Posts Tagged ‘Water’

Fountains at the University of Texas, in Austin.

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009
The fountain at the LBJ Library

The fountain at the LBJ Library

University Campus in Austin Texas boasts some very cool fountains. Most are in the immediate area of the UT tower, but the most relaxing is the one by LBJ library. At the library, you can sit on the grass of a gentle sloping hill and soak in the view of the rhythmic water. At sunset, the lights kick on and the vibe is perfect for an evening picnic.

Closer to the tower, UT has a few fountains along the central square.  The Littlefield fountain, on the southern side, is one of the more ornate and fantastic.  On the east side, a circular and simple design. If you time your visit during football season, you might catch a glimpse of the tower glowing orange just after a victorious home game.

another fountain at the university of texas in austin

another fountain at the university of texas in austin

fountain with UT tower in background.

fountain with UT tower in background.

brightly lit UT tower behind fountain and sculpture.

brightly lit UT tower behind the Littlefield Fountain at the southern edge of campus.

fountain near theater on UT Campus.

fountain near theater on UT Campus.

Niagara Falls!

Sunday, September 20th, 2009
Riding on the Maid of the Mist, Niagara Falls.  Click on image to see more photos.

Riding aboard the Maid of the Mist, Niagara Falls. Click on image to see more photos

After a long, hot and drought stricken summer in Austin, it seemed fitting to visit Niagara Falls in New York.  The season is starting to change and crowds should be less.   It’s a natural wonder of the world…it’s gotta be seen.

The plan was to fly to Buffalo and take the #40 NFTA bus to Niagara Falls, New York.  Then walk across the Rainbow Bridge and up the hill to our room.  But the plane was delayed by two hours and it put an additional strain on the wait time for the next bus.  By the time we got there the visa office had closed, 1:30pm on Friday, and we got denied.  So we stayed on the American side.

This lucky couple poses, with their posse nearby, for wedding photos in Niagara State Park.

A bride and groom pose, with their posse nearby, for wedding photos in Niagara State Park.

The falls are surrounded by a magnificent state park that has trails to several different views.  The grounds area by Horseshoe Falls is immaculate and well known for hosting wedding photo-shoots.  Two were underway at the time we walked by.  The weather was perfect for this crisp September day and Niagara State Park is sure to produce wonderful backgrounds for photos. Those lucky couples definitely scored some killer shots for their wedding.

Onboard the Maid of the Mist, viewing the might American Falls and about to get wet!

Onboard the Maid of the Mist, viewing the mighty American Falls and about to get wet!

In the immediate area surrounding the park entrance, the American Falls are just to the left. We stood there and soaked in the view and contemplated the immense amount of water flowing. It’s a trip! There is an observation tower nearby that is also an elevator down for the Maid of the Mist. For nine bucks you can have access to a viewing platform and of course a boat ride into the mist of Horseshoe Falls.

The trip is pretty quick, but well worth the money.  It beelines for American Falls, and then heads over to Horseshoe Falls.  With the wrap around effect of Horseshoe Falls, you can really lose yourself in the power of all that water.

After the the boat ride, there is a foot trail to the edge of the American Falls that is a must see.  There’s a small dead-end area that allows for a snapshot of a person with part of the falls directly behind.   It’s a squeeze to position yourself and your model, but it’s a must have in the collection of snaps.  There’s also lots of interesting and robust plant life on the rocks at the bottom of the falls.  It’s a very crisp and ionized area!

A man photographs a woman near American Falls, Niagara.

A man photographs a woman near American Falls, Niagara.

At night the park is almost as crowded.  Lots of people roam until midnight hours to view the colorful falls lit by Canadian spotlights.  Tiny flashes pop in the darkness as people pose for night shots almost as vigorously as in daylight.  A really good shot is a challenge, but with some of today’s digital cameras I’m sure plenty of people were pleased with their take.

Posing with some flowers in Niagara State Park, next to Horseshoe Falls.

Posing with some flowers in Niagara State Park, near Horseshoe Falls.

Unfortunately, outside of the park area, there’s not much to do!  If you like Indian food, then you have your pick of dozens of grub spots.  Otherwise all we found was the Denny’s in our Hotel and a nearby bar/grill that only has fried foods.  There’s a Hard Rock Cafe, but on a Saturday night, it was too loud and obnoxious inside.  It would have been fine anywhere else, but right next to an awesome State Park, it really was out of place and just not a pleasant atmosphere.

During the day, if you get hungry in the park, be prepared to spend 6 bucks for a hot dog.  It’s not that far to leave the park area and find that greasy spoon place for a beer and some fried pizza balls at the same price.  Or maybe some of their fried chicken breasts.  Did I mention they have beer?

Considering our next stop is New York City, it definitely weighs down upon my outlook on the small scene at Niagara Falls.  But hey, we’re here for the water, not the scene.  I found it was actually refreshing to visit a small town next to such a huge natural wonder of the world.

Aquarena Springs in San Marcos, Tx.

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Not very well hidden, in a small college town centered in Texas, there’s a bit of spring water that will knock your aqua socks off!  The area here, and in New Braunfels, gets more rainfall than most of the rest of Texas and it shows.  The clear spring water from Aquarena Springs flows generously and chilled waterfalls dot the way.

Water flowing from the nearby Aquarina Springs.

Water flowing from the nearby Aquarena Springs.

Kate and I paid a visit to the area for the late afternoon, evening hour of the Labor Day holiday.  It was a partly cloudy day and the water got chilly fast, when the sun dipped below the trees.  Considering the holiday weekend, but factoring in the small size of San Marcos, it was a comfortable sized crowd that gathered.  The sign says, no alcohol, but we weren’t alone in cracking open a few beers.  Keeping the area clean and safe comes first.  With some careful planning, accommodations can be made to skirt any hassles.  Both, the law and from a guilty conscience.  Think smart, and you deserve a beer while soaking your feet in the spring water.

Kate tosses spring water under a canopy of trees.

Kate tosses spring water under a canopy of trees.

Underwater in Barton Springs.

Friday, August 21st, 2009
Diving toward bottom at Barton Springs Pool.

Diving toward bottom at Barton Springs Pool.

Now first off, be careful. This area is a federally protected natural habitat! That’s what the lifeguard barked out. No, not to me, but might as well have been. We’ve always known the cold-water springs to be the home of a rare salamander, but even I didn’t really think about not picking stuff up, like rocks, while diving around. And yeah, there’s some cool stuff down there. But just remember to cruise around carefully and disturb as very little as possible. It only takes a few dives to realize it’s a delicate ecosystem that is playing host to hundreds of swimmers above.

There are lots of tiny snails around the main spring and a few fish taking refuge in a crevice that leads to a big hole. The hole is much deeper than the rest of the area, so I’m thinking it’s a crater from the main spring flow, years before the recent man mad dam. It’s filled with small white pebbles and lined with a beautiful limestone miniature cliff that reflects the filtered sunlight.

Fish living in Barton Springs Pool.

Fish living in Barton Springs Pool.

It’s a fun dive and enough to cause a pressure change in the ears and presses the mask harder against your face. It takes a few times to build up the tolerance, and if you rarely dive below nine feet then ease toward the bottom of the hole over the course of a couple of dives.

In the distance, a swimmer comes up for air.

In the distance, a girl rises to the surface after a jump from the diving board.

After you’re used to it you will start to explore a whole new world no matter how many times you say you’ve been to Barton Springs. Just remember to treat the area with tons of respect and also yourself. Stay safe and be aware of your surroundings. Many times people are swimming right above where you’re free-diving.

Tubing the Guadalupe River

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009
Around the bend area, tubing the Guadalupe River.

Around the bend area, tubing the Guadalupe River.

It’s the hottest summer I can recall in  central Texas, and in spite of the lack of rainfall there’s little choice but to visit the surviving swimming holes in hopes of a refreshing dip.  Unless you want to stay in the house all day, or someone else’s air conditioned hang out, the only way to roll outside is within reach of fresh water.  An old time favorite is tubing some of the river areas around New Braunfels and San Marcos.  It’s a time honored tradition in these parts, and there’s plenty of services for tube rentals and return shuttles.

I called ahead to the Tube Haus to ask about some details.  She said the loop at the Horseshoe was flowing at an hour and half.  It’s been awhile since I’ve been there, but I’m pretty sure it should be around 45 minutes.  But when we got there, she said it was taking 2.5 hours.  Wow, I know there’s a drought but it’s apparently getting worse by the minute!  We better jump in and start off with some paddling to speed it up.

The start of the horseshoe is the slowest part of the tube ride.

The start of the horseshoe is the slowest part of the tube ride.

After scratching through the weekend crowd, most of the pile up is at the start, the view is much better and the flow is just a tad bit better.  There are lots of private lawns leading right up to the river’s edge, and homeowner’s dot the shoreline along the way, also part of the weekend crowd.  And just when you thought you might get a moments privacy, there’s a county sheriff checking everyone out with binoculars and another standing on the other side under a shade tent.  I guess they are enforcing bottles and beer limits, but they are also conveniently situated downwind of the approaching and unsuspecting tubers.

Speaking of, don’t forget to lay down on your belly at times, and even out the scorching mid day sunburn your in the middle of getting.  As slow as this river is going, if you don’t flip at least once, you gonna be belly fried!

Just before the bend, the river is lined with cypress trees and the current carries Kate a little faster.

The river is lined with cypress trees and the current carries Kate a little faster.

view photo album

Barton Springs Pool!

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009
Kate escapes the Texas heat with an afternoon visit to Barton Springs.

Kate escapes the Texas heat with an afternoon visit to Barton Springs.

Always a hit. Unless you go on Thursday, of course. Even if it is right down the street, a trip on the one day of week they close the pool for cleaning is a heat stroking affair! It’s hot right now in Austin Texas. You gotta go to the springs…

The pool water at Barton Springs averages between 68-71 degrees Fahrenheit, year round! It’s the perfect temperature during summer and actually kinda warm for winter. The pool is pretty much huge, so it’s great for distance swimming or just lounging on an air mattress.

Floating around during a July afternoon.

Floating around during a July afternoon.

The parking lot can get pretty packed because there’s a few other nearby parks.  Zilker park, Umlauf, Botanical Gardens and the hike/bike trail along the river are also very popular.  So when you pull up (unless you’re really cool and you ride your bike or walk) chances are you’ll find few places to park.  But once your in the pool area, it’s not usually too bad.

The diving board at the springs almost always has a line to it.

The diving board at the springs almost always has a line to it.

The diving board will probably have a line to use, but it’s well worth the chance to have an interesting dip into the chilled waters.  If you get a chance, swim around and below the ladder a bit and you’ll find the main feed of Barton Spring.  It’s the coldest part of the pool.

Kate and Jenny walk along the rock surface while Kyle does a backflip off the diving board.

Near the diving board, part of the pool's natural rock offers a wading ledge.

If you are looking to do some sunbathing, there’s plenty of that on the east side of the pool.  It’s a sloping hill and works great to prop you up and point you due west into the brutal Texas-July sunshine.  It shouldn’t take long to dry off and start to turn bronze before you’ll be ready to jump in the pool again.

Parked in the shade...

Parked in the shade...

If you are more the type that wants the shade, then this place has also got you covered.  The three springs that deliver chilled water from the Edwards Aquafer and make up Barton Springs Pool, are also constantly feeding the giant oak and pecan trees that line the pool.  Not many trees in Texas get the chance to grow next to spring water and these trees show the difference.

View more pics of Barton Springs located in the SPI360 Galleries.

Biggest Clean Up Set (that I’ve seen…)

Saturday, January 12th, 2008
Clean Up Set On A Chest High Day

Clean Up Set On A Chest High Day

It was, i think, about the third day after a new swell…maybe second…i dunno… anyway, it was the on the downgrade but still HH. Small enough though that some of the people that stayed out of the water the day before because of “bad tamales”, suddenly felt fine and were chargin morning high tide.

As the day went on, the tide went out but size was about the same. Plenty more people scratch for the line up. Basically by lunch time, if the winds are good and it’s the trailing edge of a swell anyone that got shitfaced drunk because it was too big or mysteriously “sick” or even just flat out said, “no way mang!” They all felt confident enough to head out today.

I was kicked back in the shade on the beach and I snapped a quick shot or two of the mid-morning session and kept the camera nearby. At around 2 or three (the hottest time of day and there’s still people out!) I see a friggin’ MACKING set explode way outside of the line-up. I grabbed for my camera and snapped a couple rush shots as the set just unloaded, out of nowhere, onto the full range of funboarders, blue-crushers, and a couple toasted and surfed out tweakers. it cleaned ‘em all up. Sent them all to the beach!

before the clean up set

before the clean up set

After scrambing for the camera, I managed to shoot the last two waves of the set.  People are already under full rinse as another macker breaks well past the surfers horizon.

After scrambing for the camera, I managed to shoot the last two waves of the set. People are already under full rinse as another macker breaks.

the last wave of the clean up set.

the last wave of the clean up set.

oh wait, one more rinse...

oh wait, one more rinse...

The Ten Dollar Surfboard

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

What would you do with an old thruster that has tail cancer? I’m not sure about you, but Paolo Schulte bought one for 100 pesos, scooped out the damaged tail and center skeg, sealed it and surfed it!

Paolo Schulte keeps this board alive and ripping.

Paolo Schulte keeps this board alive and ripping.

I first met Schulte sometime in December, somewhere in Mexico. He basically ripped and knew the spot very well. Anytime the point got too crowded or fat with tide movement, I often found him gambling with barrels on the beach break. We were both at the same spot for quite awhile and eventually became friends. I watched him surf a few different boards and he ripped on all of them. He’s on those boards in a few other photo galleries in this site, but this story is all about his open-minded approach to staying in the curl…even if it’s odd looking. And also, the guy has a hell of a sense of humor. I could never tell if he was going to bust an air with intense focus or just try to make me laugh while screaming out of a tube ride.

When you’re a long-timer, and surfing nearly daily sessions, a small quiver really starts to get beat to shit. So in order to save the good boards for the good swells, but to keep up the water time, some people start surfing on older, uglier, and stranger boards than normal. Especially those that aren’t rich or have ten perfect boards that look like they’ve never been used. The unsponsored, but core guys, will surf anthing that floats.

I first noticed Schulte was surfing a different board when I saw it flipping over and getting tossed in front of the foam as he was swimming in after it. Someone grabbed it for him before it hit the rocks and he paddled back out. A few days later, it happened to be me that grabbed it for him. It was then that I noticed why he wasn’t using a leash. There was no place for one! I was looking at a strange twin fin with a C-shaped tail. It was yellowed with age and taking on water from recent times when no one was there to keep it from hitting the rocks. I put it on the sand and continued to head out. We waved at each other and I made a mental note to ask him about the board later on.

When I got the scoop about the amputed fin and gutted tail cancer, I was still left a little confused. But when he told me how much he paid for it, I understood. The question wasn’t, why? It was more like, why not? It floats and it turns…what more do you need? For the price of two meals, anyone can score a board. Whether it’s rideable or not is totally up to you.

Slotted for cheap!

Slotted for cheap!

Spicy Tex-Mex Surfing

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

Early in January, I ran into Frank Floyd and his crew of Texas rippers. Joining Nathan, Micah and J.R. was Jaime, formely of Sayulita but currently living on Kauai. This group of B.H.P. rippers are still borderline drinking age, but yet the beaches in Central Mexico are old stomping grounds for them. The surf was small when they hit up this spot, but they got plenty of shack time at a different beach for most of their trip. Having seen them surf overhead before, I only could only wish that there would have been some size in the water while they were here. Oh well…they rip the small kine too!

Jaime pops it out on the inside,over the shallow rocks.

Jaime pops it out on the inside,over the shallow rocks.

Nathan Floyd with a hard snap off the top.

Nathan Floyd with a hard snap off the top.

Smooth style in Nathans surfing...

Smooth style in Nathan's surfing...

cool angle, Nathan Floyd about to rip a chunk off.

cool angle, Nathan Floyd about to rip a chunk off.

More shots of Spicy Tex-Mex Surfing!


Surfing Tropical Storm Alberto

Tuesday, June 13th, 2006

Shawn Cooksey devouring pockets on the inside.

For such a disorganized spinner, Tropical Storm Alberto sure did kick up some corduroy lines. Mid-Gulf buoys were tapping the six foot mark at 11 seconds as the east swell marched toward the Texas coast. The swell came in on Monday, June 12th and would gradually fade to 3 foot at 10 seconds for the next two days. A weak low pressure system dipped down past the Lone Star State and briefly changed local winds to offshores, creating some early morning perfection on Tuesday.

James Walters, threading sections and swimmers.

James Walters, threading sections and swimmers.

If this is any sign of things to come, the answer to the question could very well be yes, get a semi-gun and start getting in shape. Some local surfers are keeping a bit of reserve, pointing out how it is not uncommon that the first couple of spinners can be responsible for the best surf of the whole season. Sometimes it just lines up better with stable early-summer weather patterns. Also, the threat of red tide grows with each hot summer day. Some of the later season storms can be almost too big, creating victory at sea conditions. One thing is certain, if mother nature is going to throw some summer lines at the Texas coast, they will be greeted anxiously by a waiting crowd.

Nicole Ekstrom enjoying the glide on the outside.

Keith gaffs one during the first evening session.