the ironies of life, rural Texas, bicycling, theater, wildlife, Paluxy,
Sea of prickly pears
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It would appear that the only things growing well during the recent dry spell were cacti. Took this picture near Paluxy last week. I will be back to photograph the same location again when all are in bloom.
The smell of freshly ground ginger root while making BBQ sauce and the smell of rain on a hot dry summer day are my favorites. A brief rain while BBQing yesterday brought these two into close proximity. Also for the record, you can't open a beer with an electric can opener, even when when sober. If you haven't had drunken chicken, it is worth a try. The addition of crab boil to the beer makes it even better.
You teach me baseball and I’ll teach you relativity…No we must not, you will learn about relativity faster than I learn baseball. Albert Einstein I am writing today about one pitch in one baseball game from the 1920s. But, before retelling what I remember of the story, I am going to share my memories of the catcher in this game. As you have obviously observed, this game took place 20-30 years before I was born. The only record was the memory of the catcher who died 30 years ago and the pitcher who verified the story for me a few years ago. The pitcher, John Crowell and his wife Lois have passed on as well in recent years. A side note - Lois made a Green Grape Cobbler from wild mustang grapes that was even more legendary than this baseball play. They were two of the very strongest supporters and hardest workers for saving the Paluxy River. That the river still flows free is in large part the result of the determination and work of John and Lois. The catcher was my great uncle Bi...
"A dull pencil is greater than the sharpest memory" arthur unknown BC (before calculators) I remember when I was growing up, many of the farmers and ranchers carried these pocket pencils. They were the calculator of the day. And any flat surface would suffice for figuring the cost of a load of hay, how much you owed the hired hands, etc. Seemed like there were numbers every where; on the faded paint of truck fenders, door frames and many pages of pocket sized note pads.
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