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October 06, 2008

The Trees

You mought find it curious, I'll warrant, that the dialect Yankees have always associated with hillbillies, crackers and rednecks, in fact originated in their own neck of the woods. And so Conrad Richter delivers it in The Trees, the first (1941) book in his Awakening Land triology.

It's the memorable story of Worth and Jary Luckett, and their spirited children, especially daughter Sayward, woodsies all, who pull up stakes and leave behind their puncheon-floor cabin in 1780s Pennsylvania, treking single-file into the virgin forests of the Ohio Valley to start anew.

Their "early, vigorous spoken language," Richter notes in his foreward, "contrary to public belief, had its considerable origin in the Northeastern states, whence it was carried by emigrants into pioneer Ohio and adjoining territories, where today it has largely disappeared, and along with the Pennsylvania rifle, into the South and Southwest, where it has more widely survived..."


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September 19, 2008

Gilchrist is gone

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They loved the sunsets in Gilchrist, the working-class people in the seashore homes, but the people are just about all gone now. Hurricane Ike wiped most of the little village away. Its collection of mainly homes on stilts, just above the flat ground of the narrowest point on Bolivar Peninsula, was just east of devastated Galveston.

The peninsula in general, and Gilchrist in particular, took the fierce right side of the Category 2 hurricane: the 110-mph winds and a storm surge estimated at 15 feet or more (topped by 20-foot high battering waves). Combined, they swept much of Gilchrist clean, as shown in the Accuweather shot above, and in these before and after photos. No one knows how many residents elected to stay to ride out the storm. Apparently few survived. There isn't even enough debris to search. Gilchrist was one place whose peril was not overestimated.

Via Jeff Masters.

UPDATE:  The owners of the lone, surviving house above finally return to it. Turns out the photo is not by Accuweather, but by Smiley N. Pool, now at the Houston Chronicle, formerly of the Austin daily.


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September 18, 2008

Houston after Ike

The Texas Rainmaker, who did not evacuate, has a good post on the storm, the aftermath, and the continued deprivations in the old (1830s-40s) capital of Texas. His photographs tell the story of downed trees and signage, blocked roads and long lines at gas stations and groceries better than words. Our evacuated friends from Kingwood, on Houston's northwest side, are still in Austin, but not staying at the rancho as they have two dogs. A wonder they found a hotel that would take the dogs, but they did.


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September 17, 2008

The six-gun tamed the West

Not hardly. It was something a lot bigger, a lot nosier, and still necessary after all these years.


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Vince, we hardly knew ye

Vince Young, injured and depressed at being booed when he throws an interception, seems to be a different fellow than the one who won a national title for the Longhorns in 2005--after throwing more than a few interceptions.

Now he's talking of suicide and carrying a gun in the glove compartment of his car. Even with Chris Sims (Chris Sims!) to mentor him now he seems to be having second thoughts about the NFL, possibly because of all the pressure: the hits, the fans, the coaches, all the relatives with their hands in his pockets. Hey, Vince, you can always come back to Austin and sell cars.


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September 15, 2008

Evacuating Houston

Mom's friends who live in Kingwood, on the northeast side of Houston, didn't choose to evacuate before Hurricane Ike arrived. But, now, they're thinking about moving to Austin temporarily, if they can find a motel. Many of them already are full with other evacuees. We may wind up taking them for a few days.

Like blogger Melissa Clouthier, a chiropractor who lives in the Woodlands, on the northwest side of the city, they're tired of the squalor. The power is out, so there're no lights, no air-conditioning, no water, and no refrigeration. The phones don't work, and cell phone service is spotty. Their neighborhood grocery is open but they have to use what they buy pretty quickly or it will spoil. Even their employers are without power and therefore shut down. It's like a return to the 19th century, without the ice deliveries.


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September 13, 2008

Sonnentheil House survives

A Galveston landmark, in the city's East End Historical District, the Sonnentheil House appears to have survived Hurricane Ike handily. And why not? It survived the 1900 hurricane that stripped the island city of many homes, and four others.


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Why we need more refineries

Drilling is a good start, nuclear power plants are, too. But Hurricane Ike will show why they won't be enough:

"I think people need to understand how profoundly the [Houston area] refining being down is going to affect the nation. Even if the refineries could get back going the minute the storm passes, it will take at least a week to get going again. And, it should be noted, the refineries will not get going the minute the storm passes. America needs to build more."  --Dr. Melissa Clouthier, Houston blogger.

Via Instapundit.


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September 12, 2008

Forecast changes

This could be my last post for a while, if the power goes out tonight or early tomorrow, as it may. The wind is picking up. No rain yet. But we have an upgrade in the weather forecast and there is an abundance of trees around power lines in Austin.

Weather service is now looking at 50 percent chance of thunderstorms tonight and wind gusts to 45 mph. Then, early Saturday, 100 percent change of rain, heavy at times, with gusts to 50 mph. Still looks like a normal fall thunderstorm, even with the wind gusts, so long as they're not sustained for long periods. Fortunately for us, Ike's core is forecast to stay well to our east. If you want to follow events in Houston and Galveston, where the worst is certain to occur, go to KHOU television for their video reports as long as they have at least generator power to stay on the web. Also this Houston area blogger, and this one. Both have local blog rolls for more. And Houston Chronicle's blog.


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September 11, 2008

Stocking up

Lots of folks at the grocery this morning buying up bottled water, batteries and canned goods, in anticipation of possible lengthy power outages if Ike's core comes close to Austin after crossing the coast early Saturday. Mom, visiting friends in Maryland, is scheduled to come back Saturday but now may have to wait until Sunday, if Austin's airport is closed. Texas Longhorns home game Saturday with Arkansas has already been postponed. 

Local forecast sounded dire yesterday: Not just torrential rain all-day and all-night Saturday, but sustained winds of 50 to 70 mph. Meaning trees downed and flying limbs and other debris. Today's forecast is milder, with winds only gusting to 45 mph and less rain. Evacuees from the coast still may be sorry they came. All depends on how close the core comes to us. Fifty miles east would be good. Ten miles west would be a true disaster. Meanwhile Ike is already bigger than Katrina in '05. It's pussyfooting through a patch of cool water in mid-Gulf this morning, but is expected to strengthen. Lots of uncertainy yet, but Houston looks now to bare the brunt of the winds and rain, and the storm surge is expected to be a killer on the coast, sweeping miles inland. Possibly overtopping Galveston's seventeen-foot seawall.


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September 10, 2008

Indianola 1886

Accuweather meteorologist Joe Bastardi (a Texas A&M grad) believes Ike could come ashore in Tejas early Saturday as a Category 4 (winds 131-155 mph; storm surge 13 to 18 feet above normal) and be reminiscent of the 1886 hurricane that finally wiped Indianola--once a major port--from the map, after an 1875 storm began its demise. Them's scary words, especially if you own one of the many pastel beach houses and condos on, say, Mustang Island.

He's also comparing Ike to Carla, a Category 5, which did extensive damage to the Texas coast, and inland as far as Dallas, in 1961. She spawned twenty-six tornadoes which did even more damage. Think I prefer the Indianola example, if I have to choose. More worrisome for us is what Ike's core might do, as it is expected to be sucked north by a trough of low pressure dropping south out of the Rockies, either right before landfall, in which case it might go to Galveston, or after, which could bring what's left of it up to Austin.

Fortunately, Bob Rose is only calling for Ike to be a Category 3 (bad enough with 111 to 130 mph winds and storm surge of 9 to 12 feet above normal)--still big, powerful and very destructive, with a possible 4 to 6 inches of rain for us by Sunday morning. But there's always Gustav to consider. He was going to the final slayer of New Orleans until he turned into a pussycat in the last few hours before he struck. Atmospheric conditions don't look to be the same for Ike, but we've still got three days to keep our fingers crossed that they will change. Otherwise, it's time to give thanks that we don't live on the coast and get the leaves out of the gutters!

MORE:  The state's already ordering mandatory evactuation for people all along the coast. Yipes.


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Home away from home

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Tatyana snapped this one on her recent trip to London. Is that a Tardis in the corner? Speaking of time machines, London and Paris might still have some remnant of an old Texas Embassy, considering the French, Brits, the Netherlands and Belgium recognized the Texas Republic in the 1830s-40s. Texas sent Dr. Ashbel Smith as chargé d'affaires to both England and France to establish trade relations. But a restaurant and grill is the next best thing!


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You mean they weren't already doing this?

Florida, it seems, will finally require people registering to vote to prove their identity with a valid state or federal I.D. Seems the law is "controversial." Wow. This is very old news in Texas, where you also have to show an I.D., preferably your driver's license, before you can actually vote. If a state didn't require this, how else would they know who the voter was?


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August 27, 2008

Adios, Stevie Ray Vaughan

I was impressed the first time I saw the statue of blues guitar-hero Stevie Ray Vaughan on the south shore of Town Lake--since renamed Lady Bird Lake for a politician of dubious merit. Mostly because it was modern--it even has a metallic shadow. Although with his high boots, pancho and cowboy hat he looks more like a vigilante than a musician. Nowadays, exactly eighteen years since the Dallasite who used to play in Austin clubs died in a chartered helicopter's crash, the statue is mainly a target for bird poop. Like most things in Austin, it is rarely maintained. His death introduced me to his compelling music, which I had never really listened to before, though I was aware of who he was. R.I.P. Mr. Vaughan.


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August 18, 2008

Off to the beach

Looks like Fay will not be joining us at Port Aransas, although some big waves from her intensity as she sweeps through Florida just might. It happened with Ivan in 2006. In any case we're outta here until Thursday. Off to see the likes of Ruby Begonia, the Presidio La Bahia, and other familiar but still amazing attractions, along the trail to Port A, which is on Mustang Island in the Gulf of Mexico. Adios.

UPDATE: Returned sunburned but happy on the 21st. Drove down in the rain, and it rained off and on for a few days. But there were some afternoons when the sun came out, so the gang had a good one. Mr. B. even got to try boogie boarding, similar to surf boarding, which he pronounced strenuous but fun.


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August 14, 2008

Daily joins others on the block

The Austin American-Statesman is for sale, not a surprising development given the state of the Internet-oppressed newspaper advertising industry. It joins the San Diego Union-Tribune which went on sale yesterday. Maybe they should try advertising on Craigslist to see who wants to buy.

UPDATE:  Wouldn't the locals be intrigued, upset, horrified, whatever, if the United Arab Emirites decided to buy? Might be more diversity than the good liberal town is prepared to accept, eh?


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August 13, 2008

Same old Rangers

Down 10 runs to none in the first inning, Mr. B.'s Texas Rangers came roaring back last night, looking by the seventh like they were going to finish off Boston 16 to 14. So Mr. B. went off to bed happily. Alas, the Red Sox then came back, winning the game 19-17. This is the problem with being a Rangers fan. Even when they seem to be winning, they lose. Their hitting is tops this year, but their pitching stinks. It's always half-a-loaf with the Rangers, and by August they turn into bums. Luckily for Mr. B., he also likes the Red Sox--especially Ortiz who hit two three-run dingers in the first.


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August 12, 2008

Hello, rain

Got a brief shower at the rancho this morning, with the weather service saying there's a fifty percent chance of more to come. More than two inches fell at Harper, northwest of Fredericksburg in the hills out west. Doubt we'd get that much. The LCRA's Bob Rose says the cause is a couple of unusual cold fronts sliding south into Texas after a shift in the Jet Stream moved the dome of high pressure that's made recent weeks so hot south to where's now over northern Mexico.

Bob says this is on track to be the hottest summer on record, 87.2 degrees average temp vs. the previous hottest of 87.1 in 1998. But the city records he's talking about only go back to the 1840s, so that's nothing to get very excited about, all you global warmists. Rain chances are expected to end later today but a "cooling" trend, at least dropping temps into the nineties, could last a week to ten days. That would be nice.


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August 10, 2008

The Barnett Shale

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The Dems may be holding up exploitation of oil shale elsewhere in the U.S., but not in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex where these billboards are common along the interstates--as energy companies seek to extract natural gas to run such as Austin's electricity-producing turbines. That's Tommy Lee Jones up there, although it doesn't look much like him to me.

Mr. B.'s grandma was telling us the other day about how her neighbors are all talking about the money to be made if they allow the shale under their property to be drilled. But, as you might expect, it's controversial. Some people are telling stories about natural gas pipelines built through yards. Hence the billboard campaign to encourage the sales. All I know for sure is if American resources aren't exploited, the only choice will be to keep depending on foreign supplies, because the Democrat's notion of wind and solar replacing oil and gas is a fantasy.


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August 05, 2008

The lollipop pitch

It's fun when you start learning things from an eight-year-old. Mr. B. is so infatuated with baseball that he's constantly rattling off player and team statistics. So many that sometimes I'm tempted to believe he's making them up. So when he described a Ranger reliever in Monday's 9-5 Ranger win over the Yankees throwing a lollipop pitch, I couldn't quite believe it. Never heard of it. He said it was like a curve ball. Sure enough. Also this: Hall of Fame reliever Bruce Sutter's split-fingered fastball "came in high, looking like a lollipop, then dropped straight down."


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August 03, 2008

Rangers, ho-hum

The first disappointment of our attendance at Saturday's game was when Mr. B. learned that the big-headed Rangers only autograph baseballs for kids on Wednesday nights. Jeez. The second one was when we watched Toronto warm up in the outfield and take batting practice from home plate. Meanwhile, the Rangers never stirred from their dugout until a few of them came out for stretching exercises a few minutes before the game began. Thereafter, it was no surprise to us that they lost, 6-4. Sure was hot. Well over a hundred degrees when the game started. Didn't seem to deter Toronto, however. Nice park the Rangers have. But, we decided, that as bad as the Astros are, at least their park offers air conditioning.


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July 31, 2008

Umpire ejects pitcher

I think it was the first time I saw a pitcher cuss an umpire, as happened in last night's game between the Rangers and Seattle. Mariner's reliever Arthur Rhodes is under some pressure, apparently, not knowing whether he's going to be traded to the Marlins. But when he was pulled in the bottom of the eighth, after loading the bases with walks, and giving up a pop fly to bring one of them in, he left the field saying bad things to the homeplate umpire, who ordered Rhodes ejected, as well. The Rangers won 4-3.

Rhodes, it seems, has long been controversial, according to Wikipedia: "In 2001 [he] was pitching against the Cleveland Indians when Indians shortstop Omar Vizquel said that Rhodes's glowing diamond earrings were distracting him from seeing the ball. This incited an argument...that led to Rhodes's ejection...Since then, players have not been allowed to wear distracting jewelry on the field."


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July 28, 2008

Texas regulates breast implant size

"The limit in Texas is 1,000 cubic centimeters of silicone in each breast."

Who knew? We do, now. That's a triple F, by the way.

Via Dustbury.


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July 26, 2008

River Cats 6, Express 3

We spent a fun evening at the Dell Diamond in Round Rock, but it would have been more fun if the Express had won. But the Sacramento River Cats just plain outplayed them. The Cats had the first pitcher, a reliever, that I ever saw with a full beard. It's like the nineteenth century is making a comeback.


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Ray Wylie's anthem

Everytime this little weiner dog from Ohio, and the other dork from Michigan start whining about how they're gonna impeach W for his "wrongs"--instead of getting off their pampered rears and allowing some drilling of American oil to bring down gas prices--I think of a song: Ray Wylie Hubbard's 2003 favorite, to be exact: Sc**w You, We're from Texas.


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July 24, 2008

Going to bed Remembering the Alamo

That's what kids around the world are doing these days, thanks to the Handbook of Texas Online: "...a trailblazing resource about all things Texas." It's also, just plain fun to read. And more is coming. Watch the video, pard.


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July 23, 2008

Brownsville radar

Here's the very best view of Hurricane Dolly to watch today, and local stations to check on for news and weather. The Brownsville Herald is updating quickly.

UPDATE:  By 9:30 a.m., tornadoes were already popping up on radar west of Corpus Christi. By 1 p.m., Dolly had grown to a category 2 hurricane, its eyewall was moving ashore a bit north of Brownsville and it was pounding the coastline with hundred mph winds.


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July 21, 2008

Fort Worth light bulb's (alleged) hundredth year

I won't go into any of the crass names that Fort Worth has been called, even by Texans (maybe, especially by Texans). But I truly doubt the Stock Yard Museum's claim to an antique light bulb that's been burning since September, 1908. What, no power outages in a hundred years? Bosh. When it comes to municipal brag, I prefer such as lowly Hutto's claim that it is the Hippo Capital of Texas with, almost certainly, the largest concrete hippo in the world today--Henrietta, by name, weighing in at 14,000 pounds--not to mention diverse others.

Via Millard Fillmore's Bathtub.


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July 18, 2008

9/11 air crew memorial

While New Yorkers and the feds still argue about what to do with the hole in the ground in lower Manhattan, a memorial has finally been raised in Texas to the flight crews who were among the first to die on that terrible morning that still resonates in the mind's eye of most Americans. It's complicated, and a bit strange, the statue at Grapevine, just outside Dallas-Fort Worth International, but it holds your attention.


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July 16, 2008

Rangers sweep the All-Stars

Mr. Boy had to regretfully go to bed before the eighth inning, so he missed seeing the game drag on through fifteen innings and the Rangers' Michael Young finally put it away, 4-3, with an RBI. Neat. After Hamilton's record-breaking, homer-hitting performance the other night, Young's ending the game for the AL's twelfth victory in a row, kept the focus where we wanted it, on the Rangers. Now let their pitching improve (please, Lord) and may their second half of the season be as sweet!


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July 14, 2008

Tubin' on the Gwadaloop

Except that I believe Scott used one of those plastic kayaks, instead of a big, black truck tire tube. Probably had a cooler, too. Just the thought. It's been too long. I need to do that again.


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July 10, 2008

108 degrees

Not here, no. In Sacramento, on Wednesday, where we left last Saturday after a week of what everyone there said was an unusual period of very pleasant temperatures, despite their lengthening drought and smoke from wildfires to the north.

Still, it's hot enough here, though not quite as bad as when we left to go out there--a few degrees lower on the daily highs. But Jim Spencer's forecast at KXAN is for the highs to get back to ninety-nine by the weekend with more to come. The triple-digit days are going to come back. This is the time of year when they normally start. This year they just started early, in late May. Maybe they'll be too exhausted to return. Hope, hope.


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July 07, 2008

Hamilton, Bradley, Kinsler & Young

Might sound like a law firm but these guys are the top four hitters of the Texas Rangers, and Mr. B. was thrilled to discover this morning on the way to day camp that they're all new AL all-stars.


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July 06, 2008

Pumpjack

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When I was a kid moving all over the place with my military father, I thought of these things as mechanical grasshoppers. Until my Texas oilman grandfather set me straight that they were called pumpjacks. Used to see a lot of idle ones hereabouts when oil prices were low. Now it's more common to see them pumping, especially around major oil towns like Midland. Baby Barry and his pals in the news media can whine all they want about the alleged coming recession, but I'm wondering if it's time, once again, to buy stock in Texas drilling companies?


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June 25, 2008

Ran Runnels, the Hangman of Panama

They're still trying to figure out if Randolph Runnels really was a Texas Ranger before he was hired by the builders of the first transcontinental railroad (forty-seven miles across the Isthmus of Panama connecting the Atlantic with the Pacific) to solve a nasty bandido problem.

 Runnels didn't fit the physical image of a Ranger, according to historian David McCullough in his 1992 book Brave Companions, but he acted the myth well enough: he hanged seventy-eight men in two separate incidents in 1852 and, lo and behold, the banditry stopped. The Texas Rangers Association apparently has no record of Ran's Ranger service, but their records admittedly aren't complete. But at least one railroad historian found sources crediting the Ranger tale, and there was a Runnels who had to do with the Rangers in the 1850s, Texas Gov. Hardin Runnels who took office in 1858. He was a champion of the Indian-fighting Rangers and he may have been Randolph's brother.


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June 22, 2008

Wearing the Cinco Peso

I came away from independent historian Mike Cox's The Texas Rangers, Wearing The Cinco Peso, 1821-1900 with a new view of the fabled outfit, the samurai of early Texas, you might say. There's less of their invincibility here than vulnerability. Despite committing occasional injustices, they seem often to have been short of manpower, money and even modern weapons yet would charge into a fight they couldn't reasonably win and only after taking as well as inflicting casualties, withdraw. They usually were effective, but they paid a high price.

I can't find the link but one newspaper reviewer complained the book is too bloody. It is graphic in describing the appalling things the Commanche and other maurauding Indians liked to do to settler families, but no more so, I don't think, than some recent historical fiction. More so, however, than professional historian Walter Prescott Webb's 1935 classic that Cox has updated with thorough documentation. Webb, for instance, says on page 313 only that Ranger D.W.H. Bailey was slain in July, 1874, trying to get water for a thirsting company under Indian siege. Cox tells us that Bailey's name was Dave and quotes a comrade that the Indians killed him in sight of the others by cutting off his nose, ears, hands, arms, etc. and eating his flesh until their leader dispatched him with a tomahawk. It helps you understand why the early Rangers tended to shoot Indians on sight. When the savages finally were subdued, there were still Anglo and Mexican murderers and border bandits to fight and the Rangers kept charging, and sometimes losing, but were always ready to charge again.

The only thing I found disconcerting was the author's continual mockery of the spelling and grammar of old letter-writers and memoirists. Any reader of nineteenth century material knows that spelling and punctuation were ad-hoc, and only the arrival of mass public education standardized them. Cox is finishing a second volume to bring the Rangers up to the 21st century, something Webb didn't live to do, and it should make a dandy story, or rather series of stories, which is the way this first volume is put together. Rangers are mainly detectives, nowadays, but their mystique lives on in their holstered but cocked .45s. I'll look forward to No. 2 and, meanwhile, recommend this one to anyone interested in Texas history. As my Corsicana grandfather used to say, "It's a peach."


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June 20, 2008

Oh, Tartar Sauce!

Having a SpongeBob moment here, after watching the Rangers lose to the Nationals 4-3 in fourteen innings. Fourteen innings, no less. My hearing's none too good, but Mr. B. assures me the announcers said the Rangers, when they have a .500 win-loss average, as they do right now, start finding that each opponent is an electric fence. Sure was tonight. Zap.


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June 19, 2008

Juneteenth

Woke up this morning with the words to the gospel tune Way Up In The Middle of The Air running through my mind's ear. Also, which I had forgotten but Google reminded me, a longish short story in Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles. Then I realized it was Juneteenth and I knew the significance of it. Gordon Granger knew what he was doing. He just didn't know all of it.


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June 17, 2008

The Texas Rangers

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This was Company B of the old Frontier Battalion about 1880. (Here's today's Company B.) About half through now with a review copy of Texana author Mike Cox's new book on the rangers, The Texas Rangers: Wearing the Cinco Peso 1821 - 1900, I can endorse it with only a quibble or two. Basically it's a worthy updating of Walter Webb's 1935 classic. More when I finish it.


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The heat goes on

Ten days of a hundred degrees and four of ninety-nine so far this month. The front forty at the rancho is turning brown, despite our best efforts to water it after midnight--which is illegal now that Austin is on mandatory water rationing for things like lawns. Meaning you can water two days a week only. Trying to balance whether the five hundred dollar fine for watering other days would be cheaper than buying new sod and starting over. Probably not.


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Mansion arson could be political

No particular surprise there. Now the only remaining question is what politics? Austin has more than its share of liberal whackos. But there are plenty of conservative nutjobs wandering around out there in the dark on the perimeter.

Via The Discerning Texan


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June 15, 2008

Bat Man moves to Laredo

The Laredo Broncos are hitting it. They've got a new pitcher and it only cost them ten baseball bats.

Via Rene's Apple.


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June 12, 2008

Colt McCoy on the Amazon

No, the Longhorns QB was not putting up books in bubblewrap for early shipment on free delivery.


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June 09, 2008

Corsicana oilfield

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The first significant oil field in Texas began today in 1894. It might be thought of as the one that started it all. But I bet they would not have imagined a barrel of oil at almost a hundred forty dollars. 


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June 08, 2008

Like a death in the family

This morning's near-total loss of the 152-year-old Governor's Mansion, one of the oldest buildings in Texas, near the Capitol in downtown Austin, feels like a personal blow. It's especially heart-breaking that it's now being called arson. I've been in there several times over the years, mom has twice that I know of, both at Christmas parties for the news media, and Mr. Boy attended one of those when he was three six. We climbed the winding staircase together to tour the Sam Houston bedroom. They say the furnishings have been saved, but, without the old mansion, they're just furnishings. The only good news is that the state fire marshall, who is one of our neighbors, says the building may be salvageable.


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Eat your heart out, Hutto

Hutton, home of the concrete Hippo, meet Jessica a pet Hippo--restricted to the kitchen after breaking a couch and a bed.

Via Southern Appeal.


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June 04, 2008

Wildfire danger

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Meteorologists are saying our high winds, with gusts to 25 mph, bring back memories of the Dust Bowl era. I guess you'd have to be in your eighties to know for sure. But just being outside last evening, while Mr. B.'s tournament team practiced for its first game next week, I got a thin coating of dust. Got some in my eyes when I took my glasses off. Seen here, the Austin area is still in moderate fire danger, but high danger is creeping eastward towards us. The wind, the dry and the heatwave are combining to make it so.


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June 03, 2008

Fry Pan Olympics

We've had four five 100-degree days (and a slew of ninety-nines) already this year, according to the National Weather Service, and June has hardly begun. Usually we don't see more than a fluke one of them before early July. Accuweather's Joe Bastardi is calling this weather our Fry Pan Olympics. Sure feels like it.


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May 31, 2008

The heat is on

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After today's second scrimmage for the Northwest Austin Little League's Blue team, the team mom passed out watermelon slices. The temperature was, then, close to a hundred degrees, and the kids were clearly wilting. So the scrimmage was halted after three innings. Mr. B., who is playing right field when he isn't warming the bench (there are twelve players) got a hit but was thrown out at first. Did better yesterday, with a single, a walk and a run. Tomorrow's third scrimmage is expected to be even hotter. So who knows how long it will last. Summer's brutality is early this year, and the meteorologists are saying that only the rain from a hurricane or tropical storm can cool us off now. After a week of high nineties, even the St. Augustine grass at the rancho is turning crispy.


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May 30, 2008

The McClellans of Austin

Victor Davis Hanson is calling Scott McClellan "the worst press secretary of either party since [President Nixon's] Ron Ziegler," words that will sting in West Austin if, indeed, Scott's mom ever hears about them. But, so far, Carol Stewart Keeton McClellan Rylander Strayhorn (which accounts for her given name and those of her three husbands), former Austin mayor and onetime Texas Comptroller, is just pleased as punch about her son Scott's tell-all book about President Bush. "He knows his values," she told the daily, "and this book is his values." That's her boy.

Not that the beans he has spilled are very important ones, and they're mostly his own opinion. But, so far, he's outselling Carol's ex-husband (and Scott's dad) Barr McClellan's 2003 book alleging that LBJ killed President Kennedy, or video rentals of  her 1980 movie Roadie starring Meatloaf. Scott, as you can see, comes from an unusual family. The daily's political humor columnist John Kelso says that Scott could be aiming to become the next mayor of Austin. Somehow that rings true. This is, after all, a very quirky town. W