Showing posts with label road trip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label road trip. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

St George Island 1: The Drive, Crabs, and Sunset

Note: The videos in this post aren't currently functional, but will be soon.

To start off this trip, I'll let the dubious duo of Bing Crosby and Bob Hope have the opening act:


That's right!  We're on our way to Apalachicola, Fla!

No one packed long underwear [that I know of], we didn't stop for grits or drive through Tallahassee.  However, thanks to that song, it wasn't long before we learned the language of the natives and didn't sound like the GPS when we said "Apalachicola."


As the song says, the Apalachicola Bay is down south on the panhandle of Florida, and we stayed "along the Apalachicola Bay" on St. George Island - accessible only by a 4 mile bridge from Eastpoint.  Oh, and by water.  And by air too.


Benjamin picked up a cover for his truck which made packing immensely easier.
As you can see, we took cues from UPS and carefully set and arranged everything in the back of the truck.

Every good thing starts with a visit to Saint Louis Bread Co.

And I think nearly every morning you'll find this man in our local Bread Co with his newspaper or laptop.  Today was no exception.

Looks like he's working on a crossword puzzle. 

What's an 11 letter that would describe the windshield of Ben's truck?

Starts with "B" ends with "R."


The answer is BUGSPLATTER.


Early-ish morning fog in the farm fields of our valley.


This billboard.  The scariest thing we encountered on the trip.


The last leg of the trip took us through the 632,000+ acres of the Apalachicola National Forest.
Mostly straightaways and no speed limits, but it still seemed to take forever.


But we finally arrived and it didn't actually take forever.  
It wasn't long before we were unpacked and heading to bed.
And it wasn't long before I'd geeked out my room.

I hooked up my laptop to the TV, plugged in my external hard drive, laid back on the bed, and started posting on this blog with my wireless mouse.

With my wireless mouse, remote for the TV, remote for the fan and lights, and my books, it may have been tempting to stay in bed during the whole trip.

It was more than tempting for this little creature:

My first view of the beach the next morning.




Each day I ran along on the beach - rocking out to Chariots of Fire -and audiobooks.




On the first day I started at a good pace, but when it was time for me to head home, I found that I was battling a small gale that was blowing in from offshore.  I clawed my way through the wind and got back before the storm hit.


#windblown

I ended up running at least a 5k every day.  By the end of the trip, I'd accumulated enough distance that I could have easily run the entire length of St George Island.


On some days there were pleasant discoveries like this...


...and possibly horrific discoveries like this.


And there was the dodging through all of this while running barefoot...


...and working your way through the obstacle course of debris and seaweed that hurricane Hermine washed in.

I even had to dodge a couple of these guys:




I was impressed by this crab's footwork - he belongs in the octagon!

He always kept his potential attacker in front of him - where he could see me and could defend himself with his claws.  

I'm thinking that I should use him as an example for the students at martial arts.


This is paradise for me.

I mean, I ended up boiling in the sun because I couldn't set this book down, but before I started burning and peeling it was heavenly.


Your first exposure to the many sunset photos I'll be posting.




God our Savior, the hope of all the ends of the earth and of the farthest seas...

The whole earth is filled with awe at your wonders; where morning dawns, where evening fades, you call forth songs of joy. Psalm 65:5, 8







Besides the beautiful sunsets on the beach, in the words of Air Supply, "even the nights are better."





It was a "beautiful night for a moon dance."




And with those views of the sun and the moon the first night came to a close.

Friday, May 8, 2015

Spelunking in Marvel Cave

April 10, 2015- Spelunking is the recreational exploration of caves...unless you're in the UK, in which case it's called potholing.  The Brits and their weird terms for things...although "spelunking" is a bit odd already.
Anyway, pardon my linguistic digression...
The bat guano (look that term up for yourself) of Marvel Cave was the first reason why people settled in what is now known as Silver Dollar City.  Later, there were recreational tours given and it became the first attraction for what is now the Silvery Dollar City theme park. 
My family and I used to tour the cave all of the time when we were younger, so I was very excited to tour it again after an absence of more than 8 years.

Oh, and this is also the second in a "series" of 3 posts of our trip down to Branson in April of 2015:
Branson
[Marvel Cave]




Before we went down to the cave we were given a plethora of negative possibilities that could occur on this tour, which was very reminiscent of a drug commercial you'd see on TV.
Well, it scared off some, but it steeled the nerves of the determined few who continued to venture into the very bowels of the earth.  Time for a "Journey into the Center of the Earth!"


The Haguewoods are cautiously using the hand rails 
- while the lady in front of them is recklessly taking a selfie?


Our tour guide, Tim.  or was it Rick?  Charlie?  I really don't remember.
Maybe it was Chip?  Nah...that'd be way too obvious for a cave guide.
We'll just call him Steve.  Steve is a nice name.

I'm going to completely obliterate any remaining semblance of respectability this blog may have if I keep posting internet gifs like this...


View from above and below





This room/cavern is absolutely enormous.
One time they simultaneously had 5 hot air balloons floating in this cave.



That pillar to the right is called "The Sentinel"


We ooohhh-ed and ahhhh-ed over "the sentinel" at the tour guide's behest.








Okay, random thought - but can you imagine holding a church service down amongst the catacombs like the early Christians in Rome did?









At one point, the electric lights were completely shut off and we got to see what it must've been like to explore the cave by candlelight.  



We travel down a few hundred steps to the floor of the cave


This photo is terribly -disconcerting- if you see it unexpectedly.



We continue walking traversing through a maze of staircases through the cave.





This "shelf" or rock was lit up with colored lights, which looked incredible.




The final room before we head up and out of the cave



..and to give her due credit, Kate came down into the cave with us and took this photo.



The ONE bat that we spotted on the tour



Just try and wrap your head around this picture!



Enormous calcite formations



#SoGratefulForRailings


To get out of the cave, we are pulled up in a shuttle