The Longdogs

The Longdogs
Harley takes his role as navigator seriously!
Showing posts with label RV Women (RVW). Show all posts
Showing posts with label RV Women (RVW). Show all posts

2023-5-24 Stonehenge at Ingram Texas

 I headed up to Kerrville for a Texas Ramblin' Roses Rally on Wednesday. The rally check in was actually Thursday but it's always nice to have a little extra downtime.  Arrived about noon at the Old river Road RV Resort and got all set up. My sister-in-law Elaine arrived about an hour later. We decided to head up the road to check out Stonehenge II. We had stopped at Culver's for a quick lunch. It's no longer on my list of places to visit in Kerrville. Food was luke warm when finally delivered. Burgers were burned and they definitely didn't use their famous butter burger buns. they werre the same as the cheapest ones available at Walmart.


Doug Hill built the Stonehenge replica in his backyard and finished it in 1989. He eventually retired and sold his ranch and donated the sculptures. It is now located at the Hill Country Arts Center. 


The replica is obviously much smaller than the original and it is built with concrete, plaster, and wire frames cemented in place.

There are also two Easter Island statues.



We also got a tour of the inside and outside theaters. They put on some great productions for future reference.

Much later we had ribs that Elaine got from Aldi's. I cooked them in my convection oven. They were fabulous. We had a very relaxing visit to the ht tub before bed.

2019-02-10 TRR Goliad Rally

This is my second Texas Ramblin' Roses Rally here at Goliad State Park. Now the picture below is not Goliad State Park as all the sites there were full up well in advance.  So we found a backup solution by staying at the Angels in Goliad RV Park. It is a nice park that honors Passport America. They have full hookups as well as cable and wifi but no restrooms or amenities like a pool or hot tub. So you really do have to be self-contained.

Not having a pool or even a hot tub was not a problem this time as the bottom dropped out of the thermometer Thursday night and the high Friday was about 45 but felt much colder. Saturday was not much of an improvement.

Mary Jane and I arrived on Thursday and, right about suppertime, a couple of carloads of women showed up from the state park telling us about a "Taste of Goliad" going on at the fairgrounds. About 12 to 15 of us headed over there along with what must have been the entire town of Goliad.

You got a plate and silverware when you bought your ticket and then got in line where you picked up samples of all kinds of food in little cups. There were actually two different lines with different food. It was interesting. It was a fundraiser as they also had a silent auction with about 10 tables with lots of baskets on them.

Now on to the rally over at the State park. This is a picture I already had because the sun was definitely not shining and it was too cold to get out and take another one.



A lot of chatting goes on as Texas Ramblin' Roses catch up with each others news.

 Putting puzzles together is a very popular activity. This one had really small pieces.

Charli works her magic making new members feel right at home in the chapter at their very first rally.

 We had a great time in spite of the weather. Cookie Davenport took this great evening photo at the park entrance.




Big Chief Rally Part 3

Sunday morning, there was an official "Hitch Up" breakfast with sweet rolls and coffee.  And there were actually some ladies that did hitch up and leave before noon.......usually because of that four letter word that comes on Mondays and affects the younger members..."work". However, there was a significant number that planned to stay until Monday. Some decided to take advantage of the nice weather and get some more kayaking in....Rita has scratched the itch for a lot of women who go on to buy their own kayaks.

Some of us opted to check out the Perissos Vineyards.

The Texas hill country has become a mecca for wineries and vineyards. Perissos is located on Park Road 4 south of Inks Lake State Park. They have in door seating, patio seating, and tables down under the trees.


We chose the patio since the weather was very nice but not overwhelmingly hot. There were two tables of women in our little gathering.

You don't have to be a wine snob or even a wine lover to enjoy visiting a vineyard.

Mary Ann had been to this vineyard before so she gave us a little introduction to wine growing. Soil, in addition to sun, water, and temperature all affect the grapes and shape the final taste of the wine. The soil here is similar to crumbled granite. The vineyard has jars showing different soils.

Inside the winery, you can se the various casks of wine as they age.

This poster shows the wineries all over the Hill Country. Hwy 290 between Johnson City and Fredricksburg is heavily populated with vineyards.

The winery was already decorated for the Christmas holidays.

They even had a tree that was quite unique.
 
We had a great time sampling some wines, cheese, and fruit and visiting with each other. Our waiter was really great and took good care of the group bringing tastings and answering questions. Definitely a fun time.

Big Chief Rally Part 2

How could I forget the Cookie contest on Friday night......because there was so much going on.

And the winner was........Rita! She had chocolate chip cookies drizzled with mint chocolate.

Saturday was a busy day. There was plenty of chicken left over for lunch for anyone that wanted it. The afternoon featured an ice cream social provided by SkyMed who came to give us a briefing on their services.  Then we were off to bless the rigs. New members or members who have gotten a different rig have the opportunity to have their rig christened/blessed for a long and happy RVing life. I got a photo of Brenda's blessing but there quite a few rigs that Jimmie anointed. There was also an opportunity to take a peek inside the rigs which is always interesting to other RVers.

Saturday night, Lynn and Nancy catered a fantastic fajita dinner for all of us. It was great! They had all the fixin's plus several sides. This was followed by our annual business meeting. In addition to other business items on the agenda, we reelected the vice president and elected a new secretary. Each were supposed to have one minute to speak. I was nominated but hoped to give an impassioned speech for someone who has been a member longer to step up to the plate. Somehow my moment to speak came after I was elected.

Then we had a surprise visit from Santa Claus. I say surprise because no one knew that the RV park staff was going to show up to entertain us with several Christmas songs.


The planned "Surprise" entertainment came next. Marlene and Donna did a fantastic clogging performance to a Christmas song.

Cookie did a great job as emcee and had some great jokes for us. then we were visited by "Phyllis Diller" aka Jimmie. She was absolutely hilarious and had the act down perfectly.

 Judith, in the yellow T, did a fantastic version of a Christmas song rewritten in her own words. She was great.  The whole evenings entertainment was way over the top. Congrats to the cast.

Big Chief Rally Part 1

We had a chilly spell the week before but when we headed up Hwy 281 towards Burnet TX and the Big Chief RV Resort for the Texas Ramblin' Roses Rally, the weather was great. I left the dachsies at home with Dave for the first time because, although this is a great resort, the last time I was there, they had a real goathead problem.....you know those really hard stickers that dig in and are very painful.  I will tell you right up front though that they have really worked the problem and it was 100% better. And I missed having the dachsies along. The rally officially started on Friday but a lot of us were there on Thursday.

We all gathered down by the boat ramp to see the spectacular sunset.

Can you believe that it started at 5:35PM?

It was really worthwhile though.

And promised us another beautiful day.

I did manage to get a few photos of the resort before the sunset gathering. Mary Jane is between her rig (left) and my rig behind her.

The clubhouse is really nice and a good size. It has a nice kitchen at one end and a big screen TV at the other end. The pool and hot tub as well as a nice deck are just behind the clubhouse.

The office is at the right end of this building and there is another rec room for guests at the left side.

 
Friday, we had a happy hour followed by a potluck dinner which included fried chicken provided by the 2018 officers. Needless to say, we could have served well over a hundred.....so much food!

February Flies By

Some days it feels like February is flying by and other days it feels like it is dragging. The weather is up and down. Sometimes it is warm and beautiful like the Saturday we went to the Pearl Market days...kids playing in the fountain,

A delicious treat from one of the venders.....

I attended a Brunch of Roses and met a lot of really nice women. That led to another fun thing I did this month.....attend an Texas Ramblin' Roses Rally at Braunig Lake RV Resort.  Texas Ramblin' Roses is the Texas chapter of the RV Women (RVW) group. Photos courtesy of Pat Brown.  It was a large gathering of women and their RVs. Some of the rigs were small but many were large.

Our hostess's outdid themselves.

As a matter of fact, I had so much fun that I joined RVW and the Ramblin' Roses during the rally. I wasn't the only new member. I'm looking forward to many fun rallies in the future.

Fairbank Historic Townsite

My friend Mary Jane arrived at Tombstone Territories RV Resort midday today. After our Pink FlaminGoes Rolling Rally officially ended last week, she headed up to Mesa to participate in the RV Women Rally. It was a huge rally with chapters from all over the country attending. Several other members of our small group also attended. Different groups, different kind of rally, one big thing in common.....women RVing together and having fun. What could be better?

The RV park provided information on area places of interest in the package they gave me when I arrived. Fairbank Historic Townsite was just down the road from the park. Fairbank used to be a very important transportation hub with three railroad lines including the New Mexico and Arizona which connected Fairbank to Benson and the Mexican port of Guaymas. In the 1880s, at the peak of the silver boom in and around Tombstone, Fairbank was a central point of entry and exit for miners, prospectors, materials, and ore. Tombstone was not connected to the railway until 1903 so passengers had to take a stage from Fairbank.

In the 1880s, Fairbank had an elegant hotel and restaurant, a post office, railroad depots, a schoolhouse, a merchantile building, and several other businesses.

The first schoolhouse was built in 1884.....it burned down in 1920 and was replaced by the current building. It had one room that could be divided by a partition....a side room was added in the 1930's. Up to 45 children attended in grades 1 through 8. There were one or two teachers. The school was a community center hosting dances and events. Students from the 1930's and 1940's return for annual Fairbank reunions. The school closed in 1944 and students were bused to Tombstone.  In 2007, the school was restored as a visitor center and museum.





The Fairbank Mercantile building dates to 1882 and was open for business until 1973. Over the years, it housed stores, restaurants, a post office, saloon, gas station, and jail. The Mercantile was primarily a railroad freight office where customers ordered goods for delivery via train. It was originally three separate bays that were combined under a single roof sometime before 1913. As railroad traffic decreased, the Mercantile evolved to fit the times and by the 1950's it functioned as a post office, country store, and gas station.


There are numerous hiking trails leading out from the historic site.



This is the outside of the schoolhouse now a visitor's center and museum.


The "teacher's house" across the street from the school was used by teachers until the school closed in 1944. After that it was used as a residence, probably by employees of the Little Boquillas Ranch. The Works Progress Administration (WPA) constructed the garage, stable and outhouses in 1941.

No other event in the colorful history of Fairbank gained as much attention as the robbery of 15 February 1900. The year before, an outlaw gang......secretly led by Wilcox Constable Bert Alvord and his deputy Billy Stiles.....robbed the Wells-Fargo Express car of a Southern Pacific train and got away clean. They next thought to rob the Express car of the NM&AZ train as it stopped in Fairbank. A gang of 5 thugs, led by "Three Finger Jack" Dunlap waited at the station. When Jeff Milton, the Express Car guard, opened the car's doors to unload packages, the robbers used the crowd on the platform as a shield and told Milton to leave the car and give them the keys to the safe. He refused and gunfire began. Milton was finally able to fire his shotgun hitting Dunlap and wounding another. He was also wounded with a broken and bleeding arm. He threw the safe keys into a pile of boxes. The outlaws couldn't find them and fled as a crowd of citizens gathered. After a posse found Dunlap on the trail after the gang abandoned him, he named Alvord and Stiles as head of the gang. Over the next few months, most of the gang were arrested and jailed although Alvord escaped from jail twice before he ended up in Yuma Territorial Prison. Jeff Milton eventually recovered and had a distinguished career as a lawman, Texas Ranger, El Paso Chief of Police, and Wells-Fargo guard. Later, he became the first Customs Agent patrolling the U.S. - Mexico border.

You will have to use your imagination to see Fairbank as a bustling community but there is a lot of history here. Get the Walking Tour brochure and check it out. Keep in mind that Fairbank is now a portal into the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area and is open every day for public visitation. Just in case you were wondering, a riparian area is the area of land along a river.  I had to look it up myself. I know that this area is very popular for birding.