Constantly fascinated by the world around me. I've got the dreamer's disease... and I believe that a truly happy person is one who can enjoy the scenery on a detour.

I spend most of my time reading, writing, cooking & planning my life on Post-It notes. Music, wine, food, art & travel are my favorite fuel; spending time well wasted.
I began writing this blog because I think that every day we have something to be celebrated, shared, something that sparks creativity, inspiration & ideation.
Although I'm quite optimistic, I'm more judgmental than I'd like to admit. Here's to overturning assumptions.


Showing posts with label Cookeville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cookeville. Show all posts

Monday, June 20, 2011

René of the Day // 6.18.11 // Fall Creek Falls

Fall Creek Falls
iPhone photo doesn't do it justice.
For perspective, the tiny white specks by the pool are people.
This weekend, I felt like I was in Hawaii – in middle Tennessee. MR’s small town of Cookeville doesn’t offer a wide selection of entertaining activities so we often flee to Nashville but this weekend we decided to stay put. Friday was a nice night on the deck, grilling burgers, drinking wine, talking and listening to music. Saturday is stormed on and off but we went to the 10th annual Cookeville Soapbox Derby – pretty cool! MR’s co-worker’s daughter had the coolest car on the drag and won third place.


Sunday, I made a frittata for brunch then we ventured 40 miles to Pikeville, TN to hike to Fall Creek Falls. Although I love a good workout on the humps of Mother Nature, I expected to park and walk an eighth of a mile to an overlook like you do at most state parks. Horrible assumption.

 First we looked at Cane Creek Falls, which the plush summer foliage made hard to view; we planned to hike down to the bottom – the amazing thing about this park is all of the falls have beautiful pools to swim in. But after the rest of our adventure, we put the kibosh on that idea. Cane Creek Cascade was pretty… and the rope bridge was very Indiana Jones-esque – I had to scold MR not to jump, shake or touch me as we scurried across. It felt a bit janky.

Then we plowed straight up into the woods for a couple mile hike in the middle of the thick woods. It was a hot as a hornet and huffing and puffing! I mean, I could not believe there wasn’t any sort of disclaimer about this trail – it’s no stroll through the woods. It was a hefty hike! We came to an overlook and again the view was covered by trees. MR walked forward and I sat to rest – I did not hustle up here for this! Ten minutes later he came back looking for me – a few minutes further there was what we had needed in the first place – a parking lot and an overlook. We clearly came the wrong way – but just getting to where we parked was like the twisty turns of the moonshine routes in the hollers – I thought we’d fly off the side of the mountain at any turn. This park is so pristine - I didn't see any litter or what appeared to be human wear except for footprints on the trails. 

The view of the falls here was gorgeous... 256 feet of two thin and steady streams of white water - the highest free-falling waterfall east of the Mississippi. We took it in then decided to climb down to the bottom pool. And I thought the last trail was treacherous… it was steep, jagged, slippery rocks the entire way down. It was beautiful and I couldn’t believe we were in Tennessee… we had fun manuvering down and then sitting on a big boulder enjoying the view and cool mist watching people swim – next time we’ll have to plan for that! I could have sat there all day; it was so peaceful. And it was quite romantic - albeit our sweatiness and the strangers. The trek back up was bloody hell – we were both sweating like high school wrestlers running laps in garbage bags – and you had to be ever so calculated with your footing or you’d slip. I never thought we’d make it back up – and then back through the woods and across the bridge. God dog! I will say it was worth it but today my buns and ribs are so incredibly sore and tender.

My friend Meredith just told me that the original un-animated "Jungle Book" movie was filmed here and the pool is shallow but in a small area it's around 20 feet deep and he had to hit the exact spot when he jumped off the waterfall!

I love how we’ve gone on these little adventures and sought out amazing things in this small and simple part of the country while MR is on this work assignment for a year or so. I laughed and told him it will be sweet to look back on in 10 years. 

Suspension Bridge that begins the hike to the falls


Cane Creek Cascade

Monday, June 6, 2011

René of the Day // 6.6.11 // All the Buzz

Read all about it! The tiny town of Cookeville, TN, where MR currently resides, was in USA Today this morning.

"Tennessee: Cookeville - Putnam County deputies who responded to a 911 call about a 'loud machinery noise' in the area discovered that the caller and his wife were bugged by cicadas. Cpl. Joe Davis said no cicadas were arrested. The cicadas are part of a population that emerges every 13 years."

Really?! I'd like to see cicada-sized hand (um, wing?) cuffs if they did attempt to arrest insect wildlife. Tell you a little something about the fine city of CookeVegas?

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

René of the Day // 5.17.11 // Burgess Falls

I’ve contemplated doing this for months… a quick daily post to share a thought, link, photo, recipe or any part of my day or life that feels fun, unique or worthy of sharing. Last night I had dinner with three friends I’ve known since grade school and I mentioned the idea for my “René of the Day” posts and they encouraged me to go for it - thanks gals! I’ll do my best to post a tidbit every day. And so it begins…

My first “RoD” is a photo of Burgess Falls in middle Tennessee. I hiked there this weekend with my boyfriend Matt (to be referred to from here out as MR, his initials) . It was a fairly challenging hike on a cool, misty Sunday morning. 

I’m sharing this because, besides showcasing it’s natural beauty, Matt and I were intrigued by the the anti-climactic end to the falls. You hike for 3 miles past a strong, rushing river and three large falls (the largest, last pictured here), swollen from the recent rain and floods, but the pool at the bottom just billows and swirls and ends… it didn’t continue into the river beyond. 

This made me mindful of something I despise but seems to happen often: hurrying up to wait. I always have to be early, I rush to make something happen or look forward to something and then when it’s time, expectations aren’t met or appreciation is lost in impatience. It’s a one-off thought, but it reminded me to appreciate the moment - the fall - and not worry about where the water is running to next.

NOTE: I have switched from Tumblr back to Blogger. Although Tumblr has dynamite themes, it doesn't easily allow for sharing or comments and it was being a punk about loading photos. Blogger performs these tricks without trouble. We're back!