![]() This is understandable since its among the fastest growing cities in one of the U.S.’s fastest growing states. ![]() Suffice to say, San Antonio has gotten much, much bigger since my first visit – and even expanded a bit more since our more recent visits. We’ve passed through it twice in recent years on the way to and from Big Bend National Park. When I first visited San Antonio many years ago, it was still a fairly small city in southwest Texas. If we were windshields, we would probably have cracked. It was 12℉ (-11.1℃) when we left home and 82℉ (27.7℃) when we landed in San Antonio 3 hours later. Our noble urge to see these tracks was helped along by San Antonio being, ah, just a touch warmer (and more humid) than Minnesota is at this time of year. So we planned a trip to the tracks plus to some other sites in the Lone Star state’s Hill Country. More wandering the web revealed additional state natural areas (SNA – other than the one harboring the tracks) and state parks north of San Antonio. But, for whatever reason, this other person’s blog pushed some odd mental button, and suddenly we wanted tracks.īut going all the way to Texas just to see some gigantic reptile footprints seemed excessive. That questionable purple dinosaur aside, who isn’t (or wasn’t) fascinated by dinosaurs? □□ Still, up until this point, going out of our way to see dinosaur tracks wasn’t high on our endlessly expanding to do list. One fateful day it dredged up someone else’s hike to see dinosaur tracks in Texas. If you click on it without specifying a search parameter, it offers up a changing mix of other WP powered blogs (of which there are many). ![]() WordPress has a “search” feature in its Reader section.
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