Florida
Camping
By Steve Gillman
Florida camping can be expensive. My wifa Ana and I paid $23
to camp in our conversion van one night. Of course, it was at a
beautiful state park on the beach, and in the morning we saw a
dolphin swimming near shore.
Florida camping can be inexpensive too. While at the beach,
we heard we could camp for free at the isolated campgrounds
which dotted the Apalachicola National Forest. Naturally, our
frugality sent us into alligator country.
We camped two nights in the dark woods, next to the dark
waters of a slow river. There was was an old guy who seemed to
be living there, and a young couple with their two-year-old
daughter. Lester was from England, Kari from Texas, and Indya
was born in Guatamala. They met in India, of course.
No crowds, and the price was right. March nights can be
chilly here, so the six of us circled the fire at night,
trading stories, and sometimes sneaking down to the water to
look for the eyes of alligators. Unfortunately, we saw nothing,
but we did hear splashes in the night.
Lake Talquin The old guy told us that camping was
also free at Williams Landing, on Lake Talquin, about twenty
minutes west of Tallahassee. We moved up there, looking forward
to the hot showers. Lester, Kari, and Indya followed the next
day in "The Beast," which was an old RV that had carried them
there from Texas.
For eight days, we continued trading stories around the fire
each night. We saw all kinds of wildlife. Packs of armadillos
walked through camp, and giant grey herons fished offshore from
the van. There were racoons, owls, squirrels, ducks, and
turtles. Then there was the "monster."
I was poking around near a corner of the lake, when I heard
the splash. We had already seen two small alligators sunning
themselves the day before, but this one had to be a giant. I
returned with Ana the next morning, and again heard the splash,
but it was under the water before we could see it.
Every morning we visited the monster once the sun was high
enough for him to come out and soak up the heat. We caught
glimpses, enough to know he was at least ten feet long. Lester
and Kari made a "Crocodile Hunter" movie of us stalking it.
Soon it no longer panicked, but just slowly lowered itself into
the water, as if getting ready to hunt us properly.
After that we stopped trying to get so close to it. The five
of us went to view alligators safely after that, from the tour
boat at Wakulla Springs. I even got the chance to jump off of
the big diving platform there. We eventually
Steve Gillman hit the road at sixteen, and traveled the U.S.
and Mexico alone at 17. Now 40, he travels with his wife Ana,
whom he met in Ecuador. For travel stories, tips and a free
e-book, visit: http://www.EverythingAboutTravel.com
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