As Corinne mentioned in our earlier blog we have arrived in Fredericksburg, Texas in the Texas Hill country. When we left Albuquerque, there were predictions of high winds, gusting to 70 mph in the afternoon so we wanted to be off the road by noon. We picked Fort Sumner in eastern New Mexico just south of the I40 and arrived by about 1 and had the problem with the bike rack. We stayed at Sumner Lake State Park that day and the wind did blow – we had to turn the camper 90 degrees because the wind was hitting us on the side and rocking us.
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| Fort Sumner Visitors Center |
After getting the bike rack fixed, we visited the Fort Sumner State Historic Park. This is a monument to the Bosque-Rodondo Reservation built during the Civil War to imprison the Navajo and Mescalero Apache rounded up by Kit Carson. The government wanted to remove the Indians from their homelands – they had taken to the war path when the soldiers were removed to fight the Civil War, and turn them into farmers. That was a total disaster as the land was poor and the Pecos River alkaline. In the end the government had to feed the Indians and the reservation, instead of being self sufficient , cost the government $1.5 million a year. The park is an excellent memorial to that event with a beautiful visitors center, an informative self guided audio tour and a great film recounting the first visit by Navajo’s to the area in the 1990’s (a group of teachers and historians – when the Navajo left in the late 1860’s they promised that no Navajo would ever return – over 20% of the Navajo nation had died either on the forced march to the reservation or of starvation at the reservation).
We then moved on to Oasis State Park which is near Clovis and Blackwater Dig where archaeologists first figured out the native pre history that is accepted today with the Clovis peoples living among the Mastodons being followed by the Folsome peoples who lived with the first buffalo. Unfortunately neither the sight nor the museum was open.
So we’ve moved on to Texas. The drive down was very nice, except for the police blitz. We came through miles of windmills (we were in sight of windmills for over 35 miles) and cotton fields from horizon to horizon for a half day of driving. There was irrigation for the cotton fields otherwise I doubt there would be anything there. Texas is suffering through a bad drought and there has been little rain this winter – none in some places.
We spent 2 nights in San Angelo, which turned out to be a lovely little city, with a river walk, an historic down town and the best surviving western indian fort (from the war against the Comanches).
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| Bopa - a picture for Anna |
We visited Fredericksburg yesterday, Corinne did some window shopping and I visited the National Museum of the Pacific War (an exceptional museum). Planning on a small hike and another visit to town today before heading east once again.