Thursday, October 30, 2014

Arlington to Canyon Lakes Recreational Area

Happy Halloween!

Wed., Oct. 22.  We took Luci to Doggie Day Camp at Petsmart so we could go to the George W. Bush Presidential Library in Dallas, located on the campus of SMU.  This is the fourth presidential library we've been to.  Several years ago we saw Ronald Reagan's in Simi Valley, Ca., the following year we visited Richard Nixon's in Loma Linda, Ca., last year we visited LBJ's in Austin located on the campus of University of Texas.  We were rushing toward Wichita, Kansas last month, we didn't realize Eisenhower's is located in Abilene, Ks, we missed it by about 25 miles.  We talked about taking a day trip  back but it was over 100 miles and the weather was nasty.  Bush's Library features exhibits using artifacts from his presidency, video and interactive exhibits to show you the key parts and decisions of his presidency.  There is quite a section on 911, the oval office, family and exhibits about his life in the White House.  I loved the pictures of the gowns Laura wore for inauguration and state dinners.  The gifts from heads of state to George and Laura  are gifts to America.  Beautiful silver and gold objects but what really caught my eye was a diamond and sapphire necklace, earrings and bracelet.  I wonder if she ever wore them.  Afterward we went to lunch at Jakes, a place that specializes in burgers, we had the Screaming Rooster, a very spicy chicken sandwich.  MMMMMM good but HOT.  We headed back to Arlington before rush hour started in Dallas.  Of course I wasn't driving but the traffic seems much less congested than the Portland area.  It seems most of Texas is under road construction, especially driving down from Oklahoma City.  We picked up Luci and headed back to Tree Top RV Park.

Thurs., Oct. 23,  We headed back to downtown Dallas to see the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealy Square, the building where Lee Harvey Oswald  shot JFK.  Being there sure put everything in perspective, it seemed so much bigger on TV.  Everyone remembers where they were that day, it was my junior year in hs and I was in bookkeeping class.  When you first go into the museum they give you  audio tour ear phones but I found that distracting, I ended up taking them off and read all the captions.  They do not allow any pictures to be taken on the 6th floor, flash or no flash.  The pictures we took of Dealy Square were from the 7th floor where they had photo mosaics of Jack and Jackie, 50,000 pictures of her for his and 50,000 pictures of him for hers.    Back on the 6th floor you go through chronically the day as it unfolded then pictures of funeral.  The corner window that Oswald shot the president is glass enclosed reproduced to look exactly like that day.  There was a section on the Warren Commission and how they used all the film shot by Zapruder and other photo's for evidence.  After, we walked on the grassy knoll and Dealy Plaza.  There were X's painted on the street where the shots hit, I found that a little creepy for some reason.  We walked around the historic area downtown Dallas.  It is really a beautiful city.

Friday, Oct. 24,  We left Arlington about 10 for a relatively short drive to College Station, home of Texas A&M and the George HW Bush Presidential library arriving about 2:30 for just one night.  As I said before, all Texas is a construction zone.  As we reached our turn, the road was all torn up, of course we missed our turn, we saw the RV park as we were going up the overpass.   Nothing makes Gary happier than to have to find a place to turn around, go through the construction again only to miss our turn (again)  FUN.   We finally arrived, it was a little "tense" in the coach at that point.  The RV park was pretty full but no one was around which was curious.  What a racket, you have to rent the space for the entire football season for probably 8 or so Saturdays.  The Aggies were on a bye thank goodness, it would have been nuts there. A stiff adult beverage was called for.  I headed for the pool for a little "time-out".

Saturday, Oct. 25,  We got up early to get the coach departure ready, the manager gave us a couple of extra hours, we didn't have to rush that way.  George HW Bush (two middle names, his parents couldn't decide who's father's name to use)  Presidential Library also preserves pictures and documents from his presidency.    In 1955 GB was a pioneer in the field of offshore oil drilling, one whole room was exclusively about the industry.  One interesting fact, 1 gallon of oil equals 42 gallons of milk.  The first oil rig, the Scorpion was off the coast of Aransas Pass, Tx  close to Rockport, Tx.  It showed his early life with his family, time of WWII as a 20 year old pilot he was water rescued twice, once because of enemy fire and the second, engine failure right after taking off from an aircraft carrier. The rest of the library chronologically his life from US Senator, UN Ambassador (appointed by Nixon), Ambassador to China, Director of the CIA, VP to Reagan and of course president.  Outside the library is a beautiful pond and rose garden, we walked around the pond, it smelled so fragrant.  (I'm a rose sniffer when I walk through neighborhoods, you've got to stop and smell the roses)  A sign at the edge of the pond was a surprise, it is stocked with fish and you can catch and release.  As we finished our walk we saw a sign  saying "Graveyard", across the bridge is an area waiting for George and Barbara, their daughter Robin died of leukemia is there now.  He and Barbara are living in Houston carrying on with their public service.  We left College Station about 1 to head toward Ft. Hood Killeen Texas.   On our way out of town we saw about 10 turkey vultures having a nice lunch, as we drove by one of them flew off and almost hit us.  That would have been trouble, they are big birds.  Then as we made a turn north we heard a crash!  Somebody (me) forgot to put the Velcro strap on the frig.  Things went flying, what a mess!  I won't make that mistake again.   Most military bases are easy to enter, show your ID and they direct you to Fam Camp.  Well Ft. Hood is not one of those.  We followed the directions, entering at the correct gate, well we had to turn around and go back to another gate to get inspected.  Gary had to open all the doors to the basement for them to check for ???, then we were sent back to the first gate.  We finally got into Fam Camp and set up.

Sunday, Oct. 26, Gary's nephew Chris and his wife Nancy live in Harker Heights with Nancy's mom Dottie, just about 10 miles from the base.  We had our mail forwarded there, we haven't gotten our mail since Hart Ranch in Rapid City, SD.  We took Luci with us so she could play with Neavah (heaven backwards)their chocolate lab.  They have a lovely back yard with lots of trees to keep it cool.  Chris, retired Army, is now working as a civilian employee at Ft. Hood.  On our way back to base we'd decided to drop Luci at the coach when we went to the commissary.  As we pulled in the guard asked us if we had a temporary permit.  We said no, no one said we needed one even though we had to go through two gates to get in the day before.  He grudgingly let us in because we were staying at Fam Camp.  We dropped Luci off and left to go to the commissary at another gate. Big Mistake!  No temp. permit no admit.  We had to go to the visitor center  to show the registration and insurance for the Jeep.  Would you believe we didn't have the current insurance card.  Well no insurance no admit.  We still needed to get back to Fam Camp somehow. The supervisior came to help, still no.  The clerk got the bright idea to look at Oregon DMV and low and behold it showed current insurance.  Arggggghhhh!  We got our temp permit and undaunted off we went to the commissary, back to Luci and an adult beverage.

Monday, Oct. 27, We said good bye to Ft. Hood and headed toward Austin.  Another short drive of under 100 miles, we had reservations at Lone Star RV park.  Our rate for two nights through Passport America was $12.50 each, but the third night was going to be $100.  Well no. It seems the Formula 1 US Grand Prix was coming up this weekend in Austin and corporation doubled the rate.  They did lower it to $50.00, still too much money but what could we do.  It was a nice park, lots of trees but we were able to get satellite reception.  After settling in we drove down to Zilker Park on Lady Bird Lake for a nice walk and a little geo cacheing. 

Tuesday Oct. 28, Austin, the Texas state capital has a population of about 800,000 and growing very fast especially judging by the road construction.  Austin is like Oregon's Eugene, we saw T-shorts saying "keep Austin weird". Locals are afraid the influx of new people will take away their quirkiness.
Last year we visited the LBJ library and the capitol building. at one time the capitol was the tallest building in Austin by law (just like Salem)  Not any more.  The Colorado River runs through Austin with a series of dams and lakes.  Lady Bird Johnson Lake right in the middle of town,  a beautiful park with 15 miles of trails along both sides of the lake.  Many years ago LB visited and was appalled at the dirty lake.  She championed it's restoration of the lake, now Austin gets its drinking water from there.  After she died, the lake, formerly called Town Lake, was renamed Lady Bird.  We went to see Mt. Bonnell, a 5 acre park overlooking Austin Lake, (the second of several).  We had to climb 104 stairs up, I had to stop to  "admire the scenery" a couple of times before making it to the top.  You could see Austin's beautiful skyline and the mansions along the lake near the park.  We had reservations with Capital Cruises for a sunset cruise along Lady Bird Lake to see up to a million bats fly out from underneath the Congress Street bridge at dusk.  When they retrofitted the bridge to include heat expansion joints the bats discovered the 6" slits about every 4 feet or so made a perfect place to live in the summer.  In the spring 25 million pregnant bats fly 650 miles from Mexico, the babies weigh 1/3 of their mama's weight.  Bats never stop flying, no coasting for them.  When the babies are born they sort of bungee jump out of mama on their umbilical cords.  Bats live 15-20 years. have a wing span of 6 inches and eat 15 tons of bugs( collectively) every night.  They can swim but have to get to shore to dry off before they can fly again.  Who Knew?

Wednesday, Oct. 30, we left early for Canyon Lakes Recreation area which is operated by Sam Houston Joint Base in San Antonio.(where we stayed last year for a month)  We were a bit apprehensive after our experience at Ft. Hood.  No troubles no hassle.  The park is located on a lake formed behind an earthen dam about an hour or so north east of  SA in what they call Hill Country.  It is beautiful here.  The woman that checked us in told us there were  a million deer.  I think she was exaggerating, but there are many, many here.  Our neighbor here was feeding them out of her hand, Gary tried but they were pretty skittish around him, the new guy in town.  The weather is lovely, we had dinner outside and walked down to the lake on one of the many trails.  We'll be here until Saturday when we leave for Rockport.

TTFN,

Gary and Pam


                                        Our place at Tree Top, see Dolly?
                                         6th Floor Museum
                                          The grassy knoll
                                         Street motorcade took Parkland hospital
                                         Dealy Plaza, X on street where shot hit
                                         Corner window 6th floor
                                         George Jr. Library
                                          Some of the gifts from heads of state
                                         George getting the news about 1st tower
                                         Father and son
                                         Gary making a difficult decision in Oval Office
                                         Laura's gown and George's Tux for state dinner
                                         The diamond/sapphire jewels
                                         Replica of a off shore oil rig
                                         Presidential limo
                                          Gary and George shooting the breeze
 
                                          Barbara's gown and Sr. tux
                                         Gary signing a bill into law at Sr's library                                
                                         Camp David office
                                                    A piece of the Berlin wall
                                         What a surprise, a fishing pond at the library
                                         View from rose garden across pond to library
                                         Future graveyard
                                         The stairs to Mt. Bonnell
                                          View of Austin Lake from top
                                         Nice place!
                                           Our bat cruise boat
                                         Building's roof designed to look like an owl
                                         Congress St. Bridge
                                         Egrets nesting in tree in the middle of the city
                                         Starting to get dark, see people lining up on bridge
                                         Ahh, life is good at Canyon Lake
                                         Our neighbor at Canyon Lakes hand feeding doe
                                          A buck just strolled past our camp site.
                                         Back to Austin, part of the trail along LB Lake
                                         Dottie, Nancy, Chris and Naveh in back yard at Harker Hts.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Oklahoma City to Arlington, TX

Greetings, we finally made it to Texas!  The sun is out, no wind and no rain.  Life is good.

Friday, Oct. 17, Happy Birthday Talena, you were only 8 when I became your "spare" Mom, now you're a  beautiful, grown, successful woman.  Time does fly.  We started the day with a 3 1/2 mile walk along the trails on base, we are able to (against the rules) let Luci off the leash and let her run with the butterflies and jump with the grasshoppers, it's so fun to watch.  Today is the day we went to the Oklahoma City History  Center, which showcases the states history with thousands of artifacts and interactive exhibits.  Many movies have been made in Oklahoma starting in the 20's to present, the exhibits show props and costumes.  Another section was interesting, they opened a time capsule, about 8 feet by 4 feet, placed in the early 1900's with a wide variety of items.  Outside Devon Energy Corp. had an exhibit with oil rigs and equipment including an oil derrick.  Devon Energy Corporations us a leading independent oil and natural gas exploration and production company home based in Oklahoma City.  Their operations are focused offshore US and Canada.

Saturday, Oct. 18, We wanted to see a section of Route 66, the first major highway from Chicago to California.  Route 66 travels 400 miles through Oklahoma the longest of all the states.  Our first stop was at the Round Barn about 30 miles north east in the city in Arcadia.  The reason for round barns, when horses walked in circles thrashing wheat a farmer decided to put a roof over their heads, from there they became barns.  It was built in 1898, in 1988 the roof collapsed and a group of retired carpenters restored building in 1992.  The highway traveled through forests and rolling hills with quaint restored buildings along the way to Chandler.  We stopped at the Route 66 Interpretive Center in a former National Guard Armory, built by the WPA during the mid-30's.  The outer walls consist of hand-chiseled blocks 20 inches thick.  It fell into a state of disrepair after a number of business came and went.  Locals were going to tear it down but the walls were too thick.  In 1998 they turned it into what it is today by donations, no taxpayer money went into the project.  The drill hall is used now for many local activities, weddings, proms etc.  The six video stations in the museum have car seats (65 mustang bucket) so you can sit and watch in comfort and one even has a bed.  In 1959 a college bound student from Chicago drove to Tucson for school  in his 1939 Chevy, every night he would send his folks a post card (an early blog) telling them how the day went.  A few years ago the last of his parents died, as he was going through their things he found all the cards and letters he'd sent them from the trip.  He decided to do the trip again, 45 years later with his wife and in a Corvette.  Some of the places they stayed were still in business.  Our next stop was Stroud where we had lunch at the Rock CafĂ©, another building made of thick stone walls.  Lunch was good old home cooking.  We took the freeway back to base.  After a lengthy trip to the commissary to stock up on groceries we "prettied" up and went downtown to the Devon Energy tower 79th floor, since the dinners were a little out of our budget we had an appetizer and an adult beverage.  Beautiful view, locals claim you can see all the way to Texas.  On our way back to base we stopped at the Oklahoma Memorial, it is open 24 hours a day, all the chairs are lighted to give you a different perspective.
The Ducks won!

Sunday, Oct. 19.  Oklahoma City is normally windy, with the winds blowing freely off the prairies.  This morning there was only a slight breeze and overcast.  A perfect day to wash 4 states of dirt off the coach.  A few days earlier I'd washed my car, by the time I finished it was water spotted so bad I had to use a damp towel first then a dry one to finish up.  So after washing each section of the coach we dried it before continuing on to the next side.  Sure is pretty!!  After that I spent several hours cleaning the inside, it gets a little deep inside when you're "playing" every day.  Seahawks Lost!

Monday, Oct. 20,  We left about 10:00 for Arlington, about a 225 mile trip.  As we entered Texas we stopped at a beautiful Visitor Center/Rest area, loading up on travel brochures.  We are staying at the Tree Top RV Park,  in Arlington,  a pretty big park probably 200 spaces, all good sized with patios and gas BBQ's.  The trees are thick which are great for shade but lousy for satellite reception.  Most of the spaces are pull-thru's. Happiness is a pull-thru!  After getting all settled we made a run to Costco,  about a mile and a half away, we haven't been close to one since Montana.  Wah Hoo!!  We grabbed a bite to eat at Applebee's and watched a little football.

Tuesday, Oct. 21,  Warning: if you get bored with football "talk" don't read todays entry. As everyone knows, I'm a HUGE football fan so I had to go see AT&T Stadium, better known as Cowboy Stadium, we took the 11:30 guided tour.  We dropped Luci off at PetSmart Hotel for doggie day camp so we wouldn't have to worry about her.  We are not Cowboy fans, well actually Cowboy haters, but we wanted to see the famous stadium.  We waited for our tour to start in the Pro Shop, we wanted to buy a souvenir but everything had those stupid blue stars on them.  I'm glad I wore my walking shoes, one of the first things our guide told us was it was a mile and a half walk.  Mary (the guide)said that the Cowboys have the cheapest tickets in the NFL, $29.00, 10,000 standing room only, and have sold out every game this year.  (Rotten Cowboys beat Seattle a few weeks ago)  Before construction started, the city of Arlington committed $325 million dollars to build the new stadium with Jerry Jones matching that amount and would pay any cost over runs.  Well it did go over budget, JJ had to come up with another $375 million.  Do the math.  It took one whole year to dig the bowl 50 feet down, 1.2 millions of dirt was hauled off.  They did implode the old stadium but they kept the roof, the ring of honor and the statue of Tom Landry that was in front.  We went into the "owners perch" where you see JJ and his two sons on TV, a fairly small room, almost "office" like.  An elevator brings him up from underground parking to the locker room, his suite and his perch.  His wife sits in the suite just below, of course on the 50 yard line.  They rent out the stadium for concerts, wedding, parties, etc. Sometimes they just rent the suites, locker rooms, the field or the clubs.  Mrs. Jones, as the guide referred to her, had a big hand in the decorating of the stadium, she wanted it to be as nice as a 5-star hotel.  They even have special guided art tours.  The guide told us she wanted the lockers to be made out of the same wood she has in her Bentley, I'd never heard of it before, Sapealy (or something like that) my Jeep has fancy plastic.  Some fun facts; at Super Bowl 2001 they sold 12 tons of nachos,  there are 1600 toilets in the stadium, 60% women's 40% men's but can be reconfigured depending on the venue.  The big doors at the end of the stadium, if you'd had to watch the Cowboys last sunday like we did, they opened the doors and the sun was in everyone's eyes including JJ's.  The doors were a present from Mrs. Jones to JJ, they are 180 feet tall, it takes 7 minutes to open them.  I gave Gary a card for his BD.  The roof splits in the middle, taking 10 minutes to open.  There are 368 suites, 5 clubs and 3 helipads.  You can decorate your suite any way you want, the Mary Kay suite looks like Pepto and an oil billionaire has a derrick in his.  There is a Wal-Mart across the street from the stadium, the NFL, for security reasons did not want it open the day of the Super Bowl.  The NFL asked the manager what was the biggest Sunday receipt  and paid him 3 times that amount, they closed the store that day.  On our way to the locker rooms we walked through an area where they store the "college" turf.  Who knew?  I thought they just put a little temp paint on the field.  No, they take up the NFL turf, takes about 6 hours and put down the college turf, it takes about 12 hours.  The rolls are 5 yards wide and run the length of the field.  It was fun to stand on the star in the middle of the field and look up at all the seats.
                                         View of the capitol from the Oklahoma History Museum
                                          Gene Autry's saddle from Oklahoma made movie
                                           Car from Grapes of Wrath
  
                                         Native Oklahoma astronauts
                                          Quilt from time capsule with names embroidered in circles
 
            
                                         Round Barn in Arcadia
                                        Route 66 Interpretive Center in Chandler
                                         Drill hall
                                                   65 Mustang seats
                                         A Navy E-6 at Tinker AFB
                                                  Devon Energy Tower
                                           79th floor, see Texas in background
                                         Lighted chairs at Memorial, Devon tower in back
                                         The view from JJ's "perch"
                                         The view of the field from Standing Room Only section
                                         One of the suites, undecorated
                                          Cheerleaders locker room
                                         Entry to Cowboy's locker room
                                                   Gary in front of Romo's locker, notice the wood
                                          Rolls of turf
                                         Area Cowboys run through to field
                                         Standing on the blue star
                                          Front of stadium
         Our space at Tree Top, do you see the witch?
   As I said, I'm a Cowboy hater but after visiting their stadium I must admit I have to like them a little.

Well that's about it for this week.

TTFN

Gary and Pam