By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂
Thankfully, with a few exceptions, 黑料天堂 State Parks remain open during the COVID-19 restrictions.
And as diligent as always, our park rangers are on duty to deal with any situation that might arise with everything from a welcoming wave and helpful hand to rescuing park visitors in peril.
That peril was particularly apparent last December when a line of storms started moving through north 黑料天堂.
Joe Wheeler State Park Ranger Ryan Robertson was on patrol on December 16, 2019, while Ranger David Barr had the day off, or so he thought.
鈥淭hat afternoon, we had some pretty volatile weather,鈥 Barr said. 鈥淩yan was running duty, and I stopped him at the boat ramp and told him I would be home if it got bad.鈥
It got bad at the 2,550-acre park on the Tennessee River near Rogersville. When a tornado warning was issued a little after 5 p.m., Barr donned his uniform and headed into the park to help Robertson warn the patrons and park volunteers of the impending storm.
Fortunately, with the Christmas season in full swing, the park was not full of campers or visitors.
鈥淩yan already had people evacuated from the campground,鈥 Barr said. 鈥淲e only had seven campers and four of those were volunteers. If we have a lot of people, we put some in the bathhouses and some at the campground store. Ryan took some of them to the lodge. He stayed with them.
鈥淚 was at the campground store with two ladies and two kids and a Pyrenees dog. I usually get out and ramble during something like this, but something told me not to do that. I stayed at the store. My son was with me, and he was watching the storm on the weather radar.鈥
Barr鈥檚 son told him the storm was about to hit, and Barr sent the visitors into one bathroom while he and his son got in the other.
The power went out, and a few minutes later it became apparent that they were in the tornado鈥檚 path.
鈥淭he store has metal doors on each side,鈥 Barr said. 鈥淭hose doors started flapping. I didn鈥檛 stick my head out to see, but it sounded like those doors were opening all the way and closing. The wind was howling and whistling. That lasted for three or four minutes and then it was quiet.鈥
While all campers, volunteers and park personnel escaped injury during the storm, the campground did not fare as well.
鈥淲hen I was sure it had blown over, I thought we had escaped the worst of it until I went outside and got in my truck,鈥 Barr said. When the lights came on, I could see big pine trees down. I tried to go up the hill to my house, but the road was blocked by trees.鈥
Barr walked the rest of the way to his house, which was unscathed, although numerous trees were down in the yard. Back in the campground, Barr discovered that the A section did not have much damage.
鈥淏ut the B section was total destruction,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he bathhouse was destroyed. The meeting pavilion was caved in by trees falling on it.鈥
By that time, Barr was joined by Robertson and Park District Supervisor Chad Davis as well as part-time employee Morris Barnes, who has since become a full-time ranger at Monte Sano State Park.
Barnes hopped onto a backhoe and all hands started clearing downed trees out of the roadways until they realized live power lines were down in the park and decided to wait until daylight to resume their work.
The next morning, Barr discovered he had a view of the Tennessee River that he never expected or wanted.
鈥淚鈥檝e been a ranger and campground supervisor here for over 30 years,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is my home. To see my life鈥檚 work blown away was devastating.
鈥淲e got strike teams in from other parks, cut our way through the different sections to assess the damage. I can鈥檛 really describe it. A section survived. Three-quarters of B section was gone. C section was completely wiped out.鈥
Barr, who was recently promoted to assistant superintendent at Wheeler, said out of 116 camping sites only 60 remained usable. Two bathhouses were destroyed. One large pavilion and two smaller pavilions were destroyed. Beautiful, tall pine trees were strewn throughout the campground.
鈥淔rom my house, you can see forever,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou can see the river from my backyard, which you used to could never see. I can see all the way across the river. I miss the trees.鈥