Thursday, February 28, 2019

Back In The Day Hiking & Hanging At The Sierra Club Chapter Meeting


This might have been a month back (that is why it is now a Back in the Day blog), but it is still worth looking back to the last weekend of January which was the quarterly annual meeting of the Tennessee Chapter of the Sierra Club.
The winter edition of the meeting was at Cedars of Lebanon State Park in Middle Tennessee. Hosted by the Cherokee Group it is three days of food, hiking, and environmental work. On Friday and the way was a stop at Burgess Falls State Park with three waterfalls (Falling Waters Cascade, Little & Middle Falls) before coming to the massive 136-foot cascade, Burgess Falls. 






While I couldn't go to the base (the steps had been washed out by a flood), but the view from the overlook was spectacular and there was a beautiful waterfall rainbow. Oh, once I got to Cedar of Lebanon I had to build a fire that evening at the Group Lodge.




On Saturday it was a day of hiking, but first I had to help with making breakfast. Then it was on to the trail. First was the morning hike led by Tennessee State Naturalist Randy Hedgepath on some trails in the state park. We hiked a loop on the Cedar Run Trail. It was a nice two-mile through the Cedar Glades. 







In the afternoon it was across the street to a farm that the state recently bought. We first toured the old home and farm buildings. After, we took a loop hike around the property on old farm roads about three miles. After dinner, our speaker was Marge Davis who gave a talk on the merits of TennCan








On Sunday, I had to stay for the Executive Committee (Ex-Com) meeting while the lucky ones got to hike the Cedar Forest Trail with Randy. However, during the meeting, the Wood Booger was reappointment Sergeant at Arms. Overall, it was another excellent Chapter meeting protecting Tennessee.






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