The last activity of the western loop was a canoe trip on
the Buffalo National River in Arkansas. We drove up from Louisiana, through
Tennessee and into Arkansas in a day, marveling at the bayous and cypress trees
along the way.
We started our float trip the following day and rented our
canoe from a local outfitter just off the river. The local who shuttled us to
our put-in site with the canoe had been working on the river for 43 years and
had seen the zinc boom and bust that had originally populated the river basin.
Since the bust however, the town of Rush among others had become ghost towns,
and the skeletons of buildings hidden back among the overgrowth looked like
they’d been abandoned forever, until our shuttle driver told us about the person
who had owned the building and why they left. It felt like we were talking to a
ghost of the ghost town, though he seemed to be doing well for himself even
with the lack of mining.
As darkness fell, some raccoons chattered in a tree not far
from camp, which caught our attention pretty quick, and about an hour later a
loud howl came from beyond the trees. Still not sure what that was, but it
sounded like a wolf (more likely a dog). It was as we were putting the fire out
that I noticed bright glittering in the sand from the light in my headlamp.
Looking around, I noticed the glittering diamonds were all over the sand. Huh.
What are these things? I headed over to the nearest glittering jewel in the
sand.
And that’s when I learned a fact I really didn’t want to
know.
Apparently there’s a species of spider that, when LED lights
hit them right, their eyes glitter like diamonds, and apparently these spiders
burrow in the sand at Buffalo National River. They’re not incredibly big
spiders, though there’s more substance to them than their clumsy neighbors the
daddy long-legs. The other horrifying fact is that the brighter the glitter,
the bigger the spider, and they did get to a size that I was a little more than
uncomfortable with their presence.
And we did, easily. This canoe trip was not nearly as taxing
as Voyageurs (no waves and headwind helps a ton), so we leisurely canoed
downstream and made it to our car in about six hours. The only snag was
attempting to avoid overhanging trees where additional spiders lurked. Clearly
Lisa does not like spiders.
In any case, we actually really enjoyed the river and
honestly we’d go back, so long as I just ignore the diamonds in the sand. Next
time, we decided, we have to remember two things: beer, and fishing gear.
So....now I have to be afraid of glittering sand. Awesome!!
ReplyDeleteCome on, adventure queen. You've gotta be scared of something to make the rest of us feel more normal! ;)
ReplyDelete