Category Archives: Geocaching

Geocaching

January 7, 2014 Borrego Springs, California

We fell in love with beautiful Anza-Borrego Desert State Park in Borrego Springs the minute we arrived. 4-P1030582 We had a wonderful view of the mountains right outside our front window, and our campsite was arranged so we could leave our front shades up and not worry about our privacy.  The first hour we were there we saw a big jack rabbit. We enjoyed the view from the time we woke up each morning until darkness settled in each night.  1-IMG_20140108_104103 2-IMG_20140108_104137Sadly, we were only there 3 nights.  Anza-Borrego Desert State Park is the largest state park in California with 500 miles of dirt roads, 12 wilderness areas, and many miles of hiking trails.  The park is named after the Spanish explorer Juan Bautista de Anza and the Spanish word “borrego” which means bighorn sheep.  As we drove from El Centro to Borrego Springs, we noticed many campers who had set up camp in the desert.  Some set up solitary sites while others seemed to form little wagon trains in the desert. 1-P1030572 We also noticed that we continued to be below sea level for part of the drive west.  5-IMG_20140111_202425

The first day we made the 45 minute drive that took us over a ridge of 4,200 feet to Warner Springs to see Bill’s cousin Sandra and her husband Ed. 7-P1030601 The view was amazing but the road was very winding with steep drop offs. 5-P1030597 4-P1030590 We enjoyed spending time with Sandra and Ed in their lovely home.

On Thursday we spent the day exploring Borrego Springs by doing some hiking and geocaching.   After stopping by the Visitors Center which included an interesting movie about desert plant and animal life, we took a hike which turned out to be more challenging than we expected as it took us over a fairly rocky trail that was longer in length than was shown on the park map. 1-P1030607 2-P1030613 We always enjoy our desert hikes with the beautiful plant life, however we did not encounter the birds and wildlife we had hoped to see.  We were amazed to see his and her bathrooms in the middle of the desert!  3-P1030614

After the hike we spent the rest of the day geocaching in Borrego Springs where there are more than 130 free standing steel metal sculptures created by Ricardo Breceda of Perris, California spread over a 3 mile area of desert landscape.  Luckily for us, several of these sculptures had geocaches hidden in them, and we were able to enjoy both the sculptures and get in some geocaching!  The size and detail of the sculptures were truly amazing!  6-P1030619 4-P1030615 9-P1030628 8-P1030622 7-P1030621 5-P1030618

Our list of places we want to return to someday is growing, and Anza-Borrego Desert State Park is definitely on that list!

 

January 3, 2014 El Centro, California

California here we come!  We loved Yuma, but we had been eagerly anticipating our arrival in California, so it was with much excitement we crossed the border from Arizona into California. We noticed the landscape went from flat, desert dirt with small shrubs and cacti, to a more sandy appearance with huge sand dunes with little or no plant growth.  We saw some dune buggies in the distance climbing the high sand dunes.

Sand dunes with dune buggies in the distance. taken from car window

Sand dunes with dune buggies in the distance. taken from car window

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Campers boondocking in the desert

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Dune buggy paths

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one of many canals in the desert

Our first stop was the small farming community of El Centro.  In this area we noticed more evidence of farming, especially lettuce and other greens.  We also noticed huge covered bales of hay along the side of the road in several places.  There is not much to do in El Centro and the RV resort where we are staying is geared more to golf and not much else, so we used our time there doing paperwork and trip planning for January.  The resort was very quiet and we enjoyed the relaxing time there.

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The highlight of our time in El Centro was when we drove 60 miles north to see the Salton Sea. At 45 miles and 25 miles wide it is one of the world’s largest inland seas and the largest lake in California.  It is also 227 feet below sea level which makes it one of the lowest spots on earth.  With its marine, freshwater, desert, wetland, and agricultural habitats, it has the second highest number of different species in the country with over 400 species.  More importantly is the dependence of a large bird population on the lake because just below the surface is an abundance of fish.  Scientists called the Salton Sea “California’s Crown Jewel of avian biodiversity” and is thought to be one of the most productive fisheries in the world.  1-2014-01-05

The Salton Sea is currently 25% saltier than the ocean and getting saltier every day because the lake has no outlets.  Water flows into the lake from the Whitewater, Alamo and New rivers which brings salt from the Colorado River.  The only way water can leave the Salton Sea is by evaporation.  There is estimated to be 500 million tons of salt in the Salton Sea.  This salinity is seen as a time bomb to the future survival of fish and birds. There are government projects underway to reduce the salt.

The Salton Sea was the setting for the 2002 movie, “The Salton Sea”.  We enjoyed our visit there very much.  We had read before going that the smell there can be very bad, especially during windy days as the wind dredges up all the sediment and dead materials from the bottom of the sea.  The wind was calm during our visit and we detected no unpleasant odors.  They have a very nice visitors center at the park 04-IMG_20140105_140215 02-IMG_20140105_133459 06-IMG_20140105_131558 03-IMG_20140106_222511 where we enjoyed a nice picnic lunch 05-IMG_20140105_131546

Rock with petroglyphs

Rock with petroglyphs

 

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and saw a short movie about the history of the area.  The park has full hookup sites but for a third of the cost you can boondock at one of their wilderness areas.  While driving around we stopped and chatted with a couple from Oregon who had come down to the Salton Sea for 2 months and were hosts at one of the wilderness areas on the sea.  With the closest grocery store being 30 miles away, and the only place to get water and dump our fluids being 7 miles each way, we decided this was not a location we would come back to camp.

After leaving the visitors center we drove to nearby Mecca where we did some desert canyon geocaching.  We completed finding 200 geocaches in 2013 and now are starting our goal of another 100 in 2014. We had a great time and saw some truly beautiful areas.  This is a good time to do some desert geocaching because we feel fairly confident that we will not encounter any crawling creatures, though we are always vigilante about where we place our feet and hands no matter where we are geocaching. 12-IMG_20140105_144743 09-IMG_20140105_143458 13-IMG_20140105_144751 14-IMG_20140105_144839 10-IMG_20140105_143623 11-IMG_20140105_144437 15-IMG_20140105_144953 16-IMG_20140105_153610

1-20140105_161251One geocache was hidden inside a plastic duck hidden in this canyon

 

 

December 20, 2013 Yuma, Arizona

We love Arizona!  From Tucson to Casa Grande, and now a final stop in Yuma, our stay in Yuma has been wonderful! During the short drive from Casa Grande to Yuma, we continued to enjoy the interesting rock formations and views. 01-IMG_20131220_132032 02-IMG_20131221_000122  Yuma is in an area near the borders of Arizona, California and Mexico. Guinness  Book of World Records describes Yuma as “the sunniest place on earth” with an average of 339 days of sunshine and 3.01 inches of rain a year.  Years ago Yuma was a popular place for gold rushers to cross the Colorado River because of the Yuma Crossing.  Here there are two large granite outcroppings which squeezed the river into a narrow channel, allowing for a safer and easier crossing of the river.  Over the years the Hoover Dam, as well as other dams have altered the flow of the Colorado River and therefore the water supply to the area.  For example the Yuma Territorial Prison was once surrounded by water on three sides but today that area is dry desert.  Other dams such as the Laguna Dam diverts water for crops into the Yuma area.  The Colorado River is one of the most controlled and litigated rivers in the world because it is shared by 7 western states and Mexico.  It serves about 25 million people and 90% of its water has been directed by the time it gets to Yuma, and it disappears as it enters Mexico.  Yuma is home to the world’s largest reverse osmosis desalting plants which was completed in 1992 by the Bureau of Reclamation to ensure that the U.S. could meet their treaty obligations to deliver water to Mexico.  The plant can produce 72.4 million of gallons of desalted water per day.  The plant never has run at full capacity because it is expensive to operate and Mexico has enough water from normal river flow without the plant.  Throughout Yuma, seemingly at every street corner, there are small buildings offering desalted water for sale.

The Yuma Proving Ground, formerly Camp Laguna, trains troops, and tests weapons and systems, as well as bridges on the Colorado River, before battle.  It is located on 1,300 square miles of desert terrain.  Also nearby is a Marine Crops Air Station.  Yuma’s economy is made up of agriculture, the military, and tourism.

Speaking of agriculture, today farming is a $3 billion industry in Yuma.    It is known as the winter lettuce capital of the world.  Chances are very good that if you eat salad anywhere in the U.S. during the winter, it came from Yuma.  This helps make Arizona second in the U.S. in the production of all kinds of lettuce, cauliflower and broccoli.  05-IMG_20131227_144802 At the peak of the season, 2,000,000 pounds of lettuce is processed at EACH of the NINE salad plants DAILY!  Every day we saw busloads of migrant workers out in the fields working and fields of lettuce and other greens was a common sight.  They flood the fields for irrigation and also have irrigation equipment actively watering the fields.  04-IMG_20131229_004101

While in Yuma we celebrated Christmas.  The RV resort where we were staying had a lovely Christmas Eve service which included placing luminaries along all the streets in the resort.  It made for a beautiful Christmas Eve atmosphere. 03-IMG_20131224_182802 On Christmas Day the resort provided a delicious Christmas dinner of prime rib and ham.  We were able to meet and talk with many snowbirds, and we are finding that many of then come down from Canada, Washington state, and Oregon.  We have found people to be friendly here and we were inviting to Happy Hours and enjoyed talking with our neighbors.

The Yuma Territorial Historical Park opened in 1876, with the first prisoners building their own cells.  10-IMG_20140101_200451The prison was open for 33 years and housed 3,069 prisoners, including 29 women.  It was truly a hell hole, especially in the summer months with unbearable heat.  It was surrounded on 3 sides by water and the other side by desert and quicksand.  As mentioned earlier, today there is no longer water there, just dry desert. 09-IMG_20140101_200035
There were few escapes.   14-IMG_20131229_004419One area, called The Dark Cell, was a dark cave-like area where prisoners who didn’t follow the rules were placed for

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different lengths of time, depending on the severity of the misbehavior.  It was such an unpleasant place that few prisoners were repeat

13-IMG_20131228_15171012-IMG_20131229_004327offenders and some were model prisoners after the Dark Cell experience.

11-IMG_20131228_151135 Next door to the museum is a visitors center and museum. Nearby on the grounds was a small cemetery where they buried those who died there. 16-IMG_20131229_004640 Bill and I found visiting the prison a sad and somewhat discomforting experience.  The Yuma Territorial Prison was home to the Yuma High School from 1910 to 1912 after a fire burned down their school.  During a football which Yuma won in the final moments of the game, one of the announcers said it was criminal the way the team stole the game.  At first the townspeople were insulted, but then decided to go with area history and they became known as the Yuma Criminals.  08-IMG_20140101_195702

Close to the Yuma Territorial Prison Historical Park was the Ocean to Ocean Bridge.  This bridge opened in 1915 and was the first and only vehicular traffic bridge over the lower Colorado River for 1,200 miles.  Until then, people had to wait for a ferry to cross the river and it was the final link from the Atlantic to the Pacific.  Later a railroad bridge was added.06-IMG_20140101_195046

We had heard so much about Quartzsite, so we drove the 75 miles to check it out.  It normally has a population of 3,700. but during the months of January to March, the population swells to over one million as the area is inundated with RVers who mostly boondock in the desert on Bureau of Land Management property for no or little cost.  Many vendors come to the area for those months and set up huge tents where you can buy jewelry and gems, antiques, arts and crafts, and anything and everything an RV owner could possibly need or wish for.  We drove around and looked at some of the potential camping areas and checked out some of the vendors.  Since it was late December, the area was still relatively quiet with few RVs and vendors.  Calm before the storm for sure.  We still can’t decide whether the experience in January would be for us.  Before leaving Quartzsite we did stumble upon a historic part of the area while geocaching.  Once again, finding a geocache caused us to find an area we not normally have found.  The Hi Jolly Memorial is a memorial to Ali Hadji.  In 1856 thirty-three camel were brought from Syria with Ali Hadji as their caretaker.  They were brought to the U.S. aboard a federal supply ship as an experiment to be used for transportation in the desert.  The idea was originally that of Jefferson Davis, but he was soon preoccupied by the Civil War and lost interest in the project.  Later an additional 41 camels were brought over with the idea of using them to build a wagon road from Arizona to California.  The camels were found to be difficult to manage and it is said that the sight of them caused horses and cattle to stampede.  Some were sold to circuses and some were left in the desert to fend for themselves.  Because of a communication problem, Ali Hadji became known as Hi Jolly.  He remained in the area near his camels and worked as an army scout and miner.  After 30 years of service to the U.S. government, he died at the age of 64 in Quartzsite.  The Arizona Highway Department constructed the pyramid like  memorial from chucks of ore minerals in the area, with a metal silhouette of a camel on top in his memory.  It is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  17-IMG_20140101_200841

We also heard a lot from fellow RVers about the small Mexican town of Los Algodones.  We first started hearing about it when we were in Casa Grande and people continued to talk about it in Yuma.  The town is very dependent on snowbirds and is therefore seen as a safe and friendly place to visit.  We decided to give it a try.  Los Algodones is 7 miles west of Yuma.  It is known for having more doctors, dentists, opticians and pharmacies within a 4 block area than any other similar 4 block area in the world.  It is very common for Americans to go across the border for dental work, to get eyeglasses, 8-IMG_20140101_194532 and their supply of pharmacy drugs at a fourth to a third of the prices they would pay in the U.S. 7-IMG_20140101_194250 Many of the doctors and dentists are trained in the U.S. and give similar care to what you would receive in the U.S.  Next to the border entry is a large casino on an Indian reservation where you can safely park your car for the day for $6.00.  We parked and walked across the border.  We were a little surprised that no one in Mexico was at the border to check us.  It was amazing to see all the stores advertising dental and optical care.  There were many vendors offering you just about anything you could want to buy. 6-IMG_20131230_135527 We had been warned to haggle and never pay full price, and we bought each of us a jacket and Bill a hat and belt for great prices.  Bill wanted some prescription reading glasses so we went to an optical business recommended to us by fellow RVers.  For $29 he received an eye exam and prescription glasses which were ready in 2 hours.  They have single vision, bifocals and progressive lenses available for low prices.  Bill likes his new glasses and sees fine with them.  We had a nice Mexican lunch where a margarita is included in the price of the entree, 1-20131230_131013~2 and the entree price is cheaper than you would pay in the U.S.  later in the day before heading back across the border we decided to have another margarita and relax and enjoy the sights and sounds of the town. 4-IMG_20131230_135754 5-IMG_20131230_211616 3-IMG_20131230_134148 2-IMG_20131230_134134 The two margaritas were the price of what you would pay for one here, and we found margaritas there much stronger than those made in the U.S.  We struck up a conversation with two couples sitting near us.  They were snowbirds here for the winter from Canada.  After great margaritas and conversation, we got in line to re-enter the U.S.  We were told this could take minutes or hours depending on the day and time of day.  We only had about a 15 minute wait and then showed our passports to the custom agent.  She did ask us what was in our packages and why we had visited Mexico, but that was it.

Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope; Star Wars Episode VI Return of the Jedi; Flight to Phoenix, and Space Balls were all filmed in and around Yuma.

As I mentioned earlier, we have loved our time in Arizona.  It can be a bit dusty from all the tilling and plowing of fields and lack of rain.  It has seemed strange to see dirt, sand and cacti instead of grass and trees.  But we agreed it is someplace we definitely want to come back to again and probably stay longer.

Campground:  Araby Acres RV Resort

December 13, 2013 Casa Grande, Arizona

We reluctantly left our desert campground in Tucson Mountain Park and headed west.  We saw more farmland, mainly corn and cotton as we traveled toward Casa Grande.  We arrived at our new home, an RV resort, far different from our previous desert home.  This resort is now filled with snowbirds, many from Canada who have come down for 6 months.  There are many activities to chose from to keep everyone busy, and we have enjoyed getting to know some of them by attending a church service and playing Mexican Train dominoes two evenings.  We realized that if we ever decide to winter in one place for several months, these kinds of resorts can keep us very busy and active.  Sunday night they had a Christmas parade with a float 1-P1030540 3-P1030547 2-P1030541and

many people 

4-IMG_20131217_173917decorated their golf carts and had them in the parade.  The Christmas spirit was contagious and we decorated our rig too!  

Monday we drove to Casa Grande Ruins, from which the city got its name.  The Casa Grande Ruins National Monument 01-20131216_135535 02-20131216_140131has the remains of a prehistoric Hohokam farming village where the Hohokam people lived from 1300-1400 AD.  The main building called Casa Grande, was four stories high, 60 feet long, contains nearly 3,000 tons of caliche mud, and is the largest known structure of the Ancestral People of the Sonoran Desert.  06-IMG_20131216_145937 05-IMG_20131217_203551 04-20131216_142703 03-20131216_142037 08-IMG_20131217_203823 07-IMG_20131217_203451 09-20131216_143046

 

model of the Casa Grande

model of the Casa Grande

The Hohokam people are referred to as the “First Masters of the American Desert”.  Shortly after the time of Christ, these people became the first farmers of the American Southwest.  They were influenced by the great Mexican civilizations to the south and using stone age tools and the strength of their backs, they dug hundreds of miles of canals across the desert.  One interesting thing was that the holes in the upper walls aligns with the sun and moon, indicating that the people would study the positions of celestial objects and use that for planting, harvesting and celebrations.   At one time the village was surrounded by a 7 foot wall.  13-IMG_20131216_143025 12-IMG_20131216_142341 11-IMG_20131216_142136Time, weather, and vandalism has harmed the structure and the park service put a roof over the big structure to try to prevent the destruction from weather.  No one knows what happened to the Hohokam people, but among various theories are that floods destroyed the canals they built for water and then a drought forced them to move.

A Jesuit missionary discovered the ruins in 1694 and between then and 1889, visitors vandalized the area. In 1889 Congress took action to protect the ruins and wooden beams and steel rods were put in to reinforce the walls.  In 1892 it was designated as a natural preserve and in 1932 the roof was added to protect the structure from weather.

On one of our days in Casa Grande we drove thirty minutes to Chandler, Arizona to ride on the Paseo bike trail, a wonderful paved trail that runs along a golf course and through neighborhoods.  It was a great day for biking! 1-P1030554 2-P10305563-P1030553

We enjoyed our time in Casa Grande, and like Tucson, think it would be a nice place to return to someday.

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December 10, 2013 Tucson Mountain Park

We arrived at Gilbert Ray Campground in Tucson Mountain Park and immediately fell in love with this campground. 3-P1030373 14-P10304112-P1030371 The campground was not as deserted as we expected, but we still had our pick of campsites.  After choosing one with a beautiful view of the mountains and saguaros, we quickly set up and headed to the nearby Saguaro National Park Visitors Center.  We watched a movie there on the plants and animals of the desert.  We have watched movies at many visitors centers in the past, but this one had an amazing ending.  After enthralling us with the sights and sounds of the 1-P1030364desert, they ended the movie by having the screen raise and the huge drapes open to show a breathtaking view of the desert outside.  it was a very dramatic way to end of movie.  I wish I had the words to express the affect it left on us.  Above all else, it left us with an appreciation for how we as visitors to to the desert, need to respect and care for such an amazing resource entrusted to us.  After the movie and touring the rest of the visitors center we attended a talk on desert life given by one of the park volunteers.  We ended the day by taking the scenic Bajada Loop Drive.  That evening the Space Station was visible overhead and we heard coyotes howling.

Our second day in the desert park we wanted to do some hiking and additional scenic driving.  We hiked the Desert Discovery Trail where we learned more about desert plant and animal life.  We then hiked to the top of Signal Hill to see some petroglyphs which were created by the prehistoric Hohokam people more than a thousand years ago.  I kept telling myself the rattlesnakes had hibernated for the winter!  02-P1030386 04-P1030398
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After lunch at a picnic table made by the Civilian Corps men many years ago, we went back to the Visitors Center for a talk about the history and life of the Hohokam people.

We spent the rest of the afternoon grabbing a geocache in the desert and then rode along Picture Rocks Road which included narrow Gates Pass and some amazing scenery. 15-P1030419 3-P1030373 4-P1030376 5-P1030377 6-P1030378 When we arrived home we enjoyed sitting outside watching the sunset and listening to the coyotes.  They were especially vocal tonight!  16-P1030444 17-P1030445

December 2, 2013 Deming, New Mexico

We crossed the border of Texas into New Mexico and stopped at the welcome center to pick up some tourist information and grab a quick geocache….our first in the desert!  1-P1030231 Not long after crossing the state line into New Mexico we had our first border patrol stop on Interstate 10 which was quick since they just waved us through. We stayed at an Escapees park called Dream Catcher RV Park.  One thing we noticed so far about RV parks in west Texas and New Mexico is it is very much like camping in a parking lot…wide open spaces with no trees or grass, just hookups for your RV.  This is something that has taken some getting used to! The next day we decided to drive the two and a half hour drive to see the Gila Cliff Dwellings in Gila National Forest.  06-P1030265The signs promised us a scenic byway, and we were not disappointed! 02-P1030248  Not long after leaving the Deming city limits we encountered another border patrol stop.  This time they made us stop, and they looked through the window of our car, asked if we were both US citizens, and then wished us a nice day and we proceeded on our way.    We loved seeing windmills against the mountains.  01-P1030245The views were amazing as we climbed over 8,200 feet along narrow roads with sharp curves and hairpin turns.  03-P1030246 05-P1030263    10-P1030275 08-P1030271 09-P1030272 10-P1030275       We were more than a little surprised to see snow on the mountaintops and along the side of the road!   We arrived at the trailhead to the cliff dwellings.  The ranger told us they had recently had 4 inches of snow, and while the trail was clear, there were some icy patches along the trail, so we decided to use our trekking poles.  We purchased the trekking poles last fall to help with steep and uneven terrain, and we have certainly enjoyed using them and have found them to be very helpful.  We really recommend them to anyone who does much walking or hiking.  We did not find the trail particularly difficult going up, but coming down was another story since that side of the trail does not get much sun and the trail was very icy in some places. 25-P1030303 Certainly not what we expected to encounter when we left home that morning, but the snow and ice all added to the excitement of the day.  It had been some time since we had last seen snow! The cliff dwellings were amazing and definitely worth the drive over and back.  We were told by one of the park rangers that this is the only cliff dwellings in the country that actually allow you to go inside the dwellings and not just view them from a distance.  Archeologists believe the Mogollon people lived in the dwellings from the late 1270’s to 1300 AD. 13-P1030282 They think they lived here for such a short time because a severe drought affected their ability to farm and they moved on.  The cliff dwellings have approximately 40 rooms built inside several natural caves in the canyon.  We did see some pictographs but many have faded over time. 11-P1030279 12-P1030280 14-P1030284 After the Mogollon left, it appears no one lived in the region for over 100 years until the Apaches migrated there around 1500 AD.  Geronimo was born near the Gila River in the early 1820’s.  26-P1030306  In 1878 a prospector and miner H. B. Ailman discovered the cliff dwellings.  By 1884 when archeologist Adolph Bandelier arrived, looters had stolen many of the artifacts and burned the roofs of some of the cave dwellings.  In 1907 President Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed the area a national monument in an effort to prevent further destruction.         16-P1030286 17-P1030289 18-P1030290 19-P1030291 20-P1030292 22-P1030293 23-P1030294 21-P1030296 24-P1030298 15-P1030300                                                                                         We had planned on leaving Deming the next day, but Tuesday night we received a high wind advisory on our phones for difficult driving conditions along Interstate 10 for high profile vehicles like RVs.  Since we had seen many signs throughout west Texas and New Mexico along the interstate warning of cross winds and low to zero visibility due to blowing sand, we decided to heed the warning and stay in Deming another day.

December 1, 2013 El Paso, Texas

We had heard that Interstate 10 through west Texas could be boring and tedious so we were prepared to be bored as we drove from San Antonio to El Paso. 4-IMG_20131204_205559 I never knew Texas was so huge!  We found the drive anything but boring.  Once we were outside of the San Antonio city limits the traffic thinned out and we had little traffic to contend with the rest of the way, which is always nice.  Perhaps it is because the terrain is so new and different, but we were fascinated with the changing terrain and the time passed quickly.  So much open land and we were entertained with the 80 mph speed limit signs, 1-IMG_20131130_125631the windmills in the middle of oil fields, the oil derricks, and the breathtaking mesas and scenery around us. 5-IMG_20131201_173313 03-P1030246 At points along Interstate 10 the road had been but through towering cliffs of limestone.

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Mexico as it appears from the U.S. side

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Mexico

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Mexico

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a dried up Rio Grande River

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After a one night stopover in Fort Stockton, we arrived in El Paso for a one night stay.  We had originally planned to stay several nights, but the cold weather changed our plans.  We arrived early enough to get in some quick sightseeing before dark.  Since our campground was a quick 5 minute drive from the Mexican border, we decided to drive down to the border.  We drove along the tall fence and river separating the two countries and noticed the border patrol vehicles.  We could see through the fence into Mexico with many many small houses crammed very close together dotting the hillsides.   We rode along a dried up Rio Grande River.  There was a very long line of cars on both sides of the border waiting to get into or out of the United States.  It wasn’t a surprise since it was the end of a holiday weekend.  We grabbed a quick geocache near the El Paso airport before heading home.

November 8, 2013 Houston, Texas

On the way to Houston we stayed one night in the Sam Houston National Forest at Cagle Campground.  What a nice campground!  We had a large site with a concrete pad and full hookup.  This is not what is usually available in a national forest campground!

We arrived in Houston 01-IMG_20131108_195417for a 5 night stay at a private campground about 13 miles outside of the city of Houston.  It was a nice site with a concrete pad and full hookup, but without the space, trees and privacy we found at the national forest campground.  It also had some traffic noise from the interstate close by.  It seemed more like a concrete jungle after the state parks we have grown accustomed to camping in.  After dealing with the mud and dirt from all the rain in Dallas earlier in the week, the concrete pad was nice, but we would have really liked some trees and grass!

On Sunday we drove into Houston to visit our friend Priscilla and her husband Roy.  We met Priscilla when we lived in Northern Virginia and she is now living in Houston.  It was SO good to spend time with them!  We had a great meal at a barbecue restaurant and after eating they gave us a nice tour of Houston and Rice University campus.  1-P1030167

 

 

 

 

 

 

02-P1030171Monday we drove 45 minutes to Brazos Bend State Park to do some geocaching and orienteering.  It is hard to find permanent orienteering courses and we were pleasantly surprised to see they had one in this park.  While driving in we noticed signs saying the area had alligators and venomous snakes.  We drove to one lake in the park and walked around and to our disappointment we didn’t see any alligators.  We pretty much decided we wouldn’t see any that day because the lakes were way down from the ongoing drought in Texas.  We decided to find two geocaches near an observatory in the park.  As we parked our car we encountered two elderly ladies who calmly and nonchalantly told us they had seen an alligator on the trail near a small bridge over the water.  We thanked them for telling us and thought they surely had seen an alligator in the distance sunning on a far bank.  To our astonishment as we walked down the path we came upon a huge alligator estimated to be 7 or 8 feet long five feet away from us.   04-P1030175We figured if those two ladies could get by him alive, so could we, so Bill told me to give him the camera in case we had to start running.  He took my hand and led the way as we slowly and carefully walked past the alligator.  If truth be told, he had to slightly pull me past the alligator because my feet were not so eager to walk past the creature.  We found our geocaches and then headed back down the trail thinking we would once again inch our way past Ally Alligator.  To our amazement, in the short time we were gone, the alligator stretched his body across the trail, blocking our way.  06-P1030182Since it didn’t look like he was in any hurry to get on his way, we had to find another trail back to the car.  Bill and I both agreed this was the closest we had ever been to an alligator of that size….a once in a lifetime experience when you least expect it!  Never thought we would leave Florida to have a close and personal encounter with an alligator in Texas!  On the way to the car we saw another huge alligator on a small island in the water and a little baby alligator sunning on a rock in the water.  We also saw many turtles, a bunny, and a lot of birds.  05-P1030179 09-P1030185 07-P1030183 10-P1030186 08-P1030184

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

While orienteering later in the day we saw another 7 foot alligator on a bank across the lake, but he dove into the water before we could get a picture so we had to be satisfied with one of him in the water as he swam away.  11-P1030188We came home tired and happy from our fun and exciting day in the park!

October 30, 2013 Dallas, Texas Part 2

Heavy rains and some wind hit on Wednesday so we spent the day inside watching tv and listening to the weather forecasts of flooding.  Luckily the storms that passed through were not that bad even though Bill had to venture outside at one point to raise our surge protector higher off the ground because of rising water.  As Bill stepped off the RV steps onto the ground he was up to his ankles in standing water.  Once the rain stopped the water quickly drained away and the next morning we saw some minor flooding in the campground, but thankfully not as bad as it could have been!

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Thursday evening we drove into Royse City to have dinner with Cody and his wife Jeannette at a Mexican restaurant.  Cody and Bill are Boy Scout friends who met at the 2010 Jamboree.  It was great seeing them!  1-P1030122

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday we drove once again into Dallas 01-IMG_20131101_142151where we visited the Boy Scouts of America National Scouting Museum  02-P1030126

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

where they had one of the world’s largest collections of original Norman Rockwell art.  The exhibits included the founders of scouting, uniforms past and present, the Jamboree, personal journals of past Scouts, information on the Order of the Arrow, and various Boy Scout awards including Eagle Scout.

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This is the front of the Boy Scouts of America headquarters, across the street from the museum.  We found a geocache here!

This is the front of the Boy Scouts of America headquarters, across the street from the museum. We found a geocache here!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Next we drove over to Arlington to see the Texas Rangers Ballpark and right next door was Cowboy Stadium.

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That evening we had a wonderful dinner with Raul and his wife Adela in their lovely home in nearby Grand Prairie.  Bill and Raul worked today in Boca Raton, Florida in 1998.  16-IMG_20131101_213921

October 24, 2013 Dallas, Texas

Up a big hill and down a big hill all the way from Oklahoma into Texas.  We passed through miles and miles of open land, with a few cattle now and then grazing in the rocky fields.  We traveled down the Indian Nation Turnpike through various tribal areas, often driving for miles without seeing another vehicle in either direction.

We arrived at Lake Tawakoni, a Thousand Trails campground near Point, Texas.  The campground was basically deserted so we had our pick of campsites.

On Monday we drove into Dallas

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and our first stop was the Frontiers of Flight Museum,  03-P1030089an aerospace museum affiliated with the Smithsonian Institution and located at Love Field.  It has a large collection of artifacts, information and vehicles related to the history of aviation and space exploration.  Among many exhibits it has the Apollo 7 command module, a World War 1 biplane, artifacts from the Hindenburg, and over 200 World War II aircraft models.

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They had a special exhibit for the 50th anniversary of the Kennedy assassination.  An Air Force One plane like the one that brought President Kennedy to Dallas on that fateful day and then took his body back to Washington.  It was also the only plane in which a president was given the oath of office, the only time the oath was administered by a woman, and the only time the oath was administered in Texas.  While not the actual plane, it was reconstructed inside to show what the plane looked like that day.  It is interesting to note that Air Force One used today is about twice the size of the one used in 1963.

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Next we went to Dealey Plaza and the 6th Floor Museum (JFK.org) at the former Texas Schoolbook Depository where Oswald shot from during the Kennedy assassination.  The museum was well done with an audio tour that took you throughout the sixth floor and explained in detail the events leading up to that day, beginning with the start of Kennedy’s political career and ending with the aftermath of the assassination which included the shooting of Oswald by Jack Ruby and the Kennedy funeral.  My only complaint is they did not allow ANY photography.  I would really have liked to take a picture of the area, enclosed in glass, where Oswald was sitting during the assassination.  They found Oswald’s fingerprints here on some boxes and everything is arranged the way it was found that day.  The area has been preserved so the floors and walls, etc are the way they were November 22, 1963, which was also Bill’s 10th birthday.  The building is now owned by the Dallas County Administration Building.  One exhibit they had that was especially interesting were 9 possible conspiracy theories about what really happened that day.   The bottom line…we will never know for sure.  When we finished at the museum we went outside to the Grassy Knoll area where Bill took some pictures, including the two X’s marked on the street to show where the Kennedy limousine was located during the shooting.

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Bill added arrows to the picture to show where Oswald was located and the two X’s in the street marking the location of the limousine

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This is where Zapruder was standing on the grassy knoll when he filmed the assassination

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Building ahead and grassy knoll on the left

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jfk motorcade 1963