[Intro]
Fire’s in the sky
[Break]
[Instrumental, Fiddle, Guitar Solo]
[Verse 1]
In the heart of Texas, the wild west winds blow,
There’s a tale of fire, a story you’ll come to know.
Late February came, and the skies turned gray,
As the Smokehouse Creek fire swept our dreams away.
[Chorus]
Texas BBQ, where the flames burn bright,
In the heat of the day, and the dark of the night.
The Smokehouse Creek, a wildfire’s spree,
Leaves a scar on Texas, for all to see.
[Instrumental, Banjo, Percussion, Drum Fills]
[Verse 2]
A million acres scorched, beneath the blazing sun,
The souls lost, their journey done.
Homes, farms, and ranches, all consumed by the flame,
As the Smokehouse Creek fire played its deadly game.
[Chorus]
Texas BBQ, where the flames burn bright,
In the heat of the day, and the dark of the night.
The Smokehouse Creek, a wildfire’s spree,
Leaves a scar on Texas, for all to see.
[Break]
Fire’s in the sky
[Break]
[Instrumental, Fiddle, Guitar Solo]
[Bridge]
But the fire’s just a symptom, of a bigger fight,
As Texas heats up, in the harsh daylight.
Three degrees warmer, by twenty-thirty-six,
The future’s uncertain, and the stakes are fixed.
[Chorus]
Texas BBQ, where the flames burn bright,
In the heat of the day, and the dark of the night.
The Smokehouse Creek, a wildfire’s spree,
Leaves a scar on Texas, for all to see.
[Outro]
Withstand the weather in the Lone Star State?
Fight for our future, before it’s too late.
For Texas BBQ, under the burning sky,
Let’s protect our land, and keep our dreams alive.
[End]
A SCIENCE LESSON
In a harrowing display of nature’s fury, the Texas Panhandle became engulfed in a relentless inferno during late February and early March of 2024. The Smokehouse Creek fire, a monstrous beast of flames and smoke, etched its name into the annals of history as the largest wildfire ever recorded in Texas.
With unyielding ferocity, the fire ravaged more than 1 million acres of land, leaving in its wake a trail of devastation and despair. Tragically, two lives were lost amid the chaos, and the flames mercilessly consumed hundreds of homes, farms, and ranches, reducing them to ashes. The toll extended beyond human losses, with thousands of heads of livestock falling victim to the relentless blaze.
As the smoke cleared and the embers dimmed, the scars of the Smokehouse Creek fire served as a grim reminder of the escalating climate crisis facing the Lone Star State.
Looking ahead, the forecast paints a troubling picture of Texas’s future climate. By the year 2036, projections suggest that the Lone Star State will experience a significant warming trend, with the average annual surface temperature expected to soar 3.0 °F above the 1950-1999 average and 1.8 °F higher than the 1991-2020 average. The sweltering heat is not confined to the summer months, as the number of scorching 100-degree days is predicted to quadruple compared to the relatively temperate 1970s and 1980s.
Urban areas, in particular, will bear the brunt of this warming trend, facing a higher frequency of scorching 100-degree days. The mercury continues its relentless climb, with extreme monthly summertime temperatures already showing an alarming increase of about 2 °F over the past fifty years.
Even in the depths of winter, the trend toward warmer temperatures shows no signs of abating, with extreme monthly wintertime temperatures expected to escalate at an even faster rate. The once-cool reprieve of summer’s chilliest days is rapidly evaporating, as they too succumb to the inexorable march of climate change.
In the face of these dire predictions, the people of Texas stand at a crossroads, compelled to confront the urgent reality of a changing climate and take decisive action to safeguard their future and the generations yet to come.