Showing posts with label Veterans Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Veterans Day. Show all posts
Friday, November 10, 2023
Wichita Falls Veterans Day With Flags & Santas
A couple days ago I was driving south on Hamilton Boulevard in the Beverly Hills of Wichita Falls, and was surprised to see a HUGE Christmas display already on display.
So, today I drove to Hamilton Park to park and walked to that aforementioned early Christmas display for photo documenting purposes.
I would hazard to guess that this Christmas display in in the running to win this year's coveted Griswold Award.
That photo above was taken from across the street, trying to capture the entire scene, but there was more to see to both the left and right in the photo.
I crossed the street, to the sidewalk, to take a closer photo, which captured way less than the above photo.
Flags were planted in the ground, everywhere I drove this day before Veterans Day, which for some reason is officially somehow on November 10, this year, not November 11.
My wall calendar has both today and tomorrow being Veterans Day.
For today my wall calendar says...
Veterans Day observed (US)
For tomorrow my wall calendar says...
Veterans Day (US)
Remembrance Day (AU, CA, NZ)
Armistice (BE, FR)
Saturday, November 11, 2017
Veterans Day Visit To Wichita Falls Prairie Dog Town With No Armistice
With it being Veterans Day, or Armistice Day if one prefers to pretend the American 1950s never happened, I decided to visit my neighborhood's survivors of the Indian Wars who live in the Wichita Falls Prairie Dog Town.
I did not know if the cold weather would have the Prairie Dogs underground or out and about.
I brought with me a bag of various bread products I cleared out of my fridge this morning, along with sweet potato peelings I made this morning when I peeled sweet potatoes.
Arriving at the Prairie Dog Town suburbs it was quickly obvious the cold weather had not sent the Dogs down under Town.
The little guy on the left is enjoying one of those sweet potato peelings. When the Prairie Dogs see food has arrived they announce the delivery with a sort of high pitched barking which has the Town come to life with Prairie Dogs peeking out of burrows all over town. And in the suburbs which ring the walled main Prairie Dog community.
This guy, who I call Chester, immensely enjoyed the chunk of Italian bread I tossed him. He finished that and then I tossed him some whole wheat bread, so as to provide some extra fiber. Chester also got some sweet potato peelings.
This pair enjoyed big chunks of French bread while I admired their artistic homage to nearby Mount Wichita.
Since my last visit to Prairie Dog Town a new playground has been installed. A walled playground with a deep covering of sand inside the wall. I assume this is intended to be a barrier to Prairie Dog additional development, blocking this area from being a new suburb.
The previous playground equipment had been compromised by a Prairie Dog invasion, with burrows at the base of the slide and all around the swings and monkey bars. The Prairie Dogs are strategic with their land grabbing invasions, hence the Trump-ish border wall, attempting to keep an area out of Prairie Dog control.
I suspect there is Prairie Dog plotting afoot in the Prairie Dog Councils of War, on this Armistice Day of 2017, trying to determine the best way to make an encroachment into the new walled playground area.
When next I visit I expect to see Prairie Dogs popping up from burrows burrowed under that deep sand behind the wall....
I did not know if the cold weather would have the Prairie Dogs underground or out and about.
I brought with me a bag of various bread products I cleared out of my fridge this morning, along with sweet potato peelings I made this morning when I peeled sweet potatoes.
Arriving at the Prairie Dog Town suburbs it was quickly obvious the cold weather had not sent the Dogs down under Town.
The little guy on the left is enjoying one of those sweet potato peelings. When the Prairie Dogs see food has arrived they announce the delivery with a sort of high pitched barking which has the Town come to life with Prairie Dogs peeking out of burrows all over town. And in the suburbs which ring the walled main Prairie Dog community.
This guy, who I call Chester, immensely enjoyed the chunk of Italian bread I tossed him. He finished that and then I tossed him some whole wheat bread, so as to provide some extra fiber. Chester also got some sweet potato peelings.
This pair enjoyed big chunks of French bread while I admired their artistic homage to nearby Mount Wichita.
Since my last visit to Prairie Dog Town a new playground has been installed. A walled playground with a deep covering of sand inside the wall. I assume this is intended to be a barrier to Prairie Dog additional development, blocking this area from being a new suburb.
The previous playground equipment had been compromised by a Prairie Dog invasion, with burrows at the base of the slide and all around the swings and monkey bars. The Prairie Dogs are strategic with their land grabbing invasions, hence the Trump-ish border wall, attempting to keep an area out of Prairie Dog control.
I suspect there is Prairie Dog plotting afoot in the Prairie Dog Councils of War, on this Armistice Day of 2017, trying to determine the best way to make an encroachment into the new walled playground area.
When next I visit I expect to see Prairie Dogs popping up from burrows burrowed under that deep sand behind the wall....
Monday, November 11, 2013
Reflections On Veterans Day
On the left you are looking at a screencap from a blog post titled Reflections on Veterans Day written by an ex-soldier who is a veteran of the Vietnam War, with a poignantly different take on Veterans Day.
A couple days ago I found myself in an odd conversation pondering what the difference is between Veterans Day and Memorial Day.
The answer was rather easy to find.
Veterans Day celebrates the military service of all who have served. Memorial Day is a day of remembrance of those who died while serving.
Why is Veterans Day on this particular date? I am glad you asked.
Originally Veterans Day was known as Armistice Day, with the armistice being referred to being the ceasing of hostilities in World War I, with Germany's formal surrender occurring on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918.
President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed the first Armistice Day a year later, on November 11, 1919, saying...
"To us in America, the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country's service and with gratitude for the victory, both because of the thing from which it has freed us and because of the opportunity it has given America to show her sympathy with peace and justice in the councils of the nations."
At the end of World War II, a veteran of that war, Raymond Weeks thought it a good idea to change Armistice Day to a day celebrating all veterans of all of America's ubiquitous wars. Mr. Weeks led a delegation to enlist General Dwight Eisenhower's support for the Veterans Day idea.
Eisenhower was onboard with the Veterans Day plan, but it took nine years for Congress to pass a bill establishing Veterans Day officially, a bill signed on May 26, 1954 by the then President Eisenhower.
It being Veterans Day it would probably be a good day to drive to Arlington to take a walk in Veterans Park....
A couple days ago I found myself in an odd conversation pondering what the difference is between Veterans Day and Memorial Day.
The answer was rather easy to find.
Veterans Day celebrates the military service of all who have served. Memorial Day is a day of remembrance of those who died while serving.
Why is Veterans Day on this particular date? I am glad you asked.
Originally Veterans Day was known as Armistice Day, with the armistice being referred to being the ceasing of hostilities in World War I, with Germany's formal surrender occurring on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918.
President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed the first Armistice Day a year later, on November 11, 1919, saying...
"To us in America, the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country's service and with gratitude for the victory, both because of the thing from which it has freed us and because of the opportunity it has given America to show her sympathy with peace and justice in the councils of the nations."
At the end of World War II, a veteran of that war, Raymond Weeks thought it a good idea to change Armistice Day to a day celebrating all veterans of all of America's ubiquitous wars. Mr. Weeks led a delegation to enlist General Dwight Eisenhower's support for the Veterans Day idea.
Eisenhower was onboard with the Veterans Day plan, but it took nine years for Congress to pass a bill establishing Veterans Day officially, a bill signed on May 26, 1954 by the then President Eisenhower.
It being Veterans Day it would probably be a good day to drive to Arlington to take a walk in Veterans Park....
Friday, November 11, 2011
Veterans Day Thinking About Veterans, The Buffet At The Kickapoo Indian's Double Eagle Casino & Nachos At Black Rock Mexico
Looking through the bars of my patio prison cell at an outer world chilled to 41 degrees I'm feeling like time is quickly slipping away because a third of the next to last month of 2011 has already passed into history.
Speaking of history, today is Veterans Day.
I probably should go walking at Veterans Park in Arlington today, but I likely won't.
Changing the subject from Veterans to something else.
Last weekend I virtually went south to the Texas/Mexico border to the town of Eagle Pass where I virtually had a really good $4.99 buffet at the Kickapoo Indian's Lucky Eagle Casino. The town of Eagle Pass is situated on a river called the Rio Grande. On the Mexican side of the river is a larger than Eagle Pass town called Piedras Negras.
I believe in English Piedras Negras translates as Black Rock.
Black Rock, Mexico is where the gourmet dish that goes by the name "Nacho" was invented. If I remember right, I blogged about this recently.
Changing the subject from Nachos to swimming.
Yesterday morning it was 41 degrees when I went swimming. The high for that 24 hour time period had been barely 60. I had a very pleasant time in the pool yesterday, followed by a very pleasant hot shower. This morning it is also 41 degrees, but the high in this particular 24 hour time period was higher than yesterday's 24 hour time period. Which means, I think, that the pool will be warmer than yesterday.
I will test this theory in a couple minutes.
Speaking of history, today is Veterans Day.
I probably should go walking at Veterans Park in Arlington today, but I likely won't.
Changing the subject from Veterans to something else.
Last weekend I virtually went south to the Texas/Mexico border to the town of Eagle Pass where I virtually had a really good $4.99 buffet at the Kickapoo Indian's Lucky Eagle Casino. The town of Eagle Pass is situated on a river called the Rio Grande. On the Mexican side of the river is a larger than Eagle Pass town called Piedras Negras.
I believe in English Piedras Negras translates as Black Rock.
Black Rock, Mexico is where the gourmet dish that goes by the name "Nacho" was invented. If I remember right, I blogged about this recently.
Changing the subject from Nachos to swimming.
Yesterday morning it was 41 degrees when I went swimming. The high for that 24 hour time period had been barely 60. I had a very pleasant time in the pool yesterday, followed by a very pleasant hot shower. This morning it is also 41 degrees, but the high in this particular 24 hour time period was higher than yesterday's 24 hour time period. Which means, I think, that the pool will be warmer than yesterday.
I will test this theory in a couple minutes.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Criminally Insensitive Incompetent Fort Worth Judge Issues Veterans Day Execution Order Of A Wounded Iraq War Vet's Innocent Dog, Mimi
You are looking at part of the stunning skyline of beautiful downtown Fort Worth, from the Tandy Hills, today around noon.
That is not a Flying Saucer that has landed in downtown Fort Worth. That is a part of the Fort Worth Convention Center that desperately needs to be replaced, due, in part, to it being a very bad example of very bad architecture that is seriously at odds with its surroundings and the rest of the Convention Center.
I read a disturbing blog post on one of the news sources in Fort Worth that prints news the Fort Worth Star Telegram doesn't tell you about. I had to read it in the Star-Telegraph.
Apparently a badly injured Iraq Vet had a dog which his psychiatrist thought would help in the Vet's recovery. This is a house dog named Mimi. A neighbor accused Mimi of biting his finger. Mimi was arrested and thrown in to Fort Worth Dog Jail, where she quickly lost weight.
On Veterans Day, yet one more bad Fort Worth judge, who probably should not be a judge, sentenced Mimi to death, despite multiple character witnesses attesting to her innocence.
The judge ordered Mimi's execution unless, within 15 days, the Vet comes up with $1,000 of fees, $100,000 liability insurance and a 6 foot enclosure on his property.
I have seen embarrassing things happen in Fort Worth, before, but this outrageously horrible treatment of a Vet and the abusive treatment of his dog, Mimi. And the sentencing of yet one more innocent Texan to death, with no evidence proving guilt. Well. I am appalled.
There are some reports, that I have been unable to confirm, that this travesty has a happy ending. That Mimi has had a stay of execution and has been reunited with the Vet, who calls her "my little girl."
UPDATE: The Star-Telegraph is now reporting that all the money needed to rescue Mimi has been raised. Mimi will be released from custody, after she is spayed, and returned to the Vet, Steven Woods. A Veterinarian has agreed to provide Mimi free medical service for life.
Fort Worth is full of very nice, very generous, very decent people, sadly, with a city government and municipal court system not worthy of the people.
That is not a Flying Saucer that has landed in downtown Fort Worth. That is a part of the Fort Worth Convention Center that desperately needs to be replaced, due, in part, to it being a very bad example of very bad architecture that is seriously at odds with its surroundings and the rest of the Convention Center.
I read a disturbing blog post on one of the news sources in Fort Worth that prints news the Fort Worth Star Telegram doesn't tell you about. I had to read it in the Star-Telegraph.
Apparently a badly injured Iraq Vet had a dog which his psychiatrist thought would help in the Vet's recovery. This is a house dog named Mimi. A neighbor accused Mimi of biting his finger. Mimi was arrested and thrown in to Fort Worth Dog Jail, where she quickly lost weight.
On Veterans Day, yet one more bad Fort Worth judge, who probably should not be a judge, sentenced Mimi to death, despite multiple character witnesses attesting to her innocence.
The judge ordered Mimi's execution unless, within 15 days, the Vet comes up with $1,000 of fees, $100,000 liability insurance and a 6 foot enclosure on his property.
I have seen embarrassing things happen in Fort Worth, before, but this outrageously horrible treatment of a Vet and the abusive treatment of his dog, Mimi. And the sentencing of yet one more innocent Texan to death, with no evidence proving guilt. Well. I am appalled.
There are some reports, that I have been unable to confirm, that this travesty has a happy ending. That Mimi has had a stay of execution and has been reunited with the Vet, who calls her "my little girl."
UPDATE: The Star-Telegraph is now reporting that all the money needed to rescue Mimi has been raised. Mimi will be released from custody, after she is spayed, and returned to the Vet, Steven Woods. A Veterinarian has agreed to provide Mimi free medical service for life.
Fort Worth is full of very nice, very generous, very decent people, sadly, with a city government and municipal court system not worthy of the people.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Veterans Day In Major General Worth's Fort Waiting For Rain & Thinking About American Wars
As you can sort of see, looking out at my empty pool, we are under a cloud cover, this November 11 Veterans Day, in the Fort of Major General Worth.
Incoming rain expected. With Thunderstorm action tomorrow.
What is the total number of American veterans living today, I am wondering?
I'm guessing America has the world's highest per capita number of war veterans, due to the fact that America seems to get involved in more wars than any other country.
American kids, in the 10 year old age range, have never known an America that is not off in some foreign land, with soldiers dying. Those kids are growing up thinking war is some sort of perpetual reality.
That is sort of disturbing.
I wonder what percentage of the years, between 1776 and 2010, America has been at war? I could figure that out if I wanted to take the time to do so.
Some of the American wars have been of very short duration, like the Spanish-American War. American victory came in only 4 months. And out of that we ended up with Puerto Rico, among other lands, now returned to their natives, like the Philippines.
The Mexican-American War was also a short one, 1846 -1846. Out of that war America gained a lot of land from Mexico. Places like California, among others. President James K. Polk was determined to expand America all across the continent. Texas was annexed a day or two before Polk's inauguration. The Mexicans were not happy about that. The Mexican unhappiness set in motion events that would give Polk the excuse to make war on Mexico, with a full on invasion that made it all the way to Mexico City.
Polk considered taking all of Mexico for the United States, but settled for just taking California and most of what is now known as the American Southwest. Years later Adolf Hitler was to use America's aggressive expansionist technique, of the Polk era, as one of his excuses for his bad expansionist behaviors, like the takeover of Poland.
Had California not been taken from the Mexicans would there be no Hollywood? No Disneyland? I can't imagine a world without Hollywood and Disneyland.
Another of America's short wars was the War of 1812. This was to be the only American war, other than the War of Independence and the War on Terror, that saw America attacked on its homeland. In the War of 1812 the British invaded, eventually running President Madison and wife Dolley out of Washington, D.C., burning the White House, which was not white at the time. The White House become white during the refurbishment after the British burning, and then became known by the name we know it today.
The biggest victory, in the War of 1812, came after the war was over. Due to the slow communications of the day, Andrew Jackson and the British did not know the war was over when the Battle of New Orleans took place, with a future President Jackson led rout over the British.
American involvement in the worst war of all time was less than 4 years, that being World War II. In that war America used all its power to get the thing over with as quickly as possible, with a positive outcome.
In the American wars since WWII America has not used its power to the max to get the wars over quickly, with a positive outcome.
Well, that is enough American war talk for this 2010 Veterans Day.
Incoming rain expected. With Thunderstorm action tomorrow.
What is the total number of American veterans living today, I am wondering?
I'm guessing America has the world's highest per capita number of war veterans, due to the fact that America seems to get involved in more wars than any other country.
American kids, in the 10 year old age range, have never known an America that is not off in some foreign land, with soldiers dying. Those kids are growing up thinking war is some sort of perpetual reality.
That is sort of disturbing.
I wonder what percentage of the years, between 1776 and 2010, America has been at war? I could figure that out if I wanted to take the time to do so.
Some of the American wars have been of very short duration, like the Spanish-American War. American victory came in only 4 months. And out of that we ended up with Puerto Rico, among other lands, now returned to their natives, like the Philippines.
The Mexican-American War was also a short one, 1846 -1846. Out of that war America gained a lot of land from Mexico. Places like California, among others. President James K. Polk was determined to expand America all across the continent. Texas was annexed a day or two before Polk's inauguration. The Mexicans were not happy about that. The Mexican unhappiness set in motion events that would give Polk the excuse to make war on Mexico, with a full on invasion that made it all the way to Mexico City.
Polk considered taking all of Mexico for the United States, but settled for just taking California and most of what is now known as the American Southwest. Years later Adolf Hitler was to use America's aggressive expansionist technique, of the Polk era, as one of his excuses for his bad expansionist behaviors, like the takeover of Poland.
Had California not been taken from the Mexicans would there be no Hollywood? No Disneyland? I can't imagine a world without Hollywood and Disneyland.
Another of America's short wars was the War of 1812. This was to be the only American war, other than the War of Independence and the War on Terror, that saw America attacked on its homeland. In the War of 1812 the British invaded, eventually running President Madison and wife Dolley out of Washington, D.C., burning the White House, which was not white at the time. The White House become white during the refurbishment after the British burning, and then became known by the name we know it today.
The biggest victory, in the War of 1812, came after the war was over. Due to the slow communications of the day, Andrew Jackson and the British did not know the war was over when the Battle of New Orleans took place, with a future President Jackson led rout over the British.
American involvement in the worst war of all time was less than 4 years, that being World War II. In that war America used all its power to get the thing over with as quickly as possible, with a positive outcome.
In the American wars since WWII America has not used its power to the max to get the wars over quickly, with a positive outcome.
Well, that is enough American war talk for this 2010 Veterans Day.
Friday, January 15, 2010
Gas Driller Caused Allergy Driving Mom From Home

A Barnett Shale natural gas drilling rig hovered above an apartment complex, appearing to be very close to the apartments.
What about the 800 foot rule between a drilling operation and residences? Did Arlington, a town known to run roughshod over citizen's property rights, not impose any distance rules?
Doesn't the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality over see such things? Well, worded correctly, is the TCEQ not charged with the responsibility of protecting Texans and their environment?
Well, sadly, we've all come to know the answer to that question. The TCEQ has been co-opted and corrupted with the installation of natural gas industry lackeys on the Commission, letting the fox watch the henhouse in yet one more example of corruption in Texas.
After I blogged about that noisy, too close, drilling operation in Arlington, I heard from Lynda, the daughter of the nice lady I talked to who was being made miserable by the around the clock noise coming from her new neighbor.
Let me interject before I get back to Lynda. Why is it if you call 911 to report that someone is disturbing the peace, as in drilling in the middle of the night, why is this not treated by the police in the same way as it would be if an individual were producing an equally noisy decibel level?
Back to Lynda.
I heard from Lynda again today. The situation has grown more dire for her nice mom. Here's what Lynda had to tell me...
Hi Durango...
Lynda the "nice lady's daughter" again. Yes, I was a passenger in the VW.
My Mom, the nice lady has already started to have allergy problems and her apartments smells of chemicals. My daughter went to visit today and after 10 minutes, had a sore throat and runny nose and complained that my Mom's apartment smelled of chemicals. It then hit me that my Mom's recent severe allergy problems and asthma as well as headaches could well be caused by the chemicals being released from the gas drilling at the tower sitting so close to her apartment.
I then called the EPA who said I needed to call the Texas Railroad commission. I am now awaiting a call from an attorney. from the railroad commission. If nothing else, I am hoping that the property will be forced to allow her out of her lease which expires in April because with her health problems, she cannot stay there.
Whatever became of Dr. Al Armendariz? The new head of the EPA in this region. There were such high hopes, with he being the guy who had shown that the gas drilling was causing some heavy duty, dangerous pollution, that the TCEQ and the corrupt local governments, like the City of Fort Worth and its Conflicts of Interest corrupted mayor, Mike Moncrief, would somehow be giving a good sound spanking by the federal government and a no longer toothless EPA.
Where was the EPA and Dr. Al Armendariz when Fort Worth mayor, Mike Moncrief, put on his bizarre dog and pony show to announce that there is no pollution being caused in Fort Worth by the gas drillers?
It is all very perplexing. I am getting real tired of being perplexed all the time.
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Veterans Day In Texas
A soldier guards the Veterans Memorial at Arlington's Veterans Park 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, all year long.
Monday, November 3, 2008
Veterans Park & Veterans Day

I had to go visit Washington Mutual today. I decided to go to the one by Veterans Park in Arlington, due to thinking I'd like to take a nice hike there. And so I did.

The Veterans Memorial at Veterans Park isn't finished yet. As you can see in the first photo it was being feverishly worked on today by a large group. I suspect they may be getting it ready for some sort of dedication ceremony next Tuesday, that being Veterans Day.

This put me in mind of last summer in drippy, cold Tacoma where I was chastised several times for not watering enough. I knew from my own successful plant growing that my sister's plants were being drowned. Poor, sickly tomato. Made my heart ache to see the drowning torture those plants were put through.

In the distance, in the photo above with a lot of trees, you can see the flags you saw in the first photo.

The next photo is of the wildside of Veterans Park. Very steep hills. It can be treacherous due to the need to watch out for flying frisbees tossed by the disc golfers. Bizarre sport. Looks funner than normal golf though.

The last photo was part of an area of chalk art scrawled on the paved trail. The one in the photo appears to be the Empire State Building with the message saying "I Love NY."
That's it for today's look at Mother Nature in Texas.
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