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Victorian splendor in Jefferson, manly minimalism in Archer City: Check into ten charter members of Texas’ inn crowd.

I AM ALONE IN THE OLD HOTEL, THE ONLY GUEST. The innkeepers are out for dinner. My room has no phone, no television, and no radio. I am vibrating from my long drive, and my eyes are too tired to read, so I take a hot bath in the claw-footed tub beneath the chipper gaze of a framed Shirley Temple paper doll. I put on my practical pajamas and lie down on the many-pillowed bed, struggling to keep my nose above the ruffles. I admire the twelve-inch baseboards and the twelve-foot-high walls for a spell. I study the doodads covering every horizontal surface—a hairbrush-and-mirror vanity set, a teddy bear, a tray bearing a couple of wineglasses and a dainty porcelain plate (even though eating and drinking are not allowed in the rooms). I don’t feel as if I belong here. Then an antique nightgown hanging on the wall catches my eye. It looks so inviting, so delicate and appropriate. I wonder if I should slip it on. Is it allowed? It is on a clothes hanger, after all; it’s not like it’s nailed to the wall. I gently take it down and wiggle into it. Carefully, I lie down again and await some sort of epiphany. I am no longer a tourist; I am a traveler.

And here’s my epiphany: A successful adventure at a historic hotel in small-town Texas requires total immersion. You need to drown in the experience. Ideally, you should arrive in town on horseback or by rail, decked out in period costume, holding a scented handkerchief to your nose. At the very least, you should pop in a Bob Wills CD on the way to Turkey, his hometown, and listen to a Larry McMurtry audiotape en route to Archer City (I recommend Horseman, Pass By). You should haunt the harbor in Palacios and try to score some shrimp. You should wear boots, maybe even chaps, at the Gage in Marathon. Above all, you should slow waaay down.

The things you shouldn’t do? You shouldn’t expect luxury, but be grateful when you find it: Thick towels, free shampoo, and direct-dial phones are scarce. You shouldn’t go for nightlife or haute cuisine, although there’s always a chance that you might stumble onto some local festival or a great restaurant along the way. You shouldn’t forget your reading glasses, since it’s a good bet you’ll be without television, or a pair of earplugs, the best defense against rattling pipes, thin walls, and passing locomotives. And at most of these places, you shouldn’t count on the “continental breakfast”—which must be French for “rubber muffin and weak coffee”—for your morning nutrition.

This is a story about “historic hotels,” so to be included a place had to be, first, a hotel, not a restored historic home recently converted to a bed-and-breakfast. And second, it had to be historic. Although Europeans, Central Americans, and even New Englanders might snort at my criterion, I figure that any hotel built before 1939 should qualify. Let’s face it: In light of Texas’ short hotel timeline, the inns surviving from the mid-1800’s are beyond historic; they’re positively antediluvian.

Only a couple of the following ten hotels have been in continuous operation all their lives. Most were snatched from the jaws of decay by civic groups or passionate individuals. Some soar off the funky chart, a few are temples to understated style, and a couple are over-the-top studies in ruffles and flounces. And while spending a night at these unique hotels wasn’t really like stepping back in time—what with electric coffeepots, flush toilets, hot water, air conditioning, and the ever-present option of automotive escape—it sure was fun trying to turn back the clock.

Hotel Turkey, Turkey

I’M NOT SURE IF ONE HUNDRED MILES northeast of Lubbock and one hundred miles southeast of Amarillo qualifies as the middle of nowhere, but it’s as close as you’ll come without intergalactic travel. Here in the tiny burg of Turkey, you’ll find confirmation of the theory that nature abhors a vacuum: the memorabilia-packed Hotel Turkey. Built in 1927 at a cost of $50,000, the Turkey—which has never closed its doors to guests since it opened—was bought in 1988 by Jane and Scott Johnson, who undertook its restoration. After seven years, the industry standard for hotelier burnout, the couple sold the hotel to a cousin, Gary Johnson, and his wife, Suzie. Just three years into the hospitality business themselves, the Johnsons are still eager to please guests, even rising at six-thirty in the morning to make sweet-potato pancakes for their lone guest, me.

Sensory deprivation isn’t an option at this hotel. Music fills the lobby. Books are everywhere. Treasures abound: a grandfather clock, Edwardian settees, crocheted gloves and doilies, wire-rim spectacles, old photographs, crucifixes. So much stuff, in fact, that when I checked into room 6, I wondered where I was supposed to put my things. Maybe I should have sprung for room 10, a spacious suite that could accommodate Bob Wills and all the Playboys, with a view of the hotel’s patio, empty fishpond (a lightning bolt wiped out its population several years ago), and two-story cross strung with colorful Christmas lights.

You can have your Turkey with all the trimmings if you join some 10,000 Bob Wills fans here during the annual festival held in his honor the last Saturday in April (but you can’t stay at the Turkey: It’s reserved for Wills’s family and the Playboys). If you’re seeking solitude, bike along the Caprock Canyons Trailway, a 64-mile-long abandoned railway running from South Plains to Estelline, or hike in nearby Caprock Canyons State Park, where it was so quiet one cloudy morning that my sneeze sounded like a rifle shot.

Third and Alexander (806-423-1151, 800-657-7110; www.llano.net/ turkey/hotel). Rates for the fifteen rooms (seven of them with private bath) run $50 to $100 and include a full breakfast (remember those sweet-potato pancakes?). No phones or TVs in the rooms, but you can borrow an alarm clock. AE, MC, V.

Excelsior House, Jefferson

MY BEST EFFORTS TO ADHERE TO MY IMMERSION rule were thwarted on the way to the Excelsior House last November. My mom was along for the trip, and as we barreled down the East Texas highways surrounded by logging trucks and scarlet maples, she kept the radio tuned to either—gasp—Rush Limbaugh or the House impeachment hearings. What a way to set the stage for a stay at the state’s second-oldest hotel (after the Menger in San Antonio). In continuous operation since the 1850’s, it was built to accommodate fashionable travelers (Jefferson was once the largest inland steamboat port in the Southwest). But then I made a connection. Here we had a modern-day philandering president, and we were headed for a town named after a historic philandering president. Then, on arrival, we checked into the presidential suites. Coincidence? You be the judge.

I tossed my bags on the red velvet chaise longue in the Ulysses S. Grant Room, richly decorated in jewel tones, and tried not to drool on the Eastlake rocker while my mom claimed the adjacent Rutherford B. Hayes Room, more for its walk-in shower than for its huge canopied rosewood bed. All the rooms in the hotel have been restored to their former grandeur: oriental carpets, brocade fabrics, pristine period antiques. Elegant, luxurious, even slightly pompous—but never cloying or frilly—the hotel’s atmosphere befitted the powerful and important men who once strolled its corridors and filled its ledger with their ostentatious signatures: John Jacob Astor, W. H. Vanderbilt, Jay Gould (whose private railroad car, now a museum, is parked across the cobbled street from the hotel), and even the flamboyant Oscar Wilde.

And was it rich and powerful men who saved the Excelsior Hotel when it fell on hard times in the sixties? Hell, no. It was women—specifically, the members of Jefferson’s formidable Jessie Allen Wise Garden Club. Founded in 1939, the club bought the derelict Excelsior and its contents in 1961 for $30,000. As past treasurer Elizabeth Dannelly wrote in a brief history of the garden club, “It is difficult now to imagine the condition of the Hotel then. The lobby was painted black and was as dark as a dungeon . . . there was no central heat or air. . . . Any day there were Garden Club ladies in their work clothes, refinishing furniture, scraping off old paint.” The “before” photos in the lobby support Dannelly’s contention that the hotel was not, as some suggested, a “hobby” for the club: “It was more akin to the plight of the Patriots in 1776 when they pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor to their cause!” That should persuade you to keep your muddy shoes off the bedspread.

Like any good little restored town, Jefferson is packed with antiques shops. When you tire of pawing through the knickknacks, take a tour up Big Cypress Bayou with Captain Nance aboard the Bayou Queen or ply the swampy mysteries of Caddo Lake aboard the Graceful Ghost, a re-creation of an 1890’s steamboat.

211 W. Austin (903-665-2513; www.jeffersontx. com/excelsior). The fifteen rooms, all with private bath, run from $65 to $100. The generous plantation breakfast—ham, grits, eggs, biscuits, and the hotel’s famous orange-blossom muffins—is $6.50. AE, DS, MC, V.

Tarpon Inn, Port Aransas

TO DESCRIBE A PLACE AS “scaly” would usually be an insult, but not at the Tarpon, where more than seven thousand scales of the inn’s namesake fish cover the walls of the lobby. The translucent disks, dating back decades to a time when the Gulf was lousy with the great fish, bear the autographs and hometowns of the happy fishermen who landed the beasts, along with the size, weight, and date of their less happy catch. The tarpon are all but gone, but the Tarpon has withstood the abuse of coastal living since 1919. (The inn, in other incarnations destroyed by fire and storm, has existed on this site since 1886.)

Big, breezy porches run the length of the blue-and-white clapboard building both upstairs and down, furnished with the requisite rocking chairs. And while the view through the palm trees to the harbor is now sadly blocked by a restaurant and a parking lot, the Tarpon’s atmosphere sure beats a characterless condo, even one on the beach. Yes, the rooms are tiny, but so stylish that you enjoy the close proximity to such cool stuff. (When I told the clerk that our bright white chapellike room, number 26—with its iron bed, matelassé coverlet, lace curtains, and weathered dresser—reminded me of that bastion of shabby chic, the Homestead in Fredericksburg, she said, “The owners do shop there a lot.”)

If you need to be told what there is to do in a coastal getaway like Port Aransas, you’ve got no right to leave home. I like to pass my time riding the free ferry back and forth, watching the dolphins arching in its wake.

200 E. Cotter (512-749-5555, 800-365-6794; www.texhillcntry.com/tarponinn). The 23 rooms, all with private bath, range from $50 for a cozy but stylish room to $125 for a spacious upstairs corner suite. No phones, no TVs, no breakfast—who cares? AE, MC, V.

Dabbs Railroad Hotel, Llano

YOU MAY SWEAR YOU’RE TALLER AFTER staying at the Dabbs, on the Llano River; proprietor Gary Smith has a penchant for pulling legs. A natural (and professional) storyteller, Smith will spout straight-faced lies about reported sightings of the Llano Booger Toad or how Jacques Cousteau once sailed the Calypso up the river. These whoppers are easier to swallow when they’re washed down with a cup of Smith’s cowboy coffee (“guaranteed to get you ready for drivin’ them dogies to Cowtown”) and held in place by a couple of his homemade buttermilk biscuits.

Smith was raised in nearby Mason and traveled extensively (“Yes, I’ve been as far north as Brady, honey”) before returning to the Hill Country to rescue the Dabbs, Texas’ last remaining railroad hotel built in the era of steam trains. When he discovered the rat-and-cat-infested clapboard building in 1987, it was used to store hay and had become an embarrassment to the city. He didn’t even get all the hay out before guests began arriving.

Determined not to overgentrify the old rough-and-tumble hotel—once a hangout for Bonnie and Clyde and the site of a Nazi spy hanging—Smith stuck with “the original floor plan, menu, and service of the Dabbs . . . when it opened its doors in 1907.” This means that the rooms are small, the furnishings spartan, and the bathroom is down the hall, but that is made up for by a list of amenities seldom flaunted by B&Bs: moonlight swims in a Llano River lagoon, campfires and s’mores, walks down the railroad tracks to the spooky train bridge, romantic “roll to the middle” beds, and—how’s this for relaxed?—no check-in or checkout time. “The lack of structure cures everyone who comes here,” says Smith.

112 E. Burnet (915-247-7905; www.io.com/~dkb/ dabbs/dabbs1.htm). Rent the entire ten-room hotel (sleeps up to 25) for $750 Fridays or Saturdays, $650 weekdays. Rooms, none with private bath, phone, or television, are $75 Fridays and Saturdays, $65 weekdays. A real breakfast—buttermilk biscuits, cream gravy, hash browns, and sliced tomatoes, plus cowboy coffee brewed in a big porcelain pot and served in a jelly jar—comes with the room. Personal checks accepted; no credit cards.

Gage Hotel, Marathon

I LIKE THE INSIDE OF THE GAGE, BUT I love the outside of this 1927 hotel. During my stay, I could hardly wait to get home, not because I didn’t enjoy the Pancho Villa—meets—Pottery Barn ambience the hotel’s owners, J. P. and Mary Jon Bryan, have perfected with a mix of saddlery, leather chairs, iron beds, and woolen blankets. No, I couldn’t wait to get home because I was so eager to start landscaping my courtyard to mimic the Gage’s. Let’s see—if I just cut down my lumpy cedar tree and plant a twisted Mexican elder, spend a fortune on punched-tin lanterns, antique mesquite doors, and iron garden gates, and hire a couple of full-time gardeners, I think I can recreate the magic.

I first stayed at the Gage about ten years ago, before the addition of the twenty-room Los Portales wing and its inspiring courtyard. (The extent of the landscaping then was a couple of potted cacti alongside the rockers on the front porch.) After three days of camping in the sun and the wind in Big Bend National Park, my husband, Richard, and I stumbled into the last available room that evening, so grateful for its cool, dark calm we could have wept. On our most recent visit, we were again near tears when, after driving through a hair-raising lightning storm to get there, we discovered that the bar was open and had Red Hook ESB on tap. We lit a fire in the little kiva in our room in the new wing, wrapped ourselves in thick terry cloth robes, and listened to the trains roll by.

The Gage is a gentrified home base for tenderfoot exploration of Big Bend National Park, rock hunting for agates on the Woodward Ranch, or simply staring into space. Sound too stressful? A spa is in the planning stages, scheduled to open in the stone building across the tracks in the year 2000. In the meantime, relax in the only heated pool for miles around.

102 U.S. 90 West (800-884-4243; www.gagehotel.com). The seventeen rooms in the historic hotel, nine of them with private bath, are $65 to $85; the twenty rooms in Los Portales, all with private bath, are $125, or $140 with fireplace. No televisions in any rooms (an emergency TV is in the den off the lobby), and no telephones in rooms in the old hotel; we did find a phone hiding in a wooden box in our Los Portales room. Breakfast at the hotel’s Cafe Cenizo is extra. DS, MC, V.

La Borde House, Rio Grande City

I LOOKED FOR WINGS ON THE SIDE OF this 1898 hotel: It must have been flying from Paris to New Orleans when it was blown off course and accidentally landed in this dusty border town. That’s easier to believe than the fact that Rio Grande City was once a bustling steamboat port. But it was during this time, around 1893, that François La Borde commissioned Parisian architects to design a residence to remind him of his hometown of New Orleans. That explains the fancy metalwork, the interior courtyard, and the verandas. The breezeways, fountains, and brick and tile details are courtesy of the San Antonio architects and border artisans who worked on-site during the building’s construction.

La Borde House has flown high and low throughout her hundred years. The oil boom of 1939 saw her resplendently restored at a cost of five times her original price tag. The subsequent bust found her housing ladies of the evening, one of whom wrote her clients’ IOUs on the wall. In the early eighties the hotel was bought and restored to its current grandeur by a San Antonio resident. For the past ten years she has been managed by the Starr County Historical Foundation.

When I made our reservation at La Borde, the clerk asked what time we planned to arrive; around five o’clock, I guessed. Uncharacteristically prompt, Richard and I drove up only fifteen minutes late, and within moments, I realized why the clerk had been so time conscious. She had been waiting for us, the only guests, and she departed the hotel for the night immediately after handing us our key. We climbed the staircase to the Maria Tejas Room, where the sunlight filtered through the shuttered floor-to-ceiling windows and dust motes floated in the sunbeams. A massive four-poster bed with a painstakingly pleated satin canopy dominated the rosy room. We’re talking serious atmosphere here, folks. I didn’t ever want to leave.

Which was a good thing, since there’s not much to see in Rio Grande City other than a large, well-lighted H.E.B. and an unintentionally whimsical 1928 replica of the Grotto of Lourdes. The Mexican town of Ciudad Camargo, three miles away, is unspoiled by tourism—for good reason. So Richard and I set up a little table in front of the television in our room and enjoyed a dinner of take-out tacos and cerveza while we watched an X-Filesrerun.

601 E. Main (U.S. 83); 956-487-5101. The seven historic rooms, all with private bath, are $75; the six efficiency apartments across the back patio are $50. Ignore the continental breakfast included in the room price (do they serve cornflakes on the Continent?); great migas await you just across the street. AE, DS, MC, V.

Spur Hotel—Archer City

THERE IS A REFRESHING ABSENCE of chintz at the Spur, attributable perhaps to the hunters who pack the place on weekends during dove and deer season. Instead, a mounted turkey and bobcat stare down at you from their perches in the lobby, and the heads of three bucks gaze out from the dining-room wall. Though this manly atmosphere seems appropriate up here in the windswept wilds of Archer City, I was relieved to find my room free of dead animals. The minimalist decor is a blessing in the small space (I mean, you could put out an eye on an eight-point rack). But bright Mexican blankets—one at the foot of the bed and one draped above the window—save the squeaky-clean rooms from austerity. (Avoid the center rooms on the second floor if you can help it: Their windows look out on a solid brick wall.)

Richard and his friend Hal flew to Archer City in Hal’s plane to meet me. Hal couldn’t stop fussing about the lack of action in Larry McMurtry’s hometown. I knew it would be sleepy, but even I was surprised to learn that the only place to eat dinner midweek is the Dairy Queen. The restaurants of Wichita Falls aren’t far away, however, and on the way back to the Spur, we stopped by a video store and bought its last copy of The Last Picture Show to watch in the hotel’s cozy den . . . I mean, the Longhorn Room. The desk clerk had left for the night, and as we three were the only guests, we sprawled across the rug and watched Sonny’s drama unfold on the big-screen TV. “There’s more going on in this movie than ever went on in this town,” Hal grumbled.

It occured to me that Hal and Richard’s quick flight to Archer City hadn’t allowed them the decompression time my long drive through the countryside had given me. But even for me, a DQ Hungr Buster and an operable VCR—alone or combined—didn’t justify a trip to Archer City. The hotel’s owners, W. C. “Abby” Abernathy and Vivian Green, the Archer City natives who bought and painstakingly restored the 71-year-old hotel in 1990, must realize this as well, because they occasionally organize special events at the Spur, such as Three Forks and a Tune, when a visiting chef is paired with a visiting musician for a night of singing and supper.

And of course there’s McMurtry’s Booked Up kingdom, where bibliophiles can feed their addiction. From among the 300,000 books scattered through four buildings downtown, I chose a small stack of mostly Texana titles, including one stunningly politically incorrect Texas Guidebook published in 1962. Among its other faux pas—such as suggesting that huevos rancheros is pronounced “wave-us-ranch-ear-us”—it leaves out Archer City entirely.

110 N. Center (U.S. 79); 940-574-2501; www.spurhotel.com. Each of the eleven rooms, with private bath, is $82.50, including a bare-bones breakfast. The Three Forks and a Tune package is $202 for two, including accommodations. MC, V.

Hotel Limpia—Fort Davis

THE HOTEL LIMPIA? HOW ABOUT THE Empire Limpia? In addition to the thirteen rooms in the original 1912 pink limestone hotel, there are eight rooms across the street in Limpia West, a former commercial building, circa 1926. Behind the hotel is the porch-rich twenties-era annex, known in the days before air conditioning as “the coolest building in town,” which now houses one- and two-bedroom suites, some with full kitchens. Five blocks from the hotel you’ll find the Mulhern House, a restored 1905 adobe home converted into three suites. And this spring, the suite-filled Dr. Jones House, built in 1903, will open down the road. Add to this two gift shops, a restaurant, and the only spirited watering hole in these parts, and you begin to wonder if some huge corporation is attempting a takeover in mile-high Fort Davis.

In fact, the force behind the transformation of the town from ranching center to tourist mecca is neither a huge company nor even an entrepreneurial outsider but Joe Duncan, a native of Fort Davis whose West Texas roots go back to the 1880’s. He and his wife, Lanna, moved back to Fort Davis from Dallas in 1991 to run the hotel and related businesses. Despite their longtime ties to the community, Lanna says their expansion is “not very appreciated” by some natives who are resistant to the changes. Obviously, these folks have not had the opportunity to rock away their resistance on the private screened porch of room 34 in the original hotel. With muted floral carpeting and lace curtains on the tall windows, the room manages to be feminine without being frilly. (Lanna is partial to suite 3 in the Mulhern House, with its private porch overlooking Sleeping Lion Mountain out back.)

It was hard to leave the comfort of the claw-footed tub in my bathroom, where I could stare at the original pressed-tin ceiling, way up there, for hours—good practice for gazing skyward at one of the star parties at the McDonald Observatory or contemplating the austere installations at the Chinati Foundation in nearby Marfa. Or, for that matter, for swimming in the huge spring-fed pool in Balmorhea.

On the square (and everywhere) in Fort Davis (800-662-5517, 915-426-3237; www.hotellimpia.com). Rooms, all with private bath, are $79 to $150. Coffee in the lobby, but no breakfast. AE, DS, MC, V.

Luther Hotel—Palacios

I ADMIT IT. I’M A SUCKER FOR RITZY-sounding words like “penthouse,” especially since, until this trip to Palacios, I’d never been in one. So when the reservations clerk at the Luther told me the penthouse was available, I bit, lured particularly by its private balcony overlooking Tres Palacios Bay, a rare arc of Texas coast free of refineries and condos. I was also intrigued by the penthouse’s most famous guest: LBJ. I suppose the hotel, owned by a member of the Luther family since 1939, decided to honor the president by decorating the room as it might have looked when he was president, during those dark days of interior design, the sixties. Fortunately, the balcony, from which I could watch the Norman Rockwell pageantry of the boardwalk unfold as the shrimp boats cruised the bay, more than made up for the huge suite’s Mod Squad accents: foiled and flocked wallpaper in orange, lime green, and puce, pseudo—French Provincial and rattan furnishings, and bright red plush carpet in the bathroom, home to the hotel’s only bathtub, which appeared to have been tiled by someone using his feet.

Despite—or perhaps because of—my room’s kitsch, I was prepared to adore the Luther. Built in 1906 of cypress and long-leaf pine, it has persevered through hurricanes, a fire, and decades of salt spray, a state of affairs that, to my mind, elevates it from an inanimate object to a living creature. Then Billy Hamlin, the gregarious manager, gave me a tour of some of his favorite rooms, like the freshly redecorated blue-and-yellow Dolly Suite, the slightly baroque La Belle Suite, and the simply furnished Magnolia Room, where you can see the bay through the leaves of its namesake tree. No, they weren’t the penthouse, but they were spacious, filled with sunlight, and had clearly been visited by a tasteful decorator at least once since LBJ’s administration. The great thing about the Luther is you can take your funk or leave it.

Many of the rooms come with a full kitchen, in case you’re tempted to stay awhile, gorging on Gulf shrimp and jogging the calories off along the seawall. Be sure to take your binoculars: More than three hundred bird species pass through the area or call the nearby nature preserves home.

408 S. Bay Boulevard (512-972-2312). The 31 rooms in the main hotel, all with private bath, range from $55 for one facing the rear lawn to $150 for the penthouse suite, continental breakfast included. A room facing the bay is $60 and the spacious suites are $75 to $90. No phones in the rooms; televisions in the penthouse, suites, and lobby only. Rooms with full kitchens in the motel court, a one-story building alongside the hotel, rent for $150 to $200 a week. MC, V.

Ye Kendall Inn—Boerne

I’M NORMALLY PREJUDICED AGAINST any business that prefaces its name with “Ye,” but I can forgive the Kendall if for no other reason than its twenty-inch-thick limestone walls. And if only these walls could talk. What began as the Southern Colonial home of Erastus and Sarah Reed in 1859 quickly became a hotel for stagecoach travelers and horsemen. Over the hotel’s 140-year history, proprietors came and went, some more easily than others—one, Edmund King, accidentally shot himself behind the building in 1882—and guests ranged from pioneers headed west on the stagecoach to health-seeking city folk.

By the time Vicki Schleyer bought the Kendall in 1982, it had become a sort of hermit hangout and trash repository on the town square. She didn’t buy it with the intention of reviving the hotel: “I just fell in love with the building.” But people kept showing up with their suitcases. When Schleyer told one such couple that she might open a few guest rooms the next year, the elderly man said that they’d spent their honeymoon at the hotel fifty years earlier, wanted to spend their anniversary there, and weren’t sure they could make it another year. She had to send them on their way, but the reluctant innkeeper soon began restoring the hotel with help from her son, Shane. The impressive result is thirteen antiques-filled guest rooms, including several spacious suites; a window-wrapped dining room overlooking Cibolo Creek; and a lobby—cum—clothing boutique. The Schleyers’ restorative powers have also spilled out beyond the rear patio to include a shopping “village” created from rescued log cabins, an old church, several clapboard homes, and a schoolhouse moved to the site. They must have taken a liking to innkeeping: Two years ago they bought the next stagecoach stop down the road, in Comfort, and began renovating its cluster of old buildings, some dating back to 1857.

Shopping in the many antiques and gewgaw stores along Boerne’s main street seems to be the activity of choice, but if you suffer consumer’s cramp, you can limber up with a hike along the Cibolo Wilderness Trail in town or a swim at the nearby Guadalupe River State Park.

128 W. Blanco (830-249-2138, 800-364-2138; www.yekendallinn.com). Rooms with private bath are $85 to $135, quiche-and-fruit breakfast included. AE, DS, MC, V.

Inn Dire Straits

CALLING ALL DELLIONAIRES: I’M sure you high-tech tycoons are tired of investing in the future. Why not dump some of that disposable cash into the past? If you want a renovation challenge beyond compare, I’ve got two words for you: Baker Hotel. This 415-room, fourteen-story behemoth, one of the largest health spas in the country when it opened in 1929, dominates the horizon as you drive into Mineral Wells. There was a time when Jean Harlow, Judy Garland, and Clark Gable strolled its halls and its ballrooms were filled with the music of famous big bands, but now it stands vacant except for a few dusty storefronts on the ground floor.

Bob Jenkins, the president of the Mineral Wells Area Chamber of Commerce, says the hotel’s current owner, who recently inherited the building, has assured the chamber that he’s either going to do something with the building or sell it to someone who will. “We’ve had two or three lookers this year,” says Jenkins. “Contractors say it’ll take around $20 million to restore it.”

Restore it to what? One by one, the mineral wells in Mineral Wells are being uncapped, and two bathhouses are scheduled to open this year. Despite renewed public enthusiasm for natural healing, however, I can’t picture nine hundred guests checking into a hotel in this tiny town every day. Neither can Jenkins. “It’ll never be a hotel again,” he says. “Maybe a couple of floors of hotel rooms, but most people are looking at it as a multipurpose site—condos, offices, a retirement complex.”

If $20 million is a little steep for you, other, slightly less demanding hotels also await well-heeled saviors. Among them is the towering Hotel Settles in Big Spring, built in 1930, which was recently fitted with new windows—around four hundred of them—thanks to the Friends of the Settles; the group’s founder, Tommy Churchwell, hopes the hotel’s face-lift will attract investors. In Blessing the 1906 Hotel Blessing, a ramshackle clapboard beauty currently functioning on minimal life support, courtesy of the Blessing Historical Foundation, desperately needs a major transfusion. And the list goes on; in small towns across Texas, you’ll find old hotels from grand to simple that have one thing in common: They all need rescuing.

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Palestine CVB

Palestine CVB

We invite you to Visit Palestine, preserving its past while looking to the future; you’ll find it to be a city which beckons you back time and time again. “Embrace Nature” in Palestine, Texas, your next getaway for rest and relaxation.

Corpus Christi CVB

Corpus Christi CVB

Beachcombers Wanted. Give them a trip they’ll cherish for a lifetime. Playing in the sand for hours. Chasing crabs. Eating mountains of fresh seafood. Exploring the flight deck of the USS Lexington and experiencing the Gulf from the bottom up at the Texas State Aquarium.

Hotel Granduca

Hotel Granduca

Welcome to Hotel Granduca. Be transported to old-world Italy when visiting Hotel Granduca, Houston’s new luxury boutique hotel in the Uptown/Galleria area. Created by Giorgio Borlenghi, this hidden gem offers impeccable service in a private, intimate setting.

Hotel Contessa

Hotel Contessa

Voted “Top 100” Hotels in the World by Condé Nast Traveler, Hotel Contessa embodies a true reflection of the state’s most popular destination city. This Spanish inspired, contemporary, world class all-luxury suite property on the Riverwalk captures both the historic and cultural essence of San Antonio.

New Mexico

New Mexico

Unsurpassed in natural beauty, New Mexico is a state of fascination, where scenic grandeur, exotic cuisine and unleashed spirit provide an endless flow of experiences; and the sweet scent of piñon, the enticing aroma of roasting green chili and brightly-colored balloons linger in the dazzling blue skies.

Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, Albuquerque

Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, Albuquerque

Learn about Pueblo Indian culture, history and art in the center’s museums, exhibit galleries, gift shops and plaza area where traditional Indian dances take place every weekend.

Lafayette Convention & Visitors Commission

Lafayette Convention & Visitors Commission

Lafayette is a flavorful combination of spirited festivals, savory cuisine, outdoor activities, breath-taking scenery, and a rich history. Our culture, like our dialect, is seasoned with a taste of Cajun French and Creole. Experience the distinct joie de vivre that is Lafayette.

Alpine Chamber Of Commerce

Alpine Chamber Of Commerce

Our city draws visitors from all over the world to enjoy our unique setting, rich history and enjoyable climate. Throughout the year Alpine offers a variety of events and activities. Come find out for yourself why Alpine is considered one of Texas’s BEST KEPT SECRETS.

Durango Area Tourism Office

Durango Area Tourism Office

Durango is the kind of town you dream about. Friendly locals, a magnificent mountain setting, limitless activities, and 300+ days of sunshine. Endless ways to relax, refresh, and reinvigorate, and our scenery is awe-inspiring. Perfecting the good life in Durango, Colorado.

La Posada de Santa Fe Resort & Spa

La Posada de Santa Fe Resort & Spa

La Posada’s $6 million restoration brings you a more lavish RockResorts Spa; a redesigned AAA Four Diamond Award-winning Fuego restaurant; and enhanced guestrooms and public spaces. Visit the new La Posada and discover all the magic and charm of Santa Fe.

Arkansas Parks & Tourism

Arkansas Parks & Tourism

The six distinct regions of The Natural State provide travelers with many unique destinations—from thermal spas along Hot Springs National Park’s famous bathhouse row, to the charming Victorian village of Eureka Springs.

Waxahachie CVB

Waxahachie CVB

The picture-perfect place for your next visit! Experience the charm of historic downtown with unique restaurants, boutiques, and entertainment venues. Beautiful historic lodging and motels will complete your visit! Upcoming Events: SCREAMS Halloween Park and Texas Country Reporter Festival.

Downtown Bryan Economic Association

Downtown Bryan Economic Association

Our members include a broad array of supporters including community members in the Bryan-College Station area, business owners, Downtown property owners and merchants, and professionals who call Historic Downtown Bryan their home.

The Gates Residences, Avon

The Gates Residences, Avon

The Gates Residences® is a luxury condominium residences in the heart of Avon.Enjoy the complete tranquility of the Colorado Rockies with family and friends while we ensure that your every wish is granted in exquisitely casual first class style.

Diamond Beach, Galveston

Diamond Beach, Galveston

Diamond Beach offers access to an untouched private sand beach and a lazy river that captures the relaxing peaceful mindset of a five-star resort. Only 140 condominiums, on the Seawall in Galveston – overlooking the Gulf of Mexico.

Lubbock, TX

Lubbock, TX

Lubbock is the home of Texas Tech University, Buddy Holly, unique shopping, dining and a legendary ranching and music heritage. For more information, to sign up for e-blasts and to request a FREE Visitor Guide, call 800-692-4035 or visit www.VisitLubbock.org.

Radisson Resort South Padre Island

Radisson Resort South Padre Island

The Hotel South Padre Island, located 20 minutes from Brownsville/South Padre Island Airport, is surrounded by ten acres of lushly landscaped beachfront grounds on the Gulf of Mexico. Guests can enjoy a wide range of water sports, golf and easy access to the colorful markets of Mexico.

Colorado Tourism Office

Colorado Tourism Office

Spend a day hiking or biking through the mountains or go horseback riding at a dude ranch. If it gets your heart pumping, we’ve got it. Enter for your chance to win 1 of 3 Colorado vacations!

Coushatta Casino Resort, Kinder

Coushatta Casino Resort, Kinder

Experience the thrills and excitement of our immense gaming floor, featuring the games you like, the jackpots you love, and the personal service you deserve!

Odessa Convention & Visitors Bureau

Odessa Convention & Visitors Bureau

Odessa is host to numerous meetings and conventions throughout the year. We can help you plan your next event!

Plano CVB

Plano CVB

Plano, Texas—close to everything, far from ordinary. Just minutes north of Dallas, Plano offers something for everyone—great accommodations, world-class shopping, fantastic cuisine, a historical downtown district, and many attractions such as the world famous Southfork Ranch and the Plano Balloon Festival held in September.

Gobierno del Estado Michoacan

Gobierno del Estado Michoacan

Michoacan is located in Mexico’s southwestern region, an area known for its cultural wealth and abundant natural beauty. Handcrafts, history, villages full of lively customs, dance and arts are just some of the reasons Michoiacan is deservedly known as “The Soul of Mexico”.

Amarillo

Amarillo

Amarillo is the gateway to Palo Duro Canyon, the Grand Canyon of Texas, and camping, hiking, biking. See these great events: Tri-State Fair (September), WRCA World Championship Ranch Rodeo (November), Cowboy Mounted Shooting Association World Finals (November), NCHA World Championship Finals (February).

Rosewood Mansion on Turtle Creek

Rosewood Mansion on Turtle Creek

Once the palatial home of a Texas cotton magnate, Rosewood Mansion on Turtle Creek has received such honors as the top U.S. hotel by Zagat and the top hotel for service in the world and top U.S. hotel restaurant by Travel + Leisure.

El Paso Convention & Visitors Bureau

El Paso Convention & Visitors Bureau

El Paso. More than you imagined. Experience 400 years of history, a quick trolley ride to Mexico or one of our newest attractions: golf at Tom Fazio’s newest public golf course or shopping at the newest outlet in the Southwest. El Paso’s got it all.

Marble Falls Economic Development

Marble Falls Economic Development

Centrally located in the heart of the Texas Hill Country with it’s beautiful views and unique opportunities, Marble Falls has always been friendly to businesses and continues to welcome employers who recognize a good working environment.

Hyatt Regency Lost Pines Resort and Spa/Destination Bastrop

Hyatt Regency Lost Pines Resort and Spa/Destination Bastrop

Escape to infinite comfort at Hyatt Regency Lost Pines Resort and Spa. This expansive, 405-acre Texas hotel resort welcomes you with distinctively approachable luxury in the midst of rugged wilderness, where jeans and business suits intermingle with ease.

Beaver Creek/Vail Resorts

Beaver Creek/Vail Resorts

Beaver Creek Resort, the ultimate family ski vacation. A luxurious village with award winning dining, perfectly groomed runs and exceptional guest service. It’s a place where the staff are trained to not just provide what guests want, but to anticipate it.

Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi

Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi

Since 1972, the gleaming white walls of the Art Museum of South Texas have been a landmark on the Corpus Christi Bay.

Inn and Spa at Loretto

Inn and Spa at Loretto

An exquisite Santa Fe boutique hotel located in the heart of the city, the Inn and Spa at Loretto features 134 guestrooms, a full-service spa, casual fine dining, three art galleries and a tranquil sculpture garden.

Ghost Ranch

Ghost Ranch

O’Keeffe Loved Ghost Ranch – You Will Too! B&B, group facilities, and summer getaways. Join us for an overnight stay to paint, hike, explore, or just relax.

Marathon Motel

Marathon Motel

Established in 1940 and recently renovated, the Marathon Motel sits on 10 acres with newly decorated rooms divided among four duplex cabins. Relax in the new adobe-walled courtyard with native plants, fireplace, fountain, and spectacular mountain views.

St. Tammany

St. Tammany

Feast on life in St. Tammany Parish. Great fun, great food, and the great outdoors await you on Louisiana’s Northshore. Bike the Tammany Trace. Pet a giraffe and ravish a pile of crawfish. Play hard and rest easy in St. Tammany Parish.

Hilton Buffalo Thunder

Hilton Buffalo Thunder

Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino combines the magic and mysticism of Native American culture with world-renowned Hilton hospitality to create the most magnificent resort in Santa Fe.

Mesquite Convention & Visitors Bureau

Mesquite Convention & Visitors Bureau

Enjoy Texas-style hospitality and rip-roaring, family-friendly fun! Just fifteen minutes from downtown Dallas, Mesquite offers 1,700 guestrooms, 150 restaurants, the Mesquite Championship Rodeo, Devil’s Bowl Speedway, and the Mesquite Arts Center. Don’t miss the Real. Texas. Festival. April 25–27, realtexasfestival.com.

Tuscaloosa, Alabama

Tuscaloosa, Alabama

Located on I20/59, Tuscaloosa is the perfect stop for great Southern cuisine, contemporary and folk art galleries, and unique attractions. So next time you’re headed this way, make sure Tuscaloosa is one of your stops. And remember, your table is always ready for you in Tuscaloosa.

Fredericksburg CVB

Fredericksburg CVB

Your closest friends, distinctive shopping, regional cuisine, winery tours, spa treatments, and live Texas music. This is Fredericksburg. The ultimate destination for a girls’ getaway weekend. So much fun, you’ll almost feel guilty . . . almost.

Westin Princeville

Westin Princeville

Perched high atop the lush, emerald cliffs that line Kaua‘i’s North Shore, this rejuvenating retreat is the perfect place to savor refreshing Pacific breezes while gazing at the sparkling ocean that lingers beyond the island’s breathtaking bluffs.

Vineyard Court Designer Suites Hotel

Vineyard Court Designer Suites Hotel

Escape to our Garden Getaway. The Vineyard Court is an oasis in the heart of College Station. The courtyard beckons, and guests are drawn to make new friends, or quietly rest with a good book beside the sparkling waters of the Tuscan-inspired pool.

Kerrville Convention & Visitors Bureau

Kerrville Convention & Visitors Bureau

Fall in Love with Kerrville, an ideal base for exploring the treasures of the Texas Hill Country. Upcoming fall events include: The 8th Annual Texas Furniture Makers Show and the 88th Annual National Watercolor Exhibition.

Lake Conroe

Lake Conroe

Welcome to the Lake Conroe Area—Lake, Links and Lone Star! Relax on beautiful Lake Conroe with a lunch or dinner cruise on the Southern Empress. Tee up on our challenging golf courses or take in a show at the Crighton Theatre.

Bishop's Lodge

Bishop's Lodge

This Santa Fe resort offers a tranquil retreat with the award-winning SháNah Spa, luxurious ranch-style accommodations, outdoor heated pool, horseback riding, trap and skeet, kid’s camp, workout facility, hiking trails, and more! Celebrate 90 years of hospitality with us!

San Patricio Economic Development Corporation

San Patricio Economic Development Corporation

San Patricio, “The New Texas Connection,” is positioned to serve markets in Texas, Mexico, the Western Hemisphere and the world. Located on the Gulf of Mexico, this region includes the 5th largest port in the nation and has rail and highway access to the rest of the continent.

Fredericksburg Convention & Visitors Bureau

Fredericksburg Convention & Visitors Bureau

Your closest friends, distinctive shopping, regional cuisine, winery tours, spa treatments, and live Texas music. This is Fredericksburg. The ultimate destination for a girls’ getaway weekend. So much fun, you’ll almost feel guilty . . . almost.

City of Bryan

City of Bryan

From its contemporary Tejas Center to its revived historic downtown, today’s Bryan is defined by renewed growth, development and renovation.

Port Aransas

Port Aransas

Stay for a weekend or a week in choice accommodations -from quaint cottages to beachfront condos and RV parks to camp grounds. Visit Port Aransas on Mustang Island and enjoy the unspoiled beauty of Texas~Island Style!

New Braunfels CVB

New Braunfels CVB

New Braunfels will revive your senses and quench any visitor’s interest. Nestled in the Texas Hill Country, New Braunfels is a premier family vacation destination. Relax, shop, dine, float, dance, and stay a while to soak up this historic “burg.”

Santa Fe County

Santa Fe County

The desert road curves between towering rock formations and opens to a vista where you’ll feel life is more mysterious than you could have imagined. Santa Fe County—unique and captivating. It’s No Place Like Home! FREE travel guide.

El Monte Sagrado

El Monte Sagrado

The AAA four-diamond El Monte Sagrado Living Resort and Spa® in Taos, New Mexico, boasts luxurious accommodations, an array of spa services, exquisite gourmet cuisine at De la Tierra, and an exceptional art gallery. Enjoy outdoor activities and area attractions.

Grand Hyatt San Antonio

Grand Hyatt San Antonio

Welcoming rooms with flat-panel LCD televisions and our ultra-comfortable signature Hyatt Grand BedTM. WiFi everywhere. A 24-hour Stay Fit gym with heated outdoor pool. Plus unique bars and restaurants like our Achiote River Café, with its fresh pan-Latino menu.

Hot Springs CVB

Hot Springs CVB

Soak away the day in thermal waters followed by shopping and sightseeing. Explore a woodland garden, art galleries, and lakes. Wind down with dining and gaming. Hot Springs has so much to do—all year long.

Gunnison-Crested Butte

Gunnison-Crested Butte

Our cool 1880s Rocky Mountain towns offer “inspiration included vacations.” See the USA’s largest aspen tree grove in shades of gold and red! Enjoy Colorado’s best outdoor recreation, one-of-a-kind dining and shopping, museums, the arts, and diverse lodging. We may even provide $350 to pay for your gasoline!

Angel Fire Resort

Angel Fire Resort

With our cool summer temperatures, colorful alpine meadows and brilliant autumn foliage, Angel Fire makes a beautiful year-round destination. Come up for world-class mountain biking, a round of golf—and a whole lot more. 800-633-7463 angelfireresort.co

Albuquerque CVB

Albuquerque CVB

The true Southwest awaits you in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Come immerse yourself in our rich culture and heritage, rooted in centuries of history. Breathe in the high desert air scented with sage and piñon, and you’ll understand why Albuquerque, NM is a destination like no other.

Quail Run

Quail Run

Texans enjoy sophisticated accommodations at one of the Southwest’s most luxurious resorts. Quail Run offers exceptional accommodations for vacation and business travelers, just minutes from the Plaza. Impeccable condominiums are complemented by a private health club, golf course, spa, and restaurant.

Bozeman CVB

Bozeman CVB

Bozeman offers a plethora of in-town activities to keep you busy on your next vacation, from exploring the Museum of the Rockies to wandering through the art galleries downtown. The surrounding area also provides a number of outdoor recreation opportunities.

Ruston-Lincoln Convention & Visitors Bureau

Ruston-Lincoln Convention & Visitors Bureau

Experience a weekend adventure in north Louisiana. Ruston is just four hours due east of Dallas, offering the perfect blend of home cooking mixed with eclectic shopping, historic attractions, and unique outdoor fun.

Bastrop Chamber of Commerce

Bastrop Chamber of Commerce

Nestled on the banks of the Colorado River, the historic district of Bastrop is filled with a variety of shops and restaurants. Visit beautiful Bastrop and discover why we’re known as the “Heart of the Colorado”.

Natural Bridge Caverns

Natural Bridge Caverns

Located in the beautiful scenic Texas Hill Country, the caverns began forming around 12 million years ago. Visitors are treated to a fascinating trip back in time.

Bay Area Houston CVB

Bay Area Houston CVB

From the fascinating high-tech wonder of space to the casual atmosphere and natural beauty of the waterfront, Bay Area Houston offers endless opportunities for a relaxing weekend getaway for two or a fun-filled adventure for the entire family.

El Dorado Hotel & Spa

El Dorado Hotel & Spa

Every great city has its premier place to stay. Discover the Four Diamond landmark just off the historic Plaza . . . with pampering treatments at Nidah spa, elegantly appointed guest rooms, and dining at the city’s most celebrated restaurant, The Old House.

Vail Mountain Concierge

Vail Mountain Concierge

Kim Sheridan, President of Vail Mountain Concierge, has the knowledge and the experience to help make your stay unforgettable. On your next vacation, enjoy yourself in our world renowned mountains and let Vail Mountain Concierge take care of the rest.

Bastrop Economic Development Corporation

Bastrop Economic Development Corporation

Established in 1832, Bastrop is the second oldest incorporated city in Texas. You can see more than 140 homes and sites on the National Register of Historic Places. Old Town Bastrop, the Heart of the Colorado River, is where the present meets the past.

West Texas Triangle

West Texas Triangle

The West Texas Triangle is the Space for Art: Open lands . . .big skies . . . small-city ease . . . rural charm . . . and surprising cultural sophistication.

League City

League City

League City, in Houston’s Bay Area, is home to the luxurious South Shore Harbour Resort and Conference Center. Enjoy Clear Lake dinner cruises, water activities, golf, festivals, the Kemah Boardwalk, NASA, and Galveston, only five to fifteen minutes away.

Northshore - St. Tammany Parish Tourist Commission

Northshore - St. Tammany Parish Tourist Commission

Feast on life in St. Tammany Parish. Great fun, great food, and the great outdoors await you on Louisiana’s Northshore. Bike the Tammany Trace. Pet a giraffe and ravish a pile of crawfish. Play hard and rest easy in St. Tammany Parish.

Abilene Convention & Visitors Bureau

Abilene Convention & Visitors Bureau

In the heart of the Texas frontier, the West lives on! Stroll downtown galleries and shops or plan your visit during a world-class exhibit. Feed “the Tallest Texan” on the frontier at the Abilene Zoo or savor the flavor of a juicy rib-eye. 800-727-7704 • abilenevisitors.com

Lakeway Resort and Spa

Lakeway Resort and Spa

Situated on the shores of Lake Travis near Austin, Texas, Lakeway Inn has begun a total transformation of the once legendary Texas Resort. Located 40 minutes from Bergstrom International Airport the Resort captures the beauty of the Texas Hill Country and the elegance of a World Class Destination.

Royal Sonesta

Royal Sonesta

Savor the best of the city with a Bourbon Street location, live entertainment, authentic New Orleans dining, and a tranquil poolside refuge. Our French Quarter Fling starts from just $99 per night and includes a complimentary bottle of champagne upon arrival.

Commemorative Air Force

Commemorative Air Force

The American Airpower Heritage Museum is conviently located at Midland International Airport half way between the cities of Midland and Odessa, Texas. Both cities offer a wide variety of accommodations, transportation and attractions making your visit to the museum one you will never forget.

New Mexico Fiber Arts Trails

New Mexico Fiber Arts Trails

Support creativity at its source! Your guide to 250 fiber artists and their creations at more than 60 rural destinations along the Trails. Travel and explore.

Village Of Ruidoso

Village Of Ruidoso

Ruidoso, New Mexico; the high-altitude sanctuary in the Sacramento Mountains welcomes you with casual sophistication, world-class gaming, and exhilarating outdoor adventures. Seasonal highlights include Ski Apache, Spencer Theater, Boutique shopping. 877-784-3676 • MyHighGround.com

Port Royal

Port Royal

There is water as far as the eye can see, from our famous lagoon pool to the Gulf of Mexico. Dive right in or enjoy the view and the balmy breezes from your balcony. And our family-size condos with complete kitchens make us a great value beach vacation.

McKinney CVB

McKinney CVB

McKinney’s upscale shopping, distinctive restaurants, and special events offer visitors a first-class experience just 30 miles north of Dallas. Upcoming events like the return of Dinosaurs Alive!, Oktoberfest, Nationwide Golf Tour, Dickens of a Christmas, and Holiday Tour of Homes make McKinney truly Unique by Nature!

AAA

AAA

With a AAA membership, you’ll have access to services such as 24-hour Roadside Assistance, special member discounts, professional travel services, and access to insurance at great rates.

South Padre Island Convention & Visitors Bureau

South Padre Island Convention & Visitors Bureau

Located on the tropical tip of Texas, South Padre Island is bordered by the Gulf of Mexico and the Laguna Madre Bay. An abundance of activities such as water sports, dolphin watching, fishing, birding and golf await every visitor. 800-SOPADRE • sopadre.com

Balcones Heights CVB

Balcones Heights CVB

San Antonio Central is Balcones Heights! Located at the intersection of I-10 and Loop 410, Balcones Heights puts you minutes from San Antonio’s most popular tourist attractions – Sea World, Six Flags Fiesta Texas, the River Walk, Alamo, South Texas Medical Center, and San Antonio’s finest shopping.

Austin

Austin

Welcome to The Live Music Capital of the World®. We have tour guides ready to show you our city. Check out all the places to catch a show, eat, shop, and find out what really makes Austin weird and more in this big city meets laid-back college town.

Silver City / Grant Chamber of Commerce

Silver City / Grant Chamber of Commerce

Escape to Silver City, New Mexico, where there is always something unusual to enjoy! We have art galleries, museums, unique shops, fine restaurants, friendly people, beautiful scenery, and a touch of old west history. 800-548-9378 • www.silvercity.org

Grand Junction

Grand Junction

Awe-inspiring natural beauty and a dramatic red rock landscape. Exhilarating outdoor adventures and stunning golf courses. Peaceful places to reflect and unwind and a charming downtown full of great shops, restaurants, galleries and more. This is Grand Junction, Colorado’s Wine Country.

Great Wolf Lodge, Grapevine

Great Wolf Lodge, Grapevine

Make a splash in your scrapbook with a family vacation to Great Wolf Lodge in Grapevine, Texas, conveniently located between Dallas and Ft. Worth. Plunge, splash and float in Texas largest indoor water park, reserved exclusively for our guests. Or unwind in any of our spacious suites.