Coming from someone who grew up there: No, because that spot was dry/stagnate 90% of the time. This spot is the runoff from a lake, and the area around the lake (for several miles out) is made of limestone which does not absorb water. Think of it like filling a bowl with water in your sink. Water will only pour over the sides while the tap is on. Similarly, if it did not rain the day before or the day of there was no runoff occurring there. In 2015 or 2016, there was a horrible storm and tornado that actually ripped through the area. The flooding was horrible, half the park was under water. The flash flooding got so bad that the creek feeding that lake washed out the roads behind the park in the residential areas. One woman's house got demolished by the creek turned river. Her place was wedged between the bases of 2 hills. The people that lived a bit above her lost quite a bit of livestock. I remember when my family went down to help clean up the park. Chunks of someone's house washed up on the banks along with whole goats and cows. Volunteers were scared to get near the dead aminals because they had become so bloated. No one wanted to get popped on.
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