This is your Caliche Road: Tales from the Heart of Oil Country podcast.
**Caliche Road: Tales from the Heart of Oil Country**
**Episode: "Dust and Dreams"**
You're driving down a winding lease road in West Texas, the sun beating down on your truck, the dust swirling around you like a living thing. This is oil country, where the land is tough and the people are tougher. My name's Jake, and I've lived here all my life. My family's been in the oil business since the 1950s, when my grandfather, Bob D. Henderson, worked as a land surveyor for Continental Oil, or Conoco.
Granddad used to tell me stories about the early days, when he and his crew would move from town to town, surveying new leases and living out of their trucks. He met my grandmother, Ann, in Aspermont, Texas, and they got married in 1950. They spent the next 13 years moving between Pecos, Decatur, Gainesville, and Denison, always chasing the next big oil find.
But it wasn't just about the oil. Granddad loved the land, the history, and the people. He'd collect spear points and arrowheads, and tell me stories about the Apaches who used to roam these hills. He'd show me the old rock fences, makeshift forts built to protect against night raids.
As I grew up, I saw the oil boom come and go, leaving behind a trail of prosperity and problems. The cost of living would skyrocket, and folks without oil jobs would struggle to make ends meet. The roads would get crowded with tankers and equipment haulers, making it a hazard to drive. And then there were the environmental concerns – the flares burning methane and benzene, the sand mining, and the trash that littered the landscape.
But despite all the challenges, West Texans are a resilient bunch. We've learned to adapt, to make do with what we have. And when the boom ends, we'll be here, waiting for the next one to come along. That's just the way it is in oil country.
I remember talking to Christian Wallace, a local writer who's documented the boom times and the damaging side effects. He told me about the strain on our limited natural resources, especially water, and the toll it takes on our communities. But he also talked about the people, the roughnecks and ranchers who call this place home.
As I drive down these dusty backroads, I see the same spirit that drove my grandfather to keep moving, to keep searching for the next big find. It's a spirit of hope and determination, of people who refuse to give up, no matter what the land throws at them. That's the story of West Texas, and that's the story I want to share with you on Caliche Road.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
**Caliche Road: Tales from the Heart of Oil Country**
**Episode: "Dust and Dreams"**
You're driving down a winding lease road in West Texas, the sun beating down on your truck, the dust swirling around you like a living thing. This is oil country, where the land is tough and the people are tougher. My name's Jake, and I've lived here all my life. My family's been in the oil business since the 1950s, when my grandfather, Bob D. Henderson, worked as a land surveyor for Continental Oil, or Conoco.
Granddad used to tell me stories about the early days, when he and his crew would move from town to town, surveying new leases and living out of their trucks. He met my grandmother, Ann, in Aspermont, Texas, and they got married in 1950. They spent the next 13 years moving between Pecos, Decatur, Gainesville, and Denison, always chasing the next big oil find.
But it wasn't just about the oil. Granddad loved the land, the history, and the people. He'd collect spear points and arrowheads, and tell me stories about the Apaches who used to roam these hills. He'd show me the old rock fences, makeshift forts built to protect against night raids.
As I grew up, I saw the oil boom come and go, leaving behind a trail of prosperity and problems. The cost of living would skyrocket, and folks without oil jobs would struggle to make ends meet. The roads would get crowded with tankers and equipment haulers, making it a hazard to drive. And then there were the environmental concerns – the flares burning methane and benzene, the sand mining, and the trash that littered the landscape.
But despite all the challenges, West Texans are a resilient bunch. We've learned to adapt, to make do with what we have. And when the boom ends, we'll be here, waiting for the next one to come along. That's just the way it is in oil country.
I remember talking to Christian Wallace, a local writer who's documented the boom times and the damaging side effects. He told me about the strain on our limited natural resources, especially water, and the toll it takes on our communities. But he also talked about the people, the roughnecks and ranchers who call this place home.
As I drive down these dusty backroads, I see the same spirit that drove my grandfather to keep moving, to keep searching for the next big find. It's a spirit of hope and determination, of people who refuse to give up, no matter what the land throws at them. That's the story of West Texas, and that's the story I want to share with you on Caliche Road.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta