Showing posts with label Sweetwater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sweetwater. Show all posts

Monday, May 21, 2012

Gap, Old Home, and Roller Coasters


Saturday around noon, DJ and I were off again on another exploratory excursion. We were Buffalo Gap bound, where we strolled through the flea market that occurs there every third Saturday of the month from Spring to Fall. The market was full of 'stuff grandma left me,' and 'shit no one wants' booths. There were also some 'things that I stole' booths. We weren't much impressed with any of those booths, but the craft booths were excellent and gave us a lot of ideas for a booth of our own some day. Booths at the market start at $14; and I really believe that DJ and I can make a go of it if we try.

The air of the market was filled with the rich odors of roasted corn, tacos, tostadas, burgers, and funnel cakes. We bought us some homemade salsa, and the couple that sold it to us also makes prickly pear jelly. Yummy!!! They gave me their card so that I can put myself down for some of their next batch. They had already run out of prickly pear jelly for the weekend.

DJ and I made it over to the live animal section of the market where we saw puppies, goats, miniature horses, rabbits, quail, chickens, ducks, dove, turkey, and other fowl. I am anxious to buy a house someday, so we can buy one of each. I didn't photograph the market this time, but I plan on photographing it next month when we go. Hey, maybe I'll even have my own booth.

DJ and I went home, and he cooked brats for an early dinner. Yeah, I know, a diet breaker, but we have not had anything like this since March; and we are still losing inches.

Damien went to the mall with his female friends, and Dylan and Xavier were hanging out playing video games. So, DJ and I decided to go out for a drive and take pictures of whatever we could see. We headed out west toward Sweetwater, my old stomping grounds.

DJ thought it would be a good idea for us to go out and see the home that I used to live in with my second closest and dearest friend, Vicki. We passed the truck stop where DJ and I first met, and quickly, we both realized that it doesn't look the same. Of course, when I worked at the truck stop, it was the Sweetwater 76. Now, it is a TA. There is no longer a restaurant with wait staff. In its stead, there are fast food eateries inside. I cannot imagine what it looks like inside now, and I want to remember the truck stop as it was not as it is.

Down the road that runs past the truck stop, DJ and I travelled further and further into the countryside. My anxiety rose the closer we got to my old home on hill. The higher the anxiety rose, the more my hands began to shake. I am not 100% sure as to why I was so nervous, but I suppose it could have been that I was frightened to run into one person I know from my past. It is the same person that pulled a gun on me years ago, but that is another story. We topped the hill and almost missed the house, so I quickly told DJ, "This is it. I meant to tell you before we got to the top." I was distracted.

It looked like no one had lived in the home for quite some time, as the windows are busted out, garbage is strewn about the yard, and the weeds are grown up high. Regardless, I still have many fond memories of sitting on the front porch with Vicki and watching nature pass us by while we passed a drink and smoked our cigarettes. My tiny trailer is no longer beside the house and our covered carport where we used sit in the shade and roll cigarettes under is gone. We rolled our cigarettes at the old card table while our laundry washed in the tiny ancient washing machine. Our clothing had to be wrung out through an old crank ringer before we took it to the backyard to hang on the line, which there was no sign of. I wondered aloud if the old container full of silver Kennedy dollars is still hidden in the wall, or did someone finally find it?


The morning glories' vines are now golden, but they are still twisted through, around, and along the fence. Only one flower bush we planted still thrives, and the tiny red flowers still bloom showing their brilliant colors to the world. Several trees are dead and the ground is mostly yellow instead of green.


Behind the tiny home, the old tire swing that Vicki and I hoisted up in the tree for Selena and Danny is still hanging but drooping almost to the ground. The old rubber is cracked and the rope is worn and frayed. The kids would giggle and squeal as I would let lose of the swing that I twisted high in the air. The pen we kept our old three legged cow in still stood but was bent and twisted with wear.


The old chicken coop on the back of the property still stands, but it is grown up with weeds, brush, and bramble. Often, I would wake early in the morning and go into the coop to gather fresh eggs - large, small, white, speckled, and brown. Then, I would take the eggs into the home, and Vicki would fix us a breakfast fit for kings. The old pig pen may still be there, but the weeds are too high to tell.


The feed shed is still standing, and I wonder if it still contains any of our things. Dressed in shorts and tennis shoes, I did not dare to venture out behind the old home for fear of getting snake bit or even worse, bit by a black widow. I know enough about snakes to know it is not the venom of a rattler that will kill you. A person has plenty of time to make it to the hospital and get the anti-venom if they don't go into the shock, which means it is usually the shock that gets people. I also know that if you are allergic to a bee, then a black widow can take you to the grave; and I am very allergic to bees.


I am glad that DJ and I took the trip down Memory Lane. The dust from the road had fallen to the ground, and the memories had begun to fade. I believe that I needed to go and remember the nights I slept in the back of Vicki's old beat up truck under the bright light of the moon and the twinkling stars. The stars were always much brighter out here because it is so far away from the city. I always loved living at Vicki's, and the time I spent in her home is the one period in my life that I can say I consistently felt as one with nature. It was a tough way of living, but it was simple and gratifying at the same time. Our garden, where we grew our on food, is long gone. We made our own bread, and from the goats, we made our own cheese. However, I never could bring myself to try the goat milk mainly because I don't like the taste of milk anyway.

DJ and I departed the small home and followed the road to the dead end with only three ways to go, back north from which we came, east, or west. Westward DJ turned, and I began to remember climbing the hills in that old, beat up, 1970s Dodge Duster. The dirt road twisted and turned up the hill and down the hill under canopies of trees, and the dust flew up from where the tires touched the freshly grated caliche road.


Cows watched us as DJ traversed to the end of the twisting dirt road to Nolan County Road 147. Again, we headed westward, and the paved road dipped and rose ahead of us like a roller coaster. I squealed and screamed with delight as the truck dropped and climbed with the hills. The further we traveled on the road, the more speed the truck picked up, and the more fun I had. I don't think I have laughed so hard in a very, very long time.


The road finally leveled atop a hill next to a wind farm, and I begged DJ to turn around, so we could ride that roller coaster again. DJ pulled into a gate opening for the wind farm to turn around, where we noticed two burros in a field with several cows. I asked DJ to stop, so I could shoot the animals. I kept trying to get the nearest burro's attention in order to get a good shot, but he would not look up at me. DJ decided that the burro was just "being an ass."



DJ and I traveled back east to ride the roller coaster and head back to our house. On the way back, the trip was different, of course, and the ride down the first hill did not only catch me off guard. It also caught DJ off guard. "OH SHIT!!!" He hollered as the ground dropped from beneath us. For just a second, the tires did not touch the road. We laughed and laughed up and down hill after hill. DJ smiled so big that I felt my heart was going to burst because I have never seen him laugh so hard in the eighteen years that we have been together. We stopped to take pictures of the hills, so I decided to take a picture of the two of us as well.


DJ and I followed Nolan County Road 147 to Nolan County Road 145, Farm to Market 1809, and Texas Highway 70, where we headed south toward Blackwell and Bronte. On the way, we saw a sign for the Decker Cemetery. Decker Cemetery sits atop a hill overlooking the beautiful rolling plains of the mesa. Nothing but the open countryside could be seen for miles. The sign on the fence around the cemetery states that Decker Cemetery does not charge for plots but relies on donations for the upkeep. There is an old windmill in the cemetery along with the tallest evergreen that I have ever had the opportunity to see. The grounds of the cemetery are sprinkled with wildflowers, and grasshoppers and butterflies fill the sky as your feet and legs brush against the plant growth. This cemetery, like many others around here, has a high number of grave sites of unknown souls.







After we left Decker Cemetery, DJ and I returned to Highway 70 and back toward Bronte and Fort Chadbourne. We went to the Fort Chadbourne cemetery in an attempt to capture the sunset and to see how different the cemetery looks with the plants and flowers growing in and around it. I did not get the sunset shot or the other shots that I was hoping for because the mosquitoes were too thick, and they were eating us alive. I did get a couple of shots of flowers and a grasshopper before I wussed out and decided I was going back to the truck.


DJ and I rode down 277 back east talking all the while. We made plans for our future and talked about our past. Before we knew it, we were passing Caps and View. We continued to gab when the red and blue lights of a highway patrol behind us flashed. Ahead of us a sign read 60 miles per hour. DJ was only driving 72, and we were surprised that an officer would pull us over for such a small infraction. However, according to the officer, the speed limit changed from 70 to 60 a good way behind us. Uh-oh!!! DJ apologized to the officer, and I photographed him while the officer headed back to his car to 'check us out.' We laughed about the mistake and decided that DJ should have been paying better attention rather than b-s'ing with me. The officer gave DJ a warning since he has no points on his license and no criminal record. We made it home before the sun set, and DJ posed for a picture with his warning slip.


We had a good time on Saturday, and I relish having many more Saturdays like this one.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Kirby, Barkeley, and Sweetwater

March 17, 2012
Lake Kirby
DJ and I travelled to Lake Kirby to attempt to photograph some of the green that is once again beginning to grow in this arid land. West Texas has been so parched the last several years, that green became a color we have seen very little of. Over the last couple of weeks, the drought has lifted and everything is blooming early. The area around Lake Kirby is beginning to bloom, and my lonesome tree is turning green. There are bluebonnets and Indian blankets blossoming. Small yellow flowers are beginning to sprinkle across the ground. I have never seen the park this green. The rain that we have been getting has been well worth the cold dreary days.

Camp Barkeley
Camp Barkeley is green as well, and it is just as beautiful if not more than last week. DJ stopped to allow me to photograph the lush green fields left behind by our pleasant weather. DJ followed the road that snakes through the rich farmland, and along a trail that took us through the hills until we came upon Hidden Valley Road (CR 101). Before the road lined with elegant homes dead-ended, I spotted two caves atop a steep hill on the west side of the road. Small bats could be seen dangling from the ceiling of the south cave. I was excited to share my discovery with my best friend.


County Road 298
Once we turned around at the end of Hidden Valley Road, DJ and I ventured onto CR 298 and headed west. We took the first dirt road to the north and found an abandoned home. I wonder, did a family live here? Was the home once loved? The brilliant spring flowers, though unkempt and wild, suggest that the home was loved at one time. Behind the home two large turkey vultures flew away from the shed and circled the home. An old windmill still stands tall next to the shed, but the rust and weathering of the wood suggest that the mill has not been used in years. The scent of lavender filled the air, and the dark thunderous clouds provided an ominous backdrop to the sad, broken down home.




DJ and I ventured from one county road to another, some without signs. Down one road, we found a lush green field that surrounded a blue and yellow pump jack that looks unlike any pump jack I have ever seen. The pump jack relied on a different system of levers and pullies than typical pump jacks do allowing the pump jack to look like a working piece of art in its movement. The open beams allow air to flow through the mechanism, which must be why they chose this particular style for this particular location. The wind is much stronger here than anywhere else in the area.


County Road 52
DJ and I found ourselves on CR 52 where we passed the R&R Ranch. The fence around the ranch was quite a bit higher than other West Texas ranches. We soon spotted why the fence was so high, for we approached a heard of dear lazing about the open green field.


County Road 352
DJ and I followed CR 52 to CR 352, where we zigzagged up the mesa hillside. Here, we found a massive AES Wind Farm. The mills climbed high into the sky and hummed lightly. Here, I found a twisted old tree, which I found fascinating, so I decided to snap several shots of the gnarled limbs of the tree.


Farm to Market Road 89
West on FM 89 led DJ and me to more windmills, some of which were thinner and more streamlined than any that I had seen before. These mills seem to reach even higher into the sky pulling energy from Mother Nature’s winds. Along the way, we saw many of the Texas Redbuds in full bloom. I insisted on stopping to photograph the beautiful pink trees.


Farm to Market Road 126
DJ followed FM 89 to FM 126, where we found another deer ranch with much bigger deer on it. I begged DJ to stop so I could photograph the deer. As I quickly but quietly approached, the deer turned away from me and prepared to bolt. I called out to the Alpha Male speaking softly and assuring him I was no threat. I crouched down as I continued to speak softly, and he turned back toward me. He came closer, and his heard went back about their business. I swear this mighty elk posed for every photo I took of him. When I got back to the car, DJ and I discussed what happened. He was astounded that I was able to call the deer back to me, as was I. As we began to pull off, another passing motorist stopped to photograph the heard; but the heard did not stay for them.


Nolan County Road 202
Further west, DJ turned north on Nolan CR 202. We found, once again, a massive wind farm. I suppose wind energy is the future of Texas commercial growth. Here, I found a pump jack amidst the massive mills and decided that another stop was warranted. I photographed the pump jack with the windmills in the background showing both the present and future of energy.

Doris Cemetery
Doris Cemetery is located on the east side of FM 126 at a curve past a rock home to the west just before the Nolan CR 202 Junction. This cemetery is the most empty of any cemeteries DJ and I had previously visited. There are approximately thirty-five plus graves that are marked unknown. I estimate that at least 75% of the cemetery is marked unknown.

Junction Nolan County Road 202 and FM 126
Here an old dilapidated store sits. Only the concrete walls of the store stand. The interior of the store is filled with garbage, old cans, a lot of beer bottles, cactus, and mesquite trees. Some of the trees even poke through the windows of the building growing inside of the store.


County Road 344
DJ took us down CR 344. Again, on the north side of the road, we saw another deer fence with what look to be antelope behind it. Wow! I had never seen a deer leap along as high as these deer leapt.

Around the corner, DJ stopped to allow me to photograph two Billy Goats, who tried to mosey away until I began to call them back to me. They turned around, allowed me to photograph them, and went on about their business.

Interstate 20 and Beyond
DJ and I stopped in Sweetwater to get a bite to eat at the local sandwich shop before we headed back east. We traversed to Lake Sweetwater, where I used to frequent when I lived in Sweetwater. The park is no longer public and belongs to a private golf course. The lake is almost non-existent, as it has dried up mostly. There was not much to see.

Outside of Sweetwater (south), we found a historical marker of the place where a C47 Transport plane crashed with twenty-five Army Air Corp officers and enlisted men aboard. The plane went down at 6:30 a.m. on April 20, 1945. There were no survivors. It was determined that the plane came down due to equipment failure during a thunderstorm. I had never heard any stories about the plane crash that took these soldier’s lives.

Eventually, DJ and I arrived at I-20 and headed back east to Abilene. We did not see much aside from a few empty cotton fields and natural gas pumps, so we took a detour to the north of the interstate. Here we found the remnants of three small towns that I have never heard of, Boyd Chapel, Nienda, and Radium. Historical markers state that all three communities lost many of their citizens due to World War II.

DJ and I saw several dilapidated homes where Boyd Chapel once stood, and we stopped to take pictures of one. While photographing the run down home, a flock of what look to be barn swallows flew from the dead trees surrounding the home. I snapped a shot of the birds and wished that I had that zoom lens I have been wishing for.

Nienda still had a few homes with families busying themselves about the yards, and a cemetery. In the cemetery, we saw several graves marked as unknown. The sun began to lower in the sky, and I was able to get a beautiful shot of the headstone of a girl, Clara Munoz who passed away shortly after her fourth birthday. We searched but found no sign of the town of Radium.

The evening began to close in on us, so DJ pulled over allowing us to sit hand-in-hand and watch the sun go down. The sunset was one of the most beautiful I have seen. Then again every sunset I have with DJ is beautiful because it reminds me that I have had another day with the love of my life, and every day with DJ is precious.