Thursday, July 8, 2010

Mammoth Cave

Jill's Journal: Somehow we’ve lived only a few hours from Mammoth Cave National Park for all these years and never went. Shameful. Why did we never realize what a natural wonder was such a short drive away?

First, the park itself – beautiful. Over 52,000 acres of lush vegetation and eye candy. Within our first three minutes in the park, we saw a deer and fawn on the side of the road, nearly hit a wild turkey crossing the road, and passed within inches of a vulture having a lunch of turtle. There are over 70 miles of horseback riding trails in the park – why did I not know this? I am kicking myself for never taking advantage of it before.

Regrets aside, Rob took off work a little early today to join us on an introductory tour of Mammoth Cave. I’ve been on other cave tours in different parts of the country and had never been wowed. Today, I was wowed. Seriously wowed. Phenomenal.

Mammoth Cave (the picture is of the entrance) is over 365 miles long and geologists believe there are approximately 500 more miles waiting to be discovered. It’s the longest known cave in the world and is designated as a World Heritage Site. And it’s not just long (and wide), it’s tall too. At one point, in an area of the cave known as the Rotunda, I asked the ranger how high the “ceiling” was because it just seemed so…mammoth. The answer? Eighty feet. Amazing. We were approximately 150 feet underground at that spot.

Mummies and artifacts found deep in the cave (approximately seven miles in!) show that Native Americans mined gypsum from the walls as long as 2,400 years ago. More recently, it was used as a saltpeter mine for U.S. forces during the War of 1812. Saltpeter is a key component of gunpowder and became a necessity when the British blockaded U.S. ports. Much original mining equipment from that effort nearly 200 years ago remains – including some of the innovative water piping of the time. Miners hollowed out yellow poplar trees (Kentucky’s official state tree) and banded them together to create an impressive system of pipes.

After the War of 1812 was over, the U.S. didn’t have such a need for saltpeter and the mine was shut down. Someone realized what a spectacular cave it was and decided to try the tourist thing in 1816. Mammoth Cave has been open to the public ever since, making it the second-oldest tourism destination in the 50 states (behind only Niagara Falls). The first hotel was built at the site in 1837 and it became a National Park in 1926.

The cave remains at 56 degrees year-round, which felt awfully chilly compared to the sweltering conditions outside. Unfortunately, the girls found the whole experience pretty boring, with one grand exception: the ranger wanted to show us how dark it is inside a cave, so he killed all the power. Trust me, there is no dark on the surface of the earth that compares. You could literally hold your hand a centimeter from your face and not be able to see it. There was, however, one tiny thing we could see – two of the girls had on a glow-in-the-dark silly bandz (a rubberband/bracelet fad of the moment). Those little rubberbands dimly glowed on those little wrists and completely cracked us all up!

4 comments:

gretchenhs said...

I knew those silly bands would make them smile! LOL
I used to go to the caves more as a child, but we took Liz last year and she seemed to enjoy it.

Unknown said...

Mammoth Cave is one of the destinations that I have not yet been to, but want to go to. A couple years ago we went to the Jewel Cave in South Dakota and the rangers kept telling us about the Mammoth Cave (Way to sell your site guys.)

Have your girls been doing the Junior Ranger program at the National Parks? We've been having ours complete the Junior Ranger badges at all the parks for the past 4-5 years or so. They get a huge kick out of getting the ranger badges.

thegang@RVfor5.com said...

Gary - it really is a must see, especially for you. Within seconds of just entering the park I turned to Jill and said - why haven't we been HERE all week? I didn't know how amazing it was going to be, and it is absolutely, completely a must see (and I saw one 1:45 tour and drove in, then out).

We haven't Rangered because A) didn't know much about it and B) didn't have the time this quick jaunt. Might be something we look into. 2 might still be a little young to get it tho ;)

Unknown said...

2 is probably a little young, but they vary the amount that has to be done by age. For just a couple dollars you get an activity book that they get to color in and learn about the park that you're visiting. If they don't finish in the park, you can mail in the booklet and they'll send the badges.

You should also get one of the National Park Passports. The girls can collect stickers for any parks you visit and get a stamp in the passport.