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Crazy I had a dream two days ago that lasted what seemed to be a hour or so and Mark and I were having fun camping I believe.  
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Helping hands

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Please consider a gift to Hill Country Conservancy.
$2,508.24
Raised by 10 people

I first met Mark when our mutual friend James invited me to join them one autumn camping and bow-hunting elk in Colorado's Flattops Wilderness.  In the ensuing decades, from our different corners of the country, we repeatedly returned to those magical mountains to share the high adventure of their woods, weather and critters, and the special companionability that's a good campfire's highest purpose.  Mark would start the countdown to these forays about six months ahead, enthusiastically announcing the advent of the "Infernal Elkquinox" and adjuring us to begin making ourselves ready.

Among his many talents large and small, Mark was a dead shot with a bow. He could put a flu-flu arrow through a soaring frisbee on the fly. “True story”, as he would say. Story-telling was in fact another of his talents.

He was also a ​terrific camp cook. His organization of the kitchen was particular and not to be messed. His grouse wraps were legendary. But more than feeding the camp, he was its beating heart and everyone’s unabashed cheerleader. Not coincidentally, the place where we most often made our base camp in the early years acquired the name “Welcher Creek”. Don't look for it on any USGS map.

Mark walked humbly; knew the names of wildflowers, grasses and constellations; loved the mountains and being among his tribe. Delighted in people. In particular, he loved Lucy and his sons.

I’m sure he had his flaws. I believe “exasperating” might have been a word that crossed Lucy’s lips now and then.

But he had a big big heart and wore it on his sleeve for all the world to see. He was special, and this firelit circle of the living is diminished for his leaving it.

Just three of my recollections: Mark introducing me to John Erickson of Hank The Cowdog books; Mark reminding my son, Sam, to take along some video tape for a shoot he was producing; Mark cooking fresh deer backstrap. Hundreds more. And as he knew well, his great fortune to have Lucy at his side. Wonderful man, father, husband and friend. Kit Laybourne
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What's in a name?  An odd set of coincidences?  If you're extraordinarily lucky,  it's a twenty year friendship packed with laughter, adventures, and remarkable friends. Memories and good stories that can warm you, even this miserable winter.   

Each  hike was an education and  every back road travelled had a tale to be told.  There was always someone you wanted me to meet, or a place you wanted to share.  There were fish to catch and shit to blow up.  There was smoke and brisket and there was music, lots of music. 

Above all, there was the magic of the Hill Country and its seasons.  Your love for the flowers, critters and history was only exceeded by your respect and love for those friends who make their homes there.

Thank you Mark for sharing Texas and its wonders.  Your and Lucy's generosity of spirit and life has given so much to my family and to me.  Spring, and the world, is greatly diminished without you.

Mark and I were friends from the time I was four and he was three. We spent countless hours together as children, we were in Boy Scouts together, he was a “manager” for the football team I played on, and our fathers took us on lots and lots of Texas fishing and hunting expeditions until we could drive and could mount our own. Mark and I drifted apart for a few years, not completely and not with any enmity at all; we saw each other seldom when I went away to law school and afterwards moved to Colorado. A while later came our 24 straight years of bow hunting for elk in the Flattops Wilderness Area of Colorado, which welded back together our lifelong friendship. Mark and I looked forward to September in the Rockies like we looked forward to Christmas as young children, only more so. We trained for it, practiced our archery, worked on our bugling and cow chirping, and waited impatiently for the season to begin. With Mark, there was the added anticipation of release from the Texas heat and entry into the heaven of late summer in the mountains. (And let’s not forget, it was through elk hunting that he met the love of his life, Lucy, at our house and absconded with her to Dripping Springs.) The stories that emerged from these hunts were iconic. We hunted with a bunch of guys from Arkansas for many of those 24 years, until the relationship with their leader went sour, and then we hunted with another group of guys who were very different from the Arkansas gang but who helped to spawn a whole new set of stories. One year we had to evacuate Mark on horseback due to an acute lung problem, and that was the last hunt for Mark in Colorado. But he still experienced the hunt after that, albeit vicariously through my hunts, and his dreams were still inhabited by bow hunts in the Flattops. Those memories and dreams kept Mark going through a lot of headwinds that he would experience later on. You can’t make old friends like Mark, and I’m missing him a lot.
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I called him uncle Mark.  and aunt Lucy.  Well, because he treated me like family.  That's what Mark did if you were his friend, he turned you into his family.  I remember after a bad breakup with my fiancee, Mark and Lucy, noticed i was really down in the dirt.  Mark suggested I come out to the house for a visit.  That turned into weekly Wednesday night dinners for about 2 months.  Mark needed to make sure I was getting back on my feet and going in the right direction.  I lost my dad when I was 5 and Mark always knew that I needed a father type person that could give guidance if asked upon.  We would email each other always around holidays but mostly around October or November to discuss who UT needed to hire after we got the football coach fired.  Those rants about UT football without exception turned into catching up and making sure I was living my life to the fullest.   I'll really miss those chats and endless rounds of encouragement Mark dished out.  
I remember meeting Mark for the first time right before he and Lucy were going to get married. At the time Lucy had a wonderful little dog named Alice. Bob and I were Lucy's neighbors at the time and loved Alice as much as Lucy did. The apartment tenants took a vote (rather jokingly) as to whether Lucy should marry Mark or just keep Alice as her partner. I believe Mark won out, but not by much!  Perhaps it was because we knew Mark was going to take Lucy away from us. But have stayed in contact, and seen them both many times since then. My heart goes out to Lucy and family. Much love, Juli and Bob Fisher
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Knew Mark well as we grew up together one same block. Rosedale Rats.  All the qualities attributed to Mark today could be seen in young, sensitive Mark. 

In recent communication with Mark he called me “Spaniard” and then apologized. I was over joyed with emotions at hearing my beloved nickname. That’s Mark, giving joy yet worrying he might offend! 

No finer companion than Mark …
The Flat Tops, Colorado, USA
No finer companion than Mark at elk camp
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I'd shout it from a mountaintop, but Townes Van Zandt's song chosen as a memorial verse sings everything better. Mark was and will ever be a great human, a good friend and one of my finest teachers at my first real film/television job. Thinking of afternoons beneath the Chinaberry that grew out a limestone ledge.

"Spring only sighed

Summer had to be satisfied

Fall is a feeling

That I just can't lose...

Til I'll be tying on

My flyin' shoes"

Flying Shoes, Townes Van Zandt

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This is one fine fellow who needed to live forever.  It will be hard to fill his shoes.
Barr Mansion, Ballroom, and Farmstead, Sprinkle Road, Austin, TX, USA
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Barr Mansion, Ballroom, and Farmstead, Sprinkle Road, Austin, TX, USA
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Barr Mansion, Ballroom, and Farmstead, Sprinkle Road, Austin, TX, USA
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Barr Mansion, Ballroom, and Farmstead, Sprinkle Road, Austin, TX, USA

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