Morning conditions: an overcast sky and squishy ground around our tents. Fingers crossed for the weather to improve. (It worked!) Today Carol and I tackled Section 2 of the Lake Moultrie Passage.
Before we left Angels Landing Campground, we stopped at the restaurant and asked Ray if he would mind being a contact person if we literally got in too deep around Springwood Road. This section could be swampy and we wanted a bail-out option. He said yes and gave us his phone number. I might have seen him shaking his head as we went out the door.
We parked a car where the trail crosses Viper Road near the campground, with the idea that if we finish the 12-mile section early enough, we’ll tackle the 3-mile road walk from there to the end of Section 2.
Starting from Amos Gourdine Landing again, this time westbound, we looked for Palmetto Trail signs pointing out which bridge to take across the diversion canal. First bridge, no signs. Second bridge, railroad. Third bridge, no signs, but we ran across it anyway (should have crossed on the first bridge.) Our confusion added 2.5 miles to our day.
On track at last, Carol and I were up on the dike again, enjoying partial shade and a pleasant breeze as we passed by piney woods and a wide canal bustling with wildlife. Two bald eagles circled overhead.
The first time we heard a very loud splashy “plop” and saw a wave ripple across the water, we thought an alligator had snagged something to eat. After several more splashes, we deduced that our presence was startling gators sunning on the banks and, one by one, they slipped into the water. There were a lot of them!
Unlike the endless straight miles walking on the dike on our first day, angles and turns helped us to feel progress. Still, taking bathroom breaks were tricky, either out in the open or amongst trees in standing water.
At midafternoon the dike walk ended. The trail descended into piney woods transformed into swamp by the recent rains. Not gonna lie, I was petrified, but I knew I had to suck it up, praying that (A) the water wasn’t deep enough to support a real alligator and (B) that snakes did not exist.
Boardwalk soon disappeared. With great skills in tricky sidestepping and slight bushwhacking, we made our way until we reached a chain link fenced backyard that was the domain of a small but ferociously barking dog. The racket drew the attention of a little boy that lived there, who ran to get his grandpa. Carol and I stood looking at the deep black lake that, according to GPS, was the Palmetto Trail.
Welcome to Hammonds Landing, the end of Springwood Road.
Grandpa splashed through his yard to say hello and suggested we walk around to the dry side of his property and follow the road through the neighborhood “and the trail is right there.”
According to GPS and our two sets of eyes, the trail was not, in fact, right there. We’d heard about a “beautiful high wood bridge” that spanned across this swampy area, but we never saw it. If you’ve read my blog for a while, you know there was some moaning and groaning on my part right about now.
We thought about calling Ray for rescue but decided that we can do hard things. As we splashed around in the pines we noticed yellow blazes, decided that was all we had to go on, and pinged from one to the next until we got to higher ground on a forest road parallelling Bulltown Ditch. Soon we emerged onto Viper Road. What felt like hours was about 45 minutes.
Carol and I agreed not to spend the rest of the day walking the remaining 3 miles on Viper Road and Highway 45 to complete Section 2. Both roads were very busy with trucks, including a large bridge over the canal connecting Lake Moultrie and Lake Marion. There were no road shoulders to walk safely and the risk was not reasonable.
Instead we took our chances at Mac Daddy’s, a fish camp overlooking the water. Not a fancy place, but they sure know how to fry stuff! Delicious catfish bites, sweet tea and the best hushpuppies I think I’ve ever eaten.
~”O Cumberland River” Old Crow Medicine Show

















































