This idea began almost 2 years ago,
when Barbara and I were heading back east from a winter in Arizona
and New Mexico. Tired of traveling on I-10 through West Texas, we
hopped off the interstate, eventually finding ourselves traveling on
Texas Route 290 through one of the most quaint and restored small
towns in America - Fredericksburg, TX. Our drive-thru was during
their Founders Day celebration, and bunting was on every storefront
and crossing their main street. It was also remarkable that it
differed from virtually every small town we had traveled through in
the previous 2 years; as it was vibrant, with nary a storefront
boarded up or closed down. Every parking space occupied and people
walking everywhere.
As we headed out of town, we began
noticing wineries dotting the countryside. The place was LOADED with
them. Barbara began some cursory research, and we found out that
Texas has a designated “wine country”, and we were driving
through the heart of it. While Barbara and I don't drink a lot, we do
enjoy the occasional glass of wine. We put a pin of Fredericksburg,
vowing to head back some day soon.
A year later, and we're meeting with
fellow RVers Byron and Lynn Hill at the Tampa RV show, and we mention
our intention to head back to Fredericksburg, TX sometime in the
Fall. Both thought it was a great idea, and expressed a desire to
meet us there, so we set a tentative date in September which
coincided with their plans to visit friends and family in nearby San
Antonio. Also during that stay in Florida, we met back up with other
fellow RVers Dan Bachrach and Jodi Dominguez, whom we had helped
earlier in the winter when their motorcycle experienced difficulties.
After mentioning the planned trip to Fredericksburg, it happened to
coincide with their planned 5-week trip up and down the great
Midwest, so they adjusted their plans to meet us the last week of
September in Fredericksburg.
Wine Country Safari was on!
What was interesting is that all six of
us prefer sweet wines; the sweeter the better. We're definitely not
wine experts, but we all know what we like and that's all that
counts. As the time grew nearer, I began reaching out to various
wineries in the area, inquiring about tasting opportunities and
expressing our preference for a sweeter set of wines. Interestingly
enough, one of the first wineries I was able to get in touch with
admitted they didn't have what we liked, but recommended another
winery for us as a much better experience. Frankly, that doesn't
happen very often these days, so kudos for Becker Vineyards for doing
so. We actually stopped by before heading out to buy one of their
sweeter wines as a thank you for being so helpful and forthright.
Byron and Lynn had found a municipal
park about 10 minutes away from downtown Fredericksburg, which
actually featured a “buy 6 nights, get the 7th free”
deal. Typical Texas park with grassy separations between crushed
gravel sites, and few trees of any significance. Lady Byrd Johnson
Municipal Park also featured a golf course (wish my hand had healed
from it's earlier break in July, but it wasn't ready to swing a club
yet), a couple of playgrounds that Jace and Grover would have drooled
at, a pool (sadly closed for the season), and miles of walking
trails.
It was also situated right next door to
the runway at Gillespie County Municipal Airport. More on that later.
Everyone showed up within a few hours
of each other, and we met to plan out our first few days of tasting
and sightseeing. A meal was planned at our site for two nights later,
and our first tasting opportunity was scheduled for the very next
day.
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Planning sessions are easy when you have a sunset like this one.
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Fiesta Winery has three separate
locations around Fredericksburg, but their tasting room on Texas 290
is the best place to go for a tasting experience. Charles was there
to assist us with various flavored wines, with a handy sheet that you
marked off with the six wines that interested you. He then poured
sometimes “generous” samples of wines for everyone in our group,
starting with the less-sweet wines and moving to the very sweet
wines. Didn't matter if we chose different wines for each pour; he
had each of us taken care of with every wine we had marked off. He
spoke about the wines, the area, and places to visit while we were
there. At the end of the tasting, we each enjoyed a glass of our
favorite wine outside using the complementary wine glasses that came
with our tasting. All-in-all, a wonderful first experience.
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This is one happy group of RVing wine tasters! |
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While Barbara and I prepared our group
meal for Wednesday, the others headed out to various points of
interest that day. The early Fall weather cooperated and cooled down
nicely that day, so we ate outside in our Clam shelter to keep any
bugs at bay.
Barbara and I love to eat at local
diners and Mom and Pop restaurants during our travels. It helps out
the local economy and the quality of the food and service is usually
off the charts. Dan and Jodi had eaten lunch at a downtown diner only
opened for breakfast and lunch called the Texas Sunrise. We both
decided to head there in the morning, as Byron and Lynn were seeing
friends for lunch that day. Really great breakfast, and a different
feature, the kind of something that attracts us to local places in
the first place. They tacked donated money to their ceiling, and
people can buy a raffle ticket held once a year to win all the money
tacked to the ceiling.
Dan and I had expressed a desire to see
the National Museum of the Pacific War (not something you'd expect to
see in the middle of Texas), and as with everything in
Fredericksburg, it was just a short walk away. Dan is a Marine, and
I'm Air Force, so our veterans status got us inexpensive tickets to
two different museums. Fredericksburg is the birthplace of Admiral
Chester Nimitz, who commanded the Pacific fleet during World War II,
so there was a very well-done museum covering his life and service.
The main Pacific War museum was one of the better detailed museums
we've ever been in, and one where all the audio/visual displays
actually worked. Barbara figured that it was because this was not a
museum geared for little kids, so the displays were treated better.
Plans were made for a breakfast at the
Airport Diner on the other side of the runway for the next morning.
As a former flier, I knew that in many cases, airport diners also
served some of the best food you can find in a particular area. The
Airport Diner didn't disappoint. Afterwards everybody went their own
separate ways for the day. Byron and Lynn had more company visiting
them, Dan and Jodi took their motorcycle into San Antonio to see the
Alamo, and Barbara and I took a nice walking tour of downtown
Fredericksburg.
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Full bellies from the Airport Diner make for big smiles!
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Our final day of Wine Country Safari
before heading out was Saturday. Byron and Lynn's son and
daughter-in-law were visiting, so it became the eight of us to visit
the Fat Ass winery and brewery, located just a bit further out Texas
290. For $30 per person, you got either two separate 5-wine tastings
(one at the brewery side and one at the winery side), or a sample of
4 beers and a 5-wine tasting at each site. Barbara, Jodi, Dan and I
opted for the wines, while the Hill's opted for the beer and wine
experience. It's a short walk from the brewery to the winery sides, but Fat Ass provides a winemobile to take you from one side to the other. Even their windshield wrap screams 'Let's have some fun!"
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Dan Bachrach and yours truly waiting to board the Fat Ass winemobile. Oh, and it's driven by a 14 year-old! (photo courtesy of Jodi Dominguez)
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So here's the thing; when you are at a
place called “Fat Ass”, the people who work there are naturally
more friendly and outgoing, adding to your overall experience. When
you add in five 1-ounce pours on one side (with one wine having a 13%
alcohol volume!), another five 1-ounce pours on the other side, PLUS
a full glass of their Sangria “slushie”, everybody is having a
VERY good time. Fortunately, there was a food truck on site, so Dan
and I each got some excellent chicken bites and fries to contribute
to some group alcohol absorption while listening to a DJ provided by
Fat Ass. I also managed to remember Barbara's and my favorite song to
dance to (Kenny Rogers' 'Through the Years'), and got that request
in. I then dropped $120 bucks on some wine for us and our friends
back in Georgia, earning my “free” Fat Ass t-shirt.
A point to note: Fat Ass features some
very interesting flavored wines. Two of our choices on the second
side of our tasting (each side featured separate wines so you got a
really good sampling of their product) were very different - their
PB&J and their Chocolate wines. While I probably might not ever
buy a bottle of either, I enjoyed them for the simple reason that they
absolutely NAILED the two flavors. You could smell the peanut butter
and taste the separate flavors in the PB & J wine, and their
Chocolate wine included a hint of cherry cordial in it. Oh, and their
Sangria was to DIE for! Bought two bottles of that.
Interesting side to this adventure is
that both wineries ship to about 33 states across the nation, so
while we will probably come back to Fredericksburg again some day, we
don't have to wait to get some really great tasting wines.
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Just a (very) small sample of the haul that was taken at Fat Ass winery. And of course the obligatory T-shirt!
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This trip epitomized what RVing is all
about; meeting new people, reconnecting with friends you've met on
the road, and realizing just how friendly many people who do what we
do truly are. Aside from some Jace time on certain vacations, this
was the best trip we've taken in the motor home since starting this
adventure 4 years ago.
One I believe our little group will cherish forever.