0703 CLM - Country Line Magazine
Transcription
0703 CLM - Country Line Magazine
4 • The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E IN THIS ISSUE F E AT U R E S boot-strap tough series: kathleen o’keefe braun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 jay boy adams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 fess parker: pushing the boundaries . . . . . . . .13 DEPARTMENTS Nashville Music News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Texas Music News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 ’Round About Texas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 by Sandra Greaney Homespun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 Cowboy Corner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 by Marc Bradberry On Pit Row . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 by Chuck Licata The Texas Outdoor Zone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18 by Larry LeBlanc Fishing Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19 by Don Gordon w w w. c o u n t r y l i n e m a g a z i n e . c o m 5 1 2 - 2 9 2 - 1113 MAILING ADDRESS 9508 CHISHOLM TRAIL • AUSTIN, TEX. 78748 LETTERS & COMMENTS TJ@COUNTRYLINEMAGAZINE.COM OR MAIL TO ADDRESS ABOVE PUBLISHER & EDITOR | T. J. Greaney CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Shirley Baker, Marc Bradberry, Sheryl Bucsanyi, Don Gordon, Sandra Greaney, Larry LeBlanc, Chuck Licata, Pauline Reese, Patty Ruland I F I get so anxious at times with all the noise in my life that I just want to scream. Yes, that is coming from the publisher of the No. 1 Texas music magazine and the No. 1 outdoor radio show host in Texas. If it wasn’t for the noise from both of these endeavors, I might be an airline pilot or left fielder for the Houston Astros and then where would I be? When I get up in the morning I like the first few minutes to be peaceful. The most noise I like is the gurgle of the coffee brewing or the faucet running. They say the loudest noise ever was the eruption of the volcano Karakatoa and that the sound traveled around the world several times. I think that might be equivalent to the sound of, “Honey, take out the trash, feed the dogs and then let’s go over calendars” — the sound of wife-ecus de-Sandra-decus at my home on several occasions. The sound has always been heard in the morning before I have had a chance to get to the coffee maker. I know folks who hit the on button for the television first thing when they wake up. The kids sit at the television watching cartoons or other shows in the morning while they are getting ready for school. The radio is on as soon as the car is started in the morning on the drop-off drive to school and the drive to work. Not that listening to the morning drive guys isn’t fine; it’s the constant example I am referring to — noise. Some people can handle this constant bombardment of noise in their head, their life. I can’t. I am convinced that quiet time is important to the human spirit. I think that without quiet moments in our lives, we miss feeling life. I truly believe that too many of the kids today are being raised in a world of noise and do not experience the peace of quiet. Recently I was with a group made up of young boys who have hunted and boys who have not. There were some differences I attribute to the lesson of hunting. One was that the hunters could sit still, not wiggling all the time. The hunters could listen better than the others, or so it seemed. The boys who had hunted just appeared to be a bit more disciplined. Draw your own conclusions, but the hunters were required to learn these lessons if they were going to be successful in the field — they had to sit quietly, listen, watch and relax. Do you have quiet time in your life? I have a challenge for you. A month ago I challenged my family to a week without television. My wife was mad as heck at first and said she would not participate. My kids had no choice — and I competed in the challenge with them. It was one of the best weeks we had had in a long time. We read books, magazines, talked and the kids played outside a lot. The lesson we learned was that quiet time is good. The constant bombardment of noise is optional. We can actually interact without noise. God speaks to us when we listen. Things go smoother, we get more done and we actually have the opportunity to think clearer. Are you up for the challenge, to find a quiet time in your life? It can be hard, but the rewards are fantastic. God bless, T. J. Greaney Publisher tj@countrylinemagazine.com C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine • 5 who see me onstage know what that means…” “Life is what you make it,” says the hardworking songwriter/singer who spends his life dreaming out loud. “I don’t think I could’ve ever imagined a lot of it, but I sure am glad I get to be here watching it all go down. After all, this is the kinda stuff that’s beyond belief. Look for Chesney’s Flip-Flop Summer Tour — brought to you by Cruzan Rum — to kick-off April 12th at the Qwest Center in Omaha, Nebraska and roll through early fall. Catch him on CBS’ “The Early Show” March 5, not to mention in Sports Illustrated Swim Suit issue, making him the envy of red-blooded American men everywhere. RODNEY ATKINS INSERTS BOOT INTO LEFTWING BUM BILL MAHER’S BACKSIDE ON TONIGHT SHOW Curb recording artist Rodney Atkins got the chance to defend country music on “The Tonight Show” when talk show host Bill Maher told Jay Leno “The only use I have for country music is to make fun of it.” Atkins response? To have the last word by closing the nationally-televised show with his multiple week Number One single “Watching You.” “I take it as an honor to be the guy representing country music last night,” says Atkins. “I was proud to sing a song about family values, my life and what this format is all about. This guy was purposely bashing Alan Jackson, Garth Brooks, Brad Paisley, Tim McGraw, Kenny Chesney, George Strait, Martina McBride, Dolly Parton and all the greats artists that influenced my life’s direction. I believe that country music is representative of real people and a real way of life. I don’t take that lightly. Everyone does have the freedom of speech, but they should sometimes think before they actually exercise that right.” Despite the band and crews’ strong desires to make more of a “direct point” to Maher, they put their energy into a great performance. After the show, Leno apologized, thanked 6 • The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E Rodney for coming and invited him back saying “You are a class act.” In addition to “The Tonight Show,” Rodney made his second appearance in less than five months on “The Late, Late Show” with Craig Ferguson. KENNY CHESNEY IN SPORTS ILLUSTRATED SWIM SUIT ISSUE It’s a hard life — being a hillbilly rock star out of control. Between the flash sell-out football stadiums, the four Entertainer of the Year awards and watching your buddy pick up the MVP Award at this Super Bowl, there’s never a dull moment. And just when it seems life can’t get any better, here comes Sports Illustrated infamous Swim Suit issue, and rather than buying it, you’re in it. Hard to believe a kid from Luttrell, Tennessee who started picking guitar in sundry bars in college could get so lucky — and yet, there he is: Kenny Chesney, paired with leggy blond beauty Marisa Miller for a free-for-all. “I could tell doing this shoot, we had very similar lives,” Chesney said of what appears on the page to be instant chemistry. “We’re both very normal people, but then the lights come on, she becomes this other person. People TERRI CLARK AND HUSBAND GREG KACZOR FILE FOR DIVORCE BNA Records artist Terri Clark and husband Greg Kaczor filed for divorce Friday, February 16th at Nashville’s Davidson County Courthouse. “This is very sad,” the singer said. “Greg is one of my dearest friends and a wonderful person, and we are sorry that we’re here. This is an amicable spilt, and we appreciate everyone’s concern and respect for our sorting this out. No big drama ... just a couple heavy hearts. Anyone who’s ever been here, I am sure, understands.” The pair has known each other 10 years; Kaczor worked as Tour Manager in Clark’s organization. Under the circumstances, he has opted not to continue in that capacity. JEFF FOXWORTHY NAMED HONORARY CHAIRMAN OF NATIONAL HUNTING AND FISHING DAY person I am today,” said Foxworthy. Although his “you-might-be-aredneck” jokes are his signature material, Foxworthy is a decidedly sophisticated entertainer. He is the best-selling comedy recording artist in history, star of the popular Blue Collar comedy tours, television series and movies, a multiple Grammy award nominee, host of a weekly country music radio show airing in 220 markets nationwide, and a best-selling author. National Hunting and Fishing Day, celebrated annually on the fourth Saturday of September, was founded by the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) and formalized by Congress in 1971. Every U.S. President from Richard M. Nixon to George W. Bush has recognized the day via formal proclamations. For more information about National Hunting and Fishing Day, including a hunting-and-angling profile of Jeff Foxworthy, go to www.nhfday.org. In his new volunteer position, Foxworthy will spend coming months communicating the annual celebration’s message that hunting and fishing are vital conservation tools, important economic engines and, most of all, just plain fun. “I’m flattered to be asked to serve as the 2007 honorary chairman of National Hunting and Fishing Day. Without question, sharing hunting and fishing trips with my family had a profound impact on my life, and undoubtedly shaped and molded the www.texasoutdoorzone.com Visit today and you can … download our radio shows, find current weather radar, enter hunt contests, find kids’ outdoor activities, and more! C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine • 7 by Pauline Reese C F Congratulations to our friend Roger Creech (program director at KHBR in Hillsboro, Tex.) He and his wife are already the proud parents of two little girls and now they have a little boy on the way! How do you have time to work, Roger? I did a show in Archer City last month with Rodney Hayden and Drew Kennedy. Rodney’s latest album, Down the Road, came out May 1. Drew’s album will be released March 27. I can’t seem to get either CD out of my car. They are both great! We had a good time swapping songs, jokes and stories for the crowd. Later that night we played a little Texas Hold ’em. I’m still not gonna show you guys how I did my card tricks! It’s magic … When I was up in Grapevine, Tex. I saw part of Matt Begley and Bo Cox’s show. Matt is from Uhland, Tex. which I know well because of the famous Club 21. It was the first Honky Tonk I ever played! He wrote a song for his latest CD called “Have a little Fun.” You can find it on his my space. www.myspace.com/MattBegley The big Countrypalooza show in Brenham, Tex. with KTEX FM was a big success! Jason Allen put on one heck of a show, as well as Ricky Calmbach, Rich O’Toole, County Road 114, Lantana and Southern Roots! County Road 114’s second CD is coming out this spring. They also put together a free outdoor concert every July in Loebau, Tex. Check out cr114.com for more info. Ben Morris’s debut, The Other Side of Broken is out! You can hear his passion for the music and his talent for songwriting. I love those story songs. Thanks to Ben for having me on such a wonderful project! benmorrislive.com Gary P. Nunn has a new record deal that involves a merger of Campfire Records and Icehouse Music. Icehouse Music will be taking over his catalogue and producing a new record for him. They have a nationwide distribution deal which means you may be seeing his CDs on display at some of the upscale roadside convenience stores around the state of Texas! Great news for G.P.N. fans! I’ll keep you posted on the release date of the new record! garypnunn.com Cory Morrow sent me an email from the road to catch up on things. I’m really excited to hear his latest project. He’s working with Keith Gattis on his ninth independent CD! Cory’s been making records for ten years hence the title Ten Years. He’s taking a song from each of the eight albums he’s done in the past and doing a re-make. A lot of thought and time went into the songs so that they sound totally different. Some of the songs F•E•B•R•U•A•R•Y 22308 HWY 71 WEST SPICEWOOD, TEX. 512/264-0318 Voted on of the Top 20 Places to Visit in Austin . —Austin Chronicle 2-FRI Pauline Reese with Just Plain Trouble 3-SAT Paula Nelson and George Devor, Mario Matteoli opens 9-FRI Ray Wylie Hubbard and The Band of Heathens 10-SAT Jane Bond & Kats Meow 15-THU Green Mountain Grass 16-FRI Calvin Russell and Tracy Conover 17-SAT Hill Country Bash! Troubadillos and Jimmy Lee Jones have even been re-written so it’s really something cool for all you Cory Morrow fans! There will also be one new song Cory wrote and one he co- wrote with Keith. Ten Years is scheduled for release sometime this spring. Cory’s scheduled to tour Europe this August and there’s talk of a golf tournament/concert in Steamboat Springs, Col. this summer! Go to corymorrow.com to find out more. That’s all for this month, see ya’ll in April, amigos! PA U L I N E R E E S E I S A P R O U D T E X A S MUSICIAN. TO FIND OUT MORE, VISIT W W W. PA U L I N E R E E S E . C O M BRANDON RHYDER AND HIS VERY FIRST LIVE RECORD On Friday, March 2nd, Brandon Rhyder will record his very first Live Record at the Midnight Rodeo in College Station, Tex. His live show has gained blockbuster momentum this year selling out venues across Texas! His fan base is now nationwide and his music reputation has now grabbed the attention of major music executives. We would love for all his fans in your area to join us for this special live recording. His current record, Conviction, has amassed national exposure in a few short months both on radio and in print. The success of this record has 21 AND OLDER 23-FRI TUESDAYS The Troubadillos Pool Tournament WEDNESDAYS Open Pickers Night w/ Jimmy Lee Jones 2007 Talent Search Winner Megan Tubbs KCee Edwards opens True Texas spring water bottled right here in Austin. Don’t buy bottled 24-SAT Barnhill opening with Magnolia Band 30-FRI city tap water when you Walt Wilkins can enjoy natures pure 31-SAT Burnett Jones CD Release Party refreshing spring water. KEEPIN’ IT LOCAL! Check out our menu, music calendar and events at WWW.POODIES.INFO 8 • The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E Home or Office Delivery Call Today! 512/280-4037 Official Water of The Texas Outdoor Zone Texas Proud! lead him to the highest of highs in the Texas music scene. His reputation as a stellar songsmith has garnered him sold out shows and a rapidly growing fan base across the US. Rhyder has also found support from Mr. Radney Foster who is quoted as saying, “I don’t know what Brandon Rhyder did before he made Conviction, but now that he has made this record, a whole lot of other people are going to know about him. Rarely have I picked up a record at someone’s suggestion and been so delightfully surprised. ‘Go Back In Fool’ slays me, as do ‘Moving Too Fast’ and ‘Losing The War.’ Brandon is also mentioned in a recent issue of Country Weekly Magazine. JASON BOLAND AND THE STRAGGLERS BRING THE BOURBON LEGEND TO AUSTIN Join Jason Boland and The Stragglers as they take a stage as only they can. Known by some as modern day outlaws, others as the vanguard of the Red Dirt movement and still others as the second coming of Waylon Jennings, one thing is certain, spend ten minutes with one of their records or at one of their blazing shows and you’ll be a believer. Jason Boland walks the line, merging authentic vintage country sensibility with refreshing newness; in short, old-fashioned songs akin to Waylon Jennings that aren’t reruns. Instead of arousing fear, the whiskey-soaked ghosts that haunt Boland inspire an inimitable country sound. His band, The Stragglers, is tight both musically and within the ties of friendship, assets earned from miles upon miles together. AUSTIN CONVENTION AND VISITORS BUREAU RELEASES NEW CD The Austin Music Office, a division of Austin Convention and Visitors Bureau, unveiled its newest CD, Austin Music, Volume 6, at a release party on Feb. 13, at the Austin Visitor Center. The 14-song compilation album features diverse genres that define Austin’s musical landscape including country newcomer Sunny Sweeney. The limited-edition CD also contains a detailed Austin music guide with maps and club listings for the Warehouse District, Sixth Street, Red River, South Austin, University of Texas campus, East End and other venues within a short distance from downtown. The guide also offers information on where to hear live music while you dine, which spots are the most “authentically Austin” and how to find music in unexpected places. A calendar of major music events and listing of additional resources are also included. The 2007 compilation is the sixth CD produced by the Austin Music Office to promote the city’s live music scene. The Bureau distributes copies at tradeshows and other events throughout the year. Starting Feb. 13, a limited number of the CDs are available for sale for $9.99 at the Visitor Center, Waterloo Records or online at austintexas.org. C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine • 9 B O OT- S T R A P TO U G H S E R I E S You hear a lot about a handful of Texas musicians and rightfully so, but there are just as many, even more, who have worked hard playing the same barrooms and dancehalls that have never won the gold buckle. In this series of articles in 2007 we will introduce you to some of these hard-working musicians and encourage you to go see them play and maybe buy a CD. They get up every day and pull on their boots with long days and long nights ahead of them. It’s Texas music, boot-strap tough. I kathleen o’keefe braun I HAVE MET FEW WOMEN MORE caught up in the music business or driven to play music than my dear friend Kathleen O’Keefe Braun. Since the first time I met her she was focused on making her life one of music. Her spirit is alive with melodies of every tone and verse. This month I wanted you to meet her. Who are your band members? For now it’s mostly me doing the solo singer-songwriter thing, but I’m starting to collaborate more and am excited about what’s to come. My husband, Cody Braun, plays with Reckless Kelly, and he helped me produce and record 3 songs last year. I got to borrow Willy Braun and David Abeyta to play on those, as well as Shane Vannerson of Micky and the Motorcars, and Adam Odor of Cedar Creek. It hasn’t been formally released because I hope to head back into the studio and release my full-length debut later this year. Both onstage and in the studio, I’ve been lucky to have the support of some amazingly talented musicians. How is it to be a woman in a predominantly male realm (Texas Music)? I guess it all depends on how you look at it, plus I grew up an only girl with brothers so I’m kinda used to having to duke it out sometimes. Kidding, but really, there are so many Texas women making great music all over the place. Some of them are amazing multi-instrumentalists who 10 • The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E have played with various touring bands, like sisters Bonnie and E l e a n o r Whitmore, or Elana James of Hot Club of Cowtown. There are ladies like Lisa Pankratz who plays drums with Hayes Carll, and then there are songwriters like Patty Griffin, Trish Murphy, and Susan Gibson. The list really goes on and on. You wrote all the songs? I’ve written most all of my material so far, but I am really looking forward to writing more with other people and learning from the whole process. When I play live there are a few cover tunes, of course you’ll hear some of that, too. What is the album’s name? The 3 song EP is called Best Behavior. It’s available for download at www.myspace.com/kathleenokeefe. I’m also playing a weekly happy hour show Thursdays in the lounge of the Red Eyed Fly in Austin, from 7:30-9 p.m. C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine • 11 JAY BOY ADAMS W S T E P P I N G B A C K O N T O T H E M E R R Y- G O - R O U N D WEST TEXAS HAS BEEN A HOTBED OF music since the turn of the 20th century, when Bob Wills used to travel with his fiddle playing father to play house dances across the Texas Panhandle, laying the foundations for Western Swing in the process. In the intervening decades, Roy Orbison, Waylon Jennings, Buddy Holly, Joe Ely, Butch Hancock, Terry Allen, Natalie Maines (of the Dixie Chicks), the Flatlanders and many more have come of age in that empty region of the Lone Star State where making music was viewed as both a birthright and an escape. Now, another name with a distinguished West Texas musical pedigree is making a fresh start. Jay Boy Adams, who was born in Colorado City, Tex., a wide spot in the road on I20 south of Lubbock, came up to tour with ZZ Top, The Band, Jackson Browne, The Marshall Tucker Band, Joe Cocker and other arena-filling acts in the 1970s and ’80s. Along the way, he released two solo albums on the prestigious Atlantic label. Now, after stepping away from the music business for two decades, Adams is back with a new album, The Shoe Box, an independent release on the Rockin’ Heart/Smith Entertainment Records label. The album represents the first new music from the West Texas native in several years, and features guest appearances by Lee Roy Parnell, Jack Ingram, Marty Stuart and Asleep At the Wheel’s Ray Benson. “When I was running hard in the seventies and early eighties, I never dreamed or planned that I would walk away from music, and in 2007 I never dreamed that I would be walking back,” mused Adams. “I wrote ten of the 12 songs on The Shoe Box. The songs are on a CD of course, but this is a true ‘record’ of the important things in my life. Hopefully, one of these songs will strike a nerve with some of you.” They already have. Texas music icon Jerry Jeff Walker, who has known Adams since the ’70s, said, “I was blown away. Jay’s music fits right into the present-day Texas scene like he was born into it … And, hell, he was!” Cory Morrow remarked that The Shoe Box “is gonna be stuck in my CD player for awhile. (The music) reminds me a bit of Rodney Crowell at times, and yet I still hear Jay and his upbeat attitude and introspective demeanor in each song.” And Stephen Stills, with who Adams toured back in the day, cited Jay Boy as “a great musician and a storyteller in the true Texas tradition.” Critics have been impressed, as well. Writing in Texas Music magazine, Richard Skanse noted that The Shoe Box is “a solid and welcome comeback … marked by a sure sense of craft and quiet grace. He’s an impeccable picker, too.” The album is a chronicle of both growing older and growing up, of good memories of good friends, and life’s lessons learned — some of them learned the hard way. It’s a record, in other words, of the ups and downs in a singer/songwriter’s life and the costs that roller coaster ride can impose. Since The Shoe Box’s release on Feb. 6, Adams has been courting radio on behalf of the album and its first single, “Color You Gone” (as of midFebruary, the album was No. 13 on the national Americana chart and the single was at No. 10 on the Texas Music Chart). He was also in Washington, DC to guest on a broadcast of XM Radio’s Country 12 Americana channel in late February, followed by a radio tour of the East Coast. Back home, he and his band, the Roadhouse Scholars are storming the state, one beer joint at a time. He is also scheduled to headline three nights at the Molotov Lounge in Austin in mid-March during the South By Southwest music festival. The activity marks Adams’ first sustained touring in 17 years. In 1972, Adams was sitting on top of the world: He had signed a management contract with legendary Texas music Svengali Bill Ham, of Lone Wolf Management. Ham, who also kick-started the careers of ZZ Top and Clint Black, put Adams on the road opening for ZZ and caring for Billy Gibbons’ guitars. Soon, he graduated to opening ZZ’s shows. Then, Adams was signed to Atlantic Records and the fledgling recording artist and songwriter entered the studio in 1978. He recorded two albums for Atlantic; Jay Boy Adams (1978) and Fork In the Road (1979), which included a duet with Jackson Brown and toured with some of the biggest names in the business. But then, in 1982, Adams got off the merry-go-round and left the music business behind. “My brother-in-law used to tell a story about a man from our hometown who was married to a real mean woman for about ten years,” he recalled. “One day she sent him to the grocery store for a loaf of bread. That was 20 years ago and she’s still waiting for the bread. That’s what happened to me. I just disappeared.” But he never left the music itself behind; just the spotlight. Call it disillusionment or just a need to recharge the creative batteries, but Jay Boy Adams simply slipped away. In the intervening years, he carved out a successful career for himself running a touring coach business that provided buses to many of the same acts he used to tour with. He married and fathered children and, as the saying goes, got on with his life. But he never put down the guitar entirely, and he had friends who never stopped rooting for him. It was country singer/songwriter Lee Roy Parnell and J.W. Williams (an old friend from the Lone Wolf Management days) who encouraged Jay Boy to step onto the stage again. In March of 1997, Parnell invited Adams to join him onstage on the spur of the moment at a concert in San Antonio. Adams found himself with a guitar in his hands, onstage, for the first time in five years, and his love for live performance was re-kindled. He decided he could either cut his fingers off, or go back home, dust off the cobwebs and get back to work. The result is The Shoe Box (produced by Jay Boy Adams and Monty Byrom, of Big House and Eddie Money fame). It’s been a long road back to center stage for Adams, but its his fervent hope that his new music will gratify both longtime fans and those discovering Adams and his music for the first time. Fess Parker: Pushing the Boundaries J B Y F José Enrique de la Peña was right. Davy Crockett did not die at the Alamo. He went to California, became a motion picture and television star, and now owns a beachfront resort hotel in Santa Barbara. Fess Parker’s portrayals of Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone for film and television are so entrenched in the public’s mind, seeing pictures of the real things are often an unpleasant surprise. They don’t look nearly as authentic as this six-foot-six-inch man with kind eyes and a long straight nose holding wide nostrils that seem to breathe in gulps of everything that life has to offer. So maybe Parker wasn’t king of the wild frontier and didn’t kill a bear when he was three. This quiet, unassuming San Angelo native has made a huge success of his life, and he thinks being a Texan had everything to do with it. Parker was born in Fort Worth, but his family moved westward when he was three months old. After graduating from San Angelo High School, Parker became a cadet at Texas A&M University. It was not a co-ed school at V I C K Y R O S E that time, so Parker spent a lot of time with his thumb in the air hitching rides to Austin, where the pretty girls were more plentiful. “A lot of times,” he said, “I didn’t wait for the weekend.” Consequently, he and the dean came to an agreement that A&M might not be the place for him. After a three-year stint in the Navy that provided him with a glimpse of California, Parker returned to Texas. He was attending Hardin-Simmons University when he was attacked by a drunk who had previously tried to run his car off the road. Parker’s throat was slashed, severing 20 veins. There were no witnesses, and the man was never brought to trial. The injustice frustrated Parker. He said, “My face was paralyzed for over a year.” He decided to enter the University of Texas to study law. Eventually, the decision to be an attorney faded, and Parker switched his major to history. Meanwhile, he worked as a janitor, a manager of a dance band and as a water ski instructor on Lake Austin. Veteran actor Adolphe Menjou OUTDOOR RADIO LIVE IN AUSTIN The Texas Outdoor Zone Radio Show Exclusively on 1300AM The Zone 6 - 8 am Every Saturday Morning appeared at U.T. as a guest speaker and offered to introduce Parker to his agent if he came to Hollywood. After graduation, Parker followed up on the offer, and Menjou did as he promised. Parker did a few bit parts, but it was when Walt Disney saw him in a small role in the science-fiction movie Them! that success came into his hands. Disney signed him to play Davy Crockett in what became a five-part miniseries and made the Disney studio millions. The Davy Crockett phenomena had children everywhere singing about the king of the wild frontier and scrabbling for coonskin caps. Disney also gave Parker a small but good role in another mega-hit, Old Yeller. Fred Gipson, the author of Old Yeller, had once worked for the San Angelo Standard Times and had been a friend of Parker’s father. Parker went back into the coonskin cap for television, this time playing Daniel Boone. “Daniel Boone” ran for six very successful years, but when its run was finished, Parker decided against another grueling television series. “By that time, I was out of the mind of staying in that kind of business,” Parker said. Instead, he went into real estate development, eventually building the Fess Parker DoubleTree Resort Hotel on 32 acres of Santa Barbara beachfront property. Nowadays, Parker spends time at the luxury inn and spa he and his wife built at their winery in Los Olivos, where the Texas flag flies in front. He hasn’t retired. He’s working on another beachfront hotel that will adjoin his other one. Parker is proud of his Texas heritage and attributes it to his success. “Texans … don’t buy the boundary of a challenge. They make their own challenge, and it doesn’t matter if it makes a lot of sense to anybody else. Texans have a persistence, a perseverance. They look at something, and they say, well heck, I can do that better.” Spoken like a true son of the Alamo. C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine • 13 by Sandra Greaney J F Just in case your schedule isn’t busy enough with Spring Break, Austin Rodeo, SXSW, Texas Independence Day, and St. Patrick’s Day celebrations, here are a few more things happening in and around Central Texas this month. around central texas MAR 2-4, 12 TEXAS I N D E P E N D E N C E D A Y Take the family and celebrate Texas’ independence from Mexico with a wonderful parade scheduled for Saturday, March 3. The parade begins at 11 a.m. and travels down Congress Avenue. A golf tournament has also been scheduled on March 12. Check out the Web site for details on all of the festivities. 512-2885506, celebratetexas.org M A R 4 ZILKER PARK KITE FESTIVAL at Zilker Park. Zilker Park’s annual Kite Festival offers old-fashion fun for all ages. Compete in the steadiest, smallest and most unusual kite contests, or just come to watch while enjoying Austin’s spring weather. 512448-KITE, zilkerkitefestival.com M A R 9 ANNUAL COWBOY BREAKFAST Free breakfast, cowboy coffee and great music kicks off the Star of Texas Fair and Rodeo on Auditorium Shores, beginning at 6 a.m. 512-919-3000, staroftexas.org MAR 17 SHAMROCK SHUFFLE 5K WALK/RUN & IRISH FESTIVAL Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day with a run and an authentic festival afterwards, beginning at 10 a.m. Every person wearing green or a costume will receive a special gift. Lots of fun for the kids and live music by the Tea Merchants and the Bagpipers. reelsnjigs.com MAR 17 THE AUSTIN SYMPHONY P R E S E N T S D O N M C L E A N at Riverbend Centre. Known for such hits as “Vincent (Starry, Starry Night)” and “American Pie,” Don McLean has been hailed as “the voice of the century” by such artists as Buddy Holly and Roy Orbison. As one of the most renowned singer/songwriters of our time, McLean’s music influenced generations of future performers. He again achieved chart-topping recognition when “American Pie” was voted number 5 in a poll of the 365 “Songs of the Century” compiled by the Recording Industry Association of America and the National Endowment for the Arts. austinsymphony.org, 512-476-6064 MAR 24 CHRIST UNITES YOUNG A D U L T S M U S I C F E S T I V A L Go out and celebrate your faith at the City Hall Plaza (301 W. 2nd street) from 4 – 10 p.m. There will be great live music and it’s all FREE! christunites.com, email info@christunites.com. M A R 2 5 C A P I T O L 1 0 K Texas’ largest race and one of the nation’s top 10K runs draws some 10,000 serious and not-so-serious runners. 512-472-3524, statesman.com/sports/content/cap10k MAR 29-APRIL 1 TEXAS HILL C O U N T R Y W I N E & F O O D F E S T I V A L at the Four Seasons, Driskill Hotel and other locations. The best Texas and nationally known chefs and wineries pair their best culinary creations and fruits of the vine at a variety of venues ranging from an exotic game ranch to an outdoor festival in the park. texaswineandfood.org, 512-249-6300 MAR 31 SWAMP ROMP & CRAWFISH FESTIVAL at Republic Square Park (4th & Guadalupe St. across from the Texas State History Museum). This Louisianathemed event features cuisine from Louisiana and Texas, including six tons of jumbo crawfish. Festivities involve dancers, “juju mamas” and a traditional funeral procession. Cajun & Zydeco music by local and national entertainers complete the celebration. Starts at 10:30 a.m. until after Midnight. roadwayevents.com, 512-441-9015 out of town M A R 1 8 ST. PATRICK ’S DAY ON T H E R I V E R W A L K Go see the River Walk in San Antonio turn green for St. Patty’s Day on March 18th at the 38th Annual San Antonio River Dyeing Parade. The fun starts at 1 p.m. at the Arnesen River Theater. 14 • The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E M A R 3 1 - A P R I L 2 BLUEBONNET B L U E S & A R T S F E S T I V A L on Marble Falls’ Main Street. Head to Marble Falls for three days of blues music and art from more than 50 artists. bluebonnetblues.com, 800-864-5175 Have a great March! E-MAIL YOUR EVENTS TO SANDRA@COUNTRYLINEMAGAZINE.COM F O R C O N S I D E R AT I O N . S PA C E L I M I T S O P P O R T U N I T Y. by Shirley Baker MOVIE & BOOK REVIEWS Each month Country Line has the opportunity to review lots of music. We also have been blessed to preview many new books and movies over the last few years and in the next few months there will be a lot of opportunities for you to relax with one of these great books or films. Here are a few favorites we picked to review this month. These are hand picked for the whole family. SWEET SOUR TUNA 6 slices pineapple, cut into chunks 2 Tbsp butter 22/3 cup pineapple juice 2 large green peppers, cubed 2 Tbsp cornstarch 2 tsp soy sauce 2 Tbsp vinegar 2 /3 cup sugar 1 cup chicken bouillon 2 (7oz) cans tuna 1 /2 tsp salt 1 /2 tsp pepper Chinese noodles MOVIE Flicka S TA R R I N G T I M M C G R AW, M A R I A BELLO, ALISON LOHAM Sauté pineapple in butter for 5 minutes. Add 1/3 cup pineapple juice and green pepper. Cover and simmer for 10 minutes. Mix cornstarch with remaining pineapple juice. Add to pineapple with soy sauce, vinegar, sugar and bouillon. Cook, stirring constantly, until thick. Add tuna and seasonings and heat through. Serve over crips noodles. ? ? take all the love and strength the family can muster to restore hope in this sweeping, heartwarming epic the whole family will love. A passionate story about following your heart the new release is available for the suggested retail price of $29.98. A great value for the whole family to enjoy, the Flicka DVD also features Tim McGraw’s music video “My Little Girl,” three deleted scenes, bloopers, a gag reel, a “Making of” featurette and more! Rated 5 Spurs – Excellent for the whole family. —T.J. GREANEY G R A N D M A’ S H I N T S Remove paint from glass by applying hot vinegar with a cloth. After it is softened, scrape off gently. Place a blotter on candle wax, then hold a hot iron over the blotter which will absorb the melted wax. Simmer vinegar on the stove to get rid of unpleasant odors while cooking. Oldtimers used cobwebs to stop cuts from bleeding. They also applied crushed marigold leaves and their juices to warts. Whitening teeth by applying ground charcoal was also an old old tradition. Aren’t we glad that science has advanced? ? ? Witness a teen’s poignant tale of courage, determination and passion in the newly-released DVD Flicka from Fox Home Entertainment. Featuring an all-star cast including country music superstar and actor Tim McGraw (Friday Night Lights), Maria Bello (Thank You For Smoking) and Alison Lohman (Big Fish). Flicka is pure screen excitement and a great movie ride … that rare family film that has something for everyone. Based on the beloved novel My Friend Flicka by Mary O’Hara, Flicka masterfully injects moving cast performances, breathtaking scenery and majestic horses with raw emotion to tell the story of a fiercely independent young girl’s quest to tame a wild mustang and prove herself to her family. This is an inspiring, coming-of-age story of a headstrong, 16-year-old Katy McLaughlin (Lohman) who longs to work on her family’s mountainside horse ranch — yet her father (McGraw) insists she finish boarding school. So when Katy finds a mustang in the hills, she sets out to tame the horse and prove she can one day take over the struggling ranch. But when tragedy strikes, it will Sometimes we feel we need a little change from eating beef, beef, beef. Here is a simple recipe that gives a change, is tasteful and lighter fare. A Lenten meal that is sure to please all the family. C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine • 15 by Marc Bradberry A Good dreams come true at the Dreamcatcher As a boy growing up in Acuff, Tex., Don Meador had a dream. A member of the State 4-H champion Livestock Judging Team proved it. Don loved cattle, good cattle, and had an eye to pick out good ones. He also showed his own good cattle at the local and state livestock shows. (Reserve Champion Steer at El Paso.) Don went off to college after high school to get an Agricultural degree, right? No, a degree in industrial engineering. You see Don loves to use his brain. He knew that he needed a good career start that would help him realize his dream and maybe find a good partner. A good partner indeed came along. Don met Karen while attending college. Then came kids, Kim and Brad (Kim by the way, came up with name Dreamcatcher, she wished for only good dreams at the ranch.) Kim and Brad now have successful careers of their own and inherited their mother’s musical talent. They both play the piano, compose music, write and sing songs. I’ve heard that Brad is very talented F with a guitar and a violin. Don’s lifelong partner and wife, Karen, has become quite the ranch woman. She loves good Angus cattle as much as Don does and takes active interest in daily planning. Don found a good starting point to work his goal of ranch ownership. It was with Proctor and Gamble as an industrial engineer. This led Don Meador and family to a wonderful career in several states building and managing operations for Proctor & Gamble. When it came time for Don to retire, Don decided that San Marcos, Tex. would be a good place to start a ranch and the rest is history. Don started the ranch with a philosophy that he learned from his Dad, no matter what he does he should do the best job possible. Don also believes that breeding good cattle is based on continuous improvement. “You must always seek to improve the product and services that you offer,” Don says. With this philosophy in mind Don found some of the best Angus cattle in the world at Gardiner Angus Ranch in Ashland, Kan. With help from Mark Gardiner, Don has started a herd 16 • The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E of registered Angus bulls and females second to none. With the use of embryo transfer program Don and Karen Meador have built a herd quickly that are members of the Gardiner Guaranteed Genetics (G3) Identification Program. This was no small task. It takes and incredible amount of skill, capital, hard work and brains to accomplish this feat. Don and Karen Meador and the Dreamcatcher Ranch are now currently working on their 4th Annual Registered Angus Bull and Female Sale. The annual sale occurs in late October at the Dreamcatcher Ranch in San Marcos, Tex. At their last sale there were 95 range ready bulls and 73 elite females offered by the ranch. To tell you how valuable some of Don and Karen’s top females are, one cow out of a Precision bull brought $108,000 at the 2006 production sale last year. Don and Karen are interested in only total quality Angus cattle. The genetics they offer are the result of data-based selection. To put it simply, if the cattle don’t turn out absolute top quality, they are not used in their program. They also offer a fertitlity guarantee for the first 12 months. If a new owner buys an animal and has any fertility problems Dreamcatcher Ranch will replace them. Don and Karen meador are focused mainly on customer values. Their goal is to provide top Angus cattle to registered breeders or the commercial producer. Dreamcatcher Ranch 1100 Lime Kiln Rd. San Marcos, Texas 78666. dreamcatcherranch.net 512-757- 2714 cell 512-396- 8424 residence QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS? E-MAIL MLBRADBERRY@CENTURYTEL .NET by Chuck Licata T Harvick and NASCAR both earned the checkered flag The exciting finish to Sunday’s Daytona 500 was the perfect capper to what was a wild, crazy — and newsworthy — week. Two weeks ago, the hot topic among racing fans and media — as well as most “mainstream” media — was the internal power struggle at Dale Earnhardt, Inc. (DEI) between Dale Earnhardt, Jr. and his stepmom, Teresa. That “hot” topic was then nullified as Matt Kenseth and Kasey Kahne lost their crew chiefs for four weeks due to violations of NASCAR rules after last Sunday’s qualifying. Oh, yeah — Kahne’s Dodge teammates, Elliott Sadler and Scott Riggs, lost their crew chiefs for two races. The Michael Waltrip violation really blew the “lid” off when he was caught messing with one of two NASCAR’s “taboo” areas of the car — fuel (tires is the other taboo). Oh, wait — Fake Michael wasn’t personally involved; or as he put it, “this was an independent act done without consent or authorization from me or any of my F executive management team.” Yeah right, and I’ve got some land near the Dell Diamond I’ll sell you real cheap. But when it comes to Sunday’s 2007 season-opening race, let’s admit something up front: the “real” winner of the race was knocked out in an accident on Lap 152. That’s where Tony Stewart — who had climbed back into the lead after restarting in 40th place just 60 laps earlier — got tangled up with Kurt Busch, who himself had the second-fastest car in the race (next to T-Stew’s machine). Technically, NASCAR should have thrown the caution flag on the last lap as Kyle Busch and Matt Kenseth started a race-ending melee that took out many a car. However, because Kevin Harvick and Mark Martin – who were racing side-by-side for the checkered flag — were ahead of the car “carnage” behind them, NASCAR officials “ate the caution flag” and let the two battle it out. As you know by now, Harvick beat out Martin by two-hundreths of a second — the smallest winning margin since NASCAR started keeping time. A lot of Martin fans — and believe me, he has a TON of fans — will argue the officials “stole” a win away from their favorite driver in this, a part-time season. No matter. All the controversy — and the great race finish — has the entire nation buzzing about the sport. What’s better than that? So as we get back to “real” racing at tracks like California, Atlanta and Bristol, here’s my Power Rankings top 10: (1) Tony Stewart; (2) Kevin Harvick; (3) Matt Kenseth; (4) Jeff Gordon; (5) Jimmie Johnson; (6) Mark Martin; (7) Kyle Busch; (8) David Gilliland; (9) David Stremme; (10) Elliott Sadler. C H U C K L I C ATA , A N A W A R D -W I N N I N G W R I T E R , H O S T S T H E M OT O R S P O R T S Z O N E R A D I O S H O W O N A U S T I N K V E TA M 1 3 0 0 ( S AT U R D AY S 1 0 – 1 1 A M C T ) . H E I S A L S O C O - O W N E R O F K- M A C SPORTS PRODUCTIONS, AN ONLINE C O M PA N Y T H AT B R O A D C A S T S H I G H S C H O O L AT H L E T I C S A N D S H O R T-T R A C K A U T O R A C I N G . E-MAIL: CHUCK@THEMOTORSPORTSZONE.COM countrylinemagazine.com The only Texas-Country Music, Cowboy, Outdoor and Lifestyle magazine brings you all this and more on our website! VISIT TODAY AND YOU CAN … Find links to advertisers Read the current issue’s articles Find info on advertising in Country Line Order copies of Country Line Find links to Texas Music Web sites and more! countrylinemagazine.com C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine • 17 by Larry LeBlanc Shooting sports use to be synonymous with hunting, but no more When I was growing up and first started hunting on my own, shooting sports meant grabbing my Red Rider Daisy, BB gun, caliber .177, and heading for the marsh. The marsh started across the street from our house and continued all the way to Winnie, Texas, about 30 miles away, and I hunted water beetles, big roaches and other such prey. I remember one time three of us, all about seven years old, were on a big game adventure and we came on a cottonmouth water moccasin. We all aimed and on the count of three we started to shoot the dark, strong smelling, pit viper. As it was a warm day and this cold blooded reptile was nice and warm and active he came after us like a bull at a rodeo pointing out that our escape route and fast retreat became the action of choice. We learned that day that a Red Rider Daisy, BB gun was no match for an angry cottonmouth. Later, about age 12, when I wanted to hit the marsh for a day of shooting sport I would grab my .22 caliber rifle and again hit the marsh hunting rabbits. The W Leon Measures (left) starts his training by having students shoot a BB gun with no sights. .22 long rifle ammunition was also an adequate match for the occasional cottonmouth I would encounter. About 12 years old I also started hunting ducks and geese with a Stevens, double barreled, 16 gauge shotgun. It beat me up for a while, until I grew into it, but I would never complain, because only a sissy did such a thing. I moved on to a 12 18 • The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E gauge, Remington semi-automatic at 14 years old, which I received for Christmas; still hunting ducks and geese, rabbits and occasionally squirrels. Here we are in the year 2007 and although hunting is still a big shooting sport there are many non consumptive shooting sports that are taking off like a prairie fire in the Panhandle. Shooting sports have increase over the past few years in leaps and bounds and not just with us hairy legged, manly types, but women and children are getting involved in a big way as well as families. The growth comes in the form of IDPA clubs and events for both men and women, Cowboy Action Shooting, and shotgun sports such as skeet, trap, five-stand and sporting clays. Shotgunning is one of the fastest growing shooting sports and I attribute that in part to the technological advances in shotguns. One can still purchase the old time shoulder busters, but if you are a serious shooter you will want a shotgun that will last and be comfortable to shoot and those are readily available. My 11-year-old grandson, Nicholas, has been to the trap range with my son and I and he loves shooting a shotgun. He and I competed at a Life Outdoor Ministries adult/child event and we really had great time. Nick was shooting a Beretta, 20 gauge, semi-automatic and never showed a mark on his shoulder. I was taking one of Leon Measures shotgun clinics a while back and a lady who shot competitively let me shoot her 12 gauge, Browning, semi-automatic and it was so smooth and gentle anyone could shoot all day long. So folks do not miss out on a lot of fun by not participating in some of the fun shooting sports available to us in the 21st century, but get involved. Boys and girls in the age range of 11 or 12 years old are usually physically big enough to handle one of the new shotguns comfortably. I saw a 17 year old girl recently shoot a perfect 25 on one of our skeet ranges. Local organizations such as the 4-H Club have safety training, regular practice, and state wide competitions for the youth of our county. So if you are looking for a sport and are tired of the usual such as golf or bowling look into shooting sports and I will bet there is one that will take your fancy. P H O T O G R A P H Y B Y L A R R Y J. L E B L A N C F by Don Gordon L F Lately, extreme weather seems to be the norm every time we uncover our bass boats for a tournament. The first Fishers of Men tournament to be held January 20th on Lake Belton was cancelled due to the ice storm that paralyzed Central Texas for almost a week. The air temperature for the Skeeter Bass Champs’ first event on Feb. 3 on Lake Belton was a chilly 22 degrees with the lake temperature down eight degrees from the week before. Even the big FLW tournament — February 15 – 18 on Lake Travis — faced some chilly take-offs. The second day of the tournament the air temperature was 18 degrees. Finally, the Fishers of Men on Lake Travis, Feb. 24 was blessed with fair temperatures, but cursed with mighty strong winds! Mario Hernandez won the Skeeter Bass Champs tournament on Lake Belton. Fishing alone, he ran up the Leon arm of the lake to the north side and fished in a deep pocket of water adjacent to a large spawning flat. With the water rising slowly from recent rains, Mario elected to fish shallow by pitching an “old-style” honey brown crank bait right up to the bank. He caught four keepers weighing 12.60lbs, including a 5.48lbs small mouth bass — a good enough haul to earn him $20,000! 2nd Jeff Epling 9.94lbs $5,000 3rd Charles Gerhart/David Shuster 9.78lbs $3,000 Steve Thiel/Brian Tate 4th 9.16lbs $2,000 5th Chuck Aleksines/Chris Brasher 8.58lbs $1,200 Twenty-seven places were paid with the last place paid bringing $600 for only 5.08lbs of fish. There were 202 teams fishing, 197 fish caught, and ninety six zeroes. Only five limits were brought to the scales. Named for Forest L. Wood, originator of Ranger Boats, the WalMart FLW Tour is the richest pro-level tournament trail around. Austin was very lucky that the FLW chose to fish Lake Travis in Central Texas for their first tournament of 2007. This megaevent lasted four days with 200 professional fishermen and 200 amateur fishermen competing for a million dollars in prizes. For two days the fishermen battled to make the cut to enter the final events. After weigh-in on the second day, ten pros and ten amateurs are selected to compete on the third day. An amateur champion was chosen at the end of the third day at a nationally televised weigh-in at the Austin Convention Center. Only the professionals fished the last day and the winner was crowned at another even more spectacular and exciting weigh-in — also at the convention center and nationally televised. Going into the event Leander pro Clark Wendlandt was picked to win due to his knowledge of Lake Travis. (It seems that Clark was also working some kind of magic on his fellow fishermen with regards to his ping-pong playing skills.) Clark said that he was fishing marinas anchored with complex cable systems that broke off some key fish. He was using a combination of crank baits and jigs. Aaron Hastings, in his second year on tour, started the season with a bang by winning first place for a prize of $125,000. He had a two-day total of 19.9lbs of fish. He fished the back of Cypress Creek and targeted docks for his first place finish. He used a drop shot with six-pound fluorocarbon line and a four-inch roboworm. Second place went to another fisherman who is relatively new to the www.texasoutdoorzone.com Visit today and you can … download our radio shows, find current weather radar, enter hunt contests, find kids’ outdoor activities, and more! FLW competition, Brian Thrift. By fishing docks with a one-half ounce jig Brian caught 17.15lbs of bass to win his $50,000 check. Craig Dowling came in third place with 15.5lbs of fish that netted him $40,000. He fished marinas with a 1/16ounce jig head and a shad-styled sinko trailer. Clark Wendlandt finished in fourth place with 13.11lbs for a $30,000 check. Of course, the crowd went wild for the success of a local hero. Congratulations, Clark! Fifth place went to Ron Shuffield with a 13.8lbs catch and a check for $20,000. Scott Martin caught the Big Bass of the tournament — an 8.12lbs hog. Seventy-five places were paid with the 50th place receiving a check for $10,000. All in all, quite a big pay out! The FLW put on a great show at the Austin Convention Center, complete with a grand motorcade of sponsor logo decorated trucks and boats and a police escort to take the pros to the launch site on Lake Travis. In addition, a Family Fun Center was set up with entertainment for adults and kids, including autographs from pros, fishing tips and demonstrations, boat simulators, fun houses, and rods and reels for the kids. The “Texas Outdoor Zone” radio show was done live from the convention center Saturday morning at the regular time — 6 to 8 a.m. on 1300AM The Zone. Host T. J. Greaney and I interviewed Castrol pros Mike Surman and Carl Svebek and A&W pro Chris McCall. I would like to thank them and the FLW vice-president of Communications, Dave Washburn, for making this possible. (You can listen to the show online at theoutddoorzone.com.) The FLW Tournament in Austin was such a success that I believe they might be back next year. I sure hope so because I had an awesome time watching it all unfold and meeting so many great people. The Fishers of Men tournament on Lake Travis was held on Saturday, Feb. 24. As I have said, the day was not very cold, but with wind gusts in excess of 50 miles an hour it could hardly be called pleasant. Fishing was brutal with the constant winds and waves hammering both our boats and us. Here are the results of the tournament, but the techniques and baits will have to wait until next month’s article due to the next Bass Champs Tournament on Lake Travis. 1st D. Johnson/C. Crienke 14.59lbsBig Bass5.04lbs 2nd S. Wilson/R. Cantu 10.42lbs2nd Big Bass 5.00lbs C. Johnson/L. Benton 3rd 10.37lbs 4th M. Roberts/J. Penny 9.44lbs 5th P. Smith/G Smith 7.94lbs Ten places were paid with tenth place having 6.40lbs of fish. Three additional places received gift cards from Sportsman’s Warehouse that were valued at $50, $30 and $20. CHECK OUT MY NEW WEBSITE AT CAPITOLVIEWGUIDESERVICE.COM. BUILT BY DARRIN LEBLANC, 512-736-6552. FOR CURRENT FISHING REPORTS ON AREA LAKES AND MORE — LISTEN TO THE TEXAS OUTDOOR ZONE RADIO SHOW, SATURDAYS 6 – 8 A.M. ON 1300 AM, THE ZONE OR VISIT TEXASOUTDOORZONE.COM. ’07 Skeeter Bass Champs Tournaments Mar 3, Lake Travis Mar 31, Lake LBJ | Apr 28, Lake Belton June 9, Lake Choke Canyon | Oct 20, location TBA (Championship) A D D I T I O N A L I N F O R M AT I O N AT B A S S C H A M P S . C O M ’07 Fishers of Men Tournaments Feb 24, Lake Travis | Mar 17, Lake LBJ Apr 14, Lake Austin | May 19, Lake Stillhouse For more info or guide service, call Jeff Cook 512-413-4178. www.fomcentex.com C OU N T RY LI N E M AGA Z I N E The Only Texas Lifestyle Magazine • 19