alt

Bookmark and Share

Events Calendar

Peruse our database of Texas events – from community plays and cook-offs to mega-festivals and touring productions. We highlight a few of options here.



Celebrate Texas!

Last year’s 175th anniversary of Texas’ independence sparked celebrations from one end of the state to the other, and the party continues this year at a number of locations. For example, Historic Gruene’s 3rd annual Texas Independence Day Celebration takes place in downtown Gruene on March 2 and includes a free live show at Gruene Hall. For details, call 830/629-5077; www.gruenetexas.com. Washington-on-the-Brazos State Historic Site hosts its annual Texas birthday celebration March 3-4 at the site of the Independence Convention of 1836. The festivities include performances by Texian Army reenactors, demonstrations of frontier crafts by Texas artisans, music and stories of Texas’ past, and a Texas-size birthday cake. Call 936/878-2214, ext. 224; www.birthplaceoftexas.com.
More Independence Day events at TH Tip.


Last Chance!

Griff Smith’s Texas: A Retrospective Through the Lens and Images From Texas Highways will be on view through March 25 at the Institute of Texan Cultures in San Antonio.

Some 60 of Texas Highways Photo Editor Griff Smith’s most memorable images span the state—from Amarillo’s Cadillac Ranch and Monahans sand dunes to a South Padre sea turtle and Dallas’ Thanks-Giving Square.Call 210/458-2300 or 800/776-7651; www.texancultures.com.

More on the Folklife Festival exhibit at TH Tip.


Whoop-de-do

TH Traveler is beach-bound this month for the annual Whooping Crane Festival (February 23-26) in Port Aransas. Festival highlights include whooping crane boat tours to the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge—the only location in the world where the sole natural migrating flock of whooping cranes (from Wood Buffalo National Park in Alberta, Canada) spends the winter.

The boat tours offer festival-goers the chance to observe these endangered and territorial birds at close range. Other birding excursions take place at nearby sites including La Copita Ranch, Fennessey Ranch, and various locations in Port Aransas. Hear talks by leading birding and nature authorities, including renowned whooping crane expert Dr. George Archibald, who discusses efforts to establish four other populations of whoopers in the U.S. With more than 75 nests found in Canada this past spring, ANWR biologists anticipate that the flock size could reach record levels this winter—possibly 300 cranes. Call 800/45-COAST; www.whoopingcranefestival.org.

On the subject of whooping cranes: there's another, unusual opportunity to take a peek at these big birds—six have been wintering at Granger Lake near Georgetown


Now Showing!

The Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in Canyon tells the region’s story with diverse collections that span more than 500 million years. Along with an extensive array of Texas and Southwestern fine art, the museum’s millions of artifacts include a Ford Model A, Charles Goodnight’s silver-mounted saddle, Quanah Parker’s headdress, and a lock of George Washington’s hair.

This month’s lineup of traveling exhibits includes The Littlefield Murals (through Feb. 18), three recently rediscovered murals by E. Martin Hennings once housed in Austin’s historic Littlefield Bank building; Try!: Rodeo on the Southern Plains (through Sep. 8), which traces the evolution of the rodeo in the region; and Another Day, Another Dollar: The Legacy of the Civilian Conservation Corps (Feb. 11-Oct. 13), with displays illustrating the CCC’s lasting mark on the Panhandle landscape. Call 806/651-2244; www.panhandleplains.org.


Want more? Go to the Events Calendar.

For a free printed copy of an even more detailed, quarterly schedule of events, write to Texas Events Calendar, Box 149249, Austin 78714-9249. Or, call 800/452-9292 from anywhere in the U.S. or Canada, between 8-6 Central.

For Texas travel questions, call 800/452-9292 to reach a TxDOT Travel Infor-mation Center, where a professional travel counselor will provide routing assistance, advise you of any emergency road conditions, and send brochures (including the official Texas State Travel Guide and map, accommodations guide, and quarterly Texas Events Calendar).

Send future event information to: Texas Events Calendar, Box 141009, Austin 78714-1009; fax: 512/486-5879; e-mail: trv-tec@dot.state.tx.us. Listing deadlines: Spring (Mar, Apr, May) Dec 1; Summer (Jun, Jul, Aug) Mar 1; Fall (Sep, Oct, Nov) Jun 1; Winter (Dec, Jan, Feb) Sep 1.


 Back to Departments