Tag Archives: spider

Cross Country Vacation Sept./Oct. 2025-Post 9

Dismal Swamp State Park, North Carolina

When I visit my daughter and fam, one of my favorite places to visit is Dismal Swamp State Park. It is very close to where the fam lives and a great place to get back to nature. I briefly shared about my first visit to this park here.

“Located in Camden County abutting the state’s northeast border with Virginia, Dismal Swamp State Park provides access to the Great Dismal Swamp, the largest remaining swamp in the eastern United States. This area features unique and abundant plant life and wildlife, as well as a rich cultural history that intertwines with George Washington, the Underground Railroad, and Prohibition.” 

Dismal Swamp State Park

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Dismal Swamp State Park

The one-of-a-kind swing bridge is the only access to the park and is staffed during park hours. Boating traffic has the right-of-way. The canal is an alternate route of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway and is managed by the Army Corps of Engineers. Boat traffic from all over the world use this canal.

In the late 1600’s, the swamp was a wetland, covering over a million acres, stretching from the James River in Virginia to the Albemarle Sound in North Carolina. Native Americans hunted and fished here.

During the 1800’s, the swamp was a refuge for escaping slaves. The slaves who chose to live here lived in permanent settlements called maroon colonies. The Great Dismal Swamp is a designated site of the National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom.

Over time, attempts at draining to convert for agriculture, and harvesting the timber, took their toll.

There is a very nice visitor’s center where you can learn all about the canal and the swamp.

Dismal Swamp State Park

In 1974, over 14,000 acres was purchased from timber companies by the State of North Carolina creating the Dismal Swamp State Park.

On my first visit, the ranger enlightened me as to what these mysterious stumps are. This Bald Cypress does not grow where I live.

Dismal Swamp State Park Bald Cypress

Dismal Swamp State Park

Turkey Tail fungi are a fun find and, through the wonders of the internet, I learned that, among other benefits, they are good for gut health. Don’t eat them raw, these fungi are apparently tough to chew!

Dismal Swamp State Park Turkey Tail Fungi

Also edible, but not raw, is the American Beautyberry. This pretty plant does not grow in my part of the world. I wish it did, because I learned that the leaves are a mosquitoes, ticks, and fire ant repellent!

Dismal Swamp State Park American Beautyberry

Dismal Swamp State Park

The delicate Tiger Swallowtail butterfly is missing part of a wing, but she knows how to make do. I admire her spirit!

Dismal Swamp State Park Tiger Swallowtail

To help pay the debt from the Revolutionary War, a whiskey tax was enforced, and later the Prohibition movement, became factors in the making of moonshine in secluded places such as the Dismal Swamp.

Dismal Swamp State Park

Dismal Swamp State Park

Dismal Swamp State Park Marbled Orb Weaver

This beautiful family hosted my hike!

Love them!

Dismal Swamp State Park Breuer Family

See the world around you!

More Travel Posts:

A Stroll in the Garden

Has a bee ever landed on you, and instead of getting scared, you appreciate the possibility that you got confused for a flower? -Unknown

Bumble Bee and Candytuft

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Bumble Bee and Candytuft

Bumble Bee and Candytuft

Bees do have a smell, you know, and if they don’t they should, for their feet are dusted with spices from a million flowers. -Ray Bradbury, Dandelion Wine

Bumble Bee and Candytuft

Bumble Bee and Candytuft

Aerodynamically, the bumble bee shouldn’t be able to fly, but the bumble bee doesn’t know it, so it goes on flying anyway. -Mary Kay Ash

Bumble Bee and Allium

Bumble Bee and Allium

Bumble Bee and Allium

Bumble Bee and Allium

It’s not so much how busy you are, but why you are busy.  The bee is praised.  The mosquito is swatted. -Mary O’Connor

Spider on Euphorbia

Discoveries in the Garden

In every walk with nature one receives far more than he seeks. ~John Muir

It is always good to slow down and take a walk once in a while.  It refreshes body and soul and one never knows what one might discover.

A nest in the apple tree:

A crab spider hiding out in the phlox (she is so clever with her camouflage):

And a pine beetle:

Oh yes, he is alive!

I think the dent in the beetle’s wing casing was caused by an adventurous kitten.

She only looks innocent!

 What discoveries have you made on your walks?