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IMAGES From Nostalgiaville
TEXAS-
TEXARKANA
, TX- 2/26/99

NOTE: A Click of your Mouse on most of the pictures will enlarge them for better viewing

wpe6A6.jpg (4644 bytes) TEXARKANA, TEXAS wpe69A.jpg (7583 bytes)
It's 9:58 AM, and I just looked up and saw a sign... "Texarkana  I-30 West", and a little later we pulled into a rest-stop for... you guessed it... a rest. wpe69B.jpg (10565 bytes) wpe69C.jpg (14170 bytes)wpe69D.jpg (10279 bytes) wpe699.jpg (12949 bytes)
We stop for a smoke and potty break and an idea comes up to do a collage of our trip. We start with a very flat, old penny I found… and a thing from a tree that neither one of us can remember the name of the thing but we know what it is.10:50 A.M., "Texarkana, 68 Miles". Red buds are in bloom. There are very big crows here.  Crows are my friends.   They follow me everywhere.  They caw at me and I hello or good morning them back. BIG, BIG CROWS here.  I wonder if Texas crows are bigger.

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You know, everything is supposed to be bigger in Texas.

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TEXARKANA, "Two Feet in Two Cities in Two States", is a saying on the sign.

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wpe6D5.jpg (4949 bytes) wpe6A0.jpg (3164 bytes) We stop for another rest at the Texas welcome center. At the entrance to the center the sign reads, "The Eyes of Texas Are Upon You". I think there is a song like that.

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9:50 AM on 3-01-99... 887 miles from home and we're departing for somewhere.
We are 13 miles from Sweetwater, Texas on I-20 and oil wells are beginning to pop up. They look like Praying Mantis. wpe222.jpg (3622 bytes) wpe21F.jpg (4217 bytes) wpe21E.jpg (4520 bytes)
The bathrooms at the rest stops are really pretty. There are mosaic tile designs inside of them.

We stopped at a truck stop for lunch and had steak and fries just to see how Texas steak tastes. I think there is a tongue twister in that sentence. We are passing a place called Colorado City and both agree we don't want to live here. It looks really dry, flat and boring. There is no cactus but there are Yuccas… enough said.

It seems most of the barns are made of galvanized steel instead of wood. It looks like tin but Sir Knight tells me it's steel.

We are approaching the towns of Sand Springs and Big Springs. We're out of cattle country now and definitely into oil wells. Without blinking our eyes we passed through the city of Coahoma. We did not see one human being there. We've still got 100 miles to reach our nights' destination. I asked Paul the name of it but he can't remember. Doth I put my faith in the wrong chariot driver?

We stop at a picnic area with an oil rig close by. I took a picture of it. They sound like a swing singing in the desert. The smell of crude oil is breath taking, extremely strong. I wouldn't want to have to wear it as a scent. There must have been billions of dinosaurs tromping around here at one time.

El Paso is 324 miles away. It is hot, dry and sandy here. The shrubbery is gray and light brown. The sky is pale blue with a trace of white clouds. No wonder the Indians were hostile. I'd be quite a bit pissed off myself if I had to live here.

A sign at the side of the road entering the town of Stanton, Texas reads, "Welcome to a Town of 3,000 Friendly People and a Few Old Soreheads".

 

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