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-   -   Ghost Town trip #2 for the Boxster. (http://986forum.com/forums/boxster-general-discussions/58754-ghost-town-trip-2-boxster.html)

Retroman1969 09-14-2015 12:01 PM

Ghost Town trip #2 for the Boxster.
 
With temps in the 70s and a nice hazy partly cloudy day, how could one not put the top down and go exploring?!
Once more, the Daily Boxster served as an all terrain vehicle without complaint and made it a really fun trip. In hunting down more ghost towns we ended up driving for 11 hours and to some of the most remote forgotten regions of SW Oklahoma and around the Quartz Mountain area. Some surprising discoveries along the way.

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...ps6kajup4e.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...ps4mkcrr0f.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psjm3qvhem.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...pshem49mqb.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psvdnh6fpp.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...ps5dbvp17r.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psbwkllbot.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psbs1q704i.jpg

Continued...

EJ-Fresno 09-14-2015 12:05 PM

Really nice colors !
What camera are you using? Photoshop?

Retroman1969 09-14-2015 12:06 PM

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psaha3etcg.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psqzqsxyfq.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psdw3r1wtn.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psmrc89fjy.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psc8woesm5.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...pswsmjz0rh.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psvvkqj9xb.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psut58tp0f.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...pssnf6f8df.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...pszer3e3i2.jpg

Retroman1969 09-14-2015 12:08 PM

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psba2m4imx.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...pslueqmxwy.jpg

http://i286.photobucket.com/albums/l...psr1zvecrh.jpg

Chuck W. 09-14-2015 12:46 PM

A lot of history and stories there. Cool pictures.

jotoole 09-14-2015 01:48 PM

beautiful photos
 
ashes to ashes...

Jamesp 09-14-2015 03:48 PM

Thanks for sharing those pictures. Whenever I see old abandoned buildings I imagine the lives that built them. They were brand new once and the pride of those that built them.

jdlmodelt 09-14-2015 05:15 PM

It's sad to see parts of our Great Nation that have fallen by the wayside. Great photos. Great memories lost long ago by someone long forgotten.:cheers:

Retroman1969 09-14-2015 07:20 PM

Thanks guys! :)
That fascination with long forgotten bits of life is what keeps me going on these excursions. ;)
It gives me a more solid and grounded view of history through the eyes of the people that were there.
In an odd coincidence, my dad, who grew up about 40 miles south of the school in the final pictures remembered the place when I showed him the pics. He said it was a bustling community called Plainview. The school was a consolidated rural school that in the 1930s and 1940s was one of the most modern and the above gymnasium was the largest in the county. His high school (Mangum High) played basketball games against Plainview. He still vividly remembers their bright yellow uniforms. Dad described how in the 1950s, there was a sudden dropping off of the population in communities like Plainview as more and more kids left to attend college and never came back.
By 1957 the school was consolidated with Willow (and later Mangum) and shut down. It has been abandoned since, now with even the nearest farm house many miles away.

BIGJake111 09-14-2015 07:35 PM

I always love seeing your photos! The ghost town settings always make your photos seem like press shots.

itsnotanova 09-14-2015 07:40 PM

I want that U.S.TIRES sign. Would look good in the garage

78F350 09-14-2015 08:42 PM

So, on Sunday I went out for lunch and saw a really nice Austin Healey Sprite in the restaurant parking lot. I parked next to it and took a couple quick pics on the way in:

http://986forum.com/forums/uploads01...1442291623.jpg
http://986forum.com/forums/uploads01...1442291644.jpg

Other than the strangeness of seeing those two shots, I really love you post. Great pictures! Thanks for sharing. :D

Retroman1969 09-15-2015 03:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EJ-Fresno (Post 465973)
Really nice colors !
What camera are you using? Photoshop?

I currently use a Canon 7D with Sigma 10-20mm and Canon 80-200mm lenses. I process them through Photoshop CS6 with NIK Efex Pro 2 plug-in. ;)

Quote:

Originally Posted by BIGJake111 (Post 466026)
I always love seeing your photos! The ghost town settings always make your photos seem like press shots.

Thank you Jake! I really appreciate that. :)
I'm trying to step it up a bit because I want to put together a book about ghost towns in Oklahoma. There's one that's been out, but was published in 1977 so it's woefully outdated.

Quote:

Originally Posted by 78F350 (Post 466031)
So, on Sunday I went out for lunch and saw a really nice Austin Healey Sprite in the restaurant parking lot. I parked next to it and took a couple quick pics on the way in:

http://986forum.com/forums/uploads01...1442291623.jpg
http://986forum.com/forums/uploads01...1442291644.jpg

Other than the strangeness of seeing those two shots, I really love you post. Great pictures! Thanks for sharing. :D

That's so weird, same angles of the same platform car shot one day apart!
When passing, my friend said "stop here! Is that a Sprite?" Even as the MG version it warranted a look. Just cool cars!

There were actually 4 US Tires signs on that old garage, on all 4 sides of the roof. I'm going to guess dating back to the late 30s early-mid 40s.

Frodo 09-15-2015 04:45 AM

Nice work, fella.

I especially like the goat pic. They seem to be challenging your presence in their domain, in no hurry to get out of your way..

And the gravestone...so much to read in that face, the face of someone who died way too young, a handsome fella just getting started, with so many unfulfilled plans for life. It's hard not to be touched by that image.

BoxsterLS376 09-15-2015 06:36 AM

Very freaking cool! Thanks for sharing!

@ Frodo - agreed, couldn't have said it better~
J

jaykay 09-15-2015 06:52 AM

Awesome post!

BruceH 09-15-2015 06:52 AM

Thanks for the great pictures:cheers:

Retroman1969 09-15-2015 05:09 PM

Thank you so much for the great comments everyone!
Browsing the cemeteries, when available, gives a good barometer of the community and a rough timeline of events and history of the town. It can be a heartbreaking experience as well. It was a hard, hard life then. From what I've seen, you were lucky to make it to adulthood, and if you did, you were lucky to make it to 40. If you were over 50, you had one foot in the grave no matter who you were. Anyone over 70 was an oddity.


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