Revisting past pastures

Today I am wrapping up 12 days off from work although I only burned about 40 hours of vacation. That would be a week’s worth of vacation to most folks but because of my part-time status that is about one-third of two work weeks. Got it? I will still have about 17 days leave left after accounting for the current 40 hours. One thing I do not lack is time off — on the books. Taking that time off is a hoarse of a different cough.

Whenever I return to the town where I went to college I always refer to it as “returning to the scene of the crime.” It’s not that I committed a crime there — I plead the Fifth and a six-pack — it is just my quaint way of saying I have more memories than can fit in this aging mind of mine. Nacogdoches, Texas, is more than just the town where I attended and received my bachelor’s degree at the local Stephen F. Austin State University. After all, I lived there three separate times. The third time’s a charm says the old adage. I would think so but it is hard not feel a wistfulness for this town and the people I lived among.

These were not my neighbors but perhaps their offspring's offspring's offspring or something similar

The picture above is one is of where I once lived. I mean, I didn’t live out with the herd itself. I lived in a small house with its front yard essentially bordering the pasture. There was no fence separating the yard from the herd — the fence in the above photo spans the property line — and it wasn’t unusual to wake up and find cows huddled around your car. I’d get up and go shoo them away or if one of the two dogs I had when I lived there, also at two separate occasions, were around they would chase the cattle from the yard.

It really wasn’t a complicated arrangement.

The house had a really small front porch, par for the course since it was a rather small structure. But one couldn’t find a better place to sit on that shade-covered porch and watch a thunderstorm roll in from the south on a hot summer day. It was a great place to be even if you were alone. What is it about watching rain fall down that can make us feel, at least for a little while, that all is right with the world?

I noticed that nothing much has changed out at the farm since I left it. Oh several folks have lived there. The house hasn’t been occupied in awhile. A car, most likely needing work or scrapping, sits in the yard. The nearly 200 acres on which the house sits still provides hay and pasture land for a modest herd as was the case when I lived there in the middle 1980s. The same cannot be said for the area nearby.

Fewer than five houses were located in the mile-long stretch of oil-paved road from my house to the farm-to-market road which led to town when I lived there. That seems to have more than doubled. Folks are flocking to the countryside. While the city population of Nacogdoches has hovered around 30,000 people from the time I first moved there in the late 1970s to the present, the county population has grown by nearly 20,000, according to the latest Census estimates.

Time marches on and people move in search of something. Maybe it is solitude. Perhaps it is a shade tree. Or maybe it is a porch overlooking a pasture. Go find whatever you are looking for before it is gone.

 

 

Thinking skeeters and bumbling Cardinals while my mind is on annual leave

Remain, do I, on annual leave although as warned I still might post and thus it is that I write–strangely.

Skeeters buzzin,’ everywhere. Everyone has a different theory it seems

Perhaps it is the attack of the mosquitoes. I do not know for sure what is behind it. One local newsperson here on the Mosquito Coast of Southeast Texas said that authorities or experts or somebody blamed the skeeters on a recent high tide. What the puck? Don’t we have high tides all the time? Was there a tsunami on the Jefferson County coast when no one was looking?

Besides, it isn’t just us getting bitten by the little f*****s. They are everywhere. Houston. San Antonio. And everyone seems to have a different reason for the swarms. It is sort of like when gas prices spike.

Oh well, keep the DEET handy until the cold front later this week which will supposedly deliver us from evil–mosquitoes.

Tony sez: “Can you hear me now?” Or, eh Tony, who’s the boss already?

The World Series game last night, where the Rangers went up to one game away from taking the championship, was probably the most entertaining baseball game I have seen in years. It wasn’t just the comeback Texas pulled off, but the dazzling miscues made by St. Louis’ manager Tony LaRussa and superman slugger Albert Pujols.

I seriously doubt you will see screw-ups again like that from the Cardinals when they face Texas back in St. Louis. Hopefully though, the momentum train that has left the station in Arlington will chug on through the next game at Busch Stadium III to give the Rangers their first-ever World Championship.

Vacation for me? Fixing trucks. But here is a good entertainment tip too!

I am on vacation, technically, until Nov. 1. I might write something between now and then if I feel like it. But right now I am about 58 percent pissed off, in pain a tad more than normal and my truck is once again having @#&^%!*?>+ing problems with its cooling system. I thought all that was fixed. It isn’t.

Meanwhile, for those of you in Southeast Texas or within driving distance of Newton — almost as far as you can go east and still be in Texas — and if you want something entertaining to do for a good cause, the Newton County Fire Department and Sheriff’s Association is hosting a day-long cornucopia of events for your entertainment pleasure benefiting the county’s Toys For Tots drive. Here are the details:

When: Beginning at 8 a.m.

Where: Newton County Fair Grounds, Newton, Texas

Newton is 15 miles east Southeast of Jasper, Texas, on U.S. 190; 51 miles North of Orange, Texas on State Hwy. 87; 36 miles West of DeRidder/Fort Polk, La., area on U.S. 190; and about 70 miles east Southeast of Lufkin, Texas, via State Highway 62 and U.S. 190.


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Cajun and zydeco performer Wayne Toups plays the night of the festival. Pre-sale tickets will be available at NAPA Auto in Newton, Top Line in Newton and First Insurance in Jasper or you can call one of the numbers listed below for tickets. Only $10.00!!

Brian Hornois…Star of Haunted Rhode Island and formerly of Ghost Hunters has graciously donated his time to come out and sign autographs and have pictures taken from 5-8 pm for all you ghost hunting fans.

Bikers Ride register 8am. First bike out 10am, last bike in 3pm. $20 per bike, $10 passenger. All bikers will receive an event bandana and there will be a 50/50 drawing and door prizes.

Chili cook off registration: 9am. Judging 1pm. $50 entry fee – 1st place trophy awarded – call for rules and entry forms. 409-224-6173

Non- food vendors welcome – $25. per booth.

Wayne Toups

10am-3pm -we will have free games for the kids,a petting zoo, a cake walk, bounce house, food booth and more!! Smokey the Bear as well as McGruff the Crime Dog will be there to meet the kids, and the fire trucks/police cars and Jasper Countys D.A.R.E. car will be on display.

Trailride – begins at 9am at the softball field beside the fair grounds. Call Karen @ Top Line for more information. 409-379-2283

5-8pm washer and horseshoe tournaments, $10 entry fee. 50% for toys for tots, 30/20% split for 1st and 2nd place winners.

Concert gates open at 4 p.m.. First band plays 6 p.m. Auction will be during intermissions.

Donations can also be mailed to Santas Toy Brigade, P.O. Box 1292, Newton, Texas. 75966

Donations of can goods, dry goods, new boxed toys, and auction items would be appreciated.

Sponsored by the Newton County Fire Department and Newton County Sheriff Association – All proceeds go to Newton County Toys for Tots.

And just a note. Tell them Eight Feet Deep sent you and you might just get a free trip to the Newton County lockup! Seriously, this is for a good cause put on by some good folks. I saw Wayne Toups and ZyDeCajun play at the 2004 Beaumont Blues Fest and they were some good sho’ nuff! He is probably the most successful Cajun recording artist today and he brings a great combination of Cajun, zydeco, blues and swamp pop to the stage. And all is for $10 and a good cause. It’s a steal.

Ding, dong the Moammar’s dead

 

To hear Ronald Reagan tell it, Moammar Gaddafi was evil personified. Those whose loved ones were among the 259 who died in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 in 1988 over Lockerbie, Scotland, may have felt that way as well — and with what many say are good reason.

Gaddafi is one of the list of dictators and mega-mass murderers who have now been hunted down and executed. His end came after weeks of NATO bombing and no telling how much covert help from the CIA and U.S. Special Forces. Gaddafi ceased to exist after being shot by his captors and, if he wasn’t already dead, being beaten by crowds through which the murderous dictator was dragged today.

Under Shrub Bush it was Saddam Hussein, who also threatened Bush Sr., and between the two Bush presidents came two U.S. wars — who got his comeuppance. Under Barack Obama it has been first 9/11 driving force Osama bin Laden and now Gaddfi. Now there was no way out for the GOP to avoid praising Democrat Obama, the main GOP hate obsession, for the SEALS cornering and killing Osama. But this close to the 2012 presidential election — one year away — the Republican haven’t even heard that Obama had anything at all to do with the way the Libyan uprising turned out. This includes the killing of Gaddafi. That figures. What a bunch of chickens**t politicos.

Not all bad guys get theirs’ but some do, even it is by the forced hand of suicide. Here are just a few of the more prominent:

Adolph Hitler—1924-1945—Suicide
Hideki Tojo—1941-1944—Captured, tried and hung after attempting suicide.
Saddam Hussein—1969-2003—Captured in a spider hole, tried and hung
Benito Mussolini—1922-1943—Overthrown, shot and hung by his heels
Osama bin Laden—1971-2011—Hunted down, shot by SEALS
Moammar Gaddafi—1969-2011—Shot by rebels and beaten by mob

It’s kind of like some folks I knew back in the 70s and 80s who seemed to live on never-ending cocaine binges. Some quit. Some didn’t. For those who didn’t it seemed to them as if they were on the top of the world, until it killed them.

Mommas, don’t let your babies grow up to be dictators and terrorist leaders.