Saturday: Del Rio, Texas
Del Rio is a major town in this area
and we were able to do some grocery shopping, get fuel and propane
before we head south to Big Bend.
We continued west on US90 stopping at the Amistad Reservoir Recreation Area Visitor Center to watch to movie about the joint Mexico/US reservoir and its history.
Pecos River |
Pecos River |
Judge Roy Beans' "Jersey Lilly" Saloon and Court was often held on the porch |
Sidling up to Judge Roy Bean's Bar |
Ornate feet from the original pool table in the Jersey Lilly |
There is no place in the USA that has local pride like Texas - their flag and the Texas Star are everywhere!
I drove the rest of the afternoon
through Texas scrub land mostly mesquite and creosote – and as I
approached the town of Marathon, we began seeing some greening of the
land and a few cattle and goats.
We were thankful to be here as it
is a much higher elevation (4,000') and the temps were only in the
80's a welcome relief from the 104 degrees back in Del Rio. Marathon
has some of the darkest skies in the U.S., and we sat outside and
watched the stars – beautiful!
Marathon Campground |
Sunday: Marathon, Texas
Sunrise in Marathon Campground |
When having my coffee outside, I
noticed that our back tire was super soft-almost flat. After
checking, found that both dual tires were the same. Huh??? Called
our Good Sam roadside assistance and they informed us that they
cannot send someone to check the tires, but only send a guy to either
change the valve stems or install new tires (all parts and labor at
our expense). OK, so tires only have 25k miles on them and we do not
have extender valve stems that can cause problems, so hesitant to
“order” new stems or tires. We knew that being it was Sunday,
nothing would be resolved, so spent the day doing RV cleaning and
maintenance.
Monday: Marathon, Texas
Had multiple conversations with our
Roadside assistance before finding out another option (that they do
not recommend) is to have someone come out and fill our tires with
air, but they will only fill one tire and we have to pay for the
other - duh. OK – that is what we requested and drove the half
hour to the nearest large town (Alpine) to a tire dealer. They
diagnosed the problems – a hole in one tire which they repaired and
the other had the valve stem broken – replaced that. We also found
we had a lot of oily residue on the hubcap and so they repaired an
axle seal. Very reasonable – and we will be looking for a new
Roadside Assistance company. We did some shopping, had lunch, and
decided to just stay in Alpine for the night.
Tuesday: Alpine, Texas
Bummer, outer dual tire is low again.
Back to our friends at the tire shop and they determined that we had
a cracked rim! So, they put on the spare (for free!) and we were on
our way. Finally, on to Big Bend National Park.
We drove south an
hour and a half, through some small towns - mostly spread out campers stuck under aluminum sheds.
We stopped at the Visitor Center to watch a movie about
the Park and then drove half hour to the Chisos Mountain Basin area
to get a campsite. It is above 5,000' feet here and the top temps
are in the 80's and forecast to be high 60's at night- perfect! No
hookups here, so we took a scenic drive in the afternoon, returned to
the Chisos Mountain Lodge for dinner and to our campsite for the
night. A gorgeous spot surrounded by rugged peaks.
Despite the mostly arid scrubland, there are occasional bursts of pretty color |
"Mules Ears" |
From our campground in Chisos Mountains Basin, looking out the "window" at the plains |
Signs around the campground |
Bear Boxes |
Wednesday: Big Bend National Park
Happy 4th of July !!!!
Case Grande Peak |
Looking for shade near the Rio Grande |
The mules should have been here in the Rio Grande to keep cool! Mexican washing his horse |
Rio Grande looking west |
Drove to the eastern part of the park
to see the Rio Grande – if we had been here for the weekend, we
could have taken a quick rowboat ride across the river to Mexico for
lunch at a Cantina, but unfortunately, the summertime is the slow
time here and they only do the crossings on weekends. It is over 100
degrees down by the river. The river is muddy and and can be waded
across in many spots. We enjoyed watching some folks give their
horse a bath. Stopped for lunch and then drove west through a scenic
drive with volcanic rocks, jagged peaks and unusual rock formations
back down to the Rio Grande where we saw cattle grazing. The River
has carved huge 1500' canyons through the rock – a beautiful area.
I decided to take shortcut back to the main road that the Park Ranger
said had some washboard, but fully passable by our vehicle. Ahem.
Some washboard turned out to be 10 miles of washboard, and couldn't
go faster than 10 mph. That means by shortcut to save us 45 miles
took more than almost two hours to traverse, but we did see some
beautiful scenery and a few roadrunners.
Rio Grande is Western Part of Park. Right side is USA |
St. Elena Canyon - in high water months can take multi-day raft trips through 1500' walled canyon |
Out of the park, we stopped at Lajitas,
Texas on the Rio Grande for a site at an RV Campground Resort –
absolutely essential we have electric as the temp is 106 degrees! I
had stayed here a year ago January, and they no longer accepted our
discount RV campground pass and had to pay $45, but it is the only
game in town and we had to have electricity for the AC.
Heading to higher ground and more
reasonable temperatures tomorrow.
Great pictures! We visited Big Bend in our fulltime years. However, we did not get to see much as Anneke fell and broke her foot on the first trail we were on:( Someday, we may get back:)
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