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Saddle Creek, Lakeland |
I was lucky enough to grow up in Florida before the advent of all the people who came down here because they fell in love with it and wanted to escape the winters up north. The problem with that is they also do not like the heat or humidity, rain or storms that we are known for.
Last week we got a lot of rain. We needed it and although the inches were high, my yard, and I live 5 miles from the beach, was so dry that it all soaked up pretty quickly. Plants and things that were looking a little brown, are now blooming like crazy and everything looks green once again. After the drought last summer which brought very little summer rain, I appreciate all rain, even 8 inches. We are at or below sea level in many areas of the coast so to complain when your property floods elicits no sympathy from me. For 25 years I lived on Anna Maria Island and when it rained, you could canoe down some streets. Now people just complain.
The photo above is an old one of Saddle Creek in Lakeland. Saddle Creek is a collection of old phosphate pits left behind before mining companies were made to reclaim the land. The creek does flow in to these pits which are the coldest water around in the summer. When I was a teenager, my friend Pat and I used to rent a canoe and spend all day soaking up the sun, tipping the canoe to get wet, tipping it back over to climb back in and then have great conversation about our lives when we grew up. We never thought about the alligators because we knew certain things: don't feed them, don't mess with any babies because there is a momma gator around somewhere, they are more scared of you than you are of them. We were not reckless but it was also not something we worried about. There were wild hogs and raccoons and there could have been a bear or two but we never saw one. We did not think about the pits being bottomless limestone and I don't think we ever had a life preserver on the canoe. We were not reckless, just teenagers having fun.
We swam in most lakes in Lakeland and Winter Haven. We spent most of our time outdoors in the summer in cutoffs and bikini tops. It was hot and humid, just like today, but we didn't think anything of it. Everyone's house was not freezing cold with air conditioning, and most cars did not have it. We could go the the mall which did have air conditioning and walk around, but we didn't have money, so most of the time we did not hang out there.
Now Saddle Creek is a park, with houses and a golf course and all the accoutrements you see with the continual building going on. I am not sure if you can swim in any of the lakes any longer. Maybe Lake Hollingsworth but most people are so afraid of what might be in the water, they don't.
Most of what you see now is on social media in some form whether it is a photo or an article. I read a very good one about humidity that was shared by a friend that was in the New York Times. It made sense to me. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/11/magazine/florida-heat-sweat.html
I am glad I grew up here when I did. I am grateful for the parents I had at a time when kids were allowed to be kids and not joined at their parents' hips. My memories keep me going when ignorant people begin trying to explain things they really have no clue about.
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