I left the motel at 7:51, stopped by the gas station for a bag of “Orange Slice” candy, and set off for the hills.
I went up the road, but couldn’t locate the bakery. Just by chance, I had stopped by the Leakey Senior Center, and a man getting out of his car in the parking lot asked if I needed help. I asked where the bakery might be, and he gave me directions, but then asked if I would join them for lunch. Well, sure!
I never did find the BBG Bakery. Oh, well – there will be other chances for kolaches.
I’m not going to tag today as hard. I just stayed in my granny gear on the steep grades and kept very relaxed speed. Maybe the reason others burned out was that they were trying to attack the hills too quickly?
Tomorrow, after breakfast at the store, maybe I’ll be able to make Kerrville. There’s only one steep climb on the way to that, then a general downhill trend.
Miles today: 40.2 (with steep climbing)
(Visited 108 times, 1 visit(s) today)
So you did three of the four peaks today, then? Not bad!
Curious that there are kolaches there in TX. My brother-in-law’s family was Czech/Bohemian on his dad’s side, and his dad had a recipe for (fruit-filled) kolaches that he gave to my sister. I infrequently made them around Christmas time (but now… low carb bandwagon). (Your bakery ad has me drooling and sighing.)
(On a side note… when I was a senior in undergrad, one of the grad students was from Poland. I asked him if they had kolaches, and his response was something on the order of “not with fruit” (more bread-like), and that they had an old saying along the lines of “Without work, there is no kolache”. For you, I guess that would translate to “Without climbing the peaks, and putting in the miles, and then searching for the bakery, there is no kolache!”)
Lots of Czechs immigrated to the U.S. through Galveston in the early 1900’s, and many remained in Texas. There are Czech heritage organizations and museums in Temple, Houston, La Grange, and Caldwell. My mom’s parents came from Moravia and farmed near Austin for a number of years before moving to Oregon. (My dad’s parents came from Bohemia to Berwyn near Chicago — lots of Czechs there, too.)
“Bez práce nejsou koláče” is a Czech proverb. Literally “without work there are no kolaches”, it implies nothing ventured, nothing gained. As my wife, Liba, who is also from Moravia, will attest, it also actually does takes a lot of work to make good kolache.
When I lived in Chicago kolache’s were very popular I believe because of a large Polish population, you have to try one !
Also I’ve been looking for Utopia most of my life glad you found it looks like I’m going to Texas, Safe travels.
Am I the only guy in the room who has never had a kolache?
Also, I spoke to a cashier at the store who now lives in Vanderpool, having previously lived in Utopia. Contrary to the name, she didn’t think it was that great a place to be.
So you did three of the four peaks today, then? Not bad!
Curious that there are kolaches there in TX. My brother-in-law’s family was Czech/Bohemian on his dad’s side, and his dad had a recipe for (fruit-filled) kolaches that he gave to my sister. I infrequently made them around Christmas time (but now… low carb bandwagon). (Your bakery ad has me drooling and sighing.)
(On a side note… when I was a senior in undergrad, one of the grad students was from Poland. I asked him if they had kolaches, and his response was something on the order of “not with fruit” (more bread-like), and that they had an old saying along the lines of “Without work, there is no kolache”. For you, I guess that would translate to “Without climbing the peaks, and putting in the miles, and then searching for the bakery, there is no kolache!”)
Lots of Czechs immigrated to the U.S. through Galveston in the early 1900’s, and many remained in Texas. There are Czech heritage organizations and museums in Temple, Houston, La Grange, and Caldwell. My mom’s parents came from Moravia and farmed near Austin for a number of years before moving to Oregon. (My dad’s parents came from Bohemia to Berwyn near Chicago — lots of Czechs there, too.)
“Bez práce nejsou koláče” is a Czech proverb. Literally “without work there are no kolaches”, it implies nothing ventured, nothing gained. As my wife, Liba, who is also from Moravia, will attest, it also actually does takes a lot of work to make good kolache.
And even after finishing the 4 peaks, and climbing in the hot sun today, still no kolache!
When I lived in Chicago kolache’s were very popular I believe because of a large Polish population, you have to try one !
Also I’ve been looking for Utopia most of my life glad you found it looks like I’m going to Texas, Safe travels.
Am I the only guy in the room who has never had a kolache?
Also, I spoke to a cashier at the store who now lives in Vanderpool, having previously lived in Utopia. Contrary to the name, she didn’t think it was that great a place to be.
OK I’ll keep looking.