Toccoa, GA
It was about
seven on a Sunday morning, the air was cool, and I had gotten more chilled on
the train, so I was eager to go into the lobby and warm up; unfortunately, this
station was currently unmanned and there was no one around. I did find a little
heated waiting room, complete with rest rooms, and spent a few minutes warming
up and trying to reorganize my pack (my bed roll kept coming undone). I only
had one stop to make, and that was at, what I thought, was a Wal-Mart so close
to the station I should be able to see it. Sadly, as I walked in widening
circles around Toccoa, I could not find it.
I had
checked Google Maps before I left, and according to that, there was a Wal-Mart
less than a couple of blocks away; what I didn’t know was that it had been
relocated to a site four and half miles away since. Luckily, I ended up on the
right road and even going in the right direction, but I was already exhausted,
my shoulders ached, and each step with my pack was becoming more and more of an
effort, especially on the hilly parts.
One can
only guess what people driving by in their cars thought as I struggled up the
road, panting like a choo-choo train, sweat pouring off my face, hair tangled
and matted. The sun came up strong, and the temperature rose quickly. A car
stopped at a red light, and I desperately motioned for the driver to roll down
her window. She did, and I asked for directions.
Mellissa S, Toccoa, GA |
“Well,
I’m going there too!” she replied. “Want a ride?” I gratefully accepted,
shrugging off my pack and wedging it into the back seat while trying to wipe
the sweat from my eyes.
Mellissa
Spencer, my benefactor, was a lab technician at a nearby hospital just on her
way home from work – she was the first of many people who have stunned me with
their kindness. She not only took me to the Wal-Mart, but she waited for me,
too! By now, my money was about one third of what I thought I would have, so I hurriedly
bought about half of my list of “necessities,” just figuring I’d have to do
without the rest (there are necessities, and then there are really necessities). Mellissa and I
headed out -- at long last I was on the final leg on my journey to the Chattahoochee-Oconee
National Forest!
Panther Creek, GA |
We talked on the
way, she graciously offering to take me all the way there, saving me about
eight miles of hiking. She told me about her husband and family; I asked her
about fishing in this area. She mentioned that her husband always went to
Panther Creek, and that he always did
well; he liked to use a white rooster tail. She explained that it was probably
a better place to go then what I had planned, which was to start out at Toccoa
Reservoir, and then hiking up Highway 17 to US 441, eventually to Rabun Lake,
Seed Lake, and Burton Lake. After, I
would circle around to the beginning of the Appalachian Trail, once the weather
cooled towards the end of summer.
Hopefully I would be able to enjoy some of the fabled Georgia trout fishing,
once I had enough for a license. (I didn’t know it then, but there were several
issues with that plan). With a disconcerted, worried look in her eyes, offering
again to take me to Panther Creek, she dropped me off. Of course, I refused her
kind offer, hanging on resolutely to “The Plan.” I have to admit, she really
touched my heart with her laughter and kindness; turns out that maybe my brain
was touched too, because “The
Plan” immediately fell apart.
Toccoa Reservoir, Toccoa, GA |
For one
thing, I was expecting this to be in wilderness; after all, it was surrounded
by National Forest, but it wasn’t very wild. There was a golf course on one
side of the lake and a store on the corner. A gate led to a road that went a
short distance along the wooded side of the lake, and I bypassed this, found a
likely camping spot near the water, and set up camp. That afternoon and evening
it slowly sunk into my understanding that this was, after all, a reservoir, the
City of Toccoa’s water supply, and probably I shouldn’t be camping there. (It
turns out that the local police often chased homeless people away from here).
To make matters
worse, it had begun to rain heavily, and I discovered that there were ticks everywhere! Hundreds, thousands, hundreds of thousands, perhaps, all
waiting at the top of every weed and blade of grass there was. (One got in my
hair and dug into my skull, where it apparently lived quite happily for over
two weeks until I was finally able to get it removed). Though I had no license
yet, I did fish a bit, and spent a large amount of my limited remaining funds
in the nearby store, buying bread, eggs, night-crawlers and so forth. Otherwise,
the night passed without event.
I broke
camp early the next morning, wanting to get out of there before I garnered any
unwanted attention. My gear was wet from the rain, but I painstakingly packed
up my dripping, muddy tent, managed to get everything back in my pack, and hit
the road.
No comments:
Post a Comment