NO LIGHTS OR REFLECTORS: The state park is off of a stretch of highway that goes to a smaller stretch of road, to a yet smaller stretch of road, to the gate of the park. Did I mention at night it's pitch dark? We arrived at night - the 6 hours it took was longer than anticipated.
CABINS 1 FLIGHT UP: The cabin was deep in the woods - not riverside - but it was the last of the cluster so it was private and beautiful. This is not roughing it. These are like homes. Well insulated, appointed with 2 bedrooms (sheets, pillows & blankets provided), full kitchen (side by side fridge with ice/water on the door, silverware/dishes/cutting boards and knives, detergent, sponges, hand soap, etc.), electric fireplace, etc. (There's a fire pit outside of each cabin and for $6 they'll deliver wood.) The cabin was so well insulated, we had to step outside to the wraparound porch to check the weather.
WOODS: Look up at night and be dazzled by all the stars. You'll see TONS more than you do here. And in the morning, do what we did - we grabbed coffee (there's a coffeemaker) and sit on the porch to view of cardinals, quick oak-nut-eating squirrels, wrens and other birds.
Just know that if you return to the park after dark - as we did every night - you're going to be driving in an incredibly dark area and will have to open a padlock and remove a chain to open the gate to get into the park. See the pics...notice how pitch dark it is? Remember that when you're driving there - no lit up street signs, nothing.
CONNECTION: We didn't notice until the day before we checked out that there wasn't a tv. We didn't turn on the radio they provided but we did run the electric fireplace and used it's heat function one night. But wifi fades - just what the hell is 1X? I saw that where I usually see 3G or 4G on my phone. Is that dial-up connection?
Beyond the usual BS reasons we want our phones, it's unacceptable because this state park fails to provide a strong signal for emergencies. The cabin has a binder of phone numbers and directions for medical help. But if you can't call for help and you're in the middle of nowhere you're screwed. This is our tax dollars at work and we should insist that wifi be made available to help protect the area and its people.
Interestingly, we went into town and saw the fire station. There is a thick layer of dust on the old trucks. We went by 3 times - the door was locked and no one was there. The people are the nicest and the town is filled with decaying buildings and as many empty storefronts as open businesses. This is not a rich community. Nor is it densely populated - Mayo has about 800 residents and when you add all the towns in Lafayette county, the number swells to 8800.
FOOD: This is the land of tan, fried food. Do what we did and stop at a Publix in Alachua to get ANYTHING reminiscent of healthy food. We actually preferred to eat at the cabin than in town because of the few restaurants and food choices. I packed my NuWave and we used it!
SHOWER: The water was steamy hot. But the tiny shower head isn't set up for short people. (If you're short, good luck getting into bed! This cabin was made for really tall people.) They need to provide a hand held shower head so short people have a chance to remove the soap from their lower halves without having to stand against the back wall of the tub to try to catch the water.
PARK MAP: There's no park map in the cabin binder. I didn't have connectivity to use the Pocket Ranger app I downloaded. They need to provide a paper map to each guest. They also didn't have one posted on the bulletin boards where info about mosquitoes was provided.
OVERALL: This was a visually beautiful vacation spot. The cabin was set up to provide comfort and great views of nature. The "roughing it" comes by way of no wifi, civilization (drive for an hour to a chain store for provisions - local stores are mostly Family Dollar, Subway and independents like Mayo's Thriftway market), or map of the park. Small tweaks would make a HUGE difference...from 4 to 5 stars. read more