Revenge of Montezuma, Cortez, CO

It's been a couple of years since we last shot in Cortez but given we had people to see, gear to get to others from Aus, it was onto Cortez after Montrose.

Stumble Leena and Piedra Kidd always put on a great annual, this being their 15th. Of course there are many others of the Windygap Regulators who assist in putting on this great match also. A big hearty thank you to all for another good year.

The weather was hot and a little dusty as you strode across the range but then we wouldn't be cowboys without the sun on yer brim and dust in yer nose!

Friday was side matches and according to the end results today I won two of the side match stages and Jackaroo the third! Luscious fudge of different kinds were our reward…….hmmmm I can feel more workouts coming on already!

Cowboy Clays were won by Cerveza Slim and Lucy Trigger.

Katie Younger from QLD, Australia, on stage 2.

Saturday came with first day of 6 stages. Had some awesome stages I should be proud of and then came the dreaded 11 stuck in the rifle. (Duh duh daaaaaaahhh) – note this should be said with evil intent or like the sloth in the movie, The Croods.

Mulga Bill, QLD, Australia and Jackaroo, QLD, Australia/OK, USA On stage 10 at the loading table.

Jack had a great day, only a miss and a bobble on one stage.

Anywho, today was indeed another day! The little prairie dog got me, 1 pistol shot that's it. Jack had a miss but overall a good finish to the weekend,

We shot the team match with Mulga Bill, KC Woody, Jackaroo and I. Well, suffice to say the team of SASS Kicker, Cody James, Twelve Mile Reb and San Juan kicked our butts. But that makes the scoreboard even anyway with 2 to Aus and 2 to US.

Clean Match Aussies were Mulga Bill, his first ever! Coyote Baz, Mystic Meg and Lazy Dave, I think another one or two but these guys were from our Posse.

Posse 1 consisted of Aussie Drover, Capt Woodrow C Kelso, Card Killer, Coyote Baz, Grizzly Grumps, Jackaroo, Kathouse Kelli, Katie Younger, Lazy Dave, Mulga Bill, Mystic Meg, Pecker Bird, Private Pappy, Robb & Co, Skagway, Tehachapi Hornn, Texas Banker, Utah Bob and Willy B Shakin'.

Posse 1!

We had a ball of course and Capt Kelso is always hilarious. See a video of him on the FB page.

Plenty placed or won and was very happy to see Katie and Robb take home a plaque each given its their first trip over and their first match here. Yippee! πŸ™‚

Wrap up for the Aussies. Jack finished a very credible 6th place, Mulga Bill 10th, Kathouse Kelli 22nd, Aussie Drover 24th, Sam Balin 25th, Sunrise Ned 33rd, Phillips 34th, Lazy Dave 41st, Mystic Meg 43rd, Grizzly Grumps 46th, Robb & Co 47th, Section Hand 50th, Johnny Reb 53rd, Ruff Anreddy 57th, Coyote Baz 59th, and Katie Younger 72nd.

Here's a pic of all the Aussie competitors, oh wait, of course Sam Balin buggered off somewhere and so he is not in the pic.

 

Tonight some of us are headed to the Main Street Brewery. What a great way to end another good weekend in Cortez!

Now it's on to EOT! See you there.

Kat xo

http://www.windygapregulators.com

 

 

Visit to the Museum of the Mountain West

Monday we visited the Museum of the Mountain West, just 2 miles East of Montrose heading towards Gunnison. Some of our other Aussie friends had been on the Saturday afternoon when they had some other activities going on at the Museum.

I think we might have scored going Monday as we had a personal guided tour by Mr Richard E. Fike. He runs the Museum and has been personally collecting all the artefacts and acquiring others and buildings since he was 4 years old. He opened his first Museum in his home at age 8. He is an archaeologist by trade, teaches at University's and has written many books.

He is “a walking museum” with the knowledge that he imparted along the way. I was truly in awe and amazed at this mans lifetime of experiences.

Now all of this is to the best of my ability to tap away fast enough on here as we went along, so I hope I got things right and can do it some sort of justice. Or just get there yourself! πŸ™‚

We enjoyed our tour with a couple from Iowa. Along the way we met Greg, who usually restores wagons and carriages, and Susan, who is working a summer job before attending college and has helped in the restoration of the piano and stool that are in the early 1900's house they are currently restoring.

We started in at The General Store. A facade has been added to this once horse stable. When it was acquired the bottom row of logs had rotted from the horse manure but was carefully moved to site and restored.

 

The Granary, would not have had a facade originally. You would be able to see the 4×2 timbers on the outside and the facing lining would be on the inside walls only. That way the rain would run down the outside and dry but would not cause damage in the cavity.

 

The top door in the wall inside was where the grain went in and the small door at the bottom was where you got it from. You can just see it in the picture through the rest of the gear. This room is filled with old machinery, butt stocks being worked on, pistol frames, like it could be a gunsmiths workshop.

 

All these buildings would be in landfill if Richard hadn't saved them. The brick building saloon was built reproduction. It represents the Clipper Saloon.

 

The bar was up in Telluride and made by Brunswick. In the 1920's was used when you could only sell soda pop! Then the bar was placed in the Clipper Saloon in Telluride. It was burnt during a fire but has been restored, one pillar is charred in behind at the end of the mirrored back wall and underneath the bar top still has around 2″ thick charring. That just goes to show how solid some furniture and fixtures were back in the day.

 

Lee Wung was a Chinese laundryman in the 1880's. Story goes that a prostitute walked in one day and passed out. Mr Wung went and grabbed a business man from across the road to help and he told him, as a joke, he'd killed her. Mr Wung fled, never returning or retrieving any of his belongings. The businessman who told him this was fined $20 for mischievous conduct, around $400 today. This building holds the history of laundry.

 

The next building was a Chinaman's house. It used to be situated approx 8 miles south of Montrose. It was moved to its current location piece by piece.

In the very early days they would sleep on a mat and later they would have had cots. On and in the cabinet are many dishes and bottles excavated from various sites of Chinese presence. On top are Soy sauce bottles (l), dried vegetables jars (m) and whiskey (sake) bottles to the right.

 

We didn't go into the next one, but it was a Tack house.

Then came the sod house from Gunnison, every piece numbered by Richard, dismantled and put back together piece by piece. Using Adobe soil from the Adobe Flats that surround Montrose.

 

The school was from Uncompaghre, built in 1880's and opened in 1890. You weren't allowed to enter until the teacher rang the bell to say class was in. So as Richard unlocked the building he rang the bell for us to enter. The cloak room was where you hung your coats and your lunch pail when you came to school. Children would be assigned tasks like placing wood on and stoking the fire and getting water.

 

Of course some of you may know that there were no lady teachers until the Civil War and then they were made sign contracts not to get married during their tenure. You could 'spark' once a week or twice if you went to church. That means to date.

Barns and schools were painted red so they could be found in a snow storm and at the time was the cheapest paint to acquire. Of course maintenance was required as reds and blues quickly faded over time.

The teacherage used to be located up near the Fairview school and later became a milk drop off for farmers. Notes on the walls from the farmers to keep track of what they'd dropped off still remain on the brickwork today.

Inside are items of furniture that would have been similar to a teachers quarters, her curling iron ready to be heated over the kerosene lamp and of course – a copy of the contract she would have to adhere to.

 

Next it was into the 1909 house that is currently undergoing restoration work. The back section of the house was added in 1928.

 

The piano is Coromandel timber native to India and Sri Lanka (side note, from days of Captain Cook and later mining history, New Zealand also has a huge coromandel timber history) and more than likely would have two candelabras where the oval shapes are on the front, otherwise how else would you read your music as you entertained of an evening?

 

Next came the station house, probably would have had bunks in it for more than one conductor and rail workers.

The next little building was bought in a yard sale! Built in 1936, again carefully taken down and pieced together again, fitted out in period style.

The green box car over behind the railway platform was used in the film making of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

 

The church was brought in from 6 blocks south of Montrose. When first moved (and due to changes over the years) the windows were not period correct and it had no steeple. Eventually the steeple was added and from generous donations of time and money the windows have been reproduced in proper stained glass with the Lutheran symbols.

The old stove has been restored with its 32 pieces of nickel. The square grand piano from the mid 1800's was donated and is awaiting restoration.

 

Into the Depot next and there are all sorts of photos and movie posters that are all of films (mostly westerns) that were/partly filmed in Colorado. Yes even part of Crocodile Dundee 2.

The old style game machine is a gem. You looked into the sight and saw a negative picture, when you pulled the trigger a mechanism inside would poke a hole in it. Then it would dispense the picture with a hole where you 'shot' it.

 

The carriage house arrived in 3 trailers and then they had to figure out how to put it back together. Jack Dempsey heavy weight boxing great used to train in the top of it, (in its original location)

Built originally in 1895 most of the artefacts in the carriage house were salvaged and dug up from the original site. It has a 16 ft high, balloon frame. When the building was taken down, unfortunately, the square nails were sold off for scrap metal. Fortunately photos were taken of the inside and they were able to put it back together.

 

Back to the main building! This houses a whole little street of shops.

First up we were taken round the end to the Miners Delight Saloon.

Just outside of this is a fascinating piece of firearm history. It's one of those 'if only the walls could talk' pieces. The Colt was excavated from Richard building a two story office building in Ridgeway. The site was originally a saloon establishment and during the excavation of the basement revealed an old bathroom. The Colt was found buried in poop, so you can imagine the damage this and urine has had on it. Also found were penis syringes and a number of bottles etc. (the syringes you ask? What was their use? No idea, was having enough trouble keeping up but believe you me, my curious mind will need to find out!)

 

The Miners Delight Saloon – a reproduction of a saloon from a photograph of the Leadville saloon. The porch roof is not original but was from the True Grit movie building.

There were no batwing doors in saloons until they were introduced in the movies and bars were often across the windows because it would cost $1 to replace a pane of glass and workers normally only earned around 8cents an hour. So your drunken escapades could become quite costly if you weren't cautious!

The bison head was from a bar in (1889) St Luis. Back in the day of the railroads, it could take almost 8hrs for a train to wait for a herd of buffalo to cross the tracks.

Richard has his grandfathers 1908 pool table in the Saloon.

The 1858 bar is from a Nevada/Utah border ranch. Richard found it while researching and writing a book on the pony express. He did excavations and assisted in restoration to some of the pony express stations.

 

The pride of the museum a violin combination pianola (I didn't catch exactly what it is called) – 44 miles of wire and uses spark and 3 motors to run it. Last played on an English cruise ship but came from Chicago.

 

One of only 6 left in the world, the electric derby would play for a quarter and you would bet on which horse would come in first!

 

Next the vertical Music Box, made in Germany around 1889, the bells in it are very rare. A beautiful piece!

 

I have placed a short video of each on our Facebook page. They were pretty special.


There are 3 dentist offices, 2 set up from 1885. There would have been no running water, no electricity and their furnishings were dark and drab until sterilisation came in in 1915.

All false teeth until the First World War were rubber. Then later became Bakelite and so on. How do you reckon I would have gone getting my teeth fixed back then and if the dentist had been interrupted whilst using his pedal dentistry equipment?

 

Onto the drug store and the counters shown in the photo are from 1929, the ceiling pressed tin in the drug store was actually from a whore house in Cumberland, Wyoming.

 

Frozen Charlotte's – for a penny you could by a China doll. For a nickel you could get one with movable arms. Frozen Charlotte came about from a little girl wanting to show her dress off, she didn't wear her coat in winter and her arms froze to the seat rest. (So the story goes)

 

Look at all the prescriptions filed!

 

Bitters for medicinal purposes. More alcoholic content than whiskey. A lot of these bottles were found under old Mormon homes Richard had excavated.

 

All these postcards are collectible the Lucitania one is worth around $350.

 

Schmidt was his grandfamilies name and they had the store in Nebraska.

His grandfathers pendulum clock hung in the store and is made of pressed cardboard. It took him a while to restore it back as every time his grandfather painted the store the clock got a touch up as well. The post office was across the road from the store. As things got replaced the older items were stored in the basement and as Richard grew up he took them for his collection and Museum.

 

Abliah Johnson was a doctor in 1885 and bought the first woman doctor to Colorado in 1892.

 

An 1885-1910 rotating cabinet houses the bullet puller from civil war, bone saws and a skull drill.

The waiting room for patients, where you may be offered a cookie and played the gramophone to drown out the noise behind the curtains in the doctors office.

The gramophone was found in a pig pen getting covered by manure. Also a short video of this on Facebook.

The millinery shop was in Montrose, 1906, In the store window here is Richard's great, great Aunt's 1869 baby bonnet.

The final room houses items of Chief Ouray (pronounced u-ray) of the Ute Indiana. He was known as the white mans chief.

There is Butch Cassidy's saddle and chaps (Richard knew Butch Cassidy's sister and had been regaled by her stories of her brother).

There are also firearms and civil war ones that Richard found during an archaeological dig at the site of Little Big Horn battle. His knowledge is just incredible, I can't keep up!

 

The Kentucky flintlock at the top of this particular showcase is Bat Masterson's father or grandfathers.

 

The little green bottle found in Doc Hollidays room, the neck was broken off but the next pic shows what it would have been like.

 

Have you heard the whole Hatfield and McCoy's story? Or aware of them? The saddle below is one of the Hatfield's saddle.

 

Into the Dry Goods Store and to me of particular interest was his grandmothers dress. Apparently his grandmother and mother cut off the bottom to repurpose, the bodice was placed in the box it is still in today. The hair pieces in the show case are human hair and the braids in the bottom front were his grandmother's who owned the shop.

 

A quick last look at the 1923 mortician and doctors office. There is a machine that can produce anaesthetic and flick the switch in reverse and can suck all the fluids from the body. I guess you would want to make sure the doctor was on the ball that day!

 

Richard's collection is extensive, his knowledge even greater and I do hope that one day someone will take as much care, pride and historic attention to all that exists here.

 

On this day in history

Kat xo

For more pics I will have them up on the Facebook page some time soon

http://www.museumofthemountainwest.org

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diospyros_melanoxylon

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frozen_Charlotte_(doll)

 

 

Colorado State Championships

The San Juan Shooting Range is a spectacular spot on the top of a ridge at 6,600ft. Hmmmmm, Mt Kosciuszko is only 7,310ft – a little higher than current but the highest that exists in Australia, let alone a shooting range to boot!!

 

There is still a little snow on the mountains as you can see from the pic above,

Friday was first day of main match, certainly not my best but we got through with Posse 7 and had two other Aussies on the posse with us. Aussie Drover, Mulga Bill and then Colorado Blackjack, Edward R S Canby, Hey Granpa, Jackaroo, Kathouse Kelli, Marshal Jack Murph, Pinto Being, Shot-Z Lady, Spades and Union Jack. (We had a few not turn up)

 

The day started on the cool side but soon warmed up and before you knew it 6 stages were completed whether you liked it or not.

 

Friday night was the banquet and side match awards evening at the 'Turn Of The Century' Saloon. A gorgeous reproduction of an 1890's saloon. What better place to have a banquet for a heap of cowboy shooters!!?

'A recreated 1890's Saloon decorated with thousands of Victorian Period antiques, including a 20' Brunswick Bar, originally in Montana, manufactured in 1883. The beautiful foyer room complete with Eastlake style chairs and couches, merchandise displays and Parlor Mirror create a striking entrance. Fabulous Leaded Glass Windows from the original Grand Imperial Hotel in Seattle separate the Parlor from the main lower level of the Saloon. The lower level features dinner seating for up to 80, and show seating for up to 120.' Taken from the Turn Of The Century website, see below for the link.

It was perfect and after dinner it was into side match awards. Many of our friends placed and we were amongst them also. I took Best Dressed Cowgirl, Speed Shotgun, Speed Rifle, 2nd in Trail Walk for Wild Bunch, and Jack took Speed Shotgun (a matching pair we were). He entered best moustache but was taken by some other more worthy opponents in that department!


Saturday morning and we are into Day 2. Let's hope today was better than yesterday….not!! OMG! What am I doing?! At least Jack shot better. My rifle is doing something weird as well. Lol! Despite me being weird.

We took Aussie Drover (aka Moonshine), Alison, Mulga Bill (aka Waddy) and Kathy to Chili's, where we all had dinner. Good meal, chit chat and b.s!

Another early start to the day and we are into Sunday – man on man/cowgirl on cowgirl/anyone can shoot out! Congratulations to the Cowgirls, 1st Place, 'Mesa Belle' and 2nd 'Kitty Carbine'. For the Cowboys, 2nd Place 'Twelve Mile Reb' and 1st Place 'Big Iron Buster'.


Check out the two Confederate braced Cowboys. Cobra Cat and Jackaroo and they were up against each other in the 'man on man'.


'Cobra Cat' and I took Top Gun Cowboy and Cowgirl,


Posse 7? Well everyone in our Posse took a placing and prize!!! So we made sure we got a group photo, some are a little hard to see, but every one of us in Posse 7 left with a trophy. Thank you to all the wonderful cowboy and cowgirl shooters of our posse, it was a pleasure to shoot with you.


So at the end of the day, the Colorado State Championship winners for Men's 'Cobra Cat' and for Ladies, our good friend 'Lefty Jo'. Congratulations to you both!

 

Look forward to seeing everyone down the trail heading to End of Trail and the World Championships, Good Luck to all!! A great big thank you to Kodiak Kid, San Juan and Hurricane Camille (and I know this is only a very small touch of the assIstants that helped put this match together!) oh, and Pinto Being for his not too bad shootin' but more so for his wit and cowboy poetry – mind you, for one of the quietest on the posse???

 

Cheers

Kat xo

 

 

Side Match Day, CO State

Slightly on the cooler side this morning but with guns unloaded and then finding out side matches were being held over on the rifle range, the walk made for a great warm up.

We started with the Trail Walk (first with cowboy and then Wild Bunch) good fun! Man at this altitude you are definitely huffing and puffing by the end of your run though!

The San Juan Shooting Range sits at an altitude of 6,600ft and the gorgeous scenery is something to marvel at.

 

After the Trail Walk there was Speed Rifle, Pistol and Shotgun and feel my hands are back from WB use and ready for a cowboy match or 2….or 3.

Lunchtime and this afternoon will be Long Range events, Pocket Pistol, Derringer, 22 match etc. Hopefully they don't get dumped on out there. We decided to leave at lunch and it was black as black, thunder and some very light rain here.

Tomorrow is the start of the Colorado State Championships. In the evening will be dinner at the Turn Of The Century Saloon. After checking out their website, I'm looking forward to going there, as a whole bunch of cowboys is going to look sensational hanging out in a recreated 1890's saloon!

Yee haa, good times

Kat xo

 

Gorge and Pass Travel

Leaving CaΓ±on City this morning it's looking a little dark and may just get those storms they are predicting.

Now starts the winding road through Bighorn Sheep Gorge beside the river and some small rapids. Passed Spike Buck, Five Points, Salt Lick, Pinnacle Rock, Texas Creek to name a few.

 

We got rain on and off but with a spectacular view of the mountains, who really cares. Just beautiful!

 

Pity we left our rafting shoes at the house, could have done some more white water rafting next week. I'm sure we will find something else to amuse us between shoots though. We can see the first bus loads of adventurists getting ready for their rafting experience.

Salida, 7036ft and surrounded by a snow capped mountain backdrop. Only thing I've achieved on this part of the journey is to paint my toenails and take in the scenery. Lol!

One of our random stops, let's make a trip up the mountain on the Monarch Crest Tramway. A 20 minute round trip to the top of the crest, 11,312 at the top 12,012ft.

The gondola is the oldest one in Colorado at 49 years of age – Haa haa haa should have seen the look on Jack's face when the guy said that!

 

Ok so we get to the top and we are in the observatory. Standing either side of the Continental Divide.

 

Mount Ouray (pronounced u-ray) 13,971ft left of the tower,

 

San Luis Peak which is part of the La Agarita Mountains & Wilderness is 14,014ft but covered in cloud today.

Out there SW is the San Juan Mountains and Gunnison Valley, where we are headed.

 

Spectacular, spectacular, no words of the vernacular! (Lol, bit of a Moulin Rouge twist in there) An awesome quick stop!

Now it's back on the road and get some millinery done whilst navigating the bends.

Into Montrose round lunchtime, headed to the range and checked in, sussed out the beaut facades and chatted a while before heading to the Motel.

We caught up with some of the Aussies here as well and look forward to getting into some side matches tomorrow.

 

Beers and cheers!

Kat xo

 

Trippin’

Heading west again, this time we opted for the country roads instead of the super highways. We headed out through Kingfisher, Woodward and Fort Supply. Lots of wheat farming up in this western corner of Oklahoma and after all the rain last month, everything is nice and green.

 

At Fort Supply we stopped at a roadside marker that indicated the last general tribal battle at Wolf Creek in 1838.

 

There is a historic site museum type experience that we thought we might go have a look at but it now appears to be entrenched in the correctional facilities yard and we couldn't access it.

We are on the Chisholm Trail Corridor and soon we will cross into Kansas and keep North onto Dodge City where we will stop for lunch.

 

Jack took a break and visited at the table with Doc Holliday briefly!

 

Just outside of Dodge and we are heading west on the Santa Fe Trail now. On the highway there is a Santa Fe Trail park stop with information that we hadn't stopped at before. It's incredible to think that anyone made it across these open prairies with next to nothing in between, little water and enduring heat and/or bad weather?

 

We've now crossed into Colorado and on to Pueblo which will be the stop for the night.

Ahhh the familiar sights of Colorado. Can now see some of the 'Fourteeners' in the distance and some are still snow capped. πŸ™‚

Well, we forgot about the time change and gained an extra hour so staying in CaΓ±on City with mountains as the backdrop and Royal Gorge close by.

 

Kat xo

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chisholm_Trail

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Fe_Trail

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/CaΓ±on_City,_Colorado

 

TSRA State Match, Oakwood, TX

Back to Texas for another match and by crikey's you can really see the effects of all the rain and flooding that has occurred the past couple of weeks. Rivers are way, way up and driving through to Palestine the Trinity River has well and truly broken its banks.

 

The 2015 TSRA (Texas State Rifle Association) is being held at the Oakwood Outlaws Range. I'd forgotten how quaint this range is and the details they have, like the good ol' boys country music playing in the background as you walk the line of stages. Beautiful trees, great facades and buildings.

 

Whilst we shoot, and you will hear it in some of the videos on Facebook, there is anything from Marty Robbins, Frankie Lane, western movie soundtracks to name just a few.

 

Friday was Wild Bunch with around 20 competitors completing 6 stages and then the afternoon with the sun out and the humidity rising, it's time for side matches – I call it, get your hands back working in full cowboy mode.

 

We caught up with Texas Mac, Texas Flower, Sheriff Robert Love, Shootin' Iron Miller, Lady Ghost, Texas Ghost, their granddaughter Angel Ghost and Colorado Jackson for dinner.

After that I spent time measuring Flower for a new gown – but that's a whole other story and we will get to that one later. Suffice to say that it was more than the usual measures (gosh I'm even starting to talk like the instruction book) and will be used with The McDowell Garment Drafting Machine!

 

So Saturday comes with a potential storm at the time of opening ceremonies but with a breeze and a clap of thunder it was gone. Overcast skies turned into sunshine and so began the 2015 TSRA State Match.

 

With 6 stages completed we are now into Sunday. There are 4 stages left with awards to be held after lunch.

(At the time of writing we are on the way to the range Sunday morning, perfectly sunny and clear skies today with 97% humidity)

 

We were head long into completing the last four stages. Lots of laughs, a few oh dear's (or words to that effect) and it was 'all over bar the shouting'. (That's an Aussie term, I don't think I've heard it said here in our travels)

Awards and raffles were done and before you know it we are holding out for the top Cowboy and Cowgirl. Honours go to 'I Reckon' and 'Spur Broke!

 

Jack finished a very credible 8th Place and I was in 21st Place (ouch, too many misses and a P!) Had a good finish in Wild Bunch and beat the men's Traditional shooters!

We had a blast as usual and will see many of the pards at End Of Trail.

Thanks Texas Ghost and Oakwood Outlaws – among many others who assisted – great shoot.

Kat xo

(The week got away on me, been flat out like a lizard drinkin') πŸ™‚

http://www.oakwoodoutlaws.org

 

 

Branson It Was!

Last Wednesday we went and visited the Big Cedar Lodge. Very, very nice, rustic charm, gorgeous facilities. It was raining lightly but still saw some of the grounds.

 

We then came back into the strip and visited the Veterans Memorial Museum. Fantastic display of veterans uniforms and information about their various deployments. Quite fitting for this Memorial Day weekend (Like our ANZAC Day) honouring men and women for their service,

 

There are hundreds of names listed on walls throughout, of those who lost their lives fighting for country. The central hall in particular, very humbling with just a lone casket and flag. One of only a few left in the nation.

 

Onward through other exhibitions right up to recognition for present day military.

 

Spent some time down in the historic district, in and out of the shops.

Wednesday evening was for the Dixie Stampede dinner theatre show. Horses, buffalo, fantastic performers, comedy, magic, dancing, trick performers, you name it – crammed packed into one, light and music show spectacular!

 

Good one Dolly! (Dolly Parton owns it) beautifullY done, fantastic costumes. The building, stables and grounds are also noteworthy.

 

Thoroughly enjoyed it!

 

Thursday it was out for breakfast and then went to the Titanic Museum. Couldnt take any photos inside which was a shame. This is an awesome museum put together by John Joslyn, the man who did the expedition to the final resting grounds of the Titanic in 1987.

It's two storey's of around 400 artefacts and experiences. There is the touching of the iceberg as you walk in, a model of the Titanic, a beautiful staircase like would have been on the ship and a music room honouring the musicians who all perished in the sinking tragedy.

 

After, we went to one of the craft mall's and then drove down to the landing to see where the Branson Belle showboat goes from.

 

Onto some fun/competitive putt putt golf! We played at Pirates Cove Adventure Golf. Great grounds and course, waterfalls, pirate ship and caves! Jack finished 3 shots ahead of me. He scored a hole in one but I scored a credible 3 hole in ones across the 18 holes. We had fun and plenty of laughs.

 

Thursday night we went to the Presley's Country Jubilee. A mixture of comedy, singing, gospel, country and bluegrass music. This family run show has been around for years and was very entertaining!

Friday we had a slow start to the morning and headed out round lunchtime, checking out some more shops, the Amish shop included.

In the evening we were on the Branson Belle Showboat for dinner and exceptional entertainment while it travels on Table Rock Lake.

Entertainment included CassandrΓ©, Rhythm (four tap dancing guys), The Showmen (excellent vocals, can sing like they came from 50yrs ago or more) and the magician Christopher James.

 

That, folks, wraps up our visit to Branson, Missouri. We will be back for some more fun at some stage.

On our way out of town Saturday morning we went via Butterfield Trail Cowboys and did a quick 5 stage shoot with them before heading back to a stormy and wet Oklahoma.

Ahhh, life is good.

Kat xo

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branson,_Missouri

http://www.dixiestampede.com

http://www.presleys.com

http://www.silverdollarcity.com/showboat-branson

 

 

Branson, Missouri

Last year we got a holiday package that only now have we been able to get round too due to the very busy shooting schedule!

Staying at the Radisson no less, a room with a view and shows booked in for the next couple of nights!

 

A relatively non shooting few days, so on the order is Veterans Memorial Museum, Titanic Museum, Auto and Farm Museum, Historic District, Craft Mall (hell yeah!), Branson Belle Showboat, Dixie Stampede dinner and show, The Presley's music and comedy show and putt putt golf!

At the moment though we are in the Time Out Lounge, yes, a bar and onto the second Blue Moon whilst enjoying the 80's music, contemplating to eat at the bistro here or walk 200 metres to another restaurant up the road…..

Kat xo

 

Texas Senior Games 2015

Senior Games this year were held at Old Fort Parker, Groesbeck, TX. It's as green as green with all the rain they've had recently and after Friday's rain and side matches has quickly turned to mud in a lot of areas.

With pledge and a prayer, we commenced the main match dodging mud and puddles as best as we could.

Rain held out to humidity and partial sunshine and having completed 5 stages it was decided that there would be a mandatory lunch break and then continue with another 2 stages. Leaving only 3 for tomorrow should it rain more.

 

Saturday night was banquet and side match awards to which Jack and I both faired well with that! We also won a beautiful steer hide, pieced, wall hanging with a Texas star in the middle, handmade by Texas Irish Princess.

Sunday came and it was bucketing down with rain again in the early hours of the morning. After an hour delay we headed down to the range and commenced on the “drier” stages. Feet were already wet now, so by the time we got to finish “in the river” at the Corral, no one really cared that we were now ankle deep in water!

 

So when it all came out in the wash – Haa haa pardon the pun! – Spirit of the Game Awards were handed out, match directors and helpers recognised for their efforts and match awards given.

 

Jackaroo finished 3rd in Seniors, Blind Bob 2nd and I Reckon in 1st Place! For the Yusta B's (or anyone in the Senior and above category) Jackaroo finished 4th.

 

In the field of Wanna B's (anyone younger than Senior category) I finished 1st and 7th place overall.

 

Overall winners for the Wanna B's was 'You Bet' for men's and 'Kathouse Kelli' for the ladies.

 

Overall winners for the Yusta B's were none other than 'I Reckon' for the men's and for the ladies 'Dream Chaser'. Along with their trophies they were presented with hand carved walking sticks! πŸ™‚

 

Despite the rain and many deciding to not continue on the Sunday because of the weather, Bent Barrel Betty and Kow Katcher should be congratulated on a job well done! Thanks for having us!

Cheers

Kat xo