Sunday, June 14, 2009

Ike Height


My brother, Bart and his wife Nita visited from Killeen this weekend. Bart recently retired as Colonel after thirty-eight years and five combat tours with the army and army reserve .

Topwater Grill, one of our favorite restaurants has not quite recovered from IKE so we opted for dinner at Landry's on Kemah's touristy boardwalk.






Landry's has a colorful history. Part of that history is told by the gauge now painted on the first floor wall. The gauge shows the high water marks measured from the building's floor for hurricanes since 1900. Note that the floor is about four feet above mean high water in the Clear Lake Channel just outside. Ike is off the scale! Looking out over the bay and realizing that Clear Lake is twenty-five something miles from the Gulf of Mexico, the volume of salt water that was pushed up the bay to bring the water level that high is just incomprehensible.

The Kemah waterfront was very different when we first "sailed" down the Clear Lake Channel and out to Galveston Bay. What a thrill it was to pass the shrimp fleet tied up across the channel from the restaurants. Some people still called Landry's, Jimmy Walkers. I can remember how good the seafood smelled as we passed the Flying Dutchman, Joe Lee's and of course, Landry's. The shrimp boats are long gone. In fact, the north side of the channel is almost barren; the pilings, packing houses and everything is just gone. Click http://www.art-photography-nature.com/Category_22.html to see some historical pictures.
All the restaurants are now connected by one corporate boardwalk lined with carnival games and amusement park rides. Of course, I liked it the way it was. Besides the great food, that is why I like Topwater Grill so much more. I suppose it is time to move on.








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