Monday, January 27, 2014

Sunsets and Skies

As I previously threatened to do, I am going to post some favorite pictures to this blog in hope they will have a more permanent home than where they resided previously on line.  I will simply post the photos for each category with the briefest descriptions of the scene. Enjoy them if you want; ignore them if you must.


Anaconda Montana Sunset

Bowling Green Ohio

Dragoon Mountains Arizona

Horseshoe Lakes Clinton Indiana


Keaton Beach Florida

Glacier National Park Montana


Anaconda Montana


Lakewood New Mexico 

Custer South Dakota

Carrabelle Florida

Soledad Canyon California

Titusville Florida

Casa Grande Arizona

Casa Grande Arizona

Cottonwood Arizona


Tarentum,Pennsylvania Above and Below





Salmon Prairie Montana

Lake Conroe Additions and Columbus TX 2014


I have a couple of new pictures to add to those already posted to the Lake Conroe page and as we are preparing to leave Columbus TX for our new digs in Port O'Connor TX on the Gulf Coast I have a few images from our week in Columbus too.


There were lots of Bluebirds and this one posed for the camera.

Try as I may, I cannot get Blogger to display this vertically so you will either have to turn your screen or bend over to view the Red-bellied Woodpecker.


This was our Anniversary Dinner consisting of whole lobster, grilled peppers and onions, wild and long grain rice and cheddar bay biscuits prepared by your blogger.

Quite a herd of deer roamed the campground at Thousand Trails Colorado River Preserve and this seemed to be the dominant male.


These two young bucks provided early mornng entertainment for Dixie and me as they practiced their head butting.  When the big guy above decided he had seen enough he charged over and scattered them momentarily. But like all youngsters, as soon as he retreated they were right back at it!
The youngsters in more peaceful times.



Columbus is the County Seat of Colorado County TX and was established in 1837. It is one of the ealiest settlements in the state. The courthouse, to the right above is undergoing restoration. The circular tower in the foreground was once the town water tower which was built in 1833 after the town nearly burned down.  Its walls are nearly four feet thick and are made from 400,000 locally produced bricks. A metal water tank sat atop and the local fire department had its facilities below. Today it is a museum.

The Columbus Oak. Read about it below.
A picture cannot do justice to the immense size of this tree which is thought to be 500 years old.

Columbus Oak Stats.



Cathy's hot tea was leaving a vapor trail above the cup and the sunlight passing through resulted in a little rainbow.  

The Colorado River (not to be confused with the Grand Canyon carving river of the same name) is the 18th longest river in the United States and the longest river with both its source and mouth within Texas.  It is 862 miles long.

The Colorado River originates south of Lubbock and flows generally southeast through the Thousand Trails Preserve and eventually emptying into the Gulf of Mexico at Matagorda Bay near where we are presently parked in Port O'Connor.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

A Few Birds and 2 Dogs - Texas 2014


For my first blog entry for the new year I have just a few photos to share. Frankly it has been too cold to get outside too much since we got here to Lake Conroe about an hour's drive north of Houston.  We are staying until January 13 and will have been here for 6 weeks then.  This is a Thousand Trails Resort and it is quite busy with lots of full time residents as well as travelers passing through.

Lake Conroe was completed in 1973 and was built to serve Houston as a source of drinking water.  The lake is 21 miles long with a convoluted shoreline which has given rise to extensive residential development which continues today. New construction offers are from $300,000 to $5 million for waterfront properties!  The Thousand Trails is situated on one of the tributary streams and has lake access for boating, fishing and birdwatching.

I have been looking for a way to make it easier for us to enter and exit the rig. Ever since Cathy had her fall taking Dixie outside I have been looking for a solution. Our stop at the Escapees Park in Livingston TX was fortuitous as another member had just what we needed and he gave me the contact information to get the handrail you see in the pictures below.  It extends automatically as the steps extend and retracts with the steps for travel.  So this week it arrived and we had it installed by a local RV Tech.  


Handrail Extended
Handrail Travel Position













We have been treated to near daily visits from Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers at a tree just outside our table.  I have taken some photos through the window so they are not as sharp as they might be.  This bird, as the name implies, feeds on the sap from trees which is accessed by small holes made from pecking the bark. Birds must constantly maintain the holes and enjoy not only the sap, but any insects which may be trapped in it too.

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

It is the only woodpecker to have the long white stripe along the folded wing.


Yellow-bellied Sapsucker


There seems to be a few resident ducks, mostly Mallards, but I did spot a Northern Shoveler in the boat launch area. I spoke to another geezer who had taken pictures of the Bufflehead but it was not around when I returned with my camera.

Northern Shoveler

And the last of the bird photos for this time is the ubiquitous Black Vulture, Nature's Clean Up Crew!
Black Vulture

This, I think is a young one and a sibling is just out of the frame. Larger birds were perched atop boat shelters.  Interestingly, there was a single Mallard lying on the dock nearly motionless until a woman and her dog walked on the dock and the duck raised his head in alert. This morning when I returned it was gone and the Vultures were circling overhead.

Now to happier images...The folks next to us live in Houston and have a rig parked here year around. They came just after Christmas with an Australian Shepherd puppy they had been given by their daughter as a Christmas gift.  Since then, Dixie and Honey Bear have become pretty good buddies and enjoy a romp with one another.  I picked 2 shots of a series from a recent "play date". 

Ya wanna play?

Why I oughtta...






Thanks for looking.  I'll be adding more new pictures as we move around and hopefully find warmer weather, but we are keeping toasty with just two electric heaters and have only had to use the gas furnace rarely.  Since we have to pay a flat rate for the elecricity we might as well use it!


I am also contemplating posting some of my favorite pictures from 10 years on the road.  Since my original Pixagogo albums were lost when the company folded, I thought I'd preserve some of what I deem the best in future, but irregular posts!