Much prettier country between Abilene and San Angelo, near Robert Lee. Most scenery around Lubbock is a beating.
WestTexasAg04 said:
An area most people don't consider west Texas that I've always liked is the San Saba, Llano and Mason area. I'd consider it more of the western edge of the hill country. Greener, nice hills, creeks and some rivers. And not full of yuppies like a lot of the hill country.
Abilene A&M ClubTommyBrady said:
Sounds like it checks a lot of boxes. We'll definitely check out the area. Being active in a A&M club is very important to us so this is pretty great.
Moe 92 said:Fellow USG Sweetwater alumni, here - my first job out of A&M from 93 - 97 (when USG transferred me to NJ). Ever get a chance to check out the contents of Norman Painter's pockets? See Hugh's missle silo? For the record, those are NOT double entendres.jrwoodchuck said:
Entirely possible even though that was a bit after I graduated. I was probably working at USG in Sweetwater along about then. My tag line after "back in the day" stories is "...and beer was involved."
3rd Generation Ag said:
Graduated from Borden County in 67. Have only been back to Gail a few times. I consider people able to live there blessed. Now in huge metroplex to be close to my kids, who have zero interest in small town life. I think many would retire back to those small towns except for the fact of family.
WestTexasAg04 said:
I like to think Eden as the gateway to West Texas. About five miles west of Eden as you're coming down from the edwards plateau is where it starts in my opinion. Landscape change there is very distinct.
Guice is vaguely familiar, Ernstes is absolutely familiar. Farm is on the other side of the tracks from us.DipEmAndPickEm said:
Does the last name Guice ring any bells? Original Katy family was Ernstes.
jrwoodchuck said:
First off, let me say I never attended TAMU. However, I like to check in here every so often to see any news or what's going on in West Texas. I was born and reared in Hamlin and really enjoyed reading FossilAg's thread.
I'm on vacation right now (the first one in many years) and went to Hamlin's homecoming this past weekend. It was the second time I had been there in 47 years. It was a shock to see how the town has declined, although not completely unexpected.
I guess I'm interested to hear how your hometown has fared over the uhulk years, especially the small towns. And, as we all know, Friday night football in small town Texas still is king.
BTW, Hamlin won their game 32-6 over Hawley.
Fishing Fools said:
Rising Star got a new Stop Light and the intersection is now concrete.
They also are getting a new superintendent.Fishing Fools said:
Rising Star got a new Stop Light and the intersection is now concrete.
LoudestWHOOP! said:
I came from a small town in SE Texas some of you may have heard of called Katy. The city limit sign read "Pop. 1,760" when we moved there in 1971. Since then it got bigger, a LOT bigger. Some say it has between 500k and 1M folks that use Katy as a mailing address. I recognize almost nothing but Cardiff's Rice drier, which I believe has a new name. It was always a sight for sore eyes after driving home after Aggie Games as a kid. My family was one of the original 10 families to settle there in the early 1900s.
We used to live in the "sticks" and now everyone does, so its not the "sticks" anymore. We used to sneak onto Cinco Ranch, when it actually was a "ranch" and fish the canals (oxbow lakes) for some of the best black bass from a "pond" you will find. (and believe me we looked) I found mammal fossils embedded in the creek bed wall and sent them to the Katy Outdoor learning center. We used to fish wherever we could get away with it, swim in Rice wells until someone used to run us off.
I can probably name of a half dozen occasions where I should have died while I was growing up. Snakes, Drowning, Lightning strike, Cerebral hemorrhages come to mind off the top of my head. But damn we had a lot of fun.
I played football for the coaching legend in Mike Johnston and Gary Joseph was an Assistant Coach, but we won 2 games in years when I was varsity. We are not mentioned much in the football lore of the Katy Tigers. I love the little town I grew in, but it is gone. I would not trade my growing up there for anything but you cannot live my childhood in Katy anymore.
BTW, I have lived in Midland now for over 25 years.
My oldest brother graduated in 1981. My just older brother was the barefooted punter #23 for KHS in 1981 & 1982 seasons. I was running track those 2 years at KHS. I wore Mike Cargill's #41 when I made varsity football at KHS in 1983 & 1984 seasons.sanangelo said:LoudestWHOOP! said:
I came from a small town in SE Texas some of you may have heard of called Katy. The city limit sign read "Pop. 1,760" when we moved there in 1971. Since then it got bigger, a LOT bigger. Some say it has between 500k and 1M folks that use Katy as a mailing address. I recognize almost nothing but Cardiff's Rice drier, which I believe has a new name. It was always a sight for sore eyes after driving home after Aggie Games as a kid. My family was one of the original 10 families to settle there in the early 1900s.
We used to live in the "sticks" and now everyone does, so its not the "sticks" anymore. We used to sneak onto Cinco Ranch, when it actually was a "ranch" and fish the canals (oxbow lakes) for some of the best black bass from a "pond" you will find. (and believe me we looked) I found mammal fossils embedded in the creek bed wall and sent them to the Katy Outdoor learning center. We used to fish wherever we could get away with it, swim in Rice wells until someone used to run us off.
I can probably name of a half dozen occasions where I should have died while I was growing up. Snakes, Drowning, Lightning strike, Cerebral hemorrhages come to mind off the top of my head. But damn we had a lot of fun.
I played football for the coaching legend in Mike Johnston and Gary Joseph was an Assistant Coach, but we won 2 games in years when I was varsity. We are not mentioned much in the football lore of the Katy Tigers. I love the little town I grew in, but it is gone. I would not trade my growing up there for anything but you cannot live my childhood in Katy anymore.
BTW, I have lived in Midland now for over 25 years.
Class of 82 from KHS. Used to drive to Dorm 6 in 82 minutes from West Memorial up to Clay to Katy hockley to FM 529 to FM 359 past the concrete bull on the left hand side of the road just past Monaville. Someone always painted its nuts blue until around my senior year someone chiseled them off. stopped at the Shell Station in Hempstead and drove past the gigantic Marshall Chevy place dreaming of a new truck. After that, it got fairly bland to navasota and then to the speedway. Watched them build that new water tower on the south side of college station during latter trips.
We went from 3A to 5A between sophomore and junior year. Had no chance against Stratford, Memorial, westchester or even Spring Branch. I recall Farmer Stephens in the dark green or blue old ford coming at us on the cinco ranch when it was a ranch. A buddy was a dishwasher at the new Landrys. We'd borrow the dirty napkins and table cloths to make goose decoys. Ate a bunch of lunches and dinners at Nonmachers BBQ. There were beer bashes at the old stockdick school and a place called the door. My freshman year in college a new place for parties was created between Mason and Fry Rd called The Boxcars.
When I returned from my first USAF assignment in Guam circa 1990, I missed the Mason road exit. I didn't recognize it. In the mid-2000s the Vegetarian Indian Cuisine restaurant opened on Mason road. I didn't think it was going to last 6 months. The demographics changed, I guess. Last time I was there, the vegetarian Indian cuisine place was thriving. And Mr Nonmacher died but I heard a young couple is rebuilding the bbq experience there.
When I moved to Mason road it dead ended at Provincial circa 1973. Watched west memorial elementary get built and then the junior high next door. We were the first class to graduate from both. Our class was split in half in 10th grade to form Taylor. Most of my friends went to Taylor. I stayed at Katy. Rode bus #19 until I got a car. Worked at Westside Hardware for Frank Kammerlohr, one of my best mentors for teaching me business acumen.
I've lived in San Angelo for the past 18 years.
I used to hunt Buster Welch's ranch in Fisher and Scurry Counties, near double fork of Brazos. Beautiful country. Lots of draws, ravines, and mesas in that area. His place had some caves in Rough Creek. Mr. Welch was a hell of a man.FishrCoAg said:
Yellowhammer from '73 here. I'm sure we have a lot of mutual acquaintances
Carmine Scarpacio said:I used to hunt Buster Welch's ranch in Fisher and Scurry Counties, near double fork of Brazos. Beautiful country. Lots of draws, ravines, and mesas in that area. His place had some caves in Rough Creek. Mr. Welch was a hell of a man.FishrCoAg said:
Yellowhammer from '73 here. I'm sure we have a lot of mutual acquaintances
Wow! Been ten years since I got off that lease. Just too far to drive once we had kids. But I was obsessed with that country. I killed a nice mule deer off his property in a small wheat field pretty close and northeast of his HQ.FishrCoAg said:Carmine Scarpacio said:I used to hunt Buster Welch's ranch in Fisher and Scurry Counties, near double fork of Brazos. Beautiful country. Lots of draws, ravines, and mesas in that area. His place had some caves in Rough Creek. Mr. Welch was a hell of a man.FishrCoAg said:
Yellowhammer from '73 here. I'm sure we have a lot of mutual acquaintances
The White House and barn on the little curve west of his ranch HQ is mine. Did a lot of work for him over the years. He was an icon for sure. Small world
Carmine Scarpacio said:Wow! Been ten years since I got off that lease. Just too far to drive once we had kids. But I was obsessed with that country. I killed a nice mule deer off his property in a small wheat field pretty close and northeast of his HQ.FishrCoAg said:Carmine Scarpacio said:I used to hunt Buster Welch's ranch in Fisher and Scurry Counties, near double fork of Brazos. Beautiful country. Lots of draws, ravines, and mesas in that area. His place had some caves in Rough Creek. Mr. Welch was a hell of a man.FishrCoAg said:
Yellowhammer from '73 here. I'm sure we have a lot of mutual acquaintances
The White House and barn on the little curve west of his ranch HQ is mine. Did a lot of work for him over the years. He was an icon for sure. Small world
Also went on a date with a real pretty girl from Rotan (her last name was Shipp and she still lives there). This was 25+ years ago when we were at ACU. She was/is a class act.
My family is from San Angelo and I lived there from 2012-2013 so it was fun to watch Johnny at some of those downtown bars. I was also in Angelo every summer since the early 90s. I think it was a lot nicer back in the day and my family tends to think the same. Maybe it's just that American towns are declining in general. I would still live there over most major cities in Texas though.The Fall Guy said:
Grandma and Grandpa were both born in Talpa, Tx in Coleman county in 1915. They moved to Ballinger after getting married. Grandpa was stationed at Mathis field in San Angelo during WW2 and fixed airplanes because he was a tractor repairman. Dad was from Ballinger,Texas. Born in San Angelo, left Ballinger to go to A&M in 1962. We moved to San Angelo in 1977 and moved to the DFW area in 1984. Had our family ranch north of San Angelo and South of Robert Lee. Sold it in 1998. Worst day ever. I live in Kyle, Tx now and wish I could move back to the Angelo area.
Klaus Schwab said:My family is from San Angelo and I lived there from 2012-2013 so it was fun to watch Johnny at some of those downtown bars. I was also in Angelo every summer since the early 90s. I think it was a lot nicer back in the day and my family tends to think the same. Maybe it's just that American towns are declining in general. I would still live there over most major cities in Texas though.The Fall Guy said:
Grandma and Grandpa were both born in Talpa, Tx in Coleman county in 1915. They moved to Ballinger after getting married. Grandpa was stationed at Mathis field in San Angelo during WW2 and fixed airplanes because he was a tractor repairman. Dad was from Ballinger,Texas. Born in San Angelo, left Ballinger to go to A&M in 1962. We moved to San Angelo in 1977 and moved to the DFW area in 1984. Had our family ranch north of San Angelo and South of Robert Lee. Sold it in 1998. Worst day ever. I live in Kyle, Tx now and wish I could move back to the Angelo area.
it's interesting you feel it was nicer back in the day. every time i go back to see my family i feel like there are so many things i wish i could go and do and old restaurants to revisit. i feel like it reinvented itself in the 2010s quite a bit after i left.Klaus Schwab said:My family is from San Angelo and I lived there from 2012-2013 so it was fun to watch Johnny at some of those downtown bars. I was also in Angelo every summer since the early 90s. I think it was a lot nicer back in the day and my family tends to think the same. Maybe it's just that American towns are declining in general. I would still live there over most major cities in Texas though.The Fall Guy said:
Grandma and Grandpa were both born in Talpa, Tx in Coleman county in 1915. They moved to Ballinger after getting married. Grandpa was stationed at Mathis field in San Angelo during WW2 and fixed airplanes because he was a tractor repairman. Dad was from Ballinger,Texas. Born in San Angelo, left Ballinger to go to A&M in 1962. We moved to San Angelo in 1977 and moved to the DFW area in 1984. Had our family ranch north of San Angelo and South of Robert Lee. Sold it in 1998. Worst day ever. I live in Kyle, Tx now and wish I could move back to the Angelo area.
c-jags said:it's interesting you feel it was nicer back in the day. every time i go back to see my family i feel like there are so many things i wish i could go and do and old restaurants to revisit. i feel like it reinvented itself in the 2010s quite a bit after i left.Klaus Schwab said:My family is from San Angelo and I lived there from 2012-2013 so it was fun to watch Johnny at some of those downtown bars. I was also in Angelo every summer since the early 90s. I think it was a lot nicer back in the day and my family tends to think the same. Maybe it's just that American towns are declining in general. I would still live there over most major cities in Texas though.The Fall Guy said:
Grandma and Grandpa were both born in Talpa, Tx in Coleman county in 1915. They moved to Ballinger after getting married. Grandpa was stationed at Mathis field in San Angelo during WW2 and fixed airplanes because he was a tractor repairman. Dad was from Ballinger,Texas. Born in San Angelo, left Ballinger to go to A&M in 1962. We moved to San Angelo in 1977 and moved to the DFW area in 1984. Had our family ranch north of San Angelo and South of Robert Lee. Sold it in 1998. Worst day ever. I live in Kyle, Tx now and wish I could move back to the Angelo area.
i'd think it's just nostalgia, but i feel like it has a lot more going for it now than it did in the 80s and 90s when i was there.
i will say when we go back it's so much busier than it used to be. The town stopped at the mall and Target out on the loop for most of my child hood and then the kmart, home depot, and super walmart were built and i feel like that whole area is just a concrete jungle now with a Sephora, Kohls, etc.
little SA, Temple, Tyler, New Braunfels, Georgetown or Abilene are still my perfect sized towns although all of them feel so much bigger than they used to 20 years ago. My family was in New Braunfels at church camp this week and i was passing through and went to see them and felt like i passed 1000 cars on the way back to 35. i had no idea that it was 100k population now.
jrwoodchuck said:
I think small town Texas back in the day is what a lot of people yearn for today. It sounds corny, but it was a kinder, gentler time. We made our own fun. We didn't hurt anybody. Even though every Tom, Dick, and Harry had a gun, it wasn't the first move in a fight. If you got busted for drinking it was usually a phone call to the folks where you got the "counseling" you needed. This isn't all there was to it. Other people will have different memories. I'm pretty sure I'll be moving back to Hamlin when I retire. A perfect example of coming full circle.
My roommate was from Ballinger: class of '66 so he/we went to A&M in fall 1962. Ivan Estes.The Fall Guy said:
Grandma and Grandpa were both born in Talpa, Tx in Coleman county in 1915. They moved to Ballinger after getting married. Grandpa was stationed at Mathis field in San Angelo during WW2 and fixed airplanes because he was a tractor repairman. Dad was from Ballinger,Texas. Born in San Angelo, left Ballinger to go to A&M in 1962. We moved to San Angelo in 1977 and moved to the DFW area in 1984. Had our family ranch north of San Angelo and South of Robert Lee. Sold it in 1998. Worst day ever. I live in Kyle, Tx now and wish I could move back to the Angelo area.