Note: I must have been drinking wine when I scheduled this as it was supposed to be posted next Monday – not Wednesday! Oh, well, I will leave it up. Cheers!
Note: I must have been drinking wine when I scheduled this as it was supposed to be posted next Monday – not Wednesday! Oh, well, I will leave it up. Cheers!
One of my favorite movies is “The Birdcage” with Robin Williams, Nathan Lane and Gene Hackman, as there are so many layers to savor. Yet I had never seen the musical, “La Cage Aux Folles,” until I saw it last month at a local theater, Harbor Playhouse, in Corpus Christi. Husband, Daughter and I attended a Sunday matinee performance.
Daughter and I were delighted when Husband brought our wine in commemorative glasses.
The production was great fun and an outstanding last performance. My favorite song was “The Best of Times is Now”as it reminded me (at this age) that the best times are those right now in the moment…tomorrow…who knows…CHEERS!
The morning rain had stopped. Our favorite wineries did not open until 10 o’clock so we decided to stop at the Lyndon B. Johnson National Historical Park. We had been there before but had never toured President Johnson’s Texas White House. Checking in at the visitors’ center, we were informed that the last tour would begin at 11 o’clock because a special event was being held there. The pass for the window of the car was put in place, and we started on the self-guided LBJ Ranch Tour Route that follows the Pedernales River. The park brochure describes it this way.
“President Johnson drew strength and solace from to demonstrate the cultural and conservation practices associated with ranching prompted President and Mrs. Johnson to donate a portion of the LBJ Ranch to the National Park Service in 1972. Johnson stipulated to park planners. that the LBJ Ranch remain a working ranch, and not a ‘sterile relic of the past.’ To that end, the National Park Service maintains a herd of Hereford cattle descended from the President’s registered herd and manages the ranch lands as a living demonstration of ranching the LBJ way.”
The road meanders along the river until it turns and crosses it via a low river crossing. It took us past on old school where Johnson attended, his reconstructed birthplace, the Johnson family cemetery and a modest farm-house where his grandparents had lived. Remnants of Johnson’s Herefords grazed quietly as we passed cattle guard after cattle guard seemingly accustomed to the slow movement of cars.
The first thing you see at the Texas White is Johnson’s jet. He would fly into Austin on Air Force One from Washington and then take the smaller jet to the ranch where a small landing field was constructed. Husband reluctantly agree to a photo.
The building next to the jet had been an airplane hangar originally, but it had been converted into a visitors’ center. At the entrance a huge white tent was set up with white tables and chairs and red-checkered table cloths; people were busy decorating the tables and getting things set up. I imagined some local fundraiser for a charitable cause. We proceeded inside to obtain our tickets at $3.00 each.
Soon a park guide gathered our small group together. We walked to the entrance of the house that was surrounded by a low white picket fence. A small delivery truck full of wildflowers, some in blue and white pots, was being unloaded. I assumed they were for the special event scheduled for later.
For those of us who had lived through the Johnson administration years, being inside the Texas White House was like going back in time. There were three television sets placed side by side so that the President could keep up with the news on CBS, NBS and ABC – no cable in those days. Telephones were scattered all over the sprawling house; the guide told us that Johnson was constantly on the phone.
At the end of the tour our park guide casually mentioned that we had chosen to visit at a special time as Jennifer Robb was getting married that evening at the ranch. So that was the reason for the flowers and tent! I remembered that Lynda Bird Johnson Robb was the daughter of President and Mrs. Johnson but did not know anything about her children.
Now I wanted more details! I walked to the front of the house outside the fence and saw a woman (dressed in shorts & boots) placing what appeared to be horseshoes on metal rods.
“Excuse me, ” I said. “Are those for the wedding?”
“Yes, ” she replied. “They will be married up at the house on the lawn, but she wants to cut the cake down here by the river.” That would explain the flowers being unloaded there, I thought.
“Oh, that will be lovely! May I take a photo – I won’t include you in it.”
“Yes, that’s fine,” she replied as she continued placing the horseshoe things firmly in the ground.
I could just imagine flowing white silk fabric being entwined in the horseshoes to guide wedding guests toward the Pedernales River and a bride’s table with a huge cake.
On our way out we had to pass the tent. Politely, I asked if we could take a picture. Again, a friendly wedding planner said it was fine and volunteered that the couple had reception the night before in Austin at the LBJ Library and that she hoped it would not rain. I joked that my invitation must have gotten lost in the mail.
On out way out we stopped at the Johnson family cemetery where President and Mrs. Johnson are buried near the Pedernales River. At each of the headstones was a huge bouquet of wildflowers in short blue vases identical to the ones brought for the wedding.
Later that afternoon as we left our last winery, Texas Hills Vineyards, just outside Johnson City, it started to rain. Oh, I thought, I wonder if it is raining back at the LBJ Ranch.
To find out how the wedding went, click the link below to a website maintained by an Austin newspaper.
For those on Facebook, check out even more intimate photos of the wedding on their 5/27 post.
https://www.facebook.com/FriendsofLBJNationalPark
CONGRATULATIONS, JENNIFER AND JOSH!
Trick or treat! Wine or beer! Wine is usually my choice, but when Husband opens a nice lager or ale and pours it into his pint glass, I have to sample it. He bought a variety six-pack of Shiner beer from Spoetzl Brewery brewed in tiny Shiner, Texas. They were all good, but I preferred the Bohemian Black Lager and the Prickly Pear.
Bohemian Black Lager
Premium
Pale Ale
Prickly Pear
Kosmos
Bock
Many breweries bring out specialty brews for fall. Perhaps we will try a pumpkin brew next time. You can check out Shiner and the brewery on their website or if you want a personal tour of both check out this blog, Tales and Travels of the Tin Man, who shared his visit to both. Cheers and Happy Halloween! Prosit! (Enjoy)
SIGNS THAT FALL IS COMING TO THE COAST
1) The whooping cranes have left Canada and are heading for Texas.
2) Hummingbirds are swarming my feeders and it is time for the Rockport Hummingbird Celebration. One year a woodpecker helped itself to the feeders. I have not seen it this year.
3) I will be looking for white pelicans to arrive before long. They arrive in the fall and leave when it gets warm in the spring.
4) The stores start to fill with faux leaves, pumpkins, wreaths, cinnamon scented candles, bibelots and everything we need to decorate our homes and pretend that we have a real fall season where the leaves turn a golden hue, and drop poetically to the earth.
5) I pick a Syrah from Texas Hills Vineyards to celebrate the autumnal equinox. Texas Hills Vineyard is a small but elegant winery just outside of Johnson City. We picked up this bottle there last year.
HAPPY FALL TO YOU!
Do you remember Etch-a-Sketch? My children had them,, They came in mighty handy for road trips to help keep them entertained. Mine were a girl and boy three years apart so keeping them from arguing in the back seat was important!
SHE: Mother, he touched me!
HE: Did not! She made a face at me!
Today kids have all sorts of devices to keep them entertained on the road at any age. The older ones can watch TV or movies, talk or text with their friends or surf the Internet. The youngest ones are safely strapped in their car seats and can watch the latest movies on the built-in devices or hold one in their hands to watch, play or learn.
I found this image on a post titled “How Easy is Change?” by blogger Eric Tonningsen. In his post he uses the Etch-a-Sketch as a metaphor for change. Remember how it worked? If you didn’t like the way your creation turned out or you just wanted to try something different, you gave it and shake and started all over with a clean slate. Wouldn’t it be grand if change in our lives were so simple?
Eric writes in this post, “… it’s as easy as reviewing what you have created in your life. If you aren’t jazzed with what you’re facing, turn it upside down, shake things up a little, and move forward. Clean and fresh.”
He then goes on to give us three starters for consideration to effect changes. His blog is called “Awakening Awareness.” He doesn’t preach or pretend to have all the answers for everyone, but he does gently nudge us to think and find practical answers for ourselves from a mature viewpoint. Check out his blog sometime if you want a little encouragement and inspiration.
Oh, I’m not really out of wine. It is the height of hurricane season here. We have no bottled water, but we do have plenty of wind and candles. I feel smugly prepared.
Cheers to change! And I do not own an iPad.
It is the summer’s great last heat,
It is the fall’s first chill: They meet.
– Sarah Morgan Bryan Platt
“The word equinox comes from the Latin words for ‘equal night.’ The fall and spring equinoxes are the only days of the year in which the Sun crosses the celestial equator. From here on out, the temperatures begin to drop and the days start to get shorter than the nights.” – Old Farmer’s Almanac
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We shall celebrate the autumnal equinox by lighting a candle to bring light into the coming darkness and to honor the light. Then we will open a bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon/Syrah Texas from GrapeCreek Vineyards. We will not feel the chill of autumn in South Texas for some time, but we have had glorious rain lately that has cooled down the summer heat. It is a hint of fall.
ENJOY THE FALL WHEREVER YOU ARE!
The temperature here in South Texas has been summer for some time. This evening we will celebrate the Summer Solstice by opening a bottle of Texas Viognier 2011 from Pedernales Cellars and lighting a candle. This piece of Talavera from Mexico hangs near our front door. Her name is Isabella.
Cheers to life and sunlight! It is good to be back.
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