Gone to Texas

"You can go to hell, I will go to Texas"--Davy Crockett
We decided to take a trip down to Austin to visit relatives the last two weeks of March. It was nice to catch some warm Spring weather a little early for those of us who live in mountains!
We had reservations for Abiline State Park as a way point, but it seemed like a good idea to break it up into two shorter drives, so we planned to leave after lunch a day early and spend the first night in Roswell at Bottomless Lakes SP NM. Then, a late winter storm was predicted, and we decided to leave a day earlier still and outrun the worst of the weather.
Unfortunately, we couldn't get a reservation at Bottomless Lakes that night, so we spent the first night at Oasis SP NM near Clovis

Best thing about Oasis is that I forgot to take a picture of it last time we were there, so I got two this time. It wasn't very windy until about 15 minutes after we got there, and then we caught the edge of the winter storm.
It's right on the edge of West Texas, and I suspect always windy. It was a point to stop, and it was warmer and less snowy than Cedar Crest, but I can't recommend it as a destination.
Roswell should have been better, but it wasn't. Still rainy, and the facilities at Bottomless Lakes were poorly maintained. No benches in the showers, which had water all over the floor. One men's room which was not cleaned and was, in fact, unusable.

However, we did spend the afternoon in Roswell and visited the Miniatures and Curious Collections Museum, and the Roswell Museum. The latter has, among other things, some of the tools that Robart Goddard used for his early rocket tests, as well as pictures and information about him and those experiments. Shelly made a deal with the Miniatures and Curious Collections Museum to display some of her doll house furniture and sell them on consignment, so we even got some business done while we were there!
Abiline SP TX, by contrast was very nice, and a bit warmer, though still cool and rainy when we got there

Good clean rest rooms, warm showers, and the trees were starting to green, so a vast improvement all round!
On our way there, we stopped at Sweetwater Texas at the National WASP Museum. For awhile during World War II, they trained women who had private pilot's licenses to fly military aircraft there. Worth maybe an hour, and a good break since we had the time.
(Continued)
Tom
We decided to take a trip down to Austin to visit relatives the last two weeks of March. It was nice to catch some warm Spring weather a little early for those of us who live in mountains!
We had reservations for Abiline State Park as a way point, but it seemed like a good idea to break it up into two shorter drives, so we planned to leave after lunch a day early and spend the first night in Roswell at Bottomless Lakes SP NM. Then, a late winter storm was predicted, and we decided to leave a day earlier still and outrun the worst of the weather.

Best thing about Oasis is that I forgot to take a picture of it last time we were there, so I got two this time. It wasn't very windy until about 15 minutes after we got there, and then we caught the edge of the winter storm.

Roswell should have been better, but it wasn't. Still rainy, and the facilities at Bottomless Lakes were poorly maintained. No benches in the showers, which had water all over the floor. One men's room which was not cleaned and was, in fact, unusable.
However, we did spend the afternoon in Roswell and visited the Miniatures and Curious Collections Museum, and the Roswell Museum. The latter has, among other things, some of the tools that Robart Goddard used for his early rocket tests, as well as pictures and information about him and those experiments. Shelly made a deal with the Miniatures and Curious Collections Museum to display some of her doll house furniture and sell them on consignment, so we even got some business done while we were there!
Abiline SP TX, by contrast was very nice, and a bit warmer, though still cool and rainy when we got there
Good clean rest rooms, warm showers, and the trees were starting to green, so a vast improvement all round!
On our way there, we stopped at Sweetwater Texas at the National WASP Museum. For awhile during World War II, they trained women who had private pilot's licenses to fly military aircraft there. Worth maybe an hour, and a good break since we had the time.
(Continued)
Tom