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Texas
| Trips
Texas Road
Trip 2016
by Holly Gibson |
For
the last three years, my dad, Barclay
Gibson, and I have taken a three to four-day road trip through
central and eastern Texas. The tradition started as a wildflower tour
and a chance for us to do something together, but this year the trip
had a more historical/documentary bent. Dad has a vast knowledge of
the state (evidenced whenever some hapless resident asks him where
a certain town is; the answer is usually followed by the name of the
county, county seat, and cemetery location), and for the past few
years he has spent many hours on the road documenting the centennial
granite markers that dot the state, courthouses, churches, jails,
depots, and cemeteries. He's met a lot of people along the way and
even led a few groups to various sites they didn't know existed even
though they lived nearby. |
Texas Road
Scene
Photo courtesy Holly Gibson, April 2016
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This year he
had numerous abandoned churches and schools he wanted to find and
photograph in a number of small, isolated towns. Now, that sounds
relatively easy, but let me add that many of these old churches and
schools are located on county roads, dirt roads, and overgrown roads,
not to mention bumpy roads. There was also no one route to take that
would include all of them. As we criss-crossed through counties and
around towns (I saw the sign for Crockett,
Texas at least five times but never did see the town), I realized
this was very much like the old Westerns where the hero keeps riding
past the same rock. As we went by a barn I had photographed two days
before, I knew exactly how that old cowboy felt. To be fair, every
so often I'd yell for dad to stop the car because I'd seen something
I had to get a picture of. He'd slam on the brakes, pull over, and
I would run down the road and over to whatever scene had caught my
eye. We had beautiful weather each day, with dramatic spring skies
of dark clouds illuminated by the sun and set off by the bright green
below. |
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County Road
Photo courtesy Holly Gibson, April 2016
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Anyone who has
not visited Texas probably envisions a mix of images from Western
movies, Pace picante sauce commercials, and anything else stark
and dusty in nature. In fact, a wide expanse of dirt, scrub, and
tumble weeds likely comes to mind. True, that landscape does exist,
but so does one of winding roads over grass-covered hills disappearing
into thick forests. Of bluebonnets and Indian paintbrush dotting
the roadsides and nearby fields and huge wisteria draped over wooden
fencing. I've lived in the Pacific Northwest for the past ten years
and as we drove through north
central Texas, I had to keep reminding myself I wasn't watching
the Oregon landscape flash past.
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Ranch Entrance
Photo courtesy Holly Gibson, April 2016
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Mistletoe
Trees
Photo courtesy Holly Gibson, April 2016
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After
three days of old buildings and back roads, we made our way to Dallas,
stopping every now and then for me to take pictures of bluebonnets
and Indian Paintbrush. Once we arrived in Dallas,
we had several hours to kill before meeting family for dinner, so
we headed to the Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden. This wasn't
quite Dad's thing so he good naturedly read for about three hours
while I swarmed round the gardens. The azaleas, rhododendrons, delphiniums,
impatiens, and about every other spring flower imaginable were on
full display. There were also numerous water features, which meant
using a nearby sign and my handy rice "beanbag" as a makeshift tripod
in order to slow the exposure time down to give the water a smooth
texture. I had my excuse all ready in case an employee asked what
I was doing with their sign.
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Dallas Lake
Photo courtesy Holly Gibson, April 2016
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Dallas Arboretum
Photo courtesy Holly Gibson, April 2016
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Dallas Arboretum
Photo courtesy Holly Gibson, April 2016
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The next morning
I spent some time in a nearby park and enjoyed the sunshine and heavy
smell of honeysuckle. My plane didn't leave for several hours so we
visited the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum on the
campus of SMU before heading to the airport. As always, I was sorry
to leave Texas and I'm already finding myself looking forward to next
year's excursion. I hope dad feels the same way.
© Holly Gibson
June 6, 2016 guest column |
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