We are in the “we have to do it now or we’ll never get to do it again” phase of Chambana life. This is our last summer here, so anything we like to do or anywhere we’ve wanted to go, we’re trying to cram it all in. In that spirit, we went to Clinton Lake yesterday for a hike. We found this trail in early March and really enjoyed ourselves: it has topography! So back we went to have another care-free day outdoors.
This is the lake. This is the view we had pretty much the entire trail the first time we came here. Except less green stuff, of course. But there were nice lake vistas at every turn.

Not so anymore. The aforementioned green stuff has choked out any view of the lake except that first scenic overlook. This is now about what the trail looks like for 12 miles.
Lovely. But a lot of green stuff. A lot. This is apparently not a maintained trail. In March the trail was easily followable: trail in the middle with some little plants on either side. This time around there were a couple spots where we had to trust that Eliza was accurately following the real trail. (She’s short. The waist-high foliage that droops obscured the trail for us, but she’s below the droopage point and so just went on full-bore.) And here I am with our most indispensable piece of trail equipment: the stick.
It kept us from walking through tons and tons of spiderwebs. Instead we only walked through tons. And Bill says I was constantly throwing spiders back at him by swinging the stick. But still, the stick was appreciated.
Did I mention this is not a maintained trail? Here’s a bridge along the trail. Or it was. Once.
I know this picture is terrible; the dog pulled my hand as I was taking it.
So I’ll tell you, it’s a bridge, on it’s side. The part you can see is the hand railing.
Not that we didn’t have a good time. It was an adventure. A hero’s trek. And the highlight of the week for at least one of us.





