
Patricia (Tricia) Jumonville REALTOR®

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I Must Be Getting Old |
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Texas Horse And Home
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By Tricia Jumonville on
8/19/2006 7:51 AM
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When your old stompin' grounds gets an historical marker, and one of your favorite bands way back then was the opening act on opening day, it does sort of tend to make you feel a little old.

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Lifelong Learning |
Texas Horse And Home
Home Sweet Home
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By Tricia Jumonville on
6/28/2006 8:30 AM
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Education can not only be fun, education can be a blast. Education means so much more than sitting in a classroom; it means life, it means the things you learn as you go about your daily activities, it means really cool television, it means helping others who are trying to learn.
Here's some websites to illustrate my meaning:
James Burke. Ah, James Burke. The man I'd most love to follow around London. Author of Connections 1-3. I once got to hear him speak live, at the Paramount Theater in Austin, Texas. He spoke for a couple of hours about, yes, education. And then, when he was finished, and left the stage, he got a standing ovation (for a talk on education!) and demands for an encore - which he provided, given that, after many, many minutes, it became clear that we just weren't going to leave until he did. Amazing man - and more f ...
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Use Your Energy Wisely: Alternative Energy in the Home |
Texas Horse And Home
Home Sweet Home
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By Tricia Jumonville on
5/11/2006 4:02 PM
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Energy costs are on everyone's mind, and alternatives are a hot property - though many homebuyers aren't sure how to find and evaluate them. There are a number of technologies to choose from which can help make your next house the home of the future.
Alternative energy gives new meaning to the real estate mantra of "location, location, location" – what works in sunny California may be different from what works on the windy plains. But just as there are many styles of homes for buyers' diverse tastes, there are varied options in energy systems – with more than one sometimes working hand-in-hand for the same house.
Wind power – an ancient energy source now seen in high-tech "windmill farms" with tall propeller-like turbines – has come down in the cost for generating electricity by over 80 percent since 1981. Geothermal energy – home heating powered by underground steam warmed up by the temperature of the earth itself – is a source getting more attention in the ...
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NAIS (National Animal Identification System) in Texas |
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Texas Horse And Home
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By Tricia Jumonville on
1/17/2006 12:51 PM
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I received a press release from the Texas Animal Health Commission recently. It's below. Discussion of this has been going on on various horse-related Texas lists that I'm on - most people are very concerned with it, not in a good way.
I'm not terribly crazy about the idea, either. But what it boils down to is this: If we are going to insist that we be protected by the government from every threat, no matter how miniscule, even threats from which we can protect ourselves (for example, not eating beef if we're really afraid that we're at risk for "mad cow disease"), then we're really not in a position to complain about the government using the tools it needs to in order to attempt to accomplish the impossible.
If we're willing to stop demanding that, then we ...
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Christmas: It's All About The Food |
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Texas Horse And Home
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By Tricia Jumonville on
12/29/2005 6:32 PM
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Well, not really. It's about family, and celebration, and being with the ones you love in the deep, dark days of winter (hah! In the 70's and sunny here on Christmas Day!). But, for a family as food-oriented as ours, it's also All About The Food.
This year, there was a little bit of a changing of the guard in the cooking department. Instead of me being the Major Chef, the duties and pleasures were spread around a little.
Starting with Christmas Eve Dinner. Our son being home for the holidays from New York City, where he currently resides, offered to fix Christmas Eve Dinner for us. He and his father went off a-hunting to the new Whole Foods Market down on Sixth Street in Austin, where he'd not had the opportunity to go on previous visits. Hours later they returned, laden with the fruits of their labors, and DS set to work.
After m ...
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The Day Winter 2005 Came to Central Texas |
Texas Horse And Home
Home Sweet Home
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By Tricia Jumonville on
12/8/2005 3:57 PM
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We got ice. All the fence lines, barbed and no-climb, are coated in a quarter inch of ice. Wrecks all over the place. IH35 (the major highway from Mexico to Canada) is closed from Jarrell to Salado (which means, my neck of the woods, just two miles away if I could get there), due to the unique slant of the highway there that makes semis go sliding back down the slope if they should make it even partway up. (We - the town, small enough not to even have a flashing yellow - put up 400+ people due to that a few years back, the highway being closed from here to Waco, some 73 miles, that year.)
Windchill of 9. I'm out here by myself because my husband had the good sense to camp out at work last night rather than become a statistic by getting stuck or wrecked somewhere trying to get home.
I went out to feed, and Lydia, who lived in Vermont for her first six years and for whom, consequently, this is a ...
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The Ideal Horse Property, Part I |
Texas Horse And Home
Life With Lydia
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By Tricia Jumonville on
11/30/2005 8:46 PM
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If you buy your wife a horse for a wedding anniversary gift, make it a gelding, not a mare!
Some years ago, after boarding our horses for a few years, it became evident that I was not going to stop breeding Lydia, the mare he bought me for our 19th wedding anniversary. My husband did the math and decided that it would be cheaper to buy me a house on some acreage and bring the horses home than it would be to continue living in town and boarding. Further math showed that it would be cheaper to buy me a house on some acreage than to live in town, period, without even adding in the board.
That was almost a decade ago. I had a wish list then for my perfect horse property, and I have one now. But they're not identical by any means; what I thought I needed from my experience of boarding and what it turns out is really most useful or desirable when I'm taking care of my own are two different things.
Here's a list of some of t ...
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