Main Page  »  Archive  »  Area  »  Terlingua
View Article  Terlingua Ranch annual members meeting marked by spirited discussion of hot issues and new directors elected, despite lawsuit

Attendance was notably lower than at some other annual meetings, and the number of ballots cast for new directors decreased from last year’s elections, perhaps more fallout from a lawsuit that has hobbled the association for a year and half. The lawsuit, instigiated by a collection of property owners against others on the board at the time the legal petition was filed, stems from the core allegation that... by Marlys Hersey    more »
View Article  An open letter to the community from the new Pres. & CEO of Lajitas Resort
In the coming months you will see many changes at Lajitas, the first of which will be making the resort a public resort not only for the benefit of everyone in Texas, but also everyone in the community.   more »
View Article  Honkin' huge batch of letters to the editor (thank you!)
I thought about your request for improvements to the Gazette [“On celebrating 4 years of publication,” October 2007] and could think of nothing. It seemed as if nothing should be changed…and then suddenly   more »
View Article  Lajitas Resort Saga Continues: new $18 Million Bid Reported.
Lawyers for the bankrupt Lajitas Resort have postponed a bankruptcy court hearing until November 16. by John Waters    more »
View Article  On Eve of Possible Sale of Christmas Mountains, Group Asks for Delay
WHERE: South steps of Texas Capitol, Austin, Texas WHEN: Monday, November 5, Noon VISUALS: Large color photos of the Christmas Mountains. Also, the delivery of thousands of petition signatures to Gov. Perry's office.   more »
View Article  Christmas Mountains auction cancelled - again
The land sale had proceeded with scant notice outside the Big Bend until mid-September when the Austin American-Statesman and the Houston Chronicle reported that the original donors on the land, the Mellon Foundation and the Conservation Fund, had communicated to the GLO their opposition of the sale. by John Waters    more »
View Article  Point: State’s fire sale threatens Christmas Mountains gift
Selling our Christmas Mountains (and reneging on Texas’ promise to the Mellon Foundation) is scandalous, something akin to chiseling the Alamo or the San Jacinto Monument for profit. Essentially, Patterson has told Texas hunters and bird-watchers and heritage lovers to buzz off. If he goes through with the brazen act, using legal loopholes as his fig leaf, he will forever be remembered in the annals of land management as an untrustworthy double dealer. by Douglas Brinkley    more »
View Article  Counterpoint: Save the Christmas Mountains
Brinkley should re-read his Reagan Diaries. More than any other American, Reagan understood that government is not the solution to the problem – in many cases, it is the problem. The Christmas Mountains are no exception. The Land Office has neither the authority nor the funding to restore the land to its natural state. by Jerry Patterson    more »
View Article  Poindexter rekindles Big Bend Ranch State Park bid with Lajitas land swap at core; Brewster County officials irate

During a regularly scheduled meeting of the Big Bend Ranch Advisory Committee in Lajitas on August 7, Poindexter outlined his proposal whereby he would buy land from Lajitas Resort in Brewster County that may be of interest to Texas Parks and Wildlife. That land would be appraised, then offered as a swap to TPWD in exchange for land of equal value for part of BBRSP land near Cienega Creek that adjoins Poindexter’s Cibolo Creek Ranch in Presidio County. by John Waters    more »
View Article  How the West Was One: Yoga Blossoms in the Big Bend
When most people think of yoga, they think of people twisting their bodies like pretzels, and the way yoga has been adopted in the West definitely focuses on the physical postures, or asanas, that make up much of the practice. Actually, these asanas, or exercises, are only one of the eight limbs of yoga as set down by the Indian sage Patanjali in the Yoga Sutras, over 2,000 years ago. by Ceil Drucker    more »
View Article  A good day to be ovulating (if there is such a thing)

Confrontation is not our style, nor is it the right thing to do, but neither is poaching cactus from the desert. I’d been ovulating for 2 days and I would like to believe natural instincts were kicking in. Just like a mama bear protecting her young, I had a maternal feeling to protect what I love – in this case, the desert. Off we went chasing the poachers down the road. by Kym Flippo    more »
View Article  Spoke Lives! A mini Geography of Terlingua

On the evening of April 6, Terlingua resident Jim Carrico returned home around 10:30 pm, and had just barely opened his front door a few inches when their family cat, Spoke, bolted out into the desert. “He was wound up tighter than a tick, and out he went,” said Jim. Out he went indeed.... by John Waters    more »
View Article  South County recycling program stays on track despite some growing pains

“It’s the true believers who want to do this,” says Mindy Hamlett, one of the handful of volunteers who make recycling work for the Big Bend’s residents and visitors. “We want to see recycling work in this area, but sometimes when you show up on a Saturday to make sure everything is sorted properly for delivery to the recycling center in the National Park and you discover that people have just left all their garbage in bags by our trailer, well, you’d like to strangle somebody.” by Andy Byrnes    more »
View Article  Where has the music gone?

When I moved to South County to make my fortune with the Roadhouse, one of the major plans was to provide local music on as regular of basis as I could. From previous visits I knew this resource was available. What I didn’t realize and was thrilled to discover was that the music scene “back then” was as much a part of our community as the tortured landscape and muddy brown river. Music was everywhere, running the scale from the phenomenal, to the awful, to the bizarre. It was in the bars, on the porches, around campfires and liable to strike up anywhere. by Don McDowell    more »
View Article  Cheering Up Charlie

¡Vive La Yucca! Yucca Nation: part 2. His Yuccaness, Tommy Moore, at “Yucca Nation Day” in the Terlingua Ghost Town, April 1. In support of Terlinguan Charlie Fulcher, currently in Houston undergoing medical treatment, friends gathered, dressed as yuccas, for a group portrait to be sent to Charlie, self-ordained minister of the Yucca Church born in Terlingua in the 1980’s. by Crystal Allbright    more »
View Article  May is the new August...?

We expect intense thunder and lightning and monsoon rains in July, August, and September. But May? by Marlys Hersey    more »
View Article  Terlingua Writing Students go to State UIL competition

Two 11th graders, Helena Stark and Lydia Eby, became silver medalists in their respective disciplines and tenth-grader Blake Trester became eligible for state scholarship money by virtue of his performance. by Andy Byrnes    more »
View Article  Terlingua's Menagerie Press: a Different Breed of Printing

Since November, Stedman has renovated the rectory transforming it into a stunningly beautiful workshop, conducive to producing the art of letterpress printing. Just as brewing in the United States has seen a demise and renaissance, so has letterpress printing and Stedman is proud to bring artisanal printing to the Terlingua Ghost town. by John Waters    more »
View Article  Herd of “Terlingua Turtles” runs half marathon

The women’s efforts evolved from those humble beginnings, however, and they were soon a familiar sight, running in groups along Routes 118 and 170 and in the national park itself. Marcy, Pam and Martha were joined by Kassi Williams, Carin Taylor and Jennifer Peña, who would eventually participate in the Austin race, and Dede Granado, Bobbie Jones, Ellen Quigg, Debbie Willoford, Nicole Killingsworth and Noemi Aviles, who would run their race in the park in support of their fellow ‘Turtles.' by Andy Byrnes    more »