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Bonham’s final farmers market of the year takes place this Saturday, October 25, from 8 a.m. to noon in the parking lot of the Creative Arts Center - rain or shine (and indoors if it pours). Visitors can grab fresh produce, honey, eggs, bread, and more while browsing local art, turning a grocery run into a small-town celebration. Director Sandy Barber calls the partnership a “win-win,” bringing both fresh food and fresh faces to the center. So come early, shop local, and say goodbye to market season - until it returns next April, just in time for spring harvests and sunny Saturdays.
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Good news for North Texas drivers: gas prices in Sherman and Denison have dipped below $2.50 a gallon -about five cents cheaper than last week and 12 cents lower than a month ago. AAA credits the drop to lower demand, steady supply, and the seasonal switch to cheaper winter-blend fuel. “Nothing major to worry about,” says spokesperson Daniel Armbruster - though locals like TAPS driver Corey Wood still keep one eye on the pump. After all, as he puts it, “It’s $2.49 today… could be $3.80 tomorrow.”
More than three months after catastrophic floods devastated Sandy Creek near Leander, a group of volunteers is helping children reclaim a sense of normalcy - one piece of candy at a time. The nonprofit Core of Volunteers is organizing a Trunk or Treat Halloween event at Round Mountain Baptist Church, offering sweets, games, fire trucks, and even pumpkin painting for kids who’ve endured tragedy after tragedy. “These children have been through so much - they need this joy,” said Trisha Lee Hernandez, the group’s vice president, who’s also helping plan Thanksgiving and Christmas events for the community. Since the July floods that killed more than 130 people, Core of Volunteers has led recovery efforts - from feeding firefighters to rebuilding homes - often without much help from county officials. This Halloween, the group’s mission is simple: remind the children of Sandy Creek that laughter, candy, and community can still conquer heartbreak.
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It may still feel like pumpkin spice season, but in Waco, the holidays have officially arrived. The 19th annual Deck the Halls Gift Market, hosted by the Junior League of Waco, is back at the Extraco Events Center, featuring a record lineup of 90 vendors and 140 booths from across the country. Shoppers can snag gifts for family (or themselves - no judgment) while helping raise funds for the League’s local community projects. Last year’s event brought in $88,000, proving that festive shopping can do more than fill stockings. “It’s really the start of the holiday season,” said co-chair Katherine Speckmeier - and yes, even if Halloween’s still a week away, Waco’s already jingling.
Forget oil - Texas is quietly turning into the sunniest power plant in America. TotalEnergies’ Danish Fields solar farm sprawls across nearly 5,000 acres southwest of Houston, churning out up to 720 megawatts - enough to light up 300,000 homes and maybe a few cowboy hats. It even packs a 225 MWh battery system to save power for those rare cloudy days. Not to be outshined, Hornet Solar and Roadrunner add another punch, together delivering more than a gigawatt of clean energy from a combined few million panels. So yes, everything’s bigger in Texas - including its solar farms and its ambition to outshine the oil rigs
“Swan Lake” Takes Flight: 500 Drones to Paint the Sky Over Forney
Move over, ballerinas - the real performers now come with propellers. This November 1, more than 500 drones will pirouette through the Texas night sky in DroneArt Show, the world’s longest drone performance, synced live to Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake and Vivaldi’s Four Seasons. For 65 dazzling minutes, the sky will bloom with stars, flowers, and whatever else the algorithms dream up. The global hit has already sold half a million tickets - because who needs fireworks when you can have flying LEDs set to classical music? VIP seats are gone, but picnic spots (from $48.90) remain - just arrive early if you want the best view of ballet’s high-tech makeover.
A Texas deer has gone full emo-chic, strutting around Lago Vista with a hammock tangled in its antlers - and honestly, he’s pulling it off. Locals flooded police lines in concern, but officers assured everyone the deer is fine, just “embracing his emo era.” Wildlife experts say there’s no harm done - and since male deer naturally shed their antlers before winter, the forest’s newest fashion icon will ditch his ropey headpiece soon enough. Until then, he’s the undisputed king of early-2000s woodland couture.
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On Nov. 2, all 89 Texas State Parks are throwing open their gates for free in honor of Texas State Parks Day - because nothing says “we love nature” like not charging you to see it. Visitors can hike, bike, or just post sunset pics to prove they went outside, though reservations are still recommended and camping isn’t included in the freebie. Ahead of Veterans Day, the state also reminds military families they can get in free year-round - proof that sometimes, the great outdoors really is the greatest deal in Texas.
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Three members of the Creative Arts Center took a sunny field trip to Fannin County to marvel at David Keene’s bois d’arc craftsmanship - and left convinced that artisanal pens can be geopolitical . Keene, a former engineer, runs a finely tuned barn workshop where he quarter-saws Osage orange, rigs clever dust-management systems, and even dries pen blanks in a kitchen food dehydrator - because precision sometimes demands domestic appliances. He demonstrated the full pen-making process, shared hard-won shortcuts, and donated a vintage kerosene lamp to the Center’s upcoming Taste of Chocolate auction, proving local craft still fuels community pride (and auction nights).
Hillsboro’s long-abandoned outlet mall is finally getting a second act - this time as a restaurant hub. The city and Glaser Retail Partners have landed four major chains - Chili’s, Chick-fil-A, Panda Express, and Waffle House- to anchor the redevelopment, with more on the way. Once a bustling shopping stop along I-35, the site had sat empty for years, collecting dust and nostalgia. Now, demolition is underway, jobs are coming, and Hillsboro officials say the project will feed both locals and travelers hungry for new options. In short: goodbye outlet racks, hello snack stacks.
After eight long years of wishing and waiting, Raguet Elementary in Nacogdoches, Texas, finally has a brand-new playground -and the kids are loving it. Principal Julia Wells said the old one was so rundown it looked “like a crime scene,” with broken slides and taped-off areas. Thanks to a $400,000 upgrade, the school now boasts modern equipment for both younger and older students, giving everyone a reason to run, climb, and laugh again. Wells says seeing 400 students enjoying the new space “makes my heart so happy.” After all, every childhood deserves more jungle gym and less caution tape.
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The City of Amarillo is rethinking the future of its zoo - and this time, it might hand over the reins. City officials are considering leasing the Amarillo Zoo to the Wild West Wildlife Rehabilitation Center, allowing the nonprofit to manage operations while keeping the gates open to the public. Executive Director Stephanie Brady says the plan isn’t a takeover but a transformation - turning the space into the “Amarillo Zoo and Sanctuary,” complete with upgraded habitats, an on-site vet clinic, and themed regions like “Asia” and “South America.” The move could cut the zoo’s $600,000 budget in half within a year and make it self-sustaining through donations, events, and a revamped café. In short, Amarillo wants its zoo to roar again - just with a little nonprofit muscle behind it.
Trivia met charity in style at the North Texas Area United Way’s first-ever Trivia Night - a sold-out success at Wichita Falls’ Backdoor Theatre. Seventeen teams battled through rounds on movies, music, and pop culture (with a few United Way facts sneaked in for good measure). Executive Director Carol Marlar said the goal was to kick off the campaign season with something “fun and engaging,” and judging by the laughter, mission accomplished. The night ended with prizes, bragging rights, and - more importantly - every dollar raised going to local nonprofits. Turns out, doing good can be just as entertaining as winning trivia night.
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Highland Woods Health turns 40 - and still going strong.
The Woodlands clinic, founded back in 1985 when shoulder pads and pagers were in fashion, will celebrate its 40th anniversary this December. The privately owned practice has been keeping locals healthy with everything from annual checkups to cancer screenings and flu shots. Located at 4840 W. Panther Creek Drive, Highland Woods Health has seen four decades of medical trends come and go - and somehow still manages to make people schedule their physicals on time.
Austin’s long-awaited Wishbone Bridge is finally spreading its wings - early 2026, to be exact.
After years of construction dust and detours, the $25 million project will soon give cyclists and walkers a fresh way to cross Lady Bird Lake (and maybe an even better selfie angle). Funded by the 2020 Mobility Bond, the bridge links the Ann and Roy Butler Trail with a new underpass below Pleasant Valley Road - complete with lights, planters, and that all-important Austin touch: a mural. Meanwhile, just a few miles away, plans for a new boardwalk along the south shore are moving forward, promising even more waterfront Instagram material. In true Austin fashion, it took years - but hey, at least it’ll look good once it’s done.
Lufkin students took a trip around the sun - without leaving the library.
At Burley Primary, a mobile planetarium transformed the school library into a mini universe, dazzling some 500 kids with cosmic sights and plenty of “oohs” and “aahs.” Sponsored by the local Lions Club, the show came from the Discovery Science Place in Tyler and gave students a hands-on look at the solar system - a nice change from YouTube videos. Principal Yaneth Clifton said it’s all about sparking curiosity, and maybe even a future astronaut or two. Because hey - every space career has to start somewhere, even if it’s between the bookshelves.
Teachers in Bryan ISD got a welcome surprise this week - $150,000 in grants from the district’s Education Foundation. The so-called “Grant Patrol” rolled through schools Thursday, handing out checks to fund everything from new soccer goals to classroom tech. Fourth-grade PE teacher Lori Stewart crossed her fingers for new equipment - and scored big. Meanwhile, Bonham Elementary’s Yvonne Williamson was stunned when a committee member showed up with her own oversized check. Consider it a rare day when teachers get something back for all they give.
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Move over, Chick-fil-A - there’s a new bird in town. Houston TX Hot Chicken, a Las Vegas-born chain with a Texas-sized name and Nashville-style flavor, is gearing up to conquer 2026. Founded in 2021 by entrepreneur duo Houston Crosta and Edmond Barseghian, the fast-growing brand already boasts 29 locations across nine states - and just snagged the No. 1 spot on Restaurant Business’s Future 50 list. The menu is a heat-seeker’s dream, with spice levels ranging from “mild” to “Houston, We Have a Problem!” - the latter requiring both a $2 upcharge and, yes, a waiver. With rave reviews, all-natural ingredients, and ambition hotter than their sauce, this chicken chain might just give America’s poultry powerhouses something to sweat about.
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After Halloween, the folks at Gilt-T-Pleasure Farm in Lubbock County are asking residents to donate their leftover pumpkins - not to compost bins, but to pigs. The farm’s 120 hogs, sows, and piglets happily feast on local produce, and now pumpkins are on the menu. Families can drop them off at the farm or arrange a pickup by phone, turning spooky décor into sustainable snacks. It’s a win-win: less waste, happy pigs - and one last good deed from your pumpkin before it rots on the porch
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Bad harvests and global cocoa shortages are making chocolate a luxury item this Halloween, with candy prices up nearly 11% from last year. Single mom Nei Burton says what used to cost $5 now hits $10 - “and that’s just for a bag of candy.” Even big brands like Hershey’s are cutting corners, swapping cocoa butter for cheaper oils, while smaller chocolatiers like Sweet Shop USA vow to keep their treats authentic (and their margins slimmer). Cocoa once cost $2.50 a pound; now it’s $10 -proof that inflation has a sweet tooth too. Still, with Ghana planning new plantations, chocoholics everywhere are praying relief comes before the next holiday binge.
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A new upscale consignment boutique, Whatchama Closet, has opened its doors in Champions Village Center, promising to turn secondhand into first-rate style. Owner April Lockwood describes it as an “unconventional” space where women can sell designer clothes, shoes, and accessories - and earn some cash while doing it. Sellers rent hangers and shelves for $50–$100 a month, giving their fashion finds a glamorous second act. Open Tuesday through Saturday, the boutique’s mission is simple: sustainability, style, and a little extra sparkle (and spending money) for everyone.