If you follow the little yellow line from here, you'll see the path we took- a path I looked at on this very map last night, but failed to memorize EXACTLY.... As you see, shortly after we took off, there's a creek you can cross, and an old steel truss bridge to cross it on.
Look a little sketchy to you? Well, one side was marked, "Bridge unsafe", and the other had this nice instruction...
So we wisely deferred, heading on down the trail towards what I then thought was the "chin" of the "smiley face" that the trail system made. Little did I know we were still in the "cheek." Within a couple minutes, we hit a spot where a big tree had fallen on the trail, and you had to take a "walk-around" to keep going. Just on the other side of the walk-around, something moved...
It was a dozen or more TURKEYS! They ran ahead and peeled off into the undergrowth, never to be seen again. So on we went, enjoying the cool air, the usually shaded sunshine, and the nicely kept trail... that began to get a little shabbier as we went.
We then reached the point where the creek joins the river, which I thought must be the bottom of the chin (and was actually the corner of the mouth). So we went on, figuring we were headed towards the road, checking out the river, watching a pair of big hawks circling above (hawks, not vultures, BTW), and fighting through ever-growing amounts of spider webs across the trail.
Then, when I thought were weren't far from the road (and were actually still heading for the bottom of the chin, the trail just stopped. As in, "went from 8 inch tall weeds to 4 1/2 foot tall weeds". So we turned around. But I was still reasoning we were about "bottom chin" at the unsafe bridge, so we then took the "Redfox Trail", which I thought would lead us right back to where we parked. Scrolling back up to the map, you'll note that it was actually going to take us TO the bottom of the chin, i.e. exactly the opposite way I thought. And of course, by this time Laurie had to go pee, and it was getting critical I get it right. Ooops.
About halfway up (down?) the trail, I spied something I had to check out.
If you can't read the top, it says, "Byth Anna, wife of David Edwards- died May 5, 1859- aged 35 y, 2 mo., 23 d" Until I posted this, I had misread wife and not seen 35 y, so thought it was the grave of a 2 month old child. In fact, the woman interred here was the mother of this brood of children:
Jesse
John
Euphemia
Sarah
Hannah C.
Infant
It wasn't a graveyard, it appeared to have been a lone grave, marked off by rocks, once in a garden on the property of David Edwards, but now in the middle of a jungle. Further up, a trail led to a post which I took to be the remaining gatepost into the garden.
Soon after, I caught sight of a small well.
Shortly thereafter, we reached the end of Redfox Trail, and I learned that I was totally messed up in my direction. I assumed the left trail was the other end of the trail that died, (correctly) and figured that the right would have to lead eventually to our car, ( as it turns, it would have took us to a trail that would have, had we took it). But after a couple dozen yards of ever increasing weeds (and exponentially increasing spider webs), I took the better part of valor (listening to Laurie for once) and retreated back down to Redfox trail, and thence to where we KNEW where we were at.
(BTW, the Laurie going to pee problem was resolved at the T... and I don't think it was a very popular decision on my part for her to do so.)
Thus it was that we were soon back to the car (after what Laurie estimated was just over two hours), and we went to go have lunch in Napoleon.
Me and Bobby G's son. |
And that's the story- until I started trying to put up pictures. You see last night, I got a notice from Google, that they had tried to pull my autopay 2 bucks for picture storage but my card had updated. No prob, just let me change the expiration date. But whenever I tried to log in, it would just send me to a "Your browser is outdated page". So I updated my I.E. to the latest one- through the link on Google's page- but oh, no, that wasn't good enough. They weren't going to let me change my card, the lady I called told me, unless I downloaded Google Chrome and did it from there.
You who know me well know that is not the way to make friends with me. I let her know that, sighed, and downloaded the damn thing, figuring it would thence remain just an obnoxious reminder on my status bar of an obnoxious way to get what you want. Problem solved.
Well, almost, as Hank Jr. used to sing.
I learned as I began to tell you this story, that Blogger (Google's incestuous lover) won't let me post MY pictures to MY blog anymore, unless I do it on Chrome. It will co-operate right up to the time you hit the "post selected" button- even act like it is posting the pic- but then, the post photos screen will NOT go away. And no amount of begging/bitching will make it.
So there's TWO things I will have to do henceforth on Google Chrome. A-holes. But don't expect there to be any more things done on it that I can help. Because, I don't like being forced to do stuff that I shouldn't have to.
C'mon, Chris, it's just Google Chrome... (BTW, downloaded off the internet on IE. So there! |
Chris:
ReplyDeleteThat is some very cool place you guys went to...how did you choose that one anyway?
(have a mental picture of a large tri-state map on some wall with some darts)
Like the trails, the well, the gave marker...got some history there. The font is exactly the same to those back in old Philly cemeteries.
(yeah, it's a macabre "hobby")
All those TURKEYS, too...must stumbled onto a DEMOCRAT "getaway".
And that bridge...yeah,. I would run across it (and back).
Or hold onto a beam and hum loudly...see if you can set up a sympathetic vibration (it's a TESL:A thing...lol)
ROFLMAO...love the portrait with my son from another mother...!
I had the same problem w/ BLOGGER before I had to D/L "chrome" on the old XP 'puters. I could not place ANY pictures in ANY format with I.E.
(gotta love technology...NOT)
Again, nice day-trip.
1- Me and KC passed signs for it on the way to Cleveland last week, and I looked into it from there.
Delete2- I think that font is the same on all stones from that era. One side read: "We will meet again in the new Jerusalem." It really broke my heart to think of that poor soul all but forgotten in the midst of a jungle. But not quite forgotten, because now I remember.
3- I might have tried it, but we were a LOOOONG way from home, and Laurie wasn't gonna budge.
4- As soon as I saw "your boy", I knew what I had to do.
5- Amazingly, you can't have a Google toolbar on chrome. How stupid is that?
I think wild turkeys are the most commonly photographed animal on blogger. I see them everywhere, including my own blog. I had never seen them until moving to BFE.
ReplyDeleteI might have seen one before yesterday. And damn near missed them!
DeleteI know this will probably get a few boos but I actually like google chrome. I don't like being forced to do anything, but I have to admit I like chrome anyway.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful place to visit! Seeing old remnants of the people who use to live in the area long before it was a State Park can have a chilling effect.
1- I might not have any problem with Chrome, or Bing for that matter, if it wasn't for their pushy marketing. Show me your advantages, not a freaking shotgun!
Delete2- Especially when I was thinking it was a baby. To be out there, so forgotten... chilling is a very good word for it.
gorgeous photos. It looks like a really beautiful place for a walk.
ReplyDeleteDidnt Scrappy get to go with you on the adventure?
Scrappy's just so-so in the car, and an hour and 20 minutes each way with a restaurant stop between is just a tad much for the family collective nerves.
Delete