state parks

Little Grand Canyon, Illinois

Published on by Katya in the category Hiking, National Forest, out and about, state parks | Leave a comment

We had a late morning, as we often do, on this, the Sunday before Labor Day. We spent some time in the trailer slowly gaining momentum to meander to the truck and venture off to one of the many state parks and geological awesomenessities that southern Illinois has to offer. After exchanging some synthetic leather hiking/winter boots I bought at Jouneys that fell apart the moment I put them on – we decided to try for Larue Pines, an area of the Shawnee National Forest that we had missed the weekend before when we wandered around too long in the back roads and overlooks that the area had to offer. On the way today we were of course again distracted when we saw a sign for “The Little Grand Canyon,” a place neither of us had heard of in our Shawnee research or pamphlet perusal at a welcome center.
7 miles after seeing the sign we were there, and not alone. It was probably one of the busiest trails we’ve seen in a while. There were at least 10 other cars there when we arrived. An older couple in matching rain coats were talking to a ranger, another couple were heading towards a trail head and a couple other people were standing around recovering from their hike. We walked up to a placard with an etching of the trails, which I looked at but in no way absorbed, then just took the unlabeled trail closest to us that we had seen the couple disappear on.

Little Grand Canyon Trail, IL

Ross in drag me to hell

After a while of walking through dense forest, fallen trees and wild flowers and observing steep drop offs on both sides of us, we started to wonder if the “Little Grand Canyon” was actually buried deep underneath the miles of piles of vines and post inland hurricane disaster (2009?) and not actually visible, per say. After a while we caught up with the couple who left before us at the Mississippi overlook, one of the highlights on the map, and has to ask if we were on the right trail. Well informed, unlike us, they told us that the true treasures lie ahead and that we were about 1/3 through the hike that totaled 3.5 miles. We decided to carry on and as we left, the couple parted ways and we were joined by a well prepared man who would prove to be good company as well an an informed nature lover. This was our first hike with another human being and a welcome change. I’m a bit of a know it all when it comes to nature. Even if it’s in a state I’ve never been to before, I try and fill my brain with as many local species as possible but usually just sound like an ass no doubt. We saw one snake – I think a bull snake (used a website for that one), a few small tree frogs and one sloppy giant one, one baby skink, potential coyote prints (although later some hiker brought their boxer on the hike so.. may have just been a dog) and some trapped fish who will hopefully make it through to the next rain, oh, and one giant spider.

Little Grand Canyon Swamp

Through our last few weeks of hikes in this area we’ve seen several caves and canyons, strange rock formations/anomalies and places where gorgeous waterfalls the likes of raging rocky mountain glacial creeks would be if there were not such a drought. The Little Grand Canyon was one of the best so far and it surprised me we had not been told about it by the retired volunteers we ran into last weekend nearby. Maybe because they were older and possibly had not seen it in person. The hike is a little difficult and not what I expected when we entered the trail. I’m glad we both have good hiking shoes now and that the hikes of the past have started to make the more difficult ones easier, humidity permitting. The full canyon trail is a little demanding but doesn’t require any special skill. At one point you have to step/climb down a small waterfall (dry of course) to continue the trail, and at another point, to get out of the canyon, you have to walk up a 90 foot waterfall (that’s a guess and it was also dry) of smooth rock with conveniently placed and mostly natural stair like qualities up the most of it. Some of the steps were hard for a short legged person like me to get up, though even in jeans I managed. Then the incline continues for another infinity or so, my lungs wanting to jump out of my chest, we polished off most our water but took only short breaks. Luckily it was actually a really mild day due to some rain which made it much easier to breath than on our usual hikes this summer. Yesterday had been almost 100 again and our shorter 0.9 miles or so hike at Giant city had wiped us out for the day.

This hike was probably the coolest weather hike we’ve had in a long while, and maybe the longest hike we’ve had in a while as well. It also went more quickly than our usual hikes, where we spend half our time staring into spider holes, harassing beetles, counting rings in trees and taking tedious hdr pics with my new droid app (PROHRD).

We left Little Grand Canyon at around 6pm, just an hour and some before sun down and continued our search for Larue Pines. When we found it, it was about the same time we had been looking for it last weekend, and it was basically the same place we had already been. We did however come from a different direction this time and saw some great cliffs, oddly situated across from farmland. I stood in the back of the truck and made a video for later editing.

Our drive home from there was through some great Amish/non Amish country. Horses, buggies, and roads with names like Rattlesnake Road and Pitbull Lane. Illinois is a greatly underestimated place.

G’night!

Last goal for Florida, the Keys

Published on by Katya in the category out and about, state parks, travel | Leave a comment

We have been in Florida since September after almost not coming here at all. We were thinking of jumping straight to the Smokey Mountains after Savannah, but since the Everglades and Florida Keys were a major goal of mine on this “trip”, we decided to take on the potentially ’full to the brim with retirees’ state. After spending this last month in South Miami, a time where there wasn’t much to see or do unless we left town on the weekend, we finally made it to the Keys the day before leaving town on a 600 mile drive back north. This time we took Chena, something we don’t get to do often because it is either too hot, or she’s not allowed where ever we’re going (which is most places, especially since ‘pitbulls’ are banned in Dade county), but the drive down the keys could be as far as 300 miles round trip and she couldn’t stay alone in the trailer that long. Luckily the weather was cool the entire day and although she is used to sleeping 80% of the day away, she managed to stay up most the trip and get some vacation time in.

The unpopular beaches and old bridges were the best part of the Keys for me, especially the remnants of an old rail road bridge that still ran along side parts of the main bridges. We stopped at one of many state parks along the way and walked around the beach a little but the second state park we stopped at, Long Key State Park, had far less people and a beach-side boardwalk that was missing the typical “no dogs allowed” sign you see on Florida state park trails. We walked about a quarter mile and stopped on a small deserted beach covered in shells and dead tree branches. My kind of beach. The water was cold but tolerable enough to wade in and Chena got a chance to cool off but unfortunately kept trying to drink the water.

We ate at a little cafe, too early for the lunch menu (by like 20 minutes) and had banana, pineapple, coconut covered pancakes with a side of papaya syrup. For pancakes they were great though unfortunately not that filling. To make up for it, we later tried to find a pizza place but ended up finding a raw bar and had pita sandwiches, also not so fulfilling, but the raw bar was inside a health food store and book store and luckily they had the awesome and completely satisfying Stonewall’s Jerquee bites (vegetarian jerky) for us to snack on during the drive home.

Our last goal before turning back was the 7 mile bridge, At the end we found a pull-off just where we watched the sun go down and said our goodbyes to any chance of warm sunny beaches for a long time.

Chena in the Florida Keys

Lobster in the Keys

Neon sunset in the Keys

7 mile bridge and railroad bridgeRoss does the Crane

The next day we left to north Florida’s St George Island State Park, where it would be down to 22 degrees the first night. After enjoying an average of 83 for the last month, this was going to be a rough change. Sure enough I was sick within the first day. I think spending 3 days in the car between the Keys and the 600+ mile trip north probably didn’t help either.

Weekend at Cheaha State Park

Published on by Katya in the category state parks | 4 Comments

Friendly deer at Cheaha State Park

Friendly deer at Cheaha State Park

We had seen several interesting parks on the map of Alabama but Cheaha seemed like one of the best since it was deep inside Talladega National Forest – and the only place to camp inside the forest. We were excited to arrive, managing to show up at a decent time this time, but finding out on the drive through the mountains, that we were unlikely to have internet for the work week. When we arrived we still had no internet so we paid for just 2 days and tried to stay in a good mood while we setup camp. Again we had a hard time parking, ending up at some terrible angle because of the uneven lot, but closer to the hookups this time and able to have our awning fully out.

The forest was awesome and every moment of setting up and wandering around camp was a little more torture knowing we only had one and half days to spend in it. Susa and Chena were excited to go for a walk so we took them to the area just behind camp, pretty much forest for the next 500 feet up, where the top of Alabama is. It was a much different forest than Oak Mountain. In the area of Cheaha, the ground was rocky and covered in thick pillowy moss and the rocks were covered in layers of grey lichen. There were tons of young healthy trees, none of them very large yet throughout the forest were perfectly laid out larger dead trees, suspiciously looking like the rangers put them there for looks, but obviously much too large (sorry seems I took only film photos and they are yet to be developed).

The first day, after taking the animals out for a while, we decided to drive to the lake at the bottom of the mountain followed by lunch at the “lovely” restaurant at the lodgings near the campgrounds. The lake was busy with families barbecuing and swimming. The lake itself, only a few hundred yards at the longest, seemed more like a pond but it was equipped with a floating dock and floating rope to signify the swimming area. They had hauled in some sand and there was tent camping nearby so it was officially a fun place to be but too many kids to swim. We stayed long enough to walk to the water and back to the truck, navigating through running kids and waddling parents as we went.

We had lunch after than then just drove and wandered around the park, just before dusk planning a hike to the mountain tower, the highest point in Alabama. We looked at the map for the best way to go and saw a trail just behind our campsite that went all the way there uphill. We found what looked like a trail head and did our best to stay on track but because of the forest floor already being clear, it was nearly impossible to know where it went. We ended up traversing over rocks, trees and tall grass, passing a cave and the mountain’s telephone pole service road before finally getting to a random place on the road next to the tower. After already climbing quite a ways, we had to walk up 6 flights of stairs to the top to get a decent view of the coming sunset. It was pretty cloudy but there was some interesting rays from behind the clouds and some Vietnam war movie quality reds. Now we had to get down the mountain after dark, the trails are “closed” at dusk, but we wouldn’t have found it anyway. We decided to walk down the road that wrapped the top down to the campground, of course taking the wrong way – then half way down, when there was another split, we went the wrong way again and ended up walking a mile or 2 in the dark. After my feet didn’t hurt anymore, it was more fun to remember the unnecessary parts of the walk.

Sunday we decided to see as much of Talladega National Forest as we could. We brought a little water (we’re bad about that) and headed west into the forest towards the thickest an.d least road filled part. After a few miles the road sort of split into a dirt road and a continued paved and there was a parking lot with a trail. We haden’t had internet nor gotten any good whole park maps at the camp office (our usual unplanned selves). We found an great little trail where the road split and wandered down it a bit, finding two ants we’d never seen before but nothing else much to speak of animal wise. The trees were mostly pine and covered in vines and bitter berries. After about 1/2 miles the trail split into 2 more trails, one 15 miles and the other 6, neither of which we had enough water for in 90 degree weather. We headed back to the road and decided of the two roads to take we would take the dirt one. We figured it wouldn’t be open if it wasn’t meant to drive on or in a bad condition. It was 15 miles of fairly well kept dirt road through the middle of Talladega forest. Somewhere in the middle we even found someone living there, with a house and newer cars. I was jealous but at the same time, I always imagined having a place like that only if I had a helicopter – but I imagine they adapted just fine and maybe even have satellite TV and internet to keep sane.

Strange Ant (the least strange of the 2 that stood out as odd)


Pretty leaves…

Talladega Scenic Highway

Talladega Scenic Highway

After our drive we haded back to camp to break everything down to leave. It was sad because there was so much to do in the park, trails we hadn’t seen, paddle boats we hadn’t really wanted to rent but might have because we could… When we were leaving camp late at night, we came across two girls and a little boy who had been locked out of their cabin and needed a ride to the office. We gave one woman a ride who said she had come to the park because of some great Waterfall we didn’t even hear about, but sadly there had been a fire and the waterfall was closed. One more thing we missed but wouldn’t have been able to see anyway I guess.

Onto Walmart in Chattanooga we went.