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BS: What is Texas like?

DougR 07 Mar 03 - 05:57 PM
Ebbie 07 Mar 03 - 06:01 PM
GUEST,Dreaded Guest 07 Mar 03 - 06:04 PM
DougR 07 Mar 03 - 11:27 PM
Stilly River Sage 07 Mar 03 - 11:40 PM

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Subject: RE: BS: What is Texas like?
From: DougR
Date: 07 Mar 03 - 05:57 PM

I was born and reared in Texas. I left the state when I was 29 years old, and I never had a scorpion find a home in one of my shoes, cannot recall seeing many tarantulas, and very few rattlesnakes. Some parts of Texas are beautiful try central Texas for example (Bosque County in particular), some of it is average, and some of it is God awful. Example: it is said that if the Devil wanted to give the world an enima, he would give it in Odessa, Texas.

DougR


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Subject: RE: BS: What is Texas like?
From: Ebbie
Date: 07 Mar 03 - 06:01 PM

Gads. Let's stay out of Odessa for the next few months...


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Subject: RE: BS: What is Texas like?
From: GUEST,Dreaded Guest
Date: 07 Mar 03 - 06:04 PM

Just because Doug got 'reared' there and now is fixated on enemas doesn't make it a bad place. Midland, where Laura Bush killed her first boyfriend, is near there.


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Subject: RE: BS: What is Texas like?
From: DougR
Date: 07 Mar 03 - 11:27 PM

Probably less than forty miles apart, Odessa and Midland, DG. I hope the first boyfriend passed peacefully.

DougR


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Subject: RE: BS: What is Texas like?
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 07 Mar 03 - 11:40 PM

Groan. I don't know that story, but the lead-in indicates that if Dreaded Guest tells it, it'll be pretty yellow. (I heartily dislike Dubya, so that isn't the reason I groaned). Find a link, perhaps?

There are many places I've lived over the years, quite a few in Texas, but also in Washington, Arizona, Nevada, Tennessee, Kentucky, and New York. Work as a seasonal park naturalist is one way to see the some of the better parts of many different places over time.

A couple of hints: anyplace looks more interesting close up than from a car (there are exceptions to this, and I'm not generalizing to the degree that dumps or marginalized ghettos become sunny places). If you find yourself in a place that is new, and you have the time to take a walk, take the walk. An example comes from the first place I tested this theory: I worked at North Cascades National Park in Marblemount, Washington a long time ago. The park headquarters is a mile back from the highway along a nondescript little 1 1/2 lane road. As an experiment to test this theory, one day I walked out to the highway along the road I usually drove. Amazing the stuff I saw! Wildlife and flowers in the roadside ditches, the way driveways were constructed, leading up to houses with little interesting features, gardens, pastures, horses, hobbies I didn't have time to see when I drove past, lots of birds, just the feel of the road was nice. It's hard to set aside the comparisons (I've struggled with that ever since I left Washington, which I still think is one of the most beautiful places in the nation to live), but if you can, you'll see a lot worth seeing.

I took a walk like this with my kids just recently, through a greenbelt that starts across the street from us. We only walked the equivalent of about a half mile, but they were astonished to see all of the neat geological and botanical features that are very close to the house.

I agree with DougR (for once!). We haven't experienced the annecdotal scorpions in shoes and snakes under the furniture. We've seen some of these animals, but not regularly, and except for geckos and the one tarantula, not in the house. Like horny toads, they're kind of rare around here. That doesn't mean we assume there are none here. We know that living next to the water we're more likely to have critters come through the house as go around it. Frankly, it's part of the reason we enjoy living here--so we might see some of what lives in the area.

SRS


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