Rodney And Angela's Guidebook

Rodney And Angela
Rodney And Angela
Rodney And Angela's Guidebook

Food scene

This place is pretty good!! We like Chester's because it's better than Whataburger and extremely close to the house. Chester's is casual so if you're looking for a more hip burger shop you could try Sam's by the Pearl or BurgerFi. As for taste, I give Chester's five stars!
26 recommandé par les habitants
Chester's Hamburgers
9980 I-10
26 recommandé par les habitants
This place is pretty good!! We like Chester's because it's better than Whataburger and extremely close to the house. Chester's is casual so if you're looking for a more hip burger shop you could try Sam's by the Pearl or BurgerFi. As for taste, I give Chester's five stars!
Nothing quite like it that I know of in the area. Portions are on point!
Holy Crab
2921 Pat Booker Road
Nothing quite like it that I know of in the area. Portions are on point!
This affordable restaurant has many locations. Great diner that serves breakfast all day along with lunch and dinner options. Our History, Our Promise. G-Jim-Hasslocher.png In 1947, a young entrepreneur named G. “Jim” Hasslocher opened a small bicycle rental business at the front gate of Brackenridge Park in San Antonio. When summer arrived he started selling sliced, ice-cold watermelon next to his bike stand. It was here that he met his wife and lifetime business partner, Veva Ball. Soon Jim started selling charcoal-broiled hamburgers at a stand, which evolved into the first Frontier Drive-In. The popular drive-in was a favorite meeting place and became famous for its burgers, onion rings, milkshakes and carhops.
35 recommandé par les habitants
Jim's Restaurant
302 TX-1604 Loop
35 recommandé par les habitants
This affordable restaurant has many locations. Great diner that serves breakfast all day along with lunch and dinner options. Our History, Our Promise. G-Jim-Hasslocher.png In 1947, a young entrepreneur named G. “Jim” Hasslocher opened a small bicycle rental business at the front gate of Brackenridge Park in San Antonio. When summer arrived he started selling sliced, ice-cold watermelon next to his bike stand. It was here that he met his wife and lifetime business partner, Veva Ball. Soon Jim started selling charcoal-broiled hamburgers at a stand, which evolved into the first Frontier Drive-In. The popular drive-in was a favorite meeting place and became famous for its burgers, onion rings, milkshakes and carhops.

Sightseeing

879 recommandé par les habitants
The Alamo
300 Alamo Plaza
879 recommandé par les habitants
804 recommandé par les habitants
San Antonio River Walk
610 River Walk
804 recommandé par les habitants
Guests report loving to rent bicycles to check out the mission trail
234 recommandé par les habitants
San Antonio Missions National Historical Park
6701 San Jose Dr
234 recommandé par les habitants
Guests report loving to rent bicycles to check out the mission trail
Natural Bridge Caverns is a nice place to do indoor ziplines to cool off in the summer heat.
22 recommandé par les habitants
Natural Bridge Caverns Road
Natural Bridge Caverns Road
22 recommandé par les habitants
Natural Bridge Caverns is a nice place to do indoor ziplines to cool off in the summer heat.
168 recommandé par les habitants
Natural Bridge Wildlife Ranch
26515 Natural Bridge Caverns Rd
168 recommandé par les habitants
13 recommandé par les habitants
Schlitterbahn
381 East Austin Street
13 recommandé par les habitants
The beach is a 1.75 hour drive.
63 recommandé par les habitants
Corpus Christi
63 recommandé par les habitants
The beach is a 1.75 hour drive.
63 recommandé par les habitants
Zoo Animal World and Snake Farm
5640 Interstate 35
63 recommandé par les habitants
Go to the top for a lovely view of San Antonio or eat in the sky high restaurant
9 recommandé par les habitants
Tower of the Americas Way
Tower of the Americas Way
9 recommandé par les habitants
Go to the top for a lovely view of San Antonio or eat in the sky high restaurant
A free venue to pass an hour or two.
338 recommandé par les habitants
Japanese Tea Gardens
3853 N St Mary's St
338 recommandé par les habitants
A free venue to pass an hour or two.
18 recommandé par les habitants
District historique de King William
122 King William St
18 recommandé par les habitants

Recreation

222 recommandé par les habitants
Canyon Lake
222 recommandé par les habitants
Locals prefer going here over Corpus
186 recommandé par les habitants
South Padre Island
186 recommandé par les habitants
Locals prefer going here over Corpus
Golf and a spa!
12 recommandé par les habitants
TPC San Antonio
23808 Resort Pkwy
12 recommandé par les habitants
Golf and a spa!
917 recommandé par les habitants
Six Flags Fiesta Texas
17000 W I-10
917 recommandé par les habitants
30 recommandé par les habitants
Texas Ski Ranch
6700 I-35
30 recommandé par les habitants
K1 Speed - Karts Indoor, lieu d'événement d'entreprise, activités de renforcement d'équipe
6955 Northwest Loop 410
13 recommandé par les habitants
57 recommandé par les habitants
Andretti Indoor Karting & Games
5527 N Loop 1604 W
57 recommandé par les habitants
This course is about a mile from the house. You may lose your ball in the ball wash on the front 9. The back 9 is a bit more forgiving though!
Olympia Hills
12900 Mt Olympus
This course is about a mile from the house. You may lose your ball in the ball wash on the front 9. The back 9 is a bit more forgiving though!
568 recommandé par les habitants
Zoo de San Antonio
3903 N St Mary's St
568 recommandé par les habitants

Shopping

Great place to shop!
450 recommandé par les habitants
The Shops at La Cantera
15900 La Cantera Pkwy
450 recommandé par les habitants
Great place to shop!
358 recommandé par les habitants
San Marcos Premium Outlets
3939 I-35
358 recommandé par les habitants
This small German town is a great place to walk around the shops at historical Downtown Gruene.
173 recommandé par les habitants
Gruene
173 recommandé par les habitants
This small German town is a great place to walk around the shops at historical Downtown Gruene.

Entertainment

We loved this small blues bar on Congress.
815 recommandé par les habitants
The Continental Gallery
1313 S Congress Ave
815 recommandé par les habitants
We loved this small blues bar on Congress.
Live music and book parties
54 recommandé par les habitants
Howl at the Moon San Antonio
54 recommandé par les habitants
Live music and book parties
History The Many Lives of the Phoenix Since 1871, our building has been home to various bars and saloons, most famously the original Phoenix Saloon. It was here in 1894 that William Gebhardt, proprietor of the back room cafe, invented chili powder! Prior to this, chilis had only ever been used fresh, but Gebhardt devised a process for crushing and drying them. Gebhardt brand chili products are still widely available today. The original Phoenix Saloon was reputedly the first bar in Texas to offer service to women. No lady who valued her reputation would dare be seen in a saloon, so the proprietor set up a ladies beer garden with bells in the trees for service. There was a deer pen too, and an alligator pit and badger fights. There was even a parrot on a perch just inside the front door that was taught to say, “Have you paid your bill!?” in German! Prohibition put an end to the good times at the Phoenix, which closed its doors on June 26, 1918. The Ludwig Building, as it was then known, was expanded and turned into a department store in 1922. In 1935, by now renamed the Schmidt Building, it was remodeled again. The building was home to a number of retail and service businesses until the Phoenix rose from the ashes, so to speak, on March 5, 2010. Like its mythical namesake, the Phoenix Saloon has been reborn! The new owners relish the building’s flavorful past. In bringing the new incarnation to life, they’ve exposed the original 1871 brick wall, salvaged the old Phoenix Saloon beadboard paneling and re-used various old shutters, sinks and lights. Trying to celebrate all aspects of the building, they also constructed the 40-foot-long bar from the old department store cabinetry, flipped a mirror from the old shoe department upside down behind the bar and relocated a three-way dressing room mirror in the ladies restroom. A Different Sort of Night Life For years, people have reported paranormal happenings in and around the Phoenix. Doors and windows open and close on their own, footsteps are heard on the upper stories late at night, and some have even reported seeing a shadow man who drifts down the 2nd floor hallway, accompanied by a chill breeze. Some speculate that it’s the restless spirit or Mr. John Sippel, the man who constructed our building in 1871. By all accounts, Mr. Sippel led a tortured life of depression and alcohol abuse after his wife left him and took up with another man. Eventually, the grieving business owner took his own life with a single gunshot in 1900. Could a man who was so haunted in life still roam the building he made? Others speculate that it could be one-time saloon proprietor Walter Krause, who died in 1885 from injuries he sustained in a barroom fight. There is also talk of some hushed-up accident in the basement; and for many years, there was a Masonic Lodge on the third floor, where many of the odd noises are heard to this day. Whether it’s one ghost or several – or just the “personality” of a 140+ year-old building – the nocturnal mysteries add just a bit more flavor to the Phoenix legend.
41 recommandé par les habitants
The Phoenix Saloon
193 W San Antonio St
41 recommandé par les habitants
History The Many Lives of the Phoenix Since 1871, our building has been home to various bars and saloons, most famously the original Phoenix Saloon. It was here in 1894 that William Gebhardt, proprietor of the back room cafe, invented chili powder! Prior to this, chilis had only ever been used fresh, but Gebhardt devised a process for crushing and drying them. Gebhardt brand chili products are still widely available today. The original Phoenix Saloon was reputedly the first bar in Texas to offer service to women. No lady who valued her reputation would dare be seen in a saloon, so the proprietor set up a ladies beer garden with bells in the trees for service. There was a deer pen too, and an alligator pit and badger fights. There was even a parrot on a perch just inside the front door that was taught to say, “Have you paid your bill!?” in German! Prohibition put an end to the good times at the Phoenix, which closed its doors on June 26, 1918. The Ludwig Building, as it was then known, was expanded and turned into a department store in 1922. In 1935, by now renamed the Schmidt Building, it was remodeled again. The building was home to a number of retail and service businesses until the Phoenix rose from the ashes, so to speak, on March 5, 2010. Like its mythical namesake, the Phoenix Saloon has been reborn! The new owners relish the building’s flavorful past. In bringing the new incarnation to life, they’ve exposed the original 1871 brick wall, salvaged the old Phoenix Saloon beadboard paneling and re-used various old shutters, sinks and lights. Trying to celebrate all aspects of the building, they also constructed the 40-foot-long bar from the old department store cabinetry, flipped a mirror from the old shoe department upside down behind the bar and relocated a three-way dressing room mirror in the ladies restroom. A Different Sort of Night Life For years, people have reported paranormal happenings in and around the Phoenix. Doors and windows open and close on their own, footsteps are heard on the upper stories late at night, and some have even reported seeing a shadow man who drifts down the 2nd floor hallway, accompanied by a chill breeze. Some speculate that it’s the restless spirit or Mr. John Sippel, the man who constructed our building in 1871. By all accounts, Mr. Sippel led a tortured life of depression and alcohol abuse after his wife left him and took up with another man. Eventually, the grieving business owner took his own life with a single gunshot in 1900. Could a man who was so haunted in life still roam the building he made? Others speculate that it could be one-time saloon proprietor Walter Krause, who died in 1885 from injuries he sustained in a barroom fight. There is also talk of some hushed-up accident in the basement; and for many years, there was a Masonic Lodge on the third floor, where many of the odd noises are heard to this day. Whether it’s one ghost or several – or just the “personality” of a 140+ year-old building – the nocturnal mysteries add just a bit more flavor to the Phoenix legend.
Super fun With many events, contests, parades, concerts and more spanning over two weeks.
14 recommandé par les habitants
San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo
723 AT&T Center Parkway
14 recommandé par les habitants
Super fun With many events, contests, parades, concerts and more spanning over two weeks.
El Mercadito Art's & Crafts
112 Produce Row
One of the largest remaining dance halls still operating. Check their website for events and schedules.
31 recommandé par les habitants
Cowboys Dancehall San Antonio
3030 NE Interstate 410 Loop
31 recommandé par les habitants
One of the largest remaining dance halls still operating. Check their website for events and schedules.
German food with some live music
64 recommandé par les habitants
Krause's Cafe
148 S Castell Ave
64 recommandé par les habitants
German food with some live music

Day Trip

463 recommandé par les habitants
Fredericksburg
463 recommandé par les habitants

Conseils aux voyageurs

Coutumes et culture

Folks are friendly!

Most people in the neighborhood wave with a smile :)
Se déplacer dans les environs

Rideshare or rent a car to get around

There are no busses in the neighborhood
Se déplacer dans les environs

Scooters And bicycles

If you Uber downtown, there are scooters and bicycles that are for rent everywhere. Super fun experience and can be dangerous.