nest in protected areas of the beach during the summers. I feel that I must post this warning: Our waters are presently not safe to swim or wade in due to the dangers of the debris from Hurricane Katrina. Efforts are underway to try to clean the waters, but it will take a very long time before it is safe to go into the water. Quite a few beachers are now open, so you can enjoy sunbathing and watching the shore birds on the beach for now. To see
how my neighborhood fared in Katrina, you can go Here.
Check out our subtropical temperature. To
read more about Biloxi and the Mississippi Gulf Coast, please go to my
Biloxi page.
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Links
to more of my Magnolia Sites:
| Some
of my web pages and magnolia pages are designed for your viewing pleasure and
to learn about magnolias. Others showcase my magnolias images that are available
for sale as fine art or for use in graphics, logos, and illustrations. All of
the images on all of my pages are Copyright 1998 - 2005 by Linda Saxon Nix. None
of the magnolia photos on this page, or any other page, are protected by copyright
laws. They may not be copied, printed, used, download or publish in any format.
Unauthorized use strictly prohibited. Sounds and graphics not credited to others
(or not created by me) are considered to be in "public domain". There
are no public domain graphics on this page. All Rights Reserved |
Updated November 17, 2005,
July 15, 2006, 7/28/08.
(Uploaded to Velvet-Hammer)