Bluebonnet season is one of the most Texas things Texas does. It is also the time of year when people forget that a roadside photo spot can be a traffic hazard, a fire-ant mound, or a rattlesnake hangout.
Around San Antonio and along highways like I-10, the real risk is not the flowers. It is the combination of fast-moving traffic, narrow shoulders, limited visibility, children near the roadway, and unsafe stopping decisions. TxDOT actively encourages people to use safe, designated parking areas such as safety rest areas rather than improvising a shoulder stop near blooming roadside flowers. (TxDOT)
Quick Answer
- Sometimes, yes, stopping for bluebonnet photos can be illegal or unsafe. Texas law restricts stopping, standing, or parking on the main traveled part of a highway outside a business or residence district, and Texas law allows use of an improved shoulder to stop, stand, or park only when it is necessary and can be done safely. TxDOT also promotes designated rest areas and a wildflower map tied to safe parking locations. (Texas Statutes)
- If someone gets hit during a bluebonnet photo stop, the claim usually turns on negligence and comparative fault. A passing driver may be liable for speeding, distraction, failure to keep a proper lookout, or failure to control speed. But the insurer will also examine whether the family stopped in an unsafe place, stepped too close to traffic, blocked visibility, or ignored posted restrictions. Under Texas proportionate-responsibility law, an injured person generally cannot recover if their percentage of responsibility is greater than 50 percent. (Texas Statutes)
- Insurance may still help even when fault is disputed. Depending on the facts and the policies involved, recovery may come from the other driver’s liability coverage, your own PIP, medical payments coverage, or UM/UIM coverage if the driver was uninsured, underinsured, or fled the scene. Texas auto policies must offer PIP and UM/UIM, and TDI explains that those coverages can help with medical bills, lost wages, and hit-and-run or low-limits situations. (Texas Department of Insurance)
- Do not wait too long to act. In Texas, many personal-injury claims are subject to a two-year limitations period, and delay can also make it harder to preserve scene evidence, witness information, and roadway conditions. (Texas Statutes)
Why Bluebonnet Photo Stops Turn Into Injury Claims
The problem is rarely “flowers in a field.” The problem is people trying to create a photo moment next to an active roadway.
A typical bluebonnet roadside injury case may involve:
- a family parked partly on the shoulder and partly near the travel lane,
- a child stepping unexpectedly toward traffic,
- a driver drifting onto the shoulder,
- a tractor-trailer creating wind force and panic near the roadway,
- a sudden stop by one vehicle that causes a rear-end collision,
- or a person stepping into tall grass without seeing fire ants or a snake. (TxDOT)
Texas Parks and Wildlife notes there are multiple rattlesnake species in Texas and explains that bites usually happen when snakes are surprised, cornered, or handled. Texas A&M AgriLife also describes fire ants as an aggressive medical and nuisance pest in Texas, with painful stings that can be especially problematic for children. (Texas Parks & Wildlife Department)
Is It Illegal to Stop on the Highway Shoulder for Bluebonnet Photos in Texas?
That depends on where you stop, how you stop, and whether it can be done safely.
Texas Transportation Code Chapter 545 addresses stopping and parking on highways. One provision states that an operator may not stop, park, or leave a vehicle standing on the main traveled part of a highway outside a business or residence district unless certain conditions are met. Another provision allows driving on an improved shoulder to stop, stand, or park, but only when it is necessary and may be done safely. TxDOT also has authority to restrict stopping, standing, or parking on highways where it determines doing so is dangerous. (Texas Statutes)
The practical takeaway is simple: a bluebonnet photo stop is not automatically “legal” just because the flowers are beside the road. A shoulder may be narrow, soft, sloped, poorly visible from behind a curve, or posted against stopping. That matters both for a citation issue and for how an insurance adjuster will evaluate fault. (Texas Statutes)
TxDOT’s own public guidance points people toward designated safety rest areas and mapped wildflower locations near safe parking rather than informal roadside stopping. That is good safety advice and, in many cases, better claim-prevention advice. (TxDOT)
If a Driver Hits You During a Bluebonnet Photo Stop, Can You Sue?
Potentially, yes. But the answer depends on who was negligent and how much fault each side carries.
In a Texas injury claim, the basic questions are:
- Did the other driver owe a duty to use ordinary care?
- Did the driver breach that duty by driving unsafely?
- Did that conduct cause injury?
- What damages resulted?
A driver can still be at fault even if your family made a poor stopping decision. For example, a passing driver may have been:
- speeding for the conditions,
- distracted,
- following too closely,
- driving on the shoulder,
- or failing to keep a proper lookout.
At the same time, the defense may argue that you created the hazard by stopping where you should not have, standing too close to traffic, allowing children to move unpredictably near the roadway, or choosing a location with poor visibility. Under Texas proportionate-responsibility law, your recovery can be reduced by your share of fault, and it is barred if your responsibility is greater than 50 percent. (Texas Statutes)
What insurers usually focus on
In these cases, adjusters usually care less about the flowers and more about the mechanics of the scene:
- Was the vehicle fully off the roadway?
- Was the shoulder improved and wide enough?
- Was there a curve, hill, or blind spot?
- Were there posted signs restricting stopping?
- How close were people standing to the travel lane?
- Was a child involved?
- Were hazard lights on?
- Were there safer parking options nearby? (Texas Statutes)
How Insurance Usually Works After a Bluebonnet Roadside Accident
Texas claims often involve more than one possible source of coverage. The table below shows the most common paths.
| Situation | Likely coverage path | What to watch for |
|---|---|---|
| Another driver hits you or your parked vehicle and has insurance | Third-party bodily injury liability / property damage claim | The other insurer may argue you stopped unsafely or created a visibility problem. (Texas Department of Insurance) |
| You need immediate medical help regardless of fault | Your PIP or medical payments coverage | PIP is offered with Texas auto policies and can cover medical bills; PIP also covers certain lost wages and nonmedical costs. (Texas Department of Insurance) |
| The at-fault driver has too little insurance | Your UM/UIM or possibly health insurance / other first-party benefits | Limits matter. Texas minimum liability limits are often too low for serious injuries. (Texas Department of Insurance) |
| The driver flees the scene | Your UM/UIM coverage may be critical | Texas insurers must offer UM/UIM coverage unless you reject it in writing. (Texas Department of Insurance) |
| Your car is damaged and fault is disputed | Your collision coverage may help, but deductible issues can arise | TDI notes deductibles often apply on first-party claims. (Texas Department of Insurance) |
What to Do Right After a Bluebonnet Photo Accident
1. Get everyone out of danger first
Move away from traffic if you can do so safely. A good photo spot can become a second-impact scene very quickly.
2. Call 911
If anyone is injured, if a child is involved, if the crash is blocking traffic, or if there is a hit-and-run, call immediately.
3. Document the scene before it changes
Take photos of:
- the roadway,
- the shoulder,
- where the vehicle was stopped,
- any signs restricting stopping,
- skid marks or debris,
- nearby curves or hills,
- the bluebonnet area itself,
- and the distance between the flowers and the travel lane.
In a disputed-fault case, these details often matter more than the damage photos alone.
4. Get witness information
Independent witnesses can be important if the other driver claims you “jumped out” or stopped in an unpredictable way.
5. Get medical care promptly
This matters for your health and for documentation. Delayed treatment gives insurers room to argue the injury was minor or unrelated.
6. Preserve insurance information
Do not assume the at-fault driver’s limits will be enough. Review your own policy for:
- liability coverage,
- PIP,
- MedPay,
- UM/UIM,
- and collision coverage. (Texas Department of Insurance)
Common Mistakes That Hurt Bluebonnet Injury Claims
- Giving a recorded statement too early. Insurers often lock into liability themes quickly.
- Admitting fault in broad terms. Saying “we never should have stopped here” may be framed as a liability admission.
- Failing to document the shoulder and signs. That evidence can disappear fast.
- Settling before you understand future treatment. TDI warns that insurers may seek a release on medical claims; once signed, you generally do not get a second chance on that claim. (Texas Department of Insurance)
- Waiting too long. In Texas, many personal-injury claims must be filed within two years of accrual. (Texas Statutes)
What If the Injury Was Not a Car Crash?
Not every bluebonnet injury is a vehicle claim.
A child who sits in a fire-ant mound or a person bitten by a snake may have a very different legal analysis. Some incidents are simply unfortunate outdoor hazards with no viable liability claim. Others may raise questions about property ownership, warning signs, event organizers, or whether the incident happened on public versus private land. The fact pattern matters. Texas Parks and Wildlife and Texas A&M AgriLife both recognize that venomous snakes and fire ants are real Texas outdoor hazards, especially where people step into grass or disturb natural areas. (Texas Parks & Wildlife Department)
How Long Does a Bluebonnet Roadside Injury Claim Take?
There is no single timeline, but most claims move through the same stages:
Early stage: days to weeks
- medical evaluation,
- crash report and witness collection,
- insurance notice,
- scene investigation,
- policy review.
Middle stage: weeks to months
- treatment continues,
- liability positions harden,
- adjusters evaluate fault,
- settlement discussions may begin.
Later stage: months to longer
- serious injuries may require future-care analysis,
- low policy limits may force UM/UIM issues,
- disputed-fault cases may require suit,
- child injury claims may need extra care before resolution.
In roadside-photo cases, timing often depends on injury severity and whether the insurer is blaming the family for the stopping decision.
Attorney Insight
In a Texas roadside wildflower case, the best early evidence is usually not dramatic. It is technical.
Photos showing the width of the shoulder, the edge line, nearby signage, sight distance, lane position, and the relationship between the flowers and moving traffic can make a major difference. So can evidence that there was a safer parking area nearby or, on the other hand, evidence that the passing driver drifted, sped, or ignored an obvious hazard.
That is especially true when a defense lawyer or adjuster starts building a “you chose a dangerous place” argument. In those cases, small scene details often decide whether the claim is viewed as a bad family decision, a negligent-driver case, or both.
When to Talk to a Lawyer
Consider speaking with a Texas personal-injury lawyer if:
- a child was injured,
- a driver fled the scene,
- fault is being disputed,
- the insurer is blaming your stopping location,
- the injuries are serious,
- a commercial vehicle was involved,
- or there was a death.
These are the cases where proportionate-responsibility arguments, coverage issues, and evidence preservation matter early.
FAQs
Can I still recover if I was parked on the shoulder?
Possibly. But the insurer will examine whether the shoulder stop was safe and lawful. In Texas, recovery can be reduced by your percentage of fault and barred if your responsibility is greater than 50 percent. (Texas Statutes)
What if the other driver did not have enough insurance?
Your own UM/UIM coverage may help if the at-fault driver was uninsured, underinsured, or left the scene. Texas insurers must offer UM/UIM unless you reject it in writing. (Texas Department of Insurance)
Does PIP matter in a bluebonnet roadside accident?
Yes, it can. TDI explains that PIP is included with Texas auto policies unless rejected in writing, and it can help pay medical bills plus certain lost wages and other nonmedical costs. (Texas Department of Insurance)
How long do I have to file a Texas injury lawsuit?
Many Texas personal-injury claims must be brought within two years after the claim accrues, although exceptions can apply in some situations. (Texas Statutes)
What is the safest way to do bluebonnet photos?
Use a location with designated parking and room away from moving traffic. TxDOT specifically points people toward safety rest areas and mapped wildflower locations near safe parking. (TxDOT)
Bottom Line
Bluebonnet photos should not turn into an emergency-room visit or a disputed injury claim. In Texas, the biggest legal issue is usually not whether the flowers were pretty. It is whether the roadside stop was safe, whether a driver failed to use ordinary care, and how fault will be divided after someone gets hurt.
If a bluebonnet roadside photo stop led to an injury in San Antonio, Bexar County, or elsewhere in Texas, the key questions are usually:
- where the vehicle stopped,
- whether the shoulder was safe,
- what the other driver did,
- what evidence exists from the scene,
- and what insurance coverage is available.
Ryan Orsatti Law
4634 De Zavala Rd, San Antonio, TX 78249
Phone: 210-525-1200
“This blog is for informational purposes only, not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee future results.”