About Me

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Arizona City, Arizona, United States
We are Barbara and Bill Connor formerly of Meadville, PA. We sold our home in October, 2008 and are now living fulltime in a 39' Titanium 5th wheel RV and loving every minute of it! Back to Arizona for the winter. CLICK ON ANY PHOTO TO ENLARGE.

Friday, December 30, 2011

Conner Museum, Kingsville, TX Dec. 3, 2011





We sold the little RV that we had taken to Alaska and delivered it to Kingsville, TX for the new owners. While in Kingsville we visited the Conner Museum on the campus of Texas A & M University of Kingsville.


















One of the most interesting areas was the "Hall of Horns", the lifetime collection of Graves Peeler. Peeler collected trophy game animals from all over North America. Included in the collection are 4 Boone and Crockett Mule Deer.



Also in the collection were elk, moose, big horn sheep, stone sheep, caribou, antelope, mountain goats and bears. Here is a good comparison of the grizzly bear and the brown bear. Notice the wide fore head of the grizzly on the left. Peeler was also one of the men responsible for saving the Texas longhorn cattle from extinction.

























The Collared Peccary, or locally know as the Javelina, are the only native, wild, pig-like animal found in the United States. There are called Javelina for their razor-sharp tusk, Spanish for javelin or spear. Ranging from 35 to 60 pounds and 20 to 24 inches tall, they have poor hearing but good eye sight. Their typical diet includes agave and prickly pear cactus.































This kitchen display from circa 1880-1900 included a Hoosier Cabinet, manufactured in Greencastle, Indiana where my sister-in-law lives. Also note the wooden barrel wringer washing machine on the right.

























Another display depicted a different kind of kitchen, the chuckwagon, a much needed piece of equipment used to feed the cowboys on their long trail drives or just tending cattle on the huge ranges of Texas. It carried everything needed to feed the hungry hands, all condensed into a very small space.

The museum also contained animals, birds and snakes native to Texas, a large display of barbed wire and branding irons used to identify the cattle that roamed the ranges of south east Texas. It was a very interesting and I'm glad we took the time to stop and visit.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Goose Island State Park, Rockport, TX Nov. 29, 2011


A warm, sunny day took us to Goose Island State Park, just north of Rockport, Texas. Our first stop was the "Big Tree", one of the most famous Live Oaks in the world. It was named the Texas State Champion Coastal Live Oak tree in 1969. The Texas Forest Service estimates its age at over 1000 years old, but more recent estimates place it nearer to 2000! This grand old lady has a circumference of 35 feet and a diameter of 11 feet. Her crown is 89 feet wide and she is 44 feet tall. According to climatologists the Big Tree has survived between 40 and 50 major hurricanes and numerous droughts, floods, and wildfires.

Numerous other Live Oaks stand guard around the "Big Tree". The way the oaks lean is common along the coast, perhaps because of the almost constant wind from the Gulf. They are very strange looking, rather eerie.















Next we took a walk out on a fishing jetty. The tide was out and we saw a lot of jelly fish in the water.















Soon it was time for our picnic lunch. Syd and Jen were the tour guides for the day and we found a relazing place near the water to eat.


Another beautiful day in Texas......






USS LEXINGTON, Nov. 15, 2011




We toured the aircraft carrier, USS Lexington Museum on the Bay, docked in Corpus Christi. The "Lex" has flight deck 910 feet long and had a crew of 1500 men and women. Despite repeated attacks during World War II and the Japanese reporting her sunk no less that 4 times, the USS Lexington came back to fight again, prompting Tokyo Rose to dub the carrier "The Blue Ghost."






A "Tomcat" sits on deck, among many other aircraft. We were also able to tour many areas inside the ship, including the captain's quarters, mess hall, dental facilities with 2 dentists and 7 technicians, surgical facilities with a 20 bed hospital, 2 doctors and 14 corpsmen, and a very "posh" room where visiting dignitaries were entertained. There were over 40,000 books in the library. The crew daily consumed 660 pounds of meat, 164 gallons of milk and 97 dozen eggs!





This "Skyhawk" used by the Marines had "Capt. C. R. Connor" under the cockpit window. I wonder if he's related??















A "Cobra" helicopter had this message written on it: "Don't bother running you'll only die tired." We spent about 5 hours on the ship and could have stayed longer as there is so much to see. There are rooms full of interesting stories, pictures, and memorabilia inside along with an I-max move and many short videos throughout the ship.


Commissioned in 1943, the USS Lexington has served the US longer and set more records than any other carrier in the history of naval aviation. During WW II she spent 21 months in combat in the Pacific Theater. Her planes destroyed 372 enemy aircraft in the air and another 475 on the ground. She was the oldest working carrier when she was decommissioned in 1991. A heartfelt "Thank you" to all who served on the "Lex" and to all of our brave soldiers all over the world.


Corpus Christi is privileged to be selected as the permanent home of this national treasure.