Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Lake Alan Henry is a reservoir situated in the upper Brazos River Basin in the United States.Created by the construction of the John T. Montford Dam in 1993, it is operated and used as a future tertiary water supply by the city of Lubbock, Texas and serves as a recreational spot for the region of West Texas. [2]
Yellow House Draw is an ephemeral watercourse about 236 km (147 mi) long, heading about 20 km (12 mi) southwest of Melrose, New Mexico, and tending generally east-southeastward across the Llano Estacado to the city of Lubbock, where it joins Blackwater Draw to form Yellow House Canyon at the head of the North Fork Double Mountain Fork Brazos River. [1]
Joyland Amusement Park was a small family-owned traditional amusement park, located in Lubbock, Texas, United States within Lubbock's Mackenzie Park.It typically operated from March to September of each year, opening six days a week but only during the evening on weeknights.
"The City of Lubbock would like to clarify that at the time the above referenced post was created, the City of Lubbock had not received any communication from the 'Aqua Cabana Water Park ...
The Texas Tech University System also chose TXU Energy as its retail provider for the system, including the TTU and the Health Sciences Center campuses, according to a recent news release from TXU ...
Lubbock Water Rampage, Lubbock; Joyland Amusement Park, Lubbock; Morgan's Inspiration Island, San Antonio; NRH2O Family Water Park, North Richland Hills; Palm Beach at Moody Gardens, Galveston (part of Moody Gardens) Pirates Bay Waterpark, Baytown; Schlitterbahn, Galveston; Schlitterbahn, New Braunfels; Six Flags Hurricane Harbor, Arlington
(The Center Square) – After an agreement was reached between U.S. and Mexican authorities requiring Mexico to deliver water to the Rio Grande Valley in Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott directed the Texas ...
Lubbock Lake is in a meander of the Yellow House Draw also known as "Punta de Agua", a tributary of the Brazos River, near ancient springs. People on the Llano Estacado used the water resources in the draw until those resources went dry in the early 1930s. In 1936, the City of Lubbock dredged the meander in an effort to make it a usable water ...