Tuesday, June 6, 2023

Natchez Trace part 2

 As we progressed north along the parkway the towns got smaller and there were fewer side trips. 

Day 3

 A short walk along a cypress swamp


Day 4

Another Cypress swamp and trail



Lunch stop and another nice walking trail


Day 5

Pharr Burial Mounds AD 1-200

and a lovely nature walk at the Visitor's Center at milepost 266 where we discovered that the next segment of the parkway was closed for construction.


Day 6

Since it was a rainy day and part of the parkway was closed we did a car tour.

We crossed into Alabama, admired the John Coffee Memorial Bridge across the Tennessee River then had lunch in Muscle Shoals


Next we crossed into Tennessee to visit the final resting place of Meriwether Lewis. He died at age 35 and the broken column on his memorial indicates a life incomplete.



Day 7

The final day of the ride.

Start

Finish

I think their total bike milage was about 400 miles

 
Our last night we had an evening at the "Opry" before we headed home.


Natchez Trace May 2023 Part 1

 Calvin and his brother took an epic bike ride on the Natchez Trace Parkway.I went along in the car for support and while they were riding I actually got to visit the sites along the way and walk segments of the original Natchez Trace.

We flew to New Orleans and then rented a car and drove to Natchez, Mississippi.  We didn't have time to explore Natchez, but we did spend the night at the Linden Historic Bed and Breakfast.

After a very formal breakfast the boys hopped on their bikes and headed for the parkway.


While they rode I visited the Emerald Mound used by the Natchez people AD 1250-1600 as a ceremonial mound.


Mount Locust Historic Inn, the last remaining historic roadside inn on the Trace built about 1780 with a lovely little cemetery


then I walked a segment of the original trace


After the bikers finished we visited Vicksburg Military Park

We spent the night at the Colima Plantation Inn


The bikers headed off 

and I explored the ghost town of Rocky Springs which consists of a few foundations and church built in 1837 which is still used today.

and I walked another segment of the Old Trace


In the late afternoon we did a walking tour of downtown Jackson Mississippi, the state capitol, which was surprisingly deserted at that hour, but did have a Smith Park where Calvin and James posed for pictures

and a lovely statue dedicated to the mothers, wives, sisters and daughters of the veterans of the Confederacy.