29 September 2013
First night out of Oklahoma City
was Wichita Falls, Texas. Didn’t do any sightseeing there and left the next
morning for Lubbock. The roads in Texas are SO much better than the ones in
Oklahoma. And we had to pay for the
privilege of driving that horrible road, Interstate 44, through Oklahoma. The
drive to Lubbock was through flat, flat land covered with fields of cotton,
soybeans and peanuts. Not a lot of trees
to break the horizon. And not a lot of towns.
I miss the green fields of Iowa.
We stopped in a small town,
Guthrie, Texas, to get gas, but couldn’t find the gas station. As we were
turning around in the parking lot of the city hall, a woman in a pickup stopped
and asked us if we needed help. When we
asked where the gas station was, she told us to follow her and she escorted us
to the store. Nice people around here.
Turns out the town was really a company town for the 6666 Ranch and we got gas
at the Supply House. I googled the ranch and found out that it is well known
for quarter horses and cattle. It has about 200,000 acres and is one of the
largest ranches in the Panhandle region of Texas.
Lubbock turned out to be a rather
interesting town. We spent a bit of time at the Silent Wings Museum, a tribute
to the glider pilots of World War II. It
is housed in the old air terminal of Lubbock International Airport. We also
visited the Wind Energy Museum which contains a bazillion windmills. The docent gave us a great individual tour
and I learned a lot about the history and use of windmills. The museum was not
a “garage” museum like I saw all through Alaska even though it had lots of
windmills and associated parts. It was laid out in a very attractive manner.
Besides windmills inside the museum, the fields surrounding the museum building
was a veritable garden of windmills.
Then we decided, since it was still
early in the day, to take in the South Plains Texas Fair. This was no Iowa
State Fair. Either we missed the animal competitions or they hadn’t started
yet, either way, there were no cows, pigs, goats, sheep or chickens to be seen
in the exhibit buildings. There were a few bunnies to admire and that was it.
The domestic exhibits weren’t very impressive and they weren’t displayed very
attractively. We finished with the fair
in about 2 hours and agreed that we would probably stick with state fairs from
now on.
We finished our tour of Lubbock
by driving through Texas Tech University.
This is a beautiful campus. The
buildings are Spanish Renaissance architecture which looks great in this
southwestern area and they have done a great job of keeping the new buildings
in harmony with the older ones. The football stadium is beautiful and you can
tell that sports are important in this neck of the woods. Over 32,000 students
attend this school and the surrounding area is full of student apartments and
fast food restaurants. I doubt that
there is a lot of integration of the campus with the city since the rest of the
area looks to be pretty downtrodden.
Our next stop was Carlsbad, New
Mexico. Like Texas, the roads in New Mexico are great and we had a very nice
drive down to Carlsbad. Less farming and more cattle ranches as the land gets
drier and drier.
The caverns are 20 miles south of
Carlsbad and we arrived at the visitor center early on Thursday. Our Senior
Golden Eagle pass got us in for free (that is the best $10 dollars we have
spent in a while) and we were soon down in the cave. There is an elevator that takes you down 800+
feet in about a minute, so my ears were popping. The Big Room is over 14
football fields deep, 625 feet wide and over 200 feet high and we spent more
than 4 hours walking along the paved paths which take you all the way to the
back. One great thing about being retired is that we can visit these kinds of
places during the offseason. There
weren’t a lot of people around and we could spend as much time as we wanted
gawking at the beautiful formations. It was dank and chilly down there so we
were glad we wore our heavy sweatshirts. Even so, I felt like I had been in a
deep cold soak and it took a while up in the visitor center for me to warm up.
After lunch in the restaurant, we took in the bookstore and gift shop then
headed outside to take a drive through the Chihuahuan desert. There is a 10
mile gravel tour which winds its way through the desert with various stops
along the way explaining the geography, geology and history of the desert. I could see why they didn’t allow motorhomes
or trailers on the tour – it was pretty steep in some areas with sheer
drop-offs. Even through the tour pamphlet said there was lots of life in the
area, we only saw birds. None of those six foot long rattlesnakes as thick as a
person’s leg. That was ok with me. I was surprised at how green the area was,
turns out that the area has had quite a bit of rain the past few weeks, so we
were seeing the benefits of that – lots of wildflowers and green grasses.
Late in the afternoon, we headed
back to the visitor’s center for the Bat Flight. Every evening, bats come out
for their night feeding and the park service has built an amphitheater in front
of the cave opening so we can watch it. The bats do not come out of the regular
cavern opening; there is another entrance behind the visitor center. They have
an interpretive program before the flight so we learned quite a bit about
freetail Mexican bats and their history in Carlsbad Caverns. The bats aren’t on
a schedule, so you don’t really know when they are going to head out. The park
service has placed sound sensors deep into the entrance and we get an advance
notice when they head out. At that
point, everyone had to be quiet and just watch.
No electronics were allowed to be on and no photography was allowed.
Boy, the flight was impressive!
We watched for about 30 minutes until it got so dark we couldn’t see the bats
flying out, grouping up and heading out.
And they were still coming out. They
estimate that there are over 400,000 bats in the cave! The next day, I was
asking one of the Park Rangers some questions about the bats and she said that
what we saw was a migratory flight, meaning they are heading down to Mexico for
the winter. These bats don’t hibernate. Instead they go to Mexico in groups and
stay in caves down where it is warmer and there are lots of bugs to eat.
The next day, we spent another
couple of hours in the Big Room, just marveling at the size of the space and
the variety of formations. Then Russ went on a guided tour to another part of
the Cavern while I took a break up in the Visitor Center. We watched a nice
video on the caves administered by the National Park Service, then headed back
to Carlsbad for the night. This was one of the most inspiring National Parks I
have been to. It is impossible for me to get my head wrapped around the
millions of years it took to create the caverns and their formations. I am so
glad our government spends some of our tax money to purchase and run these
national parks. And I am glad that they make the caves accessible for us
tourists. Back in the day, we would have
had to be lowered that 800+ feet in a guano bucket. And the lighting that has
been installed has added so much dramatic beauty. We are so blessed to have
such wondrous natural areas in our country.
Sunday, we continue our trip west
via Las Cruces and Tucson. Should be
home next week.
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| The campground in Oklahoma City was one of the nicest we've stayed at - paved with landscaped grounds. |
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| A Texas RV! |
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| Lots of cotton fields were between Wichita Falls and Lubbock. |
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| The Texas Panhandle is incredibly flat. The road we were on was in good condition and very straight. |
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| Interesting vehicles on the highway. Russ wanted to try driving under this one, but I wouldn't let him. |
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| The Silent Wings Museum is housed in the old Lubbock air terminal, so we had nice views of the runways as well as some very interesting exhibits. |
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| The gliders were designed to transport people and equipment. They were not very sophisticated vehicles - wood and cloth with just a few gauges. Most of the pilots were trained here at Lubbock. |
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| This was specifically designed to be small and light so that it could be transported in gliders. Once the glider landed, the bulldozer was used to grade runways for large airplanes and more equipment. I will have to go through my family pictures - I think I have a WWII photo of my dad on one of these. He was an airplane mechanic for the Flying Tigers in the Burma campaign. The museum specifically talked about the use of the gliders in the Burma campaign, so it is entirely possible that he saw these bulldozers. |
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| This is a replica of the first windmill built in the American colonies in the 1700s. The original is in Virginia. The fan on the back serves to move the windmill into the wind. |
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| Lots and lots of windmills inside the museum, most from the 1800s. |
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| The small windmill served as a wind vane to align the larger fan into the wind. |
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| Unbelievably, this is a real bird's nest made out of barbed wire. Cowboys leave behind small pieces when they repair fences out on the range. Ravens have figured out that these work in the absence of twigs (not a lot of trees out on those ranges.) They line the nest with leaves and softer material. |
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| This was called a woman's windmill. The windmills needed lots of oil and the original ones required someone (usually the farmwife) to climb up to oil it, sometimes once a day. This particular windmill allowed a person to lower the fan so it could be oiled from the ground. |
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| The South Plains Texas Fair is held annually in Lubbock. |
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| In addition to the standard bakery entries, competitions of tortillas are held. |
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| This tall guy rode his little scooter around the fair singing in a rather annoying robotic voice. This was probably the most exciting thing we saw at the fair. |
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| Some cute bunnies had started to arrive at the exhibit building. |
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| The agricultural competitions included best cotton plant stalk for commercial harvesting |
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| Entrance to Texas Tech University campus. |
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| This is an example of the Spanish renaissance architecture design that most buildings had. |
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| This is the front of the football stadium - very impressive! |
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| Very dramatic lighting adds a rich dimension to the caverns. There is a paved path with guiderails to help you get through the caverns and to protect the formations from people. |
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| It took hundreds of thousands of years to create these huge formations. |
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| Some of the formations are named - the one on the right is called totem pole. It is probably 60 feet tall. |
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| There were lots of side chambers with their own unique sets of formations. |
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| This formation is called the Rock of Ages. Long ago, the guided tours would stop here, they would turn out the lights to make the cave totally dark, then they would light this formation and everyone would sing "Rock of Ages". That was back when a lot of folks knew the song. Now the tour is self guided. no lights go out (hopefully) and there is no singing. |
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| On the guided tour, Russ walked down this ramp area for about 800 feet to get to the King's Palace. |
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| Although no one knows the exact age of the formations in the Caverns, this ranger pointed out these little baby stalactites as being about 80 years old. They know this because this area had been blasted out to make an entrance to the King's Palace area 80 years ago. |
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| Some of the dramatic draperies in the King's Palace area. |
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| The King's Palace area used to be self-guided, but they lost over 10,000 formations over 10 years from people not following the rules, so now it is guided only. |
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| The ocotillo plants were beautiful. |
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| This is the view from the front of the Visitor Center. |
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| The road leading up to the Visitor Center which is on top of an ancient reef which was covered with sentimentary rock, then pushed up into mountains. The Caverns were carved out of the reef by sulfuric acid millions of years ago. |