Day 18: Nearly Dallas

When I looked at the maps & lists this morning, I realized there was still a whole bunch of stuff north and northeast of Dallas that I couldn’t live without.  With that all done, finally, tomorrow will be a big Dallas marathon.  Glorious & spectacular sun and mild temperatures all day.  Quick romps on grass for the dogs.  Didn’t see any streams or water today.  Except for that big lake on I-30 Northeast of Dallas that we crossed over again which made Nik & Grem nuts.  Noses in the air, synchronized screaming, to no avail.  Sorry guys, nowhere to pull over.  Sparkle chugging along perfectly.

Posted an extra big batch over at Flickr just now & have another big blog batch.  So since it’s after midnight, let’s get to it.  The day started ever so briefly in Dallas where I encountered this mega McDonald’s.  I guess that’s a giant Happy Meal Box?  And the giant Ronald was kinda creepy:

 

A neat Hacienda-ized former Whataburger in Carrollton.  Vacant now:

 

As far as modern neon signs go, this one’s pretty neat.  In Frisco:

 

A couple signs from McKinney.  This Masonic sign was clearly lit from inside — maybe it still is:

I never get tired of these navy porcelain signs:

 

This one’s from Anna — the stand is still open:

 

From Sherman:

 

From Denison.  This Art Deco sign must’ve had some nice colors originally.  The name might be the same since the letters seem to match up with the former neon tubing holes:

 

Sky blue on a blue sky.  From Paris, TX:

The biz’s ad on the side of the building plus a rare Texaco ghost sign:

Paris Junior College has a dragon mascot.  This guy sure seemed goofy looking.  Don’t sports teams usually aim for threatening looking mascots?

 

Miller’s Drugs in Cooper.  Weird marbled patina.  I have no idea what the original paint job was like on this Art Deco gem.  Sometimes specks or marbling was used on painted signs – so it’s possible this might not be as bizarre as it seems:

 

Maybe a clothing store originally?  From Sulphur Springs:

 

From Greenville.  Now not so dreamy — the rooms are all boarded up:

 

The last couple hours of shooting, a moon (here on the right) was posing in the background in a lot of my shots (e.g., see Miller’s sign above as well).  This neat building and sign are in Greenville:

 

That’s a wrap for the night.  I hope this weather holds for the megashoot tomorrow in Dallas.

Day 17: Not Quite Dallas

There were lots of towns on the outskirts of Dallas today — and will be more of them tomorrow.  But really, finally, tomorrow, we MUST be doing the Dallas stuff.  Only five days left for Texas then must start on Oklahoma.  The weather was spectacular, blue skies all day long AND in the 70s I think.  We didn’t mind not having AC for a minute.  Maybe we’ll tough it out for the rest of the trip.  It’s almost the half-way point.

No problems with ducks today.  The dogs mostly got fields instead of water.  A couple big lakes that we passed and Grem & Nik were VERY disappointed — screaming and then sulking when I didn’t pull over.  Sparkle’s running great.  I’ve been turning off the engine and having no trouble starting at all even when the engine’s warm.  Still, I wouldn’t try it in a skeevy neighborhood.  Gas has gone from $3.49 to $3.79 per gallon during this trip.  I hear it’s $4.15 back in San Francisco (the highest in the country right now).  Very boring food the past couple days.  Snacks mostly, like scones, muffins, veggie Subway sandwich, Panera cookies….

On with it.  The day started in Hillsboro.  This building must’ve originally been used for the gas company — a nice double-sided flame sign.  A different style but it reminds me of one in Fort Worth:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/agilitynut/112727764/

 

I was really looking forward to finally seeing the giant frogs on the gas station canopy at Carls Corner — which I’d heard was now really Willie’s Corner (Willie Nelson’s biofuel station):
http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanweinkrantz/196654214/
But, alas, no frogs and there was just a normal looking Exxon station there now.  And the only trace of Carls now is what’s left of this sign east of there:

 

I was hoping that the Wampus Cat statue (local sports team mascot) had returned to Itasca after being damaged and removed during a storm:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/meknits/376045868/
But no, the folks at the Exxon station said that the city had him now.  So, of course, off to City Hall I went.  I got a personal escort vehicle to the outskirts of town just so I could see him.  He’s not as damaged as I’d imagined.  Yes, missing his paws but still basically in one piece.  His foam is really showing through though and fixing him up would be a challenge.  I personally like him lumpy and hope they don’t either a) smooth him up too much or b) just replace him and destroy the original.  I was told that a bank had been interested in restoring him but that fell through:

 

A wonderful tiny place — the Burger Bar in Cleburne.  A bit of info here:
http://trtdg.com/2008/04/01/the-burger-bar-in-cleburne-texas/

 
So while I was sleeping, little did I know, there were tornados and windstorms going on just north of me.  I start noticing a lot of scrap metal on the sides of the road, street lights that were out, blown out signs, and damaged buildings.  I initially assumed maybe it was from a month or so ago.  But then I was told it was just last night!  This building in Lancaster gives you an idea:

It seems lots of towns east of Dallas got hit.  I saw damage in Mesquite but this beauty was untouched thank goodness!  It was mostly the cheapo plastic signs that got busted up — another reason to stick with steel & neon folks.  Any maybe those curved edges help deflect the wind as well?

 

Also Mesquite.  I posted the wonderful neon sign for this place over at Flickr tonight — but thought you might like to see the building as well:

 

One more from Mesquite.  I saw this guy from the highway and just HAD to have him.  A nightmare of service roads.  Despite help from my iPhone GPS, it took me about 20 minutes to get him — but SO worth it.  He’s on the roof of Town East Plumbing & Heating:

 

In Forney — I went to DeRidder Antiques to shoot a dinosaur which was hiding behind their building.  While there, I saw some other interesting items including these — a Fisk Tire Boy statue.  He would have held a tire in his right hand and a candle in his left:

a neon Van de Kamp’s sign — those blades would have turned originally:

and this bowling sign which I have not seen before:

 

So that’s it for the night.  A big day tomorrow with city traffic and a huge list of destinations.  Best to stock up on sleep.