The Ark Encounter

On our way out of Texas we stayed at Lake Tawakoni (Tuh-WA-kuh-nee) which is 50 miles east of Dallas. The lake is pretty with the trees surrounding it and the campsites are situated near the edge of the lake. We took a walk one evening and watched the sunset.

Lake Tawakoni
Lake Tawakoni, Texas

As we traveled in the month of April, we saw more and more wildflowers. Here is a field of wildflowers outside our park in Lake Tawakoni. I believe they were Indian paintbrush which is a common flower in Texas.

Wildflowers near Lake Tawakoni

Our next stop was an Army Corps of Engineers Campground located a few miles south of Texarkana, Texas. The eastern side of Texas is called the “piney woods”, and in this campground we camped right in among the pines and had a wonderful view of the lake. It was a really windy day, so there weren’t any boats out on the choppy water.

Piney Point Campground ACOE, Queen City, Texas
Piney Point Campground, Texas

I thought the sunset was unusually beautiful when viewed from among the trees. We were only there one night, but we plan to stay several days on our way back during mid-June. It should be a nice cool place to camp when temperatures start to warm up.

Piney Point Campground, Texas

We stayed in a campground near Corinth, Kentucky, so we could visit the Ark Encounter. The Ark Encounter is a full-size replica of Noah’s Ark. I’d read a little about it online and it was something I had always wanted to see. Since our path to Ohio was taking us right by it, we planned a visit.

The day we chose to visit it was raining for 40 days and 40 nights. (Just kidding!) I really didn’t know what to expect when we booked tickets to the Ark Encounter–they are rather pricey. I was hoping it would be worth it.

When we first arrived, we had to pay an additional $15 for parking. The huge parking lot is situated with a building in the middle. There we showed our tickets that we bought online and were given wrist bands to wear. After that, we were ushered into a waiting line for the next available bus to take us to the Ark. We didn’t have to wait long. The buses come and go all day long.

The bus dropped us off in front of the Answers Center where we walked through the gift shop to the large auditorium and listened in on the last few minutes of a talk about desert animals. A little armadillo was running back and forth across the stage. So cute!

From there, we went outside and walked through a rainbow archway along a sidewalk that led to the ark. It was probably a quarter mile to the Ark. There was a pond in front of the Ark, and what looked like topiary animals walking on their way to the ark entrance.

The Ark from across the pond.
Topiary Elephants
Topiary Camels

We didn’t walk up the huge outside ramp to enter the ark. We entered under the huge keel in the stern of the ark. According to the designers, this huge keel was needed for stabilizing the ark through the turbulent seas.

Keel of the Ark

As we entered the Ark, it was dimly lit. Sounds of boards creaking, animals screeching and trumpeting, along with background music immediately made me feel like we were in the Ark and the storms had begun.

We saw rows and rows of cages stacked to the ceiling on the first level. The lighting was made to look like oil lamps which were hung from the ceilings and along the end of the rows. Notice the containers for food and water hanging outside the cages. There were slanting boards underneath the cages to carry animal waste to the bottom where it could be cleaned out.

Small Animal Cages with water and feed containers hung on the outside.

Along the side walls were numerous shelves with large clay jars for fresh water storage.

Clay jars for water storage
More Small Animal Cages

Also along the outer walls were bags of grain stored for feed.

Grain Storage

The enormity of the Ark can be envisioned somewhat when you look down the hallways. There was a hallway like this on either side. In the middle was a large ramp that led to the next level. There were three levels. Also along the outer walls were exhibits. These displays focused on explaining how the animals were cared for throughout the Ark journey with enough food and water to last for most of a year. In the actual Ark, all this space could be used to house the animals and food.

Peeking inside the cages, we saw artistically crafted representations of animals that may have been on the ark. Some of them were strange-looking to me.

Some people have questioned if Noah could fit dinosaurs on the ark. The exhibits postulated that Noah would likely have taken young dinosaurs or smaller species of animals. But we were reminded that God brought the animals to Noah.

Small dinosaur type creatures

It seems like a lot of thinking went into the displays on the Ark Encounter. One of the displays showed these clay jars with burlap coverings that housed moths for lizard and other small reptiles. The moth eggs would hatch and the moths would make their way into the place where the reptiles were waiting to eat them for food. Water could be poured on the burlap for moisture.

Reptile houses with a food supply of moths.
Reptile cages.
More large reptiles in their cage.

The Ark had to have a way to get fresh air and light. In this reproduction, the three decks were not entirely sealed off from each other. The artists who designed this Ark replica showed how shutters on the windows above could allow light and air into the lower decks of the Ark.

Air and light from the top could reach the bottom deck.

The second deck primarily showed how Noah’s family might have lived. Here, one of Noah’s sons is playing a musical instrument while his wife paints pottery.

Noah’s “cabin”

The Ark had to provide enough food not only for the animals, but also for Noah and his wife, his sons and their wives for nearly a year. Since the Bible tells us that the animals and people were all vegetarians until after the flood, you see many vegetables and herbs being stored.

Below you can see how vegetables might have been grown for food using light from the windows above. The vegetables are grown in the wooden bins or from hanging pots.

This scene shows one of the men trying to catch a bird that got loose from a cage.

The second and third decks housed exhibits that explained alternate views to the standard evolutionary viewpoint. The “Warped Rocks” display explained something I’ve often thought about when I see rocks like this. The rocks had to be soft and flexible in order for the layers to bend like this without cracking.

Something I’ve known about for some time is that nearly every civilization has a flood story. The details may vary, but they often have similar details of a flood in their oral histories. The Ark Encounter had several stories from different people groups on display.

Ray was particularly interested in this story. A group of planes were forced to land in Greenland in 1942 due to bad weather and had to be abandoned. Fifty years later, an expedition found the planes and bored through 250 feet of ice and snow to recover them. The hole was bored through 250 feet of ice that was deposited over 50 years. Science has been saying that each line in ice bores is a layer representing one year and 250 feet of ice would have represented millions of years. In reality, each layer is a layer of snow of ice deposited in a single storm, not an entire year.

Other exhibits showed the history of the English Bible and why it is a reliable translation of the originals. Below is the Tyndale Bible. It was the first Bible translation in the English language.

Other exhibits were about missionaries and their work around the world. This chair belonged to Hudson Taylor. He was a missionary to China who founded China Inland Mission. He was responsible for bringing over 800 missionaries to China who founded 125 schools and resulted in thousands of conversions to Christ.

Outside the Ark were other attractions like a zoo, camel rides, petting zoo, a zip line and aerial challenge plus many places to eat. Most of these were closed since the season had just opened. The Answers Center where lectures took place throughout the day also housed a very large gift shop and book store.They also host conferences and seminars in the large auditorium. Everything was well organized and very well maintained.

We spent hours walking through the three decks and exhibits. We also attended a very interesting lecture by Dr. Andrew Snelling, a geologist who studies the evidence of the flood around the world.

He revealed the six main geological evidences for the Flood. Genesis chapters 7 and 8 describe the flood in which the water covered all the high mountains. These floodwaters carried along marine creatures, and all air-breathing and land-dwelling life was killed. He posed the question: “Wouldn’t we expect to find billions of dead plants and animals buried and fossilized in sand, mud, and limestone that were deposited rapidly by water in rock layers all over the earth?” In his lecture, Dr. Snelling demonstrated that is exactly what we find in the fossil record.

The Gospel message was also clearly explained in the lecture and in some of the exhibits. The slogan of the Ark Adventure is, “Get Ready to Believe!” I can’t think of a better phrase to summarize what we saw on our day spent at the Ark Adventure. I think both of us came away with greater understanding and belief in the Biblical record of the Genesis flood.

I highly recommend it!

“If [God] did not spare the ancient world when he brought the flood on its ungodly people, but protected Noah, a preacher of righteousness, and seven others, …then the Lord knows how to rescue the godly from trials and to hold the unrighteous for punishment on the day of judgment.” 2 Peter 2:5,9

Big Bend National Park

Big Bend National Park Entrance at Maverick Junction

From the tip of southern Texas, we traveled northwest along the Texas/Mexico border to the “bulge” of southern Texas. It is appropriately called “Big Bend” because that is where the Rio Grande River makes a huge bend toward the southeast and then bends back to the northeast. In the crook of this huge bend is Big Bend National Park.

Spring was a perfect time of year to visit before the heat set in. It was still chilly at night, and not many cacti or wildflowers were blooming yet except for a few bluebonnets (the Texas state flower) that were starting to bloom by the roadside.

Bluebonnets

We stayed in an RV park in the town of Terlingua (Ter-ling-gwa), a little town that got its start in the 1880’s when “quicksilver” (mercury) was found in the area.

The first thing I noticed was how vast this area is that Big Bend encompasses. You can see the purple mountains in the far distance, and somewhere beyond those mountains is the Rio Grande, and beyond them is Mexico. Though it is only #15 on the list of the largest national parks, Big Bend National Park is over 800,000 acres, and is larger than Yosemite National Park.

There are plenty of things to do in Big Bend NP including scenic drives, day hikes, river trips, bird watching, fishing, horseback riding and stargazing. Speaking of stargazing, Big Bend has the darkest night skies of any national park in the lower 48 states and is designated an International Dark Sky Park.

The Big Bend NP website has suggestions for scenic drives. We drove on all the paved roads in the park. The Ross Maxwell Scenic drive took us to Sotol Vista where we had a view over the entire valley. The notch in the distant ridge is where the road would end. That is where the Rio Grande cuts through steep cliffs at Santa Elena Canyon.

Sotol Vista
Santa Elena Canyon at the end of the road.

This is the “notch” in the faraway ridge you were looking at in the last photo. But first, some sites along the way.

We stopped at the Mule Ears Overlook. You don’t have to have much of an imagination to see the “mule ears”.

Mule Ears Overlook

Tuff Canyon and Castalon Peak were other stops.

Tuff Canyon
Castalon Peak

Near the end of the road, there is a massive mountain of rock wall that makes a natural barrier at the border of USA and Mexico.This is where the Rio Grande cuts through the rock and becomes Santa Elena Canyon.

Rock walls on the border make a natural barrier.

The Rio Grande is a favorite place for those who like to kayak and canoe down the river. It’s also a favorite spot to watch the sunset, as it sets between the two walls.

Rio Grande at Santa Elena River Access
Rio Grande at Santa Elena Canyon

We brought a picnic supper with us so we could wait for the sunset. But instead of staying at Santa Elena Canyon, we started making our way back along the same road, stopping to photograph the “golden hour” effect on various mountains and hills.

The sunset did not disappoint.

The next day we packed a lunch and drove to the high country of Big Bend on the Chisos Basin road. In less than 6 miles, this road climbs over 2,000 feet above the desert floor to an elevation of around 4,500 feet. As the road gained elevation, the desert flora soon gave way to drooping junipers, gray oaks and the tall Douglas firs and Arizona pines. The air was notably cooler.

The road ended at the Chisos Mountains Lodge and the Chisos Basin Visitor Center. The parking lot was full, so we turned around and went back home.

Our third day of exploration took us to Panther Junction where we turned onto the road to Rio Grande Village. This 20 mile drive descends nearly 2,000 feet in elevation on its way to the Rio Grande. Along the way we drove through a tunnel, and stopped for a view of the Rio Grande from above.

Tunnel before Rio Grande Overlook

Looking out across to the Rio Grande, we could see the mountains on the Mexican side of the Rio Grande. Nearby, we saw a spineless prickly pear cactus and other native plants.

Rio Grande Overlook
Spineless Prickly Pear Cactus

Down by the river is a campground, but the sites had no hookups. Even in early March the weather was quite warm. A generator would be a must.

We drove to the Rio Grande river overlook at Boquillas Canyon. Curiously enough, a sketchy-looking man was there selling trinkets and souvenirs to tourists for a high price. I’m not sure if he was from Mexico or the USA. There were three vehicles parked on the other side of the river and a canoe pulled up on the opposite bank. It’s hard to tell why the vehicles were there, and if they had anything to do with the peddler.

Rio Grande River at Boquillas Canyon Overlook

Another day we visited the nearby “ghost town” of Terlingua. The town is now a tourist trap more than a ghost town. A few old buildings and ruins could be seen. We visited a general store next door to the Holiday Hotel and the Starlight Theatre. We strolled through the old cemetery and then bought supper-to-go at the Rustic Iron BBQ.

General Store in Terlingua Ghost Town
Terlingua Ghost Town Cemetery

On the way home, I took a peek in the Quilt store in the town of Terlingua. Two little ladies were sewing away. The owner said she has 14 quilters working for her. When I asked how she ended up in the middle of nowhere, she said, “The warm weather!” “Yep,” I said, “That’s why we’re here.”

Quilt Store in Terlingua, Texas

Big Bend National Park was better than I anticipated. I found myself wanting to visit again someday because there’s so much more to see.

Sunset in Big Bend National Park