TOUR AMERICA, 2020: BULVERDE, TEXAS, THE LONE STAR STATE

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Places We Have Called Home In 2020

Home Is Where We Park It:  Texas 281 RV Park, Bulverde, Texas

July 26, 2021

Temperature 93 Degrees

So We Waited, and Waited For What Never Came

Sunday Worship At Our Home Church in Colts Neck

They said it was going to get bad.  Real bad. Lots of rain and wind.  Thunderstorms as well.  So we waited, and waited, and waited some more.  Not a drop.  Not even a breeze.  Forget the thunder and lightening.  They definitely blew the forecast this time.  I was wanting at least one good heavy rain to wash the dirt and dust off of Elvira.  Ah well, when I get to the Escapees Park I’ll give the girl a good detailing.

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Today being Sunday we began our morning with worship at our home church in Colts Neck, New Jersey.

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Pastor Scott began the service with our call to worship.

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Our first song has always been a favorite of mine.

And he walks with me, and he talks with me, And he tells me I am his own

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Continuing in the series that he started in September, Pastor Scott’s message this morning was centered around how the resurrection impacted the disciples then, and how it continues to impact and empower our lives today.

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This, truly, is a summary of his message.  As I’ve always said I never know what life is going to throw at me as I round the next corner on the road of life, but I do know with certainty that the God of my faith will be there to see me through.  Bottom line, life is definitely worth living to the fullest because Christ lives in me.

Pastor Scott then interviewed several members of the question and asked each of them What does the resurrection mean to you?  Each in turn gave their testimony of faith.

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Our special music today was a special handbell arrangement of Crown Him With Many Crowns.

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Our closing song.  We’re now ready to move into a new week with a true sense of excitement and hope.

Later in the day via Zoom we were able to participate in the ordination to ministry of Susan Mulholland, a really dear friend of mine.  She is my age, however, several years ago she felt God calling her into fulltime ministry so back to seminary she went.  She and her husband Mark have been friends of ours for a number of years.  Their support and encouragement and selfless love saw Barbara and myself through some rough times in the past.

That was our day on The Road of Retirement.  We waited in vain for the storm that never came.  We went to church – twice mine you.  We played a marathon round of Mexican Train.  Yes, we watched some more Cedar Cove.  It was another great day all the way around.

Thanks for stopping by today.  We always appreciate your company and your comments.  Stay safe, wash your hands and wear your mask.  Till tomorrow.

These are the voyages of  Elvira and her two intrepid travelers.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have never been before.

See you on down the road!

 

TOUR AMERICA, 2020: BULVERDE, TEXAS, THE LONE STAR STATE

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Places We Have Called Home In 2020

Home Is Where We Park It:  Texas 281 RV Park, Bulverde, Texas

July 25, 2021

Temperature 89 Degrees

Decision Time – Houston or Not

Cave With No Name

Last night I decided to take a couple of Tylenol PM and really get a good nights sleep.  Well, they worked way too well!  I slept to a little past 7 am this morning and when I did get up I felt like I had been drugged.  I am here to say that it took quite a bit of caffeine to get myself going this morning.  Never again.

I am also having a hard time adjusting to the high humidity in these parts.  Yesterday it took me over twice as long to set up once we got here.  I kept having to stop, rest, hydrate and then go again.  I’ll take the high desert heat over these conditions any day.

Houston or not?  We sat and talked about it and finally decided to avoid Houston all together.  It is now the epicenter of the COVID 19 crisis in Texas so the decision was an easy one.  We had planned to visit the Houston Space Center while we there but the thought of being shoulder to shoulder with people from all over was not an appealing one.  This is the way it has been all this year.  Attractions closed or in the middle of a state with COVID 19 out of control.  Definitely, a world turned upside down.

Enough of that.  Let’s go back to yesterday and my tour of Cave Without A Name.

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This is the gift shop and the place to purchase tickets for the tour.

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A picture of the grounds in front of the office.  I found the heart most interesting.

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This is the original entrance to the cave.  The cave was discovered in 1927, when a goat fell through a hole into the cave.  We were told that a small boy was lowered down, through the hole to rescue the goat.  Once they were both pulled out a boulder was rolled over the hole and no further though was given to the cave below.

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The cave went largely unnoticed again until the 1920s during the era of Prohibition when a small moonshine distillery was installed in the uppermost cavern.  With the end of Prohibition the still was dismantled and again the cave was forgotten.

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It again fell into obscurity until three local farm children rediscovered the sinkhole in 1935. These children are believed to be the first who actually entered the main chambers of the cave.  The story we were told is that they tied a rope to the stalagmite in the first picture, entered into the narrow entrance in the second picture, and finally emerged out the hole in the third picture.  Moreover, they did this with only a flashlight for illumination!

And let me tell you, with no light it gets really, really dark in the cave.  At one point during the tour they had us all sit down and then they turned off all the lights.  They informed us that if you stayed down in the cave completely in the dark for three months or more you would go completely blind.

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In 1939, using dynamite – the holes above are evidence of where the dynamite was loaded – a public entrance was opened up into the cave and the cave was now open to the general public.

How did it get its name?  In 1940 a state wide contest was held to name the cave. A young boy suggested that the cave was too beautiful to have a name, and so the cave became the cave with no name.  The young boy, for his suggestion, received a prize of $250.

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The beginning of your descent into the cave.

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You can’t say there wasn’t a warning – Know your limit you will climb 8 stories to exit.  The closer you got to the surface the tougher it became.

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Going down.  But remember, what goes down also must come back up!

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Down you go into a underground world of natural beauty.  Estimates of the cave’s age vary from 100 million up to 400 million years, when the land was covered by a shallow sea that carved out large underground cavities. The temperature in the cavern is a constant 66° F, and the cavern floor is approximately 100 feet below the surface.  Our guide informed us that there are over seven thousand caves in Texas but only seven have been opened up to the general public.

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This is the first of several chambers that you come to.  This room is often used for birthday parties or wedding receptions.  How neat it would be to do a vow renewal down here.  Of course there is the problem of getting everyone down, and then back up.

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As we moved deeper into the room several things were pointed out to us.  Inasmuch as this is still an active and living cave you’ll often find small stalagmites in the process of growing.  A stalagmite we were told grows from the floor up.  As water drips from above and deposits new minerals on what is already there it continues to get taller and taller.  This one will reach full height, oh in about another thousand or so years!

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This is a stalagmite that has almost reached the ceiling.  It has just an itty bitty little bit to go but it will take at least another 80 years for it to make it that far.

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We were informed that this type of stalactite is called cave bacon.  Our guide told us that a stalactite is an icicle-shaped formation that hangs from the ceiling of a cave and is produced by precipitation of minerals from water dripping through the cave ceiling.  The minerals in the water are what give it a unique color.

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At another location in the cave we discovered other bacon strips which are considered some of the largest in the United States. 

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Our guide asked us When you look at this what do you see?  I answered an ice cream cone with vanilla ice cream!

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Yet another time she asked What do you see sitting on the ledge?  We all answered We see an owl.

Moving deeper into the cave we were shown other unique features of the cave including the 50-foot-long set of rimstone dams fed by a natural spring.

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This is where the water begins, with this natural spring.  Our guide asked us How deep does this spring look to you?  Most of us answered Oh maybe two feet at most.  Guess what?  A couple of years ago people had filled the pool with pennies and so one of the guides volunteered to jump in and clean them out.  That’s when they discovered that it really was over four feet deep! Surprise, surprise.

Moving deeper still into the cave.

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We come now to what has been labeled the Queen’s Throne Room.

 

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This is what is referred to as The Queen’s Throne with the Queen in the center surrounded by her subjects.  Oh come on now, use your imagination.

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Due to the great natural acoustics created by 3 large solution domes on the ceiling of the large Queen’s Throne room, the cave is host to 8-12 concerts – usually vocal or native American flute – each year, with attendances of up to 200 people.

More pictures as we made our way through the cave.  What a fascinating and beautiful underground world.  Everywhere you looked there were so many unique formations to behold.

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End of the tour.

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The tour ends at an underground river that spelunkers have explored and mapped up to 3 ½ miles upstream.  However, they have yet to find the beginning and end of the river.

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Currently cavers have mapped out over 2.7 miles of this cave, making it the 7th longest cave in Texas. The cave is currently being remapped by a team of researchers from Texas State University.  There is still, however,  more of the cave waiting to be explored.  As an example, these are two entrances to nobody knows what.  However, because of the delicate nature of the formations around the entrances they have yet to send anyone through them to whatever waits on the other side.

I hope you enjoyed our tour through The Cave With No Name.  It is definitely off the beaten track but if you ever are passing through Boerne, Texas and have an hour or two to spare do yourself a favor and take the tour.

Another day on The Road of Retirement has drawn to a close.  We’re still waiting for the rain that they stated would be here just after noon.  Now, they’re saying it will start after midnight and continue all day tomorrow.  I’ll believe it when it actually begins to rain.  Once again we’ve made a change to our travel plans due to COVID 19.  Even now, we’re here because we wanted to tour The Alamo but it is closed like so many other attractions.  This year has definitely been turned on its head because of this deadly virus.  We can’t complain, though, for it has only been an inconvenience to us but for others a real pain.  We just have to remember that sometimes the situation is the boss and you just have to go with the flow.

Thanks for stopping by today.  We always appreciate your company and your comments.  Stay safe, wash your hands and wear your mask.  Till tomorrow.

These are the voyages of  Elvira and her two intrepid travelers.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have never been before.

See you on down the road!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TOUR AMERICA, 2020: BULVERDE, TEXAS, THE LONE STAR STATE

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Places We Have Called Home In 2020

(We Added Another Stop to Our Link, Our 15th For This Year)

Home Is Where We Park It:  Texas 281 RV Park, Bulverde, Texas

July 24, 2021

Temperature 96 Degrees

Travel Day

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Tour Day today and I was really looking forward to it.

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Did you catch that last sentence?  You will climb 8  stories to exit.  Because of that, I ended up flying solo today.  And I’m here to tell you it was a chore to get back up, especially the closer you got to the surface.  I was gasping for air due to the heat and humidity the last stretch that took us up and out.  Well, more about my cave tour tomorrow.

OK, the cave tour was from 11 am to 12 noon.  What to do now that it was over?  Barbara said Let’s move to our new home today so that we avoid driving and setting up in the rain tomorrow.  That works for me.  So after the cave tour I disconnected water and electric, Barbara brought the slides in while I was on the tour, up with the jacks and away we went.

We only had a 45 minute ride to our new home.

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This is the sign that tells us we are home.

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The road leading in.

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Registration.

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Remember the empty park from yesterday?

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To the right of our new home.

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To the left of our new home.  I’ll take a guess and say probably more than 50% of those here are permanent.

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Our new home until the 30th.  Site spacing is so, so.  It’s not the worse that we’ve had to cope with, not the best either.  We’re comfortable with it.

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  It is a pull through, plenty long enough for Elvira and Little Graybeard.  It is paved, reasonably level, a little tweaking with the jacks got us dead on.  I was able to get us in a position for the satellite antenna to get a clear view of the southern sky.

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However, it getting us in position for DISH to work, it put us a country mile from the sewer hookup!  There is a closer one, right by the power pedestal but it is plugged up.  Water and electric were no problem.  You can see from the picture above if you don’t have to worry about a satellite antenna, you could slide back and put the sewer adjacent to the wet bay.  You would then end up parking in the front.

We’re home and ready for the rain.  I caulked a few spots on the roof.  The tow bar cover is on as are the tire covers and the privacy screen for the front windshield.  Time to discover if we have any leaks.  Let it rain, let rain, let it rain.

That was our day on The Road of Retirement.  We had hoped to go to a fine German restaurant for lunch today, but

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we settled instead for quick and easy.  We’ll do a bit more research and then pick a German restaurant to go to in the coming week.

We’re home, happy, and still traveling along, holding hands, singing our song.  Time to run, time for some ice cream and a waffle.

Thanks for riding with us today.  We always appreciate your company and your comments.  Stay safe, wash your hands and wear your mask.  Till tomorrow.

These are the voyages of  Elvira and her two intrepid travelers.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have never been before.

See you on down the road!

TOUR AMERICA, 2020: BOERNE, TEXAS, THE LONE STAR STATE

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Places We Have Called Home In 2020

(We Added Another Stop to Our Link, Our 14th For This Year)

Home Is Where We Park It:  Cave Without A Name RV Park, Boerne, Texas

July 23, 2021

Temperature 97 Degrees

Travel Day – Driving Got Really Interesting Toward The End!

I guess it should go without saying Never let Bill browse the internet when he has hitch itch.  I mean to tell you I was bored, going out of my mind, anxious to get on the road, wanting to go somewhere, almost anywhere.  That’s how we ended up where we are.

Cave Without a Name | Speleofolklog

That is how we ended up here.  Where is here?  More about this in a couple of minutes.

We knew we had a ride ahead of us today.  Google Maps indicated a drive time of about 4 hours.  I’ve learned to always add at least an hour to that.  That meant we would be on the road for five hours.

What was that line from the Dr. Seuss Book Sam I say I don’t like green eggs and ham.  Allow me to paraphrase Sam I say I don’t like five hours on the road, oh no I don’t.

Yet, we had to do it.  Therefore, we were up at the crack of dawn and on the road by 8 am.  Guess what, I did it again?  Not the wrong way this time but I missed the on-ramp for 10 East.  Not a problem I said to myself I’ll just stay on the access road to the next on ramp.  Guess what?  The access road dead ends!  But wait, what is that at the very end?  Why it is a small gravel road that allows access to 10 East.  By golly I guess others have made the same mistake in the past and they’ve accounted for that.  No harm, no foul we were on our way.

10 East proved to be a bit of this and that.  Some good pavement, some not so good, and some brand new pavement.  It was a rolling road that went over hill and dale.  We even had some 7% downgrades.

I decided to try an experiment today.  Once on 10 East I set the cruise control at 62/63 and decided not to touch it – not even for the hills we came to.  It turned out to be the right decision.  Elvira handled everything, downshifting and upshifting at just the right time to keep the RPM’s at 2000 – that is where this engine makes its maximum horsepower.  The temperature varied between 179 and 195 but never went any higher.  I believe I’m on to something.

Now about where we ended up.  Here is where my flawed reasoning almost got me into trouble.  I figured if there was an RV park associated with the cave then the roads must be OK for RV’s to travel on to get there.  Sort of.  The first few miles were just OK.  Then the fun really began.  The road turned into a narrow, two lane country road barely wide enough for two trucks to pass going in opposite directions.  More than once I thought I was going to loose a mirror.  The road also had more twists and turns and hairpin corners then a snake doing a belly dance.

We made it though.  Where are we?  We are outside of the town of Boerne.  Although this town is commonly mispronounced Born by people like me, the locals don’t mind. The correct way to say this name is Ber-NEE.  Boerne was named in honor of German author and publicist Ludwig Börne.

More to the point.

Cave Without a Name | Speleofolklog

 

We are in the RV park associated with the Cave Without A Name.

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Home sweet home.  It is hard packed dirt, with a bit of a slope to the front.  But hey, we really don’t have to worry anymore about being level – unless you don’t want to roll out of bed!  We have water and electric but that is all.  As for satellite – notice I parked dead even with the only tree that could block the satellite antenna from getting a signal.  Oh well, we have plenty of recorded shows to watch.

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We have the whole place to ourselves.  Given the road leading back here I can well understand why.

Tomorrow, we’ll go on a cave tour.  Then on Saturday morning we’ll move a few miles further east to another new home on the outskirts of San Antonio.

That was our day on The Road of Retirement.  We didn’t use the generator today rather I wanted to try using the inverter.  Which, once I remembered to turn it on up front worked without a hitch.  We had the same crazy issue with the front AC once we got here.  The whole silly on/off sequence for two or three times before it settled down and worked without an issue.  No idea what that is all about.  Hey, we’re here and we’re  good and we’re feeling blessed and fortunate to be doing what we love to do.

Thanks for riding with us today.  We always appreciate your company and your comments.  Stay safe, wash your hands and wear your mask.  Till tomorrow.

These are the voyages of  Elvira and her two intrepid travelers.  Our continuing mission: to explore as many new states as possible, to seek out new acquaintances and make new friends, to boldly go where we have never been before.

See you on down the road!