This fishing pier isn’t the biggest fishing pier in Corpus Christi, but it is one of the nicest, with many stations for washing up, actual chairs to sit on, and other ameneties!
Month: January 2025
Choose your wood
DDoS – Distributed Denial of Seagull Attack!
This is a Texas grackle – a noble bird, for more civilized times. They inhabit the parking lots of Corpus Christi, working hard to scrounge for their food and keep the parking lots clean:
And these are fat, lazy supermarket seagulls – not the proud, respectable seagulls that fly along the beaches and hunt for fish, but rather fat seagulls that sit on the roofs of supermarkets in Texas – on their fat bird-asses – waiting until they see something to eat:
Well, I just didn’t think it was FAIR that the noble grackles work so hard for their food, only to have it violently seized by their fat-assed feathered breathren just before they can eat it.
So . . . I started a DDoS – a Distributed Denial of Seagull Attack – in which I sprinkled some potato chips underneath the shopping carts, where the grackles could easily get to them – but the seagulls were just too big!
As we’d probably say in Texas: that’ll learn them fat-assed gulls, don’t mess with grackles!
Sun dogs
I blew up this snap, and the two “sun dogs” are visible to the left and right of the sun. These are caused by the hexagonal nature of the ice crystals in the atmosphere, and they are VERY rare to see!
Corpus Christi Sunset
Here’s a nice snap I took of a sunset on a warm winter’s evening in Corpus Christi. You can see two effects that are not always visible: a round “22-degree” halo around the sun, where ice crystals in the atmosphere has scattered the light; and a horizontal line, called “crepuscular rays” or “horizon glow,” caused by refraction off the horizon:
Old pumpjacks keep doing their stuff!
Continuing the series, here is a snap of an old pumpjack I took somewhere between Corpus Christi and San Antonio:
Eagle Ford Shale
Continuing the series, what is 50 miles wide, 400 miles long, and delivers 1.1 BILLION barrels of oil per day?
The Eagle Ford Shale in Texas!
Here “shale” is the operative word. Thanks to fracking, the production has increased from around 300’000 barrels per day ten years ago, to over a million today!
“Frack, baby, Frack!”
New pumpjacks – did they frack?
Here is a snap I took in southeast Texas, somewhere between Corpus Christi and San Antonio:
These are modern pumpjacks – and the owners are clearly labelled on the sign:
This snap was taken here,
just a few miles north of the village of Cambellton (pop. 350):
There are two things that are really interesting to me.
First, since Texas is a very mature oil area, how could there be NEW pumpjacks? Does this mean they carried out fracking somewhere nearby? My guess after doing a bit of research – YES!
And second – I looked up the company: Murphy Exploration and Production. Interestingly, the senior leadership teams has financial leaders, HR leaders, legal leaders – but nary an operations leader!
So . . . who at Murphy is responsible for actually getting the oil out of the ground?