Tag: Kingsville

  • Ranch Hand Weekend

    Ranch Hand Weekend

    Once every year, King Ranch – the biggest working ranch in the USA, hosts a breakfast for the public. All monies collected are donated to local charities. This is the only day all year that private vehicles are allowed on the ranch proper.

    Hubs and I have attended the breakfast twice since 2019, once by ourselves, and once a couple of seasons ago, with friends from home who were ranchers at one time. This year, along with these same friends, we skipped the breakfast, but did the bus tour of the ranch.

    The bus tour is open year round and is a great way to spend 1.5 hours learning about this 825,000 acre (in South Texas) massive ranching operation.

    On the same weekend as the ranch hand breakfast, the city of Kingsville hosts a festival, complete with vendors, food and art demonstrations, rides for kids, entertainment, and lots of opportunities to get to know the locals. We decided to do the bus tour on the morning of the festival, so we could spend some time checking out the happenings in town, and then head out for the tour after lunch.

    Unfortunately, just as the bus tour was about to begin, the rain started. We went anyways and, with the exception of not many photo ops through the bus windows, we didn’t regret it.

    After my post Steamroller Blues? , I promised some of my followers that I would explain the festival in greater detail.

  • Steamroller Blues?

    Steamroller Blues?

    I’m out of sync with my regular post times this week.

    This is a busy week, so today will be my only post.

    On Saturday, we made the two hour drive to Kingsville, TX to take in the Ranch Hand Festival.

    This was our third trip to the festival and our second trip there with good friends from home who winter in a park near here.

    One of the demonstrations that was new to all of us was the one by TAMUK (Texas A & M University Kingsville) arts department Javelina Printing Club.

    Their printing press was a steamroller! My feature photo is a screenshot from a movie I found about them on Facebook – not my own.

    The process: Designs are carved into a block of wood, and then ink is rolled over the whole slab.

    This is a clip from a movie I shot

    Once this step is complete, the slab is laid face up on the ground and a large sheet of paper placed over it, and then thick matting is layered on top of all.

    The steamroller then drives over and backs up over the lot.

    And voila!

    This is my own photo of the finished print being lifted off the ground

    It was fun and interesting to witness this unique process!

    There were many prints done over the course of the day, and this was apparently their 12th year at the Ranch Hand festival.

    Google Image

    I don’t know how we missed it on previous visits, but am happy we found it this time!