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Posts Tagged ‘womenhiking’

I visited my trail sister, Robyn, in Orlando over the weekend for lunch and shopping. I met Robyn in Georgia last fall when we both signed up for a slackpacking trip and completed the first 52 miles of the Georgia Appalachian Trail. We have planned a camping/hiking trip to Georgia next fall—four days, three nights—to complete the Georgia AT and to get started in South Carolina.

Beautiful Trail at Lake Louisa State Park

We met at our favorite store, REI. Robyn is the camping guru, and she helped me gear up for our trip. After that, we relaxed over a delicious lunch and bottle of wine at a local restaurant to plan our trip.

Before I headed home the following morning, Robyn and I drove to Lake Louisa State Park, Robyn’s local state park. We hiked a couple short trails and Robyn showed me the two primitive camping sites she frequents. At $5 plus tax per person, per night, you can’t beat this for entertainment. I agree with the park’s introduction on their website: “A natural theme park awaits those with a hearty outdoor spirit. “

Cypress Knees Along the Trail

We hiked about three miles; however, the park has seven miles of paved roads and another twenty miles of unpaved multi-use trails that wind through cypress swamps, tall pines, and scrub forests. Included in the park are Lake Louisa, Hammond Lake, and Dixie Lake You can glamp, camp, or even rent a cabin. (trail map)

Lake Louisa at the State Park

Like many of the state parks, some areas showed evidence of a recent controlled burn with black charcoal markings on tree trunks. However, our surroundings were beautiful and quiet. You got to love Florida State Parks!

(Lake Louisa State Park. 7305 U.S. Highway 27, Clermont, FL 34714.  https://www.floridastateparks.org/parks-and-trails/lake-louisa-state-park)

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Several months ago, I created a list of fun goals to achieve in my retirement. Fourth on the list is “Hike the Florida Trail.”  To accomplish this and to help prepare me for overnight hiking, I chose to day hike a section of one of the off-shutes/secondary trails of the Florida Trail system, the first (or last, depending on perspective) section of the Ocean to Lake Trail which runs about sixty-one miles from the Hobe Sound Beach to Lake Okeechobee.

Sugar Sand Trails at Jonathan Dickinson State Park

This would be my longest day hike thus far, and I knew that during the week, I would most likely be the only person on the trail. My backpack was a bit heavy for a day hike—16.4 pounds—but this would help get me use to carrying more weight for overnight camping trips. I felt prepared with plenty of food, water, sunscreen, and an extra pair of socks and trail runners.

I parked at Riverbend Park shortly after they opened and took an Uber to the Hobe Sound Beach, pretty simple. At 9:17 a.m., I walked to the water; I wanted to make certain I didn’t miss a step. I began my walk west and loved the beginning of this trail. I walked under beautiful Banyan trees and over the bridge in Hobe Sound. However, the next section on Dixie Highway made me glad I started north and hiked south so to get this section out of the way. At 10:07 a.m., I entered the Jonathan Dickinson State Park just off US 1 and started my trek across the sugar sand trail.

Tall Grasses in the Breeze on the OTL Trail

It was quiet, and hot, and I was grateful for the breeze, overcast sky, and the beautiful scenery as I hiked through the various ecosystems—sugar sand trail decorated with sand pines, prairies of tall golden grasses moving with the breeze and contrasting beautifully with the palmetto scrub, pine forests, and cypress swamps.  After walking through several wet areas, I became even more grateful when I came upon the occasional wood bridge over the deeper waters. Thank you, Boy Scouts.

On this Wednesday morning, I saw no one until I crossed paths with a park biologist, checking her hog traps, a few miles in. I had noticed areas where the hogs had dug up the ground around the trail. We chatted for a bit before I moved on. I had miles yet to go! 

By the time I hiked out of Jonathan Dickinson State Park at 2:45, I had been hiking for 5.5 hours and over 10 miles, and my body had begun to protest. As I crossed Cypress Creek, the waters called to me, “Jump in! Jump in!” If the water was clearer, and I knew what the heck lurked below, I may have done just that to cool off. Instead, I sat on the wooden bridge and enjoyed a rare moment in the shade. I met only one other person at 3.88 miles from Riverbend Park, a young man, Brian, who had parked at Riverbend for an out-and-back.  I had passed two campsites—Scrub Jay and Kitching Creek—with no sign of life. Other than that, I saw a few hawks and scrub jays.

A Pause at Scrub Jay Campsite

I turned into Riverbend Park at East Slough Trail at 5:50 p.m., close to sixteen miles from the start with about a half mile to my car. My weary legs had slowed me down at the end, and if they would have allowed it, I would have jumped for joy when I saw the exit sign! It was already getting dark when I got to my car.

I have begun planning for my next hike—East Slough Trail at Riverbend to BeeLine Highway.

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