Day 3 – August
24, 2004
{Photos} Ride from Texarkana, Texas to Beaumont, Texas {Home}
We got a late start today and managed to miss the spread
they laid out at the restaurant, so we decided to go on down the strip a little
ways and find a place we could eat that still had a little shade for Diamond.
As we left we noticed an Arkansas
sign and then on the other side of the street a Texas
sign. As we drove down the strip, we just kept crossing back and forth. We must
have gone in and out of Texas a
dozen times and we were on our way to Louisiana.
The sun was already hot and it wasn’t even 9:30.
We had no luck finding a place to eat, so we gassed up and decided to go to the
next little town down the line. But as luck would have it we were not in a very
food oriented part of the country or at least not on this road. The roads are
pretty good though here, but the scenery looks a lot like what we have see most
of the trip so far. As beautiful as they are, I find myself looking for something
a little different. Diamond seemed to be having the time of her life, but I noticed that after
about 50 miles or so she starts to get a little rowdy
if we don’t give her a little break. There seems to be a lot of horse ranches
through here as well as crops, corn mostly, but still the scenes are similar.
We rode all the way to Shreveport, Louisiana
before we located something. I don’t think either of us was very hungry early
on anyway and by the time we did eat it was after noon,
but we still wanted breakfast. So we stopped at a Waffle House and found some
shade right outside the window so that Diamond could see us while she waited.
After the needed repast, we hopped onto the freeway for a short ride to our cut
off. Wouldn’t you know it, as soon as we hit the onramp, it started pouring
rain. It stopped about 10 seconds later before we reached the end of the on
ramp. We got off the freeway on our side road and stopped at a nearby gas
station where we were informed by a local that Louisiana
now requires helmets. I think I will have to check into that because my list
shows otherwise. Still we were only about 6 miles from the Texas
boarder on a back road so we decided to chance it. We stopped at the boarder to
get a couple of pictures with the state
emblem, but then I had to take a phone call, so we stopped a couple of miles
into the state at a roadside park. I’ll give the Texans one thing; most of the
road side parks I have ever stopped at are very nice. We were there for just
over an hour and by the time we left Diamond was already waiting on the bike
before I got to it. As we begin our ride through Texas
we do manage to see a lot more water, but I am noticing a difference that I
wasn’t really looking for. One of the
things I have always liked about riding is the odors. When you pass a bakery,
an oriental restaurant, fast food places, flower gardens, etc. you smell some
of the things that you will never get driving. But when you are driving through
eastern Texas and it has recently
rained, the odor you get from decaying vegetation is not one of my favorite
smells. We rode through Jasper, Kirbyville, and Silsbee, three towns that grew
up in and around, but even though I had been there as a small child, none of it
looked familiar at all to me. Still it brought back some memories of getting
burnt to a crisp in my Uncle’s pool and a lot of bugs and my mom screaming when
a small lizard ran across a window sill. Amazing what the mind can recall isn’t
it? As we finally arrive in Beaumont,
our stopping location for today, I notice two very interesting sights. The
first is the Harley dealer sign. It actually
says Harley Davidson “Cowboy” on it. The second is that directly across the
street is a Dealership complex called “Mike
Smith Autoplex” It seems that I sell many different
kinds of cars and I didn’t even know it.
Well it’s time to call it quits, so I’ll see you on the byways…