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Author Topic: Indian Lodge?  (Read 2799 times)
Picacho
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« on: July 22, 2007, 02:24:48 pm »

Anyone stay at the Indian Lodge in Ft. Davis lately?  How was it?
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SHANEA
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« Reply #1 on: July 22, 2007, 02:56:21 pm »

Quote from: "Picacho"
Anyone stay at the Indian Lodge in Ft. Davis lately?  How was it?


Never have stayed there.  Have camped at the park @ Fort Davis.  I'd rather camp at Balmorhea.  TPWD just got finished with a huge, expensive, renovation/upgrade to the Indian Lodge, so it should be outstanding.  Did have a friend stay there with his GF a couple of years ago before the renovations and they had a most outstanding time.  The swimming pool has always looked nice too.  If you are there, be sure and spend some time swimming @ Balmorhea and bring your mask, snorkel, and fins.
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Timbo
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« Reply #2 on: July 23, 2007, 08:44:27 pm »

My wife and I are booked at the renovated lodge for Aug 10-12 - in time for the Perseids. We stayed there several times in the past - have always enjoyed it - very comfortable, quiet and (other than the Chisos) you can't beat the scenary. We'll take a dip at Balmorea on the way back....  :D
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Picacho
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« Reply #3 on: July 31, 2007, 08:44:18 pm »

I'll be at the lodge on August 11th after hiking the South Rim.  Maybe I'll see you there.
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« Reply #4 on: August 26, 2007, 12:19:48 am »

How was it?  Did it live up to it's billing?  Would you stay there again?  

I wonder why Steve Smith in Lajitas can't get 10,000 guests when this place can?

Restored Indian Lodge worth a West Texas trip

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Published: August 07, 2007 11:03 am
Restored Indian Lodge worth a West Texas trip
By Robert McCorkle
Special to the Record

From my table inside the Black Bear Restaurant, I find myself eye-to-beak with a pair of black-chinned hummingbirds.

As I sip my coffee and munch on a fresh-from-the-skillet breakfast taco, the hummers just beyond the window pane several stories up suck nectar from a mature desert willow. I would venture that few restaurants in Texas can top the view from the Black Bear at historic Indian Lodge just outside Fort Davis.

The original 16-room Indian Lodge rose from the grassy slopes of the Davis Mountains in the 1930s as a result of the tireless labors of unemployed young men during the Depression years when eating breakfast was considered a luxury by many.

Teenager Charles Potter Brody Bassett was one of several hundred men of the federally funded Civilian Conservation Corps companies who helped build the Pueblo-style adobe inn at Davis Mountains State Park, as well as park roads and other facilities.

“It was when I quit being hungry,” Bassett told his son years later about his Davis Mountains CCC experience. James A. Bassett’s letter recounting his father’s reminisces about his CCC days hangs on the wall of the inn’s original lobby that today serves as a sort of mini museum and lounging area for lodge guests.

With its massive fireplace, polished, hand-hewn Ponderosa pine columns and vigas (beams), latillas (river cane) and handmade cedar furnishings from a CCC camp in Bastrop, the lobby is a must-see architectural showplace.

Here, too, are found historic artifacts, vintage photographs and tributes to the “Enduring Legacy” of the CCC boys. Be sure to check out the memorabilia display case that includes one of the 120,000 adobe bricks made on site in 1933 uncovered during last year’s extensive renovations, an original handcrafted cedar lamp base, a CCC pocket knife and original Indian Lodge room keys. Don’t miss the panoramic black-and-white photo of 400 enrollees from Companies 1879 and 1881, who worked in the Davis Mountain camps in what was one of Texas’ first CCC camps.

To stay at Indian Lodge is to step back into the early 20th century when automobile travel and tourism were in their infancy and life unfolded at a slower pace. But that doesn’t mean Indian Lodge’s accommodations aren’t up to modern standards.

The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department has spent more than $4 million over the past five years renovating the original 16 (numbered in the 100s) historic rooms, as well as the 24 “modern” (200s and 300s) rooms added in the 1960s. Many of the original pine ceilings and floors have been restored, heating/air conditioning and plumbing systems upgraded and almost 200 pieces of original rustic cedar furniture refinished. In rooms that were “modernized” in the 1960s, workers removed old carpeting and suspended acoustic tile ceilings, installed wood flooring and applied a stucco finish to interior cement block walls to mimic the look of the more historic part of the lodge.

“All and all,” says Indian Lodge manager Alfred Tobola Jr., “seeing how it looks today compared to the way it was before renovations is truly amazing. The rooms were stripped down to the bare bones and totally redone with new drapery, bedspreads, carpeting, lamps and vanities added.”

Since the second and final phase of Indian Lodge’s renovation was completed in October of 2006, occupancy has been setting a torrid pace, according to Tabola. Through June of this year, just under 10,000 people have stayed at the inn. Rooms rent from $90 to $125 a night.

SHANEA SIDEBAR:  I bet Steve Smith of Lajitas could get 10,000 people to stay there...  :lol:

When guests aren’t lounging in a comfortable bed watching cable television or gazing at the amazing scenery of Limpia Canyon and the surrounding mountains, they may be found taking a dip in the lodge swimming pool, driving up nearby Skyline Drive to take in the postcard-quality sunsets or hiking on one of Davis Mountain State Park’s several trails. Wildlife watching in the 2,700-acre park is often rewarded with sightings of the unusual Montezuma quail, mule deer, javelina, antelope, fox or perhaps even a black bear at higher elevations of the Davis Mountains.

Speaking of black bear, the on-premise Black Bear Restaurant is slated next for renovation, but for now serves a fine chicken fried steak, home-style Mexican food and hearty breakfasts fit for a CCC worker. It is open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, staying open an hour later on Fridays and Saturday to accommodate those heading to the McDonald Observatory star parties.

Other things to see while visiting the Fort Davis area include: the Chihuahuan Desert Nature Center & Botanical Gardens; Fort Davis National Historic Site (one of the best examples of a Southwestern frontier citadel); the famed McDonald Observatory (Star Parties every Tuesday, Friday and Saturday nights); Overland Trail Museum and the 72-mile Scenic Loop through the Davis Mountains.

Indian Lodge is located inside Davis Mountains State Park State Park four miles west of Fort Davis on State Highway 118. For information about the park, call (432) 426-3337.

To make an overnight camping reservation, call (512) 389-8100. For general Texas State Park information, call 1-800-792-1112 or visit www.tpwd.state.tx.u s/spdest/.

Editors: For downloadable j-peg images of the park, please go to the TPWD Newsroom at www.tpwd.state.tx.u s/news/newsroom/photo.
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« Reply #5 on: August 26, 2007, 09:30:11 am »

Kathy (Kellis1231) and I (Timbo) had  a GREAT time. The restored lodge is beautiful. Stayed in the Lady Bird room - the best room at the Lodge.

Everything was very green and lush. Swam at the Lodge pool, went to the Observatory, saw some Persieds, visited our little patch of dirt at the DMR, ate at the Black Bear, Pop's, Murphy's (not what it used to was)  and the Caboose. Hiked the ridge trail to the NHS Fort, drove the scenic loop, visited Alpine and Marfa (got some chocolate at Squeeze).

Drove down 118 to BBNP - again: crazy verdancy! Visited the basin, ate at the Lodge - always surprisingly good. Stayed at Las Portales at the Gage in Marathon - also beautiful. Went to Shirley's for breakfast and talked for a while with Robyn at James Evans' Gallery. Shot over 450 digipix, highlights are here:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/11658771@N05/sets/72157601522115068/

(let me know if this link works ok)

Again - can't wait to get back! Already making plans for Thanksgiving and next Spring.... :D
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SHANEA
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« Reply #6 on: August 26, 2007, 12:40:05 pm »

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visited our little patch of dirt at the DMR
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SHANEA
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« Reply #7 on: August 26, 2007, 12:48:27 pm »

Really like the pics of the road with the yellow stripes.  Everything is so green out there.  Indian Lodge sure looks nice - looks like an oasis when viewed from a distance.  Shirley's Burnt Bisket - that was on Texas Country Report a while back, Marathon if I recall correctly.  Really a great pic of the century plant with the bird perched on top.  Magical sunset pics.
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« Reply #8 on: August 26, 2007, 01:23:38 pm »

Shane:

Thanks. When a place is THIS photogenic - point 'n' shoot, repeat. ;>)

DMR = Davis Mountains Resort - a 'development' off Rte 166 West of Fort Davis in the heart of the Davis Mtns. We have 6.22 acres there with nothing but alligator juniper, oaks and grass on it (and a seasonal creek) -a great view of the McDonald Observatory. Maybe we'll retire and build on it. It will make a great base of operations for West Texas explorations.
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« Reply #9 on: October 15, 2007, 05:57:02 pm »

The hotel is really a "destination" in itself.  Everybody I've ever taken there falls in love with it, and there's so much to do in and around Ft. Davis.  I've never gotten a bad room - all rooms are spacious, quiet, and quaint.  The porch swings in the courtyard, or the patio seating nestled around the various levels, are great places for quiet conversation, star-gazing, and a glass of wine.  My favorite vista for morning coffee is the veranda  over the swimming pool, which looks out over the mountains.  The enormous "family room" or "lobby" with its fireplace, comfortable furniture, and games and decks of cards hearkens back to a time when families drove a long way to vacation together, then played games or put puzzles together in the evenings.
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LandCruisers4Life
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« Reply #10 on: February 05, 2008, 11:29:59 am »

A friend of mine and his wife always stay at Indian Lodge. For years now over and over they booked their room there. I tried once in 2006, but they are always full. Also, despite how nice the place is supposed to be, they are pricey.


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« Reply #11 on: February 05, 2008, 02:15:21 pm »

Being a first class cheapskate of the lowest order, my experience with Indian Lodge is the price ought to be higher.  Each time I have been there I considered it cheap for the value delivered.  This goes back nearly 35 years.  Am I prejudiced in favor of it.  Very much so. One Thanksgiving my GF and I ate there for Tgiving dinner ( in 02 I think) but did not get to stay there because my RV was down in Alpine.  Our "waiter" was the main miantemance man for the park and he was a hoot.  It turns out that all the food had been prepared by employees at their homes and in the Lodge kitchen.  They were all fantastic in spirit an made it a wonderful T'giving.  The manager and I got into a nice conversation and we got to tour some rooms partially redone and see what was under the years of changes.  His plan was to take it back to original as much as possible.  It was hard for me to describe the experience of the employees appreciation that most of the crowd showed for their efforts. That really was a day of toooo much fun.
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« Reply #12 on: February 07, 2008, 11:43:35 am »

I guess for the times, the price is moderate. I still remember Motel 6's being about $10 a night or so when I was a kid. I don't stay in many hotels/motels so I don't have any idea what is a good rate or not. Sounds like you do get a good value for your money there though. I still want to stay there.


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WayneR
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« Reply #13 on: February 07, 2008, 04:05:17 pm »

I finally secured a reservation (after trying for several years) and stayed at Indian Lodge last November.  Our group had two rooms; one in the "new" section and one in the original lodge.  The rooms had been recently remodeled and were very nice/clean and had a distinct cedar aroma.  Most of the rooms have front patios with great views of the Davis Mountains.  The food in the Black Bear restaurant was excellent.  I can definitely recommend the fajitas!

Only stayed one night but will endeavor to reserve several nights next time as there are many hiking trails in the immediate area that beckon exploration.  The rates are not cheap at $100+ but then again your probably not going to find anything as nice for less in the Fort Davis area.

Wayne
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« Reply #14 on: March 20, 2008, 11:54:30 am »

I went by there for kicks on the way to the observatory, and noticed they have RV camping etc. To me that detracts from Indian Lodge itself.... too bad they did that in my opinion.


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