Sunday, December 22, 2019

River’s End Campground - Tybee Island, Georgia (November 2019)

River’s End was not supposed to be the end of our WBCCI 2019 Southeast Coast Caravan, but it happened. There was one more stop before the caravan officially ended, but we didn’t make it there.

Sign at entrance welcoming our caravan


Sign at the campground


Things started off about as normal as it gets on the road. We arrived at the campground and were led to our site by the park’s staff. This turned out to be very helpful because our site had several difficult trees along the path. The park staff person was familiar with how to slip in dodging the trees and provided some helpful hints as we parked Rosie, our Airstream trailer.

Our site in this campground


Once we were safely parked in our site, we noticed that it was a little larger than most sites in that campground. Most sites were very close together and too shallow to hold a 25 foot rig and tow vehicle. Our site was deep enough that we could hitch up without blocking the road. 

We were thankful we were not in the sites along the access road. Trailers in those sites were as close to the road as you could get. They were also packed in about as close as the laws of physics and human interaction allows.  We were happy our site was in the middle of the campground. 

We visited Fort Pulaski National Monument while camping there. The fort was built in 1847 and saw action during the Civil War. We thought this was one of the better preserved forts we have visited from this era.

The moat around Fort Pulaski


Inside the fort

A canon inside the fort


There is a monument to John Wesley near the fort. John Wesley was an evangelist and religious leader of a movement that became known as the Methodist Church. Having grown up in Methodist parsonages, it was interesting to see that monument.

John Wesley, founder of the Methodist Church


There was a lighthouse near the campground. We didn’t have a chance to explore it.

The Tybee Island Lighthouse


Here are some specifics about this campground:
  • Our site was a back-in
  • Our site was paved with gravel 
  • We had to use leveling tools to correct a left-to-right lean
  • Our site had 20, 30 and 50 amp electrical service
  • Our site had a water connection 
  • Our site had a sewer connection
  • There was a dump station in the park 
  • The bathhouse near our site was clean and well maintained 
  • The campground provided basic cable TV service 
  • We did not check to see if we could pick up any stations using Rosie’s TV antenna 
  • AT&T placed two bars of service for voice and data over our site 
  • We were unable to find a WiFi service at this campground 
We were in this campground for a day and a half instead of three. We left the caravan a few days early due to health reasons. We hated to leave early, but we knew we needed to head home. 

It seems that all of the WBCCI caravans we have been on have been great and this was no exception. We enjoyed being with that group and hope to see them on other Airstream caravans. 

Sunday, December 1, 2019

Hunting Island State Park - Hunting Island, South Carolina (November 2019)

When we camped here in 2014, the park’s volunteers greeted us with, “Welcome to paradise!”  There was no such greeting this time.

Sign at the park


We were shocked to see all of the beachfront sites were gone along with most of the trees in that section. Hurricanes and storms have taken a toll on this park.

The old beachside loop


Also among the missing was the maritime forest that we found to be very interesting during our first visit. It is somewhat ironic that the majority of the park’s destruction came from Hurricane Michael, the same storm that leveled Port St Joe Peninsula State Park on Florida’s Gulf Coast. It was sad to see two state parks, one on the Gulf Coast and the other along the Atlantic, were damaged by the same hurricane.

The beach


The loop we camped in the last time was about six rows of campers back from the beach. Those sites are now as close as you can get to the ocean.

Rosie in the campground

Another photo of Rosie in the campground


Bits of asphalt and disconnected wires from the old campsites were visible along the beach. These reminders of destroyed sites were under water during high tides. 

It was easy to see where the beachside loop was before Hurricane Michael

Two of the things that were the same from our earlier visit were the mosquitoes and raccoons. We learned how important it was to quickly open and shut the door to keep flying pests out of Rosie, our Airstream trailer. 

Our 2019 Southeast Coast WBCCI Caravan was able to attend morning colors and graduation ceremonies for approximately 500 new United States Marines on the training base at Parris Island. It was inspiring to ride around the base watching Marine recruits in training and to see the newest Marines graduate from basic training.

Morning Colors at Parris Island

Graduation at Parris Island


Drill Instructors wait for their platoons to arrive for graduation

Pass and review at graduation


As our caravan group was riding on a bus to Parris Island, I couldn’t help but think about the last time I was on a bus in South Carolina heading to a military basic training facility. I remembered the names of my Drill Sergeants and the head Drill Sergeant screaming at us to get off “his” bus and how a certain part of our anatomy belonged to him. He also emphasized that we needed to quickly move that part of our anatomy off his bus. 

Looking back, it seemed as if drill sergeants tended to believe they owned everything and I was not going to challenge that assumption then or now.

Sign at Parris Island


A Marine Corporal served as our host on the base. He was knowledgeable and a great example of a U.S. Marine. 

Here are some specifics about this campground:
  • Our site was a back-in
  • Our site was paved with gravel 
  • We had to use leveling tools to correct a left-to-right lean
  • Our site had 20, 30 and 50 amp electrical service
  • Our site had a water connection with low pressure problems 
  • Our site did not have a sewer connection
  • There were two dump stations in the park 
  • The bathhouse near our site was clean and well maintained 
  • We were able to occasionally watch ABC and PBS using Rosie’s TV antenna as the signals tended to drift in and out—mostly out
  • We were able to occasionally watch TV digital channels Bounce and Grit 
  • AT&T placed one bar of service for voice and data over our site 
  • The campground provided WiFi service that never seemed to work for us
  • The campground had a good and well stocked store
The Hunting Island lighthouse

Campstore

Visiting a Kazoo factory while in the area

We enjoyed a horse-drawn carriage ride around Beaufort