Showing posts with label #AlmostHeaven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #AlmostHeaven. Show all posts

Friday, July 24, 2020

West Virginia Road Trip! Part 5: Summersville & Fayetteville: wine & food with a view!

Summersville Lake
West Virginia is open for business and #vacation #travel fun! Come on down!
NOTE: Due to possible COVID-19 restrictions, which seem to be changing daily, before you travel or book Anything, CALL every place you want to go and make SURE they are open and operating! I have included phone numbers for almost every place we went to and enjoyed in this post. Although I have also included website hotlinks, do NOT rely on websites and online reservation sites- they are often not kept up to date! Every place we stayed at was spotlessly clean, and we had NO negative issues whatsoever! Dan and I are not kids- he is 73, and I am 61- and we had a fabulous West Virginia getaway!

 Our 9-night Road Trip loop thru West Virginia first took us from the Elkhorn Inn & Theatre in the southern mountains of Landgraff, in McDowell County, up to Romney, in Hampshire County, to ride the Potomac Eagle Dinner Train (see this post: https://southernwestvirginia.blogspot.com/2020/07/west-virginia-road-trip-come-on-down.html). Then we drove a little farther north to Berkeley Springs, in Morgan County, to "take the waters" at America's First Spa: https://southernwestvirginia.blogspot.com/2020/07/west-virginia-road-trip-part-2-taking.html We next drove south to Shinnston, in Harrison County,
to stay at Gillum House Bed-and-Breakfast, meet Punjab the Camel, and sip some great whiskey: https://southernwestvirginia.blogspot.com/2020/07/west-virginia-road-trip-part-3.html We then drove south to Cass, in Pocahontas County, to take the Cass Scenic Railroad, enjoy a Kissing Bridge, and see the Ice Age Foresthttps://southernwestvirginia.blogspot.com/2020/07/west-virginia-road-trip-part-4-cass.html
West Virginia Road Trip! Part 5: Summersville & Fayetteville for wine & food with a view!
Our final stops on this trip before heading home were Summersville and Fayetteville,  specifically to go to the Kirkwood Winery and Isaiah Morgan Distillery: https://kirkwood-wine.com/  Tel: 1-888-4WV-WINE right outside Summersville, the first winery and distillery we visited in West Virginia, back in 2002! At that time Dan was deployed to West Virginia by FEMA, following the floods that had devastated southern West Virginia, and we were staying in Beaver, WV. On Dan's days off we went and did all the fun, "touristy" things one does in West Virginia, including white water rafting, ATVing, taking train excursions, camping, fishing, and horseback riding, and although Dan was no lover of wine back then, I convinced him to "humor" me and go to the nearby Kirkwood Winery. Kirkwood is famous for their fruit and uniquely West Virginian vegetable wines, and we both fell in love with them the first time we visited, when we met the late Rodney Facemire who founded it. Among their truly unique West Virginia wines are Ramp Wine, which Chef Dan uses to marinate meat and to make reduction sauces, Ginseng, Dandelion, and Rhubarb Wines! They also have a large variety of grape and fruit wines made from the bounty of their vines and orchards. In creating the Isaiah Morgan Distillery, Rodney Facemire brought the "naughty" Appalachian tradition of the illegal moonshine still into the legal daylight, obtaining the license for the nation's smallest still in 2002. He conceived the vision of mini-distilleries, formed a team of government and business leaders, and created what has truly become a fabulous industry for the state of West Virginia, now nationally famous for our legal 'shine! Isaiah Morgan makes Moonshine, Rye Whiskey, Grappa, and now a fine, aged Bourbon, and after indulging in another yummy tasting, we bought a selection of their wines, as well as their Bourbon, and a bottle of Grappa for our Italian Inn-Sitter! We had Kirkwood wines at our wedding at the Elkhorn Inn, and our guests all loved them, and a few years ago we went to one of their fun, fall Grape Stomping Festivals, where we got in the vat and stomped grapes with our bare feet like Lucy and Ethel did on I Love Lucy! (Unfortunately the Grape Stomping Festival has been canceled for this fall, but we are trusting it will be back next year- it's truly another West Virginia "Must-Do"!)
Whine and Whiskey Tasting at Kirkwood Winery
Kirkwood Winery
Tooling around Summersville and Fayetteville, we drove across the famed New River Gorge Bridge several times: https://www.nps.gov/neri/planyourvisit/nrgbridge.htm, and at one point finally stopped to get a look at it from afar!
New River Gorge Bridge, peeking thru the trees!
The Bridge has spectacular views of the river on both sides, but it's impossible to get a good photo while driving across it, as all you can see from a car window is the darn barricade!
The Bridge is on Route 19, just north of Fayetteville, and when it was completed, in 1977, it turned a harrowing, 40-minute drive down narrow mountain roads and across one of North America's oldest rivers into a one minute drive! The Bridge is famed for being both the longest steel span in the western hemisphere, and the third highest in the United States, and it even has a day of its own: Bridge Day- the 3rd Sat. in October! On Bridge Day, the bridge is open to pedestrians and hosts a wide variety of activities, including BASE jumping, rappelling, music, and more, but unfortunately it has been cancelled this year: https://officialbridgeday.com/  You CAN, however, take a Bridge Walk, which is a guided tour of the New River Gorge Bridge from the catwalk 25’ beneath the Bridge: https://bridgewalk.com/  Tel: (304) 574-1300 - something we intend to go back and do!
We stayed in Fayetteville for two nights at The Historic Morris Harvey House:
https://www.morrisharveyhouse.com/   Tel: (304) 250-7090, a very pretty, 3-story Queen Anne-style house dating from 1902 that is on the National Register of Historic Places. We stayed in their Harvey Room, one flight up, which has a half-bath within the room, and a full bath with an antique claw-foot tub next door.
The Historic Morris Harvey House
The Harvey Room
Our first evening in Fayetteville we popped into Southside Junction Tap House for a beer: https://www.facebook.com/SouthsideJunctionTapHouse/  Tel: (304) 574-2222: 
Southside Junction Tap House
and then had dinner at Smokey's on the Gorge at Adventures on the Gorge:  https://adventuresonthegorge.com/dining/smokeys-gorge/  We remembered Smokey's from years ago when we went ziplining at TreeTops:
https://adventuresonthegorge.com/adventures/zip-line-aerial-adventures/treetops-zip-line-canopy-tour/  (totally awesome and wonderful, and an Absolute "Must-do"!), and it was still a relatively small operation; Smokey's was rather elegant, with fine dining... It's now a huge operation, and the new Smokey's is a humongous, family-style restaurant... Dan had their ribs, and I had their Brisket, with two tasty sauces, including a novel White Alabama BBQ Sauce, and we ate outside on their deck and enjoyed the beautiful sunset view over our plastic cups of wine, and it was very nice... but it wasn't as we remembered... Is anything, ever? ;-) 
Dinner at Smokey's on the Gorge
The next day we went sightseeing, driving to see beautiful Summersville Lake, and the Dam that created it, dedicated by President Lyndon Johnson in 1966: http://www.summersvillecvb.com/summersville-dam.html  
Summersville Lake
Summersville Lake
Above Summersville Lake



Summersville Dam

Above Summersville Dam
We then Had to go see the amusing Summersville Lighthouse at Summersville Lake Retreat:
http://summersvillelakeretreat.com/summersville-lake-lighthouse.html  Yes, Virginia, there is a real lighthouse in the mountains of West Virginia!
Summersville Lighthouse

A doe and her fawns!
While many of the roads we traveled were devoid of cars, and we often felt like the only people out and about, we did see a Lot of deer on this trip- basically everywhere we went! And they were fearless deer, totally unafraid of people, and several posed for photos, too!
Deer!
That afternoon we found a fun “private club” bar in Fayetteville: Jaybird and Charlie's Pub: https://www.facebook.com/jaybirdandcharliespub/  Tel: (304) 574-0822 and had drinks at their bar and outside on their patio, as well. Jaybird was really nice, and we were made to feel very welcome; his bar has pool tables and foosball, and this is definitely the place that would be our "Cheers" if we lived in Summersville! We'll definitely return if we get back to the area!
G&Ts at Jaybird & Charlie's
Our "foodie find"of this trip was that evening, when we had dinner at Wanderlust Creative Foods (formerly New River Curry): https://www.facebook.com/newrivercurry/  Tel: (304) 574-3111 in downtown Fayetteville, a charming, informal, friendly, not expensive, chef-driven restaurant serving inventive, international, gourmet-level cuisine! Dan and I shared three yummy appetizers for dinner and left stuffed: their Samosas, served with an excellent Mango Chutney, delicious Sisig, caramelized pork belly sauteed with ginger, garlic and Thai Chilies and topped with a fried egg, and scrumptious seared Gulf Shrimp in a Sherry Reduction Sauce, garnished with seasonal microgreens. I had a unique and delicious Thai fruit drink, as well, that included gelled basil seeds, which I'd never seen in West Virginia before, and it was so good that I got one to take with me! If you get to Fayetteville, THIS is where you want to eat!
Sisig - Carmelized Pork Belly
Shrimp in a Sherry Reduction Sauce
We did a leisurely drive home the next day, taking the “back roads” through the mountains, stopping to see pretty places, historic sites, and fun things along the way...
West Virginia...
The cutest playhouse!

Big Lime
Greenbrier County
Chainsaw Sculpture Adorableness!






Big Beaver Creek
Camp Jones

Napoleon Bonaparte French
Engagement at Falls Mills
...and passing through Oak Hill in Fayette County, whose claim to fame is apparently as the place where Hank Williams was pronounced dead...
Hank Williams Memorial
Hank Williams Memorial

We stopped for lunch at Kimono Japanese Seafood & Steak House in Princeton, WV in Mercer County: 
https://www.facebook.com/Kimono-Japanese-Seafood-Steak-House-157785594261594/  Tel: (304) 487-8008. Kimono is our fave local restaurant, and we ended our WV Road Trip with an epic seaweed salad-sushi-sake feast! We Love this place, still amazed, after 18 years, that our landlocked southern West Virginia mountains boasts a sushi bar that beats every place we've eaten at in the USA, including NYC, where I'm from!
Sushi-Saki feast at Kimono!
We then drove through Bramwell, also in Mercer County: https://www.bramwellwv.com/ , famed as “Home of the Coal Baron Millionaires” for its many historic mansions, and stopped to photograph the train trestle, and again to photograph a Norfolk Southern train chugging 'round the bend through Keystone... 
Train Trestle in Bramwell
NS Railroad coming thru Keystone
and before we knew it, we were back home in Landgraff, at the Elkhorn Inn: http://www.elkhorninnwv.com
Tel: 304-862-2031, and unpacking all the wine and booze and foodie treats we'd picked up along the way! :-)  
West Virginia is open for business, and #vacation #travel fun! Come on down!
Our West Virginia Souvenirs!

NS Railroad coming thru Keystone

NS Railroad coming thru Keystone




Thursday, July 23, 2020

West Virginia Road Trip! Part 3: Shinnston & Punjab The Camel!

Punjab The Camel!
Levi Shinn Log House, Shinnston
West Virginia is open for business and #vacation #travel fun! Come on down!
NOTE: Due to possible COVID-19 restrictions, which seem to be changing daily, before you travel or book Anything, CALL every place you want to go and make SURE they are open and operating! I have included phone numbers for almost every place we went to and enjoyed in this post. Although I have also included website hotlinks, do NOT rely on websites and online reservation sites- they are often not kept up to date! Every place we stayed at was spotlessly clean, and we had NO negative issues whatsoever! Dan and I are not kids- he is 73, and I am 61- and we had a fabulous West Virginia getaway!

Part 3: Shinnston and meeting Punjab the Camel! 
Our 9-night Road Trip loop thru West Virginia first took us from the Elkhorn Inn & Theatre in the southern mountains of Landgraff, in McDowell County, up to Romney, in Hampshire County, to ride the Potomac Eagle Dinner Train (see this post:  https://southernwestvirginia.blogspot.com/2020/07/west-virginia-road-trip-come-on-down.html). Then we drove a little farther north to Berkeley Springs, in Morgan County, to "take the waters" at America's First Spa- see this post: https://southernwestvirginia.blogspot.com/2020/07/west-virginia-road-trip-part-2-taking.html
From Berkeley Springs we drove 2.5 hours down to Shinnston, in Harrison County, so we could see our good friend Kathleen Panek and stay at her B-&B, Gillum House Bed-and-Breakfast: https://gillumhouse.com/  Tel: (304) 592-0177. 
Gillum House Bed-and-Breakfast
Kathleen has been to our inn several times, but in all our years here we had never been able to get up north to see hers! Gillum House was built in 1912; Kathleen and her husband John purchased it in 1994 and opened it as their B-&-B in 1996. Kathleen was the President of the West Virginia Bed-and-Breakfast Association, and one of the first people we met when we decided to buy our historic property and create the Elkhorn Inn & Theatreshe gives an excellent Aspiring Inn-Keeper Course which we took prior to opening the Elkhorn Inn. I made Kathleen promise to take us to experience two special things in Shinnston that she can arrange: to meet Punjab The Camel and feed him carrots, and to see the historic 1770s Levi Shinn Log House! Shinnston is named for Levi Shinn, who settled in that area with his brothers and cousins circa 1772. By 1778 Levi had built a 2-story log house for his wife (nee Elizabeth Smith), and their 9 children. The original log house, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, still stands on the original site, and Kathleen has the permission of the Shinnston Historical Association to take her guests inside! A two-story Log House is quite rare- for its time it was definitely a mansion! Occupied until the 1970s and wonderfully maintained, it was super-cool to be able to go inside and look at all the furnishings and historic items! (A note to lovebirds: Kathleen arranges Elopements, and she can arrange for you to be married in the Shinn Log House! https://gillumhouse.com/elope)

Levi Shinn Log House
Levi Shinn Log House


In the Levi Shinn Log House
In the Levi Shinn Log House

Upstairs Bedroom


Log House Chinking 
Upstairs in the Levi Shinn Log House
Inside the Levi Shinn Log House
Upstairs Bedroom
National Register of Historic Places

The Levi Shinn Log House
Dan and I loved meeting Punjab the Camel and his horse, zebra, and burro friends, and feeding them carrots! This was another truly unique WV experience, as I don't think anyone expects to find a camel- much less a truly sweet and good-natured, carrot-eating one- in the mountains of West Virginia!
Me and Punjab!
Punjab's Burro Buddy!
Punjab loves carrots!
Feeding the horses carrots...
Dan feeding Punjab a carrot!
Me, Kofi the Zebra, & Punjab's Butt!
That night we all sat on the Gillum House front porch, ate pizza delivered from the new East of Chicago Pizza: https://www.facebook.com/EOCShinnston/, drank West Virginia wine, and caught up on a million things- a lovely evening! We stayed in Gillum House's Gillum Room, which has a private bath with an antique claw-foot tub- which I loved! You can see all the guest rooms here: https://gillumhouse.com/rooms-rates 
Gillum House Guest Room
Gillum House Guest Room
Our Claw-Foot Tub!












Kathleen's B-&-B is famous for her world-wide selection of coffees, which she roasts fresh for her guests, and for her scrumptious breakfasts, which we were privileged to enjoy! I especially loved her Blackberry Cobbler, which she makes from her garden's blackberries, and tops with her sinfully rich "Mock Devonshire Cream"! When we left she gave us a "take-away" box of cobbler, which we happily devoured on the road!
Simpson Creek Covered Bridge
From Shinnston we headed south towards Cass, but at Kathleen's suggestion we first stopped at the Simpson Creek Covered Bridge, which dates from 1881, and is one of only 16 covered bridges left in West Virginia, and then the MannCave Distillery and Lambert's Winery! 
Simpson Creek Covered Bridge

Ducks at the Covered Bridge...
MannCave Distillery: 
https://www.manncave.com/
Tel: (681) 533-1001 in Weston, WV is a brand new and truly unique distillery with an amazing backstory! Stephen and Wendy Mann are crafting and selling excellent whiskies, vodka, and gin, that literally won medals right after they opened in 2019! What makes MannCave so unique and truly West Virginian is that their spirits are made from the crystal-clear Artesian spring water that lies beneath two abandoned 1930s coal mines! Their successful creation of the MannCave Distillery is an incredible and truly West Virginian story of ingenuity, grit, and perseverance that really hit home with us, given our experience creating the Elkhorn Inn: https://www.manncave.com/our-story/  We were treated to an excellent tasting by Stephen, followed by a tour of the distillery by his daughter, and we bought their superb gin and whiskey. Check out their Facebook page and give it a “like”:  
https://www.facebook.com/spikeworld (One of the great things about MannCave is that it's actually easy to find, thanks to 8 bright blue signs at literally every turn along the way- something truly unique in West Virginia, where directions often start with “turn left at the Chevy up on blocks” and end with “turn right where the old schoolhouse used to be”. LOL)
At MannCave Distillery with Stephen Mann

MannCave Distillery Tour
MannCave Distillery Tour


Dan checking that corn mash!

MannCave Distillery
We then drove to Lambert's Winery http://lambertswinery.com/  Tel: (304) 269-4903, a beautiful winery also in Weston, WV, had a tasting, and bought several bottles of wine to take home!
Tasting at Lambert's Winery!
As we headed south towards Cass, history-buffs that we are, we stopped to see a number of historic sites, including the log cabin at Jackson's Mill, the site of the boyhood home of Stonewall Jackson, which is now a 4-H camp, and the Weston Colored School, which is now also a Veteran's Memorial. There's truly gorgeous scenery to enjoy, barns with cool, old ad signs, deer and wildlife all over the place, wildflowers out the wazoo, and 1000s of fun street signs all over West Virginia, from Country Girl Road to Moo Cow Lane, and we enjoyed more than a few of all of the above on this road trip! 
At Jackson's Mill
Jackson's Mill



Weston Colored School

Weston Colored School

Battle of Middle Fork Bridge

Herman Guy Kump, 19th Gov. of WV

Along the way...
Pocahontas County on one side...
Gee Lick Road!



Randolph County on the other side!














Mingo Flats
Next: WV Road Trip, Part 4: Cass Scenic Railroad!
West Virginia is open for business, and #vacation #travel fun! Come on down!