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Showing posts with label Lake Travis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lake Travis. Show all posts

Monday, August 8, 2011

Hot, Hot, Hot

This is my lakehouse post. Ryan's will be infinitely more interesting. Probably funnier too. (Update: Ok, this is turning out to be the Tree of Life of Charging Interests posts. Without dinosaurs. Can't say I didn't warn you.)


Damn, no pictures of me at the lakehouse in summer. Team Smith doesn't believe in cameras.


As I gazed up at the clouds sitting at the edge of the dock, I could only see one solitary cloud. To be honest, it didn't look like anything. I would love to say that the cloud looked like a duck or superman or even Abraham Lincoln, but it was none of those things. The cloud just sat suspended in the middle of the sapphire sky, a little white blemish on what otherwise was a perfect swath of blue heaven. It was of course white and fluffy, but it wasn't burdened with that one hope of 32 million Texans: Rain.

If you were there with me sitting on the dock, you would probably forgive me for thinking about the weather while I was in probably the happiest places on earth (Sorry, Disneyland). I'm not sure what there is about the lakehouse. The rolling hills? Beautiful. Weekends with my best friends? Awesome. The intoxicating effects of (copious amounts of) alcohol? Probably mostly responsible for most of my warm associations with the Hill Country. In short, if I tragically died in a freak accident involving me hitting my head on the world's worst rope swing, I'd be ok with that since it was at the lakehouse.

I shifted my vision from one great white object to another, the white band of Austin limestone that seemingly capped the shores of Lake Travis. It was pretty much impossible not to notice the 20 feet of water that was missing just like it is impossible not to notice the despair in the sunken eyes of a sick hospital patient. It was the constant reminder that this part of Texas was suffering through one of the hottest and driest summers on record. The water was simply gone, having either flown down the Colorado River or quite literally vanished into the thin air. However, I soon discovered that taking my eyes away from the white stripe was an exercise in futility. The whiteness of the rocks seemed to reflect even more light than what shined down on it. With brilliant white light coming off of the rocks and the broiling yellow light from the evening sun, the entire scene both was dazzling and depressing in the same glance.



I don't really know where I became so sensitive to the magnitudes of droughts. Maybe it came from growing up in the the hinterlands Cedar Park and Leander, where the waves of urban concrete only just began to lap up on the sea of cedar and oak trees. Even though my family had little to nothing to do with agriculture, we lived in an area that still had remnants of its rural past. Every so often, I'd hear a prayer from a rancher at church for more rain, "Because Lord knows we need it". Perhaps I got it when I would go to my grandparents ranch and feel the dry grass crack under my shoes and put my fingers in the dusty fissures in the earth where water used to puddle. Even then I could remember seeing that white ring of rock around the stock pond where my dad and I would fish. (My most memorable moment: I caught two perch on the same line once!)




We all decided to go back up to the house. Or rather, climb back up to the house. First, we had to traverse the aforementioned white limestone rocks, which killed your feet if you were short-sighted enough to go barefoot (Just ask Chi Chi). Then it was up the metal stairs to the landing. From the landing it was the concrete stairs to the backyard. From the backyard, it was still a sticker-filled 15 feet across the lawn to the back door. As I conquered onto the last step, my lungs were already gasping for air from what seemed to be an embarrassingly short climb up from the lake. However, the only thing I could force into my lungs was the achingly hot summer air. Not only was it hot, but it was also thick with humidity. Breath after breath seemed only to scream for what I already wanted: The cold mountain air of Colorado.

But that wasn't what was waiting for me at the top. Unfortunately, the central AC at the lakehouse had gone out, which only left a lone window unit to cool down the entire downstairs. I'm sure the little thing gave it's all, but it couldn't beat back the heat of the Texas summer. In fact, I'd be willing to give the AC a medal of honor for refrigeration if there were such a thing.

No, the air inside the house was barely better than the air outside. Having successfully climbed up from the lake, sweat was now seeping through my shirt.

Oh shit, what's that?

One hot, moist drop collected midway up my back.

Heavier.

Heavier.

Heavier.

There it goes, trickling down!

And that is pretty much the most disgusting feeling you can ever experience outside of a morgue.




Back in the middle of that concrete ocean near the Galleria, I'm all of this is leaving my German coworkers very confused. They post crazy shit like, "38 C? No rain? Pool!!!!" To them, Texas is just a bluer Gulf of Mexico and a Democratic governor away from paradise. (Ok, I have to admit both of those would be pretty awesome.) Sometimes, I'll tell them that my favorite weather is when it's 50 F with a light rain. You know, the perfect weather for watching a terrible movie from Netflix or catching up on a classic novel. They can only look back at me with the most incredulous stare that screams at me, "Are you out of your fucking mind?! How could you possibly want that?!" This conversation is most likely happening on an outdoor patio in a restaurant because, once again, I've lost the battle between sitting inside (in the glorious AC!) and sitting outside in the heat and sweat (see section above for my thoughts the entire meal). I can't tell you how many times I've suggested to sit outside only to be shot down.

To be honest, I don't know where they get this from. It might be the bitter German winters from their childhood. I don't know, maybe 6 months of no warmth would make me pine for the blistering Texas sun too. Maybe it's because they are tucked in the middle of Houston, far removed from the white stripes of dried rock on top of lakes and the crunch of dessicated grass. Perhaps it's because you've-never-dug-trenches-in-the-Austin-bedrock-or-the-clay-of-East-Texas. (Yes, I use that one a lot.) In the end, I suppose it's just a fundamental experience that they lack, just like I never experienced a country divided or a decent national soccer team. They'll never know what it's like to hear the weatherman forecast snow for the next day, only to wake up the next morning still seeing black asphalt and being absolutely gutted because of the disappointment. And they'll never get why I find the intense summer heat to be utterly depressing.



On the drive back home, we passed by lawn after lawn and field after field of brown, dead grass. In fact, it made little sense in calling them lawns any more since what we call "grass" was now replaced with tiny shreds of crinkled paper. I was afraid that if I looked at one single piece for too long, it would burst into flames. Of course that might have been exacerbated by the light the repressive sun high in the sky. It was really a sight to behold. I'm sure that the most talented artists couldn't have painted the picture I saw. Unnatural browns starkly contrasted with the green tufts of the cedar trees, while bits of blue pierced through the branches. All the while, the whole landscaped was bathed in the yellow sun. In fact that's all I can see right now as I look out the office window. Yellow. And heat. I know you can't "see" heat, but I swear that I could see it sucking the life out of the hills this weekend. (For the record, I think the Texas sun has a unique glow. It even shines through on film. If you took any movie filmed in Texas and showed me a scene without a discernible landmark but showed the sky, I could tell you that it was filmed in the Lone Star State. Office Space? Austin. Rushmore? Houston. Spy Kids 3D? No, I won't go there.)

When it is so hot like it is now, people like to use lots of cooking metaphors. Man, the sun is baking my car right now. It's as hot as a broiler out there. It's so hot, you could fry an egg on the concrete. However, I think these descriptions incorrectly put heat waves in a positive light. You see, to me, cooking implies that something delicious and wonderful is being made. I've baked you a birthday cake! Broil the roast for 10 minutes. Mmmm, fried twinkies! A heat wave makes none of these things. Instead, I see God up in heaven with a giant magnifying glass, dancing a jig as he incinerates half of the state.



I know that I'm leaving out a lot of very positive things about summer. What would life be like without those couple of months that are set to the music of ice cream trucks in the haze of frozen margaritas? (Ok, I'm confusing two eras of my life.) I enjoy the summer with its bikinis and swim trunks as much as anyone else. Yet, as I drive home from the pool or lake all those thoughts and memories melt away, and are followed by low lakes and dead grass.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Tuesday Top Ten: Moments at The Hydra

Stranded.


The Tuesday Top Ten is back for a quick look at some of my favorite moments over the years at the lake house (aka the Hydra).  While I kinda wish these were more detailed (I'm not sure how interesting these short anecdotes will be to outsiders), I really just wanted to make a short and light-natured post after the drawn out Road House epic.  If you need more info on the Hydra...here's a shameless plug for an older post.

Honorable Mentions
- Cale barrel rolling off the roof to the ground.
- Blake to Heather: "I'm cold...can you give me your socks?"
- Nick: "She's mine tomorrow night." 

10. Ghost Stories
-On special occasions (New Years, boredom) we build bonfires down by the lake.  With a little help from some Color Flames (also talked about in an earlier post), the bonfire quickly turns into an Are You Afraid of the Dark world where we can tell stories while throwing magic dust into the flames, turning them cool shades of blue and green.  There's something about being able to tell ghost stories in the same mold as a classic '90s Nick at Nite show that makes me content with my life.  I guess it's the little things...

9. Sneaking into the Neighbor's Hot Tub
-For as long as I've visited the lake, our next door neighbors have always been a giant condominium.  The mysterious strangers that live over there have been more secretive than JJ Abrams and the only thing I know about the place is that a hot tub is located in the center of the complex.  Ever since I was six, I've wanted to jump in it.  Not until New Years' Eve 2010 did we finally gain the courage and idiocy to trespass and use the vacant tub.  We were 22-24, the weather was cold, and the tub was awesome.

8. The Ghost-Riding Jet Ski
-The summer before our freshman year of college, about seven of us went to the lake house for our first trip together.  My friends Alli, Janisch, and I were riding a jet ski when we all flipped off of it.  Normally, the key is strapped securely to your life jacket in order to kill the engine in situations like this.  Long story short, the key was not securely attached and as soon as we emerged we watched in horror as the jet ski headed straight towards rocks.  However, in a miraculous twist of fate, the jet ski did a 180 and headed straight towards us.  The three of us swam steadfastly towards the jet ski.  While Janisch and I might as well have been bowling balls in the water, Alli pulled an Indiana Jones and grabbed on to the passing craft and saved the day.

7. The Sink Picture
-There is a picture online somewhere with my friend Jessie and I.  While our friendship is completely platonic, the photo says otherwise.  We've recreated it for fun countless times, but it is by far the weirdest photo I've ever seen involving a guy, a girl, a kitchen sink, and a bottle of WD-40.  Sorry, not gonna upload it.  I promise it's classy.

6. Cliff Jumping as Superman
-This is actually a memory from high school, but it's absurd enough that it needs to be noted.  For my 16th birthday my friend Max gave me a Superman costume.  (Those were the days).  Within minutes it was decided that I should put the costume on and jump from our cliff into the lake thirty-five feet below.  Cliff jumping as a regular person has never been the same since.

5. Rickesh and His Wrath
- Several chairs, small life jackets, and rafts have seen better days after my friend Rickesh, a bigger guy, wrecked unintentional havoc on them. Some highlights:
a) "Snorlax."  - T.Whitt's nickname for the sleeping giant.
b) "This is a child's vest! I'm drowning!" (That life jacket was never the same.)
c) "Heather, stop being immature and let's play hide and seek."
d) Literally fell three-forths of the way down a spiral staircase, crashing into a bedroom door like a battering ram.
e) Getting on name-to-name basis with local BBQ cooks...more on that in a bit.

4. The Male-Bonding Trip
- Graduation has made me lament about the end of meaningful pick-up basketball in my life, but it also signifies the end of trips where my friends and I can leave on a Tuesday and go to the Hydra for several days.  My friends Blake, Rickesh, Nick, David, and Janisch joined me on this trip, which happened spontaneously from a Tuesday-Thursday and involved several trips to Lee's Burgers, discovering the mythical Strangely-Attractive Girl, cliff-diving, and card games involving a gentlemen's amount of air humping.  Don't ask, don't tell.

3. Spring Break 2011
- This may have been the last stand.  Not only because of graduation but because there is a chance my parents may rebuild the Hydra in order to live there after retirement in a few years.  This week had it all- a great group of friends, some great stories (the failed shotgun on the dock, throwing live matches at each other, a day full of Community, 3 AM trash disposing, to name a few), not to mention plenty of frustration from real life knocking on the door, but I think what sticks out most is the finality I got out of it.  If that's the way the Hydra went out, I think I can live with it.

2. The Impromptu USA Weekend
-On 4th of July weekend 2010, my friends and I decided to head up to the Hydra for some fun and fireworks.  What we got was Rickesh making friends with the local BBQ people ("What should we make for you tomorrow, Rick?"), Janisch shooting Roman candles at me, friends yelling at the moon, and one of the greatest shows of American patriotism I've ever witnessed.  I was on the hammock with someone while a few friends played a game inside.  Normally, after one team wins with my friends there is incessant but unintelligent trash talking.  Not this time though.  On cue, a raucous chant of "USA! USA!" emerged from inside the Hydra, which lasted for what seemed like an eternity and could be heard over the fireworks blasting from across the lake for all our mysterious condo neighbors to hear.  I jumped from the hammock and left her behind, because anytime you can win a game and demean your opponent by yelling your shared nationality at them, you've gotta do it.

1. The Stranded-on-the-Lake Fiasco
-MLK weekend 2008 may have been the game-changer with my friends.  It was that weekend that we realized that the Hydra was a place where we could always go to to reconnect, no matter how far away we lived.  This is the same weekend where I came down with what I am pretty sure was walking pneumonia.  I felt deathly sick.  Rickesh, always looking to complicate things, demanded that he go out in the freezing January water on jet skis.  Since I was the only one who knew how to get them off the dock and into the water, I went out to help.  As the jet ski started to drift away I jumped on it, thinking I could drive the it back to the dock with the keys.  Little did I know that the machine's battery was dead.  In a matter of moments, I found myself a hundred yards away on the other side of Lake Travis as the rest of my friends pointed and laughed from either the dock or the cliff above.  I felt the icy water with apprehension, knowing I had to make a decision.  I took off my sweatshirt, shoes, and jeans, yelling at my friends "Don't look at me!"  (Except for the girl I was interested in... she could look.  Kidding.)  I jumped into the water, positive that I was going to die embarrassingly in my underwear, and pushed the jet ski back towards the dock.  Here's the best part though: Rickesh and Janisch jumped in foolishly to help.  While Janisch actually swam like a normal human being, Rick, who threw a life jacket over his clothes, thought that he could magically float towards me.  He looked like a human buoy.  Together, we acted like human seals and moved the jet ski like a beach ball while the rest of our friends mocked us from above.  And THAT is what friends are for.

(I'm sure I'm missing on some better stories, so if you guys remember one, post it below!)

-PB (this song has been stuck in my head for days)

Monday, March 21, 2011

The Hydra: Our Key to the Past


Spring Break 2011 came and went as quickly as Texas A&M's stint in the NCAA tournament, and as Charles Dickens once said, "it was the best of times, it was the worst of times."  The best of times because for my group of friends (a hodge-podge of old high school friends and newer college buddies) Spring Break usually means a trip to the one of the greatest places on earth, my family's lake house on Lake Travis in Austin, Texas.  Many of us hardly have time to keep in touch during the school year, but as soon as mid-terms are over it's almost like we never left Mrs. Waggoner's 12th grade Bio class.  Regardless of what college we attend or how long it's been since we last spoke, the Hydra (our nickname for the house) serves as our safe haven from the rest of the world.  Leroy, my Comm professor, would call it "hyper-reality".  However, it was the worst of times not only because it felt like the end of an era with graduation looming, but also because Spring Break will always be the dark reminder of a lost friend as well.

The Hydra was built in the '50s by my Great Uncle Ralph, who left it to the rest of our family once he passed.  I grew up spending most of my vacations at the house, so when my high school friends and I were looking for a "Last Hurrah" before heading out for our freshman year of college, it was a near-perfect choice (our first choice would have been Lost island, but I digress).  We spent an entire week there, lounging by the lake by day and climbing the tree to the roof to gaze at the stars by night.  We roasted marshmallows and played games; without a doubt a bond was formed that week at the Hydra.  While we were all friends to begin with, we suddenly became inseparable.  The eight or so of us, most of whom had barely even known each other in high school, were now closer than the Bluth family from Arrested Development (probably a bad reference, but that show had a lot to do with our friendships).  I am fairly certain I spent over 2/3rds of my freshman year road tripping all over the state to visit my friends, making sure that we would all stick together.  Attending UTSA as a frosh, I was a literal Roadrunner.  We spent enough time at the Hydra that the rest of my family should have started charging rent, with possible interest(s) as well.

 (From left: Janisch, Alli, Nick, Alya, Me in 2007)

One of my friends that was a part of the original trip to the lake was Alli Maloney.  Without sounding too cliche, she was the sweetest girl I ever met.  She hardly ever had a bad word to say about anyone and always went out of her way to show her support for me, whether it was planning a surprise birthday gathering for me, giving me relationship advice ("what were you thinking?!") or creating ridiculous "Team Smith" shirts with the rest of the group.  She gave me a cross necklace for my 19th birthday and I never took it off.  She was a great friend.  She was particularly in love with my nieces and nephew, who were all less than two years old when she first starting showing up at the house with the rest of my friends.  She always did her best to make it to the Hydra, no matter what else was going on in her life.  She was a joy to be around and we were lucky to have her in the group.  However, for some reason or another I began to take her for granted over time.  Instead of welcoming her over whenever my sister and her kids were in town, I tried to find reasons to not call her.  Her near catchphrase "When are the babies coming to town?" quickly went from cute to annoying.  I became selfish to the most selfless person I knew.  

I moved away from Texas my sophomore year and consequently my friends and I slowly began drifting apart.  College life consumed us all as we began to make new friends and lost more and more time for our old ones.  What used to be our bimonthly Hydra trip turned into one single trip in late February of our sophomore year.  Although it was just like old times, the feeling that things were not like they used to be was thick enough to grab out of the air.  I remember leaving that trip feeling that everyone was less nostalgic than ever for how close we used to be.

Then, a few weeks later, Alli died in a car accident.

It was the last weekend of Spring Break (two years ago to this day, March 21st, actually) and I remember sitting in my living room with my friend, shell-shocked and bewildered.  My mind was swimming with thoughts to how I had treated her recently: How the hell could I have been so resentful towards someone who showed nothing but genuine interest in my life?  How could something so horrible happen to someone so good?  Why not me?  I was angry with God, but really I was furious with myself for not being a better friend to her.  I remember standing outside my driveway in the beautiful Texas sun, calling all of my closest friends, one by one, and telling them the heart-wrenching news.  It was the worst time of my life.

My friends and I, who normally reconnected at the Hydra, found ourselves returning together for our best friend's funeral.  Seeing everybody mourn her was truly haunting.  She made such an impact on us without even realizing it.  To that effect, the biggest tragedy in our lives made our bond stronger.  I don't like to talk about what happened much, but very rarely does a day go by that I don't think about her.  An avid artist, her drawing of a flower hangs on the wall of my room and the cross necklace that she gave me now hangs protectively over my rear-view mirror.

Flash forward two years and most of us are beginning to feel the pressure of the real world breathing heavily down our necks.  I'll be the first to admit I have no idea what is in store for me upon graduation.  It is a scary feeling that I have not been able to shake for months.  We arrived at the Hydra and for the first time, it felt like time didn't stop.  The real world pressures are more tangible now, with several of my friends already out with full-time jobs.  No matter how much we want it to be false, the days of packing our things on a Tuesday afternoon and spending three days at the Hydra are over (one of the greatest male bonding trips of all time, BTW.)



One of the last nights during our final Spring Break Hydra trip we sat on the roof, staring at the stars just like our first time before college.  The cathartic feeling that consumed my soul made me shiver in the cool night air.  Although I'm not the same doe-eyed teenager from that original trip, I felt like a part of us never really left.  I could almost picture Alli taking photos of the lake while we continued our four-year argument on whether that was an airplane, a shooting star, or a satellite in the sky.

I'm not the best Christian by any means.  I have my struggles and my insecurities with life, but no matter how stubborn I am to try and figure life out myself, I do believe He has a plan.  Two summers ago I was able to share my testimony with several hundred people in Germany during a mission trip.  Despite being a terrible public speaker (the language barrier helped), I had enough confidence to talk about my friend Alli and her love for God.  No matter how angry I was with myself and with God, I came to the conclusion that she did not die in vain but that she shaped countless lives while she was with us.  I miss her and will always wish I had been a better friend.

As I drove back from the Hydra on Sunday, I noticed the cross necklace dangling from my car's dash, only further reminding me that although she may not be with us anymore, she is not lost. 


For me, the Hydra has been the location of many of the most important events in my life.  I have learned the true meaning of friendship and experienced a little bit of what love was like there.  I've found out how it feels to jump off of a roof and what the inside of a sink feels like.  I have watched countless bad movies there as well as experience countless shooting stars (Okay, maybe some satellites too, Alli) in the night sky.  But most importantly, I've learned that no matter how old we get, we will never forget the family we made there.

-PB