Saturday, November 5, 2011

Home Sweet Home

Arrived home on Thursday, November 3, 2011



Our route home was southeast through Houston, Louisiana then north through Baton Rouge to Mississippi.  We spent an afternoon in Bayou country to get some real Cajun food.  Stopped in Breaux Bridges, La. and hit a couple really nice antique stores and asked for the most authenic cajun restaurant in the area.  We were sent to Poche's about 5 miles away.  Authenic it was....located in the back of a small meat market we shared a plate of dirty rice, crawfish gumbo, etouffee, cracklin, boudin sausage.

Poche's Market & Restaurant

Heading north into Mississippi we made 2 strategic decisions:  the first was to stay in our first hotel in Jackson, MS and the second to take the Natchez Trace Parkway.  The motel decision was primarily to ensure we were able to see Game 8 of the World Series and order a Dominoes pizza!!!  Although a little disappointed with the outcome of the game (Donyce and Vic got us rooting for the Texans) we were thrilled staying in a nice warm and roomy hotel.

The Natchez Trace, managed by National Parks Department was recommended by a friend and is similar to the Skyline Drive in Va., but not as hilly and windy.  The entire length of the parkway is 444 miles but we got on about one-third up.  The 2 lane highway with a speed limit of 50 mph was perfect for a stress free 3 day drive.  We barely had anyone in front or behind us on the road.  Alot to see and just at the tail end of foliage color, it was an excellent decision.  We made numerous stops along the the way and camped at nice spots.  The first night we stayed at Davis Lake operated by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture (got to use the Golden Pass for $13 fee & full hookups).  It was beautiful and as we pull into our spot and began to set up, the folks at the next site yelled over and invited us for a fish fry.  There were about 9 couples from around Miss. and Tenn. who meet several times a year at this campground.  Great people who made us feel so welcome.  They had delicious fried fish just caught from the lake, hush puppies, french fries, cold slaw, sweet potato casserole and pumpkin pie.  What a feast and we shared backgrounds over a blazing fire into the dark.  Janice made friends with a guy with an enormous telescope and moon-star gazed for about 45 minutes.  She came back in a mesmerized state and excited about the cosmic sights she viewed.



Great area for star gazing


New friends at Davis Lake

As we wrote before our quick stop in Nashville to visit the Petitts, then from here on our mission was home still about about 3 nights away.

We pulled into our driveway at about 4pm on Thursday.  After 71 days on the road and 10,816 miles we have alot to reflect on; what would we do differently, our most memorable experience, favorite attraction and part of the country, what we should left home, or where else in the country we may want to live part time.  One thing we both know is we were blessed by the Lord the whole time with safety, great weather and life changing experiences which we wouldn't trade for anything.

Thanks for following our journey.  Here's a few pics that didn't get posted.


Old Town Las Cruces New Mexico

Las Cruces Home to Billy the Kid
One Bad Hombre at the Continental Divide

San Antonio………….Remember The Alamo!!!

San Antonio………….Remember The Alamo
 October 19 - 21

 We landed in a wonderful RV Park in San Antonio and for the first time on the trip we just hung out at the pool and Jacuzzi.  Really relaxing not rushing to one attraction or another.



They had a convenient bus line right out front which took about 20 minutes to reach the center of town.  If you never heard of the River Walk it is something to see some day.   It is a series of canals that make a circle around the city and is actually fed and connects the San Antonio River.  A massive gate can be lowered to protect the city from flooding conditions up river.  We took one of the many canal boat tours which was really fun and informative.  Talk about restaurants!!!  We got our fill of TexMex food at lunch and picked a great restaurant for dinner………called Saltgrass.


We learned that San Antonio is really busy in the winter with numerous monthly events;  lighting of the canal, Christmas barge parades, Mardi Gras, Cinco De Mayo and something called the Mud Walk.  Every January they drain the canal and participants “muck around” in them to remove all the junk accumulated during the year.  Why would they do that…well they also get to keep anything they recover and some the finds have been quite valuable.



The Alamo is right in the center of San Antonio and to me a special “patriotic” highlight of the trip; up there with the Crazy Horse sculpture.  It signifies the true spirit and sacrifice of our early American settlers….the price of freedom.  The battle, in 1836, lasted only about 90 minutes as the 200 defenders were greatly outnumbered by General Santa Ana’s 2,000+ troops. The co-commanders William Barrett Travis and Jim Bowie knew from the start they would never survive, but chose to fight anyway!!  Santa Ana was defeated several months later and it took 9 more years for Texas, an independent republic, to be annexed to the United States.






Time to head further south to South Padre Island at Donyce and Vic Sprecher’s for some sun and beach.