Category Archives: Texana

Dissin’ the Pecos

“In Texas, I had crossed over the Pecos River, which I had read of in many stories. You could have easily walked across the Pecos River without getting your feet wet.

Now, now, let’s be fair. Depends on the season and the location. The Pecos feeds a reservoir close to the Texas-New Mexico state line, where a hydroelectric plant pumps out the electrons daily. There’s even whitewater canoeing thereabouts, and usually enough water all the rest of the way to the Rio Grande without any walking necessary. It could be belly-deep on a horse in the late 1850s.

Late spring, early summer and mid-to-late fall are the best times for good flow.

Via Alexandria.

The Train To (and From) Crystal City

Reading a new book on the WWII internment (read concentration) camp in South Texas for thousands of Japanese, Germans and some Italians. What drew me to read it was not the fact of the camp’s existence (on vegetable-growing land southwest of San Antonio near the Mexican border) which I knew about, but that it was for whole families. And more, below.

They’d been arrested and uprooted from California, Ohio and elsewhere—including some kidnapped by the FBI from Peru and other South American countries—losing all of their property and possessions. Father, mother and their American-born children. For simply being from enemy countries.

Okay, except for the kidnappings, I’d heard most of that. But not this: to compound the injustice, the “Greatest Generation” designated some 4,500 of the Germans, including whole families, as “trade bait.” They were dispatched to Nazi Germany during the war in exchange for other Americans held prisoner there. One Ohio family’s then-teenage daughter tells their sad tale.

And who did they have to thank for all this? Why the great Democrat saint FDR, who engineered it all and stamped it secret. The guy Barry likes to compare himself to. When he isn’t channeling Abraham Lincoln.

More when I finish the book.

Via Instapundit.

UPDATE:  I was almost done when I wrote this and I’m finished now. It’s a good tale about federal perfidy with some stunning personal stories. The author found a Dutch Jewish family who were freed from Bergen Belsen apparently in conjunction with the dispatch of a German-American family from Crystal City to Naziland.  The Nazis were keeping “trade Jews” in their camps for just such an occasion.

See the comments for more. Arthur Jacobs who was a child at CC when he was shipped to the Nazis (and wrote a book about it) sent me jpeg’s of some docs from the Nazi archives gathered by Texas A&M Prof Arnold Krammer apparently showing the names of 15 German Jews kidnapped from Panama and Honduras by the FBI who were interned at a Seagoville camp near Dallas. Jacobs said Krammer found no evidence they or other German Jews were sent to the Nazis, but given the docs from the Nazi archives you have to wonder.

May the rains disperse the Texas curse

Forecast rain today and tomorrow will be more welcome than usual here at the Rancho. This winter’s round of cedar fever (which isn’t a fever and isn’t about cedar) has been a particularly bad one. Although they’re always bad enough.

The damn juniper (called mountain cedar) trees have been puffing out billows of pollen which only a rain can disperse. We’ve had several good rains but the damn pollen has always come back to give me another snoot-full.

If the Democrat/Obama economy wasn’t so rotten so many other places this annual curse would be cutting into our bumper-to-bumper traffic. Hasn’t noticeably so far, however.

A prayer is in order: May this rain finally do the trick.

Bluebonnets 2014

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This is what we’re waiting for, spring in Texas, due in a few weeks, while the northeast digs out of its latest blizzard. After all the rain we’ve had this winter this is what we should be able to expect. I think this was taken out near Inks Lake in the Hill Country a year ago. I’ve driven this road before when it was just like this. But I’m not sure. The Internet provides but it doesn’t always clarify.

Rule 5: Georgia Pellegrini

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This gal, who is from New York’s Hudson Valley but seems to now live in Austin, is a real hunter, as well as an author, a chef and a looker who might one day embody the old saying: Looks don’t last but cookin’ does. Check out her site here.

Snowden to return to SXSW

Well, via Skype, anyhow. The famous “human rights activist” and Russian dupe is scheduled to perform his latest routine on March 10. While Austin’s Commie libs swoon over their favorite resident of Putinistan.

“Now that Ed Snowden has been in Russia for more than eighteen months, having settled into a cosy domestic arrangement with his stripper dancer girlfriend, his long-term presence in Putinistan has become a bit of an embarrassment to Ed’s admirers who possess any sense of honesty and/or decency. His sponsor and protector is a KGB thug who does smash-and-grabs against other countries, and for normals this is a tad incongruous with Snowden’s saintly status…”

Ah, well, “honesty and decency” have always been highly fungible terms to Austin Lefties.

Via The XX Committee.

I Eat Vegetarians For Dinner

I don’t usually wear tee-shirts of any kind. They just seem too juvenile and low-rent. When I do, however, I try to eschew those shirts printed with provocative slogans. Who needs to start a fight, okay?

But this one I would really like to wear. And, unfortunately for me, it comes in a men’s version. So far I’m successfully resisting.

Via By Georgia.