Taking Time to Look

Mon Mar 2, 2009 at 12:55 am in Environment, Inspiration

I want to post about crafty things, and in fact I have been pursuing handiwork like mad, but I just don’t have enough for a respectable new post.  These things I’m doing, they take time, oodles of time to get things accomplished on them.  I’m making hundreds of tiny handstitches a day, but when I step back from the project after all those stitches, it seems like so very little has actually been completed.  And so it goes, another day, and other few hundred stitches.  Today I feel lucky I have very little feeling in three of my fingers, because otherwise I think they’d really hurt from getting poked with needles.

Apart from stitching, one thing I really wanted to start doing was wandering around Austin on foot to see what I could see.  Places look a lot different when you’re walking instead of driving, you know?  So I’ve walked around my neighborhood, around the University of Texas, around downtown and the capitol area, through parks, over rivers, up hills … you get the idea.

Waller Creek

One Sunday, I think it was two weeks ago, I went to Waterloo Park, a place I drive by quite frequently but had never been to.  What I found was that this park suffers from a lot of that – thousands must drive by on a weekly basis, but only a handful probably ever stop.  Waller Creek runs through the park, and these pictures are from a pathway that has been built along the creek. I don’t think it was built recently, given the style, but I don’t know.

Waller Creek

Thing is, this park and the waterway are falling apart and weed-choked.  It’s sad. It could be a beautiful place, that pathway, but no one seems to care that much that it’s so run down.  It’s a little surprising, honestly.  It’s in the middle of the city, mostly built already, just a few blocks from the University of Texas and the Capitol, in a well-traveled part of the city.  I can only think someone shows up to take care of it better in summer, but somehow I doubt it.

Waller Creek

This bridge, for example, is one that I know lots of commuters, goverment officials and the like pass over daily.  I wonder – do people notice this older, pretty bridge?  Do they ever look over the edge?  Do they see this pathway below?  Do they know where it goes in either direction?  Does anyone think – why does this look so rundown here in the middle of everything?

Waller Creek

A number of small beasties live down there – I believe we saw squirrls and a rabbit, even, and there are probably possums.  I saw a few turtles peeping up and sunning themselves.  Turtles are lovely creatures, in my opinion, even though they do tend to bite.  I’ve always thought I might like a small turtle pond.  This fine specimen was peering at me suspiciously as I wandered around him taking pictures from various angles.

Waller Creek

Part of the pathway ends under a place called Symphony Square, which looks as though it was once used for concerts.  It would be awesome for the window scene in Romeo & Juliet.  The stage is set on one side of the Creek, and the seating is on the other side.  Above the seating, there is a restaurant.  If you stand on the walkway next to the creek you are several feet down from diners and they can’t see you and don’t even know that you are there!

Waller Creek

So we stopped to note the details for a minute, and look at the rocks, and think about what could be.  And of course, there was enough time for me to wonder how you can make a quilt look like individual rocks, because that’s how I seem to be seeing the world lately … “can I quilt that?”

Waller Creek

I hope one day someone decides that restoring the area is a good use of funds and time, and that they go back to using Symphony Square for concerts in the warmer months, though of course it would help to clean up the water some first, maybe a coat of paint or so would be good, and a gardening team for those weeds … ?  I hope the old byways and buildings in Austin are not forgotten amidst this city’s seemingly unquenchable thirst for new thirty-story buildings and condo developments.

Waller Creek

Off to contemplate another few hundred tiny stitches! TTFN, Miriam.

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Hey Miriam, found your post on Waller Creek. It is so underutilized! But, there is a reason. It’s in the floodplain and unfortunately there is vagrancy and drug use problem which scares many people off. Good news is that the the city and county have measures to revitalize the creek by, first, taking it out of the floodplain.

http://downtownaustin.wordpress.com/2009/01/16/public-invited-to-view-waller-creek-tunnel-models/

-Jude

p.s. Bill Spelman is running for City Council and is the chair of Waller Creek Citizens Advisory Committee.

Jude — Mon Mar 2, 2009 at 8:31 am (link)

I certainly hope the city has plans for it, Jude, because it’s a very sad place right now and should not be. Lack of use begets vagrancy and drug problems begets lack of use, too.

Miriam — Mon Mar 2, 2009 at 10:19 pm (link)

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