For Riverwind (Texas Bragging)
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Studlover (imported)
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For Riverwind (Texas Bragging)
It wouldn't let me copy and paste, but here is the link.
The Texas Brag (http://www.texasmonthly.com/ranch/readme/brag.php)
(http://www.texasmonthly.com/ranch/readme/brag.php (http://www.texasmonthly.com/ranch/readme/brag.php))
Some people think that Texans are born braggarts. The honest truth is that most of us have to be coached. We begin with a few simple facts about the proud history of the republic and the conditions under which we allowed the United States to join up with us. From there we graduate to pithy anecdotes and colorful metaphors about bigness, oil, humidity, snakes, money, dust, and so on. By the age of five, we are all pretty skilled boasters. I wouldnt want to exaggerate, though; some are better than others.
Texans brag about Texas because we have always done it, but also because Easterners demand it. Not that bragging is an unpleasant duty. Still, some people are just never satisfied until they push you into a brag or two when you might prefer to remain quiet and modest. Even then they are not really happy with the usual statements. You have to start lying.
For instance, you might start off by saying that Texas is as big as five ordinary states. They would be impressed but not visibly moved. You could say that the state is so big it takes three days to drive across, and that might set them to thinking. But if you said the swimming pool on your ranch is as big as the Gulf of Mexico and the three-day drive to cross the state doesnt include the day it takes to get from your front door to the end of the driveway, well, then they would smile and shake your hand and say they were glad to know you.
Texans also brag to each other, of course. One morning a neighbor of mine was discoursing on the topic of the land and how it shifts and settles with time and the seasons. The vagaries of the land and weather have been an honored theme in Texas bragging since the beginning, and my neighbor, a retired dairyman and patriotic Texan, knew duty when it called. "You know, that ground up around Austin heaves around so much you cant hardly keep up with it," he said, staring down at the tips of his black shoes as if this were the beginning of a long, serious discussion. "I had a house up there," he added. "In the morning you could pour water in the front of the house and it would roll all the way to the back." Pause. "And wouldnt you know," he continued, scratching his neck, "by the end of the day the ground would shift so much that that water would roll all the way to the front again."
Now, just how did this tradition get started? How is it that Texans came to be so puffed up full of brags and lies, so proud of Texas, as an old saying goes, that they cannot sleep at night?
Embellishing the facts about their new world was a common promotional tactic even among the humorless settlers of colonial America, and by the 1830s pioneers were lying competitively and laughing about it. American literary historian Walter Blair likens this impulse to whistling in the dark, for boasting was and still is a way to make light of adversity, turn aside the jeers of skeptics, and boost ones spirits and resolve. Obviously the frontier was no place for negative thinkers.
The Texas frontier was especially hard, and reports back East were not sympathetic; they dwelt upon the bad land, bad weather, mean Indians, shaky politics, and settlers of questionable background, breeding, and motive. To counteract the discouraging publicity, farmers, speculators, and newspaper editors early on began claiming all sorts of fabulous things about the state--for example, that ears of corn grown in the fertile Brazos and Colorado river bottoms were so large that it took two boys to carry one.
The great-grandfather of all Texas braggarts, however, was Davy Crockett, hero of the Alamo. Though some historians now describe Crockett as a cowardly boaster, during his lifetime he was rightly known throughout America and Europe as a sharpshooting frontiersman who could carry the sunrise in his pocket, grin the bark off a tree, kill a bear with his hands, and catch Halleys comet by the tail.
Texas now is more civilized. We dont kill large animals with our hands or grab comets by the tail. For heavens sake! Today we build tall, modern buildings so that the stars can find their way across the sky at night. And in the evenings, after a hard days work in our bustling, prosperous cities, we take what remains of the sunrise out of our pockets and use it for coals in our portable barbecues.
The Texas Brag (http://www.texasmonthly.com/ranch/readme/brag.php)
(http://www.texasmonthly.com/ranch/readme/brag.php (http://www.texasmonthly.com/ranch/readme/brag.php))
Some people think that Texans are born braggarts. The honest truth is that most of us have to be coached. We begin with a few simple facts about the proud history of the republic and the conditions under which we allowed the United States to join up with us. From there we graduate to pithy anecdotes and colorful metaphors about bigness, oil, humidity, snakes, money, dust, and so on. By the age of five, we are all pretty skilled boasters. I wouldnt want to exaggerate, though; some are better than others.
Texans brag about Texas because we have always done it, but also because Easterners demand it. Not that bragging is an unpleasant duty. Still, some people are just never satisfied until they push you into a brag or two when you might prefer to remain quiet and modest. Even then they are not really happy with the usual statements. You have to start lying.
For instance, you might start off by saying that Texas is as big as five ordinary states. They would be impressed but not visibly moved. You could say that the state is so big it takes three days to drive across, and that might set them to thinking. But if you said the swimming pool on your ranch is as big as the Gulf of Mexico and the three-day drive to cross the state doesnt include the day it takes to get from your front door to the end of the driveway, well, then they would smile and shake your hand and say they were glad to know you.
Texans also brag to each other, of course. One morning a neighbor of mine was discoursing on the topic of the land and how it shifts and settles with time and the seasons. The vagaries of the land and weather have been an honored theme in Texas bragging since the beginning, and my neighbor, a retired dairyman and patriotic Texan, knew duty when it called. "You know, that ground up around Austin heaves around so much you cant hardly keep up with it," he said, staring down at the tips of his black shoes as if this were the beginning of a long, serious discussion. "I had a house up there," he added. "In the morning you could pour water in the front of the house and it would roll all the way to the back." Pause. "And wouldnt you know," he continued, scratching his neck, "by the end of the day the ground would shift so much that that water would roll all the way to the front again."
Now, just how did this tradition get started? How is it that Texans came to be so puffed up full of brags and lies, so proud of Texas, as an old saying goes, that they cannot sleep at night?
Embellishing the facts about their new world was a common promotional tactic even among the humorless settlers of colonial America, and by the 1830s pioneers were lying competitively and laughing about it. American literary historian Walter Blair likens this impulse to whistling in the dark, for boasting was and still is a way to make light of adversity, turn aside the jeers of skeptics, and boost ones spirits and resolve. Obviously the frontier was no place for negative thinkers.
The Texas frontier was especially hard, and reports back East were not sympathetic; they dwelt upon the bad land, bad weather, mean Indians, shaky politics, and settlers of questionable background, breeding, and motive. To counteract the discouraging publicity, farmers, speculators, and newspaper editors early on began claiming all sorts of fabulous things about the state--for example, that ears of corn grown in the fertile Brazos and Colorado river bottoms were so large that it took two boys to carry one.
The great-grandfather of all Texas braggarts, however, was Davy Crockett, hero of the Alamo. Though some historians now describe Crockett as a cowardly boaster, during his lifetime he was rightly known throughout America and Europe as a sharpshooting frontiersman who could carry the sunrise in his pocket, grin the bark off a tree, kill a bear with his hands, and catch Halleys comet by the tail.
Texas now is more civilized. We dont kill large animals with our hands or grab comets by the tail. For heavens sake! Today we build tall, modern buildings so that the stars can find their way across the sky at night. And in the evenings, after a hard days work in our bustling, prosperous cities, we take what remains of the sunrise out of our pockets and use it for coals in our portable barbecues.
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Riverwind (imported)
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Studlover (imported)
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colin (imported)
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Re: For Riverwind (Texas Bragging)
Studlover,
Apart from teaching music, I assume that you export cattle. Probably a lot of them 'cos it sounds as if you are the biggest bull shipper in the state.
LOL
Apart from teaching music, I assume that you export cattle. Probably a lot of them 'cos it sounds as if you are the biggest bull shipper in the state.
LOL
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Studlover (imported)
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Re: For Riverwind (Texas Bragging)
colin (imported) wrote: Wed Mar 16, 2005 12:44 pm Studlover,
Apart from teaching music, I assume that you export cattle. Probably a lot of them 'cos it sounds as if you are the biggest bull shipper in the state.
LOL
Colin, don't ship cattle but I do own two oil wells in Wheeler County.
Studlover
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Riverwind (imported)
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Slammr (imported)
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Re: For Riverwind (Texas Bragging)
Krister, yes, the do have oil in them. My grandmother lived off the earnings in the 50's. With oil having risen so much, my income has improved. Eisenhower put an 8 day pumping limit on domestic oil wells in the 50's, but Nixon lifted that ban. Interesting. But, yes, they *do* pump.
Studlover
My grandfather owned some in the East Texas Oilfied, but what hasn't gone dry or been sold, has been split by so many relatives that I only receive one small check from Exxon each year. The amount of the check has trippled in the last few years, though.
There was an oil well behind one of my grandfather's houses (where I lived for a while). It was dry by the time I was six years-old, though. East Texas, while I was growing up, was covered with oil derricks. I used to climb them. That's how I overcame my fear of heights. I'd climb up as far as I could force myself, go back down, then come back the next day and go a few rungs farther up the ladder, until I eventually made it to the top.
Studlover
My grandfather owned some in the East Texas Oilfied, but what hasn't gone dry or been sold, has been split by so many relatives that I only receive one small check from Exxon each year. The amount of the check has trippled in the last few years, though.
There was an oil well behind one of my grandfather's houses (where I lived for a while). It was dry by the time I was six years-old, though. East Texas, while I was growing up, was covered with oil derricks. I used to climb them. That's how I overcame my fear of heights. I'd climb up as far as I could force myself, go back down, then come back the next day and go a few rungs farther up the ladder, until I eventually made it to the top.
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A-1 (imported)
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Re: For Riverwind (Texas Bragging)
Thank God that there is still oil in them
There is nothing worse that trying to pump a dry hole...

:shakemitk
a-1 
There is nothing worse that trying to pump a dry hole...
:shakemitk
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Studlover (imported)
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Re: For Riverwind (Texas Bragging)
Slammr (imported) wrote: Wed Mar 16, 2005 5:02 pm My grandfather owned some in the East Texas Oilfied, but what hasn't gone dry or been sold, has been split by so many relatives that I only receive one small check from Exxon each year. The amount of the check has trippled in the last few years, though.
There was an oil well behind one of my grandfather's houses (where I lived for a while). It was dry by the time I was six years-old, though. East Texas, while I was growing up, was covered with oil derricks. I used to climb them. That's how I overcame my fear of heights. I'd climb up as far as I could force myself, go back down, then come back the next day and go a few rungs farther up the ladder, until I eventually made it to the top.
Slammr, yeah, that's an interesting area. Many people had rigs in their backyard. I remember working on the railroad in Luling when the stinch was so bad, one would gag. Then Phillips petroleum came up with some concoction and the stinch was gone. But it's still interesting to see wells pumping right on main street. Ah! Only in Texas!
Studlover
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Studlover (imported)
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Re: For Riverwind (Texas Bragging)
A-1 (imported) wrote: Wed Mar 16, 2005 5:10 pm Thank God that there is still oil in them
There is nothing worse that trying to pump a dry hole...
:shakemitk
a-1
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A-1, well, I got some oil if you never need it for that dry hole!!!!!