February 2015 Part 1 - Parrotheads of Port Aransas
Transcription
February 2015 Part 1 - Parrotheads of Port Aransas
ISLAND POOP February 2015 SPRING INTO THE PHLING Saturday March 14, 2015 Time to get in the swing and plan for the Phling ! Volunteer to help make this annual event a success. Deno’s Dialogue I am a charter member of the Parrot Heads of Port Aransas (PHOPA). A charter member means that I joined PHOPA in Dec 2008 when it was first formed in Port Aransas. LuAnn Ferguson, our founder, got a special dispensation from the Parrot Heads In Paradise (PHIP), our national group, because at the time there was a Parrothead club in Corpus Christi. She explained that Port Aransas people do not interact with Corpus Christi and we are a separate area. The exception was granted thus PHOPA was formed. Our club is a phun (parrot heads change f’s to ph) club that does good for local charity groups. Our club is constantly changing. People come and go. Some folks change interests or do not like to party. We meet on the 2nd Thursday and have a happy hour on the 4th Thursday. When there is a fifth Thursday we have a party too. I do a Bonfire on the beach every month on the night of the full moon. Although this is not an official Parrothead event many come and we try to notify every one of the event. You can bring anyone you wish to the Moonfire. We also sometimes just do a happy hour because. We are going to plan a party for National Margarita day coming soon. There are rules that we operate by. Many of them are in our bylaws (copies forth coming to you) and some related to Jimmy Buffett and Margaritaville and patents, use of names or related material (see application ) or check with me if you need more info. Remember, Jimmy Buffett has a battery of lawyers to deal with this issue. Our club, in my opinion, should always be a social club that does good for the community. I believe that our goal in any event we participate in should be phun first. The amount of money we raise should not be paramount. Every group we have given money to has said “Thank You”. Once a check is given to a group it is none of our business where the money goes unless we designate it. We should feel no pressure to “do more than last year” and I hope we can say we had a lot of phun raising it. Our club has 2 phund raising events. We do a Spring Phling (3-14-15) which is mostly “winter Texans “ who follow the excellent PA Rockers band. This is a phun parrot head event and phun is the goal. We do raise some money which we give away to a designated charity voted on by the club (to be decided next meeting). We want to make this event not too much work for anyone. If everyone does a little no one has to do a lot. In October we do our Wings over Port A event which is our one “required” fund raising event. We solicit donations and money and have a party. Planning for this event will be after our Spring Phling is over and put away. This year the date is Oct 9-10, at the Civic Center and the band is the Bad Monkeys. These decisions were voted on by the club to guarantee these items. Much more will be coming on this event. We may need to decide the theme soon. We are constantly looking for happy hour locations. We try to have one a year at all of our sponsors and supporters. We like to have all our members to come by events at sponsor locations to show return for support. It makes it easier for us to ask for support. I hope this has been informative and I promise not to go on this long again. We have PORT A PETE’S PHUNTASTIC PHEATURES Lines n Lyrics Can you name this Jimmy Buffet tune from one line or lyric in the song ? “Beachcombers ride oh children lost in the tide” I HEARD IT ON THE COCONUT TELEGRAPH We need a trailer for the Mardi Gras parade on Feb 17. It needs to be 16-18 feet long. We’ll decorate it with all sorts of stuff, ride on it, undecorate it, and be done, all in one afternoon! Call Deno with ideas...749.0256 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Fourth Annual Rockport Writers RoundUp Saturday, Feb. 28 5 p.m. Estelle Stair Gallery, 406 S Austin St, Rockport, Texas 78382 Readings of original works in a variety of genres by members of the Rockport Writers Group including a PHOPA member who will read an excerpt from her latest release, "The King's Redress." Beverages and light snacks will be provided. The event is free and no RSVP is necessary, just come and enjoy. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Looks like Schlitterbahn financing is now secure and TxDOT has 361 improvements on their radar for approval in 2015. Guess the traffic will be getting even more interesting on our salty piece of land. PHoPA Doc Hause is cookin’ again ! SATURDAY FEBRUARY 7TH, 2015 AT VFW 8967 311 N, ALISTER ‘CHEF DOC BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND” STEWS AND BREWS MENU SHINER BOCK PUB STEW PUEBLO GREEN CHILI PORK STEW SHELLFISH AND ANDOUILLE SAUSAGE GUMBO HOMEMADE SHINER BOCK BEER BREAD HOMEMADE WHOLE WHEAT BREAD NOT YO’ MOMMA’S BANANA PUDDING “SERVING TIME” 5:00 PM TO 6:30 PM “DANCE” FOLLOWING THE DINNER FEATURING THE RIP TONES DUO $5.00 SHINER BOCK PITCHERS DONATIONS $8.00 Tickets Available at the VFW Inspired by Naked Came the Sharks by Jed Donellie and Devorah Fox A WHALE OF A TAIL © Copyright 2015 by Orville Ballard and Devorah Fox In previous episodes, Cheri Bradshaw, a student at the Intracoastal Marine Institute in Turtle Point, has been helping with a team excavating the skeleton of a whale buried in the dunes and has uncovered a human skull. Cheri, fellow student Corny, freelance journalist Tool, local law enforcement, and the director of the IMI all want to know to whom did the skull belong and how did it end up buried on the beach. Cheri lifted her hands from the keyboard and leaned back in her chair. It simply didn’t make sense. She looked up from the monitor and gazed around the room. The Marine Institute’s library was quiet this afternoon. She figured that everybody must be at the beach taking advantage of the sunny weather. That’s where she should be, not here in this ghostly silent library surrounded by maps and reference books on oceanography but she found she couldn’t go to the beach without thinking about that skull she had dug up. No one seemed to be doing anything about it. If the police had made any headway in their investigation they certainly weren’t telling anyone. There hadn’t been anything on TV, in the newspaper, or even online. She tapped a pencil against her chin. That reporter Tool, she should talk to him. He might know how the investigation was coming along. Then she could get out of here and out into the sun. Cheri picked up her phone and tapped a quick text: Stuck in IMI Lib researching tide charts. Tell me they know where that damn skull came from so I can get outa here. When she got no response, she sighed and put her hands on the keyboard. She typed, jiggled the mouse, and entered another combination of wind and water currents and air and water temperature. Red, blue, yellow, and green lines snaked across the digital image of the Gulf of Mexico displayed on the monitor. They made landfall, and took off in every direction across the Texas Coastal Bend and beyond. At no point, however, did they cross the spot on the Turtle Point beach where she found the skull. “You rang?” Cheri looked up to see Tool standing behind her. “If anyone’s come close to identifying that skull or how it ended up on our beach I haven’t been able to find out anything.” “You didn’t have to come all this way to tell me that. You could have just texted me.” Tool shrugged. “Watcha doin’?” Cheri explained her research and the lack of results. Tool frowned. “So far I haven’t been able to determine that the skull was brought to the shore by any tide originating from anywhere. Unless it’s a very old and I have to go back further in time. I can’t claim to be an expert in forensic anthropology and I’ll admit I didn’t spend a lot of time examining that skull.” She had, in fact, tried to get her hands off it as quickly as possible. “But if it was very old would it still have hair?” Cheri scowled at the baffling display and shook her head. “You’d think it dropped out of the sky or something.” “Stranger things have happened. I did a story for the paper once on sky junk, weird shit that falls off of and out of airplanes, even outer space.” Cheri scoffed. “’The Skull That Fell from Outer Space.’ Sounds like the title for the next Keanu Reeves movie.” She frowned at Tool’s distant expression. “What?” “Speaking of stories, there’s another one that I did that might be of more help. Are you done here or do you have more research to do?” “What do you have in mind?” Tool grinned and said, “Come with me.” Fifteen minutes later, Tool brought his Jeep to a stop outside one of a line of hangers at the Turtle Point Municipal Airport. The compact white plane parked in front of the hanger looked like it could take off and go somewhere with no more preparation than a car would need to run a quick errand downtown. A loudspeaker mounted over the open bay door broadcast Van Halen’s “JUMP.” Cheri followed Tool into an open hanger which from the unadorned corrugated metal exterior appeared as nondescript as a boat storage locker. Inside it looked like part auto repair bay, part stables. She saw fuel tanks, oil cans, and compressed gas cylinders. Toward the rear, a couple of people in cargo shorts and T-shirts stood at worktables covered with hand- and power tools. Ropes and rigging hung from hooks on the wall. Sheets of what looked like nylon or maybe even silk draped another wall. At their entrance, a young man strode out from the rear of the hanger. Despite his slim build he seemed robust and held himself with confidence. “Welcome to JUMP. I’m Fitz. Oh, hey, Tool, it’s you. Great to see you, man.” Fitz held out his hand and Tool shook it. “Thanks for that story that you did for the newspaper. We got a ton of interest after that ran. Are you here to do a follow-up? You ready for that jump?” “Thanks, Fitz, but I’m still not ready to throw myself out of a perfectly good airplane. Tell ya what, though. I could use another ride. Fitz, this is Cheri. She’s part of the Intracoastal Marine Institute team that was working on that whale excavation.” “Oh, yeah, I remember reading about that too. You dug up something more than a whale skeleton as I recall. And didn’t I read that then the whole thing got bulldozed or something?” Cheri said, “That’s right.” “Must have made the director awful mad,” said Fitz. Cheri nodded. “Cheri’s still looking into the whole business. What would really help would be an aerial view of that part of the shoreline. Could you take us up?” “Sure,” said Fitz. “I don’t have a jumper coming for a few hours. I think we’ve got time for a little cruise. Let me get it set up.” He jogged back into the hangar and conferred with his staff, and gathered up equipment. He returned with another fellow, a slightly older gentleman whom he introduced as Sal, the pilot. “You’re not flying the plane?” Tool asked. “No, I’ll sit with you in case you have questions. Now hang tight. We’’ll just give this a pre-trip once-over.,” He and Sal strode out to the plane. Cheri and Tool followed. The loudspeaker now played “Jump” by the Pointer Sisters. Fitz and Sal completed their inspection. Sal climbed into the cockpit and Fitz rolled a set of steps into place so that Cheri and Tool could climb into the belly of the plane. As minimalist as the hangar, it offered no seats. “Just plunk yourself down on the floor,” Fitz said. He rubbed his hands together and cackled. “Now my pretties, I’ve got you up here. Who’s going to jump?” Tool snorted. “I told you, man, no way. All we wanted was an aerial view of the coast.” Fitz pouted. “Aw, really? You won’t believe the experience. It’s like nothing else.” He turned to Cheri and gave her a pleading puppy dog look. “How ‘bout you? Wanna give it a try?”
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