Football Playoffs

This past weekend was a big one for the Goldthwaite Eagles and Copperas Cove Bulldawgs, with both teams winning their first round playoff games. Sara cheered Cove on as they beat beat Mesquite 21-7 and The Eagles, with Colton playing a good game with 5 solo tackles and one ‘pic’, whomped Thorndale 42-10. Last Friday a serious cold front arrived in our area with 25 MPH winds, gusting to 40. Both games were played in the Waco area and in those windy, conditions, the best defenses won both games!

The Bulldawgs with a final, Class 5A ranking of 15th, next opponent will be Garland, ranked 17th, while Goldthwaite, ranked 17th in Class 1A teams, takes on a tough, 15th ranked team from Shiner. Digressing, Shiner is known statewide for the best locally owned and produced beer. The brewery is over 100 years old and still going strong. Both teams will face stern tests as they strive to move on in the playoffs.
Meanwhile, this past Sunday, Sara and her Bulldawg cheerleader squad defeated 15 other teams and won first place in their division of the American Cheer Power competition. The judges scored their routine the highest in all of the different classes.


In the picture, taken at the first of their routine, Sara is flippin’ on the right.

Having never seen a real cheer competition, this one was an eye opener for me. The girls, from all ages, are marvelous athletes and some of the routines were outstanding! There were over 75 teams involved, representing all of our great State, except for the far western portion.

Austin quickly switched to basketball, making his middle school’s ‘A’ team and they had their first game Monday, but he came down with a stomach virus and didn’t even go to school. Mikayla’s middle school basketball team played played at Commanche and came out on the short end of a 40-19 score.

I didn’t get to watch Mikayla’s game because I went to the booster club meeting and heard the scouting reports on the football team from Shiner. The game this Friday should be a good, tough, hard hitting one!

Another Championship In The Family

My Grandkids continue to rack up championships! This past Saturday, Wesley, age 10, and his soccer team, The Gators, won the Paris, Texas Soccer Association’s, 11 and under, boys division championship. Wesley is a veteran having played soccer for 5 years. He also stars in youth baseball, makes straight A’s and because of his athleticism and trampoline skills has been asked to try out for the local, competition gymnastics team.
Wesley, left, and his brother, Will, 5 and just getting started in sports, look down as they try to figure our who to blame for spilling the ice water.

Vacek’s

At 5:00 PM this past Wednesday afternoon, I had defied logic and was sitting behind a tree scouting for deer. What’s illogical about that? The tree that I was hiding behind was in the feed lot, not two hundred feet from the east side of my house and by dark, within fifty yards of my hide, I had seen eleven does and two young bucks! My cover was so sparse that I couldn’t lift up my camera for pictures.In the thick fog Thursday morning, on my ranch,near Goldthwaite, Texas, sitting in a tree stand by a food plot, I had only seen four yearling does. Then it dawned on me, the bucks will be close to where the does are!

So, then and there, I decided that I would convert one of the partial round bales of hay in the feed lot, into a blind of sorts and see if that would provide me sufficient cover to get a shot. Moving the hay around for a makeshift ‘blind’ proved to be easy, but the hard part was angling into the chair so only the top of my camo’d head would show. Thursday afternoon found me ‘scrooched’ into a bale of hay, watching a spike about a hundred yards away down a lane in the trees, stop and rub his head against an overhanging limb, put his back legs together and urinate over his glands on to the obvious scrape. In quick succession, he would be the first of four more bucks, a six pointer and three shooters, to repeat this act. This was a first for me. I’ve seen one buck ‘work’ a scrape, but never two and certainly not five and don’t ask me why I watched and didn’t shoot!

A doe walked across the clearing not forty yards in front of me, followed by the spike. Soon the spike beat a quick retreat and I got ready. Out walked this nice buck, guessing his age on the hoof, probably four and a half with heavy body, wide horns and muscular neck. He looked at the doe as I centered my cross hairs in the heart, lung area, bam, down he went and bounced back up, ran for twenty or so feet and fell dead!

During the fall, through junior high, high school, college and my first 2 jobs, my afternoons, when not otherwise occupied, were spent outside of Fairchild, in Ft. Bend County, Texas, hunting on the Vacek, Stavinoah and Franek farms.  From 1949 until 1969 this was a Dove and Duck hunting paradise for my Dad and I! Today this area encompasses a huge, Reliant Energy, power plant and an upscale subdivision. Progress and municipal sprawl equates to loss of hunting grounds!

Mr. Vacek was an Uncle of one of my Dad’s employees, and us getting to hunt down there started innocently enough with my Dad buying eggs and fresh produce from them. It was also a pleasant, 30 minute, afternoon drive for us, and soon, Mr Vacek, said, “Bryan and Jonny, vy don’t you come shoot ‘dem Dove and Duck covering my place?” That was all the invitation we needed and Mr. Vacek even got us permission to hunt on the other 2 properties.

From mid September until Duck season we concentrated on Doves then switched our pursuits to the Ducks. Mostly they were in a wooded, creek bottom that is now gone, covered by the power plant’s cooling lake.

Mr. Vacek would call my Dad and say, “Bryan, them bottom got ‘dem Ducks” and off we’d go. I remember several occasions when my Dad even got me out of school on “an emergency” to go hunting. He correctly surmised that being out hunting with him, would keep me out of trouble and teach me valuable lessons for the rest of my life. He was correct!

The hunting was excellent, sneaking the Ducks in the bottom or pass shooting Doves in the cut milo and corn fields, but one trip taught me a valuable lesson. Taking another computer salesman with me one afternoon almost cost me “big time”! I had loaned him one of my shotguns and explained its action to him and I was leading us down a small creek on our “sneak” of a bunch of Ducks, when Boom!!!

His shotgun exploded and the shot plowing into the ground right beside my foot and I froze. I turned around and checked the safety, and sure enough, in his excitement, he had clicked it off, accidentally touched the trigger and almost blew my leg off!

This taught me three valuable lessons, never loan out a shotgun, always try to walk abreast with another hunter and don’t take a “cicero” hunting until you’re sure of his capability and judgment! This man and I remained friends and neighbors until his untimely death in 1990 but we never hunted together again, we fished a lot, but no more hunting!

Both my Dad and Mr. Vacek died in 1969 and I moved away and when I returned to Houston in 1979, the power plant had gobbled up our hunting area.

 

The Haystack Buck

At 5:00 PM this past Wednesday afternoon, I had defied logic and was sitting behind a tree scouting for deer. What’s illogical about that? The tree that I was hiding behind was in the feed lot, not two hundred feet from the east side of my house and by dark, within fifty yards of my hide, I had seen eleven does and two young bucks! My cover was so sparse that I couldn’t lift up my camera for pictures.In the thick fog Thursday morning, on my ranch,near Goldthwaite, Texas, sitting in a tree stand by a food plot, I had only seen four yearling does. Then it dawned on me, the bucks will be close to where the does are!


So, then and there, I decided that I would convert one of the partial round bales of hay in the feed lot, into a blind of sorts and see if that would provide me sufficient cover to get a shot. Moving the hay around for a makeshift ‘blind’ proved to be easy, but the hard part was angling into the chair so only the top of my camo’d head would show. Thursday afternoon found me ‘scrooched’ into a bale of hay, watching a spike about a hundred yards away down a lane in the trees, stop and rub his head against an overhanging limb, put his back legs together and urinate over his glands on to the obvious scrape. In quick succession, he would be the first of four more bucks, a six pointer and three shooters, to repeat this act. This was a first for me. I’ve seen one buck ‘work’ a scrape, but never two and certainly not five and don’t ask me why I watched and didn’t shoot!

A doe walked across the clearing not forty yards in front of me, followed by the spike. Soon the spike beat a quick retreat and I got ready. Out walked this nice buck, guessing his age on the hoof, probably four and a half with heavy body, wide horns and muscular neck. He looked at the doe as I centered my cross hairs in the heart, lung area, bam, down he went and bounced back up, ran for twenty or so feet and fell dead!

Pictured is my ‘Haystack Buck’.
Whew, that was some deal, but where’s the smoke coming from? The muzzle flash had ignited some of the hay, but it soon smoldered out. Getting out of my ‘blind’, I hadn’t taken two steps, when I saw movement ahead in the brush and three bucks exploded out.

Walking up to the buck, I noticed he was a seven pointer, with his left, main beam broken from fighting. Earlier in the week I’d passed on a big buck with only one antler. These guys around here are getting aggressive!

The big boys are moving and they were certainly were close to where the does were!

Pictures From Randy Pfaff, Outfitter, Colorado

 

 

Warren was guided on his hunt for this fine Muley by Randy Pfaff. Randy sent me pictures of some of his client’s successful hunts this year including one of his son Adam and his Bighorn Sheep. Obviously, the huge, muley was photographed and not rifle. Randy’s e-mail is rpfaff@bresnan.net.

         

    

 

 

 

 

High School Football – District Champs

All four of my Grandkids enjoyed winning weeks last week and all four of their teams won their respective district championship!  Quite a feat for the four first timers!
First off, Austin and his San Marcos Diamondbacks, won a squeaker over cross town rival, Goodnight, by a 14-12 score.  The Diamondbacks, losers of their first 2 games,  claimed the 7th grade, district championship and ended up with 6 wins and 2 losses for the year.
Mikayla and her Goldthwaite 7th graders won their district championship, beating a scrappy team from Meridian 29-20.  Goldthwaite lost their first game then coasted to a 7 and 1 record!

Sara’s, 13th State ranked, Copperas Cove Bulldawgs, survived being upset last week by A&M Consolidated and came back and hammered Harker Heights 38-6, winning their Class 5A district championship and moving on to play Mesquite in the first round of the State playoffs, this Friday night in Waco.

Meanwhile, Colton and his, 19th  State ranked, Goldthwaite Eagles traveled to Meridian, came from behind twice and won a close, hard fought game over the Yellow Jackets, 33-26.  The win ran the Eagl’s record overall to 9 and 1 and gave them the district championship with a mark of 5 and 0.  This Friday, the Eagles begin the State Class 1A playoffs and square off in Moody against Thorndale.

Coach Spradley is all smiles after the big win against Meridian and poses with his 3 Freshman stand outs (L to R) Sergio, Colton and Tyler.
High school football playoffs begin this Friday night and middle school basketball started for Mikayla on Monday with her Lady Eagles taking on Dublin and losing 29-20.  Mikayla did not score but collected 2 rebounds and had 3 steals.  Austin will also be playing basketball but his season hasn’t begun.  Sara will run track and Colton will participate in track and baseball.  Much more high school sports to come with my Grandkids and their teams.

Randy’s Big ‘Un

My Son, Randy, is the pastor of Fellowship of San Marcos Church and he has to carefully pick his times to come up to the ranch and hunt deer. He missed opening day this year, but really made up for it with the trophy he shot.
Here, my Grandson, Sean, proudly shows off his Dad’s deer. This picture was snapped from Randy’s iPod and I’ll have better ones later this week. This big buck was 3-1/2 years old and had 15 points! Randy will have the horns scored when they dry out. We’d not seen this buck around the ranch.

Veteran’s Day – Buck Barry

After rereading Buck Barry’s, diary, edited in 1978 by James K. Greer, I thought the following tale of a battle fought over 160 years ago would be appropriate. Referencing Mr. Greer’s book and discovering more details on the internet, I’m pleased that I can summarize it. These men, Texans, all volunteers, responded to an urgent plea from an American General. Remember only two years before, Texas had been annexed into the United States, but old ties are strong.

Fight Along The San Juan River

Buck Barry, my 3G, Uncle was a veteran, a veteran of the Indian Wars, the Mexican War and the Civil War and was, I’m sure, a supporter of the fore runner of our Veteran’s Day – Decoration Day. Decoration Day began in Virginia in late 1863, with southern ladies decorating the graves of Confederate soldiers with red and white bunting. It quickly spread across the South, then the North and finally in 1867 was named, Memorial Day, a national holiday.

In 1846, before Decoration Day was even thought of, Buck had joined a company of volunteers in Franklin, Texas, under the command of Capt. Eli Chandler and the unit had made haste to south Texas, responding to the urgent request for reinforcements from Texas, from U.S. General (later President) Zachary Taylor. Arriving, ten days late for the battles at Resaca De La Palma and Palo Alto, the Texans, Buck included, were formed into a regiment of other Texas units and elected Capt. Jack Hays, who Buck had served with as a Texas Ranger in 1845, their Colonel and Samuel H Walker, their Lt. Colonel.

Digressing, Walker, a former Texas Ranger, was the inventor of the famous Walker Colt pistol, that until the .357 Magnum was introduced in 1935, was the most powerful, hand gun ever produced. Walker was later awarded a direct commission in the U.S. Army and served under Gen. Winfield Scott during the march to Mexico City. In 1847, Capt. Walker was killed by enemy fire while leading a charge into the Mexican city of Huamantla.

Buck and the Texans were the lead units of Gen. Taylor’s column heading up the San Juan River, a tributary of the Rio Grande, until their advance was stopped outside of Monterrey, by a regiment of Mexican Lancers and this led to a very, spirited fight!

The Texans had stopped for a break and unsaddled and were rubbing their horses down when the Lancers surprised them! Buying time for a hasty defense, Col. Hays rode out and challenged the Mexican Colonel to a saber duel. Hays mentioned to Buck that he knew nothing of saber dueling. The challenge was accepted and valuable time was gained when the Mexican officer removed all of his accoutrements and then rode out to meet Hays.

The Mexican drew his saber, and unceremoniously, Hays drew his pistol and shot him! At that breech of etiquette, the infuriated Lancers came boiling down the riverbank and charged the Texans! Hays ordered his men to fire from behind their horses using them as shields. The Lancers rode through the Texans three times, rifles and pistols were emptied and the fight continued with bowie knives against lances, until the attack was beaten off. Texan losses were one dead and many wounded and eighty of the Lancers were killed. Both sides suffered heavy losses of horses.

Buck said, “After that fight, I never called Mexicans cowards again!”

Where There’s A Will, There’s A Way

Previously, I had mentioned seeing out in my field, a nice deer, with tall, uneven antlers and a pronounced limp and I had decided that if given the opportunity, I would dispatch it.

My neighbor captured a picture of the deer coming in to his feeder and it clearly showed that it was missing its rear, right hoof and leg, just below the joint. Barbwire or a bad shot, we couldn’t tell. As expected the deer’s left horn was deformed and much smaller than the right one and with only one rear leg, I was wondering if he could perform his yearly reproduction duties?                                                                                                                                         Last Friday was the first cool morning of the year and I was in a tree stand overlooking thick cover and a feeder 110 yards away and here came three does right to the feeder. On time at 7:30 AM, the feeder spread the corn, the deer jumped over the low fence and chow was on!

Deer Pictures

Our scouting, hunting and preparations for this deer season has afforded us a good chance to get some interesting pictures of some does and yearlings.The bucks just won’t sit still for a picture.

         

 

 

Bits and Pieces from Jon H Bryan…