There
is an upside to downsizing. My cousin Debbie collects postcards and
while going through my stuff I found a scrapbook of a trip to Texas. I
grabbed some pages and put them in a box to mail, thinking explanatory
stuff might interest her. But, oh the memories. Dallas/Fort Worth
really does have more shops than New York, more music than Nashville and
more thrills than Disneyland. We went to the stockyards and saw a
cattle drive that was a life-sized sculpture of long horns crossing a
river. Museums, art galleries, the Hard Rock Cafe, the White Elephant
Saloon, a cooling water walk, Assyrian treasures at Kimball, Cavanaugh
Flight Museum, a sewing machine museum, the H.W. Perry Homestead. We
followed the footsteps of Kennedy's assassin at Dealy Plaza and the
grassy knoll. We could easily have spent three weeks there, so much to
see and do.
Our
method suited both my husband's and my personality. He would write for
tourist information, we'd fly into the major airport, rent a car and do
as much as we could during a 3 to 4 week period. In Houston, the Sam
Houston Museum, the Astrodome, LBJ Space Center, San Jacinto
Battlefield, Missons. We toured the Battleship Texas, and the Funeral
Services Museum. We really did go to Billy Bob's Honky Tonk,
(disappointing) and Ruth's Chris steak house, but we didn't order
steaks the size of a roast. George wanted to go to the Millionaires
Club, just for a peek, but realized you need to be a millionaire.
We
drove to Galveston and visited the historic Moody Mansion, The Texas
Seaport Museum where I got my art fix watching Anthony Blackman draw.
The old downtown area is quite small and interesting. A Mardi Gras
Museum, History of the Galveston Hurricane of 1900. The best estimate
of life lost was six thousand perished, one of the worst disasters in
our nation's history. We took pictures of a mansion with a two foot
picket fence. The other four feet were covered in mud and the owners
never rebuilt. They chose to live in what was the top two floors of the
mansion. I loved Galveston.
We drove to San Antonio to see the
Alamo. Texans didn't set aside land around the Alamo. It sits on a city
block with businesses surrounding it, smaller than you'd think. The
missions- magnificent edifices in stone, a cool place rest. The Arts are
the heart of San Antonio at La Villita with glass blowers, candle
making, stained glass, weavers, jewelry, etc. And, every where we ate
Tex Mex, different from California Mex. The best River Walk in Texas, on
the San Antonio River right through the middle of town. Cooling,
breathtaking.
Then to Austin, to visit the State Capital building,
the Governor's Mansion, LBJ Library, the amazing Bishops Palace
resembles Chateau of France. George didn't want to see a bunch of bats,
but I'd heard about Mexican bats living under a bridge in Austin and I
worked to convince him. It helped to have a nearby journalism museum.
We sat on the grassy banks of the river. When it got dark, the bats
flowed out in waves of millions swooping up and down the river, wave,
after wave, after wave.
Once we got home, the thing that impressed
him the most of our entire trip was the bats. I enjoyed his enthusiasm
for the bats, as he told everyone we met about them.
My favorite
experiences from that trip? The bats, the funeral museum and the San
Antonio river walk. American diversity, every state a marvel.
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