As rich as the aesthetics are, the history woven through the area is equally impressive. I learned more in an hour on The Graceful Ghost, a "replica of an 1800's era steamboat and is the last known wood-burning, steam powered, stern paddle-wheel touring vessel in the world," than I have in quite some time, probably since an entire semester of a high school or college history course. A few highlights:
- Lady Bird Johnson, perhaps my favorite historical First Lady, was born and raised near Caddo Lake
- I'm aware of a 2011 movie titled "Uncertain, TX" but I'm not CERTAIN if it contains any factual features
- The handcrafted lift enabling large volumes of luggage and travel gear to be transported easily from an upper level parking cliff to the lodging levels of http://www.gatorlodge.com/
- A clock in the lodge that chirps a varied bird tweet for each hour of the day and night
- A leave one/take one book library, complete with a "Knife Laws of the Fifty States" guide
- Weeks of obsessing over a child (or adult) being snagged by a gator, thereby prompting me to include a baseball bat of Char's in my lake luggage - which had the unfortunate result of a certain little boy repeatedly chanting "I wanna kill an alligator" several times each day, while brandishing the bat about
- I don't possess a firearm (which is probably fortunate for mankind) so my logic ran along the lines of if I could not bop said gator about the head in my many imagined attacks with the aforementioned bat, I could simply shove the bat into the awaiting gator's jaws
My adventure photos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/piangenti/sets/72157633169505154/
Mudda's adventure photos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/94351246@N05/sets/72157633163569419/
Side trivia: Don Henley has a small house on the bayou but it's so nondescript that this photo was focused more on the waterfowl than the structure's corner.
General factoids: Click here! But watch carefully for gators.