Saturday, December 22, 2012

San Antonio TX

The Emily Morgan Hotel in the background at Sunset

San Antonio is hot. Quite hot. Almost too hot to walk around. This is a nice change from record snow falls in Nelson.
I always wondered why the Gaines family were so insistent that I would love San Antonio. Now I know. It is a unique North American city in that the hub of downtown is so social. The core of this social atmosphere is the river walk. It is very unusual in that it is a recessed walkway around man made canals that is full of people walking and eating at outdoor cafes. Apparently most of these people are tourists: according to the guide books the downtown is devoid of the locals trying to make a living. It doesn't seem to matter who they are - they all are having a good time and you feel like you are a part of something that is happening.
Historically the San Antonio river did wind through the downtown but a tremendous flood in the 20's that killed over 50 people saw the downtown bend almost paved over. Two young women apparently had the foresight to see that would be devastating and managed to convince the decision makers to turn it into a canal system. This stroke of brilliance was executed by the WPA in 1938. The action not only saved all of these 500 year old cypress trees lining the banks but created an unsurpassed social core that makes the city.

Really a person could camp downtown and endlessly walk the river walk and feel like they were really living.
Happily ensconced in our room



The infamous Alamo at night


All the horse drawn carriages beside our hotel

Where have all the telephones gone?

Joop descending to the River walk.
Our hotel  the Emily Morgan is a refurbished medical arts building from the 20's that sits right beside the Alamo. God knows why but apparently even non Texans feel a real kinship to the Alamo. Every sign in town points to it and this has helped us navigate and never get lost. The clip clop of all of the horses carting people around in carriages gives it a nice nostalgic feel. The hotel has been nice but we hit it during a transition to Double Tree Hilton which meant that the only priority in the world was making sure every awning had Double tree painted on it and who cared about the internet not working for several days. I'm sure the manager after multiple interactions with Joop has reconsidered this oversight for the next Hilton takeover. And if he hasn't lets hope Joop and I aren't tenants.

San Antonio's large Hispanic population means that the flavour of  is mostly Mexican. I have yet to see an employee of our hotel that is not of Hispanic descent. Because Jalapenos don't agree with Joop's digestion we have had to consult guide books for restaurant recommendations. Weirdly every restaurant we have picked has disappeared.
.



















River Walk

River walk




Charming boat captain

Sad home in the King William area

Less sad home

Joop pointing out all of the Bald Cypress roots - wildly searching for water

Texas Christmas wreath at the Botanical Gardens

The happy couple in Wimberly TX

As wonderful as walking the city is we felt forced to use our rental car and justify the $30/day valet parking fee. It is hard to navigate San Antonio with any map. Every purchased map has not had enough detail. As chief map reader I have an unerring ability to land us in "Military Installations". After  stopping our car at a check point, the guard felt sorry for us. Seeing my frazzled look and maps scattered all over my lap as I claimed: "We're just trying to find the botanical gardens!" Despite:"You are in the middle of a Military Installation Ma'am." and demanding our driver's licenses, he let us sneak through.

One of the more posh historic areas of town had a combination of derelict abandoned homes with beautifully maintained mansions. I think this juxtaposition seems to permeate all of San Antonio. Even the bustling downtown River Walk exists interspersed with gigantic vacant old department store buildings. That same disparity even permeates the vegetation.
                   
The trees of this region are very interesting. The most fascinating are the bald cypress that also line the river walk. They are swamp trees that lose their leaves every fall and have these weird knobbly roots that madly search in the adjacent body of water for something. The combination of these deciduous trees that lose their leaves with the scrabbly oaks that don't, gives a desolate feel in December as though most the trees are dead.
The region has been in a drought for a few years. Neighbouring towns have very paltry rivers. I quizzed a young girl working at a cafe in Wimberely what was the draw for so many young people to the town as all the stores were staffed with young people. She didn't know. The only draw she could think of was river tubing in the summer. Judging by the trickle of water in the river I don't think that is a very viable recreation option. She agreed that the last few years have been rough but she stated with quite a degree of authority that it would rain in the next couple of years and the river would return. Needless to say given the precipitation reality the trees are all interspersed with cacti.

3 comments:

Miranda said...

Nice overview of your experience! Looks like fun - I love those kind of impromptu escapes...

Melissa Hart said...

Great pics. Miss San An! Love the Alamo at night.
Nice map reading skills Theresa--Surprised you didn't end up in Mexico! Really like the cacti Christmas wreath :)

venables writes said...

Hi Theresa. This is Grant Venables. Just saw your name in Caroline's blog and thought I'd say hi. I haven't seen you in years.

Nice to see you're traveling. Nelson is quite amazing, but it's always nice to leave Canada. I left some 20 years ago and have yet to really return.

Anyway, all the best.

Grant