Thanksgiving Follow Up

We are home again (as of last Saturday).  Thanksgiving in Las Cruces was fun – GREAT food.  The ride home was uneventful.  Here are a few follow up pictures from the day after Thanksgiving starting with the family picture and then a gallery.

 

Click on the gallery below to bring up a scrollable window that shows the complete pictures — (the gallery preview you see show just thumbnails of the pictures)

Next up:  Maybe some pictures of Elaine’s September trip to Ireland,  Definitely pictures from our Christmas/New Year’s adventure in Dingle, County Kerry, Ireland – we arrive in Dingle on 12/23 for ten days.

 

Thanksgiving in Las Cruces

We drove to Las Cruces on Tuesday for a Weiler family reunion at Thanksgiving.  We took the old route through Globe, Safford, and Duncan AZ before joining up with I-10 in Lordsburg, NM.  More scenic and no traffic at all.  Nice ride.  Takes a bit longer, but I hate I-10 from Phoenix to Tucson.  We stopped for a picnic lunch in Duncan.  Not much there except a decrepit jet plane.

We are staying at the Hllton Garden Inn in Las Cruces, just five minutes from Caroline’s house.  Nice hotel.  Nice junior suite.

Here are the pictures from Thanksgiving.

Click on the gallery to bring up a scrollable window with complete pictures and captions – the gallery preview below shows just thumbnails of the pictures without captions)

Take It Easy

So, last week we did an overnight trip to Winslow, AZ for dinner.  More about that in a minute.  Winslow, AZ, located along the famous Route 66, was made famous by the Eagle’s song, Take It Easy.

Well, I’m running down the road 
tryin’ to loosen my load 
I’ve got seven women on 
my mind, 
Four that wanna own me, 
Two that wanna stone me, 
One says she’s a friend of mine 
Take It easy, take it easy 
Don’t let the sound of your own wheels 
drive you crazy 
Lighten up while you still can 
don’t even try to understand 
Just find a place to make your stand 
and take it easy 
Well, I’m a standing on a corner 
in Winslow, Arizona 
and such a fine sight to see 
It’s a girl, my Lord, in a flatbed 
Ford slowin’ down to take a look at me 
Come on, baby, don’t say maybe 
I gotta know if your sweet love is 
gonna save me 
We may lose and we may win though 
we will never be here again 
so open up, I’m climbin’ in, 
so take it easy 
Well I’m running down the road trying to loosen 
my load, got a world of trouble on my mind 
lookin’ for a lover who won’t blow my 
cover, she’s so hard to find 
Take it easy, take it easy 
don’t let the sound of your own 
wheels make you crazy 
come on baby, don’t say maybe 
I gotta know if your sweet love is 
gonna save me, oh oh oh 
Oh we got it easy 
We oughta take it easy

It’s a three hour drive to WInslow and there’s not a ton to do there other than a few art galleries and a couple of Route 66 gifts shops.  The main activity is to, well, stand on the corner and take pictures.  The city has made that corner a city park.  There is a mural on the wall.  There is a real flatbed Ford parked at the curb.  And there is a statue of a man with a guitar standing on the corner.  Some say it resembles Jackson Browne, one of the co-authors of the song.  In 2016 a second statue was added, this one definitely of Glenn Frey, the other co-author who died that year.

Click on the gallery preview to bring up a scrollable window that shows all the pictures full size

The gallery preview shows only thumbnails of the photos.



After taking the requisite pictures, we proceeded down the road just a half mile to check in at La Posada Hotel.  La Posada is one of Fred Harvey’s famous Railway hotels (the hotel is also the station for Amtrak’s Southwest Chief on its Chicago to LA run).  All the Harvey hotels fell in disuse and disrepair, but this one has now been lovingly restored by Allan Affeldt and his wife, Tina Mion, who has filled the hotel with her haunting art work. They have made the hotel a destination in its own right.  Note the camel sculpture in one picture below – the camel played a big role in the American west and the building of the railroad.  The rooms are named after famous guests from over the years.  Last time we were in the Howard Hughes room; this time it was the Albert Einstein room.


A great hotel needs a great restaurant, and Affeldt convinced renowned California chef John Sharpe, born in the UK, to actually move from Los Angeles in 1999 and open the Turquoise Room in La Posada.  Affeldt and his wife oversee every aspect of the restaurant every day, and his southwest inspired menu is nothing short of fantastic. The waitresses dress as “Harvey Girls“, the “young, single, intelligent women who were also of ‘good character,’ and, presumably, had the sort of sense of adventure that propelled them to unknown territory in the 1880s to work as waitresses in Harvey hotels“.     Dinner was magnificent, as usual, on this, our fourth visit, and we slept late this morning so we would have room to enjoy breakfast here for the first time. Oh, yum! A final note: neither the hotel nor the restaurant is particularly expensive. Come if you ever get a chance. The extensive wine list is the most reasonably priced one I have ever seen at a first class restaurant.


Our Choices from the Menu

Read the links provided about the hotel, the restaurant, Fred Harvey, and Harvey Girls – good reading.  Especially look at the menus! for the Turquoise Room – you’ll want to come yourself and try them!
Next morning we drove the three hours back home after the wonderful breakfast.  The best part about the ride is that it on AZ state route 87 the whole way – no Interstate and no traffic.