Pullups

Hang from the bar and let all your muscles relax.  Feel the stretch.  Then pull your shoulders back and down.  Engage your abs.  Fire the muscles in your arms and back, pulling yourself upward until your chin is even with the bar.  Then slowly lower your body back down to the starting position.  Repeat.  I can remember how it feels.  Satisfying.  We did them in high school.  We did a lot of them in Army training.  I try it today.  I can hang from a bar.  I still have the grip strength.  Pull the shoulders back and down.  I can do that.  Engage the abs.  Seriously?  That’s as far as it goes.  Fire the muscles in my arms and back.  Nothing happens against that much body weight.  The satisfying part is nowhere to be found.

Wouldn’t it be cool to be able to do pullups again?

Agua

When we were kids, back when the only thing in car radiators was water, we would see barrels along the side of mountain roads; water to put in the radiator when your car overheated going up the hill.

In current times, in South Texas where there are no hills, there are blue water barrels along the side of the highway.  These are not for radiators.

These are to try to help the undocumented people, who have made it this far, stay alive out in the brutal hot ranchlands.  The people may be breaking our rules, but they are still people that live and breathe and dream, until they can’t anymore.  Human rights groups put these barrels out.  Ranchers put them out so they will find fewer dead bodies on their remote properties.  That’s how it is here.  The better we get at our highway checkpoints at apprehending migrants, the more the migrants are pushed to higher risk routes, and the body count escalates.  Unintended consequences of our efforts to control a situation that defies control.  It’s not just here.  There is a global surge of human migration.

Quote of the day:

“Don’t tell my mother I’m a member of Congress. She thinks I’m a prostitute.”

Pat Schroeder.  Congressperson from Colorado.  (She didn’t say it today, I just learned of it todayish.)

It happened

After our 90th day of triple digits this year, the summer weather broke.  (The previous record for triple digit temperatures was 62 days.  Could there be something going on here?)  For the first time in four months, a cold front made it all the way down to South Texas.  In the summer, the weather here just stays the same every day, only changing by a few degrees one way or the other.

We hit our high of 100 earlier in the day, then the front hit, knocking 20 degrees off the thermometer and dousing us with rain while the wind rearranged our deck furniture and yard ornaments.  Our highs for the next week are projected to be in the 70s and 80s, not even breaking 90 again until next Wednesday.  Certainly, a change in the weather.  By winter we’ll have fronts rolling through every week.

El Torero Church

I chronicled the decline and demise of the historic little church out in the ranchlands.  Over a period of years, it went from this

To this

…to this.

It couldn’t be saved.

This little church used to be important.  It was built about 1920 out in sparsely populated ranch country, near the small town of San Luisto that no longer exists.  Until it was built, the closest church was ten miles away, in a time that much of the travel out there in the ranchlands was still by horse and buggy.

This last weekend Judy and I went on a driveabout on Highway 1017 planning to stop and see if there was anything left of the remains and found this.

A shiny new, almost completed, replacement in the style of the one they couldn’t save!

What a nice surprise.  They probably don’t really need a tiny little church like this out here now, but it was important enough to them to keep the history alive.