A timelapse of driving our RV, a Tiffin Allegro Bus motorhome, 184 miles from Lena, Mississippi to Red Bay, Alabama.
Author: David
Travel from Lena, Mississippi to Red Bay, Alabama
We drove our coach 184 miles, about three hours of driving, from Lena, Mississippi to Red Bay, Alabama.
Here’s a map showing our route (kinda), heading north:

That wasn’t actually our route, as we decided to take the Natchez Trace Parkway, which the RV routing didn’t like, but I examined closely and determined it’d be fine for us. Here’s an interactive map of the actual route:
A branch and lots of leaves by our truck:

A narrow road from the campground:

A sharp turn from the park road; not too hard for our coach:

Another Allegro Bus passing us:

A drizzly drive:

Entering Natchez Trace Parkway:




Lunch stop at the Jeff Busby area:


Loose dogs roaming around:




Leaving Natchez Trace Parkway for I-22 East:


MS-25:

Turned into MS-76 (a newer and much nicer highway):

Welcome to Sweet Home Alabama:

Arriving at our destination, Red Bay Acres:

Mostly empty RV park:

Oooh, a Zephyr (top of the line Tiffin motorhome):

Our site:

Leake County Water Park
We stayed at Leake County Water Park in Lena, Mississippi. (Campground Reviews listing.)
A nice county park.
Dates:
- Check in: 2024-12-13
- Check out: 2024-12-15
- 2 nights
Weather:
- Mostly cloudy
- High temps 59-65°F, lows 42-55°F
- A little wind, gusts to 25 MPH, but sheltered amongst trees
Noise:
- No road noise
- No train horn noise
- Some neighbor noise (kids and dogs)
Site:
- #15, back-in, concrete
- Needed to disconnect toad, parked in front of coach
- Somewhat unlevel site; high on passenger side and front; used hydraulic leveling
- Concrete driveway about 50 feet long by 10 feet wide
- 50 feet to neighbor on driver side
- About 180 feet to neighbor on passenger side, though a path about 30 feet away
- Grass and occasional trees between sites
- Picnic table
- Fire pit
- Tall trees
- Mostly clean site
- Elevation 310 feet, front facing SW
Utilities:
- 50 amp power, very conveniently located
- 65 PSI water, very conveniently located
- Unthreaded sewer connection, conveniently located (1 10-foot pipe needed)
Internet (in usage priority order):
- T-Mobile: 65 Mbps down, 3-8 Mbps up, 45 ms ping
- AT&T: 10-22 Mbps down, 0.05-0.3 Mbps up, 125-780 ms ping
- Verizon: 2.5 Mbps down, 0.1-7 Mbps up, 35 ms ping
- Starlink: not used
- Campground Wi-Fi: none
Amenities:
- Garbage dumpsters
- Pool
Our review on Campground Reviews:
Quiet park under the trees
This was a great stop for a couple of nights on our way through Mississippi. The road to get to it is a bit sketchy (it’s more pothole than road), but once you get in, it’s peaceful and the sites are nicely spaced out. There is a short walk to the day use area, which wasn’t very busy in December, so it felt like we had the place to ourselves. We camped at Leake County Water Park in a Motorhome.
Campground map:

An interactive map:
Our site:





Day use area near our site:

Bridge to primitive camping area:


Floating dock:

Trees and other vegetation in a little bay off the river:



Boat ramp to Pearl River:

Fish of Pearl River:


Other sites:


Playground:

Swimming pool:


We’d be happy to stay here again, and for longer.
Video: Springfield, Louisiana to Lena, Mississippi motorhome travel timelapse
A timelapse of driving our RV, a Tiffin Allegro Bus motorhome, 186 miles from Springfield, Louisiana to Lena, Mississippi.
Travel from Springfield, Louisiana to Lena, Mississippi
We drove our coach 186 miles, about three hours of driving, from Springfield, Louisiana to Lena, Mississippi.
Here’s a map showing our route, heading north:

An interactive map:
Convertible Beetle:

Flooded road in front of our first site:

Our first site was a little damp:

An interesting sign near the entrance of the park:

A closer look:

Narrow road from the park:

Petro fuel stop:

We had lunch while driving, with me feeding crackers with salami and cheese to Jenn:

Welcome to Mississippi:

A sign for the Lynyrd Skynyrd Monument… so of course we had to play Free Bird and songs seeded from that:

Roadworks on I-55 North:

Watching a Sinclair Trails timelapse travel video while traveling is always a little disconcerting:

Paladin asleep, touching my foot:

Rest area:

Exit from I-55 to route 25:

Paladin asleep:

Late foliage:

A narrow road to our destination:

Leake County Water Park:

Our site:

Broom hanging grippers
We keep a mop and broom hanging in our half bath, as a convenient place to keep these long tools. They hang on the wall with Command Broom and Mop Grippers, available from Amazon. They are mounted using self-adhesive Command Strips, so can be installed and removed without drilling any holes or damaging the wall at all.


Very handy.
River Bottomland Hardwood Trail hike
We went for a nice stroll along the boardwalks of the River Bottomland Hardwood Trail in Tickfaw State Park in Louisiana.

Pavilion:

Boardwalk:


Bayou:

Tickfaw River and bridge:



Closed area:

Bridge:

End of the boardwalk:





Video: a timelapse of a flooding RV site in Tickfaw State Park, Louisiana
A short timelapse of our RV site flooding; watch the right side to see the water creeping in, and see how much it rises overnight! We changed sites when it kept rising.
Tickfaw State Park
We stayed at Tickfaw State Park in Springfield, Louisiana. (Campground Reviews listing.)
A nice state park, at least until our site flooded; we moved to a different site for the last night.
Dates:
- Check in: 2024-12-08
- Check out: 2024-12-13
- 5 nights
Weather:
- Rainy at first then sunny
- High temps 56-74°F, lows 35-64°F
- A little wind, gusts to 26 MPH, but sheltered by trees
Noise:
- No road noise
- No train horn noise
- Little neighbor noise
First Site:
- #27, back-in, asphalt
- Needed to disconnect toad, parked in front of coach
- Mostly level site; high on passenger side; used hydraulic leveling
- Asphalt driveway about 65 feet long by 10 feet wide
- No neighbors on either side (over 100 feet through trees)
- Lots of tall trees between sites
- Scraping branches
- Picnic table on 24 by 10 feet wooden deck
- Charcoal grill and fire pit
- Lantern hook
- Mostly clean site
- Elevation zero feet, front facing South
Second Site:
- #6, back-in, asphalt
- Needed to disconnect toad, parked in front of coach
- Level site; used air leveling, since only one night
- Asphalt driveway about 70 feet long by 10 feet wide
- 75 feet to neighbor on driver side
- 120 feet to neighbor on passenger side
- Some tall trees, but only grass between sites
- Picnic table on small concrete pad
- Charcoal grill and fire pit
- Lantern hook
- Clean site
- Elevation 10 feet, front facing SSW
Utilities:
- 50 amp power, conveniently located behind site
- 42 PSI water, fairly conveniently located behind site
- Loose sewer connection, very conveniently located (less than 1 10-foot pipe needed)
Internet (in usage priority order):
- Verizon: 3-5 Mbps down, 4 Mbps up, 25-45 ms ping
- T-Mobile: 5 Mbps down, 14 Mbps up, 24 ms ping, unreliable
- AT&T: 2-9 Mbps down, 1 Mbps up, 85-1300 ms ping
- Starlink: not used
- Campground Wi-Fi: none
Amenities:
- Garbage dumpsters
- Boardwalks
Our review on Campground Reviews:
Surrounded by the bayou, sometimes in it
This is a beautiful state park amidst the bayou, but it became a problem because it had rained heavily before we got there, and the river started to rise. We woke up one morning to see that our deck area was surrounded by water and our power pedestal was partially submerged. A very nice ranger came by, ensured we were okay, and offered to help us disconnect the power when we were supposed to depart the following day. However, the water continued to rise throughout the day, and we weren’t comfortable with how high it was getting, so we opted to move to a dryer site for one night. Two other helpful staff put on their waders and disconnected us so we could move. While the rising water was problematic, and the access road is a bit narrow, we would happily stay here again. We camped at Tickfaw State Park in a Motorhome.
Campground map:

An interactive map:
Our first site was delightfully private, surrounded by trees:




Utilities:


Deck, in the rain… hey, what’s a little rain when staying in a bayou?

Oh, that’s what… we woke up to a flooded site on our last full day:




We kept an eye on it, but the water level kept rising, submerging the power cord from our Watchdog… not great, Bob:

So we made the call to ask to be moved to another site for our last night.
Our second site was more open, not quite as nice, but also not underwater, so that’s a plus:





Other sites:





If we stay here again, this might be a slightly better site, #29:

Glamping tent:

Cabins:

Group camp, cabin style:

Another group camp, tent style (used by scouts):

Dump station:

We were very glad we made the call to change sites; our first site was completely submerged the following day, on the day we departed:


Yowza!
Despite the flooding, we’d be happy to stay here again. If we do, our first site (#27) would still be a reasonable choice (if no recent or expected rain!), though site #29 might be an even better site.
Video: Galveston, Texas to Springfield, Louisiana motorhome travel timelapse
A timelapse of driving our RV, a Tiffin Allegro Bus motorhome, 346 miles from Galveston, Texas to Springfield, Louisiana.
