Whitewater State Park – southeastern
Minnesota – No mosquitoes, no cell service and no wifi. But I have
Tony so all is good. We came down here for a short little getaway.
Even though I am reluctant to make
reservations, if you wish to stay in a Minnesota state park in the
summer, you had better make one. I suppose it is because the summer
camping season is so short and people are so anxious to get out and
about. I lucked out in that I found probably one of the better sites
available from Tuesday thru Thursday. Unaccustomed as I am to making
reservations, I actually made the reservation thru Friday and then
proceeded to set up a whole bunch of Friday appointments back home.
Focus is perhaps a little weak at times. Luckily, the campground
folk were understanding and refunded my money for Thursday night.
Tuesday, when we arrived was lovely.
We set up our lawn chairs and just zoned out staring at all the
mosquito free greenery. It is a real treat to be someplace in
Minnesota in the summer without mosquitoes. They say it is because
there is no standing water in the area, it is all moving streams and
rivers.
Wednesday, it was supposed to rain but
after a good soaking in the morning, it stopped raining. We decided
that we would do the Chimney Rock hike. It was over 100 steps to
reach the top of the bluffs. It was pretty steep but really lovely.
When we get to the top of all of these steps, there is a map. I look
at it and figure out which way I am supposed to go to get to Chimney
Rock. Tony, knowing how map challenged I am chooses to sit on the
conveniently placed bench and wait for my return. Clever man as I, of course,
picked the wrong way. If I had gone left, Chimney Rock was maybe a
five minute walk. I went right and walked for about a half hour
before I decided that I was perhaps going the wrong way. It was
really a pretty walk, there were several outstanding views over the
river valley, but because of the rain, there was also a lot of slick
mud. I'm really grateful that I had my walking stick. I never did
get to see Chimney Rock, only the most popular sight to see at
Whitewater. Oh well.
When we get back to the campsite, it
starts to rain. My phone goes off with severe thunderstorm warnings.
Ok, fine – but then the phone tells me we have a tornado warning
also. It is pouring down rain. We decide we should maybe head for
shelter in the campground shower house. As we are heading over
there, a ranger drives up and tells us we need to evacuate. When we
get to the shower house, I decide that we should go into the Women's
side, the reasoning that it would probably be cleaner. I guess I was
basing that on past experiences. Later on, we talked to some people
who were in the Men's side of the shower house. His reasoning was
that the southwest corner of a building is supposed to be the safest
place to be in a tornado. Guess who had a more valid reason for
which side to choose. Fun Fact: Southwest corner safety is a myth –
no part of a building is safer than another during a tornado – staying away from
windows is the key. We were in the shower house for about an hour
and a half and eventually walked back to the campsite all safe and
sound.
Miko, of course, chose the safest place to be |
Later that night, we found that we were
parked in the middle of a lake. Seriously, the water around the RV
was above my ankles. My door mat was floating several feet away. By
the next morning, most of the water had drained away but it was
muddy. Since we were leaving that day, we decided to do a short hike
around a meadow. Pleasant enough except for the parts where there
was still standing water and we had to trail blaze around the little
lakes on the trail.
Yes, the mat is floating |
Since I had no cell service, when we
left the park, I could not use my stand by travel assistant –
Google Maps. We ended up going along some of the smaller highways,
which I thoroughly enjoyed. These roads are always much more
entertaining than the big interstates.
I would love to go back to Whitewater –
maybe actually see Chimney Rock and do some more hiking. There were
some new experiences and I got to share them with Tony. I'm not sure
being evacuated to the shower house because of a tornado is something
that will make him want to continue this camping adventure, but I
guess it was a unique way to spend the night.
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