Stories from Texas

Stories from Texas > All Episodes

April 2, 2025

Whistling while you work

By: W.F. Strong

Growing up in Texas, WF Strong found that whistling played a important role in his life. But there are many ways to whistle. He explores a few of them.

The full transcript of this episode of Stories from Texas is available on the KUT & KUTX Studio website. The transcript is also available as subtitles or captions on some podcast apps.

WF Strong [00:00:00] As a boy growing up in Texas, I found that whistling played an important role in my life. My father would whistle for us to come in at night. This could be with thumb and forefinger against the tongue or forefingers if he needed serious amplification. All of us whistled for the dogs to come in, still do, something like this. I love the movie, The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly, for the whistling, so hauntingly included by Ennio Morricone. Mm-hmm. The Andy Griffith Show also inspired me with its whistling theme song. Even now, I want to join in, and I’m sure some of you did. My neighbor, when I was a kid, used to whistle Christmas tunes as he put up Christmas decorations outside. Jingle Bells was one of his favorites. Seems strange to me, given that we only got snow about once every 30 years in South Texas, but he was a good whistler. Cowboys whistled herd cattle and communicate with each other. Whistles can be heard at a far greater distance than speech. It’s efficient, and your whistle is always with you. Whistling has vocabulary. This whistle is universally known. It’s now called a woof whistle, and in France you can be fined 700 euros for woof whistling in public. Here’s a whistle that can be used for being shocked at a high price, or even as a compliment for a brilliant idea. There are many interesting expressions about whistling. Ever heard of whistling past the graveyard? When you do that, you’re showing that you don’t have a care in the world about the dangers you’re ignoring. I like popular songs with whistling, like Sitting on the Dock of the Bay. How about patients? Guns and roses? or even this one featured in Kill Bill, but from the film Twisted Nerve. There are many great ones, but the whistling that seems always to be on a ready loop in the back of my mind comes from the spaghetti westerns, like this one from A Fistful of Dollars. I’m W.F. Strong, these are stories from Texas, some of them are true.

This transcript was transcribed by AI, and lightly edited by a human. Accuracy may vary. This text may be revised in the future.


Episodes

October 4, 2017

Texas Contractions

Anytime I hear someone say something like this: “Y’all ‘bout fixin’ to head out?” I think it’s highly likely that they are from Texas. You have y’all and fixin’ to in the same sentence and a couple of contractions. We do love our contractions, which, if you don’t recall from your halcyon days of grammar […]

Listen

September 20, 2017

Uncle Dale’s Greatest Gift

Uncle Dale was the first grownup to come home in the afternoon. He wasn’t our real Uncle – we just called him that. Back then, it was considered rude for a child to call an adult only by their first name, so we had lots of aunts and uncles. Uncle Dale got up when it was […]

Listen

September 6, 2017

Bass Boat Heroes

Every destructive hurricane is remembered in a unique way. Katrina is largely remembered for levees breaking and the paralyzing chaos that followed. The Galveston Hurricane of 1900, whose anniversary is in two days, is remembered for a horrific number – 6-thousand. 6-thousand people perished. It was the deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history. I believe […]

Listen

August 23, 2017

Texas: The Name Heard ‘Round The World

By W. F. Strong I’ve spent a good deal of time over the last couple of years contemplating all things Texas inside of Texas. So I thought I would take a look at Texas OUTSIDE of Texas. There is a lot out there. First, I suspect you’ve heard that in Norway the word “Texas” means […]

Listen

August 9, 2017

Cabeza de Vaca: The First Texas Tourist

The first person to waltz across Texas – okay, waltz is the wrong word (just tipping my hat to Ernest Tubb there). The first European to walk across Texas was Cabeza de Vaca. And he did it barefoot and mostly naked. Why? We shall see. His full name was Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca. Bet […]

Listen

July 26, 2017

Top of the Chart Songs about Texas Towns

There are thousands of songs about Texas. For example, all the way over in England, Duran-Duran – the British new wave pop group, dropped a top 20 (#14) song called “Rio” back in ’82. And you have “All My Ex’s Live In Texas” and “The Yellow Rose of Texas” and “The Road Goes on Forever,” […]

Listen

July 13, 2017

Show ‘Em Your Badge

As told by W. F. Strong   This story comes under the heading of a Texas classic.  It is folklore. I don’t know for sure that its origin is in Texas, but from the oldest versions I know of, going back 30 plus years, they have Texas linguistic markers.  So I believe there’s a good […]

Listen

June 28, 2017

Texas Land Rush

The most expensive property currently on the market in Texas is a 2300 acre estate in Lago Vista. It is near Austin, on Lake Travis, going for a mere 68 million. Only 30 thousand an acre. Get out your checkbooks. That’s quite a contrast compared to the deals the first Texans were getting on real […]

Listen