Terlingua Dreams

Terlingua Dreams
Governors Landing Campground - Lake Amistad - Del Rio, Texas
Showing posts with label Moore Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moore Park. Show all posts

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Easter 2014 at area parks

Friday before heading to Lake Amistad decided to swing by the area parks and see how many people were already there.  I read last year they had enforced the no camping until Friday at 10:00 a.m. rule which is good because it gives others an equal chance to nab a prime spot.  This year it appears the same enforcement took place.

Sure beats a tent

Pictures at San Felipe Lions Park




 Moore Park



State Park








This year I noticed more port-a-potties, the suppliers are the same people that provide the service during the Terlingua Chili Cook-off . I believe the mother runs the Del Rio business and her daughter runs the Alpine, Texas branch.


Last night we finally got a good shower so hopefully the wet grass wont ruin it for the adults because when you are a kid rain events do not matter.  These pictures were taken Friday so I am sure more people set up camp after they got off work and on the weekend.  Since I knew I would not be able to come back...I took the pictures then.

Good night.  May you all have Terlingua Dreams.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Easter Saturday – State Park

Part of Moore Park but known as State Park because it faces State Highway 90 East and West.  This side of the park is the most popular because of its short proximity to San Felipe Springs.












Easter Saturday – Moore Park

Moore Park is the oldest park in Del Rio, Texas.  It is known by two names Moore Park and The State Park because part of it borders Highway 90 East and West.







Friday, April 6, 2012

Early Birds

I have mentioned many times in this blog that all the programming we get on TV comes from San Antonio, Texas a town 144 miles east of Del Rio.  I am more aware of what goes on in that beautiful yet far away city than I am of what is happening locally where we live.






These guys were having a lot of fun, especially with an ice chest full of beer!

San Antonio has a tradition dating back 30 plus years of allowing the population to camp out at Brackenridge Park over the Easter weekend.  Families go a week early to stake out a claim and save a space (usually grandparents or their non-working relatives) so their kinfolk can join them later in the week.






Campsite complete with an Easter basket pinata

I guess the powers that be decided to give us Del Rioans a chance to start a tradition of our own using San Antonio as an inspiration and a couple of years back allowed camping in the local parks during the Easter weekend.  Per the local newspaper this starts on Friday but I drove by late this afternoon and there were a lot of families already there.




See that nice house in the background?  It is located in the Del Rio side
This park is located in the San Felipe side.


These lucky owners get to go down the stairs of their deck and enjoy
the creek all to themselves.
All parks in Del Rio welcome campers during this time but the most popular parks are those that are along the banks of San Felipe Creek.  Long before there was Lake Amistad we had this wonderful creek that is the source of our local drinking water and where the majority of the locals learned to swim.

I cannot remember how many times my friends and I jumped off this bridge.
This is part of Moore Park but since it faces highway 90 it was known back in my day as
The State Park.



Back in the late 60’s not everyone could pay a quarter or however much it cost to swim in the only swimming pool Del Rio had at the time and which was located at Moore Park.  Even if you could most of your friends were swimming in the creek anyway, so that is where the majority of the people congregated.  Besides it was in town and within walking distance.  Back then people only had one vehicle and dads usually drove it to work, so going to Lake Amistad was like going out of town.





San Felipe Creek snakes along the city and divides the town from the poor working class mostly Mexican-American that live in the neighborhood bearing that same name (San Felipe) and the Anglo-Saxon and/or middle class Mexican Americans that live in the Del Rio side.





Our schools consolidated in the 70’s and I am proud to be a member of the Del Rio High School class that went all four years with the former members of San Felipe High School.  One of these days I may do a post on the history and importance of San Felipe Creek.





For now I leave you with a couple of pictures of the early birds and hopefully I can bring you some more on Saturday or Sunday when the parks will be packed to capacity.  Wish they had given us the opportunity to camp out when I was kid, it would have been a lot of fun and made for some great memories.

Good night.  May you all have Terlingua Dreams.