Weekend escape
Jul. 18th, 2011 06:39 pm
Spent a lovely long weekend out in Shenandoah National Park with my mom, who is now well enough to do things like hike 1 mile up a terrifying Appalachian mountain peak for a 360-degree view, thanks so much for the total lack of warning about the sheer drops and rock climbs, Mr. Park Ranger. We had a good time other than the accidental terror: took a couple of hikes through meadows and along wooded streams, drove the 100-mile park from top to bottom, sampled blackberry festival treats (BBQ sauce, salad dressing, ice cream, breakfast syrup), heard a mediocre but enthusiastic dulcimer player, saw a clogging troupe performance and played some Scrabble in the exhausted evenings.
Wildlife sightings included:
- 22 deer
- 1 coyote
- 1 groundhog or possibly woodchuck
- 1 bright blue flash of reptile of indeterminate origin
- 1 barred owl
- 1 (heard) woodpecker
- 2 curled-up maybe-centipedes
- 6 chipmunks
- Many butterflies, including monarchs
- Many ravens and hawks
- 4 baby chickadees in a nest
- 1 bluebird and 1 yellow bird (sorry, not a bird expert)
- 2 dead beavers, 1 dead raccoon and 1 dead skunk (road outside park)
- 1 Chihuahua with a motorcycle helmet and goggles
- Countless gnats, bees, ants, flies and spiders and 1 green stick bug
- 0 bears (unless you count the 50+ stuffed, ceramic, photographed and refrigerator magnetized versions in the gift shops and the life-sized doll in one lodge)
A lot of people visit the park for spring wildflowers or fall foliage, but it's not too shabby in summer, either.



The "rock scramble," a.k.a. summit hike of doom, which basically went straight up.

And up.

And then straight down. See the bright blue markings on the rock at lower right and center? That's the path.

Then there were some deer.


And a sunset.

And a much less mountainous hike the next morning.



Bad to the bone.

And finished off with lunch in Charlottesville's pedestrianized historic district.

All in all, a good weekend. You?
no subject
Date: Jul. 19th, 2011 12:08 am (UTC)Also, DEER! *g*
no subject
Date: Jul. 19th, 2011 12:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 19th, 2011 01:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 19th, 2011 11:09 pm (UTC):D
Of course. We could NOT do the hike of doom, but instead try the hike to the 87-foot waterfall that sounded great but we were too tired to attempt. And other things.
I wonder how similar the Smokey Mountains are to this park.
no subject
Date: Jul. 20th, 2011 12:26 am (UTC)oh, waterfall sounds good.
no subject
Date: Jul. 19th, 2011 05:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 19th, 2011 11:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 19th, 2011 05:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 19th, 2011 11:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: Jul. 20th, 2011 04:30 am (UTC)Glad to hear that your mom is enjoying herself again -- you both deserve a holiday!
no subject
Date: Jul. 21st, 2011 09:45 pm (UTC)Yellowstone was far more gorgeous than Shenandoah, but there were parts that looked a bit the same - rocky mountainsides and lush pines with periodic scoured patches where there'd been fires.