Showing posts with label Kathryn Abbey Hanna Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kathryn Abbey Hanna Park. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

The city park that has it all!

We spent a week and a half at Kathryn Abbey Hanna Park, a city park in Jacksonville, FL.  It's a beachside park that surrounds a lake as well, so there's water for whatever you're looking for!  We stayed here briefly back when we first got on the road, but only for one night during a cold snap.  At that time we determined that it would be a lovely place to stay in warmer weather, and also that next time we visited we needed to stay longer to make the windy roads worth it!  Jacksonville is close to my sister's new home in St. Augustine, and once we decided to do a joint camping trip for my nephew's birthday, Kathryn Abbey Hanna Park quickly came back to mind.  

Our campsite at Kathryn Abbey Hanna Park

We didn't remember anything about the campsite layout in the campground, and we really lucked out that we picked an amazing site that was plenty big for our RV and my brother-in-law's tent (where he slept with the kids...my sister stayed in the cool and dry with us in the RV), while also offering a ton of privacy as we parked the RV parallel to the road.  We had a great time exploring the lake, beach, campground, playground, and splash pad with my sister's kids.  We stayed a week after they left and went mountain biking and actually swimming in the ocean (when the kids were there we were on keep-the-kids-from-drowning duty).

Breakfast outside

Playing games on the picnic table

A modern day see-saw?  I think the
weight was a little unbalanced...

Aaron playing football with the kids

Our oldest nephew went mountain biking with his dad and got 
quite muddy...Aaron helped hose him down

After the kids left we saw a lot more
wildlife!  This guy is drying out after
catching and eating a fish.

At the beach

During the week we went to see nearby Fort Caroline and Kingsley Plantation, both National Park Service sites (more stamps for my passport!).  I'm ashamed to say that until we visited the fort, I didn't know that the French ever had a presence in Florida!  While we were at the fort, we witnessed the Coast Guard practicing chasing boats down in St. John's River, which was pretty cool!  Kingsley Plantation was pretty well preserved and I learned about the 'task' system of slavery, which I don't think I'd heard of before, wherein the slaves had tasks for the day and, once they were completed, the slaves were able to do whatever they wanted with the rest of the day (as opposed to the 'gang' system, which required an excessive number of hours of work each day).  

A reconstructed Fort Caroline.  Nothing remains of the original fort,
which would be in a location now underwater, and they didn't have
any architectural diagrams, but this is their best guess based on
some artists' renderings of the fort.

Kingsley Plantation

Remains of the slave cabins at Kingsley Plantation

So we had a great week and a half, and we're making plans with my sister to do another combined camping trip when we head north again at the end of winter.

Thursday, December 19, 2019

Heading South & Thoughts on Thousand Trails

We had a couple of short stops this week as we continued our trek to Florida.  First was The Oaks at Point South (Thousand Trails), and second was Kathryn Abbey Hanna City Park.

The Oaks was a nice RV park in South Carolina.  Overall clean, all pull-through sites, and relatively spacious sites (for an RV 'parking lot').  Like the last Thousand Trails park we visited in Williamsburg, the campground was quite wooded, giving more of an illusion of privacy than you actually had.  We had some neat neighbors from Canada also trekking to Florida.  This RV park also had the relatively unique feature of a walking trail around a neighboring lake.

It was interesting to contrast this to our previous private and beautiful spot at Cheraw State Park.  We've watched a lot of RV YouTube videos and it's fairly common for people to share their thoughts on staying in RV parks like the Thousand Trails collection vs. boondocking or staying in state/national parks.  I feel like most people express a strong preference for the state/national parks, though we've personally met a lot of happy Thousand Trails campers.  I'm thinking there are some pretty strong pluses to both...pros for Thousand Trails: (1) it's 'free' on a per night basis (you pay an annual membership); (2) they are almost always very close to an interstate, so there is minimal motor home driving on narrow winding country roads or crowded city streets; (3) you almost always get full hookups (50A power, water, sewer); (4) you almost always have a reasonably priced on-site laundromat; (5) the sites are typically level.  Pros for national/state parks: (1) they tend to be BEAUTIFUL; (2) the sites tend to be private; (3) they usually have a lot of hiking trails and/or other natural outdoor activities; (4) they usually have fire rings and frequently grills on each site.  The pros for each, negated, become the cons for the other category.  So I think I like both.  The state parks are refreshing for the soul, but the RV parks involve less stressful travel days and make it a lot easier to get chores done.

The Oaks at South Point was kind of in the middle of nowhere, but the weather was pretty decent so we went walking a lot and set out to explore.  We stopped by the visitor center, where they directed us to some impressive ruins of Old Sheldon Church, and where we learned about a nearby Spanish settlement (Santa Elena) that pre-dated Jamestown.  We attempted to learn more about the settlement first hand, but the site itself was on a marine base and thus inaccessible to us, and a museum in downtown Beaufort was inexplicably closed in the middle of the day.  Still, it was neat to learn that the site even existed.


After The Oaks, we FINALLY made it to Florida and stayed at Jacksonville's Kathryn Abbey Hanna Park.  This park was beautiful; the campground was sandwiched between a lake and the beach, both on park property and within walking distance.  Unfortunately a cold front had just moved in and it was too cold to do much more than take a quick picture at the ocean.  We learned here that although the peak season for southern Florida is in the winter, the peak season for northern Florida is in the summer just like the rest of the country.  The campground was not even half full, which made it wonderfully quiet and peaceful.  The roads to get to the campsites though were narrow, windy, and a bit scary in a 40ft long, 9ft wide motor home!


At our next stop we should finally be far enough south in Florida to escape the cold!