Thursday, June 9, 2016

Florida National Cemetery - not exactly an adventure

A visit to the Florida National 
Cemetery in Bushnell isn't exactly 
anadventure. But the cemetery is something to see and it's not too far from Citrus County. In fact, it's a scenic drive through rolling countryside to get to the cemetery. The cemetery is located within the Withlacoochee National Forest so it's peaceful and serene. It's also a great place to reflect upon all the many in the military who have served and sacrificed for our country.

I've only been there for funerals and to visit the grave of a deceased family member. However, I believe that the cemetery is really something to see around Memorial Day (flags) and Christmas (wreaths).


Monday, June 6, 2016

A visit back to "Old Florida"

Last Thursday was all about "Old Florida."

The "Hike It, Bike It" leader of Citrus Newcomers Club, a social women's club that I'm a member of, planned something a little different for the May and June outings. In May, the group went zip lining in Ocala. Not that I'm a chicken or anything (or maybe I am...), I was afraid of any impact to my already bad left knee. I went to Epcot that day!

The June adventure was tubing at Ichetucknee Springs State Park, not quite an hour northwest of Gainesville, in Fort White, Florida. We normally go for lunch after a hike or bike ride or zip lining... or tubing! The organizer figured that as long as we'd driven so far... and since tubing is such an "Old Florida" thing to do, we might as well eat at a restaurant that shows up on many lists if you google Florida Historic Dining. We ate at the Yearling Restaurant in Cross Creek, Florida. After dining on "Old Florida" favorites like fried green tomatoes, venison burgers and gator tail, we took the short drive to the Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Historic State Park.

Prior to the outing, carpools were organized and from the starting point for my group, it was an hour and a half up to Fort White. As is typical for most destinations, we had 3 choices of routes, each taking about the same amount of time. Our group opted for what seemed the most direct route, taking the interstate north. If you choose to go tubing at this park, please check the website to see where you need to park and what you need to bring. You do want to enter the park through the south entrance. You do want to have $6 in cash for parking. If you'd like to take the shuttle to where you get in with the tubes - and then shuttle back to the parking lot, you need $5 plus tax (so $5.35 in total). I wasn't the driver so I really can't remember what the fee was for car key holding at the concession stand.

I hadn't tubed since I went tubing on the Weeki Wachee River in the early 80s so I really can't compare this tubing site to others. I can tell you that Itchetucknee Springs were beautiful. (There's some history to the location of the springs. The state of Florida purchased the property in 1970 from the Loncala Phosphate Corporation for $1,850,000. From Wikipedia: A 17th century Spanish mission site has been identified in the park, next to a short tributary connecting Fig Springs to the Ichetucknee River, about one mile (1.6 km) downstream from the head of the river. The mission has been provisionally identified as San Martín de Timucua, which was occupied in the first half of the 17th century. Plans to reconstruct the mission and open it to the public as an interpretational site were dropped.)



The shuttle takes you from the South Entrance to where tubers
enter the springs. There's a 45-minute float, a 90-minute float
and a 3-hour float. Our group went for 90 minutes.


Cooperation amongst group members to get us
into the water and comfortably onto our tubes.



What a beautifully relaxing morning on the water.
Can see the dragonfly on my left leg?


Coffee Spring? Ichetucknee snail????


The view when I tilted my head back.


Our exit point. It was far too easy to float
over the barrier.


Cooperation was required while getting out of the springs.



We dropped off our tubes for the tube provider
to come fetch them.
We then climbed back onto the shuttle unencumbered by tubes.
But had we chosen to, we could have walked back to the
parking area near the South Entrance.

My car full of women decided that rather than taking the interstate back down towards Cross Creek, we'd take the scenic route. There is still so much open land in Florida. Plus we got to see a part of Gainesville that none of us had seen before. Our route took us about 15 minutes longer than the quicker route (which was about 55 minutes), but most of us arrived at the Yearling Restaurant at about the same time. The restaurant had warned our organizer that if we all arrived at the same time, they might have trouble serving us all at once. They provided us with a large table in a "private" room. We arrived in three groups. Two smaller groups first and a much larger group third. Service was excellent and we were all able to enjoy our meals together.

Pretty unassuming exterior

I guess they don't always have cooter.
Do you know what cooter is?


The hallway leading into the dining room
 really appealed to my nerdiest side!

A bit of the menu

Lots of nostalgic items abound. I wonder
if all these items have been here since the
restaurant first opened in 1952. The Yearling Restaurant
is named after Rawlings best selling novel, published in 1938.
The book, The Yearling, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1939.
You might notice the titles of some of her books
hanging on the beam near the ceiling. Cross Creek
was her memoir. In actuality, it was a memoir of the
land and the other residents of Cross Creek. It was,
as our tour guide said, "a love story to a place."

Click here for my review of Cross Creek which was written before my visit to the park. That was a book club selection in April. I was about halfway through the book when I realized I wasn't going to the April meeting. Once I made plans to visit the park, I decided to pick up the book and finish it before my outing.

More stuff....

The Yearling was her most well-received and successful book.
Sojourner was her final book. It's said that it didn't measure
up to her earlier books, possibly because her mentor had died
prior to her writing it.


Note: the restaurant has very limited hours. Please check the website before heading to the restaurant.

Our final stop of the day was to the Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Historic State Park. I'd been there once before in 2011... but I hadn't checked the hours so the house wasn't open. Since we'd already paid to park (honor box), the groundskeeper let us walk around. We weren't able to enter any buildings nor was there a ranger there to give us anymore information that we were able to get from reading a walking tour pamphlet.

The park is open from 9 to 5 daily. Guided tours by the ranger are available October thru July only on Thursdays thru Sundays (closed Thanksgiving and Christmas) at 10:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m., 2:00 p.m., 3:00 p.m., and 4:00 p.m. There's a $3 fee for parking. You may walk around the park for free, but if you'd like the guided tour which includes the inside of the house, it's $3 per adult and $2 for children ages 6 to 12. Over the summer, there are special events held at the park. There are special events throughout the year as well. Coming up on June 16th through June 19th,  there will be an Old Florida food event with cooking demonstrations and tastes of food throughout the day.

The park rangers shared lots of stories about both the house and Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. Some of the information I'd gathered from reading Cross Creek. Some of it reminded me of things I'd read but forgotten. In one way, I was sorry I'd read the book before exploring the home site. In other ways, I was glad to go in knowing what I already knew. I was able to say, "Ah ha!" quite a few times during the tour. The combination of reading the book and visiting the park really enhanced the experiences of both.

Entrance to the park, complete with all sorts of information.

"It is necessary to leave the impersonal highway
to step inside the rusty gate and close it behind.
One is now inside the orange grove, out of one world
and in the mysterious heart of another.  And after long 
years of spiritual homelessness, of nostalgia, here is
that mystic loveliness of childhood again. Here is home."
~Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
Cross Creek, 1942
The sign reads as follows:
This short trail loops through Rawlings' young citrus grove.
Over time, the land reverted back to a hardwood
hammock, its natural state.

There are still several chickens on the farm. While we were there,
the rangers called the flock of chickens for dinner. That's how they get
caged up overnight. The night prior one of the chickens did not
make it back into the cage and was found dead in the morning.
This little guy was hiding inside a cart inside of a tractor shed.


Most of the items inside the house are the actual items that were in the house when Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings lived in the house. Her property was bequeathed to the University of Florida upon her death with most of the possessions intact. In later years, the homestead was designated in the National Register of Historic Places and as a National Historic Landmark. The park is currently run as a Florida State Park.


This is the porch where MKR did most of her writing.



The Yearling has been translated into 29 languages.

Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings had the first toilet
in Alachua County. She held a bathroom party with
flowers in the toilet and drinks on ice in the
bathtub. More about this story in Cross Creek.

Many famous artists visited MKR at Cross Creek. They include
Margaret Mitchell, Thorton Wilder, and Robert Frost.

I saw this and immediately thought "valise."

The ice box where the ice man discovered
MKR's un-housebroken raccoon, Racket.

The old Cracker house from the back with MKR's car which
 got lots of her servants into quite a bit of trouble.

The tenant house, where most of the servants lived.

Broom made from palm fronds
The grove adjacent to the farm


Oranges still growing on the trees


It's certainly not necessary to go tubing in Ichetucknee in the morning and visit Cross Creek in the afternoon. But I would most certainly experiencing tubing in a spring-fed Florida river. And if you're a historical nerdy bookworm like I am (hey, even if you're not), you'll enjoy a visit to Cross Creek, both eating at The Yearling and exploring the historic park on a guided tour.

And yes, there is a creek. I apologize for no photo of the creek. After such a long day, the group I was riding with was ready to come home. I'd already seen the creek. Plus I'm sure I'll be back again sometime.


Citrus County is conveniently located for access to two major airports!

Orlando International Airport - at the gate


Shortly, I'll write about my latest adventure to "Old Florida."

But after having made multiple trips to both the Tampa and Orlando airports over the weekend, both from/to Citrus County and Hernando County, I need to give Citrus County a shout-out!

Citrus County beats Hernando County hands down by having easy access to both airports. We're about an hour and twenty minutes to Tampa and about an hour and a half to Orlando.

Yes, Hernando County is closer to Tampa International Airport. It's a drive that's under an hour. But... the routes are direct to Citrus County and the routes between Hernando County and Orlando International Airport zigzag you north and south and west. (I don't think I had to travel east. Although there might be some routes that would take you east - which is not the direction you want to be going in!)

Score 1 for Citrus County!



Saturday, May 28, 2016

Six Acres of Sunflowers


We had tentative plans to attend a lasagna cook-off in Hernando County this afternoon. But I wanted... no, I needed... to go somewhere interesting to take photos even more. I looked through the Happenings section of yesterday's Chronicle and couldn't find anything. Then I thought Hmm, let me look for Facebook events near here and see if I can find anything interesting. Look what I found!


This sounded perfect! Because it was in Hernando County, we  could look at sunflowers and then eat lasagna! Off we went.

Sweetfields Farm was a little bit further away than I imagined in my mind, but it wasn't too bad a ride. It was very easy to find. I realized once we got here that I had no idea how much this event was going to cost. Relief washed over me when I realized we didn't have to pay. The entrance fee was $9.50 plus tax for adults and $5 per child. Having no idea what to expect, I had no sense of whether this was a good price or not. There was a reasonable crowd - and I love taking photos of sunflowers. Seemed reasonable enough.


Very easy to find!


This was the view from the "parking lot."


Once you're thru the entrance, you need to walk through a market to get to the rest of the farm. The market was very quaint. They sold produce and sunflowers that was grown on the farm. Yellow squash, cucumbers and green beans were available for u-pick. They sometimes have u-pick blackberries but that was suspended since the ripe berries had been mostly picked over already.






Once we were outside, WOW! 




The sunflowers were amazing!




After taking some photos of sunflowers, we started walking towards the sunflower maze. 

Lots of rules and instructions before we walked in.




We'd been given this list of numbered questions. The idea was to find the numbers along the path, answer the question and then go in the direction written next to the correct response.

Okay, that didn't work! We got to number 1 - and quickly got lost. We tried backtracking and quickly ended up at the location for the final question. Yes, we skipped questions 2 through 6 and were at question 7. We made a wrong guess there, walked towards a dead end, then turned around and walked the other way. And in less than 20 minutes, we were out of the maze! We seriously did plan to walk through the entire maze, but once we found ourselves outside, I took it as a sign that we should be doing something else!


Outside the maze, we explored what else was available. And there was lots! Lots for kids but plenty for adults!

There was a rubber ducky race with water pumps propelling the duckies.
The kids whose hand is in the lower left cornerof the photo
was a master! He had those duckies flying!


Rosie Moo Moo
Kids & adults had the opportunity to feed her and her pal.

Huge tree house

Snacks
Besides kettle korn, there was wood fire
pizza and ice cream.

And lots of sunflowers!


 Against beautiful blue skies!



In addition to the maze, the animals (cows, pigs, goats, chicken, turkey) and the tree house, there were pedal tractors, pig races, arts & crafts and much, much more. We only had about 2 hours to spend here but you could easily spend 3 to 4 hours at the farm if you're without children and many more hours if you're there with children.

Included in the admission was a hayride. It wasn't the most exciting hayride but we were able to get a better sense of how large the farm is (19 acres), how much space is devoted to sunflowers, and what types of things they had growing.


The building where produce is sold as seen from the hayride over the
blackberry bushes.
I would have loved to pick blackberries.
But as you can see, not too many were ripe!


The u-pick fields
We picked green beans. 


This is the final weekend of the Sunflower Maze. The first weekend was in late April. This is something I'd definitely go back to again.

In the fall, there is a hay maze and special activities for Halloween. There's a pumpkin patch... but I think the pumpkins might be brought in as I believe it's too warm to grow pumpkins down here.

Sweetfields Farm is a small, family-run organic farm. The owners are a young family so lots of what is available to do at the farm is geared towards other young families. I highly recommend visiting this farm when you want something a little different to do.