Category Archives: Texas

Good Ole Texas Towns, Hearne and Calvert

I love me some old western, Texas towns. You know the little towns that you drive through. The main drag has boarded up windows, run down buildings and the old homes along the railroad tracks. Some towns are really sprucing up their areas and taking advantage of the fact that people love these locations (how can they not) and for me, I love photographing them (if only I had a better camera). Disclaimer: The pictures would have come out a whole heck of a lot better if we had stopped but we had a birthday party to get to.

These are some of the pictures from our drive along Route 6 between Waco and College Station. Again – if only I had a better camera and knew how to use photoshop… anyway – lets use our imagination. While driving down Highway 6 all I could think of was Fried Green Tomatoes.

Little “use-to-be-white” homes sitting right next to the railroad tracks, towns few and far between…
…makes you realize how important the railroad was to this area years ago.

The Union Pacific still runs through this area today. Now the cars just have some “nice” “art” to them.

…And lots and lots of farmland, and cows (my favorite part). 🙂

The new Depot in Hearne – reminds me of the one in Grapevine, TX
Can’t you just imagine ladies waiting on the platform with their big hoop dresses and umbrellas?
Or the cowboys moving into town like in Tombstone?
Here we are rolling into town….
…imagine this town around 1930’s and 1940’s… must’ve been the place to go for all your needs as the next town would’ve taken you a while to get to in your Model A Ford…or horses… we are in Texas after all!
The next picture shows absolute photography skills while snapping shots in a moving car.
(…I know you are impressed!)

It’s a good thing there are water towers around. If you are ever lost, just look for the water tower in Texas.

This was the nicest place in Calvert and I’m not even kidding,…the sign in front says as seen on the Food Network.
 …This is their hotel off a side street. It kind of creeped me out and I was instantly absolutely positive it is haunted. I’ll have to research more on these towns later (just on the towns, not the hauntings – I’ll leave that up to someone else).

This is their City Hall. Part of me just wants to go in there and clean up the buildings but then again someone would have to help me – there is no way that I’m going in there alone. No way!

And the locals don’t let you forget where you are headed and in what country you are in
… you are in Aggie Country!
There is a lot more to these towns than what I discovered. I would love to go back and checkout the history that they have to offer. The websites below show pictures of old Victorian mansions during the Civil War era. Definitely a place to go check out if you are looking for a destination for a weekend drive.

For More Info:
Calvert: http://www.calverttx.com/index.html
Hearne: http://www.hearnetexas.info/

There’s Something about the Mornings….

Vermont mornings, there’s something about the dew on the grass, hearing the cows mooing and the birds chirping. It seems like I wake up here in Texas and I hear cars driving thru the apartment complex and airplanes flying over head. Quite the difference, eh?

I’m not a morning person. It’s a lot easier for me to sleep in than get up at the crack of dawn and before the rest of the 6 million people in this metroplex (Sy is keen to remind me that this is 10x more than the entire state I came from) but beating those 6 million is so peaceful, even in the middle of this big ol’ place.

When we left for our trip on Saturday we left at 7am and I’m pretty sure that was earlier then at least 4 of those 6 million, maybe 5.

We slowly left the city…
and hit the open road…
there’s nothing like watching the Texas sun come up…
and having a front row seat…
to see Texas.
Sometimes we forget everything the world offers.
Sometimes we just need to sit back and enjoy the scenery.
Today, take a second to enjoy the view.

A&M Bonfire Memorial

I attended a small private four-year college in Burlington, VT. We didn’t have athletic teams however it was a small community, everyone pretty much knew everyone and I wouldn’t trade the experience for anything in the world.

Then we come to the South. The South loves their big (huge) schools and has the best school spirit I’ve ever seen. Everyone goes to the games and everyone wears the school colors. Case in point – A&M. A&M is a huge engineering and agriculture school located in College Station, Texas. The students are known as “Aggies” and they all wear maroon. All of them.

We arrived at A&M and I immediately felt like a small fish in a big ole pond. A&M is enormous, massive, too big for this Vermonter. All I could think was that I could never go to school here. For starters, I would need a moped to get to class. Everyone wears maroon, and if its not maroon it says A&M. You really need to admire the schools pride, we just called our school “Camp Champ”, haha. (It was a good place.)

A&M has so much pride, its admirable. Everyone shows up for the football games, everyone knows the schools cheer, its a community. There is a lot of tradition, a lot. Each year, A&M builds their infamous bonfire. In November 1999, tragedy struck the engineering students who were constructing the bonfire. 12 students died, coincidentally enough as A&M is known for having the 12th man.

A Memorial has been built in remembrance of those twelve students and to honor the tradition that A&M stands for. The Memorial consists of three elements:

1. The Traditional Plaza: This is the entrance of the memorial. Here sits a vertical wall which serves as a barrier between the outside world and the memorial. The wall is engraved with The Last Corps Trip which is recited each year before the bonfire lighting.

2. The History Walk signifies the 90 years of the bonfire tradition before the tragedy in 1999. 89 stones compromise the timeline, beginning in 1909. Each stone consists of an amber light which signifies the lighting of the bonfire each November, except in 1963 when JFK was assassinated (signified with a black slab). There are also three other bonfire related deaths which occurred in 1955, 1982 and 1996 which are also acknowledged in the walk.

3. The Spirit Ring. The ring signifies the students who lost their life as well as those who were injured in the collapse. The ring itself has a 170 foot diameter (the same distance that is erected around the Bonfire stack annually) consisting of twenty-seven granite blocks which recognizes those injured in the collapse. Surrounding the ring are twelve portals, representing the students who lost their lives on that tragic day. Each portal holds a students portrait, his / her signature and a written reflection. Each portal is extending from the center of the ring towards his / her hometown.

The inside of the spirit ring sits a black-granite marker which represents the center pole of the bonfire. The marker is engraved with the date and exact time that the bonfire collapsed.

Whether you attended a big school, small school or no school at all there is great admiration in the spirit and remembrance of A&M.

For More Info: http://bonfire.tamu.edu/memorial