If you are a Texan, or an aficionado of Texas history, there is a Facebook Community page called Traces of Texas which you might want to check out and follow.
Traces of Texas posts extremely interesting historical photos, usually sent in by readers, with the photos sometimes being of a general interest sort, with others being photos showing ancestors from long ago living life in Texas.
The explanatory text is often colorful and as illustrative as the photos.
For example the following text describing the photo you see below the text.....
"Traces of Texas reader Guy Choate kindly shared this sensational photo of a group of bicyclists in San Angelo, circa 1900. The "San Angelo Wheelmen" were a bicycling club that formed during the bicycling craze that gripped early 20th century America. I don't know if there are words to describe how good this is. Look at the clothing being worn by the girls in front. And it's hot enough riding a bike in Texas in a t-shirt and spandex. Can you imagine doing so attired thusly? Wow. Every person in this photo is wearing a hat."
As a modern day mountain biker, who frequently gets flat tires, the above was quite interesting, causing curiosity as to what constituted bike tires way back in the early 1900s.
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
Monday, February 15, 2016
The Mountain & Canton First Monday Trade Days
Canton's First Monday Trade Days may be the biggest such event in the world. Well worth a visit.
Recently we received a blog comment about Canton and First Monday Trade Days which included so much good information it is worth repeating here....
If you haven't visited Canton Texas lately, either for the First Monday Trade Days or any time of the year, now is the time to revisit!
During market weekends or even during "off-market" times, you'll want to stay on The Mountain in Canton! Meandering footpaths and wooded trails lead to quaint and cozy bed and breakfasts nestled among the trees, where blue jays and other songbirds help start the day! And in the early summer evening let the fireflies light your way!
The Dockside Cottages is one of several B&B's that offer accommodations throughout the month. Rooms are crisp and clean, hosts are warm and hospitable, and the getaway will rejuvenate your soul! Rates start as low as $95 per room, per night.
If planning an special event, be sure to check out the newest private event venue in the region, Boot Hill, opening on The Mountain in Canton, Texas, March 5, 2016 at 5:30PM. The soft opening will be during First Monday Trade Days with a fun night of Karaoke starting at 8:00PM.
For hosting your own private event, you can book the entire place (complete with full catering kitchen) at Boot Hill, or book the big outdoor decks for an enchanting event under the tall oaks and cedars!
You can find more information about Boot Hill on Facebook at Boot Hill Entertainment & Private Event Venue - and the new website will be coming soon to www.BootHillPlace.com
The Dockside Cottages is also on Facebook at www.facebook.com/TheDocksideCottages/
Call or text them at 214-463-8463
An overnight stay on The Mountain in Canton would be fun. We saw The Mountain on the last visit to Canton.
A map to help you find your way to Canton and The Mountain and First Monday Trade Days.
Recently we received a blog comment about Canton and First Monday Trade Days which included so much good information it is worth repeating here....
If you haven't visited Canton Texas lately, either for the First Monday Trade Days or any time of the year, now is the time to revisit!
During market weekends or even during "off-market" times, you'll want to stay on The Mountain in Canton! Meandering footpaths and wooded trails lead to quaint and cozy bed and breakfasts nestled among the trees, where blue jays and other songbirds help start the day! And in the early summer evening let the fireflies light your way!
The Dockside Cottages is one of several B&B's that offer accommodations throughout the month. Rooms are crisp and clean, hosts are warm and hospitable, and the getaway will rejuvenate your soul! Rates start as low as $95 per room, per night.
If planning an special event, be sure to check out the newest private event venue in the region, Boot Hill, opening on The Mountain in Canton, Texas, March 5, 2016 at 5:30PM. The soft opening will be during First Monday Trade Days with a fun night of Karaoke starting at 8:00PM.
For hosting your own private event, you can book the entire place (complete with full catering kitchen) at Boot Hill, or book the big outdoor decks for an enchanting event under the tall oaks and cedars!
You can find more information about Boot Hill on Facebook at Boot Hill Entertainment & Private Event Venue - and the new website will be coming soon to www.BootHillPlace.com
The Dockside Cottages is also on Facebook at www.facebook.com/TheDocksideCottages/
Call or text them at 214-463-8463
___________________________
An overnight stay on The Mountain in Canton would be fun. We saw The Mountain on the last visit to Canton.
A map to help you find your way to Canton and The Mountain and First Monday Trade Days.
Saturday, January 9, 2016
Amarillo's Big Texan Steak Ranch Free Steak Dinner
If you've driven through Amarillo on Interstate 40 you've likely noticed the Big Texan Steak House. It is hard to miss. The Big Texan Steak Ranch opened way back in 1960 on what was then known as Route 66, also known as the Main Street of America and the Mother Road.
The Big Texan Steak Ranch is known the world over for its Free 72 oz. Steak Dinner, the Texas King Meal. Free if you can eat the whole dinner, a dollar per ounce if you can not.
The Big Texan Steak Ranch website is informative. There we learn how the Free Steak Dinner came to be....
Cowboys from across the area came to the Big Texan for a good steak, and Bob had noticed more than once that everyone enjoyed the friendly carnivorous competition between the cowboys. One Friday night, Bob pulled the local guys together to see who could eat the most. He charged them five dollars apiece to participate with the pot awarded to the winner at the end of the contest. The rules were simple: don’t leave the table until you’re finished, and if you lost your dinner you lost the contest.
After quickly devouring a couple of steaks, one hungry hand asked for a salad and a shrimp cocktail. A couple of steaks later, he asked for a baked potato and a dinner roll. After eating those sides, he asked for his fifth, one-pound steak. When the cowboy finished, he had consumed 72-oz. of good Texas beef along with the rest of the dinner. Bob vowed that night that anyone else who could match that limit would get his or her dinner free, if they could do it within the one-hour time limit.
On the Big Texas Steak Ranch website you will find The 72 OZ Steak Rules....
- Meal consists of: Shrimp Cocktail, Baked Potato, Salad, with Roll, Butter, and of course the 72 oz. Steak
- Entire meal must be completed in one hour. If any of the meal is not consumed (swallowed)…YOU LOSE!
- Before the time starts, you will be allowed to cut into the steak, and take one bite. If the steak tastes good and is cooked to your satisfaction, we will start the time upon your acceptable approval. The time will not stop, and the contest is on, so make SURE before you say “yes.”
- Once you have started you are not allowed to stand up, leave your table, or have anyone else TOUCH the meal.
- You will be disqualified if anyone assists you in cutting, preparing or eating of your meal. This is YOUR contest.
- You don’t have to eat the fat, but we will judge this.
- Should you become ill, the contest is over… YOU LOSE! (Please use the container provided as necessary.)
- You are required to pay the full amount up front; if you win we will refund 100%.
- You must sit at a table that we assign.
- If you do not win the steak challenge, you are welcome to take the leftovers with you.
- No consumption or sharing of the leftovers is allowed in the restaurant once the contest is over.
- If you fail to complete the challenge, you must pay the full $72 dollars.
Wikipedia has an article about The Big Texan Steak Ranch in which we learn the current record for eating the entire Texas King meal belongs to 125 pound competitive eater named Molly Schuyler. who first took the record when shecleaned her plate in 4 minutes 58 seconds and then completed a second Texas King meal in 14 minutes 57 seconds. A year later Molly returned to the Big Texan Steak Ranch and broke her own record by 40 seconds.
How could a 125 pound woman eat that much steak so quickly? 72 ounces is 4.5 pounds. And on top of all that beef there's the shrimp cocktail, baked potato and a buttered roll.
I probably won't be stopping at the Big Texan Steak Ranch for the Texas King meal the next time I pass through Amarillo.
Unless I am really really hungry....
Sunday, January 3, 2016
2016 Fort Worth Stock Show Rodeo & Parade
The 2016 edition of the Fort Worth Stock Show & Rodeo opens January 15 and runs through February 6.
The Fort Worth Stock Show’s “All Western Parade” is scheduled (weather permitting) for Saturday, January 16, 2016 at 11 a.m. in Downtown Fort Worth.
An all-western parade means humans, horses and wagons – with no motorized vehicles allowed in the parade.
You are allowed to use a motorized vehicle to get yourself to Downtown Fort Worth for the parade.
The Fort Worth Stock Show’s “All Western Parade” is scheduled (weather permitting) for Saturday, January 16, 2016 at 11 a.m. in Downtown Fort Worth.
An all-western parade means humans, horses and wagons – with no motorized vehicles allowed in the parade.
You are allowed to use a motorized vehicle to get yourself to Downtown Fort Worth for the parade.
Monday, September 21, 2015
The Big Boots Of Big Tex Are Ready To Walk The 2015 State Fair of Texas
Those are the big boots of Big Tex, looking mighty fine at the 2007 edition of the State Fair of Texas,
The 2015 edition of the State Fair of Texas is opening in Fair Park in Dallas on September 25, closing on October 18.
Big Tex is a giant, talking, animatronic cowboy in Dickey jeans and Justin boots.
Fernie's Holy Moly Carrot Cake Roly won the Big Tex Choice Award this year, out tasting the other finalists who came up with concoctions like Chicken Fried Lobster with Champagne Gravy, Deep Fried Alligator's Egg Nest, Fried Beer-Battered Buffalo, Pretzel-Crusted Pollo Queso and Smoky Bacon Margarita.
The Smoky Bacon Margarita won the coveted Big Tex Choice Most Creative Award. You will need to prove you are 21 to order a Smoky Bacon Margarita.
Below is video of an Eyes on Texas look at the 2007 State Fair of Texas. In the video you will see and hear Big Tex, among many other things.....
The 2015 edition of the State Fair of Texas is opening in Fair Park in Dallas on September 25, closing on October 18.
Big Tex is a giant, talking, animatronic cowboy in Dickey jeans and Justin boots.
Fernie's Holy Moly Carrot Cake Roly won the Big Tex Choice Award this year, out tasting the other finalists who came up with concoctions like Chicken Fried Lobster with Champagne Gravy, Deep Fried Alligator's Egg Nest, Fried Beer-Battered Buffalo, Pretzel-Crusted Pollo Queso and Smoky Bacon Margarita.
The Smoky Bacon Margarita won the coveted Big Tex Choice Most Creative Award. You will need to prove you are 21 to order a Smoky Bacon Margarita.
Below is video of an Eyes on Texas look at the 2007 State Fair of Texas. In the video you will see and hear Big Tex, among many other things.....
Monday, August 31, 2015
Big Tex Best Taste Choice Award Goes To Fernie's Holy Moly Carrot Cake Roly
Well, we were sure Chicken Fried Lobster with Champagne Gravy or Deep Fried Alligator's Egg Nest, one or the other, would be the surefire winner of the State Fair of Texas Big Tex Choice Award for Best Taste.
Instead the coveted Best Taste Award went to Fernie's Holy Moly Carrot Cake Roly by Christi Erpillo
One would have thought the Holy Moly Roly part of the name would have been enough to leave a bad taste in the mouth of the taste testers.
You have to be 21 years old, or older, to sample the winner of the Big Tex Choice Most Creative Award because that award went to the Smoky Bacon Margarita created by Isaac Rousso who somehow was able to infuse a frozen lime-based Margarita with smoky bacon.
Seems a bit odd to give a State Fair Food Award to an alcohol concoction that fairgoing kids can not imbibe in.
You can read the descriptive details of all the Deep Fried Finalists, and the one non-Deep Fried Finalist, in our previous blog post about the 2015 Big Tex Choice Awards Finalists.
Instead the coveted Best Taste Award went to Fernie's Holy Moly Carrot Cake Roly by Christi Erpillo
One would have thought the Holy Moly Roly part of the name would have been enough to leave a bad taste in the mouth of the taste testers.
You have to be 21 years old, or older, to sample the winner of the Big Tex Choice Most Creative Award because that award went to the Smoky Bacon Margarita created by Isaac Rousso who somehow was able to infuse a frozen lime-based Margarita with smoky bacon.
Seems a bit odd to give a State Fair Food Award to an alcohol concoction that fairgoing kids can not imbibe in.
You can read the descriptive details of all the Deep Fried Finalists, and the one non-Deep Fried Finalist, in our previous blog post about the 2015 Big Tex Choice Awards Finalists.
Friday, August 28, 2015
A Look At The Fort Worth Stockyards Before They Are Possibly Ruined By New Development
Lately the Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District has had some Fort Worth locals, and others, worried that a proposed development in the Stockyards area would somehow compromise the Historic District's integrity.
From what we understand of the proposed development it seems like it would enhance and improve the Stockyards, not damage them.
We have long been fond of the Fort Worth Stockyards, it being Fort Worth's only unique tourist attraction.
We have also long thought Fort Worth does not devote sufficient resources to the Stockyards, of the improvement sort, that such a tourist attraction warrants.
So, let's take a look at this "Historic District" and see how historically well preserved it currently is.
Above we are walking on the sidewalk on the north side of the east end of Exchange Avenue, the Stockyards main drag. Last December, on a night visit to the Stockyards, I tripped when I came to this section of missing sidewalk. The lighting in the Stockyards is very bad, drastically needs improving.
The sign on the missing sidewalk is pointing you to the Stockyards Stables Petting Zoo.
The Petting Zoo is housed in what looks like a circus tent. Is this one of the new developments threatening the historical integrity of the Historic District?
Next we are looking at the Cowtown Cattlepen Maze.
Is this an historically accurate maze? Does it add to or detract from the Stockyard's authenticity? Is the proposed new development, which is seen by some as so threatening to the Stockyards historic integrity, of the same sort thing as this maze?
And then next to the maze we have the Mechanical Bull installation.
Again, is a Mechanical Bull an historically accurate thing to install in an Historic District? Or does it compromise the Historic District's integrity?
Next we come to a recent addition to the Fort Worth Stockyards, the Hyatt Place Hotel.
I do not remember much protesting happening when a developer proposed building a new hotel in the heart of the Stockyards. The hotel was built where a tacky carnival was located. We thought it to be a big improvement on that piece of land, and the building aesthetically matches the look of other older Stockyard buildings.
And then we come to The Shoppes on Rodeo Plaza.
We have long thought the garish yellow did not look good. And that the use of the word "Shoppes" seemed out of place. Is the new proposed development of the quality level of The Shoppes on Rodeo Plaza?
And then there is the tackiest eyesore in the Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District.
The New Isis Theater. This has been a boarded up mess since before the turn of the century. The billboard used to say "New New Isis Theater Opening Soon." Now the billboard says "Welcome to the Stoc Yards." Missing a 'k'.
Now, all those people upset about the proposed new Stockyards development, how do they rationalize being upset by that, while tolerating the boarded up New Isis Eyesore?
There have been some attempts to improve the Stockyards in the past, such as that which you see below.
This is Saunders Park. A Venice-like scenic spot in the Stockyards which few people see. The water you see flowing under the Stockyards is Marine Creek. We believe if you have been in the White Elephant Saloon you have been above the water tunnel you see here.
Now, why have few people seen this scenic part of the Fort Worth Stockyards? Below is your answer to that question.
Access to Saunders Park and Marine Creek is via the alley you see above. This alley is a short distance east of the aforementioned White Elephant Saloon. There is no signage on Exchange Avenue pointing you to the park. If you venture down this alley you get to walk past some fragrant garbage bins before you take a right turn to find yourself surprised by Saunders Park.
The most authentic part of the Fort Worth Stockyards is the actual stockyards, with its impressive boardwalk one can walk on to view the stock, such as the Fort Worth Herd, which you see below, taking a rest between their twice daily Cattle Drives down Exchange Avenue
We don't believe the actual stockyards, which you see above, are threatened by the proposed new development.
Is the proposed new Fort Worth Stockyards development developing the area we refer to as The Stockyard Ruins? That being the area of the long abandoned Swift Armor meat packing plants, which in the 21st century look like Berlin at the end of World War II.
The Stockyard Ruins were used by the FOX TV show, Prison Break, to simulate a Panama prison. We can see where some might think the Stockyard Ruins are an amazing eyesore. But we think of the Stockyard Ruins more like an historic relic, and thus fitting quite well being adjacent to a National Historic District.
From what we understand of the proposed development it seems like it would enhance and improve the Stockyards, not damage them.
We have long been fond of the Fort Worth Stockyards, it being Fort Worth's only unique tourist attraction.
We have also long thought Fort Worth does not devote sufficient resources to the Stockyards, of the improvement sort, that such a tourist attraction warrants.
So, let's take a look at this "Historic District" and see how historically well preserved it currently is.
Above we are walking on the sidewalk on the north side of the east end of Exchange Avenue, the Stockyards main drag. Last December, on a night visit to the Stockyards, I tripped when I came to this section of missing sidewalk. The lighting in the Stockyards is very bad, drastically needs improving.
The sign on the missing sidewalk is pointing you to the Stockyards Stables Petting Zoo.
The Petting Zoo is housed in what looks like a circus tent. Is this one of the new developments threatening the historical integrity of the Historic District?
Next we are looking at the Cowtown Cattlepen Maze.
Is this an historically accurate maze? Does it add to or detract from the Stockyard's authenticity? Is the proposed new development, which is seen by some as so threatening to the Stockyards historic integrity, of the same sort thing as this maze?
And then next to the maze we have the Mechanical Bull installation.
Again, is a Mechanical Bull an historically accurate thing to install in an Historic District? Or does it compromise the Historic District's integrity?
Next we come to a recent addition to the Fort Worth Stockyards, the Hyatt Place Hotel.
I do not remember much protesting happening when a developer proposed building a new hotel in the heart of the Stockyards. The hotel was built where a tacky carnival was located. We thought it to be a big improvement on that piece of land, and the building aesthetically matches the look of other older Stockyard buildings.
And then we come to The Shoppes on Rodeo Plaza.
We have long thought the garish yellow did not look good. And that the use of the word "Shoppes" seemed out of place. Is the new proposed development of the quality level of The Shoppes on Rodeo Plaza?
And then there is the tackiest eyesore in the Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District.
The New Isis Theater. This has been a boarded up mess since before the turn of the century. The billboard used to say "New New Isis Theater Opening Soon." Now the billboard says "Welcome to the Stoc Yards." Missing a 'k'.
Now, all those people upset about the proposed new Stockyards development, how do they rationalize being upset by that, while tolerating the boarded up New Isis Eyesore?
There have been some attempts to improve the Stockyards in the past, such as that which you see below.
This is Saunders Park. A Venice-like scenic spot in the Stockyards which few people see. The water you see flowing under the Stockyards is Marine Creek. We believe if you have been in the White Elephant Saloon you have been above the water tunnel you see here.
Now, why have few people seen this scenic part of the Fort Worth Stockyards? Below is your answer to that question.
Access to Saunders Park and Marine Creek is via the alley you see above. This alley is a short distance east of the aforementioned White Elephant Saloon. There is no signage on Exchange Avenue pointing you to the park. If you venture down this alley you get to walk past some fragrant garbage bins before you take a right turn to find yourself surprised by Saunders Park.
The most authentic part of the Fort Worth Stockyards is the actual stockyards, with its impressive boardwalk one can walk on to view the stock, such as the Fort Worth Herd, which you see below, taking a rest between their twice daily Cattle Drives down Exchange Avenue
We don't believe the actual stockyards, which you see above, are threatened by the proposed new development.
Is the proposed new Fort Worth Stockyards development developing the area we refer to as The Stockyard Ruins? That being the area of the long abandoned Swift Armor meat packing plants, which in the 21st century look like Berlin at the end of World War II.
The Stockyard Ruins were used by the FOX TV show, Prison Break, to simulate a Panama prison. We can see where some might think the Stockyard Ruins are an amazing eyesore. But we think of the Stockyard Ruins more like an historic relic, and thus fitting quite well being adjacent to a National Historic District.
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