After a day of much-needed rain, Suzanne and I got to take our good friend Terri of the Frozen North for a hike on the Cross-Florida Greenway. We started at the Landbridge Trailhead on a cool, sunny day typical of central Florida in January. It was a Saturday, and there were actually more people out enjoying Nature than we had seen in all of our previous visits combined, about a dozen other hikers on the orange-blazed Florida Trail and a whole herd of horses and riders on nearby equestrian trails. I convinced Terri that she didn't need her snowshoes, ice axe and Arctic parka, as the day promised temperatures in the low 70s, rather than the 70 below she was used to back in Minnesnowta. We found an accommodating tree branch on which to balance (somewhat precariously) my camera, and the self-timer took this slightly un-level image of the Three Musketeers...
We crossed I-75, which was just a tad noisy. We apologized for the change from the silence of the forest, but Terri said, "All I hear is a rushing river and maybe a waterfall..." (Now that's positive attitude!) The trail goes over the Interstate on a concrete overpass landscaped with saw palmetto, Chickasaw plum, rusty lyonia and yellow hawthorn, and at one end are two infra-red cameras that monitor deer, bear and even panther activity; large mammals often use the overpass to get from bed-downs to feeding areas.
Finally, I have to relate the following sad, but true, story. Suzanne had seconded the recommendation of My Lovely Daughter Elisabeth to have me procure a SPOT emergency locator beacon for my upcoming trip into the wilderness. I fought the idea, saying that I had done perfectly well this far in my life without an electronic "Help Me" device. Being reminded that I am getting longer in the tooth didn't set well, and "Dad, we have to know where to look for the body if you don't come out after a week" was even less well received. But after ordering a SPOT beacon to get the two women in my life off my back, I was reminded by My Lovely Bride that, "And oh by the way, it has a feature that can let us track you while you are hiking... and if it shows you in the Mesa, Arizona, 'Hooters', instead of on a mountain, you're in deep trouble!"


Ty, take your "Help Me" and attach it to a Desert Big Horn Sheep (Ovis Canadenis Nelson) and let them track you. Wow!!! Look at Ty climb those mountains.
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Dale, I love it! Suzanne was somewhat less enthusiastic. ;-) Cheers, Ty
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