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I found the little Gay District next to San Antonio College and I'm so happy cause it means I can sit down somewhere and have dinner without worrying about anyone but TERFs. I'm leaving town on Sunday, but at least when I come back in April I have a safe place to go.

Apparently this place just opened: sacurrent.com/food-drink/new-l

For those of you wanting to see the different Dairy Queen menu in Texas. I was craving pretzel breadsticks, but they didn't have them here. But they had steak fingers, so I didn't go away disappointed.

I hope that's readable....

Saturday's Texas Adventure Part Six. The final stops in Waring, Welfare and Boerne.

I'm so glad someone took the old gas station on the old highway in Boerne and did something with it. Looks like a cafe. I was always worried it'd be demolished

Saturday's Texas Adventure Part Five

With a late start, the traffic jam at UTSA and the side trip through old Segovia I didn't get into Noxville until twilight, and Fredericksburg at sunset.

I talked about Fredericksburg on another post, and decided since it was night I'd just turn this into a night drive and put my night photo filter to the test.

Grabbed some pics of Grapetown and Bankersmith and the night setting led to some interesting photos. Around Mt Alamo, we kind of have the limits of how far the night photo mode could go.

I want to go through this door, but I know if I do, I'm going to be isekai'd into a wierd anime about the old Texas frontier.

You know what? I'm going in. Good chance of a gender swap in an anime...

The Secret Place was a small grassy area under large oaks next to a lake on the Devil's River. It was quiet You could only hear the wind, the birds and the water. It was isolated. It was private property, to be sure, but far enough away that unless you were visting the cemetery, no one would know you were there. And most of all isolated.

I'm revealing this place now cause I doubt I'll be coming back soon. Yes, there's the trans stuff going on in Texas, but honestly, I think more people knew about this place than me. WAAAY more No Tresspassing signs since I was here last. Probably got tired of my sitting out here thinking.

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Noxville was founded in the 1870s as essentialy a fort keeping the local setlers protected from ther native Comanche, Apaches an Kiowas. In the 1880s, a post office, store and school were created for the local ranching community, all of which still exist. The school is used for voting, the store and post office are now a private residence.

This is also the location of Jenn's "Secret Place." This was a place I would dissappear to when things were really bad and I needed (1) thinking time on the drive out here (about 2 hourw from Austin) (2) needed a calm cool place to relax for an hour more and (3) more thinking time on the drive home.

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Saturday's Texas Adventure, Part 4.

From Segovia, I went to Old Noxville. This is in a pretty remote part of the Texas Hill Country, being on a dirt road, off a rarely traveled farm road, off a rarely traveled US highway, off the freeway. It's as isolated as it gets in the Hill Country

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Drive-in Saturday: you're all becoming stronger, faster hunters.