Pouring in. Not the rain, the campers. It's Thursday evening and the
beat-the-weekend-crowd crowd - no, that is not a typo- is pouring in. It's raining again as
well, – it's rained every day since we got here on Monday – but
the stream of campers is more impressive than the water flowing down
the middle of the loop road. RV's of every shape and size pull
through the loops of Vogel State Park looking for the best possible
camp site. The bigger units like the Class A and larger Class C's
have to drop their towed cars before entering the shire, sorry, the
campground, and those campers use the smaller vehicles to reconnoiter
the camping loops while the mother-ships wait behind patiently. I
would imagine it's hard to distinguish camp sites in the rain but
many of the campers are repeat visitors and know exactly which of the
68 sites they are looking for. The weekend crowd is going to be
disappointed they didn't get here earlier.
Vogel has somewhere around 300,000 visitors a year, but how many are
campers and how many rent one of the 33 cabins isn't clear, but after
spending four days here, almost solid rain not-withstanding, we see
why this park is so popular with RVers. This loop filled up quickly
and many RV's make the cul-de-sac turn at the end of the road and
head back past us hoping the remaining available sites aren't the
worst ones in the park. We retire to the trailer and fix dinner when
the rains once again start and darkness slowly falls on the
campground. A few late arrivals still drive through searching for
open sites.
___
|
Hungry tree attacks slow moving rock... |
Friday morning breaks dry and cool and several campers up the road
from us who were here when we arrived, break camp and head out,
probably to avoid the weekend crush. Ilse and I decide to explore one
of the trails at the end of our loop while walking Taz, our Golden
Retriever, and take an excursion into the woods on a well-worn path
that isn't well marked. The recent rains have left their mark on the
trails as the paths are well rutted. We follow a trail that wanders
around the base of Blood Mountain, then drops back into the
campground about a mile a way. Great hiking trails here, and we'll do
this one again on Monday after the crowd heads home.
Most of the newly vacated sites are soon occupied by new arrivals as
very few sites remain open for long. A steady stream of campers
towing trailers make the futile trip looking for sites.
Soon, a
throng of onlookers watch as Don and Wendy struggle through the
campground with their 42 foot long, three axle trailer looking for an
open site, and after making the excruciatingly tight turn at the end
of the loop, finally back into the last remaining site on our loop
just below the camp shower facility. There isn't any free space left
on their campsite after they get settled; the front bumper of his
pickup truck is right against the roadway. The Vogel campground dates
from the 1930's when trailers and campers were smaller, and while
some of the sites are suitable for newer, bigger units, the roads and
bridges are confined and narrow by most modern, commercial campground
standards. There isn't much clearance on many of the tight turns and
curves. Still, they are happy to be here, and plan on enjoying the
coming weekend.
In a case of irony that couldn't be scripted, Don and Wendy have to
park next to an eighteen foot long Casita, one of the smallest travel
trailers on the market and definitely the smallest camper in the
campground. Our dear friends Richard and Arlene, who got us
interested in camping in the first place, also have a Casita, so I
had to take one of those comparison photos of the two units side by
side. Two different views on Rving, and each has its own merits.
|
An 18 foot Casita is dwarfed by a 42 foot Fuzion - Each has its merits... and drawbacks
|
Good weather is forecast for the
weekend and we are supposed to get a break from the rain. There's
live music scheduled by the lakefront tomorrow evening, all we have
to do is bring lawn chairs. School started in Georgia two weeks ago,
so most of the campers here during the week are older, mostly retired
couples, almost always with their pets. Weekend campers usually are
younger, working people with kids, but there are few children here so
far. The campfires all smell like hickory, and the only water we hear
is from the creek behind us. All in all, life is good in the shire.
___
Saturday morning is when the park
staff earn every penny they're paid. The weekend warriors are here in
force and every conceivable question about the park or situation that
requires immediate attention takes place now. We walk down to the
visitors center to pick up a hiking trail map and watch in horror as
an elderly fellow backs up in the parking lot, after looking as best
he could, into a family with young children and a dog on a leash that
wander unconsciously behind his car. No one is hurt, but we are
reminded why we like empty campgrounds.
|
Lord of the Rings, anyone? |
People are standing in the visitor
center elbow to elbow. The weekend crowds are here, enjoying the lake
and the hiking trails. Almost everyone seems to have a dog, but they
are all leashed, and so far, well behaved. The kids aren't leashed,
but for the most part, they're having a good time and except for an
occasional pack of young bicycle riders frantically pedaling past,
you wouldn't notice. For a full campground, it is relatively
peaceful.
Ilse and I walk around the small
but pretty lake – some would call it a large pond – and walk down
the short spillway trail at the far end and are quite taken back by
the beautiful waterfall at the bottom of the trail. A woman taking
photos from the wooden deck lookout accidentally drops her walking
stick into the creek below and her companion dutifully climbs down
the rocks to retrieve it for her. He clambers over the rocks and
avoids falling in, and successfully retrieves the hiker's aid.
Another young woman watching with us on the deck volunteers to take
our photo with the waterfall as a backdrop. Our first photo of the
trip with the three of us.
The rains hold off for a second
day so we decide to take advantage of the good weather and set up our
screen room. We take the formidable looking collection of fabric and
aluminum poles out of its bag and wonder how did we do it last time?
No problem, after unfolding a few legs or arms or what ever, it
begins to look like the picture on the outside of the box, and within
just a few, trouble-free minutes, it is set up and ready for use. We
position the screen room just behind the camper, then set up the gas
grill and open another bottle of wine. We sit and watch as the
curious crowds wander by, and by early afternoon, we are pretty much
left alone. The campground is full but it is relatively quiet up here
at our end of the park. Time to grill the chicken and kick back. Ilse
is already deep into a book she has been trying to read for several
days, and we still have over a week to go. Come Monday we will have
the park to ourselves once again. Vogel gets great marks from us, a
park we will return to in the future.
NEXT: The Last Train to Clarksville, at:
http://sleepstwo.blogspot.com/2015/08/the-last-train-to-clarksville.html