Archive

Posts Tagged ‘Austin’

Austin Girl Blog

January 30th, 2010

A warm welcome to our friend “Austin Girl”, and their first story The Jump.

I stand stock still, the fear in the dark recesses, A great animal of prey. I dare not look down but am transfixed by the clear, blue sky so vast and beautiful. …

Nigel Stewart Austin, Personal , , , ,

Austin Street Art

March 25th, 2009

KLRU Conspirare Concert

March 11th, 2009

Grammy nominated Conspirare

For the first time, Austin-based, Grammy nominated Conspirare and esteemed Artistic Director Craig Hella Johnson bring their exquisite sound to national television in A COMPANY OF VOICES: CONSPIRARE IN CONCERT, a one-hour choral concert produced for PBS.

Nigel Stewart Austin , , ,

The Money Box Cap 2K Swim

February 27th, 2009

Cap 2KThe Money Box Cap 2K Swim in Lady Bird Lake, Austin.
Sunday, May 3rd, 2009
From Red Bud Isle to the Texas Rowing Center.

Nigel Stewart Austin, Personal , ,

Austin Urban Tree Options

December 19th, 2008

TreeFolks are offering us a free tree, in return for taking good care of it, as part of the NeighborWoods program.

Mexican White Oak

40 ft high, full sun, no bloom, drought tolerant, evergreen, fast growth, oak wilt resistant.

Mexican White Oak

  • Plantfiles
    There is a beautiful specimen of this tree near my home in south Austin (Texas). It is about 45 feet tall and very healthy. That particular tree is about 17 years old I am told. Based on this, I planted two in my yard in January, 2007. 13 months later they are doing just fine.
  • Shademaker trees
    An underutilized, highly adaptable shade tree that will tolerate urban planting conditions.
  • wildflower.org
    This species is widespread in Mexico and found in a few west Texas canyons. It is a relatively fast growing oak, and practically evergreen in Austin. It is more resistant to oak wilt and other diseases and pests than other oaks.
  • Texas Forest Service
    Leathery leaves come in many different shapes and remain on twigs into winter.

Bur Oak

80ft high, acorns, deciduous, slow growing, drought resistant, state tree of Iowa.

Quercus macrocarpa

  • wikipedia.org
    Large deciduous tree growing up to 30 m (100 ft), rarely 37 m (120 ft), in height, and is one the most massive oaks with a trunk diameter of up to 3 m (10 ft). It is one of slowest-growing oaks, with growth rate of 30 cm (1 ft) per year when young. A 20-year-old tree will be about 6 m (20 ft) tall. It commonly lives to be 200 to 300 years old, and may become significantly older. The bark is a medium gray and somewhat rugged.
  • grownative.org
    A slow-growing, long-lived impressive tree with the largest leaves and acorns of all the oaks. Leaves turn brown or light yellow in the fall and remain on the plant through winter. Trees are weakly pyramidal when young then develop a massive trunk and broad crown with strong branches.
  • USDA Forest Service
    Bur oaks bear seed up to an age of 400 years, older than reported for any other American oak. The minimum seed-bearing age is about 35 years, and the optimum is 75 to 150 years (5,16). Good seed crops occur every 2 to 3 years, with no crops or light crops in intervening years. The acorns are disseminated by gravity, by squirrels, and to a limited extent by water.

Chinquapin Oak

90ft tall, deciduous, full sun, drought tolerant, good shade, acorns, disease and pest resistant.Chinkapin Oak

  • wikipedia.org
    A deciduous tree reaching 30 m tall (exceptionally up to 50 m), with a rounded crown and thin, scaly or flaky bark on the trunk. The name comes from the resemblance of the leaves to those of a chestnut or chinkapin, although they also greatly resemble the chestnut oak or swamp chestnut oak; coarsely toothed, 5-15 cm long and 4-8 cm broad.
  • Texas A&M
    A good-looking medium to large shade tree suitable for use in much of Texas. Its unique saw-tooth leaves, which resemble those of the chinquapin tree found in the eastern United States, are rich green, turning yellow to bronze in the fall. It grows in the wild on well-drained bottomland soils and on limestone hills near water. It’s adaptable to a range of soils and exposures. It’s moderate to fast-growing and develops an open rounded crown as it ages.
  • Texas Superstar
    Although this member of the beech family (Fagaceae) can obtain a larger size in the eastern U.S., it usually grows to be a handsome medium size shade tree in the 30′ to 50′ tall range in many of our urban or suburban Texas landscapes. Thus, chinkapin oak remains more in scale with residential plantings than some larger shade trees.

Elm

100 ft tall, deciduous, susceptible to Dutch elm disease, disease-resistant cultivars available.

American Elm

  • wikipedia.org
    There are approximately 30 to 40 species of elm; the ambiguity in number is a result of difficult species delimitations in elms, owing to the ease of hybridization between them and the development of local seed-sterile vegetatively-propagated microspecies in some areas, mainly in the field elm group. Rackham describes Ulmus as the most difficult critical genus in the entire British flora. Eight species are endemic to North America, and a smaller number to Europe; the greatest diversity is found in China.

Nigel Stewart Austin, Commentary, Personal, Texas , , , , , ,

Austin Capitol Tree Lighting

December 1st, 2008

Capitol TreeHoliday Sing-Along, Capitol Tree Lighting and Holiday Stroll
6:00 PM – 9:00 PM

Capitol South Steps, Congres Avenue and 2nd Street District

Join the Downtown Austin Alliance and KUT Radio 90.5 for for the Holiday Sing-Along, Capitol Tree Lighting and Congress Avenue Stroll!

The festivities, which are free to the public, begin at 6 p.m. on the Capitol’s south steps. KUT’s John Aielli will host the Holiday Sing-Along, leading the crowd in a chorus of favorite seasonal songs to set the mood for the tree lighting.

As the clock chimes 7 p.m., the countdown begins to the lighting of the Capitol tree and the brand new Congress Avenue Holiday Lights, brought to you by Austin Energy!

Revelers can view the tree and new lights from every vantage point during the Congress Avenue Stroll from 7-9 p.m. Congress Avenue shops, restaurants, galleries and museums will be open late, offering special activities, offers and refreshments to visitors. A diverse array of Austin musicians, including Golden Arm Trio, The Invincible Czars, McCallum Fine Arts Academy Orchestra and the Super Sonic Soul Squad will entertain shoppers.

The Austin Farmers’ Market will also join in the festivities, temporarily setting up shop across from the Capitol grounds from 5:30-9 p.m. And 2nd Street District merchants and restaurants will be open late for shopping, strolling, food and fun!

In keeping with the season’s spirit of giving, KUT 90.5 and the Downtown Austin Alliance are coordinating a special food drive with Caritas of Austin. You can help Caritas help others by bringing non-perishable food items or monetary donations to the base of the Christmas Tree on the Capitol Grounds.

Parking is easy and available for just $3 all day at the AMLI on 2nd parking garage (entrance on San Antonio between 2nd and 3rd Streets).  Park your car, then take the ‘Dillo to the Capitol!

Nigel Stewart Austin , ,

BBC comes to Austin Texas

November 21st, 2008

Debugging Core Dumps with GDB (the GNU debugger)

October 11th, 2008

 The Austin Linux Group, Inc.

Jason Schonberg will show some basic features of the GNU Debugger at the October 16th talk. Core dumps and their common causes will be examined and discussed. GDB, the GNU Project debugger, allows you to see what is going on `inside’ another program while it executes — or what another program was doing at the moment it crashed. As described at the GNU Debugger website (http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/), GDB can do four main kinds of things (plus other things in support of these) to help you catch bugs in the act:

  • Start your program, specifying anything that might affect its behavior.
  • Make your program stop on specified conditions.
  • Examine what has happened, when your program has stopped.
  • Change things in your program, so you can experiment with correcting the effects of one bug and go on to learn about another.

The GNU debugger supports the languages found in the Gnu Compiler Collection. These include Ada, C, C++, Objective-C, Pascal (and many others). GDB can run on most popular UNIX and Microsoft Windows variants. Digital copies of the first chapter of “The Art of Debugging with GDB, DDD, and Eclipse” will be available. As usual, questions can be asked during and after the talk.

Nigel Stewart Linux, Tech , , ,

Texas Regional Python Unconference 2008

October 4th, 2008

The Second Annual Texas Regional Unconference for Python. Like last year, this unconference is intended to be a FREE event for Pythoneers from all over the Texas region to gather and share experiences and developments. Again, the topics to be presented are purely up to the participants.

Topics of interest:

Texas Python Conference 2008

Nigel Stewart Tech , , ,

Hurricane Ike is Coming to Texas

September 10th, 2008

Hurricane Ike is tracking towards Texas across the Gulf of Mexico.  Rain and wind forecast for Saturday with possible flooding, tornados and hurricane-force gusts.  No need to water the lawn this week.

Hurricane Ike

Hurricane Ike

Hurricane Ike

Ike Saturday 11am

Nigel Stewart Austin, Personal , , ,