IrmaGerd! Spontaneous Alabama Road Trip!
Northern Alabama Exploration
September 8-12, 2017
Most everyone knows about Hurricane Irma. If not, you can check out the details on Wikipedia. As a Tallahassee resident who lives in a jungle house covered by trees, I was nervous as well as everybody else that lives in the Caribbean, Southeastern United States, Gulf of Mexico, etc. It didn't help Irma wasn't trying to win any running races, just bodybuilding competitions. Due to her slow-movingness, there was no clear calculated path at any point. I decided to leave and take the kiddos with me. It was our first family road trip!
I stayed in Birmingham, AL with my friend Brooke and took a few days to enjoy some parks, drink local brews, and get some National Park passport cancellations. My main points of interest were as follows:
I stayed in Birmingham, AL with my friend Brooke and took a few days to enjoy some parks, drink local brews, and get some National Park passport cancellations. My main points of interest were as follows:
Oak Mountain State Park | Blog | Website
Little River Canyon National Preserve | Blog | Website
Russell Cave National Monument | Blog | Website
Little River Canyon National Preserve | Blog | Website
Russell Cave National Monument | Blog | Website
The Gear:
- Osprey Daylite (+Bladder)
- Sony A5100 Mirrorless Camera
- TeVa Terra Fi Lite Sandals
- Dagger Stratos
- Werner Sherpa
The Story:
I was fairly confident that I would be leaving Tallahassee to travel inland. Irma is a slow swimmer taking her time, and the trajectories shifted daily. Oddly enough, the European model was the most accurate from the beginning. Thank you National Hurricane Center for being confident about it going up the East coast and then bouncing back into the Atlantic Ocean. Now we know who the idealists and realists are.
I would not fair well with a tropical storm in my death trap of a jungle house. The house survived Hermine last year but only a few months ago, I had a magnolia tree smash one side of my deck from a 15 minute evening windstorm. Irma is a spiral of catastrophic demolition. I only stayed at work until noon on Friday before going home to continue with preparations. My roommate and I brought everything that was outside into either the house or shed. I took my XT250 to Paula's house to hang out in her garage, and I set the kayaks up on my truck. The rest was packing and moving items around and getting the cats ready to go. I left many valuables behind, but I did bring my PC tower, 1/2 monitors, projector, camera, kayak gear, Surface, etc. I couldn't have too much since it will be the kitties' first road trip, and they need space.
Birmingham
I arrived in the evening where I found my friend's place. The kitties were not happy about the dog but found their spots to hide. I was probably a bad Kat Mama, but I needed food and a beer. I walked over to the Southside neighborhood and consumed some local brews and a burger at Jack Brown's Beer & Pizza. I've started to eat burgers again. It's weird how my food cravings are seasonal. My burger got lost somewhere, but I eventually did get to eat it and had a huge discount on my bill. Not bad. I returned back to the house, where I found a traumatized Taco and a jaded Jovi. I'll call around to board them for both their sakes and mine.
The next morning I met Brooke and her friend at The Market At Pepper Place. It is also in the Southside neighborhood and occurs every Saturday from 7-12, rain or shine. I had a delicious breakfast (and coffee), listened to music, checked out the large selection of farm grown products, and tried Kombucha for the first time! I had one while I was at the market, and then bought two bottles to go (each from different Kombucheries?).
The next morning I met Brooke and her friend at The Market At Pepper Place. It is also in the Southside neighborhood and occurs every Saturday from 7-12, rain or shine. I had a delicious breakfast (and coffee), listened to music, checked out the large selection of farm grown products, and tried Kombucha for the first time! I had one while I was at the market, and then bought two bottles to go (each from different Kombucheries?).

Oak Mountain State Park
Link to Post: Oak Mountain State Park - Paddling and Hiking
Heading back to the boat ramp [2017-09-09] Oak Mountain State Park | Pelham, AL |
Turtles! [2017-09-09] Oak Mountain State Park | Pelham, AL |
Leave No Trace [2017-09-09] Oak Mountain State Park | Pelham, AL |
I came across another map on the trail. I clearly took the Red/Blue connector that was further East, but I was trying to take the Western one on this map. I did not make it as far as I thought I had. Oh well! Plenty of room to adjust. I was close to the trailhead too, which isn't necessarily a bad thing if I don't want to go on a long hike. This added a perspective for me that the park is even larger than I imagined.
Trail Map [2017-09-09] Oak Mountain State Park | Pelham, AL |
Local Kombucha! [2017-09-09] Oak Mountain State Park | Pelham, AL |
Last but not least, the main entrance sign at the "front gate" of the park.
Main Entrance Sign [2017-09-09] Oak Mountain State Park | Pelham, AL |
Little River Canyon National Preserve
Sunday morning I decided on a National Park agenda. I'm never travelling without my U.S. Nationals Parks or Florida State Parks passport. I never know where I could end up!
Link to Post: Little River Canyon National Preserve
Link to Post: Little River Canyon National Preserve
The Main Overlook of Little River Falls [2017-09-10] Little River Canyon National Preserve | Fort Payne, AL |
Russell Cave National Monument
Link to Post: Russell Cave National Monument
After getting my fix at Little River Canyon, I drove North right at the Tennessee border to visit Russell Cave National Monument. Again, no research and planning. I asked the rangers about the gist of the park, and they told me a brief background on the cave and said I should start with the exhibits inside the visitor center. I of course got my stamp! This park did not have much of a crowd, but I liked it that way.
I rounded a corner and arrived to a view of the cave. While I have been in caverns and seen sinkholes, it's neat to see the collapsed limestone with a roof over it from the outside. And that there are still plants growing on top of the cave.
The boardwalk ends just under the entrance to the cave. I had a feeling I wouldn't be allowed to wander. There's more signs for me to gain knowledge though!
Huntsville, AL
I decided to pass through Huntsville on my return trip. I was recommend Ale's Kitchen, which was the restaurant for Straight to Ale. While my Jerk Chicken Tacos were scrumptious, it was one of the more disappointing beer flights I've ever had.
Straight to Ale / Ale's Kitchen:
Beer Flight - Ale's Kitchen [2017-09-10] Straight to Ale | Huntsville, AL |
Therefore I walked over to Yellowhammer Brewing which was across the field. I'll classify this flight as being at least average. They had an electronic beer menu with an Untappd feed, so I could see my check-ins.
Beer Flight [2017-09-10] Yellowhammer Brewing | Huntsville, AL |
Hey those are my Untappd check-ins! [2017-09-10] Yellowhammer Brewing | Huntsville, AL |
I went to Starbucks for an hour or so to make sure I was sober enough for the dark, 2 hour drive back. I also took advantage of the Wi-Fi and got started on this blog post.
The next day, I went for a run, worked on my blog at a local coffee shop as well as Ghost Train Brewing, and then went on a crazy urban adventure, but no more nature things.
Ghost Train wins the award for cutest flights, as well as good Wi-Fi to camp out for a few hours and work on this again.
No bad news from the hurricane. My house had no damage and never lost power or electricity. Unfortunately not everyone was so lucky. Day after that, I scooped up Jovi and Taco, and we drove back to Tallahassee.
The next day, I went for a run, worked on my blog at a local coffee shop as well as Ghost Train Brewing, and then went on a crazy urban adventure, but no more nature things.
Ghost Train wins the award for cutest flights, as well as good Wi-Fi to camp out for a few hours and work on this again.
No bad news from the hurricane. My house had no damage and never lost power or electricity. Unfortunately not everyone was so lucky. Day after that, I scooped up Jovi and Taco, and we drove back to Tallahassee.
Hurdles:
If you are good at losing things like I am, get a dog (or cat) tag made with your first name and phone number and attach it to your key chain. I lost my keys, and it took awhile to find them. I was almost at the point of having a friend overnight them with FedEx. I now have a leopard print tag on my keys with that information.
Other than that - it was great to catch up with a friend, experience a new city, and explore some new parks!
Relevant Quote:
"Spontaneity is what travel is all about."
-Zach Anner
Normally I have a solid schedule when I travel with built in time for spontaneity. This trip was purely spontaneous, but thanks to suggestions and Google Maps, I had a great time exploring.
Other:
Such a long post...I took so many photos, but everything was so pretty! Including beer flights - which are always pretty.
I only have three more Alabama National Park cancellations. They are in the Southeastern part of the state, so it can be a really long day or weekend trip. Stay tuned!
***12 June 2018 - Edited post to separate out each section of the main 3 sections.
I only have three more Alabama National Park cancellations. They are in the Southeastern part of the state, so it can be a really long day or weekend trip. Stay tuned!
***12 June 2018 - Edited post to separate out each section of the main 3 sections.
Related Resources:
- AL State Parks: Oak Mountain State Park
- U.S. National Parks: Little River Canyon National Preserve
- U.S. National Parks: Russell Cave National Monument
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