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In this blog you can read a complete record of the visits we have made to The United States since march 2007.
Each of our trips has its own blog site Blog site. However we have now brought them all together onto our main Blog Page.
Our last trip, with a current name: Road Blog Spring 2013 is now complete.


Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Home and getting ready for Christmas

We had a very good flight back from Orlando to Manchester - only just over 7 hours - and were only a half hour late arriving 8am. The delay was due to a couple who didn't board the plane in time and their luggage was taken off.

We were amazed to see the amount of snow and ice lying on the ground - they had had over two feet of snow which is very unusual - especially in November in the UK. Fortunately, the main roads were clear and we had a good run over the highest motorway in England, getting home around lunch time. Our street was lethal - like a skating rink with very deep snow and ice, so Terry was very careful in negotiating the front so we could unload our luggage and then taking the car round the back alley to put it in the garage. It has been very cold too, but the temperature has eased up the last couple of days and most of the snow has melted. There are still patches of ice on the side roads and the pavements and walking out is treacherous . We have seen a lot of damage to roofs and gutters as the weight of the ice was quite considerable. We seem to be OK. The cold weather is due back later this week, so we may yet get a White Christmas.

We have been busy doing last minute shopping and posting cards and all the usual hoy palloy in the run up to Christmas. We are off to Derby for Christmas and then Terry and I are flying to Guernsey for New Year. Cannot wait to see all the grandchildren.

Terry has already booked our flights for the next visit to the USA - flying into Orlando on the 8th March ( we WILL be at Jim and Connie's Party - whoo hoo) and then onto Dallas on the 14th March to pick up the trailer. We will return directly from Los Angeles on the 24th May as this time as we really are heading west.

Looking back over this last trip, we have had another amazing time. We have travelled a total of 3,700 miles in the truck, 1815 miles with the trailer in tow and flown approximately 11,00 miles. We have met up and spent quality time with some of our friends and met and made some new friends. Our address book is getting quite full. We have sampled and enjoyed Cajun food, - gumbo, jambalaya, etoufee, boudin - Mexican food and Texan steaks. We have eaten lots of shrimp and Terry learnt how to prepare and cook shrimp from our expert friends. We have learnt about Cajun, Arcadian, Mexican and Texan cultures and music. We visited two State Capitol buildings and learnt about politics in Louisiana and Texas. We have seen the country changing from the wetlands and sand of Florida through the swamps and prairie lands of Louisiana, the beautiful coastal area of southern Texas to the drier hill area further north in Texas. All beautiful in their own way. We have seen fossilised dinosaur tracks, Spanish Missions, the Alamo, beautiful plantation houses, lovely rivers, sweeping plains and rolling hills, lively cities like New Orleans, Austin, Baton Rouge, San Antonio and Dallas and enjoyed some wild country in the depths of Louisiana and Texas. We have seen coyotes, snakes, raccoons, deer, opossum, armadillos, and myriads of birds from pelicans to cardinals, from hawks to eagles.

Our love of America and American people just grows with each venture into the New World.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Homeward Bound

Well, we are sitting in Orlando airport waiting to catch our flight back to the UK. We flew from Dallas Fort Worth airport to Orlando this morning after putting the trailer and truck into storage yesterday. We spent a night in a motel near the airport so we could catch the early flight to leave us plenty of time in Orlando. There is a big freeze on here in the USA, so we were glad to find out that all our flights have not been affected and we should be OK to get back to the UK. What we'll find when we get home us another thing - been freezing there for the last week. Will our car start, will the roads be clear - fingers crossed!!
The last 5 days have been taken up with slowly getting our rig ready for storage. Washing everything in sight, cleaning all within an inch of it's life, draining water systems, packing all linens in vacuum bags etc. etc. It's also been very cold, so we have been unable to wash and dry things which will not go in the tumble drier - will have to do them when we next get back. Anyway - we managed to get everything done and leave for Dallas at the time we wanted.
We have had such a great time here and cannot wait to get back again. We plan to return in March - fingers crossed. Sally

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Ray Roberts Lake

Today we have moved on to our last campground for this trip. It is a State Park beside a huge reservoir – they say it is 30000 acres, which is 46 sq. miles. A large part of the 118 mile journey was spent in going round the outside of Fort Worth, which is a large conurbation. We decided to stop en route for lunch, rather than making a packed lunch and then cooking in the evening. Since we did not know the area when we thought it was about time for lunch we just pulled off into a town area and looked. We saw a sign which said CafĂ©, great, so we pulled up and went in, only to find that it was a Mexican Restaurant. What the hang, we had never eatn proper Mexican, as Sally was bothered that everything would be too spicey, also that everything seemed to have wheat or corn in it (fajita, burrito, enchilada, tortilla, etc.), however we were pleasantly surprised that we were able to find some great food there.

We arrived at Ray Roberts Lake and have a great campsite almost beside the lake and this evening we sat and watched a massive red sunset as the sun went down over the lake. It was very beautiful.

The Lost World of Dinosaur Valley

Wednesday we set out bright and early to take the road to another world. The Lost World of The Dinosaurs. Yes we were going to stay at Dinosuar Valley State Park.

We had a good journey, using mostly back roads, which though only two lane were very straight and fast. We travelled through the Hill Country to the north of Austin. Worth mentioning is that when we passed through Hamilton we passed a cemetery and Sally had to do a double take as she saw a sign over a gravestone which said ‘Billy the Kid is Buried Here’. Sure enough this is where Billy the Kid is buried, but we didn’t get a picture of it.

We arrived at Dinosaur Valley State Park and were set up by 3.00, so set out to investigate what the place was about. The Paluxy river is a small (15m across) river that flows in a deep gully through the park. Along the banks on either side a hard layer of limestone is exposed, providing a flat shelf of rock, in which we should be able to find dinosaur footprints. We climbed down into the gully and used giant stepping stones to cross the river. There we found our first footprints, we could see them in the bottom of a small pool of water, clearly an elongated foot with three toes. We moved on and there, under the lee of the wall of the gully was a large flat area of rock, covered with footprints. The three toed clawed feet were the easiest to see, but then we picked out big round impressions in the rock. As we moved round we could see other tracks, clearly there were four impressions showing that the animals had been walking. The footprints are huge and of two different dinosaurs. One is a large, plant eating monster, with feet shaped like an elephant’s feet, but larger, these are the footprints of a sauropod, most likely the Paluxysaurus Jonesi.

The other footprints are of a 3 toed carnivore. We could see it was a carnivore as each toe ended in a huge curved claw, leaving marks in the rock 4 inches long. The footprint impressions were made some 110 million years ago, when what is now hard limestone was a hard, shelly clay, a bit like playdo. Most likely it formed the bottom of a shallow lake or estuary as once the mud had been stepped in it was never disturbed again, but covered over by more layers of shells and mud. Over millions of years the lime/clay became hard, but the layers above stayed soft and shaley. When the river eroded down to the soft shale it was easily washed away, leaving the hard limestone exposed, complete with its fabulous footprints.

Finding these dinosaur footprints was amazing. It was something I read about as a child. The whole afternoon had a air of Jurassic Park about it. To be actually treading here dinosaurs walked was very exciting. To be doing it in this beautiful river setting made it even more of an adventure.