Three Days in Small Town Texas: Granbury for Couples, Families, or Friends

April 25, 2013 11:08 by Bevin

In our last post, we introduced you to Granbury, Texas.
In this post, we explore three itineraries for what to do in Granbury directly from innkeepers.


Fun for the Whole Family

Day 1: Check in and explore your B&B. Stop by Babe’s Chicken Dinner House and grab some of their famous fried chicken to-go. Chow down while you enjoy a family-friendly double feature at the The Brazos Drive-In. Gates open at 7:15pm and all shows are cash only.

Day 2: Eat a hearty breakfast at the inn to fuel you for a day of adventure. Drive out to Fossil Rim where you’ll go on a mini-safari in the heart of Texas. Once you’re done feeding giraffes and cooing over the baby rhinos, get some lunch at Loco Coyote in Glen Rose for Texas-sized barbecue plates and sandwiches in a converted barn. After a round of brontosaurus burgers, head to Dinosaur Valley State Park for a more prehistoric animal outing. On your way back to the inn, grab a quick dinner at Agave Tamale Co. before turning in early.

Day 3: After breakfast, head to Lake Granbury Marina for your last day of fun. Spend the morning on the water in a rented boat or kayak. Finally, stop in at Stumpy’s Lakeside Grill for a late lunch of fish tacos for the grown-ups and fish sticks for the kids. After this much excitement, expect the kids to sleep the whole way home!

Family-Friendly Cabin B&Bs

Dinosaur Trail Cabins

Dinosaur Trail Cabins

  • Dinosaur Trail Cabins: Family-friendly cabins, full breakfast, and ¼ mile dinosaur trail 
  • Heritage Cabins: Eco-friendly log cabins on several acres, breakfast basket delivered to cabins
  • Windmill Farms: Cabin suites, full breakfast delivered daily, sprawling grounds with windmill collection


Romantic Rendezvous

Day 1: Make a detour on your way into town at Red Caboose Winery if you’re coming from the south or Barking Rocks Winery if you’re coming from the north. After dropping your things off at the B&B, stop into Christina’s for a light lunch at one of their outdoor bistro tables. Afterwards, head over to D’Vine Wine to get a custom bottle to take back to the B&B for a relaxing and romantic evening in.

Day 2: Enjoy breakfast in bed (you may need to arrange this ahead of time with the inn). Spend some time walking leisurely around the square with a cup of joe from Paradise Bistro and Coffee Co. before heading to Nutshell Eatery and Bakery to get sandwiches and snacks for a picnic lunch and people watching at Shanley Park (or rent a bike in the square to ride over the Moments in Time Hike & Bike Trail). End the evening with a five-star dinner and a show at the Eighteen Ninety Grille and Lounge and the Granbury Opera House.

Day 3: After a leisurely breakfast at the inn, head to Revolver Brewery or Bluff Dale Vineyards for a last taste of Granbury before heading home. Revolver Brewery tours are Saturdays only.

Revolver Brewery

Revolver Brewery

B&Bs Made for Romance

  • Baker Street Harbour: Victorian style house, full family-style breakfast, waterfront
  • Granbury Gardens: Craftsman style house, full breakfast, garden hot tub
  • Lambert House: Cottage style inn, pastries and coffee, historic district
  • Manor of Time: Victorian style house, full gourmet breakfast, relaxing sun room


Girls’ (or Guys’) Getaway

Day 1: Stop by The Bootlegger Liquor Store for weekend supplies and fun country kitsch before checking into the B&B. Before settling in for a night of board games, s’mores, and general shenanigans, head out to Grumps for their Ladies’ Night and enjoy cheap margaritas and big greasy burgers.

Day 2: After a hearty breakfast at the inn, strap on your shoes for some serious shopping. Check out unique furnishings and clothing boutiques like Dakota’s Kabin, The Pan Handle, and Wagon Yard Home Furnishings. When you start to wind down from all of the shopping, stop in at The Art of Chocolate & Wine Shoppe for a mid-afternoon refreshment (and pick up a few snacks for later). After a few more trips around the square, stop into Pearl Street Station for a barbecue dinner before walking off the calories during the Granbury Ghosts and Legends Tour.

Day 3: By day three, you will be sufficiently pooped from days of fun and friendship in Granbury. Ask the innkeepers to wrap a light breakfast to go, fill a thermos with orange juice or mimosas, and head down to Granbury City Beach Park for white sand and relaxation. After you’ve soaked in your daily dose of vitamin D, make a little more room in your stomach for one more down home country meal at Linda’s Southern Kitchen. Here you can enjoy Southern favorites like chicken fried steak and black eyed peas. Order the “Lighter Fare” portion size to save space for a shareable slice of their famous Tollhouse pie: a decadent confection full of chocolate chips and walnuts, topped with ice cream and hot fudge.

Ideal Friend Hangout B&Bs

The Iron Horse Inn

The Iron Horse Inn - Opening Spring 2013

  • Arbor House: Victorian style house and separate “Angel House”, full breakfast, beachfront
  • Arkens Bed and Breakfast: King rooms, hearty two-course breakfast, lakefront mini-resort
  • The Iron Horse Inn: Arts-and-crafts style rooms and cottages, newly renovated, historic district
  • Pomegranate Cottages: Cottage-style, full breakfast, cookies, evening dessert, guest lodge

Granbury, TX Resources:

Where to eat

Where to drink                

What to do

Where to shop


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15 commandments of vacation travel

July 30, 2009 09:46 by Sandy

Fifteen Commandments of Vacation Travel

We all know people who come back from a vacation feeling on top of the world, and others who seem vaguely disappointed. Here's how to put yourself in the first category, not the second.

Know yourself. A successful vacation is one that works for the person you are, not the person you think you should be. Confirmed couch potatoes who resent having to walk from the far end of the parking lot will not find true fulfillment on a trek through the Himalayas. If privacy is a top priority, a group tour or communal lodge will turn fantasy into frustration. Acknowledge your own comfort levels. Are independence and flexibility top concerns? Or being structured and secure? How essential are the creature comforts when it comes to sleeping, eating, and bathing? Would you rather have one week of luxury travel or two weeks of budget food and accommodation? And remember that while your personality doesn't change, your needs do. The type of vacation you plan for a romantic getaway is totally different from a family reunion.

Know your travel companions. Adjust your plans to accommodate your travel partners. Whether you are traveling with friends, spouse, children, and/or parents, you'll need to take their age, attention span, agility, and interests into account. If you're traveling with the kids, balance a morning at an art museum with an afternoon at the zoo; if you're spending time with elderly parents, make sure that they can stroll a country lane while you go rock-climbing; if your group includes skiers and non-skiers, pick a resort that has appealing shops and off-slopeactivities.
Plan ahead: anticipation is half the fun. Enjoy the planning process. The more you know about an area you're going to visit, the more fun you'll have. Check out destination websites; skim a guidebook; read a novel or watch a movie set in the region; talk to friends who have been there recently.

Don't bite off more than you can chew. Keep your itinerary in line with the amount of time and money available. Focus on seeing a smaller area well, rather than trying to cover too much ground and seeing nothing but interstate highways. Don't over-program; allow yourself the luxury of doing nothing.
Avoid one-night stands. Plan to stay a minimum of two nights everywhere you go. A vacation made up of one-nighters is a prescription for exhaustion. You will sleep poorly, spend most of your time packing/unpacking and in transit, and will get only the smallest glimpse of the place you're visiting.

Travel off-season. Unless your vacation dates are dictated by the school calendar, off-season travel offers many advantages: fewer crowds, greater flexibility, reduced costs, and a more relaxed atmosphere. Learn to pick the best dates for off-season travel; typically these are the weeks just before and after seasonal rates change.
Book well ahead for peak season travel. If you must travel during peak periods to popular destinations, make reservations well in advance for the key sites to avoid aggravation, extra phone calls, and additional driving time.

Take the road less traveled. Get off the beaten path and leave the crowds behind. Instead of booking a room in the heart of the action, find a quiet getaway tucked in the hills or in a neighboring village.

Ditch the car. You’ll need a car to get most destinations, but once you're there, get out and walk. You'll see more, learn more, experience more at every level, while avoiding crowds at even the most popular destinations.

Hang loose. The unexpected is inevitable. When your plans go astray (and they will), relax and let serendipity surprise you. And keep your sense of humor in good working order. If possible, travel without reservations or a set itinerary.

Carpe diem--seize the day. Don't be afraid to follow your impulses. If a special souvenir catches your eye, buy it; don't wait to see if you'll find it again later. If a hiking trail looks too inviting to pass up, don't; that museum or outlet mall will wait for a rainy day.

Don't suffer in silence. When things go wrong--an incompetent guide, car troubles, a noisy room--speak up. Politely but firmly express your concern then and there; get your room changed, ask for a refund or discount, whatever. Most people in the travel business would rather have you go away happy than to leave grumbling.

Remember--being there is more than seeing there. People travel to see the sights--museums and mountains, shops and scenery--but it is making new friends that can make a trip memorable. Leave a door open to the people-to-people experiences that enrich travel immeasurably.

Don't leave home to find home. The quickest way to take the wind out of the sails of your trip is to compare things to the way they are at home. Enjoy different styles and cultures for what they are and avoid comparisons and snap judgments.

Give yourself permission to disregard all of the above. Nothing is immutable. If you find a pattern that works for you, enjoy it! 


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