Oklahoma - Oklahoma City
By Sandy
By Sandy
We stayed in a little RV park right next to Oklahoma City. It was next to Panera Bread where Wes and the older girls worked during the day. We went to the Oklahoma City Bombing Memorial . It had a Memory Lake and many metal chairs placed around it indicating who died during the bombing.
We had dinner at Cattleman's Steakhouse which is in the National Stockyard Exchange. The Exchange was the nations primary source for meat processing and packaging . Now it is filled with Cowboy apparel, a place to buy and sell cattle and a popular place to grab dinner.
Oklahoma City is close to the historic Route 66 , so we drove the hilly road to a fun place called "POPS" . It is a store off the side of the road filled with every flavor soda imaginable! The kids loved it of course.
We decide to skip the Science museum and Zoo this week because it was spring break and everything was super busy. So we went to a huge mall and watched the Cinderella movie . ( Collin wished we could of watched the Avengers, poor only boy) ;-)
Amarillo Texas- By Ally

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The Limo we road in |
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Cow Girl Tori |
The Limo Ride |


Setting up didn’t take too long and after doing so Mom looked up a place called “The Pantry” to go eat dinner. It was a small little place but their food was amazing! Shelby and I got a chicken bacon avocado chipotle wrap. The best wrap I have ever had. Yum Yum. :) After eating we drove to downtown Santa Fe to just check it out. The first thing we noticed is that all the houses were Adobe Style. All of them. And that bushels off dried chili peppers hung from each side of the doorways. We walked to the plaza and roamed around the little shops. Dad lead us to the Supreme Court Building and made us pose for a picture. :) We got tired after a while and went back home. The next day was Monday and was an online school day for Shelby and I. The internet wasn’t great at our RV site because it was kind of out in the mountains. So Mom dropped us off twenty five minutes away into town at a Panera Bread. We spent the day there doing school. Tuesday we did school in the RV. I was going to dissect my crayfish for biology outside on the picnic table but that day was really windy and all my stuff blew everywhere. So I dissected my crayfish on the small dinner table in the RV. :) It all turned out well, though while I was doing the dissecting some of the insides flew in my face…. yuck.. :P Wednesday was online school day once again and Shelby, Dad, and I worked at Panera Bread. Mom picked Shelby and I up after we were done and took us kids back to downtown Santa Fe. We were going to go to this very well know chocolate shop called “Kakawa Chocoate House” but the prices were very high for just a piece of chocolate. We instead walked around the shops and bought postcards. Thursday was a lighter day of school and in the afternoon we went back to downtown to go to the Palace of the Governors. This is the oldest building in Santa Fe that is still being used. It used to be a building for governors of the state to meet and many of the states decisions were made in the building. They still use it this way to this day, though now it is also a museum. So we went to the Palace of the Governors and saw the museum exhibits then walked just over the courtyard to the History Museum of Santa Fe. Once we were all "museumed" out we went back home and had a campfire whose wood was all the way from Maine! While Shelby and I were doing the laundry a retired couple arrived and it was their first time Rving. So we helped them out and settled them in. They were extremely grateful for the help. :) Friday we took a forty five minute drive to Los Alamos where the first atomic bomb was made during World War II. It was a very scenic drive where we got to see plateaus and snow capped mountain tops. We went to the Los Alamos Science Museum which is like the only thing to do in the small little town. We learned about the Manhattan Project where they built the first atomic bomb to stop World War II. To this day Los Alamos is the main place where brilliant scientist work do further research on atomic bombs for the U.S.A. Dad had to go on a meeting for his work so we left him at the museum and drove a half hour to Bandelier National Park. Here we took a hike through mountains in a valley and explored the cliff dwellings that the Native Americans once lived in a long, long time ago. These cliff dwellings are caves that the Native Americans carved into the mountain sides for shelter. It was a perfect place to live because there was a river running through the area and we even saw a herd of deer eating in the tall grass near by. Those deer would have been dinner for the Native Americans. We also saw other remains of Native American houses and other cliff dwellings. It was getting late so we drove back to Los Alamos to pick up Dad and drove back to Santa Fe and to our RV. We packed up and left New Mexico to Castle Rock, Colorado.





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