This blog is an ARTISTIC regional photo journal. I focus on mundane scenes. ANY AND ALL STATEMENTS I MAKE HERE ARE MY OPINONS ONLY! I OFFER NOTHING WHATSOEVER AS A STATEMENT OF FACT! The photographs are offered as ARTISTIC EXPRESSION ONLY! They are not representative of anything other than themselves. Most of the places mentioned here have surely changed substantially since they were visited. Check my list of recommended sites at the bottom of this blog!
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Canyon, Texas, continued...
Here is another batch of pics from the Panhandle Plains Museum, in Canyon, Texas. Canyon has a college, part of the A&M system, with an enrollment of over 8000, by the way. That, plus the oil boom, is making the small city of Canyon quite prosperous.
Here in Lubbock, TTU's enrollment exceeded 33,000 for the current semester (Fall, 2013). You can see the difference those students make when you drive anywhere in town. Lots of extra traffic, especially around Tech and the places where these kids party and shop. Texas Tech infuses massive amounts of money into the local economy. Lubbock is also benefiting from the oil boom. Jobs seem plentiful. Let the good times roll...
Here in Lubbock, TTU's enrollment exceeded 33,000 for the current semester (Fall, 2013). You can see the difference those students make when you drive anywhere in town. Lots of extra traffic, especially around Tech and the places where these kids party and shop. Texas Tech infuses massive amounts of money into the local economy. Lubbock is also benefiting from the oil boom. Jobs seem plentiful. Let the good times roll...
Friday, September 20, 2013
More Canyon, Texas
My wife thinks that name of that BBQ place was FAT BOYS. She is probably right. Well, FAT BOBS might have been a better name, giving it a Harley connection. At any rate, the museum took us two hours to tour. Here is the first installment of pics:
This museum has a local focus, but the time span ranges from the Cambrian to about the 1950's. Especially interesting are the oil industry exhibits and the reproductions of early habitations. It is really obvious in this area that an OIL BOOM is taking place. We saw several convoys of immense oil field equipment while on the road, and signs of boom times in every little community. Unfortunately, such prosperity has always been cyclical, part of a boom-bust cycle. There's no reason to believe that the current drilling binge will be any different.
This museum has a local focus, but the time span ranges from the Cambrian to about the 1950's. Especially interesting are the oil industry exhibits and the reproductions of early habitations. It is really obvious in this area that an OIL BOOM is taking place. We saw several convoys of immense oil field equipment while on the road, and signs of boom times in every little community. Unfortunately, such prosperity has always been cyclical, part of a boom-bust cycle. There's no reason to believe that the current drilling binge will be any different.
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Canyon, Texas
Months in advance of our trip we reserved a room at Knight's Inn. We found it in an online list of hotels and motels in that area. It had a two-star rating. I did not realize what that would actually mean. It is less than a two hour drive to get to Canyon. You just take I-27 North and it's a divided highway. But I quickly discovered that that stretch of road is very poorly maintained. Repair work was in progress, especially around Plainview, which led to a plague of orange warning cones and concrete barricades and single file traffic in opposite directions. I'd hate to drive that road at night. But Canyon is a pretty town. We got there on schedule, with plenty of time to take a slow tour of the Panhandle Plains Museum. We dumped our stuff in room 106 at Knight's Inn and toured the museum. First it was necessary to get something to eat, however. We wanted to find a LOCAL place, not a big corporate chain. And we did! That's where I kind of had food thrown at me, but it's just a matter of local customs. The place we found, FAT BOB'S BBQ just had an unfamiliar protocol. You give your order at the counter, the cook notes it, and instantly prepares the first item, wraps it, and tosses it on the counter in front of you. I was just kind of startled because it happened so fast. I wasn't expecting it. So then you come up with your side and it is instantly scooped out and placed before you. Item number two is ordered and SPLAT it lands in front of you and your side quickly follows. Pretty darned efficient. You don't get a tray to put this on. You just sort of make multiple trips to the table. I don't know what happens when they are busy. But the food was good. My wife had a chopped beef sandwich with potato salad and I had BBQ sausage with potato salad. Lots of meat on these sandwiches! Hearty! Good potato salad!
To be continued...
To be continued...
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Mr. Sawmill, SIR!!
In case you thought I was kidding about the One Man Sawmill thing, check this link:
http://www.mistersawmill.com/
Can a One Man Army Corp be far behind? Keep your old comic books because they might well be books of prophecy!
I'd like to see OMAC do battle with OMSaM!!
http://www.mistersawmill.com/
Can a One Man Army Corp be far behind? Keep your old comic books because they might well be books of prophecy!
I'd like to see OMAC do battle with OMSaM!!
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