Posts Tagged ‘#lakewoodpark’

Lakewood Highest Point – Part TWO

May 14, 2021

This follow up is necessary to the previous post where I talked about a great place to walk at Lakewood Park, Florida’s highest point. The improved trails, signage, trail map and other upgrades done over a year ago were due to an awesome young man which I know personally.

Eugene Hall is a kid that I’ve had the pleasure of watching grow into a young man working hard as a runner. Cross country (5K) runner at Paxton High School. Not only was he an excellent cross country runner but the kid was fast too and set records for our school in 400 meter competition. As a huge fan of Paxton High School sports I somehow became the cross country and track (self designated) number one fan. One of my grandsons was a cross country runner and track participant, maybe that’s how I became involved? Felt like I had a special connection with all those boys and girls on the track and field teams. Attended all the meets possible, got involved as much as was allowed, and thoroughly enjoyed watching the kids compete.

We used Lakewood Park as a training area especially for cross country training. Coach Gilbert would drive a bus load of boys and girls to the Park after school some days and the kids would put in some hard workouts. We also did some training and meets, inviting other schools for competition at Lake Jackson in Florala, AL, just up the road, article about Lake Jackson coming soon. 🙂

I said all that to let you know Eugene’s attachment to the park and maybe where his idea came from to improve the trails? When they were training there the trails were not nearly as defined, no signs and sometimes it was hard for the kids to know if they were on the trail or not.

The trail map you see out front and the signs throughout the trail are some of Eugene’s work.

Trail Map

I’d like to share an article with you from the Walton Sun written on April 24, 2020:

MOSSY HEAD — Eugene Hall of Mossy Head received his Eagle Scout Award on Feb. 8. 2020.

He learned at that time that he was number 1 out of 97 scouts in the quality of his project, according to an email from his grandmother, Libby McScheehy.

A plaque will be displayed at the Scout Headquarters and he received a lifetime membership without dues in the National Eagle Scout Association.

His project involved upgrading the trail at the highest point in Florida, a state park called Lakewood Park. He widened the trail and removed debris, cut down trees, added mulch donated by Chelco, made a new trail map, and added eight new trail signs, lumber donated by Hodges Lumber.

He also updated the trail map digitally and made it more accurate.

Hall is also president of his junior class at Paxton High School. In sports he has been running with the varsity track team in track and cross country since he entered sixth grade and has gone to state the last two years.

Recently he and his teammate and training partner Philip Anderson did their first half marathon in Andalusia, Alabama and broke the course record.

Clicking the link to the Walton Sun Article will display photos of not only Eugene but some of the work he did.

Eugene was a Junior at the time of this article but will be graduating in just a few days from Paxton High School. Already miss seeing that young man compete.

This post is just my way of saying THANK YOU to Eugene for the improvements of the trails at Florida’s Highest Point in Lakewood, Florida. He deserves a lot of credit as his work has made it a pleasure for me and others to walk and do their exercises to improve over all health. Also a nice place to visit while out riding the motorcycle. Every time I go there to walk those trails, I think of that young man and the work he did and the improvements he accomplished!

Throwing in a little video below of my ride out to Lakewood Park yesterday, May 13, 2021. 🙂

One of my routes to Lakewood Park

Hope you found this interesting. Thanks for reading and hopefully following. Not an “Old Biker” by definition, just an old man that loves to ride motorcycles. Not really a Biker “motorcyclists” fits better.

Please leave comments, suggestions and hit the like button. Stay tuned, follow to be notified when my next post publishes. Feel free to share this on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Thanks for reading. 🙂

Keep the shiny side UP!

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Below are links to some of the many items I’ve purchased to enhance and improve my experience with motorcycle riding. Should you be interested, click and make a purchase I might receive a small commission for sending you there.

Viking Saddle Bags

Motorcycle Sissy Bars

RAM X-Grip Phone Mount for Motorcycle

Ad Tec Harness Straps Grain Leather Motorcycle Riding Boots

Audew Jump Starter

Black Leather Motorcycle Lever Covers for Motorcycles 16 inch Fringe

Motorcycle Bluetooth Headset

Motorcycle Gloves

Cheap but decent Camera

Motorcycle Cleaning Products

Flag mounts and flags for motorcycles, made in the USA

Battery charger/maintainer for Motorcycles, Suuwer Store

Camp Accessories Equipment Pots and Pans Set

Coleman Camping Cot, Air Mattress, and Pump Combo

Visit the 5.11 Tactical Store

Motorcycle Cargo Net

Clymer Motorcycle Repair Manuals

No endorsement or commission from Revzilla but I’ve purchased several items from them and have been very happy with the quality of products and the expertise of the employees, highly recommend www.revzilla.com

Lakewood – Highest Point in Florida

May 13, 2021

Might have mentioned this in my previous post about the place I go for walks. This is inline with my thoughts of writing about interesting places I visit on the motorcycle or my daily life within the small area near me that hopefully some will find interesting.

Still trying to get back in the swing of things and get my legs back to somewhat normal after the accident last year, by walking as much as possible. It is a great place to walk, has three different trails to hike, longest being about seven tenths of a mile but if you walk them several times it’s possible to build up any distance you desire.

A very quiet place rarely anyone around to disturb you and since it’s only about five or six miles from my home, it provides a great excuse to jump on the motorcycle, take a little ride and do some walking. The trails are soft with leaves most of the time which is better than walking on pavement or concrete in my recuperation. You’re basically walking through the woods, trees shading all the trails. Before the accident I was walking there three or four times a week an average of four to five miles each time. Two miles is my current goal and have been reaching it for the last couple of weeks with only a day or two off due to rain, etc.

Florida’s highest point is in the country, North Walton County bordering on the Alabama state line east of Paxton, Florida, a place called Britton Hill. At 345 feet above sea level, Britton Hill is Florida’s highest natural point – and the lowest “high point” in the United States. Your grandmother can get to the top without breaking a sweat. 345 feet is pretty high for us Floridians since the Mean Elevation of Florida is only 100 feet above sea level. It also has many visitors from the HighPointersFoundation.org of which their motto is: Education, Support & Conservation of the Highest Point in each of the 50 United States. Have actually met a few of their members while there for my walks.

Found this interesting article about the area of Lakewood and it’s history:

From The Palm Beach Post archive (Oct. 1993), Florida historian and author of Florida Time, Eliot Kleinberg, visits Britton Hill, Florida’s highest spot.

This 400-by-900-foot plateau less than 2 miles south of the Alabama line has been declared the highest spot in Florida – a nosebleed-inducing 345 feet above sea level.

Margaret Jean Britton Richbourg has heard the jokes. It doesn’t change her love for this unique spot on a stretch of Panhandle country road.

On the west side of County Road 285, a turnoff leads to an open shelter. A short walk into the woods brings one to a granite marker reading “Lakewood Park: Florida’s Highest Point. 345 feet.″

The settlement surrounding the marker “is kind of a ghost town,″ Richbourg says sadly.

The post office is now a guest house. The old railroad depot sits in a pasture across the road. The former one-room schoolhouse is a dusty private museum filled with rusting chains and tools, mementos of the region’s once-thriving lumber and railroad trades. The Richbourgs open it on request.

The lumber company founded by Margaret Richbourg’s father and uncle at the turn of the century was the economic heart of this region. It owned 90,000 acres and a 22-mile-long railroad spur and was cutting 100,000 feet of lumber a day.

At its height, Lakewood had boasted 101 buildings, including a three-story hotel, rail depot, store, commissary and housing for 400 mill workers.

But the Depression, a timber glut and fires – the mill burned down three times – had taken their toll by World War II.

In 1956 state engineers did a survey to find Florida’s highest point. Other sites made the claim but the honor fell to a spot just south of Lakewood.

Richbourg’s mother, post office manager Hazel Slaughter Britton, saw a chance to resurrect the town. She pursued investors without success and died at 87 in 1976. Soon her post office was closed and mail routed from Florala, Ala.

It was an insult to be in the highest point in Florida and get our mail from Alabama,″ Richbourg says.I wrote (then-president) Jimmy Carter up in Georgia and asked him how he’d like to get his mail from Alabama.″

She never mailed the letter but mail now goes through DeFuniak Springs, about 20 miles south.

The year her mother died, Richbourg got a letter from a girl in Lakewood, N.Y., wanting to know what the Florida town planned for the Bicentennial. That sparked her to pick up her mother’s cause.

She set up the museum in the old schoolhouse, pushed to convert the post office into a historical exhibit, and began organizing homecoming festivals. Reunions in 1978 and 1979 drew as many as 1,000 former residents. But the town returned to obscurity. Richbourg partially blames a 1982 Associated Press story that cynically described “Midget Mountain″ and told of visitors showing up in climbing gear.

In 1984, the Richbourgs donated 17 acres and the county spent $17,000 of a state grant to build the park and monument.

Richbourg envisions a restored settlement and museum complex, with a barn, a cane-grinding mill, a blacksmith, and harness, gun smith and bicycle shops, along with a studio for weaving, pottery and leather crafts.

But, she says, “I’m getting old. It’s just in limbo. I’d like to see somebody pick it up and carry on.″

Florida Time is a weekly Florida history column from Palm Beach Post historian and reporter, Eliot Kleinberg. The series launched on January 3, 2019 across 22 GateHouse Florida website markets including Jacksonville, Fort Walton Beach, Daytona Beach, Lakeland, Sarasota and West Palm Beach.

Here is an idea of what Lakewood Park looks like today. Nice clean quiet place in the country that not many people know about and that’s great for me. Like being able to walk in peace, maybe listen to some music. 🙂

My Walk 05/12/21

Found this video on You Tube posted by Two Egg TV talking about Florida’s Highest Point.

Once again, thanks for reading and hopefully following. Not an “Old Biker” by definition, just an old man that loves to ride motorcycles. Not really a Biker “motorcyclists” fits better.

Please leave comments, suggestions and hit the like button. Stay tuned, follow to be notified when my next post publishes. Feel free to share this on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Thanks for reading. 🙂

Keep the shiny side UP!

Follow My YouTube channel.

Follow My Instagram Page

Like & Follow RaysMotoring Facebook Page

Below are links to some of the many items I’ve purchased to enhance and improve my experience with motorcycle riding. Should you be interested, click and make a purchase I might receive a small commission for sending you there.

Viking Saddle Bags

Motorcycle Sissy Bars

RAM X-Grip Phone Mount for Motorcycle

Ad Tec Harness Straps Grain Leather Motorcycle Riding Boots

Audew Jump Starter

Black Leather Motorcycle Lever Covers for Motorcycles 16 inch Fringe

Motorcycle Bluetooth Headset

Motorcycle Gloves

Cheap but decent Camera

Motorcycle Cleaning Products

Flag mounts and flags for motorcycles, made in the USA

Battery charger/maintainer for Motorcycles, Suuwer Store

Camp Accessories Equipment Pots and Pans Set

Coleman Camping Cot, Air Mattress, and Pump Combo

Visit the 5.11 Tactical Store

Motorcycle Cargo Net

Clymer Motorcycle Repair Manuals

No endorsement or commission from Revzilla but I’ve purchased several items from them and have been very happy with the quality of products and the expertise of the employees, highly recommend www.revzilla.com