Attorney Jane Lane To Speak At Lions Club

Archived in the category: Announcements, General Info, Organizations
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 23 Aug 12 - 0 Comments

The noon, Wednesday, Sept. 12th meeting of the Port O’Connor Lions Club will host Guest Speaker Jane Lane, Attorney At Law who will speak on the subject of Wills and Probate.

The community is invited to attend to listen and gain knowledge on this important subject.

The meeting will be held at Cathy’s Restaurant.

Mark your calendars and please phone Joyce Jordan, President at cell #361-655-7999 for RSVP and details of the meeting.

-Joyce Jordan

POC Grand Slam

Archived in the category: Announcements, Fishing Reports, General Info
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 23 Aug 12 - 0 Comments

7th Annual Christopher Ragusin POC Grand Slam
Memorial Fishing Tournament

October 5th & 6th, 2012

Port O’Connor Community Center Pavilion

For information: call 361-935-8745

Box Tops For Education

Archived in the category: General Info, School News
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 23 Aug 12 - 0 Comments

Save those Box Tops and earn cash for your school. Look for Box Tops for Education throughout your grocery store on hundreds of participating products. Please save and bring to Port O’Connor School.

Hunting, Fishing Licenses On SaleHunting, Fishing Licenses On Sale

Archived in the category: Fishing Reports, General Info
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 23 Aug 12 - 0 Comments

Current year Texas hunting and fishing licenses (except year-to-date fishing licenses) expire Aug. 31, and new licenses for 2012-2013 went sale Wednesday, Aug. 15.

The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department issues about 2.1 million hunting and fishing licenses annually through the agency’s 28 field offices, more than 58 state parks and at over 1,600 retailers across Texas. Licenses may also be purchased online through the TPWD Web site at www.tpwd.state.tx.us/buy or by phone (800-895-4248) with a $5 convenience fee required for each transaction , Call center hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday — Friday. The online transaction system is available 24/7. A transaction receipt may be printed at the time of purchase for online and a confirmation number is provided for phone orders, and the physical license is mailed separately. Confirmation numbers will verify that a license has been purchased, which is sufficient for dove hunting, but will not allow hunters to take fish or wildlife that require a tag.

Dove Hunting Requirements

In addition to a hunting license, all wing shooters will need to purchase a game bird stamp. To hunt dove or teal in September, a Migratory Game Bird Stamp ($7) is required. Duck hunters also need to purchase a Federal Duck Stamp and receive HIP (Harvest Information Program) certification. HIP certification involves a brief survey of previous year’s hunting success and is conducted at the time licenses are purchased. Certification will be printed on the license. Lifetime license holders must also be HIP-certified and purchase the Federal Duck Stamp to hunt migratory birds. All other state stamp endorsements are included with a lifetime license.

There are other mandatory endorsements to consider at the time of purchase, too. An Upland Game Bird Stamp ($7) is required to hunt all non-migratory game birds, including turkey, quail, pheasant and chachalaca.

Of course, anyone who purchases the Super Combo license package, the best bang for the buck at $68, automatically gets these needed stamps. Sportsmen ages 65 and older qualify for a discounted Senior Super Combo for $32. Duck hunters will still need to purchase a Federal Duck Stamp.

Big Time Texas Hunts

Also available everywhere licenses are sold are chances for Big Time Texas Hunts. The Big Time Texas Hunts is a very popular Department program that offers hunters the opportunity to enter to win one or more premium guided hunts with food and lodging provided, as well as taxidermy in some cases. The crown jewel of the program is the Texas Grand Slam dream hunt package, which includes four separate hunts for Texas’ most prized big game animals — the desert bighorn sheep, white-tailed deer, mule deer and pronghorn. There are several quality whitetail hunt packages available, as well as opportunities to pursue alligator , waterfowl, upland game birds, and exotics such as sable and gemsbok

Hunters can buy Big Time Texas Hunts entries online for just $9 each at www.tpwd.state.tx.us/buyentry, or for $10 each at license retailers or by phone. There is no limit to the number of entries an individual may purchase and all proceeds benefit conservation, wildlife management and public hunting. The program is made possible with support from Toyota, Dallas Safari Club, Texas Trophy Hunters Association and the Texas Bighorn Society. More details on all seven premium hunts can be found online.

Lifetime License Drawing

Hunters and anglers can also take care of their licensing requirements for life with the purchase of an $1,800 Lifetime Super Combo, or you can enter for a chance at winning a lifetime license through a special drawing. Entries for the Lifetime License Drawing cost $5 each and may be purchased wherever licenses are sold. There is no limit on the number of entries that may be purchased. Winners will be drawn on Dec. 30, 2012 and June 30, 2013. If you enter by Dec. 27, 2012, you will be eligible for both drawings.

Mandatory Hunter Education Certification

Hunter Education Certification is also required of any hunter born on or after Sept. 2, 1971 and who is at least 17 years old. For hunters who are unable to work in a hunter education course before hunting season for whatever reason, TPWD does offer a deferral option that allows people 17 years of age or older a one-time only extension to complete the state’s hunter education requirements. The individual must first purchase a hunting license and then may purchase the deferral option #166.

Hunters using the deferral must be accompanied by someone 17 years old or older also licensed to hunt in Texas. The accompanying individual must have completed hunter education or be exempt from the requirements (born before Sept. 2, 1971). The extension is good for one license year, by which time the person with the deferred option needs to complete a hunter education course.

This option is not available to those who have ever received a conviction or deferred adjudication for lack of hunter education certification. They still must take the course before going afield.
For more information on hunting and fishing in Texas, check out the 2012-2013 Outdoor Annual available at license retailers and online at www.txoutdoorannual.com.

What’s Rockin’ at the Port O’Connor Library by Shirley & Sue

Archived in the category: General Info, Organizations
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 23 Aug 12 - 0 Comments

We’ve just received four cookbooks dedicated only to Texas cuisine (really cooking for us Texans), and Shirley and I would enjoy receiving your input as to whether we should keep these books. They are currently on the top shelf behind the chairs of the computer stations. Please, if you have the interest and the time, glance through them and let us know what you think.

Really didn’t do much reading this past week as we were out of town again and I had too much fun. But I can speak of three books, one I recommend quite highly as it made a huge impression on me.

The first is Black Water by T. Jefferson Parker. Despite having the same last name as a very popular author, his books are not being read that much. Which is really a shame as he writes an excellent mystery with totally believable characters and a fast moving plot. This book starts with immediate action and this pace continues to the surprise ending. And that really grabs you so don’t be like me, and read the ending after only 1/3 of the book!

The second is another of Nelson DeMille’s stories, entitled Night Fall, and I am uncertain as to where the title originated. DeMille says in his forward that the book is a fictionalized premise of the cause of a real life tragedy; that of the explosion of TWA 800 in July of 1996 over the Atlantic. Although the finding for the explosion has been agreed upon by four Federal agencies, there remains doubt as to this conclusion. DeMille returns his character John Corey, formerly a NYPD homicide detective and now a part of the ATTF (Federal Anti-Terrorist Task Force) who still remains curious as to the cause of this explosion. And, though the Federal Government has closed its investigation at the end of five years, Corey and his wife, FBI agent Kate Mayfield, are still asking questions. The conclusion of this book leaves you gasping.

But Craig McDonald’s El Gavilan is the story that impressed me, and, I consider, one of the most outstanding tales I’ve read. Set in a fictionalized town in Ohio, McDonald tells the struggle of the townspeople to cope with the influx of illegal immigrants arriving in their town. The book begins with the story of an extended family traveling from Veracruz to the Arizona border, their struggles to reach Arizona and the deaths of many members due to the lack of proper preparation, namely water. The book ends with the meeting of a young Mexican couple in Tubutama with a Coyote looking to make some money. When asked by the young man, where to go, the Coyote replies: “O-H-I-O”.

El Gavilan is the local sheriff who knows many of the naturalized families and tries to help them. As the residents of the town are unaware of the difference between the “illegals” and the “legals”, intolerance is the result with the knowledge that the non-English speaking children are causing a huge drop in the ratings of the schools, an overburdened health-treatment system and an overwhelmed police department. A new police chief arrives who was formerly a Border Patrol officer that recognizes the problems as he tries to bring an understanding between the townspeople and Hispanic residents. But there is so much more to the book than just the foregoing.

Just a quickie: we have an unbelievable array of books for purchase at our Library, both hard cover and soft cover, of all types of fiction and even nonfiction. Come see us before you take your trip! And we welcome all you summer visitors to our Library; we may be small but we have a lot of good books and DVDs! Just takes a Library Card!

And remember: Our Library is open on Monday and Tuesday from 9-1 and 2-6; on Wednesday, we open at 1:00 p.m. till 6:00 p.m.; Thursday from 12:00 Noon till 5:00 p.m. and Saturday from 9:00 a.m. till 1:00 p.m.

“When an old person dies, a Library burns down”
Karin Gillespie

Untitled Document