16-Jan-2000 -- Sunday afternoons seem to be an
ideal time for confluence hunting -- much more entertaining than TV or
reading our 16-page local newspaper. 33N/100W is about 50 miles from
home, between the small towns of Hamlin and Sagerton. The area is part
of the 'Rolling Plains' of western Texas, a region of mostly flat land
with occasional mesas and patches of badlands. The land is used for
farming (cotton and sorghum-family stuff), cattle, and oil
production.
I drove through Hamlin, then on Northeast on paved, then gravel,
roads to the point where Coon Creek crossed the former Santa Fe Railroad
line. I had planned on hiking west along the creek to the confluence,
but it has been dry enough that I was able to walk in the creekbed
itself. I suppose that the local raccoons, if they really do wash their
food like I was told in Cub Scouts, are having to give it dust baths
this year.
The confluence itself is about a half-mile due west of the tracks,
almost in the creekbed. A road/trail indicated on the TopoZone map
appears to be completely overgrown- I couldn't find a trace of it.
Picture #2 is a view of the creekbed as close to 100W as I could
estimate- probably within 50 feet or so of the actual confluence.
Picture #3 looks north from the confluence toward a low mesa, upon which
the U.S. Geological Survey placed a benchmark back in 1925. I didn't go
looking for it. Picture #1 is northeastward from the confluence, and
gives a good feel for what the area is like. Finally, Photo #4 shows the
abandoned railroad bed and the nearest farm, off to the top right. Even
the telephone poles are abandoned- no wires, just miles of poles with
old glass insulators.