This was one of those days that felt like all the things were working against us. As we left our house, a friend messaged to say the road down the mountain was at a standstill and I should find another way. We have lived on our mountain for seven years now and it turns out I still get lost in neighborhoods. I spent five extra minutes trying to pick my way through a neighborhood to get to the W road. It was exasperating and made us a good 15 minutes late for our hike.
When we got close to the trailhead (a new one for me), I came up to a detour less than a quarter of a mile from where we needed to park. So another five minutes down the drain as I navigated around the detour. I was almost to the trailhead from the other side of the detour when I found myself stuck behind an excavator. I frantically called my friends to ask how they made it to the parking lot. They assured me that I just had to keep driving. We all had a good laugh as we finally pulled kids from cars and explained our mishaps before heading up the trail.
Life is just like that sometimes. Filled with obstacles and detours and wrong turns, exasperating us and making us frustrated. Thank goodness for good friends to encourage us along the way.
We finally started up the trail and everyone was in good spirits. The recent rains make everything exceptionally green right now in the mountains of the Tennessee Valley where we live. We hurried along the trail, stopping to talk about different plants as we walked.
One
of the moms in our group recently introduced us to an app called SEEK and
we love to pull it out and learn about different species of things as we
walk. There was a particular fungi growing on the side of a rock that
we stopped to check out. The underside was black and velvety and the top
just looked like a leaf. The app said it was Smooth Rock Tripe. It was a
cool discovery and we were all amazed that the app was able to identify it.
We pressed on to the top of a set of stairs that led to Point Park and enjoyed the amazing views of the Tennessee River and the city of Chattanooga. We watched hawks sore and occasionally dive out of the sky in search of food. I could sit here all afternoon.
But Wednesdays are busy days, so we snapped our pictures and turned back. Half of the group went back the way we came because we thought it was a shorter route, while half of us continued on to finish the loop. Had we had more time we could have gone on to Sunset Rock. We will save that for another hike when we aren't short on time.
We
came across a bird that none of us had observed before. It had a white
breast with brown and black. We checked our app and learned that it was
an Eastern Towhee. I will be on the look for them in our yard now that I
know what they are.
This was our 36th hike for 2021 (36/52). We knocked out 3 miles bringing us to 111.5 miles hiked this year.
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