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| Beautiful Alabama Fall Colors |
Grandeur
takes many forms. This morning it is Rickwood Caverns camp ground outside of
Jasper, Alabama a small town is outside of Birmingham. The date is November 4,
2017. This morning the sun came up over towering Alabama Pines and oaks dressed
in their fall finest. The fog muted the
peaks of the trees with white mist. The sun shines rays through falling golden
leaves while the squirrels and chipmunks playfully gather their snacks. Below
the surface of this majestic display of fall lies a vast cavern with a maze of
passage ways down to 125 feet below the falling leaves. In the darkness of the cave live three creatures,
tiny
little bats that sleep by themselves apart from each other, Alabama Cave
Fish (white clear fish that live in the underground lake below) and Alabama
cave crayfish. The cave lake creatures
wisely stay in the darkness and eluded us. The tiny bats however where here and
there. These little furry are about the size of a small plum and hang upside
down by themselves. They are solitary creatures and do not like each other
until it is time to mate according to our young guide, Ashley.![]() |
| Tiny Alabama Bat |
Ashley has
more than one juicy story to tell about Rickwood Caverns. Most of which could
not be verified on the web. So in all likelihood is actually true. Ashley our guide
was a delightful young lady named Ashley who wore 2 blond French braided pig
tails. She was adorable and sweet and has a boyfriend in the Marine Corp. She
explained that she always wore braids now because one time a bat flew into her
hair and got stuck. She had to sling her hair around and it finally got it loose.
She said screamed a lot at the time but now it was a funny story to tell.
At one time
the cavern served as a fallout shelter and has stored barrels water purifiers
and crackers from the 1960s. They are stored in large metal drums that are now
rusted shut. The government had certified the cavern as a fallout shelter and
at some point decided that there was no longer a need and un-certified it. The
government came to get all the food and stuff out of there but the owners at
that time did not want them to. It is unclear who paid for the food storage but
in any case the owners of the land wasn’t about to give it up. They brought dirt
in to the passage way so the containers would not fit through the opening from
the underground storage room. Evidently the government gave up trying to get
the food and it remains there to this day.
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| David & Kim in Rickwood Caverns |
The Caverns
themselves are stunning with stalactites and mites and sparkly gleaming
limestone tunnels. (I half expected Gollum to surprise me around the next
bend.) Someone had vandalized the cave before and the quartz crystal center of
the stalactite could be plainly seen. It was glimmery and beautiful. Incredible
that God put these just gems inside a brown pillar of limestone solidified mud.
The story
goes that these two guys found this cave on a Boy Scout camping trip. It was
owned by another who knew about the cave but didn’t do anything with it. These
two Boy Scout masters decided to buy the land and open the caverns to the
public. They blasted part of the cavern
to make it possible to walk all the way through it. The boy scouts helped clear
the path and the tidy rock wall they made still decorates one of the walls of
the cave.
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| Natural Cave Passage Way |
Although a
small part of the cave was defiled it still enjoys plenty of its original splendors
such as cave drapery so thin that light can be seen through it. In meandering
through the natural cave tunnel and keeping an eye out for the tiny bats
hanging on the wall about 5 feet above the ground I hardly noticed why Ashley
was stopping. On the left of the passageway my eyes had to adjust to what I was
seeing. The passageway gave way to a side cavern filled by an underground lake.
The water was so clear that I did not even see it at first. My eyes had to
focus on what Ashley was saying. This was a vast underground lake! Divers had
gone down one time and never reached the bottom. They only had so much air and
light which forced them to turn back. The state did not allow another
expedition siting that it was too dangerous. So no one knows exactly how big it
really is. They suspect that it connects with other caverns. Ashley said that
she had seen the little blind cave fish 7 times in the thousand or so times she
had been to this cave lake. So the cave creatures do surface but no one seems
to know much about these two life forms on the web. They do seem to be unique
to this are because they are called the Alabama cave fish and Alabama cave crayfish.
We noticed a
strange scent in the cave rather than the expected scent that we found in
Carlsbad Caverns. Ashley said that they had given 75 school children a tour in
the morning and that the caverns do not normally smell like that. The fragrance
was not a wholly unpleasant combination of crayons and sweat. We had a good
laugh.
At some
point the one of the Boy Scout master owners had planned an underground burger
joint. He had big plans for the place. He most like figured that he could make
a fortune and he probably could have except that the he declared him insane and
put in an institution and the land was then sold to the state. Alabama
eventually turned it into a state park. Although our curiosity is peaked we
were unable to verify what really happened to the poor fellow.
Along the
path fossils can be seen clearly in the cavern tunnel walls. They are of some
kind of extinct bug eating plants and sea shells. The whole area used to be a giant
sea in prehistoric times.
There is a
small but lovely camp ground at the caverns and a swimming pool that is open
during the summer. The pool is supplied with water from the underground cave
and some city water to warm it up since the cave water is a chilly 41 degrees. The
surrounding area near the gift shop and pool is heavily wooded with limestone
rock formations smooth and flat as though someone had carved shapes of
prehistoric animals.
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| Fossil Trail |
As soon as
we had our RV backed into our spot while we were still hooking up power etc. a
white haired fellow camper walking her ancient Chihuahua, Jack. She insisted
that she immediately show me the fossils telling me that she had a pterodactyl
fossil at her camp site. What she actually showed me was a bunch of rock
formation that looked like various animals not “fossils” Sometimes we humor our
senior campers with their stories. I hope someone listens to mine one day or at
least reads thisJ so I followed her to her site. She pointed out a rock that
looks a little like a pterodactyl if you have a big imagination in which I do.
A man was sitting at a picnic table eating a giant bowl of beans. “Hello.” I
said. He waived with his giant spoon in a gesture of greeting since his mouth
was full. The woman said, “This is Terry.” “Nice to meet you” I said to the
man. The woman who had not stopped talking since our first encounter embarked
on how he and her met and bla, bla.” There was a problem with gnats flying up
your nose that day and I was ready to boogie back to David who should have felt
completely abandoned by now since this was not exactly the time to socialize.
It seemed like I had been gone forever but it was only about 15 minutes. The
flies and gnats were all buzzing in the man’s beans and he didn’t seem to care.
I was grossed out and finally interrupted her. “I have to be getting back. It
was nice to meet you Jack and Terry.” I nodded to the dog and the man
respectively. The woman said, “Oh that is Tom, that is Terry” She pointed to
the rock that sort of looked like a Pterodactyl. I immediately felt like I was
in an episode of George Burns and Gracie Allen.
Gracie Allen had been reincarnated. I had been introduced to a rock and
not the man. They left the next morning and nothing was left at that site
except “Terry” until nightfall when a new camper arrived. I resisted the urge
to introduce the new campers to Terry rather than become a paragraph in their
blog.
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| Rock Formations on Fossil Trail |
We met a
nice Mennonite family and a Not-so-Retired Roper and a Retired Florist headed
for Florida for the winter. We enjoyed the place so well we stayed for 2 nights
even though we were just passing through.
The morning we left we took the
recommended hike through the forest. It was stunning like a fairy tale. I half
expected fair creatures to peep out from underneath the ferns. The limestone
formations were blanketed with a layer of moss topped with short ferns growing
straight out of the thick moss. Every so often we saw what we determined to be
alternative entrances to the caverns.
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| Ferns Growing out of Moss Crusted Limestone |
Rickwood
Caverns State Park is a beautiful and almost magical place that you have to see
if every passing through Alabama. The camp ground is lovely and the staff if
friendly and helpful. We loved it.







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