Summer in the Texas Panhandle
This summer getaway in the Texas Panhandle features scenic landscapes, Western heritage and Route 66. Start in Amarillo with a Palo Duro Canyon Tour and the TEXAS Outdoor Musical, Backstage Tour, and Chuckwagon Dinner. Then head to Lubbock for world-renowned wine and Buddy Holly.
HGTV Southern Road Trip
Our Southern Road Trip visits the HGTV communities they made famous with shows that help you transform your home with pictures and inspiration for interior design, home décor, landscaping, remodeling and entertaining. You will see the places shown on tv and have a chance to shop for home décor that you have also seen.
San Antonio & The Texas Riviera
A warm weather getaway in Jan & Feb is an easy sell. Escape the snow and cold in San Antonio and South Padre Island, teach your group how to make Enchiladas and Margaritas, learn about Sea Turtles, migratory birds and dolphins. This is a great addition to any tour program.
The Wild Wild West
In Texas and Oklahoma during the second half of the 20th Century it was a time of cattle & conflict. Cowboys clashed with the Native Tribes as ranching changed the landscape and the buffalo disappeared. Come learn of the characters who defined this era.
Grapevine: Wine & Waco
Your group will love this Texas Swing. It begins with a great new hotel (there’s a bottle of wine in every room) two winery tours, an education class, dinner theater, an evening of music at Billy Bobs, a train ride, cattle drive . . . and a visit to Chip & Joanna Gaines Magnolia Market.
Magnolia Market & Dallas
The Best of Texas TV Shows. This tour begins with The South Fork Ranch, home the famed Ewing Family from the TV Show “Dallas.” Then it visits Waco, The Magnolia market and the Silos with a once-around-town tour looking at sites where Chip and Joanna filmed episodes of “The Fixer Upper.”
San Antonio
One of America’s oldest cities, San Antonio offers a glimpse of early Spanish colonial life in the Southwest. San Antonio was colonized by the Spanish empire in the early 1700s. And today, many of its architectural and cultural elements remain. Rich layers of this and other cultures give the city its distinction – nowhere does the term “”Tex-Mex”” take on more meaning.