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View Article - Arkansas Game and Fish Commission

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The second Turner Bend Store. Photo courtesy of Brad Wimberly.when “The Mighty Mulberry” was published in1974. The 56-mile National Wild <strong>and</strong> Scenic Riveris known for its Class II/III water.Wimberly remembers conversations with Champduring the 1976 <strong>and</strong> ’77 spring floating seasons.“When we returned for a float trip in 1978 the storewas closed,” he said. “Champ was soon to pass on.”The Turner family leased the store for a couple ofyears <strong>and</strong> sold it.“Champ died of lung cancer,” Turner said. “Brad heard aboutit <strong>and</strong> came down here <strong>and</strong> met with my dad. Brad said, ‘I neverwant to change the name. It’s Turner Bend to me, too.’ ”“As the saying goes, ‘Fools rush in,’ ” Wimberly said. “Ipurchased the store in May 1981. Good thing I was only 26 sincethere were hardships <strong>and</strong> problems at every turn. I lived in theback of the old store like the Turners before me. The wiring wasfaulty, the water well was suspect, the roof was leaky <strong>and</strong> therewas no insulation.”Wimberly’s first major improvement was a rock l<strong>and</strong>ingthat became a l<strong>and</strong>mark, built by Lloyd Schlicker in 1981.Wimberly moved into a 250-square-foot shack in the Turner Bendcampground in 1982 so he could exp<strong>and</strong> the store. He lived there10 years, <strong>and</strong> married Vien on the l<strong>and</strong>ing.“University of <strong>Arkansas</strong> students flew down the trail on Fridays<strong>and</strong> back up on Sundays,” Wimberly said. “Businessmen travelingto <strong>and</strong> from Little Rock would stop. Hog fans with their flagsflying stopped on their way to games. Canoeing on the Mulberrygrew in popularity.”Wimberly started building a store next to the old one in 1986.“Actually, we had to build part of the new building, tear partof the old one down, build some more, tear the rest of the oldbuilding down, then complete the construction. The wholeprocess took about a year <strong>and</strong> we never closed a day.”He improved the campground <strong>and</strong> built a home <strong>and</strong> rentalcabin on the property by the late ’90s. But the Pig Trail,Wimberly says, lost about two-thirds of its traffic when Interstate540 opened in 1999.“I had naively thought that a lot of the regularswould continue to travel the Pig Trail since it isso much shorter than the interstate route, butI was wrong,” Wimberly said. “Students nowattend the University of <strong>Arkansas</strong> <strong>and</strong> don’t evenknow what the Pig Trail is.”A couple of good canoeing years bolstered thebusiness <strong>and</strong> a growing motorcycle crowd foundthe Pig Trail. Wakarusa, an annual music eventat Mulberry Mountain a few miles north, drawsthous<strong>and</strong>s of people.“Turner Bend has this whole new life of peoplethat know it for a new reason,” Turner said.Tight curves <strong>and</strong> a tree canopy make the PigTrail a favorite with motorcyclists. The Bikes,Blues <strong>and</strong> BBQ event in Fayetteville each falldraws motorcyclists to the store, where theybuy patches, pins, goggles <strong>and</strong> T-shirts. Boaters find NorthwestRiver Supplies gear – river shoes, gloves, life jackets <strong>and</strong> more.Turnerbend.com is a primary source for daily river levels.Along with groceries <strong>and</strong> camping supplies, the store offers OzarkHighl<strong>and</strong>s Trail maps <strong>and</strong> a custom-designed Mulberry River map.Wimberly also stocks a documentary of the river from Wolf Pen toMill Creek. The store’s known for homemade s<strong>and</strong>wiches, whichboaters take for lunch on the river.Turner Bend runs shuttles for Ozark Highl<strong>and</strong>s Trail hikers,<strong>and</strong> Wimberly hosts an annual river cleanup, which he’s done for 20years. Four years ago he purchased some riverfront property witha rental cabin just downstream from Turner Bend, <strong>and</strong> he’s addinga few primitive campsites. The new property is called ’Round theBend.Turner says Wimberly serves the community <strong>and</strong> preserves theriver much like Champ did. “We just feel like the Wimberlys areTurners,” she said. AWJill Rohrbach is a travel writer for the <strong>Arkansas</strong> Department of Parks<strong>and</strong> Tourism.Champ <strong>and</strong> Flora Turner inside the store, circa 1974. Note the licenses sign.The shelves offered soap, lighter fluid, fishing lures, SPAM <strong>and</strong>, yes, theTurners had Prince Albert in a can. Photo courtesy of Dena Turner.NOVEMBER • DECEMBER 2011ARKANSAS WILDLIFE19

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