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Going to Madison

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Leaving Arkadelphia , Arkansas a woman pulled up along side me in her car and asked where I was headed.

“I’m going to Madison ,” she yelled back.

What are the odds?

Patty was a teacher from Houston . She was a small woman dressed in a simple black t-shirt, khaki shorts, sandals and fashionable rectangular glasses.

She was headed to teach a summer enrichment program in Wisconsin

It gets weirder.

“I can’t believe you’re riding a Centurion, I used to work for them,” said Patty. “That’s a really old bike.”

Normally people who yell out a car window want to know if they can give me a ride.

Patty didn’t have room.

She was loaded down with friends, which included two cats, two caged rats, and a trunk full of crayfish, mill worms and pill bugs.

“My class kept these alive the entire school year and I thought I’d bring them along to summer school,” she said.

I reassured Patty…. I’m pretty sure we had pill bugs and mill worms in Wisconsin .

In order to ensure safe travel, Patty filled plastic baggies with ice and surrounded each miniature tank and box so the menagerie wouldn’t swelter in the southern heat.

After a 40-minute conversation, Patty said she would be living in Madison with her parents during the next month.

“If you pass through and I’m not driving Mr. and Miss Daisy, you can call and you’ll have a place to stay,” she said.

More from Arkansas

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I would have LOVED to stay here, but the bums beat me to it. And, they beat up the cute little building at Round Top corner at the edge of Sherwood –
just outside North Little Rock.

Political buttons from the Clinton Library Museum in Little Rock.

I laughed out loud when I saw this sign, just outside Little Rock.

Patty passed me in a car and yelled out the window. She was headed to Madison. What are the chances. We talked at the outskirts of Arkadelphia, Arkansas. She’s a teacher and was transporting her class projects… 2 cats, 2 rats, a tank of crayfish, mill worms and pill bugs.

From Texas to Arkansas —

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Do you remember Dolly Dimple Dolls? Me either. Dolls were printed on sacks of flour from the Arkadelphia Milling Co. in Arkadelphia Arkansas.
Moms cut them out, stitched and stuffed them. Little girls loved them.


Hope, Arkansas… birthplace of President Bill Clinton. That’s me on the right.


Crossing the state line from Texas into Arkansas in Texarkana. Picture taken in front of the federal courthouse where I would later encounter U.S. Marshalls who surround my bike because of an apparent security threat.


A bronze sculpture outside the state capitol in Little Rock representing the Little Rock Nine, a group of students who tried to integrate Little Rock Central High School in 1957.

A rifle used to shoot around corners, on display at the
Historical Society in Jefferson, Texas.

TEXAS, June 11

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Madisonville, Texas – I’m traveling northeast out of Austin, Texas on Highway 21.

Known as the Kings Highway or El Camino Real, it was the stagecoach trail and the route for wagon trains and cattle drives from Mexico City to Nacogdoches to Louisiana.

After three days I’ve logged more than 182 miles in 97-degree heat.

Native Texans are complaining it’s too hot, too early.

I normally begin riding at 5:30 a.m. However, today progress slowed because I found another wallet; it’s my second wallet discovery on this trip and, oh yeah, I found that last night a dog attacked my luggage.

I’m not sure why it happened. Full disclosure, after two weeks of travel my bags smell like feet and ass.

The stink has actually forced me to abandon hand washing my spandex uniform and opt for a laundromat.

Luckily in Madisonville, a block over from the local paper The Madisonville Meteor, up the street from The Mule Barn Boutique and across from 8 Amigos Auto Inc. and the Quik-E-Mart, there’s the convenient Washateria. (See pictures in former post.)

It’s a coin laundry combined with a cafeteria. And yes, that emotion you’re feeling right now is jealousy. It’s a unique idea featuring an on-site attendant that sells detergent, soda, and frozen Popsicles.

I doubt anyone else can say they’ve had the Washateria experience.

JAKES IN CALDWELL…

The recommended restaurant in the small town of Caldwell, Texas is Jakes.

It’s a sidewinder cafe where the owner, Gladys, knows all her customers by name. The front counter at Jakes has the feel of a high school cafeteria.

A bowl of shredded lettuce sits packed in ice in the bottom compartment of a stainless steel counter. There are large slices of white cake with chocolate frosting on individual styrofoam plates on the second shelf and on the counter is a slab of butter the size of a toaster.

There’s already considerable yellow melt in progress.

And, there is the collection of 3-foot-tall raccoon-hunting trophies above the cake level on the serving counter.

It’s just like Norman Rockwell would have painted it.

The trophies reach the ceiling and it looks like the ceiling has been raised just to accommodate the awards.

Customers at Jakes are friendly – drawing maps of back-road routes to get me to College Station and scanning their cellphones to see if they can wrangle up a real cowboy to come visit before I leave.

One old timer, Bob, has married 1,800 people and buried nearly 3,000; he promises to say a prayer for me later that afternoon to ensure safe travel.

GEORGE BUSH LIBRARY..

The George Bush Presidential Library and Museum is located on the Texas A&M campus in College Station, Texas.

The exhibit begins with a series of black-and-white family photos of Bush’s parents, his siblings, and days of youth. The photos are displayed in a variety of frames and has the feel of a living room wall in the Bush family home.

The library covers Bush’s work as a Navy hero, the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., his term as vice president to Ronald Reagan, and his election as the 41st President of the United States in Jan. 1989.

There were impressive displays of a slab of the Berlin Wall, Bush’s Oval Office and pictures and letters from the Gulf War.

One overriding theme is how the Bush’s stressed the importance of nobility of public service.

Bush credits his parents for teaching him about ‘common decency and honor’ and there are several references to Bush being known as ‘have half’ because he offered half of anything he had to friends and family.

HYDER HILL…

Took a break at the Yellowjacket Cafe in the small, small town of Alto, Texas.

As I was downing my second glass of water a large man (think Wimpy from Popeye swallowed Cletus from Dukes of Hazzard) sitting at a table across the room.

He asked which way I was headed. When I said north, all he could do was laugh.

“You’re headed for Hyder Hill – you’ll never make it.”

Then the man started laughing; not a large-man boisterous laugh but something like “Tee hee hee hee…”

It made me think he was wearing Dora-the-Explorer underwear, meant for a large child.

He laughed all the way out the door.

A woman name Alma sat with me and had breakfast.

She too asked which direction and quietly stared at her plate, pushing her pancake around in syrup, shaking her head while mentioning Hyder Hill.

Eight miles out of Alto there were some minor hills, and I thought these people really didn’t know what they were talking about.

Then, just outside of Nacogdoches, it was like seeing Godzilla walking in your direction and you have no where to go but straight at him.

The hill was a jaw-dropping climb; pretty vertical – not Decorah Hill vertical, but close. And a little less than a mile long.

Temperatures was nearly 100 degrees and it was around 3 o’clock in the afternoon. I thought it was funny that a woman, standing by the curb at her mailbox said plain as day, “I wouldn’t even pull my truck up that hill in this weather.”

The next day while heading out of town I stopped at a Wal-Mart. I’m dressed in a bright bicycling shirt and spandex shorts and one of the clerks, a biker, asked me how I got to town.

I told him on Highway 21 and he interrupts and said, “You climbed Hyder Hill. You know that’s a Stage One climb?”

And then he gave me a windmill high five.

I did not know that was a Stage-One climb, matter of fact I don’t even know what a Stage-One climb is…. but I nailed it.

So I guess I’m awesome; everybody says so.

OLDEST CITY IN TEXAS…

One of the more beautiful portions of Highway 21 is a forested section between Crockett and Alto.

The 34-mile stretch changes from a flat prairie to rolling hills filled with trees offering an umbrella of branches that provide a cool canopy of shade over the highway.

It feels very “On the Road” with Charles Kuralt.

Nacogdoches is the oldest town in Texas. There are brick pavers lining the entire Main Street in the downtown historic district.

The Town Information Center features a lot of local history including a graphic black-and-white photo from 1902 of hundreds of people gathered in the town square for a noon hanging of a 19-year-old black man.

There’s also history on Stephen F. Austin University, the start of oil drilling and a framed newspaper article and color photo of the 2003 Shuttle Columbia crew.

After the February explosion, chunks of the shuttle were found along Main St. in Nacogdoches.

Back on the streets of Nacogdoches, historical markers dot nearly every corner and building.

Most interesting is the old Opera House and its link to the Marx Brothers and their improvisational style of comedy.

In 1907 during one of the Marx Brothers performances there was a disturbance on Main St. and the audience left their seats to witness the goings on. There was some confusion whether it was simply a runaway horse or a mule that kicked a cart to pieces and dragged it down the street. Whatever the case, the Marx Brothers were angry with the loss of audience and began to race around the stage in a frenzy of comic behavior. Their antics brought the audience back and launched a new direction in their entertainment careers.

Today the Opera House is home to an art center and individual business offices.

I found accommodations that night while sitting on the corner listening to a group of guys playing guitar and mandolin. They put me in touch with a friend who let me stay in the Nelson-Davis House in the Stern-Hoya Historic District.

The “Yellow House” has three stories with 18 rooms, four bathrooms, two kitchens and architectural features indicative of the Queen Anne style. The house at 522 E. Main was built by Dr. Nelson in the 1890s. The second floor was added under a raised roof in approximately 1905. In the early 1900s it was a fashionable boarding house and still has screen doors on each upstairs bedroom. The home features 15-foot high ceilings, large 8-foot-high windows, and a Victorian Tea Room on the first floor. There is dark, stained hardwood through the entire house, including a 25-step staircase to the second floor.

A couple of interesting things include the transoms above the doors and the wallpaper is actually fabric – colorful flower patterns, stripes, and there’s a bathroom with Depression-era jugglers and clowns on horseback.

The home has been restored and is currently for sale.

TIDBITS FROM TEXAS…

  • I’ve seen a lot of armadillo, dead by the side of the road. Texans say they used to shoot them and eat them, now they all say the armadillo can give you leprosy… and they just steer clear of them.

  • When I was in Austin the local athletic apparel stores and bike shops would voluntarily put big, orange coolers of water on the edge of trails for runners, walkers and bikers. The goodwill apparently translates well and helps draw customers back to the stores.

  • Went to the Davy Crockett museum in Crockett, Texas. The town is named after Davy Crockett, which is odd since he only slept there one night and then went on to San Antonio where he was killed while helping defend the Alamo. Anyway, one of the interesting things at the museum was paperwork of someone’s will, which put a price on what their slaves were worth. A 6-year-old girl was listed at $300. An 8-year-old boy was about $350. A 35-year-old man was around $850 and a 70-year-old woman was free for the taking.

  • Stopped at a gas station in the small, small town of Garrison to get some water. Even with my savage tan I was still the whitest person within 10 miles. A big ole black man was in the store buying candy for his grandson and he asked me about my trip and how I was handling the heat. During our conversation a young, muscular African-American teen strutted around the parking lot, glanced at my bike and finally shuffled over to a pickup and sat in the passenger seat. He kept a keen / cocky eye on me. When the gentleman and I were done talking he walked past the pickup and the kid said, “Whut she want?” The old man nonchalantly said, “She’s looking for someone to ride with her and I gave her your name.” I love how the old folks mess with the young whipper-snappers.

  • By the time you read this I’ll have crossed into Arkansas. I’ll also have collected my first 1,000 miles on the tour.

Headed to Little Rock —

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Finally hit Arkansas.



The Texarkana Gazette picked up my cycle-logue. Here’s the scoop:

Judy Steffes has the kind of adventurous spirit that makes biking across the country her ideal summer vacation.

Steffes hopped a plane from Wisconsin to Dallas on May 18 with her teal 1982 Centurion bicycle in tow. Six days later, she’d pedaled her way to Austin.


READ AND SEE PICTURE HERE

Madisonville, Crockett, and more from TEXAS

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Look at the stairwell in this old house.
You’re looking at the 25 stairs through the entryway of the home. Magnificent…

The famed Washateria in Madisonville, Tx.

Entering Houston Co…. just to give you an idea what the scenery is like.

Mural from Crockett, Tx. Funny… Crockett was named after Davy Crockett,
even though he only spent one night in the community.
Then he went to San Antonio and was killed at the Alamo.

My tired face after climbing Hyder Hill. It was tough… a man pulled over to check on me while I rested by the city sign just to see if I was okay.

Sat on the corner with these old timers and listened to them play music.
The one had a Gibson mandolin.
They helped me find a place to stay in this historic mansion in Nacodoches.

Some of the funky wallpaper in one of the 18 rooms in the house (in first pic above)

June 2nd – Texas A&M, George Bush Museum

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On the Texas A&M campus, students leave pennies at the feet of the Lawrence Sullivan ‘Sully’ Ross statue hoping it will bring them good luck when taking exams.



Sitting in the president’s chair at the George Bush Library Museum.
It was the one picture that turned out – the docent was camera challenged and cut off my head on all the other shots. I’m applying for her job.

Next to the Dixie Chicken, a trendy campus hangout, there’s this alley FULL of bottle caps. That kind of puts UW-Madison to shame.

More Austin Pics

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Outside Lance Armstrong’s bike shop and cafe.

Pics from the LBJ Library and Museum in Austin
(above and below)


Saturday Farmer’s Market in downtown Austin


FUN Fran’s restaurant on Congress Ave. just south of downtown Austin


LBJ – although some college student thought he looked like
political commentator Bill O’ Reilly

Dawn at the Alamo – painting in the Senate chambers at the Austin St. Capitol

There is no basement at the Alamo

Pics from Austin, TX

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Blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughn – statue overlooks downtown Austin


This was the coolest sculpture located right outside the State Capitol in Austin.



ABOVE AND BELOW:
Jammers get ready to sprint.


Bloody Pick A from the Hell Cats roller derby team. The writing on the back of her shorts reinstilled the message for anyone who was lost – it read, ‘I like it bloody.’


Austin, Texas

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Austin, Texas – It took six days to bike from Dallas to Austin, Texas. I headed direct south and was smacked in the face each morning with a consistent 20-mile-per-hour wind.

Roads in central Texas have been relatively flat; early-morning blue-gray skies are accompanied by furnace-like temperatures in the 90s; by 3 p.m. the intense heat makes your skin feel crisp.

My stay in Austin has been made simple by friends Deb and her husband Robin.

The couple are revamping a second home and it’s the perfect stay for the next few days while exploring a city with the slogan, ‘Austin – keep it weird.

‘Weird’ isn’t negative or intimidating – it’s like wearing your favorite iron-on t-shirt, accessorizing with a rub-on tattoo, throwing a little rat terrier in your bike basket next to a Wham-o Frisbee and some sunscreen you’re off to mix with the cutting-edge music scene, and a genuine love of life – ‘Run, sleep, live, repeat’ is the message on one runner’s t-shirt.

The word ‘sit’ is in not in the Austin vocabulary; as townies and tourists alike are constantly taking advantage of the rivers, trails, parks, and activities the city has to offer.

PLACES TO GO – THINGS TO DO..

Bicycles tend to rule the road in Austin. It’s like a convention came to town and stayed.

The women are as serious about biking as the men. A quote from Dropout, a bicycling book for women, notes, “female bikers in Austin think about whether or not shorts would work underneath that dress before they buy it.”

There are specific bicycling lanes in Austin, bridges, paths, and a bike store or six – every few blocks.

Mellow Johnny’s Bike Shop at 4th and Nueces is owned by Tour de France champ and Austin native Lance Armstrong.

Full of gear, posters and a series of Armstrong’s actual racing bikes; there’s also an attached coffee shop, Juan Pelota Cafe.

The name translates to ‘one ball’ – a sharp stick-in-the-eye reference from Armstrong to the testicular cancer that tried to take him down.

Independent businesses like The Spider House Cafe (think The Safehouse in Milwaukee) keep kitchy alive in the community.

The interior of the downtown establishment is lit with strings of colorful Christmas lights surrounded by old-school paintings of Jesus, cherubic statues, and old tin toys that include a train and Ferris wheel with a comical face in the center circle.

The Saturday downtown Farmer’s Market takes over the entire Republic Square Park.

Ripe peaches and raspberries overflow containers and fight for space on tables weighed down with bountiful vegetables including large spears of leeks, radishes the size of ping-pong balls, and ripe red tomatoes.

Farmers in straw cowboys hats market Austin organics; and homemade products like gluten-free peach cobbler.

A sold-out sign hangs by the Thai omelet tacos and a crowd is forming around a booth touting an upcoming program, ‘Anyone can cook – not everyone should.’

In the evening, the bats at the Congress Avenue Bridge draw a regular crowd.

Just after dusk about 1.5 million Mexican free-tailed bats fan out from under the bridge in waves to take part in a nightly feast.

It’s like waiting for the fireworks on the Fourth of July, only the bats fly unbelievably close. They swarm in packs and leave the stage quickly, like spoiled rock n’ roll stars.

Below the Congress Avenue Bridge runs Lady Bird Lake. Hundreds of people take advantage of the $15 an hour rentals of kayaks, boats and paddle boards.

Up the road is the Texas State Capitol which features a wide array of Texas history including a pair of paintings by H.A. McArdle.

The paintings feature a graphic account of Dawn at the Alamo on March 6, 1836 and The Triumph of Texas Independence in April 1836.

Interesting to me were the chandeliers in the Senate chambers that spelled out the word “Texas” in lights.

Also eye opening was the question from a 20-something in our tour group who asked about the life-size portrait of conservative political commentator Bill O’Reilly.

It was President Lyndon B. Johnson; but yeah, there was some resemblance.

LBJ PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY…

The Lyndon Baines Johnson Library Museum on the University of Texas campus is incredible.

Three floors of photos, memorabilia and history from Johnson’s birth through his presidential career.

One interesting narrative focuses on Johnson’s second campaign for U.S. Senate, where he would fly into a community and throw his hat from a helicopter as it banked over the crowd.

His staff would be required to retrieve the straw hat – even if it meant prying it away from a 10-year-old boy.

The museum highlights LBJ’s election in 1960 as John F. Kennedy’s running mate and then Nov. 22, 1963 when he was sworn in as the 36th President of the United States and shouldered with the task of leading a grieving nation and world.

Lady Bird Johnson said of her husband, “An exciting man to live with and an exhausting man to keep up with.”

During the Johnson administration 3,018 public and private laws were enacted by Congress and signed by the President. Of these, 207 were fundamental law which changed the way the nation lives.

Johnson wanted to be known as the education president but wound up with war instead.

Johnson deemed 1968 The Nightmare Year and said it was, “..one of the most agonizing years as president ever spent in the White House.”

Despite his accomplishments, Johnson’s term included the assassinations of JFK, Bobby Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr. and fallout from the Vietnam War.

NORMA…

In a fit of spontaneity, I rode shotgun with Deb and Robin to their home in San Antonio.

The quick day trip allowed me to bike San Antonio, check out the famed River Walk and tour the Alamo.

Yes, I asked to see the basement at the Mission.

Docent Bob was less than impressed and said he’s heard the comment more times than he can count.

“It’s incredible what an influence Pee Wee Herman had on multiple generations,” he said.

Despite all the attractions in San Antonio, I was fascinated by Robin’s 83-year-old aunt Norma who lived with the family.

Norma was 5-feet-tall, light red hair, a spitfire with a strong Cuban accent; imagine if Edith Bunker channeled Ricky Ricardo.

“Whut chew doin’ – biking?” she asked rolling her eyes and whispering ‘loco’ under her breath.

Although Norma’s face was drawn by age, she maintained a meticulous appearance with well-coiffed hair and a matching robin’s-egg blue outfit.

Her jewelry was sparse except for a silver bracelet of butterflies and fish that jangled from her wrist as she patted the belly of her small black dog.

“My baby so good,” she cooed.

Norma never married; she spent her life taking care of her mother.

She said she dated a bit, remembering the Cuban tradition of how she had to have chaperones.

These days, she has eyes for just one man.

“I likes Vin Diesel,” she said bluntly, casting a distracted gaze over my shoulder.

Norma spent a good part of her day engrossed in hard-core action movies.

I was evidently in the way of the 65-inch television where she was caught up in the high-volume thriller xXx, starring her he-man Diesel and Samuel L. Jackson.

Silently, Norma sat locked in on the action, a bit of a smile on her face as the bloody violence played out on the big screen with Vin Diesel mowing down a team of ragtag assassins.

It was deceptive to initially see Norma with a Wheel-of-Fortune demeanor and then find she had tiger blood in her veins.

The feisty Cuban could talk smack and recite lines from Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

As the movie credits rolled Norma packed up her chair pillow and called it a night stating there was only going to be “panky panky on the telebision” the rest of the night.

ROLLER DERBY…

Spent an evening at my first banked-track roller derby watching the TXRD Lonestar Rollergirls.

Friends of my hosts in Austin stopped with tickets and invited me along.

Roller derby is a mix of glitter, glam and World-Wrestling-Federation-style entertainment.

Participants are a motley mix dressed in ripped fishnet stockings, leopard-skin skirts, and low-cut shirts tagged with names meant to intimidate including Maya Mayhem, Honey Homicide and Dawna Destruction.

The evening’s program featured The Cherry Bombs against Putas Del Fuego.

This was not a competition for sissies.

“You skate at your own risk,” said Glitterotica A.K.A. Julie Hunter, co-captain of The Hell Cats.

At 31, Hunter had been skating roller derby for five seasons.

“The sport instills confidence; there’s a bit of sex appeal but it’s hard-knock competition so you’d better have good insurance,” she said.

Accessories in roller derby include helmets, elbow and knee pads; the post-event six pack often times substitutes as an ice pack for bruises, better known as derby kisses.

“You can get your aggression out,” said The Freakin Irican, a 10-year-old on the Sparkling City Roller Dollz from Corpus Christi, Texas.

The Dollz are rink rats who don’t play with Barbies – if they do, it’s only to practice hip checking them across the room.

The Roller Dollz made the trip to Austin to watch the big girls play.

“It’s fun if you love to skate and it’s better if you like to hit,” said Kay – Krusher, a 16-year-old on the Dollz.

Body checks, shoulder blocks, random elbows and an intentional shove are all part of roller derby.

Dollz coach Angie Gonzalez said it’s a good sport that keeps the girls off the streets.

“And away from the boys,” she said. “The girls love it; they never miss practice.”

Gonzalez said the Drew Barrymore movie Whip It starring Ellen Page had a big influence on the popularity of roller derby.

“The sport is still growing – but look at this crowd,” she said.

Roller derby in Austin used to draw 700 but the Saturday-night venue at the Palmer Events Center saw attendance top 3,500.

Questioned whether there’s any crying in roller derby, Gonzalez said definitely not; only to be quickly contradicted.

“But coach I cried all day at practice – look at these bruises,” said one girl lifting her shorts to show off a purple and yellow bruise about as big as a baby’s head.

“I cried, too,” said another.

“It’s something we’re still working on,” said Gonzalez with chagrin.

SIDE NOTE…

If I had a roller derby team, we’d be The Norma’s, striking terror in teams including the famed Anne Richard’s Girls.

Norma would be my wingman and the enforcer – dressed in a spiked dog collar and a bloody teardrop running down her face.

The back of her jersey would read The Vin-dicator.

She’d jump the rope and circle the rink with a pocket dog stuffed in her bodice, grab the mic and scream, “Are jew wearing socks? Because dare about to be knocked off!’

LEAVING AUSTIN…

With my bucket-list trip accomplished, I’m leaving Austin for home. I think I’ll bike back.