Category Archives: Texana

The Waterloo Trio

waterlootrioatmedici

The Waterloo Trio is my favorite semi-classical (well, Bjork to Beethoven) Austin ensemble, partly because the fiddler James Anderson (on the left) is my fiddle teacher. But they’re also just fun to listen to.

Other members are Jonathan Geer, at the piano, and Tony Rogers on cello. Their first CD (mostly composed by Jonathan) is worth buying (or at least playing the excerpts at the link to decide which one to buy) and they have a second one in the works.

All three of them also are part of James’s jazz ensemble the Austin Piazolla Quintet. And they are also  freelance musicians, Jonathan composing themes for computer games and Tony and James acting as sidemen for various artists. If you like jazz, for instance listen to James’s beautiful violin lead on singer Suzi Stern’s “Tango for Tina.”

Winters are turning colder

We’ve had four severe winters in the past decade in North America and this one is shaping up as a repeat performance. Not that you’d know that from paying attention to the Non-Fox news media or reading the dictator’s club’s annual crock on global warming.

But the good Joe D’Aleo at Weather Bell Analytics has a interesting take on those winters that began in 2002/03: “Most of the media seem to be obsessed with extremes of heat, completely ignoring cold weather extremes, despite these apparently being on the rise and despite the IPCC’s science failing to offer an explanation for them. In fact, the IPCC extreme weather events table projects ‘fewer cold days and frost in future’.”

I remember 2002/03 because we lived in a drafty old shiplap house on a ridgeline in Travis Heights where the windows rattled when the wind blew. And it blew hard that winter. This year, our tenth in the stone-and-siding rancho in a small valley in Northwest Hills, is starting out to be just as frigid and windy. Unusually cold for this time of year, but it was last year and the year before also.

Purely anecdotally, our Central Tejas winters do seem to be getting colder. Used to be November and December were mild with only the occasional cold front passage of a few days. January was our only killer cold month and February was the warmup. I’m getting nostalgic just writing that.

Let’s all hope the future is nothing like Larry Niven’s Fallen Angels. We don’t need a glacier whose leading edge is 400-feet high and moving, well, glacially, through what was once called Missouri.

Gusty wind could promote ice

Weather Bell Analytic meteorologist Joe Bastardi says our wind of 16 gusting to 22 mph could make us more prone to an ice storm. If it continues as the temp drops to 24 tonight.

“Deep in the Heart of Texas, the hideous specter of the ice storm is rearing its ugly head. Since the wind is blowing while precip is falling, the heating of the air that occurs through the freezing process of water is negated by evaporation due to wind…The heart of Texas will be cold and unforgiving in this pattern the next 3-5 days.”

Hasn’t happened yet. But if it does, we may be off the air, since ice buildup tends to bring down power lines, or over-weight and bring down adjacent trees which fall on the lines.

When Leftist radicals rule

“While you were sleeping the past generation, anti-Israel radicals took over much of academia. They now run groups like the Association for Asian American Studies, which was the first academic group in the U.S. to approve a boycott of Israeli academic institutions.

“Now the American Studies Association National Council, the leadership of the organization, has endorsed the boycott and is putting the vote to the membership before putting the boycott into effect.”

Two of those “leaders” apparently are right here in Austin at the University of Texas : Ann Cvetkovich who teaches (what else) gender studies and, not incidentally, coedits GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies.

The other one is Jeremy Dean, a doctoral candidate in English who seems to specialize in race and ethnicity, part of the new radicalization of what used to be called, quaintly, literature.

Will either of them be endorsing future boycotts of Arab and Persian universities that discriminate against women, homosexuals, Jews and Christians? Silly question.

In the meantime you can support the Israeli economy and, thereby, Israel’s many universities (for such a small, beleaguered country) by buying these yummy Xmas gifts as presents. I did.

Or, to be more directly involved, plant some fruit trees in Israel. Or become a Guardian of Jerusalem. There are endless ways to fight back.

Via Legal Insurrection

UPDATE:  Some American universities, such as Columbia and Tufts, have declared themselves Israeli universities and invited the boycotters to boycott them, too. The University of Texas is not yet among them, however.

Common Sense

I like to read Andy at My Old RV, not only to find out what’s going on in the oil patch, but just to hear some good old fashioned common sense. Here he is on the Affordable (choke) Care Act:

“Miss K’s project of the week has been watching the disintegration of an American President.  She has taken it on herself to read the Affordable Care Act first hand just to see what we got goin’ on here for real since you can’t trust that Dianne Sawyer.  Brian Williams comes a tad closer to separating the fly shit from the pepper but he still doesn’t tell us all he knows. Miss K says there is plenty more stuff in that ACA that is gonna set everybody on their head and nobody is even talking about…..yet. I say flat out bold lying is fraud and that is an impeachable act.”

Yep. At least in a reality-based world that doesn’t give extra points for skin color and hair texture.

Blue Norther

Today, we are promised, will be in the low 80s. Likewise tomorrow. But not Thursday. Daytime Thursday is to drop 20 degrees until nightfall brings an arctic blast that lasts the weekend into next week, plunging daytime temps into the 30s with freezing rain. Or sleet if you want to get technical.

Weather extremes are what Texas is all about, but 50 degrees difference in a few days is pushing it. Must be global warming, as Wormtongue’s hencethings have insisted since at least 2009. They must raise our taxes so they can solve the problem. How? Well, they’ll start off by taking the money and partying ’til they drop.

Happy Days Are Here Again, as the Democrats like to sing.

More likely it could be one of our Blue Northers of song and story. Well known (and feared) on the Texas plains—west and northwest of us here at the rancho—for many years. Their warnings once could be only a few hours at best, sometimes mere minutes. Bringing death to unsheltered livestock and, sometimes, people.

I wonder if we’ll get a rare snow? Freezing rain will be enough to start.

Robo-Longhorn

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In case you’re wondering, the blog’s new header pix is cropped from this photo of mine of a unique piece of sculpture on private property a few miles outside Johnson City on the way west to Fredericksburg.

It’s a ginormous thing made of various metal thingies, some of them chromed. I wouldn’t be surprised to learn it has been the cause of a few accidents. Drivers passing it for the first time must be so distracted by it that they could cross the center line into oncoming traffic or else wind up in the bar ditch on the shoulder.

UPDATE:  It may have been moved to South Austin, or else duplicated by some ambitious person there, according to this.