5 Things to Know About Camping With Dogs

I do not camp so the fact that I’m writing this is hilarious. My mom has said for decades that my idea of roughing it is staying at a five-year-old Holiday Inn. It’s true; I’m not a fan. I mean, I *like* nature but I don’t want it touching me. Imagine my surprise when the boyfriend announced we would be tent camping in Southern Arizona. In my 46 years on Planet Earth, I think this is the first time I have ever slept in a tent. On the ground. In the wild. With a dog.

#1 Shade The sun is ridiculously intense in Arizona all year long. Right now, I’m hot in the sun and cold in the shade. There is no in between. Our campsite near Cochise Stronghold had zero shade so we draped a tarp between our two vehicles to stay cool.

The cooler and water jugs kept moving around the vehicles throughout the day. Unless you have some kind of super tent or a camper with A/C, that’s not going to provide comfortable shade in the heat of the day. It will be like a literal oven and your dog will be miserable.

Depending on the sun and the ambient temperature, sometimes inside a vehicle with the windows down is the most comfortable spot. My test is always to climb in with my boy. If I’m uncomfortable, his hairy ass sure will be. Speaking of which, they will also get cold once you lose the sun. Sherman is a fuzzy bear and he knows not to get too close to the campfire but he was just sitting there shivering the other night.

I put him in the tent to curl up on our bedding and he was a happy boy. Not so much when I attempted to reclaim my sleeping bag. Also, now is not the time to debate whether your dog should sleep with you. The answer is YES.

Sherman prefers cabin camping to the tent. Less wind, more cushion.

#2 Leash Use it even when you think there’s no one around. Unless your dog is some kind of super genius who never disregards your commands, just use it…and not the retractable kind. You never know when another dog will come trotting around a corner on the trail.

And just because your dog is “friendly,” don’t assume they all are. If you’re camping with a dog, there will absolutely be others doing the same. Not trying to be a Karen here…it really is a safety issue, especially if your dog has a strong prey drive. They can easily get in over their heads. Raise your hand if you’ve ever chased a dog who took off after a rabbit, squirrel, or other creature. Now raise your hand if you’ve done it on a mountain in an unfamiliar location with shitty weather.

It’s fun to watch people working off-leash with dogs who have actual jobs and people’s lives literally depend on them not getting distracted. Chances are, those dogs don’t belong to you so use the damned leash.

#3 Water This one is painfully obvious but too important to skip. When we were in Mexico, we got in the habit of using five-gallon jugs and were pretty consistent in our usage so we know how long we can go between refills. There are tons of places to refill them with filtered water. Your favorite map app probably has water stations listed. Convenience stores can usually refill them or look for a standalone machine. Dogs are obviously built for unfiltered water but giardia and other bugs can still upset their digestive systems so take it easy on them.

Sherman actually got sick after drinking tap water at a hotel in Sierra Vista. I won’t get into how I know but just understand I know my dog and where he put his face. It was definitely the hotel water, 100%, final answer. Doggy diarrhea isn’t a fun travel component so if you’re able to find water in the wild, consider filtering it for your pupper as well. Remind your dog about water. They get distracted just like we do and often find their surroundings more interesting. Insist that they drink and watch for signs of dehydration.

#4 Wildlife I was looking for firewood near our campsite at Madera Canyon and found a dead calf at the edge of a wash. There are free range cattle up there so it wasn’t a huge surprise but I was glad I left my boy in the tent.

Sherman loves to pick up dead birds and once found a treasured dead rabbit. I never let him near that area because I knew what would happen. Pay attention to posted notices. In addition to the standard coyotes, you might have to deal with  bears, bobcats, and mountain lions. Javelinas *hate* dogs because they mistake them for coyotes, which are their natural competitors for…you know…survival and junk. They have terrible eyesight but can smell predators from an astonishing distance and will attack the hell out of your dog. Do not let your dog provoke a javelina or even attract its attention.

Once it warms up a bit, rattlesnakes will be a huge problem. Dogs love to stick their noses where they don’t belong and don’t assume you’ll hear a rattlesnake before it strikes.

Also bees! The bf and I were both stung about a week ago and I was concerned about Sherman but he hears their buzzing and heads in the opposite direction. We always have Benadryl just in case.

#5 Paws Watch out for thorns, stickers, and rocky terrain. If it looks like grass in Arizona, it’s probably stickers. Booties are an option if your dog is tolerant. Sherman is not. Last week I had to use tweezers to remove a tiny piece of thorn that broke off when I tried to grab it. Watch how they walk. Check the toe beans regularly and try to keep them on relatively smooth surfaces. Work up to seriously rocky terrain gradually.

Depending on the weather, you may invest in paw remedies like the sled teams use. When it’s warm, check the surface with the back of your hand. You won’t be able to keep your pupper from tracking debris into your tent or camper but I try to towel Sherman off before he enters to minimize it as much as possible. Dogs are gross…it’s a good thing we love them.

Bonus tip: Know when your dog has had enough. When left to their own devices, they nap throughout the day. If you have them out hiking and doing stuff and that’s not their normal routine, they will lose both energy and patience. If you notice your pupper is suddenly ignoring orders, a time-out nap may be required. You’ll both be happier when your hiking buddy is well-rested.

Caveat: I have no idea what I’m doing so follow my advice at your own risk.

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Dodge City Then and Now: Part VII

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Lora-Locke Hotel

100 Walnut (Gunsmoke) Street

Believe it or not (shut up), I’m old enough to remember when the Lora-Locke Hotel was a hotel. My most memorable experience at the Lora-Locke was when my mom (and one of her friends?) took me there for lunch and I was tricked into ordering a Reuben sandwich. Why tricked, you might ask. Because my mother knew I hated sauerkraut but she thought I was just doing one of those stubborn kid things because it sounded weird or whatever. I kept asking what was on it and she just kept saying she thought I would like it. I gave up and ordered the Reuben and knew the moment I bit into it that something was terribly wrong. I asked if it had sauerkraut on it and she burst out laughing. She had purposely ordered something she knew I would like just in case I really did hate it. And I did…so we traded.

That memory was made possible by Mike Burkhart, among others. Mike, especially, poured a lot of love and a helluva lot of money into the Lora-Locke, literally saving her from disaster.

A lot of this you may already know. The Lora-Locke Hotel opened for business in 1928. It was named after Lora Howell and Hattie (Locke) Theis, wives of George Howell and Otto Theis.

Walnut (Gunsmoke) Street entrance

Howell and Theis formed Citizens Hotel Company in May of 1927. The site they selected is at the corner of Central Avenue and Walnut Street, which was the northwest boundary of the Fort Dodge Military Reservation.

The Wichita Eagle, February 3, 1955

The 1926 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map shows only dwellings on the entire block.

Howell and Theis intended to build a five-story hotel for about $300,000 and hired Wichita architect Ellis Charles to draw up the plans. It was to be built by Eastergard & Bullard.

The Wichita Eagle, August 18, 1927

Cost estimates clearly varied, perhaps along with degrees of accuracy.

The Daily National Hotel Reporter (Chicago, Illinois), August 25, 1927
The Wichita Eagle, September 4, 1927

The Lora-Locke was scheduled to open on or around March 1, 1928 and was to be managed by Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Brown. Ten shops on the ground floor were already rented by February 16, 1928. According to The Daily National Hotel Reporter, the actual construction costs amounted to $350,000.

Retail spaces along Central Avenue
The Hutchinson News, March 19, 1928

Some people mocked the name, saying it sounded like a “beauty parlor or millinery shop.” The Dodge City Chamber of Commerce moved into its rooms at the hotel in March of 1928.

The Hutchinson News, March 31, 1928 with a classic typo

I wonder if tear sheets were a thing in the newspaper advertising biz in 1928.

The Hutchinson News, March 31, 1928

From the very beginning, the Lora-Locke hosted guests attending all sorts of large events.

The Wichita Eagle, April 7, 1928

The Lora-Locke’s manager was fired not long after the hotel opened, causing several employees to walk off the job.

The Hutchinson News, April 17, 1928

Hal Minton was hired to replace Mr. Brown in June of 1928. I have no idea where he came from but he must have been thrilled to see his new hotel make the national news.

Rupert Hughes – The San Francisco Examiner, December 2, 1928

The Dodge City Journal, June 27, 1929
The Dodge City Journal, July 18, 1929

While most of us remember nothing but a tight housing market in Dodge, contrast this article with a later quote from Mike Burkhart in which he indicated there were too many hotel rooms in town.

The Wichita Eagle, October 12, 1929

I admit I am somewhat curious about what kind of hustle these ladies were running.

The Hutchinson News, October 17, 1929

The block along Walnut Street where the Lora-Locke sits next door to another Howell building (and another building Mike Burkhart tried to save) was nicknamed “The Million Dollar Block.”

Corner of Walnut (Gunsmoke) Street and First Avenue
The Dodge City Journal, January 9, 1930

Honestly, I’m not sure this recipe is worth trying but it ran in newspapers throughout the country.

The State Journal (Lansing, Michigan), December 4, 1931

Hal Minton resigned as Manager in November of 1932 to head West and was replaced by Mike Biggs.

Otto Theis died after falling off a horse at his ranch near Englewood in May of 1934.

The Catholic Advance, February 9, 1935

The movie Dodge City premiered at the Dodge Theater in Dodge City in April of 1939. Less than six months later, the Lora-Locke was sold.

The Hutchinson News, September 6, 1939

This is where I get a bit confused. I’ve read numerous articles and historical accounts which state the Lora-Locke was owned by the Theis family (after buying out George Howell’s widow in the 1940s) continuously until it closed the first time in 1978. At some point, there was a Howell-Theis Hotel Company in play and maybe that’s the entity which bought it back from American Hotels Co.? Maybe it was a DBA? Down below, you will see articles showing the Theis family (Theis Co.) again as owners of the hotel as of the early 1960s. The sequence of events is unclear to me so I would appreciate comments from anyone who knows the complete story.

During the Dust Bowl, each room had adhesive tape and when the wind started blowing hard, the desk clerk would call all the rooms and tell the guests, “Duster coming.” The guests would then plaster the windows and doors with the tape to keep out the dust. And then a wayward towel found its way home.

The Kansas City Times, June 4, 1949
Weekly Star Farmer (Kansas City), November 25, 1953
Polk’s Dodge City Directory 1953
Polk’s Dodge City Directory 1957
The Advance Register, April 1, 1960

So here’s where I found mention of the Theis family owning the hotel again.

The Wichita Sunday Eagle and The Wichita Beacon, July 9, 1961
Great Bend Daily Tribune, December 10, 1963
The Wichita Eagle, March 14, 1964
Garden City Telegram, August 8, 1972
Garden City Telegram, January 16, 1975

This article incorrectly stated the theater was in the lower level of the hotel.

The Wichita Eagle, October 19, 1977

And then…a shock.

The Parsons Sun, February 11, 1978

Wichita Beacon, March 21, 1978

Bob Stith, Myron Wheaton, and George Voss bought the building in July of 1983 and began working to reopen the Lora-Locke Hotel. Dodge City authorized the sale of $1.2 million in industrial revenue bonds to finance the purchase of the building and equipment and for renovations. Work was expected to be completed in December of 1983 but after a brief delay, she reopened on February 26, 1984 with a restaurant, club, 19 suites, and 35 guest rooms. Work was to continue on additional guest and resident spaces as funds allowed.

The Wichita Eagle-Beacon, September 20, 1984

But then a reprieve.

The Wichita Eagle-Beacon, October 17, 1984

Renovations were about 70% complete when Burkhart stepped in and paid off creditors. Some apartments were occupied and the hotel had some overnight guests but utilities hadn’t even been paid and the gas had been shut off. Burkhart also got the Lora-Locke added to the National Register of Historic Places. He also bought the old Montgomery Ward building next door and said the Million Dollar Block was closer to the Four Million Dollar Block back in 1986.

And then Miss Kitty came to town and stayed in the same room Errol Flynn had used during the premiere of Dodge City.

The Wichita Eagle-Beacon, February 28, 1985
The Wichita Eagle-Beacon, August 27, 1985

I had to read this one a few times to understand what in the wide world of sports they were thinking.

Parsons Sun, December 31, 1985

Unfortunately, nostalgia is extremely expensive and love doesn’t pay the bills.

Parsons Sun, August 5, 1987

The Wichita Eagle-Beacon, February 27, 1988
The Manhattan Mercury, April 21, 1988
The Wichita Eagle-Beacon, September 22, 1987
Los Angeles Times, November 6, 1988

The Wichita Eagle-Beacon, November 16, 1988

The Wichita Eagle-Beacon, November 20, 1988

I vaguely recall the debates and delays taking place when I was in junior high and high school. My attention was on other things but the arguments were hard to miss.

The Wichita Eagle, January 28, 1991

I’m sure you’ve been waiting for my take on all of this. Eyebrows may have been raised in 1991 but the building was saved. I was in grade school when the Lora-Locke reopened so I don’t know how viable Stith, Wheaton, Voss, and ultimately, Burkhart really found the project. I’ve heard rumors that Burkhart, at least, just pumped enough money into the building so she would make an attractive option for Ford County. Maybe. Maybe he was a true believer and thought she could continue as a hotel. I don’t know and I don’t care. The Lora-Locke was saved. The county obviously had to make layout changes for functionality and systems changes in accordance with building codes but they managed to leave the Lora-Locke’s beauty intact. Some floors have been modified to the point where it’s difficult to tell you’re in a beautiful old building. All you have to do is wander around the place a bit, though, and you’ll see why she was worth saving.

A while back, I found this blog post from a guy who stayed at the Lora-Locke with his parents in the 1980s.

I remember hearing someone who worked at the hotel complaining about pheasant season. Hunters had filled all of the rooms in Dodge and several stayed at the Lora-Locke. They had apparently been born in barns and determined the hotel bathrooms were appropriate venues for cleaning birds. Imagine!

Anyway, the Lora-Locke is a real gem and the local community should be grateful to the people who took a chance on her. The next time you’re renewing your tags or researching a deed, take a look around. Sit on the mezzanine and just enjoy.

This is the last one in the series…at least for now. I’ll probably write about the Chalk Beeson Theater at some point but I really need to focus on my Otero Beeson research. Until then, you can check out Parts I through VI below:

Part I – First National Bank Building

Part II – First Baptist Church, Walnut Street, Masonic Temple, First Avenue, and O’Neal Hotel

Part III – Merritt Beeson House

Part IV – Carnegie Library Building, Dodge City Milling and Elevator Company, First Presbyterian Church, and Post Office

Part V – Dodge City High School (1000 North Second Avenue)

Part VI – Dodge City Senior High School (1601 First Avenue)

If you like what you see, be sure to subscribe (way at the bottom of the post on mobile devices) to receive an email each time a new post is published and share on social media. You can also buy me a cup of coffee using the donation form. Thanks for reading!

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Dodge City Then and Now: Part VI

First of all, thank you to everyone who has read and shared these posts. I am especially grateful to all of you who have donated to the cause! I’m writing this one from a seedy hotel in Tucson because what better time to return to the desert than during the Gem and Mineral Show.

This was a fun building to research. Just looking for the year of completion was quite a ride. 1923? 1924? 1926? Nope…none of those! Even some official sources (which I will not publicly shame) missed the mark. Because it lacks any sort of style, I’m pretending the addition along Second Avenue doesn’t exist. Unfortunately, the most recent Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps available online for Dodge are from 1926 so they were no help.

Dodge City Senior High School

1601 First Avenue

The people who say you don’t know what you have until its gone didn’t attend high school on First Avenue in Dodge City. I’m pretty sure we all knew, even when we were self-absorbed teenagers. The 1966 addition on the back is meh, whatever…but the original building is an absolute treasure and I’m so happy Dodge has made the effort to keep it in use. The latest additions on the north end are about as well-matched as one could possibly expect.

I’ve mentioned before that Dodge City schools have always been overcrowded. In addition, technology advanced very quickly in the early 20th century. Our high schoolers were doing the sportsball contests before they had their own dedicated facilities. The high school building on Second Avenue was magnificent but its facilities were outdated in no time. Imagine holding a district basketball tourney at an elementary school because it was a better venue!

The Dodger, March 2, 1926

The Southwest News, September 9, 1926

Not to worry, though…the school board was on the case. I can imagine the faces of Dodge City residents when they learned they were expected to cough up $250,000 (nearly $4 million in 2022) for the new facilities. The district was already at their legal bonded debt limit of $269,000 and they wanted to basically double it.

The Dodger, January 11, 1927

We all complain about opinion pieces masquerading as journalism but it isn’t a new problem. Check out this beauty on the front page, above the fold, presented as news:

The Southwest News, January 20, 1927

The high school paper did a much better job of relaying the facts. Also, it looks like the school board learned from prior missteps and quickly resolved the location issue.

The Dodger, March 22, 1927

It’s no surprise there was fierce opposition to the plan. There always is.

The Dodger, April 5, 1927

Imagine how bad the conditions must have been for the bond issue to pass by more than two to one!

The Dodger, April 19, 1927

While the Class of 1928 missed out on the new building, they were excited for their younger peers and included this artist’s rendering in their yearbook. It would have been neat if the school had been built as depicted here with those spaces along Second Avenue…expensive, but neat.

The 1928 SOU’WESTER “The Weather Edition”, Volume 12

This time, the school board even correctly guestimated in which year the new high school would be completed!

The Hutchinson News, October 9, 1928

So this is super cool…a member of the first DCHS graduating class attended the dedication of the new school.

The Hutchinson News, December 12, 1928

These self-absorbed teenagers were also pretty grateful for the new facility provided to them.

The SOU’WESTER 1929

The SOU’WESTER 1929

As previously mentioned, Dodge tried to build a new high school forever when I was growing up but couldn’t get the bond issue to pass. I couldn’t understand why it was such a big deal to simply add an additional high school but you see, Football won State once in the 1970s so you know we *had* to stay 6A to reclaim our glory, or whatever. I mean, I get it. What would the mascot for the Dodge City Northwest High School be anyway? They’d probably call them the Cowboys or something equally ridiculous. So I will acknowledge the logic in their argument. Dodge City is and will always be “Home of the Red Demons,” regardless of what my junior high art teacher’s husband had to say about it.

The Wichita Eagle-Beacon, July 7, 1988

Anyway, 83 years was probably too long at that location, especially since Associated Press can’t do the maths and The Wichita Eagle can’t do a basic fact check. 2001 minus 1928 is 73. You saw it here first!

The Wichita Eagle, June 1, 2001

If you haven’t been by the school in a while, here are a few photos I took recently to refresh your memory. I still love all the details…especially the D Men outside the gym.

Next time, I’ll dig into the Lora Locke Hotel. Until then, you can check out Parts I through V below:

Part I – First National Bank Building

Part II – First Baptist Church, Walnut Street, Masonic Temple, First Avenue, and O’Neal Hotel

Part III – Merritt Beeson House

Part IV – Carnegie Library Building, Dodge City Milling and Elevator Company, First Presbyterian Church, and Post Office

Part V – Dodge City High School (1000 North Second Avenue)

If you like what you see, be sure to subscribe (way at the bottom of the post on mobile devices) to receive an email each time a new post is published and share on social media. You can also buy me a cup of coffee using the donation form. Thanks for reading!

Donation

Your support keeps the caffeine flowing! Make a one-time donation. Your contribution is appreciated!

$5.00

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