Week 5 done - many more to come!
There
are two ways to travel. One is based on the destination in a specific time
frame and what is along the way is considered an annoying hindrance. My way,
especially on this trip, is to enjoy the entire ride and all the places it
takes me.
The South – seems
like a foreign “country”
I am enjoying each day and the people I meet, even if they
are sometimes difficult to understand. They probably think I’M the one from a
foreign country.
Short drive in
Louisiana
I spent three nights at Lake
Bruin State Park
in Louisiana, parked just a few
feet from the swampy lake. Jeremiah Junior was parked among tall trees –
cypress, sweet gum and oak. It was a playground for squirrels and a perfect
place for birds to perfect their songs
Squirrel info of
interest
Intrigued by these fluffy tailed creatures especially the
variety of ways a squirrel moves its tail, I went to the Internet to learn
more. This body part can be nearly as big as the critter it's attached to. But
it’s not there just for decoration. The squirrel uses its tail to keep itself
steady as it leaps across treetops or does a high-wire act on telephone lines. And
it uses his tail to communicate with other squirrels. When a squirrel is
alarmed, it flicks its tail; when it's feeling aggressive, it fluffs it up.
During its breeding season, a squirrel will wave and shiver its tail while
approaching the opposite sex.
From Lake Bruin to Natchez
The highway from Lake
Bruin to Natchez
was sparsely traveled, giving me time to ponder life and to look at the farm
fields – mostly corn, cotton and soybeans – as I drove past. Along the way I
stopped at the Louisiana State
Cotton Museum;
took pictures, including an old tractor and a sharecropper’s cabin. I also saw
some early cotton gins in one of the outbuildings.
Mississippi, the sixth state on this trip
The bridge spanning the mighty Mississippi River
was high and long. (Question: when
you were in elementary school do you remember learning how to spell Mississippi
– M, I, crooked-letter, crooked-letter, I, crooked-letter, crooked-letter, I,
hump-back, hump-back, I?)
Natchez, Mississippi
Settled in 1710, two years before New
Orleans was settled, Natchez’
claim to fame is that it is the oldest “civilized” town on the Mississippi
River. I’m in this state specifically to drive the Natchez
Trace Parkway from Natchez
to Nashville, Tenn.
The Natchez Trace Parkway – 444 miles through three states and
10,000 years of history
At first, the trace was probably a series of hunters’ paths
that slowly came to form a trail. By 1785, Ohio River
Valley farmers searching for
markets had begun floating their crops and products down the rivers to Natchez.
They sold their products and also their flatboats for lumber, so returning home
meant either riding or walking. Growing numbers of travelers tramped the crude
trail into a clearly marked path. By 1810, it was an important wilderness road.
As the road was being improved, many inns (called ‘stands’)
were built to provide shelter and food. Difficulties of the trail included
thieves, floods, swamps, disease-carrying insects and sometimes unfriendly
Indians. The trace was used until the steamboat era made the return north
easier.
The Trace Today
The National Park Service has completed a really nice,
two-lane road over many parts of the original Trace. No commercial traffic. The black-topped surface
makes for a smooth ride – maximum 50 mph – with no stop signs or traffic
signals. Cross traffic along the way is access controlled. All traffic entering
or leaving the parkway does so by yielding. A delightful drive.
In most areas the tall trees and generous mowed-grass road
shoulders form a wide corridor for the road. There are more than 100 marked
features on the parkway and pull-outs – historic areas, buildings, Indian
mounds, side walking trails, overlooks, primitive camping areas, etc. I stopped
at many – but not all – of those areas.
My first campground stop along the Trace was Natchez
Trace State Park.
Senior camping fee is $13 a night for water and electricity. Being here three
days gave me plenty of relaxing time. And it is here I met some super new
friends, Gary and Cheryl from Pembroke, Maine.
We had lovely visits as we shared happy hour each evening. And it is here that
a tick managed to find my leg! It was a very small one. Below you'll find me relaxing at my campsite.
A memorable stop was
at Mt. Locust Stand.
This is the only remaining stand (inn) from the beginning of
the 19th century was about a day’s walk from Natchez.
This restored cabin is one of the oldest buildings in the state. It is the only
remaining example of a frontier home of the 1820s, which was he peak era of he
Trace’s foot and horse travel..
A whole lot of mowing
going on
Another stop was at Pharr Mounds – ancient burial grounds
for Indians. Look carefully and you’ll see two lawnmowers at work. With 900
acres, this must be a full time job! (You can double-click a photo temporarily enlarge it)
Still more Trace to
go
I’m at Milepost 304, so there is plenty of this historic
road to travel. I’m camped at Tishomingo
State Park. Knowing that rain was
forecast for a few days, I decided this was a good place to hunker down. I was
met by a member of the campsite greeting committee.
And on one of my walks, I came to this outdoor church
location here in the park.
I fell asleep last night to the “crooning” of an American
Bullfrog. Its deep voice that can be heard up to a quarter
mile lulled and relaxed me. We’ve had lots of rain today – it is
comforting to know that I have a water-tight motor home! Weather permitting, tomorrow
I’ll continue up the Trace to Alabama
and then Tennessee.
I am so blessed to be on this trip. Jeremiah Junior is doing
super. Since I started on April 7, I’ve driven 2,812 miles.
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