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Misgivings in Mesa

3/15/2017

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To backtrack a couple of days, on Sunday I went back to the book festival and heard an excellent session with Dan White, author of Under the Stars, a history of camping in the United States. Mr. White is very humorous and shared several funny selections, illustrating his point that it is the occasional miseries in camping that make the great stories. Meanwhile, Butch caught up the laundry, and we spent a quiet evening. Three nights of socializing in a row is almost too much for us oldies.

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Monday morning, we took a drive out to Saguaro National Park, a short distance from our campground. The drive through Gates Pass is impressive--and a little scary for those of us with a fear of heights. The desert landscape is spectacular and we enjoyed the visitor's center.

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Our next stop was only about an hour away to visit with one of my classmates and long-time friends. Betty and her husband have a motorhome, so generously shared their parking pad and hookup for the night. The different configuration of our slide setup made parking a bit of a challenge, but between Butch and Ken, was accomplished expertly. Betty has spent most of her adult life in Brazil, Germany, Alaska, and Arizona, so our paths have not often crossed and it was great to catch up.

It was only about an hour yesterday morning to Mesa where we will spend almost a week sightseeing and visiting friends and relatives. It's always a risk choosing campgrounds on line, and we drove through Mesa to the address with trepidation as the city appeared rougher and rougher. This campground--as most city ones are--is pretty close quarters, and most of the park is permanent mobile homes and long term campers. But one section is for transients like us, and Ivan, the young man who does maintenance, couldn't have been more helpful in getting us parked, leveled, hooked up and set up. And we had a nice visit with him afterwards. Later we met a neighbor, a woman from Omaha fulltiming it on her own with a delightful chocolate Lab/Doberman mix named Snickers, and enjoyed a chat with her. There's even a tangelo tree back of our site. So all is well and one should not be too quick to make judgements.

I would appreciate it if Mother Nature would back off a bit. As I have said before, I am not a hot weather person, and the forecasted 90s for the next week when the average is supposed to be 76 is a bit over the top.


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Words, Words, Words...

3/12/2017

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...abound at the Tucson Book Festival. We took in several hours yesterday at the huge event staged on the University of Arizona campus. A long wait in line snagged us a couple of seats for a panel called "Masters of Mystery" featuring one of my favorites, John Sanford, plus J.A. Jance and T. Jefferson Parker. We also took in a couple of workshops and walked about four miles. I will go back today for more workshops.

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Our camping spot is quite different from the wilderness of the last one in New Mexico. It's a commercial place on the edge of Tucson--a nice spot with plenty of amenities but close neighbors and less scenery--although the sunrises are nice.

Friday we celebrated Butch's birthday. He got in a round of golf and we had friends over for pizza and cake. The early mornings and evenings are very pleasant but 90 degrees at midday are not my cup of tea!


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History v. Fantasy

3/9/2017

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On a recommendation, we made a reservation for two nights at Leasburg Dam State Park in New Mexico just north of Las Cruces. It is a beautiful spot with mountain views on both sides and great picnic shelters by each site. The showers have five hooks, but are lacking benches so I'll have to give them an A-. The weather has been perfect and we have been able to have our first (and possibly last) campfires of the trip. We are expecting burn bans in much of Arizona, Texas and Oklahoma, considering the devastating wildfires going on there.

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Yesterday, we headed to Las Cruces first to get propane and a few groceries. Like Coronado searching for the Seven Cities of Gold, we ended up frustrated in the propane search. We had looked on line for the nearest source, but neither the online address or the different one in the yellow pages yielded any results. When I called the phone number, a voice said "What city are you in anyway?" and informed me that their company no longer had an outlet in Las Cruces. So it goes to show that even if Coronado had had the Internet, he wouldn't have been any more successful. Anyway, we did find groceries. After we returned to the campground, we visited the nearby Fort Selden, built after the Civil War to protect commerce and settlers from attacks by Native Americans and bandits. Interestingly, the displays said that more soldiers were killed by their fellow soldiers than the Indians.

The one thing the visit brought home again is how much we've romanticized our history to make soldiering on the frontier or being a cowboy an exciting life when actually it was extremely boring. Douglas MacArthur's father was the commandant here when Douglas was a small child. When the fort was abandoned in the 1890s, the roofs, windows, and doors were all removed from the adobe buildings, leaving the walls to gradually weather away.

We will be moving on today to Tucson. Butch has a birthday golf game lined up for tomorrow and I am extremely excited to attend the Tucson Book Festival on Saturday. Woohoo!


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We Aren't in Iowa Anymore, Toto

3/7/2017

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Monahan Sandhills is a Texas State Park just past Midland and Odessa on I-20. We had a very long day on the road and Midland must be one of the most depressing cities in the country to drive through. A desolate landscape stretches for miles, of rusted oil machinery, peppered with more plastic shopping bags than probably contained in all of the Wal-Marts in the country. Some of the machinery gives the appearance of an aviary of robotic birds: oil pumps dipping their heads like pecking chickens and flocks of cherry pickers looking like a group of long-necked cranes trying to get organized for a family photo. There are many, many RV parks--using the term parks loosely--which obviously serve more as living spaces for seasonal workers than vacation spots and as many used camper lots--it must be where old campers come to die.

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So we were ready for some scenery less brutalized by man and arrived at the park just after 5:00. We didn't carefully check out the message board at the entrance--where our reservation was listed-- and followed the road in guided by the campground signs. The road twists through sand dunes where you can't see more than one turn ahead or to either side, so it's an adventure. But after another loop back to the entrance, we found our site and managed to get planted. The sand drifts over the roads and the sites constantly so it's somewhat of a challenge to find the hard surface.

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It's a beautiful place. Once again I'm sorry that we will only be here one night. The sunset was beautiful--a pleasant reprieve from the clouds of the day. Kids from one group of campers used the windy spots at the tops of the dunes to fly kites. One to put on our list of places to come back to.

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Oh Me, Oh My

3/6/2017

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At some point over the weekend I contracted a head cold and now I am joined at the hip with a Kleenex box. And I've always felt that if you're going to be miserable with a cold, everyone around you might as well be miserable too. Poor Butch. Anyway, that aside, it was a good weekend. Saturday afternoon we went to the Lego Americana Roadshow at the Stonebriar Centre in Frisco. Perhaps Lego structures are the modern day 'ship-in-a-bottle;' the workmanship and patience required is amazing. The star of the show was the US capitol and  included in the display were nine other famous American buildings. That evening, Pat, Jill, and Jack came to the campground for supper. Blustery weather precluded a campfire, but we had a rousing round of The Oregon Trail card game--a gift from granddaughter Brooke, who had played the computer version at our house back in the Nineties.

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Sunday morning, we met them for breakfast at the Country Club Cafe, a small diner between the campground and their house with excellent food.  We returned to the campground to pack up, hook up and get on the road. We had decided that it was enough for one day to simply get on the other side of the DFW metroplex, so had made a one night reservation at Holiday Park on Benbrook Lake, just southwest of Fort Worth. It was a good decision; the route through Dallas and its environs was a brain-battering one.

We also seem to have a knack for picking the best campgrounds for our one-night stays. Our site is huge, again with the permanent shelter over the picnic table. I threw some soup ingredients in the crockpot and we settled in for a pleasant night with "Madame Secretary" and "Elementary"--two of my favorites. Today we will continue southwest to Monahan Sandhills State park.
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Hope Springs Eternal

3/4/2017

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We love Corps of Engineers campgrounds. They are not only reasonably priced--especially if you have a senior pass--but are usually well-maintained. We have enjoyed beautiful spots in Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, South Dakota, Georgia, Alabama, and on and on. The one exception in our experience is East Fork on Lake Lavon in Texas. We have stayed here several times because it is the closest campground to our son Pat and family. Last year, we complained about the potholes almost big enough to hide our truck and a shower house desperately in need of maintenance. The same toilet stalls and showers that were out of order the year before were still not working and the sink faucets sprayed sideways. Besides which it desperately needed a good cleaning.

So when we arrived on Thursday and encountered the same potholes, we were not optimistic. But, when we passed the shower house, we could see that it had either been renovated or was new. It is not fancy, but functioning. And get this, folks--two hooks in each one. On closer examination, we noticed spray paint markings on the worst of the potholes so maybe something is going to happen there, too. (Although why they think the workers couldn't find these chasms without the markings is beyond me.) Anyway, otherwise the sites are spacious with little shelters over the picnic tables so things have improved.


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Yesterday, Butch and Pat played golf and I spent a pleasant day at the campground, enjoying the weather and getting some writing done. Later we went to one of grandson Jack's soccer games which came with a lovely sunset. Then Pat and Jill fed us grilled chicken and broccoli for a great end to the day. Today, we will Take advantage of their laundry facilities and also check out a special Lego display nearby. Weather permitting, we will grill out tonight and have our first campfire of the trip. There is a slight chance of rain, but if they can fix the shower house, maybe the rain will pass by too!

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Alligator Purse, Anyone?

3/2/2017

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Our two days in Bella Vista, Arkansas were very pleasant not counting the severe storm warnings and a couple of campground glitches. We were there to visit two of Butch's classmates, and the first night managed to locate their lovely home in the woods for an excellent suppers. On Tuesday, Butch and Jim played golf while I got a haircut and Pat and I did a little shopping. We all went for an early supper at a great hamburger joint and returned to the campground to see what the weather was going to do. We didn't have any TV channels again so relied on the internet radar to keep us informed. The storm finally hit about 2:00 a.m., but did not include the hail and tornadoes that had been mentioned as possibilities. We were lucky to avoid it--Missouri and Illinois not so much.

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Yesterday morning, we left to follow Highway 71 down the west side of Arkansas. Much of the highway is designed to separate your head from your spinal cord but the scenery is beautiful. I read that they are building a roller coaster through the woods at the Lake of the Ozarks, but really it isn't necessary--the roads do the same trick. I always imagine in wooded mountains like that that there has to be spots where no human has ever walked. Spots of misty green indicate new buds trying to pop, and redbuds and wild plums peek out from the woods. We stopped for lunch at a local comfort food place and chuckled (with reservations) over the sign above the kitchen door that read Many have dined here...few have died. We made another stop for gas at a station that was not old enough to be vintage but not new enough to take credit cards at the rusty pumps.

Beard's Bluff Campground on Millwood Lake near Texarkana is a very nice Corps of Engineers facility. We had a great pull-through site that was so level, we didn't even unhook the truck. A level gravel area held a picnic table and fire ring overlooking the lake. Unfortunately, a stiff wind literally drove us inside. So we settled for supper, and, since it was our fifth night with no TV reception, rewatching the second season of Downton Abbey.

It's probably just as well that the weather wasn't conducive to long hikes or wading in the lake. A friend sent me a link about the alligators at this lake. Check this out. Millwood State Park. So on today to Texas.


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