Changing Schools – A Recurring Great Adventure for the Military Brat

Portsmouth Junior High School (now Portsmouth Middle School), New Hampshire

How many schools did you attend growing up as a military brat? Do you remember this as a great adventure or gut-wrenching trauma?

I attended ten public schools for my twelve grades of schooling. Eight of the school changes were during my very formidable years of grades five through nine. Yes, I changed school eight times during the time all the changes of adolescence were happening. For me, it became gut-wrenching after my father retired from the military, and we transitioned to the civilian world. Only by the grace of God can anyone survive such trauma.

I had an unusually difficult period from August 1964 to August 1967. If you are a military brat, I know you can relate.

In August 1964, my father returned from his first tour in South Vietnam. I had just completed the fifth grade at Jefferson Avenue Elementary School in Seguin, Texas. I remember my mixed feelings of excitement and fear as dad returned home from his tour of duty. Would I recognize him? Would he know me? Would he even want to be involved in my life anymore?

Mother was all of thirty-one years old when he returned home. I was a grown-up ten years old. Mom was wise. She talked to me and my brother before dad’s arrival. She made sure we understood it would take some adjustment. She wanted us to know not to get under his skin or pester him too much.

I still clearly remember the day we went to the San Antonio International Airport to pick up dad. His flight arrived on time from California. He was wearing his khaki United States Air Force uniform with the stripes of a technical sergeant on the upper sleeves. He was tan, standing military erect and outstretched his arms as he and mother quickly moved to each other, embraced and kissed on the lips for several minutes. He whispered in her ear, and I remember the big smiles. I lip read “I love you” as he held her tight.

After their embrace, he hugged my brother and me separately. It was beautiful to hear him say, “I love you, Jimmie Aaron. I sure missed you.” He said he wanted me to tell him all about what was happening in baseball. He set an appointment with me for Saturday afternoon after lunch. One whole hour with me. He kept his word. I had him for an hour.

We quickly shut down the household at 803 Jefferson Avenue in Seguin, Texas. We took a brief vacation to Jamestown, Ohio to visit dad’s family before returning to relocate to El Paso, Texas where I started another school, my third I three years.

I attended the sixth and the first semester of the seventh grade in El Paso, Texas at Ben Milam School at Biggs Air Force Base. Biggs AFB was home to the 95th Bomb Wing of the USAF. It was a B-52 bomber and KC-135 tanker base. From the school grounds, I would watch US Army draftees march down the long dirt road into the desert as they went through basic training in preparation for going to Vietnam. I could be scary giving there. Sometimes we watched aircraft doing an emergency landing knowing one of our parents could be on the plane. We lived there from August 1964 to February 1966. Biggs Air Force Base was shut down and turned over to the US Army.

The second junior high school I attend was Portsmouth Junior High School in historic Portsmouth, New Hampshire. My father’s assignment was at Pease AFB, home of the 509th Bomb Wing. The 509th is the unit that dropped the atomic bombs on Japan. It was a B-52 and KC-135 base. Frequently parts of the unit were on temporary duty on Guam, which they used as a base to bomb North Vietnam.

The school was a couple of blocks south of downtown Portsmouth, NH on Parrot Ave. Only two blocks away was the historic John Paul Jones Home and three blocks another direction the historic Strawberry Bank. Across Parrot Avenue was the South Mill Pond. From the second and third floor, you could see the Piscataqua River and out into the Atlantic Ocean. The St Patrick’s Catholic School that went through 8th grade was on Austin Street two and one-half blocks to the west. The nuns would chase us away from the school if we got off the bus early to look at the Catholic school girls in their cute uniforms of a white blouse, plaid skirt, and knee socks.

My father retired from the USAF the end of April 1967. We moved back to Texas and lived with my mother’s parents for the month of May 1967. Have you ever lived with the extended family? I did while waiting furniture to arrive from the previous posting of my father. It is fun and different.

The fun was having aunts, uncles, and cousins as well as grandparents. The minus was not knowing or being involved in the lives of these close relatives for years. I wondered who are they? Here I had my introduction to country music and living.

I attended Nixon Junior High School (now Nixon-Smiley) for a month. I went from a military influenced school with nearly 300 in the eighth grade to a rural school with 14 in the 8th grade. They just didn’t have new kids transfer in during the school year. Related to over half the class, it was the one place that I felt I did not fit in. A dairy queen across Texas state Highway 80 was my view. I had a 15-mile bus ride to and from school.

When the school year ended, we moved about 50 miles away to Schertz, Texas. There I started the ninth grade at Samuel Clemens High School. It was the year they changed the name from Schertz-Cibilo High School to Samuel Clemens. It was adjacent to Randolph AFB, so I was back in a comfortable military community. By mid-semester, we sold the house and moved two-hundred and fifty miles north to the Dallas area to DeSoto, Texas.

Dad had taken an engineering job with Ling Temco Vought (LTV Aerospace). I started another school. This time it was in a non-military high school. The change was traumatic. I had always been the class president, the student government leader, on the honor roll, and star baseball player. All those roles were filled. No outsider was going to replace someone in their role.

Close friendships formed quickly on military bases and military influenced schools. That did not happen in this Dallas, Texas suburb. It was also the first time I was in a school that wasn’t totally integrated. It was my first non-integrated neighborhood. I had transitioned to the real world wasn’t happy with what I found.

Maybe your experience was similar. I would love to hear your story.


Jimmie Aaron Kepler

Jimmie Aaron Kepler’s work has appeared in six different Lifeway Christian publications as well as The Baptist Program, Thinking About Suicide.com, Poetry & Prose Magazine, vox poetica, The Dead Mule School of Southern Literature, Bewildering Stories, Beyond Imagination Literary Magazine and more. His short stories The Cup, Invasion of the Prairie Dogs, Miracle at the Gibson Farm: A Christmas Story, and The Paintings as well as Gone Electric: A Poetry Collection are available on Amazon.com. He is also the author of The Liberator Series. The Rebuilder – Book 1 is available for pre-order on Amazon. It will be released October 1, 2015. The Mission – Book Two will be available Spring 2016, The Traveller – Book 3 will be available Summer 2016, and The Seer – Book 4 will be available Fall 2016.

Write His Answer: A Bible Study for Christian Writers, Third Edition by Marlene Bagnull

BagnullSeveral years ago I attended a conference at the Green Lake Conference Center in Green Lake, Wisconsin. In the bookstore, I found a book by Marlene Bagnull titled “Write His Answer.” The cover did not have impressive artwork, yet I was drawn to the book.  Taking it off the shelf, I noticed the subtitle – “A Bible Study Guide for Christian Writers.”

I remember thinking I had never heard of a Bible study guide for the Christian writer. I opened the book. It is under 200 pages in length; it was not too long to be overwhelming and not too short as to make me think it wouldn’t be worth my time or money. I bought the book.

Since that time, two more editions of the book were released. The third edition is November 2014. I own each edition.

Write His Answer: A Bible Study for Christian Writers, Third Edition has 33 short chapters. They can be used as part of a person’s daily devotional or quiet time. Chapters include: Called to Write; Overcoming Procrastination; Seek His Kingdom First; Conquering the Deadly D’s; Driven or Led?; and Proclaiming Truth to a Dying World

It also includes nine Appendix:

  • Appendix 1 – Called to Write His Answer
  • Appendix 2 – Laying A Biblical Foundation for Your Writing Ministry
  • Appendix 3 – Writing Your Testimony
  • Appendix 4 – From Idea to Published Manuscript
  • Appendix 5 – A Writer’s Statement of Faith
  • Appendix 6 – Helps for Forming Critique Groups
  • Appendix 7 – The Critique Process
  • Appendix 8 – Goals for Christian Writers’ Groups
  • Appendix 9 – Recommended Resources

It is an excellent resource for discovering your calling as a writer. It gives abundant direction and insight to my purpose as a writer.

Marlene will walk you step by step where you will learn what it takes and will know for sure if you are called to write.

This book is full of Bible-based advice sure to help any writer seeking to further the Kingdom with their writing.

It is an encouraging work that discusses a writer’s vision and goals, the need to rightly divide the word of truth, and to share God’s message to a hurting world with compassion and faithfulness. The author stresses the importance of first taking off our mask so that we might be real and relevant to others as we strive to give them a clear picture of Jesus Christ.

Marlene Bagnull is quick to share her frustrations and disappointments as an author as rejection slip after rejection slip came her way, but through the encouragement of her pastor and others, she did not give up.

I love a quote from the book that reminds us as Christian writers, “We are literature missionaries!” p. 19

Write His Answer is a wonderful Bible study for all Christian writers.   It will encourage you to do more writing.

I attended the Colorado Christian Writer’s Conference in 2013 and will attend it again this year. I met Marlene through the conference.

From her Amazon Bio: “Marlene Bagnull has made over 1,000 sales to Christian periodicals. She is the author of eight traditionally published books. As the founder of the Greater Philly Christian Writers Fellowship in 1983 and director of their yearly conference, Marlene has embraced God’s call to encourage and equip you to write about a God who is real, who is reachable, and who changes lives. She teaches Write His Answer Seminars around the nation and has also directed the Colorado Christian Writers Conference since 1997.”


This article originally appeared in the January 15, 2015 issues of Author Culture.


clean shavenJimmie Aaron Kepler is a novelist, poet, book reviewer, and award-winning short story writer. His work has appeared in over twenty venues, including Bewildering Stories and Beyond Imagination. When not writing each morning at his favorite coffee house, he supports his writing, reading, and book reviewing habit working as an IT application support analyst. He is a former Captain in the US Army. His blog Kepler’s Book Reviews was named a 100 best blogs for history buffs. You can visit him at http://www.jimmiekepler.com.

Reading Classic Illustrated Comic Books at School

Classic Illustrated Comic Book - The Deerslayer
Classic Illustrated Comic Book – The Deerslayer

Moving from Biggs Air Force Base, El Paso, Texas to Pease Air Force Base, Portsmouth, New Hampshire was one of the greatest adventures in the life of this military brat. I was in junior high school back then. During this time that I went through puberty, became interested in girls, and fell in love with reading.

My love for reading got a kick-start when I was a preschooler with my father and mother reading to me. I loved to sit in their lap as they read. Mother read me classic Bible stories. Dad read me Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Chip & Dale comic books. He let me hold one page of the comic while he held the other. The illustrations came to life with the characters running across the page before my eyes.

School teachers like my second-grade teacher Mrs. Davis, my third and fourth-grade teacher Mrs. Jensen and notably Mrs. Englebrock, my delightful fifth-grade teacher read to us entire books, one chapter at a time. Tornado Jones, Robinson Crusoe, and the Swiss Family Robinson captivated my young mind.

Arrival at Portsmouth Junior High School brought two dear women into my life, Mrs. Athens, and Dr. Pickett. They were my English literature teachers and had a Dartmouth and Radcliffe College education. They instilled a passion in me for reading. One way they captivated my attention was through the use of Classic Illustrated Comic Books.

Each student received the comic book. The intent of using the comic book was to keep us from being intimidated by a 300-page novel. The Classic Illustrated Comic was only forty-eight pages long. Instead of reading page after page of words, we had the mix of illustrations and words. We learned the main characters, the story theme, storyline and setting.

Portsmouth Junior High School, Portsmouth, NH
Portsmouth Junior High School, Portsmouth, NH

We developed an interest in the work. After reading the comic, we then would tackle the novel. Being familiar with the characters and story we were hungry to find out the entire story. Many times we read a chapter aloud in class followed by discussion. The teacher’s goal was to get us to enjoy reading and to be conversationally literate in classical literature.

This technique somehow got most of the boys in the class to read! Reading comics was considered cool. At home, we would read Spiderman, Superman, Sargent Rock, and Archie Comics. They were not allowed at school. At school, we added Ivanhoe, The Last of the Mohicans, A Tale of Two Cities, Les Misérables, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Pathfinder, The Invisible Man and other Classic Illustrated Comics to our read for pleasure list. The teachers allowed us to read these “real literature” comics in study hall, before class or at lunch.

Who would have thought a comic book could motivate a boy to read? Not me, but they did. Mrs. Athens and Dr. Pickett were sneaky in getting me and many others to love reading. Thank you, ladies. You were the best, and you made a lifelong impact in this military brat.

Picture Credit: Classics Illustrated – This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported2.5 Generic2.0 Generic and 1.0 Generic license. b)


Jimmie Aaron Kepler

Jimmie Aaron Kepler is a writer of speculative fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and reviews books. He’s written for Poetry & Prose Magazine, vox poetica, The Dead Mule School of Southern Literature, Bewildering Stories, Beyond Imagination Literary Magazine, Thinking About Suicide.com, Author Culture, FrontRowLit.com, The Baseball History Podcast, Writing After Fifty, Sunday School Leadership, Church Leadership, Motivators For Sunday School Workers, The Deacon, Preschool Leadership, Sunday School Leader, and The Baptist Program. For sixteen years, he wrote a weekly newspaper column. He has written five fiction and poetry books. All are available on Amazon.com. His blog “Kepler’s Military History Book Reviews” was named a 100 Best Blogs for History Buffs and has had over 750,000 visitors.

Never Surrender: A Soldier’s Journey to the Crossroads of Faith and Freedom by LTG (Ret.) William G. Boykin and Lynn Vincent

Few people have been involved in as many significant US military operations over the past three decades as has LTG (ret.) William G. “Jerry” Boykin. From being a founding member of the Delta Force to commanding all US Army Special Forces he shows that a person can be a committed Christian and a soldier.

Co-written by New York Times best-selling author Lynn Vincent, Never Surrender: A Soldier’s Journey to the Crossroads of Faith and Freedom gets your interest on page one and keeps it through the entire book. The book’s structure helps with the presentation. It is has thirteen sections. Each part covers one of the stages of Jerry Boykin’s life or a major US operation where he had involvement. Each section is divided into short, action-packed chapters.

The book tells story after story of how important military operations went down. The Iran Hostage Crisis, Sudan, Grenada, Panama, Waco and the Branch Davidians, Columbia, Somalia, the Balkans and more give great insight into contemporary US military history.

Jerry Boykin is a born-again Christian. The role of his faith is very tastefully woven into each story. You will not feel preached at, but rather have an appreciation of how his belief in God sustained and directed him through the years.

One of my favorite stories in the book involved Panama, the playing of loud, rock music and Manuel Noriega. The media thought the US Army was using the loud music as a psychological weapon against Noriega. The original intent of the music was to keep the media from being able to eavesdrop on the conversations between Boykin and the Vatican embassy where Noriega was hold-up.

The most insightful section was in Mogadishu, Somalia. It gives the real story that the movie Blackhawk Down omits. Boykin was the leader of the mission. He had to make the tough decision of leaving a man down to save others. He said that was the worst thing he has ever experienced.

Boykin has never been afraid to admit he is a Christian. Some things he said during the most recent war in Iraq upset people. He stated that he believed God put George Bush in the White House. The news media quoted that statement. What the media didn’t quote was that he continued by saying God put Bill Clinton and every other American leader in their positions. Boykin was beaten up in the press over this. He was completely exonerated by internal military investigations.

I highly recommend the book. It provides some fascinating insight into military tactics and life behind the scenes of Delta Force.

Mrs. Brown You’ve Got a Lovely Daughter

As a military brat, the end of the school year always meant Little League Baseball. As an eleven years old boy in May of 1965, three things occupied me life. They were Boy Scouts, baseball, and a little garage band I had just joined.

Spring and the start of the baseball season never failed to give me dreams of playing professional baseball. “Tryout Saturday,” as we called it back then, was a day when coaches and managers could see your talents. They woul have us field ground balls, catch pop flys, and take batting practice.

I could catch or knock down any baseball hit my way. My father had taught me to get in front of the ball and let my body help knock it down if it missed my glove. I could then pick up the ball and throw out the runner. I could hit the cover of a baseball in 1965. I was the only kid my age that was a switch hitter. When batting right-handed I could hit the ball over the fence with regularity. When hitting left-handed I was more a contact hitter. I would knock the ball to all fields hitting for a high batting average. I was good. I knew it. My dad knew it. The coaches and managers knew it.

Selected second overall, I went to the Cardinals. Also on my team was Bobby Mars. He was in the band that had recently asked me to be their rhythm guitarist. Bobby could do something I could never do consistently. He could sing lead. I’m talking about a pop star, rock idol, lead singer quality voice. He had a voice that the girls swooned over.

Bobby got all the boys on the team to sing. The song of choice was Herman’s Hermits (featuring Peter Noone on lead vocals) “Mrs. Brown You’ve Got a Lovely Daughter.” I started bringing an acoustic six-string guitar to baseball practice. I put my handkerchief close to the bridge of the guitar body to mute the sound. It gave an almost banjo-like sound. We would sing “Mrs. Brown You’ve Got a Lovely Daughter” over and over.

The first time we would sing using the correct lyrics. Then we would begin substituting the last name of the every boy on the baseball team like “Mrs. Smith” or “Mrs. Jones” instead of “Mrs. Brown”. We would always end with Mrs. Mars You’ve Got a Lovely Martian and giggle. We sang the tune with a heavy, fake British accent.

One of the things that made the song, so appealing was Peter Noone. He was barely five or six years older than me and the boys on the team. Many had brothers his age. When we watched him on Shindig, American Bandstand, Hullabaloo and Where the Action Is. Peter had a charisma that we only saw elsewhere in The Beatles.

The musical summer of 1965 was special. The music of Herman’s Hermits “Mrs. Brown” and The Beatles “Ticket to Ride” captured our imagination. The Beach Boys “Help Me, Rhonda” and The Byrds “Mr. Tambourine Man” blasted from our little AM radios. The Rolling Stones “Satisfaction” became the first rock anthem our lives. Herman’s Hermits “I’m Henry VIII, I Am” had us singing along once more with Peter Noone.

We also followed the Houston Astros and Los Angeles Dodgers baseball teams in the newspapers and on the radio. After all, El Paso where I lived on Biggs Air Force Base, was about halfway between Houston and Los Angeles.

Music filled the summer days. Baseball filled the summer nights.

Company Commander: The Classic Infantry Memoir of World War II by Charles B. MacDonald

Company Commander: The Classic Infantry Memoir of World War II by Charles B. MacDonald. I highly recommend Company Commander: The Classic Infantry Memoir of World War II by Charles B. MacDonald. At just 21 years of age, Captain Charles B. MacDonald first commanded I Company, 3 Battalion 23rd Infantry, 2nd Infantry Division from October 1944 to January 1945 and later G Company, 2 Battalion 23rd Infantry, 2nd Infantry Division from March to May 1945. This memoir was written in 1947 when recollections were still sharp. It resulted in a very detailed account of what it was like to take command of a line infantry company and lead it into battle. The book is a template for writing a personal military memoir.

It is by far the finest memoir of any junior officer in World War II. Charles MacDonald does a great job of keeping his focus on his own experiences. He does not speculate or waste my time by giving conjecture on the big picture. We only have first-hand information from the events of his personal participation. He sticks to what life was like for a junior officer in command of an infantry company, sleepless, hungry, dirty, stressful, and very dangerous. He takes us from the Siegfried Line in the Ardennes, through the Battle of the Bulge, and to the end of the war in the Czechoslovakia.

This book is a must-read for all army officers who seek to command at company-level and it is informative for military historians as well. It is still required reading at West Point and on the company level officer (second lieutenant, first lieutenant, and captain) recommended reading list by the U.S. Army today. Upon this book’s publication in 1947, Charles B. MacDonald was invited to join the U.S. Army Center of Military History as a civilian historian, the start of a career during which he wrote three of the official histories of World War II in Europe and supervised the preparation of others. The book is simply the best. Read and reviewed by Jimmie A. Kepler.

A Life in a Year: The American Infantryman in Vietnam, 1965-1972 by James R. Ebert

The book review contains SPOILERS.

Wisconsin high school teacher James R. Ebert does a masterful job as he combines interviews and printed primary sources in this remarkable telling of the infantryman’s experience during the Vietnam War. Ebert tells the story of the US Army and a few US Marine infantrymen during the Vietnam War.

He takes their story from induction into the service through basic and advanced individual training, arrival in Vietnam, their first combat experiences, the first killed in action they experience, in some cases the soldier’s death, and the freedom birds that take them back to the world. Ebert points out while infantryman accounted for less than 10% of the American troops in Vietnam, the infantry suffered more than 80% of the losses.

Ebert uses an interesting technique starting every chapter with a letter by Leonard Dutcher to his parents. Dutcher just wanted to do his part for God and country and go home at the end of his 12-month tour (13 for Marines). In the last chapter, we find out that Dutcher was killed. It caught me off guard and added to the impact of the book. Ebert takes many of the soldiers and Marines experiences word for word from the individual himself through interviews or letters. It is a collective look at similarities of the many infantry soldiers and Marines in the war. It is a very personal account from many points of view.

This book is an important book in Vietnam War literature. The book shows what the grunts went through. I felt guilty after reading the book. Why? I graduated high school in 1971. Some of my high school classmates went to Vietnam and fought. Everett Maxwell was killed in action. I went to college and was ultimately commissioned a second lieutenant in the infantry, went to airborne school and served three years active duty. My becoming an officer deferred my entry on active duty from 1971 to 1975. My deferred entry on active duty is the reason for my reflective thoughts.

Sunday Afternoon Walk at the Arbor Hills Nature Preserve

This morning I was around 6:00 AM. I prepared a cup of coffee, spent some time reading, and then did some editing before going to church. I also ate breakfast.

My wife and I are members of Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano, Texas and attend regularly, about 50 Sundays out of the year. After church, we went to Mama’s Daughter’s Diner in Plano for lunch. We then headed home.

When my wife took a nap, I headed to the gasoline station to fill up her car. Then I drove to the Arbor Hills Nature Preserve in Plano, Texas. It is located in west Plano where the borders of the cities of Plano, Carrollton, and The Colony meet. I had my iPod where which also has an FM Radio built-in. The earplugs act as the antenna. I listened to the St Louis Blues play the Dallas Stars in the Stanley Cup National Hockey League Playoffs while I walked.

 

Arbor Hills Nature Preserve Entrance
Arbor Hills Nature Preserve Entrance

It is located on West Parker Road, in Plano, Texas. The photo is of the entrance sign looking toward the east. In the background of the above picture is one of the City of Plano’s fire stations.

 

Parking Lot
Parking Lot

As you drive into the Arbor Hills Nature Preserve you will find adequate parking. They have sidewalks were you don’t have t walk in the street.

Arbor Hills Nature Preserve welcome area
Arbor Hills Nature Preserve welcome area

The Arbor Hills Nature Preserve is located on the western border of Plano, Arbor Hills Nature Preserve is a 200-acre park featuring vast areas of natural beauty for walking, jogging, hiking, orienteering, and other outdoor activity. The paved recreational trail is about 2.6 miles in length. There are also a natural unpaved trail for pedestrians only  that is about 2.6 miles). There is a designated off-cycling trail of 2.8 miles. It also has a natural biofilter for cleaning surface run-off from the parking lot before it reenters the ground water tables as well as an observation tower, playground, restrooms, and pavilion. I’m sharing many pictures I took during my walks.

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The Arbor Hills Nature Preserve has three distinct areas.

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It is located in the city of Plano.

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Here is a map to help you explore and discover the preserve.

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One of the areas of the preserve is the Upland Forest.

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A second area is Blackland Prairie

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A third area is Riparian Forest (that is forest along the creeks and streams).

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Here are a few pictures of the pavilion area.

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Another pavilion picture.

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A third picture of the pavilion area.

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The concrete in the pavilion area has some designs in them.

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A view from the pavilion

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One last pavilion picture.

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From the pavilion, you can see the playground.

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Near the pavilion is the restroom. It is near the parking area as well.

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As you leave the pavilion area you head south.  The concrete walkway has a center yellow stripe. The ask that you keep right except to pass. A large number of people walk the trails and ride their bikes on the trails. The go and come in both directions.

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Many people bring their dogs. The dog must be on a leash and you have to clean up after your four-legged friend.

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Another view of the playground.

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The grass along the trail is well maintained.

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The are signs with instructions along the trail. There are off-road bicycle trails.

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Trash cans and benches are along the trail.

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The scenery is diverse.

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Instruction signs greet you from time to time.

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Here is a trail off the main trail that returns to the pavilion.

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The views are amazing.

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There is lots of Blackland Prairie.

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Signs warn you to beware of critters.

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A view from the main walking trail back up at the pavilion.

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The trails go through many different settings. I tried to take pictures without people on the trail. Some folks get upset if they think you are photographing them.

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As you walk you cross several bridges. There are creeks and streams throughout the preserve.

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I took this picture from the bridge looking north.

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More Blackland Prairie.

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Along the concrete trail are off-road trails. The one just ahead is the prairie trail.

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Prairie Trail sign.

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Continuing down the main trail. The scenery can change as you go around a bend on the trail.

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You go down the hill, and into the Riparian Forest (that is forest along the creeks and streams).

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It gives you a right mix of moving from the sun to shade.

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Some of the trees are tall.

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Here is the entrance to the Outer Loop Trail.

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Benches are found along the trail.

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Parts of the trail are on flat ground.

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It crosses the Blackland Prairie.

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Another off-road trail is ahead on the right.

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The off-road trails are well marked and worn from use.

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You find cedar trees in the preserve.

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There are different types of trees.

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Another tree.

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The preserve takes erosion control seriously.

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The are large hills to climb with major elevation changes along the walking trail.

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Here is a view of the observation tower.

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Looking down the hill onto the Blackland Prairie.

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Another view of the observation tower. This is taken from the west side of the tower facing east.

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Looking to the northwest. I live about six miles away in that direction.

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This is a large mesquite tree with a bench in its shade. You are still walking uphill at a gentle slope.

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Up the hill we go.

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Interesting vegetation abounds.

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As we near the top of the hill, we start into the Upland Forest.

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It is very pretty terrain.

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My photos are in the sequence of my 2.6 plus mile walk around the preserve.

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Another trail heading off the concrete trail.

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If you look close you can see cars in a parking lot in the background. This is at Austin Ranch in The Colony, Texas. Austin Ranch borders the preserve. This is at the highest point of elevation.

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The Outer Trail comes close to the concrete trail.

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As you start back down the hill you come to the observation tower.

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There is a side trail right before the observation tower.

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This is a view of the last side trail from the observation tower.

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Another view from the tower.

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Still another view from the tower.

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A view from the observation tower back to the main concrete trail.

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Descending from the observation tower.

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Along the concrete trail from time to time, I found chalk art.

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Another dirt trail off the main trail.

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Another bridge over a creek.

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A view from a bridge.

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A view from the next bridge.

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Almost back to the pavilion and parking lot.

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Cars and the parking lot at the top of the hill. I walked 6,500 steps or about 3.25 miles. I enjoy a leisurely walk. Arbor Hills Nature Preserve in Plano, Texas is an urban gem.

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Do you see the rabbit? I saw this one when first leaving the parking lot.

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I think we scared each other when I looked to my right and saw this deer not ten feet away.

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If you got off the concrete trails you saw more critters like the turtles.

You can read more about it at: http://www.plano.gov/Facilities/Facility/Details/Arbor-Hills-Nature-Preserve-20

The photos are taken by: Jimmie A. Kepler