06/04/2026
Here’s a Texas-adapted caption in the same style:
Writing
Texas has some of the most iconic landscapes and productive agricultural land in America. 🤠🌾
The cattle ranches.
The cotton fields.
The hay meadows.
The family farms that have sustained Texas communities for generations.
From the Panhandle to the Hill Country… from East Texas to the Rio Grande Valley… from communities near Amarillo, Lubbock, Abilene, Waco, Tyler, Corpus Christi, and beyond… agriculture remains deeply woven into Texas identity.
That’s why many Texans are asking a simple question:
If we’re expanding solar energy…
why not build more of it over land that’s already developed?
☀️ Cover parking lots
🏢 Cover shopping centers
🏟️ Cover stadium parking
🏥 Cover hospitals and business parks
🚗 Cover giant asphalt surfaces already absorbing heat all day
Solar canopies can:
• generate clean electricity
• keep vehicles cooler during Texas summers
• provide shade and weather protection
• reduce heat from massive paved areas
• make use of space that already exists
Meanwhile Texas farms and ranches can continue doing what they’ve always done:
🌾 growing crops
🐄 supporting ranching communities
🌎 preserving open landscapes
🇺🇸 helping feed America and the world
For many people, the conversation isn’t about being against solar energy.
It’s about finding smarter places for large-scale infrastructure while protecting the farms, ranches, and open land that make Texas feel like Texas.
Because once productive farmland and wide-open views disappear…
it’s hard to bring them back.
Texas’s future needs both energy and agriculture.
The challenge is making room for both. ☀️🌾🚗