Island Moon December 13 Section A

Page 1

Inside the Moon...

Sports A7

Fighting CIty Hall A6

Travel A8

FREE

The

Island Moon

La Posada A9, A11

Free

Concept and Photo by Miles Merwin

The Island Newspaper since 1996 Island Area News ● Events ● Entertainment

December 13, 2012

What happens on The Island leaves on Sunday.

Around The Island

By Dale Rankin editor@islandmoon.com

Moon Mike liked to compare La Posada parties to seven-layer bean dip; everyone may be on a certain level at the beginning but by the end the crowd is all mixed together in one big happy mash. This year was no exception. The first rule of La Posada parties is that if you heard about one then you’re invited because someone you know was invited. Just show up with a dish of food and whatever you plan to drink and come on in. If the deck is rockin’ don’t bother knockin’. That was pretty much the case last weekend as The Island was alive with people and parties.

Next Publication Date: 12/20/2012

Winners of Christmas Lights Home Decorations

Facebook: The Island Moon Newspaper

Year 15, Issue 453

Toys for Tots – An Island Success Story By Brent Rourk

Photos in next issue Waterside 15808 Punta Espada 15810 Punta Espada 14714 Cuttysark 13533 Peseta 15205 Caraval

If anyone has any doubt about whether Santa Clause is an Islander all we can say is you weren’t paying attention last weekend as Santas of all shapes and sizes, mostly wearing flipflops, flooded The Island with toys which even as you read this are on their way to the North Pole for worldwide distribution.

15205 Cartegena

The exact number of toys collected this year for Toys For Tots through the hard work of Islanders, and especially the folks at the Padre Island Yacht Club, are included elsewhere in this issue; suffice it to say there was more than a couple of sleighs full. In fact there was a Ryder Truck stuffed to the gunwales on Sunday morning at the Yacht Club as the toys were loaded for delivery to the Marines. There were workers at the Yacht Club until almost midnight on Saturday as boats continued to roll in from stops around the La Posada Lighted Parade route with toys they had collected from deck parties all over The Island.

14321 Dorsal

13526 Port Royal 13517 King Phillip Ct. 14106 Palo Seco 16121 Cuttysark

More La Posada Photos on A9

14212 Playa Del Rey

Streetside 14321 Dorsal 14212 Playa Del Rey 14222 San Felipe

Winners continued on A11

Island Stocking Stuffer…

101 Reasons You Might Be An Islander…(or not)

Members of the Padre Island Yacht Club (PIYC) appeared with coffee in hand beginning at 7:30 A.M. on Sunday morning. It seemed like only hours earlier they had been organizing and enjoying a boat parade and toy collection as well as storing countless bags of toys donated during the La Posada Boat Parades and the La Posada Kick-off Party at Scuttlebutts. The bottom floor of the PIYC was full of bags brimming with toys waiting to be transferred to the large yellow truck. Soon over 50 PIYC members formed lines to carry the toys from the building to the parking lot and eventually into the waiting truck. It was like watching precision clockwork as bags went from hand to hand until ultimately they found and filled the truck. PIYC members, happy with the haul of toys, then celebrated the parades and the hard work

done by hundreds with a fabulous breakfast and an awards ceremony.

Later La Posada organizer Jim Weatherill obtained final toy numbers; 3,903 toys plus enough cash from donations and auctions to purchase an additional 220 toys, making a total of 4,123 toys. Mr. Weatherill added, “It’s all about the kids”. He also wanted to, “thank everybody on the island for their generosity and kindness”.

Countless children in South Texas will have a little happier Christmas thanks to your generosity and the work of the PIYC. There is still time to donate to Toys for Tots. Toys are being accepted through December 19th. You can drop off your toys at CVS, Mail Plus, The German Bakery, and Docs.

It is Official – Duck Hunting Within 1000 Feet of Island Homes is Now Illegal Decade-long controversy finally settled at City Hall Photo by Miles Merwin

For the first time in a couple of years the weather on both Friday and Saturday nights cooperated and The Island was in full party mode as decks from Caravel to Cayo Cantiles strained under the weight of hordes of revelers watching what was one of the largest boat parades we’ve had in years as fourteen boats on Friday, and twenty one on Saturday, made the promenade through Island canals tossing candy and collecting toys. We are proud to announce that only one Moon Monkey fell (all the way) into the drink during the parade and managed to escape unscathed except for some waterlogged clothes and dinged up dignity. There was an overflow crowd at the Yacht Club on Saturday night and cars lined up along the end of Whitecap to watch as the boats made the turn. No records are kept of such things but it looked to be the largest group of spectators ever. All in all this was one of the most successful La Posada Lighted Boat Parades we’ve ever had, including the Kickoff Party on Tuesday at Scuttlebutt’s, and from the looks of things next year should be even better. We want to send out a hardy Attaboy to the folks at the Island Foundation, Padre Island Yacht Club, and the many Island organizations who worked to make the event such a great success. We can’t wait for next year. In January we will enter our second year of weekly publication after fifteen years of being a fortnightly. In the meantime say hello if you see us Around The Island.

Moon Holiday Schedule

The last issue of the Island Moon for 2012 will be on Thursday, December 20. We will not publish on Thursday, December 27, because – well, we don’t want to work on Christmas Day and neither does our printer. So we’ll see you in these pages next Thursday, then again on the other side of the New Year.

Salty Sue and Island Mike have gone and done it. They have written a book entitled 101 Reasons You Might Be An Islander (or not). The illustrations are done by Wes Nyle and it is just in time for Christmas and may be the ultimate Island Stocking Stuffer. There are ten illustrations and 101 reasons; so we’ll run ten reasons and one illustration each issue for the next ten issues. We’re not sure what we’ll do with the one reason that’s left over… so here goes… You know you’re an Islander when… You’re too laid back to actually count to see if there are 101 reasons in this book You know the kitty on the lost cat flyer isn’t going to be found You have, have had, or know someone who owns a dog named Roxy You’ve been around long enough to eat second generation pizza and hear second generation music at the local Italian hangout You take a boat, not a car, to eat the best seafood on The Island You grill …a lot…just to be outdoors After years of working OTB, you create a job you can do from your home so you don’t have to go OTB You’re typo tolerant (we think that one’s a shot at the Moon, but if the shoe fits…) Your wardrobe includes yard flip flops, town, flip flops, and wedding flip flops Going OTB (over the bridge) is worse that going OTH (over the hill)

As we reported last week the Corpus Christi City Council on Tuesday finally weighed in on the enforcement of a ban which prohibits discharging a firearm within 1000 feet of Island homes. Homeowners near freshwater ponds near the end of Primavera and Sea Pines have complained for years about hunters shooting too near their homes and last year filled the air with a barrage of flack as dry conditions pushed more hunters into areas near homes and Corpus

Christi Police officers found themselves caught between irate homeowners, a handful of hunters ignoring the law, and a city ordinance too full of holes to be enforced.

The problem with enforcement of the 1000foot provision in the ordinance stemmed from two sources.

One, the City Attorney’s Office for the past two duck seasons has cited a clause in

Ducks continued on A5

A little Island history

World Set to End on Friday, December 21! (or maybe not)

Editor’s note: We’re going to take a time out from our regular series of history stories this time because, well, the next time we will publish is only one day before the End of the World; that is if certain interpreters of the Mayan Calendar who believe the world will end on Friday, December 21 are correct.

arriving in January so let’s go with that..

Here at the Island Moon we don’t use Mayan Calendars, we mostly use Dog Calendars, or Cat Calendars, or Beach Scene Calendars; and always Free Calendars and so far those have kept on coming in the mail so we don’t buy into the End of the World outlook.

It all started with a story in the journal Science. The story described a small painted room unearthed in 2011 in the Mayan ruins in Xultun, Guatemala. The Mayan civilization lived between 2000 BC and the Spanish conquistadors’ arrival in the 16th century and reached its zenith from 300AD to 900AD.

But given that so many people are talking about it we decided this time we’ll take a look at what the fuss is all about. We realize it is not specifically Island History, but hey, if the world ends we won’t have any Winter Texans

The only thing we can say for sure is no matter what December 21 will mark the end for people who sell Mayan Calendars …so here goes… By Dale Rankin

The Xultun site was first described by archaeologists in 1915 and had been explored and plundered ever since. But the 2011 find Doomsday continued on A3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Island Moon December 13 Section A by Mary Craft - Issuu