Terrible.
Please forgive me, but I have absolutely no idea what this post means. Is this a Waco thing?PartyBear said:
Terrible.
Three long time Austin eateries not reopening. Shady Grove was a neat restaurant/watering hole on Barton Springs.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Please forgive me, but I have absolutely no idea what this post means. Is this a Waco thing?PartyBear said:
Terrible.
Guess I can sleep in.Nguyen One Soon said:Three long time Austin eateries not reopening. Shady Grove was a neat restaurant/watering hole on Barton Springs.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Please forgive me, but I have absolutely no idea what this post means. Is this a Waco thing?PartyBear said:
Terrible.
Thank you Nguyen One Soon. Hope all is well with you Sir.Nguyen One Soon said:Three long time Austin eateries not reopening. Shady Grove was a neat restaurant/watering hole on Barton Springs.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Please forgive me, but I have absolutely no idea what this post means. Is this a Waco thing?PartyBear said:
Terrible.
I'm one of those few.fadskier said:
I'm one of the few people that don't like Austin.
Sorry to hear you're not coming again.PartyBear said:
Sorry about the typo in the title. I was on a phone. Plus I cant edit titles. Should have said "in not coming back or returning" whatever I said, not "I'm....." Although I did get a good laugh at myself when I saw it. Sorry I also assumed Waco being as close as it is in Austin that Waco folks would know some of the historic Austin restaurants as well.
I'm not sure if this is true. One time when I went to Shady Grove around 2010, an employee there told me that they and Chuy's had the same owner. This was about the time Chuy's was becoming a regional chain (it has since become almost a national chain now). I thought it would be cool if they duplicated that concept in other locations as well at the time. I'm really not sure if it is true or once was true decades ago or was true at the time I was told this. It seemed logical at the time, similar type of atmospheres and the original Chuy's is practically next door. If anyone knows please share. I hate to see it go. I had not been back since 2010 until this past February just before the shutdown. Glad I got that last visit in.
Nice pattern of social distancingwilliam said:
snobs -
Stranger said:
I'm familiar with Threadgill's and Shady Grove closing. Magnolia Cafe? Is that in Austin or are you referring to Magnolia in Waco aka Chip and Joanna?
You must have been in charge of "Reuben's" before things switched over! They were the guys who explained some differences in spirits and made some very helpful suggestions to a much younger me in the early days. I've been a customer ever since.transmit5by9 said:
I was born and raised in Austin, then left to attend Baylor in 1970. I moved back in 2000, then returned to Waco in 2009 when Twin Liquors opened their store at Bosque and Wooded Acres. As a manager, I had had quite enough of the daily commute up and down MoPac and kicking pangandlers out of the parking lot.
Austin is the prime example of "a great place to visit, but I wouldn't want to live there".
If hitting up the bar scene regularly and attending over priced, crowded music festivals featuring acts you MIGHT have heard of is your thing, I say knock yourself out.
Since retirment has kicked in, I'm at the age that let's me get more than my fill of what it has to offer on a weekend trip maybe twice a year. I can at least drive there and, unlike Dallas or Houston, not get turned around.
The constant road construction sometimes makes the nice lady on Waze/Google Maps more of a hinderance than help. Uber/Lyft drivers are a roll of the dice.
As a matter of fact, I was working at the Reuben's at South Congress and St. Elmo when Twins bought the chain. I think I even managed to hang on to a couple of my old shirts before they were replaced with the Twins branding. That was the last liquor store in Austin with a drive thru window still in operation (a whole set of nightmares that I won't go into.) I had to fight tooth and nail to convince the powers that be to bring in some decent wine and quit depending on sales of Boone's Farm and 40oz malt liquor.Mr Tulip said:You must have been in charge of "Reuben's" before things switched over! They were the guys who explained some differences in spirits and made some very helpful suggestions to a much younger me in the early days. I've been a customer ever since.transmit5by9 said:
I was born and raised in Austin, then left to attend Baylor in 1970. I moved back in 2000, then returned to Waco in 2009 when Twin Liquors opened their store at Bosque and Wooded Acres. As a manager, I had had quite enough of the daily commute up and down MoPac and kicking pangandlers out of the parking lot.
Austin is the prime example of "a great place to visit, but I wouldn't want to live there".
If hitting up the bar scene regularly and attending over priced, crowded music festivals featuring acts you MIGHT have heard of is your thing, I say knock yourself out.
Since retirment has kicked in, I'm at the age that let's me get more than my fill of what it has to offer on a weekend trip maybe twice a year. I can at least drive there and, unlike Dallas or Houston, not get turned around.
The constant road construction sometimes makes the nice lady on Waze/Google Maps more of a hinderance than help. Uber/Lyft drivers are a roll of the dice.
Because I still have a passion for the industrial and punk bands, I'll go hit up some of the ever changing venues in Austin when they tour. I may wear ear filters now (because being functionally deaf for two days isn't funny any more) and button down shirts (because nothing's more pathetic than the oldster in a concert tee), but I can still give as good as I get in the pit. Years of experience.
My daughter is finishing her freshman year at Texas, although she's been on my couch here in Waco since mid-March. Like everyone else, we'll see what September holds. I still have friends there, but it's more daylight activities and "remember when" now than it was.
I'm sad to see some of these places close up shop. Still Austin wasn't "what it once was" when I was there. It isn't what is was then now. Time makes you bolder, even children get older, and I'm getting older, too.
Treadgill's has been dying for years.Flaming Moderate said:
I went to Threadgill's once a few years ago - it was absolutely awful.
Magnolia and Shady Grove are huge losses, Austin institutions.