We arrived at Buckhorn Lake Resort outside of Kerrville, TX, located in the Hill Country, early afternoon. We had heard about how nice it was and wanted to see for ourselves. We don't usually feature where we are staying, but this place is unusual. This is the office.
Here is the view as you enter the resort. The windmill is only decoration.
This is the social hall and is used for serving breakfasts and dinners.
These are private homes with RV parking.
Here is another private residence under construction. There appear to be several others also being built. The resort has a pretty creek for fishing, very roomy RV sites, pool, tennis court, buddy sites, and just about every amenity you can think of, including massages and facials and an RV weighing service. There are two park TV stations that provide current information. Our pull-through cost $37.00. It can be seen from I-10 at Exit 510.
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Friday, January 9, 2009
Las Cruces, NM
The Visitor Center of White Sands National Monument is architecture worth seeing. It was built by the WPA between 1936-1938. The short video about the monument was well worth watching. The monument is about 44 miles Northeast of Las Cruces on I-70.
This charming gate leads to a picnic area near the Visitor Center.
The "combed glass" in this lamp was made by drawing a common hair comb over the painted surface of the glass.
The ceiling in the Visitor Center is made using vigas (large logs), savinas (poles at right angles to the vigas, and cobels (decorative carved scrolls on which the vigas rest). The tin lighting fixtures can be found even in the restrooms.
The white sand is gypsum that has been eroded from the near-by mountains. It is not abrasive to touch. It feels liked powdered wall board which it almost is.
This was a photographer's paradise. Ted got a new camera and lots of "toys" for it at Christmas. We are both experimenting and learning.
Vegetation has adapted by sending down roots to the soil many feet below. This may be only to tops of very tall Yucca plants.When the dunes move on some plants are so estabished that they hang on to the sand around their root system.It takes 17 mph winds to get the sand moving. This is not rock. It is soft sand.
Plants provide cover for the many nocturnal animals that inhabit this environment.
The only evidence of their existence during the day is their tracks.
Another photo opt that I am sure a better photographer could improve upon.
This is the top of a cottonwood tree that survives buried in the gypsum sand. Amazing. You can imagine the size of this thing.
The interdune area provides vegetation for many animals. There is no water here. All animals must get all their water from their food.
The stark whiteness of the sand emphasizes shadows and textures.
Not Malibu. This is the top of a 60 foot dune. Near-by we saw kids using a saucer sled to enjoy the snow-like hills.
On our way back to Las Cruces we stopped at the White Sands Missile Range to see the museum. Ted trained in missiles during his army enlistment. As a measure of readiness, one of the exercises he participated in was shooting down a drone on this range. This is a V-2 that was captured from the Germans after WWII. It was the beginning of the space age in the United States.
The missile in the center of this photo was the one that Ted worked on when he was in the army.
What a beautiful end to a fun day.
Basilica San Albino Church in on the Mesilla Historic Plaza in Las Cruces. The old statehouse sits on a corner of this plaza. It was where Billy the Kid was tried and sentenced to hang. He would have seen the original adobe version of this church.
This charming gate leads to a picnic area near the Visitor Center.
The "combed glass" in this lamp was made by drawing a common hair comb over the painted surface of the glass.
The ceiling in the Visitor Center is made using vigas (large logs), savinas (poles at right angles to the vigas, and cobels (decorative carved scrolls on which the vigas rest). The tin lighting fixtures can be found even in the restrooms.
The white sand is gypsum that has been eroded from the near-by mountains. It is not abrasive to touch. It feels liked powdered wall board which it almost is.
This was a photographer's paradise. Ted got a new camera and lots of "toys" for it at Christmas. We are both experimenting and learning.
Vegetation has adapted by sending down roots to the soil many feet below. This may be only to tops of very tall Yucca plants.When the dunes move on some plants are so estabished that they hang on to the sand around their root system.It takes 17 mph winds to get the sand moving. This is not rock. It is soft sand.
Plants provide cover for the many nocturnal animals that inhabit this environment.
The only evidence of their existence during the day is their tracks.
Another photo opt that I am sure a better photographer could improve upon.
This is the top of a cottonwood tree that survives buried in the gypsum sand. Amazing. You can imagine the size of this thing.
The interdune area provides vegetation for many animals. There is no water here. All animals must get all their water from their food.
The stark whiteness of the sand emphasizes shadows and textures.
Not Malibu. This is the top of a 60 foot dune. Near-by we saw kids using a saucer sled to enjoy the snow-like hills.
On our way back to Las Cruces we stopped at the White Sands Missile Range to see the museum. Ted trained in missiles during his army enlistment. As a measure of readiness, one of the exercises he participated in was shooting down a drone on this range. This is a V-2 that was captured from the Germans after WWII. It was the beginning of the space age in the United States.
The missile in the center of this photo was the one that Ted worked on when he was in the army.
What a beautiful end to a fun day.
Basilica San Albino Church in on the Mesilla Historic Plaza in Las Cruces. The old statehouse sits on a corner of this plaza. It was where Billy the Kid was tried and sentenced to hang. He would have seen the original adobe version of this church.
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Palm Desert, CA to Las Cruces, NM 1-6 through 1-7-2009
Our week in Palm Desert with my cousin Beth and her husband, Bud Youle was as much fun as last year. It is terrific to have our own personal tour guides who know the local places to eat. We left this view from our coach on January 6th for Gila Bend, AZ.
Since I have been across I-40 and I-10, I wanted to see I-8. We took a two lane road into El Centro where we caught I-8. We saw lots of date palms, the Salton Sea, and the Blue Angels practicing over the Imperial Valley. I missed a picture of a very tall oil tank with "Sea Level" marked about half way up the side at El Centro. This photo is the Imperial Sand Dunes Recreation Area.
Having heard so many people say they spend the winter in Yuma, I wanted to see it. Ted says that it looks a lot bigger and more appealing than when he saw it about 20 years ago. You must have to stay and get to know the place to understand the appeal.
Can't you visualize Randolph Scott, if you are our age or older or a movie buff, riding toward these peaks in Arizona? We saw a huge military transport flying low and very close to another mountain range. It went through a pass that looked way too narrow. This was on the Barry Goldwater Air Force Range.
I never tire of the misty look that mountains can have. Many of you already do this, but today I finally connected my computer to the Internet while we traveled. It was wonderful to answer emails and to look up places that we passed and learn about what we missed. It was fun to check elevations and name the topography. I also researched the next stop for places we might want to see or interesting places to eat. Now Ted is designing a computer desk for the passenger seat that will fold down when not in use. This is Picacho Peak near Tucson. It is an interesting shape for this area. I drove from Gila Bend to Tucson. I asked to be relieved because I remembered the construction that was going on last year. The concrete barriers that narrow the lanes make me nervous as a passenger, let alone as the driver. Since Ted felt rested, we skipped our planned stop in Benson, AZ and drove onto Las Cruces, NM. It was almost 4:30 pm when this photo of the Organ Mountains was taken. This is the office/club house of Hacienda RV Resort in Las Cruces. Since we skipped Benson, we will have tomorrow to be tourists.
Since I have been across I-40 and I-10, I wanted to see I-8. We took a two lane road into El Centro where we caught I-8. We saw lots of date palms, the Salton Sea, and the Blue Angels practicing over the Imperial Valley. I missed a picture of a very tall oil tank with "Sea Level" marked about half way up the side at El Centro. This photo is the Imperial Sand Dunes Recreation Area.
Having heard so many people say they spend the winter in Yuma, I wanted to see it. Ted says that it looks a lot bigger and more appealing than when he saw it about 20 years ago. You must have to stay and get to know the place to understand the appeal.
Can't you visualize Randolph Scott, if you are our age or older or a movie buff, riding toward these peaks in Arizona? We saw a huge military transport flying low and very close to another mountain range. It went through a pass that looked way too narrow. This was on the Barry Goldwater Air Force Range.
I never tire of the misty look that mountains can have. Many of you already do this, but today I finally connected my computer to the Internet while we traveled. It was wonderful to answer emails and to look up places that we passed and learn about what we missed. It was fun to check elevations and name the topography. I also researched the next stop for places we might want to see or interesting places to eat. Now Ted is designing a computer desk for the passenger seat that will fold down when not in use. This is Picacho Peak near Tucson. It is an interesting shape for this area. I drove from Gila Bend to Tucson. I asked to be relieved because I remembered the construction that was going on last year. The concrete barriers that narrow the lanes make me nervous as a passenger, let alone as the driver. Since Ted felt rested, we skipped our planned stop in Benson, AZ and drove onto Las Cruces, NM. It was almost 4:30 pm when this photo of the Organ Mountains was taken. This is the office/club house of Hacienda RV Resort in Las Cruces. Since we skipped Benson, we will have tomorrow to be tourists.
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