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Cement Mountain

August 05, 2015 by Travis Ward in Plant Hunt

It was a very warm August afternoon when my mom and I ventured out along Cement Mountain Road in southeastern Young County, Texas in search of some unique flora. This county-maintained gravel road traverses the transition between the Rolling Plains and Oak Woods eco-regions. The soil here is sandy and conglomerate, proving responsible for the formation's "Cement" name. There is a lot of early Texas history on this topographical rise (it's difficult for me to call this a "mountain"), including the murder of a Texas Ranger by Native Americans in 1864. Luckily for us, there were no aggressive Indians in sight, and the county crews had not mowed the bar ditches all year. 

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August 05, 2015 /Travis Ward
Cement Mountain, Young County, Texas, Texas native plants, Rolling Plains, flora, Oak Woods, Vernonia, baldwinii, Ironweed, Ibervillea, lindheimeri, Balsam, Gourd, Prunus, rivularis, River Plum, Plum, Asclepias, viridis, Green Milkweed, Milkweed, Grindelia, nuda, Curlytop, Gumweed, Ruellia, humilis, viridiflora, Green Comet Milkweed, Dalea, multiflora, White Prairie Clover, Clover, Echinacea, angustifolia, Narrow Leaf Coneflower, Coneflower, Liatris, punctata, mucronata, Texas Gayfeather, Gayfeather, Euphorbia, marginata, Snow on the Mountain, engelmanniana, Engelmann, Engelmann's Milkweed, Desmanthus, illinoensis, Illinois Bundleflower, Bundleflower, asperula, Antelope horns milkweed
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