Posting daily at 1pm central about all kinds of things. One day it's dating, the next it's TV commercials. I hope you're entertained. Professional photos on SmugMug – https://benwilder.smugmug.com
Texas. Is. Beautiful. Somewhere between Mother Neff State Park and Dinosaur Valley State Park (recaps here) the views changed to this beautiful copper landscape that I can’t get enough of. Ranches and farms as big as from me to the horizon. Cows, horses, donkeys, goats. And larger than life wind turbines as far as the eye can see. Here are a few pictures from the road.
This is a question I was asked recently when I was riding my bike one evening in a Texas state park. It was very dark, as most state parks are, and my bike was lit up all over the place. There’s a headlight, taillight, and bright lights on the wheels. I also had a headlamp on because I was returning from trying night photos. It was a full moon so the shots didn’t come out as good as I was hoping.
But still cool, right? This was an unexpected gem, called Dinosaur Valley State Park in Glen Rose, Texas. There were some drawbacks I’ll talk about in another post but overall, I loved the park. So anyway, I’m returning to the camper which is a 3/4 of a mile bike ride. There was a guy and his two young kids walking in the road without any flashlights. As I passed, the young boy asked, “Who ARE you?”
I’m socially awkward, I’ll admit. Often times when I am approaching people I don’t know I tell myself, “Be ready to answer any questions!” What I’ve learned as I’ve been camping around the southeast (recaps here), I’ll get asked the most unexpected questions or people will say things I didn’t expect. I’m not quick on my feet in those moments, unfortunately. I always come up with great responses 5 hours later.
I should’ve answered, “Good question,” or “Who are YOU?” or “I’m Batman.” Anything would have been better than what I did… I didn’t answer at all! I just rode right by. Maybe it added to the mystery of who this superhero of a guy is (me, I’m talking about me). I had ridden around the night before with all the bike lights going because I was scouting out where I wanted to try my night photos. No exaggeration, my bike gets comments 95% of the time, especially when there are kiddos around. So this was the second night, maybe the guy with the colorful bike was a mystery among the campers here. I don’t know.
But I know this… I never have the right response at the right time. Maybe next time I’ll have a good answer, or ANY answer, next time.
I’ve been in Texas for a few days and have been thrilled to see lots of wildlife. I even saw a black-tailed jackrabbit. I take that back, I saw TWO black-tailed jackrabbits. Those things were huge!
They were hanging around with some deer. Maybe those two species get along well?
But it was while I was traveling between campgrounds that I saw a low-flying helicopter. It was so low that I thought something was wrong because first of all, how many times does a helicopter get this close to a road? Secondly, why? Why would these people get close enough to make it appear as if something is going wrong? Here’s the dashcam video…
What’s up with that? As I approached, my mind went immediately to every action movie I’ve ever seen. The helicopter is there to cut off someone trying to get away in a car. The chopper spins around and unloads a round of shots towards the vehicle, but the people in the car somehow narrowly escape! Well, the crazy thing is that as soon as I got close to the helicopter, it began to rotate around so the side opening was facing me. I thought, “This is how I’m going to die?? Gunfire from a low-flying helicopter!!?”
Who do they think I am, Daniel Craig?
I narrowly escaped, as any hero would. I have no idea what was going on, but it was strange. After I passed them, I glanced back a few times through the mirrors to see if they flew uncontrollably into the cable lines. But I didn’t seen any crashes or explosions.
Weird, right? Have you seen anything like this that seemed out of the ordinary?
Texas has SO MANY ranches. On my way to Mother Neff State Park, I should’ve counted all the ranches. There had to be at least 50 just on the one stretch of road where I spent most of the trip. Highway 7, I think it was? These pastures and hillsides were grand and spread out. I kept wanting to stop to get pictures but when you’re pulling a trailer, there isn’t much space to just pull over beside the road.
From all my camping this year (recaps and photos here), this park had the best campsite. Nice paved pull-through with shade and full hook-ups. It was luxurious! I still haven’t been lucky enough to get a good photo of an armadillo, so I felt like someone was teasing me as I turned into the campsite. Part of the playground included a HUGE armadillo for kids to play on. How rude.
But still, here are a few of my favorite pictures…
Is it one of those things where consumers are demanding a foldable phone, or are the phone makers telling us we want a foldable phone? I guess that’s sort of the question that’s always on the forefront of marketing, especially in the tech world. Whatever the answer, Samsung is pushing hard for consumers to adopt a phone that is set apart from boring tech like the iPhone. Take a look at their latest “horrific” commercial.
It’s like a mini horror movie. I love it! Also, is this not what happens to us when we’re shopping for something specific? Let’s say I need a new pair of shoes and I like Brooks. Then everywhere I go, all I see are people wearing Brooks. I think it happens with car shopping, too. Last year I became obsessed with the Jeep Gladiator. Once it was stuck in my mind, I started seeing these Jeeps everywhere I went. To look at it in a more sinister way, especially with how “big tech” is nowadays, if I were to search for Brooks shoes online, I’d start getting Brooks ads in my Facebook timeline or Instagram feed.
What we want becomes all we see.
This is definitely the case with this woman in the commercial. It’s a nice burn of the Apple iPhone, too. Truth be told, most smartphones do what we need them to do for us (email, social, YouTube, etc). But Samsung is offering us variety in a major way. Instead of the next slightly different and newer version of the iPhone, why not pick up something that is truly unique and solves problems we encounter with phones (taking a group shot, for example)?
Consumers will determine whether the flip-style phone catches on… again. But if we’ve learned anything from this ad, it’s that there’s a lot more out there than the iPhone. 😉