On Wednesday night, the campground began to fill with folks getting an early start to the long Memorial Day weekend ahead. At 10:30 p.m. some campers pulled in across the road from me and made raucous noise until 3:30 in the morning.
Dale and I decided it was time to move up the road to Juniper, the quieter non-electric campground. We found two great sites next to each other on the end of the far loop, and it was bliss for the next 10 days.
Waiting for graham cracker crumbs to drop |
On Thursday (May 30), we piled Hanna and ourselves into the car and drove north to Durango, Colorado. We had googled "things to do in Durango" and found a list of sites and attractions. We started at the Durango Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad Museum, wandering through a lot of artifacts of both the railroad, and also other historical forms of transportation. From there we went to Nini's Taquerio for huge delicious burritos. With full tummies, we made our way to the Animas Museum, which was also quite interesting, well worth the $4 senior price of admission. We drove another dozen miles north to visit the Pinkerton Hot Springs, a cool little pull-off site where warm soda water bubbles up and over the rocks creating streaks of color that cascade down the hill. The green and snow capped mountain behind it is the perfect backdrop.
By that time, it was mid afternoon, so we headed back south, meandering down the pretty road through the Colorado landscape.
The following weekend, a bunch of twenty somethings filled the campsites around us, and we knew it was again time to move on. Home was calling, chores and appointments are building up, and I'm longing to see my kids and grandkids again.
And other brothers...
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