Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Ralls, Texas, After The Storm

So I managed to make that drive to Ralls to view the aftermath of the recent storm, and I did it without being too depressed. I have to learn how to be alone, painful as it is. And I took my spanking new/used Canon SX100 from eBay to see how it might work for me.




You can't miss the damage. This is what greeted me as I drove into town on 62/82. The turnoff into Floydada was barricaded and traffic lanes were blocked and I could not have proceeded on 62/82 to Crosbyton. A detour would have been necessary.
I pulled over to photograph this stuff, then entered Ralls. I was in Ralls a few years ago with my wife and I remembered how little there was to photograph in Ralls. We did the grand tour, then, of Lorenzo, Ralls, Crosbyton. 




These towns, in my humble opinion, are pathetic. They just get worse.




Downtown Ralls. I found some damage there. Broken windows, mostly.




Broken windows and glass on the sidewalks and in the streets. Lots of debris and gravel and mud in the streets as well due to flooding.




The zoom works well! This camera will be useful. More next time.

Sunday, June 3, 2018

Old Stuff From TTU

The Texas Tech Campus does not even look like this anymore-- lots of new construction since these photos were taken in the early 2000's. This is more stuff that used to be in the Spotlight section of Unofficial Lubbock. But I did drive out to Ralls today, to see for myself the damage from recent storms and take photos with the new camera. If I had wanted to go to Floydada I'd have been out of luck. The road was blocked. It was impassable for some reason. Looked like a lot of debris and maybe areas of high water covering the road. And if I'd wanted to continue on 62/82 to Crosbyton, I'd have had to detour. Yes, there was a lot of damage.




I had several classes in this building, long ago.




In 1967 this was new!




I'm not even sure that any of this stuff is still there.





Let us not overlook the humble drain. Without the humble drain, none of this would be possible.
And now the wind power center and museum of agriculture, as THEY used to be, about fifteen years ago.




The wind power center is much bigger now, and the museum of agriculture is on the other side of Broadway, now, and much bigger. Sometime this summer I will take a camera out there and take a lot of photos for this blog. I will do a lot of walking-- it takes a lot of walking to tour these locations.




I seem to be living in the past a lot, and I don't really give a damn.





Maybe sometime soon I'll have the new stuff ready to upload. Ralls! See the destruction!