Archive for October 18th, 2008
Goodbye, Tejas…Part 2
We also took time to see the Texas State Aquarium on Corpus Christi Beach. It is a smaller facility than we are used to for an aquarium, but it made up for size in quality. I had particularly sweet interactions with the sea turtles, which crowded around to pose for my camera (I must have been standing where they are fed or something!)
The boys enjoyed the Big Tank…Peter is a huge fishing enthusiast and lamented being unable to catch some of the prize redfish on display:
Da Berry Boys posing in front of the Big Tank
We were guided to leave Corpus on Wednesday, October 16th…so we pretty much had the RV ready by then. As we left, we gassed up at the local Valero, and were shocked to see that gas prices had dropped to $2.32 a gallon! We took a picture because we know we won’t likely see that price again!
The 16th we headed up to San Antonio….again, we were guided to go there. We thought we were going so that we could have the car serviced (40,000 miles in 16 months!) But it turned out there was something more special in store!
At close to time to make supper, I received a call from a man who said he had seen our website and that his family was planning a cross-country trip to see National Parks. He had received our web address from a woman who had met us 4 years ago, when we were on our first big trip and were stationed at Padre Island National Seashore as volunteers. She remembered us and passed our contact info on to him as a resource for his own family’s trip. Usually a procrastinator by his own admission, he called on this night to ask some questions. He said he had seen we were in Texas to get the RV, and wondered if we were still in the state. I told him we had just left Corpus Christ, but we were staying in San Antonio until the following morning, when we would be heading west. He paused for just a moment before he said, “I live in San Antonio!”
This is exactly the kind of thing that used to happen to us all the time on our previous journey…the magic of synchronicities became so common place that we expected them. It was so fun to feel the “magic window” open up again for this kind of happening! He suggested our families meet for dinner at a famous burger joint in town…we did, and we spent hours talking and answering their questions. They are very special people and I want to pass their website on to you to see what they are up to. Their current plan is to disembark in December. We can’t wait to meet up with them on the road somewhere out there!
We left San Antonio on Friday, October 17th and headed west on highway 90; we slept at Alpine, Texas at the Lost Alaskan RV park, where Susan in the office was an absolute hoot (the park was great, too, except that the pool was closed down for the year). As we drove away from Alpine the following morning, I had the sense that we wouldn’t be seeing Texas (or, Tejas in Spanish) again for a long time. The sweet rolling hills and live oak trees are so very beautiful there.
Thank you, Tejas, for the memories!
So next…..a night in Deming, New Mexico on our way to Tucson AZ. We will be in Tucson for the week of October 19-25. More soon!
Goodbye, Tejas!
We have officially left Texas, ya’ll!
When we arrived down in the Corpus Christi area to fetch the RV on October 5th, it was a balmy 90 degrees and the soft, moist air billowed our sails after a LONG drive down from Colorado. After waking up to 30 degree mornings back home, the warmth was a welcome change. Felt like vacation all over again! We found out later it snowed the day after we left. Hee hee, good timing, Universe!
We promptly scurried around, getting the RV back into live-in condition and doing the inevitable shopping to re-outfit us. We fell into an easy pattern within 3 days….we know this routine so well after traveling together for those 2 years! We parked (I just cannot, in good conscience, use the word “camped”) at a GREAT place in Portland, Texas, right on the bay across from downtown Corpus Christi, called Sea Breeze. The water was lovely, the fishing was good, the skyline lights at night were jewel-like. It was a perfect spot to regroup after leaving Colorado and to prepare for our sojourn. I was asked by my dear friend Elizabeth Barbour what it was like being back in the RV again, and I was happily surprised to hear myself say that it was a breeze.
For those of you who have not gone RVing for any length of time, there is an entire lifestyle and culture that goes along with it. I was reminded as we did our laundry at the recreation building and was chatting with other RVers how much I enjoy the core devotion to freedom that Rvers seem to embody. It is an unspoken, but highly respected value that we hold dear. I imagine this is true for anyone who seems to have travel in their blood!
We went to Padre Island a couple of times to play in the gulf….the water was clear and gorgeous…however the beach was covered in trash washed ashore from Hurricane Ike, which hit north of Corpus Christi at Galveston. I found a computer, a toy chest, electric outlets, shoes, and plastic, plastic, plastic. It made me renew my commitment to buy as little plastic as possible….there was no end of the horrid stuff littering the beaches for miles. It was an odd feeling to see these pieces of people’s homes tossed so indiscriminately and deposited on this wild stretch of beach.
For educational supplementation, I took the boys to see the replica of Columbus’ ship, Nina, which sits on the Corpus Christi Bay waterfront in downtown.
More in Part 2……..











