Thursday, December 31, 2020

What a Year 2020 Has Been

I still have a few more hikes to post from my December hiking trip to Dothan, AL, but the turning of the calendar says it is time for my annual summary and reflection post.  We've all had a rough year, and my hiking has not been immune to the pandemic.  Although I have managed to stay Covid-free, I had to cancel 2 hiking trips totaling 11 "trail days" this year.  Nevertheless, we still managed to get out there quite a bit.  We did 49 new hikes in 2020 totaling 117.9 miles.  The hikes came across 18 states including 2 new states: Kansas and Colorado; 47 of the 50 states are now represented in this trail journal.  I passed 2190 career hiking miles (the length of the Appalachian Trail) during my Colorado hiking trip in July, and this year saw the debut of the YouTube vlog complement to this photo and text trail journal.  All things considered, it was a pretty good year on the trail observing God's creation in its natural state.

Looking ahead to 2021, I have a hiking trip to Florida scheduled for January, but after that the pandemic-inspired academic calendar at my university will keep me off the road for awhile.  I hope to get to Crater Lake, Oregon this summer, another bucket list destination for me.  However, unlike my usual schedule-a-year-in-advance philosophy, all hiking trips in the near future will be dependent on how the pandemic continues to unfold; hopefully we are almost through it.  Also, the ongoing rebranding of my online presence from Math Prof Hiker to Parking Full Time will continue.  Finally, I am working on a disc golf version of this trail journal, and I hope to debut the Parking Full Time Disc Golf Reviews in a couple of months.

Thank you for taking the time to read about my hikes in 2020, and I look forward to bringing you more hikes and content in 2021.

Lord bless and have a great 2021,

David Prager, aka Math Prof Hiker, aka Big Dave the Parker

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Kolomoki Mounds State Park: Temple Mound/White Oak Loop (Blog Hike #830)

Trails: Temple Mound and White Oak Trails
Hike Location: Kolomoki Mounds State Park
Geographic Location: north of Blakely, GA (31.46757, -84.94041)
Length: 1.6 miles
Difficulty: 3/10 (Easy/Moderate)
Date Hiked: December 2020
Overview: A loop hike among the tallest mounds at Kolomoki.
Park Information: https://gastateparks.org/KolomokiMounds
Hike Route Map: https://www.mappedometer.com/?maproute=850431
Photo Highlight:
Hike Video: 

Directions to the trailhead: From the courthouse square in Blakely, head north on Main Street, which becomes First Kolomoki Road after it leaves Blakely.  Drive a total of 7 miles from the courthouse square to the signed entrance for Kolomoki Mounds State Park on the right.  Turn right to enter the park, stop at the Visitor Center to pay the entrance fee and pick up a trail map, then drive another mile to the Temple Mound and group picnic shelter parking area on the left.  Park here.

The hike: Constructed roughly 400 years after the time of Christ but nearly 1000 years before the more famous Ocmulgee mounds up in Macon, Kolomoki mounds represent one of the largest and earliest mound complexes in the southeast.  Located just a few miles from the Chattahoochee River in southwest Georgia, the 8 mounds on this site were built by the Swift Creek and Weeden Island cultures, and this site's Temple Mound is the largest temple mound in Georgia.  The mounds are labeled A through H, and they show an attention to astronomy: mounds A, D, and E form an east-west axis that aligns with the path of the sun at the spring equinox, while mounds D and F align with the path of the sun on the summer solstice.
            The Smithsonian Institution did excavations at Kolomoki between 1894 and 1897, and the site was dedicated a National Historical Landmark in 1964.  The park's Visitor Center contains an interesting museum that is built around an excavated mound, and the extra museum admission fee is well worth the historical treasures contained therein.  The park also features a 24-site developed campground, several picnic areas, two lakes, and four hiking trails totaling nearly 6 miles.  The Temple Mound and White Oak Trails explore the site's largest mounds, and they are described here.  The park's other two trails explore the park's natural areas, and they are featured in the next hike.
Trailhead at group picnic shelter
    
        From the parking lot, pick up the signed Temple Mound Trail as it heads west on a wide mowed grass treadway.  The trail climbs almost imperceptibly and curves around the south side of the Temple Mound to enter the mound complex's main plaza area.  At 0.25 miles, you reach the front of the Temple Mound.
Front of Temple Mound
    
        The Temple Mound stands 56 feet above the plaza, and a set of concrete stairs takes you to the top of the mound.  The flat area atop the mound measures 325 by 200 feet, and researchers estimate more than 2 million baskets of dirt would have been required to build the mound.  Experts think tribal priests would have lived atop this mound, so take a few minutes to soak in the fantastic fit-for-a-priest view that extends in all directions.

View of plaza from Temple Mound

Top of Temple Mound
    
        Descend the Temple Mound the way you came up, then continue the Temple Mound Trail by walking across the plaza and checking out Mound D.  Though only 20 feet high, cone-shaped Mound D is one of the largest and oldest burial mounds in the southeast.  Geometrically speaking, Mound D forms the center of the entire mound complex.
Mound D
    
        The Temple Mound Trail continues past Mound D and leads back to the Visitor Center, but this hike retraces its steps to the Temple Mound and then turns left to begin the White Oak Trail.  Marked with green paint blazes, the White Oak Trail quickly passes Mound C, a small mound of unknown function, and heads north into the woods.  The dense forest here consists of 
white oak and pines with some magnolias.
Hiking the White Oak Trail
    
        Near 1 mile into the hike, the trail narrows as it curves right to leave an old road.  The balance of the hike dips through a couple of ravines and crosses the creeks in these ravines on wooden footbridges.  These footbridges had seen their better days on my visit, but they got me across safely.  A slight rise deposits you at the group picnic shelter, and your car sits in the parking lot to the right.