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December 30, 2009

The pirate walks the plank

Something tells me we've seen the last of Mike "The Pirate" Leach. The flamboyant lawyer-coach, whose QBs put up high-flying numbers but never seem to make it in the NFL, claims to have a doctor's okay for making that player stand in a closet for two hours. Hardly matters that the player had a mild concussion or that his daddy is a big shot television talking head. Punitive "coaching" doesn't sell anywhere. Not even on the High Plains. At least not when you get caught. Adios, coach.

UPDATE:  Indeed, he sued and the university fired him. No surprises here. Said Chancellor Kent Hance on ESPN: "When you sue your boss, it's not going to turn out well." Heh.


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Aggie farms-to-forest plan typical

I usually like Aggies, but I have to admit they come up with some harebrained schemes. It wasn't enough that their football team had to fumble its way to embarrassment the other night against Georgia. Now I discover they're trying to stop global warming by proposing to convert farmland to forests.

Yep. Well, I guess to them it makes sense. After all, their meteorology department (the only one in Texas that graduates weather warriors) is wholly in the bag with AGW. So it figures other Aggie researchers would be looking for solutions. But eliminating farmland? That seems a little extreme. The ag industry lobby apparently is not amused and has set Barry's ag secretary to backfilling. He'll turn this sucker around. You betcha.


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December 26, 2009

Texas' next governor? Not.

Nobody with any knowledge of Texas politics is taking Democrat Farouk Shami's run for governor seriously. For one thing his incumbent opponent, Republican Rick Perry, is too popular. For another, well, when was the last time Texas had an Arab-American Muslim governor? Exactly never.

On the other hand, Shami has ten million dollars of his own money to invest in his campaign. Consequently he's getting a lot of media, free and otherwise. They all quote him saying he's from Palestine, wherever that is. It's not the Texas Palestine. Apparently he's from the West Bank, though no one is sure because he doesn't call it that.

He tells the American Task Force for Palestine, which seems to think he's a Muslim though some Texans think he's a Quaker, that he's for peace and love and equality in the Middle East. Debbie Schlussel thinks he's a clandestine Jihadi in an anti-Semitic package. She cites as partial evidence this column he wrote two years ago for the Houston Chronicle in which he implies that the nasty Israelis are forcing the poor Palestinians to ration water "while Jewish settlers cultivate lush lawns and fill their swimming pools." That's libel enough for me to be glad that Shami's chance of election is exactly nil.

UPDATE:  The daily's Ken Herman did a job on Shami: "The downtrodden minority/victim role is particularly unattractive on a guy who lives in a 24,585-square-foot-home like Shami does."


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December 23, 2009

Cedar Fever cometh

The stuffy nose, the telltale itching on the roof of the mouth. Cedar Fever seems to be making its seasonal debut early this winter. The pollen counters say the air content is low at 132 grains per cubic meter of air. Bound to rise. Oh, well, the sooner it begins, the sooner it will be over.


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December 22, 2009

Western humor

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Snoopy the Goon's from Arizona.


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December 19, 2009

Hueco Tanks Rock Art

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Far West Texas rock art by archaic Native American artists copied in water color by Forrest Kirkland for the Texas Archaeological Research Laboratory at the University of Texas. More from a beautiful, copyrighted Web site depicting Texas rock art from the Lower Pecos region of West Texas.


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Before Columbus: The Americas of 1491

I picked up a copy of this young adult cofee-table sized book filled with drawings and photographs at Mr. B.'s school's book fair back in the fall. I'd heard of the original version by journalist Charles C. Mann and wanted to see how the new, largely theoretical research on Native Americans was being pitched to kids. It's a fair and entertaining rendition, if a little heavy on blaming Europeans for bringing the small pox and other diseases which researchers now believe may have wiped out millions of susceptible people in a very short time.

Mann makes it clear when he introduces the subject that the Europeans didn't spread the diseases on purpose (they had developed immunity to them, partly by living with the animals that carried them, whereas Native Americans hunted but apparently did not raise animals), but he neglects to remind the reader of it as he belabors the point again and again. It also contradicts the title, since the diseases all arrived after Columbus did. But this is the politically-correct version of history, after all.

Nevertheless, it's an fascinating look at research indicating that what is now the continental United States was thickly populated by a variety of sometimes warring peoples who were practiced at building cities and landscaping their world long before European colonists arrived. After most of the Indians died of European diseases spread by Spanish and English explorers, however, the landscape reverted to the wilderness which the colonists found on arrival and understandably decided had been there all along. Kids books are introductions not exhaustive treatments and, in that sense, this is a good one.

UPDATE:  A good (if dizzying) photograph exhibit of Mohawk ironworkers on the WTC and others: "There's pride in walking iron."


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December 17, 2009

The finest castle in... Austin?

Hard to believe they could find anyone to rent this place for $350 a night. But they apparently do, according to the piece in today's issue of the daily. New Yorkers, mostly, I imagine. Who else? I was struck by the article and these photos on the rental site because I used to own a condo within spitting distance of the "castle." That was back when Austin was small and cheap. Long gone. What I'd like to know is how they keep the black mildew off the stone? It's a never-ending battle with the stone work at the rancho.


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December 11, 2009

Holiday gifting

So far, most of my shopping has been (as usual) online: at Amazon and Kodak Easy-Share. With a side trip to X-treme Geek. My one bricks-n-mortar buy was a unique toy at our local hardware store. Last up is Harry & David for my diabetic veteran friends, one of whom (Mr. Boy's godfather) also is allergic to nuts or he'd be getting a traditional Texas fruit cake from Corsicana.


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December 07, 2009

Houston snow boots

Mrs. C. returned from her weekend trip to Houston Sunday evening safe and sound and with a funny tale. It was about what kids in her friend's neighborhood were wearing while romping in the rare inch or so of wet snow: plastic shopping bags over their shoes and ankles held on with rubber bands. She called them Houston snow boots.


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December 03, 2009

Snow in our forecast

Weather historians would say it's unlikely that tomorrow's forecast 2-4 inches of snow can possibly come true. It's been five years since we had any snow at all and that was barely enough to make a snowball.

But, then, after twelve years of global cooling and an extended solar minimum, the trend is headed that way. Our winters have been coming earlier and a very cold Canadian air mass is scheduled to push through this afternoon.

Just checked the latest weather service update, however, and they're already pooh-poohing the previously anticipated amount of snow. A low cloud deck is pushing eastward and the atmosphere is drying such that "as of right now the trend is down for accumulating snows on Friday." Looks like flurries are most likely. Whew.

UPDATE:  Revised forecast at 1 p.m. has snow accumulation of less than half an inch. More like it.


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December 01, 2009

More like New Jersey every day

Left Mr. B. with our favorite babysitter this evening and headed downtown to join Mrs. Charm at a reception for one of her old friends. It took almost two hours to get there in bumper-to-bumper traffic, creeping along the speedway MOPAC (Loop 1) at roughly five mph. Not a wreck in site, just beaucoup traffic in the pouring rain. Austin is more like New Jersey everyday. Except, thank G-d, it doesn't snow.


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November 30, 2009

Early winter, again

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Winter has arrived, says meteorologist Bob Rose of the Lower Colorado River Authority. About a month early. Cold and raining this week, at least through Wednesday. Then highs only in the 50s. Even some snow forecast but not expected to be cold enough for it to stick. Nothing like the above sat photo of 2004's record snowfall across South Texas. That dark spot on the upper left edge of the snow line is Lake Travis. I could do without a repeat early winter, the same thing that happened to us last year. But since global temps haven't been warming for twelve years now (contrary to the delusional convictions of so-called climate "scientists" and other warm-mongering politicians) I suppose we have to expect it.


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PT-19 trainees

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It never gets this cold in Cuero, southeast of Austin, but these boys are headed to altitude in open cockpits. Taken at the former Cuero Army Air Field in 1942 when this was basic pilot training. I do not subscribe to the "greatest generation" baloney, which I think mainly scorns Korea and Vietnam veterans, but it's for sure these guys had to deal with some fairly primitive technology. They were just lucky to have the almost complete backing of the whole country during their war.


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November 29, 2009

One-legged jack bed

Was reading a new genealogy narrative pulled together by a cousin of Mrs. Charm's and came across the phrase of the headline. The description of this old technology wasn't clear, so I searched it and came up with this which is. It also has some diagrams and a photo to reinforce it. Pretty ingenious.


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November 22, 2009

Tuscola Kid: Winningest College QB

Texas QB Colt McCoy, leading a 51-20 thumping of Kansas last night, became the winningest quarterback in college football history. The Horns will play Nebraska for the Big Twelve title. And, almost certainly, play the winner of the SEC title for the National Championship. Quite a night.


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November 18, 2009

USS Texas

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Nuclear Attack Submarine Texas (SSN-775) on sea trials. From the Navy's photo archives here. Since October, her home base has been Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.


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November 16, 2009

SSN 775 Attack Submarine Texas

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No match, picture-wise, for the old Battleship Texas, but by their nature, subs are hard to photograph in the water. Commissioned in 2006, she's a worthy new age successor to the old battle wagon. More photos and info here.


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November 12, 2009

TCU's new Nike Pro Combat

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Always have been a sucker for TCU (that's Texas Christian, y'all) even if they're called the Horned Frogs. And this new football outfit of theirs, to debut this weekend against Utah, clinches the deal. Ten other teams will wear similar outfits. But, sorry guys, you're just not TCU. Their new helmet even has "red lines up the center represent[ing] the blood that a horned frog will shoot from its eyes when under attack." Whoa. Go TCU!

Via The Fat Guy.

UPDATE:  Those Frogs sure went, beating Utah 55 to 28. They deserve a BCS bowl, for sure.


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Kay Bailey's "purse boys"

Or her J. Crew aides as former Bush speechwriter Matt Latimer relates in his new book Speechless:

"Now I want you to take my purse back to the office," she said.
"Yes, senator," the purse boy responded.
"Take the nail polish out and put it in the refrigerator."
"Yes, senator."
"Take the rest of the makeup out and put that in the refrigerator too."
"Yes, senator."
"Then put the purse by my desk." She said this as though it were her routine speech.

"I felt a little like entering your parents' bedroom and finding your mother putting on deodorant. It was something you knew happened, but you didn't really want to think about."

Heh. How would KBH get along as a mere governor of Texas? I imagine Michele Obama, certainly Hilarity Clinton, are worse. But you never know.


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November 11, 2009

Dawn at San Jacinto

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The stern 14-inch gun turrets of the Battleship Texas, in her permanent memorial basin, with the San Jacinto battlefield monument (crowned by the Lone Star) in the background. Photo by Louis Vest, with more details here. A good way to remember Veteran's Day, since the Texas fought in WW1, at the close of which today's commemoration began as Armistice Day.


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November 10, 2009

Radar room on the Battleship Texas

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The Texas was one of the Navy's first warships to be equipped, in 1939, with a production version of the new, top secret radar technology that would greatly help to win the coming world war. The radar room was on a lower deck between the amidships and stern gun turrets, with telephone contact with the bridge.


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November 08, 2009

1877 ELISSA

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Always time for another photo of the official Tall Ship of Texas, the Elissa, under topsails in the Bolivar Roads off Galveston. Sweet sailin'.


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World's biggest cave

I've been in a few, from Shenandoah Caverns in Virginia to Inner Space under I-35 north of Austin. But this, apparently, is the largest found to date. It's in Viet Nam, oddly enough. Another tourist attraction for a country that can always use another one.

Via Naturography.


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November 07, 2009

In Memoriam

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Via Lone Star Times.

Want to help?

Chaplain's Fund Office
Bldg 44, 761st Tank Battalion Ave.
Fort Hood, TX 76544-5000
Checks should be made payable to COTF (Chapel's Tithes and Offerings Fund) with a note on the memo line stating "Nov. 5 Tragedy."


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November 06, 2009

Scale model of the Alamo

Wow. Not just the famous chapel, with its Army-modifed facade. But the whole 1836 compound, in 25mm scale. I'd buy it in a heartbeat, if I had any place to put it.


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November 01, 2009

Haveil Havalim #241

The Jewish/Israeli blog carnival Vanity of Vanities is up. Never better, I say modestly, as it has two entries of my own.


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The Old Stage Coach of The Plains

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The coming of the Butterfield Stage Line to Texas. Frederick Remington painting, Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth. From the great Texas history site Texas Beyond History, found here.


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October 31, 2009

Time of The Rangers

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The amazing thing about the Texas Rangers is that, after a hundred and eighty plus years, they continue to thrive, despite the pressures of political correctness, the addition of a few women to their ranks and recurring political attempts to change them. Indeed, at 134 strong, there are more of them now than at any time in the past hundred years. Some no longer ride or even like horses, but all still dress Western, with boots and big hats. They are, apparently, more independent than ever and certainly better-trained. And they have kept their legendary reputation for toughness and ingenuity while adding a now-rarely-disputed one for integrity.

Independent historian Mike Cox's valuable new contribution to Texas history shows the evolution of all that in an entertaining sequel to his popular Wearing The Cinco Peso, about the Rangers' nineteenth century origins. Their new role is more complicated, in keeping with the times. Mike tells it in the same episodic way as his previous book and shows how the Rangers are woven through modern Texas history: policing the border during the Mexican revolution; enforcing Prohibition and gambling laws; taming overnight oil-boom towns; and catching bank robbers and kidnappers. They wisely drew the line at one politician's insistence that they enforce laws against fornication. They've even survived their own romance, from the first dime novel in 1910 to television's silly kick-boxing version. But some legends are factual. The apocryphal "One Riot, One Ranger" has proven true as often as not. "There's an unwritten code in the Rangers," longtime leader Homer Garrison said. "You don't back out of situations..."

Yet Mike shows they have sometimes failed, sometimes spectacularly, as in a 1970s attempt to free hostages during a prison takeover that became a bloody fiasco, and the tragic end to the 1990s Branch Davidian standoff in Waco, though the FBI had more to do with it. Nowadays all Rangers have some college and function as detectives more often than enforcers. As always they are spread thin across the state, each having responsibility for "two to three" of the 254 counties and "some as many as six." Nevertheless, they can mass anywhere on short notice for "situations" requiring their skills and political independence. As the book ends in 2009, they're investigating  the possibility that the 2008 burning of the 1856 governor's mansion in downtown Austin may have been retaliation--for the Rangers-led raid a few months earlier on the Yearning For Zion ranch where polygamy with girls as young as twelve was practiced. Driving by the grand old home's gutted shell, a Texan has confidence that if anyone can track down the pitiless arsonist(s), it will be the Texas Rangers.

For more on Mike's book:

Publisher's book page: http://us.macmillan.com/timeoftherangers
Author's blog with virtual tour itinerary: http://www.lonestarbooks.blogspot.com/
Author's website: http://www.mikecoxonline.com/


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October 27, 2009

Father and son tackle Texas

A melodious little essay by a father mostly riding with his driving son across the west to Navy flight training at Pensacola, where my nephew also flew:

"Rested then, and once again on our way, a salt tang in the air, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama giving us back some sense of forward movement after a day hurling ourselves repeatedly against Texas."

Ah, yes, that repeated hurling against the broad width of the Lone Star and its several sharp points. One does that daily, just living here, even in the rolling green hills around home.


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October 23, 2009

Lake Travis drought ending

This week's rain, particularly storms out in the Hill Country along the Pedernales and Llano rivers, and the subsequent runoff, have raised Lake Travis by more than six feet. The rise is expected to continue today, eventually bringing back about half of the fifty feet lowering by the drought.

That would still leave the lake about twenty feet lower than normal for this time of the year. But one more flash flood out there should be enough to fix that. Then I'll have to scurry out to the lake and get some pictures to add to the befores I've already posted. Because, if things stay true to form, by Christmas we'll be talking about the flooding on the lake. Heh.


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October 21, 2009

Dreadnought

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Another view of the Battleship Texas, in its landlocked parks' berth east of Houston.


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October 18, 2009

Battleship Texas

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Not sure when this was taken, but possibly after the retrofitting in 1990 before moving back to the permanent berth near the San Jacinto battlefield. How many kids get to sleep on an almost hundred year old battleship that fought in both world wars? Mr. B. will in January with his Cub Scout pack. Count me as another kid. I'll also be there.


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October 16, 2009

The independent Texas electricity grid

Long may it wave, even in the face of invitations to join the East and West grids to extend the reach of renewable energy sources. Looks good on paper, maybe, but it's a bad idea when you consider that we are never struck by brownouts and blackouts occurring elsewhere (not to mention being immune from the political whims of federal regs over rates, terms and conditions of transmission), and we already lead the nation in wind generation. Stay independent, ERCOT.

Via Instapundit.


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October 14, 2009

Willingham was no poster boy

So says the Corsicana judge who sentenced him to die for the arson-murder of his three children, a toddler and two infants, and he makes a convincing case. For me. It's a rebuttal to the anti-death penalty crowd--the usual suspects, including the Grits for Breakfast blog and the New Yorker, who think they have a winning hand in the callous wife-beater Willingham.

All because one outside analyst pronounced the state's fire forensics in the early 90s case faulty. Now other partisans who claim Willingham was "an innocent man" are piling on Gov. Rick Perry, who wasn't in office when Willingham was convicted but did deny his reprieve, claiming he's obstructing justice by undercutting a state investigation. One of them is Paul Begala, the famous Democrat attack-dog, who likes to toss around the porn-word "teabaggers" on CNN. What a crew.

As one of the commenters at the Volokh Conspiracy has it: "I know the dude [was] guilty [because] his story makes no sense to me, and I doubt it would to any father. If my daughter woke me up to tell me the house was on fire, well, a lot of things might happen but one thing that isn’t going to happen is that she dies and I live." Nope.


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October 13, 2009

New Orleans Greys

This evening in 1835, the New Orleans Greys assembled for the first time in the grand coffee room of Banks Arcade in the French Quarter. They were one of the few volunteer units of the Texas Revolution which could claim battle honors at Bexar, the Alamo, San Patricio, Refugio, Coleto, Goliad, and San Jacinto.

One hundred seventy-three years later, the Mexican government still has their silk "God and Liberty" battle flag, captured at the Alamo, which it has steadfastly refused to relinquish despite requests from governors and presidents. The tattered remnants are believed to be hidden in the archives of the Museo Nacional de Historia at Chapultepec Castle in Mexico City.


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October 09, 2009

Off to Enchanted Rock

Mr. B. and I leave early tomorrow morning for the annual fall Cub Scout camping trip. This time we're staying at Enchanted Rock state park, the big pink granite dome north of Fredericksburg where Texas Ranger Jack Hays fought off a Comanche war party about 1844.

The boys will be hiking to the top at noon. Not sure I'm going to make it to the top this time, but have done it many times before. Fortunately the mail today brought my review copy of Mike Cox's new book, so I can read until they come down.

We've been advised to bring lots of bug spray, as all the recent rain in the Hill Country out there has vastly increased the mosquito population. Forecast highs in the seventies, lows in the fifties, however, should make long pants and long sleeves comfortable, as well as protective.


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October 08, 2009

Pilot walks away from crash

Lake Buchanan instructor pilot Alan Crawford, who has a Web page showing how his Lone Star-painted, kit-built Glasair Super II-RG was put together, walked away from a crash in it Oct. 3. The daily's crash shot shows the Glasair nestled between several mesquite trees in San Saba County west of Austin. Good piloting and good luck.


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October 07, 2009

Rock on

The latest annual ACL music fest hereabouts showed, once again, there is no shortage of people willing to believe the local hype and travel across the world to hear a bunch of retread bands playing the same old, same old. Usually, after a hard local summer, they get a humid dust bowl for their trouble. This year they got a swamp.

Via Dustbury. (That's right, this thing is so boring to us locals, I had to get the tip from Oklahoma.)


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Forty-two

Strange that it took the otherwise comprehensive Handbook of Texas Online until this year to add a mention of this famous dominoes game. It took Texas by storm after two rural youngsters, one twelve, the other fourteen, conceived it in the tiny town of Trapp Spring (later absorbed by Garner) west of Fort Worth. The year was 1887, and the two boys began teaching their team game of cards-like bidding and trumps to the whole town.

Fifty years later, Forty-Two was widespread, particularly in rural Texas where it was passed down from generation to generation. It's been called the National Game of Texas, and, indeed, a book about how to play and win, including such variations as Nel-O, Sevens, and Plunge, began its fourth printing this year by Texas Tech U. press. There's also an online game. I once saw a championship game in Halletsville, another small town between Houston and San Antonio. It was played with strategy and finesse, and occasionally gleeful laughter.


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October 06, 2009

The Modern Texas Rangers

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I'm jumping the gun a bit here, promoting former newspaper colleague Mike Cox's new book before my review copy arrives from the publishers. I'm not supposed to be part of his virtual book tour until the end of the month. But when I saw the news that the FTC will begin requiring bloggers  to disclose conflicts of interest (i.e. product freebies), I thought no time like the present.

The AP's claim that "traditional journalism outlets" are required (by their publishers) to return products "borrowed for reviews" is a fantasy. Review copies of books, for instance, are never returned. Indeed, many newspapers have year-end discount sales to their employees of their thousands of free review copies, the vast majority never having been reviewed at all.

I happily review Mike's stuff because he's a heckuva writer and this Texas Rangers book, the twin sequel to a previous one which I also reviewed, promises to be another good one of importance to Texas history. As for the "bribery," I'll undoubtedly buy several more copies to send to friends. But I'll keep the review copy, just like "traditional journalism outlets" do. I assume this disclosure will be good enough. But if it isn't, tough.

Via Instapundit and Hot Air.


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October 03, 2009

The Come and Take It cannon

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I knew there was a lot of disagreement about this cannon from the Texas Revolution. Apparently this is the very one. Unless you believe the versions that say it was lost long ago and never found. The Gonzales version, seen here in the Gonzales Memorial Museum, supposedly was made by a local blacksmith. He must have been expert, indeed. The version I always heard was that the Mexican army loaned the little popgun to the American colonists to help fight off Indian attacks. Who else would something that small impress? The "Come and Take It" slogan of the time, referring to the Mexican demand for the cannon back, is from the ancient Greek, Molon labe.


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September 22, 2009

Dandy rain

Radio says we've had almost three inches since it began with the passage of a cold front overnight. Indeed, Mr. B. and I saw it running in the neighborhood gutters and ponding in the yards as I drove him to school this morning. Forecast shows more to come. We sure need it, and it'll lower the temp nicely on this, the first day of fall. Was starting to get hot again.


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September 20, 2009

Your rights online threatened

You can criticize the Austin police and fire departments and their chiefs and personnel at Twitter or Facebook or elsewhere online, but only until you say something they don't like. When they decide that your criticism is untrue, well, citizen, then you better watch out.

Because then, Police Chief Art Acevedo and Austin Fire Chief Mae Kerr tell the daily, they could launch formal investigations against you, seek search warrants or subpoenas, or even sue you for libel, defamation, etc. It seems that our alleged defenders of the public weal can't read, much less comprehend, the American and Texas constitutions. They've become prickly potentates behind their shiny badges and the little stars on their shirt collars who would make Hugo Chavez puff with pride.

As one commenter at the daily put it: "I like Acevedo too, but guess what chief, this is not California and you are not in charge of everything." Heh.

Via Slashdot. Where many of the comments are smart and funny and worth reading.


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September 19, 2009

Hummer time

Not a reference to the overpriced, oversized urban assault vehicle, but the little, frenetic hummingbird. We're seeing a lot more now that it's cooled off some than back during the big heat wave. JD invested in a red feeder you fill with sugar water. We used to do that, until the yellowjackets made a mess of it. Now we just let the Turk's Cap and the Plumbago get bushy. They attract all the Ruby-Throats we need.


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September 17, 2009

A Moment In Time

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Alamo illustrator Gary Zaboly's concept of the dawn battle's midpoint, sold here.


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September 15, 2009

More Lake Travis drought

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The upper end of Cypress Creek Arm, at Anderson Mill Marina on Lake Travis, is a boat-and-float-filled pasture.


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Lake Travis drought

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This sloop (probably full of water from the recent rains thanks to the open hatch) and the two sloops behind it were abandoned at Anderson Mill Marina, apparently because the owners weren't paying their slip rent. The rest of the boats, and the docks, were moved out toward the main basin where there's more water. I haven't seen this part of the lake, called Cypress Creek Arm, this low in twenty-four years. It's going to take at least two or three flash floods to bring this back to normal.


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September 14, 2009

One year after Ike

Galveston is still recovering from Hurricane Ike's devastation. Which is not so unusual for the island city. It goes through hurricane hits every twenty years or so. But they're still finding skeletal remains on nearby Bolivar Peninsula, parts of which Ike's fifteen foot storm surge swept clean.


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Leadership doesn't stop

Latest news from Brook Army Medical Center in San Antonio on First Cav's LTC Tim Karcher:

"I have no legs, and I accept that. I do not accept that my lack of legs will limit me. The adventure is re-learning, so that I am not limited.  Some people talk about how brave or heroic this attitude is, but for me it is simply practical. I refuse to let this keep me from living my life to the fullest, and you would too. It's not heroic, it's realistic. I admit, I look forward to moving through this adventure with others who are travelling the same path that I am. Thus far, many have helped me and guided me, and I look forward to inspiring future wounded Soldiers. Leadership doesn't stop at the hospital door."

Some would. So it's nice to hear from one whose leadership doesn't. Good luck, colonel.

Via Op-For.


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September 13, 2009

Armadillo claims X Prize

The rain cleared off long enough earlier this evening, at Caddo Mills northeast of Dallas, for Armadillo Aerospace to claim the X Prize Foundation's million dollar award for a private rocket capable of taking off, flying for a hundred eighty seconds and landing precisely on a simulated lunar surface. Two videos here show the vertical takeoff and vertical landing rocket doing the trick.


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September monsoon

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When it rains in Texas, it pours. This is from Friday, the second day of almost all-day rain which is expected to continue throughout today and finally start to taper off tonight. There are flooded streets and swollen creeks all over the place. The lakes are still low because their watershed hasn't gotten that much yet. But it will. El Nino is not even cooking yet, but it's coming. Flashfloods ahead.


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The great escape

Texas 41, Wyoming 10. I had planned to watch a few minutes of the game, until the first couple of Texas touchdowns, maybe, and then go to the library. Never got there. I was amazed at how bad Texas played in the first half against what the daily's Kirk Bohls says was a team forecast to be dead last in the Mountain West conference this season.

Of course the Cowboys were playing with a lot of heart, going for broke, not caring if they got injured, something the Longhorns players had to think about with the toughest part of their season still ahead. Nevertheless. The Texas O line just fell apart. Colt was being chased all over the field. It was a scary game until the end of the third quarter when Texas was up by three touchdowns. But I never got to the library. I wasn't willing to assume the best after that first half so I watched it all until the end.


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September 08, 2009

Twenty million bats on radar

Accuweather meteorologist Jesse Ferrell has a neat series of augmented radar-capture pix, plus a radar video from the NEXRAD of the Austin-San Antonio weather service office in New Braunfels, showing a cloud of bats exiting Bracken Cave, southwest of Austin. Even if some of them are radar echoes clutter (also called radar bloom), the cloud is pretty impressive.


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September 05, 2009

Earliest known view of the Alamo

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A ca. 1835-36 sketch by Jose Juan Sanchez Navarro, an officer in the besieging Mexican army.


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September 04, 2009

Big rain

Finally departing west on the radar after coming in from the east about half an hour ago. Ponding all over the Back Forty, and out front. Really poured. Looks like at least an inch. Good show. We needed that.
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Oat Willie's

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 A recent poster of the Oatman. No slogan on it, tho'.

  This is for the head shop. Hence the "high above."


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September 03, 2009

Barry's schoolchildren chat

It's strange that a president would do this, especially during the school day instead of in the evening when kids are at home. But it's probable it'll just be boilerplate: "Stay in school, study hard, contribute to your world, etc." Austin schools, picking up on the scattered protests elsewhere, are telling parents they can opt their kids out, if they want. What will the kid do? Go wait in the hall until it's over?

The schools already are plenty political. In Texas, as early as second grade, they teach global warming as a crisis, not a controversy. It's made for some interesting discussions with Mr. B. I remember the schools trying to indoctrinate me and my peers with this or that bit of politics years ago. By high school, our b.s. detectors had become pretty sensitive.

Eisenhower was president when I was in elementary school. He famously preferred golf to almost anything else. His successor, JFK, was too busy with extramarital affairs to speak to us directly. But if either of them had wanted to, I'm sure the schools would have made arrangements for us to listen. Probably forced us to listen. There was no opting out in those days.

UPDATE:  Dan Riehl ponders whether Barry is uniquely unable to do this without controversy or if any president could do it peacefully anymore.


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Balcones Canyonland

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Clear spring pool near the Varga site, a prehistoric archaeological dig near the upper Nueces River.


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September 01, 2009

"Hellstorm" Jimena

It's the surge that will get the tourist beaches and fishing villages in Baja California, since the near-Category Five hurricane will lose some of its now-155 mph winds by the time it comes ashore tomorrow.

But, as the meteorologists say, a hurricane is not a point, and Baja is already getting plenty of wind, rain and waves. Meanwhile, we wait to see if we'll get any of Jimena's endgame, i.e. good rain. Benefiting from someone else's tragedy, as usual with these things. Accuweather is still calling for thunderstorms for us, but has pushed them out to Saturday night now. Jim Spencer at KXAN sees a better chance Friday night than Saturday.


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August 31, 2009

Lord Ganesh

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One of Mr. B.'s best buddies is back from his annual family trip to see the in-laws his grandparents in India. So we'll thank the Hindu remover of obstacles and hope we can have a little bit of that rub off on us.


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August 28, 2009

New Fi-Fi 321

Captain Dave, at more than ten thousand feet above the Llano Estacado. Life on the line continues.


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August 26, 2009

A Texan in Auschwitz

"Someone told me a few months ago that Auschwitz would be a life-changer for me, and they were right, but I would like to emphasize that it is a good change. In the six weeks since I was there, the majority of my previous petty concerns have stopped mattering to me, completely...It has been a very surprising and welcome change. My experience of life is different, in a good way."


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August 25, 2009

Drought buster

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Here's a bit of hopeful weather prognostication. The rains haven't started falling yet. But the LCRA's Bob Rose says they might by Friday. The Purple Sage outside his office already is in bloom.


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August 24, 2009

Whole Foods still whole

The so-called boycott, begun after the CEO offered an alternative to Obamacare, seems to be a bust. The Austin-born chain's stock price is trending up and the parking garage, at least in Chicago, is almost full.


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August 16, 2009

To the edge of space

Six years ago Mrs. Charm, Mr. Boy and I bought the rancho from a couple who were moving away from Texas. She was a homemaker. He was an airline pilot who had flown U-2 spy planes before he retired from the Air Force. I won't mention names, they'd probably not like me to.

I've read about the U-2 so I have some idea of what it is like to work in full pressure suit at seventy thousand feet--more than twice as high as jetliners cruise. But, until now, I'd never seen the curvature of the earth from a U-2's cockpit, out there on the edge of the black. Magnificent view really.

Via Flightblogger.


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August 13, 2009

Watermellon Thump

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Just about every town in Texas has a water tower and some can't resist painting theirs, for fun or to attract tourists. This one, end-on from a distance, resembles a striped blimp. But it's actually Luling's watermellon ad for their annual Thump, when the watermellon crop's in. Nice town, Luling. A railroad still runs through it. They even decorate their oil field pump jacks.


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August 08, 2009

Off to the beach

Off to Port Aransas today through Wednesday, where the National Weather Service forecasts highs in the eighties and twenty percent chance of showers through the period. Sure hope they're right.

What a nice break it would be from the triple digits here. On the other hand, the humidity is above ninety percent which will push the heat index above one hundred. Port A cam aimed at part of the beach will tell the tale.

UPDATE:  The humidity was high, but it felt cool nevertheless, especially at night. Didn't rain once. We got the rain coming home on the 12th, just outside of Austin.


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August 07, 2009

Peak oil is a lie

The next time you read or hear the phrase "peak oil," usually as part of some politician's blather about how we need more solar cells and windmills, just think of this alternate: "North Dakota Oil." Not that there aren't still naysayers.

Via The Seablogger.

UPDATE:  Here's another for instance.


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AARP: Deaf

This eight-minute clip shows the main reason I trashcan AARP fliers when they come in the mail. It's not really about seniors. It's about whatever the execs and their lobbyists want to do with the dues money. And they proved it Tuesday in Dallas.

UPDATE:  About sixty thousand others also have gotten the message and stopped paying their dues. Or are switching. Competition is good.


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August 06, 2009

Pretty country

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Pasture near Bledsoe, Texas, west of Lubbock, in the Panhandle. From this realtor's site. Probably taken one spring, long before the current drought. Or drouth, as the oldtimers used to say.


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August 04, 2009

Alamo Chapel

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For those who have never been there, or have been but have forgotten what it looks like inside. No Texas blog can have too many pictures of the Alamo. Although I believe this was taken before the souvenir-trinket cases at the far end were removed to a separate building elsewhere on the grounds. Then, the flags of all the states and countries the defenders came from were scrunched into a tiny room to the left of the entrance. They now line the walls here in the outer room. More such pictures, inside and out, old and new, some you've probably never seen, are available here.


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Indianola

Researching the ghost town of Indianola, once the second-busiest port (after Galveston) on the Texas coast, which figures in a book of Texana I'm writing, I found this good site. Then-Secretary of War Jeff Davis shipped his thirty-two experimental Egyptian camels through the port on Matagorda Bay in 1856. They proved relatively useless. Among other problems, their feet were too tender for the rocky West Texas soil. But some people still like to experiment with them.


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July 31, 2009

Port Aransas fever

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This time of year, lots of inland Texans are thinking of the coast and the surf and the Gulf breezes. Course the latter come to us when there's a good low-pressure area off to our west-northwest, sometimes bringing us the only summer rain we get. Anyhow, when we go we stay at the condo. Never have stayed at the little Tarpon Inn, at PortA, with its cavalry-barracks architecture, but lion tamer Clyde Beatty did, and cake-mix magnate Duncan Hines, etc., way back when. FDR caught a tarpon offshore, as many still do, but he slept somewhere else.


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July 30, 2009

Rain on Red Bud leaves

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This works a bit better than the Turk's Cap shot below. It's busier but at least you can see the rain drops on the leaves. The toy tugboat in the background used to be a tub toy. Since relegated to the Back Forty.


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Rain on Turk's Cap

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A little fuzzy, this quickie snap of our surprise and very welcome morning rain shower. Figured the rain would show up best on this native Turk's Cap "bush" which attracts hummingbirds. This older shot of the plant is somewhat better. I'm glad I don't have to make a living as a photographer.


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July 29, 2009

Falcon 9 moving along

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McGregor, TX (July 29, 2009) – Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) announces the successful completion of qualification testing for the Falcon 9 launch vehicle first stage tank and interstage. Testing took place at SpaceX's Texas Test Site, a 300 acre structural and propulsion testing facility, located just outside of Waco, Texas. [First stage is green; interstage is black; this is the bird that will service the International Space Station when the shuttles are retired.]

UPDATE: But I'm opposed to government handouts for these and other commercial ops. We can see how well that worked for NASA, whose proposed Ares 1--whose capsule spacecraft is a throwback to Apollo and doesn't even have an airlock--already is seeking more tax billions.


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Jay Janner's photos

Jay, a staff photographer for the daily, has plenty of good ones on his blog. I'd post one but he'd probably ask me to take it down. Since he's put them on the Web himself, it's not necessary. Go see for yourself. Good stuff. No fakery.

Also Ralph Barrera. (I think I've spelled his name correctly, this time. Little inside joke. Very little.) And Brian Diggs and Kelly West. I didn't realize so many had their own sites. Jay's led me to them. Good for them.


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July 25, 2009

Pedernales "River"

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This is one reason Lake Travis is so low this summer. The almost dry Pedernales is one of the major suppliers of water to the lake-reservoir. The other is the Llano River. Haven't seen any current pictures of it lately.


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Falcon 9: It is Rocket Science

The first launch of SpaceX's heavy lift vehicle, Falcon 9, may be delayed until fall, but its Falcon 1's orbiting of a Malaysian sat ten days ago was a plus. Fun to have their Merlin engine test facilities just up the road in McGregor, southwest of Waco.

Might not be if they were rattling our windows, but they don't do tests very often. Since their founder Elon Musk is the co-founder of PayPal, I hope my use of that service helps SpaceX, too. Falcon 9 was designed from the start to fly a four-man crew and service the International Space Station once the shuttles are retired.

Good luck, guys. It might not be in your plans but I hope you can beat the Indians and Chinese to the moon.


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July 22, 2009

Lake Travis: The Sometimes Islands

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Years ago, one of the daily's photographers (I hesitate to guess which one) took a couch out to one of the Islands, propped an Elvis-on-velvet on it and immortalized the droughty geography. This photo is from June. Probably worse now, since there's been no rain to speak of. But there will be. With El Nino returning, the lake will be rising by winter. Probably higher than people want by then.


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Frozen Charlotte

Late nineteenth century Americans apparently had a courser sense of humor than even we do, debatable as that may seem. Take Frozen Charlottes, unjointed porcelain dolls that cost about a  penny, and would sometimes be baked into birthday cakes for children to find as presents.

The Charlotte in question comes from this popular folk ballad about a young woman who set off in a sleigh one freezing night with too little clothing and wound up, well, frozen. Today the one-inch dolls seem to be pretty valuable, at least on E-Bay where prime examples might fetch up to $1,500.

Why bring this up? I just found out that the archeologists excavating Austin's Guytown redlight district in the summer of 2001 (before the appropriate construction there of the new City Hall) found at least one Frozen Charlotte, broken, and tossed into a privy. There's a story for you. Make of it what you will.


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July 19, 2009

Texas: Pre-flood

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How bad is our drought? This bad. But I feel sure there'll be major flooding by late fall.


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July 17, 2009

Lake Travis's better days

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A familiar view, from my sailing days, coming out of Cypress Creek Arm into the main basin. Heading west. Lake's much lower than this now, but it'll come back. It always has, AGW and other doomsday predictions to the contrary notwithstanding.


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July 16, 2009

Cavalry charge on the plains

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Got to love the chapeau on the lead rider. A Frederick Remington painting via Texas Beyond History.


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Plummeting Lake Travis

All our triple digit days means the big lake in the Highlands chain is dropping 1.5 to 2 feet a week now, according to the LCRA:

1) 614.18' set in August of 1951
2) 615.02' set in November of 1963
3) 636.58' set in October of 1984
4) 640.08' set on July 13, 2009 639.53 set on July 17, 2009 (and falling)
5) 640.24' set in October of 2000

But, as you can see, there's still a long ways to go before it's hitting real record territory. Some slight fauna and flora relief is in sight for the weekend, but probably nothing meaningful for the lake.

Via KVUE's Mark Murray.


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July 15, 2009

Hole in the ceiling

I suppose the one foot-square hole that developed in a Southwest Airlines jet over West Virginia Tuesday could have happened to any airline flying older planes. The 737-300 is twenty-eight years old, though this plane might be younger. That it happened to my favorite airline, the former "national airline of Texas" is just sad. It fits, unfortunately, into some of their questionable activities of late. Just stick to the no-crash policy, boys. Please.


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July 14, 2009

Purple Sage rain alert

LCRA meteorologist Bob Rose has noticed the area's Purple Sage bushes are in timely bloom:

"As I’ve mentioned previously, these plants, also known as a 'barometer bush' often bloom about a week to ten days before there’s rain in the local area. They seem to have a fairly good track record. Unfortunately, the blooms don’t say anything about the quantity of rain. The last time they bloomed, rain amounts were fairly low.  But they did bloom about a week before we got some rain. Could the plants [be] sensing [a] pattern change?"

We can sure hope so. Slight chances of rain, after all, are forecast this weekend through next week.


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July 13, 2009

Green road not taken

Austin's clean (wind and solar) energy program isn't attracting many takers. Mainly because "green energy" is more expensive than coal or gas. Oh, ho.

This is the part they didn't tell you. Meanwhile all that extra carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is doing plenty of greening with no extra charge at all (unless you believe Al Gore). Ironic, isn't it?


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July 12, 2009

JKP, Barsana Dham

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Okay all you folks who think of Texas in stereotypical terms. Here's one to jangle your spurs. Southwest of Austin, on the road to Driftwood and not far from Dripping Springs, there's this two hundred acre replica of an Indian holy district.

It's the North American home of the Hindu sect JKP, Barsana Dham. You can almost smell the incense by clicking on the link. Unfortunately, its international leader and swami, Prakashanand Saraswati, has run afoul of the indecency-with-a-child laws, twenty counts worth. So things are not copacetic at the ashram these days. Reminds me of the Russian Orthodox sect's similar problems down in Blanco in '97. It's the freedom that draws 'em, I think. And, sometimes, trips 'em up.


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July 09, 2009

Aztec flower wars

Reading T.R. Ferenbach's Fire and Blood, a History of Mexico, I encountered the Mexica (or Aztec as they are called in English) concept of flower wars. Which made me think of the San Antonio Fiesta's Battle of The Flowers.

The Mexica version was the fifteenth century pursuit of thousands of prisoners for human sacrifice to the bloodthirsty Aztec gods. The San Antonio one, which began in 1891 as an April 21 salute to the heroes of the Texas revolution, has become a chamber of commerce event where floats are decorated with flowers.

In early years the Texas participants threw flower petals at each other. Otherwise the only apparent connection between the two is that some San Antonians undoubtedly are descendents of the Mexica. But, to my cluttered mind, it's a strange coincidence that probably bears scrutiny.


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July 08, 2009

Lake Travis still falling

The lake she is sinking like a stone, two feet lower than at the link there which was a week ago. I mean fifty-one percent of capacity? Whoa. On the other hand, we've been here before, just three years ago, in fact, and it's not yet as low as it was in 2000. The important thing to remember about Texas, folks, is that, for us, drought is normal.


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June 29, 2009

FM 2222

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I probably ought to file this under Obituaries as it must have been taken before the road was widened a decade or so ago. Once upon a time, say, back in the late 70s, this was a fairly typical scene around Austin--uncluttered, pristine, and pleasant. The rest of the photos here, while certainly interesting, are more up-to-date and representative. Alas.


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June 28, 2009

Rain ahead...

Well, a reasonable chance for some tomorrow night, anyhow, which will feel good after today's hundred degree heat (it's 100 in the city at the moment). But the real chances, according to the federal Climate Prediction Center begin in October and last through April of next year. Thanks to the anticipated return of El Nino, they're forecasting precip to be above normal for that period. After two years of dry, that would be sweet.

Via KVUE's Mark Murray.


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June 24, 2009

Heat emergencies

"Since June 12, Austin-Travis County EMS paramedics have responded to 37 heat emergencies. Included in the elevated response data for heat emergencies [were] construction workers, patients with pre-existing conditions including pregnancy, also several very young patients."

Meanwhile, the forecast is for more of the same through the July 4 weekend. And probably thereafter.

UPDATE:  Thursday's highs at Camp Mabry and the airport were records: 106 at Mabry, 107 at ABIA. The LCRA's Bob Rose says those were the second hottest June days in recorded Austin history, which I might add only goes back to the 1840s or so.

The warmists will say this is Global Warming. That's what  they say when it's freezing, too. And, probably, when there's a big sale on at Fry's. Nevertheless, with the ground thoroughly heated after weeks of this, we can expect plenty more records ahead.


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June 22, 2009

Clean, but audible hell

That's one reviewer's take on Austin-Bergstrom International Airport for those who want to sleep there. Bring earplus, suggested another. But a third enjoyed his overnight in the VIP lounge. DFW and Houston didn't score much better. Seems to be quieter at San Antone. I didn't know people did this. I have been hit up by the cigarette panhandlers out in front of the baggage area at ABIA. Austin seems to attract panhandlers.

Via Things With Wings.


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June 19, 2009

The heat is on

Six days (through Thursday) of triple-digit highs (was only 97 today) with, fortunately, some relief in sight, according to Bob Rose:

A few coastal showers will be possible the latter part of next week, but the majority of the region looks to stay dry.  If this pattern develops as currently forecast, we should break out of our streak of 100-degree temperatures the latter part of next week.

That would be nice. Sunday morning is Summer Solstice, after all. Cooler days are coming...


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June 18, 2009

Fort Mason

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The federal infantry and cavalry forts of Texas were not the palisaded stockades of the movies.


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June 17, 2009

Comanches

Comanches: The History of A People is one of Texas historian T.R. Ferenbach's greatest hits and I enjoyed it thoroughly, as much for its Texas and U.S. Army history as for the tale of the destruction of the murderous, wholly unlovable Comanches.

The book was written in 1974, so it's free of Hollyweird indian mumbo jumbo, as well as the hand-wringing, multicultural, everything's-relative claptrap. By the late 1860s, with their ultimate demise plain to see, Comanche chiefs began lying about their nomadic guerrilla-warfare culture which had, for hundreds of years, been raiding, stealing, kidnapping and enslaving women and children, torturing some for pleasure, raping most, and mutilating all.

"The story of the People is a brutal story," Ferenbach writes, "and its judgements must be brutal." No one but their victims ever understood them, especially not the patronizing Quakers whom Washington put in charge of trying to pacify them. The 4th U.S. Cavalry did it best, by using their own tactics to massacre the men and take the women and children captive to the reservations. Ferenbach is sensitive to the pathos of their end. But, by then, the Comanches had slain so many thousands of noncombants, most of them white and black Texans and peasant Mexicans, that few who knew their handiwork would mourn.


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June 16, 2009

The Electric Jet

Computer scientist Edsger Dijkstra invented much of software technology yet only used a computer for email and browsing the Web. He was still writing with a fountain pen when he died in 2002.

Dijkstra once told me that he would never consent to fly on the space shuttle because he didn't trust the software that controlled it.

With the coming introduction of the Boeing 787, we're all pretty soon going to be flying in craft controlled by software. Dave, an Airbus pilot who already does, explains why we shouldn't worry.

But some still do, and, especially since the loss of AF 447, I must admit that I'm one of them.


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June 15, 2009

The Belle's cannon

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The wreck of French explorer La Salle's ship, The Belle, more than three hundred years ago in Matagorda Bay is one of the compelling tales of Texas history that most schoolchildren here learn. These six to ten foot, dismounted bronze cannon, recovered in the remarkable 1995 discovery and subsequent preservation of the ship's hull and cargo, are just part of the story.


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June 04, 2009

Lege chuckle

Not because this last-minute amendment to a passed bill to let state Rep. Wayne Christian (an allegedly conservative Republican) rebuild his beach house on Ike-swept Bolivar Penninsula is particularly unusual. But because, in fact, this is just the sort of thing that gets smuggled into law in the last "chaotic" days of every biennial session. The last days are always "chaotic" because the Lege likes them that way. So much easier to slip stuff through when there's so much going on that no one is likely to notice until it's too late. Heh.

Via Lone Star Times.


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June 01, 2009

Guns on campus defeated

Not surprisingly, commonsense has failed the Texas Lege, that notable bastion of insipidity, and the concealed-carry-on-campus bill that passed the Texas Senate never made it out of the House. It has officially failed for the session. Might be brought back. Might not. Wouldbe campus killers take note: You're still good to go. Nobody will shoot back and, as always, the cops won't get there in time to stop you.


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May 28, 2009

Morning haze at Port Aransas

Looks like it's going to be a rainy day on the beach at Port A. Webcams on the Net sure are fun. You have to refresh this one periodically. The Panama Canal one below refreshes itself.


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May 21, 2009

Concealed carry on campus

The Texas Senate has passed the bill, SB 1164. Now it's up to the House, where passage is far more problematic because of more Democrat influence and a weak Speaker.

The Lege is due to work all weekend, in its usual biennial rush to do everything at the last minute, so we'll just have to wait and see. Meanwhile, the usual suspects are frothing, but notice that the commenters there aren't having any of the predictable anti-gun flapdoodle. I'm still in favor of the idea. I just doubt the Lege is capable of this much commonsense.


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May 19, 2009

Gov. Shivers' jumbled papers

The past two mornings I've spent at the State Archives going through a small portion of the 561 cubic feet of materials from the 1950s administration of Texas Gov. Alan Shivers. I'm looking for some correspondence of importance to a book of Texana I'm putting together. Shivers played a minor but significant role in the story.

Alas, I haven't found what I'm looking for. And no wonder. The materials are a jumble. The dates on some of the folders, in the four boxes I've been through so far, often don't match the dates on all of their contents. At one point I asked the young archivist helping me if anyone, state or academic, has been through all of this stuff and indexed it in some manner other than just the (alleged) contents of the boxes. The answer was no, no one. It all came to the state in 1977 and has been largely untouched since then. What, I wonder, do Texas academic historians actually research these days?


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May 18, 2009

Go Rangers!

They are leading their division. But, as we all know, it might not be so by the All-Star break. Probably won't be. Being a Texas Rangers fan is almost as good a lesson in humility as being a Cubs fan. So we cheer while we can.


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May 17, 2009

Flying the Texas flag upside down

This is a funny site about a situation I didn't realize was so prevalent: flying the Lone Star upside down. Actually, there's an easy way to remember that the white part is rightside up, and the red part is downside down. It's not PC, just a fact: in the struggle to settle Texas, the whites came out on top.

Their culture was entirely incompatible with that of the nomadic Comanches and Apaches, and especially the cannibalistic Tonkawas. Texas historian T.R. Fehrenbach explained it very well: "On the frontier, it was Them or Us and They were killed so that We might live. In such wars the defeated vanish in ignominy. The winners hold out neither hope nor generosity." It wasn't about good or bad. Only survival.

Via Texas Blog Notes.


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May 12, 2009

Dildos are a Girl's Best Friend?

I know, I know. This is a family blog. More or less. But I couldn't resist a post on the article by that title to be found on the Houston Chronicle's new Web site. It's supposedly a puffer for a Montrose boutique. What it really is (in addition to a first for Texas daily newspaper journalism) is a bid to make some money by pandering to the Web's porn audience. Uh, like me, too? Why no, course not.


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May 07, 2009

Keep your guns at home, son

State Rep. Leo Berman, R-Tyler, is carrying a bill modeled on similar ones in Montana and Alaska: essentially exempting Texans from federal firearms registration and background-check laws, insofar as they concern firearms made and sold in Texas. Likewise with ammunition and gun parts.

Berman is a state rep best known for his largely unsuccessful efforts to stem illegal immigration from Mexico. His gun bill is still in committee and remains to be seen whether it will die there or make it to the floor. If it passed, would the feds take it lying down? I imagine not. A similarly assertive move, but one without any practical effect, has passed in Oklahoma.

Via The Fat Guy.


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May 05, 2009

Viva Cinco de Mayo

Any holiday that celebrates a French defeat (for which we must, in part, remember Gen. Ulysses Grant) can't be bad--even if our alleged intellectual president uses it to demonstrate his abysmal grasp of the Spanish language. If he was W., we'd never hear the end of it, and the Hispanic caucus would be demanding an apology. Not now, of course. That sort of media hurrah is reserved for Republicans.


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May 04, 2009

Peach cropper

It's always hard to tell with the Hill Country Fruit Council's guide to finding peaches, whether the "closed for season" remarks for some growers are for this year or refer to last year and just haven't been updated yet. But the April 7 freeze appears to have zapped more than a few of them, including the Marburger Orchard in Fredericksburg. They say "No Peaches" straight out on their site. So I expect we will see a slimmer supply at the H.E.B. than usual this year. Alas.


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April 18, 2009

Secession fantasies

The usual media idiots and their sycophant pols are frothing over Gov. Perry's secession talk. But it makes a certain sense, from a fantasy perspective. They forget (but some of us don't) that we have a lot of nuclear weapons sitting in white, concrete igloos a few miles north of Amarillo. A little forethought, this time, and we could make sure the feds didn't try to blockade and invade again. If nothing else, we could threaten to sell the nukes on e-bay.


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Yankee's version of Texas secession isn't funny

Quite frankly, it's hard to take seriously anyone named Aloysius. Especially when his idea of white Texans is "idiotic right-wing rednecks." A pox on your house, Aloysius. You need name as well as brain surgery. You might want to work on that scraggly chin beard of yours, too. Viagra might help. Maybe.


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April 15, 2009

Red meat: secession!

It's understandable, what with the whopping deficit that Barry & the Dems are running up, that Texas Gov. Rick Perry would want to run for re-election against the federal government. Especially when his likely primary opponent is U.S. Senator Kay Baily Hutchinson.

So, on the occasion of the Tax Day Tea Party protest, Perry decided to throw Big Media and its liberal pals a little red meat about potential secession. Not that Texas would or could. Can't keep our sales and property taxes relatively low (not to mention no income tax at all) without all those federal dollars. But it's nice to see a independent action now and then from the Repubs.

UPDATE:  The Seablogger gives Rick more credit than I think he deserves, but he makes other, better points. Rick Perry for president in 2012? That would be interesting. I expect he'll concentrate on getting re-elected governor, first.


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April 13, 2009

Hobby-Eberly 9.2 meter

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The HET at McDonald Observatory in West Texas didn't make this Top Ten list, but it should have.


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April 11, 2009

Elissa beating into the wind

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As close as the little "barky" can get to the wind, anyhow. You can expect to see more of these, as I have always been a sucker for sailing, even though I don't do it anymore meself.


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Texas wildfires

We thought the smoke in the air yesterday was the usual spring influx from the Chiapan farmers of southern Mexico burning the scrub off their fields to prepare for planting.

But it was actually coming from the northwest, above Fort Worth, where the drought-induced wildfires have burned-out a couple of small towns. Since some one hundred ninety-nine counties are affected so far, the governor has called for help from the national guard and FEMA. More wildfires appear to be burning around the Fort Hood area which is closer to the rancho but still a comfortable distance. Forecast rain tonight and tomorrow will help, if it shows up.


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April 10, 2009

Texas tall ship: Elissa

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I used to have one of her commemorative key rings, picked up on a trip to UTMB when I was a medical writer. It gave metal detectors at the courthouse fits when I forgot to remove it, so I stopped carrying it. But I didn't forget the Elissa. One of these days, I might even get to take a ride, though I'll leave climbing the rigging to the younger ones.


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Chron's new money-maker: sex

I knew some newspaper executives would figure out a way to make money on the Web. I just didn't stretch my imagination as far as the Houston Chronicle did. Of course, the money is yet to be made and some readers already think it is just tacky.

Via The Brazosport News.


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April 06, 2009

Battleship Texas

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She rarely moves today. Cub scouts get to spend the night in her lower decks. She was new in 1914, was refurbished and reequipped many times, fought in WW1, received one of the first radar-assisted gun directors in the 1930s, and fought in WW2: among other things, escorting convoys across the Atlantic, firing support for the Normandy beachheads on D-Day in 1944, and also for the later Pacific landings on Iwo Jima and Okinawa.


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We used to run in boots

But the Army did not, and does not, make commercials as good as this Marine one. As the H.E.B. checker-military brat joked one time when she saw my ARMY cap: "Ain't Ready For Marines Yet?" Not on the recruiting score.


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April 01, 2009

Guns on campus, etc.

The daily, which usually opposes wider gun privileges, is off to a good start on this Texas legislation to allow folks with training and concealed-carry permits to tote their guns to college campuses, businesses and even bars. Most of Big Media is predictably beating the drum against this latest Texas insanity, etc.

I favor the changes. Not that I don't realize it could become messy in some situations. But as it stands now anyone, from crazed student to embittered ex-employee, knows his victims are almost certain to be unarmed. Because it's the law. Take that certainty away and you very likely could stop some, if not all, of the periodic mass murders on campus, at work, even at church, which we've all become unnecessarily inured to. Relying on the police to arrive in time and do it all is the real insanity.

UPDATE:  Indeed, get this from report of the latest massacre: "Police heard no gunfire after they arrived but waited for about an hour before entering the building to make sure it was safe for officers." Makes you feel real protected, right? At best, your loved ones will get an "investigation" after your funeral.


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March 27, 2009

How you gonna keep 'em down on the ranch?

For those who just can't get enough cowbell in their music, there's finally a genuine solution here.

Via Dustbury.


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March 26, 2009

Tracking Victorio

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 You've heard of Geronimo, no doubt. How about Victorio? The black troops of the 9th and 10th U.S. Cavalry and the 24th and 25th U.S. Infantry regiments, tracked the Apache chieftain and his band of maurauders across West Texas in 1880. They even followed them across the border into Mexico where he was finally cornered with the help of the Mexican Army who slew him and his band. You probably seldom hear about it because it is not the PC version of the oppressive white man and the peace-loving, in-harmony-with-nature American Indian and his black and brown fellow sufferers. History is more complicated than that.


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March 23, 2009

Bluebonnets!

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They're abundantly available, after all, just farther east than we're used to. This shot was taken by a friend who lives out near Washington-on-the-Brazos.


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Warm days, cool nights

These are the days of spring in Central Texas, and one only wishes they would last all year. With what little rain we've had so far, alas, the ditches along the highways aren't filling with the usual red, yellow and pink flowers, and bluebonnets have hardly made an appearance and probably won't be abundant in any case. And the scorching days are coming. You can feel them when the early evening hours are still hovering around seventy-five degrees, before the natural dip back into the low sixties.


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March 13, 2009

We fly off to D.C.

We're leaving the rancho this afternoon to fly to D.C. for a week of family reunion before the family there moves to Tyler and we're no longer able to save money on a hotel. Weren't able to get into the Spring Break mob converging on the Capitol and the White House. But we have plenty else to see and do, including visiting Mr. B.'s paternal grandfather's grave in Arlington and, hopefully, catch the changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknowns.


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March 12, 2009

Let the flooding begin

We're under a flood advisory from the Austin-San Antonio office of the National Weather Service :

"AT 644 AM CDT MODERATE TO HEAVY RAINS WERE FALLING AT RATES
APPROACHING AN INCH AN HOUR. RAINFALL FROM YESTERDAY AND OVERNIGHT
HAS BEGUN TO SATURATE THE SOIL AND AREA CREEKS ARE RESPONDING.
PERIODS OF HEAVY RAINFALL THIS MORNING WILL RESULT IN MORE RUNOFF."

LCRA Hydrologic gauges around Austin show almost two inches of rain at many spots in the past forty-eight hours. (Three to four inches seems to be the norm out in the hills.) And more rain is forecast through Saturday. Remains to be seen if this is the big one. But our droughts almost always end with floods.

MORE:  We're unlikely, however, to get anywhere near the fifteen to eighteen inches we'd need to permanently end the drought, according to KVUE meteorologist Mark Murray. It will help green things up for spring.


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March 10, 2009

Fall all over again

It sounds like rain, the rain we're not getting in the long standing drought, the sound of the oak leaves hammering the shingles on the ranch house at night. In the day, the metaphor changes to a blizzard of leaves flung on the wind. One of the drawbacks of life in Central Texas--our second fall, when the oaks drop their old leaves and dress in new ones, is normal. They are a mess to clean up. A bigger mess, even, than in the official "fall," because we have so many more oaks than other kinds of trees.


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March 08, 2009

Tarantula

Add the tarantula to the rancho's indigenous species. Mrs. Charm saw a black one last night on the patio with a body about four inches long. It had just walked up out of the flower bed. She reached for a dust pan to smack it with but the attached broom fell down and the tarantula reacted to the noise by scurrying back into the bed.

So we looked them up on the Web and she was consoled to learn that they are rarely harmful to people and not aggressive--unless you're a mouse, a lizard or a small bird. They're even sold as exotic pets. In six years we'd never seen one in the back forty. Although the pool guy did report fishing a dead one out a few months ago, probably looking for a drink in the drought and apparently done in by the chlorine. I'll have to be more careful pulling weeds in the future. I was already on the alert for snakes coming out in the spring warmth.


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The Sportsman's

One great barbershop in Austin, though recently undergoing changes as some of the old hands have died or moved on. The Sportsman's even has a red-striped barber pole. I was reminded of how cool it is, and worthy of a post, after reading this lament by John Weidner, who is one of the few good things about San Francisco anymore.

Seems, in too many places, the government, feminism and political correctness have combined to destroy the old timey barbershop. I can believe it. Of course Austin, being the San Francisco of Texas (which is not a compliment), has more than its share of female barbers. But the Sportsman's is Old School and hanging on. Mr. B. and I go there about once a month. It gives him a taste of what I grew up with in the 50s.

It is, I should add, run by a woman, a Vietnamese-American (one of the attractions for this Vietnam vet) but the otherwise all-male barber shop has not succumbed to the political claptrap of the day and, so far, the state is not requiring them to get junior college degrees to cut hair. They also offer shaves in this day of HIV fears. I especially like the sign on the wall soliciting a wife--if she will first send a good picture of her bass boat and motor. This Web site on them is a trifle dated as to personnel, but the decor remains the same.


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March 07, 2009

Texas Bluebonnets

Texas Day-by-Day reminds me that today, in 1901, the bluebonnet became the official state flower. We love this Laurie Lewis song about them. Sounds like good Texas Swing:

"Those Texas bluebonnets how sweetly they grow, For all the wide prairies they're scattered like snow,
They make all the meadows as blue as the skies, Reminding me of my little darling's blue eyes."

I should note that she mispronounces Burnet, but she has to make it rhyme. We forgive you, Laurie. Not many bluebonnets this year, alas, due to the awful drought that continues to parch the prairies, but do go hear the good song about them!

UPDATE:  We bought the CD the song is on, Earth & Sky, in which Lewis, who sings and plays fiddle, notes: "Apologies to the residents of Burnet - I really do know how to pronounce it."  Heh.


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March 06, 2009

Remember the Alamo

It fell this morning, one hundred seventy-three years ago, beginning right before dawn, with the Mexican army's buglars sounding El Deguello, No Quarter. All the rest is glorious confusion.


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March 04, 2009

Smile and wave, boys

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Nice artwork on our favorite airline, Southwest, considering it's Israeli model Bar Refaeli. I hear some passengers complained. Well, there's always that ten percent. Just keep up the no-crash policy, okay boys?

Via JammieWearingFool.


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March 02, 2009

Texas Independence Day

As Lyle Lovette says: "No, you're not from Texas. But Texas wants you anyway."

So, here's what you do. Read the following aloud, with a measured cadence and a certain solemnity:

Commandancy of the Alamo
    Bexar, Feby. 24th, 1836

    To the People of Texas & all Americans in the World-- Fellow
Citizens and Compatriots--

                         I am besieged by a thousand or more of the
Mexicans under Santa Anna--I have sustained a continual Bombardment &
cannonade for 24 hours & have not lost a man--The enemy has demanded a
surrender at discretion, otherwise the garrison are to be put to the
sword, if the fort is taken--I have answered the demand with a cannon
shot, & our flag still waves proudly from the walls--I shall never
surrender or retreat.
                         Then, I call on you in the name of Liberty,
of patriotism & everything dear to the American character, to come to
our aid with all despatch--The enemy is receiving reinforcements
daily & will no doubt increase to three or four thousand in four or
five days. If this call is neglected, I am determined to sustain
myself as long as possible & die like a soldier who never forgets
what is due to his own honor & that of his country--Victory or Death.

                               William Barret Travis, Lt. Col. comdt.

Much more detail at this classic site. And a contemporary view via the Alamo cam. And the Deguello bugle call of No Quarter which the Mexicans played before the final dawn assault on March 6, 1836.

(I left off the beeves and corn of the p.s. My precedent is what Barry is doing to the Defense budget in wartime.)


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February 28, 2009

Forest fire

The months-long drought combined with a downed power line due to today's strong wind started a forest fire in Bastrop County just east of Austin. Ten homes have been destroyed so far, with another two hundred threatened. No rain at all in the forecast, but the wind is expected to subside by tomorrow night.

UPDATE:  At least twenty-three homes and nine businesses taken by the fire through the Bastrop pines so far. More wind forecast tomorrow. SUNDAY: Wind is light and the fire seems to be mostly under control.


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Losing Dr Pepper

Time was, in the 1880s, when a pharmacist would concoct his own soft drinks. Charles Courtice Alder, at the Old Corner Drug in Waco, came up with a popular combination of fruit extracts and sweeteners. So popular that the store's owner, Wade Morrison, named it after a physician and pharmacist he'd once worked for in Virginia named Dr. Charles T. Pepper.

In 1898, the Southwestern Soda Fountain Company of Dallas bought the rights to the soft drink and renamed itself the Dr Pepper Company. The product sold very well until the early 1980s. The company began looking for a buyer. It turned out to be Forstmann and Little, a New York investment banking firm, (on this date in 1984) whose chosen managers had, within a year, established Dr Pepper as the third most popular soft drink in America. Corporate headquarters remained in Dallas. But manufacturing, after a merger with the Seven Up Company, moved to St. Louis, MO. Now all that Waco has is the Dr Pepper Museum. By the way, there's been no period after the Dr in Dr Pepper since 1950.


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February 24, 2009

FYI: Texas Guard is not on high alert

Or any alert, at all, in contradiction to some emails and other "news" making the rounds quoting completely misquoting State Sen. Dan Patrick. (Well, it looks like he did say there is an alert of some kind, but it's not clear to me what he means, tho it sounds like just the state emergency center's planners in Austin.)

As far as I know, the Texas guard is NOT on high alert or any alert. If it was it would be in the papers and on the television because it would be impossible to hide. If some guardsman didn't let the cat out, his girlfriend or wife would. So, for now, as far as I can tell the state and feds are still just planning for any future trouble on the border.

UPDATE:  But the president is considering sending the guard to the border--for what? He isn't sure yet.


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February 21, 2009

Polar bear club

We made the Cub Scout topaz hunt in Mason County this afternoon out in the western Hill Country (didn't find any but it was fun digging for them in a dry creek bed) but skipped the overnight campout. Stopped in Fredericksburg for supper then came on back to find the weather service out there pegging the temp at this hour at thirty-four degrees. Their forecast low will be twenty-three, cold enough to freeze their water bottles. The pack leader said all who stayed would be eligible for the "polar bear" belt loop. Most of them are in tents. Our den leader brought his Airstream trailer. We're glad we're missing it.


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Bad Bill II

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PBS's favorite sanctimonious liberal commentator Bill Moyers wasn't just involved in the wiretapping of MLK. He also investigated the sexual preferences of Sen. Barry Goldwater's aides. Where will Bad Bill II strike next?

Via Ace of Spades.

UPDATE:  J. Edgar Moyers is an even better name for him. Love to see the Fairness Doctrine applied to him.


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February 20, 2009

Dr. King's wiretapper

Used to be (and probably still is) that any appearance at the LBJ Library by PBS poohbah Bill Moyers drew an SRO crowd. Mainly aging, LBJ liberals yearning for the Great Society. They apparently never knew this side of the old Baptist hypocrite:

"His part in Lyndon Johnson and J. Edgar Hoover's bugging of Martin Luther King's private life, the leaks to the press and diplomatic corps, the surveillance of civil rights groups at the 1964 Democratic Convention..."

That's from CBS newsman Morley Safer's memoir Flashbacks. Liberal fascists do make strange bedfellows. 


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February 17, 2009

Big Corn's takeover

The usual liberal congresspeople are always whining about Big Oil. One dingbat even suggested nationalizing the oil industry if they didn't bring their gas prices down immediately. Funny how few complain about Big Corn. Nowadays you can't buy gas without their additive, even if it cuts into your mpg.


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February 10, 2009

Tornado Alley active

Rain is good. We're supposed to be getting more of it this afternoon and into tonight. But there's also a watch out for tornadoes that could be popping out of the severe thunderstorms. Not good. Fortunately it's mostly northeast of us.

Via the Seablogger.

UPDATE:  The thunderstorms swept through about 10 p.m., leaving behind about a half an inch of rain and some pea-size hail. Fortunately the storms, with wind gusts to sixty mph, were moving pretty fast so were gone in about fifteen minutes. Looks like Oklahoma got the tornadoes.


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February 08, 2009

Rain, at last

Wind's really picking up at the rancho, gusting to twenty-five thirty-five out of the southeast whence normally cometh our rain-making Gulf moisture. Indeed, the forecast is for thunderstorms overnight. LCRA meteorologist Bob Rose thinks we may get some real rain over the next three days, possibly the most we've had since mid-November.

In fact, Rose, noticing that the southern Jet Stream is becoming more active (and thus capable of guiding Pacific storm fronts our way), is thinking something I was wondering about the other day: that the 2008 drought might just finally get busted later this month into March. If so, it would be by a flood, of course. Floods are the way droughts break hereabouts. But we'll take it.

UPDATE:  By 9 a.m. Monday, according to LCRA's hydrologic system of rain gauges, one-half to three-quarters of an inch of rain seems to be the norm over the area since midnight. Nice to see water ponding in the gutters again.


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February 04, 2009

Lake Travis plunge

Having sold the family sloop, we no longer pay much attention to the ups and downs of the reservoir called Lake Travis. It has been quite low in previous droughts, but seems to be trying to set a new record in the ongoing one. It is now at six hundred and fifty-five feet below above mean sea level, which is roughly twenty-six feet below normal. Worse, it is forecast to continue its plunge to around six hundred and twenty feet. 

Nevertheless, in the interest of soothing hysterics who worry about the droughts of global warming (though it is the potential rising of sea water rather than the falling of lake surfaces that has them upset), this has happened before, and quickly (say, within thirty days) has come back to this. So, in other words, unless you own a lakeside home (which is now a gully-side home) there's almost certainly nothing to worry about. What goes down has, historically, come right back up.


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Topaz hunting

Topaz is the state gemstone of Texas. And hunting for topaz, on a Mason County ranch famous for it, is to be the star attraction of the late February campout of Mr. B.'s cub scout pack. He always sleeps well on these deals. Mrs. Charm and I do not, but the topaz hunt should help enliven our spirits. Especially if we find some. There will be, also, the charms of Mason County, to savor. All in all, we're looking forward to it.


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February 01, 2009

Renee's crush

Like a lot of people, I was smitten by Texan Renee Zellweger the first time I saw her. (And by one of the Zellweger look-alike moms I subsequently saw at one of Mr. B.'s first little league games.) But I knew the Hollyweird Renee was a few tortillas shy of an enchillada even before she married (and quickly divorced) that Hat Act Chesney--I wonder, did he take that stupid-looking black straw hat off in bed? Probably not.

So I was prepared for Renee's latest big snoozer: her crush on that worm of a one-term ex-president Jimmy Carter. But, for me, the real news comes from Ace of Spades: the poor creature has turned over her bank account to Scientology. She's another believer in Xenu's imprisonment of sinful souls in volcanoes--one of the least toxic idiocies of the fraud. Don't tell Jimmy, Renee. Southern Baptists (as you should know, having grown up in their midst) ain't fond of that malarky. But me? Well, I've already got two former Infantry OCS buds who believe in UFOs, though only one of them asserts that the UFOs are actually running everything. So good luck, Renee. You're going to need it.


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January 31, 2009

Tax cheatin' like the Dems do

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Alas, Rancho Roly Poly is just a few miles south of U.S. Rep. John Carter's 31st District. It would be so cool to be represented by the author of the Rangel Rule, which won't pass but if it did, we'd all get to cheat on our taxes like New York Dem Charlie Rangel (not to mention Barry's appointees Tom Daschle and Tim Geithner). Nice try, John. Keep up the meaningful work.

Via Doug Ross @ Journal.

UPDATE:  Then Carter tried the direct approach, asking the House to vote on forcing Rangel to step down from his, wait for it, tax-writing committee. Got that? He writes taxes for us. He just doesn't pay them.


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January 27, 2009

The drought continues

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Here in Central Texas, anyhow. Severe to moderate. Yesterday's drizzle, meanwhile, preceded a deep cold front. We're back in the icebox.


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Bush family eschews theft

Bad Bill and the Hildusa (name coined by Iowahawk in his Obamacles epic) walked off with anything that wasn't nailed down. It's a wonder they didn't steal the Lincoln bedroom after renting it out for eight years. By contrast, W. and Laura only took home what belonged to them. How quaint.


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January 26, 2009

Rain at last

Just a light drizzle. Not enough to even nudge the drought. But it should take some of the ash juniper pollen out of the air--which will help diminish my "cedar fever" allergy.


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January 25, 2009

Mason County, Texas

Scott at The Fat Guy, apparently already suffering from the noise and traffic of San Antonio, although he just recently moved there from Dallas, has taken up a casual comment I made about considering moving to Mason County. He likes winding, dark, two-lane roads, fly-fishing, hunting, and plenty of open spaces and few neighbors. The links he found and the comments he's drawn so far make me wish I could move tomorrow. That's the great thing about these Internets. You can go back to the country and still make a living, if you need to. But, until Mr. B. finishes school (about nine more years) and Mrs. Charm retires, it will probably not be possible for me.


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January 22, 2009

Roe V. Wade

Sounds like someone's name. In a way, it is. Two people. Thirty-six years ago today, the US Supremes handed down their decision in this Texas case--establishing a right to abortion under the Fourteenth Amendment. Almost immediately it became the political cause celebre that has preoccupied the country ever since.

Reinforcing the right by forcing the rest of us to pay to promote them abroad was one of the first things Barry did was expected to do. It's long been said that black women get the most abortions. I've always supported it, with restrictions such as banning them in the third trimester unless the life of the mother was clearly threatened. But for some who still fight "the culture of death" that's never been enough.


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January 16, 2009

W's legacy

I voted for GWB in 2004 because I knew the liar and traitor John Kerry would be much worse. But GWB disappointed me in every way except on Iraq. He didn't have to let the Dems and media browbeat him so much without fighting back. But he did. Worst of all was the way he let Iran walk. He's left Barry to deal with their nukes and Barry doesn't have the cojones, let alone the political backing.

So in that sense GWB was a lousy president and history (insofar as anyone is left to write it after the nukes start going off) will say so.

With that in mind, we're going to damn the recession and fly ahead to D.C. on Mr. B.'s spring break in March. We'll tour the Capitol, the White House, the museums, the zoo, the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials, and visit his grandfather's grave in Arlington. Because, among other reasons, it seems to me to be perfectly possible that none of that will be around much longer. When the terrorists start setting off their Iranian nukes, D.C. very likely will be the first target.

UPDATE:  Nevertheless, I agree with Thomas Sowell. Bush was and is an honorable man.


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January 11, 2009

Queen Bess

The first American to earn an international pilot's license (in 1921), Bessie Coleman was a cool Texan from Waxahachie who bought her first biplane at Love Field in Dallas: an old JN-4 ("Jenny") with an OX-5 engine. With it she became a sensational barnstormer and occasional parachutist. But in 1926 she fell to her death from its open cockpit when the plane went out of control. Nowadays she's memorialized all over the place, including the Texas Aviation Hall of Fame--and in at least one book.

Inspired by Miriam's Ideas.


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January 06, 2009

Good sports analysis

The daily's good sportswriters, Kirk Bohls, Cedric Golden, Suzanne Halliburton and Alan Trubow are the icing on the cake after a satisfying Texas win. Even when the Longhorns lose, KB, CG, SH, and AT are there to explain why. Around the rancho, they complement the good game announcing/commentary of KVET-FM ("The Genuine Austin Original") and their Longhorn Radio Network. Thanks, guys, we wouldn't enjoy it half as much without you.


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January 04, 2009

Damn cedar fever

It's back, the annual winter malady whose culprit pollen isn't really cedar and doesn't really cause a fever. It's complicated. It's about junipers called mountain cedar, and when the stuff gets up your nose you just feel feverish. Mostly my eyes and the roof of my mouth itch, and of course my nose runs. Runs where? Not far enough. It's a Central Texas curse that simply must be endured until we get enough rain to clear the pollen out of the air. And in our continuing drought that will be a problem. Have to use the Neti pot. Bleh.


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December 31, 2008

Happy New Year, y'all

Still scouting around for appropriate links for likely end of the year sentiments.

I hope the IDF can end the Gaza deal with minimal casualties of its own. I'm sure our spineless leaders--who nevertheless provide IAF bombs--will force them to quit soon, as they always do.

Mr. Boy claims he wants to stay up until midnight, but he probably won't make it. He had a sleepover last night at a pal's place out in the western hills, events which usually mean little actual sleep. Fortunately he hasn't heard about this yet, so we're safe for another year, anyhow.

I'm hustling to finish a Civil War historical novel in time for Amazon's Feb. 2 fiction contest. That will be it for me and make-believe. My next literary attempt will be some non-fiction Texana.

Mrs. Charm and I will spend a quiet evening and then enjoy her day off tomorrow, although forecast is for chilly. At the least we'll get going on airline reservations for a planned D.C. trip in March.

UPDATE: My novel made the first cut to the top twenty percent. Then it went down in flames on the second cut to five percent. Oh, well. Bragging rights, at least, in the impending hunt for an agent.


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December 24, 2008

The sun, the sun...

Finally, I awaken to sunshine and a moderate warm morning. Temps are climbing into the seventies. Now that's the real Central Texas Christmas I remember. Others may crave cold. But not me.


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December 22, 2008

Cotton Bowl-bound

The first time I saw Jeven Snead in person was when Mr. Boy's cub scout troop was invited to a Longhorns football practice back in 2006. Snead looked taller than Colt McCoy, to whom JS seemed doomed to play backup forever, and I got the feeling that, in line with the rumors of the time, he wouldn't be satisfied with that for long. So I was not surprised when he jumped ship for Ole Miss. Nor, given his high school performance in Stephenville, that he's done well there.


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December 19, 2008

Aggie Band seniors

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More of the 9/11 generation, headed for commissions next June and ultimate deployment.


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December 15, 2008

Iraq safer than Mexico

It's official, size ten flying shoes to the contrary notwithstanding:

"The police are generally helpless, hundreds of thousands of middle-class Mexicans have fled the border region, often to the United States (if they had dual-citizenship, which many do). Those without money must hunker down and wait for someone to win this war."

We could put the gangsters out of business and stop it all, if Barry had the nerve to end the failed drug war.


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December 09, 2008

CCC parks

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Speaking of old Texas state parks built by the CCC, one of our favorites is Palo Duro Canyon, southeast of Amarillo. It's well-hidden on the flat Llano Estacado in the Panhandle until you drive right up on it. Also known as the Grand Canyon of Texas. The lighthouse, above, stands sentinel. 


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"The infrastructure flim-flam"

I'm not so sure that Barry's idea to throw money at the nation's sagging infrastructure amounts to no more than one guy digging a hole and another guy filling it in, as some conservatives are suggesting. I see no reason to be that cynical yet.

I agree that it probably won't do much for recovery from the recession. But there undoubtedly is work to be done--see Minnesota's bridge disaster of 2007. Some of what the old CCC did survives today in such as state park facilities in Texas. There are going to be lots of ways to ridicule Barry's presidency, but I don't think this is going to be one of them.

Via Instapundit.

UPDATE:  Well, it turns out I'm a bit naive. Seems to be more about parks and sports centers than pot-holed roads and falling-apart bridges. It really wouldn't be like pols to fix the obvious stuff since at best the only thing they could point to would be a little sign with their name on it. Feh! 


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December 06, 2008

Centex drought continues

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November ended very dry, putting Austin in the exceptional drought category, i.e. the worst possible. We're surrounded by an extreme drought area (the red on the map) with no end in sight. Our driest year since 1956. Odd combination: no rain and an early winter of chilly days andfrigid nights. Yech.


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November 28, 2008

Austin's intense drought

Not good, says Lower Colorado River Authority meteorologist Bob Rose, and not likely to get better soon:

"Year to date rainfall at Austin-Camp Mabry through Tuesday total[ed] only 15.61 inches, over 15 inches below normal.  As of today, 2008 is the 4th driest year on record, dating back to 1856 and is the driest year since 1956!  This is a very intense drought, rivaling some of the terrible drought years of the 1950s. And long-range forecasts are not very encouraging for rain going into early 2009."

It is worth pointing out, for Global Warmists and other hysterics, that 1856, when reliable weather records began being kept in the central city, was only one hundred fifty-two years ago. A lot of droughts certainly occurred before then, and some of them undoubtedly were worse than this one. 


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Gulf of Mexico deep: strange squid

I've always thought of the gulf as fairly shallow when, in fact, it may be up to more than two miles  deep in the southwest off Mexico. This giant squid, apparently of a species family called Magnapinna, with elbow-like tentacles, was videotaped by a Shell Oil company robot vehicle near a drilling site at about a mile and half below the gulf's surface. Worth a look. A still photo here of the unknown species, taken off Hawaii, shows that they do get around.

Via Instapundit. 


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November 17, 2008

The Twin Sisters

For years I quite mistakenly thought the two squat little mortars that guarded either side of the main doors at the south side of the Texas Capitol were the famous Twin Sisters. The ones used to fire handfulls of musket balls, broken glass and busted horseshoes at the Mexican soldados in the Battle of San Jacinto in 1836. Whatever they were (and I think they were removed during the Capitol renovations in the 1990s), they weren't the "sisters." Texana author Mike Cox reminds me the real ones are still lost, buried somewhere in either Houston or Harrisburg in East Texas at the end of the Civil War. So replicas at the battlefield park are all there are for the present.


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Another chilly night

Sunday morning's low was only about forty at the rancho, but the airport recorded two degrees below freezing. After a blistering summer, I was looking forward to a mild fall. Instead... Was only thirty-one in the back forty by first light today. Brrrr. All part of what the LCRA's Bob Rose says looks like an early winter. The good part is his forecast of normal fall rain, though we haven't seen it yet.

ONE GOOD THING:  LCRA has updated their Hydromet Web site to make the maps easier to read.


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November 10, 2008

The drought continues

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Hope you can read the key. We are only in moderate drought, which is unusual considering this has been the sixth driest January thru October, at 14.95 total inches of rain at Camp Mabry, since 1856. 


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November 02, 2008

DSL problems

Posting will be minimal, if any, for a while. My DSL modem is on the fritz. AT&T has promised to come Monday and check the line, if not necessarily replace the modem. The thing's warranty is out, and it seems to be the major difficulty, so I hope they replace it.

If not, I may consider switching ISPs, though that would be a major hassle and AT&T has provided good service up to now. We think a thunderstorm a couple of weeks ago, which knocked out the landline service (which contains the DSL connection) may have been the culprit here. The techs said the line was the victim of a power surge. We were thinking about having the landline disconnected anyhow. We use the cell phones most of the time.

ADDENDUM: Yes, we were disappointed by last night's Texas loss to Texas Tech. But Tech, a longtime in-state rival, played a great game and deserves to be No. 1, even if the BCS computers don't agree. The Horns also beat themselves, with too many dropped passes (and one almost-interception), costly penalties, an OL that couldn't stop Tech's D, etc. Hope Texas stays in the top five. They'll be back.


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October 31, 2008

Ralph the swimming pig

Mr. B.'s third grade class goes on a field trip today to Aquarena Springs. So I told him to be sure to ask about Ralph the swimming pig. Ralph, alas, is no more. I'm glad I got to see him in action years ago. It says here the Aquarena Center is to be torn down to make room for some educational thingy or other. Heck, Ralph was plenty educational. Even historical. Or is that hysterical? It was corny, yes, but as roadside attractions went, it beat a smelly snake farm any day.


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October 24, 2008

Two dollar gas

Well, between two dollars and eighteen cents and two dollars and eighty-nine cents a gallon of regular in Austin. I don't see how this can do anything except turn the economy around, lowering food prices (food being delivered by truck) and stimulating travel and tourism.

MORE: It could be this is mainly the reaction of the thugocracy oil ticks to the threat of competition ("Drill, baby, drill.") Why else would Russia withdraw from Georgia, and might never invade Ukraine?


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October 23, 2008

Why, yes, Abilene was taken from Abilene

In case you ever wondered which came first, Abilene, Kansas, or Abilene, Texas, it was the former not the latter. Indeed, the Texas version began this very day in a little 1883 dispute over land east of Catclaw Creek.


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October 22, 2008

The polls are wrong

Best analysis I've seen so far, and there are more than a few out there. Be sure to vote, especially if you're voting for Mac and Sarah. The drumbeat "news" about Barry's juggernaut lead is highly suspect, as per usual in the Dems-media symbiosis. Including longtime Dem pollster Zogby International, to mention just one. Followed by this utterly contradtictory AP poll.

Could be the "news" audience is finally catching on. How else to explain this?

Closer to home, the rancho is in a precinct that, in recent years, has been solidly Democrat--unsurprising in Austin's blue anomaly in a very red state. Yet I have noticed this month quite a number of McCain-Palin lawn signs--a few of them already detached (accidentally?) from their supports. Something is up, and the national polls and the local "news" are not reflecting it.

Via Instapundit


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October 16, 2008

They patted their wallets

Fellow Texan Beldar's take on the last formal debate before the looong election is over:

"John McCain did fine at the third debate, but he benefited mostly because Barack Obama's ordinariness became more obvious to more people. More people escaped the mass hypnosis tonight. They sat up suddenly, took a deep breath, and as they watched Barack Obama, do you know what they did next?"

(Check the headline) Heh.


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October 13, 2008

She's friends with everyone

So a large majority of the three-hundred-sixty members of the Aledo High senior class voted for Kristin Pass, an eighteen-year-old with Down Syndrome for homecoming queen. Neat story worth a tear or two about Kristin and her classmates in the little North Texas town west of Fort Worth.

I'm not surprised, though. The Down's kids I've met were uniformly friendly and sweet. Some people think their retardation should be grounds for abortion--and they have sneered at Sarah Palin for not aborting her Down's son--but the real tragedy of these kids' lives is that they often die young.


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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. Weird, some would even say.

UPDATE:  Oops, it seems poor Scott had something else in mind all along. Wonder how mom would have felt about this?


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May 29, 2008

Polygamist kids could go home

This has gotta hurt the state of Texas. But maybe it'll teach 'em to be more careful next time. Or not.


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May 28, 2008

Interesting but dull

Indiana Jones does not represent real archeologists! No kidding. I have known a few of the real ones. They are interesting enough, at first. But how many times can you explain shards, as well as chert and other lithic technology. One of the chief complaints about them--that the stuff they find is forever sealed in warehouses beyond public view--is absolutely true. Although nowadays the more enterprising ones will put the pictures of it on the Web. And you can join an archeo society to gain admission.


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May 27, 2008

Another tell-all

Normally I don't even read the reviews of these kind of books. But I used to deal, now and then, with Mr. McClellan, back when he was the Austin shill for Gov. W. So I read the review and now I'm wondering what happened? Did he get in an argument with the boss, or is he just sucking up to the MSM's favored narratives, which might (how, exactly?) determine whether he gets another big PR job anytime soon? But wouldn't you think loyalty demonstrated would be a much better plan? Scott?

UPDATE:  Alas, Scott, it isn't working. OTH, at least one conservative loves you.


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Chance of rain

That would be nice, but, so far, the radar shows most of it well to our north. What a strange May, as even LCRA meterologist Bob Rose admits, with evidence:

"...according to Dr. John Nielson-Gammon, the Texas State Climatologist, for the Central Texas region as a whole, this May is on track to be the 7th driest on record, the 13th driest March through May period on record, and the 7th driest December through May period on record. So if you think the weather has been a little unusual lately, you're right."

So, come on rain. We need you.

UPDATE:  Well, there's hope in River City. The temperature at the rancho has dropped twenty degrees in the last twenty minutes. An hour or so later, we had a brief shower. Pleasant, anyhow.


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May 25, 2008

Flags

Mr. Boy will go with his Mom and grandmother this morning to put a little stick flag on his Navy grandfather's grave at the national cemetery near Dallas, in observance of Memorial Day. I think of his Air Force grandfather, my dad, who's buried in Arlington many miles away. Someday we'll take him there. Arlington probably put out their flags yesterday for all. There's this touching Trace Adkins song about that place.


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Remembering

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Austin, Texas. Southwestern architecture in a flag theme for the weekend, inspired by Instapundit.


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