Friday, October 31, 2014
Tonight we are camped at Fort Frederick State Park near Hancock,
Maryland, just off of I-70. We escaped in time to miss the big snow
as we traveled east back to Maryland. A week ago found us camping at
Dead Indian Lake in Oklahoma. It was in the 90's and dry. We spent
the next night at Kaw Lake in Oklahoma, warm again, and traveled
across Oklahoma into Arkansas. I wasn't sad to finally be done with
northern Oklahoma. Hot, dry, not very interesting terrain, and dying
towns.
We entered Arkansas near Bentonville, headquarters of WalMart, at
rush hour. Kind of a bit of culture shock. We had a good night's
sleep at the Army Corps of Engineers campground at Kaw Lake, close to
the suburbs. The next morning we decided to explore the Ozarks and
drove southeast a short distance to the Buffalo National River, one
of the few undammed rivers in the U.S. It is popular for canoeing
trips. We approached it on the west end, had a short drive near it,
and then had to head back cross country to find another river
crossing. We wound our way along the ridges and down into the river
valley several times.
|
Driving under a limestone ledge near the Missouri, Oklahoma border |
|
Buffalo River |
It was a beautiful, scenic area, and we passed through many small
isolated towns. Finally we reached the Tyler Bend area near the
river. It contains the visitor center and a nice campground. We
pulled in for the evening to a non- hook-up campsite, with enough
time to walk to the visitor center and down to the river. The river
had a nice limestone cliff, and some Fall colors, but nothing
spectacular. I think the appeal of the Buffalo River is an easy float
through the unpopulated areas.
|
Buffalo National River |
|
Buffalo River near our camp |
|
Fierce wildlife broke into the RV |
The next day we got a good taste of the Ozarks as we wound our way
through them to finish crossing northern Arkansas. By evening we had
reached the “Bootheel” of Missouri and crossed into the
northwest corner of Tennessee. We found the Blue Basin of Reelfoot
Lake and a very nice state park campground and set up in the rain
along the shores of the cypress stump bordered lake. The weather
caught up with us, and as we checked the extended forecast we
discovered that we were being chased by a front that was predicted to
dump snow on the parts of Kentucky and West Virginia we were headed
for.
|
The Mighty Mississippi from I-165 |
|
Reelfoot Lake |
Time to speed up our travels and get ahead of it. Working our way
across the southern part of Kentucky we made Mammoth Cave National
Park by dark. A half priced national park campground suited us for
the night. No hook-ups, but lots of empty sites in the hardwood
trees. We had to chase the deer out of our site. It was a cold night,
especially after the high temperatures a few days before!
|
Very quiet campground at Mammoth Caves |
Thursday found us back on the interstate and eating up the miles
driving east. Frankly, we hate the interstate, but if driving the
interstate meant staying out of snow, so be it. After a day of
“Zombie Driving” through the rest of Kentucky and half of West
Virginia, we found a small Army Corps campground near Sutton on I-79.
We paid our $4 for a non-hook-up site and had a quiet night in the
campground in the woods, all to ourselves.
This morning we woke to fog and damp and set off down the road to
Maryland. More “Zombie Driving” brought us across the border
accompanied by overcast skies, but no rain or snow. By the time we
reached Hancock, we were far enough east and south to escape the
coming weather. Only rain is forecast here for tonight and tomorrow.
We decided to eat a late lunch at the Park and Dine restaurant where
we began our travels with breakfast last Spring, six months and one
week ago. It was Greg's favorite stop for breakfast for many years,
before bike rides on the C&O Canal.
Nearby is Fort Frederick State Park with a nice 30 site campground
along the Potomac River. Only a few RV's here, so it is very quiet,
except for the trains running across the river. We took a walk around
the area and up to the fort and had a nice conversation with two
young interpreters just closing up. Got a quick history lesson and a
tour of the barracks. The fort was built to defend the frontier
during the French and Indian War and played a role in the
Revolutionary War. It has been nicely restored. Today it seems
strange to think that this area was once the frontier after spending
six months out west on the frontier. But, going back far enough in
the history of our country, this area was raging wilderness. I had
ancestors that settled not too far from here in the early 1700's.
|
Fall Colors |
|
The campground is located between the CSX line on the north and Norfolk Southern on the West Virginia side of the Potomac. |
|
The barracks inside Fort Frederick |
|
Fort Frederick gate |
|
The CCC Museum outside the walls |
|
One of the C&O Canal locks |
|
The C&O Towpath |
|
What is inside an Osage Orange? |
|
No one volunteered to taste it. |
|
The Big Pool of Big Pool, Maryland |
Tonight we are settled on the shores of the “Patowmak” and
hope for a peaceful, if cold night's sleep. Tomorrow we head for
civilization for some reunions with family and some TCB. The blog
should be back up in two weeks or so as we head south again!