We stopped in TN at our friends home and we stopped in GA at Cloudland Canyon State Park to take on water and do laundry. We like the GA parks for they are clean, have a laundry for a reasonable price and state parks are always much more roomy than private parks. We saw Bradford Pear trees in bloom and green grass. We headed thru AL & MS to LA where we spend another night in a LA state park where we did laundry again and the next morning had no water. We were told the main water main broke by workers doing something so we ended up at a horse camp in the state park that had better showers. Life is always an adventure and we seem to always make out better by just winging it. Then we arrived in the huge state of TX. We never went thru the lower part of the Texas panhandle so this time we entered NM in Clovis stopping in TX at Caprock Canyons State Park and Trailway. At the park we took a ranger tour of the former railway turned trailway and stayed at the park for a night. The tour was great (Ranger Piggs leading the tour-love the name and I am not kidding!) and it just happened (again) that we were in the right place at the right time. We asked and the tour was full........ but one couple did not show up and on the tour we went.
The next day we stayed in Oasis State Park, NM crossing through Clovis. John missed signs and stopped at a Sherriff's office for directions to Oasis. We were impressed for we actually got a police escort right to the entrance of the park. That's service!!!!! Or were we strange people who he had to keep an eye on? We stopped in Alamogordo, NM at another state park (good find, Oliver Lee State Park) and we questioned the visitor center in Alamogordo about housing there. I love the southwest non humidity!!!!!
We ended up in Arizona and learned all March in AZ = school break somewhere and state parks are full. We traveled to Chiricahua National Monument in the middle of nowhere but on a Sunday night that was even full (we never make reservations). I had never been there. The Class A was too large for the monument. I recommend the place if you are ever in southern AZ below Wilcox. We visited a former ranch, (part of the monument) called Faraway Ranch. Wonder where the name came from?????
Back at ORPI and beautiful as ever!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! |
Flowers everywhere in this green desert! |
Next we stopped at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument (OPR)I where we were volunteers twice, We stayed 2 nights and visited people we knew. Then we headed to Lake Pleasant where friends were volunteering. After a stop we headed north to I-40 and east again stopping at Cottonwood near Sedona on a Sunday night. Dead Horse State Park was also full. We stopped at Tizigoot National Monument in Cottonwood (ancient people ruins). That was an interesting stop. We never plan anything and things always work out!!!!!!!!!!!
I love the sunshine and low humidity of the southwest but back we came over Route I-40 stopping in the Texas panhandle at Palo Duro Canyon State Park. We had been there before. We rested there then traveled on. In GA we went directly to I-95 and north again. We saw flowers blooming, trees and green grass arriving in Connecticut. So we traveled many, many miles to enjoy warmth and color and then we were back in CT coming alive for the spring. We stayed the night at the Danbury, CT Welcome Center which has reopened with a new free dump station. We arrived home in time for a grandson's 17th birthday party. A quick trip for an early spring!
Palo Duro Canyon, TX panhandle Below grumpy John walking |