Posts Tagged ‘equestrian camping’

Monahans Sandhills State Park Monahans, Texas

Friday, July 25th, 2008

monahans state aprk

Visit our Monahans State Park photo gallery 

Monahans Sandhills are part of a dune field that extends 200 miles to the West and North to New Mexico.  This 3,840 acre park of sand dunes is a delight for children of all ages.  Rent a sand disk or toboggan and surf down dunes up to 70 feet high as the West Texas wind swirls and lifts the sand into ever changing shapes .  The day use area is well used with families picnicking, and surfing the hills.  Clean restrooms are nearby.  The Dunagan Visitor Center is where you rent your sand saucer ($1 per hour) and enjoy the hands on displays and the history of this West Texas desert area.  A short (1/4 mile) self-guided nature trail winds through the dunes nearby.  We spent a night camping here on our way home from the Big Bend area.  The Willow Bend Camping Area (sites #1-14) offers pull-thru or back ins.  We stayed in site #5, a nice, level pull-thru with views of the sand dunes in all directions.  This campground rarely fills up however if the back-ins sites were needed drifts of sand would need to be shoveled out of the way.  The surreal feeling of being surrounded by all this white sand felt soothing and strangely enveloping.  Sleeping with the blinds open heightened the effect.  Tent or pop-up trailer sites (#15-25) are roomy and appointed with covered picnic tables and bbq grills.  Most of the fire pits were buried under mounds of sand.  Be aware that the wind blows and blows here.  The fine sand will be everywhere and in everything.  We observed a young couple breaking camp the morning we left, struggling a bit as their tent turned into a sail in the wind, their children occupied with digging and playing in the sand.  Surprisingly a dependable source of pure, fresh water is found right under the sand.  This drew prehistoric man to hunt bison and mammoth in the area and later Indians, mostly Apache and Comanche camped here.  No one knows for sure why this massive field of dunes is here.  One theory is of erosion and wind blowing the sand into this area over the course of millions of years.   There are equestrian camp sites here and 600 acres of sand set aside for riding.  Overnite or 3-day Texas Camel Treks are held here in the Spring.  Take exit #86, just west of Odessa as you travel Interstate 20 and spend the day or overnite at this fun park.  Note:  train tracks run directly outside the park and trains may occasionally be heard as they pass by.

Davis Mountains State Park Fort Davis, Texas

Friday, July 4th, 2008

Davis Mountains State Park 

Visit our Davis Mountains State Park photo gallery 

At a mile above sea level Davis Mountains State Park is the coolest place to be in the hot Texas summer.  The Davis Mountains, the most extensive mountain range in Texas were formed by volcanic activity 65 million years ago.  Located in Jeff Davis County, 1 mile north of the town of Fort Davis on Texas 17 then 3 miles west on Texas 118 the 2,700 acres of the Davis Mountains State Park offers great family fun.  There are 9 miles of hiking and nature trails, one of which connects with a trail to the Fort Davis National Historic Site, a mountain bike trail, an equestrian trail as well as Skyline Drive, a scenic mile high drive especially popular for star gazing.  (more…)

We have left Petrified Forest National Park

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

A photo gallery of Petrified Forest and Painted Desert including the Wilderness Area will be posted soon.  We are back in Texas, currently at Davis Mountains State Park in West Texas.  We will be posting on this state park as well as others that we visit as we make our way back home to the Dallas/ Fort Worth area.