Ashmore Inn & Suites
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Travel Blogs from Amarillo
Ozarks to Amarillo
Delaine and I left the Ozarks this morning. We were going to do a loop around more of the roads in the Ozarks today but Delaine has to work Monday so we needed to get closer to Sante Fe. I would like to spend 2 more days in the Ozarks to go rafting or canoing and to ride the roads. There are some beautiful spots and some awful poverty there. We …
AQHA Museum & Palo Duro Canyon
I had a much needed late awakening this morning. I rolled out of bed at 9 a.m. in order to get breakfast before 10 a.m. only to discover breakfast ends at 9 a.m. on weekdays. I went to check Delaine's work staus and she was ready for a break so we went out for brunch. After lunch, Delaine went back to work and I did laundry. While my clothes washed …
Second largest canyon in the USA
... go by.
We managed about a 4 mile round trip and were totally drenched with sweat at the end, imagine our surprise that this weekend there is a charity run around the canyon, you can opt to do 20km, 30km, 30 or 50 miles. We ran into one guy who had just finished the 30 mile run and was now riding around the course on his mountain bike picking up the litter, thought the sun would be too strong for some. We of course, after careful ...
Route 66 (Part 1)
... a number of quaint villages depicting 'old town America'. After going through a number of these one-horsed towns, we quickly realized that this was going to be somewhat of a trend, at least for the first part of our trip! Most of these towns have a 'claim to fame', and the locals are only but too happy to chat to you and tell you the history of their village and why it's so great! The number of quirky (and very random in some cases) things to see are astounding and ...
The Clampetts Go to Texas
... the Grand Canyon (a lady architect, don'tcha know, by the name of Mary Jane Colter). Highlights of the desert included the Petrified Forest (which Chris was rather disappointed to see was not still standing, as a living forest would be, to which I responded that that's rather a lot to ask of trees that are 200 million years old); the Painted Desert, with it's bands of color in the dune-like landscape; and thinking about Meteor Crater, a 50,000 year old, mile-wide impact site. ...