Tuesday April 15
It is very enjoyable to get up at seven, take Molly on a longish walk, then have a leisurely long breakfast with nowhere to go and only birdwatching to do. And I got up with my hip and left leg not hurting! (much)
We started our walk before Ed got up. We tried to go down to the boat ramp, but a camper had a dog tied outside and it started barking, so why wake the world? We went back, and while going through the grassy area by the visitor center and nature center, saw Tree Swallows! Three of them. Very, very unmistakable and later I got a picture. Common as mud—I’d see thousands of them this trip—but a new bird for me. Another lifer, on top of the Prairie Warbler at Mousetail Landing State Park.
The campground isn’t really all that big, but it seems that way because the different areas are far away from each other. Along the main road, from the visitor center to the boat ramp--are some very nice full hookup sites and electric-only sites, all on the left side and with nice wide concrete pads. Along the right are gravel pads…weird. But the site I chose—at the very beginning by the visitor center and nature center and right smack up beside one of the four camper cabins—is gravel and very short. As mentioned earlier, we had to park the Jeep over in the nature center/playground parking lot, but it was safe overnight thank heavens. I was worried. It turned out another car was parked all night too, a few spots away, right underneath the streetlight. So we may have been safer than I thought, but still worrisome with the gate wide open and the entrance right nearby. The weather turned off cold--gale-force winds of 20-30 mph—and rainy. Despite the app telling me it was going to quit raining by eleven, it kept it up through 1pm or so. We went for a drive to some of the wildlife refuges in the area and never got out of the car.
Then to the candy store/cheese barn. Should have bought some cheese; I got some candy for the kids and some horrible fake yogurt pretzels for myself. They weren’t real pretzels, just cookies. Yuck.
We returned to find it was still cold and blustery, but Molly needed a walk. I put on my windbreaker over the hoodie and we went on a few trails and then up the road to the other side of the lake.
There was a
trailhead there for several trails, and although the sign said that the trail
we took went to the campground, I couldn’t figure out how it was supposed to
get there. We ended up on the disc golf course, and from a look through
the binoculars, there was no way to cross the lake back to the correct side. So
we backtracked a bit and ended up at the boat ramp. I knew my way back from there—pass
the full hookup sites and up the hill.
So I conclude, the park has some great trails but the maps are confusing as heck.
Interesting—the Buckeye Trail is actually part of the statewide trail, a 1,444-mile loop around the state of Ohio. I should have kept on going.
Tree swallows!
And a bluebird repairing his bike