
Snoopy the Goon’s from Arizona.

Snoopy the Goon’s from Arizona.
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Posted in Texana
Tagged Arizona, Snoopy the Goon, Tombstone, Western Humor

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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Posted in Texana
Tagged Forrest Kirkland, Hueco Tanks rock art, Lower Pecos, TARL, Texas Archaeological Research Laboratory, Texas Beyond History, Texas Memorial Museum, Texas rock art
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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Posted in Genealogy, Library, South of the Border, Texana
Tagged Before Columbus: The Americas of 1491, Charles C. Mann, landscaping a world, Native Americans, small pox
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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Posted in Texana
Tagged Austin, Bouldin Castle, vacation rentals
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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Posted in Mr. Boy, Rancho Roly Poly, Texana
Tagged Amazon, Christmas gofts, Collin Street Bakery, Corsicana fruit cake, Harry & David, Kodak Easy-Share, X-treme Geek
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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Posted in Mrs. Charm, Texana
Tagged Houston snow, Houston snow boots
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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Posted in Rancho Roly Poly, Texana, Weather/Climate