Saturday, February 21
In the morning I made these notes: It's so beautiful here I could stay for weeks. Last night I had to cut our walk short because it was spitting rain on us and it sermed to be getting worse. But it stopped shortly after.
Today its balmy, just like yesterday. However, Ed got up worried because the power was off. I checked with the camper across the road, and his was off too. We hadn’t noticed until the fan ran the house battery down low enough that it stopped; Ed had to turn the engine on to get the generator to start. It will use the house batteries if they have sufficient power, otherwise it needs the engine boost to use the auto batteries.
Mockingbirds think it’s spring! There were swallows in swarms and I think there
were swifts, too. The piers by the boat dock hae been occupied in sequence by
gulls, then cormorants, and today a pelican (brown) and a blackbird. They’re
popular perches!
As far as camping goes, I wasn’t loving this place like I did the last one. It’s too crowded and too open. The only option I have for walking Molly is right past other people’s campsites out to the street. And that’s what I’ll do in a little while. Hope I don’t get eaten by an alligator.
But it has some redeeming points:
I saw a Wood Stork in the pond at the entrance!!!! LIFER! And a couple of alligators, some egrets and a grebe of some sort.
In my evening walk I made the excited observation: There’s bats out here! And mosquitos. Lovely.
We ate at Local's Dockside in St. Mary’s. It was okay, although to beat the crowd we decided to eat at 5 o’clock which is awfully early for me. I actually wasn’t hungry, for once, haven eaten a small lunch at about 1:30. In the time between lunch and dinner, I spent at least an hour and a half walking with Molly. We got sort of lost on the trails by trying to take a shortcut back to the dump station. Which didn’t work. But we found it eventually.
The restaurant was fine, but I walked away still hungry. I had fried oysters (9 of them), sweet potato waffle fries, and a bowl of green peas. The oysters were very good but not filling, the sweet potatoes light and crunchy and not at all filling—there were probably no more than 1/3 of a potato cut thinly and lightly battered. The peas were tasty but boring. And none of it was filling or in any way satisfying like a bowl of beans and rice would have been, or even a big green salad with cabbage and other crunchy things.
So I came home hungry and snacked on nuts, dried fruit, and dark chocolate before bedtime. I can NOT make a habit of that.
REVIEW: Crooked River SP
Pines and palmettos, mosquitos and bats, and lots of golf carts
It’s a really nice place and hard to find fault with. Except the lack of sewer hookups—that kind of sucks considering how new and fancy this campground is. The roads are immaculate, well-marked and easy to follow. There are trails all around although without a trail map it’s easy to get hopelessly turned around and have to rely on GPS to get back to home base. And it seems very well-managed—the workers at the entrance station were on the ball and quite helpful.
Our site was #25, back-in, and very, very long. It was big and well-spaced out, but completely open to the neighbors on all sites. The surface was gray, chunky gravel. Not pleasant to walk on but not likely to come inside on your shoes, either. The picnic table was old wood but in good condition and rather long. We had a fire pit, too. Funny, I didn’t see firewood for sale, but I may have just missed it. There were a handful of fires here and there after the sun went down.
Due to all the lovely, tall pine trees, we had trouble positioning our Starlink to get an uninterrupted connection. But it worked okay, sitting on the ground on its short stand.
We were there on a Saturday in mid-February and the campground was pretty much full. The signage indicated that it was completely full. It was a little noisy but not in an objectionable way—just kids playing, golf cars zipping around, and a few bumps and bangs as people set up their stuff.
As mentioned in the headline, there were a good number of mosquitos at sundown. I don’t fault the campground for that—what else would you expect for the location and time of year? But you might want to bring repellent of some sort.
There were lots of nice trails, but for the dog’s nighttime walk there was nowhere good to go, just round and around the campground with people’s lights glaring in my eyes.
We ate at Local's Dockside in St. Mary’s. It was okay, but I walked away still hungry. I had fried oysters (9 of them), sweet potato waffle fries, and a bowl of green peas. The oysters were very good but not filling, the sweet potatoes light and crunchy but a small serving. The peas were tasty but boring. I’d go again but order something else.


















