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Wimberley Intercommunity Network dissolves, passes the torch

In a brief ceremony at Barnabas Connection last week, Cookie Hagemeier, the Acting President of the Wimberley Intercommunity Network, presented checks to two local nonprofit relief organizations following the dissolution of WIN. With the remaining funds in their coffers, they elected to pass the torch to My Neighbor’s Keeper and the Barnabas Connection.

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It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas...

All over Wimberley, the turkey and pumpkins have been stowed to make way for the glittering lights and ornaments of Christmas, Hanukkah and the other holiday observances and rituals of the season. Gone are the autumn leaves from the Cypress Creek bridge and in their place are the holly and wreaths depicting the winter celebrations ahead. Businesses around the square and in the Quarter Shops are hanging lights, decking columns and creating vignettes to get customers into the holiday spirit.

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The Civic Club hosts Breakfast with Santa

Enjoy a fun morning for the family with Breakfast with Santa at the former Scudder Primary School. The breakfast will feature pancakes and sausage with all the trimmings as well as craft activities designed to bring a smile to kids of all ages. Children can visit with Santa while parents take photos and will leave with the gift of a new book. The Hill Country Band will play live holiday music.

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About Susan Gibson

One of the reasons Susan Gibson always keeps a banjo close at hand, be it in the studio or at every show she plays, is because she likes the “lift” it brings to counterbalance a particularly heavy lyric: “Almost like it’s got a smile attached to it,” she says. But as much as she loves the instrument, the fact is, she really doesn’t have to reach for it that often. Not because she shies away from such material, but because her naturally buoyant melodies and warmly reassuring, conversational singing and writing voice more often than not provide all the lift she needs to light up any song, room, or mood. For proof, just listen to The Hard Stuff — the award-winning Texas songwriter’s seventh release as a solo artist and her first fulllength album since 2011’s Tight Rope. Much like the EP that preceded it, 2016’s Remember Who You Are, the aptly-titled The Hard Stuff is rooted in grief; Gibson wrote the album in the midst of coming to terms with the death of first one parent and then the other in the span of four years, a time during which she says her career became far less of a priority to her than her family. But it was that very period of slowing down for emotional recalibration that ultimately pulled her out of the dark and back into the light. As she sings on The Hard Stuff’s disarmingly playful title track, “Nothing lifts a heavy heart like some elbow grease and a funny bone” — and even when Gibson’s not laughing at herself, her refreshingly clear-eyed perspectives on matters of life, love, work, and loss (sometimes all within the same song, as in the invigorating opener “Imaginary Lines” and the deeply moving “Wildflowers in the Weeds”) illuminate the whole album with a spirit-charging current of resiliency. Of course, anyone familiar with Gibson’s music knows that she’s had that in her all along, from her salad days in the beloved Amarillo, Texas- based Amerciana band the Groobees back in the ’90s and from the get-go of her solo career with 2003’s Chin Up. It was even all there at the very beginning, when she wrote a little song in college called “Wide Open Spaces” that grew up to become (with a little help from the Dixie Chicks) one of the biggest country songs of all time. Turns out all she had to do to rediscover it and get herself back on the road to embracing both life and art was to heed the best advice her father ever gave her, three little words that millions of Dixie Chicks fans (and a whole lotta Susan Gibson fans over the years, too) sing along to at every show: “Check the oil!”

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Susan Gibson to play concert at Susanna’s Kitchen Dec. 21

One of the reasons Susan Gibson always keeps a banjo close at hand, be it in the studio or at every show she plays, is because she likes the “lift” it brings to counterbalance a particularly heavy lyric: “Almost like it’s got a smile attached to it,” she says. But as much as she loves the instrument, the fact is, she really doesn’t have to reach for it that often. Not because she shies away from such material, but because her naturally buoyant melodies and warmly reassuring, conversational singing and writing voice more often than not provide all the lift she needs to light up any song, room, or mood.

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Winter’s Eve Festivities

This Saturday, the annual Winter’s Eve festivities commence in Wimberley. The daylong event begins with the “Wishes for Wimberley” Toy Drive Parade led by Santa Claus that begins at 10 a.m. at Ace Hardware, 14307 RR12. Elves will be on hand along the parade route to collect new, unwrapped toys for children in need. The toys will go to The Christmas Store at the Barnabas Connection.

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12 Kings Car Club and Ozona donate to the Crisis Bread Basket

Members of the 12 Kings Car Club, popular sponsors of Wimberley Coffee and Cars and other car show events in the area, gathered to present a check to the Crisis Bread Basket last week alongside representatives from Ozona Bank, Caroline Adams and Daina Slover. More than a dozen members of the lively social and car club were on hand to present the $4,000 check.

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Giant menorah to light up Wimberley as part of World Hanukkah Observance

Chabad of San Marcos and the Hill Country will light a public six-foot Hanukkah menorah candelabra in Wimberley at the Old Mill Store, 314 Wimberley Square, on Tuesday, December 12, at 5:30 p.m. It is one of the eight days of the Jewish holiday. Following the menorah lighting there will be dancing, live music, traditional Hanukkah food, and Hanukkah gifts.

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Sarah Jarosz comes home

After singing her song, “Hometown,” four-time Grammy winner Sarah Jarosz told her audience during her concert in the Wimberley Playhouse last week that, “This is emotional. It’s taking all of my power not to burst into tears.” Earlier in the day, Mayor Gina Fulkerson declared November 22, 2023 “Sarah Jarosz Day.”

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Wimberley View

P.O. Box 49
Wimberley, TX 78676
Phone: 512-847-2202
Fax: 512-847-9054