
The Spicewood Experience
What's in the Texas Hill Country? Well, hills (of course) however, there is so much more. In it are frontier people that enjoy the peace and the stars. In it there are points of interest that are worth bragging about, events that rock and people that are taming the land! Up until now there hasn’t been an easy, creative way to hear who we are and what’s happening in our area. This podcast channel changes that and we invite you to get to know some of the amazing people and hear amazing stories!
Bio
*
Bio *
Hosted by Frank and Gail, bringing 20 years of our
“Spicewood Experience”
Frank and Gail are senior citizens and both are retired from Travis County government.
Frank is an Army brat, traveled and lived in various places and graduated from Texas State University. He lived in Austin for over thirty years before moving to Spicewood.
Gail is a city gal, born and raised in Dallas, graduated from UT Austin and UT Arlington. She moved to Austin to be close to family then moved to Spicewood to join Frank for the country adventure.
Amy and Keith Everitt kindly and gently enlightened us about the venomous snakes in our area and what to expect if we see them.
Episodes
Erin Weyland, biologist for Texas Parks and Wildlife shares her thoughts on that and on some of the other local critters.
Pet funeral directors, Scott and Tony, guided us through the final steps in giving our pup Ginger a warm and dignified farewell. We hope that our loss and this interview helps you with understanding on how to approach the options and decisions that are available for pets in our area.
Brittany and Jay give us a virtual tour of their facility and how they work to give struggling pups a chance to find their forever home.
Our nurse practitioner is followed up by the project's director and a local client who is a recipient of the study's ambitions. Gail and I had asked for an update on the study being made of the Spicewood residents who most need the social services.
How many of us know about this sweet museum right in our midst?
We began with a private docent-led tour and finished with a group of nearly a dozen other citizens of all ages and country-wide origins. We all enjoyed spirited history telling of our local settlers and we continued on to learn about the geology of the area and how it impacted the building of the state capitol!
Add on the paleontology, the Mormon mill reconstruction, the period clothes, the rooms filled with items of recently passed historical items!
On this visit we chatted with Darlene Oostermeyer, a vice chairman on the board of directors and with board member Danielle Meredith. You will love their insights on the museum's history as much as we did!
This might make you either want to go back to elementary school or be a parent of a child at Spicewood Elementary! We chat with principal Kara Gasaway and assistant principal Tiffany Brantley about the great innovative programs, their staff, and some of the daily highlights that make their days happy for the young ones!
They mention many October events including the annual Trunk-or-Treat and how it’s managed and open for our participation. Puzzled? It's what we do when the kids are far apart yet closer together for the seasonal rite! Find out what is expected and how to join in!
Volunteer Coordinator Lisa Baker and Education Connection Executive Director Amy Wilke chat with us about the importance of helping young people to read to get ahead. Their reach into 14 school districts speaks to the importance and recognition of educators to this program. The adage of "Reading is Fundamental" is crystal clear when one understands the need is greater before a child reaches the fourth grade.
We had the honor and pleasure to visit with Dortha Bittle, who is 102 and Spicewood's oldest resident, and with Doris Phillips, 95, and Spicewood's oldest teacher. They attended school at our 2-room schoolhouse (now the Community Center).
We did not have enough time to record their wonderful stories of early life and hope we return soon to learn even more. Did you know early Spicewood had a cotton gin and corn mill? What happened to the old school bell? This is a fun episode into life in the 1930s!
Whether at the barber shop, church, or amongst neighbors, weather is always on our minds. But do we have a real reason for the Spicewood Split? Is global warming a real thing? Are groundhogs going to be outsourced by artificial intelligence?
Kristine Kjolhede manages to keep our anxieties low and expectations high for our local cloud-gazing community. It was fun to tap into her professional experience and discover that she stares into her backyard to make her own on-the-fly decisions like we do.
We loved the hour spent with her vs. the 3 minutes that meteorologists typically give us on TV. What a breath of fresh air!
Eudora Welty has nothing on the stories and legacy of Wayne, our Spicewood Post Office Sr Clerk. He was happy to spend an hour with us and graciously offered stories of early goings on at the PO, Spicewood, and his long family history. You will smile and appreciate his knowledge of local and family history.
I apologize for the glitches here and there that were a result of the unnecessarily quick set up before we sat down to chat but it all worked out.
This is a report of the annual event. It is a celebration of the legacy by citizens of Spicewood as they relate over a hundred years of family history. The families gather to bbq all night and bring their favorite side dishes for all to enjoy.
The Community Center is originally a one-room schoolhouse that has been renovated and hosts many Spicewood events but this one brings all the original founding families together.
We think that this center exceeds all expectations our citizenry may have for a trauma-related event. It serves four counties and cooperates with other facilities and counties in our state. You and I can be proud to support their services. Their thrift store also amazed us and has the dual purpose of adding funds to the center and supporting the victims and families back on their feet. As with any major emergency service, we hope that you or any loved one will not require a visit or stay at the facility, but if it happens, you will be in caring and capable hands.
Here we go. We've had meetings and angst and disillusion, but how did we get there? Given our community's independent nature, is there a path forward or do we let our lifestyle get swallowed up by industry and development? We chat about the history of Save Our Springs (SOS) and why it was unsuccessful and where its premise worked elsewhere.
Mary Ruwart vists our studio to give us information on the Trap Neuter Release (TNR) program in Llano and Burnet Counties. We had a suggestion from one of our listeners to cover this organization after hearing about the dog program earlier.
Brittany joins us at our home studio to give us an overview of one of the local animal shelters. We had a great chat that went everywhere and still brought it home. We are blessed with people who care about these special pups.
A community is only as healthy as its people. So how healthy are we? How healthy can we be together? Hear how nurse-led innovation is delivering human to human care in our community.
Our library is alive and well and has a much wider array of resources than you may have thought. It certainly surprised us and Beth Cottingham provides us with the history and development of the library services.
Is this how we sound? (smiling here). This is the launch episode of our podcast channel! Thanks for listening!