Ask A Texan: The Magic Of The Yeti Cup


Illuminating Advice For Folks That Seek It

The Texan

Another old friend of mine, Bwana of San Saba, wrote me with a question. Like our other mutual friend, Mooch, Bwana refuses to talk on the phone because he won’t wear his high-dollar hearing aids. He’s also forgotten the art of texting and avoids computers. At this point in our lives, I attribute all unusual behavior to old age. He writes that he is losing sleep over knowing how his Yeti cups and ice chest work; the technology is foreign to him.

Bwana Of San Saba: Mr. Texan, I need help in the worst way. I can’t sleep, eat, or drink my hooch, and my wife is about to banish me to the Deer lease in San Saba because I’ve gotten her last nerve. I’ve owned and excessively used Yeti cups and ice chests for years: I use only the best when it comes to hunting gear. My man trailer on the lease is full of Yeti stuff. Did you know they make a Yeti iron skillet, pans, forks, knives, hunting clothes, and a darn good Deer rifle? Neither did I, until my wife stocked my hunting trailer with the gear, which makes me uneasy because I’m thinking she is baiting me, and wants to get rid of me. Well, I was sitting on a rock in a dry creek bed waiting for a Bambi to trot by so I could nail his little white-tail ass. This is the same creek bed where I killed the 1,000-pound wild pig with my Yeti pocket knife. I told you about that battle many times. It’s damn hot, too hot for Deer, so I reach in my Yeti backpack and pull out my Premium Ultra Yeti Tumbler for a drink of water. Mind you, that tumbler had been in my pack for half a day in 100-degree Texas heat, and when I pulled a swig, the water was so cold it gave me a brain freeze, and that’s when my sleepless nights and obsessive behavior started. I was so discombobulated that the Bambi I was waiting to shoot walked up to me to see if I was alright. I’m sitting there thinking about that damn Yeti cup and the biggest 20 pointer I’ve seen is in my face begging for a drink of water or a Granola Bar. I poured a handful of cold Ozarka water into my hand and gave the Bambi a sip or two. He turned, wagged his white tail at me, farted, and trotted off. I need some advice here. How does this Yeti thing work? I’m having a nervous breakdown here.

The Texan: Well, Bwana, I can see how not knowing how mystical, magical technology works is causing you to lose your marbles. When I was a young’un, right about the same time you were in the 1950s, my mother bought me a genuine Davy Crockett lunch box. In the tin box was a Davy Crockett Thermos Bottle. It was a dandy, with a coon-tail attached to the lid. I took that box to school every day, and my milk was always icy cold, which baffled me. Why would Yeti make a rifle? Does a gun need to remain at a specific temperature to work correctly? Now I’m confused. I used to feed the Deer in Ruidoso watermelon and Nabisco Granola. They loved it and would almost sit on my lap to get a treat, so it’s not surprising the Bambi in San Saba approached you. Even a thirsty Deer knows a quality product. I believe Yeti has used the same magical technology in its products as Davy Crockett. I’m no scientist, and am as jiggered as you on this one. The answer to your question is: ” It keeps hot things hot and cold things cold…how do it know?” I’m sending you a package of Deer Of The Month trading cards and a box of Cherry Bombs to help you unwind and relieve your anxiety. Let me know if you figure the Yeti thing out.


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9 Replies to “Ask A Texan: The Magic Of The Yeti Cup”

    1. I’m betting the Yeti would survive the Cherry Bomb. Back in the late 50s, my cousin put a Cherry Bomb on top of the front tire of his older brothers new MG Midget car. It blew an outward dent in the top of the fender. We both got a butt whooping for that one, and I was only a bystander.

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  1. I’m skeptical. Sure, I’ve read about Himalayan sasquatches, but no one has ever captured an authentic Yeti on film. It would be really cool if that ever happened, of course. On another subject, I’d rather shoot Snow Brown than Bambi. We don’t need woke. Let the animals walk.

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  2. Each one of my school lunch box thermoses shattered and leaked all over my pink hostess snowballs with coconut topping. Fortunately, I was gifted a Yeti by my former medical insurance company. My husband uses it all the time. I’m glad Bwana of San Saba was kind to the deer. 🙂

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  3. Honestly, sir, I’m growing worried about you.  I’m not representing all your readers, of course, because I don’t know any of them personally.  Come to think of it, I don’t know you personally either.  Still, you seem overly obsessed with pyrotechnics, which is concerning.  I also believe it’s become a problem for the ATF&E, local fire departments, and the U.S. Postal Service.  If you start hearing weird squawky noises in your hearing aid, it could be the government listening in on your conversations.

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    1. Mustang, glad to know you even if it’s in the blogging universe. Mark Twain once said he had thousands of unmet friends that he made via correspondence, as he was a frantic letter writer as well as stories. Firecrackers were a large part of my 1950s childhood. My neighborhood pals as well as my coterie of mischievous cousins. It’s a natural Texas thing to send kids a box of Cherry Bombs, or M80s. Boys love to blow things up.

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