Inclusion on this list is not intended to be, and should not be, construed as an assessment of guilt or innocence.
February 9, 2015
Trudy Janiell Litz, 40, Kingsland, Tx.; Man Del CS PG1 >=4G<200G; F1; $35,000 Bond; Released.
Pennie Diane Tamme, 44, Kingsland, Tx.; Man Del CS PG1 >=4G<200G; F1; $35,000 Bond; Released.
February 10, 2015
Ronald Dwayne Gobert, 35, Kingsland, Tx.; Theft of Property >=$20<$500 By Check; MB; $1500 Bond; Released.
Lisa Ann Larson; 33, Buchanan Dam.
Is it time to celebrate the end of construction delays while traveling between Horseshoe Bay and Llano on Highway 71? Well, yes and no.
There are some repairs still to be made and another "Super Two" project yet to come.
I asked Kelli Reyna, TxDOT Public Information Officer for this district, about this stretch of road.
A man who says he'll book flights to Saturn will do a bigger business than a Pete Carroll Fan Club will this month. Beetle Bailey will become a General before Carroll can play doubles tennis. Seahawk fans will root for Mr. Potter over another Bailey—George—before they'll toast their coach. Norman Bates will get a Chamber of Commerce medal when Pete Carroll teaches the course: "Football Strategy: The Last Yard is the Toughest."
Bomani Jones, on ESPN's Around the Horn, said the call was, "stu ...
Inclusion on this list is not intended to be, and should not be, construed as an assessment of guilt or innocence.
February 2, 2015
Clayton Doyle Oneil, 34, Kingsland, Tx.; Poss Marij >4 oz<5 lbs; FS; $7500 Bond; Released.
Aaron Sanchez, 29, Horseshoe Bay, Tx.; Driving W/Lic Inv W/Prev/Susp/W/o Fin; MB; $3000 Bond; Released.
February3, 2015
Kevin Alin Kutzer, 38, Kingsland, Tx.; Public Intoxication W/3 Prior Convictions; MB; $3000 Bond; Not Released.
February 4, 2015
Juan Lopez III, 32, C ...
Is it time to celebrate the end of construction delays while traveling east from Llano on Highway 71? Well, yes and no.
There are some repairs still to be made and another
"Super Two" project yet to come.
I asked Kelli Reyna, TxDOT Public Information Officer for this district, about this stretch of road.
February is the love month. St. Valentine's day occurs this month, so love is in the air, and perhaps you can sense that spring is on the way.
In the garden this is the traditional month to prune roses. Remember to leave once blooming roses such as 'Lady Banks' unpruned until they finish their spring bloom.
The Hill Country Astronomers (HCA) will meet at 6:30 PM, Monday, February 2, in the HEB meeting room at the Hill Country University Center in Fredericksburg.
Former shuttle astronaut Tom Henricks' program will show what it is like to be a NASA Space Shuttle astronaut through unique video taken in the cockpit during launch and landing followed by pictures of the Earth from space and scenes of life aboard the Shuttle.
The following are bits of miscellaneous information that hunters might find useful this hunting season in and around the central Texas deer woods. These observations will help hunters and managers to improve their deer herd this fall:
•This years' fawn survival is very high. Lots of new mouths on the range mean responsible managers should reduce the adult mouths accordingly to make room for the new ones.
•When harvesting antlerless deer, make certain it is a female and not a buck fawn.
Death by Mother Nature--by "natural causes"-- accidental death, death caused by something other than your weapon, that is what it is. Shooting at and wounding a deer that eventually dies from the wounds is not natural mortality. Starvation, flooding, fighting, predation, birthing complications, drought, snake bites, hung in fences and car accidents are examples of natural mortality.
As managers, we can certainly control the harvest pressure and weapon accuracy, but can we really control natural ...
Silencers, or more accurately called "suppressors" are just that. They do not make a rifle shot silent, but rather muffled and far less intrusive to the human ear. According to OSHA, the human ear safety threshold is 140 decibels. Most common deer rifle shots are far louder and have resulted in, no doubt, generations of hearing damaged hunters.
Suppressors are typically fitted to the end of the rifle barrel to simply muffle the sound as it exits the barrel and breaks the sound barrier.