Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Even more camping!


Yep, even more camping. A few more relatively uneventful days in the woods. I stopped at the Trail of Tears State Park in MO for a night, then spent two nights in a shutdown campground at Lake of Egypt, Illinois.

Trail of Tears park sits at a site used as a crossing for the Cherokee's forced march to Oklahoma. There is a small memorial site here which people seem to come and place tribute items on. I saw a dreamcatcher and a staff with several items tied to it placed there.

The campsite is not as good as it looks on the map. Yes, it's next to the river, but at a boat landing, and with railroad tracks in-between. I got one sort of neat picture of a train at night as it blew by. There is a pretty regular flow of barges (you thought a coal train looked like a lot of stuff - a coal barge is really impressive!), and nearby dredging operation keeps the air filled with the hum of distant diesel engines. The surrounding woods are realy nice though - lots of bluffs, gullies and hillsides make for a pleasant walk in the woods. I biked all around the park and took a couple short hikes to the tops of some bluffs. That's a really big river!

The next day I was undecided where I wanted to stay and eventually settled on a "decomissioned" campground at Lake of Egypt in southern Illinois (savage Silukie territory!) The highlight for me here was finding a small downed cedar tree that was just right for making a smashing walking staff from. Tried fishing again in the nearby lake, but all I caught was a nap. At least this time I could see the bobber moving when the fish took my worms.

It is positively spooky out here in these woods by myself. Last night I got here just before sundown, so was pretty much totally unfamilar with what's outside a 20 yard radius of my camp. A distant tunderstorm was generating flashes of light, the wind rustling through the trees, and my mind was racing with all kinds of crazy scary stuff. I did note that most of it was learned stuff though - vampires, ghosts, Jason - I didn't make that stuff up on my own. Even the houselights I could see through the trees and across the lake did not help ease my nerves. I think it's this sort of experience that has generated all the ghost and monster stories over the ages. I think maybe it is just part of human nature to get spooked sometimes. It made me think of the forest animals like deer - where there really IS a monster out there waiting to get them. The stories they must tell! I don't blame them for running like crazy when they see us...

7 comments:

David&Esperanza said...

Hey Michael,

You're becoming a "great" story-teller. And it's all fact not fiction! We will continue to "walkabout" with you all the way to sunny Florida!

blakelock said...

so, what's that you're tokin' on? find some interesting herbs in the forest?

Jennie said...

blake echo's my curiosity. I like the idea of deer telling monster stories in the dark. oh, the stories the llama grrls must have told after seeing those cows for the first time. glad no spooky stuff came out to getcha.

Jennie said...

eep! typo on the echoes!

Nathan Bouldin and Tina Sanchez said...

okay, now take a picture of yourself with your eyes OPEN. I know. LIGHT-sensitivity is a photographic burden. ;)

Rarrrrr..... I'm gonna come meet up witcha and scare ya at two in the morning!! jk. I would never do that. That's the ultimate cruelty.

FLORIDA KEYS!!!! And some rockin' Cuban food....

T.

Daniel Hartmann & Andrea Rogers said...

Ahhh, Dr. Sanchez...you look just like the quintessential Electrical Engineering - Photonics Ph.D. in that picture.

Unknown said...

How did all us Sanchez's end up with distinct and entertaining writing styles? Was it all the comics? The years of concocting the mythologies of stuffed animals and Lego empires?
Your blog is good to read on some subliminal Scuppers the Sailor Dog type frequency. I endorse it.