|
Real Travel Adventures
International
NEW Articles
Adventure Travels
Stories & Photos
by Bonnie Neely
By Bonnie and Bill Neely
By Emma Krasov
by Leslie Adams
by Dean and Nancy Hoch
Some of the trips described in RealTravelAdventures.com were free "fam" trips. However, as professional writers, we never write what, in our opinion, is not a true evaluation of a place. If we do not like a place we visit we say so, or we simply do not write about it.
Enjoy our past features below:
![]() INTERNATIONAL
MAGAZINE
|
|
Paid ads below:
Timeshares can be found in almost every adventure travel
destination in the world. Whether you're looking for underwater exploration or extreme mountain climbing,
there's a timeshare resort that's perfect for you. Staying in a
timeshare
is the perfect way to enjoy comfort and relaxation after a long day of outdoor adventures.
International
Travel Adventures
Stories & Photos
We average nearly a half million unique visitors a year.
Advertise on our site. We have the best rates on the Internet!
We average over 1,000 unique visitors a DAY.
If you travel for more that just a look-see, visit the excellent new Philosophical Traveller for indepth perspectives on places around the world. Click here . You'll find our podcasts there also to listen while you do other work on your computer.
Your FREE online travel magazine e-zine of exciting travel adventures, travel reviews, travel photos from all ages and lifestyles of real travel in US and the world. International travel adventure - travel adventure magazine - travel reviews - trip planner - road trip planner - travel news - Real Travel Adventures Ezine with Book Review and Travel Guides for good reads and good listens on your trips and international travel adventures.
![]() Sharing Travel Adventures & Adventure Travel
Discover Great get-aways, budget stays, and luxury travel to Dream About .Choose from Hundreds of Travel Reviews and and book reviews Outdoor and Nature Photos
Get Your Travel Review Published here!
INTERNATIONAL
MAGAZINE
![]() |
![]() Picking Blueberries In East Texas
©2010 by Bonnie Neely
My friends invited me to go with them to pick blueberries near our hometown, Paris, TX. I knew I would enjoy the company and the early summer drive through this ranch and farming countryside in the delightful late spring weather with birds singing, bright sunny skies, and Queen Anne's lace and yellow daisies blooming by the thousands. However, secretly, I was dreading the actual "picking." As a city dweller, my limited experiences with picking anything were anything but pleasurable! When I was a child my parents took me on a hot summer evening to pick peaches in South Carolina. I picked some of the ripe, pink and yellow globes, delighting in the sweet smells that made my mouth water. We enjoyed eating a few peel-it-yourself delicious peaches beneath the trees, and then we kids tired of the labor and resorted to tumbling and playing hide-and-seek in the orchard. The peach fuzz stuck to our hot, sweaty little arms and legs, and I began to itch fiercely all over. It felt as if I had rolled in angel hair or steel wool! I couldn't get to a bathtub fast enough, and I refused all other invitations to pick peaches.
My next "picking" venture was as a young mother taking my two pre-school children to pick blackberries on a steaming hot day in broiling sun... NOT a good idea on many fronts! First, we had to go through tall weeds to get to the steep embankment where the wild blackberries grew in profusion. I had heard that if you make a lot of noise and brush the grass with your boots it would scare the snakes away leaving your path clear. I carried the kids through the weeds, hoping no snake would get me, then we perched ourselves on the bank's edge to gather berries. First my son scraped his hand on the thorns and started to cry as he saw the blood. Then my daughter thought she saw a snake in the blackberry bush (and she very well may have) and refused to pick another berry. I persuaded them to wait for me to pick just a few for them to enjoy on the way home, and I gave up on the idea of blackberry pies for the freezer. We waded through the tall grass and back into the hot car and headed home, when we all started itching. At first we scratched a few little places. Then we were all clawing ourselves frantically... Instead of GETTING juicy morsels, we had BECOME juicy morsels for the CHIGGERS, whose home happened to be that blackberry bramble!
My other determined "picking" venture began quite enthusiastically as a teaching experience for my young children. We drove to the countryside where acres of cucumbers were being picked for pickles. The scene was like cotton picking days in the Old South. We trudged up and down a few rows and discovered that picking cucumbers is not only back-breaking in the hot sun but also cucumbers are covered with sharp, fuzzy spines that really hurt fingers. Well the ones in the supermarket for salads are all slick and shiney! Our hands were almost bleeding after about fifteen minutes, and we had no gloves, so that venture ended in agony, and the kids exclaimed, "We don't even like cucumbers or pickles! Why did you make us do this?" (Although strawberries do not have prickly coverings to cause agony, our experience in the knee-wrenching venture with those ended equally as enthusiastically and quickly.)
![]() So, for blueberry picking I was simply along for the ride...so I thought! But what a delightful surprise!
Late May and early June in early mornings are very pleasant temperatures in East Texas, so the ride was lovely. We arrived at the Kiomatia Blueberry Farm in northwest Red River County, where three acres of perfectly manicured land are planted with hundreds of rows of mature blueberry bushes, including high bush and rabbiteye varieties.
![]() We didn't need gloves because there were no thorns, no weeds, no snakes, no varmints...just a lovely grove with about twenty people picking berries for their own use. The one and two gallon buckets the owners provided hung easily on our arms and, to my great surprise and delight, I had one filled in ten minutes with practically no effort at all! At that time the price we paid in a super market for about a cup of blueberries was $4, and for just $10 we picked the gallon! The price, of course, varies by the crop each year.
The owners,Judy and Kenneth Short, told us how to clean and freeze the berries so we could enjoy them all year until next picking time. They even shared some wonderful recipes with us for blueberry pie and blueberry smoothies. They hope soon to have a machine to make and sell smoothies on the spot for pickers to enjoy. This is a perfect "picking" experience for you and your family, and you'll enjoy the fruit all year. We had our last blueberry pie last night and can hardly wait for the farm to open to pickers this year! Kiomatia Bluberry Farm is about thirty minutes from either Paris or Clarksville, Texas, on FM Highway 410. The owners urge you to call before you come to be sure they are open for picking, since weather can alter things: 903 674 2477.
![]() Wherever you plan to go on your travel adventures, be sure to purchase
the right travel insurance If you plan to be away for a few months then you will need a backpacker travel insurance policy, most of which now include up to two weeks ski or winter sports cover.
_____________________________________________________
Subscribers:So that your free subscription is not mistaken for spam,
Please copy & paste our E-mail address into your address book: mail@realtraveladventures.com
It's that simple!
Real Travel Adventures International Magazine
Adventure Travels in your Free Ezine
If any links don't work
Thanks for visiting us!
Real Travel Adventures International Magazine
Real and Armchair Travelers: Enjoy best trip reviews, travel features, and excellent travel photos in RealTravelAdventures.com, your FREE on-line international magazine. Send your funny or outrageous travel experiences & photos and get published!
Visit or dream of fascintating places with Real Travel Adventures e-zine! This site offers travel humor, photos, stories, helpful guidebooks, and more. Visit for fun or to seek tips for your next travel adventure...and then share your own stories with us here at
realtraveladventures.com, your free online travel magazine, where you'll find great book reviews, international travel adventures magazine, airline tickets, real travel adventures, camping, RV travel, RV's, Cruises, restaurant reviews, RVing, FamilyTrips, traveling with kids and children, Nature and eco trips, ecology, international travel, Ski Trips, Spas, Spiritual Retreats, interviews with Special People, Travel Humor, Travel News, Unbelievable, WeddingTrips, restaurant reviews and advisor, traveling adventures, adventure travels, travel, virtual and armchair travel, Back Roads, off the beaten path, where to go Camping and enjoy RV trips, where to Dine and Sleep, fun Family Trips, our Favorite Finds, Arts and Crafts, cruises and cruise vacations, romantic trips, traveling tips, travel stories, audio book reviews for your travels, books reviews, good books for a trip, wedding trip planner, wedding Trips, Honeymoons, Unbelievable adventures, Travel News, humorous travel stories, spas and retreats, spiritual retreats, meditation retreats, ski trips, week-end trips Near You, nature's Best places, ecology trips, travel guide books, traveling with children, e-zines, FREE Ezines, Free travel magazines, magazine, free online magazines, internet magazines, free magazine subscriptions, web magazines, true stories, humorous articles, funny features, human interest features, nature photos, environment photographs, photos, adventurous stories, real true stories, true adventrues, camping gear, vacation, holidays, safaris, Caribbean vacations, cheap hotels, great places to go, nature hikes, nature photography, family vacations, family holidays, trip planner, great trips, scenic photos, holiday vacations, holidays, holiday stories, foreign destinations, International travel trips. And you can Get published here too! Send us your travel stories and pictures.
![]() © 2010 Bonita Productions Inc.
If you wish to use our features or photos you must first contact us
|