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I can't believe all these people came out,” said John Evans, surveying the scene at the first-ever Stingaree Music Festival in not-so-warm, definitely-not-sunny Crystal Beach, Texas. And all things considered, there was a pretty damn good turnout for this thing — a couple of hundred people bundled up in winter clothes piled into lawn chairs in front of a stage in a muddy pasture outside a tiki bar about ten miles from the ferry landing and a half mile from the beach.

The brainchild of former Bolivar resident Hayes Carll, the weekend-long festival's lineup included everyone from Evans and fellow Houstonians in Medicine Show to Ray Wylie Hubbard, the Gougers, Todd Snider and Stone Coyotes.

As a long-standing lover of all things Bolivar Peninsula, I thought it would make for a killer family music weekend, especially when Carll told me I could use the beach house that he had reserved for the brass at his Nashville label Lost Highway, who, presciently, decided they would not be able to attend. We — my wife, ten-year-old son John Henry and two-year-old daughter Harriet, and I — would spend mornings at the beach building sandcastles and frolicking in the brown waves before heading over to the 57-acre venue around lunchtime. We would stay there as long as the kids could stand it, and then I could stay a little longer and get the scoop.

That was the plan, anyway. Unfortunately, Mother Nature decided to lift her dress and whizz all over it. Well, maybe that's an unfortunate image — actually, it didn't rain, at least not all that much. It was cold as a well-digger's ass, though, and the mean old wind never once died down. It only changed direction.

Our family is never well-prepared when we go away, least of all for this trip. But we had an excuse this time. Was it not April? Were we not going to the beach? Isn't it always 80 degrees this time of the year? Amid the usual bickering that accompanies our packing the car to go anywhere further away than the corner H-E-B, neither of the adults consulted the weather.

And it didn't seem that bad on Friday night. We arrived at the venue to pick up our tickets and keys at about 9 p.m., and there was a stiff wind, but it was blowing off the Gulf. The skies were overcast, though, and Carll's manager Mike Crowley was nervous. “We built a tent out in the pasture way back there,” he said, when I asked him why all the customers were vanishing between a line of trucks behind the tiki bar. He asked if I had any news about the weather. I didn't, really, but I assured him it would get better. This was April in Texas, after all. The winds would cease, the sun would shine, we would come back tomorrow and a great time would be had by all.

In fact, the temperature was high enough to sleep on the front porch of the beach house, which was exactly what I attempted to do. And sure enough, the wind ceased abruptly at two a.m., which enabled a cloud of sand fleas to emerge from the dunes and attack every millimeter of exposed flesh on my body. I staggered inside where I passed the rest of the night on the couch.

I rose at dawn the next day to find that the wind had started up again, except this time it was coming in hard and steady and cold from the north. I piled on two layers of T-shirts and a guayabera to go with my shorts and sandals and hoped for the best. After a cold morning building sandcastles in the lee of a man-made dune, we headed down to the venue for lunch.

If you've never been to Bolivar, you really should go now, before the developers (or a hurricane) ruin it. Bolivar's population consists of shrimpers, Texas Cajuns and salt-crusted libertarians. Right now, it is relatively unspoiled, a couple dozen miles of ramshackle beach shacks and mom-and-pop shops and bars. In fact, the only chains I saw over the course of two days there were a Subway and a RadioShack, which was tucked away in what can only be described as the “Bol-Mart,” a huge, independently owned gas station/grocery store/beach supply/beer-‘n'-cigs emporium.

At any rate, by this time, there was some talk of abandoning the tent in the pasture, as the threat of rain had mostly passed, to be replaced with a concern that the wind might crumple the tent. Despite the fact that the event was immensely family-friendly, John Henry and Harriet were not too enthused by the idea of standing around in a 30-mph norther all afternoon, so I ferried them back to the beach house after a lunch of various fried things, and we all passed the afternoon listening to the beach house wobble, creak and groan.

About five, I headed back to the Tiki Bar and Grill. I had a story to write, after all. I would try to find some winter clothes here on the peninsula. And I soon found there were none to be had — they had all been mothballed for next year. (If, on the other hand, I wanted a $35 Hawaiian shirt or a $20 floppy straw hat with a slogan like “Crystal Beach — a quaint little drinking village with a serious fishing problem,” I would have been in like Flynn. The Bol-Mart's racks were stuffed with this sort of thing.)

My only alternative would be the old-school one — drink enough booze to numb the cold. But I didn't have a designated driver, and I have a rule about driving drunk: Don't do it. Especially not at night, in high wind, on a two-lane highway, in an unfamiliar town full of cops. (I imagined being taken to the pokey in Galveston via some kind of middle passage on the ferry, and it didn't seem like much fun.)

Write Your Comment show comments (2)
  1. LOMAX THE WEATHER MAN

    What a lame story! Here I was wanting to read about the music of two of Houston's best musicians Hayes Carll and John Evans, but instead I get John Lomax's weather report. I've been a long time Houston Press reader and this my first time to post a comment. Come on Lomax don't you think with this being the first time Hayes has put a festival of this kind together we could have heard some details of his brain child? I'm sure Hayes with his dry wit would have made for a great article. And, if you've EVER been to a show where Hayes, John or Ray Wiley played you KNOW the people there are going to drink and it's not bring the kids out for a picnic day. I'm not saying I wouldn't take my teenage daughters to one of their shows, (because I have and will continue to) but come on you act like this is your first time to see them. I would enjoy to read more on the music, the musicians, the crowd, their set lists and music related issues...you are a music writer.

  2. I am the wife of James Moody, who commented first. I fully agree with his take on your 'article'. My family owns homes in Bolivar and have been a summer-time resident for most of my life there. Many many memories for me and now for my children. I've been eating at the Stingaree most of my life as well. When I heard of the festival, I was VERY excited but our schedule would not allow for us to attend and have been heart broken. I was anticipating reading an article on how the fest was....unfortunatley I read yours.
    Did you think to comment on the actual FESTIVAL? Maybe talk about the MUSIC? I felt like I was reading your personal blog with the wife and kids and sleeping on the porch and how many layers of tees you had on and your time schedule. My husband and I are very passionate about music and this article was a HUGE let down. Our daughters have attended Hayes' shows on several occasions and they are either at a bar or OTS Crawfish Fest....you judge on bringing your 2 year old to those. This was not a Disney themed weekend with huge headed furry characters running around...if you love the Peninsula as you say you do....then you naturally know the crowd that hangs around the Stingaree and definately could guess what crowd the Festival would bring in.
    I would have loved to hear about traffic, spectators opinions, interviews with the musicians, the actual performances...you know...like a REAL article and not an editorial on the weather and how Mother Nature lifted her dress....it's weather, it changes like a mo-fo there and you should know that.
    Dawn Moody
    www.myspace.com/dlpmoody

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