Big Cypress vs. The Everglades

in #life9 months ago

We were starting to see billboards that read Airboats and Alligators! and a line from The Sound of Music kept running through my head. These are a few of my favorite things…

The children were tired of hearing excerpts from the fifteen Everglades library books I had brought along, and my husband looked sleepy as he drove us into the last small town before the Big Cypress National Preserve. Out my window were lots of barn-like factory buildings with black-haired men hauling crates of produce into the backs of semi-trucks. The convenience store had signs in Spanish, and I tried my hand at translations, which I had not quite finished before the town flickered out of sight.

It was the climax of boredom. The excitement of a new adventure had lost its luster for the children about six hours prior. It was time for a pick-me-up, a bit of I-told-you-we’d-see-lots-of-gators—in other words, it was time for a proper introduction to the swamp. Big Cypress, the western swampy side of the Everglades, knows how to do that.

20240125_162637.jpg

We took the scenic road, appropriately called Scenic Loop Road, to our campsite. It is a twenty-seven mile dirt road that begins with a large amount of potholes and tall scrub obscuring the view of the swamp. It is a test of faith. The faithful soon discover the road and the view improve.

Swaths of prairie-like grass cover shallow water. Scattered mini cypress trees are dotted with egrets and herons. One feels in tune with the sway of the wind in the saw grass. Just when you have decided that you might actually be the grass...the view changes to a swampy jungle. All the trees tangle together for the light, but mostly there is dark. Dark shadows are in all that tangle, and I decided that most of them were alligators, and probably a Burmese python or three.

All of this would not impress the children too much, except that some of the dark shadows showed themselves by way of lying statue-like on the shoulder of the road. The first gator to be seen was only about four feet, but it didn’t matter because it was that coveted moment of oh my god it’s a gator and it is literally one foot away from the side of the vehicle I am currently hanging out of!

20240125_160941.jpg

We saw twenty-six up-close gators in the hour drive, and most of them large. Twenty-seven if you count the big dead one half hanging out of the swamp that the vultures were feasting on. As the only ones on this silent road, we were at our leisure for getting out and getting properly hissed at, and then watching the insulted gator swim off. Her long tail swished with ease, guiding her along as her thick back legs hung idle, enjoying the ride. She was a picture of reptilian elegance.

Let’s Fast Forward Now

We spent a peaceful night at Big Cypress National Preserve. Nary a panther or python to be seen (which is no surprise,) but a polite owl spent a great deal of time singing me a lullaby. Next stop, Everglades National Park, one hour away.

We were standing at the main entrance visitor center when I heard an older lady with a heavy northern accent say “I’m just outside of Miami. I’m at the Everglades.” She really emphasized those last words, like she was really proud of herself. It was something like saying Oh no, I never buy sunglasses unless they are designer. The Everglades is posh, y’all. While Big Cypress is a preserve, which is kind of the Walmart of national parks, The Everglades is Target—both products were made in the same place, but you pay a lot more money for one of them.

20240126_152617.jpg

We took the obligatory photos of the children sitting atop the panther statue, and headed to our campsite…the smallest group campsite I’ve ever seen.

But this is The Everglades, and it’s super posh, so let’s stay on task. Yes, there is a great deal of beautiful River of Grass scenery. There are several nice boardwalks made for short trails—the glamorous way to hike. There are a bunch of ranger-led programs, which kind of makes me think of it like the camp in the movie Dirty Dancing, except instead of a botched abortion scene there could be a person needing a blood transfusion after being bitten by a thousand mosquitos.

There are some beautiful scenes of water plants swaying and colorful birds flitting about, but there was something missing. The Everglades has a reputation for being wild. It’s supposed to have terrifying thirty foot-long pythons and alligators around every corner. And yet, in the two days we spent there we saw a total of seven gators, and most of them far off, compared to 26 in one hour at Big Cypress. It was as though the gators had Everglades National Park’s number—they probably all had a meeting and made a unanimous decision. The papa of all gators—probably an old sixteen footer named Al—said to the congregation There are far too many tourists here now, everyone head to Big Cypress!

20240126_162748.jpg

The campground does have the luxury of toilets and showers, but with them you get a fully booked campground with a lot of noisy people in close quarters. The pine trees against the setting sun make a lovely scene above the ruckus, but there was no owl to sing me a lullaby, just some distant crickets.

Fast Forward Again

We’d left the park, and I was watching my husband clean the meat off a frog’s leg and produce some very sad looking little leg bones. Grilled bits of chewy gator tail dipped in seafood sauce were set in front of the children. Just beyond the tables was a field of sugarcane and some unwanted looking coconut palms that the children had already inspected for fallen souvenirs.

20240126_154300.jpg

I told my husband that I thought Big Cypress National Preserve was a whole lot better than Everglades National Park. I mean, I’m glad Everglades National Park exists, but it wasn’t all that wild feeling with so many people around.

I opted not to eat the gator tail. I had an image of that lovely water dragon at Big Cypress, with her long trail swishing through the water like the swaying of a woman’s hips. I’ve got lots of respect for her, and her cypress swamp.

This is for you @corvidae, in case you make that trip you’ve talked about into the deepest reaches of the deep south. I also recommend you get a copy of Everglades Patrol by Tom Shirley for some ambiance reading during your stay. And check out the Ah-Tah-Thi-Kee musueum on one of the Seminole reservations—the drive out there to the middle of nowhere just above the Everglades is a beautiful picture of old cracker Florida—cattle fields with sable palms popping up all over them, between rivers of grass and canals full of wide-leafed water plants with birds hopping on them. Also, there were some very friendly crows out there keen to eat my lunch with me.

Sort:  

I've always wanted to go to the Everglades, it seems a little mysterious and primal. There's been a few films in which the area has featured, the beautiful Where the Crawdad's Sing is one of them and it only made me want to go there more.

Becca🌷

It is interesting to me that people have heard of it. It seems like something that is just a weird Florida thing that only people in this state would know of. It is unique though. I think the Okefenokee Swamp is actually much more beautiful, but that's comparing apples and oranges I suppose.

I will have to take a look at Where the Crawdad's Sing and compare notes. :)

It's widely known I think, that area, although my partner and I watch a lot of documentaries so maybe we are more familiar with places like than than those who do not.

i really enjoyed that movie I mentioned as did my guy although it won't appeal to all. Give it a try if you get the chance, I have a feeling you'll enjoy it. It's based on the book of the same name by Delia Owens which is also worth the time to read. Please let me know what you think if you take the time to see or read it.

Becca 🌷

My son found a baby crawdad in the creek today. I suppose it is a crawdad kind of mood around here :)
20240211_164836.jpg

It's a message, a sign, indicating you need to see that movie.

Becca 🌷

Hey, haven't seen you in a while!

It looks like you created some lovely memories for the kids, over there. Although in my book the words "camping" and "alligator" can't be in the same sentence :)

Cheers!

It has been a while. I guess I've been doing things like planning trips to the Everglades. Yes, lots of memories, like when I fell while hiking. Ha. Of all the places we've hiked in mountains and rough terrain, and I fell at sea level. :) And of course many other less painful memories. Fortunately there were no gators at our actual campsite, just a million mosquitos, which might actually be scarier.

might actually be scarier

Oh yes, they are!

Isn't nature wonderful :)

Big Cypress wins with its awesome dead gator/vulture attraction! It all sounds awesome but I am with you on the preferring the less peopled one

So I gagged while attempting to watch the gator/vulture action. In my defense, the smell made the sight all the less appetizing. Meanwhile my son filmed about two minutes of the vulture eating the gator's throat. He was all in. Upon returning home he promptly showed the video to his grandmother, who also gagged. It seems the attraction inspires one of two extreme reactions.

Yep, my vote is generally for the least amount of people.

Lol, I can see it in my minds eye. I can also imagine the Good Lady going full vom at such a thing!

Twenty-seven if you count the big dead one half hanging out of the swamp that the vultures were feasting on.

Hang on lemme grab my camera and I'll head over! Tell them to wait!!

I really do want to go to Florida. I thought it would be sooner, but sooner isn't ready for me just yet. I will definitely check out Big Cypress. I will definitely avoid the designer Everglades 😎, at least during tourist season (which I kind of imagine is all the time..?).

Thanks for the reading suggestion, too!

Ha! That was a really big dead gator, so I'd say you had about 48 hours to get there in time, unless the vultures decided to throw a really big swamp party and invite alllll their friends.

Hopefully Florida will be here waiting for you. Lots of places to see in it, and many very different from each other. I love my Florida. So apparently winter is the tourist season in the Everglades because the bugs are really bad every other season. I'm honestly a little curious about it. Like, if I come with a mosquito netting hat, wear long pants and sleeves and coat my entire body with bug spray, how bad can it be? I think that, and then I remember the humidity, and yeah, I'm thinking the Everglades is a no-go after the month of March, which is basically the beginning of summer in South Florida.

Hmmmm, I have had two "how bad can it be" experiences with swarming, biting bugs, and I am not sure if there is a way to make it any less bad unless you wear a mosquito net outfit head-to-toe and even then those bastards will find a way in... but what doesn't kill you goes down in the record as a thrilling experience! I say, give it a try!!

If I feel like making a six hour drive to get eaten alive, maybe I will give it a go this summer. Ha. There are lots of varieties of thrilling experiences, for sure. I hope your current one has many non-itchy ones.

My current journey includes sitting on my ass on my couch eating salad while reading your comments... not much itching happening lately except when it's time to wash my hair.

I need more adventures, itchy or otherwise, but waiting for the credit card bill to go away all by itself doesn't seem to work.

I hear you. Well you let me know when you are ready to itch and I'm sure Florida has something to offer for you ;)

Hehehe will do!

Hello !

It always makes me happy when I see you have posted. Hope you're doing well.

It's fun to see new things, but I suppose the TV is as close to alligators as I ever wanted to be. LOL Interesting though in the difference in the two places.

I haven't had an adventure in a long, long time. I'm trying to think one up for when the weather gets warmer.

I'm always glad to see you too. You'd be surprised how chill alligators are, at least in the daytime. They are pretty much like every other wild animal - they think humans are pretty scary. I'm leery of running into grandpa gator though, who might be aware that his length exceeds my height. Funny, I do the opposite here - I'm always thinking up adventures for while the weather is cool. Just planned another camping trip for March. I hope you come up with one too.

Yay! 🤗
Your content has been boosted with Ecency Points, by @corvidae.
Use Ecency daily to boost your growth on platform!

Thank you.

I came over to see if you had been here and I had missed you, but NOPE ! I hope you are doing well whatever you are doing. February ??? Really ??? You are neglecting us !

😂