- Joined
- Oct 19, 2006
- Messages
- 8,253
- Reaction score
- 50
- Location
- Big sky country; Ronan, MT
- First Name
- Bruce
- Last Name
- Taylor
I had been talking with several friends about a road trip and the plans came together for a ride to Ruidoso. One of the guys has a brother with a cabin there and the offer was made for us to stay there. At one time we had eight folks on seven bikes riding out for three days of fun in the Lincoln National Forest. As it got closer to the time to leave we were down to four bikes. Family issues and mechanical problems, the '06 Goldwing lost it's tranny , thinned the herd. Then we ended up riding out in two groups of two. I left with "P" a day early so we could include a route through Alpine, TX. I was on my 2002 Suzuki Intruder 1500LC and P was on his Kawisaki 1600 Nomad. The other two rode out to meet us the next day in Ruidoso. P and I left around 0700 and headed south from Pflugerville. We decided to take 183 south to IH10 to avoid all the traffic since it was a workday. It's a little farther that way but a whole lot less stress. We stopped for some tacos in Lockhart and by 1000 were through San Antonio and headed west on US 90.
I let P do most of the planning for this trip and he did very well lining up things to see. It was nice to be following, just along for the ride. The first stop was in Bracketville at Historic Fort Clark. http://www.fortclark.com/fortclarksprings/index.htm
This was one of the last horse cavalry posts when it was shut down after WWII. The fort was turned into a resort and the old officer's quarters were sold to individuals for private homes. All buildings are historic so they have to be maintained to preserve the old native stone buildings. Very nice.
A memorial to the cavalry units that protected our southern border from 1868 through 1947.
Back on the road we made the right turn in Del Rio, grabbed some lunch at the DQ, and made our way toward Amistad Reservoir.
This railroad bridge is cool.
Next we made our way to the highest bridge in the state of Texas where US 90 crosses the Pecos River. 273 feet above the river when it was built in 1957. It's a little shorter since Amistad backs up the river now.
By now it was starting to get pretty warm. This is west Texas in August after all. I was real pleased with my gear for the weather. I wore a Joe Rocket Phoenix jacket, First Gear Hypertex mesh pants, Cortech mesh gloves, topped off with a KBC TH-Eight full face helmet. The helmet was definitely the hot spot in the ensemble. I really think the vents are just for show. I could not feel any air movement but with the shield open I got enough air to make it bearable. A wet towel around my neck every time we stopped and I stayed pretty cool, considering.
We pressed on west and stopped for the night in Alpine. You could actually feel the temperature dropping as we rode the last 30 miles from Marathon. Dinner was BBQ recommended by the nice lady at the Antelope Lodge. A place called the Shotgun Grille. The special was combo fajitas plate. Hard to beat a plate of smoked fajitas, YUM.
The Antelope Lodge is a motor lodge style from the 50's. The AC was a little weak but the accommodations were comfortable and very clean. And the price was under 60. Not bad.
First day done. Tune in for more.
I let P do most of the planning for this trip and he did very well lining up things to see. It was nice to be following, just along for the ride. The first stop was in Bracketville at Historic Fort Clark. http://www.fortclark.com/fortclarksprings/index.htm
This was one of the last horse cavalry posts when it was shut down after WWII. The fort was turned into a resort and the old officer's quarters were sold to individuals for private homes. All buildings are historic so they have to be maintained to preserve the old native stone buildings. Very nice.
A memorial to the cavalry units that protected our southern border from 1868 through 1947.
Back on the road we made the right turn in Del Rio, grabbed some lunch at the DQ, and made our way toward Amistad Reservoir.
This railroad bridge is cool.
Next we made our way to the highest bridge in the state of Texas where US 90 crosses the Pecos River. 273 feet above the river when it was built in 1957. It's a little shorter since Amistad backs up the river now.
By now it was starting to get pretty warm. This is west Texas in August after all. I was real pleased with my gear for the weather. I wore a Joe Rocket Phoenix jacket, First Gear Hypertex mesh pants, Cortech mesh gloves, topped off with a KBC TH-Eight full face helmet. The helmet was definitely the hot spot in the ensemble. I really think the vents are just for show. I could not feel any air movement but with the shield open I got enough air to make it bearable. A wet towel around my neck every time we stopped and I stayed pretty cool, considering.
We pressed on west and stopped for the night in Alpine. You could actually feel the temperature dropping as we rode the last 30 miles from Marathon. Dinner was BBQ recommended by the nice lady at the Antelope Lodge. A place called the Shotgun Grille. The special was combo fajitas plate. Hard to beat a plate of smoked fajitas, YUM.
The Antelope Lodge is a motor lodge style from the 50's. The AC was a little weak but the accommodations were comfortable and very clean. And the price was under 60. Not bad.
First day done. Tune in for more.
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