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It's Here Somewhere, Say's Phoebe, San Antonio NM, April 15, 2010
It's Here Somewhere, Say's Phoebe, San Antonio NM, April 15, 2010

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Results of search for fmt=#description group=Travels Fort Davis:
  • Friday, January 11, 2008 - Davis Mountains State Park, Fort Davis TX
    • Oh my, what to say about Marfa, Texas and The Chinati Foundation. The Chinati Foundation is a contemporary art museum in Marfa, Texas, based upon the ideas of its founder, Donald Judd. A visit to Marfa and the museum has been one of the stops on my itinerary for some time and I've been looking forward to my visit here. Images: Marfa, Texas, January 11, 2008 and Untitled, Davis Mountains State Park, Fort Davis Texas, January 12, 2008.
  • Saturday, January 12, 2008 - Davis Mountains State Park, Fort Davis TX
    • Last night while at the McDonald Observatory for their Twilight and Star Party programs I signed on for their excellent and usually sold out 36" Telescope Special Viewing Night. Images: Davis Mountains State Park, and The 107 inch Harlan Smith Telescope, McDonald Observatory, Fort Davis Texas, January 12, 2008.
  • Sunday, January 13, 2008 - Brantley Lake State Park, Carlsbad NM
    • Today was a travel day and a fairly long one that took me north up TX 17 from Fort Davis, Texas to Pecos, Texas then north up US 285 to Brantley Lake State Park, a few miles north of Carlsbad, New Mexico. Image: Dawn, Brantley Lake State Park, Carlsbad NM, January 14, 2008
  • Thursday, January 17, 2008 - Bottomless Lakes State Park, Roswell NM
    • The southwest and I are suffering a cold snap. Eight degrees it is as I write here at Bottomless Lakes State Park out side Roswell, NM. That's darned cold in this under insulated RV. Oh, the Lazy Days are pretty tight but still there is a strong draft down off the single pane windows I like so much. Image: Dawn at McDonald Observatory, from the trail above Davis Mountains State Park, Fort Davis, Texas, January 13, 2008.
  • Friday, January 18, 2008 - Oliver Lee Memorial State Park, Alamogordo NM
    • It's deja vu all over again - eight degrees again this morning. I'm outa here. Not only is it cold here as I'm sure it is all over at the moment, but it isn't a pretty or interesting park. I'm heading west over the mountains through Ruidoso to Alamogordo, New Mexico and Oliver Lee Memorial State Park to see what I find. Image: Untitled, Davis Mountains State Park, Fort Davis, Texas, January 13, 2008.
  • Thursday, January 24, 2008 - Oliver Lee Memorial State Park, Alamogordo NM
    • We have a little weather here at Oliver Lee today. No much. Just some clouds and the occasional shower. Just enough to keep me sitting here at the dinette catching up on journal entries. Image: Untitled, Davis Mountain State Park, Fort Davis Texas, January 12, 2008.
  • Tuesday, December 30, 2008 - Davis Mountains State Park, Fort Davis TX
    • I've been hanging out in Marathon TX long enough to get bored. Today I made the loop down through Big Bend National Park and up through Alpine to Fort Davis. Image: Untitled, Davis Mountains State Park, Fort Davis Texas, January 12, 2008.
  • Wednesday, December 31, 2008 - Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Salt Flat TX
    • Today I took the beautiful drive from Ft Davis TX to Guadalupe Mountains National Park, and ended the drive with a blown transmission seal. Image: In pig heaven, McDonald Observatory, Fort Davis Texas, December 31, 2008.
  • Davis Mountains State Park Campground, Fort Davis TX
    • I like the campground in the Davis Mountains State Park and its convenience to the McDonald Observatory a few miles up the road.
  • Night Camps
    • Traveling and living full time in my Lazy Daze RV for a couple of years, here's where I've made my night camps.
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A Siberian dog signal-howl

A camp in the middle of a clear, dark winter's night presents a strange, wild appearance. I was awakened, soon after midnight, by cold feet, and, raising myself upon one elbow, I pushed my head out of my frosty fur bag to see by the stars what time it was. The fire had died away to a red heap of smouldering embers. There was just light enough to distinguish the dark outlines of the loaded sledges, the fur-clad forms of our men, lying here and there in groups about the fire, and the frosty dogs, curled up into a hundred little hairy balls upon the snow. Away beyond the limits of the camp stretched the desolate steppe in a series of long snowy undulations, which blended gradually into one great white frozen ocean, and were lost in the distance and darkness of night. High overhead, in a sky which was almost black, sparkled the bright constellations of Orion and the Pleiades--the celestial clocks which marked the long, weary hours between sunrise and sunset. The blue mysterious streamers of the aurora trembled in the north, now shooting up in clear bright lines to the zenith, then waving back and forth in great majestic curves over the silent camp, as if warning back the adventurous traveller from the unknown regions around the Pole. The silence was profound, oppressive. Nothing but the pulsating of the blood in my ears, and the heavy breathing of the sleeping men at my feet, broke the universal lull. Suddenly there rose upon the still night air a long, faint, wailing cry like that of a human being in the last extremity of suffering. Gradually it swelled and deepened until it seemed to fill the whole atmosphere with its volume of mournful sound, dying away at last into a low, despairing moan. It was the signal-howl of a Siberian dog; but so wild and unearthly did it seem in the stillness of the arctic midnight, that it sent the startled blood bounding through my veins to my very finger-ends. In a moment the mournful cry was taken up by another dog, upon a higher key--two or three more joined in, then ten, twenty, forty, sixty, eighty, until the whole pack of a hundred dogs howled one infernal chorus together, making the air fairly tremble with sound, as if from the heavy bass of a great organ. For fully a minute heaven and earth seemed to be filled with yelling, shrieking fiends. Then one by one they began gradually to drop off, the unearthly tumult grew momentarily fainter and fainter, until at last it ended as it began, in one long, inexpressibly melancholy wail, and all was still.

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