Saturday, June 5, 2010

Alaska 2010 – May 15 to 19: Caprock Canyons State Park & Trailways, Quitaque, TX

Caprock Canyons State Park and Trailways

We drove up from Matador, TX, arrived safely, and got set up for a four-night stay. We really want to see as many Texas State Parks as we can; Texas has so much to offer in its diversity. Our winter home is actually on an enormous river delta created over thousands of years by the Rio Grande River, so it’s very flat. Exploring this part of the Texas Panhandle brought us lots of surprises! Deep canyons, hills, and the most beautiful red rock this side of Sedona, AZ. And more wildflowers! They were gorgeous; highlights are shown below.

We’d hoped to visit Palo Duro Canyon State Park which is not far from here. Because it’s so deep and dramatic, Palo Duro’s been described as the “Grand Canyon of Texas”. However, we came here to Caprock because, with the recent rain, we’d heard the roads through Palo Duro were blocked off due to water over the roads. Of course, after we set up here, reports from Palo Duro were that the roads were fine, that the water had subsided. Oh, well, another trip!

What a wonderful place this Caprock Canyons is! The rich colors of the canyons and dramatic shapes of promontories!

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Yucca and so many kinds of wildflowers were in bloom. The campground is well-laid out, each site having a wind/sun shelter, lantern hook, and grill. The recent rains had produced a bumper crop of mosquitoes which was the only real negative.

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Cactus in bloom:

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A close-up of a cactus bloom:

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Look closely and you’ll see a green-looking bee inside this cactus bloom:

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Charles Goodnight TX-Quitaque-CGoodnight&Friendwas a cattle baron and rancher during the days of the huge cattle drives up from Texas to Kansas and other markets. The Goodnight-Loving Trail was named in part after him. Goodnight had owned enormous tracts of land (including the JA Ranch referenced in the next photo), fenced it for his cattle, but understood the importance of free-ranging bison, the original inhabitants of this land. He fostered his own herd of bison in order to preserve them.

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In 1996, the JA Ranch donated descendents of his original herd to Texas Parks and Wildlife, which in turn established them here at Caprock Canyons. One day, when I went to the park’s Visitor’s Center, I got to meet the Park Superintendent, Don Beard, and also the Bison Herd Manager, C. L. Hawkins. “C. L.” says there are 66 adults and 17 calves in the bison herd this spring. (Photo access to them is limited by extensive protective fencing. My apologies for the poor photo below.)

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“C. L.” has cut from steel a collection of bison silhouettes in various sizes and positions which have been placed in several locations throughout this park. Extras were even donated to the City of Quitaque (pronounced “Kitty-kway”) for the gateway sign at the west side of town.

Look closely below and you’ll see a stream of bison moving from the left and up over the signage. Each is individually cut. There’s no real way to take a close up photo. The scale gets lost. It’s meant to be seen from a comfortable distance.

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The City of Quitaque’s motto is “Hope, Pride, Progress”, which we found noble in light of its being a sleepy, dying little village.

An interesting note about the park’s bison herd: Ted Turner, who raises bison, donated 2 bulls hoping to increase the genetic pool of the park’s herd. The two Turner bulls were allowed to breed with 2 cows from the park’s herd. As a result, it was discovered that there are two genetically different bison herds in this country: a northern (Turner’s are examples) and a southern strain (Goodnight’s herd). So, in order to preserve the purity of the Goodnight herd genetics, the Turner bulls from the northern strain could not be allowed to breed freely with these bison from the southern strain, nor could their two male “test” offspring. The four bulls live a fine life in a large canyon below the park’s Visitor’s Center. They are often visible from there, and will spend the rest of their days isolated from the remaining herd. The latter is located in a large pasture just to the east of the park’s main entrance.

We toured the park by road and by foot on the Canyon Rim Trail, accessible from the campground.

Map picture

Here are more pix of this beautiful place:

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P5162069 P5182108 P5182127 Just outside the state park, there’s a 64-mile-long multi-purpose trailway ("Rails-to-Trails") for hikers, bikers, and equestrians which has “depots”P5182144 or access points sprinkled along its length. One of these “depots” is in Quitaque, not far from the park. We didn’t get a chance to ride this Trailway but here are pictures.

A view out the trail from the Quitaque depot.
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A bit further out is this metal gateway (below):

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If you turn 180 degrees, looking back across the road, you can see where the trail came from (below).
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This trailway looks like you’d rarely, if ever, encounter another hiker/bicycler/equestrian. Great for some time to unwind, watch wildlife, see the countryside!

I could post a lot more pictures but hope these few will encourage you to visit Caprock Canyons State Park and Trailway.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Enjoyed your blog! Come back and see us again sometime.

Donald Beard
Park Superintendent
Caprock Canyons State Park