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Eye to Eye with the Texas Coast
It WAS A LOT TO ASK of a 1984 Volkswagen Westfalia van, to cover the whole Texas coast from top to bottom, Louisiana to Mexico, boudin to bistec. But my friends Amy and Kenny and I wanted to see not just Port Aransas or South Padre, our usual haunts, but all 367 miles of coastline and the varied ecosystems contained within: RV parks and salty dog saloons, oil refineries and surf spots, shrimpfilled bays and shell-strewn beaches. We were after the big picture of this curvy shore where Texas ends and the Gulf begins—and we were grateful to see it from behind the wheel of a funky burnt orange VW van.
“The Texas coast is wild, wild like Texas,” says Jim Blackburn, the author and Rice University environmental law professor I called before the trip, a man who knows the state’s seaboard—its beauty, its economy, and its environmental challenges—from top to bottom. His book, , served as a kind of muse for our mission; it is rich with maps that show all facets of the coast—conserved land, bird rookeries, oil refineries—and includes poetry inspired by the coastal wildlife Blackburn has admired in his 50-plus years exploring these waters. “This coast is not
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