Wednesday, January 7, 2015

The Arts, The Stars and Some Snow--Marfa, Fort Davis and McDonald Observatory


The carful of kids have a lot of ground to cover after driving in from Central Texas. After waking up in Alpine we're off to Marfa and Fort Davis then ending the day at the Davis Mountains State Park.

The weather is much colder than originally forecasted so a quick stop to pick up some hand warmers.  The carful of kids will be outside and the high is forecasted to be 44ºF. It's 28 miles west to Marfa on US Highway 67 from Alpine and along the way you pass the Marfa Lights Viewing Station. 


Marfa, the art town of West Texas

The town of Marfa is home to about 2000 people and it is the county seat for Presidio County. It started as a water stop then evolved into a military training area, now it's an art town--home to galleries, museums and movie sets. The most notable being Donald Judd's Chinati Foundation, located at 1 Cavalry Row.


The carful of kids love art like every other kid so we prefer outdoor installations and we make it quick. Chinati works, we walk the path with 15 untitled concrete blocks where the kids can run and there is no charge for admission. Inside the repurposed artillery sheds are 100 of his works in mill aluminum, they are open a 2 p.m., so we look in the windows instead.



The carful of kids take a break from art and head to check out the Hotel Paisano, located on 207 Highland Street. Built in 1930, it is a National Registered Historic Place; Elizabeth Taylor, James Dean and Rock Hudson stayed here during the filming of The Giant. A quick stop for the carful of kids but it would be a lovely place to stay without the kids.



One last art stop--John Chamberlain's installation at the former Wool and Mohair Building in the center of town is just blocks away from the Hotel Paisano. This is an art hit with the carful of kids--large, free-standing sculptures of mashed-up cars (I apologize to all my art history professors including my mother for my description).  Again, we make it quick and don't over think it.

Final words on Marfa, there are a ton of galleries but they seem to operate on West Texas Time-- most are closed over the Christmas Holidays. Marfa is a cool, little town but it is crawling with hipsters and over-dressed art enthusiasts. So if this bothers you, move on. If not, you can make it into a three-day art adventure, including stays at hip hotels.

Not too cold for Ice Cream.

Fort Davis of Kids


The carful of kids need to change gears, we head north on Texas Highway 17 to Fort Davis, where we will spend the rest of our day. Our first stop is the Fort Davis Drug Store, located on 13 State Street, for lunch and their old-fashioned soda fountain. Good kid fare and a quick stop to warm up--it is snowing now.

Up the road is the Fort Davis National Historic Site (101 Lt. Henry Flipper Drive) where the carful of kids earn another NPS Junior Ranger badge. Though you have to budget a couple of hours to complete the requirements, they are well worth it and interesting for the adults as well.


Yesterday, we were at Fort Lancaster to tour the foundations of the former fort, so this is a great teaching moment. Fort Davis is intact, the majority of the buildings have been preserved. It is also on the old San Antonio-El Paso Road.

The carful of kids get a real feel for fort life, there are trumpet calls and many of the buildings are furnished. The boys love it, running around looking at guns and cannons then imagining encounters with the Apache.

Davis Mountains State Park 




Before our final activity of the day, the carful of kids check into the Indian Lodge, located in the Davis Mountains State Park, just 5 miles away from Fort Davis on Texas Highway 118. I reserved this room months in advance and our trip is routed around its availability.

The Indian Lodge was constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in the 1930's, if you have the opportunity to visit a CCC constructed site, DO. They are exceptional properties.

The rooms are comfortable, spacious and reasonable with all the original details including furniture made on-site. The original building and the 1967 addition blend seamlessly, the carful of kids are staying in a newer room. There is a restaurant and pool on site, both exceed my expectations for a state park. Traditional camping is available also.

That's snow!

McDonald Observatory's Star Party


Looking out the window, the flakes are getting fatter. Fun but not the best for the carful of kids' next destination--the McDonald Observatory, located at 3640 Dark Sky Drive, 12 miles north on Texas Highway 118.  The carful of kids have tickets to the Twilight Program and the Star Party for this evening.
I swear my kids have faces.

When we arrive at the McDonald Observatory, the program has been moved inside due to the weather.  The astronomers offer a series of talks and demonstrations on our solar system and nearby stars. Typically though, visitors gaze at the stars through their collection of telescopes. This is a popular attraction with many visitors, plan according, especially during school breaks.


After close to four hours inside the McDonald Observatory, this is what I find--six inches of snow on the ground and the SUV. I look at the carful of kids and announce, "Is now the time to tell you I'm not the best at driving in the snow, in the dark, down a mountain road."

The usual chatter died.

Up Next: Big Bend National Park and a cabin camping in Terlingua.


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