Tag Archives: Texas

Mason County, Texas

Scott at The Fat Guy, apparently already suffering from the noise and traffic of San Antonio, although he just recently moved there from Dallas, has taken up a casual comment I made about considering moving to Mason County. He likes winding, dark, two-lane roads, fly-fishing, hunting, and plenty of open spaces and few neighbors. The links he found and the comments he’s drawn so far make me wish I could move tomorrow. That’s the great thing about these Internets. You can go back to the country and still make a living, if you need to. But, until Mr. B. finishes school (about nine more years) and Mrs. Charm retires, it will probably not be possible for me.

CCC parks

lighthouse_356x500.jpg

Speaking of old Texas state parks built by the CCC, one of our favorites is Palo Duro Canyon, southeast of Amarillo. It’s well-hidden on the flat Llano Estacado in the Panhandle until you drive right up on it. Also known as the Grand Canyon of Texas. The lighthouse, above, stands sentinel. 

Why, yes, Abilene was taken from Abilene

In case you ever wondered which came first, Abilene, Kansas, or Abilene, Texas, it was the former not the latter. Indeed, the Texas version began this very day in a little 1883 dispute over land east of Catclaw Creek.

She’s friends with everyone

So a large majority of the three-hundred-sixty members of the Aledo High senior class voted for Kristin Pass, an eighteen-year-old with Down Syndrome for homecoming queen. Neat story worth a tear or two about Kristin and her classmates in the little North Texas town west of Fort Worth.

I’m not surprised, though. The Down’s kids I’ve met were uniformly friendly and sweet. Some people think their retardation should be grounds for abortion–and they have sneered at Sarah Palin for not aborting her Down’s son–but the real tragedy of these kids’ lives is that they often die young.

Indianola 1886

Accuweather meteorologist Joe Bastardi (a Texas A&M grad) believes Ike could come ashore in Tejas early Saturday as a Category 4 (winds 131-155 mph; storm surge 13 to 18 feet above normal) and be reminiscent of the 1886 hurricane that finally wiped Indianola–once a major port–from the map, after an 1875 storm began its demise. Them’s scary words, especially if you own one of the many pastel beach houses and condos on, say, Mustang Island.

He’s also comparing Ike to Carla, a Category 5, which did extensive damage to the Texas coast, and inland as far as Dallas, in 1961. She spawned twenty-six tornadoes which did even more damage. Think I prefer the Indianola example, if I have to choose. More worrisome for us is what Ike’s core might do, as it is expected to be sucked north by a trough of low pressure dropping south out of the Rockies, either right before landfall, in which case it might go to Galveston, or after, which could bring what’s left of it up to Austin.

Fortunately, Bob Rose is only calling for Ike to be a Category 3 (bad enough with 111 to 130 mph winds and storm surge of 9 to 12 feet above normal)–still big, powerful and very destructive, with a possible 4 to 6 inches of rain for us by Sunday morning. But there’s always Gustav to consider. He was going to the final slayer of New Orleans until he turned into a pussycat in the last few hours before he struck. Atmospheric conditions don’t look to be the same for Ike, but we’ve still got three days to keep our fingers crossed that they will change. Otherwise, it’s time to give thanks that we don’t live on the coast and get the leaves out of the gutters!

MORE:  The state’s already ordering mandatory evactuation for people all along the coast. Yipes.

Medellin execution: Ho-hum

The Mexican government, which, among other things, promotes illegal immigration to the U.S., is far more exercised about the Texas execution of convicted rapist and murderer Jose Medellin than your average Mexicano. Gee, I wonder why?

Via Baldilocks

Polygamist kids could go home

This has gotta hurt the state of Texas. But maybe it’ll teach ’em to be more careful next time. Or not.