Photo Log 1: Biking SE OK County

Hiwasee Road at SE 74th, looking south. The road crest at the far horizon is roughly two miles south.

Hiwasee Road at SE 74th, looking south. The road crest at the far horizon is roughly two miles south.


Background: Oklahoma was surveyed in a square-mile grid. From what I understand, the surveyors simply cut a straight line path between corners, and locals kept using that path they cut, which eventually saw improvements in some places. So most of the backroads in Oklahoma are laid out in that same mile-square grid and we call them “section lines.”

Southeastern Oklahoma County is hilly. At least a couple of times I pedaled over a crest that would have given you a roller-coaster sensation at the legal speed limit in a motor vehicle. It’s a good workout. Today’s route was the Draper Lake Loop. From my home it’s about seven miles to the lake, about thirteen miles around the lake, and another seven miles back. However, I decided to take a detour of a couple of miles to capture this image of a washout. I have no idea where the filmy ghost came from, but you can still see that there is no way past this mess.

Washout just north of SE 89th on Hiwasee Road.

Washout just north of SE 89th on Hiwasee Road.

If you want to follow along in this journey, open a browser tab to your favorite mapping service and see if they can show you Tinker AFB. I live about four miles east of the north end of the airbase, and Draper Lake is directly south, under the flight path. I approached the lake on SE 74th and headed south on Post Road. This simply turns into one of the few curved roads in the area, that which rings the lake. This put me on the northeast corner of the lake area and I headed straight south.

Blackberries grow all over this part of the county.

Blackberries grow all over this part of the county.


Because of the heavy rains, the berries are quite large. The eastern side of the lake is dense with them, visible all along the road. If you took off through the woods, you would see them in pockets where the soil is sandy. However, you would also be eaten alive by chiggers and deer ticks.
Sand plum growing over a culvert.

Sand plum growing over a culvert.


Even the sand plums, usually no bigger than the end of my thumb, are quite large this year. This one growing over a drain culvert was bigger and better tasting than I’ve found in years past. Plum bushes usually grow into small trees clustered together thickly. You can’t walk through them easily because they all sport very long thorns.

The lake is pretty full after all the heavy spring rains this year. This was taken on the west end of the dam. The lake is fed by streams mostly on the north side, which is about the only hilly part of the lake ring road.
HighWater
The longest arm of the lake chases a low valley that runs up toward Tinker. There’s a spot there where the water easily comes up over the road and the bed is slowly dissolving. This year the asphalt is badly broken. Since they are rebuilding the roads elsewhere around the lake, I suspect they’ll have to replace that section before summer is out.

Once I got around the entire loop, it’s time to head home. You can see the strangest things out on these hilly back roads.

Abandoned church house.

Abandoned church house.

BullNettle Someday the various city governments and the county hope to join Draper Lake by bike path to the one that now runs down both sides of the Canadian River downtown. Various segments have been built already. This path runs west of the lake for a mile or so, but the next section is three miles away.BikePath Maybe some day I’ll get a decent camera.

Come ride with me!

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0 Responses to Photo Log 1: Biking SE OK County

  1. Paul says:

    Blackberries ! Yes! : berries live in deer tick filled bushes that bite you and then the deer flies get you. We live for those days when you get eaten alive, but feel graced by finding gifts from nature, that live in bushes or trees with no saran wrap or price tag attached. Ya plums can be ornery, they seem to licke to grow near hawthorns, which are prickly. We won’t see those till august. Can’t wait. I really like the last pic with the hill and the poles…
    Paul

    • Ed Hurst says:

      Not sure how much difference, but we have what folks call “horse flies” instead of deer flies. I haven’t seen many so far this year, but we’ve had unseasonably cool temperatures with all the rain. When ambient temps are below 60°F (15C or below) most of the bugs are hibernating.

  2. Paul says:

    Horse flies take a big bite out of you we have those too .Deer flies are yellow with black stripes triangular in shape like fixed jet plane wings. They are fast, and also take a big bite out of you, and leave a volcano shaped welt..can’t shake them even on the bike. Ahh! summer!

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