Category Archives: Uncategorized

Community Thanksgiving

Some good hours were spent today at Georgetown’s Community Thanksgiving, held in the Georgetown Community Center at San Gabriel Park.  This annual gathering offers meals at no cost to whoever wants one.   Some come to share time with friends, others because they might not otherwise have a meal to enjoy.   Diners could be served onsite, but volunteers were also packaging to-go dinners to be delivered into area homes.   My favorite moments today led me to the couple dressed in red, both in their 90s, married for 65 years.   Because the serving line might present issues, a friend with the Georgetown Police Department stepped in, offering his help.    Once the couple reached their table, the husband, with a tenderness that spoke volumes, helped his bride cut her food to perfection.    We could all learn more kindness, whatever the day.

Prairie Grass

Since our time in this area of Central Texas, I’ve called it prairie grass.   Those much wiser have given it other names.  I’ll stick with calling it prairie grass.    There’s an abundance of it around the Blackland Prairie this month.   Perhaps it’s little more than weeds, but the way it reacts to light is soothing.

Holiday Spirit in Granger

Granger, one of my favorite communities, has adorned its downtown area with holiday lights.   This Williamson County town has around 1500 people calling it home, but the spirit exhibited there is inspiring.   That moon in the first photo is Waxing Gibbous, 68.3% visibility.

Mesquite Sunset

Watching a sunset tonight at a friend’s ranch, just a few minutes from home.   The mesquite tree pictured is a survivor, having been through quite a few bouts of turbulence through the years.   It’s still with us.  Our Blackland Prairie skies were at their best this evening.  As was the tree.

Wisps of Autumn

Our horrible summer heat and drought has left its mark on Central Texas, but thankfully we’re still able to see a bit of autumn color.   These photographs were taken Saturday in Georgetown. The first couple were near the pond at Our Lady of the Rosary Cemetery and Prayer Gardens, the rest along the hiking trails at Booty’s Road Park.  During my time on the trail, I met up with a hawk, quietly intent on hunting, probably hoping the camera would move on.   After watching her for about fifteen minutes, I moved onto other subjects.    I’m still pursuing bits of autumn in Taylor, usually on those morning walks.     Our fall season, what there is of it, usually continues into early-December.  You can travel the world looking for just the right seasonal photo, but don’t neglect your own backyard.

Quiet Time

There’s something about the time well past sundown that’s always appealed to me.  When growing up in the 1950s and 1960s in Texarkana, I always looked forward to the time when we’d  go “window shopping” in the evening.   It was nice to stroll along those streets, peering into those windows.   It wasn’t about what we’d buy there.   It was just a quiet and peaceful time.    For years I’ve been enchanted by night light.   These were taken Friday night as I strolled around downtown Taylor.   The opening photo is outside the Howard Theatre, closed for a few years.  There’s a local effort to bring it back to life.  That would be nice.   Beginning when he was 11, my father was a theater projectionist.   Other photos just latch onto the night.    Evening light is quiet.  Soothing.  

Evening Interlude

The transition to shorter days might not be for everyone, but it suits my personality quite well.   Presented here are three area churches, all seen after dark.  The opening photo is Georgetown’s Main Street Baptist Church,  taken on a Wednesday night during their weekly prayer service.   The second offering is Holy Trinity Catholic Church of Corn Hill, a beautiful twin-spired church in North Williamson County.   The church is one of those you can see well from a distance.     The last photo, right here in Taylor, is St. James Episcopal Church, as seen tonight.   While they all look nice in sunlight, they virtually glow after dark.