lynnb
Veteran
#USA14-29 Galveston sunrise, Texas, 18 May 1979
(note the previous picture is incorrectly labelled sunset on 17 May)
(note the previous picture is incorrectly labelled sunset on 17 May)

It would be great to see New Mexico through your eyes back then - and to see what I missed. I'll look forward to your thread.So you missed New Mexico. A great loss for you. But yes, true, six weeks to see as vast a place as the American West, means some sacrifices had to be made.
Sad to think we both may not get there again. Me, lucky enough to have stayed almost three years over two periods, in northern NM. The culture unlike any I had grown up with in eastern Canada, gave me many formative experiences in my young adulthood. I still miss that state to this day.
Now I may get busy and fill the gap. Tomorrow I'll look for my NM slides from 1979, and set up my scanner, and try to give you a little competition. Or a boost.
Your (as always most excellent) San Antonio images brought back other memories. Especially of The Alamo. As a Canadian-born kid in the 1950s, I grew up with Davy Crockett and the story of the battle of the Alamo. I believe John Wayne made a film of it, and I probably saw it, way back then.
San Antonio is still well known for the river walk! They’ve kept with it, and improved it over the years. Lots of nice development, hotels, events are there. It’s truly great. San Antonio is probably one of the more pleasant places in Texas, while still being a big city (my pick remains Houston, for food and diversity reasons). The city, however, does have a fairly bad vehicle theft problem! My brother in law is a mural artist, who has done a lot of work in the city, and his truck has been nearly stolen three times over the course of about a year. It’s truly a little shocking. Not to diminish from the city though, it is a great place in Texas, just one little weird anecdote about it.#USA14-11 Royal Street Crossing, San Antonio, TX, 16 May 1979
San Antonio's River Walk was a delightful surprise.
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I grew up a lot in Albuquerque. I lived there off and on in the 80s and early 90s. A lot about it is lost to me, just hazy memories, but I remember the food! The smell of green chilis roasting in huge metal cage tumblers outside the grocery stores, the rich hominy soups, the roast pork tomales my uncle’s mother made every year. It’s a world away from Texas, where I’ve made my home lately.So you missed New Mexico. A great loss for you. But yes, true, six weeks to see as vast a place as the American West, means some sacrifices had to be made.
Sad to think we both may not get there again. Me, lucky enough to have stayed almost three years over two periods, in northern NM. The culture unlike any I had grown up with in eastern Canada, gave me many formative experiences in my young adulthood. I still miss that state to this day.
Now I may get busy and fill the gap. Tomorrow I'll look for my NM slides from 1979, and set up my scanner, and try to give you a little competition. Or a boost.
Your (as always most excellent) San Antonio images brought back other memories. Especially of The Alamo. As a Canadian-born kid in the 1950s, I grew up with Davy Crockett and the story of the battle of the Alamo. I believe John Wayne made a film of it, and I probably saw it, way back then.
These phots are interesting, I was there 4 years ago. Some of it is almost exactly the same...#USA14-18 Lyndon B Johnson Space Center parking lot, Houston TX, 17 May 1979