The park was very nice on first glance and a long stream of weekenders were leaving as I arrived. I chose an out of the way site on the lake and near the trail that had a nice supply of leftover firewood and a smouldering fire to get me started. After setting up camp I got a bite to eat and put a little wood on the fire and sat down to read about the park. I discovered there were 29 named waterfalls in the park and that 21 of them were accessible by a 3.2 mile loop trail that was only a mile from my camp along the trail at my doorstep. I thought I would take a little stroll before it got dark so at 6:40 I headed out with a light jacket as it was headed to a chilly night and was already south of 60 degrees. I had no intention of doing the whole loop but thought I might check out a bit of it. As I got onto the falls trail there were a few late hikers finishing up and one little girl waited until I got well past before yelling, "don't try it! You'll never make it!" Well I had read that it was a very steep and difficult trail and in Texas that would have meant something but I wasn't sure about the northeast version of such a warning. I was making good time when I passed a few people and one of the ladies asked, "aren't you afraid it will get dark?" to which I replied, "I'm not afraid it will get dark, I know it will!" which got laughs all around. At this point I had seen a few of the falls and checking the time I decided to heck with it so with the little girls voice in my head arguing with the spirit of not saying no to adventure, I set out at a fast but surefooted pace to see the whole shebang, grateful for my fitness and hoping I wouldn't twist my ankle and have to hear the little girls voice as I hobbled home in the cold and the dark. The falls were worth it.
I'm pretty sure blogging it took as long as hiking it. Made it back to camp in time for dinner before it got dark. Nice quiet night by the fire.
Gorgeous! Wonder if subsurface faulting sets up those abrupt elevation changes to create the falls?
ReplyDelete