Category Archives: Texana

Why roof gutters are useless in Texas

The thunderstorm we’d been awaiting since Monday finally crashed in yesterday afternoon just as I was getting ready to leave to go pick up Mr. B. from school. A real frog strangler. All I had was Mom’s puny little umbrella, so I got soaked. But before I left I was standing in the living room watching the rain cascade off the roof. It was like being behind a waterfall. The rain was overwhelming the roof gutters which reminded me why most people in Central Texas, at least, never put gutters on their houses until fairly recently. Nowadays the Yellow Pages is full of gutter seller ads, and practically everybody seems to have them. But they really are pretty useless. Oh, it sometimes rains lightly around here and the gutters effectively channel the water so it doesn’t splash on your head as you go in and out the door. But, more often, when we get a rain it’s a big one, and the gutters simply can’t handle all that water all at once.

Cameras cut off

A cousin of mine in Dallas who has lobbied for this red-light monitoring system for Dallas and the rest of the state is going to be upset at this news. He was thinking of the safety, not figuring on the expense.

A Texan’s valor award

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Army SPC Monica Lin Brown, a medic from Lake Jackson (south of Houston) who joined with her brother in 2006, becomes only the second woman since WW2 to earn the Silver Star for combat valor.

Bluebonnets!

 

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Prettiest shot I could find on the Web, since I have neglected to take my own this year. Not sure I could match this, anyway, as we’re expecting merely an average season due to a lack of winter rain. But I’ll give it a try later in the week. They usually begin in late February and peak in late March.

UPDATE: June 18, ’08…Welcome Ace of Spades HQ readers. Enjoy your visit and stay awhile!

The aluminum cattlecar

The bloom is off Southwest Airlines for me. Oh, some of the old passenger camaraderie, especially when flying within Texas, is still more or less in evidence. But, in becoming a big coast-to-coast business, Southwest has become just another screwup-your-luggage, make-you-wait, not-on-time behemoth that plows through storms instead of flying around them. So our trip to Mississippi on Monday was nightmarish. The hop to Houston-Hobby through a vicious thunderstorm was frightening, as we were tossed around the sky. Then we sat on the ground for two unplanned hours awaiting our connection, which was late. When we finally arrived, someone had left our bags on the tarmac in the rain because the top layer of clothing inside was wet. Coming back yesterday was quicker, and not wet since it wasn’t raining. But, as every seat was filled, and takeoff was delayed while the latecomers milled in the aisle trying to decide where to sit, the ambience of the crowded cattlecar took the shine off it.

Lance “Wildcat” Wade

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Continuing my informal look at Texas fighter aces that began with Mustang pilot Richard Candelaria. Wing Commander Wade is the leading American ace in any foreign air force, in his case, the Royal Air Force of World War II. He was born in 1915 in the East Texas hills around Broadus, on the Texas-Lousiana state line, and was a muleskinner as a youth at Reklaw, near Tyler. He didn’t have enough education for the U.S. Army, so he got a private license and eighty hours of experience and went to Canada to join the RAF. He flew Hurricanes and Spitfires and is credited with twenty-three confirmed solo kills of Axis aircraft. He died in a flying accident in 1944.

Richard Candelaria: Dogfight

A flurry of visits this morning of fourteen folks from all over the country suddenly doing searches on Texas World War II fighter ace Richard Candelaria got me wondering if he was in the news or something. Couldn’t find anything about that, but did find some cool YouTube clips from the History Channel of interviews with him and animation to explain a couple of his dogfights with German fighters. Here and here.