jeebus in texas!!!

Why do they want to screw up such a good thing. The Munson Wine Trail is already so crowded on weekends that rounders cain't hardly tie up their hosses in front of the wine saloons so they just hitch them to cacti and the horses sometimes jolt when the pony express riders whoosh through and then the Seguaros get pulled over. It's an environmental disaster waiting to happen, and encouraging pioneers to swing their covered wagons through Texas on their way to Oregon will only add to it.

-Eden (soon some tourist agency will open a wine bar in the Donner Pass and answer the question "what wine goes with ____?")
 
originally posted by Lou Kessler:
ReallyI guess my prejudice is showing but Jeebus in Texas seems like an oxymoron.

Why?

They don't exactly have a reputation for not drinking down there. Do they?
 
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Lou Kessler:
ReallyI guess my prejudice is showing but Jeebus in Texas seems like an oxymoron.

Why?

They don't exactly have a reputation for not drinking down there. Do they?
Again my prejudice is showing, the only part of Texas that is habitable IMHO is the area around Austin.
 
originally posted by Lou Kessler:
Again my prejudice is showing, the only part of Texas that is habitable IMHO is the area around Austin.

Oh yes. And even in Austin I was constantly on the lookout for Guns and Cowboys.

But what does that have to do with them not being able to have a Jeebus?
 
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Lou Kessler:
Again my prejudice is showing, the only part of Texas that is habitable IMHO is the area around Austin.

Oh yes. And even in Austin I was constantly on the lookout for Guns and Cowboys.

But what does that have to do with them not being able to have a Jeebus?

i think if we brought our own wine we could shoot our food!.
 
originally posted by Lou Kessler:
Again my prejudice is showing, the only part of Texas that is habitable IMHO is the area around Austin.

Yaniger just moved to Austin. There goes the neighborhood...
 
originally posted by Lou Kessler: Sorry the only part of Texas that is habitable IMHO is the area around Austin.

Lou, People who live in Houston never want to leave...I assure you of this fact.

. . . . . . Pete
 
originally posted by Larry Stein: Yaniger just moved to Austin.

Larry, I hadn't heard about this.

Please provide me whatever details you can. New professional endeavors? Is his email address the same? Etc., etc.

. . . . . Pete
 
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
originally posted by Lou Kessler: Sorry the only part of Texas that is habitable IMHO is the area around Austin.

Lou, People who live in Houston never want to leave...I assure you of this fact.

. . . . . . Pete
That's simply because it's too hot to muster up the strength to leave.
 
originally posted by Cory Cartwright:
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
originally posted by Lou Kessler: Sorry the only part of Texas that is habitable IMHO is the area around Austin.

Lou, People who live in Houston never want to leave...I assure you of this fact.

. . . . . . Pete
That's simply because it's too hot to muster up the strength to leave.

Cory, You're thinking of Dallas...not Houston and not Austin (and not Ft Worth).

. . . . . Pete
 
originally posted by scottreiner:
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Lou Kessler:
Again my prejudice is showing, the only part of Texas that is habitable IMHO is the area around Austin.

Oh yes. And even in Austin I was constantly on the lookout for Guns and Cowboys.

But what does that have to do with them not being able to have a Jeebus?

i think if we brought our own wine we could shoot our food!.
Even the vultures will not to eat the road kill in Texas. I forgot all about Yaniger moving to Austin. I wonder if anyone has told Yaniger that there is so much protein in the drinking water in Texas that it doesn't qualify as being called vegetarian approved?
 
Wow. He can now make pizza just by setting dough outside his front door!

R, You're thinking of Dallas, not Austin and not Houston (and not Ft Worth)!

. . . . . Pete

I was in Austin two weeks ago and it sure felt like my head was going to burn up when exposed to the sun.

But I understand it was a 'heatwave' and so not the typical level of baked-ness.
 
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