Oklahoma Used to Have a National Park and I Visited What Was Left of It
Because it’s what I do.
Platt National Park (?!), which apparently was still a national park through 1976. Surprisingly, I don’t remember seeing anything in the paper about its dissolution into the Chickasaw National Recreation Area (I think it’s an NRA) back when I was 4. Was a voracious newshound back in the pre-K days.
Anyway, it’s pleasant. It’s not exactly Yellowstone. I mean, *way* less traffic. I think it was supposed to be famous for its natural (tepid) springs. Maybe they were actually famous once. We saw the springs. They were tepid. But: nice for Oklahoma.
Here are two photos.
I thought it was cool that they built this wading pool around one of the springs, but then they don’t want you to enter the water. There was also a natural (?) swimming pool in the park.
The pool is what’s on the left side of the rocks there.
I mean, basically the national park had that spring situation and this pool here. There were a couple of other cascades of < 5′ height, plus a couple of (closed) campgrounds, some picnic tables, a 1.5-mile nature walk that introduced visitors to black oak trees and poison ivy, and a nature center where they were keeping a pygmy owl in a cage for some reason. Probably it just prefers living there, like those people who commit crimes to go back to prison for the free food and healthcare. Anyway…
I kind of wanted it to be more of the ruins of a national park than it was. I don’t think there was ever all that much infrastructure to get ruined is the main thing.
I think it was probably at least as impressive as that wildlife refuge out by Lawton people sometimes talk about.
bkd
So this place, like the inside of the RLDS temple, would seem to exist just for you. Not really, but I admire your effort in trying to find meaning in the fringes of Americana. Keep trying…..I always enjoy the sardonic humor mindestens