Texas Monthly Presents: The Story
The Story: TAKING NOTICE
Episode 103 | 26m 47sVideo has Closed Captions
A journalist's job is to go beyond the surface—whether in a cave or behind a barbecue joint counter.
A journalist's job is to go beyond the surface—into a cave, inside an artesian spring, or behind the counter of a barbecue joint. This episode explores the different ways important stories are waiting to be told, if we only take the time to look.
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Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Made Possible By: H-E-B and Texas Parks & Wildlife Foundation
Texas Monthly Presents: The Story
The Story: TAKING NOTICE
Episode 103 | 26m 47sVideo has Closed Captions
A journalist's job is to go beyond the surface—into a cave, inside an artesian spring, or behind the counter of a barbecue joint. This episode explores the different ways important stories are waiting to be told, if we only take the time to look.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Texas Monthly Presents: The Story
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship(birds chirping) (gentle music) To try to write about things that are often overlooked.
REPORTER: It does not match with what you're hearing in the media.
Those are the kinds of people I like to do stories on.
It's hopes and dreams on four wheels, She understood who we were losing and who this town was losing.
REPORTER: We will have to close this place.
I was like, I have to write about this.
(keyboard clacking) ANNOUNCER: Major funding for this program was provided by: ANNOUNCER: At H-E-B, we're proud to offer over 6,000 products grown, harvested, or made by our fellow Texans.
♪ I saw miles and miles ♪ ANNOUNCER: It's all part of our commitment to preserving the future of Texas and supporting our Texas neighbors.
(cheerful guitar music) ANNOUNCER: Texas Parks and Wildlife Foundation is dedicated to conserving the wild things and wild places in Texas.
Learn more at tpwf.org.
(gentle music) When you're standing on the ground, sometimes you think, "Oh, this is as low as it gets.
Got my feet on the ground."
After this story, I don't think that anymore.
It's all space (laughs) going up and down.
There's this whole world underneath me.
Cavers think about that all the time.
They don't see the floor the way that the rest of us think of the floor.
My name is Katy Vine.
I'm a staff writer at "Texas Monthly," and I wrote "Deep - Very, Very, Very Deep - in the Heart of Texas."
I love writing about subcultures, because it opens up whole worlds that are right in my backyard that I'd never thought about.
(dramatic music) In a subculture, what I'm looking for is a group that is extremely passionate to the point where it can be alienating to other people.
(laughs) Going back, we got three teams, so I'll be leading my team through Satan's Pit Passage.
The people who are in it are really into it.
They have their own language habits.
We're gonna go through the Valley of the Fallen Lords, through the Moores, and back through the Birth Canal.
(dramatic music) (caver sighs) So yeah, cavers are definitely a subculture.
(caver sighs) I had no idea caving was a thing in Texas.
I knew, of course, that there were big show caves, giant caves, like Natural Bridge Caverns, but I did not understand that there were people who spend their weekends trying to explore and map out caves that are still not completely finished.
(suspenseful music) CAVER: Off rope.
Bill Steele is a long time caver.
Now in his seventies, he's been caving around Texas for decades, since the beginning of the caving movement in Austin.
Steele said he's not claustrophobic, he's claustrofeelic.
He loves squeezy places.
He said it feels like Mother Nature's giving him a big hug.
Well, when I was a little boy, I found out about the explorers of, you know, the Age of Discovery, and I just read all I could about that kind of thing, and I dreamed about being one.
Then I found out about caves, and I found out that there were unexplored caves, and just had to find them.
KATY: The Texas caving scene started to really heat up in the late sixties, early seventies, partly just because Texas was so close to Mexico, and Mexico has great caving.
That got a lot of cavers in other states excited, and they moved to be here in Texas.
This just seemed to be the place where it just was a magnetic attraction, you know.
I know when I was ready for a big change in life and I didn't know what was next, I decided, well, I'm just gonna move to Texas, you know, like Davy Crockett did, and just cast my fate to the wind and see what happens, and I'm happy I did.
(gentle music) KATY: In the seventies, Kirkwood Road, which is kind of northeast of the UT Austin campus, was where a lot of the cavers ended up.
This was the heartbeat of it.
This is where things got packed up, and even conceptualized and planned.
Those early years, you had all the major cavers coming through.
You had Peter Sprouse, Bill Steele, Bill Stone, Bill Russell.
At first, it was kind of hard to keep them straight, but most of the people who came through in the seventies and had anything to do with caving lived in those houses.
So what happened here on this street was people with kindred interests got together, and it was just wonderful to sit around every night and talk about it, and make plans of what's coming.
And caves are mysterious in that you can't take a satellite photo and know where you're going, what ridge line to follow like canon mountaineering and you don't know till you go.
You gotta go in there.
CAVER: This is what cavers dream of is closing the gap.
This right here.
How it was explained to me is cavers are explorers the same way that a mountain climber is an explorer.
It's just in the opposite direction.
BILL: We're always looking for unexplored passages.
They can be behind a rock, and you gotta look behind the rock to know it's there.
You never know when something might become really big.
When I was reporting this story, I went caving with Bill Steele.
I was grateful to have him there.
This is somebody who is used to spending a lot of time with other human beings in close dark spaces.
He's ambitious, so he is willing to push the limit, as any explorer is, but he will also make sure that you are on board with what's coming next.
You can be very physically fit, you can have all the elements that you think would be perfect for caving, but at a certain point, something that you can't control in your mind may take over, and you need to bail.
Bill calls that not having a good time.
(laughs) People sometimes will say, "I'm not going any farther.
Just leave me here.
Leave me behind."
And it's like, well, what are you saying?
What are you gonna do?
Stay here?
Die here?
Uh-uh, not on my watch.
So you want Bill in the cave with you, or someone else who has a lot of experience with bad situations.
It's so dark and quiet, like a quiet you've never heard before.
And for some people, that's very comforting.
Most cavers would say that the reason they continue to do this is because they're adventurers, they're explorers.
(gentle music) In 2019, Bill Steele went with part of a group to explore in Natural Bridge Caverns, and found 600 feet of new passage, which is the most that anybody has found in Natural Bridge in over 50 years.
There's unexplored places in Texas, and the best one's right here.
I didn't expect the world to change so dramatically.
(ethereal music) It just felt like someone was showing me something right in my backyard.
But everything was different down there.
All the rules were different.
I mean, I had never seen translucent spiders and crickets.
These critters don't know that there is a world with grass and sun, which is so weird, (laughs) kind of like there's people who don't know that they exist.
It's just funny how you sort of flip a switch, and then you're in this other universe.
(ethereal music) When you come back out of the cave, I think you just are sort of changed.
You just see yourself in space differently.
I didn't think about the layers of ground underneath me the way that I do now.
There's just a world under our feet that most people, myself included, didn't give much thought to.
There's great value, I think, in looking beyond.
It elevates your experience and your awareness.
You think that your world is everything that you can see, and really, you're only seeing half of it.
(air whooshes) (dramatic music) When I visit a restaurant, I'm always looking for a place with a good story, really good food, or both.
Hallelujah!
BBQ is one of those places that had both.
They had the great barbecue, of course, and then they had this great story about how it's run.
(engine revs) I'm Daniel Vaughn, barbecue editor at "Texas Monthly," and I wrote a profile on Hallelujah!
BBQ in El Paso.
I first heard of Hallelujah!
BBQ from Blake Barrow.
I had met him earlier, and he had told me about this catering operation that he ran in El Paso, and when he opened up the brick and mortar, I decided to come visit.
So the shelter is right here.
Blake had said that he runs the Rescue Mission in El Paso, and that most everyone who worked at the catering operation was housed at the Mission, and that when he opened up Hallelujah!
BBQ, the restaurant, that the same situation would be in place where there are employees, there are people who are housed at the Mission.
BLAKE: Uh-huh.
EMPLOYEE: Yeah.
BLAKE: This is Kenny.
Hey, Kenny.
Hallelujah!
BBQ is a vocational rehab program for the Rescue Mission.
Rescue Mission is a shelter for folks who are homeless.
We've been around since 1952.
I started as the CEO in '97, and by profession, I'm a trial lawyer.
So it was quite a change, a wonderful change.
I love it.
Yeah.
The homeless folks that we have, they have lots of abilities, lots of talents.
Do it like that.
They just, you know, stumped their toes somewhere, and they need a little help, and if they're gonna make it in life, we've got to be the one to give them the vocational training.
I am gonna put 'em on the stove.
We're gonna grill 'em.
The idea was if we're gonna change the perception that the world has of who people are who are homeless, let's create a business.
We'll hire only people who are homeless, and we'll make an absolutely first quality product, and market it as made by people who are homeless so that when the customer looks at it they go, "Wow, you're telling me homeless folks made this?
I must have been wrong about who they are."
I'd never heard of anything that operated quite that way.
The fact that they draw in all of their employees, you know, not just a small fraction, but truly make it the mission of the restaurant to be an employer for people at the Mission.
The way to teach people how to succeed, you're gonna make the very best product, and provide the best service.
And if anybody ever leaves here and says, "That wasn't bad, it's almost as good as Rudy's," you're a failure.
Why wouldn't they just go to Rudy's?
So if it's not perfect, we're not gonna serve it.
Yeah, so as a journalist, I can go into a place like that and be thankful that there's a good story to tell, but the general public wants to go in and make sure that they have a really great meal.
(blower whirs) And so Blake had to make sure that they've got the right equipment and they've got the right recipes to really put out great barbecue and great food that people wanna come back for.
You know, there's lots of different options for the barbecue.
Baby back ribs are so good.
Juicy brisket.
The one that stuck with me, though, is the 13 Habanero Sausage, and it's called that because they use 13 habanero peppers in every large batch of sausage that they make.
You know, it's not super spicy, but it's got that kick for sure.
And then the sides, like if you want like pure comfort in the sides, they combine carbohydrates and cheese in like beautiful ways.
They've got David's Beans, which is a recipe of someone who worked at the Mission, and then there's cheesecakes.
There's a different one every time you come in, you never know what you're gonna get, but whatever it is, it's gonna be great.
So yeah, it's gonna remain an important barbecue joint in Texas in my book.
I think running any restaurant with staff that is gonna be temporary is really tough, right?
It's hard enough to train up staff that you plan to keep on for several years, let alone staff that you know is probably gonna be gone in a year, that the entire goal is to get them out of that restaurant and into a life of independence.
So what he's done using- Okay.
That sort of staff to actually produce great food day in, day out is something to be applauded.
And it wasn't until I talked to Blake later that I learned that there's even more depth to it on the building that the restaurant is actually within.
So I come to El Paso in 1988.
I was hired out of Baylor Law School by a big firm here, and I've been here a week, and I'm coming back up Cotton Street, and I drive right in front of this building, and it was all boarded up, and I go, "Wow, what an interesting building just wasting away, what a shame."
You see from the pictures, there were holes in the roof.
There had been at least two fires in the building.
I love taking an eyesore, an old rundown building, and turning it into a work of art.
It's beautiful now.
In fact, the building restoration was done by people who were living at the Rescue Mission.
(gentle music) Refurbishing the building would be a strong message to the community that things that maybe they've just driven by and not paid any attention to, maybe it's still got some potential left if you just put in the effort.
As a forgotten part of the city landscape, like that building is the most hit-you-over-the-head metaphor for the mission that they have of, you know, really rehabilitating the lives of a forgotten population.
(birds chirping) (cheerful music) They asked me to start.
They gave me a whole chance to start my life again.
You know, they employed me, now I have my own car, I'm working on getting my own apartment.
It gives you the tools to actually reintegrate into society so that you can actually start your life again, that you don't end up back on the streets or back on drugs.
I mean, we're not bad people.
We just made bad choices.
I mean that's most of us, you know what I mean?
What I needed was, I guess direction, and probably somebody that was willing to help.
I'd probably be either dead or still in jail or in prison rather than being alive and working, you know, and doing something different and giving back to the community.
You know, they see a lot of these people that are homeless, and you know, they don't know the story behind all these people.
They're broken, they're hurt, they don't have no one to look for help, and you know, they're lost, and they need that attention, and that love that they lost somewhere around the line.
Coming here was the best thing in my life.
(cheerful music) So what have we done?
(laughs) So I have totally altered the view of not only city government but all of El Paso society thinks of us, the work that we're doing, and the people that just happen to be homeless here in El Paso.
(cheerful music) (air whooshes) (gentle music) It could be really hard to write about water issues.
I mean, frankly, you say water issues and people, myself included, are probably like bored to tears.
Like, what does that mean?
It sounds like a problem, but I don't really know how it affects me or what it looks like.
Who cares?
Jacob's Well takes all that and really distills it down to this literal hole in the ground.
It is the canary in the coal mine of the overall health of this aquifer that hundreds of thousands of people depend upon.
My name is Forrest Wilder.
I'm a writer with "Texas Monthly," and I wrote, "Who's killing Jacob's Well?"
(gentle music) So I went to high school in Wimberley and we lived not too far away from Jacob's Well.
Wimberley's filled with all these awesome swimming holes, but this is one of the best, and is like a really special place because of how the water comes from deep underground in this cavern and this one little chasm at the surface.
You know, when it's healthy, there's a force to it.
It's flowing, it's pulsing out from underground.
There's not too many spots like that that I've ever seen in Texas, or maybe even the world, but these days, it's just kind of in a diminished state.
Jacob's Well has just kind of stopped flowing for long periods of time.
I remember visiting for the story that I did, I think it was July of 2022.
You know, I hadn't been to Jacob's Well in a long time, and seeing it, I compared it to visiting a loved one in hospice.
It was kind of heartbreaking to see how much it had declined and diminished.
And so I just had to wonder like, you know, how did this happen?
(gentle music) People think of the Hill Country.
Yeah, they're thinking about the Rolling Hills, wildflowers, but the other part of it is the water.
These spring-fed streams that are just like iconic, that by and large, they're fed by aquifers.
So there's aquifers all over the state of Texas.
We can't see them, and so they're kind of mysterious, although they're the source of drinking water for millions of people.
They're the source of water for farmers, for agriculture.
These aquifers come to the surface in the form of springs and seeps.
So Jacob's Well is the expression of the Trinity Aquifer at the surface.
So what it's telling us, it's not just this natural feature is being destroyed, it's also telling us that the regional water supply is under threat and in jeopardy.
Yeah, so there's no flow coming out of Jacob's Well at this level.
You can see the normal gauge height is here.
FORREST: Wow.
DAVID: This is as low as it gets.
FORREST: Really?
David Baker is the patron saint of all things water related in the Wimberley area and the founder and longtime leader of the Watershed Association.
It was very concerning.
This spring has slowed for millions of years, and 2000 was the first time it stopped flowing.
It's basically we're pumping out more than it's going in.
So it's like a bank account that we're spending more than we're depositing, and part of that is drought, but a big part of it is the pumping for the development.
Texas is booming, right?
We have this huge population growth.
Hays County is kinda like right in the middle of all that.
So it's one of the fastest growing places in the country.
And so as this area has boomed, one of the consequences has been a lot of additional pumping on this aquifer that is a pretty finite resource.
And essentially you have this water utility that's providing water to thousands of homes, but they're doing it out of wells that are tapped into the same part of the aquifer that Jacob's Well is.
The 2022 Aqua Texas pumped nearly twice its permanent amount, and then in 2023, it massively over-pumped again.
In 2024, same problem, so you can see that there's a consistent issue here.
Here's Jacob's Well, no flow.
This is normal flow.
This was a year and a half before, but why is that happening?
Well, when Aqua turns their pumps on, you can see the correlation between the pumping and the spring flow.
And so every day, you know, Aqua Texas turns their pumps on three times, and you can see that gate go down as they pump.
This is going on every day, and as you add more homes there, you add more water that's coming out of the aquifer.
(gentle music) In 2023, I spoke to Aqua Texas's president, and he said there were a number of things that they were doing to reduce pressure on the aquifer around Jacob's Well.
(dramatic music) One is they were gonna crack down on wasteful customers to the extent that they can under Texas law.
They were investing money in improving their infrastructure so they'd have fewer leaks, and that they were also seeking alternative water supplies, specifically trying to open up new wells just outside of the Jacob's Well groundwater management zone.
As of January 1st, 2025, they're still massively over-pumping, and Jacob's Well continues to be dry.
Unfortunately, this over-pumping problem extends well beyond just Jacob's well and the area serviced by Aqua Texas.
What's happening is as the aquifer is drawn down due to over-pumping and drought, people's water wells are starting to fail.
So there's people in the Wimberley area, for example, whose wells are now unable to produce adequate water for their household needs, and it's a big problem.
Unfortunately, we continue to have huge population growth, and droughts are getting worse, so the problem looks like it's likely to continue to worsen.
There is a conflict here of values.
(gentle music) Texas values free enterprise, and development can kind of happen at will, and that's one reason I think that the state is booming.
On the other hand, water is essential to life.
We rely on these aquifers for drinking water, for industry, for everything that makes modern life here possible.
Jacob's Well, it's telling us that this aquifer is under stress, that it's essentially being depleted and mined slowly over time.
And the consequences of that are immensely important.
Jacob's Well is forcing us to focus on something that maybe people have never really given much thought to.
(gentle music) There's great value in looking beyond.
It makes me think hard about my day-to-day life.
A huge part of my job is just paying attention.
These people are often forgotten the same way that that building had been for decades.
REPORTER: It's important to write about things that are often overlooked.
KATY: It opens up whole worlds that I'd never thought about.
Loss and grief are universal experiences.
I was pretty immersed in writing about grief, my own and other people's.
Like, I need to actually just walk through this instead of run away from it.
REPORTER: She's one person making an incredible difference in the face of the absolute worst grief.
You have to find ways to kind of walk with it.
(gentle music) ♪ I love it ♪ We're on the precipice of a great discovery.
♪ Whoo ♪ (upbeat pop music) ♪ I will be ♪ Fasten your seatbelt.
(gentle music) CHARACTER: As long as we are together, it's perfect.
CHARACTER: Love is not as simple as you seem to think.
CHARACTER: We're so close to cracking the keys.
CHARACTER: Dreams do come through, eh, lad?
ANNOUNCER: Major funding for this program was provided by: ANNOUNCER: At HEB, we're proud to offer over 6,000 products grown, harvested, or made by our fellow Texans.
♪ I saw miles and miles ♪ It's all part of our commitment to preserving the future of Texas and supporting our Texas neighbors.
(cheerful guitar music) ANNOUNCER: Texas Parks and Wildlife Foundation is dedicated to conserving the wild things and wild places in Texas.
Learn more at tpwf.org.
Support for PBS provided by:
Made Possible By: H-E-B and Texas Parks & Wildlife Foundation