Author Archives: Ed Heimel and Chris Klejbuk, MN travel bloggers; ckeh72@comcast.net

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About Ed Heimel and Chris Klejbuk, MN travel bloggers; ckeh72@comcast.net

We are a husband and wife team living in St. Paul MN. Both of us retired by the end of 2012 and decided to travel and visit areas of the U.S. and Canada that we had not seen before. Most of the time we head out for 3-7 weeks; usually by driving, first in our 2001 Saturn and then when it hit 225,000 miles we traded it in for our 2016 Subaru Legacy . This travel blog is written to help us remember the great places we have visited and people we have met as well as to inform family and friends of our whereabouts. Contact us at ckeh72@comcast.net In 2013 we took the following trips: Trip 1-January--2 weeks in Florida to visit Orlando, St. Augustine, Jacksonville, Amelia Island. Trip 2-February and March-4 weeks in Hawaii, visiting the four major islands. Trip 3-March and April--several weeks in New Mexico visiting family followed by traveling cross-country to VA for VA Garden week. Trip 4-May and June--6-7 weeks driving to Las Vegas, the Sierra Nevada Mtns, Yosemite, Kings Canyon, Sequoia N.P, Salt Lake City, Grand Tetons, Yellowstone, Devils Tower and home. Trip 5-June- a quick trip to Boston to visit family. Trip 6-July and August-a 6-7 week trip to Calgary, Banff, Mt. Ranier and Mt. St. Helens, Olympic N.P., North Cascades N.P., Victoria, Vancouver, Whistler, Revelstoke, Jasper, Yoho,Whitefish lake, Theodore Roosevelt N.P. Trip 7-August and September- our daughters wedding in MD and returning home through the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Trip 8-October and November-3-4 weeks in the Ozarks, Arkansas, Missouri. Trip 9-December and January 2014-Christmas in Santa Fe and New Years in Flagstaff and points in between. In 2014 we took the following trips: Trip 1--a week in Ely MN, most of it dog-sledding in late Feb. Trip 2--6 weeks in the Deep South including LA, MS, AL, GA and FL in March and April. Trip 3--a trip to Boston to visit family Trip 4--May and June houseboating on Lake Powell followed by Monument Valley, Arches and Canyonlands N.P, Black Canyon of the Gunnison N.P, San Juan Mtns of CO Trip 5--time spent in MN and the Midwest Trip 6--visiting Ontario, Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec, the Adirondack Mtns of NY, our daughters wedding in CT and home through Philly and Ohio, 7 weeks in September and October. Trip 7--Southern California including Joshua Tree and Mojave Desert N.P, Anza Borrego Desert State Park, and then to Flagstaff for Thanskgiving for three weeks in November. In 2015, we took the following trips: Trip 1- 8 weeks traveling around FL in February and March, most of it on the panhandle, penninsula and Gulf Coast. Trips 2 and 4 to Boston in April and July. Trip 3 was to Isle Royale National Park in Lake Superior. Trip 5 was to southern MN. Trip 6 was to Voyageurs National Park and northwestern MN. Trip 7 was to the Great Smoky Mountains and neighboring areas. In 2016 Trip 1 was to Chicago IL. Trip 2 was to southwestern MN. Trip 3 was to Boston. Trip 4 was to southwestern United States. Trip 5 was to Lake Superior. Trip 6 was to Winona MN. Trip 7 to western Massachusetts (the Berkshire Mountains). Trip 8 to the Rocky Mountains in Colorado. Trip 9 to Boston and Rhode Island. In 2017, Trip 1 was to the Mississippi River Headwaters. Trip two will be a month long tour of Texas and another month traveling to and from Texas across the southern US. Image

2013 Trip Nine, Dec. 25, Christmas in Santa Fe, New Year’s in Flagstaff

Santa Fe, Dec. 25 Wednesday

Our Christmas Hostess

Our Christmas Hostess

Merry Christmas to all!! We have had a splendid time in Santa Fe. Today was a family day.

We made it to 9 AM Mass at St. John the Baptist church in Santa Fe. They had a full house and the pastor gave a good sermon. At least it seemed that way, I admit I have forgotten most of his points by now. Oh well.

The Lamb Roast

The Lamb Roast

The day was spent at Jude’s. Breakfast for us was more of Jude’s home-made pecan-cinammon coffee cake. Jude, Bernie, and Tony had more time to eat there than we did and had a more extensive menu. Appetizers before the meal featured some items new to us like a ginger spread and a fig topping. Other people said they were good.

The Christmas table gathering

The Christmas table gathering

Lucien and Joyce joined us at noon. We did not do a Christmas puzzle, we just enjoyed each other’s company, along with brief walks and card playing. Phone calls to Kathy and Mike and FaceTime with Deb, Rebecca, Sarah and Sarah were part of the holiday feeling.

Christmas gifts

Christmas gifts

Dinner was focused around a lamb roast. Lamb is not our usual meat and Jude went out on a limb to try something different. It turned out excellent.

Christmas gifts

Christmas gifts

The group had agreed not to give major gifts to each other but we each obtained minor gifts to fill a Christmas stocking for each person. From candy to pencils to calendars to cosmetics and basic utensils, we entertained ourselves with opening the gifts.

Christmas gifts

Christmas gifts

Desserts continued to be a main attraction and our sugar intake has increased substantially. At least if we keep this pace up, the desserts will be gone soon and we can revert back to our normal diet.

Christmas gifts

Christmas gifts


Christmas gifts

Christmas gifts

Ed and Chris Dec. 25 9:30 pm

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2013, Trip Nine, Dec. 24, Christmas in Santa Fe, New Year’s in Flagstaff

Santa Fe, December 24, Tuesday

Christmas in Santa Fe with snow here and there, temperatures in the high 30s during the day, and low 20s at night with a beautiful sunny sky. Lou and Joyce arrived today so everyone who is coming is here.

Brunch with Diane and Edgar

Brunch with Diane and Edgar

Jude continued her cooking madness with a cinnamon pecan coffee cake from scratch for breakfast. A new job of cook could be on the horizon.

Diane and Edgar, two friends of Jude’s, joined us for lunch and an afternoon concert. We gifted them with stocking stuffers and filled them with soup, sandwiches (which they brought) and cookies. A little bit of Heimel humor was added to the mix also.

Afternoon concert dress rehearsal with young conposer

Afternoon concert dress rehearsal with young conposer

The Santa Fe Concert Association Orchestra holds Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve performances. They also open up their dress rehearsals for each performance to the public for a nominal charge. Jude, Bernie, Tony, Chris, Ed, Diane and Edgar attended the Christmas Eve dress rehearsal this afternoon.

The gang gathers

The gang gathers

The group performed two works by Beethoven and a four-minute concerto written by a young man aged twelve. It was a relaxing way to hear some good music. One of the Beethoven pieces featured a violin solo by a young woman who has been on NPR’s “From the Top” program.

After the concert, we met Lou and Joyce at the Wyndham timeshare in Santa Fe. It was close to downtown and allowed us to gather for a quick meal. Of course it included dessert; Lou and Joyce brought chocolate chip cookies, and pralines.

Along Canyon Road

Along Canyon Road

The evening’s adventure was a Santa Fe Christmas highlight, the walk down Canyon Road. You may or may not know that Canyon Road is a premiere art and restaurant location. For Christmas Eve, the road is closed to traffic, lined with farolitos and lights, bonfires, and singing groups. Getting to Canyon Road was an adventure in itself, with parking at a premium and near gridlock on the surrounding streets. But we made it there.

Along Canyon Road

Along Canyon Road

Canyon Road was thronged with people enjoying the festive evening. The bonfires added the smell of burning pinon pine wood to the air. You were never far from some musical group. Numerous, but not all, art galleries were open. We stopped in several and spent about two hours seeing the sights.

Dog in doorway of private home along Canyon Road

Dog in doorway along Canyon Road

Lou and Joyce along Canyon Road

Lou and Joyce along Canyon Road

Ed and Chris Dec. 24 11 pm

Post Script
This was our 200th post for the blog for the year 2013. While we have been out for closer to 240 days, some days were combined into one post.

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2013 Trip Nine, Christmas in Santa Fe, New Year’s in Flagstaff

Monday, December 23 Santa Fe, NM

Getting ready for Christmas

Getting ready for Christmas

Today was a family preparation day. Chris made her Spritz cookies having brought her cookie press from Minnesota. Jude made a pecan coffee cake that we can not enjoy until tomorrow. She also made dinner, salmon with a cucumber topping. For dessert she made baked apples. Yum! Plus, it was topped with Tillamook ice cream, a great brand we discovered when we went to Oregon in 2010. I made my third batch of Russian tea cakes, there should be a few left for Joyce.

Jude's baked apple and Tillamook ice cream

Jude’s baked apple and Tillamook ice cream

We are not gifting major presents but are doing small stocking stuffer gifts so people were busy finishing off the shopping, wrapping gifts, and identifying the Christmas stockings Jude purchased for each of us.

Bernie and Ed on  La Tierra trail, off Calabasas trailhead

Bernie and Ed on La Tierra trail, off Calabasas trailhead

Bernie, Chris and Ed found some time in the afternoon for an hour walk in the La Tierra trails west of Santa Fe. It was a path Chris and I had taken once before. This time it was partially snow-covered but earlier users made the trail readily identifiable. The fresh air and blue sky with the mountain backdrop made for a pleasant experience. As we pulled up to Jude’s house, we saw a coyote. Unfortunately I was not quick enough with my camera.

Cooperative cooking

Cooperative cooking

Ed and Chris Dec. 23 10 pm

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2013 Trip Nine, Christmas in Santa Fe, New Year’s in Flagstaff

Sunday, December 22nd, Santa Fe

An interesting day. We combined the sacred and the secular.

Las Posadas started here at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis  of Assisi

Las Posadas started here at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi

The morning was greeted with fresh snow, about two inches here in Santa Fe. Albuquerque, 60 miles south and about 1800 feet less in elevation, had no snow and much warmer temperatures.

Las Posadas

Las Posadas

Our morning drive to church was slow and slippery. But when we left Jude’s house at noon for our afternoon adventure, the roads were either wet or already dry. Our destination was once again downtown Santa Fe, but this time to watch (which became participation) Las Posadas. This is a Spanish based play that recreates the plight of Joseph and Mary as they seek shelter in Bethlehem. It can be religious or secular based.

Las Posadas

Las Posadas

Today’s version was religious. It started inside the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi. The procession has at its head altar boys, two members of the Knights of Columbus, a teen portraying Joseph, a teen portraying Mary, two priests, and then a bunch of people (maybe 75 to 100) including us.

Las Posadas at First Presbyterian Church

Las Posadas at First Presbyterian Church

We processed down Santa Fe streets to the First Presbyterian Church of Santa Fe. At this church a ritual chant is exchanged between the outside group and people inside the church. The basic message (in brief) is: let us in, we need shelter; go away you are trouble makers; no, let us in, we are Joseph and Mary who is the Mother of the Divine Word; oh, so that is who you are, come on in.

Las Posadas at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Faith

Las Posadas at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Faith

Inside the church, welcomes are exchanged, hymns sung, and prayers said. The procession then leaves for the Episcopal Church of The Holy Faith where the process is repeated. At the last church, refreshments are served and gifts exchanged between the churches.

Ed and Chris at the New Mexico Museum of Art

Ed and Chris at the New Mexico Museum of Art

After this, we headed over to the New Mexico Museum of Art. The museum was free this afternoon. We explored the special exhibit on prints and drawings from Spain including a number of works by Francisco de Goya.

Madrid at night

Madrid at night

Finally we headed out to Madrid, a small town on the Turquoise Trail (not far from Cerillos Hills State Park). The town is known for its eclectic collection of shops, most featuring local artists. We toured around, Chris bumping into interesting people as usual. No purchases were made. We had dinner at the Mine Shaft Tavern.

Tony, Santa, Bernie at the Mine Shaft Tavern

Tony, Santa, Bernie at the Mine Shaft Tavern

The Tavern was a trip in itself. A musician was combining country western, Christmas and other songs. The clientele was a motley group (including dogs), providing entertainment as interesting as the musician. The bartender was limping from a pulled muscle and poured drinks without measurement-reminded me of my Dad at the bar many years ago. All in all, an entertaining way to end the evening.

Ed and Chris December 22 10 pm

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2013 Trip Nine, Christmas in Santa Fe, New Year’s in Flagstaff

Saturday, Dec. 21 Santa Fe

Apple’s version of Skype (FaceTime) provided us with the opportunity to have a video conversation with both Sarah and Sarah and with Deb and Rebecca this morning. Technology can be wonderful, makes the conversation feel much more personal.

Cookie Time!

Cookie Time!

The day’s activities did not really get under way until Jude returned from the airport with Bernie and Tony. The morning was cookie baking and house cleaning. Chris and I moved out of Jude’s guest room for Bernie and Tony. After all, they had decided before we did to have Christmas in Santa Fe. We checked in to the Courtyard Santa Fe.

Our primary destination was to go to the Children’s Museum. There was to be a demonstration of “flying farolitos”. These are luminaries that are supposed to float into the air.

Labyrinth and snowflakes

Labyrinth and snowflakes

As we understood it, there would be these brown paper bags somehow constructed with a frame and a votive candle flying up into the air. Despite what seemed like a potential fire hazard, it was something unique to Santa Fe and we thought we should make an effort to see it.

Drumming at the bonfire

Drumming at the bonfire

Well,it was so unique it did not happen. Evidently the Children’s Museum applied for the permit to do this but the permit was denied. So, we toured the grounds that were lit up with farolitos (luminaria, luminaires, depending on your spelling) into a labyrinth, around a group drumming by a bonfire, leading to a story telling area, etc. It gave us all a chance to re-live our younger days from so, so long ago.

At the Children's Museum

At the Children’s Museum

The weather was in the 20s with light snow flurries, making the night seem more like Christmas. The flurries did cause some difficulties with the farolitos, extinguishing the votive candles in some of them.

Our next stop was the Santa Fe Botanical Garden. This is a new endeavor in Santa Fe. Their first plantings were this summer and they had a “Glow Walk”. It was not as elaborate as other Christmas lighting displays we have seen but like the Children’s Museum, it offered bonfires to warm oneself and an accordion player.

Santa Fe Botanical Garden accordion player with Bernie and Tony

Santa Fe Botanical Garden accordion player with Bernie and Tony

For a description and a picture of flying farolitos, see:
http://innonthealameda.com/2010/12/the-canyon-road-farolito-walk/

Ed and Chris Dec. 21st, 10 pm

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2013 Trip Nine, Christmas in Santa Fe and New Year’s in Santa Fe

Santa Fe Friday Dec. 20th

Model train display downtown Santa Fe.

Model train display downtown Santa Fe.

Chris and I spent several hours in downtown Santa Fe. This is one city that while I have been here frequently now and know numerous road options for getting around, I am still easily able to get lost in the downtown area.

Christmas tree at La Fonda hotel

Christmas tree at La Fonda hotel

We had read about ice carvings that occurred each Christmas. The weather was to reach a high of 41 degrees so we were unsure if the ice carvings/sculptures were going to happen. There was no sign of them at the Plaza at the center of town. Two or three people we asked did not know.

Downtown Santa Fe

Downtown Santa Fe

We checked at the La Fonda hotel where the concierge told us the ice sculptures were no longer occurring. They stopped in the mid-2000s due to the economy and never resumed. The city was evidently unwilling to pick up the $10,000 cost of the ice. The La Fonda was willing to donate the labor of its chefs to do the carving but no go. The concierge also indicated there had been problems with vandalism.

Downtown Santa Fe

Downtown Santa Fe

We wandered the downtown, even spending some money on a few trinkets. Lunch was at “The Shed”, a long time Santa Fe restaurant just off the plaza.

Our evening concert was a program put on by the Santa Fe Desert Chorale. 24 singers, evenly split between men and women. The doubling of the number of singers and the addition of the deeper male voices made for a more impressive sound than that of the Santa Fe Women’s Ensemble that we heard last night.

Desert Chorale was at Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis

Desert Chorale was at Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis

The Desert Chorale is an auditioned group of singers, mainly professional, from around the country. They put on four different shows on 13 December dates in the area. Tonight’s performance was primarily carols and lullabies from Europe and from the U.S.

Jude's house

Jude’s house

Ed and Chris Dec. 20th 11 pm

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2013, Trip Nine, Christmas in Santa Fe, New Year’s in Flagstaff

Santa Fe, Thursday Dec. 19

Ed and Jude in Santa Fe

Ed and Jude in Santa Fe

The morning started with domestic activities. While Chris did laundry, I made the first batch of Russian tea cakes. This was my first time with high altitude cooking and discovered the cookies took about 30% longer to bake than usual. The results were still great, though.

Second powdering of Russian Tea Cakes

Second powdering of Russian Tea Cakes

I installed our luminaria outside Jude’s house. Since we were not going to be home for Christmas, it seemed reasonable to set them up here. After all, Santa Fe is the home of luminaria.

Luminaria set up

Luminaria set up

Chris and I returned to Cerillos Hill State Park and went hiking. One of the trails goes by three closed mines. Mines in this area were one man with a pick and shovel-none of the large, commercial mines around here.

Closed mine at Cerillos Hills State Park

Closed mine at Cerillos Hills State Park

A rest area in the park had displays created by a local school group. Besides art work, the students had created a sun dial that is calculated for the various sun angles throughout the year. It only works for noon of each day but it still well demonstrates the students’ research.

View from Cerillos Hills State Park

View from Cerillos Hills State Park

After dinner we headed to downtown Santa Fe for a concert by the Santa Fe Women’s Ensemble. The ensemble has been around for 33 years. This is a group of 12 women who sing a capella. One of the songs they sang was a world premiere of a new arrangement of “Salve Regina Mater”. Supposedly this was being filmed and it will be on YouTube sometime in the future. We made sure we applauded extra loud for this work.

Chris and jude outside Loretto Chapel

Chris and Jude outside Loretto Chapel

The concert was held in Loretto Chapel. Loretto Chapel (www.lorettochapel.com) is famous for its spiral staircase created by a simple workman and is constructed without any visible means of support with two, 360 degree turns. The chapel had been built without a way to access the choir loft and carpenters of the day were called in but no one could figure out how to build a staircase in the narrow confines of the chapel. The unknown workman showed up on the last day of the Loretto nuns finishing a rosary to pray for an answer. When the staircase was completed months later, the workman left without pay or thanks.

Staircase at Loretto Chapel

Staircase at Loretto Chapel

Santa Fe Plaza lights

Santa Fe Plaza lights


Ed Heimel and Chris Klejbuk
Thursday December 19th 11 pm

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2013 Trip Nine, Dec. 18, Christmas in Santa Fe and New Year’s in Flagstaff

Wednesday, Dec. 18 Santa Fe NM

This route is bringing back memories. We traveled I-40 last spring. We ate at a nice BBQ place in Amarillo. This time around it was closed, owner was deep in debt from multiple, failed investments. We ate at a local steakhouse next door to it (Saltgrass Steakhouse) and had a great meal, well worth the 30 minute wait.

Driving through New Mexico

Driving through New Mexico

As we drove this morning, we passed the “Cadillac Ranch”, a place west of Amarillo where the owner has planted old Cadillacs, about a dozen of them, nose first into the ground. We did not stop and take pictures this time. No one else appeared to be gazing on them either, unlike last April when numerous people were exploring the site.

The western end of Texas has some rolling, eroded hills and then New Mexico starts to have mesas and buttes and finally mountains. A little snow on the ground in the shade and on top of the mountains in the distance.

Getting turned around in Cerillos Hills State Park

Getting turned around in Cerillos Hills State Park

We tried to have lunch in Santa Rosa NM on the old historic Route 66 but the place we were looking for was hiding from us so we kept on going. Lunch ended up being just outside Santa Fe in a local place, Harry’s Roadhouse.

Jude has her Christmas tree up and decorated. Dinner was cooking in the crock pot so we headed out for an adventure. Cerillos Hills State Park became a state park in 2009 and Jude had not been here yet. The drive only took about 20 minutes and the park was having a Christmas open house, cookies and coffee, etc.

Cerillos Hills State Park

Cerillos Hills State Park

It was too late in the day to go hiking on any of the trails so we will have to return at a later time. The park commemorates the mining done in the this area in the late 1800s. Turquoise was one main mineral but others included galena, copper, iron, etc. Of the estimated 5,000 small mines in this area, it is thought that only 12 were profitable.

The town of Cerillos has dramatically shrunk from its heyday when mining was popular. The park service has a new visitor center with a few displays. We talked to two of the park rangers and promised to come back again.

After a short drive to the town of Madrid, we headed back to Jude’s for dinner.

Ed and Chris December 18, 8:30 pm

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2013 Trip Nine, Dec. 17, Christmas in Santa Fe, New Year’s in Flagstaff

Amarillo, TX Tuesday Dec. 17th

American Quarter Horse Museum and Hall of Fame,,, Amarillo

American Quarter Horse Museum and Hall of Fame,,, Amarillo

The weather has been favorable with an unusually warm and sunny period so our short drive to Amarillo was easy. Lunch was in a small, local restaurant in Shamrock, TX. The decor was done in old time tables and booths with crucifixes all around. It seemed a place where you wondered if the food inspector ever made it out here. But the buffet food was very tasty with a nice apricot cobbler for dessert.

Quarter Horse museum

Quarter Horse museum

We took advantage of the short drive to spend time at the American Quarter Horse Museum and Hall of Fame in Amarillo. It is located next to the American Quarter Horse Association Headquarters.

Quarter Horse Museum

Quarter Horse Museum

It was a pleasanat experience but it seemed more of a tribute to its members than a museum. The museum did discuss the development of the quarter horse as a specific breed unique to the U.S. The quarter horse specializes in both work (cattle ranching) and show/racing.

The quarter horse racing is focused on shorter races, dating back to early American days when “tracks” were just short straight aways in small towns. One of the major races is held in south central New Mexico at Ruidoso Downs.

American Quarter Horse Museum

American Quarter Horse Museum

The cattle focus occurs because the horses are able to cut quickly and react intuitively to cattle movement.

Most of the display is brief individual snapshots of horses, trainers, owners, jockeys, etc along with a timeline of the Association’s activities. There are some interactive displays with snippets of races, etc.

Still it was a pleasant interlude on our drive to Santa Fe.

Ed and Chris Dec. 17th

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2013, Trip Nine, Dec. 16, Christmas in Santa Fe and New Year’s in Flagstaff

Oklahoma City, Monday Dec. 16

Along Interstate 35 in Kansas and Oklahoma, we saw numerous raptors, (black with white bellies) individually, perched in trees and on fence posts. We thought, oh, maybe these are jayhawks. But no, Wikipedia says jayhawks is a term assigned, for unknown reasons, to a band of outlaws going back to the Kansas-Missouri conflicts around the Civil War. Eventually it lost some of its negative connotations and now is the mascot name for the Kansas state university teams. So, since we are not birders, we have no idea which birds we were constantly seeing.

Another minor tidbit. Knute Rockne, the famous Notre Dame coach of the 1920s era, is memorialized at a rest stop along the Kansas Turnpike. We thought, wrongly again, that he must have been born in Kansas. Instead, he died in 1931 in an airplane crash a few miles from the rest stop. Icing on the wings caused the crash and lead to airplane innovations to reduce the issue in the future.

Rockne was a Norwegian immigrant to America who worked to gain enough money to go to Notre Dame. He began school there at age 22, was a football star and chemistry major, and later came back to coach. He is credited with popularizing the shift and the forward pass in football and still has the winningest percentage of any Division I college football coach.

We were pleasantly surprised to find a Dunkin Donut at the rest stop. We just had to pop in and have a donut to keep them in business for any return trip we make along this route.
In Oklahoma City, we spent two hours at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum. (I wonder what one must do to include the term “National” in a museum title?) Started back in 1955, it now has over 200,000 square feet of display space.

End of the Trail sculpture by James Earle Fraser at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum

End of the Trail sculpture by James Earle Fraser at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum

They have a replica of a frontier town with full size buildings. The museum has special exhibits, currently they were displaying art from members of the Cowboy Artists of America and the Traditional Cowboy Arts Association. Boy, the prices of some of the items exceeded our annual budget. One saddle was already sold for $74,000. Numerous paintings were over $10,000 and many of them sold. I thought maybe I was in Santa Fe, given the prices.

Entrance to rodeo display at National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum

Entrance to rodeo display at National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum

The museum collection includes numerous items from Frederic Remington, Charles R. Russell, Albert Bierstadt and other early American artists. Contemporary painters have work displayed, some of the figures in the paintings just leap out and seem to be right in the room with you. The landscapes of the West are to die for.

Other display areas include firearms, rodeo, western movies, Native American crafts, and several halls of fame. Two hours were not sufficient to see everything, we did pretty much skip the firearms section completely.

Moon rise over parking lot Oklahoma City

Moon rise over parking lot
Oklahoma City

Our final experience was with the Oklahoma toll roads. We had to take one to reach our hotel. Exact change only. $1.15 which they tell you when it is too late to exit the road. BUT, at the cash payment booth the toll road has installed a $1 and $5 bill changer so you can get coins to pay the toll. They have an “EZ Pass” like system but evidently it does not have reciprocity with other states like Kansas, Texas, EZ Pass, etc. But MN is no better, their local program is unique to MN also. So much for encouraging travelers. Lets just heavily tax the hotel room rates and forget about any services for visitors. (So much for the rant and rage.)

Ed and Chris 10 pm.

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