Tags: magazine   texas monthly  

ISBN: 0148-7736

Year: 2023

Text
                    WHERE TO DIG FOR	THE FIGHT AGAINST ABSURD	OUR 25 BEST
SHARK TEETH HAIR REGULATIONS NEW BBQ JOINTS
BY ROSE CAHALAN	BY DOYIN OYENIYI	BY DANIEL VAUGHN
TexasMonthly
WE’RE *1!
How Texas leads the nation in everything from
cattle ranching to clean energy. (And, alas, prison inmates
and kids without health insurance.)

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Dallas Arboretum & Botanical Garden, White Roc SET л If you’re going to catch the nset in Dallas, White Rock Lake is le place to do it. Just a few minutes east of Downtown, spend the day walking, biking or sailing then grab a blanket and a friend and head to the Dallas Arboretum & Botanical Garden for live music with a view. Whatever your all is, you’ll find it here. To plan your trip, go to VisitDallas.com VISIT9ALLAS & find your all
VISIT9ALLAS’ Г W Г I ”* £_ у & FIND YOUR ALL THIS FALL With stunning sights and daily activities, the Dallas Arboretum is your home this fall for an array of beautiful blooms and evening concerts. Beginning September 16, enjoy Autumn at the Arboretum, a display of fall-blooming plants and 100,000 pumpkins, gourds and squash in the acclaimed Pumpkin Village. From the famous Fletcher’s corny dog to the Texas Star Ferris wheel, the State Fair of Texas brings 24 days of family fun and entertainment to Dallas every fall. The fun begins Friday, September 29, and continues through Sunday, October 22. This free self-guided tour is a fun and fresh way to explore the city’s best and brightest margaritas. Download the Margarita Mile pass to check in at participating restaurants, enjoy craft margaritas, and earn cool swag along the way. Break out your face paint and supersized foam cowboy hats, football season’s back. Join the crowd as fans fill AT&T Stadium and loud and lively sports bars and patios in every neighborhood to watch America's Team VisitDallas.com/things-to-do
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LONE STAR ART AUCTION HNEXT AUCTION-OCTOBER 2 8, 2 02 3-DALLAS, TEXAS A Texas-Sized Auction Specializing in the Best American, Western, Wildlife, Sporting and Texas Fine Art OPPOSITE: HOWARD TERPNING, Proud Men, 2000, oil, 12"xl3"Est: $150,000-200,000 | G. HARVEY, Enough Till Spring, oil, 30”x 50" Est: $ 175,000-225,000 | OSCAR BERNINGHAUS, A Camp in the Aspen Forest, 1926, oil, 20"x 16" Est: $150,000-200,000 | JOSEPH HENRY SHARP, Evening Council, oil, 25.25"x 30.25" Est: $150,000-200,000 TOM LOVELL, The Friendly Willows, 1988, oil, 22 x 38" Est: $140,000-190,000 | FREDERIC SACKRIDER REMINGTON, Fitzpatrick and the Wagon Train, 1890, ink, 165x1 1.5" Est: $30,000-50,000 | ABOVE: JULIAN ONDERDONK, bv/7/g/rf in the Hills, Blue-Bonnets, 1918, oil, 8"x 10" Est.: $80,000-120,000 | KYLE Ю LZ IN, Keeper of the Plains, 2020, oil, 31 x 26" Est: $100,000-150,000 | MARTIN GRELLE, Provider, 2006, oil, 40'x 30' Est: $60,000-90,000 | JOSEPH HENRY SHARP, CrowCampNcar Custer Battlefield, Montana, oil on cedar, 55"x85" Est: $70,000-90,000 AUCTION REGISTRATION NOW OPEN FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT WWW.LSARTAUCTION.COM OR CALL 469.608.7600 Presented By: Great American West and Phil Berkebile, Jr жйпгй 8333 Douglas Avenue, Suite 360 • Dallas, TX 75225 469.608.7600 • info@lsartauction.com • 20% Buyer’s Premium ass* Auctioneer: Jason Brooks, TX License No. 16216 LONE STAR ART AUCTION
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114 We’re Number One But you knew that. It’s what Texas is number one in, statistically speaking, that might surprise you. by Will Bostwick, David Courtney, Tom Foster, Russell Gold, Michael Hall, Ricardo Nuila, Jeff Salamon, Dan Solomon, and Katy Vine 150 The Apache, the Priest, And a Forty-Year Fight for Justice James Reyos, convicted in a shocking murder despite a solid alibi, has some unlikely allies trying to clear his name, by Michael Hall 158 The 25 Best New (And Improved) Barbecue Joints in Texas Fuel up the car. From Edinburg to Mabank, our small towns and suburbs are reclaiming the spotlight. by Daniel Vaughn A spread from KG BBQ, in Austin. TEXAS MONTHLY PHOTOGRAPH BY MACKENZIE SMITH KELLEY
гм 09.25 THE BEST OF THE WEB 12 FROM THE EDITOR 16 ROAR OF THE CROWD.....18 IT HAPPENED HERE 26 THE STATE 59 Travel & Outdoors GUIDEBOOK Explore the cultural and culinary treasures of the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca, by Jose R. Ralat EXCURSIONS A popular spot to find shark teeth in Texas lies hundreds of miles from the coast, by Rose Cahalan Style & Design PROFILE The latest legislative victory for natural hair comes almost three decades after Dallas braider Isis Brantley began fighting for change, by Doyin Oyeniyi 61 Arts & Entertainment LETTER FROM Smithville is Hollywood’s favorite Texas small town, but fame exacts a price. by Sean O’Neal PLUS: ONE TRACK MIND // News & Politics DISPATCH Developers of a pristine Hill Country property promise to set a new standard in land stewardship. Some locals worry the project could forever damage a fragile ecosystem, by Peter Holley PLUS: MEANWHILE, IN TEXAS 87 MEDICINE Texas Biomed aims to become the nation’s top infectious disease institute. But that involves pain and death for its monkey subjects, by Will Bostwick Being Texan Food & Drink DINING GUIDE From a perfect seafood paella to a Trill burger, here’s what to order right now. by Courtney Bond and Patricia Sharpe 71 BOOKS A biography of beloved Texas author Larry McMurtry explores the affection and disdain he felt toward his home state, by Andrew R. Graybill COUNTRY NOTES Seventy-eight-year-old Mike Capron knows horses and cattle and wide- open spaces, and today he paints what he knows, by Sterry Butcher THETEXANIST 208 ON THE COVER: Illustration by Jason Allen Lee. Spine illustration by Marc Burckhardt. 1O TEXAS MONTHLY
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The Best of the Web Meanwhile, Over on TexasMonllily.com... MOVE TO TEXAS, GET RICH... INVEST IN MAJOR LEAGUE CRICKET? A few miles west of where Houston’s highway sprawl fades from a parade of su- perstores into the low countryside, a slight rise in U.S. 290 in Prairie View reveals a surprise: six perfect circles of close- cropped grass clus- tered like petals on an enormous flower. Texas Super Kings fans at Grand Prairie Stadium on MLC opening day, July 13, 2023. Here, spread across 86 acres, the nation’s largest and most advanced collection of cricket grounds attracts hundreds of athletes every week from around the region and around the country. Tom Foster speaks to the South Asian busi- ness leaders who are turning Texas into the next hot spot for the world’s second- biggest sport. MY SEARCH FOR THE SNOW MONKEYS OF SOUTH TEXAS As a college student, Sarah Bird had visited a troop of macaques that had been trans- planted, in 1972, from their sanctuary in snowy, pine-shaded peaks in Japan to a sun-strobed ranch near Laredo. After rediscovering her photographs of the monkeys nearly fifty years later, the author sets out to detail the wild tale of the troop and its descendants. VACATION RENTALS THAT CAN HELP YOU ESCAPE THE HEAT There’s something special about a cold, spring-fed pool, swimming hole, or river on a brutally hot day, when man-made pools feel like they’re filled with lukewarm bathwater. Ana Davila Chalita curates a list of vacation rentals across the state located near chilly bodies of water—and yes, all the rentals have air-conditioning. MEOW WOLF OPENS ITS MAXIMALIST, MULTICOLORED DOORSINGRAPEVINE The interactive art and entertainment company’s newest lo- cation, in Grapevine, transforms a former Bed Bath & Beyond into a head-spinning spectacle. Titled “The Real Unreal,” the exhibit features a mesmerizing laby- rinth of interlocking rooms of bright art, imaginative sculp- tural creatures, and fantastical storylines crafted by a team of more than 150 full-time artists and an additional 40 or so North Texas-area muralists, painters, and sculptors. Taylor Prewitt visits the large-scale immersive art installation and discovers “a realm of nonstop maximalism, a dimension where no nook or cranny is overlooked and no silence is tolerated.” WHY IS WILL HURD RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT? The former U.S. con- gressman from Texas was once widely viewed as the shining example of the Republican Party’s future. Now, Hurd’s odds of winning the party’s primary elec- tions for president look extraordinari- ly slim—one poll released in July had him registering just one percent support. Alexandra Samuels speaks with Hurd about artificial intel- ligence, his zodiac sign, his determina- tion to beat Donald Trump, and more. WELCOME TO A TEXAS DINNER PARTY Looking for some fresh cooking in- spiration? In a new video series, Texas Monthly highlights recipes that are perfect for your next seasonal menu. Senior food and drink editor Kimya Kavehkar explains how to make five recipes for summer, from a berry-based cocktail and a crispy salmon entree to a crowd-pleasing, three-ingredient dessert. 12 TEXAS MONTHLY PHOTOGRAPH BY BEN LOWY
5! AUSTIN • DALLAS • FORT WORTH • HOUSTON • PLANO • SAN ANTONIO • SOUTHLAKE !5 гтш/гатЕ s » PORTUGAL s A VOYAGE OF CULINARY EXPLORATION SCAN TO DISCOVER MORE Join us as we transport you to Portugal for a store-wide celebration of the country’s storied traditions and richly diverse cultural influences. Discover custard-filled Pasteis de Nata, savory and complex Piri-Piri Chicken, a stunning seafood selection, and of course, sips of vinho. You'll feel like you ventured out to new lands yourself - no passport needed!
TXSTlIT^iiTXSTRl^iiTXSTrn^iiTXSTRT^iiTXSTlzT^iiTXST NEXTl OUR LEGACY? NEVER RESTING ON OUR LEGACY. INSPIRED RESEARCH. FUELING AMBITION WITH OPPORTUNITY. THE DRIVE THAT FUELS DISCOVERY. BECAUSE NEXT NEVER STOPS. TEXAS^rSTATE -------------® UNIVERSITY MEMBER THE TEXAS STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM TXST.EDU

From the Editor Coming Потс Texans, however much they love their native state, often set out to conquer newworlds,whetherbydevelopingtheearlyoilfieldsin Saudi Arabia, sellingkolaches to delighted Brooklynites,or serv- ing as president of the United States. But whatever they might achieve, many long to find their way back home. This magazine has often tapped into that desire, luringback fine Texas-born journalists such as Mimi Swartz, Peter Holley, Sandi Villarreal, and Lea Konczal, who had decamped to publications in the East and Midwest. I’m pleased to announce that we’ve thrown a rope over another star Texpat, with the hiring of acclaimed editor and author Ross McCammon. After eighteen years of working in senior positions at some of the best mag- azines in New York, he has moved toAustin to become our deputy editor. Ross was born in Houston and grewup in the historic OakCliff section of Dallas, south of downtown, where his father, Dan, and his mother, Peg, had deep roots. Ross recalls aletter written from a small settlement known as Pleasant Point, in Johnson County, by one of his mother’s distant relatives who had recently moved to Texas in search of higher wages. In the note, dated October 30,1882, he wrote to a brother back in the Bluegrass State, “Texas ain’t nothing extra,but itbeats Kentucky for me!” Peg, a single mother who worked in hospital administration, was an avid reader of everything from British history to Shakespeare to Texas Monthly. “The magazine was on our coffee table,” Ross recalls, “and on the tables of my friends’ parents and in their conversations.” His mom’s curiosity and love of language rubbed off on Ross, who helped found his high school newspaper, served as editor of the yearbook, and majored in English literature at the University of North Texas in Denton. His aunt and mentor Kathleen Reese worked for the nowdefunct Dallas Times HeraZcZ and helped guide Ross tohis first job in journalism, at Spirit, Deputy the (also now defunct) in-flight magazine of Southwest Airlines that in editor Ross subsequent years served as an early training ground for Texas Monthly McCammon. creative director Emily Kimbro and executive editor J. K. Nickell. Ross was a fact-checker at the magazine during his collegeyears andupon graduationjoinedSpzrz'Z full-time, rising to become its editor in chief. His workcaught the attention of arecruiter for Esquire, then edited by the brilliant and irascible David Granger. He invited Ross to meet him in New York City and hired him on the spot. Ross worked there for eleven years as aneditor and occasional writer of cover stories (often the really tough ones... on subjects such as Mila Kunis and Rihanna). He later served as an editor for GQ, Men’s Health, Popular Mechanics, and Medium. He wrote freelance stories for magazines ranging tromBloomberg Businessweek to Cosmopolitan and Wired. His book Works Well With Others examines the relationship between workplace social behavior and success and has been translated into five languages. We first enticed Ross to work for Texas Monthly as the editor of our January Bum Steers cover package, a sprawling project that involved more than a dozen staff- ers. They said they enjoyed Ross’s collegiality and sense of humor, and the feeling was mutual. “I felt like these were my people,” Ross said. “Itfelt like cominghome.” He worked with us on contract for the next seven months,during which he brought his family to visit Aus- tin. “My daughter had plastered a ‘Don’t Mess With Texas’ bumper sticker across her school-issued laptop months before we moved.” In addition to various other re- sponsibilities, Ross will focus on our print magazine, the flagship of Texas Monthly’s eight journalistic platforms. He will work especially closely with our creative director, Emily; Anna Walsh, the director of editorial operations; and Sandi, the magazine’s deputy editor for digital storytelling. “Foryears, I’ve admired all the ways Texas Monthly tells the best stories about Texas, from print to podcasts,” Ross said. “It just keeps getting better.” I hope you enjoy this issue and the fresh approach that Ross is bringing to it. DAN GOODGAME EDITOR IN CHIEF roar@texasmonthly.com 16 TEXAS MONTHLY
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Roar of the Crowd “I read your article concerning the Texas State Historical Association, and I was disappointed by how uncritically the story accepts many of the claims of one side.” A History Lessened I re ad your article concerning the Texas State Historical Associa- tion [“Come and Rewrite It,” July 2023], and I was disappointed by how uncrit ically the story accep ts many of the claims of one side. The author repeats the assertion by TSHA “traditionalists” that Mary Jo O’Rear’s appointment to the board, which occasioned J. P. Bryan’s lawsuit, shifted the balance of board members to “ac- ademics” even though decades of TSHA precedent show her to be an independent scholar. The TSHA’s chief historian, Walter Buenger, is a tradition- al historian, and his statements about the Alamo’s use as a symbol of white supremacy are hardly controversial among scholars of modern Texas. Yet the story describes him as “a progressive” Email us at roar@texasmonthly.com. Or send letters to Roar of the Crowd, Texas Monthly, Box 1569, Austin, Texas 78767-1569. Letters addressed to Texas Monthly become the property of the magazine, and It owns all rights to their use. Letters may be edited for clarity and length. who “has drawn the ire of more- traditional historians.” The article never examines the content of TSHApublications. The April 2023 issue of the Southwest- ern Historical Quarterly, forexam- ple, features one article profiling an Alamo defender who was an aboli- tionist and another pushing back against slavery’s importance to the Texas Revolution. This is excellent historical scholarship, something that Bryan and his allies should be celebrating instead of attacking. BENJAMIN H. JOHNSON, CHICAGO Rockport Overlooked Again Your article remembering Hur- ricane Harvey [“The Time It Wouldn’t Stop Raining,” July 2023] was interesting, but I was let down that there was no men- tion of the storm’s landfall. Har- vey hit Rockport head on, and we were horrified when the media shi fted focus to Houston and the rain. There was a mile-long de- bris field in Rockport that, as the months went on, grew to a debris mountain range. We lost busi- nesses that have never returned. Goingouttodinner? Forget it. The more affordable restaurants are texasmonthly.com @ texasmonthly П texas.monthly. magazine W texasmonthly still only open until 2or 3p.m. Our homes andbusinesses were flood- ed too, but they were also literally ripped apart. CHERYL ROBINSON,ROCKPORT Gwinter Wonderland I enjoyed the Texanist’s column on tall tales and “wholly invented creatures” [July 2023]. Please let him know that the “gwinter” likely has a cousin in Scotland. It’s the noble “wild haggis,” an admired and celebrated creature in that country. The haggis, like the gwin- ter, has two legs on one side that are shorter than its two on the oth- er side. This “mutation” evolved over thousands of years to allow it to outrun any predators around mountains and hillsides and never lose its balance. JOHN HOOPINGARNER, LAKEWAY Editors’note: In the August2023 issue, the article “Wacowabunga!” incorrectly stated the date ofa death after an incident at the BSR SurfRe- sort, in Waco. The incident occurred in2019.Also, the article “We Don’t Go to Mexico Anymore” misstated the location of Nuevo Leon. It is to the west of Tamaulipas. -V 18 TEXAS MONTHLY
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PAID CONTENT Proton Therapy Benefits Prostate Cancer Treatment Men age 65 and older account for about 60% of all diagnosed prostate cancer cases, and the likelihood of developing prostate cancer increases after age 50. Additionally, men with a family history of prostate cancer are also at increased risk. If prostate cancer is detected early and before the cancer spreads, patients have a nearly 100% chance of survival after five years. Treating Prostate Cancer with Proton Therapy Treatment for prostate cancer varies depending on the stage and grade of the cancer and if it has spread to other body parts. Proton therapy delivers extremely precise, high doses of radiation directly to tumors, working to eliminate cancer cells while minimizing exposure to non-targeted, healthy tissue. This precision benefits patients that require treatment to the prostate gland only or to larger target volumes such as those involving lymph nodes. Tips for Screening of Prostate Cancer Men should consider regular prostate screenings beginning at age 50 or in their mid-40’s if they have one or more first degree relatives with prostate cancer (e.g. father, brother, son). For patients with a new or recurrent prostate cancer diagnosis, a new imaging modality known as prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) PET, is now available at Texas Center for Proton Therapy. The imaging study helps detect prostate cancer cells in the prostate and other parts of the body. For more information, visit WhatIsProtonTherapy.com.
UKPLPYBFFS K/lV7 MOTOR SPEEDWAY Cet tickets now! TexasMotorSpeedway.com J H TMEHATKMAlUAftAZWEOfTfXAS [fl fl J lexasMonthly editor in chief Dan Goodgame creative director EmilyKimbro deputy editor Ross McCammon director of editorial operations Anna Walsh deputy editor, digitai SandiVillarreal executive producer: tv, film, podcasts MeganCreydt video and events director Melissa Reese EXECUTIVE EDITORS Mimi Swartz (Senior Executive Editor), Kathy Blackwell, Courtney Bond, Michael Hall, SkipHollandsworth. J.K. Nickell. Jeff Salamon, Patricia Sharpe, Katy Vine SENIOR EDITORS Josh Alvarez, RoseCahalan, David Courtney, Russell Gold, Michael Hardy, Jason Heid, Peter Holley, Kimya Kavehkar, Emily McCullar, Ben Rowen, Alexandra Samuels, Dan Solomon, John Spong, Christian Wallace, Forrest Wilder ASSOCIATE EDITORS Paul Knight, Sasha von Oldershauscn ASSISTANT EDITORS Arman Badrei, Amy Weaver Doming, LaKenya Finley, Lea Konczal, Doyin Oyeniyi, Kristen Steenbeeke, Gianni Zorrilla barbecue editor DanielVaughn TACO EDITOR JoseRalat design director Victoria Millner associate art director Jenn Hair Tompkins art producer Darice DeLane Chavira assistant photo eoitor KaylaMiracle CONTRIBUTING SENIOR DESIGNER KimThwaitS ASSISTANT managing editor Alicia Maria Meier copy chief Marilyn Bailey SENIOR engagement editor Amanda O’Donnell director of auoio Brian Standefer podcast producer PatrickMichels NEWSLETTER editor Taylor Prewitt SOCIAL MEDIA editor LaurenCastro EDITORIAL LEGAL counsel Julie Ford editor-at-large BryanBurrough WRITERS-AT-LARGE Eric Benson. Sarah Bird, Nate Blakeslee, Jordan Breal, Sterry Butcher, Oscar Casares, Jason Cohen, Robert Draper, Peter Elkind, Michael Ennis, Paula Forbes, Tom Foster, S. C. Gwynne, Stephen Harrigan, Sarah Hepola, Andy Langer, Prudence Mackintosh, Karen Olsson, Sean O’Neal. R. G. Ratcliffe. John Phillip Santos, SoniaSmith, Loren Steffy contributing editors Rafe Bartholomew, Leah Prinzivalli CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Darren Braun. Kenny Braun, James H. Evans, Randal Ford, Jody Horton, Artie Limmer.O. Ruftis Lovett, Wyatt McSpadden, LeAnn Mueller, Michael O’Brien, Platon, Adam Voorhcs, Jeff Wilson, Sarah Wilson, Dan Winters, Peter Yang TEXAS COL'NTRY REPORTER cohosts Bob Phillips, Kelli Phillips general manager MartinPerry senior producer Michael Snyder producers Abigail Adams. Quintin Blackwell, Dan Stricklin PRESIDENT Scott Brown chief operating officer Carolyn DavisChavana general manager Lorelei Calvert chief revenue officer JalaaneLevi-Garza CHIEF financial OFFICER Erin Beil SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, DIGITAL GROWTH СаШупРеГГу VICE PRESIDENT, development DavidB.Dunham vice president, research RobertHenry Vela Davila senior vice president, broadcast and custom sales FrankLibrio SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, AUDIENCE DEVELOPMENT Emily Allen Texas sales director Sunday Leek web development technical lead TimBiery digital product manager DennisBudde digital product designer Grace Davila audience development manager Kristen Fletcher research assistant audierce deveiopment AmritaBiswas AUDIENCE DEVELOPMENT COORDINATOR MiaLoVOi senior producer, film and tv deveiopment MaddyBilder operations director ErinKubatzky SENIOR PROJECT MANAGER, CONTENT DEVEIOPMENT Kathy McFarland project managers Travis English, Scott Ray, Kendall M.Talbot senior creative services manager Harrison Albrecht associate designers, tm stuoio Rachel Hudson, Randi Reding, PeterShults director, integrated marketinc Hannah Vickers digitai ad operations & marketing specialist Morgan Riley digitai ad operations & marketing associate Marina Garcia INTEGRATED MARKETING COORDINATORS Austin Callahan, Luke Coerver senior integrated marketing coordinator AnalisaCamacho MARKETING MANAGER MadisonBunner BRAND MARKETING COORDINATOR YamilaB.Maldonado TEXAS SALES director 214-871-7717SundayLeek SALES AND marketing coordinator Cassandra Fortson AUSTIN 512-320-6900 EldaArellano, Kim Todd, Christina Olivarez (Account Directors), Dallas 214-871-7717Liz Mullis (NationalSales Director,Custom Publishing),Anita Zmolek (SalesResource Director), BrandeeChampagne, MichelleGisler (Account Directors) Houston 713-871-8146Cindy Kerley, Loma J ennische, Gigi Lilly, Karen Burke (Sales Resource M anager) DETROIT ANO Chicago 847-251-3483CherylSchuldt.CSMedia new YORK917-679-5506CynthiaDonahersouTHEAST/cARiBBEAN 954-493-73UWhitneyFordDickWEST coast 512-970-8139 KristinTerkBelt senior accountant AndreaSmith sr. production director Stacey Van Landingham production director Aaron Chamberlain production coordinator StephanieKrampJohnson director of human resources AnnaAsie senior it support specialist Jim Maguire VISIT FORT WORTH TEXAS MONTHLY LLC chairman Banda Duncan Williams general counsel Charlie San Miguel VICE PRESIDENT, business DEVELOPMENT Patricia Totten founder and pubiisher emeritus MichaelR.Levy editors emeriti William Broyles, Gregory Curtis, Evan Smith. 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Now, you look at a city this time of morning and you wonder What its like, who lives there What made it take root and grow...
A SERIES PRODUCED FOR WITH TexasMonthly To Texas, With Love SPEND LESS TIME HUNTING, MORE TIME GATHERING WITH HIGHER HARVEST BY H-E-B w hen customers tell H-E-B they’re having a hard time finding a product they love, the Partners at H-E-B listen. The new Higher Harvest by H-E-B brand was established to help Texans find the products they need most—whatever their dietary or lifestyle needs. Higher Harvest is the latest proof of H-E-B’s dedication to bringing the best products to its customers, To Texas, With Love. As we learn more about the effect of diet on our everyday lives, many folks have become more intentional about what they eat. Perhaps they’re avoiding gluten. Maybe dairy doesn’t agree with them as much as it used to. Perhaps they’re looking for more plant-based alternatives. Maybe low- carb options are a priority for their lifestyle. It can be difficult to find the right products to accommodate every dietary need in a family. Sometimes it means traveling to more than one store to find the right product. Sometimes it can be confusing knowing where in the aisles the right product will be. Higher Harvest by H-E-B sets out to make shopping a breeze for Texans, by making it easy to find products for any family’s dietary lifestyle. “Like all good ideas, it came from our customers,” Celeste Schuehle, Senior Director of Own Brand Fresh, says. A native Texan, she’s been at H-E-B for 12 years and spent time previously working on the Meal Simple by H-E-B program, so she knows a thing or two about making sure families have convenient options for getting a delicious meal on the table. “We continued to hear that many customers needed to shop at a bunch of different places to meet their dietary or lifestyle need,” Schuehle says. Often, customers would voice requests for a product that H-E-B did in fact carry, but the customers weren’t aware of it or didn’t know where to find it in the store. This led H-E-B to begin strategizing to bring certain items together under one brand so customers could easily locate products for their specific dietary and lifestyle needs. “Wellness is not a one size fits all,” Schuehle says, “so we really wanted to create a product line that was approachable and was meeting customers where they were in their wellness journey.” In addition, the brand will include non-dairy, gluten-free, plant-based, and low-carb lifestyle options. The H-E-B team has designed packaging to make important ingredient information easily recognizable, simplifying the shopping experience. Instead of time-consuming treks down aisle after aisle, hunting for the
precise product that fits your needs, now it’s easy to find exactly what you’re looking for from your local H-E-B. Now, customers will be able to find more dietary lifestyle product solutions on more aisles—the goal here is to make sure customers spend less time hunting, more time gathering. Customers need only to look for the Higher Harvest logo to find options that meet their needs. Higher Harvest plans to continue to expand the line’s diverse selection of goods. Many of the items may be familiar to customers who are used to seeking out special products for their diet—but now they’ll be easier to find, and of the high-quality customers know H-E-B provides. Higher Harvest offers several varieties of gluten-free flour, non-dairy milks, dairy-free and high-protein yogurt, dairy-free ice cream, as well as zero sugar added ice cream. Their low-carb lifestyle bread options are customer favorites, with some selections boasting two or three carbs per serving. More products are always on the Higher Harvest horizon, so no matter the lifestyle or dietary choices a family requires, the Higher Harvest brand ensures it’s easy to fill the grocery cart with food catered to every preference. And these products don’t just fit customer needs, they’re also delicious alternatives. Higher Harvest by H-E-B is made for Texas tastes and lifestyles! “To me it’s all about making food that’s essential very accessible to our customers,” Schuehle says. H-E-B is always committed to making sure Texans have everything they need from a grocery store and beyond, and Higher Harvest by H-E-B is a natural extension of that. When customers request more solutions for their various dietary lifestyles, H-E-B listens—To Texas, With Love. Go look for the new Higher Harvest logo on the shelves of your local H-E-B today! Higher Harvest by H-E-B sets out to make shopping a breeze for Texans, by making it easy to find products for any family's dietary lifestyle. Celeste Schuehle and her team are passionate about making food accessible to H-E-B customers. “Like all good ideas, it came from our customers.” Celeste Shnehle ТТ-Е-П Senior Director otOn n Brand Fix Ah TO SEE MORE MADE FOR TEXAS TASTES HEB.COM TTWL PHOTOGRAPHY BY RED RIDING HOOD PRODUCTIONS
It Happened Here A MONTHLY LOOK AT THE EVE The Fall (and Rise) of Enron When the go-go Houston corporation collapsed in spectacular fashion, it became a punch line across the nation. But some of the bad guys had the last laugh, by mimi swartz Enron employees walking past the company’s headquarters, in Houston, on November 29, 2001. (have several persistent memories from my days covering the Enron saga. I wrote about the company’s collapse for this mag- azine in 2001 and cowrote a book with the whistleblower Sher- ron Watkins two years later, and with the passage of time, what remain in my mind aren’t the countless facts and figures in- volved in all the financial misdeeds but a series of human moments that together resemble a movie trailer for a classic film. You know—the one about the empire that rises to the greatest of heights, inspiring the awe and envy of all in its orbit, only to collapse spectacularly because of the greed and ambition of its leaders. Я1 My first memory: the smokers. 11 was the heyday of what was once called the world’s leading energy company and then, simply, the world’s leading company. (Enron’s early history as a stable but yawn-inducing pipeline firm was mentioned only as a basis of comparison with its newer, far more glamorous incarnation.) In the mid-nineties, on any given trip todowntown Houston, I would see a hand- ful of employees gathered by the entrances to the Enron building—that is, before there were two Enron buildings, then no Enron buildings. Those workers—executives, clerks, assistants, whoever—were huffing and puff- ing on cigarettes, seemingly taking no pleasure from the act, apparently desperate to get back to work inside the smoke-free skyscraper. Enron was all about being on the cutting edge, and smoking was so twentieth century. This was, of course, well before indoor smoking bans be- came routine; Enron made clear to everyone that it cared about the health and well-being of its em- ployees. Up to a point. But it was also true that if you were seen outside smoking, you were regarded as a weak-willed loser, and being a loser was the worst thing possible at Enron. People were leaving the best law firms, the best trading firms, the best fusty corporatebanks to work there, because Enron represented the Houston ethos on steroids, a postmodern wildcatter’s dream. It was, supposedly, a place where you could try out just about any idea—streaming video, betting on weather futures, inventing a new currency—and get really rich while you were at it. All you had to do was work impossible hours and slit the throat of the person one Aeron chair over. Metaphorically, of course. Next mental jump cut: Decem- ber 2,2001. Enron had declared bankruptcy—the largestbankrupt- cy in U.S. history at that point, with $63.4billion in assets vaporized. Even before the collapse, 2001had been rough for Houston; the com- pany’s fall provided a grim punctu- ation mark to an already darkyear. Before the 9/11 attacks, Andrea Yates had drowned her five chil- dren in a Clear Lake bathtub and Tropical Storm Allison had pro- vided apreviewof the devastating floods causedby Hurricane Harvey sixteen years later. The TV cameras recorded Enron’s fall for poster- ity: thousands of people making their exits with their belongings in cardboard boxes, their savings decimated, their designer office chairs doubling as dollies. There was a lot of weeping on earner a. £ LatercameMay26,2006,when | a jury found Enron CEOs Jeff | Skilling and Ken Lay guilty of » fraud and conspiracy. The various 1 26 TEXAS MONTHLY
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HAPPENED HERE ESCAPE TOYOUR NATURAL STATE к Bluff, Buffalo National Ri trials—this one lasted 56 days—were a mesmerizing high-stakes reality show. I hadlingered in thecourtroom afteralmosteveryoneelse had cleared out,only to spy Lay andhis familyjust in front of the defendants’ table. Ev- eryone had gathered in a tight circle around him, an occasional sob es- caping from somewhere deep with- in. When they finally pulled apart, I caught a glimpse of Lay’s face; his expression was that of a man who had gambled it all away, a big-time loser. II is complexion was a sickening, pale gray pallor that presaged his death just a few weeks later. Lookingback, I see how easily this story could be turned into a Netflix limited series. The characters were archetypal: You had a striving if somewhat bumbling Midwesterner (Lay), who brought in a messianic McKinsey guru (Skilling), who el- bowed out the rock-solid numbers guy, Rich Kinder, while convert- ing a company that actually made something into a company that was perpetually betting on the come while posting made-up numbers in the interim. There was a femme fatale: Skilling’s golden-girl neme- sis Rebecca Mark, whose efforts to construct a massive power plant in India never quite kept the lights on. There was fast-talking Andy Fastow, a CFO with a debatable interest in accurately balancing the books. And there was Watkins, the wide-eyed whistleblower who, dismissed as a naif by her peers, came out on top. The characters in this drama were larger than life in the Texas vein, but they lacked the roguish charm of the wildcatters of old, that quality that could make you forgive all. Yes, there were motorcycle races in the desert and Porsche Carreras and River Oaks McMansions, along with ill-advised love affairs and stiletto-in-the-back PLAN YOUR TRIP AT ARKANSAS.COM Arkansas. THE NATURAL STATE Editors’ note: As part of Texas Monthly’s fiftieth anniversary year, we’re offering, each month, a fresh perspective on an important episode from the past half century. corporate intrigue. But in the end the Enron villains weren’t that much fun. They were just rich. And arrogant. That Kinder emerged triumphant from the flames and became the big- gest player in Houston because he never forgot the value of real assets— well, that should have been the big takeaway from the whole sordid mess. But it wasn’t, of course. En- ron’s worst miscreants got jail sen- tences, and some, such as Skilling and Fastow, even served time. But the national financial catastrophes that followed were built on similarly vaporous business models and saw fewjust deserts meted out The 2008 financial crisis, for instance, led to only a handful of perp walks and far fewer prosecutions. What won out was the ethos of the bad guys—the bullies who set the tone at Enron and believed that you needed nothing more than a sexy, paradigm-shattering idea to sell to the chumps whose money was there for the taking. It’s not too hard to draw a straight line from Enron’s corporate culture to the fraudulent blood-testing company Theranos, or the collapse of the crypto darling FTX, or the rise of a CEO who men- daciously surfed his way through multiple corporate bankruptcies to land in the White House. Finally, I remember Fastow’s apology. After testifying against Lay and Skilling and serving five years in prison, he returned to Houston. His religious faith required him to atone, which he did, at the local Jew- ish community center, in front of a crowd of mostly older folks who lis- tened raptly. By then, Fastow’s hair had turned from black to gray, and his boyish swagger seemed to be in mothballs. In fact, Fastow started out in a cold sweat, but like any good per- former he rallied, winning over the audience with a practiced humility. By the end they rewarded him with generous applause, as if everything were forgiven, and forgotten. And soon enough, it was. #
NEAR IT ALL, but FAR away. ESCAPE TO YOUR NATURAL STATE. Play all day in 40,000 acres of clear, clean water surrounded by scenic forest at Lake Ouachita. Then, head 25 minutes down the road to Hot Springs for smoky pork ribs, tamales and handcut fries at the legendary McClard’s Bar-B-Q. Your vacation goes farther in The Natural State, but you don’t haveto.PlanyourtripatArkansas.com. THE NATURAL STATE Arkansas
Experience Jefferson Parish.'Where a unique blend of wetlands and coastal experiences meets a metropolitan flare! From scenic bayou tours to historic districts, rustic venues, and creole cuisine, your authentic experience awaits! WWW.VISITJEFFERSONPARISH.COM 504.731.7083 | TOLL FREE 1.877.572.7474
MAKE A BREAK FOR PHOTO CTpURTESY OF ST. TAMMANY PARISH' THE BAYOU STATE А В О V E | Take a walk along the beach at Fontainebleau State Park in Mandeville. Letthe good times roll in Louisiana. Head over to Louisiana to experience good food, good people, and good times. When visiting our next-door neighbor, experience rich bayou heritage, Cajun gusto for food, and infectious song and dance. Whether you’re looking to raise the stakes at one of the luxurious casinos, spend the day fishing at the scenic Wetlands, or party it up at a fais do-do, Louisiana has something for everyone. Come fall in love with the states colorful culture and leave your worries at the state line. And let the good times roll!
STATE EXPLORER ADVERTISEMENT HOTEL MONTELEONE For five generations. Hotel Monteleone has been a family-owned New Orleans land- mark. Hosting everyone from literary giants like Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote, and Eudora Welty to bng-standing family traditions and events, the Hotel Monteleone is known for its welcoming hospitality, historic surroundings, and of course the famous Carousel Bar! In 2023, the Hotel Monteleone is launching the freshly renovated Iberville Tower, a hotel within a hotel featuring new rooms, suites and events spaces, and exciting modem luxury. The Iberville Tower at Hotel Monteleone will welcome guests with serenely elegant d£cor, modern finishes, and a historic vibe, all located in the heart of New Orleans's French Quarter and just a short elevator ride to the Carousel Bar and gor- geous rooftop pool at the Hotel Monteleone. Guests at the Iberville Tower will also expe- rience enhanced amenities and services such as twice-daily housekeeping service, dedicated concierge, and an Iberville lower exclusive welcome amenity. Rooms feature soothing and serene upholstery, draperies and artwork, cus- tom granite-top millwork elevating the desks, dressers and vanities throughout the rooms and suites, spacious marble bathrooms with Rain Head shower heads and lighted mirrors, and 55- inch televisions. Inquire about other amenities and experiences with the Hotel Monteleone reservations team or by visiting our website. HotelMonteleone.com JEFFERSON PARISH Jefferson Parish offers adventure and fun from pirates to museums. Mardi Gras, and cultural experiences! An ideal des- tination for groups to explore Louisiana, Jefferson is a diverse destination surround- ing New Orleans. We offer value-priced hotels, attractions, events, and restaurants for an adventure-filled experience! From eco-educational tours aboard a thrilling airboat and cultural and histor- ic districts to festivals and events filled with music, heritage, and great fare, Jefferson Parish offers an array of ex- periences that IS authentic Louisiana! Located just minutes from Jefferson up the Great River Road is the historic Destrehan Plantation, the oldest document- ed plantation home in the lower Mississippi Valley. Here you will travel from the French and Spanish Colonial periods, through the antebellum grandeur, to the ravages of the Civil War and the rebirth of reconstruction. Just upriver is St. Joseph Plantation, one of ABOVE CENTER | Airboat adventures in Jefferson Parish. ABOVE |HotelMoteleone the few fully intact sugar cane plantations in the region. Tour the Manor Home, original slave cabins, a detached kitchen, blacksmith's shop, carpenter’s shed, and schoolhouse. Hungry for more? Jefferson offers an abundance of Louisiana fare, from fresh Gulf seafood, an official Oyster Trail featuring the delicacy prepared in a variety of ways from charbroiled to fried, and a plethora of international cuisines. 32 TEXAS MONTHLY
The Next Generation of luxury has arrived... The newly-renovated Iberville Tower at the Hotel Monteleone welcomes you to create new traditions in the heart of the French Quarter. Guests at the Iberville Tower enjoy a hotel within a hotel, with seamless transitions from 160 superior guest rooms and 48 brand-new suites to the famed Carousel Bar and Criollo restaurant and rooftop pool with French Quarter views. A serene getaway from the hustle and bustle of New Orleans, the Iberville Tower at Hotel Monteleone features modern amenities while celebrating history and tradition. For booking information please call 504-523-3341 or visit the newly refreshed www.hotelmonteleone.com for more information and 360° virtual room tours. IBERVILLE TOWER --------ешэ------ Hotel Monteleone • 214 Royal Street • New Orleans, LA 70130
STATE EXPLORER ADVERTISEMENT MCILHENNY'S TABAS- CO®-AVERY ISLAND Avery Island, nestled in the heart of Louisiana, beckons culinary enthusiasts with its unique flavors and rich heritage. Renowned for TABASCO® Sauce, this captivating destination blends Cajun and Creole influences into smoky and savory delights that will ignite your taste buds. Begin your culinary journey with a pil- grimage to the iconic TABASCO® Factory. Step into the world of peppers and witness the meticulous process behind crafting the legendary sauce that has delighted palates worldwide for generations. Embark on a self-guided tour to unravel the secrets and rich history of this culinary masterpiece. After exploring the TABASCO® Factory, immerse yourself in the captivating 170-acre Jungle Gardens. Lose yourself amidst the lush greenery, exotic flora, and TABASCO* Visit the historic home of TABASCO1 Sauce on Avery Island, Louisiana and: Experience the TABASCO’ Sauce Factory Tour the TABASCO Museum Shop at the TABASCO’ Country Store Eat Cajun and Creole dishes at 1868 Restaurant Explore the local flora and fauna in 170-acres of Jungle Gardens VISIT US: Hwy 329, Avery Island, LA 70513 | CONTACT US: (337) 373-6139 | FOLLOW US: ©TABASCO tranquil landscapes. The natural beauty of this enchanting botanical wonderland will transport you to a place of serenity and rejuvenation. Explore the centuries-old oak trees adorned with Spanish moss. Avery Island’s premier dining establish- ment is a haven for food enthusiasts. Indulge with a symphony of spices and flavors. As culinary enthusiasts yearn for an extraordinary adventure, Avery Island extends a warm welcome. Plan your visit today and let the magic of its fla- vors envelop your senses and create memories that will last a lifetime. THE NORTHSHORE The Northshore is a relaxed and refreshing destination. There’s no pres- sure to overdo anything, to check all the boxes. Instead, its a place that gives much and takes little. You can find yourself on a whim or with a plan. It’s an opportunity to escape from the grind, unplug from the hustle, and leave your cares at home. St. Tammany Parish s central loca- tion makes it easy and accessible. You can fly in or drive out. Choose from three area airports and arrive on The Northshore within an hour or less. The Northshore delivers world-class culinary flavors, thriving downtowns, aspi- rational adventures, and plenty of outdoor recreation to enjoy. There are opportuni- ties to venture out or reasons stay in. The Northshore is all about getting away—your way. And everyone is welcome here. Visit The Northshore and find your- self in a place that is easy to discover, hard to leave, created for moments, and seasoned for memories. VuitTheNorthshorexom SHREVEPORT-BOSSIER We live every day like it’s a festival. It often is. Especially in the fall, the streets of Shreveport-Bossier are alive with energy. On September 16, come out and party in the park at the Highland Jazz & Blues Festival. Two stages feature funky perfor- mances all day in historical Columbia Park. The celebration boasts the best local food and artwork and is free for everyone. The Red River Revel Arts Festival takes good times to the next level. With nine days of excitement from September 30 to October 8, the fun doesn’t stop at Festival Plaza. More than 100 artists and makers, multiple stages of live music, and a kids center make this a must-visit event. This film fest, recently recognized by MovieMaker as one of “The Best Short Film Festivals in the World,” has grown into an incredible competition across five creative disciplines—film, food, music, fashion, and comedy—with more than $100,000 in cash prizes. It’s Prize Fest, and it’s coming October 13-21. And don’t miss the Louisiana State Fair coming to Shreveport-Bossier from October 26 to November 12. Get your fill of unique fair foods, live music, carnival rides, free shows, and other attractions. 34 TEXAS MONTHLY
VISIT THE NORTHSHORE LOUISIANA’S ESCAPE VisitTheNorthshore.com visit The Northshore, where the sunshine dances, the music twinkles, boats float, memories are made and easy escapes are shore to be had.
ADVERTISEMENT CLOCKWISE: 1) Caldwell County Courthouse in down- town Lockhart. 2) Mill Scale Metal Works creates barbe- cue smokers out of old propane tanks. 3) A full plate from Chisholm Trail Barbecue. Lockhart HISTORY AND BEYOND WHEN LOCKHART IS MENTIONED, MOUTHS ALL ACROSS TEXAS BEGIN TO WATER. The city’s contribution to Texas ‘cue was recognized officially by the Texas Legislature in 2003 when lawmakers designated Lockhart as the “Barbecue Capital of Texas.” The history of barbecue in Lockhart goes as far back as we can trace the history of barbecue anywhere in Texas, and the legacies of the fine joints in Lockhart continue to this day. Combine the years of operation of Kreuz Market, Original Black’s Barbecue, Smitty’s Market, and Chisholm Trail Barbecue and you get a history of over 300 years of’cue. These joints also serve a mindboggling 250,000 people a year. That’s quite a boon to the Lockhart economy, but recent economic developments are ushering in an exciting new future for the city, ensuring that Lockhart will soon be as closely associated with business and culture as it is with barbecue. Mill Scale Metal Works, a maker of fine crafted smokers, brings new jobs to the city by building a new manufacturing facility and retail storefront. The Ziegenfelder Company, the nation’s largest producer of Twin Pops, Monster Pops, and other seasonal popsicles, expands to Lockhart through its upcoming 100,000 sq. ft. manufacturing facility in the new SH 130 Industrial Park, along with creating over 90 well-paying jobs. McCoy’s Building Supply, one of the nation’s largest privately held building supply retailers, establishes its presence in Lockhart through its newest store. New industry brings new residents. Lockhart is experiencing unprecedented growth as folks have begun to flock to the charming city. Lockhart will always be the Barbecue Capital of Texas. After all, the Texas Legislature officially proclaimed its status as such—but Lockhart is rapidly becoming known for even more. Just as great food brings people together, so does a bustling cultural scene and an economy with an eye towards the future. Come for the historic BBQ, stay for the bright new future! PHOTOGRAPHY BY ROBERT GOMEZ Produced by Texas Monthly Studio in partnership with Lockhart The B8O Capital of Texas For more information, visit TexasMonthly.com/Lockhart- Barbecue-and- Beyond
The State LAND SHARKS OF NORTH TEXAS. MCMURTRY, REMEMBERED. SPRINGS UNSPRUNG? TRAVEL & OLTDOORS 39 SEP PHOTOGRAPH BY BRYAN SCHUTMAAT TEXAS MONTHLY 37
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TRAVEL & OUTDOORS GUIDEBOOK by Jose R. Ralat • photographs by Enrique Leyva Mezcal,Mole,and More Here’s how to weave your way through magical Oaxaca. group of tourists watches Maria Gutierrez as she gingerly passes raw wool between two wood-handled carders, cleaning and stretching it between the large combs in a back-and-forth motion. The weaver smiles at her audience, flexes her left arm, pats her arched bicep, and laughs while her husband narrates her demonstration in English at their workshop, named after him: Taller Eduardo Gutierrez Martinez. Maria, who prefers to speak in her native Zapotec, one of sixteen Indigenous languages of the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca, has been making colorful rugs and other woolen items for most of her life, in Teotitlan del Valle, about twenty miles east of Oaxaca’s epon- ymous capital. The village is one of many options for a day trip, via a guided tour, from the metropolis of about 260,000 residents, which bustles with trendy restaurants and must-see cul tural institutions. Eat your way through the city, but plan at least one or two excursions while you’re here. The Xochimilco neighborhood, in Oaxaca, Mexico, on July 10. TEXAS MONTHLY 39
GUIDEBOOK DINE ♦ DRINK Start the day with coffee and conchas in downtown Oaxaca, known as the Centro, at Pan con Madre. Try lunch or dinner at Origen, where we were wowed by the wild-greens salad with seasoned agave worms and a pungent pesto made with hoja santa (Mexi- can pepperleaf). At Levadura de Olla (1), dishes such as the guava mole with shrimp are inspired by chef Thalia Barrios Garcia’s upbringing in a remote moun- tain village. Try to snag one of the six seats at Crudo, a Japanese-Oaxacan restaurant from chef Ricardo Arellano. In the Reforma neigh- borhood, tlayuda toppings include chapulines (grass- hoppers) and squash blossoms at Tlayudas Dona Flavia. Or eat and drink like a local at Casa Embajador, a restaurant and mezcal distillery. Back in the Centro, grab a late- night taco filled with juicy suckling pig at El Lechoncito de Oro. SEE ♦ DO The 2.3-acre Jardin Etnobotanico de Oaxaca (2) offers a verdant overview of the natural history of the state, con- sidered the most biodiverse in Mexico. The Museo Textil de Oaxaca shows off the area’s artisanal clothing as well as modern exhibits from international artists. At the Museo Belber Jimenez, gawk at the jewelry collec- tion, which includes pre-Columbian pieces. For a guid- ed tour outside the city, options include exploring the state’s culinary scene— especially its moles and mezcals—or visiting the archeo- logical ruins at Monte Alban and Mitla. SHOP The work of Oaxacan artisans, from rugs to wall hangings, can be found in many villages. Our favor- ites include Cocijo Artesania Textil (3), in San Pablo Villa de Mitla, and Natural Hecho a Mano, in Teotitlan del Valle. In the city you can find higher-end crafts from across the state at Tienda Q and La Casa de las Arte- sanias de Oaxaca, both in the Centro. STAY Located just a few minutes’ walk from the Zocalo (4), the city’s main plaza, the Hotel Oaxaca Real (5) features a court- yard pool and atten- tive staff. For some- thing a little quieter, La Casa Cariota is a five-room boutique bed-and-breakfast in the hilltop Xochimilco neighborhood. ¥ 40 TEXAS MONTHLY
FIGHTING BRAIN CANCER BY GIVING IT A COLD. THAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PRACTICING MEDICINE AND LEADING IT. At Houston Methodist, we’re turning malignant brain tumors into treatable conditions by infecting them with the common cold. The cold virus changes the DNA of the cancer cells, allowing us to eliminate them with conventional medication. We’re giving cancer a weakness,
A SERIES PRODUCED FOR TexasAlonthly WITH We Will Not Be Tamed Texas is defined by iconic landscapes, from Big Bend to the Piney Woods. It is the land that defines us as Texans, ten distinct ecoregions as diverse as its people. Jesse Griffiths is acutely aware of the character and subtleties of the Texas regions-as a chef he has committed his culinary vision to responsible use of the local gifts and resources of Texas. “Culturally, experiencing the outdoors is very important to Texans. Incorporating that into our food makes a lot of sense.” Jesse Griffiths grew up in North Texas, where he spent a lot of time enjoying the outdoors andfishing in the lakes there. He is chef and co- owner of celebrated Austin eatery, Dai Due, where the menu is dedicated to showcasing Texas ingredients. Also passionate abou t educating the public about seasonal and game meats, Griffiths teaches hunting andfishing cooking classes and is the author of two books. His latest, The Hog Book, won the James Beard award in 2022. “I grew up fishing around Denton. A real formative part of my childhood was fishing on Ray Roberts. I was there when they inundated the lake, so I saw it transform from farmland. I moved to Austin in ’98 and worked in a bunch of restaurants until starting Dai Due in 2006. “When I started off working in restaurants, any time of year, you could make a phone call and have asparagus or strawberries, or whatever you wanted. Then I did some travelling, to Europe and to Mexico, and I saw different perspectives on food cultures, based on what was available. Their food culture was rooted in what they had available to them locally. I became really interested in that concept. “I also decided it was something I wanted to do from the standpoint of what was equitable and right. You support your community first, the fisherman and the farmers around you. It was an exciting challenge at first. I could find a lot of okra four months of the year, but finding something like olive oil was a lot harder. Over the years we’ve seen a massive proliferation of these smaller, local producers. It’s been really exciting to see everything grow with us. Not because of us, but with us. It’s fun to know who’s producing your food by their first name. “Two hours to the west of Austin you’re in this arid Hill Country, and it’s rich in wild game. Go to the north and you’ve got these rolling Blackland prairies where there’s so much good dairy coming out of it. You go to the east and hit the coast and you have just incredible seafood options. Go south and it’s the breadbasket. The Rio Grande Valley grows anything from cabbage to citrus. Culturally, experiencing the outdoors is very important to Texans. Incorporating that into our food makes a lot of sense.
CHEF JESSE GRIFFITHS IN THE KITCHEN AT DAI DUE, HIS RESTAURANT DEDICATED TO SHOWCASING TEXAS INGREDIENTS “Food can be part of the solution. With feral hogs, we’ve got this destructive and invasive problem. But they’re delicious, and you can hunt them year- round. Every pound of wild pig you consume, you’re pulling one pound out of that system. I don’t know if we’re going to save the world, but it’s the little steps. “In Texas we have a long history of being outside. It’s a beautiful state. It’s a rugged state. There’s a lot of land. We have great state parks. Traveling around Texas we have such diverse environments. Drive a couple hours and you’re in a different world. We have such incredible beauty here. I think Texans like to get out and enjoy their state. They’re proud of their state as they should be. Texans are some of the wildest, most rugged, independent, and freedom-loving people on Earth. So is our land and the life on it. Find out how you can join Jesse and others who are standing together for the wild places that have given us so much and have made us who we are. WEWILLNOTBETAMED.ORG TEXAS PARKS AND WILDLIFE FOUNDATION PHOTOGRAPHS BY JEFF WILSON
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TRAVEL & OUTDOORS EXCURSIONS by Rose Cahalan • photographs by Trevor Paulhus In Sherman, Il’s Always Shark Week This small North Texas city, far from the coast, is a fossil hunter’s paradise. Fossil hunters in Sherman on July 24. One of the most popular places in Texas to find shark teeth is nearly four hundred miles from the sea. An hour’s drive north of Dallas is where Post Oak Creek lies just off an unremark- able stretch of road, south of downtown Sherman. A Google Maps pin labeled only “Shark Teeth” led me to the spot: the two-lane South Travis Street bridge, a few hundred yards east of U.S. Highway 75. Next to the bridge, an overgrown field beside an auto shop served as a makeshift parking lot. The place was strewn with trash. Styrofoam Whataburger cups and plastic grocery bags drifted in the breeze next to larger junk—twisted rebar, an old wooden pallet—and a row of broken-down cars. “Are you sure this is it?” my husband, Chris, asked as we loaded our one-year-old son into his carrier and then picked our way through the litter to the creek. The path down to the water was steep and rocky, so I was glad I’d worn hiking sandals. I concentrated closely on my steps, trying not to slip, until we arrived at the water’s edge. When I did finally look up, I’d been trans- ported to another world. A lush, green canopy of trees obscured the road overhead, and the sound of water burbling over the pebbly bottom drowned out any traffic. The stream was cool and clear, with no trash in sight. On this unseasonably chilly Saturday morning in May, a few other families were already here. We were all looking for shark teeth from about a hundred million years ago, when most of TEXAS MONTHLY 45
EXCURSIONS Texas was covered by a shallow sea. “I got one!” a little girl ex- claimed, splashing through the knee-deep water to show off a shiny discovery. I’d found this under-the-radar location via Google, which led me to several parenting blogs. One writercheerfullydescribedatrip to Post Oak Creek as “probably our most random adventure to date!” I was impressed by the photos of ancient fangs—some as long as a couple of inches—in shades of shiny brown, gray, and black. Another blogger bragged of finding 85 fossils in two and a half hours. Word is starting to get out about this special place, and the city of Sherman’s plans to turn it into a public park will likely raise its pro- file further. About half a mile east of where we accessed the creek, a paved parking lot and safer steps leading down to the water are planned. The project is still in the design phase, with no timeline for construction. One family we met said they’d heard about it from their kid’s A shark tooth found in Post Oak Creek; using a sieve to sift pebbles and fossils. elementary school science teach- er, and another had driven out on the recommendation of a friend. Everyone was drawn by the high probability of taking home a handful of treasures. That’s not always the case with fossil hunt- ing—or rockhounding, as it’s sometimes called—which is a lot like fishing: both depend heavily on luck. Ready to try ours, we sat cross- legged on the bank and unpacked the homemade sieve Chris had built earlier that week. It was a simple ten-by-ten-inch grid, with wire mesh nailed to four pieces of wood. Tutorials are available online, but a flour sifter or kitch- en colander would suffice as well. Then we got to work, using a gar- den spade to scoop pebbles into the sieve, which we shook to make the water, mud, and smaller debris fall away. Playing with dirt and rocks is second nature to a toddler, so our son quickly set to “helping,” picking up pebbles one by one and dropping them into the sieve. (We did have to be vigilant to make sure none went in his mouth.) The routine was calm- ing, even meditative: scoop pebbles in, shake the sieve, sift through by hand, dump it all out, repeat. After about twenty minutes of this, without seeing a single fossil, we decided to walk a few hundred feet upstream and try a different location. We were in luck. You know a shark tooth when you see it, and I was delighted to notice one that was about an inch and a half long, dark gray with finely serrated edges, lying out in the open on the riverbank. The finds came quickly after that, tumbling into our palms: teeth in various shades of gray and black, from tiny centimeter-long specimens to fearsome chompers, plus oth- er fossils that looked like clams, oysters, and pieces of prehistoric coral. After an hour and a half, we left with a baggie filled with twenty or so finds. Texas law generally allows fossil collecting in public creeks and streams, but some digs re- quire permits, and laws prohibit 46 TEXAS MONTHLY
FREDERICKSBURG, TEXAS
EXCURSIONS collecting certain artifacts such as arrowheads and stone tools from public streams. Rock hounds should also note that you can- not take fossils from state and national parks. Back at home, we laid out our trophies on the kitchen table and marveled at them. We’d sifted for shark teeth once before, on vaca- tion in Florida, but somehow it felt cooler to have collected them in our home state, far from any ocean. It’s mind-boggling to hold in your hand a tooth from around one hundred million years ago and imagine a world that looked utter- ly different. During the Cretaceous period, most of Texas was submerged by a warm, shallow sea called the Western Interior Seaway. Ptero- saurs swooped overhead, menac- ingcrocodilianspaddled through the mud, and fierce sharks with Pokemon-like names (Galagadon, Squalicorax) sent schools of fish fleeing in terror. The vastness of the sharks’ territory is hard to grasp. “The seaway went up through Texas and connected at some point to the Arctic Circle,” says Dale Winkler, research pro- fessor and director of the Shuler Museum of Paleontology, at South- ern Methodist University. “Most of this area was flooded for at least forty million years.” These teeth survived for tens of millions of years for a few reasons, he explains. One is that sharks grow and shed a staggering number of teeth—in some cases, more than twenty thousand in a lifetime. Another is that “teeth are durable, and they’re small enough that they don’t get broken up easily.” North Texas is known by hob- byists as a fossil hunter’s paradise. This stretch of Post Oak Creek isn’t geologically unique; rock hounds can turn up sharkfossils in numer- ous nearby waterways. Did more ancient sharks swim across this region than elsewhere, I wanted to know, or do the geology and access Other Fossil Hot Spots WHERE TO FIND SEA LILIES, AMMONITES, AND MORE. Crystal Beach Bolivar Peninsula Should you prefer to combine your fossil hunting with a seaside vacation, this 27-mile-long peninsula east of Galveston is a phenomenal choice. Folks seem to have the best luck on Crystal Beach (pictured). You can drive right on the sand, though you’ll have to buy a $10 permit. As with any type of beachcomb- ing, the best time to go is after a storm, when big waves will have churned up all kinds of treasures. Mineral Wells Fossil Park Palo Pinto County Flowerlike sea lilies, spiky urchins, and oblong trilobites are a few of the marvel- ous finds you might come across at Mineral Wells Fossil Park, an eroded pit about an hour west of Fort Worth that now welcomes rock hounds. Admission is free, and you can take home whatever here just make their remains more visible? Is it possible that back here, in Austin, I’m alsosittingon top of thousands of prehistoric shark teeth? “You definitely are,” Winkler says. “There are sharks’ teeth all around the Cretaceous of Texas”— a wide band that runs across a you uncover. There’s very little shade here, so bring sun- screen, a hat, and lots of water. North Sulphur River near Ladonia Spiral ammonites the size of cinnamon buns are among the prized finds at this spot, about eighty miles northeast of Dallas. Or you might see a “devil’s toe- nail” oyster, which, yes, resembles a nasty, gnarled, over- grown nail. sizable portion ofthe state, includ- | ingmostofNorthandCentralTex- 5 as,plus swaths ofthe southern and | western reaches. In other words, 3 these gems from the past are ev- | erywhere. You just have to know I where to look. # 48 TEXAS MONTHLY

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FOODS DRINK DINING GUIDE Edited by Patricia Sharpe and Courtney Bond Where to Eat Now Here’s our take on the state’s new restaurants, along with a few updates to longtime favorites. An assortment of meat and banchan at Hongdae 33. HONGDAE 33, HOUSTON 1ЛИЛ Korean | This rollicking hot spot on the second floor of the vast, double-decker Dun Huang Plaza, in Chinatown, is brought to us by Grace and Leo Xia, of Duck N Bao. It’s an all-you-can-eat concept, and the “33” refers to the reasonable $33 fixed price per person. After we ordered the recommended beef, the usual variety of small condiment plates were set before us, including pickled daikon, bean sprouts, cucumber, and kimchi (the best we’ve had). As the meat arrived and we began to grill our brisket, Wagyu beef belly, flatiron steak, and galbi, we agreed we had ascended to carnivore heaven. The japchae—stir-fried glass noodles—are worth sampling as well. Hongdae doesn’t take reservations, and there are lines, so get there early. Also, they set a ninety-minute limit on each seating, do not provide doggie bags, and charge $8 per head for food left on the plate— so eat up! 9889Bellaire Blvd: 346-980-8105; L&D 7 days. $$ Austin EZOV ★★★ i'l УД Israeli | From the folks behind Emmer & Rye comes a highly original eatery inspired by Israeli street food. The lively, high-ceilinged room is tricked out with paper lanterns painted to mimic graffiti, and the sound of happy cus- tomers caroms off the walls. The smashed cu- cumber salad flecked with black nigella seeds was a sensation, the fresh tomato salad made the best of summer’s harvest, and the lamb- and-beef kofta with roasted eggplant was something we hope to be eating year-round. Just one caution: the kitchen loves assertive bitter and sour flavors, and more than a few elements (like the amba, a pickled mango sauce that comes with the falafel) reflect that prefer- ence. A thoughtful wine list heavy on Greek whites, such as Limnio and Assyrtiko, adds to the experience. 2708E. Cesar Chavez; 512-305- 1118; 07 days. $$ GRACIA ★★★ ЕПЛ Mediterranean | The tall white room, with its colorful pillows and basket-style light shades, was filled with folks from the west-side Rosedale neighborhood, who looked quite happy with the well-priced Mediterranean menu from chef Jason Tallent, formerly of Clarksville’s Cipollina. A salad of leafy greens and lightly cooked carrots came rounded out by crumbles of feta in a fine sesame-and-pepper dressing. Salmon tartare with pine nuts, boosted by spicy harissa, was a delight, as were three baby lamb chops seasoned with salmori- glio, Italy's herby, lemony “light brine." For side dishes, we chose chunky pan-crisped potatoes with aioli and a humongous baked eggplant with Aleppo chile oil and za'atar seasoning. Some- how, we made room for rustic orange-almond cake with a dab of yogurt and a bit of honey. 4800 Burnet Rd; 512-649-4844; 0 7 days. $$$ Bryan FRITTELLA ITALIAN CAFE*W Italian | On a fateful day in June 2022, there was much sorrow in Aggieland. Word had spread that the owner of FritteIla was retiring and closing the treasured Bryan restaurant. What a difference a year makes. Investors have purchased the building and rehired longtime kitchen staff. During a recent visit we were greeted by a line at the counter, PHOTOGRAPH BY JOMANDO CRUZ TEXAS MONTHLY 51
DINING GUIDE everyone eager to order beloved dishes such as beef cannelloni and chicken Parmesan. Our first nibble of the simple bread sticks con- firmed that they were the same crunchy-on- the-outside, soft-on-the-inside treats of yore. Our entrees were similarly scrumptious, espe- cially the hearty spaghetti covered in a meaty, slightly sweet sauce. With a new bar, a few additional menu items, and a team of eager-to- please servers, Frittella is as good as ever. 3901 S. Texas Ave; 979-260-6666; L&D7 days. $$ Dallas BOBBIE’S AIRWAY GRILL ★★★ uu Modern American | With its mid-century vibe, this handsome, clubby restaurant is a Preston Hollow hot spot. The sprawling space includes a bustling front room with a huge oval bar, a carpeted dining room with cozy booths, and an inviting covered patio. The menu sticks to upscale takes on comfort- ing classics such as salads, grilled meats, sea- food, and sandwiches. Plump fried oysters were delicately breaded and presented in the THE FRESH AMERICAN, LUBBOCK j-'i v.'i American | Smart and contemporary, this spacious new restaurant distin- guishes itself with an energetic open kitchen, a reservations-only chef’s table, and servers decked out in newsboy caps and full-length aprons. The menu delighted us with a blood orange margarita (above), a salad of beets and goat cheese, and a flat- bread called the Marilyn Monroe: mushrooms, mozzarella, feta, olives, pesto, and sweet peppers. Shrimp scampi arrived with angel hair pasta and just the right amount of white wine-lemon broth, while our hand-cut filet came with a red wine bordelaise. (The most impressive cut is the caveman-size Tomahawk ribeye, which could easily feed a whole table.) 3715114th; 806-438-1322; L&D Tue-Sun. $$$ shell atop a delicious duo of aioli and red chile vinaigrette. The crab cake-a main course— was excellent if pricey ($44); crispy-crusted, with loads of briny jumbo lump crabmeat, it came with a lovely lemon-dill-caper sauce and a side of thin fries. The Italian beef sandwich held shaved roasted tri-tip, giardiniera, provo- lone, and broccolini; alongside was a savory jus for dipping. Service is warm, but the kitchen can be slow. 5959 Royal Ln; 214-272-8754; L &D7days.$$$ LEELA’S WINE BAR ★★ Ш1 iltA Wine Bar | The third location of this casual spot has opened in a pedestrian-friendly corner of central Dallas’s Uptown area. (The other two are in Greenville and Trophy Club.) The thin-crust pizzas, sixteen wines on tap, sparkling cocktails, and pulsing sound track draw a young crowd. Salads and boards-laden with charcuterie or smoked salmon (your choice), cheese, dips, crackers, and vegeta- bles-are also on the menu, but the pizzas are the big deal. Ultra-thin, with cracker-crisp crusts, they're still sturdy enough for multiple Visit texasmonthly.com/dining-guide for our wide-ranging collection of frequently updated restaurant reviews, which feature the new spots, the classics, and everything in between. Our reviews are written by anonymous critics who live in the areas they cover, and the magazine pays all expenses. toppings; they’re also sold in half and whole sizes. All three versions we tried were delicious: a prosciutto-topped white pizza with bechamel and arugula; the Butcher, topped with marinara sauce, pepperoni, and Italian sausage; and an excellent Margherita. Tossed green salads are large enough to share. 2355 Olive; 469-505- 2103;L&D7days.$$ Fort Worth LE MARGOT ★★★ LUJ French | The delicate balance found in the Lyonnaise salad sold us on the new partnership between chefs Felipe Armenta and Graham Elliot. Crowned by an expertly poached egg over a buttery brioche cube, the frilly frisee (teased with nubby bacon vinaigrette) was glorious simplicity. Perfect onion soup came in a miniature tureen topped with Gruyere toast. Cognac-laced peppercorn cream glistened atop a supple filet au poivre, nesting on a fluffy potato puree pillow. Scallops just seared at the edges lined up across a pool of pureed cauliflower, with plump raisins and salty capers as a garnish. On each day, a regular special hits the spot, such as sole almondine on Tuesday, coq au vin on Thursday, and bouillabaisse on Sunday. Whatever the day, a puckery lemon tart is the proper finish. For a cocktail as sassy and sweet as the eye-popping decor, try the Ooh La La, with orange-infused vodka, Cointreau, and strawberry syrup, topped with a cotton candy cloud. 3150 S. Hulen; 817-720- 9060; D 7 days. $$$$ RATING SYSTEM STARS ★ ★★★★ Superlative ★ ★★★ Excellent ★ ★★ Very good Good Hit or miss Houston ALBI ★★★ ЕШ Mediterranean | Expect a dramatic interior with scarlet-shaded lights, plush ban- quettes, and glossy tables and floors. Dine early (before 8:30) if you’re seeking a quiet dinner. Late-evening entertainment means a DJ and, on weekends, belly dancers. Designed for sharing, portions are hefty as well as beau- tifully presented. We started with fabulous feta dumplings, small, browned rectangles filled with creamy cheese, spiked with citrus labneh, and sprinkled with bright green pea PRICE SCALE Prices represent a typical meal for one, not including alcohol, tax, and tip. $ Less than $15 $$ $15-$30 $$$ $31-$60 $$$$ More than $60 52 TEXAS MONTHLY
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DINING GUIDE shoots. Hummus, served with hot, puffy pita, was delightfully creamy and adorned with crunchy chickpeas and paprika. The luscious roulade-style Jidori chicken featured a breast rolled around chicken sausage, wrapped with crisped chicken skin, and sliced into rounds; it came with kabsa (long-grained rice spiced with cardamom, saffron, cinnamon, and a bit of lime). Our grilled grouper also satisfied: a thick, pure-white filet surrounded by farro and sweet carrots. 1947 W. Gray; 832-464-2524; DTue-Sat.$$$ PASSERELLA ★★ СШ1 Italian | From the moment we were handed a complimentary glass of prosecco to the presentation, an hour later, of a beautiful HOLA, SAN ANTONIO ★★★ rm Tapas | This Southtown place is so popu- lar that we resorted to a 5:00 reservation after several weeks of trying to get a table. Hello, in- deed. Paella (on the menu every Sunday) was a pure taste ofValencia, with perfectly cooked rice, well-seasoned seafood, and tiny bites of smoky, spicy chorizo. Tapas had the same authentic flavors and reminded us that tiny doesn’t mean boring. Checking all the right boxes were beef- and-chorizo meatballs, charred cauliflower with a Parmesan mayo, and baked goat cheese with piloncillo jam. Other notables: simple dining rooms, a cozy bar, local artwork on the wall, and a pleasant street-corner patio. 603 S. Alamo; 210-236-5688: L) Mon-Sat. $$ slice of spumoni, Passerella's service was simply flawless. The younger sibling of the original restaurant, in Cypress, the Washing- ton Avenue edition has a slightly smaller menu but the same Italian flair. Meatballs pomodoro nestled on polenta were large, dense, and delicious. Burrata (with a beguiling hit of basil pesto), garlicky crostini, and sweet baby tomatoes could easily do for a light lunch (portions are generous). And a stunning stuffed flounder—the filet wrapped around blue lump crabmeat assembled like a pisca- torial cathedral with two shrimp perched on its "spire”-was divine. That old standard fettuccine Alfredo got a lift with plump shrimp, shaved brocollini, and small blistered tomatoes. 6011 Washington Ave; 713-242-8151; D Tue-Sun. $$ PASTORE ★★ IL1A21 Italian | The menu at this new entry from Houston’s Underbelly Hospitality focuses primarily on seafood. The restaurant’s interior, with its soft lighting and plush blue ban- quettes, reflects the ocean theme, with hand- some cutlery and white tablecloths adding to the charm. Both our starters exceeded expec- tations. The first was a beautifully crafted display of lightly cured snapper with olives, bits of fennel, and tiny lemon wedges. Next came a colorful salad of juicy tomato, peach, and gremolata resting on creamy burrata (de- signed to be loaded onto crisp toast). Our main dishes had a couple of issues, however. The small chunks of swordfish amatriciana were all but lost amid the spicy tomato-based sauce. And while we quite liked the chicken milanese, with a lovely crust, the thinner end of the meat was dry. We had no complaints at all, however, with an interesting side dish, panissa ligure, essentially rectangular chick- pea fritters served with tomato sauce for dip- ping. The finish could hardly have been better: a slice of chocolate tart, with a surprise touch of thyme in the crust, surrounded by whipped cream and drops of olive oil. 1180 Dunlavy; 346-867-1905; D 7 days. $$$ TRILL BURGERS ★★ uu Burgers | Pack your patience-and perhaps a lawn chair and bottled water—if you join the frenzied line at rapper (and Hous- ton favorite son) Bun B's smashburger joint, which finally opened mid-June. Once inside, order at the counter (the drive-through is supposed to be up and running soon). On the menu, the OG Burger is made with 44 Farms beef and cooked on high heat to create de- lightfully crispy edges. The thin patty is then loaded with caramelized onions, pickles, American cheese, and a secret sauce on a soft potato roll for a flavor that echoes Thousand Island dressing. The vegan version is even sweeter. Expect rap music, video screens, and the occasional Bun В sighting. Trill Burgers has signed a six-month lease and may relo- cate around December. The eatery is cashless, so come prepared. 3607S. Shepherd Dr; 713- 364-2284; L & D 7 days. $ McAllen ACE'S BBQ ★★★ Barbecue | The dreamy brisket botana (a bountiful helping of sliced beef, rice, and beans) always comes to mind when we think abo ut this Mission-born barbecue joint. Though the new location serves the same ac- claimed South Texas barbecue as the original, this time we fell in love with the Mexican Plate: cheese enchiladas accompanied by rice, beans, and sliced oak-smoked brisket with an exemplary bark. Sometimes we order healthy, though: brisket or pulled pork mounded atop a fresh garden salad. 111E. Nolana Ave; 956- 627-4648; L & D 7 days. 33 San Antonio FIG TREE ★★★ iijj.mh French | This storied place al- ways had good food, but before its new owner came along (Samuel Panchevre, of Sam’s Burger Joint fame), it was a bit stuffy and outlandishly expensive. With executive chef Luis Colon now at the helm, a brighter, more modern, and less pricey menu shines with French-inspired recipes and locally sourced ingredients. Butcher steak, a duo of little meaty towers, was one delight, served with miso-accented potato and grilled onion. An- other, agnolotti, brought tender, cheese- filled pillows of pasta with a sauce featuring creamed corn, pork belly, and Gruyere. The kitchen and interior have been updated, but the 1853 building is as charmingas ever, and the terraced balconies under the cypress trees still provide the best tables to be had on the River Walk. 515 Villita;210-224-1976; D Mon-Sat. В Sun. $$$ 54 TEXAS MONTHLY

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STYLES DESIGN PROFILE by Doyin Oyeniyi • photographs by Jasmine Archie Iler Crowning Glory As the rights surrounding Black natural hair expand in Texas, braider and activist Isis Brantley examines her hard-fought legacy. Isis Brantley in Dallas on July 11. In the summer of 2019, Rhetta Andrews Bowers, a Democratic state representative for Dallas County, was approached by a member of the newly formed CROWN (Creating a Respectful and Open World for Natural Hair) Coalition. The national grouphad been founded by Blackwomenwhowerefightingdiscriminationagainst natural hair and styles such as braids, twists, and dreadlocks. They wanted Bowers to take up their cause in Texas. Bowers quickly learned thatmanyBlackTexansfeltthattheywere being discriminated against at school and at work because of their hair, though some were hesitant to speak up. But a few cases had made national head- lines, including those of two high school students near Houston who were suspended in 2020 for refusing to cut their Iocs and Dakari Davis, a Dallas transit police officer who was suspended that same year for wearing cornrows. Then there was Isis Brantley. The 64-year-old Dallasbraider has been fighting some of the state’s regulations on natural hair styling for three decades—she was arrest- ed, in 1997, for braiding hair with- out alicense. In large part because of her advocacy and legal battles, the state has changed its laws. With the support of a bipartisan coalition of state House reps and members of the Texas Legislative Black Caucus, Bowers agreed to author the Texas version of the CROWN Act, which easily passed both chambers this session. The bill, which goes into effect Sep- tember 1,prohibits discrimination based on hair texture or protec- tive hairstyles in workplaces and schools and overrides dress code policies that single ou t natural hair. Texas is the twenty-second state to enact such legislation. Bowers considers it a historic victory, one directly connected to Brantley’s legacy. “I stand on her shoulders,” she says of Brantley, whose activism “really speaks to how long we’ve been fighting and advocating for natural hair.” Brantley was born in Dallas, in 1958, andgrewup in Bonton, a his- torically Black neighborhood on the city’s south side. As a child she learned hair braiding from watch- ing her mother and community elders. She studied drama at what is now the University of North Texas, in Denton, dropping out in the late seventies tohelp start a theater company. Inspired further by the celebration of Black beauty and hairstyles she would see each week on Soul Train, she began to braid hair out of her home while performing around Dallas. In 1981, she opened her own TEXAS MONTHLY 57
PROFILE salon, African Braiding Studio, across the street from Lincoln High School. Brantley, who uses methods that are gentle on scalps, also invented a lacing technique to camouflage thinning areas. In 1989 she introduced her own line of hair products made from nat- ural ingredients, called Sisters of Isis. She became known as “Queen Isis,” and word spread of her prac- tice. Women began traveling from Austin and Houston for a chance tosit in herchair,but the majority came from her community. Singer Erykah Badu started coming when she was around nine years old and has remained a client for dec ades. Brantley moved her business to a cultural center in 1994. There she continued serving clients and began teaching her craft, charging as much as $325 for courses. Her business thrived,but for Brantley, hairbraidinghas never been just a job; it’s a spiritual and cultural practice that connects her to her African religious roots. She be- lieves it can be a tool to help dis- mantle what she considers to be centuries of damage that Western beauty standards and laws have done to the hair and minds of Black people. Teaching braiding was a chance to do what she calls “healing through the hair.” Mannequin heads used to teach students; Sisters of Isis hair products created by Isis Brantley; inside her Naturally Isis salon. “We talk about the history of the hair so that people can under- stand that you didn’t just come out of your mother’s womb hating yourself,” says Brantley, who car- ries herselfwith an earthy glamour. “That this hair that you’re trying to get to know, or you’re having a hard time getting to know, wasen- slaved in this country. Sowhen we say, ‘Heal through the hair,’we have to heal all those past traumas that we have connected to the beauty of our curls and our spirals.” For all her success, Brantley, without knowing it, was braiding and teaching illegally. To braid hair in Texas, she needed a cosmetology license, which at the time required 1,500hoursof cosmetology lessons on everything from hair coloring to nail care. Such training would have meant at least nine months of school for a full-time student and cost thousands of dollars. In 1995, a Texas Cosmetology Commission inspector visited the salon and informed her that she would need a license to continue braiding. She received several ci- tations and appeared in court with herlawyer,ThelmaSandersClardy. Though Brantley argued that hair braiding is an African ancestral practice dating back to precolo- nial civilizations and shouldn’t be regulated by state laws, she was found guilty of braiding hair and operating a salon without a license and was ordered to pay a $600 fine. Brantley, who was told that state officials had waived the fine, con- tinued practicing. Two years later she was arrested on charges related to not paying the fine and operating illegally. “It was these white cops that came in there and two Black cops that were undercover,” Brantley tells me, describing the sting oper- ation at her salon. The undercover officers asked for an appointment, then the other cops rushed in, handcuffed her in front of shocked clients, and hauled her off to jail. Brantley was in disbelief. All this over braiding? Brantley paid the fine, but she still insisted on her right to braid without a license. In the following years, she braided out of her home whilecontinuingto fight forchang- es to the regulations. She argued that a cosmetology license didn’t make sense for natural hair braid- ers, whodon’t cut hair or use chem- icals or dyes. The skills relevant to braiding weren’t even taught in Texas cosmetology schools. “This is my religion,” Brantley told theAus- tinAmerican-Statesman, in 1997. “I don’t know that there’s such a thing 58 TEXAS MONTHLY
as regulating culture and religion.” In 2007, following the dissolution of theCosmetology Commission and the transfer of its duties to the Texas Department of Licensing and Regu- lation (TDLR), the state reduced the required training for hair braiders to 35 hours. Brantley was grandfathered in and received her license to braid. But she still couldn’t legally teach in her salon. The new rules reclassified braiding as an act of barbering, so to continue teaching, Brantley would need to complete hundreds of hours ofbarber trainingand movehersalon to a new location that met the physi- cal requirements for abarber school. For years Brantley lobbied against these rules. Finally, in 2013 she, along with the Institute for Justice, a non- profit law firm, filed a lawsuit against TDLR In January2015 afederal court found that the state’s requirements were irrational and thereby unconsti- tutional. Thatsameyear, Brantley and the I nstitu te for Justice worked with members of the Texas Legislature on House Bill 2717, which deregulated hair braiding in Texas. When Gover- nor Greg Abbott signed the bill into law, Brantley was there. Her two de- cades of legal battles had come to an end. She had won the ability to braid and teach not just for herself but for every practitioner in the state. Today, thanks to social media, hair braiders are having their day in the sun. Gone are the days when Black women had to quietly braid hair in their homes to avoid getting caught and fined. Now you can search a hashtag such as #houstonbraider on Instagram and pull up more than 658,000posts. The good news? Near- ly anyone can become a hair braid- er! The bad news? Nearly anyone can become a hair braider. Among those thousands of posters are tal- ented braiders showing off satisfied clients with waist-length box braids or flowy faux Iocs. But there are also memes on TikTok in which clients complain about the shoddy work- manship of an inexperienced, over- confident braider. When I asked Brantley whether she’s concerned that deregulation in Texas has empowered too many subpar braiders,her rebuffwas gen- tle but firm. To her, the freedom out- weighs any downsides. “No, I don’t worry about this,” Brantley says. “We have to start from somewhere. Someone wants to braid hair, that’s beautiful. Economics has been stolen from [Black people] over and over and over again. This is an opportunity for us to have the power back in our own hands.” She has more complicated feel- ings about her own losses and gains. She spent two decades of her “prime days,” she says, traveling between Austin and Dallas, missing out on time with her five children, all togive more freedoms to Texas braiders. Brantley worries that she’s beingforgotten and left behind as the industry explodes. In April, just before the Texas House passed the CROWN Act, I visited Brantley in her Naturally Isis salon, a small room that’s part of the S alon 972, a collection of Black hair-care businesses in North Dallas. Brantley, bubbly and regal, towered over her two studen ts for the day. She wore silver platform heels and two shimmery yellow head wraps tied around waves of her thin brown Isis Loes—her own take on micro Iocs. Brantley explained that she used to teach about a dozen students at a time and had many clients, but fewer customers come to her now that anybody can braid hair. So she goes with the flow, practicing gentle braiding techniques, teaching, and spreading her love of natural hair with events such as the Naturally Isis Hair Parade and Festival. She is active on Instagram and TikTok, with a combined 96,000 followers, and in 2021 she produced a short film about her story. “This is where we are, and we can’t hide it,” Brantley says. “Lit- tle by little, bit by bit.” Texas braiders who practice with- out a license have Brantley to thank, whether they know her name or not. Of course, Brantleywouldpreferthat they do.# DAVID GRIEGO DESIGNS £5» Santa Fe Goldworks Contemporary Southwest Jewelry and Fine Diamonds oixlhc'Pkzri 60 E. San Francisco Street Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 505.983.4562 SantaFeGoldworks.com TEXAS MONTHLY 59
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LETTER FROM by Sean O’Neal • illustration by Kaitlin Brito ARTS» ENTERTAINMENT The Best Lillie Film Town in Texas Texas’s quadrupling of annual film incentives to $200 million will likely supercharge productions across the state. Hollywood’s favorite Texas small town, Smithville, shows the opportunities—and hazards—ahead for other communities aspiring for stardom. The Smithville film tour takes maybe twenty, thirty minutes tops, depending on how badly you want to see the road on which Mi- randa Lambert wrecks her car in the “Vice” music video. Many major locations are right on top of one another: the house where Sandra Bullock’s character lives in Hope Floats sits just a couple blocks from Brad Pitt’s fictional home in Terrence Malick’s The Tree of Life. On the official Smithville Film Map, every production is represented by a colored dot, and most of them are massed in a rainbow clot choking Main Street, where several projects includingPem/e and, more recently, Max’s Love & Death were shot. 4 I’m driven along the route by Smithville Film Commission chairman M ike Shell, an amiable, if slightly taciturn, 76-year- old screenwriter whose credits include 2O15’s Wild Horses, with Robert Duvall (Shell calls him Bobby), and Kelly Holt, who sells antiques in the Texas Trails store downtown andhelps Shell liaise between the commission and local business owners. The two are used to giving this tour to location scouts, and they rattle off passing landmarks with ease. Holt shows me the corneron which HarryConnick Jr.hoists Bullockat theendofHopeFloats, near a warehouse that was used i n the TV series Fear the Walking Dead. As we crawl past Dennis Quaid’s home in Beneath the Darkness, Shell points out a stop sign that Pierce Brosnan plowed into during a scene in the drama series The Son. (He was really nice about it, Shell says.) I t’s plain what filmmakers see in Smithville. Despite the changing times, Smithville looks every bit the small town that it often plays on-screen—still the sleepy idyll of nostalgic imagination, with a pop- ulation hovering just around four thousand and nary a condo or big- box store in sight Pick a decade and you can find a neighborhood here to match it. The buildings on Main Street all dateback to the late 1800s. TEXAS MONTHLY 61
LETTER FROM Cover the paveme nt with dirt, and the town even makes a convincing Wild West backdrop. Smithville is also a logistical dream, so small that a production team could push equipment from setup to setup by hand if needed. Texas Highway 71 is close enough that Austin-based crews can zip back to the city eve ry night, saving thousands in lodg- ing, yet distant enough that micro- phones won’t pick up traffic noise. When I visit, downtown is eerily quiet. It’s easy to imagine that I’m standing not in a real town at all but on a studio back lot. Inside Smithville City Hall, the usual plaques and public notices vie for wall space with posters from the many projects that have filmed in town—107 movies, TV shows, music videos, and commercials in the past fifteen years alone, accord- ing to a spreadsheet maintained by city manager Robert Tamble. In 2017 Tamble applied for a Guinness World Record, one to accompany the town’s 2008 record for World’s Biggest Gingerbread Man, that would recognize Smithville as the smallest American city to host the largest number of film productions. Hisbid was rejected. That category doesn’t exist, Guinness said. Still, Tamble plans to try again. After all, the movies just keep coming. In June the Texas Legislature boosted the state’s film-incentives budget from $45 million to $200 million over two years—making it the largest it’s ever been and put- ting it on par, for the time being, with Louisiana ($150 million a year) and New Mexico ($120 mil- lion ayear). Texas is finally getting serious about its film industry. The revamped budget will provide media productions with more- competitive tax rebates. Forplaces such as Smithville—which became the Texas Film Commission’s first officially designated “film friendly community” in 2008—this could mean a dramatic increase in movie productions passing through. The hope is that some of those crews Sandra Bullock and Harry Connick Jr. in 1998’s Hope Floats, which filmed through- out Smithville. might even stick around perma- nently, helpingto transform Texas, at long last, into a major player in the entertainment business. Still, not everyone in Smithville is in love with the limelight, and the F austian bargain of fame applies to towns just as much as to any hum- ble, homegrown talent who’s gone Hollywood: Can Smithville—or any other community in Texas— play the quintessential small town without losing the qualities that made it a star? Smithville has a reputation as a place that gets filmmakers what- ever they need—fast. Adena Lew- is, director of tourism for Bastrop County and former president of Smithville’s chamber of commerce, likes to illustrate this with a story about the tree—the eponymous oak of The Tree of Life, which di- rector Malick handpicked from a property several miles outside of town. It weighed an estimated 65,000 pounds, with a canopy that arced a majestic thirty-plus feet, and it had to be lifted via helicopter onto a trailer so it could be moved, very slowly, down Highway 71 to be replanted behind the house where Pitt’s character lived. But when Malick’s team got it on the truck, they realized it wouldn’t clear the utility lines. So the next morning, Smithville dispatched two crews to lift every cable along the tree’s path, over atwo-dayjour- ney, while the volunteer fire de- partment sprayed it with water to keep it alive. “That wouldn’t have happened that quickly anywhere else on the planet,” Lewis says. That eagerness has helped make Smithville so sought-after, and it’s one of the main reasons that Bastrop County is the sixth-most-filmed re- gionin Texas, a cultural imprintthat stands wildly disproportionate to Smithville’s four-square-mile size. On the whole, the movies havebeen good for Smithville. Filmmakingis still only a minor revenue source for the city government, with shoot- ing permits starting at just $150. But the work has been steady, and productions tend to linger. Casts and crews are taken in by the com- munity’s hospitality; Tamble, who reads the script for every produc- tion looking to shoot here, like he’s Smithville’s own studio boss, is known for throwing wrap par- ties at his home, smoking stacks of ribs while celebrities play with his dog. They often repay that gener- osityin kind. When Quaid shotRe- neath the Darkness here, in 2010, his band threw a benefit concert for the police department’s Blue Santa program. In 2020 the Am- azon series Panic dropped nearly $1 million here, Tamble estimates, including paying $35,000to repave Main Street. “You may not get a paycheck, but the money flows all over town,” says Sallie Blalock, who from 1994 to 2014 managed the Katy House Bed & Breakfast. Blalockwas initially unimpressed with Hope Floats, cringing at the scene in which Bull- ock’s daughter (Mae Whitman) re- coilsat Smithville’s “funny” odor. “I 62 TEXAS MONTHLY
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LETTER FROM ONE TRACK MIND An oak tree handpicked by director Terrence Malick for his 2011 film The Tree of Life had to be moved into Smithville, prompting municipal crews to lift utility lines along the way. was like, 'People are going to think our town smells like cow poop!’” she says. But she definitely enjoyed having its crew members rent out rooms at the Katy for sever- al months, then recommend it to othersback in Los Angeles. Troy Streuer, the owner of Pock- et’s Grille, puts it even morebluntly. “I don’t think I would be here with- out Hope Floats” he says. Streuer opened the original, downtown location of Pocket’s in September 1996, and he would have closed by spring were it not for the extra busi- ness Hope Floats brought in. And when Streuer moved Pocket’s to its current spot, off Loop 230, The Tree of Life kept it afloat through months of renovations. He paid tribute by turning the restaurant into Smithville’s unofficial film mu- seum, where signs from the store- fronts in Hope Floats adorn the ceiling and a “DDT” placard from The Tree of Life’s mosquito-fogging truck hangs by the soda machine. The novelty of living in the film-friendliestlittle town inTexas has worn off for other Smithville residents. Since taking the job in 2014, Tamble says, he has turned downjust two filmingpermits: one was forastonercomedy that want- ed to film inside Smithville High School; the other involved aliens and the porn star Ron Jeremy. And of the 65 productions Tamble has approved, he says he’s had real problems on maybe 5 of them— such as the slasher movie that left behind pools of blood and some razor blades a woman found while walking her dog. Or when a resi- dent got so fed up with the filming of the Betty Buckley coming-of-age drama 5 Time Champion that he started shooting off a mortar in the woods, until Tamble had to ask him to stop. Mostly Tamble hears gripes about parking and street closures, but as productions have gotten bigger and more frequent, so have the complaints. “Every time a movie comes to town, I lose money,” Holt tells me. Holt—who says she’s “39 again”— has a slightly mischievous sense of humor and an ingratiating candor (about most things). Like others in Smithville, she has her own his- tory with film, in her case having worked in live TV and earned a de- gree in Radio-Television-Film at the University of Texas at Austin. Holt moved to Smithville in 2011, “Nudista Mundial’89” A DEEP DIVE INTO THE SONG BY ALAN PALOMO, OF NEON INDIAN, FROM HIS NEW ALBUM, WORLD OF HASSLE The University of North Texas (formerly North Texas State) has a history of attracting musical prodigies: Pat Boone, Roy Orbison, Don Henley, and Norah Jones were all students. In the late aughts, another seemingly world-changing UNT artist emerged in Alan Palo- mo, whose electro-pop project, Neon Indian, helped define what came to be called chillwave (think cheesy synth-pop made weird and murky by VHS tape hash). But after a hot streak including the 2011 hit “Polish Girl,” Palomo pretty much disappeared. The Mexican-born artist returns with his first album in eight years, this time singing primarily in Spanish and performing under his own name. “Despite Spanish being my first language, I had never tried writing a song in it,” Palomo says. “It was something I'd been want- ing to do since my third album but didn’t want it to be just a gim- mick.” On the earworm "Nudista Mundial ’89,” Palomo’s ductile voice floats on a synthy tune as bubbly as a dropped beer can. If you don’t know enough Spanish to sing along, you can at least imitate guest vocalist Mac DeMarco’s croaked hook: “Dos cervezas, por favor.” -ANDY BETA 64 TEXAS MONTHLY ILLUSTRATION BY MOLLY SNEE

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LETTER FROM THERE'S ALWAYS TIMEfob WINE -E IN HOUSTON Stop and smell the rose this fall with the NEW HOUSTON WINEPASS SHOP TICKETS & TOURS HOUSTONMARKETPLACE.COM MARKETPLACE in 1997, the filming displaced them for nearly four months, they say. In lieu of payment, they asked that the production crew renovate the house afterward, a process that dragged on for several more weeks. Tylene Trousdale tells me they would be open to having their home used as a filming location again, but they’d be more mindful about the terms. “There was so much that we didn’t know about the process, because who do you ask?” Trousdale says. Holt acknowledges that some Smithville homeowners have been taken advantage of because they don’t know any better. They don’t re- alize that most location agreements carry an “in perpetuity” clause, for example, allowing productions to come backfor reshoots months, even years later. Most of the homeowners don’t even know their legal rights when it comes to film contracts. On one recent shoot, she says, a produc- tion assistant trespassed on a neigh- boringproperty to shut off a noisy air conditioner j umping a locked fence and breaking it in the process. The homeowners weren’t aware they could file a claim on the production’s insurance, so they didn’t. For now, Holt says she’s happy to be the point person—the one locals know they can grab out on Main Street whenever they need help or just want to complain. Still, she wor- ries about how residents might greet her and Shell when another major production ties up the streets for weeks on end. “We may get run out of town,” she laughs. Holt and Shell say they’d like to see more locals get involved with thepro- ductions here—to see Smithville be- come not just a place where movies get made but a place that actively helps make them. Lately Holt has been assemblingalist of skilled work- ers— technicians, painters, lighting designers—who could be included in the packet Tamble hands to film- makers, with the suggestion that they hire at least part of their workforce locally. That alone could help to ease any lingering frictions and ensure that even more of aproduction’s bud- get is being funneled directly into Smithville’s economy. Unfortunately, she knows that most productions arrive with their budgets and crews locked. Austin puts Smithville at a further disad- vantage. The lodging in Smithville is comparatively scant; none of the restaurants have the capacity to han- dle catering. Smithville just isn’t big enough to become the kind of film hub Holt and Shell envision. But then, getting bigger means putting at risk the small-town feel that makes it so desirable to live here—and to film here. “It’s a tightrope,” Holt admits. Nevertheless, some urbanization seems inevitable. In 2016 Austin restaurateurs Amy and Steve Sim- mons purchased the vacant building that the Hope Floats crewtumed into Honey’s Diner, keeping the movie’s faux-vintagesignageand reopeningit as Honey’s Pizza. Other prospectors quickly followed: a gin tasting room, a couple of boho boutiques, a craft- barbecuejoint. By 2017 Texas High- ways magazine was declaring Smith- ville “the next Marfa,” a sobriquet that makes the West Texas native Holt roll her eyes. “This will never be that,” she says,before quietly adding, “I hope.” But if Smithville isn’t yet the new Marfa, it’s not quite the old Smithville either. Though several of those arti- sanal interlopers were felled by the pandemic, Honey’s Pizza remains, as does its fellow Austin transplant Your Mom’s, which recently launched a neighboring ice cream shop named, appropriately, Hope Floats. Undoubt- edly, some starry-eyed entrepreneur is bound to try again—particularly if film production picks up and the crews and celebrity-stalkers that fol- lowinevitably attract more business- es that are looking to cater to them. Smithville seems to be entering Act II, that pivotal moment in the plot in which the town faces rising action and higher stakes, and its true character is tested. And all of Texas is watching.
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ARTS» ENTERTAINMENT BOOKS by Andrew R. Graybill • illustration by Jason Holley Terms of Estrangement The Larry McMurtry we meet in this biography has a love-hate relationship with his home state. Which may have been the secret to his brilliance as a writer. Larry McMurtry boasted impeccable Texas bona tides: his pa- ternal grandparents had arrived in the state in the 1870s and entered the cattle business during its open-range heyday. But despite these bloodlines, McMurtry showed neither aptitude nor affection for the hard work of r anching. When he was three, his father, known as Jeff Mac, gave him his first pony, which, Tracy Daugherty writes in Larry McMurtry: A Life (St. Martin’s Press, Sep- tember 12), “he promptly rode into a swarm of yellow jackets in a mes- quite thicket, gettingstung twelve times.” He didn’t fare much better on his inaugural cattle drive the next year. What’s more, he was skinny, his eyesight was poor, and his manner was excessively mild. As Daugherty notes, “It was clear to Jeff Mac and all of McMurtry’s uncles that the boy was not going to be a cowpoke.” Instead, the most famous son of tiny, desolate Archer City grew up to be a self- described “word herder” who wrote, collected, and sold books. If McMurtry was ill-suited to the world of the hypermasculine Great Plains cowhand, it likely didn’t bother him all that much. As Daugherty explains, McMurtry found most men predictable, even boring. Women, on the other hand, fascinated him from an early age, initially as objects of desire (first stirred by the magazines and pa- perbacks he encountered at Ar- cher City’s five-and-dime) but far more meaningfully as friends. As McMurtry wrote years later in a letter to the novelist Ken Kesey, “I have a long string of female con- fidants, stretching back to high school, in each of whom I have invested a great deal emotional- ly, and from each of whom I have taken some self-discovery.” But most poignantly, as Daugh- erty insists, McMurtry was out of step with the geography and to- pography of far North Texas itself. Whereas many have embraced the majesty of its yawning blue horizon and sea of undulating green grass, McMurtry saw only a dun-colored bleakness, under- scored by the region’s economic and cultural impoverishment. Daugherty cites a formative epi- sode from the novelist’s boyhood when McMurtry was traveling with Jeff Mac across the Great Plains on Route 66. “I thought my father was driving us into the sky,” he later wrote. “The image always haunted him,” Daugherty writes, TEXAS MONTHLY 71
BOOKS Larry McMurtry on his family’s ranch, in North Texas. “a vision of escaping emptiness by heading into an even greater blank, as clean as a piece of paper.” Nomadism became McMurtry’s way ofpapering over the void: con- trary to the pithy bumper sticker, he may have been born in Texas, but he got away as fast—and as often—as he could, spendingmuch of his life in Arizona, California, and the Washington, D.C., area. Little of this is news to anyone who followed McMurtry’s career with even moderate attention; his skepticism about his home state is a staple of his interviews and essays. But seeing all of the evi- dence gathered between the cov- ers of one book, over the course of more than five hundred pages, brings this aspect of McMurtry’s persona into higher relief. It might have been easy, prior to Daugh- erty’s biography, to regard Mc- Murtry’s carping about Texas as something less than a convic- tion—not invented, exactly, but exaggerated as a form of person- al branding. Perhaps he thought such an offering to the East Coast literary establishment would help him gain access to their world. But such suspicions fade away as one reads these pages, prompting one to wonder: If McMurtry disliked Texas so much, why did he keep returning to it again and again, as both a subject of his work and a place to call home? The main achievement of Daugherty’s book is to make clear that McMurtry’s deep knowledge of and frequent disdain for the state was a combustible mixture that fueled his writing. This plays out most famously in his best- loved work, Lonesome Dove. Mc- Murtry was hardly immune to the romance of the ranching life; he spent countless hours as a child mesmerized by family stories and dime-store pulp fiction. But having seen firsthand the difficulties and privations of this existence, he knew that the iconic figure of the cowboy was an avatar not of independence but rather of a wage laborer on horseback. McMurtry once went so far as to declare—hyperbolically, of course—that ranching was “a form of slavery.” And he intended Lone- some Dove as a corrective to those myths. Yet somehow, through an alchemy he never managed to fully explain, he wound up resurrecting those legends for a new genera- tion of readers who were willing to accept a pinch—but no more—of revisionist history with theirTales ofthe Old West. McMurtry’s cynicism about Texan manhood offered him one further insight, which is perhaps less celebrated than it should be. Long before academic histori- ans had given the subject much thought, he weighed the costs borne by women on the Texas frontier. As he once explained in an interview: “I think that wom- en had a terrible time in the early West.... It was a masculine cul- ture and to some extent crude, to some extent fascistic, certainly Remembering McMurtry MORE THAN THREE DOZEN WRITERS CONTEMPLATE THE LEGACY OF TEXAS’S MOST BELOVED AUTHOR. Not long after Larry McMurtry died, a symposium was held in his honor in Archer City’s Royal Theater, the venue made famous by The Last Picture Show. A dozen writers spoke about the man widely regarded as Texas’s greatest novelist. This gathering, in October 2021, was the seed of Pastures of the Empty Page: Fellow Writers on the Life and Legacy of Larry McMurtry (University of Texas Press, September 5), a collection of 38 essays edited and curated by George Getschow, one of the event's organizers. There are some big-name authors here, such as Geoff Dyer, Paulette Jiles, and Diana Ossana, as well as plenty of current and former Texas Monthly writers, including Sarah Bird, William Broyles, Oscar Casares, Stephen Harrigan. Skip Hollandsworth, Katy Vine, and Lawrence Wright. But perhaps the most moving tribute comes from the Native American novelist Stephen Graham Jones, who at 23 was awed by the sight of McMurtry when he paid a visit to Booked Up, McMurtry’s legendary Archer City bookstore. “I’m still in your bookstore," Graham writes, 26 years later. “All of us listed in the table of contents, we’re bunched down at the end of that aisle, and we don't really $ want to leave. Even after you nod once, push your book dolly back into the shadows, we’re still looking into the space ° you just filled.” -ANDREW R. GRAYBILL 72 TEXAS MONTHLY
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BOOKS not welcoming to women.” He recalled from his childhood how his father “found it difficult to for- give women the ease of modem ar- rangements—something as simple as tap water,” given how hard his own mother had worked. Although many of his most enduring char- acters are testosterone-sweating men, Terms of Endearment's Aurora Greenway and Leaving Cheyenne’s Molly Taylor are just as vividly drawn as, say, Hud from Horseman, Pass By or Sonny and Duane in The Last Picture Show. McMurtry’s last editor, Robert Weil, gushed that “he and Tolstoy are the two great [male] novelists who can depict women.” But as Daugherty makes clear, it wasn’t just old, rural Texas that McMurtry regarded with mixed feelings. He was also uneasy about thestate’s intense modernization over the course of his lifetime. Yes, he once described Houston as “my Alexandria, my Paris, my Oxford”—a series of analogies surely newr made before or since. But he fretted that an increasing- ly urbanized and suburbanized Texas was becomingmore like any other place—and recognized that something important was lost in that transformation. Which may explain why, even as he fled from the loneliness of small-town Texas, he orbited Ar- cher City like a satellite through- out his life. 11 was there, in a refur- bished mansion, that he lived on and off, without air conditioning, during the last years of his life, and where he died, in 2021. Daugherty, a Midland native who has penned biographies of Joan Didion, Joseph Heller, and his fellow Texas writers Donald Barthelme and Billy Lee Bram- mer, is a steady guide through Mc- Murtry’s world, though perhaps a bit unimaginative. He draws on and quotes so heavily from Mc- Murtry’s work that at times the reader might feel as if they’ve been McMurtry, bookseller, in the seventies. handed a headset and offered an audio tour narrated by McMurtry himself. That said, this book, which was not authorized by McMurtry or his estate, is not a hagiography. Daugherty’s McMurtry occasion- ally comes off as cantankerous and vain, even pretentious. After all, who titles abook “Walter Benjamin at the Dairy Queen” and then, in an interviewwith the New York Times, cites it as one of the three best books ever written about Texas? Takingback the proverbial mi- crophone would have required Daugherty to engage in more of the sort of labor one expects from full- scale biographies. Though he con- sulted some archival material— McMurtry’s papers, housed at sev- eral Texas repositories, as well as those of figures including Kesey and Susan Sontag—this compo- nent of his research feels thin. Nor are there all that many fresh interviews. Daugherty’s notes and acknowledgments indicate that he interviewed perhaps a couple of dozen people (several of them associated with this magazine, which has covered McMurtry extensively). But given the length of McMur- try’s career, the variety of media he worked in, and the many different places he lived, it’s easy to compile an extensive list of the writers, edi- tors, agents, scholars,bibliophiles, booksellers, book critics, actors, directors, and family and friends whose thoughts and memories could have made for a more vivid, insightful, and, one might hope, surprising book. Among the most pressing ques- tions left unanswered by Daugh- erty’s biography is howto account for the maddeninglyuneven qual- ity of McMurtry’s work. Especial- ly in his later years, McMurtry chipped away at his own legacy by producing multiple clunkers, including sequels and prequels to some of his finest novels, which had the unmistakable effect of cor- rupting the originals, much like the metastasizing Star Wars fran- chise. Daugherty notes this unfor- tunate trend but leaves the heavy lifting to unsparingbook review- ers. If, as McMurtry confessed, he often wrote for money, should this change the way we view his writing? It would have been in- teresting to hear Daugherty’s take on this uncomfortable question. McMurtry’s next biographer— it seems inevitable that there will be one, perhaps several—might consider the failed cowpoke’s lifelong fascination with the leg- endarycattleman Charles Good- night as a helpful point of entry. A fictionalized version of Goodnight 74 TEXAS MONTHLY
appears in several McMurtry books, and he served as the inspiration for Lonesome Dove’s Woodrow Call. It would be difficult to summon a figure less like McMurtry than his beau ideal, who is the archetype of Texas masculinity. It was Goodnight who, as a member of a Texas Rangers squad, recaptured Cynthia Ann Park- er from the Comanches. He helped blaze an eponymous cattle trail to Colorado in 1866 and remembered years later that the happiest days of his life had been spent herding live- stock. He was strikingly handsome, with dark eyes, black hair, and a thick black beard. And by establishing an enormous ranch on the floor of Palo Duro Canyon in 1876, he opened the region for white settlement, earning the sobriquet “Father of the Texas Panhandle.” Perhaps McMurtry admired Goodnight, in spite of himself, for those attributes that the dreamy word herder could never hope to embody. But maybe something else was at play. While much of McMur- try’s work is an ambivalent requiem for a fading way of life, Goodnight had felt a similar discomfort much earlier, as suggested by a silent film he made in 1916. Old Texas depicts the Panhandle as it had been when Goodnight arrived, in the mid-1870s: empty and beckoning, rich with pos- sibility. But the толпе leaves little doubt that this moment has passed. Goodnight drives home the point by staging a last bison hunt, allowing some of his Kiowa neighbors to chase down one of his buffalo, killing and butchering it in a traditional way. The tone is unmistakably elegiac. Long before Larry McMurtry came along, Mr. Texas himself had already turned off the lights and closed down the frontier. -V ANDREW R. GRAYBILL IS A PROFESSOR OF HISTORY AND THE D1RECTOROFTHE WIL- LIAM P. CLEMENTS CENTER FOR SOUTH- WEST STUDIES ATSOUTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY. THE CARTER PRESENTS PARTY ON THE PORCH ART | FOOD | MUSIC | FREE
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NEWS& POLITICS DISPATCH by Peter Holley • photographs by Nick Simonite Not in My Backcountry A Dallas billionaire says his new luxury resort in a near-pristine parcel west of Austin is a model of sustainability. The caretaker of the nature reserve next door isn’t buying it. ot long after Steve Winn purchased a 1,400-acre property in the Hill Country, his new next-door neighbor Lew Adams took him on a tour. Adams, a 78-year-old environmentalist, is a fierce custodian of a Central Texas treasure you’ve probably never heard of—and for good reason. Since his parents purchased this land in Roy Creek Canyon, in the for- ties, the family has gone to great lengths to keep the nature reserve, located thirty miles west of Central Austin, a secret to all but a select few. Those lucky enough to descend into the lush, two-hundred-foot- Lew Adams at Roy Creek Canyon, on July 11. deep gorge, following a rugged path that snakes through j agged limestone boulders and native flora sprinkled with wild turkey feathers, have done soonly by invitation from the Adams family. The reason for this rigorous gatekeeping becomes clear to vis- itors when they reach the bottom and see a crystalline pool of spring- fed water—usually seventeen feet deep and cold to the touch, even in summer—shimmering beneath a dense canopy of centuries-old cypresses that block the outside world from view. On this particular spring day, in 2019, Winn (not to be confused with the Las Vegas developer Steve Wynn) andhis wife, Melinda, were the guests of honor. Looking awe- struck as he stood beneath the towering trees, Winn, who made his fortune in technology and real estate, surprised Adams by com- paring the landscape to a cathe- dral. When the two men parted ways later that day, Adams was hopeful that Winn’s immersion in the space had opened his eyes to the importance of protecting the land he’d bought next door and the springs around it. Home to a newly discovered species of salamander, a rare spe- cies of freshwater arthropod, and hundreds of plant species, Roy Creek Canyon serves as one of the best remaining examples of the biodiversity that once reigned across Central Texas. If the arrow- heads littering the area are any indication, the springs were fre- quented by Indigenous peoples for hundreds of years. But for the past eight decades, swims in the creek’s pristine waters have been reserved for the Adams family and i ts network of close friends, whose ranks have included birdwatch- ers, naturalists, and a who’s who of left-leaning Texas writers and politicians. On a warm summer evening some decades ago, a visitor to Roy Creek might have encountered Governor Ann Richards and the journalist Molly Ivins holding court on a boulder beside the wa- ter. “Molly would come up here TEXAS MONTHLY 77
and tell some of the raunchiest jokes you’ve ever heard in your life,” Adams recalls. “And Ann could tell some too!” “Mymomanddadkeptthisplace so quiet because they didn’t want people to change it,” Adams told me last October while we sat at apicnic table near the creek. “It’s both good and bad. Roy Creek has been pro- tected, but if they’d brought more people into the fold, there would be thousands of people screaming aboutwhat’s happening right now.” What’s happening is that in the coming months, the rollinghillsof dense cedar and grassland that al- most entirely surround Roy Creek Canyon will be developed into Mirasol Springs, a luxury resort and housingdevelopment financed by Winn’s company that could rad- ically transform this largely un- touched land. Like most battles about a rela- tively small piece of property, the fight over Roy Creek is part of a much larger struggle. On one side are the Lew Adamses of the world: e nvironmen tai purists committed to the notion that the most beautiful and biodiverse parts of the Texas Hill Country should not only remain undeveloped but habitats should be restored to the shape they were in before heavy The spring- fed pool at the bottom of Roy Creek Canyon; tap water from the springs, at the Adams’ family residence; a No Trespassing sign on the property. land use whenever possible. On the other side are developers, who are taking advantage of booming population growth in and around Austin and San Antonio—as well as the fact that only about 5 percent of the region has been set aside for conservation—to bulldoze some of the Hill Country. M irasol Springs is pitching it- self as a third option, a model for sustainable growth. “Advocates for conservation and development should be able to coexist and em- brace important elements of each side,” Jim Truitt, the director of real estate at Mirasol Capital, the Dal- las-based investment firm behind the proj ect, told me during a recent tour of the site. (Winn declined to be interviewed by Texas Monthly?) “Regional development is coming, and it needs to be cooperative.” Though the final plans are still being amended, Mirasol Springs is set to include a seventy-room hotel, 39 residential lots, and an- other thirty cottages managed by the hotel. Guests will have access to a spa, walking trails, an organic farm, and the nearby Pedernales River for fishing, canoeing, and kayaking. Compared with thatof other Hill Country resorts, the proposed ca- pacity is modest. The Omni Barton Creek Resort & Spa, for instance, about ten miles west of downtown Austin, sits on four thousand acres and has about five hundred rooms. E^’en more unusual, more than two thirdsof Mirasol Springs—around one thousand acres in total—will be turned into a conservation ease- ment, a move that guarantees that this portion ofWinn’s land will re- main undeveloped for generations to come. The site also will include a University of Texas-run field station that will be used for con- ducting biodiversity research. Still, Adams is convinced that it’s only a matter of time before Roy Creek Canyon is severely damaged by Mirasol Springs. He and some other locals believe the project represents a philosophi- cal shift in a part of Central Tex- as that boasts a high density of conservation easements—which preserve sensitive natural areas and limit building—in the state. That’s partly because of an ex- traordinary grouping of natural wonders within a few miles of one another, such as Hamilton Pool, Westcave Outdoor Discovery Center, and Roy Creek Canyon. The area is exceptionally fragile, even more so because the Trin- ity Aquifer, from which Mirasol plans to draw water, is already in decline and the Pedernales River, which the resort would also rely on 78 TEXAS MONTHLY
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DISPATCH MEANWHILE, IN TEXAS for water, stopped flowing amid extreme drought conditions this summer and last. “The alarms went off when peo- ple in this area first heard about Mirasol Springs,” said Christy Muse, cofounder and former ex- ecutive director of the Hill Country Alliance, a nonprofit dedicated to protecting Hill Country habitats. “Totheircredit,the Mirasol people paused and wanted to hear what locals had to say. They thought theyweredoingsomethingreally great right off the bat and quickly learned that a lot of people around here don’t feel the same way.” Developers held numerous meetings with local residents and faced a slew of media attention in 2022. Ultimately, they reduced the number of homes they planned to build, barred residents from dig- ging wells, and added even more land to the property’s original con- servation easement, ensuring that the vast majority of Mirasol’s land will never be built upon. For Adams and others, though, the entire process has been trou- bling. As they’ve learned, when landowners such as Mirasol de- cide to develop their property, there’s little neighbors can do to stop them. In recent years the drought in Central Texas, combined with the explosive development brought on by the growth of Austin and San Antonio, has caused water levels to plummet in parts of the Trin- ity Aquifer, a ribbon of limestone that runs from south-central Texas north to Oklahoma and provides much of the drinking water for the Hill Country. This summer the beloved swimming hole Jacob’s Well stopped flowing for only the sixth time in recorded history. Last summer, in New Braunfels, Comal Springs, whose water comes from the Edwards Aquifer, also ceased flowing, as did portions of the Llano and Pedernales Rivers (the Pedernales reached zero flow In El Paso, a hazardous-waste team was deployed when 100 gallons of... ... hot sauce leaked from a semitruck on Interstate 10, backing up traffic for miles. The U.S. Postal Service suspended mail delivery to nearly two dozen Travis County homes because a hawk nesting in the area was attacking humans. A Montgomery County grandmother posted photos of herself baking bread in a brick mailbox amid 100 degree temperatures and then, after the images went viral, admitted that they were staged. Scientists in West Texas discovered the remains of a marine reptile called a plesiosaur, the first Jurassic- era vertebrate fossils discovered in Texas. The FBI offered $5,000 for information to help catch the “Sticky Note Bandit,” a man who, dressed as a woman, has robbed or attempted to rob four Houston banks in less than two weeks, handing tellers threatening sticky notes. Texas game wardens relocated a nearly eight-foot alligator to a zoo in New Braunfels twenty years after a zoo volunteer illegally took home an egg, hatched it, and raised it as a pet. Governor Greg Abbott tweeted out a fictitious article from a parody website, the Dunning-Kruger Times, that stated that country singer Garth Brooks, who has recently drawn the ire of conservative activists, had gotten booed off the stage at a music festival. An Austin nonprofit hired about 150 goats to eat poison ivy and other undesirable flora along the city’s hike-and-bike trails. An Arlington Army veteran who was struggling to promote his supernatural-themed young adult novel saw it shoot to the top of the Amazon best-seller list after a stranger posted a TikTok video of the author being ignored during a book signing at a Kroger store.-ARM an BADREI again this summer), which stopped feeding water into the Highland Lakes that Austinites rely on for drinking water. There’s a strong chance that Central Texas springs will be- я come a relic of the past, according to Doug Wierman, a hydrogeol- ogist and a fellow at Texas State University’s Meadows Center for Water and the Environment who has served on the Hays Trinity 80 TEXAS MONTHLY ILLUSTRATION BY LORENZO GRITTI
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DISPATCH GroundwaterConservationBoard. “As development moves west from the 1-35 corridor, one by one we are losing these iconic preserves,” Wierman said. Mirasol developers argue that there’s enough groundwater for the project to use during periods of drought without impacting local springs. They say that less than 5 percent of the development will include impervious cover, which keeps rainfall from being absorbed into the ground. “Unlike some de- velopments, we’re not trying to see how many homes we can squeeze onto this property,” said one M ira- sol planner. To help offsettheuse of precious groundwater, Mirasol plans to use reclaimed wastewater and harvest- ed rainwater. “Every rooftopon the entire property will be required to collect rainwater,” Truitt said, noting that deed restrictions will prohibit herbicides and pesticides, nonnative plants, and septic sys- tems and private wells. “The goal is to redefine what responsible de- velopment across the Hill Country can look like.” In order to preserve the ground- water that feeds the creek’s springs, An aerial view of the land that will soon be home to both Roy Creek Canyon and the Mirasol Springs development. the development has acquired a Lower Colorado River Authority contract that allows for pumping surface water from the nearby Pedernales River—the same one that stopped flowing this summer and last Truitt said it would oper- ate groundwater pumps only if the LCRAcurtails its original contract, atwhich point the development, as a utility district, would be required by state law to provide guests and residents with a consistent and reliable water source. At no point, developers say, will groundwater be used for landscape irrigation. There’s no easy way to quantify how much water Mirasol will use once the resort opens to the public. Though developers expect to use less, Mirasol’s contract with the LCRA allows it to pump around 100,000 gallons of water from the Pedernales each day, except under certain drought conditions. Based on water availability studies, the developers estimate the contract will provide about 80 percent of the project’s water. They say the region’s aquifer holds enough to supply the other 20 percent. But there’s little doubt that the Highland Lakes, which supply water to about 1.5 million Central Texans, are nearing a crisis point because of long-term drought. Fears of a decades-long mega- drought have prompted some ex- perts to call for the LCRA to begin implementing more conservation efforts. If the LCRA were to curtail itscontract,Truitt said, thesitealso plans to build storage tanks that will fill up when water is plentiful. Storage tanks won’t last forever, but the developers are confident their water supply system will be sufficient to meet demand. Tru- itt notes that developers have a shared interest in ensuring that the creek continues to flow. Had someone else purchased the land Mirasol is building on, things could be worse. Anotherdevelopercould have packed the site with homes without setting aside land for con- servation. That offers little comfort to Ad- ams, who said, “What Mirasol is currently proposing is sort of like the canyon dying a slow death as opposed to a fast one.” This was, to say the least, disap- pointing to Adams, who thought he hadswayedWinntohis sidewhen he had given him that tour back in 2019. Two years later, when Adams had achance to ask Winn why he’d decided to turn that same land into a development, the businessman, he said, sounded more like a hard- nosed investor than someone com- mitted to conservation. “He said, ‘Lew, anytimel invest in something I need to see a ten percent return on my investment,’ ” Adams recalled. Todayhewonderswhether Winn’s “cathedral” comment was part of an elaborate ruse. He’s particularly rankled about the field station that UT will be operating. Adams said that before Winn bought the land,he pitched to school officials the idea of turning Roy Creek Canyon into a univer- sity-managed property dedicated to research and education. Their enthusiasm for this idea is docu- mented in correspondence that 82 TEXAS MONTHLY
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SEASON 2 NOW STREAMING DISPATCH I FCHT CER RIGHT HERE PODCAST Listen to Texas Oncology patients talk about their experiences. TexasOncology.com/podcast A TEXAS^bNCOLOGY More breakthroughs. More victories: Adamsprovidedto Texas Monthly.But Adams said the project never materi- alized, and in the meantime plans for the field station on the Marisol prop- erty were proposed and approved. The UT officials Adams had been speaking to declined interview re- quests, and a UT spokesperson de- clined tosay how the partnership with Marisolemergedandhowmuchmon- ey Winn had donated to the school. The university is “thrilled to partner with the Winn Family Foundation” on the field station, the spokesperson said. “This research by our faculty and students relates directly to con- servation and protecting land and water resources in the Hill Country.” Adams believes that the field sta- tion represents greenwashing, mean- ing cashing in on consumers’ interest in environmentally conscious prod- uctsby makingcosmetic adjustments. To service much of Mirasol Springs, he notes, the developers will need to build electric and water lines and roads, along with miles of sewage pipes that will run over the property. Relatively untouched land will soon be home to pedestrians and limited vehicular traffic, along with any run- off created by their presence and by construction. The developers said they will have extensive runoff pre- vention measures in place, and they have water monitoring systems in the creek. Guests won’t be allowed on his family’s property, but Adams still worries about hikers venturing into the canyon, destroying habitats and leaving refuse. “You’re talking about tens of thousands of people visiting Mirasol each year,” Adams said. “How are you going to possibly keep an eye on that many people?” In 1990 Austinites packed city hall on the day that council members vot- ed on whether to allow a developer and oilman named James “Jim Bob” Moffett to build thousands of homes, multiple golf courses, and millions of square feet of shopping and office space atop the watershed that feeds the legendary swimming hole at Bar- ton Springs. Outside, locals bearing signs packed the sidewalk. For hours, a seemingly endless stream of local speakers approached the lectern to rail against the proposed develop- ment. Some read poetry and sang, while others cited legal texts or found novel ways to profess their spiritual connection to Barton Springs, turn- ing the meeting into a communal “love-in” straight out of the sixties, as this magazine’s Paul Burka wrote at the time. Somewhere in the crowd that day stood Adams’s parents, Red and Mar- jorie Adams. Ifhis mother took a turn at the lectern (and Adams thinks she did), the council members would’ve likely known herby name. For years her weekly birding and conservation column, “Bird World,” had run in the Austin American-Statesman, among other Texas newspapers, giving her a forum to remind readers what was being lost as the region tilted toward a growth-first mentality. “I can remem- ber the things that ‘used to be’ such as a Shoal Creek that had clear pools deep enough for kids to swim in, but which today is only a drainage ditch,” she wrote in 1993. “I can remember when Pease Park had enough natural areas left that roadrunners nested there... its wild plum thickets gave replenishment and shelter to migrat- ingwarblers.” The night Moffett was defeated, Adams believes his parents were convinced they’d prevailed in a his- toric struggle for Austin’s soul. Three decades later, he said, it’s clear they hadn’t won a war, just an early battle. “Here we are fighting the same battle over another threatened Hill Countryjewel,” Adams said, shaking his head. “Maybe if we’d publicized Roy Creeklike Barton Springs, there’d be more people rushing to save it.” As aboy, Adams treated Roy Creek Canyonlike asecondhome. Nowclos- ing in on eighty, his bright red hair turned solid white, he cautiously descends the steep path into his be- loved canyon with reverence for a land worth fighting for. -V
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NEWS & POLITICS MEDICINE by Will Bostwick • illustration by Ibrahim Rayintakath The Monkeys Who Died lo Fight COVID Texas Biomedical Research Institute helped subdue the coronavirus and has big plans for combating future disease threats—with controversial help from its thousands of research primates. Beyond a security checkpoint and down a two-lane blacktop road that curves along the edge of a two-hundred-acre campus on San Antonio’s West Side, scientists cultivate and study some of the most virulent pathogens in the world. As the pandemic’s fright- eningearlydays ticked by, in spring2020, researchers in full-body protective suits, working in one of the facility’s six Biosafety Level 3 labs, carefully loaded a syringe-like device with SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID -19. Then they deliberately infected a rhesus macaque by compressing the end of the device to atomize the virus—dispersing it into tiny airborne particles directed up the monkey’s nose. Weighing about seventeen pounds, rhesus macaques are brown-gray primates with expres- sive pink faces and are native to much of southern Asia. Because of their genetic similarity to humans, they often act as our stand-ins in biomedical research. Hundreds of rhesus macaques live here at the Texas Biomedical Research Institute, one of a handful of feder- ally designated national primate- research centers in the U.S. and the only one in the state. The infected macaque was among the first creatures in the world to be immunized against COVID-19. Several weeks before arriving at Texas Biomed, it had been 1 of 6 injected with a Pfizer- BioNTech vaccine candidate, while another 6 received a slightly differ- ent formulation. Nine other ma- caques—the experiment’s control group—were injected with saline. Thescientists in San Antonio were tasked with infecting all 21 of the monkeyswith the coronavirus and tracking the results. By July 2020 researchers had determined that Pfizer’s candi- date vaccines were working—less viral RNA was found in the immu- nized macaques than in the con- trol group. After human trials, the vaccine was approved under an emergency-use authorization in mid-December of that year, en- ablingmillionsofat-riskAmericans to be protected against the deadly disease. A development process that would ordinarily have taken years had been completed in just nine months, thanks in part towhat Texas Biomed calls its “animal he- roes,” those macaques—all ofwhom were euthanized, as is standard for this sort of vaccine study. Traditionally the institutions that conduct primate research TEXAS MONTHLY 87
MEDICINE haven’t sought to draw attention. The useof animal subjectshas long attracted fierce opponents, who argue that the practice is unethi- cal and the science derived from it unreliable. But having played a sig- nificant role in the rapid develop- mentoflifesavingCOVI D -19 treat- ments, Texas Biomed wouldn’t mind a little recognition. The institute is raising funds to construct a $120 million Global Centerfor Bioscience that it hopes will function as a more welcom- ing “front door” for visitors to what has been a largely closed-off campus. The proposed building’s offices, labs, and meeting spaces are part of a planned roughly $300 million expansion that involves adding multiple facilities, vastly increasing the size of its research animal population, and doubling the institute’s personnel. Yet these ambitions come as emerging technologies could spell an end to the need for bio- medical research on nonhuman primates—raising new questions about the tricky ethics involved in saving human lives by sacrificing other creatures. Thomas Slick Jr., an eccentric 26-year-old heir to an oil fortune, founded what became Texas Biomed on a working cattle ranch eight miles west of downtown San Antonio, in 1941. Much of its ear- ly work was devoted to livestock breeding, including the creation of a popular Brangus hybrid that combined the virtues of Brahman and Angus cattle. Slick later be- came a world traveler who led ex- peditions in search of the yeti in the Himalayas and Sasquatch in the Pacific Northwest. In the fifties, the institute turned its attention to biomedical re- search and began importing ba- boons from Africa. By the eighties, it was testing early treatments for HIV and hepatitis C. In 1999 it es- tablished the Southwest National Primate Research Center, one of BABOONS HAVE BEEN ESPECIALLY VALUABLE FOR CARDIOVASCULAR AND NEONATAL RESEARCH. MARMOSETS ARE FREQUENTLY USED IN NEUROSCIENCE. MACAQUES HELP IN STUDYING TUBERCULOSIS AND HIV. only seven such facilities in the country funded by the National Institutesof Health (NIH) and the only one not associated with a uni- versity. Today it’s home to roughly five hundred marmosets, one thou- sand baboons (the world’s largest colony), and 1,500 macaques. When the COVID -19 pandemic began, China, the United States’ top source for nonhuman pri- mates, decided to begin keeping its supply to itself. This led to abottle- neck in animal-research projects elsewhere in the world. Cambo- dia, the next top supplier, partial- ly filled the gap, but in November 2022 it, too, halted exports, out of concerns that it was contributing to the poaching of endangered wild macaques. Experts say the primate shortage has compromised critical biomedical research in the U.S., and Texas Biomed’s leaders have de- termined that the institute should help bolster the domestic supply. Macaques are byfar the primates ingreatestdemand—inpartbecause their size makes them more man- ageable than larger primates, such as baboons. But each species has “real- ly unique characteristics andunique targets for research,” says Corinna Ross, acting director of the South- west National Primate Research Center. Baboons have been espe- cially valuable for cardiovascular and neonatal research. Marmosets are frequently used in neuroscience and were test subjects for a Zika vi- rus vaccine. Macaques have been used to study tuberculosis andHIV, as well as in COVID -19 research. In a sleek second-floor confer- ence room, Texas Biomed CEO Larry Schlesinger, who’s also a physician, explained that some ex- perts predict infectious diseases will, by2050, su rpass heart disease and cancer as the world’s leading causes of death. “This is a big deal from abusiness perspective as well as a science perspective,” he says. It’s a challenge thathe says the institute is uniquely equipped to confront because the other NIH-funded primate-research centers are affili- ated with universities, where com- mercializing innovations isn’t the primary objective. Texas Biomed, by contrast, is focused on helping to bring biomedical products to market, and it has plentiful land on which to expand. The institute’s plans include the construction— already underway—of a $20 million complex for as many as sixhundred more macaques, as well as a large veterinary clinic and pathology lab. Additional phases could allow the macaque colony to increase to about five thousand and the marmosets to about eight hundred. Much as Houston’s MD Ander- son is known as the premier cancer center in the U.S., Texas Biomed as- pires to be the premier infectious disease institute. “In Texas we’re not known enough,” Schlesinger says. “I don’t think people appre- ciatejusthowmuchpowerwehave in science.” In addition to its work on Pfizer’s COVID -19 vaccine, Tex- as Biomed was involved in develop- ing Regeneron Pharmaceuticals’ monoclonal antibody therapy, as well as in major advances for hepatitis C patients that led to a 2020 Nobel Prize for some of its collaborators. Ebola therapies and vaccines tested in the insti- tute’s Biosafety Level 4 lab have 88 TEXAS MONTHLY
It's a common refrain:Texas schools aren't keeping pace with preparing young people for in-demand STEM careers. Educators want to equip students with knowledge and skills to gather data and evaluate evidence, but it's difficult making connections in the classroom that apply to real-world scenarios. Texas Biomedical Research Institute (Texas Biomed) aims to change that, with the help of a $1.25 million science education grant designed to impact up to 8,500 students in local middle and high schools over the next five years.The project, with funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), supplements teaching practices and promotes scientific literacy, thereby strengthening the STEM careers pipeline. The goal ofthe NIH grant, known as the Science Education Partnership Award (SEPA), is to facilitate relationships among biomedical researchers, teachers and schools in order to provide opportunities for students from underserved communities to consider careers in basic or clinical research. The Texas Biomed SEPA program is built around paid, professional development for teachers that occurs year-round. This intensive teacher training takes place in the summers with biomedical education specialists and scientists at the Institute's northwest San Antonio campus. The SEPA grant is one part of Texas Biomed's Discovery & Learning Initiative, which encourages scientific skillsand knowledge through education and mentoring programs for area K-12 students, as well as undergraduate internships and graduate education and training. To learn more about Texas Biomed's Discovery & Learning Initiative visit txbiomed.org. Texas biomedical RESEARCH INSTITUTE HEALTH STARTS Wl TH SCIENCE SCAN TO LEARN MORE
MEDICINE also shown promise. Andlast year the NIH selected the institute as a training center for tuberculosis researchers. None of this would be possible without its nonhuman primates, Schlesinger insists. “Animals are a required commodity to improve human health,” he says. Yet a future in which research animals could be replaced with high-tech alternatives such as computer- modelingtechniques and “organs on chips”—key chain-size micro- chips that can mimic how a given human organ will be affected by a drug—may arrive relatively soon. Proponents argue that these new options are more accurate than ani- mal testing as well as more humane. The Environmental Protection Agency has pledged to end its own testing on mammals by2035, and late last year Congress abolished a 1938 rule that required that phar- maceutical products be tested on animals before being used in hu- mantrials. The measure “will avoid the needless suffering of countless animals, now that experimental drugtesting can be done with mod- ern non-animal alternatives that are more scientifically relevant,” said Senator Cory Booker, a New Jersey Democrat and the bill’s co- author with Senator Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican. A rhesus macaque; a Texas Biomed staffer looks out over the institute’s six- acre baboon corral. “We’re at the cutting edge of sci- ence that will enable us to replace monkeys someday,” Schlesinger agrees. “We want that more than anyone. Animals are very expen- si ve, labor i n tensive, and require a lot of care.” But Schlesinger pushes back against those who say animal testing should be supplanted im- mediately by the new options. “The reality is it’s not ready for prime time,” hesays oftheemerging tech- nology. “ What are you going to do, just sit around and say, ‘I want an organ on a chip?’ The FDA is going to laugh. It’s not realistic.” Though the Food and Drug Ad- ministration has signaled that it will accept alternatives to animal testing in some cases, acongressio- nally mandated report published this year by the National Acad- emies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine found that none of the alternatives can fully replace nonhuman-primate testing—at least not yet Tucked away in a back corner of Texas Biomed’s campus, behind the six-acre, open-air baboon corral, sit three square buildings, each surrounded by four geomet- ric domes known onsite as prima- domes. These house the institute’s thirty“retired”chimpan zees, some of them more than fifty years old. In 2013 the NIH reduced the number of chimpanzees used in research at the facilities that it funds to just fifty. “Their likeness to humans has m ade them unique- ly valuable for certain types of re- search, but also demands great- er justification for their use,” Dr. Francis Collins, then director of the NIH, said at the time. Two years later, the agency announced it would no longer support any bio- medical research on chimps, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reclassified all chimps, including those in captivity, as endangered. Those policy changes effective- ly ended invasive biomedical re- search on chimpanzees in the U.S., including at Texas Biomed. Some animal rights advocates would like to see this clemency extended to other species. Lisa Jones-Engel, a former primate re- searcher who now serves as a senior science adviser for the nonprofit People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, cites some of the na- tion’s top medical scientists who recognize that data gathered from chimpanzee studies often don’t re- sult in improved human health. If it doesn’t work with chimps, which along with bonobos are our nearest genetic relatives, sharing nearly 99 percent of our DNA, she says, “it’s not going to work with macaques, 90 TEXAS MONTHLY
From the moment Susan Woods was found dead at home in the summer of 1987, everyone in Stephenville, Texas, was certain she’d been killed by her estranged husband. When fingerprint analysis finally revealed the truth, some in town still refused to believe it. But the killer’s own words attest that the truth had been plain for years, if only someone had listened. Now, with a voice from beyond the grave, the whole story can finally be told. Listen free on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Follow @TexasMonthly on Twitter and Instagram for updates. [фд^ Podcasts]
PARKSIDE RESIDENCES MEDICINE Come Home to Something Extraordinary Brand-new Parkside Residences standstall in Houston, bringing you the endless possibilities Downtown and views you've only dreamed of. Our rental apartment homes boast elegant floor plans in studio, I, 2, and 3 bedrooms, each adorned with detailed touches of comfort and luxury. parksideatdg.com (346) 815-2296 who we haven’t shared a common an- cestor with for twenty-four million years, or marmosets, who we haven’t shared a common ancestor with for thirty-five or forty million years.” It’s true that research conducted on animals doesn’t always translate into effective treatments for humans. For instance, a 2020 study at M D Ander- son found that animal models were poor predictors of how cancer drugs would affect humans. “There is an urgent need to assess more novel ap- proaches,” the researchers concluded. Indeed,roughlynineoutoftenhuman drug trials fail because the drugs don’t work in humans, or their side effects are too severe. If the animal trials aren’t weeding out bad or ineffective drugs, animal rights advocates ask, why do we need them? Even so, some maladies, such as Ebola, are so severe that federal rules prohibit infecting humans with apathogen to testa treat- ment—in cases such as this, the broad consensus in the medical community is that animal research can and does provide invaluable, lifesaving data. The trustworthiness of Texas Biomed’s research was opened to crit- icism lastyear when Deepak Kaushal, then director of the Southwest Na- tional Primate Research Center, who was central to the Pfizervaccine test- ing, admitted to falsifyingdata in work he’d completed at another institution. Texas Biomed replaced him as direc- tor, and his federally funded research was subjected to additional scrutiny by outside experts for one year,but he remains on its researchfaculty. Critics also point to the institute’s fourteen U.S. Department of Agriculture cita- tions related to primates in its care, dating back to 2013—an average number among the seven national primate research centers, according to an analysis of USDA documents by Jones-Engel. Texas Biomed’s infrac- tions ranged from peelingpaint in animal enclosures to allowing an adult baboon to access another enclosure, where it killed an infant baboon. Nevertheless, Texas Biomed firmly stands behind the work of its scien- tists. Ross, the primate center’s acting director, told me that critics don’t rec- ognize that a deep love of animals is what fi rst d re w many, such as herself, to primate research. Lisa Cruz, the in- stitute’s vice president for corporate communications, says that consider- ing the thousands of nonhuman pri- mates the institute cares for, “we have an extremely great track record of care and safety.” Numbers vary each year, but as of this summer, the institute is conducting tests on more than nine hundred monkeys. Some studies are “terminal,” meaning the primateswill be euthanized—both to prevent the spread of a disease and to gather data from the autopsiedbodies—but most involve monkeys that will be reused in future studies, kept for breeding, or retired. (A spokesperson for Tex- as Biomed declined to disclose what percentage of studies are terminal.) According to Bob Fischer, an asso- ci ate professo r of ph ilosophy at Texas State University and director of the Society for the Study of Ethics and Animals, “there’s a real tendency to demonize” in conversations aboutthe use of animals in medical research. He notes that many consumers are complicit in the suffering of others— whether humans or nonhumans— more than they’d care to recognize. “If you go far enough back in the sup- ply chain, for just about any product that you like, you will find horrors,” he says. Estimates for the number of animals used inbiomedical research each year in the U.S. range from about 20 million to more than 100 million, but that’s a small fraction of those killed for food. And only about 0.5 percent of research animals are pri- mates, according to a recent report from the National Academies. John P. Gluck, a professor emer- itus of psychology at the University of New Mexico, is another former primate researcher who came to re- gret his decades of conducting ex- periments on monkeys. He says he fears that norms within the scientific community overpower the basic in- stinct not to inflict pain on another intelligent living thing. “A good ar- gument for doing the experiment is
very meaningful,” Gluck says. “But the pain is st ill there, so does that pain still have a claim on usethically? Does it still require something more from us? And I would say yes, it does.” In this ethical debate, Gluck is fo- cused primarily on animal welfare, while Texas Biomed’s Schlesinger is most concerned with improving human health. “I’m thinking about solvingthe world’s problems,” he says. “The goal is to use less animals, to use them in a more sophisticated fashion whenever possible, and to make sure that the studies are validated, so that the work done actually movesforward in the proper fashion. That’s what we cando. And that’s what I think Texas Biomed does really well.” When weighing the risk of emerg- ing global health crises against the accumulated suffering of research animals, judgments about the prop- erbalance are inevitably subjective. Even before Pfizer reached out in ear- ly 2020 about testing its COVID-19 vaccine, Texas Biomed’s virologists, immunologists, and geneticists had alreadybegun studying the novel coro- navirus. Researchers infected doz- ens of primates—including baboons, macaques, and marmosets—with the pathogen to observe the course of the disease. These animals endured the little-understood effects of COVID to help determine which species would be best suited fortesting the anticipat- ed treatments to come. All the infected animals were eventually euthanized. A Pfizer senior director would later say this swift action by the institute putthe pharmaceutical giant amonth ahead ingettingits vaccine to the pub- lic. For each of the dozens of animals sacrificed, it could be argued, count- less more human lives were saved. Infectious disease experts worldwide agree that there will be other pan- demics, and Texas Biomed intends to help develop the next cures. For the foreseeable future, that work will hinge on the ethically charged issue of inflicting pain and death on human- kind’s closest kin. # KERRVILLE TEXAS, CRAFTED BEAUTIFULLY Just as the Guadalupe crafts its path through our town, we invite you to craft your own experience in Kerrville. Feel inspired as you sample culinary delights, discover unknown musicians, and sample handcrafted libations. KERRVILLECRAFTED COM
TELLING THE STORIES OF TEXAS FOR MORE THAN 50 YEARS Every week, Texas County Reporter invites you to hop in and travel with us as we drive down the Texas backroads in search of ordinary people doing extraordinary things. For more than 50 years, TCR’s journey has continued as we chronicle the people and cultures of The Lone Star State. Find TCR where you are by visiting TexasCountryReporter.com/showtimes TEXAS COUNTRY REPORTER IS PROUD TO BE SUPPORTED BY THE FOLLOWING SPONSORS Hochheim PRAIRIE INSURANCE 5Htr U№ [GOLDEN fcCHICKS 5 TEXAS j.<bNCOLOGY More breakthroughs. More victories:
COUNTRY NOTES by Sterry Butcher • photographs by Bryan Schutmaat BEING TEXAN The Space of a Day Seventy-eight-year-old artist Mike Capron has spent his life with horses—and with a devotion to finding a pure and wide-open expanse. n a Saturday of gray bluster, ten- year-old Isaac Rodriguez slipped through the back door of the old mercantile in Sheffield, some sev- enty m iles southeast of Fort Stock- ton. Afire popped in the woodstove as Mike Capron looked up to greet him. This is Capron’s art studio, a cavernous circa-1900 building whose interior contains a wonder- land of objects, an encyclopedic sampling ofCapron’s interests, in- cluding but not limited to livestock magazines, saddles, spurs and bits, turkey feathers bristling in coffee cans, finished paintings in frames and some in progress on easels, drawings of hounds and horses, art supplies of all sorts, trophy mounts, books, a framingworkshop,bronz- es of bucking broncs, and a table dedicated to playing dominoes. The building is situated on the town’s main drag, not too far from the community center and the Tin Cup Cafe, which appears closed this morning. As a matter of tradition, and in a gesture of communicative shorthand, Capron hangs an Amer- ican flag from the front porch to indicate he’s there and welcoming of company. It might sometimes seem that the flag is the only thing stirringinSheffield,population 174. “Lookeehere,”Caproncalledout as I saac sidled up. “He’s one of my helpers when he doesn’t have to go to school. He’s an artist, makes clay figurines. They’re all in the comer, and he sells them to whoever comes through. Wliat’reyou doin’ today?” Capron is silver haired and sports rimless glasses. Pens and TEXAS MONTHLY 95
COUNTRY NOTES pencils sit sentinel in the breast pockets of his wool vest. When he was a teenager, in Kansas, a family friend gave him abookon the West- ern painter Charles Russell, and Capron’s world broke open. “I’ve still got that book, still look at it,” he said. “The education of a man who painted like Charlie Russell, who painted his passion and made a living doing what he wanted to do, impressed me since day one. I started right away drawing what I was doing, wherever I was.” At twenty, C apron was cowboy- ing on the Mescalero Apache res- ervation, in southern New Mexico, chasing seven thousand rangy Her- efords on seven sections of land. “We had seventy-five horses in the remuda,” he said. “Each cowboy had five horses in his string, and we’d rotate them to get the freshest oneeveryday. We rode all day e\ery day.” Even amid that isolation, his draft card found him. “My interest level in Vietnam was low,” he said. “I thought, ‘There has got to be a plan B.’” Instead of reporting for duty right away, Capron met with a Marine Corps recruiter, who of- fered him a six-month deferment in exchange for a three-year com- mitment. Deal. Immediately he set out for Montana, with the goal of seeing PREVIOUS PAGE: Mike Capron at his art studio, in Sheffield, on July 6, 2023. this PAGE: Capron’s collection of turkey feathers; Capron painting alongside one of his occasional students, thirteen-year- old Cooper Calhoun. as many Charles Russell paint- ings as he could find. He went to galleries in Helena, Bozeman, Great Falls. “Anywhere there was a Charlie Russell original,” he said. In Jackson Hole, Wyoming, he stood mesmerized by Russell’s WhenHorses Talk War There’s Slim Chance for Truce. In it, cowboys at daybreak are readying for work. One holds the reins of a roan horse he intends to mount. The set of the cowboy’s head is determined. So is that of the horse, though of an opposite determination. “It was just gorgeous,” he remembered. “The message was of a man and a horse fixing to go to war. The title was so strongbecause horses don’t always want to go with you. The expression of the men around was ‘this is gonna be a show.’ I love the attitude, the storyline of the paint- ing.” As he headed to the Marines, he thought, “That’s the plan. I want to paint like Charlie Russell.” Hearing Capron pause, Isaac approached, bearing a small clay horse. Capron examined it and returned it to the boy. “You bet- ter put some ears on it,” he coun- seled. “Ears are horrible details, but they’re what gives it expression.” In September 1965 Capron ar- rived at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego, where, after basic and infantry training, he was sent to communications school to learn Morse code. After class, Capron worked on assignments from the Famous Artists School, a correspondence course that adver- tised in thebacksofmagazines such as Field & Stream and Outdoor Life. “They would send you a book and lessons. You’d do the lessons, send them, and they’d critique them and send them back. We had instructors like Robert Fawcett, Norman Rock- well-tremendous instructors who were on this staff. And I just loved it.” He drew on the ship on the way to Vietnam, though not many Fa- mous Artists School lessons were completed once he was in country. “I did draw in Vietnam a bunch, but onC-rationcartons. Mail was hard to keep up with.” Asa radio operator attached to a mortar squad, Capron carried both pistol and radio. Halfway through his thirteen-month tour came a nightofparticular reckoning,when Capron said he thought, “This is it, kid.” Pinned down by guerrillas and beset by heavy questions about what they all were doing and why, Capron prayed. “There were no big lights, no big voice, but a feeling of peace cameover me that I couldn’t believe,” he said. “The message was: 96 TEXAS MONTHLY
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COUNTRY NOTES ‘This could be the first day of eter- nity, and I’m here to take care of you.’And I’ve had that same peace since then about picking up abrush or getting on ahorse. It’s not that I haven’t been bucked off or painted a masterpiece everytime, but I have had faith in God ever since.” Capron’s story abruptly cut off as the studio’s back door opened and Larry Bishop and his wife, Shelly, entered. “ What’re you doin’?” boomed Capron. Bishop grinned. “Come to see what you’re doin’.” Bishop had commissioned apor- trait of his late father, and Capron used a photograph and conversa- tions with Bishop and his father’s oldfriends to get a sense of the man. Capron handed him the finished piece, an image of a middle-aged man gently smiling. The color rose high on Bishop’s cheeks. “My dad’s been gone five, six years,” he said. “It looks like he’s right here.” Commissions make up a good portion of Capron’s work these days. He keeps several projects go- ing, in varying stages, at the same time. He worked on the Bishop pic- ture concurrently withaportraitof a friend’s dog. A third commission, of cowboys moving Longhorns along the Chisholm Trail, sat on an easel, awaiting final touches. While its Western subject matter registers immediately, the work is subtly electric in its use of color. The cowboy on the right, wearing a wild rag around Iris neck and a re- volver at his hip, rides a blaze-face horse that is colored periwinkle and lilac. The grass is lime, umber, and orange. The painting is alive with movement, the curves of limbs and horns making the eye travel all over the canvas. Theforemoststeer gazes at the viewer, about to step off the canvas. “I can look at those cattle and see them anticipating crossing the Red River, and those cowboys making sure that they are lined out,” Capron said. “ I love that Capron at his ranch, eighteen miles east of Sheffield, on July 6,2023. moment of leaving camp and the excitement of all the things that can happen to man and horse and work.” The start of an artwork comes to Capron in different ways. Some- times a title announces itself, and he makes the painting to meet that, or perhaps it’s a moment of local history that interests him or some- thing he sees one day. He hurtles from one project to the next, and if his ideas stall momentarily, he prays about it. “ Within twenty-four hours there will be something that says, ‘Paint me.’ I’m constantly thinking of good subj ects, beautiful sights, light, gesture, proportion.” At midday, Capron looks at Isaac, who has placed his horse sculpture, now eared, with others in the cor- ner window. “You want to have lunch with us?” The noon meal is served at the Capron home next door, a former hotel. Capron and his wife, Anne, met at a Christmas party, in December 1968, and got engaged on their third date. He promptly left for a welding job in Australia, and it took so long to hear fromhim that Anne wondered ifhe was gone for good. “The cowboy done rode away,” she said. Finally, his letters did arrive, with kanga- roos drawn across the envelopes. Six months later, he returned to Texas. “I want to go back to the ranch, and I want to punch cows,” he told her. “She said, ‘Good.’ I left a twenty-five-hundred-a-monthjob and took a two-fifty-a-month job on a ranch. And we’ve been doing it ever since.” For the next couple of decades, Capron found ranch work around the Salt Flat area near Guadalupe Peak, a place so remote that going for groceries could be a hundred- mile trip. One day he showed a ranch to a potential buyer, who told him that space, not simply land itself, was the most valuable commodity. “Ever since that day I really appreciated the meaning of the word and how much of it is diminishing in this world,” Capron said. “That’s why I paint—because I love to paint space. I went into the service, and I was itching to go home. They asked why, and I said, T can’t see far enough.’ I got to the ocean and thought, ‘This is morecrampingthananywhere I’ve everbeen. I can only see to thehori- zon, fourteen miles. I can’t see no mountains.’ At home we can see a hundred miles of dirt and dust and clouds.” The family moved, in 2004, to Fort Davis, where Anne taught el- ementary school and Capron day worked throughout the Big Bend and painted in a small studio in town. Ten years ago Anne inher- ited part of her family’s ranch, 98 TEXAS MONTHLY
eighteen miles east of Sheffield. It lacked a house, so they bought and renovated Sheffield’s former hotel and then the old mercantile next door. “It has just fit us like a glove,” he said. “We’ve dearly loved it. The ranch is a beautiful expenditure. We go out there every day, watch it, take care of it, improve it. That’s a full-time job in Sheffield—art and the ranch.” Anne set out country steak, rice, beans, and gravy. Mealtime talk cov- ered how Anne’s African gray parrot prefers Mike to her, the musicalityof a burro’s braying song, and the benefit of horses having a job. “It’s amazing howmuch animals feel connected, ap- preciated, to be part of the routine,” he said. “People aren’t that different.” He spoke on the eeriness of cowboying in the vicinity of Chinati Peak, a moun- tain southwest of Marfa where, ac- cording to Capron, old Mexican men toldhim thedevil resided in acave. “I have story after story about the top of Chinati,” he said. “There was a wreck every time we went up there of some nature.” Once, while camped over- night,his spooked companion admit- ted to hearingsomeone ride past with a pair of Chihuahua spurs jingling. “I said, *Well, that’s possible.’ ” C apron’s curiosity—his pleasure in plumbing the why of things—never lets up. A weanling heifer at the ranch has escaped her pasture and shown up at the neighbor’s. “I need to ride that west fence to see how that heifer got out, why she left, where she left. It’s gonna be a good story when we figure it out If we ever do.” After cake, Isaac scooted offtoother Saturday occupations and Capron jammed a battered black hat on his head, feathers in the band. He and Anne clambered into a Suburban for their daily trek to the ranch. The road climbed chalk-colored, flattop buttes. “ I have always related the consistency of work ethic with horses and art,” he explained as he drove. “If you main- tain a regular schedule of painting every day and riding every day, you will increase your productivity and efficiency, and it makes for a much larger comfort zone. If I’m riding, I’m payingattention to how the lightlooks and all the things, from animal tracks to fences that need mending to how the animal traffic’s moving, whatev- er’s going on. I’m always retainingin- formation on how something looks. It becomes habitual. You paint what you know. The more information you get down, the better.” Horsemanship, he continued, is like dancing. “You’re working togeth- er. If they’re comfortable, the horse will go wi th you. I f you hi t the rhythm of music, you’re not paying attention with right foot, left foot—you’re danc- ing.” Painting is the same way. “I can go to mixingpaint, and thingswill fall into a rhythm on the canvas. You get to dancingon the canvas with the brush, and it becomes harmonically beauti- ful. It becomes a rhythm of constant practice, a comforting exercise. You learn something every time you go to the easel or go horseback,” he said. “The more intent we become with our passions, the more possibilities we uncover, the more things we see, the more things we feel.” Capron slowed to look at a group of cows and calves amid the cedars. No sign of the wayward heifer’s escape route. He stopped by a year-round spring and then headed to a site called Dead Cow Camp, where he dumped feed for his horse and discovered a mouse situation inside a cabin there built entirely of railroad ties. As he descended the canyons on the way home, the gray day grew somehow grayer, the sky almost lavender. Such things should be noticed. “I love to create the atmospheric look of the Southwest,” he said. “Not so much dramatic sunrises but the light and how it plays on subjects all day long. Space is so important to me, a natu- ral ingredient I’ve always pursued. I was born in eastern Kansas, went to school in Oklahoma and Abilene, but I never got comfortable until I crossed the Pecos River and gotto the Chihuahuan Desert. The colors, the distance—I was home.” MOZART cltacoXaXfi/ LIQUEUR A Chocolate Symphony (§MozartChocolateUSA www.mozartchocolateliqueur.com Imported by Marussia Beverages USA I Cedar Knolls NJ ABV: 17% I PLEASE DRINK RESPONSIBLY TEXAS MONTHLY 99

ADVERTISER SECTION CITY GUIDE Your fall getaway awaits deep in the heart of Texas. А В О V E | late Bryan is a hidden gem offering outdoor recreation in the heart ofthe Brazos Valley. Nestled among the Brazos and Navasota rivers, the Brazos Valley region is the perfect getaway destination this fall. During your trip, enjoy the charming towns that dot the valley and the great Texas outdoors that surround them. Book a stay in Brenham or College Station and explore downtown streets full of unique art, shopping, and dining experiences. Music and arts abound here as well—catch a show at Brenham’s Historic Simon Theatre or Texas A&M Univer- sity’s OPAS, or explore the galleries of the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum. Outside of town, choose from several wineries and breweries where you can taste the flavors of the valley while enjoying a beautiful Texas sunset. Explore the countryside of rolling hills and dense forests on a hike or bike ride with friends and family, or wander down to the river for some recreational fishing or kayaking. There’s fun for everyone in the Brazos Valley!
CITY GUIDE BRAZOS VALLEY ARTS COUNCIL Founded in 1970, the Arts Council is a nonprofit organization that has grown to be the leading advocate for arts and culture in the Brazos Valley. With a driving mission of making art accessible to all residents and vis- itors of the Brazos Valley, they have forged a dynamic and multifaceted arts and culture enterprise. From providing a central location for the arts with their art galleries and visitor center, which include artist studios and more, the services and opportunities provided to the public, artists, as well as affiliated nonprofit arts organizations are abounding. They manage several art programs, from artist-in-residence to public art pieces, and host events throughout the year, from gallery openings to galas. The Arts Council provides resources for new and existing art-enthused individuals, such as event calendars with up-to-date arts and culture events and exhibits in the area. Additionally, their website provides a vast amount of information and resources for individuals, artists, businesses, and arts organizations. The Arts Council membership program has forged a network of multiple affiliated nonprofit arts organizations such as The George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum, Brazos Valley Symphony Orches- tra, Friends of Chamber Music, Ballet Bra- zos, Museum of American G.I., and MCS OPAS. An all-volunteer board of directors governs the Arts Council. Daily operations are managed by a small but dedicated staff, with assistance from a rotating team of interns, many arts-passionate community volunteers, and a team of contracted artists, all with extensive experience in fine arts, cul- ture, and nonprofit arts management. Visit the Arts Councils website to learn more and see how you can get involved! ACBV.org BRENHAM Rolling hills and winding roads through lovely countryside uncover destinations in all directions, including Brenham, county seat for Washington County. ABO VEI The Arts Council gallery with visitors viewing M Walker Nelson gallery show "West of Eden" Adorning the well-preserved historic buildings in Downtown Brenham are giant murals—breathtaking backdrops for visitor selfies. Stop by the Visitor Center at 115 West Main St. for an ArtWalk map and let the fun begin. Diverse Brenham is busily adding wine bars, a cigar bar, coffee bars, and more. If music and entertainment are your things, venues around the county include ev- erything from tiny Carol’s Ice House in Chappell Hill to Burtons White Horse Tavern, to the elegant Barnhill Center at Historic Simon Theatre. When you’re ready for a refreshing beverage, you might choose Brazos Valley Brewery for fine beer crafted on the spot—or visit a downtown bar for wine or cocktail selections. You’ll need more than stamina for check- ing out weekend live music offerings—or from choosing among four wineries or visiting historic destinations such as Wash- ington-on-the-Brazos State Historic Site, the Texas Cotton Gin Museum, the Chappell Hill Historical Museum, or the Brenham Heritage Museum. Add noted annual festivals and you'll find every comer of Washington County has much to offer. Come see us; you’ll be glad you did! VisitBrenhamTexasxom BRYAN This fall in Bryan, Texas, you’ll find fairs, festivals, markets, unexpected cultural expe- riences, and a surprising foodie scene. Savor farm fresh fare at Ronin Farm & Restaurant, named one of the Top 15 Farm-To-Table Experiences in The U.S. by OpenTable. Their Full Moon Dinners are a bucket list foodie experience, where you will dine under the stars on their farm. Their restaurant offers a top-notch beverage pro- gram. fresh ingredients sourced from their farm, and a menu that honors the culinary traditions of Texas while embracing a more sustainable future. Historic Downtown Bryan—a recognized Texas Cultural District—is home to live mu- sic venues, unique restaurants, bars, brew- eries, boutiques, and antiques, all steeped in more than 150 years of history. If you find yourself in town for an Aggie football game, the free Gameday Shuttle offers convenient transportation from Kyle Field to Downtown Bryan. Fall is the perfect season to go off the beaten path at Lake Bryan, a hidden gem under the wide-open Brazos Valley skies. With miles of hiking trails, kayaks, and pad- dleboards available for rent, and fish stocked by Texas Parks & Wildlife, this little-known recreation destination is perfect for anyone looking for a respite in nature. DestinationBryan.com 102 TEXAS MONTHLY
-я ч Come Join Us for о BARBECUE Tasty Texas Tradition TWO of Texas Monthly’s‘Best BBQ Joints in Texas’ are in our hometown ...and eight more local Pit Masters are working hard to join them on that list! It’s time to grab your friends and family and treat your- self to fresh air, friendly faces and so many great barbecue joints, you’ll need to stay a few days to sample them all. Between helpings of famous sausage, savory ribs, smoked chicken and juicy brisket, we’ll keep you entertained with live music, art walks, history tours and scenic drives throughout our picturesque rolling countryside. Come for a visit and we guarantee we’ll send you home feeling full and satisfied. See you soon! glRTQN ChappellcHill BRENHAM Independence Washington For a free Visitor Guide or more information, contact us at VisitBrenhamTexas.com | 979.337.7580 o©
CLOSE OUT SUMMER IN STYLE. Home to cool hotels, cold pools, and an emerging culinary scene, College Station is the ideal place to make your late-summer escape. ABOVE | A striking mural of musician Blind Willie Johnson overlooks Toubin Park, where the story of the 1866 burning of Brenham is told. Find great places to stay at visit.cstx.gov COLLEGE STATION Cavalry Court Hotel Discover the vibrant heartbeat of Texas at the enchanting City of College Station. Nestled in the heart of the Brazos Valley, this captivating destination invites you to embark on a journey filled with leisure, culture, and adventure. Immerse yourself in history by exploring the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum, where you can delve into the life and legacy of the 41st President. Sports afi- cionados will find their paradise at Kyle Field, home of the Texas A&M Aggies, where the electric atmosphere of college football comes alive. Indulge in delectable cuisine and savor the flavors of Texas at the city’s eclectic range of dining options. From mouthwater- ing barbecue to farm-to-table delicacies. College Stations culinary scene caters to every palate. With a vibrant arts and music scene, the city’s cultural offerings are unparalleled.
Born of converging Bryan is a community filled fr: with authentic stories, «people, and places - our legends. Our legends are ever evolving while staying true to our Texas spirit. • W ' / Discover OurLegendsl destinationbryan.com/legends V Pictured: Messina Hof Winery & Resort, a legend in the Texas wine industry
From local art galleries to live music venues, there’s something for everyone. Unwind in charming boutique hotels and relax in luxury ensuring a perfect stay during your visit. Whether you’re seeking a family vacation, a romantic getaway, or an adventurous escape. College Station promises an extraordinary experience that will leave you longing to return. Plan your trip today and discover the boundless charm of this captivating Texan gem. Visit.CSTx.flov 2024. The highly anticipated A Spirit Can Ne’er Be Told.. A Century of Aggie Football will be open August 28,2023 - April 28, 2024. This exhibit explores the development of Texas A&M University’s football program, its important role in Texas A&M’s vibrant history and provides a glimpse of why President Bush loved Aggieland and what it truly means to be a part of the 12th Man. For more information visit our website or call 979-691-4000 Bush41.org GEORGE H.W. BUSH PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY & MUSEUM The George Bush Presidential Library and Museum at Texas A&M University is a premier destination for visitors from around the world. In addition to the permanent col- lection, the museum is excited to welcome Honor, Courage, Commitment: Marine Corps Art, 1975-2018, featuring 36 works of art by 15 Marine combat artists from immediately following the Vietnam War through recent years. It will be on exhibit until January 3, OPAS AT TEXAS ASM UNIVERSITY Escape to Aggieland for big Broadway shows, Bluey’s Big Play, and much more! Beginning in October, OPAS will present a season filled with national tours of Broadway shows, exciting concerts, and four perfor- mances of a live theater show featuring every family’s favorite heeler pups—Bluey and Bingo. The new Astonishing’’ 2023-24 season picks up on where last year’s golden anniversary left off. Fresh-off two sell-out musicals featuring iconic heroines last spring (Legally Blonde. Anastasia), OPAS TO P | A campfire in the courtyard of Cavalry Court Hotel. В 0 TT 0 M | A couple taking a selfie in front of a "Howdy from Agg ie I an d" mural io Century Square. 106 TEXAS MONTHLY
BROADWAY SHOWS & BLUEY COMING TO AGGIELAND
GEORGE AND BARBARA BUSH FIRST FANS OF AGGIELAND ® GEORGE H.W. BUSH PRESIDENTIAL L1BRAR1 & MUSEUM EXPERIENCE THE AGGIE FOOTBALL LEGACY OPEN AUGUST 28 - APRIL 28,2024 shines the spotlight even brighter on female protagonists for the 51st season with stories featuring Scout from To Kill a Mockingbird starring Emmy Winner Richard Thomas. Cady Heron from Mean Girls, Bluey and Bingo in Bluey’s Big Play, and Little Womens Meg. Jo. Beth, and Amy. Plus, a one-night- only concert by internationally renowned cellist Yo-Yo Ma has just been added to the season with a performance on March 6, 2024, in Rudder Auditorium. All programs will be performed in the Rudder Theatre Complex of Texas A&M University in Col- lege Station. Tickets are on sale now at the MSC Box Office (979-845-1234) and online at our website. Whoop and wackadoo! A Spirit Can Ne’er Be Told... A Century of Aggie Football :1000 George Bush Drive West, College Station, TX 77845: : For more intonnation, please visit BUSH41.ORG or call 979.691.4000 : 4»' This program made possible i n pan through Hotel lax Revenue funded from the atv ot College Station through the Ans Counci of Brazos Valley. RADIANT EXCEPTIONAL DENTISTRY Texas has a lot of firsts to be proud of, including having the only dental practice in the world with two Master Dentists. Dr. Michael K. Reece, DDS, LVIM, FICOI and Dr. Ryan M. Jouett, DDS, LVIM, FICOI, 108 TEXAS MONTHLY
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CLOCKWISE FROM TOPLEFT: I) Burnt Bean Co. BBQ brunch features exciting dishes like their brisket Huevos Rancheros and delicious twists on sandwiches and tacos. 2) Chet takes a refreshing break after a long day of BBQ fraternizing. 3) James Beard Award nominated Ernest Servantes, the Pope of BBQ, prepares some 'cue for the BBQ faithful. BBQ Cooler Talks BURNT BEAN CO. BBQ Our series exploring some of the most popul BBQ joints on the Texas Monthly Top 50 list returns. Chet Garner (AKA the Daytripper) takes to the BBQ lines to learn what makes the Texas BBQ community so great. Bright slashes of lightning etched across the Seguin horizon as Chet Garner pulled up at Burnt Bean Co. BBQ. Deep peals of thunder rolled through the sky. Luckily for the BBQ lovers, there was also smoke rolling off the enormous offsets behind the Top 50 BBQ joint. It was early on a Sunday morning, and at Burnt Bean Co., that means BBQ brunch. Despite the weather, there were so many BBQ fans at brunch that certain coveted items began to sell out. As the rain subsided, an even longer line began to form. Crowd favorites were the huevos rancheros with brisket and barbacoa. Every component of the dish is made from scratch, from the tostada to the beans to the ranchero sauce. Also popular were pitmaster Ernest Servantes’s BBQ interpretations of tacos and breakfast sandwiches. Servantes, known as the Pope of BBQ, told Chet, “I always wanted to pay homage to growing up on Sundays when we would have these great meals as a family after church.” It certainly was a religious experience for the BBQ devotees who made the pilgrimage down to Seguin. They journeyed from all around Texas and beyond to enjoy the Sunday experience Servantes and his crew have created. We’ve traveled all across the great state of Texas to visit some of the best BBQ joints in the world. We’ve had mindblowing BBQ, but we've also had great fellowship with BBQ fanatics from near and far. Join us as we continue to travel and enjoy the gift of Texas BBQ. PHOTOGRAPHY BY SARAH KARLAN Produced by Texas Monthly Studio in partnership with ARCACONTINGNTAL SUB See the video online at TexasMonthly.com/CocaCola
Texas barbecue’s favorite pairing.

Illustration by JASON ALLEN LEE WE’RE THE TOPS WHEN IT COMES TO RENEWABLE ENERGY AND GOLF. AND WE LEAD THE NATION WHEN IT COMES TO tANNINGBOOKSlNDClOSINQRURALHDSPITALS. 1Ш151ЕШ SO DARN GREAT... AND SO DARN AWFUL? cn
The Lone Star State has always been a land of extremes. The weather, the miles and miles (and miles) of Texas, the dra- matic history that’s more eventful than that of some full-fledged nations. There’s a reason—many reasons, in fact—why we’re always crowing about ourselves and why so many outside our borders can’t help but find themselves concur- ring. 51 Some of this is hopeless- ;: ly subjective—how, exactly, do you measure freedom or opportunity or the quality of a people’s character? But some of it comes down to cold, hard numbers. And if you’re looking for ob- jective, quantifiable categories in which Texas comes out ahead of the other 49 states—the theme of this feature—we’ve got one heck of a list. 51 The topics gath- ered here range all over the place, _ from energyproduction and shrimp д £ harvests to the number of golfers who have become Masters champions. Ina few cases we rank so high partly be- cause there are just so dang many Texans running around this enormous state. (As many Texas schoolchildren can tell you, we have forty times more people than the only state that’s bigger in area, and we’re 68 percent bigger than the only state with more people.) But we've also included some categories where Texans honor ourselves on a per capita basis. 51 Or, as the case may be, dishonor our- selves. Though there are many categories we can take pride in, there are also plen- ty that feel like badges of shame. Every- thing (well, nearly everything) is bigger in Texas—the good, the bad, and the sta- tistically complicated. —Dan Solomon THEMASTERUST Things Texas Is N umber One At Ф ввпва овпве BBBBB GBQBB BBBBB BBD03 BBBBQ □ □□□□ 0ПВСП ввоз 0ВПП as BSCOB псгооивв -,?_9.22£°Л ввсапспв онвапппв евссвппв ВВВППСПВ ВПЕППППБ n a recent Tuesday morning, as he presided over the ribbon cutting for a new golf resort in Frisco, Governor Greg Abbott sat on a dais behind a sign that read “CREATING JOBS.” Chief Executive magazine hadjust announced,forthe twenty-third consecutive year, that its annual survey of U.S. chief executives had named Texas the number one state for business, and Abbott didn’t hold back in trumpeting the news. He compared his nine-year record as governor to the career of the University of Alabama’s famous head football coach. “I have won nine national championships for economic development, more national championships than Nick Saban has won,” he said. “With projects like this, I will have a ring for every single finger.” Hehadplentyof reasons to gloat. Ayear earlier, Texas had leapfrogged California and New York to become the home state of the greatest number of Fortune 500 companies, at 53. Last year alone, Texas attracted more than one thousand corporate relocations and expansions, according to Business Facilities magazine, which ranked the state first in the nation for “business climate.” (Note: all numbers are from 2022 or 2023 unless otherwise noted.) > Cotton production (3,104,000 bales) 116 TEXAS MONTHLY
WE’RE NUMBER ONE IN BUSINESS! (OR ARE WE?) Elon Musk is just one of the big-deal CEOs moving to the Lone Star State. But some are reluctant to join him. by Tom Foster loo luo That term is based on a number of met- rics, though when people say Texas is business friendly, they’re usually re- ferringtoourpermis- sive regulatory envi- ronment. With fewer rules, the thinking goes, companies are free to, say, launch gi- ant rockets over a nature preserve without havingto askforpermissionfromfoot-draggingbureaucrats. “Just try to get a business license in California— it takes forever,” says Richard Fisher, the former president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. “Here, it’s very quick” Fisher acknowledges that Texas hasn't generated as many innovative start-ups as Californiahas. But he believes that rising interest rates are prompting venture capitalists to change their calculus. “Now that the cost of money has been restored, the neg- atives of California—hyperregulation, extreme taxation—are not offset any more,” he says. “That gives Texas an advantage.” CNBC recently noted that Texas, for the first time, tied California in the category “Access to Capital.” Perhaps no issue gets more attention from the business community than Texas’s lack of personal and corporate income taxes. The truth is, neither maybe all thatbigadeal. Property taxes can offset atleastsome income tax savings for individuals, and most businesses in Texas are assessed a “franchise tax” that can lead them to pay more than theywould have in a typical state with an income tax. Still, ac- cording to the nonprofit Tax Foundation, Texas has the sixth-lowest overall tax burden in the country. What might stop all this forward progress? Some worry that Texas’s restrictive positions on abortion, LGBTQ rights, and school curricula will deter com- panies from moving here. But so far there’s little evidence of that. “I think corporations feel they can take care of their employees and contribute to their communities,” says Dallas entrepreneur Mark Cuban. “That has more impact than what the state can or won’t do.” (Though CNBC notes that Texas has fallen out of the top five states for busi- ness for the first time, largely because of the state's dead-last ranking in “life, health and inclusion.”) One likely stumbling block for CEOs is the state of our utilities. I f catastrophic failures like the one we experienced in2021 are repeated, Texas will begin to look a lot less attractive. Abbott didn’t mention our creaky grid or divisive social policies that day in Frisco, but why would he have? The sun was shining, the new resort was going to create more than one thousand jobs, and the whole place had been buil t to complement an- other big business relocation: the PGA of America, which had just moved to Frisco from Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, thanks to $160 million in subsi- dies financed by Texas taxpayers. “The Texas annual gross domestic product now exceeds $2.3 trillion,” Abbott noted. “We’ve gone from ranking twelfth in the world when I became governor to this year now ranking as the eighth-largest economy in the entire world.” He paused to bask in warm applause. The business community was delighted to be there. ► Farms and ranches (247,000, in 2021) > New techjobs created (45,331,2021-2022) ► CurrentandformerNFLPIayers(2,628) ILLUSTRATION BY KLAUS KREMMERZ TEXAS MONTHLY 117
HORTON BANS 1 BOOK Why aren’t the folks who were up in arms about the Dr. Seuss estate’s self-censorship bothered by Texas purging so many works from our libraries? by Dan Solomon ou may remember way back in 2021, when some of Texas’s political leaders fervently opposed the idea of book bans. The topic at the time was the decision of Dr. Seuss Enterprises to withdraw a handful of the author’s titles that included racist stereotypes. In protest against what he called the cancel culture mob, Texas senator Ted Cruz sold signed copies of Green Eggs and Ham on one of his donation sites. But as right-wing activists stirred panic over “woke culture,” weaponizing normal parental concern about exposing children to adult con- tent, schools and libraries banned hundreds of books. Yet though no state’s schools have been more enthusiastic about banning books than those in Texas, Cruz’s concern over censorship seems to have made itself as scarce as the mama bird in Horton Hatches the Egg. Which is too bad, given what’s been going on Pro football Hall of Earners (37) > Books banned (1,239 between mid 2021 and late 2022)
in his home state. According to a list compiled by the literature and human rights nonprofit PEN America, between July 1,2021, and late last year, Texas saw 1,239bookbans—more than any other state, and 316 more than the runner-up state, Florida. These figures refer not to individual titles but rather to the number of times any school dis- trict has issued a ban of a book. So when nine schools banned Maia Kobabe’s award-winning com- ic book memoir Gender Queer, that counted as nine bans. Then again, it’s entirely possible that more than 1,239 books have been banned in Texas; as PEN America notes, that number represents just the incidents that have been reported to the group. I t’s likely that some bans have flown beneath its radar. Some books are banned in school libraries, others in classrooms. Some are restricted to certain grade levels. Some have been removed pending investigations that school districts may not have the resources to conduct in a timely manner. Most have been banned by adminis- trators, while others are the result of a formal challenge from a parent or community member. What sort of books have been banned? They include ones about gender identity, sex, race, and political violence, as well as books that were banned for reasons that aren't clear. Or to put it in language that Ted Cruz would appreciate: Texas has banned books about boys and books about girls, and books where the gender is more of a swirl. It’s banned books about sex and books about race, and books about those whose white hoods hide their face. It’s banned classics and new books, and books in between; best-sellers, prize winners, and books rarely seen. It’sbannedbooks on what the Nazis did to the Jews, and beloved old books by the great Judy Blume. It’s banned comics and prose books and books full of poems; it’s banned slim books and tall books andheftyold tomes. Of the multitudes of books a child might read, Texas has banned hundreds of books, yes, indeed! No state's schools have been more enthusiastic about banning books than those in Texas. TEXAS MONTHLY STAFFER DAN SOLOMON FEELS PRET- TY CONFIDENT THAT SOMEONE. SOMEWHERE IN TEXAS, WILL BAN HIS NEW YOUNG ADULT NOVEL. THE FIGHT FOR MIDNIGHT. No, you’re 4* not imagin- ing it, fellow Texans: some of us are terrible drivers, as likely to run a fellow motorist off the road as we are to offer a friendly “hi sign.” And we’re not just talking aboutfenderbend- ers. Accordingto data collected by the Insurance In- stitute for Highway Safety, we trounce the competition in the number of fatal car crashes. In 2021,4,068 such incidents occurred in Texas—even more than in Cali- fornia, which has a much larger population. In particular, you should be very care- ful in Dallas, which the Austin-based Transportation and U.S. Census Bureau data, ranked in 2018 as the most dangerous place in Texas to drive, fol- lowed by Beaumont, Odessa, Fort Worth, and Wichita Falls. (Not-so-fun fact: TxDOT tells us that rural areas, home to 16 percent of the state’s population, accounted in _______ 2022 formore than half of our ’ automobile fatalities.) The least danger- ous places? Allen, the Woodlands, Frisco, Pearland, and Sugar Land, ac- cording to Aceable. Maybe that's anoth- er reason to head to the suburbs, if you haven't already. Just keep your eyes peeled on the way OVer.-KATY VINE driving-education website Aceable, drawing on Texas Department of ► Headquarter relocations (116,2021-2022) ► Fortune 500 companies (55) ► Fatal car crashes (4,068, in 2021) 7^7 ILLUSTRATIONS BY JASON ALLEN LEE ANO KLAUS KREMMERZ TEXAS MONTHLY 119
WHAT WALKS ON FOUR LEGS AND HAS 14,667,100 HEADS? Population-wise,Texasisn’taruralstate * and hasn’t been for a long time. Even as far back as 1950, the majority of Texans lived in urban areas; today, 84 percent of us do. But looking at a map, of course, tells a different story: 83 percent of our land is rural, and we’ve got the livestock to show it. When it comes to cattle, goats, horses, and sheep, Texas has more than any other state—they even outnumber newly arrived Californians.-dan Solomon WHENITCOMESTO PEOPLE BEHIND BARS, WE’RE WAV AHEAD Texas keeps putting convicts away. And lawmakers want those numbers to rise. by Michael Hall he Texas frontier was a lawless place, so the ear- ly waves of white settlers dealt with suspected wrongdoers the way the Old Testament told them to. Even as other states found alternatives to the lash, Texas—whose prison system had its roots in the East Texas cotton fields and the convict-leas- ing apparatus that replaced slavery—didn’t back down from “an eye for an eye.” For years our elect- ed officials—sheriffs, district attorneys, judges, and governors—have won office by promising to be tough on crime. The most infamous metric for this is that we’re the number one state in ex- ecutions. Since 1976, when the Supreme Court declared the death penalty was once again con- stitutional, we’ve killed nearly five times more ° convicts than Oklahoma, our nearest competitor. < (Our northern neighbor, however, executes more i prisoners per capita than we do; we’re number i two by that measure.) But we’re also the leader when it comes to liv- «2 ing, breathing subjects of the criminal justice p system: no state has more inmates than Texas. 2g (Though, again, on a per capita basis we don’t p come out on top; we’re number ten, behind some £ § much smaller states.) We weren’t always num- sj ber one; California, with a far bigger population, used to outdo us. Then in the nineties, Governor || Ann Richards led an expansion of prisons and a sg tightening of parole rules that pushed us into the | 3 top spot. Between 1993 and 1998 the population 11 of our state prisons, state jails, and private facil- ities more than doubled, to 143,889—more than the entire population of Waco. Ten years later || we reached 156,126 inmates. Yet, as crime rates i< Cattle (12,500,000, including calves) ► Money spent on a high school football stadium ($80 million, for Cy- 120 TEXAS MONTHLY
fell, so did those numbers, aided, to the surprise of many, by conservative politicians affiliated with the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s Right on Crime initiative, which framed prison issues as economic issues. Texas began sending non- violent inmates to community-based programs designed to divert them from future crimes, and it started closingprisons, not building new ones. Then, during the pandemic, law enforcement curtailed arrests, the court system slowed down its processing, and TDC J took fewer transfers from county lockups. By April 2021 Texas had 116,926 inmates in its prisons. But now, as society is getting back to normal, our numbers are climbing once again. As of January, Texas had 124,893 inmates. California, with 10 million more residents, had about 29,300 few- er inmates. And this is all part of a much larger web. Texas has more inmates in “administrative segregation”—solitary confinement in all but name—than any other state, more than3,000. And our numbers are shockingly high when it comes to prisons without air-conditioning, incidents of prison rape, and unpaid inmate labor. None of these changes take into account our 252 countyjails, where,by some accounts, on average more than 60,000 men and women await a trial, a plea bargain, or a transfer to state prison. This number could very well go up: In the fall, the Leg- islaturewill take up two bills that, if passed, could keep more Texans behind bars in local jails. One would put on the ballot a constitutional amend- ment denying bail for certain violent offenses (such as aggravated sexual assault), and another would prohibit personal bonds for some other serious crimes. We already have an astonishingly large number of inmates serving time for crimes they were convicted of committing. Now we’re on the cusp of putting more defendants behind bars who haven’t been convicted of anything. -V Fair FCU Stadium, in Cypress) ► Incarcerated adults (127,689 inmates) ► Hay production (6,528,000 tons) ILLUSTRATIONS BY KLAUS KREMMERZ AND JASON ALLEN LEE TEXAS MONTHLY 121
MEN» More than one in six Texans lack health insurance, the highest rate in the country. Behind the statistics are countless human beings experiencing unnecessary suffering. by Ricardo Nuila oyce Reed was once a star shooting guard on the basketball team at Bellaire High School. When he came to see me at the emergency room at Houston’s Ben Taub Hospital last October, he wore red warm-up pants, the kind with snaps on the side so he could tear them off at a mo- ment’s notice and enter the game—or, in this case, change into a hospital gown. I needed only to unfasten the two snaps on the bottom to see what had brought him here. The middle three toes of his right foot had been stripped of their skin and underlying fat, and there was a wound the size of a silver dollar coin on his heel. Royce, who was 44, was suffering from an infection in his foot bones that made it nearly impossible for him to walk. Royce’s health problems had emerged years earlier. He was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes at the age of seven, but thanks to the health in- surance his parents had through their jobs, the ► Freight moved through the state (3.3 billion tons, in 2018) ► Uninsured residents (18 percent of the population) 122 TEXAS MONTHLY
family managed tokeep his illness largely under control. He played intramural basketball at Sam Houston State University, earned business and computer science degrees, and, when he turned 28, got a job at the post office that provided him with health insurance of his own. Royce was, at that point in his life, lucky. Ac- cording to the latest data, from 2021, Texas has the country’s largest medically uninsured rate; more than five million Texans lack insurance, a number that represents 18 percent of our pop- ulation. That’s 4.2 percentage points higher than the rate in Oklahoma, the runner-up in this sweepstakes of shame. A perhaps even more shocking statistic: In 2021 there were 930,000 uninsured children in Texas—a number destined to exceed one million as the state rolls back the Medicaid coverage the federal government provided during the pan- demic. The percentage of uninsured children, 11.8, is the highest in the country, and more than double the national average. Not having insurance can be deadly. A 2017 article in the Annals ofInternal Medicine men- tions one study that found that having health insurance reduced adult mortality by as much as 6 percent. The uninsured are, for instance, far more likely to have cancer diagnosed at later stages and to die at younger ages. And, of course, having insurance can also alleviate manynon- fatal forms of suffering caused by crippling chronic illnesses. For many people, Texas is a tough place to get sick. When Royce was 32, he developed kidney failure and required a transplant. His private insurance didn’t pay for this procedure, so Medicare paid for it and the 36 months of re- covery that followed. His private insurance did cover a podiatrist visit after Royce found a small discoloration on his left foot in 2019, as well as continued follow-ups with his kidney doctor, who pushed him to be diligent about his health, fearing that the small diabetic ulcer he had developed on his foot would worsen. “She got on my ass,” Royce noted. Things began to fall apart in February 2021, when Royce lost electricity during the deep freeze and blackout. Because of the damage di- abetes had done to his nerves and blood vessels, Royce was especially vulnerable to frostbite, and his feet turned black. His father took him to the hospital, where doctors noticed a foul smell coming from his left foot. The skin over the wound had started to slough away, and the ulcer had expanded. Royce underwent emer- gency surgery to remove the infection. Once he was released, specialists advised him to keep off his feet. That was pretty much impossible at the post office, where Royce occasionally covered routes when a colleague was absent. Something had to give. He stopped working in early 2021, and though the union made sure he didn’t get fired, the post office eventually stopped paying its part of his insurance. Soon enough, he joined the more than five million Texans who don’t have health coverage. Royce couldn’t visit his endocrinologists or podiatrists; he did, though, re- ceive insulin and vital medica- tions for his kidney transplant through donations from the American Kidney Fund. But when his right foot began having similar issues, he couldn’t find a way to receive medical care. So it was no surprise that Royce ended up at Ben Taub, a public hospital that teems with the uninsured. Since our first meeting, Royce has been admitted four timesover eight months. He’s spent 45 days in the hospital, visited the ER six other times, and had dozens of The child uninsured rate of 11.8 percent, the highest in the country, is more than double the national average. clinic visits. Most of this expensive care would have been prevented if he’d had coverage. And he’s just one of many Texans suffering need- lessly. The first time I saw Royce, I told him how much his ailments dispirited me. “You were once a basketball player,” I said. That didn’t matter anymore, he explained. He was focused on keeping his feet and trying to stay alive. He had applied for disability, but that took time. In the meantime, he hopes that at some point his health will improve and he’ll be able to start working at the post office again. “I still got my job,” he said, noting the diffi- cult nature of his situation. “I just don’t have insurance.” RICARDO NUILA IS A DOCTOR OF INTERNAL MEDICINE AT BEN TAUB HOSPITAL. IN HOUSTON. AND THE AUTHOR OF THE PEOPLE'S HOSPITAL: HOPE AND PERIL IN AMERICAN MEDICINE. Global exports ($485.6 billion) ► Percentage of residents who speak Spanish at home (28.7, in 2021) ILLUSTRATION BY JASON ALLEN LEE TEXAS MONTHLY 123
THE ROADS GO ON FOREVER ► Average number of tornadoes (13G, 1997-2022) ► Sheep (675,000) ► Uninsured children (11.8 percent) 124 TEXAS MONTHLY
698,839 miles of Texas roads would cover the same distance as: Radius of the sun: 435,000 miles Rerunning Vince Young’s historic 14-yard game-winning sprint against USCinthe 2006 Rose Bowl 87,853,996 times. Stacking 4,919,842 Towers of the Americas on top of one another. Floating the m ile-long lazy river at Waco Surf 698,839 times. Texas has 698,839 miles of road * lanes, which is more than any other state in the country. That’s almost 300,000 more than the runner-up, Califor- nia, and more than twice as many as third- place finisher Illinois (which, to be fair, is punching way above its weight, given that it’s the twenty-fourth largest state by area). But what, exactly, does 698,839 miles of road look like? How can we hold it in our headsand contemplate its enormity?To help us grasp the concrete—or, rather, asphalt- reality of this colossal figure, we offer some helpful equivalencies, -jeffsalamon OR TO PUT IT ANOTHER WAY... ► Miles of road lanes (698,839) ► Southern Baptists (2.45 million) ► Goats (725,000 ) ► Counties (254) ILLUSTRATION BY KLAUS KREMMERZ TEXAS MONTHLY 125
WAIT, IS TEXAS... A GO£F STATE? Yes, Texas 4* is a football state, and a rodeo state through and through. But it’s also the number one golf state in the country. The state with the most inductees into the World Golf Hall of Fame? Texas, with fifteen, including such familiar names as Jack Burke Jr., Ben Crenshaw, Sandra Haynie, Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson, Lee Trevino, Kathy Whitworth, and Babe Didrik- sonZaharias.The state with the most Masters champions? Texas. Ten Lone Star State residents have won the tournament fifteen times. What’s more, two of the three bridges at Augusta Nation- al—where the Mas- ters is played each spring—are named for Hogan and Nel- son. Oh, and what is widely believed to be the best-selling golf instruction guide of all time? Harvey Penick’s Little Red Book, cowritten by thebeloved Austin pro mentioned in the title and the cele- brated Texas novelist and sportswriter Ed- win “Bud” Shrake. Why has Texas made such a mark on the royal and ancient game? One theory claims that the state’s favorable climate for year- round play—and our sometimes unfavorable climate: we play in conditions that range from cold to hot to dry to wet to windy—prepares a golfer to hit every possible shot in the proverbial bag. So maybe it’s time for more Texans to embrace their inner Ben Hogan, add a few golf shirts to their collections of old Dallas Cowboys jerseys, and get out on the course. Heck, maybe the time has come for a TV show set on the Texas fair- ways. “Friday Night Links,” anyone? -DAVID COURTNEY В ШЕ NUMBER ONE IN RENEWABLE ENERGYAND NONRENEWABEE ENERGY Why Texas is the past, present, and future when it comes to fueling the world. by Russell Gold rive south from the Oklahoma Panhandle and the first thing that greets you, after the large green “Welcome to Texas” sign, is the nation’s largest wind farm. Head south for another five hours un- til you’re nearly in Midland, and you can take in the nation’s largest solar farm—well, the largest for now. In far northeast Texas, close to Arkansas and Oklahoma, another one is under construction that will eventually be the biggest in the country. Texas generates more electricity from wind and sun than any other state and has since2006. It ain’t even close. In 2021 Texas’s output was more than double that of the runner-up, a sizable state that hugs the Pacific Ocean and likes to boast about how green it is. How did this come to be? Well, Texas has lots of sun and wind and lots of land to build on. But so do several other states. (Though let us note that the western half of the state gets more sun than the entirety of yet another large landmass—one that has the temerity to call itself the Sunshine State.) It was politics and policy that catapulted Texas to the top. “We like wind,” then-governor George W. Bush said in 1996. He was talking about wind power and aimed the remark at the chairman of the Public Utility Commission, who was baffled, so ► Counties without a local newspaper (21) > Masters championships (15) ► Places where one can legally cross 126 TEXAS MONTHLY
Bush reiterated his point “Go get smart on wind,” he ordered. So began the state’s unlikely emer- gence as a renewables superpower. A few years later, Texas ended its century-old electric-utility monopolies, a move that opened the door wide for renewable- energy developers. Bush’s unexpected affection for renewables had political roots. Two of his maj or donors, Sam Wyly and Ken Lay, had taken an interest in the field and supported changes to Texas’s electricity system that would allow renewables to flourish—and, not coincidentally, enrich themselves. (In the short term, at least Wyly, a convicted tax cheat, eventu- ally declared bankruptcy; Lay, best known as the founder of Enron, declared late in life that he was $250,000 in the red.) Bush was also considering a presidential run. A former Texas oilman might not play well nationally, but a fossil fuels fan who also liked renewables? That was something new. If Bush set the table, his successor, Rick Perry, prepared the feast. In 2005 he oversaw a multibil- lion-dollar project to run power lines connecting the wide-open spaces in West Texas—where wind and sunlight and inexpensive land were plentiful— with the energy-hungry cities along 1-35 and to the east. The wind farms—and, a few years later, solar farms—piled up like rush hour traffic on the Katy Freeway. Perry’s successor, Greg Abbott, has looked less favorably on Texas’s renewable output—he preposterously blamed it for the catastrophic 2021 blackouts—even though wind and solar farms have helped keep a lid on the state’s power prices. He has supported state legislators’ recent efforts to slow renewable growth, but thankfully the offending bills never made it off the floor. Of course, Texas isn’t going to develop a full-on green reputation anytime soon; the rise of renew- ables hasn’t put a dent in our ability to churn out the old standbys. We’re still the nation’s top producer of oil and natural gas and will be for the foreseeable fu- ture. When it comes to barrels and electrons, Texas is adamantly ecumenical. If energy is our religion, we welcome all faiths to the promised land. # the border (28) > Renewable energy production (136,118 gigawatt-hours) > New home permits (179,620, in 2021) ILLUSTRATIONS BY KLAUS KREMMERZ AND JASON ALLEN LEE TEXAS MONTHLY 127
OUR RURAL HOSPITALS ARE ON LIFE SUPPORT Texas has * the largest rural popu- lation in the nation, which means that the crisis that has hit rural hospitals across the country is striking us espe- cially hard. Rising medical costs, low patient numbers, and staffing strug- gles have led to 152 rural hospitals in the U.S. closing or converting to outpatient facil- ities since 2010. Twenty-six of those were in Texas, more than in any other state. (Tennessee has seen the high- est percentage of its rural hospitals close. We’re num- ber six by that met- ric.) Why has Texas fared so badly? Our refusal to expand Medicaid plays a large part. The eight states with the highest levels of rural hospital closures between 2010 and 2021 had all declined to ex- pand their Medicaid programs, shutting the door to federal aid that has helped keep hospitals open in other states. - WILL BOSTWICK BUTWAIT, THERE’S LESS! Wounding as it may be to our deeply ingrained sense of Texas exceptionalism, there are a number of seemingly Texas-y categories in which we don’t take the top spot Here are a few. Barbecue Alice Walton), and twenty-thlrd-rich- When it comes to est person (Michael quality, we have no Dell), live in Texas. doubt that Texas But the 73 billion- has the best barbe- aires who call the cue in the country. Lone Star State When it comes to home don’t get us quantity, though, to the top of this asof 2014 Okla- list; California, New homa and Georgia York, and Florida all had more barbecue have more. And we joints per capi- rank even lower- ta, and barbecue number ten—on a spots made up a per capita basis. higher percentage Though we'll admit of restaurants in we don’t feel all Alabama, Arkansas, that intimidated by Georgia, Tennessee, sparsely populated and Mississippi. I Montana’s four- mean, if you call count’em, four- that barbecue. billionaires. Billionaires Gun Ownership The world’s second- As you might ex- richest person (Elon pect, Texans own Musk), twenty- more guns than the first-richest person residents of any (Walmart heiress other state, nearly ► Closed rural hospitals (26 since 2010) ► Shrimp harvest value ($183,870,316, in 2021) ► Cities among the 25 128 TEXAS MONTHLY
twice as many as though, we’re well ida rivalry, it’s not Sorry, Florida, but living in the wild, the runner-up, ahead of our fellow all bad news—Texas persuading sep- and the widely cited Florida. But it will big states New added more people tuagenarian New claims that there surely trigger many York, California, and than any other state Yorkers to spend are 2,000 to 5,000 gun-loving Texans Florida. during that time their final years tigers in captivity in to learn that we’re period, and most enjoying 60-degree Texas seems to be not the number one Population of Florida’s gains lows isn't a reliable based on scanty ev- gun-owning state Growth were the result of way to maintain idence. There may, on a per capita ba- migration from long-term popula- In fact, be fewer sis. In fact, we’re not Though no state other U.S. states, tion growth. than 200 of the big even close. We rank in the twenty-first while ours reflect a cats here, putting twenty-seventh, century has added more-robust com- Tigers us behind Florida, behind a lot of much more residents bination of internal which reportedly smaller states, than Texas, from migration, interna- According to popu- has more than twice such as Montana, 2021 to 2022 tional immigration, lar legend, there are as many as we do— Wyoming, Alaska, Florida, Idaho, and and good ol’ natural more tigers living in yet another exam- Maine, New Mexico, South Carolina increase. Tex- Texans’ backyards ple of the Sunshine and Vermont. If It’s grew at a fast- as’s population is than in the wild. State’s intense any consolation to er rate. If you’re younger than Flor- That’s probably interest in trying to Governor Greg "Buy invested in the ida’s, so we have not true; there are out-Texas Texas. More Guns” Abbott, Texas-versus-Flor- a lot more babies. about4,500 tigers Meow! > most populous in the U.S. (6: Houston, San Antonio, Dallas, Austin, Fort Worth, and El Paso) ► Horses (767,100, in 2017) ILLUSTRATION BY JASON ALLEN LEE TEXAS MONTHLY 129

ILLUSTRATION BY HAROL BUSTOS PAGE 131 THE APACHE, THE PRIEST, AND A FORTY-YEAR FIGHT FOR JUS TICE BY MICHAEL HALL In 1983 James Reyos was convicted of the brutal murder of a Catholic minister. The battle to dear his name is now one of the longest in Texas history.
On a warm December afternoon, James Reyos set out from his apartment in Denver City, a small town in the Permian Basin near the New Mexico border, to hitchhike to nearby Hobbs. Reyos, then 25 years old, was short and thin with long black hair. He had grown up on the Jicarilla Apache Nation reservation, in northern New Mexico. Though he’d been in Denver City for about seven months, he didn’t have any friends, and he’d recently been fired from his oil field gig as a roustabout. Reyos struggled with alcoholism and had a habit of not showing up for his shifts. Now he was going to Hobbs to try and find work. As he walked along Mustang Avenue, a main road on the town’s west side, a red Chryslerwith a white top slowed to a stop. The passenger door opened, and Reyos heard a voice: “Where you headed?” Hobbs, said Reyos. “I’m heading that way too. Get in.” The driver introduced himself as John, a Catholic minister. He was old- er, in his late forties, tall and affable. The £ two hit it off, talking the entire 36-mile | drive. When they got to Hobbs, John I suggested they get a drink They wound | up at Tip’s, a local biker bar, where John | ordered a pitcher of Coors. The two men g fell deeper into conversation; John had i grown up in I reland and done mission- “ ary work in Africa, and Reyos told him | about growing up on the reservation and | working in the oil fields. John seemed » genuinely curious about his family and 1 life on the rez. For the first time in years, g Reyos felt like he’d made a friend. s 132 TEXAS MONTHLY
After a few hours, John said he had to get back to Denver City, so Reyos caught a ride with him. John parked his car at the local Catholic church. Reyos walked home to his apartment, three blocks away. A couple of weeks later—four days be- fore Christmas, in 1981— Odessa police were called to room 126 of the Sand and Sage Motel, where they found a naked man lying face down, hands tied behind his back, dead. His face and body were battered and bloody, and a long slashing wound ran across his buttocks. The room was a shambles: blood on the floor and walls, holes punched in the drywall. The bed was broken and the nightstand was overturned. Cigarette butts lay on the floor, beer cans stood on a bureau, and clothes were strewn across a chair. It looked as if a party had gone terribly wrong. Officers collected hairs, bloody finger- prints, blood-stained sheets. Thepathole- gist who performed the autopsy reckoned the man’s heart had stopped sometime between 7 p.m. and midnight the daybe- fore. He had been beaten to death. The man had checked into the seedy motel—a place where sex workers con- ducteda thriving business—underapho- ny name, so it took a few days to figure out his identity. When the cops finally did, the day after Christmas, they were shocked: he was a Catholic priest. Pat- rick Ryan, 49 years old, was originally from County Limerick, in Ireland, and had for the previous two years been at St. William Catholic Church, in Denver City, eighty miles north of Odessa. Ryan was passionate about helping the poor and was beloved by his working-class, majority-Hispanic flock. “He reminded you of Saint Francis of Assisi,” said one of his parishioners. Police found Ryan’s car and his wallet outside the Moose Lodge in Hobbs and dusted them for prints. Police also found a green backpack in Ryan’s Denver City apartment; in it was a photo album belonging to Reyos. When officers brought in Reyos for questioning, he told them that he knew Ryan and that he’d met him when he washitchhiking. Reyos admitted to having seen Ryan a few other times too; the father had even lent him money. Reyos said he had been to the priest’s apartment the day before he was killed—Ryan had asked him to bring over the photo album so he could see pictures of his family—and Reyos added that on the morning of the murder, Ryan had driven him to Hobbs so the young man could retrieve his truck, which he had left with a bail bondsman as collateral after being arrested for driving without a license. Nine hours later the priest was dead in Odessa. While all of this aroused suspicion, Reyos had solid proof that in the hours during which Ryan was killed, he was 215 miles away, in and near Roswell, New Mexico. Reyos had spent that whole day and night and the next morning driving drunkenly around the Roswell area, eventually crashing his truck into a bar ditch. He had a dozen receipts to prove it—for buying gas and then a gas cap, for getting a speeding ticket and then getting towed. Police checked his body for evidence that he had been involved in a violent struggle, but he was clean. None of the hairs or fingerprints found at the scene belonged to Reyos. He was questioned for four hours and passed a lie detector test. F inally, wi th nothing tying him to the crime, police let Reyos go. The case went cold. But Reyos found he couldn’t walk away from it. The truth was, he hadn’t told the police everything about his relationship with Ryan. He harbored a secret that was tormenting him: Reyos was a closeted gay man, and it OPPOSITE PAGE: James Reyos in his room at Common Ground ATX in February. BELOW: A residential hallway inside Common Ground. PHOTOGRAPH BY CHRISTOPHER LEE TEXAS MONTHLY 133
BELOW, FROM LEFT: The Sand and Sage Motel, in Odessa, where Patrick Ryan was murdered; a portrait of Ryan. OPPOSITE PAGE: A high school yearbook photo of Reyos. turned out Ryan was too. On Reyos’s visit to Ryan’s apart- ment the day before the killing, after the two drank beer and vodka and looked through the photo album, Ryan, a big guy at two hundred pounds, had grabbed Reyos and forced him to engage in oral sex. Nearly eleven months after Ryan’s murder, Reyos, then living in a motel in Albuquerque, was drinking heavily at a bar and took some quaaludes. He passed out, woke up, drank some more, and, after watching an episode of Perry Mason, staggered to a pay phone and called 911. He wanted to talk about the murdered priest in Odessa, he told the emergency operator. When asked who he was, Reyos replied, “You are talking to the killer,” His confession was enough for an Odessa jury to convict him of murder, in 1983. Ever since, Reyos has fought to exonerate himself, both in prison and out. His forty-plus-year battle to clear his name is one of the longest in Texas history. When I met him, in January, he was living in a room at a rag- ged South Austin housing complex, a place filled with dozens of others also transitioningout ofprison. The first thinghedid was pull out abinder full of articles written about him over the years—in the Dallas Morning News, the El Paso Times,News- week, and Out magazine. For Reyos, the binders are a bible of sorts. Inside are letters to three Texas governors and to other officials in which advocates proclaimed his innocence. Also inside is a letter from the murdered priest’s boss, who said Reyos was innocent. And there’s a missive from a man who had once prosecuted Reyos but now wrote that it was objectively impossible for him to have killed the priest. “That is the most important letter right there,” Reyos said. Reyos is no stereotypical ex-con. He’s five-and-a-half feet tall, with a reserved, almost timid demeanor, and speaks so softly that you sometimes have to lean in to hear him. His hair and goatee are gray, and black glasses frame his impas- sive face. He had a stroke last September and occasionally has a hard time finding the right words. He moves slowly, often using a walker. Reyos spent most of his time alone in his small room, listening to old country music (George Jones and Dolly Parton are favorites), reading, writing, and remem- bering. For Reyos, the past is never far away. On the wall above his bed is a large American flag and a New Mexico license plate. He pulled out a map of his home state and showed me where he had grown up, in Dulce, the mountainous tribal head- quarters of the Jicarilla reservation. Reyos has an abiding sense of calm about him, whether he’s talking about his past struggles or his hopes for the future. He spoke often of his dream of returninghome: he longed for the moun- tains, the snow, his tribe. He wanted to see his three surviving brothers and meet members of his family he’s never known, such as nieces and nephews. But because of restrictions from the Texas 134 TEXAS MONTHLY
Board of Pardons and Paroles, he’s un- able to return. All around him were reminders of why. On his desk sat a framed cover of a 2005 issue of the Austin Chronicle, with a close-up of his face and the words “Mur- der Mystery.” Above the dresser were a couple of pages from a 1993 story about him. Aheadline succinctly summarized the last four decades of his life: “Texas vs. Reyos.” Reyos has lost almost every battle he’s had with the state. But last November, right after Thanksgiving, he finally won one. He was visited inacommunityroom at his complex by his lawyer and an Odes- sa police detective, who had come all the way from West Texas to tell him that newly discovered fingerprint evidence solidly points to three other men as Ry- an’s killers. Reyos was stunned. It seemed that his life might finally be changing. Reyos had a typical sixties childhood, ridingbikes, hittingbaseballs, watching Bonanza on TV. He was the youngest of six children. His father was a petroleum engineer; his mom took care of the kids. The family owned a couple of small cattle ranches, and as a boy Reyos would tag along with his older brothers as they rode horses. “I used to love the cattle drives,” he told me. “Come wintertime we’d move them down south to the win- ter ranch, where it was warmer, and in the springtime move them back up to the summer ranch.” He told me about a photo he used to have that his mom, who died when he was sixteen, had taken of him duringbranding season. “I was six or seven years old, and I was holding a calf in a headlock. It had a little white face. My mom loved the Herefords.” When he was a teenager, in the seven- ties, Reyos figured out that he was gay. He was terrified to tell anyone,especially S his parents and friends. As he would say | to a reporter years later, “Apaches were о brought up to be brave and strong—and j not gay.” He was a quiet teen, a loner, » ashamed of his sexuality, afraid of be- 1 ing rejected. He got good grades in high school, but he began drinkingbeer—a lot of beer—when he went to college, at the University of New Mexico, in Albuquer- que. He later transferred to Eastern New Mexico State University, in Roswell, to study petroleum technology. He kept mostly to himself; the only times he had sex were when he was drunk. And his drinking got so problematic that he was banned from his dorm. By the time he was jailed for Ryan’s murder, he had been arrested five times for driving while intoxicated and thirty more times for public intoxication. When Reyos looks back, he knows that his alcohol use had a lot to do with why he was arrested and convicted for killing Ryan. He thinks that his homosexuality and his identity as an Apache likely contributed to the jury verdict too, as did the identity of the victim, a C atholic priest. As a lonely twentysomething living far from home, Reyos made several mistakes, ones that haunt him to this day. To push back against the painful memories of his past, he wrote twelve words on a sheet of paper that hangs above his dresser, a mantra he sees every morning when he wakes up: “I KNOW in my heart-I DID NOT KILL Father Patrick Ryan.” Reyos doesn’t have a simple answer for why he confessed to something he didn’t do. He recanted his confession the same day he was arrested and taken to the Albuquerque jail. “In the name of God, I didn’t do this,” he told his public defender Reyos has lost almost every battle he’s had with the state. But last November, right after Thanksgiving, he finally won one. TEXAS MONTHLY 135
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several times. He told a detective, “I am not the killer. I just like to cause trouble for law enforcement.” He told me how hard it was being gay back then, constantly fearing rejection, terrified of being exposed. He said his shame consumed him after that night in Ryan’s apartment. “I remember walking down the street afterward, thinking to myself, That didn’t happen. That didn’t happen. I was scared somebody was going to find out.” Eleven months later, drunk and drugged and miserable, he felt some- how responsible for Ryan’s murder: if he hadn’t gone to the priest for a ride to Hobbs to pick up his truck, he thought, Ryan likely would have stayed home at the rectory in Denver City, and he’d still be alive. “It just kept eating at me, eating at me, eating at me. I should have just hitchhiked to Hobbs. I’d done it before.” At Reyos’s trial, in June 1983, he and his lawyers were certain his solid alibi would save him, especially because he wasn’t the only one leading a hidden life. Two young men testified for the defense that the priest, in civilian garb, had approached them in a parking lot in Hobbs, saying he was looking for “a young stud to f— him.” But Reyos wasdoomedbyhisdrunken confession and his story about what hap- pened the night before Ryan was mur- dered. Reyos testified about drinking with Ryan—first beer, then whiskey and vodka—and said the priest then grabbed him by the shirt collar and forced him- self upon him. “I was scared,” Reyos said on the stand. He fell backward during the assault before getting to his feet and | fleeing in such a hurry that he left his g backpack behind. The next day, he need- 1 ed a ride to Hobbs to pick up his truck | and, friendless, asked Ryan. Reyos said 5 Ryan apologized for the night before and | dropped him off in Hobbs around 11:30 J a.m. Reyos was newly flush with cash = from a quarterly oil-and-gas royalties j check from his tribe, and he spent the | next day and a half drinking, driving, ° and sleeping it off. | His lawyer, calling upon a psychology = professor for expert testimony, insisted s that Reyos had confessed because of the excruciating shame he felt about his homosexuality and the assault. But the prosecutor accused Reyos of fabricating the story about Ryan’s aggression and of slandering the Catholic priest. (It would be another decade before the church’s sex scandals rocked the country.) Reyos was basically outed on the stand in excruciating fashion, as the prosecutor made him recount gritty details about the incident. Reyos had a hard time explaining why he would go back to the priest the next day if he had been so traumatized. After more than three days of testimony, the jury ignored the Roswell receipts and the lack of physical evidence and found Reyos guilty. Upon hearing the verdict, he went into what he told me was a state of shock. The jury sentenced him to 38 years. One of his defense attorneys, surprised by the verdict, talked to jurors afterward. As he later told a reporter, “They said no one admits to committing a murder if they didn’t do it. That’s what convicted him.” But one of the jurors also told a reporter that the verdict was based on both Reyos’s confession and “characteristics”—clearly a euphemism for his sexuality. Reyos’s father, who was eighty and using a cane, was allowed to visit his son one last time, in a courthouse conference room, before he was sent away. “Always be strong, son,” he told him. “Don’t ever give up ” When Reyos got to prison, he wrote down the words on a piece of paper and hung it on his cell wall. At the Coffield Unit in East Texas, Reyos began gathering documents on his case, helpedby family members who made copies for him. He spent hours in the library, studying the law and writing to lawyers and journalists, continued on page i48 OPPOSITE PAGE: Mementos in Reyos’s room, including handwrit- ten notes, a framed photo of Reyos, and a binder containing letters and news articles attesting to his innocence. ABOVE: Reyos reacts to news that Odessa police had discovered Ryan’s real killers. OPPOSITE PAGE: PHOTOGRAPHS BY CHRISTOPHER LEE TEXAS MONTHLY 137
25 BEST FOR AWHILE IT LOOKED AS IF BIG-CITY BARBECUE WOULD HOG THE SPOTLIGHT FOREVER MORE. I SHOULD HAVE KNOWN BETTER. BY DANIEL VAUGHN photographs by Brittany Conerly and Mackenzie Smith Kelley
NEW a pg. 139
n Texas, a few towns are so closely asso- ciated with legendary barbecue joints that just uttering their names—Llano, Lockhart, Luling, Taylor—conjures up the smell of woodsmoke and prompts an irresistible urge to get in the car. And it used to be that a trip to the rural enclaves, especially in Central Texas, was neces- sary to find superlative smoked meat. But in the ten years that I’ve been covering the state’s barbecue landscape, I’ve seen buzzy new spots in Austin, Fort Worth, and Houston start to draw all the atten- tion. That, plus the closingof many small- town joints—Prause Meat Market, in La Grange; the Swinging Door, in Richmond—had me wondering if I was witnessing the end of an era. 51 I’m happy to report that’s not the case. Texas Mon thly’s most recent select ion of the fifty best barbecue joints in the state, which we published in 2021, had already shown some promise. New additions proudly representing more far- flung parts of the state included Convenience West, in Marfa, and Rej ino Barbeque, in Olton. And the trend continues with this latest batch of new and improved joints (“new” beingthose that opened since our2021 report and “improved” including those that made significant changes to their menu or settled down in one spot long enough for me to catch up to them). I found destination-worthy barbecue from Denison and Decatur to Mabank and Montgomery. 51 Even the edges of Texas are getting in on the action. Two newplaces in El Paso embody that city’s growing barbecue culture, and the Rio Grande Valley has gone from a smoked-meat afterthought to a place where I can fill a whole weekend checking out new spots. Swinging back up to Central Texas, I feel as if I’m coming full circle as I witness three women with big-city barbecue experience plant their flag right on the square in Lockhart. 51 No matter where I go, I find there’s no end to smoked-meat innovation. Thanks to ingredients and preparation methods from a medley of culinary traditions, we’re now blessed with dishes such as za’atar-spiced lamb, berbere-seasoned pork ribs, and brisket fried rice. It’s a glorious time to eat Texas barbecue, and I’m more excited than ever for what the future will bring. ARLINGTON Smoke’NAshBBQ Opened: 2018 Pitmasters: Patrick and Fasicka Hicks Pro tip: Bring your vegetarian friends, because most of the sides are meatless. Move over, white bread, and make way for injera at the state’s (world’s?) only Tex-Ethiopian smokehouse. Fasicka Hicks uses flour imported from her home coun- try for the spongy sourdough bread that comes with the brisket and pork ribs that her husband, Patrick, smokes and coats with awaze, a deep-red sauce that com- bines clarified butter with bold berbere spice. In their first years in business, the Hickses kept the barbecue and Ethiopian dishes separate, but a new menu, intro- duced in 2021, combined the two, with items such as smoked-chicken doro wat (a spicy stew) and barbecue nachos with injera “chips.” 5904 S. Cooper, 817-987- 7715. Open Tue-Thur 12-8, Fri & Sat 11-8. OPENING SPREAD: Pitmaster Alec Varnell at J-Bar-M Barbecue, in Houston; a platter from Douglas Bar and Grill, in Dallas; Nidia Vargas with a customer at Vargas BBQ, in Edinburg. RIGHT: In the kitchen at Douglas Bar and Grill. AUSTIN Briscuits Opened: 2021 Pitmastors: Christopher McGhee and Will Spence Pro tip: Orders are taken only online, so save time by placing yours before arriving. As the name suggests, this food truck combines brisket with biscuits. The truck is parked outside Radio Coffee & Beer, in South Austin, so get your drink there, then find a picnic table and wait for your name to be called. Your reward is the unusual combination of savory biscuit, chunky house-made strawberry jam, and sliced brisket (or pork belly or beef-belly bacon). The play between sweet and salty is barely contained by the made-from- scratch biscuits, which have pleasantly crunchy edges on each buttery layer. The rest of the menu looks more like that of a modern barbecue joint, with peppery chicken wings in a tangy buffalo sauce and pork steak with chimichurri. The jalapeno-cheese sausage is so good it will make you gasp. 4204 Menchaca Rd. Open Thur-Sat 9-8:30, Sun 9-3. 140 TEXAS MONTHLY PHOTOGRAPH BY BRITTANY CONERLY
AUSTIN KG BBQ Opened: 2022 Pitmaster: Kareem El-Ghayesh Pro tip: The hibiscus-mint iced tea is the best drink pairing for the barbecue. Before Kareem El-Ghayesh’s first trip to Austin, in 2012, the Cairo native (handing over an order at right) had no idea Texas was famous for barbecue. But once he tasted smoked brisket, he knew the flavors he grew up with would be a good comple- ment. Wanting to learn more, he moved to Austin, in 2015. Seven years and nearly as many kitchen jobs later, he opened this trailer, which sits outside Oddwood Brew- ing, northeast of downtown. Pork ribs are dusted with za’atar, and the stunning lamb belly ribs are served with tahini, which El-Ghayesh calls the national barbecue sauce of Egypt. Find it in the brisket sha- warma, where the smoky chopped meat is topped with salata baladi, a mix of diced cucumbers, onions, tomatoes, and mint. Garnishes of pistachios and pomegranate seeds brighten up a barbecue tray more than pickles and onions ever could. 3108 Manor Rd, 512-586-9624. Open Thur-Sat 11-8, Sun 11-5. AUSTIN Mum Foods Smokehouse 8 Delicatessen Opened: 2022 Pitmasters: Geoffrey Ellis and Travis Crawford Pro tip: Take home a loaf of the brioche, which is made with beef tallow. Geoffrey “Geo” Ellis has been slinging smoked pastrami at Austin-area farm- ers markets since 2016, but he finally got to realize his vision of a full-blown restaurant when he opened Mum Foods. Ellis bakes his own breads, including the sourdough rye used for sandwiches that are generously stuffed with pastrami and slathered with house-made mustard. The brisket is also impressive, as are the ribs, but its the sausages that add that special Texas touch. The juicy beef links go great with the inspired side of potato chips and pimento cheese. And where else can you get spareribs alongside a bowl of matzo ball soup? 5811 Manor Rd, 512-270-8021. Open Wed & Thur 11-3, Fri-Sun 9:30-3. DALLAS Douglas Bar and Grill Opened: 2022 Pitmasters: Doug Pickering and Alex Meza Pro tip: Weekday happy hour specials, such as the $10 Wagyu smashburger, are a heck of a bargain. Too fancy to be called a joint, this restaurant in Snider Plaza has a bit of a split personality. Though barbecue can be ordered at all hours, Prime steaks dominate at dinner, along with a honey-glazed smoked salmon that’s an ideal mix of sweet and savory. Lunchtime is when barbecue takes center stage. The Wagyu brisket is always tender, the glazed ribs have just the right touch of sweetness, and the brisket bullets—bacon-wrapped, meat-stuffed jalapenos—are not to be missed. When you order your meal, go ahead and ask for the most perfect fried apple pie you’ll ever have. That way it will be ready when you are. 6818 Snider Plaza, 214-205- 5888. Open Mon-Thur 11-9, Fh& Sat 11-10. DECATUR North Texas Smoke BBQ Opened: 2022 Pitmasters: Derek Degenhardt and Taylor Shields Pro tip: Access the driveway from the northbound lane of the divided highway. Parked along U.S. 287 between a fireworks shop and a motorcycle dealership, Derek De- genhardt’s food truck isn’t easy to spot at 65 PHOTOGRAPH BY MACKENZIE SMITH KELLEY TEXAS MONTHLY 141
miles per hour. He says he sells just enough barbecue to keep it open, but he carries on by sticking to the basics, such as a dynamic duo of classic beef and jalapeno-cheese links. The brisket is sliced thick, and even the lean is juicy, with a stout bark and plenty of black pepper. A brush of sweet barbecue sauce on the massive spareribs doesn’t overwhelm, and the smoked turkey is an underrated standout thanks to a flavorful rub. Degen- hardt has never liked potato salad, but he loves loaded baked potatoes, so he combined the two and created his best side, a baked potato salad chock-full of bacon, shredded Cheddar, and green onions. 2803 U.S. 287, 940-393-6776. Open Wed-Sat 11-3. DENISON Heritage Butchery 8 Barbecue Opened: 2022 Pitmasters: Pete Gonzales, Arthur Finney, Garrett Nichols, and Marco Rios Pro tip: Check the freezer for some good discounts on Texas-raised beef. When you think of barbecue joints with an active meat market, you might picture an old- school place such as Dozier’s, in Fulshear. This is the modern version, with the raw beef, pork, and chicken in the case all coming from local farms. If you see a sausage in there, such as a spicy chipotle-and-jack-cheese, chances are you'll also find it smoked on the menu. (Heritage sources the rest of its barbecue meat from larger commercial suppliers.) The burgers are a mix of ground Wagyu and Angus, and the chicken sandwich is made with a boneless thigh that’s smoked before it’s fried to a golden brown. 211N. U.S. 75,903-287-9390. Open Tue-Thur11-8, Fri & Sat 7-10 (breakfast) & 11-9. EDINBURG Vargas BBQ Opened: 2021 Pitmaster: Ram Vargas Pro tip: Burgers made with freshly ground beef are available every day. Nidia Vargas didn’t even know how to cook rice when she and her husband, Ram, an aspiring pitmaster, began an underground business selling his smoked chicken out of their home to raise money to open a restau- rant. Yet by the time Vargas BBQ debuted, she had developed most of their non- barbecue recipes, such as a hearty brisket fideo, charro beans, and a creamy green spa- ghetti, the pasta bathed in pureed jalapenos, poblanos, and cilantro. It stands out on a tray surrounded by Ram’s beef-cheek barbacoa (a Saturday-only special) and brisket birria tacos (pictured, opposite page, along with Ram next to his smoker). And if those Rio Grande Valley specialties aren’t enough, the brisket and pork ribs more than hold their own. 701E. Cano, 956-278-0094. Open Wed 5:30-8, Thur, Fri & Sun 11-4, Sat 10-5. Hallelujah BBQ Opened: 2023 Pitmaster: Blake Barrow Pro tip: Ask about their pet leopard. The Rescue Mission of El Paso has provided services for the homeless since it opened, in 1952. Director Blake Barrow started a catering operation from the mission in 2015, and this year he opened his long-awaited Hal- lelujah BBQ in a renovated historic building nearby. The restaurant is staffed exclusively by people who have benefited from the mis- sion’s outreach. The barbecue options include tender brisket, peppery baby back ribs, and a sausage called 13 Habaneros, which is reminiscent of a spicy Italian link with plenty of caraway seed. As for sides, you’re in luck if you’re a fan of carbs, because you have your choice of tater tot casserole, au gratin potatoes, and mac and cheese. The green beans are cooked down with barbecue spices, green apple, and mushrooms—an unexpected combination that works. 130A N. Cotton, 915- 307-7500. Open Wed-Sun 10:30-3. EL PASO Smokin’Joe’s Pit BBQ Opened: 2022 Pitmasters: Joe and Martin Martinez Pro tip: The banana pudding is better once the chill has faded, so let it bask a bit in the El Paso sun. Joe Martinez had a reputation for barbecue long before he opened his food truck. At the 142 TEXAS MONTHLY PHOTOGRAPH BY BRITTANY CONERLY
same time the El Paso native was planning his retirement from a corporate job, his instructional barbecue videos on YouTube were collecting millions of views. He and his brother Martin smoke a black-barked brisket that could hold its own anywhere. Peppery spareribs get a brush of sweet barbecue sauce, and the meat comes off the bone with just a tug. There’s also a juicy cheeseburger on brioche, dressed with grilled red onions. Joe uses his sausage to bring some El Paso flavor, adding Hatch chiles and Muenster cheese. The Marti- nezes grew up with beans in their chili, so you’ll eat beans in your chili (and I bet you’ll like it). 10150 Montana Ave, 602- 796-2211. Open Fri & Sat 11-8. HARKER HEIGHTS Rossler’s Blue Cord Barbecue Opened: 2021 Pitmasters: Steven and Kristen Rossler Pro tip: Get all the meats and four sides in the $75 RBCB platter, which serves four to six. Harker Heights is next door to Killeen, where Steven Rossler was stationed at Fort Hood. When he retired from the Army, in 2021, he launched this food truck with his wife, Kristen. They are open on Wednesday and Thursday only, leaving the weekend free for catering opportunities and barbecue festivals. The menu has a few unexpected items, such as brisket ramen and deviled eggs topped with a brisket burnt end. The rest is standard fare, and the Rosslers do it well. There's a stout bark on the brisket, and any leftovers become a great brisket chili. The sides are well made; picture an eggy potato salad and cheesy poblano grits, which are even better when deep-fried into hush puppy-like balls. 300 Morgan, 254-345-2313. Open Wed & Thur 11:30-4. HOUSTON Brisket 8 Rice Opened: 2022 Pitmasters: Hong and Phong Tran Pro tip: Try the house-pickled jalapenos made with soy sauce and a hint of sweet lemon-lime soda. It’s not often you'll find a great barbecue joint at a gas station, but don’t worry—the wood-fueled smokers are far from the pumps. Owners Hong and Phong Tran say their second-most-important piece of cooking equipment is a well-seasoned wok. That’s where they craft their barbecue fried rice, with chunks of smoked meat and Chinese sausage, as well as their namesake dish: jasmine rice topped simply with slices of tender brisket and a drizzle of barbecue sauce. It’s an homage to the way their Viet- namese mother would use rice to stretch takeout barbecue. The brothers grew up in Brenham, and the simple salt, pepper, and garlic seasonings in the sausages from that area inform their snappy house-made beef links. 13111FM 529, 713-936-9575. Open Wed-Sun 11-7. HOUSTON J-Bar-M Barbecue Opened: 2021 Pitmasters: Alec Varnell and Nick Orozco Pro tip: Study the patio wall mural, which traces the history of Houston barbecue. When I visited J-Bar-M last year, everything was sunshine and rainbows at the recently opened joint. The barbecue was spectacular, and longtime Houston-area pitmaster Wil- low Villarreal was finally getting his turn in the spotlight. Within a few months, though, he and his wife, the talented chef Jasmine Barela, had departed, citing disagreements with owner John Toomey. The team they left behind, though, has done a good job expand- ing on the recipes the couple developed. Clues that you won’t get basic sides here are a bright tomato salad and cauliflower au PHOTOGRAPHS BY MACKENZIE SMITH KELLEY TEXAS MONTHLY 143
gratin with melted Gouda and fried leeks. Drinking the pot likker from the collard greens will fortify you to tackle one of the massive spareribs. The smoky brisket is still superb, as are the house-made sausages and the half chicken, but it’s best to get them before they start to show their age, which is around 5 p.m., when the steak- focused dinner service begins. 2201 Lee- land, 713-534-1024. Open Tue-Thur 11-11, Fri & Sat 11-midnight, Sun 11-6. LOCKHART Barbs B Q Opened: 2023 Pitmasters: Chuck Charnichart, Haley Conlin, and Alexis Tovias Pro tip: Dunk a smoked lamb chop into a tub of the salsa verde. Months before it opened, there was plenty of media coverage of this women-owned joint located in the barbecue capital of Texas. Such high expectations are daunting, but Barbs delivers. Chuck Charnichart, Haley Conlin, and Alexis Tovias’s combined barbecue experience—all three at Franklin, in Austin; Conlin at Micklethwait, in Aus- tin; and Charnichart at Goldee's, in Fort Worth—already spoke volumes about their chops, but this isn’t some big-city barbecue copycat. The pork spareribs are a revela- tion, salty, spicy, and sweet, with an acidic kick from lime zest. The brisket is already in contention for best in town, if not the state, and Barbs is able to pull more flavor out of turkey than seems possible. The green “spaghett” already has a cult following thanks to its spicy, creamy sauce consisting of pureed poblanos and cream cheese; soak up any extra with the house-made blue corn tortillas. 102 E. Market. Open Sat 11-3. MABANK B4 BarbequeS Boba Opened: 2021 Pitmaster: Nolan Belcher Pro tip: Don’t miss the sopaipilla cheese- cake bites for dessert. Two years ago, Nolan and Emily Belcher opened a barbecue truck that was too successful. The couple just couldn’t keep up with demand, so they took a hiatus to regroup. Not long after, Kevin Carter, a fan of the truck and the owner of Mabank Feed & Southern Glitz Boutique, offered the couple space inside his store, and they were back in business. The menu’s bold flavors run the gamut, from the bacon-wrapped stuffed jalapenos to the pork belly burnt ends topped with peach jam and crumbled shortbread (they’re called Meat Candy for a reason). The juicy brisket is coated with a sixteen-ingredient spice blend, while the pork ribs are done competition style, with a heavy combination of sweet, salty, and spicy flavors. Charred elote and mac and cheese with a brisket garnish are tops for the side options. 1100 N. 3rd, 903-910- 5272. Open Wed-Sat 11-3. MIDLAND Midland Meat Co.’s Half Acre Opened: 2019 Pitmaster: Aaron Lesley Pro tip: Don’t come on the weekend. Unlike a lot of joints, this one is closed Saturday through Monday. Owner John Scharbauer opened MMC’s Half Acre as a food trailer, in 2019, closed it during the pandemic, and then reopened it in a building left vacant by another barbe- cuejoint. He’s better known locally for his family’s cattle-ranching business, as well as Midland Meat Co., a market he opened to showcase their Texas-raised Wagyu. At Half Acre you can always find a cut of that prized beef on the specials board, and whatever form it takes—shaved ribeye in a taco, smoked picanha (top sirloin cap) atop flatbread with queso bianco—be sure to order it. The sliced brisket is tender (try it in the brisket-stuffed egg rolls), but the star of the menu is the St. Louis ribs; they’re well seasoned, with a great bark and a sweet glaze that shows off pitmaster Aaron Lesley’s barbecue chops. 1101 Washita, 432-218-7735. Open Tue-Fri 11-8. MISSION El Sancho Tex Mex BBQ Opened: 2019 Pitmaster: Danny Sanchez Pro tip: Prepare to pay with cash or online, as credit cards are not accepted. The husband-and-wife team of Danny and Ale Sanchez parked their barbecue truck behind Jitterz Coffee Roasters, in downtown Mission, back in 2019. It was an on-again, off-again business until Danny quit his day job, in 2021, to focus entirely 144 TEXAS MONTHLY
on cooking. The gamble seems to have paid off. Early this year the couple upgraded to a larger, air-conditioned truck, and their bar- becue, offered four days a week, is usually sold out before noon. The menu is heavy on tacos; breakfast brings the Iron Mike, a flour tortilla stuffed with a thick slice of mes- quite-smoked brisket, shredded cheese, and your choice of bacon or sausage, plus a fried egg on top. It’s so big you could start and finish a meal with it, but you won’t want to miss the brisket burnt-end taco or the one filled with crispy smoked pork belly, both of which feature blue corn tortillas. 1625 N. Conway Ave, 956-424-2493. Open Thur& Fri 7:3O-noon, Sat & Sun 8-12:30. MONTGOMERY Bar-A-BBQ Opened: 2019 Pitmasters: Cooper, Shelby, and Caleb Abercrombie Pro tip: Breakfast tacos, biscuits, and klobasniky are served from 8 to 10:30 on Saturday mornings. With just a folding table and a tent, Cooper and Shelby Abercrombie started out serving barbecue at pop-ups. In 2022 they upgraded to a food truck, and this year saw the grand opening of their permanent loca- tion, in downtown Montgomery. Business has grown, and Cooper’s brother, Caleb, is now on board. The brisket and pork ribs hold their own, but it was the trio of house- made sausages that caught my attention. There are two mainstays: a classic beef link and one called the South Texan, with jalapeno and cilantro. To those Cooper adds a monthly rotating sausage featur- ing ingredients that range from Oaxacan cheese to Spanish rice. The Abercrombies make all the sides, including the fried onion strings on the stellar green bean casserole. 21149 Eva, 940-445-0148. Open Wed-Fri 10:45-6:30, Sat 8-6:30. ODESSA Brantley Creek Barbecue Opened: 2019 Pitmaster: Brandon McPherson Pro tip: The barbecue may sell out, but the smashburgers won’t. Brandon McPherson lost his job in the oil and gas industry in 2019. Thankfully he PHOTOGRAPH BY BRITTANY CONERLY TEXAS MONTHLY 145
had a food truck already outfitted from his days as a barbecue-competition cook, so he and his wife, Ashley, shifted their entrepreneurial dreams into high gear. It didn’t take long for them to start serving the best barbecue in town, but I was a little late finding it. The couple moved the business around Odessa for a few years looking for a permanent home, and they have finally settled into a newly construct- ed space on the east side of town. Expect the same superb brisket, simply seasoned with salt and pepper and smoked with post oak. The pork ribs glisten with glaze, but the flavor of smoky pig comes through above all else. Brandon now has the room to make his own sausage, and Ashley’s side options have expanded to include cucumber salad and jalapeno creamed corn, alongside the always satisfying pinto beans and mac and cheese. If you fell in love with the apple cobbler at the trailer, you’ll be thrilled to rediscover it here. 3541 Faudree Rd, 432-275-0037. Open Wed- Sat 11-8, Sun noon-5. SAN ANTONIO Reese Bros Barbecue Opened: 2022 Pitmasters: Nick and Elliott Reese and Gabriel Perez Pro tip: If the parking lot is full, there are more spaces available a half block north, across the street. Brothers Nick and Elliott Reese wanted to help forge a distinct San Antonio barbecue style when they opened Reese Bros, down the street from the Alamodome. They brought on Gabriel Perez, a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America in San Anto- nio, and the results have been incredible. Boring white bread and pedestrian barbe- cue sauce are replaced with homemade flour tortillas and charred-jalapeno salsa, the better to cradle the juicy brisket and the queso fundido sausage, made with Oaxaca cheese and serranos. Their signature sand- wich is a torta stuffed with carnitas, pickled onions, guacamole, refried beans, and a smooth jalapeno-and-serrano salsa. Slaw dressed with a blend of mayo and lime juice and topped with pea tendrils is refreshing, and the unexpected addition of okra to the pinto beans lends a pleasant texture variation. The poblano mac and cheese is as green as an avocado and anything but ordinary. 906 Hoefgen Ave, 512-925-9205. Open Fri-Sun 11-3. SAN JUAN GW’s BBQ Catering Co. Opened: 2017 Pitmasters: George Watts Jr. and George Watts III Pro tip: If you need a break from barbecue, the Sunday special is fried chicken. After closing their food truck at the start of the pandemic, the father-and-son team of George Watts Jr. and George III reopened in a brick-and-mortar, in August 2021. Rather than focus on Rio Grande Valley specialties such as fajitas and barbacoa, 146 TEXAS MONTHLY PHOTOGRAPHS BY MACKENZIE SMITH KELLEY
the Wattses lean completely into Central Texas-style barbecue. That means oak- smoked brisket sliced thick and served on a butcher paper-lined tray. House- made sausages vary, from habanero and Havarti to brisket burnt-end boudin. For a side, it’s hard to choose between the braised cabbage and the jalapeno creamed corn, so get both. Specials—pastrami, chicken-fried brisket, smoked pork belly porchetta—really show off this family’s creativity. 107 N. Nebraska Ave, 956-601- 0056. Open Wed-Sun 11-4. SPRING Rosemeyer Bar-B-Q Opened: 2021 Pitmasters: Jordan Rosemeyer and Ben Maxwell Pro tip: The ice cream is made in house, and flavors change monthly. Jordan Rosemeyer ran a barbecue catering business and did pop-ups on his own until 2021, when he opened a food truck next to a gas station and brought on his best friend since kindergarten, Ben Maxwell, as his partner. Their accommodations are sparse, just a few picnic tables under a shade tree, and most orders are for takeout. Even so, demand is high. I suggest digging into the jalapeno-and-Oaxaca-cheese sausage as soon as possible; it’s got extra burn from chile pequin. The brisket is simply seasoned and perfectly executed, and the tender spareribs get a splash of honey simple syrup. Rosemeyer entered a few barbecue competitions before his food truck days, and his pinto bean recipe always scored high marks. You can see why here; pair a bowl with the green beans, which are sauteed with bacon and onions. 2111 Riley Fuzzel Rd, 281-205-0625. Open Thur-Sat 11-3. Hill City Chop House Opened: 2022 Pitmasters: Dustin Martin and Jack Allison Pro tip: Pay attention to the hours. With just about a thousand residents in tiny Tolar, Dustin Martin knows his barbecue has to be good enough to draw folks from farther afield. But he’s no stranger to challenging circumstances. A wakeboard- ing accident on Lake Granbury, in 2007, nearly cost him his leg. Then, in 2020, he and his family lost everything in a house fire. At that point the Martins decided that a barbecue joint would be the fresh start they needed. The smoked brisket is the star, plenty tender with a peppery bark. And the trimmings go into the smashburger, which boasts a thin patty with a proper sear and lacy edges. As for the sides, I enjoyed the mustardy potato salad, but the well-sea- soned borracho beans in a rich broth were better. For dessert Martin dries bread in the smoker to make crumbs for the base of his berry bread pudding. 8718 И/. U.S. 377, 254-834-4224. Open Thur 4-9:30, Fri noon-9:3O, Sat 11-5, Sun 10:30-2. VANALSTYNE Pit Commander Barbecue Opened: 2022 Pitmaster: Stephan Nedwetzky Pro tip: Pit Commander will be closed in September and October to serve its famous pork belly burnt-end pizza at the State Fair of Texas. Stephan Nedwetzky had been trying to find a home for his barbecue for years. The Ma- rine veteran and former heavy metal guitar- ist tried Plano, Murchison, and Fort Myers, Florida, before settling into a storefront in Van Alstyne’s historic downtown. He and his wife, Yolanda Russotti, open the place just twice a week, and for such a little shop, they serve an unexpected variety of smoked meats. Tender and more juicy than any beef brisket, the smoked pork belly steals the show, whether it’s the burnt ends or the slices they call bacon brisket. Nedwetzky makes a beef sausage with jalapeno and cheese that’s spectacular, and it goes great with a side of savory pinto beans. Russotti uses an Austrian-style white-bread dough to make knotted rolls for burgers and barbecue sandwiches. When the couple aren’t cooking barbecue, they fire up their oak-fueled pizza oven. 224 E. Jefferson, 972-400-0234. Open Fri & Sat 11-3. WHITE OAK Sunbird Barbecue Opened: 2021 Pitmasters: Bryan Bingham and David Segovia Pro tip: The brisket taco is far superior if you ask for sliced meat instead of the standard chopped. Bryan and Kimmy Bingham and David Segovia personify perseverance. Since leaving the original Bodacious Bar-B-Q, in Longview, in 2021, they’ve been serving smoked meat from a food truck they’ve parked at convenience stores, car deal- erships, and even a brewery in Louisiana, all the while searching for a permanent home. Until they find it, they’ll keep serving exceptional barbecue from the window of their faithful truck, currently parked in White Oak, about six miles west of Longview. Of course the sliced brisket is good, and you can get it chopped in a stuffed baked potato, a taco, or even a que- sadilla. The sweet-glazed baby back ribs and the juicy smoked turkey are always smart choices, and the well-seasoned pulled pork is great. Kimmy makes a few sides that are destination worthy as well, including a sticky-sweet honey butter corn bread and some of the best mac and cheese in the state. 1908 E. U.S. 80, 903- 399-6562. Open Wed-Sat 11-3. + TEXAS MONTHLY 147
MI CULTURA RIN N I ' N 1 11 I EXHIBITION ON VIEW Sept 2, 2023 - Jan 1, 2024 F Witte 3801 Broadway, San Antonio, TX ВДВ Scan for Tickets & Information or Visit WitteMuseum.org Commemorative book also available now at bookstores nationwide. This exhtrton Mi Cultura is presented by the Cheever Family Foundation and generously supported by WelMed Charitable Fomdaton. The book Mi Cultura s generously supported by the McCombs Foundation THE APACHE, THE PRIEST, AND A FORTY-YEAR FIGHT FOR JUSTICE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 137 Though his first appeal, in 1984, was denied, it didn’t take long to get advo- cates on his side. One of the first was Bishop Leroy T. Matthiesen, Ryan’s supervisor, who in 1990 wrote to a chaplain at Cofficld that he was convinced Reyos was in- nocent. A year later, Ector County prosecutor Dennis Cadra, who had fought against Reyos’s appeal while working for the district attorney’s of- fice, wrote an eight-page letter to Gov- ernor Ann Richards saying that after a careful reading of the trial transcript, he too was now convinced Reyos was innocent. “I came to the firm conclu- sion that it was physically impossible for Mr. Reyos to have committed the crime,” Cadra wrote, addingthat Reyos had several strikes against him in front of that jury, including that he was gay and Native American. Reyos told me he was astonished when he got a copy of the letter. “ I remember sitting in my cell reading that letter over and over. I couldn’t believe that a prosecutor had made a one-eighty-degree turn.” Reyos thought he would get out soon, and he set his mind on returning to New Mexico. When that didn’t happen, he sent a letter to Howard Swindle, an investigative reporter for the Dallas Morning News, askinghim to look into his case. Swindle did, and in 1993 pub- lished a front-page Sunday story ques- tioning Reyos’s guilt. Two months later, Newsweek wrote about the case too. Finally, in 1995, twelve years after he was arrested for murder, Reyos was set free under the state’s mandatory supervision law, which required the early release of certain well-behaved inmates. He was allowed to return to New Mexico under his brother’s watch. But Reyos didn’t adapt well to his new- found freedom and was still haunted by Ryan’s murder and by his own sex- uality. “I was afraid to get out in the open,” he told me. He began drinking again and was arrested for drunken driving—a parole violation—and sent back to prison in Texas. Behind bars, he spent time as a teacher’s aide and continued to write letters to lawyers and governors—first George W. Bush, then Rick Perry. 148 TEXAS MONTHLY
PREVENT WILDFIRES, FOR THE LOVE OF THE OUTDOORS.
In 2003 he was released again. Reyos felt confident that things would finally turn around. His case had been fea- tured in an A&E documentary series, American Justice. It had also caught the attention of state representative Paul Moreno, a Democrat from El Paso, who told Reyos he could help him more if he lived in Austin. So Reyos moved there and got a room at a transitional living facility called the South Austin Market Place, on Ben White Boulevard. He was required to attend Alcoholics Anony- mous meetings and meet regularly with his parole officer. Reyos worked various jobs, including cleaning rooms at an upscale boutique hotel near the University of Texas. His bosses liked him so much they offered him a supervisory position, though he turned it down. One of them later wrote in a letter, “James respectfully declined the promotion only because he soon hopes to see the fruition of his labors to clear his name, and to return to his home in New Mexico.” He also worked as a janitor at his housing facil- ity, cleaning up trash in the parking lot, and at Dance Across Texas, a country nightclub next door. But Texas authorities weren’t through with him yet. Early on the morning of April 25,2008, Reyos was stopped by Austin police on his way to work Officers said a man who fit his description had opened his coat and flashed his genitals at a woman named Alison Sterken. They made Reyos, whodenied the accusation, stand in front of her car. Sterken says today she told the cops that although Reyos was dressed like the flasher and, like him, was c arrying a flashlight, Reyos was too short by half a foot. “I’m five sev- en and this person was taller than me,” she told me. “But the cops wouldn’t listen to me. One of them said we were probably standing on uneven ground.” Reyos was arrested. Although the charges were soon dropped, the inci- dent led to a parole-revocation he aring. Sterken was subpoenaed to testify, and she told the board what she had told the cops: the flasher was much taller than Reyos. Still, Reyos’s parole was revoked, likely for previous violations that had until then gone unnoticed by parole officers, and again he was sent back to prison. He was now 52. This time he stayed in prison for four years. He got out again in 2012—“a little more bitter about the system,” he told me—and was restricted from leaving the state, so he moved back to South Austin Mar- ket Place, into the same small room he rents today. The complex, now called Common Ground ATX, is a rough-looking place along Texas Highway 71, populated by ex-cons, sex offenders, and former residents of mental health facilities. “There’s good people here,” Reyos told me early this year. “You know, youjust gotta watch out who you associate with.” Occasionally he wanders over to the courtyard and talks to fellow residents, but he mostly keeps to himself, walking to the convenience store to buy ramen noodles or sitting out front and watch- ing the cars zip by on their way to the Austin airport. For years he hasn’t had a cellphone, a car, or a job. A royalty check from his tribe covers his $700 monthly rent. IN UNGUARDED MOMENTS, REYOS WOULD TELL PATINO ABOUT HIS GHOSTS. “THERE’S NOT A DAY THAT GOES BYTHAT I DON’T WAKE UP AND THINK ABOUT IT,” HE SAID OF RYAN’S MURDER. One of his closest friends is Carlos Patino, the complex’s 62-year-old office manager. Patino is a native of Guana- juato, Mexico, and still speaks with a heavy accent. He’s openly gay and is in many ways Reyos’s opposite: outgoing, exuberant, the kind of hands-on per- sonality who can take care of the daily needs of some one hundred men living on the fringes of society. Most morn- ings Reyos would wake early, listen to the local news on his radio, go to the dayroom for coffee and a doughnut, and then, when Patino came in to work at 8 a.m., head to the office to visit him. Reyos would tell Patino and others in the office the news of the day, and he and Patino would chat and spar play- fully. “We laugh all the time,” Patino told me. “He call me senorita and 1 call him nina—or senora, because, I say, you are older.” Afterward Reyos would head back to his room, where he would spend most of his day alone, surrounded by Bible quotes written on scraps of pa- per and taped to his walls. “Rise up, О Lord my God, vindicate me. Declare me ‘not guilty,’ for you are just,” reads one. Another reads: “Demand justice forme, Lord!” Occasionally Patino would walk to Reyos’s room and knock on his door. “Nina, you okay?” he would ask. In un- guarded moments, Reyos would tell Patino about his ghosts. “There’s not a day that goes by that I don’t wake up and think about it,” he said of Ryan’s murder. Reyos was still troubled by the assault on him by someone he trusted— by a priest, of all people. Patino told me he once asked Reyos if he had been in love with Ryan, and Reyos replied, “No, Carlos, I don’t love him, but he was very nice to me.” Patino learned that there were two versions of his friend. “When he’s not drunk, he’s very quiet,” he told me. But when Reyos drank, he got loud—so loud that his neighbors would complain. Patino said that after Reyos got out in 2012, it was clear something had shift- ed. Reyos sometimes missed meetings with his parole officer and occasionally showed up for them drunk. In Janu- ary, Reyos told me he was no longer re- quired to attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and that his drinking wasn’t a problem anymore. “I don’t have any craving for alcohol,” he insisted. But sometimes he would catch a bus and head downtown to barhop, wandering Sixth Street and shambling home in the wee hours. He swore he wasn’t inter- ested in finding a partner. “I don’t even think about that now, you know? I’m happy alone. All I have to think about is myself, my fight for justice. That’s my main goal.” Last fall he was joined in his fight by an unlikely ally: the same office that pu t him behind bars in the first place. 11 started when ayoung woman in Odessa heard a recent episode of the popular Crime Junkie podcast about the Reyos case, which explained Reyos’s airtight alibi and the dearth of evidence tying 150 TEXAS MONTHLY
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him to the crime scene. She happened to be the daughter of Michael Gerke, the chief of the Odessa Police Department, and told her father about it. Gerke’s son heard the same episode and also let him know about the case. His curi- osity piqued, the chief asked for a copy of the case file. “I got to the end of it,” he told me, “and I went, ‘Well, where’s the rest of it?’” Gerke asked a couple of his men to investigate further. One of them was Sergeant Scottie Smith, who read the file and obtained a copy of a recent book on Reyos by the British writer Scott Lo- max, who had been following the case since 2004. “It just didn’t match up,” Smith told me. “There was nothing to put Reyos at the scene. How did they get a conviction?” Most of the evidence from the case had been destroyed back in 1993, ac- cording to department policy, but Smith looked through an old case file and was surprised to find photocopies of latent fingerprint cards, which he showed to a crime-scene tech, Stacy Cannady. She found the actual cards and ran the prints through the Auto- mated Fingerprint Identification Sys- tem, a national database that didn’t exist in 1983. The result floored her and Smith: the names of two men showed up, neither of whom were Reyos, and investigators soon identified a third figure present at the scene. All three had extensive arrest records on charges ranging from auto theft to assault. The prints of one of the men, who had a long rap sheet, were found on the cruise con- trol knob on Ryan’s car and on a credit card that had been stolen from him. All three of the men were now dead. But suddenly room 126 of the Sand and Sage Motel looked less like the site of a solitary killing and more like the scene of a murderous brawl. Smith took everything to the Ec- tor County district attorney’s office, where Greg Barber, the first assistant, was also mystified as to how Reyos had been convicted. Barber, an ex-cop and a longtime prosecutor, says he had never come across a case like this—such an obvious wrongful conviction. “This was new ground for us,” Barber told me. “We didn’t know howto go about correcting it. We wanted to know the best route to make things right.” Barber had gone to law school at Texas Tech University with Allison Clayton, the deputy director of the Innocence Project of Texas, so he con- tacted her. Clayton, forty years old and also a law professor at her alma ma- ter, jumped at the chance to represent Reyos. She brought three of her law students to Odessa, all women in their early twenties, and the police put on a PowerPoint presentation of the evi- dence theyhad come up with. By that point, the defense lawyer and the prosecutor were working together to exonerate Reyos. To Clayton, this kind of cooperation was unheard-of: she has helped free or exonerate six men, but she almost always finds her- self fighting against the police and the district attorney, who usually want to keep the conviction on the books. “I’ve
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had prosecutors in counties the size of Ector County tell me, off the record, ‘Yeah, he’s innocent,’ but on the record, ‘We’re going to support every conviction that comes out of this town.’ That’s what I normally see.” In November, Clayton decided it was time that Reyos heard what was happen- ing with his case. Smith and Barber also wanted to be part of the conversation, so a week after Thanksgiving, Clayton ar- ranged a meeting in one of the communi- ty rooms at Common Ground ATX. The lawyer and one of her assistants were there. Smith and Cannady came in from Odessa. Barber and another attorney helpi ng о n the case, Car men Villalobos, phoned in on FaceTime, the cellphone propped against a bag on a table. The acclaimed Austin-based documentary filmmaker Deborah Esquenazi, who had been workingon a film about Reyos, set up a camera. Reyos sat in an overstuffed brown chair, his walker in front of him, and looked bewildered at those gathered around him. He had no idea what the meeting was about. Clayton, a gregar- ious lawyer accustomed to speaking in front of large groups, explained to Reyos how they had all come to be there. “We always thought all the evidence in your case had been destroyed,” she said. “But there was actually some evidence that was still around.” Clayton asked Smith to talk about what the police had found, and the bur- ly cop moved to the couch across from Reyos. “We’ve identified some people that were never mentioned in the re- port that we can place in that room,” he began. Reyos nodded his head, but the words didn’t fully register. He was still processing the fact that a police- man from Odessa—from the same de- partment that had helped send him to prison—was sitting there talking to him. Smith continued, explaining how officers had taken the fingerprint evidence to the district attorney’s office. “We’re all working together to try and help you.” Reyos thanked Smith, but his face was blank. “So!” Clayton said brightly. “Here’s where we’re at.” She knelt at Reyos’s side and looked him in the eye. Then she took his hand. “We think we know who really did it.” F inally, Reyos grasped the gravity of what they were tellinghim. He reached SPONSORED TREXIHXG.XOU PRODUCTS FROM OUR PARTNERS Zadok Jewelers Vacheron Constantin Overseas Perpetual Calendar Ultra Thin This 18K 5N pink gold watch elegantly combines Fine Watchmaking with a sporty aesthetic. At just 8.10 millimeters thick, it houses an ultra-slim perpetual calendar which will display the correct date until 2100. A moon phase with two gold moons, whose sky blends into the blue hue of the dial, complements the calendar. The watch can be personalized thanks to its system of three easily interchangeable straps—leather, rubber, and 18K 5N pink gold. Boutique Exclusive. $111.000 /Houston, TX/zadok.com Zadok Jewelers CHANEL Eternal №5 Transformable Earrings Zadok Jewelers now carries Chanel fine jewelry and timepieces in store and online. These earrings, from the №5 Collection, are transformable and can be worn multiple ways. The №5 Collection are all creations inspired by the number five, Gabrielle Chanel’s favorite number. Like a precious lucky charm, each piece features diamonds set in 18K beige gold or white gold. $11,300/Houston, TX/zadok.com
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The Meg, The Monsters & The Myths Supported by Novum Energy and The J.W Couch Foundation HOUSTON MUSEUM For tickets & information, visit о/NATURAL SCIENCE HMNS.org or call 713-639-4629 was innocent. But he and his partner knew they would have trouble winning the case because of Reyos’s sexuality. “In 1983 people looked at homosexu- ality with a veryj aundiced eye,” Smith said. “It was considered abad thing to be gay.” The verdict still troubled him. “It’s haunted me for forty years.” Another witness distraught by how the state treated Reyos was Sterken, the woman who was flashed in Austin in 2008. When asked why she had traveled 450 miles from Tyler to testify, she told the courtroom, “I felt a lot of guilt for not speaking up more loudly. I feel like he’s been wrongly treatedby the justice system. I want to help right the wrong.” I t’s almost impossible to prove, i n le- gal terms, that an ex-inmate is actually innocent. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the state’s highest criminal tri - bunal, has described it as a “Herculean task” But the strength of Reyos’s case became even clearer when Smith and Cannady walked the judge through the newfingerprint evidence. On a giant TV, they showed photos and mug shots of the three men. Bobby Collins, a stocky former Marine, had left abloody thumb- print on the showerhead. A bloody fin- gerprint from Charles Burkart, a tall, dark-haired 22-year-old, was found on the door. Gary Ehrman, a long-haired drifter, had left a print on a plastic cup found behind the broken bed. It turned out that both Collins and Burkart had lived in Odessa in 1981 and that Ehrman, originally from Ohio, had checked into the Sand and Sage with an- other three guests—an hour after Ryan did. Collins had a record as a violent criminal, and Smith testified that he had talked to one of Collins’s sisters and his daughter, both ofwhom told the ser- geant how ruthless Collins was after re- turning from a tour in Vietnam. When Smith told Collins’s daughter about the suspicion that her father might have killed a priest, Smith said she told him she wasn’t surprised, adding that he had spent time running drugs in Mexico. “I know he’s killed more people than what he killed in Vietnam,” Smith recounted her saying. In most actual-innocence hear- ings, the DA and the defense lawyers are locked in battle, with the prosecu- tors refusing to admit that their office might have made a mistake. The Odes- sa hearing was different; the two sides 158 TEXAS MONTHLY
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were working together to exonerate Reyos. Throughout the hearing, Bar- ber asked questions that strengthened Reyos’s case. "Everything,” he conclud- ed, “comes back to this: We can’t find a single thing that points to James Reyos. If this came to us now, we’d look at three suspects and not Mr. Reyos. It’s our belief that Mr. Reyos didn’t commit this crime, and we ask the court to exonerate him.” Clayton eloquently summed up the case. “Father Ryan suffered a horren- dous death at the hands of violent, en- raged people,” she said. “They com- pletely destroyed a motel room and left their fingerprints behind. We don’t knowexactly what happened that night, but the objective evidence proves it couldn’t have been James Reyos. At this point not a single person thinks James Reyos is guilty. He has been suffering for the last forty years.” The courtroom went silent. “He’s a man who’s kind, timid, and didn’t deserve this. We plead that the court would finally bring him some degree of justice and recommend that his conviction be overturned.” Whalen thanked everyone for testi- fying, saying that “it gives the court a lot to chew on.” The judge will at some point make an official recommendation to the Court of Criminal Appeals, which has the final say on whether Reyos will be exonerated. The high court has a reputation for taking its time, some- times years, even in obvious cases like this one. After the Odessa hearing, Reyos did a series of interviews with reporters and held a press conference. He was closer than ever to vindication, yet he sounded exhausted, speaking even more quietly than usual. He recalled how this build- ing was the last place he had seen his father, back in 1983. The eighty-year- old had attended the trial every day and would sometimes come up behind his son at the defense table and place his hand on his shoulder, a show of silent yet resolute support. Reyos’s father died a year later, and Reyos wasn’t allowed to attend the fu- neral. Reyos could still picture him slow- ly walking away down the courthouse hallway, using a cane, after the two were allowed a final goodbye. Hegot tears in his eyes thinking about that—and all the other things he’d lost. Clayton told Reyos that while the legal process ran its course, she could pos- sibly arrange for him to get released from his parole restrictions so he could go home to New Mexico. He told her he would rather wait. “I’m not going to leave Texas until I’m officially con- sidered actually innocent,” he said. “I don’t want to leave Texas until I know I don’t have to come back.” He returned to his small Austin room, hoping for long-overdue abso- lution from the state’s highest criminal court. But once he got home and closed the door, he was beset, as he has always been, by demons. On the night of May 5 he hopped on a bus and headed down- town, hitting several bars, staying in at least one of them after hours. By the time he started for home, he was wob- bling so badly that he was arrested for public intoxication. His lawyers got the MAKE SURE THEY’RE IN THE RIGHT CAR SEAT NHTSA.gov/TheRightSeat 160 TEXAS MONTHLY
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FALL TRAVEL ADVERTISEMENT ABOVE) Enjoy the view of the Chis as Ba sin in Big Bend National Park. BIG BEND COUNTRY ALPINE Alpine offers small town charm in a remote and beautiful desert mountain valley at the heart of the Big Bend region. Enjoy shopping, dining, a lively art and music scene, comfortable lodging, and easy access to all area attractions including Big Bend’s national and state parks, McDon- ald Observatory, and the Museum of the Big Bend. Events include Alpine’s 30th annual ArtWalk (November), the Big Bend Bluegrass Festival (October), and the Lone Star Cowboy Poetry Gathering (February). YisitAlpineTX.com BIG BEND Named for a deep sweep in the Rio Grande River that divides the United States and Mexico, the Big Bend region of West Texas is a land of striking beauty. Big Bend consists of five distinct communities including Marathon, Lajitas, Study Butte, Terlingua, and Big Bend National Park. Far from any major city, the Big Bend is one of the world’s last frontiers. With a population density of less than one person per square mile, Big Bend is an ideal place to rediscover the simple pleasures of silence, solitude, and open space. Night skies in the Big Bend are absolutely breathtaking with two International Dark Sky Parks in the area and almost no light pollution. It is com- mon for visitors to see the Milky Way on a moonless night with no telescope required. The major point of interest in the Big Bend region is Big Bend National Park, which preserves more than 1,100 square miles of rugged desert, the three massive canyons of the Rio Grande and the entire Chisos Mountain range. People visit Big Bend to participate in a numerous activities including hiking, river trips, horseback riding, mountain biking, birding, golf, and photography. YisitBigBend.com MARFA Marfa is an oasis of art. culture, history, mystery, land, and sky in the Chihuahuan Desert. You’ll find colorful sunsets, star-filled nights, groundbreaking large-scale art installations, and small art studios. Taste the flavors of West Texas in elegant restaurants and far-out food trucks. Come check out the Trans Pecos Festival of Music + Love hosted September 28-October 1. Trans Pecos boasts four days of music, camping, and more kicking off for the last time at the original, legendary El Cosmico. Leave your expectations behind and get to know Marfa. VisitMarfa.com GULF COAST ART MUSEUM OF SOUTH TEXAS The iconography of the Art Museum of South Texas’s two buildings should be a destination all on their own. Originally designed by Ohio-born Philip Johnson in 1972, the Art Museum of South Texas (AMST) has stood as a post-modernism landmark on the edge of the Corpus Christi Bay. In 2006, an expansion led by Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta doubled the size of the Museum, adding 13 roof-top pyramids as well as stunning use of color and light. A beautiful marriage of unique perspectives, the two buildings come together as one incredible masterpiece proudly representing Mexican and American cultures. Today AMST opens its doors to all and remains a fine art institution dedicated to providing the highest quality of fine art access and educa- tion. With a dynamic permanent collection exhibition schedule and traveling exhibitions, there is always something new to experience at AMST. After a day of roaming the galler- ies, take advantage of the signature dishes and cocktails of the Mediterranean-inspired cafe Elizabeth’s inside the Museum. Plan your next trip to the Art Museum of South Texas and see what new worlds await. ArtMuseumofSouthTexas.org 166 TEXAS MONTHLY
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ADVERTISEMENT ABOVE | Beeville Art Museum and Cretan Bull Dancers by Colin Webster. BEEVILLE ART MUSEUM Enjoy the fall season with a visit to the Beeville Art Museum (BAM). Located in South Texas, the museum is an easy drive from Austin, San Antonio, Victoria, Corpus Christi, and Houston, and a perfect family road trip. Admis- sion and activities are always free. Housed in a graceful Victorian-style house built in 1910, BAM is home to one of the most ambitious art and educa- tional programs in Texas. The museum features rotating exhibits from a variety of established and cutting-edge Texas artists and mediums. Upcoming artist exhibitions include: Orna Feinstein, Lorena Morales, Annie Uhr, Tiffany Heng-Hui Lee, and Kingsley Onyeiwu. Children can enjoy BAM Kids Art Space, featuring an on-site themed art project inspired by a book, and use their powers of observation with a museum scavenger hunt. Do- cent-led tours are also available upon request. The museum is surrounded by a public park featuring several sculptures that is perfect for enjoy- ing a break, stroll, or picnic lunch. BAM, created in 2000 by the Joe Barnhart Foundation, is dedicated pro- viding educational programs and activ- ities that stimulate the imaginations of young people throughout Bee County. BAMTexas.org THE HOUSTON MUSEUM OF NATURAL SCIENCE One of the most popular and revered science museums in the U.S., the Houston Museum of Natural Science at Hermann Park has five floors of per- manent exhibits, spanning astronomy, anthropology, medical science. Native American culture. Ancient Egyptian culture, paleontology, the energy sector, gems and minerals, and Texas’s beautiful wildlife and scenery, alongside a slew of rotating world-class, special exhibitions. The ongoing mission of HMNS is to preserve and advance the general knowledge of natural science, and to inspire all who walk through its doors to explore the world around them. HMNS also houses three other venues: the historic Burke Baker Planetarium, the Wortham Giant Screen Theatre, and the Cockrell Butterfly Center, a must- see destination for butterfly lovers. HMNS.org PORT ARANSAS Its no secret that Port Aransas is the True Texas Coast. Texans have made the trip to the seemingly endless beaches and quiet fishing bays for generations. But the secret www.artmuseumofsouthtexas.org

FALL TRAVEL ADVERTISEMENT to planning the best trip to Port Aransas is...timing. Port Aransas is Texas’s favorite summer spot, but autumn takes everything you love about Port A and perfects it. With the ebb and flow of summer visitors long since faded, the coast is left open for fall visitors who prefer a quieter beach expe- rience. The cooler autumn weather invites couples to take long walks along the beach, birdwatchers to capture world renowned migrations, kayakers to paddle through calm waters, and cyclists to ride miles of trails. As the water cools, redfish, trout, and flounder come into season, making a fishing trip to Port A special, even for the most seasoned fishermen. With jetties and charter boats at your disposal, you’re almost assured to come home with the catch of a lifetime. Autumn reveals Port Aransas’s true self. It’s a place where busybodies find solitude, serious fishermen chase their dreams, and outdoor enthusiasts hear nature’s whisper. It’s time you find your escape, its time to make your way to Port A. VisitPortAransas.com SOUTH PADRE ISLAND South Padre Island was once again named the Texas’s Destination of the Year by the Texas Travel Awards. Winning a total of six awards, including best beach, best views, and outdoor activities, South Padre Island is the perfect tropical retreat for families, with 34 miles of coastline, 300 days of sunshine, and all forms of entertainment. For nature lovers. South Padre Island has two major eco-centers where you can learn all about the fauna and flora of the region. Sea Turtle Inc. is a non-profit organization whose mission is education, conservation, and rehabilitating sea turtles. Here, visitors can learn about their history, what to do if they encounter a sea turtle, and meet their permanent residents. The South Padre Island Birding, Nature Center & Alligator Sanctuary has more than 3,300 feet of boardwalk, five bird blinds, and a viewing tower. Kids can spot birds unique to our region and learn about the cutest couple on SPI: Big Padre and Lady Laguna. their permanent resident alligators. South Padre Island is the sandcastle capital of the world. SPI is home to many sand masters ready to teach you the science behind sandcastle building. The waters around South Padre Island are wonderful to fish any time of the year, but summer is when they shine bright like the Texas sun. From wahoo and tuna to tarpon and snapper, you can reel in your limit of giant fish and great times. You’ll find no shortage of knowledgeable captains ready to show you their secret spots and put you in schools of fish. Even better, once you’ve filled your cooler, tons of local chefs are ready to take your day’s catch and turn it into a truly memorable meal. It’s a signature South Padre Island experience and one not to be missed. SoPadrexom Hilt COUNTRY HEATH FAMIlV BRANDS Heath Family Brands is your Napa next door. These family-owned winer- ies and vineyard estates offer the best Hill Country vineyard views paired with excellent, award-winning wines. Along Highway 290, Grape Creek Vineyards and Heath Sparkling Wines make up one 25-acre vineyard estate with a full produc- tion winery and beautiful tasting rooms. Experience a guided tasting in the Tuscan inspired tasting rooms at Grape Creek or enjoy distinctive sparkling wines paired with seasonal small bites in the clean, modern architecture at Heath Sparkling, Texas’s first winery dedicated to the art of fine sparkling winemaking. Members can also dine by the vines at the full-service restaurant, savoring vibrant, fresh, and comforting wine country cuisine and an extensive list of wines. While strolling along Fredericksburg’s Main Street, visit their urban tasting room and sample 90+ point wines across their family brands including the ultra-premium Jenblossom Cellars collection. Located just five minutes from Main Street along Highway 16, you’ll find 35 acres of working vineyards and a stunning winery at Invention Vineyards. Experience Invention’s full production winery tour and wine tasting and enjoy covered 170 TEXAS MONTHLY
ADVERTISEMENT FALL IN LOVE ON ALABAMA'S BEACHES Escape to paradise on Alabama’s Gulf Coast and enjoy turquoise waters, breathtaking views, and 32 miles of sugar- white sand beaches. The mild temperatures and comfortable breezes of fall make it the ideal time to explore the natural wonders of Gulf Shores and Orange Beach. Long walks on the beach, captivating kayak excursions, and stunning sunset cruises are just a few ways to experience the area. Whether you prefer activities with a bit of excitement or endeavors that provide relaxation, you’re sure to find a special way to make new memories. With fewer crowds and lower rates, a beach trip is just what you need to unwind and reconnect this season. Book your getaway and fall in love all over again on Alabama’s beaches. Kayaking in Gulf Shores. GulfShores.com OrangeBeach.com Surrounded by water. GET YOUR FREE VACATION GUIDE ЦЦ Escape to Alabama's 32-mile island and experience a vacation like no other. Relax on sugar-white sand beaches, indulge in our coastal cuisine and reconnect with the one you love, all in one unforgettable place. GULF SHORES & ORANGE BEACH TOURISM Alabama's White-Sand Beaches GulfShores.com . OrangeBeach.com . 877-341-2400 TEXAS MONTHLY 171
ADVERTISEMENT TRIBUTE BANDS OF SHAKIRA, JENNIFER LOPEZ 8 PITBULL SAT | SEPTEMBER23 | 3P-10P FOOD, VENDORS 8 KIDZONE 469.272.2902 visitcedarhilltx.com A В OVE | Vineyard views at Heath Sparkling, Texas's first winery dedicated to the art of spa riding winemaking. patios overlooking the vast vineyard estate. When looking for the ultimate wine destination, don’t compromise. HeathFamilyBrands.com KERRVILLE Experience the fall season in the Texas Hill Country when you take a trip to Kerrville, Texas. Known for its scenic beauty, artistic attractions, and world-class shopping and dining options, visitors can craft their own unique adventure this fall in Kerrville. Begin your getaway by taking in the sights of trees displaying their fall foliage on the Guadalupe River. Kerrville is home to the headwaters of this favorite Texas river where visitors can enjoy paddleboarding, fishing, and kayaking. Continue the outdoor fun with a bike ride along the Kerrville River Trail, a six-mile trail that weaves its way through the heart of downtown. Kerrville’s bustling art scene is also one of the unique draws to the city. Check out 28 area art installations on the Public Art Trail and then feel inspired as you roam the Museum of Western Art and Kerr Arts & Cultural Center. After working up an appetite, take a bite out of the Kerrville culinary scene. Dine on handcrafted artisan dishes riv- erside and stop by Kerrville Hills Winery for an afternoon of winetasting. Com- memorate your visit by shopping for the perfect souvenir or custom home decor item at Kerrville’s many down- town shops, like Schreiner Goods. It’s all found in beautifully crafted Kerrville. KerrvilleTexasCVB.com LACANTERA RESORT 8 SPA Escape to La Cantera Resort & Spa and immerse yourself in the scenic beauty as you witness the mesmerizing Texas Hill Country fall foliage in all its glory, just a stones throw away from the San Antonio resort. Experience the ultimate luxury hideaway at the resort’s enchanting Villas, featuring relaxing hillside landscapes, exclusive amenities, and a serene oasis that offer a residen- tially inspired retreat. Unwind by one of the five sparkling pools, each offering a distinct experience suited for couples, friends, or families. Epicurean delights await at Signature, their chef-driven dining destination using locally-sourced ingredients to elevate your culinary ex- perience. At nightfall, admire the magic of the Texas Starry Nights at Plaza San Saba, creating a mesmerizing ambiance for unforgettable evenings. For those seeking unparalleled relaxation, experi- ence the award-winning Loma de Vida Spa & Wellness, where cutting-edge OTO CBD treatments reward a luxuri- ous wellness journey towards re-balanc- ing the mind, body, and skin. Discover nearby wine spots to immerse yourself in the beloved Texas Hill Country wine region or hop on their daily resort shut- 172 TEXAS MONTHLY
NOW OPEN HOUSTON MUSEUM I For tickets & information, visit of NATURAL SCIENCE I HMNS.org or call 713-639-4629 King Tut's Tomb Discovery Experience is generously supported by Woodforest National Bank | John P. McGovern Foundation | Harriet and Truett Latimer Endowment Fund | HMW Entertainment
FALL TRAVEL ADVERTISEMENT ABO VE LEFT | Enjoy thrilling attractions, delicious dining, and premium shopping (luring a fall getaway in Round Rock. А В 0 VE RIG H11 From museums and murals to theaters and festivals, art and culture abound in Kerrville. tie to The Shops at La Cantera for a day of exploration. Create cherished memories at La Cantera Resort & Spa, where the perfect blend of relaxation and adventure awaits! LaCan teraResort.com OMNI BARTON CREEK RESORT 8 SPA The most memorable, indulgent, and restorative experiences are already in your backyard. Nestled within 4,000 wooded acres of picturesque rolling hills on the edge of Austin—surrounded by pristine vineyards, nature preserves, hiking trails, and waterways—Omni Barton Creek Resort & Spa curates an elevated expe- rience of the Texas Hill Country where style, craftsmanship, and imagination come together in an experience as magnificent as Austins Hill Country. Savor the luxu- ries of the Texas Hill Country with a stay at Omni Barton Creek Resort & Spa. OmniHotels.com/bartoncreek ROUND ROCK Fall in love with Round Rock this fall season when you embark on a getaway. Not only has Round Rock been named one of the top places to live, but it is also one of the top destinations to visit in Texas. Round Rock is home to Americas Largest Indoor Waterpark at Kalahari Resorts & Conventions, so slip on your suit and get ready for some water fun. Grab a tube and ride down one of the 30 waterslides, and try the wave simulator, wave pool, and a newly expanded outdoor waterpark area. Continue the fun at Tom Foolerys, Kalahari’s 80.000-square-foot adventure park. Next, grab a pumpkin spice latte and head to Old Settlers Park to see trees displaying their fall colors. A local favorite, this park has everything from 3.3 miles of trails and a lake stocked with fish, to 12 tennis courts and seven playgrounds. Later you can get your game on at Home Run Dugout, a virtual batting cage experience, located at Dell Diamond stadium. Don’t forget to shop around at the Round Rock Premium Outlets before you head 174 TEXAS MONTHLY

ADVERTISEMENT AB OVE | Omni Barton Creek Resort and the Fazio Foothills 18-Hole Coif Course. Recharging in nature is our specialty. 30* miles of hiking/biking trails Canoeing, kayaking, paddleboarding Fishing, rock-climbing, camping MINERALWELLS WHERE TEXAS RUNS DEEP. home to snag a souvenir. When you need to refuel, try cuisine from around the world when you explore Round Rocks diverse dining scene. Go Round Rock for your next vacation! GoRoundRock.com SAN ANTONIO Experience the allure of fall in San Antonio, where unique attractions and exciting celebrations await. From cultural festivals to diverse cuisine and outdoor adventures, immerse yourself in Real & True San Antonio and create unforgettable memories this season. During fall, the abundance of cultural and culinary festivals fills the city with festive and colorful celebrations. Cheers—or should we say “Prost!”—to Oktoberfest, commemorate some of the largest Di'a de los Muertos celebrations, get lively at DiwaliSA’s 15th anniversary, and more. Then explore our culinary scene at the Tasting Texas Wine + Food Festival, which allows visitors to savor an array of local specialties and international flavors. On October 14, San Antonio is treated to a rare celestial spectacle: an annular eclipse. Experience this stunning event, as the moon passes between Earth and the Sun, creating a mesmerizing ring of fire in the sky. For adventure-seekers, the new- ly opened Hidden Wonders Tour Experience at Natural Bridge Caverns takes visitors through underground caves and a 5,700-square-foot ballroom chamber. This fall, join in vibrant festivities and outdoor adventures, savor the diverse culinary delights, and marvel at the wonders of nature. San Antonio invites you to take part in exciting and enchanting experiences. VisitSanAntonio.com PANHANDLE PLAINS ABILENE Abilene represents the frontier spirit with its rich Western heritage and authentic cultural experiences. Its storied past gives rise to a charming and flourishing historic Downtown Cultural District with inspiring and educational museums, urban parks, and a public art scene featuring an unrivaled collection of storybook sculpture, giving Abilene the distinction of being the Storybook Capital of America®. Created by the T&P Railway and established in 1881, Abilene is the hub of activity in West Texas. With three private universi- ties, an Air Force base, and a major downtown revitalization underway, Abilene is a community that celebrates its history while embracing innovation and exploring new frontiers. History comes full circle as Hilton returns to downtown Abilene, where Conrad Hilton leased one of the first hotels www.VisitMineralWells.com
ч- -ы, с s-*sL FT ? f^_'.f- .-• REAL CULTURE. TRUE TRADITIONS. San Antonio in the fall is filled with unlpi’gettable cultural celebrations that are rooted in the authentic foundations of the city and baked into everything we d$. In addition t o Diwali, Okt oberfest, and other events. San Antonio is homh- to the largest Dia de Muertos celebration in the country as well as the Tasting Texas Food + Wine Festival, the first-ever statewide culinary festival to parther with the James Beard Foundation. Learn more about how we celebrate the diversity of cultures that call San Antonio home at visitsanantonio.com.

₽ •' What started as a refreshing drink in a country club many summers ago can now be found all around the Hub City. Who knew a shot of vodka, a squeeze of lemon and a spritz of soda water would one day become an iconic Lubbock libation? From crisp cucumber to ruby grapefruit and every rendition in between, taste your way around the city one sip at a time with our cocktail pass! Scan the QR code to plan your first stop on Lubbock's Chilton Trail. yfisit LUBBSCK 0OOQO ttLIVELOVELUBBOCK VISITLUBBOCK.ORG
FALL TRAVEL ADVERTISEMENT ABOVE | Enjoys seasonal brew, live music, and epic food track eats on the Iwo Doc's patio. in the world to bear his name. The new 2OO-suite Doubletree Hotel & Conference Center offers the first-class hospitality and well-appointed accommodations travelers have come to expect and deserve. Escape the ordinary and experience the authentic charm of Abilene. The city is brimming with rich heritage, cultural events, and Texas traditions. Whether you’re looking for enriching adventures or a relaxing get- away. Abilene is the ultimate destination. AbileneVisitors.com LUBBOCK Embrace the charm of fall in Lubbock this year. From seasonal sips to farm-to-fork favorites and every memorable activity in between, plan a weekend trip out west and surround yourself with autumn skies that stretch across the wide-open plains. Start the weekend with a trip to Two Docs Brewing Co. and enjoy the fall weather with a sip served on the pup-friendly patio. With year-round. Lubbock-inspired choices like the Prairie Dog Porter and festive beverages like the Pumpkin Ale, add this brewpub to your itinerary. Nothing says West Texas like a hat bar! While you’re in town, stop by to custom- ize this wearable souvenir. From picking your hat to branding it and adding on as many accessories as your heart desires, the Hatristas will guide you through the creative process until you’re left with a product you can’t wait to add to your closet. A farm-to-table favorite of locals and visitors alike. The Fresh American puts a Texas-inspired twist on west coast cui- sine. Open for lunch and dinner with the option to reserve the chef’s table, this restaurant offers handcrafted cocktails and a fine-dining experience fit for fall. Ready to fall in love with Lubbock? Plan your weekend stay today. VisitLubbock.org LUBBOCK MUNICIPAL MUSEUMS Here in Lubbock, we have two amazing museums that showcase the City’s unique 180 TEXAS MONTHLY
expanded HORIZONS come endless possibilities. Austin’s luxury resort, Omni Barton Creek Resort & Spa curates an elevated experience, sure to create unforgettable memories for all ages. Nestled amidst rolling hills and picturesque landscapes, our resort offers an oasis of tranquility and relaxation. Located just 10 miles from downtown Austin, your perfect fall retreat awaits. OMNI BARTON CREEK OMNIHOTELS.COM/BARTONCREEK
FALL TRAVEL ADVERTISEMENT ABOVE) Visit the San Angele Symphony for an evening of incredible music. history: The Buddy Holly Center and Silent Wings Museum. The Buddy Holly Center preserves and promotes the legacy of Buddy Holly and the music of West Texas, as well as provides exhibitions on Con- temporary Visual Arts and Music, for the purpose of educating and entertaining the public. Exhibitions, tours, concerts, classes, and gallery talks are designed to cultivate an atmosphere where art and music are cel- ebrated, The Buddy Holly Gallery features a permanent exhibit on the life and music of the Lubbock native and West Texas icon. Artifacts include Buddy’s Fender Stratocast- er guitar and famed horn-rimmed glasses, along with items from his youth and career. The Silent Wings Museum is locat- ed in Lubbock, adjacent to the Preston Smith International Airport. Its the only museum in the world dedicated solely to preserving the history of the WWII military glider program. The museum is home to one of the few accurately and com- SAN ANGELO SYMPHONY 2023-2024 FIESTA AT THE MURPHEY GERSHWIN, ROSSNI, 8 THE FRANK OCTOBER 7. 2023 I 7 PM THE MURPHEY PERFORMANCE HALL FEATURING SOFIA ROS. ACCORDION SORANTINGOLD NOVEMBER 4.2023 I 7 PM THE MURPHEY PERFORMANCE HALL SPECIAL GUEST. SORANTIN WINNER MIKHAIL BERESTNEV. PIANO^ FEATURING CONCERTMASTER FAGNER ROCHA. VIOLIN. EMILEE HALL-ROCHA, VIOLIN. JOHN IRISH. TRUMPET. AND JANELLE OTT. BASSOON VIGNOLA TRIO JANUARY 27.2024 I 7 PM THE MURPHEY PERFORMANCE HALL FEATURING FRANK VIGNOLA. GUITAR. VINNY RANIOLO. GUITAR, AND GARY MAZZAROPPI. BASS SPECIAL NARRATION BY RICK MANT00TH FIRST FINANCIAL BANK FAMILY POPS CONCERT MARCH 23. 2024 I 7:30 PM ASU JUNELL CENTER A HOMETOWN HOLIDAY DECEMBER 3 2023 I 7 PM THE MURPHEY PERFORMANCE HALL THE SYMPHONY CHORUS FEATURING MEMBERS FROM ANGELO STATE UNIVERSITY, CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL. CORNERSTON CHRISTIAN SCHOOL. LAKE VIEW HIGH SCHOOL. AND THE SAN ANGELO CHORUS FEATURING CIRQUE DE LA SYMPHONIE P 0 BOX 5922 I 325.658.5877 SANANGELOSYMPHONY ORG pletely restored CG-4A gliders left in the world. The exhibits focus on the airborne operations in which gliders were used, the training of the glider pilots, and the technical history of the gliders themselves. The Buddy Holly Center and Silent Wings Museum are open Tuesday through Saturday from 10am to 5pm, and on Sundays from 1pm to 5pm. Visitors are invited to call or look online for admission prices, special events, and holiday hours. BuddyHollyCenter.org SilentWingsMuseum.com MINERALWELLS Escape to Mineral Wells, the Wellness Capital of Texas! Discover the power of na- ture as you recharge amidst our three state parks, four serene lakes, and the majestic Brazos River. With more than 50 miles of enchanting hiking and biking trails, immerse yourself in the beauty that surrounds you. For a slower pace, unwind amidst the beauty of our gardens adorned with soothing water features and tranquil walkways. Lose yourself in tranquility as you wander through labyrinths and soothing water features. Pop in for rooftop yoga with breathtaking views of downtown and the iconic Baker Hotel. Or take a leisurely drive through roll- ing hills and picturesque landscapes. For the more adventurous, find your way along our mountain bike trails, or try your hand at the only natural rock-climbing area in North Texas. To complete your wellness experience, embrace the healing properties of Crazy Water. This natural mineral water, revered since the late 18OOs, has been making visitors feel revitalized for generations. Sip it, soak in it, or savor it in a variety of bever- ages crafted from its restorative essence. Come, experience the ultimate well- ness retreat in natures embrace. VisitMineraiWells.org SAN ANGELO This fall, discover San Angelo, a hidden gem in the heart of West Texas offering a unique blend of history, cul- 182 TEXAS MONTHLY
TRADITIONS ANCHOR HERE VISIT THE TRUE TEXAS COAST Ono visit and yon II soe why generations of Texans have anchored thoir favorite traditions in Port Ai an ci > VisitPortAransas.com • В PORT ARANSAS — the island life
FALL TRAVEL ABOVE) Channel Gardens at Clark Gardens Botanical Park in Mineral Wells. ture, and natural beauty. With its stun- ning Concho River Walk flowing right through the vibrant downtown, and the rich cowboy heritage, San Angelo is the perfect destination for anyone seek- ing an authentic Texas experience. Fall is the perfect time to explore San An- gelo, with a range of events and festivals to enjoy. Just to name a few upcoming events, the San Angelo REVOLUTION Film Fes- tival, a unique celebration of independent films, is definitely worth a visit. It features thought-provoking independent films that embrace diverse cultures and perspec- tives. The city’s vibrant Dia de los Muertos Celebration is also a must-see event, where visitors can enjoy live music, art exhibitions, and experience traditional activities around the community. Art lovers can indulge in the 100th celebration of EnPleinAir TEXAS. This is another fantastic event that draws artists from all over the world to create stunning art on-site at local landmarks. With so much to see and experience, fall is an exciting time to visit San Angelo. DiscoverSanAngeloxom SAN ANGELO SYMPHONY The San Angelo Symphony offers a con- cert season packed with programming for every musical taste, world-class guest artists, and talented, professional musicians creating an experience like no other. Celebrating 74 years of live performances, we invite you to join us for an anything but ordinary season of musical experiences. The San Angelo Symphony proudly presents performances that offer a unique balance between the masterpieces from composers such as Bach and Tchaikovsky and exciting performances by the Frank Vignola Trio and Cirque de la Symphonie—one-of-a-kind orchestral entertainment perfect for the whole family. The San Angelo Symphony’s Season Ticket and Patron Memberships are avail- able for purchase over the phone or in the office. For more information, please visit our website or call the Symphony’s office at 325- 658-5877. We hope to see YOU in the Mur- phey Performance Hall for a night of incredi- ble music by the San Angelo Symphony! SanAngeloSymphony.org PINEYWOODS SHENANDOAH Conveniently situated on 1-45, adjacent to Conroe, Spring, and The Woodlands. Shenandoah provides a great value for those looking for a place to stay in the North Houston area. It also has a lot to offer for a city of its size—home to five shopping centers, several family-friendly entertain- ment venues, nearly sixty restaurants, and 12 quality hotels (including new Aloft, EVEN, and Hyatt House hotels that opened in 2021), Shenandoah's great amenities provide visitors with a variety of options when considering things to see and do, whether you’re looking for an afternoon excursion, weekend getaway, or extended stay. In Shenandoah, shopping choices abound, and foodies will appreciate the breadth of the city’s dining scene. Restau- rateurs provide a variety of cuisines, dining experiences, and price points, whether you’re looking for something quick and casual, or a more sophisticated, fine dining adventure you might enjoy at Killen’s Steakhouse, with two-time, James Beard semifinalist, Ronnie Killen. Entertainment options include a state-of-the-art AMC cineplex, Dave & Buster’s, Main Event, Pinot’s Palette "paint and sip” studio, and an Urban Air Trampoline and Adventure Park. Outdoor enthusiasts can connect with nature as they explore the W.G. Jones State Forest or George Mitchell Nature Preserve, just minutes away. VisitShenandoahlx.com PRAIRIES & LAKES AMON CARTER MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART The Amon Carter Museum of Ameri- can Art (the Carter) is centrally located in 184 TEXAS MONTHLY
ADVERTISEMENT Fort Worth’s Cultural District. The Carter has a rich history in offering events and exhibitions that provide insight into the past, present, and future of American creativity. Experience and understand American art in new ways by visiting the Carter. Explore the influences that impacted the art of Lousie Nevelson in The World Outside: Louise Nevelson at Midcentury, on view August 27,2023, through January 7, 2024. The exhibition, included in the Muse urn’s free admission, illuminates Nevelson’s multidimensional mastery of form and dialogue with postwar America and features more than 50 defining artworks by Nevelson on view together for the first time. Experi- ence the site-specific installation by New York-based artist Leonardo Drew which fills the Carter’s gallery. And discover new work created in response to James Prosek’s two years of travel investigating the allure of Tex- as’s grasslands, while raising broader ques- tions about the boundaries that shape, limit, and define prairie spaces in the present day in Trespassers: James Prosek and the Texas Prairie, on view September 16,2023, through January 28,2024. Plan your visit to the Carter to experience these exhibitions and see what events we have planned this fall! CarterMuseum.org CEDAR HILL Family memories and outdoor fun make Cedar Hill the place to be in the fall. On September 23 at Valley Ridge Park, we celebrate Latin American culture with LatinFest! LatinFest has something for everyone, a community event that gathers everyone together for one purpose—to celebrate the Latin culture. Bring your taste buds and be a People’s Choice judge of the Best Hot Sauce of Cedar Hill! There will also be delicious food vendors, kids’ activities, music, and entertainment by tribute bands for Shakira, Jennifer Lopez, and Pitbull—you can dance the night away and there is plenty of fun for the whole family. On October 14 in Historic Downtown, feel like a local at the 86th Annual Country Day on the Hill with all-day fun that starts with a parade and in- cludes vendors, food, activities, and live en- tertainment on three stages. The fun in Ce- dar Hill continues with Scare in the Square in October for safe and friendly trick-or- treating, and Holiday on the Hill to light the city Christmas tree right after Thanksgiving in Historic Downtown for fun memories with the kids. Make your plan today to join us and celebrate the holidays—the Cedar Hill way! VisitCedarHUITx.com DALLAS With ideal sunny days in the seventies and nights made for chilling out, Dallas thrives in autumn. Stroll through the State Fair of Texas to the smell of Fletcher’s
ADVERTISEMENT DIAMOND RIO KUMBIA KINGS F LOS PALOMINOS К LA MAFIA & MORE J ★ ★ ★ ARTISAN MARKET BEER I GARDEN 5K CARNIVAL LIVE MUSIC ART CULTURE MURALI5T ART IN ACTION i’ k BBQ COOK-OFF PETTING < ZOO I KIDS ACTIVITIES J । ' ЕГО I 05PM СЛТ,2РМ 11Л1 10PM JMI 10PM ч > NOV 10TH & 11TH HARLINGEN BASEBALL FIELD WWW.HARLINGENRIOFEST.COM corny dogs and funnel cakes tempting your taste buds. Take a thrill ride or kick back with Big Tex himself. Don’t miss the Dallas Arboretum’s dazzling seasonal showcase of vivid fall foliage and creative pumpkin displays. Join the crowd as fans fill AT&T Stadium to watch the Cowboys showcase their grit on the gridiron. And lively sports bars with lively patios give everyone a chance to cheer on America’s Team. From golden sunsets at the Cotton Bowl to the crunch of leaves under- foot at the Arboretum, autumn sure likes to show off here in Dallas. VisitDallas.com DENISON Get ready for an unforgettable autumn adventure in Denison, Texas! Located just one hour north of Dallas, this charming town is packed with ex- citing activities and attractions that will make your trip truly memorable. Start your journey by exploring downtown Denison, where you’ll find a delightful blend of historic charm and modern amenities. Take a stroll along the picturesque streets lined with unique shops and boutiques, perfect for some retail therapy. Don’t miss out on the chance to experience the vibrant events happening in downtown Denison, such as the annual Fall Fest on Saturday, October 7, or Dia de los Muertos on November 4—both held right on Main Street! History buffs will be delighted to discover Denison’s rich heritage. Immerse yourself in the past as you visit the historic sites like Eisenhower Birthplace State Historic Site, the Red River Railroad Museum, or Perrin Air Force Base Museum. For nature enthusiasts seeking outdoor adventures, make sure to visit Eisenhower State Park on Lake Texoma. This breathtaking park offers endless opportunities for hiking, fishing, boating, and more. Plan your trip to Denison today and discover all that this incredible destination has to offer. From charming downtown experiences to thrilling out- door escapades, there’s something for everyone in this hidden gem of Texas. DiscoverDenisonxom THE DOSS HERITAGE 8 CULTURE CENTER Have you ever wondered what life was like for pioneers? Wonder no more, when you come experience the Pioneer Heritage Festival at the Doss Heritage and Culture Center. Held annually on the first Saturday in October, this festive event offers visitors a unique opportunity to step back in time and explore four original log cabins at the museum, located just 20 miles west of DFW. Built in the late 1800s, these cabins offer a glimpse of home life for many settlers. Dressed interpreters will greet you and explain the history of each cabin and bring history to life. You can also watch spinning, basket weaving, and black powder musket demonstrations while listening to live music in the park and in the museum. For a more interactive experience, try your hand at cotton carding, butter churning, and candle dipping. This fes- tival is great for all ages and admission is free. Don’t miss out on this chance to explore the museum and the cabin park in all its glory. Make it a weekend and visit one of the oldest open-air markets in Texas, First Monday Trade Days, located minutes from the museum. DossCenter.org GRAPEVINE As summer fades and the leaves start to change. Grapevine invites visitors to experience a memorable fall getaway. One of the highlights of the season is the largest wine festival in the Southwest.GrapeFest*—A Texas Wine Experience, presented by Bank of the West, features more than 150 wines, live music, delicious food, and great shopping. This event is a must-visit for wine enthusiasts. For those who prefer a more leisurely
L you plS С О Vj.;^ OLD TOWN LEWISVILLE Enjoy an amazing blend of DINING, SHOPPING, ENTERTAINMENT, AND CULTURAL EXPERIENCES. Blacka/I Photography (a)otlewisville Experience the excitement of attending free festivals year-round, browsing the local vendor market on First Fridays, and immersing yourself in the vibrant live music scene across the city. The Lewisville Grand Theater hosts captivating live stage performances, music events, and thoughtfully curated art galleries. Come explore over 20 incredible works of public art throughout the area. Old Town Lewisville will captivate you with specialty merchants, delectable food and beverage options, and charming local experiences. Epjoy exploring the heart of Lewisville, Texas! oldtownlewisville.com
FALL TRAVEL А В О V E | Big Tex gazes out towards Dal las from the State Fair ot Texas. experience. Grapevines Urban Wine Trail offers a unique opportunity to explore the city’s vibrant wine scene. With multiple tasting rooms all within walking distance, visitors can enjoy a self-guided tour. The charming and Historic Main Street also offers unique culinary experiences and the sounds of live entertainment fill the air many nights of the week. Catch fantastic tribute artists Friday nights throughout the season at Grapevine Main Station’s Peace Plaza, then go inside Harvest Hall's Third Rail to dance and sing along with DJs Dueling Pianos and Live Band Karaoke. Don’t miss out on the incredible expe- riences Grapevine has to offer, including fabulous accommodations from a full range of hotels and resorts such as Hilton DFW Lakes and the Gaylord Texan Resort. GrapevineTexasUSA.com LEWISVILLE Immerse yourself in the enchanting nostalgia of Old Town Lewisville, where authentic historic buildings from the turn of the last century set the stage for a captivating blend of dining, shopping, entertainment, and cultural experiences. Kickstart your day with a steaming cup of coffee from the Perc Coffeehouse as you leisurely wander amidst the charming local shops like Main Street Mercantile, Odin Leather Goods, or Flourish Flowers and Gifts. Take your time as you experi- ence the inviting atmosphere and satisfy your cravings with a delectable meal along the way from well-known Sullivan’s Barbecue, new Italian restaurant D’Nonna, stylish Bendt Distilling Co., and more. Elevate your cultural journey with live stage and music performances at Lew- isville Grand Theater, engaging events, enriching classes, and a curated art gallery that will inspire and ignite your creative passion. Be captivated by the vibrant tapestry of creativity woven by artistic experienced and skilled artisans, includ- ing more than 20 works of public art. Uncover the allure of an urban oasis in captivating Old Town Lewisville, where custom homes and stylish apartments seamlessly blend with specialty mer- chants, comforting food and beverage options, and heartwarming local expe- riences. There are unique options for every palate. Plan your visit today! OldTownLewisvillexom LOCKHART Come for the barbecue and antiques but stick around for the history and “small town” hospitality that our community has to offer. Stroll around our historic down- town square to visit our unique shops and restaurants, eat some of our world-famous barbecue, and stay the night at one of our friendly hotels or historic B&Bs. On November 4 and 5. Texas Monthly BBQ Festival will take place in our historic downtown square and expansive city park. The free and open-to-the-public Worlds Fair of BBQ on Saturday will feature eclectic food, cold drinks, live music, cooking demos, and a marketplace. More than 45 of the Texas Monthly Top 50 BBQ joints from across the state will be in attendance for the Sunday BBQ picnic. Visit our web- site for more information on everything happening in the BBQ Capital of Texas. Lodchart-Tx.org THE SIXTH FLOOR MUSEUM AT DEALEY PLAZA The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza explores the life, death, and legacy of President John F. Kennedy, who was assassinated in Dallas 60 years ago on November 22,1965. Located in the former Texas School Book Depository building in downtown Dallas, the Museum provides unparalleled insight into this generation-de- fining moment in the very place where history happened, providing an authentic, powerful connection to the assassination and the events that surrounded it. Learn more and book your tick- ets in advance at our website. 188 TEXAS MONTHLY
ADVERTISEMENT STATE FAIR OF TEXAS The State Fair of Texas will return for another season of food, festivities, and family fun. It kicks off on Friday, September 29, and runs through Sunday, October 22, in historic Fair Park. Themed “Explore the Midway,’’ the State Fair of Texas is excited to welcome back everyone in the most Texan way possible—with a big "Howdy!” Adding to its annual offering of more than 100 free attractions, 70 Midway rides, and endless activities across the fairgrounds, the 2023 State Fair of Texas will be a celebration bigger than ever! From the Fairs newest attractions, like the Dinosaurs at the Lagoon, to fairgoer favorites, like the nightly parade and the Texas Star Ferris Wheel, this season will be filled with never-ending fun. Free with fairgoers’ admission, the Chevrolet Main Stage concert lineup features various musical acts across all genres. Your trip to the Fair is your ticket to Texas-sized fun—with hundreds of activities included in the price of admission. Whether you come for the food, the Texas Auto Show, or the all-around Fair fun, be sure to celebrate with us! Buy your tickets online today at our website! BigTexxom TEXAS WOMAN'S UNIVERSITY The Sue S. Bancroft Women’s Leader- ship Hall is an interactive digital exhibition gallery that showcases the achievements of hundreds of women who were pivotal in advancing women’s leadership in Texas. Learn about 12 women who channeled their Texas grit to make a lasting impact on politics and public policy. Be inspired by women who have run for and won office in Texas—highlights include an interactive map with more than 200 women who contributed to the history of Texas, and a display commemorating 17 African Amer- ican women elected as judges in Harris County in 2018. Find your elected officials at our Texas voter information stations. Read excerpts of speeches by prominent women leaders at our Rising Star interac- tive podium that simulates the scene of a breaking news story on television. Explore women’s suffrage through the lens of Texas native Minnie Fisher Cunningham, a key leader whose efforts led to the passage of the 19th Amendment which ultimately granted women the right to vote in the U.S. Visit the Hall on Texas Woman’s University campus, Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Drop in to browse the exhibits or call ahead at 940-898-4573 to reserve a guided tour. TWUxdu/lead TEXAS MONTHLY 189
ADVERTISEMENT TexasBank ._/ :>oss V*— OCTOBER 7th 2023 ioam-4pm ABOVE | Santa Fe, NM-whereartistry meets authenticity. WACO Make your fall plans for a “Get- aWaco!" Right up the road, right up your alley! Waco is an amazing escape with so many great things to do and activities to enjoy. You’ve heard of Magnolia Mar- ket and its fun shops, bakery, food trucks, and a wiffle ball field. But come explore the rest of Waco! How about a cold Dr Pepper, hand-pulled at the old-fashioned soda fountain at the Dr Pepper Museum? Explore the history of the Texas Rangers at the official museum. See orangutans and Sumatran tigers at the Cameron Park Zoo. Check out sports legends at the Texas Sports Hall of Fame. Other great attractions include Waco Surf. Waco Mammoth National Monument, Maybom Museum, the Suspension Bridge, Waco Down- town Cultural District, and more. Visit our website to plan your Waco trip today! Waco HeartO fTexas.co m SOUTH TEXAS PLAINS BROWNSVILLE Enjoy the perfect weekend surround- ed by nature, unique culture, and inno- vation! Located at the southernmost tip of Texas, Brownsville is in a thriving envi- ronment with a tropical and dynamic climate. Our city offers you a diverse list of activities, such as 100 miles of hiking, biking, and kayaking; Boca Chica beach; and nightlife activities at the Historic Downtown area where rich cuisine and culture immersion comes at their fullest! If you love nature, immerse yourself in a quiet retreat and discover more than 500 bird species in our World Birding Center, or experience the unique habitat of our Sabal Palm Sanctuary. Additionally, watch 1,600 animals and enjoy a walk in our 31-acre Gladys Porter Zoo. Before the day ends, visit the future of space, Starbase! This is the SpaceX South Texas Launch Site for the next-generation vehicle Starship, where more than 140 launches and counting have been launched! To find more information or to book your next stay, visit our website today! YisitBTX.com HARLINGEN Experience the charms of Har- lingen: a haven of attractions, ex- citing events, outdoor adventures, and unforgettable memories. Welcome to Harlingen, a vi- brant city in the heart of Texas's Rio Grande Valley. Discover an array of captivating attractions that will leave you enthralled. Immerse yourself in the rich history and architectural wonders that adorn our streets. Harlingen pulses with vibrant events that leave a lasting impression. FREE Festival
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ADVERTISEMENT TEXAS WOMAN’S UNIVERSITY JANE NELSON INSTITUTE for WOMEN'S LEADERSHIP Sue S. Bancroft Women's Leadership Hall Discover how Texas women changed history •Pioneering women •Women in politics •Texas women’s suffrage movement Come visit us and explore our interactive exhibits, historical documents and more. Bring your family, student group or friends. No cost. twu.edu/lead 940-898-4573 leadership@twu.edu Experience the rhythmic beats and lively celebrations of Riofest, a cultural extravaganza showcasing the vibrant traditions of Hispanic culture, art. and music. For the spirited athletes, the Harlingen Marathon offers a thrilling opportunity to test your endurance and explore our scenic city on foot. Outdoor enthusiasts will find their haven in Harlingen. The RGV Birding Festival is a must-attend event for birdwatchers, offering a chance to tick off your “Birding Life List’ as you spot a diverse array of avian species. Our parks and nature preserves beckon you to immerse yourself in the tranquil- ity of nature, offering hiking, biking, and picnicking amidst landscapes. Visit Harlingen and create unforget- table memories. Whether you’re drawn to our city’s attractions, seeking the excitement of our events, or longing for outdoor adventures. Harlingen offers something for everyone. Plan your visit today and experience the magic that waits in our charming city. VisitHarlingenTexas.com LAREDO Deep in the heart of South Texas, two countries, each with their own distinct cultures and history, meet along the banks of the Rio Grande River. And here in Laredo, they do more than just meet—they meld together to create an entirely unique expe- rience we call “Mex-Tex," and you’ll feel it everywhere in the city. An ideal escape for all ages, this charismatic city exists in a world unto itself; rich with natural beauty and steeped in history, it’s a place for rest, relaxation, and discovery unlike anywhere else. Discovered in 1755, Laredo tells its fascinating, centuries-long story through incredible cuisine, authentic cultural and historical experiences, one-of-a-kind festivals, and a wide variety of budget-friendly activities both indoors and out. And our welcoming people are always ready to greet you with a smile and boast about the place they’re proud to call home. We not only welcome curious visitors to our city, but we’re also happy to host your next sporting event or tournament as well as meetings and other business gatherings. Whether you’re here on business or pleasure, we want you to have an unforgettable experience. Walk with us through the famous “streets of Laredo" and experience a unique view of Texas. VisitLaredo.com ARKANSAS ARKANSAS Here in Arkansas, our wide-open spaces leave plenty of room to stretch your legs and get away from it all. Float down the Buffalo. America’s first national river, or visit Hot Springs, the nation’s oldest national park. Keep exploring at Arkansas’s 52 state parks, where you can dig for gems and keep what you find at Crater of Diamonds in Murfreesboro, stay in a luxurious lodge with stunning views at the state’s highest point. Mount Magazine State Park, and experience Ozark music, crafts, and culture at the Ozark Folk Center State Park in Mountain View. When you visit, come hungry. We’ve got exceptional food throughout the state, with James Beard award-win- ning classics like Jones Bar-B-Q diner in Marianna and Lassis Inn in Little Rock, as well as fine dining like The Preacher’s Son in Bentonville and Fayrays in El Dorado. When you get thirsty, you can also find craft brew- eries and distilleries, like Lost Forty Brewing in Little Rock, and Delta Dirt Distillery in Helena-West Helena. When you vacation in The Natural State, you’re sure to find unexpected beauty, adventure, and memories to last a lifetime. Where will your journey take you? Plan your getaway at our website. Arkansas.com 192 TEXAS MONTHLY
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FALL TRAVEL ADVERTISEMENT COLORADO THE BROADMOOR Magical, of course. Iconic, no ques- tion. But why do generations of guests return to The Broadmoor year after year? Well, that’s easy—the people. Timeless elegance, gracious service, and unplugging are the mantra here. While every season has its charm, fall is outstanding. The arid climate, iconic Aspens, and bound- less options for adventure await. Choose from the three all-inclusive Wilderness Experiences, golf on two championship courses, soar high above Seven Falls, fly Falcons, relax in the Forbes Five-Star Spa, ascend Pikes Peak at sunrise aboard The Broadmoor Manitou and Pikes Peak Cog Railway, or play pickleball in the clouds; these are just a few ways to spend your days. The Broadmoor’s passion for great food has created a range of award-win- ning restaurants and lounges that ensure our diners fresh and inspiring menus for every occasion. From fine dining to a quick bite, whatever the moment needs, something delicious awaits. Whether it’s your first time at the iconic Broadmoor Resort in Colorado Springs or your family has been coming for six genera- tions—if you’ve been here, you know, and if you haven’t, do yourself a favor and find out. Broadmoor.com SNOWMASS VILLAGE Step out of the beat and into the fresh mountain air of Snowmass Village, Colo- rado. Situated among breathtaking peaks and verdant valleys, just nine miles from Aspen, Snowmass puts nature right at your doorstep. More than 90 miles of impeccable hiking and biking trails inspire you to get out into the mountains, while the vast views and glorious summer weather invite you to slow down and enjoy each moment. Don’t miss the outdoor concert series, weekly rodeo, and Lost Forest adventure center complete with a speedy alpine coaster and challenging ropes course. With an abundance of vacation rental proper- ties nestled around a vibrant mountain village. Snowmass is an ideal place to bring your favorite people together for a quick visit or a season-long stay. Snowmass is sublimely accessible yet blissfully remote, just 15 minutes from Aspen/Pitkin County Airport, with direct flights from eight cities including Dallas/Fort Worth, Austin, and Hous- ton, and easy connections throughout the U.S. To plan your perfect getaway to Snowmass, visit our website. GoSnowmass.com One of Texas's Great Small Towns for Art 2023-2024 EXHIBIT SCHEDULE Orna Feinstein Fall 2023 Lorena Morales Winter 2023 Annie Uhr Spring 2024 Tiffany Heng-Hui Lee Kingsley Onyeiwu Fall 2024 194 TEXAS MONTHLY
WHERE HISTORY IS UNDENIABLY PRESENT. No other city makes a first impression like Santa Fe. The moment you arrive, adobe-style architecture captures your gaze. Each building crafted and shaped by the historic city that surrounds it. When you stroll through the streets, it’s clear how The City Different got its name. It’s just one of the things that makes The City Different, but there’s still so much waiting to be uncovered. UNCOVER YOUR DIFFERENT AT VISITSANTAFE.COM
FALL TRAVEL KENTUCKY KENTUCKY Known as the Horse Capital of the World and the epicenter of Bourbon Country, the Bluegrass State is also a land of immense natural beauty and wide-open spaces offering plenty of places to play. Sip centuries of tradition in the birthplace of bourbon and tour distilleries to learn how Kentucky’s signature spirit is made. Stroll through rolling horse farms, catch a race at the track, and take a trail ride through the forest. Visit epic family attractions, vibrant cities, and charming small towns. Explore woods, waters, tracks, and trails offering endless outdoor adventure. Or just find your own quiet spot, hidden waterfall, or stunning overlook to sit down and soak up the soothing sights and sounds of nature. Match these experiences with the perfect accommodations. Check into a luxury hotel. Camp under the stars in a Conestoga wagon. Escape into nature in your very own treehouse getaway. Book a B&B in the heart of Bourbon and Horse Country. With so much to see, do, and sa- vor. the Bluegrass State is the perfect place for your next road trip, week- end getaway, or family vacation. This is Kentucky—come see for yourself! Ke ntu cky To urism.com MISSISSIPPI MISSISSIPPI Throughout Mississippi, in virtually every comer of the state, you’ll find hundreds of historical markers commemorating Mississippi’s history—the people, places, and events that define our state and have had a lasting impact on our nation’s arts, culture, and history. Together, the Mississippi’s Blues, Freedom, Country Music, and Writers Trails provide a better understanding of our past and show great achievements that have come before to inspire future generations. Mississippi can rightly lay claim to the title “The Birthplace of America’s Music" due, largely, to the foundational role of our state’s legendary musicians in the creation of blues music. From its birth in the Mississippi Delta, Mississippi blues artists would go on to influence other musical genres, from country music to rock n’ roll and gospel. This story is told at more than 200 historical markers throughout the state, and for blues lovers, there’s nowhere on Earth quite like Mississip- pi. Here, you’ll find Robert Johnson’s legend- ary crossroads, the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center, GRAMMY Mu- seum® Mississippi—the only one outside of Los Angeles—and the hottest musicians en- tertaining blues fans from around the world. Wander the Mississippi Blues at our website. VisitMississippi.org/Blues THE HEART OF MEX-TEX CUISINE ----------- —L Laredo, Texas, isn’t just a city on the border of two countries. We live at the nexus of two distinct cultures fusing together to create something brand new. Where authentic Mexican dishes are not only served next to hearty American fare, they also come together to form a unique cuisine we like to call “Mex-Tex.” Learn more about this delicious melding of cultures at VisitLaredo.com. 6 LAREDO TEXAS I EST 175S | visitlaredo.com 1.800.361.3360
ADVERTISEMENT NEW MEXICO SANTA FE When you visit The City Different, you feel something different. Something brand new, yet hundreds of years old. You’ll also find fresh and diifferent—both in your surroundings and in yourself. Perhaps its the blue skies or the adobe architecture. Maybe its the vast art scene or colorful cuisine crafted meticulously on each and every plate. Or the unique mix of culture and tradition or simply the clarity of the stars at night. There are so many things that make The City Different, and so much more waiting to be uncovered. SantaFe.org WYOMING Wyoming, this autumn as you plan your Rocky Mountain getaway. Vi5itLaramie.0rg SHERIDAN COUNTY The summer of 2023 is poised to be a big one for Sheridan County. Wyoming, as we celebrate some major anniversa- ries! The legendary mountain hideaway known as Spear-O-Wigwam, beloved by Ernest Hemingway during the 1920s, turns 100 years old. Don King Days, an annual celebration of Western history and heritage that takes place at the Big Horn Equestrian Center (the epicenter of polo in the western U.S.), celebrates 35 years over Labor Day Weekend. The Bighorn Wild and Scenic Trail Run, an iconic stop on the trail running circuit, turns 30. Trail End State Historic Site will be 110. Not to be outdone, the Historic Sheridan Inn, where Buffalo Bill Cody auditioned his Wild West Show, turns 130 years young, and has never looked better! Of course, there are plenty of other events and attractions to look forward to this year, like the 93rd edition of our beloved Sheridan WYO Rodeo! For info on all of our special events, plus itineraries, travel guides, and much more, visit our website. SheridanWyoming.org For free information from our travel partners, scan here! LARAMIE In the valley east of southeast Wyoming’s Snowy Range lies Laramie, a spirited offbeat college town with an abundance of outdoor recreation. Laramie offers a unique blend of outdoor adventure and vibrant culture, all deeply rooted in a historic railroad past. Fall calls a little earlier in the season in Laramie at 7,220 feet, with color as soon as late September. Golden Wyoming cottonwoods in the valley make way for aspens up in the crisp mountain air. Wind your way through enchanting forest trails and alpine lakes, surrounded by a kalei- doscope of golds, fiery reds, and vibrant oranges tucked between the trees. After exploring fall in the mountains, embrace Laramie’s rich history on a stroll through the historic downtown. Discov- er the vibrant arts scene, with delightful murals interspersed between the art galleries. Then immerse yourself in the Old West spirit with a visit to the Wyoming Territorial Prison State Historic Site, the only prison to ever hold Butch Cassidy. Whether you seek tranquility in na- ture or a taste of the Wild West, Lara- mie is the place to be this fall. Come and experience the magic of Laramie, TEXAS MONTHLY 197
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Just like our money, we want our bodies and minds to go the distance when we hit retirement. While there’s no guarantee that we ll be physically active oldsters with sharp minds, there’s many, relatively easy steps we can take that tip the odds in our favor and make the most of what we have. Living as healthily as possible for as long as possible needs focus and care, like managing finances to make sure they’re going to stretch to cover your needs in the years to come. Luckily, scientists have identified a number of ways that serve people’s health well across the spectrum of ages. Many are simple to implement, and even life-threatening conditions like diabetes can be manageable, especially when diagnosed early. That’s good news because taking proactive self-care steps ramp up in importance as we approach and enter the “foothills of old age,” as singer Leonard Cohen describes the years when we re encountering health issues, achy joints and bodies that can’t handle the activities we once enjoyed. Good health and enhanced longevity are never guaranteed no matter what we do, but we stand a better chance of aging well if we pay attention to recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, the American Diabetes Association, and the American Heart Association, among other health organizations committed to helping people find their best health through proactive screening and medical care. Check-ups and screening. Ge: -=gul?' mecica checkups and recommended bleed tests. Your doctor or medical clinic knows the be?: tests and recommendations for conditions such as ’T alood WBwure gnd ад t-q£ hackbbod suga that car take years off your ife. High blood pressure П _.r .'id..- т.н X and K'-iv . rfhearttfeease. The good news is that its usua’ly centre’fed w*th medication. diet, and exercise. - I. । high cholesterol i. . r .'I'.r । u. .i I .. :l outcomes, and it can be managed. /- nnual physlca s n/prcally include screening far cardiovascular "isle factors. ----: diabetes and prediabetes _ . blood sugar test, done at least every three years, helps in 'ts management. Diabetes car come or silently arc cam age boT’v systems mcud’ng the nervous system, blood vessels and feet. But many issues are prevented or delayed when the disease is managed with ifesty’e and medical ‘nte’ventons. Current recommendations point to screening =s early as at age 35. ue to 70. especial’y for people w~o are overwe:ght or obese. ’ I cervical cancer a ery three to Tve r-j: re women between Tic sges of 30 and breast exams and mammograms mnee: -л • i r.ir«nded starting a c^r./ar ag?4C. colorectal *v«ryor.e starting at age SC up m an a 73. unless ycu have a • • i •• i ' ' I " i. ' ' I I Ini lib Carlsbad Chamber CarlsbadChamber.com 575-887-6516 200 TEXAS MONTHLY
In 2014, the City of Carlsbad, New Mexico, proudly joined the WHO Age Friendly Cities and Communities Network. Carlsbad, the first New Mexico community to join, was also the first community in the state to receive designation as an age friendly community in 2017. LET YOUR DESTINATION В ECOM ЕЖЯЮ11 _ I ft; 1ЖЛ 'Ж- IRWllREM E N'WLO N G ТЙЕ’BANKS OF THE PECOS Nestled along the banks of the Pecos River, Carlsbad offers a picturesque place for those looking to retire. Carlsbad offers over 300 days of sunshine each year with an average temperature of 78 degrees over the course of the year. Whether you are the outdoor adventurer, or more focused on arts and culture, Carlsbad has both. We are quickly becoming an outdoor adventure community with opportunities for hiking, biking, walking, water sports and so much more. Life in Carlsbad can be laid back, or very active depending on your retirement goals. Your destination for retirement awaits you in Carlsbad. OASIS IN THE DESERT From other worldly topography of the famous Carlsbad Caverns National Park to the awe-inspiring Sitting Bull Falls, with trails that wind through ancient landscapes or the majestic Guadalupe Mountain National Park, there is something for everyone. PEARL OF THE PECOS Stroll through the treelined streets of the MainStreet/Arts and Culture District and you will find the Carlsbad Museum and Art center. This unique museum illustrates the wonder of living in Southeastern, New Mexico. Continuing on your journey you will come across the Artist Gallery, featuring the many talents of our local artists, sculptors and more (are your masterpieces next on display?). End your evening dining at the tranquil Trinity hotel and winery which has been converted from a 19th century bank. Let your imagination swirl as you taste local wine and dine on beautifully crafted cuisine. Learn More at carlsbadchamber.com or agefriendlycarlsbadnm.com 1-866-865-6575. retirement@carlsbadchamber.com Paid for in part by Carlsbad Lodgers' Tax
; - - prostate p v• т=ле ra n? - am have pros arc ">it fr • re -. 55 to 70. After TD^ihe-benefit ma rxj i ~’ i therte . foUI -•. '•‘.-nwll commend we bier you’re a candidate for screening at oui age. Skin checks i i . [ eye and vision I I i - T - ' . -i i - I/ 'i r ‘ . -ii . i.i I; VXI hve an Issue or p;edh.p<: s’ticn tbt needs i-.ore frequent monitoring. 3 auco- id, it acu ar degeneratioi , and cate; acts are some. f the . nndMons that tend to develop with age and n ay cause probler is, including b indne x, if untreated. hearing i . I I has >=en associated wit i denier tia. Hearing kss also impacts connection with those arcund us. Have ?r ear. nose, and to'oat dc-to* т sudio .gist скес<-your ИеэЧгд regularly and tak- step^ to correct free;Tnq Ioll wrtli 1 earirp aids anc other devices. dental exams i i I for other bodily systems as well, A A J on tai disease has beer Irked wltl- cardlov-iCjl.T disease, possiby because oftbe chronic inFammation associated with poor oral health. Frequency of cletnl'.gs =r<J <=yams should be talcred to a- irdMducl’s der tai health—a dentist nay recommend more cleanings and exams for a person with periodontal disease, whereas a Health' mourn might need only an annual visit. immunization! =age After 65, ar annual flu shot and the pneumonia veccine are recommended. Those 50 and up should consider a shingles vaccine, detenus vaccines need a booster every 10 years, and your docto- may recommend immunization For whocp’ng cough end diphtheria st a similar frequency. cognitive Functioning. and sleep, just for starters. VYb'le the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention reccmmenc 150 minutes of exercise a week, walking for as fttle as 10 minutes a day car enhance well-berg and longevity, according to JAMA Maintain a healthy weight, г . _:d or obese are at greater risk tor myriad health issues, inducing diabetes, heart attack, and cancer. Dropping as l?ttle as fve □ercent of weight. however, can reduce risk of type diabetes and heart disease, wHIe -osing eve- more has been shown to reduce nsk of obesity-linked cancer. Watch your diet plants, including bears, vegetables, and fruits. Hydration is important too. The Meditemanean diet—plant-forward meals with ean protein, mcnoursaturetec Fats like o’r/e oil instead o-butter and lard, and 'ots of legumes and produce—is ar oft-recor—lercec dietary model that studies have shown to be associated with longevity and disease reduction. Try to incorporate even small changes based or its guidelines anc cut out or reduce cor. sumption of junk food like chips, soda, s jgary U eats, an d fast toon. Prioritize and nurture sleep a an sential согг.;?''Пег11 af - '.eallr.y li e; yle at any acje.As we grow olc.ei. changes In out circadian rhythms, meefcs-ИйПК, art d health conditions such as depression, at tluitis. and heart disease may cause us to sleep lex or encounter imomnia, according to toe Sleep T 11 -f i .'fit i ।-i ' ' -IviJ alva i-h i 1 n sleep e person needs, aiming "s.< sever; to eight Sours : t shureye every rght i; a good place to start Chambers Creek A Caldwell Community ChambersCreekTx.com 936-585-8025 202 TEXAS MONTHLY
Chambers Creek is all about living, and loving, your 55+ best life! Situated in the rolling green hills just north of Houston, our like-no-other active adult community offers extraordinary amenities that deliver enriched, resort-style living. And built-in neighbors and friends enhance everyday fun. Plan a tour and start enjoying your someday, today. CHAMBERS CREEK • Summit Amenity Center • Shoreline Park and Marina • Lehman Park Golf Course • Resort-Style Pool • Fitness Center • 20+ Mlles of Trails • Pickleball and Tennis • Recreational Lakes chamberscreektx.com | 14940 Chambers Creek Drive, Willis TX 77318 | 936-585-8025 КЗ? FAhPiYKffet COMMUNITIES
ADULT LUXURY APARTMENT LIVING Д n V P R T I 4 F M R N T Because You Deserve The Best alderscrosscreek.com (346) 746-7969 Alders Cross Creek is the new active adult community serving Fulshear and Katy, Texas, that redefines the 62+ living experience. Fill your days with the things you love to do...having friends over for cocktails and dinner, enjoying an invigorating workout in the fitness center, trying your hand at abstract painting, or enjoying the solitude of curling up with a good novel. Because now you can. Living at Alders Cross Creek means you have more time for leisure, more time to engage with friends, or escape to your home, your private retreat. With beautifully appointed interiors and resort-inspired amenities, Alders Cross Creek is everything you’ve wanted in a home and in a community. Cut back or eliminate alcohol Maintain connection. maintalrfng or Increasing social Viteracttor js you retire. Refationsh'ps with tfencs tre fam ily have seen shewn tc a key facte' 'r longevity i- Blue Zones—peaces around the world where people enjoy long, healthy lives. Studies ^ave l:nhed soc'al isolation to a greater ’’ncidence of dementia and oti-er dem'mentcl heath conditions. Human connection is hey. whether in pe’sor or via the phone or video calls, and tec" solutions afoot—for example, me New vo'< State Office for the Aging is working with a robot- and tab et-baseo solution to enhance seniors’ social netwc-cs. •< Cushman Wakefield CushmanWakefield.com 204 TEXAS MONTHLY
ADVERTISEMENT HOME TO YOUR 55+BEST LIFE Step into Chambers Creek and expe- rience a vibrant, active adult community built just for you. Here, an exciting mix of amenities brings you together with friends, and family too. Lace up on more than 20 miles of trails. Get in the swing at Lehman Park where you’ll find a 9-hole golf course, 18-hole putting course, fishing lakes, and an onsite vineyard. Take fun to the peak at The Summit with a resort-style pool, pickleball, bocce ball, horseshoes, and a fitness club. Or cruise to Shoreline Park featuring a private marina with access to Lake Conroe, one of Texas’s largest lakes. It’s all right outside your new front door in Willis. With quality homes by five premier builders, there is real choice when it comes to finding or building your dream home. Plan a tour today and discover Cham- bers Creek, home to your 55+ best life. ChambersCreekTX.com 936-585-8025 CHAMBERS CREEK HBCALDWELL COMMUNITIES VISIT CARLSBAD After you explore the subterranean wonderland of the Carlsbad Caverns National Park, your adventure is only halfway done. More adventure awaits at the Lake Carlsbad Recreation Area, located in the heart of Carlsbad. New Mexico. Enjoy boating, waterskiing, and fishing along the sidewalk draped shores of the Pecos River. You’ll find plenty of picnic areas, parks, golf courses, pickleball, and tennis courts as you meander along the almost five miles of paved walkway. You and the kids will enjoy using our splash pad. as well as the basketball, racquetball, and beach volleyball courts. The Lake Carlsbad Recreation Area is also home to the Carlsbad Water Park— enjoy thrilling slides and casual pools to beat the summer heat. For more information, contact the Chamber of Commerce at 575-887-6516 or visit our website. Carlsbad is your next destination for outdoor fun CarlsbadChamber.com 575-887-6516 WINFREY ESTATES NOW BUILDING IN TOMBALL, TX Welcome to Winfrey Estates, an all-new 55+ active adult community currently under construction in Tomball. TX. Nestled amidst picturesque landscapes and a vibrant neighborhood, this exceptional devel- opment promises an unparalleled living experience for discerning homeowners. Designed with the specific needs and desires of active adults in mind, Win- frey Estates offers a wealth of amenities and recreational facilities. Residents will enjoy access to a resident-only swim- ming pool, fitness center, pickleball, and community gathering spaces, fostering a lively and engaging social atmosphere. With a focus on comfort and luxury, the thoughtfully designed homes in Winfrey Es- tates boast modem architecture, energy-ef- ficient features, and high-quality finishes. Whether you’re looking to downsize or seeking an enriching lifestyle in retirement, this community offers an ideal blend of serenity, convenience, and companionship. Embrace a life of leisure and fulfillment at Winfrey Estates, where every day offers a new opportunity for relaxation and enjoyment. Discover your perfect haven in this thriving 55+ active adult community. ROC-Homes.com/winfrey-estates-tomball 346-762-1864 HOMES TEXAS MONTHLY 205
THE TEXANIST AUSTIN A creative community that offers free writing programs. For more information on programs, events, and volunteering, please visit austinbatcave.org Get involved. Donate today! TexasMonthly VOLUME SI. ISSUE 9 texas monthly (usps 552-650) (issn 0148-7736) is published monthly by Toxas Monthly LLC Principal office-. 816 Congress Avenue, Suite 1700; Austin, Texas 78701. Copyright © 2023 by Texas Monthly LLC. АП Rights Reserved. Printed in the USA Periodicals Postage Paid at Austin. Texas, and at additional mailing offices. This magazine or its trademarks may not be reproduced in whole or in part in any form or by any means electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system now known or hereafter invented without written permission from the Publisher. The foUowing is a partial list of trademarks and/ or service marks of texas monthly or its affiliates including registered marks as indicated: texas monthly'', behind the LINES". THE HOAR OP THE CROWD’'. PATS ИСК". THE HORSE’S MOUTH”. MADE IN TEXAS’. НЕЮТГЕЯ’. THE TEXANIST . TNBDQ'. TM HST’. For subscription inquiries: Write to TEXAS MONTHLY. Sub- scription Service Center, P.O. Box 37206, Boone, Iowa 50037-0206,- Web site: texasmonthly.com. Please allow six weeks for change of address or new orders. The one year (12 issues) domestic print only subscription price is S25. The one year (12 issues) Print and Digital subscription is $45. The one year digital only subscription is $30. Back is- sues: please visit our website for current pricing. Bulk rates on request. Subscribers: If the Postal Service alerts us that your magazine is undeliverable, we have no further obliga- tion unless we receive a corrected address within one year. Address this and all other correspondence to texas monthly, P.O. Box 1569. Austin. Texas 78767-1569. The Publisher as- sumes no responsibility for care and return of unsolicited materials. Return postage must accompany material if it is to be returned In no event shall such material subject this magazine to any claim for holding fees or similar charges. Occasionally we make our subscriber list available to care- fully screened companies that offer products and services that we believe would interest our readers If you do not want to receive these offers and/or information, please advise us at P.O. Box 1569. Austin. Texas 78767- POSTMAS- TER: Send all UAA io CFS. (See DMM 507.1.5.2); NON- POSTAL AND MILITARY FACILITIES: P.O. Box 37206, Boone, Iowa 50037-0206. continued from page 208 asevenyour average Aggie knows, are members of the animal kingdom too,sothejudges will allowit. Where such acclaimed creatures end up depends on the school and, in many cases, on the decade of their final departure. The cremains of each Baylor bear are placed in a chest that was handcrafted out of wood sourced from the universi- ty’s on-campus bear habitat and stored in the school’s gold-domed Pat Neff Hall. At Houston Christian one can head over to the grounds of the basketball gym and gaze at the markers standing atop the graves of two early huskies. (More recently the school has retired its mascots into the care of individuals who have made a connection with the animals. When the time comes, the dogs are presumably dealt with in a respectful manner.) Likewise, SMU has laid to rest a number of Perunas at various loca- tions around campus. Texas A&M inters its deceased Reveilles in a Reveille-exclusive cemetery located at the north end of Kyle Field that features a special scoreboard so the former first ladies can keep up with the action on game days. U of H’s Shastas seem to move on much as they live, which is to say somewhat stealthily; the cats that came before Shasta VII aren’t memorialized in any manner, though the school in- forms the Texanist that some sort of tribute at the alumni center is under consideration. Each of West Texas A&M’s bison is memorialized at the south end of Bain-Schaeffer Buffalo Stadium, though the first one, which was sold to the school in 1922 by the legend- ary rancher and noted bison pres- ervationist Charles Goodnight and his wife, Mary Ann, was taxidermied and eventually donated to the nearby Panhandle-Plains Historical Mu- seum. As for Tech’s Masked Riders, the Texanist was relieved to learn that they’re not stuffed and put on display. After the big dismount, they go the way of the rest of us, though TEXAS A&M INTERS ITS DECEASED REVEILLES IN A CEMETERY THAT FEATURES A SPECIAL SCORE- BOARD SO THE FORMER FIRST LADIES CAN KEEP UP WITH THE ACTION ON GAME DAYS. presumably an obituary will note their sendees to the school. But to get to the heart of your question, Ms. Thompson, what awaits UT-Austin’s beloved mascot after he has shuffled off his mortal coil? Though the Texanist knew of a permanent exhibit dedicated to Bevos past in the bowels of Darrell К Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium, he didn’t know where any of their literal bodies wereburiedorwhether Be vo XV would join them when his time comes. Luckily, the Texanist was able to get ahold of Ricky Brennes, theexecutivedirectorofUT-Austin’s Silver Spurs Alumni Association and as close to a Bevo expert as there is. Brennes informed the Texanist that in recent decades Bevos have been privately owned and that decisions related to their afterlives have been left to the indirtdual owners. Though Brennes could not ac- count for the ultimate destiny of each of Bevo XV’s predecessors, he was able to provide details on some of them. A few of the earliest Bevos, he said, were sourced from Fort Griffin, in Albany, just outside of Abilene, the site of the state’s official Longhorn herd, and were returned there af- ter their terms of sendee. Closer to home, the horns of Bevo VII hang in the school’s football complex, and Bevo IX’s shoulder mount adorns the office of the athletic director. The shoulder moun ts of Bevos X, XI, and 206 TEXAS MONTHLY
XII are currently in private hands, though Brennes was not at liberty to reveal whose hands, specifically. Interestingly, the Longhorn who started it all, Bevo I (the school’s first mascot was a dog named Pig), made a single official appearance, at the 1916 Thanksgiving Day game with Texas A& M, and was, despi te a sol id 21-7 Longhorns’ victory, eventual- ly, slaughtered, barbecued, and de- voured. That seems like a cruel way to treat a steer who wanted nothing more than to bring smiles to the faces of thousands of football fans. But at least he made for good eatin’. Or did he? The Texanist’s colleague Daniel Vaughn, the magazine’s bar- becue editor, says that Longhorn “doesn’t usually have great mar- bling, so the brisket would be dry and stringy. Sausage would be about the only way to make a dead Bevo toler- able to eat.” The Texanist hopes it never comes to that. Better that we feast on the ground-up remains of all those nuisance whitetail deer or that endless supply of feral hogs wreaking havoc across the state. As for Bevo XV, the Texanist can- not foretell the future with complete assurance, but given that the past is often prologue, he’s comfortable in making a prediction. Bevo XV’s im- mediate forebears, Bevo XIII (the school’s winningest and longest- serving mascot) and Bevo XIV were raised on a ranch in Liberty Hill, just northwest of Austin, by John T. Baker and his wife, Betty, and lived out their postretirement days there. Today, the shoulder mounts and hides now hang in Baker’s home, and some- day, when Bevo XV’s time on earth is done, his will presumably join those of his brethren. That would be a fit- ting and proper end for a noble beast who will hopefully bring as muchjoy to your son, Ms. Thompson, as Bevo XII andXI11 provided the Texanist lo those many seasons ago. And, fingers crossed, many more victories. Thanks for the letter, and Hook ’em, Horns! WHATEVER JUST DON'T TEXT AND '/I STOPTEXTSSTOPWRECKS.ORG НУ NHTSA TEXAS MONTHLY 207
TheTexanist q: Last fall,my family attended a football game at UT-Austin, where my son will enroll as a Longhorn this fall.Late in the fourth quarter,while roasting in the Texas sun,I noticed the paddock on the field and wondered,“What happens when that beloved Bevodies?” MEI LISA THOMPSON, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA д, Many, many decades ago, the Texanist was lucky to spend a few of the happi- est years of his life at the U Diversi- ty of Texas at Austin. So he knows ofwhat he speaks on matters per- tainingto the state’s flagship insti- tution of higher education—and of collegiate-style merrymaking. Things were very different during those long-gone days of yore; there was no internet, tele- phones were hardwired to each other like two cans and a length of string, and decent sushi couldn’t be found anywhere in the Capi- tal City. But students didn’t eat sushi, beer cost about a buck, and the drinking age was nineteen, so we had that going for us. Plus, it was much easier to get into UT in that bygone era. Were the Texanist to graduate today from dear old Temple High School (Go Wild- cats!) with the same GPA that he had back then, there’s no telling the TEXANIST is senior editor David Courtney. Send him your questions at texanist @texasmonthly.com and be sure to tell him where you’re from. where he might end up for his ad- vanced lessons. Perhaps he’d be an Aggie! The Texanist jests, of course. Still, despite all the changes that have ensued over the years, some things have remained very much the same, such as the UT commu- nity’s rabid support for its teams. This sort of fervent allegiance, which can be found at any Texas college worth its salt, happens to be the key ingredient in the phe- nomenon known to social scien- tists as school spirit, a mysterious force that binds together folks from very disparate backgrounds. But while it’s true that college teams aregenerallybelovedbystu- dents, faculty, and alumni, it’s the living, breathing beasts serving as the physical embodiments of said school spirit who occupy apartic- ularly special place in the hearts of fans. Just think about the many cherished live mascots that can be found in Texas. In addition to UT’s Bevo XV, a Longhorn steer, there’s Baylor University’s Judge Indy and Judge Belle, a pair of Ameri- can black bear cubs who debuted in the job this summer; Houston Christian University’s Wakiza III, a Siberian husky; Southern Methodist University’s Peruna IX, who, despite the team’s name, is a black Shetland pony, not a mus- tang; Texas A&M’s Reveille X, an American rough collie, a.k.a. the “first lady of Aggieland”; the Uni- versity of Houston’s Shasta VII, a cougar; and West Texas A&M’s confusingly named Thunder and Thunder,bothofwhom are Ameri- can bison. In Lubbockonecan also encounter Texas Tech’s Masked Rider, who, mounted atop a lively jet-black quarter horse, is not a typical live-animal mascot. But hu- manbeings, continued on page гое 208 TEXAS MONTHLY ILLUSTRATION BY ZOHAR LAZAR
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