Green Day

It’s not just about skipping meat. Vegans, fast increasing in numbers, do it for the animals, the environment and their health. And, in Houston, they’ve never had better food.

Shannon O’Hara
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It’s mid-morning, and the murmur of voices can be heard above the rustling of plants in a soft breeze at the family-run Atkinson Farm tucked quietly off I-45 in Spring. With the dew still thick on the crops, eager visitors — several city-dwellers, baskets in tow — take their pick of fresh produce during the quaint daily marketplace. Ripe blackberries, juicy tomatoes and leafy collards — all homegrown by fourth-generation farmer Mike Atkinson and his son, Bobby — are neatly stacked in bins and on shelves alongside the family’s own brand of jarred goods. Beyond the booths, spread across the tranquil farmland’s 140 acres, the bounty of the season is a serene sight to see in the morning light.

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Food+Travel

City in the Sky

With his trusty drones, a cool pseudonym and a passion for discovery, photographer ‘Tommy Tenzo’ is taking Houston cityscapes to new heights.

Tenzo had this image in mind for months before he captured it. “I had never seen Downtown photographed with low fog in the morning,” he says. “I kept track of the weather for months and asked meteorologists questions. Then I simply waited. One morning I could see fog out of my window. I jumped out of bed and knew this was going to be my chance. It came out exactly as I imagined it.”

The beauty and mystery of flight has piqued the curiosity of man for thousands of years. Partly because, from an aerial view, the natural wonders of the earth below become something entirely new — a vast work of art. For a photographer like Houston’s Tommy Orellana, this fascination led to a pursuit of drone photography. “I am inspired by my need to create, challenge perspectives and learn about the world,” says Orellana. “But I’m a highly visual person, and I learn by experimenting. Each photo is a summary of my interests, ideas and experiments.”

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Uncategorized

Beat the Rap

Paul Wall, 36, shines bright with his gold grill and a candy-red slab with protruding swangas. These vocabulary words — they refer to his car — are among many popularized by Wall in his 2000s-era hip-hop. But the rapper, who released his Diamond Boyz album earlier this year, is creating much more than a dope freestyle with the launch of his Trahan’s Wings & Daiquiris concept — six more locations bow this summer — and a forthcoming collab with 8th Wonder Brewery. “I’m very Houston-centric,” he says proudly. Can you spot the fake fact about Wall?

Julie Soefer

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Art+Culture