It was another day of us doing almost nothing. I have been feeling a bit punky the last few days and Peggy was nice to let me lay low for another day. It may not have been a big sacrifice on her part because the torrid outside temperatures and stupifying humidity have made venturing outdoors unpleasant.
We did take a short spin to see if we could spot some deer and we were quite successful on that point. We also wandered about in the area just outside the park looking for diesel. We filled up because we are off tomorrow, continuing our westward progress.
Author Archives: The Ramblers
August 5 Around Fitzgerrell SP
Today we woke up and the outside temperature was already on the way to miserable. It never dropped below 76 last night and by the time the sunlight started trickling through the shade trees it was well into the 80’s. The humidity was much higher than we wanted to confront so we stayed pretty close to our air conditioned trailer.
We noted from our comfy chairs that there was a bunch of critters moving around outside so we finally let temptation get the better of reason and we ventured out as far as our air conditioned truck so we could take a spin around the massive campground complex here at Fitzgerrell State Park.
There are a few critter pix. Click the asterisk *
August 4 Evansville to Fitzgerrell SP in Illinois
Today we left Indiana and headed west into Illinois. We again used I-64 for most of the drive because we are trying to sort of scamper across this part of the U.S. It is hotter than hell and the humidity is hard on us desert types who prefer the crispy west. However, the countryside along the road is gorgeous and I kept slowing down to leer at the surroundings. We figured Illinois was flat but the part we drove through yesterday was gently rolling hills. Due to recent rains, everything was bright green except the road which had lumpy bridge approaches.
About halfway between Indiana and St. Louis, we pulled into Wayne Fitzgerrell State Park. The park is located on some peninsulas protruding into Rend Lake, near Whittington. The lake is really a reservoir created by the Corps of Engineers but it is very pretty nonetheless. There are electrical hookups in the RV section but, strangely, only a few locations in the campground to get water. There are no sewer hookups. This arrangement certainly keeps big RVs from overstaying their welcome unless everyone camping chooses to go to the scattered public restrooms to go. There are no shower houses. The spaces are large and paved but the remainder of the area is lush grass and large hardwood shade trees.
I can get some satellite reception but it took some crafty compass work to get that. We don’t get all the channels but we do get an NBC broadcast from Evansville. Their news is funny because they really have very little to report in this farming country but they do an extensive local sports broadcast covering high school football hell weeks and they are showing the NASCAR races this weekend so I am pretty happy.
August 3 Evansville and Henderson
We swung into Evansville, Indiana, again today. We started out at Wolf Bar-B-Q where we pigged out at their wonderful buffet. It was only $9.95 a head without drinks and we found just about everything was very tasty although the chicken in sauce was dry. It’s a great bargain. We found Wolf’s in a book we have titled 1000 Places to See Before You Die. It was a good place to eat but I think the book author should get out more.
After turning away from the trough, we took another cruise into Evansvillle and we were dazzled by the abundance of fabulous old residences lining some streets. You can see that the tenants or owners of a few of these pretty buildings have lost out to the environment and their houses are falling apart. However, most of the buildings are well-maintained and beautiful. They are very large and maintenance must be expensive but the owners are putting up a valiant fight and their houses are testaments to their tenacity and dedication. The architecture is varied, creative and stunning.
We finally tore ourselves away from ogling the magnificent structures and headed along the Ohio River where we spotted and old LST (Landing Ship, Tank, in military parlance) Apparently, there were hundreds of these ships feeding the efforts of D-Day in Normandy in WWII and this ship is the last operating unit. They even take it out and drive it up and down the Ohio River during summer months, visiting shoreline communities but not landing any tanks.
We found a road across the Ohio into Kentucky and headed across to Henderson, home to John J. Audubon State Park. It seemed appropriate because we fancy ourselves birders, albeit woefully ignorant ones. Audubon Park is a gorgeous spot with some terrific birdwatching opportunities and, strangely, some gorgeous buildings built by the Works Project Administration back in the 1930s. They have a great observation room and I almost had to be blasted out of there because I was having a pretty good time speculating about what varieties of birds I was seeing. There were lots of them and they were very colorful. We thought this place was terrific.
Seethe downtown stuff. Click the asterisk *
August 2 Clarksville to Evansville
Another travel day today. We continue our westward trek. We left Add-More RV Park in Clarksville and jumped onto I-64 again. I always thought Indiana was dead flat but, as usual, I was full of shit. It was a gorgeous drive west through southern Indiana with combined forest and farmland situated in gently rolling but not insubstantial hills. We are starting to pick up our pace so we are breaking our informal rule and using the interstate system to cross the midwest.
We pulled off near Evansville, another Indiana town on the banks of the Ohio River. We pulled into the Vanderburg 4-H Center. It looks like the location where a county fair or an NRA meeting might be held but they have full hookups and it’s fairly cheap. Our drive today only took a couple hours and we crossed over the dividing line between the Eastern and Central time zones a half dozen times before leaving the Eastern behind and cruising into the Central, gaining an hour.
We had so much spare time after setting up our trailer that we headed into Evansville to look around. Foolishly, I did not expect anything interesting but, again, I was the donkey because the first thing we found was Gerst Bavarian Haus which was a restaurant and a tavern and previously a hardware store. It is in a gorgeous building. The food was pretty good and they had a fabulous beer selection, so we took advantage of both. It wasn’t cheap but the food was worth it.
Then we took a cruise through downtown and for the third time today, I underestimated something and found a metro area oozing with gorgeous architecture of municipal, residential and churches that look like old cathedrals. The traffic was even pretty good. It seemed a very nice place.
There are a few pix for perusal taken today. Click the asterisk *
August 1 Malingering and scheduling
We did not do anything interesting today. We scheduled some future stays west of here. We drove to two gas stations to get some tobaccy for me. I dumped the tanks. It was mundane.
July 31 Wandering in rural Indiana
Today we had no pressing items on our agenda. As a matter of fact, there are rarely pressing items that we absolutely need to address anytime because we are retired and schedules are not really pertinent for us.
We decided to merely take a spin through that portion of Indiana near Clarksville and the Ohio River. We left our park in Clarksville headed to a good local meat market where we stocked up on some stuff to contribute to congestive heart failure but then drove east, trying to skirt the north shore of the Ohio River where it divides Louisville, Kentucky, from Indiana.
We were impressed with the birds and brilliantly green vegetation bordering the roads. As a matter of fact, we spotted numerous locations where there were big stands of marijuana or hemp intermingled with the soybeans. We didn’t yank any out because, not only was it the wrong time of year, the pot looked crummy. We did spot numerous forms of unique Americana along our path. It is very pretty here although the locals say it is extraordinarily green this year due to heavy recent rains.
You can see some pictures of this bucolic wonderfulness. Click the asterisk *
July 30 Louisville
Louisville downtown was our destination for today despite the fact that I hate driving into cities because they have dreadful traffic, bizarre and arcane traffic rules inconsistent with those in other cities, an abundance of insane motorists and traffic-clogging construction. Louisville is no exception.
We headed south from our RV park in Clarksville in Indiana. There were many attempts to get us on I-65 which has a toll bridge crossing the Ohio River. It costs a bit over $2 if you are fortunate enough to have a transponder but costs twice as much if you pay by mail. There is no mechanism to pay in cash approaching the bridge. Since we don’t have a Louisville Bridge transponder, the local authorities will send a bill to my house which I will not receive since I am not there. I anticipate a warrant will follow. I hope I don’t go to jail for scheme to deprive the city of Louisville out of a $4 bridge toll.
We took an adjacent bridge today that does not have a toll. Instead, the local bridge authority is painting the iron components of the free bridge and they have winnowed the heavy traffic down to one lane each way. Traffic going north over the bridge is an absolute nightmare that snarls traffic all the way back into downtown Louisville.
Despite the traffic, Louisville has some magnificent building architecture of commercial, residential and municipal facilities. They have many statues of horses because L’ville is home to Churchill Downs, home of the Kentucky Derby. Louisville Downs is an enormous complex, unlike the spartan Del Mar Racetrack near my home in San Diego. I think the Del Mar track and the entire adjacent Southern California Exposition fairgrounds would fit inside the buildings at Churchill Downs.
Intermingled with the fabulous homes and snazzy horse racing tracks are neighborhoods that look pretty nasty with lots of sullen folks sitting on their porches ogling the passing cars. We should not be amazed – cities are miserable places but the jobs there sure pay better than, say, West Virginia.
We got some pictures crossing the river and in the city today. Click the asterisk *
July 29 Lexington KY to Clarksville IN
Today was another travel day. We hitched the fifth wheel to the truck and pulled out of Fort Boonesboro State Park and headed a few miles to I-75. We took I-75 through Lexington and then got back on I-64 in our westward quest. Usually we try to stay off the interstates but Kentucky is so gorgeous that they could not uglify it by running a freeway through it. The scenery was stunning – gorgeous horse ranches with emerald pastures. It appears that horses live better here than almost everybody in West Virginia.
We continued on to Louisville where we turned across the Ohio River into Indiana. Only about 4 exits later, we pulled off near the town of Clarksville and into the Add-More RV Park. It is sort of a big gravel parking lot and the spaces are small but they have full hookups, our satellite dish works here and they have wifi. We anticipate dropping back into Louisville tomorrow to take a look around.
July 28 Winchester & Lexington
Today we took a spin into a couple Kentucky cities with a ton of history behind them. Our first destination was Winchester, not far from our campsite at Fort Boonesboro State Park. On the way out of the park this morning, we tried to see the old Boonesboro fort from the 1700’s but all we found was a small stone foundation about 50 feet on a side. It was not real thrilling.
We headed down the highway to Winchester after this tremendous nothing. Winchester is a gorgeous city with stunning old buildings, most of them made from brick although there are some fabulous wood structures, too. We puttered around and fouled up traffic while gawking at the beautiful buildings. However, we soon figured we didn’t want to get pulled over for impeding traffic so we split and headed to Lexington, about 20 miles west.
Lexington is absolutely magnificent. The traffic lights are irritating but the sections we saw were stunning. Henry Clay, Secretary of State under John Quincy Adams and long term Kentucky statesman, had a really nice place in a neighborhood of staggeringly ornate and unique residences. After cruising Henry’s neighborhood, we drove downtown and, like an idiot, I turned into Lexington’s enormous downtown graveyard. We became lost in this massive city of the dead but not before spotting Henry Clay’s family plot and crypt. He must have been a hell of a guy because his crypt is the biggest in the graveyard and it has a big column with a marble statue of Henry at the top. Today he had a very chubby hawk perched on top of his head.
We also drove by Mary Todd Lincoln’s house. She was Abraham Lincoln’s absolutely bonkers wife who really went gunnybag after Booth shot Lincoln behind the ear. There is an amazing number of other famous folks both in the past and present that call Lexington their home but I can’t remember any of them because I am old. We made one more pass through the astounding downtown area before getting back on a skinny back road toward our campground. The skinny back roads are lined with rock walls made from limestone slabs cleared from the crop lands. Somebody did a ton of work because there are a lot of rocks involved in these roadside walls.
Surprisingly, on the way home we found another access to Fort Boonesboro State Park and drove right up in front of Daniel Boone’s old Boonesboro stockade. It is an amply sized enclosure that looks like it would be nasty to attack. Probably burn okay if you could get the big palisade logs to catch fire but you would have to get in close and Kentuckians were good shots.
We took some photos. To see them, click the asterisk *