Category Archives: Texana

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.