Tag: waterfall hike

  • Sliding Rock Felt Colder Than Lake Superior—But Was It?

    Sliding Rock Felt Colder Than Lake Superior—But Was It?

    Lake Superior

    Last year, I was standing on the edge of Lake Superior in Munising, Michigan. It was mid-June, but the breeze off the water still bit through my clothes. Kelsey and I bought a camping fan, and we definitely did not need it. Shorts were also unused for the most part. I didn’t go all the way in, honestly, not even knee-deep. I rock hounded and just let the lake touch my calves. That was enough. It was cold, but not unbearable. Bracing. That’s the word I’d use. It also wasn’t hot out at all so, why would I get in water that cold. I remember thinking, “Okay. That’s not as bad as I expected.” I absolutely do not wish to swim in it, though! I stood there for a few minutes, toes curling into sand and broken rock. Continued breathing it in, feeling the lake tug gently at my ankles and feet. Then I walked back out of the lake. Easy like Sunday morning.

    Sliding Rock

    Sliding Rock Parking lot sign, brown, sign, green trees. Sign tells you not to move rocks!

    This year was different. I found myself in Western North Carolina, in the center of a July heat wave. My sister introduced me to Sliding Rock. Look below to see a picture. It’s the natural rock waterside. It comes with tourists in a line so long we were across the creek. The sounds of nervous laughter in front of us mixed with splashing, and shrieking. It was hot, my car thermostat was reading triple digits. The sun made the stone slick and warm. I waited my turn and tried to psych myself up. Then I sat down on the rock, pushed off, and honestly barely got momentum. I, no sooner hit the pool at the bottom, though, and I froze. That cold that doesn’t just shock your skin, it locks you up. I couldn’t breathe. My chest physically felt stuck. It didn’t matter that it was July or that I’d just been sweating and cursing the sun. That water hit harder than anything else I have felt.

    Sliding Rock Natural Waterfall in Western North Carolina

    I was so confused. Sliding Rock? That’s just a little creek in the woods. Lake Superior is, well, Superior. It’s gosh darn massive and glacial and famous for being cold. I couldn’t stop thinking about how much worse Sliding Rock felt. I didn’t even go under the water in Munising. Not really. Just my lower legs. But at Sliding Rock, I was fully submerged, head and all. I am sure that is what makes a difference. Still, I got curious. I looked it up.

    Lake Superior in mid-June? Anywhere from 40 to 50 degrees Fahrenheit (ca. 10 °C), sometimes colder. Sliding Rock in mid-July? Consistently around 50 to 55 degrees. So technically, the lake is colder. But it didn’t feel that way.

    I keep coming back to that. I feel like sometimes we trick ourselves. The numbers don’t matter as much as the moment. I expected Lake Superior to be cold, so I braced myself. I only dipped partway in. With Sliding Rock, the heat had lulled me into false confidence. I didn’t just dip, I slid. That cold slapped me across the face. It stole my oxygen. It stuck to my skin even after I climbed out, dripping. Though stunned, I was still smiling like an idiot. As I listened to my adult sister beg to go again and again like we were children, and again.

    It reminded me how nature doesn’t always work in neat measurements. Sometimes it’s about the moment. It’s about contrast. It’s also about what you think you’re ready for. Others, it is what humbles you anyway.

    Anyway, if you’ve done both, I’m curious to know what felt colder to you?

    Also, so you know, we arrived at sliding rock a little over an hour before close. Jade, my sister, putting on some front like she was going to hate it. Jenna, our other sister, and Jade were here years prior. Not gonna lie, the experience was almost nostalgic. The 9-year age difference really prevented me from truly being a kid with my sisters. If it wasn’t for that feeling, I wouldn’t have slid again. There’s something about your grown sibling demanding to go down the slide again. It’s like a child at a park where you can’t deny another slid. Sliding rock greedily stole my breath each dip.

    Pictured Rocks National Lake Shore, Bridal Veil Falls in the Distance, Clear Blue Sky, Lake Superior appearing unmoving.
    Years ago my mom and I saw a true crime episode Pictured Rocks National Lake shore was the crime scene. Neither of us had heard of PRNLS before. Both of us became hooked on the beauty instantly. Call it obsessed over nature. Thus creating our shared dream to visit together. Though mom didn’t make it physically we scattered her cremains of the ledge, including her in the experience still.

    Links. Hike Poem Ko-Fi

  • Waterfalls, Sunset Bridges & Losing Track of Days | Appalachia Day 5 Travel Log

    Waterfalls, Sunset Bridges & Losing Track of Days | Appalachia Day 5 Travel Log

    I’ve done so much this trip, I can’t even keep track of the days anymore. Seriously! I thought this was Day 4, but it turns out we’re on Day 5. Which was actually yesterday!since I post the day after. Time doesn’t move normally. It’s challenging when you’re chasing waterfalls. You skip small towns, and try to fit an entire mountain range into your memory.

    But that’s the magic of it.

    Today we started with a roadside stop. It was not a tourist destination. It was not marked on any guide. This one was just a waterfall pouring its way down a rock face, belonging there more than we did. We pulled over without planning to. Sometimes the best parts of travel aren’t even the places you mark on the map. They are the ones that interrupt you.

    another one of the 6 of more waterfalls on Living Water Ministries property in WNC
    Old mill now is a rehab, pained red. Huge water fall.
    Look at this view!

    After that, we drove to Living Waters Ministries. It is a piece of private land in the mountains. They open it to the public, so everyone can share in the quiet. There are bridges and trails that wind around multiple waterfalls, and the whole place feels spiritual. And not just because it’s a ministry, but because the water itself speaks in hushes. We saw flowing falls, mossy stones, and gentle shade that made us linger longer than planned. I even found a plethora of orange mushrooms!

    I love spaces that don’t gate keep peace. There’s something so honest about that. About letting the land be seen, letting the sound of water be free.

    Axton in blue sliding rock shier, black shorts standing on a rock cave on Living Waters Ministry's property in WNC

    We closed the day on the French Broad River Overlook Bridge. We watched the sun stretch across the sky. It touched every color in the crayon box. Golden hour felt like a painting, like a hymn. I didn’t need to talk. I just breathe, just exist there with my sister and the air and the light.

    This trip has been long and heavy in some ways, but moments like this… they guarantee you are lifted.

    Sign for the French Broad River Asheville, NC

    🛣️ What’s Next: my Route Home

    I am heading back slowly, making time to stop at a few more gems before we leave the mountains behind.

    Warrior’s Path State Park in Tennessee, for a breath of forest and maybe one last skip along the lake. Hawk’s Nest State Park, WV because every trip needs a cliff view and a cable car, right? New River Gorge, that grand, wild canyon bridge where the earth opens wide.

    Each stop feels like a pause, a prayer, a final thank-you to the land that’s held me.

    Thank you for reading. Thank you for being here. You allow me to keep sharing this journey one journal entry, one stop, one miscounted day at a time. 🌿

    The video of today’s waterfalls and that wild sunset is up on TikTok. It is also available on Instagram and many other places now (@Poeaxtry_). If you’ve ever stood under a waterfall or cried at golden hour, I think you’ll get it.

    All Poeaxtry Links Portfolio Wattpad

    poem? hike? Journal?

  • Waterfall Loop Road Trip from Newark to Cleveland | Dog-Friendly Easy Hikes & Scenic Stops

    Waterfall Loop Road Trip from Newark to Cleveland | Dog-Friendly Easy Hikes & Scenic Stops


    We Love Waterfalls

    Do it before us. Do it with us. Do it after us.

    Let me explain what this is.

    Actually, no. Let me explain how I got here first:

    I just came off a 12-hour shift.

    Got my shoe peed in while giving a shower 2 hours exactly before clock out time.

    Had to finish my shift with pee sock, pee leg, pee vibes.

    Drove my bestie and coworker 35 minutes in the opposite direction so she could start her vacation. Since she worked last night for me.

    Dropped off another one a mile from my house.

    And I still had to go feed 4 cats, one dog, and the neighbor, coworker, and or buddies cats before I even changed clothes.

    And yet?

    I’m still about to chase waterfalls.

    Why?

    Because this week is STNA Week, and I’m an STNA.

    Because I’m a caregiver, a poet, a creator, a walking paradox of exhaustion and excitement.

    Because I owe this moment, this daylight treasure hunt of stops to myself.

    This is the Loop-de-Loop of Watersong:

    A full-day road trip from Newark to Cleveland and back, with:

    Waterfalls 🌊 Forests 🌳 Overlooks ⛰️ Trails under 1 mile 🥾 Dog-friendly stops 🐾 And photo ops so good they might just heal something you forgot was broken.

    📍What You’re About to See

    This is a build-your-own experience. You can:

    Start closest to your house Do just a few or go full loop Spread it out over two days or crush it in one maybe just save it for a better time or send to a friend who’d love it.

    This is the fastest and softest way to refill your soul when you only get two days off work, you write to survive, and you hike to breathe.

    And you work to fulfill the capitalist agenda

    📲 Click the Map & Follow the Route

    This is the route I’m taking.

    Do it before me. Do it with me. Do it after me.

    🌐 Click here to open the full route in MapHub

    (Replace with your final My Maps link)

    ⚡ What’s Coming Next

    This is just part one a pre-trip drop.

    Coming soon:

    📸 Photo posts

    📖 Part 2: the full trip journal

    🌀 Maybe even more than one post, depending how wild it gets

    Because sometimes the only way to reclaim your time, your rest, your art, and your energy…

    is to take it back one stop at a time.


    What Really went this down on this waterfall “loop” links