Showing posts with label Biking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biking. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Manatees!!!

Our last stop on our big winter Texas loop was at Crystal River, Florida.  This is well known for being the only place you can legally swim with manatees, and it also happens to be the home of the Crystal Isles RV Resort (Thousand Trails), so we decided to swing by on our way back to the Orlando area.  Interestingly, according to Wikipedia, this is the second largest spring group in Florida - the largest (also frequented by manatees) being Wakulla Springs, where we stopped on our way out of Florida in January.

Crystal Isles was a nice resort, perfect for boaters - a whole slew of the sites had their own personal docks, and there was a communal dock and boat launch for everyone else.  There was a nice pond with fountains in the middle of the park, and all of the sites were massively huge by RV park standards.  Several of the permanent residents had their RV, an outside patio/bar area the same width, and another width for a storage shed or boat.

Campsite at Crystal Isles

Our first order of business was to swim with manatees!!  I'd been looking forward to this for WEEKS, ever since I booked it.  Luckily for us the day I picked turned out to be a gorgeous day.  We were on a small tour - only one other couple - with a friendly and talkative captain who told us a lot about the area and manatees in general.  The reason the manatees are so attracted to this area is that the springs output a massive volume of constant 72 degrees F water year-round.  We arrived on the tail end of the real manatee season, but found a group of about 10 of them hanging out near the springs.  Unfortunately they were all behind the rope humans weren't allowed to cross, so we didn't get any up close and personal touching like you see in videos, but we did get a good look at them up close and underwater, and one tail got about 3 feet away from where I was swimming, so that was pretty exciting!  Truly massive creatures when you get so close!

Ready to swim!

Also ready to swim!  Our tour boat and captain are in the background

Manatees!!  Unfortunately all the underwater photos came out 
cloudy through the waterproof phone pouch

Floating outside the boundary, manatees in background

There were lots of hiking and biking trails all around the area, so after peaking the first day with the manatee swim we did a lot of hiking and biking nearby.  Our most major excursion was to the 7-mile trail at Crystal Springs Preserve State Park.  This was one of the longest natural (aka not paved) trails we've attempted on the bikes, but fortunately the roots and potholes of our western travels were absent here and we only had to deal with mud ruts and grass.  We saw several alligators - definitely back in Florida!

Redfish Hole

Biking the 7 mile trail

Alligator on the 7 mile trail

We saw TONS and TONS of fiddler
crabs in the salt marsh

Our last day we drove to Fort Island Gulf beach, where we enjoyed the tide pools and found yet more manatees in the wild!  Sadly we weren't fast enough to get their adorable noses surfacing on camera.

Tide pools at Fort Island Gulf Beach

Lots of birds were just hanging out on the rocks near the shore

Aaron thought I was going to slip off
the wet rock for sure...nope!

The whole area had a relaxed and beachy/vacation-y feel to it.  I loved it, but Aaron thought the smaller non-highway roads to get here were a little too stressful in the 40' RV, so if we ever come back it will probably just be in the car.

Happy pi day!  (This is my first ever
coconut cream pie - turned out great!)


Sunday, January 17, 2021

Texas at last!

Our final drive into Texas was exciting in and of itself!  First we spent over 18 miles driving on the Atchafalaya Basin Bridge across the Atchafalaya National Wildlife Refuge.  For whatever reason this was a surreal experience for me, and although 'ground' (very wet swampy ground) was always below us, it brought back strong memories of driving along the Overseas Highway to Key West.  It was somehow fascinating to spend such a long time driving with nothing to see but swamp and more bridge.  I tried to capture a photo.

No matter how hard I tried I just couldn't quite capture the
feeling, but hopefully you can get an impression of the
neverending bridges in both directions.

The other exciting thing was much less surreal and much more ha-ha...as we were driving along I-10, quickly approaching Texas, I noticed a slowdown on the map due to an 'object on the road' (according to Google).  As we approached, we saw several police cars and officers out of their cars...chasing a cow.  I couldn't stop laughing, and somehow it seemed a very appropriate welcome to Texas.

You may have to zoom the photo to see
that the police officer is chasing a black cow.

Once we finally reached Texas, we stopped just over the border in Lumberton, where we stayed at Village Creek State Park.  I went ahead and purchased a Texas State Parks Pass when I booked our first state park in Texas - at only $70 for the year, it is going to more than pay for itself as it waives the per-person daily fees required at every state park (even when you have a campsite reservation!) AND makes the second day of every campsite rental half price.  So now in addition to giving us lots of cheap (and hopefully beautiful!) state parks to camp at, it allows us to hop in and out of the gazillion other parks in Texas for quick hikes or bike rides without thinking about fees.  Hot tip for anyone else thinking of an extended stay in Texas 😎.

Our campsite at Village Creek State Park

Texas sticker on the map!

The campground at the state park was fairly small and all the campsites were close together, no privacy to speak of.  However, the sites were clean and well-equipped and the bathhouse seemed nice.  There was a nature center with an informative ranger and some interesting local wildlife (particularly a siren and an amphiuma - creepy creatures).  The small park had several hiking and biking trails and a canoe launch.  

I made the mistake of trying to bike down the main trail marked as a bike trail...OOPS.  Turns out these are true mountain biking trails.  We've been biking on shared hiking/biking trails all along the Gulf coast without difficulty as they were all flat, on firm un-rocky soil, surrounded by trees that don't have roots that poke up from beneath the ground.  So I started on this trail without a care...only to find we're out of the coastal plain and into deciduous trees with projecting roots and all sorts of slopes and gullies along the terrain.  Later I found out I was on a 'moderate' biking trail...no good for a mostly road-biker like me!  The next day Aaron and I took the trail marked 'leisurely'....this took out the gullies and slopes but kept the roots and added in sand traps.  We have a long way to go before we're really ready for mountain biking!

Attempting to pass through a sand trap

Difficulties aside, the trails had some nice views of the creek and the sloughs that fed it.

Village Creek

One of the sloughs

We spent another day driving down to nearby Beaumont and seeing the sites there.  Turns out the Beaumont area started thriving in the early 1900s due to the discovery of oil at Spindletop with the Lucas Gusher in 1901.  This oil discovery launched the American oil industry, several of the major oil companies we still know, and a boomtown in the area.  We went to a recreation of some buildings of the era at the Spindletop Gladys City Boomtown.  It was interesting to see all the old buildings and the businesses that were necessary for an oil boomtown to function the way it did - including various ways to barter and lease areas of as small as 1/64th of an acre for prospectors to put up their own oil derricks.  The photos in the museum of the area at its peak were incredible, with oil derricks crowded all up against each other.  It was said you could walk across the whole field of them without touching the ground, they were so close.

Spindletop Gladys City Boomtown

Afterward we headed to the park outside the fire museum, where you can find the world's largest working fire hydrant.  There are two larger ones in North America but they are not functional.  This hydrant was gifted to the fire museum in 1999 by Disney upon the re-release of 101 Dalmations.  It was a fun little park and picture.

World's largest working fire hydrant