Tag Archives: Texas

Monday, May 4, 2015 – Check for Understanding

Monday, May 4, 2015 – Check for Understanding

Saint Madeline Hunter here with a check for understanding for State Representative Molly White.

Texas State Representative, Molly White, R- Belton, proposed a bill to “hold doctors and counselors criminally liable if they were found to have coerced a woman into ending a pregnancy. “ Ms. White said she was coerced by her family to have an abortion some 30 years ago.

Questions – 1. Why are you not holding the family liable? 2. Wouldn’t a curriculum topic in a school sex education class about the use of condoms and then the investment in condoms have possibility prevented the need for coercion in the first place? Just asking.

Wednesday, April 29, 2015 – Two MUST See Museums in Texas

Wednesday, April 29, 2015 – Two MUST See Museums in Texas

Two must see museums that exist are in the vast plains of the Texas Panhandle.  One is the Panhandle Plains Historical Museum in Canyon, Texas.  panhandleplains.org

PPHM

  • Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-20 063 (800x600)

It is billed as the Smithsonian of Texas. I agree. Here is a very short walk among a few of the countless exhibits.

First there was the land and the ancients that lived there millions of years ago.

Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-20 100 (800x600)Dinasaur (800x600)

But there were people who lived there first.

Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-20 131 (800x600)Tale a close look at this beautiful sculpture. You can see my reflection taking the photo graph creating a sort of mask.  I think it is nice that I am reflected in this Native American artwork.

But then other people wanted the land and they came to settle driving off the other people who were there first.  We all know this sad story.

The XIT Wagon (800x600)

The Windmill (800x587)But they harnessed the wind to make the area livable. Change livable to habitable. I do not think I want to live there.

Cars (800x600)

And then people more came.

Oil (800x589)Because those dinosaur relatives in the dinosaur exhibit left fossil fuels – OIL, that is. Black gold. Texas tea.

Some stayed on their way to California and others moved on down Route 66. Who remembers Burma Shave signs?  My mother referred to places to stay along the road as tourist courts.  I doubt she would have stayed in one with a grasshopper  as the symbol.

Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-20 087 (600x800)Burma Shave (600x800)Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-20 086 (800x600)

The Panhandle-Plains Museum is dedicated to The Pioneers – extraordinary brave people who took risks to live their dreams. Two of three top ten tourist sites in Texas are in Canyon.  I hiked the Palo Duro Canyon walking where ancient creatures, civilizations and cultures walked And I visited The Panhandle-Plains Museum that tells their story.

Then second must see museum is The Frontier Texas in Adeline.  www.frontiertexas.com

This is small, but dynamic, very interactive museum and should be on a Texan’s bucket list.

I did not take many photographs at this museum.  Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-22 017 (800x600)

It tells a more detailed, intense story of how the how the people came and lived and died. The holograms telling the story are so life-like you want to reach out and touch them.  The story is told from all who settled, were settled and then resettled again in the country known as the plains of Texas.  There were Native Americans, cowboys, settlers, pioneers, ranchers, business people and all kinds of people. There were men and women of all different colors and genders.

Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-22 013 (800x600)Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-22 014 (598x800)

The story of the destruction and progress of cultures is not pretty, but it marks a point in history and tells all of us who are native Texas who we are and makes of us both proud and ashamed of our country.

OK – it is a state, but it is a state of mind and the state is mine.

Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-22 015 (800x599) Seems as though a tooth brush salesman would have made a fortune in the frontier.

God Bless Texas!

Tuesday, April 28, 2015 – Amarillo by Morning…

Tuesday, April 28, 2015 – Amarillo by Morning…

“Amarillo by morning, up from San Antone; everything that I got, is just what I got on…”

That Texas classic is sung by whom? If you do not know this one, you should be ashamed to call yourself a Texan. OK – how about this one?  “And you do the hokey pokey and you turn yourself around; that’s what it’s all about.”

Amarillo is about meat. And when in Amarillo, one should visit the famous steak house on Route 66 called The World Famous Big Texas Steak House.

Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-21 025 (800x600) Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-21 028 (800x594)Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-21 026 (600x800)

Of course the steak house is hokey, but hey it’s Texas.  Palo Duro Canyon Trip 4.15 2015-04-21 027 (800x600)

No, I did not even try to eat the giant steak that weighs 72 oz.   I doubt I eat that much red meat in one week, let alone at one sitting.  The previous record for consuming the 72 oz. hunk of meat, which resembles a roast, was held by a competitive eater named Molly Schuyler, who ate TWO of the hunks of beef.  Do the math – 144 ounces in twenty minutes.

http://kfor.com/2014/05/27/woman-breaks-big-texan-72-oz-steak-record-eats-two-steaks-in-under-20-minutes/

But then the Sunday, April 19, 2015, before we ate there on Tuesday, April 21, Molly broke her own record and ate THREE (3) of the 72 oz. steaks – or 216 ounces in 20 minutes.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2015/04/20/molly-schuyler-competitive-eating-big-texan-steak/26061353/

But I just had an ordinary steak and took hokey pictures.

History of the 72 ounce steak – http://bigtexan.com/72-oz-steak/

Oh yes, “Amarillo by morning…, – George Strait. You knew that didn’t you?

Monday, April 27, 2015 – I’ve Been to the Cadillac Ranch

Monday, April 27, 2015 – I’ve Been to the Cadillac Ranch

I came. I saw. I graffited – also known a spray painted. Granted, spray painting graffiti on the downturned Cadillac shells at Cadillac Ranch in Amarillo was on the bucket list, but not a high priority, but hey, when in Amarillo…

Cads in the ground(800x600)A line of CaddiesGraffitti ArtistDRDDRD2

 

Cadillac Ranch is a public art installation and sculpture in Amarillo, Texas, U.S. It was created in 1974 by Chip Lord, Hudson Marquez and Doug Michels, who were a part of the art group Ant Farm. It consists of what were (when originally installed during 1974) either older running used or junk Cadillac automobiles, representing a number of evolutions of the car line (most notably the birth and death of the defining feature of mid twentieth century Cadillacs; the tailfins) from 1949 to 1963, half-buried nose-first in the ground, at an angle corresponding to that of the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt.

Cadillac Ranch is currently located at

35°11′14″N 101°59′13.4″W / 35.18722°N 101.987056°W / 35.18722; -101.987056. It was originally located at 35°11′6.6″N 101°56′58.6″W / 35.185167°N 101.949611°W / 35.185167; -101.949611 in a wheat field, but in 1997 the installation was quietly moved by a local contractor to a location two miles (three kilometers) to the west, to a cow pasture along Interstate 40, in order to place it farther from the limits of the growing city. Both sites belonged to the local millionaire Stanley Marsh 3, the patron of the project.[6] Marsh was well known in the city for his longtime patronage of artistic endeavors including the “Cadillac Ranch”, Floating Mesa, “Amarillo Ramp” a work of well-known land artist Robert Smithson, and a series of fake traffic signs throughout the city known collectively as the “Dynamite Museum”.  As of 2013, Stanley Marsh 3 did not own the Cadillac Ranch; ownership appears to have been transferred to a family trust some time before his June 2014 death.

Cadillac Ranch is visible from the highway, and though located on private land, visiting it (by driving along a frontage road and entering the pasture by walking through an unlocked gate) is tacitly encouraged. In addition, writing graffiti on or otherwise spray-painting the vehicles is now encouraged, and the vehicles, which have long since lost their original colors, are wildly decorated. The cars are periodically repainted various colors (once white for the filming of a television commercial, another time pink in honor of Stanley’s wife Wendy’s birthday, and yet another time all 10 cars were painted flat black to mark the passing of Ant Farm artist Doug Michels, or simply to provide a fresh canvas for future visitors. In 2012 they were painted rainbow colors to commemorate gay pride day. The cars were briefly “restored” to their original colors by the motel chain Hampton Inn in a public relations-sponsored series of Route 66 landmark restoration projects. The new paint jobs and even the plaque commemorating the project lasted less than 24hours without fresh graffiti.

Tuesday, January 20, 2015 – And So It Begins

Tuesday, January 20, 2015 – And So It Begins

And so it begins.

To the State Legislature:

What have you done for the citizens of Texas so far?

  1. Installed panic buttons in offices because of the crazy citizens of Texas. This is both sad and funny.
  2. Ensured the boys and girls of Texas can have cupcakes in their classrooms. I had no idea the cupcake lobby was that powerful?

What is on the To Do list for today?

Inaugurate a new governor. 

Comment: Listen to speeches and promises of a new Texas.

Go to a parade.    

Comment: Dear TEA Commissioner – how does one code a school absence for ADA when the Drill Team and the Drum Line are in the parade?

Go the lunch on the capitol grounds.

Comment: The caterer for the event is Eddie Deen. Two hundred staff members will serve up “four tons of brisket, 17,000 yeast rolls and a mile of sausages.”  I hope the staff members who are serving the food are legal.

Attend the Inaugural Ball.  

Comment: With sincere respect to the new governor.  I really hope he gets on the dance floor and spins, rolls and maybe even pops a wheelie.  This would make the ADA people happy. Note: this ADA – Americans with Disabilities Act – is not to be confused with the ADA above, which stands for Average Daily Attendance. Now you see why government is so confusing.

Note to non-cat lovers.  The Inaugural Ball is not the same as the Jellical Ball.  The Jellical Ball is described in Possum’s Book of Practical Cats by T. S. Eliot. The Jellical Ball is where the old, tired cat is transported up as its nine-lives are over and a new cat takes its place.  Oh crap, it is like the Jellical Ball.