With Spring break coming Brayden asked me if we could go camping. He and Hannah were going to be out for spring break with no fun plans. I can't turn down a request like that from my grandchildren, so on short notice I looked around for an available campsite. I found a good site at Lake Ouachita State Park for March 17th through March 20. I reserved site #41 in loop B which is the first cul-de-sac type loop past the Visitor Center. Site #41 is a class AAA site with full hookups. Although close to the road it is separated from the road by long boat trailer parking spots and allowed considerable separation from traffic. The site had a nice view of the lake and a small creek behind.
While setting up camp I saw the first bald eagle of the week. As it turned out this eagle was the first of several we would see.Bald Eagle Above Loop B |
Just below out trailer was the swim beach. A pretty place near the marina, but with nighttime temperatures approaching the 20's there was no swimming going on.
Monday morning we drove to Hot Springs for a day around town. We stopped for lunch on Central Avenue at Rolando’s Restaurante for a delicious Ecuadorian lunch.
Next stop after lunch as a short walk down the street to Kilwins for desert. Everyone tried a different ice cream flavor. We also took home some tasty chocolate covered almonds.
Continuing on down Central Avenue we walked bathhouse row. We stopped at the Fordyce Bath House which now serves as the Hot Springs National Park Visitor Center. Much of the Fordyce Bathhouse is preserved as a museum. We did a self-guided tour of the bathhouse. Hannah found the whole thing to be creepy and thought most of it looked like torture devices.
Fordyce Bath House - Hot Springs National Park Visitor Center |
De Soto's Pool |
De Soto's Pool |
Old Elevator Equipment |
Old Mechanical Equipment Room |
Entrance to the Grand Promenade |
The Maurice Bathhouse |
Hale Bathouse |
Superior Bathhouse |
During our first night at the park there was a 3:00 AM incident with the tent zipper rendering it incapable of closing. With temperatures hovering around freezing sleeping in the tent was not considered an option so into the camper kids came. My solution was to get a vinyl tarp to cover the opening while we were in Hot Springs. With the new door in place the second night and temperatures below freezing the kids ended up back in the camper anyway.
Brayden and Hannah Back in the Camper |
Lake Ouachita State Park Visitor Center |
Tuesday afternoon we arranged for a a boat tour with a state park interpreter. What was to be a historical tour of the lake turned into what our park interpreter Emily called a "National Geographic Tour" due to the wildlife we were encountering. On the hour and a half tour we saw numerous bald eagles and several rafts of hundreds of coots. Although the coots look like ducks on the water they are not ducks. They don't have webbed feet and are more closely related to rails. Emily explained that coots were a source of food for eagles and in the 1990s just after the bald eagle came off the endangered species list they caused a loss of large numbers of eagles. After years of study it was determined that the coots were eating an invasive water grass the had a bacteria growing on its surface. Attempts to kill the water grass with herbicide resulted in concentration of the bacteria on the remaining grass and eagles eating coots continued to incur brain damage. Finally, sterile carp (sterile carp because they are an undesirable evasive species) were introduced into the effected lakes and the water grass was significantly reduced. The eagle population has since recovered.
Lake Ouachita State Park Marina and Breakwater |
Raft of Coots Taking Flight |
Emily showed us two special rocks, One rock is called the "Zebra Rock" because of the veins of white quarts in the rock. The other special rock is the charcoal colored rock that shouldn't be in the Ouachita Mountains. She explained that the Ouachita Mountains and the Ozark Mountains are older than the Rocky Mountains and eons ago they were taller than the Rocky Mountains. The movement of the earth and erosion of the mountains relocated the rock from the Ozark Plateau to where it now resides in the Ouachita Mountains.
Zebra Rock |
Ozark Plateau Traveling Rock |
Boat Tour Bald Eagle |
Another Boat tour Bald Eagle |
Dinner with View of the Marina |
The Dirt Driveway at 15310 Highway 9 |
The Blowout Tire at Home |
No comments:
Post a Comment