Showing posts with label road trip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label road trip. Show all posts

Thursday, December 24, 2020

Road Trip: Colorado or Bust! Part 1: Planning, Prep, and Trip Tips!

  
Ever since my husband and I returned from our Road Trip across the USA and Canada to Moose Hunt in British Columbia in 2013 (about which I blogged extensively:  https://southernwestvirginia.blogspot.com/2013/12/oh-canada-british-columbia-moose-madness.html is the post about my getting us our moose), we have been talking and dreaming about doing an elk hunt! That moose provided us with years of THE best meat I think I've ever eaten in my life; we both love elk, caribou, and other delicious game, and Dan, who hunted extensively in Alaska, Canada, Virginia, and other places, has been wanting to do an elk hunt for decades. Although our part of West Virginia, like many other places around the nation, was once Elk Country, (our inn, the Elkhorn Inn, is named for Elkhorn Creek, the great wild trout stream which runs behind our building, and the town of Elkhorn in 5 minutes down the road from us...), the elk population in our area became basically nonexistent many years ago. Elk have recently been re-introduced to West Virginia, but it will be many years before they are huntable again. Elk were successfully re-introduced into Kentucky, just across the border, however, and hunts there are now possible, and so every spring we have plunked down $20 for two elk tag raffle tickets from the State of Kentucky Dept. of Fish & Wildlife: https://fw.ky.gov/Hunt/Pages/How-to-Enter-the-Kentucky-Elk-Hunt-Drawing.aspx, in the hope of winning at least one hunt there- and every year so far we've been disappointed. Elk hunts are usually wildly expensive, especially “bull” hunts for hunters who primarily want a “rack” for display- bull elk hunts are often in the $20,000 range and up! But we are not trophy hunters at all- we are meat hunters: we wanted to do a “fill the freezer” rifle elk hunt, and cow elk hunts are often much cheaper, as cows don't have a rack- and the meat is more tender, as well. As I learned from all my “Googling” and internet research (I now know enough about elk hunting to be seriously dangerous, LOL), elk hunting, which is often thought to be primarily in western states such as Montana, Wyoming, Utah, Nebraska, and Colorado, can be done in many states (https://metallens.com/elk-hunting-states/), but it isn't “just a hobby”, like, say, deer hunting- it's an absolute passion and an all-consuming lifestyle for many- especially bow hunters! There are many websites and forums devoted specifically to elk hunting, as well as numerous Facebook pages, YouTube videos, online courses, etc. One great (and free) elk hunting course is available online on the Colorado Parks & Wildlife website: “Elk Hunting University”: https://cpw.state.co.us/learn/Pages/EHU-CH2-L01.aspx 
Dan and I have also wanted to go to Colorado for many years: Dan because he was stationed there while serving in the US Army many years ago and wanted to return, and I, as my grandfather, the fine artist, Yasha Rivkin, had painted a number of beautiful paintings at The Garden of the Gods around 1900, making it a place I have long wished to see in person: 
And as we are both “railfans” who love train travel, we also wanted to take at least one of the many excursion trains Colorado has to offer, as well as enjoy some of the state's many wineries, distilleries, and brew pubs, and unique Colorado things, such as historic gold mines and hot springs! And so, last year I began collecting tourism publications on Colorado, and Googling, and signing up on Colorado tourism websites, and joining blogs and forums, amassing quite the Colorado Dream Trip File! But the COVID fiasco intervened, and resulted in the cancellation of some of our travel plans, and Colorado got put on the back burner... But then, in August, the possibility of a cow elk hunt in Colorado in December materialized, AND our BFF agreed to stay at our Inn and care for our pets while we were away, and it truly seemed like all our Colorado and Elk Hunt stars were aligning... and so we booked the “once in a lifetime” elk hunt we'd long dreamed of!

Oddly and interestingly, although COVID wreaked havoc on our business this year, and forced us to cancel and change many things, including travel plans, we had a wonderful Caribbean cruise on NCL in January (my blog post on “railfanning” the Caribbean: https://southernwestvirginia.blogspot.com/2020/03/railfanning-caribbean-barbados-st-kitts.html) prior to COVID, a great 9-night West Virginia Road Trip in July: (https://southernwestvirginia.blogspot.com/2020/07/west-virginia-road-trip-part-4-cass.html is my 4th post in this 5-part series), and this 3 week hunting Road Trip out to Colorado in December- so we actually wound up traveling MORE this year than we ever have before! And that was a great, good thing, too, as COVID restrictions forcing us to to turn away guests at our Inn all year was absolutely devastating, and the trips we were able to take truly helped us keep our sanity!

After speaking with the elk hunt outfitter and being assured that his cow elk hunts were “99% successful”, and that a 3-day hunt was “more than sufficient” for a successful hunt, (and also that the hunt would be largely done by vehicle, as we're not kids, and hiking for 11 hours a day in the wild isn't something we can- or want to- do, at this time in our lives), I booked a 2-cow elk hunt for us for December 4-6, arriving on Dec. 3, at a cost of just under $6000. Due to my young age, LOL (I was born in 1959), I had to pay for, take, and pass a certified Hunter Education Course in order to purchase a Colorado elk tag, and, thanks to COVID, Colorado is now providing the course online. I took it and passed it, and got my Orange Hunter Card! (Dan, born in 1946, was exempt from that requirement). The course was actually quite interesting, and although I have hunted, successfully, I learned a lot of things! After I passed the course and got my certificate, the outfitter then gave me the lot numbers for his land, and I was able to buy us two cow elk tags from Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) for $500 each. 

Our original plan was to take Amtrak from West Virginia to Colorado, which would have entailed a two-night trip with a stop in Chicago. Although way more expensive than flying, at over $2000.00 for two nights in a small “Roomette” that is so tiny that Amtrak employees refer to it as “the coffin”, I thought it would be romantic and fun to take the sleeper, and enjoy some (hopefully) fine dining, as well as the glorious views along the way, without the stress and aggravation of driving or flying... We thought we'd rent a vehicle in Colorado, and then either ship the processed, frozen elk meat from our hunt home and fly or take Amtrak back, or buy a freezer in Colorado and drive the rental vehicle home. But after 5 full days of trying to make a reservation with Amtrak, and being given wrong information by every single Amtrak employee I spoke to, we realized that Amtrak was, quite apparently and very deliberately, making it absolutely impossible for hunters to take their trains. The issue was our rifles, which we had to have for the hunt, and while Amtrak states on their website that firearms can be checked as baggage in locked, airline-approved cases (which are not cheap, and which we bought, specifically for this trip), their website gives no specifics; when you click the link for more information nothing happens- it was clear that everything concerning transporting firearms has been removed from the Amtrak website. Not one Amtrak employee I spoke with over the course of 5 days, including Supervisors and Mangers, could or would give me straight, factual answers, or provide anything in writing stating the rules and regulations that had to be followed to legally transport a firearm. Instead, in addition to all the misinformation, I was finally told I would have to drive 6 hours to an Amtrak station in northern Virginia, where the firearm information was supposedly posted! After 5 days of calls, and being connected and rec-connected to an endless number of Amtrak employees, all of whom gave me different and conflicting information- and refused to provide anything in writing- I gave up- literally in tears. I then contacted UPS and FEDEX, in the hope that we could ship our rifles to Colorado, either to one of their offices where we could pick them up, to the outfitter, or to a hotel where we would be staying, but that turned out to be impossible, as well. I then called the airlines, including Delta, and got the same, loosey-goosey run-around, with no specifics (“contact TSA” was their answer to everything I asked, and the TSA's website information is loosey-goosey, as well), and nothing in writing or online stating actual rules and regulations for legally transporting a firearm. It became crystal clear that no one wanted our money or our business, and that the only way we were going to get to Colorado with our rifles and be able to hunt was if we drove our 230,000 mile pick-up truck there and back. Which is what Dan wanted to do, anyway. LOL(This was actually the same reason we wound up doing a month-long Road Trip across the USA to B.C. Canada to hunt in 2013, hauling a 7-foot freezer in the back of our pick-up truck; that turned out to be the only way that we could take our rifles, and definitely get the meat back home without it spoiling).
Dan likes to drive- thank goodness- and we do enjoy Road Trips, which enable us to stop along the way to see and do interesting things on the spur of the moment, but he was also convinced that driving would be cheaper. Riiiiiight...
Once we had decided that we would be doing a Road Trip to Colorado and back (and would be gone about 3 weeks), the next thing we had to do was buy a “camper top” for our pick-up truck- which cost the same $2200.00 that Amtrak would have charged us for a 2-night trip. LOL
Then Dan had to get the truck checked out and serviced to make sure it would make the trip (and yes, we have AAA https://www.aaa.com/AAA_Travel/Travel/travel.htm- and wouldn't dream of driving anywhere without it), and we had to buy a freezer for the elk meat we intended to bring home- and in The Era Of COVID Shortages, that proved to be quite the challenge! We spent several weeks- literally- trying to buy a freezer, both online and at an assortment of brick-and-mortar stores, including Walmart, Sam's Club, and Lowe's, as well as amazon, eBay, and others, but no one had them in stock! Every time I had one in my online cart, it would mysteriously vanish the second I pressed the “Buy It Now” button and be “out of stock”! (There was one seller on amazon who had a freezer for sale, but he was in the Ukraine, and we wouldn't get it until Feb. 2021. LOL) We finally snagged a 7-cubic foot chest freezer for $199.00 at a Rural King https://www.ruralking.com/ in Wytheville, Virginia: while Dan waited in the parking lot of the Bluefield, WV Rural King (where they didn't have one in stock), I managed to buy one online from their Wytheville, VA store, after which Dan immediately drove there and picked it up! Phew! (And YAY! for Rural King!)

The next thing we had to do was buy a number of things that the outfitter recommended, such as camo leg gaiters (which we never used, LOL), rifle scope covers (which we had to ditch as they kept falling off and getting in the way), a shooting stick (which broke almost immediately, and which we thus didn't have, and didn't need), Blaze Orange hats and vests, which are required in order to rifle hunt elk in Colorado, and some new hunting duds, including Glommets (glove/mittens), long underwear, socks (Heat Holders are wonderful!), a new pair of hunting boots for Dan, targets for practice, eye protection and ear plugs, bullets for both rifles, and Scent Killer wash and spray... I also bought us two "Ghillie" masks, figuring that if we were forced into wearing masks on this trip at least we'd have really cool (and hilarious) ones... 
I indulged myself in a Boonie Packer Safari Rifle Sling: https://www.midwayusa.com/product/2262497974/ , a new pair of spiffy, pink camo sunglasses, and a camo headband, and an absolutely Adorable camo makeup palette that included 5 colors of tan, brown, black, and green AND a little mirror- so I could feel like a Huntress again, and do a “smoky eye” without having to smear my face with real dirt. LOL  
My favorite stores for hunting supplies and gear are Cabela's https://www.cabelas.com/, Midway https://www.midwayusa.com/, and Wing Supply https://www.wingsupply.com/, but I often find what I want- especially when it comes to clothing and footwear- on sites like Cabela's first, and then try to score them for cheap on eBay http://www.ebay.com or Poshmark http://www.poshmark.com! :-) (That's how I got my lovely pair of Ugg booties for this trip, and Dan's Eddie Bauer flannel-lined jeans and flannel shirts...) I dug out our 2013 hunting clothes, including our camo bibs and jackets, my fur-lined “Elmer Fudd” hat, camo purse and heels, and wonderfully comfy Cabela's She hunting boots, and I found my Lucky Hunting Charm from the moose hunt: my “Hello Kitty with an AK” pendant:

The dining room table was now piled so high with Hunting Stuff that we could have opened a branch of Cabela's at the Elkhorn Inn! LOL 
And then we had to practice target shooting with our rifles, as we hadn't used them since the 2013 hunt! 

As we live in the Extremely Rural mountains of southern WV where there are no ranges, we did what we, and everyone else around here, does, to practice target shooting: drove up into the mountains, found a place in the middle of nowhere with a good backstop, taped up our targets, paced back 200 yards, and shot, standing, kneeling, or prone- after which I posted my good, “center mass” targets (I had bought a couple of elk targets to augment the standard, circle ones) on Facebook to impress my friends. LOL Yessiree, ma'am: after 18 years here, this NYC-born gal is now a Real West Virginian! 
(Side note: When we arrived at the outfitter, and asked to sight our rifles to make sure nothing had messed up in transit, he took us to his “shooting table”, which was a table with an attached bench and a gun rest, about 300 yards from a target. I had No Clue how to shoot from a shooting table, having never done so, and I squirmed about, trying to find a comfortable position from which to shoot accurately, while the outfitter acted like there was something wrong with me, and got a Very Concerned Look on his face. I tried to explain to him that in the Army (I was a Sgt. In the IDF, 1984-1986) I always target shot prone, resting on sandbags, and at the range or in the field, always standing up or kneeling, without a gun rest or a shooting stick, and that I thus had no clue how to shoot sitting at a table, but I don't think he believed me. LOL)
Then we had to pack- and I, as usual, took WAY too many pairs of shoes. LOL Our bulky hunting gear filled one entire suitcase, and we each had a suitcase of other clothes and shoes, a giant bag of toiletries, and boots and coats! Dan was actually concerned that, along with the freezer, we wouldn't be able to get it all into the truck. LOL
And then I had to map out our road trip to Colorado- which for me is The Fun Part!
Having both Hilton and IHG hotel-branded credit cards had enabled us to accrue a lot of points, and I used the IHG points, and points we had accrued on our Capital One credit card, to book all six nights of our trip out to Colorado, saving us well over $1000! We couldn't leave until Nov. 27, and had to be at the outfitter near Meeker, Colorado on Dec. 3, so I planned our six-night trip there using mapquest http://www.mapquest.com, as I usually do, with approx. 4 - 5 hours of driving each day, basically taking I-70 due west. (Yes, you can do it a lot faster than that, but that's no fun- especially as you get older- and we like to be able to stop when we discover cool things along the way, such as historic sites and museums, as well as wineries and distilleries, and nice restaurants!) I only booked hotels for the 6 night trip out to Colorado, as after the hunt there were things we wanted to see and do in Colorado, such as take an excursion train, and go to the Garden of the Gods, an historic gold mine, and the hot springs, and we didn't know exactly how long it would take us to get home. On the way back, I was able to use our Hilton Honors points to book hotels as we needed them, using my iPhone. :-) 
Packed up and ready to go, I went to the salon (Beauty Concepts in Bluefield, WV https://www.beautyconceptswv.com/ is my new favorite salon here) to have my hair cut, and treated myself to a pedicure, and Dan went to the barber. Thus made suitably Vacation Spiffy, we celebrated Thanksgiving with our BFF and his son, and the next morning, with the freezer, our rifles, and suitcases loaded on the truck (and yes, everything fit, LOL), we kissed our dogs and kitty on their noses and headed west!

Next: First stop: Kentucky and the Distillery Trail!

Road Trip Tips:

  • Use your hotel point credit cards to accrue points- and use them! Don't let them sit there until they expire!! We are primarily loyal to Hilton properties (Hilton, Hilton Garden Inn, Hampton Inn, Embassy Suites, etc.), and IHG (Holiday Inn, Holiday Inn Express, Intercontinental, etc.) at this time, as we have enjoyed many years of using their frequent guest programs and credit cards for free hotel stays all over the world, as well as throughout the USA, and have credit cards for both, which allow us to accrue points even when we're not traveling. Hotel-branded credit cards often give sign-up bonuses, too: the American Express Hilton card gave us a sign up bonus of 100,000 Hilton Honors points, which covered 5 nights of hotels rooms on this trip! We also used points we had accrued on our Capital One credit card for two lodgings in Colorado: a fine, “boutique” hotel in Denver, and a lovely B&B in Grand Junction.

  • As you plan your trip (I use http://www.mapquest.com, and I make an old fashioned "calendar chart" on paper with a pen, Luddite that I am), look up the places where you will be stopping online, and do internet searches for unique, independent lodgings, such as bed-and-breakfasts, historic inns, hot spring hotels, etc., as well as cool things to see and do. We stayed at two hot spring hotels in Colorado, as well as a lovely B&B. TripAdvisor, airbnb, and many other sites list unique lodgings. One of the sites I love to peruse is “Roadside America”: https://www.roadsideamerica.com/ which has tons of cool, and “off-the-beaten-path” things to see in every state! TripAdvisor and Yelp are great for finding attractions and restaurants on the road. State and city tourism websites are excellent sources, as well, and many states have winery, brewery, and distillery websites (Distillery Trail is a good one, too: https://www.distillerytrail.com/) and maps, as well as special pages and sites for music, the arts, outdoor activities, history, etc. Researching your trip takes time, but this really is The Fun Part- you basically start enjoying your trip the minute you start planning it!

  • Have TWO map apps on your cell phone. One for the route to where you are headed that day (such as your lodging), and one to find cool stuff along the way, such as historic sites, museums, wineries, distilleries, breweries and great restaurants! While Dan drives, I “ride shotgun” and hunt for cool things to see and do on my iPhone!

  • Take “old-school” paper maps of where you will be going, and paper copies of all your hotel reservation confirmations, etc. Do this even if you have “everything” on your cellphone. You WILL find yourself in places with no cell phone reception and no internet access. Trust me!

  • Take a notebook or a journal, and a pen. Trust me!

  • Have at least $200 in cash, as well as credit cards. While paying by credit card is often the best bet, there are times when it isn't, or isn't even possible, and you will want and need cash for tolls, tips, parking meters, and other things. Trust me!

  • Get AAA coverage for your vehicle, (this is non-negotiable as far as we are concerned), and then get the free AAA Guide Books for all the states you will be traveling through. They have great information, list excellent restaurants, and provide hotel ratings and details, such as if the hotel has an electric outlet for plugging in a freezer... something that even hotel staff don't often know! The AAA books were absolutely indispensable for our Canadian Road Trip, as our GPS surprised us and didn't work in Canada! Many hotels and attractions also give discounts for AAA members, as well. Whenever we pay for something I always as if they have a discount for seniors, military, or AAA members- and most do!

  • In addition to your toiletries, vitamins, medications, etc., buy, and take with you, every OTC (over the counter) medication you think you Might possibly want or need, such as Pepto-Bismol, Imodium, Senokot, Advil, Benadryl, iodine, tea tree oil, etc., as well as bandages, duct tape (a MUST for any road trip!), a sewing kit, etc. That way you won't need any of it. :-)

  • Given the COVID situation and the constantly changing rules and regulations, openings, and closings, CALL every place you want to go, and speak to a Real Person before you book! Do NOT rely on website information, as many websites are not being kept updated, and the information on them is often inaccurate.

  • My best Travel Beauty Tip is to use the sugar packets you will find everywhere in lieu of sugar scrub! Sugar is an excellent and gentle exfoliator, and it's one less thing to pack!

  • Buy things you can eat and drink as souvenirs to take home. That way you can extend the fun of your trip by eating and drinking them, remembering all the cool stuff you did while gaining weight. LOL Wine from wineries, booze from distilleries, local honey, oils, hot sauces, condiments, candies... you get the idea! My other favorite souvenirs are books, and locally made art and crafts, especially by artists and craftspeople we meet and get to know...

  • Yes, you can do a road trip wearing a pair of sweatpants, a fleece, and booties every day, but that's no fun! Take (and wear) the nice clothes you rarely get to wear, and makeup, and have some fun dressing up for dinner- and reminding each other of why you fell for each other in the first place! :-)

  • Once you get home, take the time to review all the wonderful places you've been, and all the great things you've done, eaten, drank, or seen on TripAdvisor, Yelp, and other review sites. As we know, having an historic inn in West Virginia for 18 years, great reviews can truly help businesses, especially small businesses, many of which are literally struggling now simply to keep their doors open. Do NOT bother to review places you didn't enjoy. Let it go! If we have a problem somewhere, we take it up with the manager or owner of the property right then and there, and almost always get it resolved. If not, when we get home I contact the owner in writing, and again, almost always get the issue resolved. For that reason, I have well over 100 reviews on Trip Advisor and they are all 4 and 5-star ones, with photos, to prove we really did the things we reviewed!

  • Travel with an open mind and as few preconceived notions as possible, remain flexible and optimistic, don't live in fear or sweat the small stuff, and- most importantly- HAVE FUN! Once you hit 50, almost everything you do seems like a “bucket list” event, so we try to glean as much fun and joy as possible from all our trips!

What are your best Road Trip Tips? 
Tell me in the comments so we'll know for next time! :-)

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 4: Cass Scenic Railroad & The Ice Age Forest!

Cass Scenic Railroad
Sharp's Kissing Bridge
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 4: Cass Scenic Railroad, a Kissing Bridge, and the Ice Age Forest!
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


Die-hard "railfans" (train-lovers, often called "foamers", LOL) that we obviously are, we went to Cass to ride the Cass Scenic Railroad:  https://mountainrail.com/tour/CassScenicRailroad/  Tel: (304) 636-9477

The Cass Scenic Railroad is the same line built in 1901 to haul lumber down from the mountain to the mill in Cass, and the locomotives are the same, huge Shay locomotives used in Cass during that time! Many of the passenger cars are old logging flat cars that have been refurbished, as well, and the little red cabooses are downright adorbs! Cass is home to the world's largest fleet of geared Shay locomotives: five Shays, one Heisler, and one Climax happily reside there- it's railfan heaven! The legendary turn-of-the-century class C-80 Shay, #5, has been toiling up Cheat Mountain for nearly 115 years, making it one of the oldest engines in continuous service on its original line, and the oldest operable Shay in existence! Cass is another, total "Must-Do" for any railfan, and with its fabulous, loud train whistle and billowing steam smoke as it chugs up the mountain, tons of fun for kids of all ages!
We took a Cass steam train excursion in the summer of 2002 when we first came to West Virginia, and really enjoyed it; we bought our first piece of art in West Virginia- our wonderful "Little Bear" chainsaw sculpture- from a man who was carving tree trunks into magnificent statues with a chainsaw in his driveway right outside of Cass! 
"Little Bear"
 At that time, we took the Cass excursion up to Whittaker Station, where we enjoyed an outdoor picnic lunch and live music. This time we took the longer, 4.5 hour, 22 mile excursion all the way up to Bald Knob, and had a tasty "Hobo Lunch" of sandwiches on board. We spent about 1/2 hour at Bald Knob, and got to stretch our legs in the sunshine, take in the magnificent view, and shoot lots of cool photos of the fabulous Shay locomotive! Railfan guests of our inn did a "Castaway Caboose" overnight there years ago, and Dan and I both hope we can get back to do that! We arrived at the station an hour early, at 11am, so we had time to see the movie about the history of Cass and the diorama of the town in its hey-day, and visit the Museum, which adjoins their Last Run Restaurant and Company Store. After the excursion we returnedk to the store and bought West Virginia artisan salt from J.Q. Dickinson Salt Works: https://www.jqdsalt.com/, moonshine praline pecans, and locally-made jams, including a fab and zingy Jalapeno-Cherry Jam!
The Shay at the Station, ready to board!
Getting ready to board!

Chugging up the mountain!






Caboose!











Caboose!

Up the mountain!

Up the mountain!

Watering the engine...

The view!


The view!

Railfans Dan & Elisse!

Up the mountain!


View from Bald Knob

At Bald Knob

At Bald Knob

Maintenance at Bald Knob...
On the way down the mountain...
Oiling the engine...





Cass




Exhibit of Logger ID Tags

Cass Loggers

An Immigrant's Story...

A really cool ride on the rails!



































































Although Cass Scenic Railroad State Park now has restored Company Houses available for lodging: https://reservations.wvstateparks.com/products/lodging, they are quite large, with three bedrooms, and so we chose to stay for our two nights at the Morning Glory Inn in Slatyfork, a lovely B-&-B near the Snowshoe Ski Resort, as well as Cass: https://www.morninggloryinn.com/ Tel: (304) 572-5000. Morning Glory currently has a "no contact" check-in and check-out procedure in effect, and breakfast was provided for us in our guest room.
Morning Glory Inn

Morning Glory Inn
Morning Glory Inn














For dinner we drove about 20 minutes into Marlinton, where we found the Greenbrier Grille and Lodge: https://www.greenbriergrille.com/ , a nice restaurant with an outdoor deck overlooking the Greenbrier River where we could enjoy our dinner and a glass of wine, and throw corn down to feed the ducks and geese their dinner! 
Geese & ducks at Greenbrier Grille

Feeding the geese & ducks at Greenbrier Grille
 A cool Marlinton mural...

Leaving Slatyfork the next morning, we stopped at Sharp's Kissing Bridge on US 219, the red covered bridge across from the cool and fun Sharp's Country Store https://sharpscountrystore.com/Welcome/, a place we discovered years ago on another railfan road trip thru West Virginia to Elkins, and kissed again on the bridge! The red covered bridge across the Big Spring Fork of the Elk River was built in 2005 by Ken Gibson for his great uncle, Dave Sharp. Dave had wished to one day own a red covered bridge, as he remembered sneaking a kiss in such a bridge! Unfortunately the store wasn't open when we were there this time, but at least we got to kiss on the bridge! Sharp's Kissing Bridge is on Roadside America, a site that lists all sorts of cool things to see across the nation: https://www.roadsideamerica.com/ 


Sharp's Kissing Bridge
At Sharp's

After kissing on the Kissing Bridge!
"Falling Man Barn" at Sharp's- you can't miss it!
We drove the Highland Scenic Highway:
https://www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/regions/eastern/HighlandScenicHighway/index.shtml through this area, which is a world-famous and gorgeous "Must-do" drive in West Virginia. There is truly magnificent scenery to enjoy, hiking trails along the way, geological and vegetative wonders, trout streams, and wildflowers out the wazoo!

Highlands Scenic Highway

Cool info from
https://adventure.howstuffworks.com/scenic-drive-in-west-virginia-highland-scenic-highway-ga.htm: "As an isolated area with abundant natural resources, the wilderness of the Highland Scenic Highway was an early haven for Americans seeking to avoid the horrors of the Civil War. Families who moved to the area at this time maintained their seclusion for decades. In the 1960s, the descendants of these families experienced a visit from people researching for the Smithsonian Institution. As the researchers studied and recorded the oral histories of the families in this area, they discovered that the language spoken was still the Elizabethan English of the early U.S. settlers. Tradition and folk tales of the area have been recorded and are a remnant of the mountain cultures of the East".
The center of West Virginia is also home to a unique "tundra" climate in some places, where high elevation, cold weather, and geology combined to create areas with plants and animals usually only found in the arctic, such as Red Spruce Trees, the Canada Mayflower, and the Snowshoe Hare, and we were able to see a bit of that on this trip: Black Mountain and Cranberry Glades, and the Ice Age Forest, a relic of the last Ice Age!

Ice Age Forest
Black Mountain...

Ice Age Forest
Black Mountain....



Black Mountain

At Black Mountain
Black Mountain

Wildflowers...
Cranberry Glades





















Next: WV Road Trip, Part 5: Summersville & Fayetteville for Wine and Food! 
West Virginia is open for business, and #vacation #travel fun! Come on down!