Books by
Michael Barr
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On
March 19, 1977, at 2:30 in the afternoon, a lone mud dauber flew
in low over South Grape Creek, darted around for a few minutes and
landed on an empty beer can. The crowd of 8,000 went wild, scaring
the daylights out of the nervous little critter who immediately
lit out in the direction of Cain City.
You know those people in Luckenbach.
Any flimsy excuse to throw a beer party.
The idea for the "Mud Dauber Fest" or more formally "When
the Mud Daubers Come Back to Luckenbach Day," may have come from
a letter Hondo Crouch wrote to Elizabeth Taylor in 1976, inviting
the famous actress to come to Luckenbach.
For some unexplainable reason, Hondo began extolling the artistic
genius of mud daubers.
"If you like mud daubers Liz," Hondo wrote, "you'll be ecstatic.
Luckenbach is the mud dauber capital of the world. We've just got
mud dauber sculptures everywhere. Some of it is just breathtaking
and some of it is a little obscene so we try to keep it out of sight
of the children."
"They will really go all out if you come. We're resting them up
right now (their daubers get sore) but they'll be out there just
daubing away in September."
"I sure hope you can come. A Luckenbach moon can make even an ugly
girl look pretty. Think of what it can do for a beauty like you."
When Hondo died later that year, the resident characters at Luckenbach
took the mud dauber idea and ran with it.
"Every March 19 the mud daubers come back to Luckenbach," spokesman
Jack Harmon explained. "They come back - swarms of 'em - all rested
up - ready to put their little daubers to work creating wonderful
mud sculptures."
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Luckenbach
Post Office
Photo courtesy Michael
Barr, November 2017 |
Hondo Crouch
Bust in Luckenbach
Photo courtesy Michael
Barr, November 2017 |
It was no accident
that the Mud Dauber Fest fell on March 19 - the same day the swallows
returned to San Juan Capistrano in California. The motive was revenge.
It seems Texans were still bent out of shape because organizers
moved the World Chili Cookoff from Terlingua
to Hollywood.
"Everything would have been alright if they hadn't messed with our
chili." Jack Harmon said.
Luckenbach Mayor Kathy Morgan invited President Carter's brother
Billy to the Mud Dauber Fest to serve as Mayor for a Day. A lot
of people felt sorry for Billy who had just lost his second bid
for mayor of Plains, Georgia.
Opting not to pay the First Brother's traveling expenses "since
it might look like influence peddling," the mayor instead offered
Billy all the beer he could drink.
If you remember Billy, it might have been cheaper to pay his traveling
expenses.
But the mayor withdrew the invitation after calling Billy's home,
his service station and his peanut warehouse in Plains and getting
no answer.
"That Okay," she declared. "We'll just have that much more beer
to drink."
The mayor's office was flooded with offers to take Billy's place,
given the same terms.
The Mud Dauber Fest began when the mayor poured a bottle of melted
snow from Buffalo, New York into the creek as a gesture of friendship
between Luckenbach and its sister city on Lake Erie.
The relationship between Luckenbach and Buffalo came about because
of all the publicity Buffalo received from a contest at the Mud
Dauber Fest.
It was a song writing competition about the mud daubers returning
to Luckenbach. The winner got nothing. The loser got a free trip
to Buffalo in January.
Another event was washer pitching on the beautifully manicured playing
surface located in the sticker patch on the high ground along South
Grape Creek.
Vendors peddled, among other things, leftover bicentennial souvenirs,
giving manufacturers "one last chance to rip off the public." Ten
percent of all sales went to the Hondo Crouch "I told You So" Memorial
Fund.
The Mud Dauber Fest drew a large crowd. Beer flowed like rain water
through a storm drain, and there was a funny smelling smoke in the
air.
The multitude waited all day for the mud daubers. Only one dauber
showed up, and he didn't stay long.
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Luckenbach
Texas, Est. 1849
Photo courtesy Michael
Barr, November 2017 |
© Michael
Barr
"Hindsights"
March 1, 2020 Column
Sources:
"Luckenbach Mayor Invites Liz To Nonbicentennial Festivities."
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, August 28, 1976.
"Luckenbach Mud Dauber Fest Saturday," Fredericksburg Standard,
March 16, 1977.
"Lowly Mud Daubers To Have Day In Luckenbach," Fredericksburg
Standard, February 16, 1977.
"Thousands jam Luckenbach for return of mud daubers," Brownwood
Bulletin, March 20, 1977.
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