Posts filed under 'picnic'
What to do In Bryan/College Station on July 4th, 2009
So, July 4th is upon us again. It’s hot, no sign of the heat lessening, and everything seems to be outside of the 4th, so be careful, wear sunscreen, drink lots of water, you know, all that safety stuff.
As far as fireworks, there’s a burn ban in effect, so you’ll have to ask the fireworks merchants what the restrictions are.
So, we haven’t decided what we’re going to do, but there are plenty of things to do this year. I’ve done a bit of research and found some great, fun sounding activities for Independence day. Some of you might actually be in the same place as me this weekend.
I’ll start with the Tried and True events that happen every year:
George Bush Library
For the tenth year, the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum will host the College Station Lions Club’s annual Fourth of July Celebration, “I Love America.” This is the 49th year for this community event. The Museum will open at 9:30 a.m. and extend their hours until 8:30 p.m. Admission to the Museum on the Fourth of July is free for everyone all day. Historical characters will be mingling with the crowd to pose for photographs and answer questions about their distinguished careers. Live entertainment, concessions, and games for the children will all begin at 5:30 p.m. The evening will culminate with a spectacular fireworks display and concert by the Brazos Valley Symphony Orchestra. People are encouraged to come early and bring their lawn chairs, picnic baskets and blankets. Please no glass containers!
Parking is available to the public at the West Campus Parking Garage on the Texas A&M University campus. Shuttles will begin running at 4:30 p.m. from the garage to the Museum. Handicapped parking is available in Lot 41 in front of the George Bush Presidential Library and Museum entrance.
For more information, please call (979) 691-4068.
Washington on the Brazos
Celebrate America’s independence on the site where Texas declared her independence! Enjoy a full day of festivities on Tuesday, July 4th at the “Birthplace of Texas,” Washington-on-the-Brazos State Historic Site. Admission to the Park is free, and activities will be held from 10:00a.m. until 10:00p.m.
Children can participate in period games from the late 1800’s beginning at 6:30 p.m. Free Blue Bell ice cream and free Coca-Cola drinks will be served at 7:00p.m. At 8:00p.m. relax with a picnic and listen to the Houston Symphonic Band perform patriotic favorites. The highlight of the celebration begins at approximately 9:15p.m. when HEB presents Fireworks-on-the-Brazos – an enormous fireworks extravaganza that can be viewed from all locations within the 293 acre park.
Visitors can tour historic sites within the park during the day, including Barrington Living History Farm, Independence Hall, and the Star of the Republic Museum. Regular admission/tour fees apply. Call 936-878-2214 for tour hours and fees.
Food vendors will offer a variety of food choices on-site. Visitors may wish to bring picnics, blankets or lawn chairs, and flashlights. State park rules apply; alcohol prohibited.
Washington-on-the-Brazos State Historic Site is located halfway between Brenham and Navasota on State Hwy. 105, approximately one hour northwest of Houston. Directions and more information are available by calling 936-878-2214.
Family Movie Opening this week: Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs…Opening Wednesday the 1st of July…here are more movie times. Looks like it’s in 3D. We watched Bolt in 3D And it was pretty cool. Toy Story 3 is gonna be 3D. Up is still playing…if you haven’t watched Up, go watch that. I cried within the first 30 minutes…great movie. We didn’t watch it in 3D, but I heard it was really fantastic in 3D.
Here are some other things that might interest you:
Soggy Bottom ATV Ranch
Independence Day, Picnic at the Lake [more]
* Come hang out, listen to music and enjoy all the activities, celebrating the birth of our proud nation.
* 4 on 4 Water Volleyball Tournament, Prizes to be given.
* Washers Tournament
* Free hot dogs and sodas while supplies last.
* Bring your fireworks and let’s have a blast!
* Regular park hours, gates will open at 8 AM on Thursday and close Sunday at dark.
* Normal Park Rates Apply
* Mud Races
Live Music:
Stafford Downtown Bryan: Reverend J Goodin and Bulletproof Brown – 9pm
Other Events:
Aquablast at the Bryan Aquatic Center. Celebrating their 25th Birthday from 1-7pm $3 admission. For more information call 979-209-5222
Triumph Homeschool Community: 4th of July Picnic! Cornerstone Acres, 5105 Wallis Road beginning 6:30 p.m. [more]
Traditions Club House: Food and Fun. Live music by Elmo Weedon (Traditions memebers only)
JJ’s Snow Cones: Don’t forget to stop by to get an ice cold yummy snow cone.
5th of July
Texas World Speedway: Fireworks, Miata Ride Along, Vintage Indy Car races, Burn out contest, 5K Fun Run. Check it out.
Have fun!
2 comments June 29, 2009
Central Park – Bring Bread for the Ducks
We recently went to Central Park in College Station. The grounds are very nice, and although the playground is fairly small, there were other things to do.
There’s a basketball court, pavillions, baseball fields, picnic tables, paved trails, a pond and ducks.
Lots of ducks. And geese. We took peanut butter and honey sandwiches, goldfish crackers and granola bars, and those ducks ate almost everything we threw at them. I mean toward them.
My kids don’t eat the crust of their sandwiches. My mom always made us eat ours, and for the most part we make our kids eat theirs, but not when there are ducks around.
There is one goose in particular that is pretty big, and apparently the scout, well, at least not afraid to come right up to you.
In fact, at one point, I found our 4 year old (who we call the “Bug Whisperer”) petting it…practically hugging it.
I’m not convinced ducks like peanut butter, but they ate just about everything we threw at them.
The pond was very pretty and well kept. Looks like it’s stocked with fish and you can actually catch them, so bring your rod. The regular Texas Parks and Wildlife limits for bagging apply to this pond. The Central Park pond has Trout and Catfish in it.
| Statewide Bag and Length Limits for Freshwater Fish | ||
| Species | Daily Bag | Length (minimum) |
| largemouth and smallmouth Bass | 5 (in any combination) | 14 inches |
| spotted and Guadalupe Bass | No minimum | |
| Bass, striped and hybrid | 5 (in any combination) | 18 inches |
| Bass, white | 25 | 10 inches |
| Bass, yellow | No limit | No minimum |
| Catfish: channel and blue, their hybrids and subspecies | 25 (in any combination) | 12 inches |
| Catfish, flathead | 5 | 18 inches |
| Crappie: white and black, their hybrids and subspecies | 25 (in any combination) | 10 inches |
| Paddlefish | No harvest allowed | |
| Saugeye | 3 | 18 inches |
| Sunfish: various species including bluegill, redear, green, warmouth and longear |
No limit | No minimum |
| Trout: rainbow and brown, their hybrids and subspecies | 5 (in any combination) | No minimum |
| Walleye | 5 (only 2 can be less than 16 inches in length) | No minimum |
Here are some tips on releasing fish:
Quickly play and release fish.
Keep fish in water as much as possible.
Remove hook with pliers or cut line.
Gently place fish back into water.
Revive fish by holding upright in water and moving back and forth, gently forcing water through gills.
Enjoy
jorge

2 comments January 16, 2008
Tanglewood Park – Splash Pad and Playgrounds
Tanglewood park is a great park in town. It’s one of three “Splash Pads” in Bryan and College Station (one at Tiffany Park, and another at Lincoln Center).
These Splash Pads consist of fountains and even a water bucket that fills up and splashes down. It’s great fun in the summer and spring. It’s about the size of a basketball court…maybe smaller, and there’s a controller to turn it on when it turns itself off. The cycle is about 10 minutes, and the controller is just a post with a round top that is touch activated.
I read this about the Splash Pads from the Eagle website:
Based on the popularity splash pads in Bryan/College Station, city officials are considering including more of these features in future projects, so be sure to keep the look out for new splash pads this Summer.
I called the City of Bryan Parks and Recreation, and they told me that the water is City Water, just like you’d get out of your faucet.
Tanglewood park has several covered pavillions, three playgrounds, a sand volleyball court and loads of picnic tables.
We really like this park. Not as much variety as Austin’s Colony (well, except for the Splash Pad) but great playgrounds, and although it’s a well know park, we’ve never had trouble finding empty picnic tables.
You can get there from Villa Maria, 29th or Texas Ave.
And just so you know, here’s a website that sells these Water Play Features. I don’t know if Bryan and College Station get them any cheaper, but we can assume that these are approximately the price our city paid as well. I guess that’s what our taxes are paying for. I’m OK with that. Parks are fun.
Go play.
Jorge

3 comments January 3, 2008
12 Things to do at Lake Bryan
First of all, a little info:
Lake Bryan is owned by the local utilities company (BTU). They use the lake to cool their power plant (which you can see from the lake). The use of the water by the power plant does not affect the consumption of the fish in the lake. Here’s what WikiPedia has to say about it:
Lake Bryan is a power plant cooling reservoir in Brazos County, 5 miles (8 km) west of Bryan, Texas, USA. The dam and lake are managed by Bryan Texas Utilities which uses the reservoir as a cooling pond for the electrical generators in the Dansby Power Plant. The reservoir was officially impounded in 1974.
My family visited for the first time on a very windy day. Our food practically flew off the picnic table. There were wind surfers, jet skiers, water skiers, volleyball players, a few dogs and other people having picnics. We’ll go back to swim and hang out in the Spring or Summer.
- Day use fee $3/car weekdays, $5/car weekends and holidays
- Open 6 am to 7:30 pm November 1-February, 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. March-October
There’s a restaurant (which is closed during the Winter Months), a boat landing and picnic tables just as you enter the park. The main area is across a bridge and into the center of the lake, where there’s a covered pavilion, volleyball courts, picnic tables, a beach, a stage and lots of room to run a play.
Here’s a list of things you can do at Bryan Lake:
1. Picnic: This is what we did. There’s a covered pavilion, and lots of picnic tables all around the area. There are BBQ pits at a few of the tables and a few large Oak trees for shade.
2. Swimming: It was too cold in December, but we will be back in the Spring to swim. In the middle section, at the tip, there’s a beach, and a large area cordoned off for swimming. Not sure how deep it was, but I’ll let you know.
3. Fishing: Looks like there’s Sunfish, Catfish, Crappie and Large Mouth Bass. Here’s what the Texas Parks and Wildlife Website has to say about it:
- Prey species: Sunfish make up the majority of prey fish in Lake Bryan. Gizzard and threadfin shad are present but in low numbers. Bluegill are the most abundant of the sunfish species, and most are < 4 inches in length. Threadfin shad were stocked in 1992 but do not contribute significantly to the prey base in Lake Bryan.
- Catfishes: Channel catfish abundance has declined over the past few years. Only one individual was captured in the 2006 gill net survey. However, the creel survey indicates anglers do target and catch channel catfish. Growth of channel catfish at Lake Bryan is slow.
- Largemouth bass: Largemouth bass are abundant in Lake Bryan with fish up to 21 inches collected in our electrofishing survey in 2005. The 18-inch minimum length limit has allowed the population to produce larger sized bass for anglers. The current lake record is over 7 pounds.
- Crappie: Catches of crappie in our monitoring surveys are typically poor. Though directed angler effort for crappie was low in the 2004 creel survey, anglers did report catching and releasing crappie, with some harvest of black crappie. Hybrid crappie were stocked in 1997 in an attempt to increase the numbers of crappie available for harvest; however, none were collected in the present survey.
4. Water Skiing: We saw some water skiing over by the dam. Looks fun.
5. Wind Surfing: There were two wind surfers on the windy day we went.
6. Mountain Biking: At the time of this writing, the trails are closed because of rain and mud, but I am definitely looking forward to hitting those trails. There’s an organization in town that even goes out periodically and services the trails to keep them nice and safe. Here’s a map of the Lake Bryan trails, and a place to find out the status of the trails at any given moment. (although the trails are not actually “closed” when they say “closed”, it’s just a reminder that the less they are taken care of, the more possibility there will be that they won’t be rideable in the future).
7. Hiking: Although the trails are perfect for mountain bikes, they are great for walking and birdwatching. Being a water area, there will always be interesting birds to look for.
8. Boating: There’s a boat ramp
9. Jet Skiing: Saw a couple of these while we were there.
10. Volleyball: There was at least one sand volleyball court that we saw. Looked in good shape.
11. Watch a show: There’s a stage out there. Not sure what ever happens on it, but it’s out there. Looks like a perfect place for an open mic night.
12. Eat at the Restaurant: Called The Hook Lakeside Bar & Grill“. They offer Catfish Tacos, Burgers, Po Boys and seafood platters at fairly decent prices.
13. Camping: I believe there’s an RV hookup per day charge as well as a tent charge. I can’t remember what it is, but I remember that there’s a thing called the “Honor Pole” where you pay what you owe. That’s fun.
Have fun.
jorge

7 comments December 20, 2007

