Friday, February 20, 2009

Friday's Fry's Day Sony Vaio Laptop

Who wants to go laptop shopping at Fry's Electronics with me today?

Today Fry's has the world's lightest laptop on sale, that being a Sony Vaio P Series that only weighs 1.4 pounds. Its battery lasts up to 4 hours. 2GB of Ram. With a built in camera and GPS navigation system, which I can not imagine using because I never get lost. Maybe it could be used on a plane to make sure the pilot is heading in the right direction.

I think I overdid the running around Tandy Hills yesterday. Sometime after 8 last night I started to watch yesterday's DVRed latest episode of Survivor, but I passed out on the couch before we got to the first challenge. This never happens to me, well, hasn't happened to me in a long long time. Of recent times my problem has been insomnia, not passing out in front of the TV.

Apparently I go from one extreme to another.

Like I can go from saying I'm not returning to the Northwest for another 10 years, after last summer's miserable month of, well, misery, to seeing a picture of tulips on a laptop screen and thinking it'd be fun to be in the Northwest this spring to see the Skagit Valley tulips for the first time in a decade.

This year's Skagit Valley Tulip Festival is a month long, as in the entire month of April. When I lived in the Skagit Valley I don't recollect the Tulip Festival lasting an entire month. If I remember right, last year's late Spring made everything bloom late, everything from tulips to blackberries, the blackberries being something I'd looked forward to last summer, but who's late ripening disappointed me, just like pretty much everything else had.

Maybe the Tulip Festival is being stretched longer to make sure there are some blooming flowers when the hordes, and I do mean hordes, of tourists arrive.

The same month as the Skagit Valley Tulip Festival, the Tandy Hills Prairie Fest happens. The Prairie Fest will get about 3000 visitors. The Tulip Festival will get somewhere around a million visitors. This creates epic traffic jams on country roads, requiring a lot of traffic cop direction and surveillance by helicopters. It's a spectacle.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Decapitated Cactus & Brush Bash Prep At Tandy Hills

I decided this morning that I really do not get enough exercise, so I decided to go run up and down the hills at Tandy Hills Natural Area.

I figured I'd also check on the progress of the City of Fort Worth arborist's brush cutting project preparing for Saturday's onslaught of Tandy Hills Aficionados ready and eager to haul tons of brush to the road.

I ran and ran and ran over mile after mile of the Tandy Hills trails, looking for some cut brush. Finally, after what seemed hours, I came upon several clumps of Prickly Pear Cactus that had been sliced.

Surely this is not part of the City of Fort Worth brush cutting, I hoped. I continued on with my search. I looked on the west side of the main trail that leads from the main park entry. No cut brush.

I backtracked to the main entry part, that's where there is regular, planted and mowed lawn and a playground. Just a short distance after the planted lawn ends there is a seldom used trail that heads to the east and connects to more frequently used trails.

On that infrequently used trail I did find a small section where brush had been cut. If that is all the brush that needs to be bashed on Saturday, it doesn't appear it will take too long to clean it all up.

In the meantime I'm trying to find out if there is anything that can be done to save those decapitated cactus. In Arizona you can do jail time for decapitating a cactus, if it's a Saguaro. I don't know how they feel about Prickly Pear Cactus in Arizona.

Amon G. Carter Foundation Fort Worth Heritage Park Fix

Yesterday on my Fort Worth To-Do List of Problems that I think would behoove Fort Worth to address and fix was the downtown eyesore that should never have been allowed to have become an eyesore, that being Fort Worth's Heritage Park.

Now that the destruction of Heritage Park has become a national issue, with it being put on a list of National Modern Marvels of Architecture in Danger, plus the State of Texas putting Heritage Park on a list of Texas Landmarks in Danger, the City of Fort Worth is finally, sort of, addressing the problem.

My suggestion yesterday was to immediately remove the cyclone fencing and the "Park Closed" sign, clean up the park and re-open it. And worry about fixing the water features later. I believe the claim that shifting ground has affected the structures to be a bogus concern. I've walked all over the "closed" park and saw no signs of cracking concrete.

It seems that currently the City of Fort Worth is earnestly attempting to counter the bad publicity regarding what most outsiders would view as an act of civic negligence, by contacting those who are critical, and concerned, regarding the current sad state of Heritage Park.

Yesterday I was contacted by a City of Fort Worth representative, Veronica Villegas, who wanted to share with me new information about Heritage Park. I then asked if the "new information" was what had been reported in the press, that being that Fort Worth was looking for a way to re-open the park, needing over $7 million to do so.

The City of Fort Worth representative replied with the following, regarding the "new information" about Heritage Park....

The city would like to bring residents up to speed on where we are and how we got here.

As you know, the park was closed in 2007 without much information as to why. We think it is important that residents know those reasons. Also, since then, Streams and Valleys commissioned a study that addresses some of the very issues for the park’s closure.

Last week the city announced that it will be partnering with the Amon G. Carter Foundation to bring landscape architect Laurie Olin, a close associate of the park’s designer Lawrence Halprin, to help the city explore ways to restore and improve Heritage Park. He will lead a two or three day study workshop sometime in April.

The city has forgotten about Heritage Park, but the issues are very complex and it has taken some time to determine our next steps. Certainly, the upcoming workshops will not provide all of answers or even a definitive solution. Instead, it is the first step in a what will undoubtedly be a thorough process that will involve interested stakeholders and our residents.

I would be happy to discuss additional details with you over the phone.

Veronica

I think the part where Veronica says "The city has forgotten about Heritage Park." was a Freudian Slip. I'm sure what she meant to say was "The city has not forgotten about Heritage Park." At least, I hope that is what she meant.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Prairie Power: The Tandy Hills Cleanup Has Begun

City crews have been cutting brush all day today and will continue Thursday and Friday.

We need all the "Friends" we can get to finish the job.

The first ever Tandy Hills Brush Bash is this Saturday, Feb. 21. 9 am - 3 pm.

Come join this motley band of brush-bashers and get in touch with your inner, grass-hugger.

WHO:
Friends of Tandy Hills Natural Area. That means YOU!

WHAT:
Tandy Hills Brush Bash. Phase 1.

WHEN:
Saturday, February 21
9 am - Noon
1 pm - 3 pm
Work one or both shifts.
(Rain Date, and possible second date, March 7)

WHERE:
Tandy Hills Natural Area
3400 View Street
Fort Worth, TX 76103

BRING:
Gloves, work clothes, sturdy shoes, hat, sunscreen, picnic lunch.

CONTACT - RSVP:
Don Young
817-731-2787

See you on the prairie!

This week's FW Weekly has an excellent article about the Tandy Hills cleanup and other Tandy Hills events like the upcoming Prairie Fest.

Below is an excerpt from the FW Weekly article....click the above link to read the entire article.

The city’s best example of native grassland prairie isn’t all that great anymore. Trees have been taking over Tandy Hills Natural Area for years, choking out the wild grasses and flowers that have made the park unique in North Texas.

Now, after years of neglect, the city of Fort Worth is showing a renewed commitment to restoring the park to the way it looked back when wildfires periodically cleared the land of trees and promoted the growth of grasses that sustained huge herds of buffalo.

A crew of chainsaw-wielding tree-slayers will begin laying waste to the unwanted canopy this week, and volunteers will converge on the park on Saturday to drag the cuttings to the curb for removal. What’s more, the city is pledging to make the tree-clearing an annual effort, ensuring the grasslands remain intact for ensuing generations.

“This is a huge step forward,” said Don Young, one of numerous Eastside activists who have pleaded with the city to better maintain the park in recent years.

The informal group began calling themselves the Friends of Tandy Hills Natural Area about four years ago, and created the Prairie Fest. The annual outdoor festival uses music, art, dance, environmental displays, and wildlife tours to bring attention to the park. That first year the festival attracted only a handful of vendors, visitors, and entertainers. Since then, however, the celebration has exploded. About 2,500 visitors attended in 2008, along with 100 vendors.

My Neighborhood Monster Has Returned

I was up in Southlake today. When I got back here I saw that an old neighbor had returned. An unwelcome neighbor who was real messy and made a lot of noise, that being a Chesapeake Energy Barnett Shale gas drilling operation.

I don't know why they are back. The tower is slamming something into the ground. A guy was halfway up the tower. I'd not seen that before. Whatever they were doing it was making that annoying high pitched squealing noise.

And in one of those fortuitous type coincidences that happen with regularity, just when I took the drilling rig picture off my camera, I saw an incoming email from Don Young pointing to fresh information and research about the environmental and health impacts of all this ground poking going on in this highly populated urban zone.

Who do you trust to tell you the truth about gas drilling impacts on human health?

The Big Gas & Oil propaganda machine or a well respected doctor who did her homework?

Dr. Theo Colborn's research into fracking chemicals and their impact on human health are in direct conflict with the gas drilling industry lies. Her updated website is a must-read.

Be sure and check out the, "What's New" section. If you are an expectant parent or the parent of young children, this info is very important, especially, if you live in the Barnett Shale or other oil/gas production areas:

Another must-read on the site is the Fossil Fuel Connection.

Fort Worth's To Do List

I'm in about my 3rd month of the Dallas Morning News being my newspaper, switching from the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. It's been a huge improvement.

The Dallas Morning News seems to be a much more community minded newspaper. A good example of this is each month, on the editorial page, the editors list 10 items they feel need fixing as part of their campaign to bridge the gap between North and South Dallas.

On the list are things like a the run down Dallas Inn, near the zoo. The editorial notes that progress has been made, bulldozers will soon roll. Other items on the list, along with the prognosis for solving the problem are things like burned out houses, a grocery store that has turned into an eyesore, cracked asphalt on a playground. Well, you get the idea.

Meanwhile, in all my years of reading the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, I do not recollect reading a similar editorial. And how could there be, what with the Star-Telegram's editorial position that everything in Fort Worth is perfect, so much so that Fort Worth is the Envy of Cities and Towns Far and Wide, causing serious outbreaks of Green With Envy Syndrome.

So, with the Fort Worth newspaper of record opting out of its civic duties, I will try and fill the gap with my own Fort Worth To Do List.

Problem #1: The Fort Worth Stockyards are arguably Fort Worth's top attraction. Yet it is rundown. Eyesores like the New Isis Theater (pictured above) blight the National Historic District. How hard would it be to put some cosmetic camouflage on some of the more rundown parts of the Stockyards? And get rid of the Wells Fargo Bank building. It totally does not fit.

Problem #2: The I-35W Freeway exits to the Fort Worth Stockyards. They are both littered, weed-covered eyesores. Most town and cities in the states west of Texas, landscape their freeway exits, particularly freeway exits to a tourist attraction. At least keep the exits mowed and litter-free.

Problem #3: I have never seen a major American city with so many streets lacking sidewalks. There are so many areas where pedestrians have worn a path into the grass. In some locations the lack of a sidewalk is dangerous. A few weeks ago I saw an elderly lady, gingerly trying to push her cart load of groceries down a rough trail where a sidewalk should be. No town that has pretensions of being the envy of any other place should be so lacking in sidewalks. How about losing the Trinity River Vision Boondoggle and replace it with the Fort Worth Sidewalks Vision? It'd probably be cheaper and way more useful.

Problem #4: East Lancaster, East Berry, East Rosedale. I take visitors from the northwest down these roads. Their jaws drop. They can't believe they are still in America or that a part of America looks so much like they've entered a Third World Country.

Problem #5: Camp Bowie Boulevard. I was told by a lifelong Fort Worth native that Camp Bowie Boulevard is unique, no other place has a brick paved road. Well, I hate to disabuse people of erroneously held notions, but a brick covered road is not unique. There are brick covered roads in other towns in Texas. What makes Camp Bowie unique is, for the most part, despite some renovation, the road is a bone-jarring mess. Either fix it or pave it. Trust me, it is not unique.

Problem #6: All the long dead businesses you see when you drive around town, turned into eyesores. Fort Worth needs to act like other cities, that are actually envied, and clean up these messes instead of letting them fester.

Problem #7: Heritage Park. What other city in America would arbitrarily close a park, and leave standing, signs that say things like "The visitor to Heritage Park walks on the paths of one man's vision, all those who follow and give life to that vision continue the legacy of courage and purpose." What other city, that is the envy of towns and cities far and wide, would let such an eyesore fester at the heart of their downtown, with a view overlooking what may become their Trinity River Vision? It just seems bizarre to me.

This week the City of Fort Worth says it is looking at the possibility of reopening Heritage Park. The reasons it was closed, supposedly, was ground shifting had affected the structures, the water features were no longer working, no lighting at night, people found it scary and too many homeless people.

The supposed price tag to fix Heritage Park is over $7 million. Here is my solution. Take down the cyclone fencing and the "Park Closed" signs. Clean up the debris. Put in some lighting. Patrol the park regularly. There is a police station/jail right next door. How hard could it be to patrol that park? I saw no sign of any structural damage when I walked all over the park. I think structural damage is a bogus reason to keep it closed. Leave the water features off til Fort Worth can afford to turn them back on.

Fort Worth's Heritage Park is the first thing I found in Fort Worth that actually impressed me as being very well done. When I saw, over a year ago, what had been done to it, I was shocked and appalled and disgusted. Send the same task force Fort Worth sent to Seattle to check out Seattle's new trolley and how Seattle handled the homeless problem, only this time focus on how Seattle solved their Freeway Park problems, that being a park very similar, though bigger, to Fort Worth's Heritage Park.

The cyclone fencing and park closed signs need to come down today. It's ridiculous.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

The Dogs Of Tandy Hills, A Restored Shrine & Purple Wildflowers

I saw my first wildflower of the year, this morning while jogging on the Tandy Hills. I don't know what the name of the purple wildflower is. I've not yet seen one of the shy Trout Lilies that are also currently blooming.

It's another gray day in North Texas, but not a cold, gray day.

I had some good wild excitement while communing with nature this morning. I came over the crest of a hill to see 3 big dogs. When they saw me they started barking and running towards me. I took off at high speed in the opposite direction. I think I moved faster than when I thought a water moccasin was chasing me in Lake Grapevine.

I hope the dog incident does not cause a scary nightmare like what happened when I was chased by dogs at Oakland Lake Park. That night the dogs reappeared in dream form, which quickly turned nightmarish when the 6 dogs morphed into 6 hugely obese, extremely ugly, hideous fat women trying to bite me with their big mouths. I still shudder when I think of it.

I thought today seemed like a good day to rebuild the Tandy Hills Shrine. It'd been destroyed by Shrine Vandals a couple months ago. I did not rebuild the Shrine as artfully as the original. I was in a hurry. So, pretty much all I did was take the Shrine Materials out of the grass and put them back on the trail.

I saw a very odd sign by the Tandy Hills Shrine. I'm sure it has always been there, but I never noticed it before. Why? I do not know. I've been at this location dozens of times. I must not be very observant.

The sign warned "NO DRIVING OFF ROADWAY." The problem with that is there is no roadway to drive off. The sign didn't look all that old, so it's not like a long time ago there actually was a road requiring this now pointless sign. It's perplexing. There are a lot of mysteries in the Tandy Hills.

None of which I solved today. Maybe tomorrow.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Squirrely Shirley & The Nuts

After day after day of leaving me voice mails my mom finally got me on the phone this afternoon about 5.

Mom wanted my favorite ex-sister-in-law's email address so she could thank her for a real nice DVD the ex-sister-in-law had sent me and them. The DVD had videos of my grand-nephew, mom and dad's great grand-kid, Spencer Jack. Spencer Jack may be the cutest kid on the planet.

When I got off the phone I walked out to the living room zone and looked out the patio doors to see my pet squirrel, ironically named Shirley, nibbling on the fresh growth popping out on the trees.

Ironically named Shirley, I say, because I'd just gotten off the phone with my mom who also is a Shirley. Squirrely Shirley is still out there doing her balancing act on the thin limbs. She is quite an acrobat. I leave Shirley nuts out on the patio. Shirley likes nuts.

My mom reminded me today that I'm coming to Phoenix to load up on citrus, and that I better hurry because the lemon season is nearing its end.

My aerobic therapy was the Tandy Hills again today. Signs of spring are starting to sprout. In about a month or so Texas becomes very colorful, with wildflowers sprouting out all over the place. It's my favorite time of the year here, wildflowers, wild weather, warmer temperatures.

And then summer hits. But, actually, I've learned to like summer too. I don't let 100 degree or more days stop me from having fun outside. For the most part. It can get vexing when too many 100 degree days in a row make the swimming pool's water feel like a bath tub. That I don't like.

One thing I know for 100% certain, this summer I am staying in Texas. I will not be spending a frigid month in the cold north, like I did last summer. I've still not totally recovered from that. Although I always have to remind myself, even though it was traumatic, it did fix a long-standing problem that had me vexed. But, I actually could have fixed that without leaving Texas. All I had to do was not answer my phone....

Vitamixing Peanut Butter

A long long time ago in a land far away, that being Washington and the town of Seattle, I went to the annual Home Show that took place in the now deceased Kingdome.

At the Home Show I watched a demonstration of a Vita-Mix. The demonstrator made it seem so easy to make tasty soup, ice cream, all sorts of things.

So, I bought a Vita-Mix. It's been so long since I bought it that my Vita-Mix is now an antique. I saw the new version at last year's Texas State Fair in Dallas. The modern Vita-Mix is quiet and looks very high-tech. Mine looks low-tech and is so noisy it probably does ear drum damage.

When I got my Vita-Mix home I tried to make soup. The demonstrator made it look so easy, just throw in a bunch of vegetables and turn it on. I did so, but it did not make soup. Instead it was a thick green slurry that was inedible.

Eventually I figured out how to make bread, grinding wheat berries to make flour, then making the dough that ended up being very very dense bread that many also said was inedible.

As time went by I did find some uses for the Vita-Mix, but it's been a long time since I've made anything with it. Til this morning.

What with peanut butter turning deadly and with me having an over supply of very good Virginia peanuts that I got at Sprouts Farmers Market and with my jar of Smuckers Natural Peanut Butter empty, I decided to use the Vita-Mix to make peanut butter.

I recollect having made peanut butter before in the Vita-Mix, I think. This morning it took a long time of running that noisy thing, my ears are still ringing, but eventually the peanuts turned into butter. A real course, crunchy butter. That tastes real good.

So, that's been my day so far. Being a very productive peanut butter maker.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Sunday In The Park (Tandy Hills)

For 2 days my mom has been calling and leaving voice mail messages. When I call back I get their answering machine. It's vexing. Modern communication is so unreliable.

One of my ex-sisters-in-law sent me and mom and dad a DVD with a lot of video of my grand nephew, Spencer Jack. I don't know if mom and dad will figure out how to watch the movie.

I don't know if they've ever recovered from buying a Beta VCR, rather than the VHS version. For some reason all my relatives blame me for them all buying Betas. While I got rid of my Beta and got a VHS. It seems like decades ago and I still hear complaints. As recently as last week. I guess on some things there are no statutes of limitations.

Are you planning on being at the Tandy Hills next Saturday to help with the first phase of Operation "Make it Natural"? I went hiking there today, with an eye to looking at what is going to be removed. It would appear to be quite a daunting task. Rather than haul out all that mesquite, why not have a huge bonfire? It'd smell real good. I'll bring meat products to BBQ.

That is downtown Fort Worth, in the photo above, looking through a haze of smog. Even the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, which usually operates as some sort of industry shill, is reporting that the Barnett Shale natural gas drilling operations are adding more pollution to the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex air than all the vehicles on all the roads in this large metropolitan area.

I was startled by a large cat-like creature while hiking today. Moments later I was startled by a large mammal in human form with a big cock-a-poo type dog. The human was an older gentleman who walked with a cane. I thought he was being quite adventurous, negotiating the steep Tandy Hills with a cane.

I don't know if it true or not, but he told me that Mesquite is not native to Texas. It came from Mexico, brought north by the cattle drives that ran through Fort Worth. He told me that since there were no cattle drives through Dallas, there is no mesquite there.

The Man with the Cane has lived near the Tandy Hills since 1979. Back then, the long gone restaurant that used to sit on the western end of the Tandy Hills, was still in operation. He couldn't remember the name for sure, thought it might be something like Calamity Jane's. He said it had a great view and an outdoor patio. It was still standing when I first moved here. Then it was torn down. After that you could make out the layout by looking at the foundation. There was a water feature that you crossed over via a bridge to enter the restaurant.

I've long thought it may have been a Prohibition era Speakeasy type joint, due to its isolated location on a bluff affording a good view of possible incoming police. The Man with a Cane said the building looked like it could have been built back in the 1920s. I am now on a mission to find out the history of that place.