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My Walkabout: Winter 2021
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My Walkabout: Winter 2021

12/07: Tent Camping Under Little Mountain

Posted on August 21, 2022October 26, 2022

Among the many joys of the Nashville Trace Parkway are its campsites. Managed by the National Park Service, they are available free on a first-come, first-serve basis. Since long before leaving Vermont I’d been hoping to find warm enough weather in the South to use my tent. “Warm enough” to me was a low above freezing, and tonight, wending my may through Mississippi looked good.

The map told me that there was a campground at about the right distance. It was just North of Tupelo, and an old song came to mind that I hadn’t heard since my 20s. Ray and Lucy’s was a dive bar in Hardwick, Vermont, popular with both young hippies and local pig farmers. A band called “Coco and the Lonesome Road Band” played there most Saturday nights, and one of their songs went like this:

It’s 42 below
I wish I was in Tupelo (Mississippi)
‘Cause in Tupelo
There ain’t no snow

Happy to have escaped the worst that December was bringing to my home state, I belted out the song as I drove.

The Jeff Busby campground is named after Thomas Jefferson (“Jeff”) Busby, a Mississippi congressman who first proposed and fought hard for the creation of the Natchez Trace Parkway. I arrived early enough to have my pick of the eighteen campsites, set up my tent, and headed to a short trail that climbed Little Mountain. It was aptly named. It would have been called a hill in Vermont. Size notwithstanding, it had some nice views to the east and I had the place to myself, despite the paved road that met the trail at the summit.

Some fun fungi on the Little Mountain trail

The sun was very low as I climbed down to my tent. “Climbed” isn’t quite right. I was strolling more than I was climbing (it really was a little mountain). As the sky darkened I noticed that a few others had arrived at the campsite. I didn’t meet anybody; they were all securely packed away in trailers or RVs that dwarfed my little tent.

Looking like a ghost, a burnt stump turned nurse log protects its charge.

I gathered a few twigs and used my cool little Kelly Kettle to heat up dinner by headlamp, painfully aware of another drawback to camping in December, even in a place as warm Tupelo. It wasn’t quite 5:00 PM, and daylight wouldn’t arrive until around 9:30 tomorrow. While it was warm enough to camp, there was no escape from winter’s long nights and short days even at this latitude. I wasn’t ready to sleep for sixteen hours. Unlike my neighbors in the RVs, I didn’t have Netflix and a comfy couch. Jeff Busby Campground didn’t offer a lot of nightlife.

Well, I had a book, spare batteries for my headlamp, and more than enough warm clothes to sit at the picnic table and read a few chapters. And it was going to be awfully easy to get an early start. Tomorrow was going to be a busy day. After a stop in Jackson, I would swing west, leaving the Natchez Trace, to visit Poverty Point, Louisiana, another enigmatic native American site.

Kelly Kettle in action. A few twigs inside the chimney quickly bring water in the outer jacket to a boil.

1 thought on “12/07: Tent Camping Under Little Mountain”

  1. Bob Wescott says:
    October 28, 2022 at 9:17 am

    On my next visit you’ll have to show me your Kelly Kettle.

    Reply

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Posts

  • November 2021: This Itch
  • 11/20: Cannabis, Smoked Fish, Sandbanks
  • 11/21-22: Everest Wedding, Arboretums, Dunes, Lost City
  • 11/23: Mustard Museum, Hoodoos
  • 11/24-29: Pie, Superior, President Streets
  • 11/30-12/1: Swans, Mounds, Rivers, Funicular
  • 12/02: Mother Jones, Truckstop, Tall places, tasting a concrete
  • 12/03: Superman, The Boat That Wasn’t, Elk and Bison, Mutton
  • 12/04: Honky Tonk Highway, the Parthenon, Women’s Suffrage
  • 12/05: Microcars and Latkes
  • 12/06: Loveless Biscuits, The Natchez Trace, Hippy History, and the Farmhouse Sanctuary
  • 12/07: Tent Camping Under Little Mountain
  • 12/08: Tupelo, Jackson, Poverty Point
  • 12/09: Natchez: Forts, Gumbo, missed opportunities
  • 12/10 – 12/12: New Orleans, Izzy, the End of the World, Cat Acrobats
  • 12/13: Turning North to Montgomery
  • 12/14 – 12/15: Rosa Parks, Freedom Riders, and Confederates
  • 12/16: Roses, Bread and Roses, and Georgia on my Mind
  • 12/17: An Owl, Chocolate Beer, and Ecumenical Barbecue
  • 12/18: Natural Bridge, Blue Ridge Fog, The 1970s Vermont hippy invasion
  • 12/19: John Brown’s Fort, the Appalachian Trail, Harrisburg’s “Old Shakey”
  • 12/20: Highway to Hell, A Visit to Tammany
  • 12/21: The Last HOJOs, the Road Home
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