Texas Trip
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A few days before Christmas Meagan and I flew to Texas to spend the holidays with Nathan and Janet and Jeff and Lara and their kids. We were gone two weeks and a day and Meagan had two weeks for holiday break. We left a cold and snowy Mt. Hood where we had a couple of feet of snow on the ground. It has continued to snow. In fact, we have had more snow this year than any winter for 28 years. So it was good to get out for a couple of weeks and enjoy the sunshine of Texas.
Accompanying us on our trip was our good friend Zhang Haiyan. She is a graduate student in environmental engineering at Portland State University. We have adopted her into our family. She is a wonderful Christian girl, 24 years old and is here for a few years to get her degree before returning to her native China. Up to this point, she has only been in Oregon and Washington and we wanted to show her another part of the country. She was eager to see Texas and lots of cowboys.
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It was good to see some greenery after the snows of Mt. Hood. This palmetto tree was on the Colorado River near Nathan's home in Austin.![]()
These flowers were at the Ft. Worth Zoo, near Jeff's home in Decatur.
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Meagan even thought shorts were in order in the warm Texas climate. The other kids are Jeff and Lara's three: Sidney, Ben, and Blake.
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In Ft. Worth we visited the house I grew up in at 3033 Hiawatha Trail in an area called "Indian Oaks." The house doesn't look that different than when I was a kid. My dad built the house in the mid-1940's. He started with the garage and we lived in it for a year or more. I remember the dirt floor and my mother sweeping the dirt floor. As we could afford it, we built the rest of the house. There used to be a lot more trees but a tornado took them out one weekend while we were gone. We were glad that the house was spared.
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Lake Worth was not far behind our house. I attended Lake Worth schools from First Grade through High School graduation except for half of the Seventh Grade when we lived in the Bay Area of Northern California. I knew every kid in Lake Worth School. In our graduating class of sixty, forty of us had started in the First Grade together. I haven't seen most of them since.
After several days in the Decatur/Ft. Worth area, we went to Goldthwaite near where my parents both grew up. I visited my parents and grandparents graves near Goldthwaite.
My dad was orphaned at an early age and he and his two sisters were taken in by an aunt and uncle, Harvey and Annie Hale. The couple pictured here are Billy and Laverne Hale. Technically Billy was my dad's first cousin and my second cousin, but they've always seemed like my aunt an uncle, and the other Hales also. I've never met more loving and Christian people than Billy and Laverne. They still live on the old home place at Rattler, on the Colorado River (pronounced Coloraydo in Texas.)
While we were in Rattler, Haiyan got to meet two real cowboys, two of my young cousins. Though on that day they were hunting, not dressed like cowboys. Anyhow, they had shot a deer that morning on the Hale place and Haiyan got to see it. She and Meagan also "got to" dress some doves the boys had shot. The girls weren't too excited about it and the boys are still chuckling.
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Near Goldthwaite we also saw Bobby Boykin, one of my first cousins who runs a rock quarry in the area. He and his older brother James were like my brothers when we were growing up. James was sick so I didn't get to see him this trip. Their mother, my Dad's younger sister, is Lorene Boykin. She is 94 now and is in a nursing home in Goldthwaite. I was blessed to have two visits with her. She is a real dear. She is hard of hearing, but clear of mind and in good health mostly. I look like her so she always said I was handsome and I always said she was pretty. I'm sorry I didn't get a picture of her or you could decide for yourself.
I got to visit other loved ones in Goldthwaite, on both sides of the family. In fact, I have some relatives that I'm actually related to on both sides of the family.
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On our way to Nathan's house in Austin, we went by Longhorn Caverns in Burnet. Nathan came up to join us. We had a tour of the caverns which is one of the largest in the U.S.
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At Austin we took a tour of the Texas State Capitol which is larger than the U. S. Capitol in Washington. It is beautiful inside and out and was paid for by giving ten Texas counties to the XIT ranch in the Panhandle. (XIT stands for "ten in Texas.) It is built out of native red granite.
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Inside the dome. I have a bit of history at the Texas Capitol that I'll save for another blog. At one time I was very close to the Governor of Texas, Preston Smith. I participated in his inauguration. He appointed me to the Governor's Commission on Human Relations. Once a month I went to Austin for meetings and had my own desk in the Senate Chamber. I'll save that story for another time. I'm also an Admiral in the Texas Navy, an honorary position like being a "Kentucky Colonel." Our one ship is the historic Battleship Texas, anchored at San Jacinto, near Houston. I didn't get to see it this trip.
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Texas has been under six different flags in its history. We drove 1800 miles in our rented car on this trip. We never got farther north than Denton, farther south than Austin, or farther west than Abilene. We didn't get East at all, didn't even get to Dallas. I had wanted Haiyan to get into the Piney Woods but we ran out of time.
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No report of our trip to Texas would be complete without mentioning the food. I don't think we ever passed a Cracker Barrel without stopping. And that's saying a lot. I love the food at Cracker Barrel. If they ever need a "poster guy" I'm applying for the job.
We also ate at other great places including: Babe's (fried chicken), Rudy's (where big chunks of barbecue are served on butcher paper rather than plates, ) Joe Allen's (Barbecue and catfish), Catfish O'Harley's (obvious), River Grill (chicken fried steak,) and a number of Luby's Cafeterias. It was all great. Even Dairy Queen's have better food there. As I write this I'm remembering why I shouldn't live in Texas! I survived two weeks without weight gain but probably couldn't have done it much longer.
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Some people say the flat parts of Texas are where you can see the farthest and see the least of any place in the world! But I love it. You can see from horizon to horizon. I can breathe better there. As a kid I remember Gene Autrey singing, "Don't Fence Me In" and I loved that song. I still get claustrophobic in big groves of trees.
I'm really grateful to have my work and friends in the Pacific Northwest. And I don't think anyone appreciates the beauty of Oregon more than I do. But it is good to go to Texas now and then, remember my roots, and get my passport stamped. There's no such thing as an "ex-Texan."

