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1.Steps:
Battery Rock to Rock Creek
The beginning of the River to River Trail. My steps are quick
and light in anticipation of what lies ahead. I fill a small
bottle of water from the Ohio River to empty into the Mississippi
River, a trail tradition. The trail takes me from a Civil
War battle site over-looking the Ohio River to Rock Creek,
home of Anna Bixby, who, with the help of a Shawnee woman,
known as Auntie Shawnee, found the cause of the dreaded milk
sickness that took many lives, including that of Nancy Hanks
Lincoln, the mother of Abraham Lincoln.
2.Heartbeat
at High Knob
here, through difficult terrain, the trail had led me to this
breaking spot in the wilderness. My heart races from the grade
of the trail and simply from the view. A good spot to rest
and enjoy the vista high above the forest. A friend was here
once when migrating Monarch butterflies landed on their way
to Mexico. I feel like I am on top of the world.
3.Angels' Dance
at Garden of the Gods
Such wondrous beauty that I am in awe and muse how such a
place could exist. This is the glorious spot we in Southern
Illinois visit again and again, especially in fall. I remember
here as a child with my mother and grandmother. While I longingly
reflect on those memories, surrounded in beauty, the angels
dance in this glorious garden.
4.Broken Wing
at Lusk Creek
Perhaps the most beautiful area in Southern Illinois, seen
only by hiking or riding a horse, the Lusk Creek Wilderness
has been named a National Scenic Landmark. At Indian Kitchen
overlook, nothing man-made is visible. Nature exists here
largely undisturbed by man. Today, I sadly find a swallowtail
butterfly with a broken wing. She will rest here; perhaps
shell fly again.
5.Flight of
the Thunderbird at Mill Stone Bluff
The remains of an ancient Indian village is off the trail
but worth the hike and the ascent of the bluff where white
men later quarried stones to grind their grain. I wonder,
as I look down and out at the beautiful view, what happened
to the people who lived here so long ago. In my dreaming,
the giant Thunderbird in the petroglyph here takes flight
before me. He soars effortlessly before me as I stand breathless
in his presence.
6.Rain at Ghost
Dance Canyon Trail: Dixon Springs
An incredible jumble of giant boulders piled upon each other
as if thrown down by some giant playful hand. The water winds
its way through in little rills, pools, and waterfalls to
the bottom of the canyon. The Indians, from whose ritual dance
it name derives, made weapons here. Today, the stone creek
whispers of life long ago and the native people who lived
here as the rain dances around me, dotting the leaves and
the wildflowers.
7.Walk by Here:
Ferne Clyffe
Here, the Trail passes briefly through the most well-known
part of the park, but winds through areas most visitors never
see. There are wondrous contrasts: the delicate ferns, the
swift creek, and the wildflowers touched by the breeze among
the grand cliffs. I stop for a while and then walk on.
8.Barred Owl
at Panthers' Den
Deep solitude and in the dense forest we walk toward a barred
owl resting in a pine tree. He examines us with a calm repose
with as much interest and intensity as we examine him. After
he has seen enough of us, he turns his head and flies off
into the forest, swooping low, silently threading his way
through the tangled branches.
9.Trail Magic
at Rocky Comfort
Long distance hikers carry with them their favorite tales
of trail magic, fortuitous things that have happened
to them, often in times of need or despair, when they were
tempted to give up. It might be as simple as someone to talk
to or an offer of a meal. Magic comes in many
different degrees to those who believe in it. The piece is
for those who have experienced it and for those who may take
the steps to place themselves in its way.
10.Shooting
Stars on Trillium Trail: Giant City
A place protected, adored and explored by many. There were
two sisters, Gladys and Ruth Dudley, who painted the wildflowers
of Southern and Central Illinois from early life into old
age. It was their dedicated dream that they would publish
a book on wildflowers and publish and show that, they
are beautiful just where they grow. While their works
were never published in book form, the state of Illinois purchased
their collection, and pieces of their works are on display
at the Giant City Visitors Center. Another such person was
a biologist at SIU, George Hazen French, who on may 6, in
1870 bicycled to Giant City and discovered a new and rare
wildflower now known as Frenchs Shooting Star. Today
they bed delicately in the wind surrounded by the bluffs on
the Shawnee Forest. Ironically, the great chief of the Shawnee,
Tecumseh, was also known as Shooting Star.
11.Mighty River:
Tower Rock
Anticipation is keen for the first sighting of the Mississippi
River. Conflicting emotions swirl through me, as the water
swirls though the sand along the shore: relief that my journey
is over but also sadness for it and joy at my accomplishment.
I empty my Ohio River water into the Mississippi completing
the journey, symbolizing my sense of personal triumph. I did
it! I reflect on the grandeur of this father of rivers, the
lives it has touched and the stories its churning currents
carry with it.
12.
Trails Never End: Devil's Backbone*
Here my hike comes ato an end, but the trail goes on as it
becomes part of the American Discovery Trail. There will be
another trail; another journey for one trail leads to another.
Trails go on and on; they never really end.
*Richard McNeill - vocalist

Really
Big Shoes
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