Best Tent Camping: Alabama. Joe Cuhaj
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Название: Best Tent Camping: Alabama

Автор: Joe Cuhaj

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Книги о Путешествиях

Серия: Best Tent Camping

isbn: 9780897329484

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ flow in the spring. Site 11 is located near the remains of the furnace, giving you a historic view to wake up to.

      The park is rimmed with nine primitive sites. Tucked away in the hardwood forest are two very nondescript ones, which are on the very north side of the park just across the road from the main campground. The remainder are found in an open field between the main gate and furnace. Each primitive site has a picnic table and a fire ring as well as simple dirt or grass pad.

      The park has a swimming pool by the bathhouse. If you register for an improved site, the pool is free; otherwise a pool pass is $5 per person.

      The camp store, located in the office, has a good selection of items and plenty of snacks. A very clean bathhouse with hot showers is outside the campground at the south end of the park. The shower doors are made from old-fashioned wooden planks, reminiscent of days gone by.

      :: Getting There

      From McCalla take AL 25 South 6.6 miles. Turn left onto County Road 62. Travel 0.4 mile and take the first left onto CR 62/Furnace Parkway. In 0.3 mile arrive at the park entrance.

      GPS COORDINATES N33° 02.290' W86° 56.931'

      3

      Cheaha State Park

      “The perfect place to set up base camp and explore remarkable landscapes”

      :: Ratings

      BEAUTY: images

      PRIVACY: images

      SPACIOUSNESS: images

      QUIET: images

      SECURITY: images

      CLEANLINESS: images

      :: Key Information

      ADDRESS: 19644 AL 281, Delta, AL 36258

      OPERATED BY: Alabama State Parks

      CONTACT: 256-488-5111; 800-610-5801; alapark.com/cheaharesort

      OPEN: Year-round

      SITES: Mountain Top (43 improved), Cheaha Lake (30 improved), Picnic Trail (25 primitive), CCC (30 primitive)

      SITE AMENITIES: Improved—picnic table, fire ring, grill, water, power; Primitive—picnic table, fire ring, grill

      ASSIGNMENT: First-come, first-serve or by reservation

      REGISTRATION: Pay attendant at office or by reservation

      FACILITIES: Flush toilets, hot showers, playground, pay phone, pool, restaurant, camp store

      PARKING: At each site

      FEE: Improved, $22 ($3 additional fee on Saturday–Sunday and holidays); primitive, $16

      ELEVATION: 2,213'

      RESTRICTIONS:

      images Pets: On 6-foot leash only

      images Fires: In fire ring only

      images Alcohol: Permitted

      images Vehicles: 2/site

      images Other: Quiet hours 10 p.m.–6 a.m.

images images

      Saying that Cheaha State Park is a standout in the Alabama State Park system is not an overstatement. The park is located atop Cheaha Mountain, the state’s tallest at 2,407 feet (Cheaha comes from the Creek word chaha, meaning “high place.”)

      Located within the 390,000-acre Talladega National Forest, in the east-central part of the state, Cheaha is the perfect place to set up base camp and explore remarkable waterfalls and beautiful mountain vistas; swim in deep, cold mountain stream pools; and simply admire nature.

      As with many Alabama state parks, Cheaha was built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s. The CCC was created during the Great Depression under the orders of President Franklin Roosevelt. Its simple mission: create thousands of jobs for able but unemployed young men through an array of public works projects ranging in scope and size from dams to roadways to state parks.

      The centerpiece of Cheaha is a signature piece of CCC engineering, a massive stone fire tower at the summit built entirely by hand with stone mined from the region. A CCC museum was just opened within the tower in spring 2013.

      Hiking is Cheaha’s prime draw. The handicap-accessible Boardwalk Trail offers a 1-mile trek out to Bald Rock and a spectacular view of the surrounding Talladega Mountains. The park’s second trail is for the more adventurous. The Rock Garden Trail begins at the base of the mountain and climbs to the top with a steep elevation gain. You’ll often find rock climbers scaling cliffs and rappelling here.

      And the surrounding Talladega National Forest, with hundreds of miles of trails, is just a short drive, or walk, from Cheaha. A few outstanding routes include the Chinnabee Silent Trail, which travels alongside beautiful rushing streams, waterfalls, and gorges; the Cave Creek Trail through tunnels of bright rhododendrons in the spring and more magnificent views; and the world-famous Pinhoti Trail. The Pinhoti travels more than 130 miles, the entire length of the forest, and then into Georgia, where it connects to the Appalachian Trail. The Pinhoti provides a wide variety of loop hikes for day hikers.

      Cheaha State Park is also a prime gathering spot for fall-leaf spotters. Thousands of people flock to the mountain late October–late November to see the spectacle provided by the north-Alabama hardwoods.

      Needless to say, Cheaha is a very popular campground and will be full most of the year except in the very dead of winter, late December and early January. Summertime and the weekend of the Talladega 500 NASCAR race is when the park is most packed, followed closely by the fall, when leaf seekers descend on the area.

      You’ll find four campgrounds in the park. A semiprimitive one sits along what is known as the Picnic Trail and is located across the road from the stone CCC fire tower. The 25 nondescript sites here are simple grassy plots, some a bit rockier than others. Each has a fire ring and a picnic table. The large field СКАЧАТЬ