Showing posts with label West Virginia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label West Virginia. 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 2: "Taking The Waters" at America's First Spa!

At Berkeley Springs Spa!
Live Music & Dinner!
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 2: "Taking the Waters" at America's First Spa in Berkeley Springs!
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!  Berkeley Springs is only about an hour north of Romney, and being a die-hard "spa babe", I have wanted to "take the waters" there Forever! Being history buffs, when Chef Dan and I do road trips we stop to read the historic signs we encounter along the way whenever we can, and we pulled over to see the cool 1932 Pinoak Fountain:
Pinoak Fountain
We also pulled over to see the gorgeous view looking down into the valley where the Civil War Battle of Great Cacapon took place in January, 1862:
Prospect Peak
Overlook of Cacapon Valley


Overlooking the site of the Civil War Battle of Great Cacapon

Civil War Battle of Great Cacapon
Berkeley Springs is known as "America's First Spa", as George Washington bathed there (as did we!), and it's the ONLY spa in a State Park! We stayed right next door to the spa- literally- at the historic, 1933 Country Inn of Berkeley Springs: https://www.thecountryinnwv.com/ Tel: (304) 258-1200, and it truly was one of the loveliest places we stayed on this trip. History buffs that we are, we chose to stay in their Queen Deluxe Room, which is pictured on their website: https://www.thecountryinnwv.com/queen-deluxe, in the historic main building, even though that meant walking upstairs; our room was lovely, I loved the old political cartoons they have framed in the hallway (which proved, conclusively, that nothing ever changes...), and I found an enjoyable 1930s book to read in their library: The Silver Flute, by Lida Larrimore... 
Our Queen Deluxe Room
The Country Inn of Berkeley Springs
Old political cartoon...

Old political cartoon...

Old political cartoon...
When I called to book and learned that they had live music the evening we arrived, I immediately made us reservations for 













dinner on their patio so we could enjoy the music- and it was great! The band was Matt Otis and the Sound www.mattotismusic.com from Pennsylvania, and it was standing room only, with every seat taken, as they have quite the fan base! They played a variety of music (the violinist is superb!), including covers of classic rock and their own songs, and they were so good that we bought two of their CDs! We had a great table outside right near the bandstand, and enjoyed a delicious dinner of steak and seared tuna, and several G&Ts, while listening to the music.
G&T  and Great Music!
YUM! Dinner and Music!
Music at night out on the Inn's Patio...
We went to the Berkeley Springs State Park https://wvstateparks.com/park/berkeley-springs-state-park/  Tel: (304) 258-2711 shortly after we arrived and checked into the hotel, literally walking next door, and it was SO cool! It was SO great to see families and children enjoying the waters, frolicking in the swimming pool, and taking in the historic sites, such as "George Washington's Bathtub", which I, of course, had to dip my feet in for a photo!
Roman Gath House at Berkeley Springs State Park
Berkeley Springs State Park
"Taking The Waters"!


At Berkeley Springs State Park


George Washington's Bathtub!
Our Private Bath at Berkeley Springs














Berkeley Springs is a mineral spa that has been in use since before colonial times. It's renowned for its warm spring water, which flows at a constant temperature of 74.3 degrees, and the park’s Old Roman and Main Bathhouses offer a wide selection of spa services, 














including massages, saunas, baths, and showers. Dan and I took a private room in the Roman Bath House for a ½ hour bath, soaking in the warm, relaxing water, and then we filled a gallon jug with drinking water from the outside taps at the “Gentleman's Spring”, before I went to dip my toes in George Washington's Bathtub! From the Park website: "Long before the first Europeans discovered the warm waters of Berkeley Springs, it was already a famous health mecca which attracted Native Americans from the St. Lawrence Seaway in Canada and the Great Lakes to the Carolinas. Those first settlers, who came in 1730, learned the uses and value of the springs from the Native Americans and began spreading the word of its benefits throughout the settlements of the east. Perhaps the most notable and influential advocate of the curative powers of the springs was George Washington, who, at 16, visited them as a member of a survey party. As the party, which was surveying the western limits of Thomas Lord Fairfax's lands, camped there for the night, young Washington noted in his diary: "March 18th, 1748, We this day called to see Ye Fam'd Warm Springs". For many years afterwards, George Washington visited the springs regularly, and it was largely through his efforts that its fame as a health spa grew throughout the colonies. At the urging of the Colony of Virginia and in the public interest, Lord Fairfax conveyed his land holdings at the springs and fifty adjacent acres to the Colony of Virginia in 1776. Shortly thereafter, the land was offered for public sale. George Washington, three signers of the Declaration of Independence, four signers of the Constitution, seven members of the Continental Congress and five Revolutionary generals were among the prominent colonists who made initial purchases there. Hence, the spring's reputation as a health resort became firmly established. Borrowing the name of a famous counterpart in England, the General Assembly of Virginia formed the town of Bath on this location in 1776 and created a board of trustees to govern the new town. James Rumsey, who later invented the first successful steamboat, was then contracted to construct five bathhouses and several other public buildings. This officially established the springs as a resort facility". More interesting historic info on Berkeley Springs: https://berkeleysprings.com/oddities-and-legends/secret-destiny-of-berkeley-springs/ The Inn and Park are right in the middle of the downtown Historic District, and after we "took the waters", we found a GREAT bar with yummy, small foodie plates: The Naked Olive Lounge! https://www.nakedolivelounge.com/  Tel: 304-500-2668 The Lounge is chic, friendly, lively, and fun, and Dan and I shared a delicious Smoked Salmon Charcuterie Board made with locally-smoked salmons; he had a glass of wine, while I had a yummy Honey Ginger Bourbon Cocktail. They also have The Naked Olive Shohttps://www.thenakedolive.com/ right next door, which sells a variety of fine olive oils, Balsamic Vinegars from Modena, Italy, and condiments, so of course we had to go in and buy some to take home, including Truffle and Pepper Oils, and their Blackberry Ginger Balsamic for cocktails! (Unfortunately, they can't do tastings at this time).
Honey-Ginger Bourbon

Smoked Salmon Charcuterie Board at The Naked Olive
At The Naked Olive
The next day we went "sightseeing", stopping first outside the Berkeley Castle, which Dan actually bid on many years ago when it came up for auction! (At that time, the bidding opened at $10,000, LOL, and the castle sold for about 100K; it recently sold for $1.4 million...) Closed now to the public, it has a very interesting history, and I would have loved to see it inside, as Dan had, when it was still filled with the original furnishings- it even has a dungeon! Berkeley Castle is perched on a hill overlooking the town of Berkeley Springs, and was built back when the town was called Bath, after the town of the same name in England also famed for its waters, the name given to it by George Washington and pals when they formed a town around the springs in 1776. Bath is still the official name of the tiny municipality that surrounds the mineral springs, as well as the Historic District, which was established in 2009. The castle was designed in the English-Norman architectural style and built by Colonel Samuel Taylor Suit, who was quite a guy: a successful whiskey distiller, Civil War Veteran, honorary Kentucky colonel, and a wealthy, well-connected landowner, businessman, and politician. He built it between 1885 and 1891, entirely for love... and then his widow partied hearty and lost it all... From https://www.onlyinyourstate.com/west-virginia/medieval-castle-wv/ :
Suit, a veteran of the Civil War, met 17-year-old Rosa Pelham, the daughter of a congressman, when he was 46. He fell in love with her and proposed marriage. She refused, and the two parted ways. Five years later, the two ran into each other once again, and once again he proposed marriage. This time she accepted, perhaps due to his solemn pledge to build her a castle in the town of Bath. Later that day, the couple walked up the hill to Warm Springs Ridge and decided it was the perfect spot to build their castle. So, Suit purchased the land and married Rosa a few days later. Construction began in 1885 by 100 German masons. Each stone was hand cut from the silica sandstone mined in the area. It took them until 1891 to complete the castle. Unfortunately, Suit did not live to see his vision completed. He died just short of the castle's completion in 1891. As stipulated in his will, in order for Rosa to receive her inheritance, she must see the castle to completion. So that is exactly what she did. The elite of high society would come to the castle from D.C. and around the country. Each event had a full orchestra and catering. She would even rent entire train cars to bring people in, and further pay for hotels and spas in which they could stay, sometimes for longer than a week. This lavish spending eventually caught up with her, and she was broke by the time she was 50 years old. As a result, the castle was sold at a public auction in 1909, and Rosa moved to a small cottage to raise chickens”. You can't make this stuff, up, kids!    
The Castle on the hill!
Berkeley Castle

The Gate of Berkeley Castle
Outside Berkeley Castle

The original Gate Post, now in the valley below
Dan at the castle he once bid on!
We then Had to go to the Berkeley Springs Brewery: https://www.berkeleyspringsbrewingcompany.com/  Tel: (304) 258-3369 for a beer sampler, as all their beers are made with that special Berkeley Springs spa water, and I just Had to try them! All the beers we tried were tasty, and some of the names were hilarious- such as "Her Dirty Bathwater"! If we can get back, I would Really like to try their Boozy Brisket on a Brioche Bun, and Beer Cocktails! 
Berkeley Springs Brewery
Berkeley Springs Brewery Beer Sampler
We then discovered a winery- the Cold Run Valley Winery- which makes fruit wines from fruits grown on their farm: https://www.facebook.com/pg/Cold-Run-Valley-Winery-104159694368012  Tel: (304) 258-2828 Dale Carlisle, the owner, gave us a tasting of all their wines, and we bought their yummy Strawberry, Blueberry, and Apple-Blueberry-Strawberry wines to take home! 
At Cold Run Winery
Cold Run Winery

Sir John's Run

overs Leap!
Next: WV Road Trip, Part 3: To Shinnston, to meet Punjab the Camel!  West Virginia is open for business-, and #vacation #travel fun! Come on down!