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Sunday, March 13, 2016

Let's Go to Luckenbach Texas

Before reading the rest of this post, you should click here to get in the proper frame of mind!

There now?  OK!  LET"S GO!

Luckenbach, Texas is just a few miles outside Fredericksburg (see previous post).  The last official census prior to Luckenbach being incorporated (sold) to Fredericksburg was...... 3!  Yep, a 3-person town, all three being of the same family!





Basically, the "town" is a small saloon and a dance hall... and, of course, a souvenir shop.  Janice and I first visited the saloon (no surprise there).

Yep, that's it... all of it!  And if the dog on the floor bothers you, you can always sit a the one table in the saloon, seen below.


Check the Illinois State Police patch on the door post!  If you don't like either dogs or cats, you can have a beer under the "Luckenbach Squirrel." (notice spelling on the sign)


After getting our Lone Star and Shiner, we walked the few feet over to the dance hall.

Luckenbach dance hall.  Dances are held Wednesdays and Saturdays during this time of the year.

We made it over  to the picnic tables and enjoyed our Texas beer while listening to a singer.  Can't remember the guy's name, but he had recorded a few CD's and was pretty good.  He did a great job on my request of "You Don't Have to Call Me Darlin'."




And if you haven't warmed up to the dog, the cat, or the Luckenbach Squirrel, you may enjoy the several roosters that freely roam (and crow!)  BTW, we found they like peanuts.



What a great time!!  Janice liked it better than the wine tasting... never thought I'd hear that!  A house in hill country and hanging out at Luckenbach would be... well... back to the basics of life!


Fredericksburg

Fredericksburg, with a population of a little over 10,000, is considered by many to be the epicenter of the Texas hill country.  Founded in 1846 and named in honor of Prince Frederick of Prussia, the town maintains its German roots, as shown is this collection of signs.


If you like German beers, this is the Texas town for you!  And if beer isn't your beverage of choice, there are A LOT of wineries located within 5-10 miles.  They all have nice areas where you can enjoy a glass (or a bottle) of the local vintage.  Janice and I did a tasting and the wines are very good.  In fact, this area is consistently rated as number 2 or 3 in U.S. wine production.

Fredericksburg is also known as the home of WWII Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz.  The Nimitz family was one of the original settlers of Fredericksburg, so I guess that means they just had cable TV?  The family ran the hotel in Fredericksburg, which has been preserved and is now the home of the Chester Nimitz museum.

Life-size statue of Chester Nimitz next to the Nimitz museum
The hotel owned by the Nimitz family now houses the Chester Nimitz museum
Adjoining the Nimitz museum is the National Museum of the Pacific War.  Started in 1971, the museum's foundation has developed the museum into a first-class facility.  It is the only facility in the U.S. dedicated to telling the story of the Pacific and Asiatic theaters in WWII.  It is a fantastic facility!  Great displays and information from the start of the war and its causes to the dropping the atomic bomb and subsequent armistice.  Between the Nimitz hotel and the War in the Pacific Museum, you walk through a very moving memorial courtyard.  In the garden are located walls bearing hundreds, if not thousands, of plaques honoring individuals, vessels and crews that served in the Pacific.

One of the Memorial Walls
 All in all, Fredericksburg is a fantastic destination, and allow at least one  full day to go through the museum.  You can click these links to learn more about the museum or  Fredericksburg 

Friday, March 11, 2016

Going to the Hill Country

We left the motorhome for a few days and drove the truck through the hill country, planning on staying in Fredericksburg for a few days.  The hill country is very pretty!  here's a couple of examples:


This was taken from a highway overpass.  The water is only a couple of feet deep, but notice the visibility of the rocks comprising the creed bed.  The water is crystal clear!  This next pic was also shot from the highway.


Researching real estate prices, the lan itself is going for about $5K / acre.  It is common to see 600+ acres being offered for sale as one block of land.  Once I win the loto, I'm in!!  Beautiful scenery, hunting and fishing!  Did I mention mild winters?

Thursday, March 10, 2016

The Alamo

We finally got reliable internet back, so time for a few updates.  No visit to San Antonio is complete without a visit to the Alamo. 

This was my second visit to the Alamo, but was Janice's first.  It was a beautiful day and we spent considerable time reading the various history markers.  Of interest was a monument given by the Japanese to honor the heros of the Alamo.  The monument is now pock-marked by gunfire!  Seems the Texans took exception to the monument following Pearl Harbor!

The Alamo also has a very nice memorial garden in the rear.  Great place to sit and reflect.


OK, enough reflection!  Time to head to the River Walk for cocktails.  See ya' later!

Saturday, February 27, 2016

YEE-HAH! SAN ANTON!

Feb. 7 found us pulling into the Alsatian Motorhome Resort just outside of Castroville, Texas,   about  15 miles west of San Antonio. Ironically, Castroville is actually named for a Frenchman who was given tons of acreage by the government by way of land grant.  The grant was conditioned upon Mssr. Castro being able to obtain 600 immigrants with whom to divide and till the land.  Castro persuaded the required number to immigrate from the Alsace area of France and neighboring German territory.

We had planned to move on to Tucson and Phoenix, but decided instead to remain in Texas until we head home on March 22.  We love the area and, more importantly, we were able to get a casita (Spanish for "small house") that really adds to our enjoyment!  The casita has a nice, big patio with a counter housing a sink, a built-in gas grill, and a small refrigerator.  Also has a very nice patio table with four cushioned chairs.  There's a place to hook up an outside TV (you can see the mount on the wall), but with our TV in the side of the coach, we didn't need one.






On our patio, we are about 15 yards off the 14th green of the Alsatian Golf Resort


Note the pond in the left part of the above photo.  It is home to a couple of weird-looking geese.


 We have been told that they are "Egyptian geese."  Of interest is that their aggressive and territorial nature keeps other types of waterfowl, including Canadian geese, out of their area.  I'm trying to figure out how to bring some back to Illinois!  I could make a fortune renting them out to property owners on Lake Springfield to chase away the other geese!!

Our casita also has a LARGE walk-in tiled shower and, more importantly, the casita gives Janice a nice place to work "from the road" (i.e., make $) while I put on some tunes, pop a beer, and watch the golfers from the patio!

Will attempt to make more frequent posts.  Unfortunately, the one thing that has not cooperated with our visit has been the resort's WiFi.  Worked great until we decided to stay.. then went out for two weeks.  Figures, doesn't it?!  They have been working on it today and HOPEFULLY, this post will upload successfully.  See y'all later!

Sunday, February 7, 2016

Galveston Mardi Gras

Galveston has a full week-long Mardi Gras celebration.  We went to the final parade on Saturday night (2/6).  It was very cool!  Unlike Springfield, there were no firetrucks, but rather 15 marching bands and tons of floats.



 The crowds were in full Mardi Gras mode!



Janice and I had a great time and cleaned up on beads!



Thursday, February 4, 2016

Johnson Space Center

Well, here I am hanging out at the Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston


OK... a lousy attempt at humor.  We were greeted at the JSC by a most impressive site - the space shuttle atop the Boeing 747 used to transport the shuttle from its landing at Houston to Cape Canaveral for launch.

Both the 747 and the shuttle may be toured.  There are films and other interactive displays explaining the shuttle program.  They even had the wind tunnel model of the shuttle atop the 747 used to test the aerodynamics of this radical mode of transportation.  The airplane reportedly suffered a significant vibration the entire flight when transporting the shuttle; "like driving down a cobblestone road."
Shuttle Flight Deck


Other interesting items that we were able to view incuded the Russian Soyuz space capsule
the newly-developed Orion spacecraft, capable of transporting 4-6 astronauts
The weirdest thing we saw?  a docent explaining how urine is recycled to drinking water aboard the international space station!  Note the bag is labeled URINE.
I think I'd rather die from dehydration!!
The coolest thing we saw?  Definitely the Saturn V rocket!!!
This building houses the Saturn V seen in the pictures below.
Janice next to a Saturn V engine
Janice with all five engines. Each engine produces 1.5 million pounds of thrust!
The Saturn V broken down into its stages.  This thing is HUGE!
OK, maybe the strangest thing, or at least the thing you least expected to see at a space center, wasn't the recycled urine, but rather this:
The JSC has 58 acres that is devoted to the raising of Texas Longhorn cattle.  Local schools are heavily involved, as is the Longhorn Cattlemen's Association.


Monday, February 1, 2016

Galveston

We spent Jan. 31 through Feb. 6 on Galveston Island, Texas.  The weather was atrocious; even though there were a few days of sunshine, the temperatures continued to hover in the 50's during the day and the 40's at night. 

 We were really impressed with the Bishop's Palace in the city of Galveston.  The Bishop's Palace, also known as the Gresham mansion, was made all of stone, and was sturdy enough to withstand the great hurricane of 1900. The Greshams welcomed hundreds of survivors of the hurricane into their home.  The house was built between 1887 and 1893 by Galveston architect Nicholas J. Clayton for lawyer and politician Walter Gresham, his wife Josephine, and their nine children. In 1923 the Roman Catholic Diocese of Galveston purchased the house, and, situated across the street from the Sacred Heart Church, it served as the residence for Bishop Christopher E. Byrne.[3] After the diocesan offices were moved to Houston, the diocese opened the mansion to the public in 1963.



The intricacy of the stone work can be seen in this chimney
Likewise, the beauty of the wood work is evident

These two shots are of the main staircase
This room was converted to the Bishop's chapel, coemplete with hand-painted stained glass windows, seen in greater detail below













Saturday, January 30, 2016

Cajun Country

Both Janice and I were suffering from colds while in Bay St. Louis.  We managed to take a drive along the coast, visiting Gulfport and Biloxi.  No stories; no pics.  Just a lot of sneezing and coughing.

By the time we reached Lafayette, LA, we were on the road to recovery.  We drove around Lafayette, my hometown for about four years while I was flying offshore oil support for Petroleum Helicopters, Inc., a/k/a PHI.  Even visited PHI's new digs - a beautiful new facility built in 2011.  I wandered inside and, on my telling the receptionists that I flew for the company 40 years ago, I was given a very nice guided tour of the facility.  Also drove by the old homestead.  One of the little trees I planted is now huge... hard to believe that much time has passed!  We also found a GREAT cajun restaurant in Henderson, about 9 miles east of Lafayette.  The name of the place is Pat's and if you are ever in the area, jump off I-10 and grab some etouffee.  You won't be disappointed!!

Monday, January 25, 2016

Well, we pulled up stakes at Pensacola / Milton today and heaed to the Hollywood Casino RV Park in Bay Saint Louis, Mississippi.  The park is nice... and almost deserted.  We kinda hated to leave the park in Milton, where we had this view out the windshield of the motorhome.

 
Taken through our windshield at Avalon Landing RV Park in Milton, Florida

We'll be in Bay Saint Louis until Thursday, when we head to my old stomping grounds of Lafayette, Louisiana.  See ya'll later!
After touring the Naval Museum and climbing the lighthouse, we decided to try out McGuire's Irish Pub in Pensacola.  McGuire's more than lived up to the high recommendations we had gotten from the RV park personnel.  Expecting a "comfort food" pub, we were surprised to discover that the restaurant has been featured several times on The Food Channel and has won numerous rewards, including the best steak in Florida.  Janice and I both had the filet, which was absolutely incredible!  As if the food wasn't enough, the ambiance is super cool!  The restaurant was started by William and Molly McGuire in 1977.  Molly wrote her name on the first dollar the restaurant made and stapled it to the wall.  Since then, it has become a tradition for customers to follow suit.  Take a look at the dollar bills in these pics:

Note all the dollar bills on the walls... and ceiling!

You have to remember that the restaurant covers a full square block!  There are now officially in excess of $1 MILLION in dollar bills stapled to McGuire's walls and ceilings!!  Do people try to lift a few every now and then?   Yep.  And there are several newspaper articles posted throughout the restaurant reporting the criminal prosecution of those individuals.  McGuire's takes the tradition (and the one million dollars the tradition has generated) very seriously!  Bottom line:  If in Pensacola, you HAVE to dine at McGuire's!
We visted the lighthouse located on NAS Pensacola.  Pensacola is the oldest European settlement in mainland America (1559), its location has caused great turmoil, with many buildings destroyed by wars, and by numerous major hurricanes. The location, south of the original British colonies, and as the dividing line between French Louisiana and Spanish Florida, along the Perdido River, has caused Pensacola to change ownership several times. Pensacola was Spanish, then French, then Spanish, then British, then Spanish again, before becoming American, then Confederate, and then the current U.S. city.

Congress authorized construction of the lighthouse in 1823 at a cost of $6,000.  The light was first illuminated a year later.  When Florida seceded from the Union in 1961, the Confederates dismantled the lens and extinguished the light to prevent the navigational aid helping the Union ships.  The Union regained the lighthouse the following year and the lens was reinstalled and the light turned back on.

Janice and I climbed the 177 steps to the top and were rewarded by this view


What astounded me was the size of the 1,000 candlepower bulb that, when transmitted through the French-made lens, can be seen 27 miles from the lighthouse.
The primary bulb, seen just to the left of the "P" in Primary, above, is the only bulb that illuminates.  The bulb looks like it belongs in an oversized flashlight... not a lighthouse!  If the bulb burns out, the block holding the two bulbs rotates and the Secondary bulb takes over.  The bulbs last 2 to 3 years and cost about $1,000 each.