granddaughter coraline

granddaughter coraline

grandson mason

grandson mason

grandson jaxson

grandson jaxson

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

10-16MAR14 - Willcox & Fort Huachuca, AZ (via fort stockton, tx & las cruces, nm)

 
Early Monday morning, 10MAR, we hit I-10 heading west towards Phoenix, AZ, where hopefully we will meet up with Corrie's brother Ed & wife Elaine in about ten days.  Also we plan on stopping near the Army installation at Fort Huachuca, AZ, to visit with our son-in-law, Raymond Pitre, who we just left in Houma, LA.  Raymond is in the Louisiana National Guard & has been selected for advanced training at Fort Huachuca.  Unfortunately this means a four month separation from our daughter Rebecca, & the kids Jaxson & Mason:(!

First stop was at Fort Stockton RV Park outside of Fort Stockton, TX, where we stayed back in MAR11.  We stopped here because it made for a reasonable drive for the day, & because it is home of The Roadrunner Cafe.  The Cafe is only open for breakfast, & during "in season" for dinner.  There are only five items on the dinner menu & all come with green beans, mashed potatoes, & a small dessert.  Dinner is only from 6-8PM, & certain items (like ribs) sell out fast; very good food at affordable prices!
 
 
 
After dinner at the Roadrunner, we went back to the RV & skyped with Rebecca, Raymond & the grandkids.  As long as you use "free" wifi or a home network, it is free; & we actually thought it was pretty neat to see everyone "live" while you talked.  Grandson Jaxson even asked where Gumbo was, so we dragged him into the picture.
Early Tuesday morning back on 1-10W for another long drive to Las Cruces, NM.  This means going thru one our least favorite cities for traffic on I-10 - El Paso, TX.  We have learned to take Loop 375 around the NE corner of the city, even if it adds time & has a steeper pass to climb.  At least you bypass all the idiots driving in central El Paso!  The drive was pretty windy most of the way.  We stayed at RV park we always stay at in Las Cruces, NM.  The weather people said it would be windier tomorrow.
 
Wednesday morning, 12MAR, we awoke to very little wind; turns out that El Paso got the worst of it, while Las Cruces was spared.  Today was a short drive to Willcox, AZ, so we (ie Dan) can tour the Chiricahua National Monument.  We have stayed in Willcox before, see below BLOG for our thoughts on the town.
 
 
Thursday morning we had nice waffle breakfast provided by the RV park & then headed to Chiricahua National Monument.  Since we would be touring most of the morning past noon, we were going to park the RV in the RV park's parking lot rather than pay for another day in our site.  But the manager said they would only charge us $1.50 per hour past 11AM.  Our first stop at the Monument was the Visitor Center to get park information & to watch the eight minute park video.  From there we took the dead end Bonita Canyon Drive to Massai Point at the end of the drive, before retracing our route.
 
To paraphrase the park brochure - Chiricahua is a sky island; an isolated mountain range rising above the surrounding grassland sea.  Meadows dotted with cactus & mesquite begin to fill with sycamore, juniper, & oak trees.  Farther up are cypress, pine, & fir woodlands.  The landscape is typical of the basin & range topography in this part of the SW.  It's the rock pinnacles looming over the road, like guardians of the forest, that announce you are in Chiricahua country.  The Apaches called these pinnacles "standing up rocks".




http://www.nps.gov/chir/index.htm
 
We have discovered that by getting to a National Park early, going to the end of any scenic drive, then turning around to hit the scenic overlooks on the drive back; we end up in front of the usual large groups of tourists who get to the park later & stop at each scenic turnout as they hit them.  We weren't prepared for hiking, but Dan did quickly hike the Massai Nature Trail.  Departing the National Monument we took a dirt road north over Apache Pass, past Fort Bowie National Historic Site (hopefully to be visited in the future), to Bowie, AZ, & then I-10W back to Willcox.
 
 
Returning to the RV park we broke camp & headed to Apache Flats RV Park on Fort Huachuca Army Post outside Sierra Vista, AZ.  As we stated at the beginning of this BLOG, we are going there because son-in-law Raymond will be here tomorrow for a four month Army "school".
 
 
Late Friday morning we first headed to the base exchange, followed by the Commissary for groceries.  Then it was back to the RV for lunch.  After lunch Dan headed to two museums on the Fort - the Fort Huachuca Museum, & the US Army Intelligence Museum.  The Fort Huachuca Museum serves the Fort by collecting, preserving and exhibiting artifacts representing its own history and the larger history of the military in the Southwest.
 
Opened in 1960, the Museum houses several thousand objects and documents, many on display in attractive exhibits telling the Fort’s one hundred and thirty-five year story.  The Museum is located in two buildings on the Fort’s historic Old Post, and is open to the public without charge.  The nearby Army Intelligence Museum serves the US Army Intelligence Center of Excellence’s training mission with exhibits interpreting Military Intelligence history from 1885 to the present.
 
A large portion of the Fort's museum is devoted to the Buffalo Soldiers who were a significant portion of the troops at the fort from the late 1800s until WWII.  Also of interest is the history of the Army's Apache Scouts who were a part of the Fort until 1947.  Dan also learned that MRE stands for "Meals Refusing to Exit", "Meals Requiring Enemas", & "Massive Rectal Explosion".  Another small example showing the true value of museums:).




http://www.huachucamuseum.com/
 
That evening we attended the RV park's St Paddy's Day pot luck; where there was lots of good food, most of it green. There was group sing-a-longs of Irish songs (and a great solo Danny Boy); Irish joke/story telling; capped by the Armed Forces Song Medley.  The even showed the "age" of the attendees - starting at 5PM, finishing by 7PM.


Saturday morning, 15MAR, we headed to Tombstone, AZ, arriving just in time for the 12 noon O.K. Corral Gunfight Site Historama on the very site of the O.K. Corral.  After the show, Dan went oneway to historical sites, & Corrie went another to window shop.  Be advised that Tombstone is almost totally geared to separating tourists from their money (ie it is a tourist trap)!  Although is prides itself in its motto as "the town to tough to die"!  It is because of tourism today, that it is not a ghost town like other western boom towns.
 
For example, there are several enclosed areas where the Gunfight at the OK Corral is recreated on almost an hourly basis.  We picked the one we went to because it was on the actual site & we received free tickets to "Tombstone's Historama" narrated by Vincent Price; & a free copy of the Tombstone Epitaph with all the articles about the gunfight & Wyatt Earp's murder trial (note - the paper played a role in the feud between the Earps & the Clantons by supporting the Earps not the "cow boys").





Dan really enjoyed the Historama, which is advertised as a multi-media experience?  Quoting the Roadside America website about the Historama:  "A triumph of Great Society technology, it features a big, lumpy mound on a turntable, decorated with small vignettes from Tombstone's early history, set on a stage in a small theater."

"Every half-hour the house lights dim, the curtain lowers and then rises again (it stays open between shows so that you can admire the mound) and the story of Tombstone unfolds through blinking lights, recorded sound effects, and a projection screen that lowers and raises to show Western movie clips, although it often raises and lowers in the middle of whatever it is that you're supposed to be watching.  The screen also serves to hide the lump, which silently, magically has turned to reveal a new scene when the screen is raised."

"Despite Price's cache, the star of Historama is the lump. It was designed for a generation that demanded less from its special effects, and reminds us of other mesmerizing Paleolithic-tech A/V attractions."

"One imagines that Historama's robot brain is powered by punch cards and vacuum tubes.  To depict the fires that destroyed Tombstone, tiny red light bulbs flicker in a few representative buildings.  To show the murders of Morgan Earp and Frank Stillwell (who killed Morgan), small wooden people have their internal supports pulled away, allowing them to collapse onto the turntable with an audible "tonk" of wood on wood.  We'll leave it to you to guess how the flooding of the silver mines is depicted."

Dan gives it two thumbs up!!!

www.ok-corral.com
 
About 5PM son-in-law Raymond Pitre came to RV.  We visited for a little, & then went to "The German Cafe" for great German food (can you say schnitzel?).  Turns out the Cafe is pretty small & we were going to have to wait outside in the cold wind for a table.  The waitress recommended we order & eat their German food in the bar next door.  Its been a long time since Dan has been in a dive like Paul's Pub!  For some reason Corrie didn't want to eat there & we went back out into the wind & cold & waited for a table in the Cafe; the food was excellent & we are glad we toughed it out.

Sunday morning Raymond & Dan took off for the Coronado National Memorial.  Dan had discovered that there was a West Gate on the back side of the base & you could take Forest Service roads all the way to the Memorial.  But the drive would take over two hours, so they stuck to paved roads & made it in 45 minutes.  First stop was the Visitor Center to watch the film about Coronado's expedition from Mexico, northward almost to what would become Kansas, in search of silver & gold.  There are no indications that Coronado actually passed thru the area of the Memorial, but his records show he did pass thru the adjacent valley area.  Then Dan & Raymond hiked/climbed to Coronado Cave.  Lastly, they drove up the scenic park road to Montezuma Pass to hike up to Coronado Peak.








This is the first time Dan has run into a what looks like a "park" but is called a Memorial, so he did some internet research & discovered from Wiki that - "National Memorial is a designation in the United States for a protected area that memorializes a historic person or event.  National memorials are authorized by the United States Congress.  The memorial need not be located on a site directly related to the subject and many, such as the Lincoln Memorial, do not have the word "national" in their titles.  There are 29 national memorials owned and administered by the National Park Service as official units.  Five more are administered by other organizations but receive assistance from and are considered affiliated areas of the NPS."

http://www.nps.gov/coro/index.htm
 
After Dan & Raymond returned to the RV, we all skyped with Rebecca & the kids.  After Raymond left the RV to start preparing for reporting to school tomorrow, we started prepping RV & Toad for tomorrow's departure.  We know the four month separation will be hard on Rebecca, Jaxson, Mason & him!

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