The view from the back of my condo:
You see this kind of thing all over Galveston. I think it’s
mostly the result of Hurricane Ike in 2008, which was devastating. I walked by a "high water" marker the other day; it was well over my head.
Sometimes, the planners and developers seem to deliberately
create contrast, as the State did in Houston by plopping a state park and
memorial to the Battle of San Jacinto right next to the Ship Channel and miles
and miles of refineries. To get there, you have to drive in tons of freeway traffic, mostly semis,
through a refinery area.
You arrive at a peaceful acreage, mostly empty in winter, that has
two eye-popping draws: a battleship you can tour (I didn’t), and a 500-foot
memorial tower (I definitely did—there’s an observation area near the top).
From that height, you can see how Houston became one of the
busiest ports in the world: lots of room for even the biggest ships to maneuver
and 25 miles of places for companies to put their facilities.
As for that battle, stay tuned! The real reason I went to the monument was for the museum in the base. It’s all about Texas
independence. The Lone Star forever!





A wise man (Dad) taught me that Houston is that way because it's the largest city in the USA without zoning.
ReplyDeleteSon, we need zoning!