Thursday, November 25, 2010

Happy Thanksgiving

We enjoyed a wonderful Thanksgiving get-together & dinner in the club house at the RV Park.
All the camp hosts helped prepare the dinner. We had everything - from turkey & ham, to potato & bread filling, to jellied cranberry sauce, to pumpkin cheesecake & pies galore- Everything I like! There were well over 30 people that attended the festivities. A great time was had by all.
Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Back to Amarillo-Different Route, Different Scenery

We took a different route through Arizona, down through Prescott into North Phoenix where we stopped for the night at Dessert Sands RV Park.

The next morning we pulled into Agave Gulch RV Park at Davis-Monthan AFB; it's one of our favorite parks. They just added an enclosed (fenced- in) dog park with an agility course that Tazzy just loves. Look at this adorable Airstream amongst the dessert landscape. We stopped the Soldier Horse Museum - mostly a tourist trap. While walking the dogs we came across these Ellipigo bikes - definitely something I've never seen before. They work just like the Elliptic Exercise Machine. One thing though, is that they don't have a bike seat; you can only stand while cycling.



We decided to take a different route back to Texas. We drove through Billy the Kid & Jicarilla Apache country in the mountains & rugged mesa's of New Mexico.
Check out this gorgeous view.

Those Ponderosa pine trees smelled like Christmas.
Further down the road near Alamongordo, we stopped by the White Sands Monument. This time we drove into the national park - it's "Like no place else on earth."








Here a father & son are preparing to sled down the dunes. We were told that earlier this year, during spring break, the parks gift shop sold over 900 saucer sleds in one day to college students. That must have been a blast!


As I climbed to the top of a dune, I saw this group of people in the far distance. It looks like snow!

White Sands National Monument is the largest pure gypsum field in the world covering 275 square miles. Unlike dunes made of quartz based sand crystals, gypsum does not convert the sun's energy into heat, so you can walk on the sand in your bare feet even during the hottest summer months.


There are 4 types of dunes that exist at White Sands, Dome (low mounds), Barchan (crescent-shaped), Transverse (long ridges of sand), and Parabolic (plants anchor the arms of barchan dunes & invert their shape).

Here's Liam on top of the world.

He climbed to the top, but immediately turned around to go back down to the RV - Okay, so now he can say "Been there, done that!"
When we finally got back to Amarillo, we heard there was a snowstorm earlier in the week. Glad we missed that. Until next time...


Saturday, November 6, 2010

Evan

Evan invited us up to Las Vegas - As he put it, you're not that far away from here, why not come up to visit me; so we did. We had some unexpected engine issues on our way to Vegas that turned out to be nothing more than resetting the dashboard computer. Thank goodness. We stayed at the Nellis AFB Desert Eagle FamCamp.

We had a great time with Evan; he is so funny. We met him after work for dinner, then Joe & I went to The Mirage Casino to see "LOVE." It celebrates the musical legacy of the Beatles song lyrics through interpretive dance performed by Cirque du Soleil. His friend scored the tickets for us. Thank you Fabrice. The next day we brought the dogs over to see Evan. It was a short visit; Evan was leaving for Utah & we were leaving for Arizona, and, OOPS! I forgot my camera.



Evan told us that the Hoover Dam Bypass they were constructing the last time we were here was now completed, so we decided to drive across it on our trip down to Tucson. As we approached the Dam we saw this spectacular view of Lake Mead.




The new Colorado River Bridge spans the Black Canyon connecting Nevada & Arizona. The bridge is over 2,000 feet long & over 900 feet above the Colorado River. The new bridge is said to save significant travel time, and it does - We didn't have to navigate the narrow, windy road congested with tourists snapping pictures of the Hoover Dam & not paying any attention to what is going on around them (we should know, we've been one of those tourists). It easily saved us 20 to 30 minutes from the last time we were here.