Welcome to Port O’Connor, Bubba’s Smoked Meats!

Archived in the category: Announcements, General Info
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 15 Nov 12 - 12 Comments

POC Chamber Ribbon Cutting for Bubba’s Smoked Meats L to R: Mary Jo Walker, Bubba Conran, Patti Elkins, Bill Tigrett, Leah Griffin, Paul McGee, Kim Conran, Harry Lawrence, Donnie Klesel.

Chamber of Commerce members gathered on Friday, November 2 for the Ribbon Cutting/Grand Opening of this new business, and welcome addition to the Port O’Connor community. The newly-remodeled facility at 704 W. Adams (Hwy 185) is the new home of Bubba’s Smoked Meats, which has moved here from New Braunfels after 29 years in the custom processing and smoked meat trade.

This fully inspected and licensed facility offers a wide variety of smoked meats and cheeses, including sausages, salamis, summer sausage, turkey and beef jerky, old-style jerky, beer sticks, and ham. Most are offered in both regular and jalapeno varieties. In search of a unique holiday gift? Ask the friendly folks at Bubba’s about their custom made gift baskets.

If you are a successful hunter, you can save yourself a lot of work and leave the processing up to Bubba. All the processing equipment (hanging, drying, smoking, packaging) is condensed into their compact and very clean facility. And fisherman, you can have your catch smoked in the mesquite wood smoker as well. Stop by or call 830-237-2482 for details.

Bubba’s Smoked Meats is owned and operated by Kim and Bubba Conran, residents of Matagorda Peninsula. (Seems Clint Bennetsen now has neighbors!) Shop manager, Harry Lawrence, also resides locally.

Stop by Bubba’s Smoked Meats, and you’re sure to find some smoked meat or cheese to your liking. And on Wednesdays, from 11:00 until 2:00 you can enjoy a delicious lunch (Chef’s Choice) at Bubba’s.

Fish Out of Water, by Thomas Spychalski…

Archived in the category: Featured Writers, Fish Out of Water, General Info
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 15 Nov 12 - 0 Comments

Seasonal Depression

Regular readers of this column (I know there is at least one of you out there) might have noticed a preoccupation with Fall over the last four installments, and with good reason. Besides being my favorite time of year, what with all of the Halloween goblins we recently said goodbye to for another year and the close proximity of an overabundance of turkey, stuffing, a good beer and a football game, Fall has most other season’s beat before the competition even begins.

Recently however, I found myself face to face with a revelation that hits me each year around this time.

I am going to miss the Sun.

The Sun, that great ball in the sky that has kept life on this planet going long before man and for a long time to come. The Sun has so many simple and complex connections to man and their history, it is almost as if the two were made for each other.

However, each Fall the time the Sun spends warming or lives and our Earth begins to be reduced, till the sun feels more like an acquaintance then a friend, someone who might drop round for dinner but might not stay for a drink afterward.

It makes me feel tired, less focused and almost kind of sad, as if something were lost and just could not be found. The feeling deepens a bit after Christmas, when after all the holiday fanfare the rest of Winter is laid out before us in one uninteresting lump, leaving us begging for Spring.

Amazingly, although my symptoms are the mild sort that can be pushed away by a good Basketball match up or an exciting writing project, this is a real condition, called Seasonal Affective Disorder.

The disorder can take place at any time of year but the most common is during the Fall and Winter, when the number of daylight hours starts to lessen.

Symptoms include loss of energy, fatigue, a gain or reduction in weight and feelings of general depression.

This is connecting in a clinical manner the feelings and intuitions of many philosophers and psychological figures. The idea that the Sun is somehow connected to our happiness and virtue is an old one.

Sunlight in healthy doses has been shown to increase happiness and lessen depression, not surprising when you think of the psychological impact of light vs dark.

It should be noted however that the body has a natural tendency to be lazier in the Winter, even if the climate is not exactly hibernation or snowman weather. This completely normal behavior has been ingrained into our bodies yearly cycles for generations.

This has at times’ however, led people (like me, how do you think I started reading all this) to falsely think they may have a bigger issue, when it is just a normal reaction everyone can have from time to time.

The subject was reinforced when another of Dolphin Talk’s stable of writers confided that she too was feeling a bit down about less daylight each day, igniting my interest. It was fascinating for me to think that there could be many people who were affected by this shift in daylight hours, especially during those first few transitional weeks when we start to really feel the changes.

Even then we have it better then others to our far north and North-East, where daylight has already been lost to the wind and cold, making me shiver in my warm boots and should make you glad you are lucky enough to have Gulf Winters.

But even if the temperatures are a bit warmer and there is about as much chance for snow as there is a chance for Godzilla to rise from one of the bays, the reduced sun time has its effect here as well.

Has anyone else been missing the extended hours of sunlight we had in the Summer months?

An Artist’s Point of View by Joyce Rhyne

Archived in the category: General Info
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 15 Nov 12 - 5 Comments

“Icons of Port O’Connor” - oil painting by Virginia Lichac

“Spend some time in Port O’Connor, Texas and you will experience a colorful array of places to see and fun times. Fish, swim, picnic, bird watch, dine, take nature walks and kick back in all the glory of this eclectic little town on the Texas Gulf Coast! The ‘End of the Road’ is the beginning of an adventure like nowhere else. A rich historical past adds to the pleasure of vacationing and living in POC – an iconic treasure which has something for everyone!”

Although the above quote could be an excellent promotion piece for the Port O’Connor Chamber of Commerce, it is actually from local artist Virginia Lichac, describing her painting “Icons of Port O’Connor” that she painted especially for the 2012 CCA annual fund raiser. “This was my third year to donate a painting for the fund raiser. The first year it was in the raffle; the next was placed in the silent auction, and this time my art moved up to the live auction. Well, to say the least, it was a thrill to have it sell for a whopping $1,150,” she said.

Virginia began painting in 1991 and exhibited her works in her office at the University of California-Santa Cruz, where several who viewed them commissioned paintings from her. Through the years she has sold about 50 paintings, but she says, “I really don’t paint with the idea of selling something; I do it for my own joy.”

She prefers large canvasses to small, prefers oil paint because it is ‘more fluid’, but does use other mediums as well. She paints various styles, including portraits, but calls her preferred style “expressionist”, using lots of color, distortion and exaggeration.

Virginia in her studio

While living in California, Virginia and husband Jerry did a lot of traveling. Their first trip to the Texas Gulf Coast was to Corpus Christi and South Padre Island. They liked the warmer weather here and when they decided it was time to move, they found Port O’Connor.

“When we first came into town, Jerry said, ‘I think this is it’,” she said. “It felt so spacious here.” The couple designed their own house; gave Mike Marshall the task of building it, and returned to California. They moved here in February of 2009.

“I love the community and the things that go on here,” Virginia says. In addition to the CCA, she is involved in the Service Club, Chamber of Commerce, and Friends of the Library. Especially rewarding to her is being able to participate on a personal level with the wounded warriors of Warrior’s Weekend.

Virginia is also a member of the Port Lavaca Art Guild and exhibited a cloth wall hanging in their recent Arts-Crafts-Antiques Festival by the Bay. The wall hanging was a smaller rendition of the 8’X8’ barn quilt she made for her daughter’s barn in Tennessee.

Barn quilts, a popular art form in Tennessee, are mounted on the sides of vintage barns and other outbuildings throughout the area. Virginia’s barn quilt was composed of 36 14” Hardiboard tiles and depicts her daughter and son-in-law’s goal to have a working farm, raising their own cows, pigs, and sheep and growing their own vegetables and fruits. The weather-resistant barn quilt was done using outdoor acrylics.

Wall hanging similar to the original "barn quilt"

Fifty-five Frolicking Fish by Virginia Lichac

Candlelight Service of Remembrance

Archived in the category: Events, General Info
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 15 Nov 12 - 0 Comments

The annual Candlelight Service of Remembrance at the Seadrift Cemetery Chapel on Saturday, December 8, at 6:00 p.m.

This is a special time of remembrance for all who have relatives and friends interred at Seadrift Cemetery, and features music of the Christmas season performed by the Seadrift Community Choir.

This annual event is a meaningful and important part of the holiday season in our area and all are invited to attend.

Christmas Outdoor Lighting Contest

Archived in the category: Announcements, Events, General Info, Organizations
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 15 Nov 12 - 0 Comments

Pull your outdoor decorations out of storage, and – Ready, Set, Go!! The Port O’Connor Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring the Christmas Outdoor Lighting Contest for 2012 and will be handing out plaques for the categories listed below. Let’s put up the trees and tinsel and light up Port O’Connor!

Best Overall – Most Decorated – Best Christmas Theme – Most Colorful – Best Religious Theme – Most Unique – Best Spirit -Best Commercial

In addition, there will be a drawing for a prize of $100. just for entering and having some colored lights glowing during the judging days of Wednesday, December 12th and Thursday, the 13th. So – don’t forget to have your lights turned on – on December 12th & 13th!!!

Note: In order to win one of the plaques in the categories listed above. or a chance in the drawing, you must complete the form below and send it to the POC Chamber of Commerce, c/o Joyce Jordan, P. O. Box 847 , Port O’Connor, TX 77982 since we will need to have your contact information.

After that, make sure you have your lights on for the judging. If you look around town, you may see one POC Citizen’s decorations already on display.

Please note that previous winners receiving plaques in the last two years are not eligible to win in 2012 – in order to give others a chance at the prizes. However, previous winners in the drawing in the last two years are eligible to win in 2012. For any additional information, please contact Joyce Jordan at Cell# 361-655-7999. PLEASE FILL OUT THE FORM BELOW AND MAIL TO THE POC CHAMBER OF COMMERCE TO PARTICIPATE (In case needed, some extra forms will be posted on the bulletin board outside the Port O’Connor U.S. Post Office):

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