COPPER BREAKS STATE PARK, Texas — I had intended for this blog post to be a high-minded tribute to the Texas Parks & Wildlife departmentās state park system.
Specifically, I intended to write about how easy it is to back into TP&W park sites. I would pull our 28-foot fifth wheel up to the site, straighten the truck/RV assembly out and back it all in. Slick, man! No sweat!
For some reason I donāt yet know, it didnāt work out that way.
I want instead to devote most of this post to the neighborliness of RVers. Iāve experienced their friendliness and willingness to offer a hand. This time an angel named Jim stepped up and said, āHey, do yāall need help backing in?ā
We answered simultaneously, āYes!ā
We offered him the keys to the truck. He took āem and back the rig into our spot.
We learned that Jim and wife, Brenda, have been traveling for two years full time in their RV. Theyāre originally from Hereford, Texas, just about 30 miles southwest of Amarillo. Theyāve been just about everywhere in this country, Jim said.
He also told us he began backing up semi trucks when he was 13 years of age. His father hauled cattle in these big rigs, Jim said, so he got indoctrinated early. āYep, thatās Hereford, all right,ā I said with a weary chuckle.
I do not intend to speak ill of TP&W and its system of state parks. Indeed, the agency does make its back-in RV sites quite accessible ā even more for brain-dead RVers such as yours truly. My wife and I are huge fans of the Texas parks system and we visit them whenever we can when we’re traveling in-state. Copper Breaks is a lovely site just south of Quanah in Hardeman County.
Maybe Iāll do better the next time I have to back our RV into a site. Not this time. Iāll chalk it up to, oh, a long day on the road. Yeah, thatās the ticket. I was tired. That works as an excuse.
Now that weāre here, we intend to relax for a few days. We can do that now that weāre retired.