Sunday, April 24, 2005

Signs


Wally Wash

Wet Willie's
Limp Willies

PeeWee Cray

Psycho Clown

























“Go West, young man!” Works just as well today as it ever did. Once again, at a loose end, and with nowhere particular in mind, I decided that it was a while since I’d been west of Dallas. To the west lies Fort Worth (about 15 miles) and Abilene (about 300 miles). Interstate 30 takes you all the way to Abilene – I had no intention of actually going that far, but just in that general direction.

After several double-takes and back-tracks (to confirm what I had just seen), it became apparent that my mission for the day was to collect signs – not the signs themselves, you understand, but just photographs to prove that they exist.

So here I present just some of the ones that I saw. Would you wash your clothes at “Wally Wash”? Or go for a beer to “Wet Willie’s”? Or buy a SnoCone at “Limp Willie’s SnoBall Palace”? Or get yourself tattooed by the “Psycho Clown”? Or buy a car from PeeWee Cray? I think not (although, for PeeWee at least, there may be some reverse psychology involved – as I’ve noted before, Texans are not renowned for their subtlety, so I suspect that it’s just a gimmick).

Thankfully, once off the beaten track, Texas is not all like this. I stopped for lunch at the Sunday Creek BBQ in Santo – a BBQ beef sandwich, with onions and pickles, and lemonade. Their slogan, which all the waitresses sported on the backs of their t-shirts, is “Nobody beats our meat!” Remember, I’m only reporting what I see.

Then I headed north towards Palo Pinto on a minor road, and diverted again towards the signposted Palo Pinto Lake. The countryside you see here probably doesn’t coincide with the average (non-Texan) image of Texas. But, apart from the clump of cactus that is just visible at the bottom right, this could almost be an English country lane. It was difficult to get a picture of the lake itself, since, like everywhere else in the world, a small percentage of the population have effectively barricaded it off with their expensive lakeside second homes. What I did manage to see was very pretty.

I also collected a variety of wildflowers, still in bloom, that are at the moment sitting in the bottom of my hotel wardrobe, carefully arranged between sheets of absorbent kitchen towel, underneath several telephone books and my almost empty, but still remarkably heavy, suitcase. At my age, pressing wildflowers is merely eccentric. I think eccentricity is greatly under-rated.

Sunday, April 10, 2005

I30


Yesterday I went to the annual Arts Festival in downtown Fort Worth. It was much too crowded for me, and I was glad I’d only spent $5 on parking – although I did stay long enough to buy a wonderfully comfortable pair of handmade (by a father and son team from San Antonio) leather sandals.

Today I headed out on Interstate 30 towards Texarkana, into northeast Texas in search of wildflowers. They were plentiful, but you’ve seen enough pictures already. In northeast Texas, once you get off the beaten track, you’re in redneck country (especially as you get closer to Arkansas). How do you know when you’re in redneck country? Every town has a Dairy Queen, and it seems to be where the whole town gets lunch, so that the parking lot is always full of beat-up farm trucks; it’s often difficult to tell whether some of the houses are actually occupied, or gradually disintegrating around their owners; and most families cling doggedly to every truck or car they’ve ever owned, perhaps in the forlorn hope that the rusting hulks will one day be resurrected.

Once again, the weekend bikers are out. You can usually tell the weekend variety from the serious ones because no self-respecting hardcore biker would ever wear a T-shirt that said on the back: “If you can read this, the bitch fell off”.

Pawn shop
I went into a pawn shop for the first time, just out of curiosity. They’re everywhere here, and don’t seem to carry the same stigma as elsewhere. For me, it’s saddening to see the remnants of people’s lives up for grabs, knowing that they have probably been taken advantage of at a most vulnerable point in their lives. Pawnbrokers seem to occupy the same social strata as prostitutes, flop-house owners and fast food outlet proprietors: we’re glad they’re there to mop up the human detritus so we don’t have to, but we look down on them anyway. I’m sure they’re all very nice people. Society would certainly have trouble functioning without them.

I stopped for lunch at Sonic (how hypocritical is that!) and picked up a cheese Coney with onions and a vanilla shake (it’s ok because I had fresh fruit for breakfast). Shortly afterwards, as I was jotting down some notes, another car pulled up alongside me, and the driver wound down his window and asked: “Do you know how to get to the State Hospital from here?” As you know, I usually travel without a map, and so I replied, laughing: “I don’t know how to get to anywhere from here.” Fortunately, he detected my accent and saw the humorous side. A bit further down the road, I saw a sign to the hospital, and saw him making the turn in my rear-view mirror, so he must have made it.

Fate City Hall
I took a slight detour following the lure of a sign to the “city” of Fate. Where they get these names from I don’t know, but it was a tiny “city”, with one of the tiniest City Halls I’ve ever seen. I turned round in the parking lot of the “Fate Gas & Grocery Store” and got back on the highway, satisfied that I had seen all that Fate had to offer.

Finally, I had had to stop for a picture of a large model bull on a trailer, even though I have mostly become inured to such sights. I don’t know where he was bound for, but it’s the kind of thing you only see in America. I think subtlety must have fallen overboard during the Mayflower’s long journey to the New World.

Thursday, April 7, 2005

The Chisholm Trail, TX


A couple of weeks ago I showed you a picture of the outside of the hotel I’m staying in. Thankfully, the inside is much nicer than the outside.
Embassy Suites outside ...


Yesterday I went to “Traders’ Village”, which is just a giant flea-market. It’s getting warm here, but luckily about half of it is under cover, so you’re not in full sun all the time. I wasn’t looking for anything in particular – rather just heading in the opposite direction to the Texas Motor Speedway, which is hosting a NASCAR event this weekend (and many of the participants and patrons are staying at the hotel: both the Jack Daniels team and the Jim Beam team, among others), so that the roads in that vicinity are naturally clogged with race-goers. But I still finished up with a nice leather belt and buckle – the buckle is inlaid steel, which the dealer let me have for $15.
... and inside

You’ve also seen the size of the car the rental company gave me this time – a Ford Explorer that I have to climb up into. Just in case you think this is big, I parked next to a truck outside the hotel yesterday. The best selling truck in America is a Ford F150; one step up from that is the F250; one more step takes you to the F350, pictured here, next to my comparably modest vehicle. One thing my car does have is a built-in compass. Armed only with this, you really don’t need a map. So today, I headed south – literally south. I just kept following roads that went south, to see where I’d finish up.
Ford Explorer

Barn sale
I took country roads wherever I could, because I’m still fascinated by the variety and beauty of the spring wildflowers (don’t worry – no more pictures!). I found a “barn sale” signposted down one of the roads, and found four delightful ladies manning a barn full of antiques and bric-a-brac. I bought two more belt buckles, at least as nice as the one I bought yesterday, for $5 each. So now I have a choice of belt buckles!

I stopped off at the Cotton Patch CafĂ© in Cleburne for some Texas-style cooking – meatloaf, mashed potatoes and black-eyed peas, washed down with a tall glass of lemonade. Meatloaf often gets a bad rap, but a good meatloaf is delicious – it’s all in the sauce!

Inevitably, I found myself back on Route 67, the old Chisholm Trail – I think I must have been a cowboy in a former life. I know this leads right back to Dallas. I was overtaken on the way by a biker in a furry crash helmet with large cow horns sticking of it, his long plaited hair streaming back in the wind. I tucked in behind him, hoping he might pull off somewhere so that I could get a photograph, but then Lucy called my mobile phone, and I lost him in traffic. But not before I pulled alongside him when the traffic slowed, and noticed he had a cigarette hanging out of his mouth. And moments before we were barreling down the highway at 80mph! Pretty neat trick!
The Chisholm Trail

Sunday, April 3, 2005

Spring flowers


You folks are lucky – you only lost an hour of sleep on one weekend. I lost an hour two weekends running! This is because British Summer Time (BST) and Daylight Savings Time (DST) are very slightly different. If you’re at all curious about the whole history of this, take a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daylight_saving_time - and it doesn’t have anything to do the farmers, who insisted that it wouldn’t make any difference because animals can’t tell time! Apparently it was proposed as recently as last year that it be abolished, and there is even talk of Scotland becoming a different time zone – obviously, being so much further north, BST is more disruptive for them.

Ford Explorer
Embassy Suites
At least Hertz made up for it by giving me a shiny brand new Ford Explorer for this trip. But then Marriott put up their rates and couldn’t agree on a corporate rate with American Airlines, so I had to move hotels! I insisted on staying 3 nights at the Marriott, which gives me the 50 nights needed this year to maintain my “gold” status for next year! So I’ve moved to the Embassy Suites (part of the Hilton chain) – the picture below is actually taken from my room in the Marriott, so, as you can see, it’s not far away. I haven’t decided which I prefer yet. My new room does have a fridge and a microwave, and a separate lounge area. It also has a restaurant, with complimentary breakfast and happy hour every day. The pool is inside, but then I never went in the Marriott’s outdoor pool in 18 months of staying there! It’s also an architectural monstrosity that doesn’t seem to be able to decide whether it’s Spanish or modern.

In New England, the fall foliage is the big attraction, and the local TV news, newspapers and websites all report on the best places to see it in all its glory as the leaf colour-change advances through the area.

Bluebonnets
In Texas, it’s the spring flowers, which are just beginning to bloom in abundance in this part of the state. There’s a toll-free telephone number you can call to tell you which highways are the best to travel to see carpets of wildflowers by the roadside. To see some of them, visit http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/park/wildflower/, and there are a couple of pictures of two of the most prolific – the Texas bluebonnet and the pink evening primrose – below (both taken just outside my hotel). Towards the summer, sunflowers will be growing wild in profusion alongside most highways. The Texas Department of Transportation (http://www.dot.state.tx.us/) actually sows 33,000 pounds of wildflower seeds each year along 79,000 miles of state highways. The sight of such a huge variety of wild flowers (which, I have to say, put ours to shame, both in number and size) seems to contradict our traditional image of Texas as a vast barren desert landscape.

Primroses 
The news here is very obviously biased away from what’s going on in the Middle East, and the death of the Pope, and the trials and tribulations of Charles and Camilla, provide the news media with welcome diversions. Because the church here is so much stronger than at home (and also because I’m in the middle of the “bible-belt”), the Pope’s death attracts huge coverage, even though the Americans are only too aware that there is no way an American cardinal will be elected to replace him. The Charles/Camilla fiasco is reported almost with glee, and I’ve heard on at least one occasion the British pre-occupation with pomp and ceremony referred to as “silly”. For a country that has no history to speak of, that’s a bit rich.

This weekend I’ve had little time to do more than work and change hotels, even though the weather has been glorious. Assuming the weather stays good (and that’s a fairly good assumption), I think next weekend would be a good time to jump in my shiny red Explorer (about 14 miles per gallon!) and head out to see the wildflowers at their peak. What was that toll-free number again …