Have you checked out the field by the deserted house across from the PEC building in Marble Falls yet? It was generally awash with blue bonnets, but last year was a little thin.
Have you done the Texas Painted Churches tour?
Your wife was smart. The Rangers will tell you to keep a respectable distance from the bison. They are unpredictable and fast. The bears are even faster.
A Cuba in Kansas with Czechs.
I have seen it on US Army bases in Germany. ETSing (Expiration-Term of Service) troops would toss a pair of combat boots over the power lines as a way expressing their elation at being separated from Uncle Sam's service.
The lupines look like lupinus texensis.
Great shot of the "Cats".
They popped the balloon on the Atlantic coast. Now they have to find the debris to see what it was really.
No stop at Antelope Canyon?
That is a USB-C adapter. My iPad Air uses lightning.
https://www.amazon.com/SD-TF-Card-Reader-Adapter/dp/B07P7ZS2HN/ref=psdc_172456_t4_B09T5K56ZZ
Fredericksburg and the Museum of the Pacific War. And the area abounds in vineyards. And then there are the Painted Churches...
Austin is real scary right now. The Legislature is in session.
If you do go to Austin, check out the Bob Bullock Museum. Waco has the Texas Ranger Museum. And there is the Mounted Warfare Museum just outside the Main Gate of Fort Hood, soon to be renamed Fort Cavazos. The Alamo is good, the River Walk also and there are the Missions of San Antonio.
Simplify it down to three ways: Right, Wrong, Army
ASA ALL THE WAY
"We weren't there! We aren't here! We don't exist."
In 1972 I packed away my black boots and received jungle boots at Oakland. Then four months later I was issued black leather boots again because jungle boots deemed a fire hazard for aircrew. So, until December 1973 it was leather boots with Nomex and jungle boots with fatigues.
The boots were black in 1964 and still black six years later when I received mine at Fort Leonard Wood. They are now coyote brown ruff outs, no polishing. And the low quarters are Corofram.