Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Charleston, WV to Olean, NY - July 30


Charleston, WV to Olean, NY - July 30

We had a long travel day today from West Virginia through Ohio where we had lunch at Donato’s Pizza. We stopped at Malley’s Chocolate shop (a chain) where we bought the Buckeye candies the last time we were in Ohio. 

 the Bridge over the Ohio River
great shot of the Ohio border sign in the rain.....


Then, we continued through Pennsylvania and finally arrived in Olean, New York. We got settled into the Fairfield and then out for some grocery shopping and then back for dinner at the hotel. 



It was on and off rain all day, cloudy when it wasn’t raining and then some occasional sun bursts.

Tomorrow, Tom & Cathy are meeting us at the hotel, and we are going hiking at the Allegany State Park. We are very excited to spend the day with them.

Monday, July 29, 2019

New River Gorge Bridge – Fayetteville, WV - July 29


New River Gorge Bridge – Fayetteville, WV - July 29

We drove about an hour or so to visit the Canyon Rim Visitor Center for the New River Gorge National River & Bridge. Along the way, we stopped at Kanawha Falls. There was a dam there making some rapids (falls). 
 Kanawha Falls









 the hills and everything was covered by the invasive vine - made you feel like you shouldn't stand still long in these parts.....






We started with the short film on the history of the river and the bridge. Despite the name New River, it actually is one of the oldest rivers in the World.

The bridge was completed on October 22, 1977 and it reduced a 40-minute drive down narrow mountain roads to less than a minute. It is the longest steel span in the western hemisphere and the third highest in the United States.

They offer a Bridge Walk which we didn’t have time for (takes 2 to 3 hours and we only had 1 day here) We did the Sydney Harbor Bridge Climb which was awesome, but this was just a flat walk over the lovely gorge on a 2 foot wide catwalk. (you are tethered to a safety cable)

We checked out the view of the gorge from the Visitor’s Center and then walked to a coupe of the viewing areas. One had 178 steps down to the best view. After that we walked to a view that showed the cars going across. (we drove across it a couple of times today)







 New River Gorge National River


 Tunney Hunsaker Bridge - we crossed it later





We then drove across the street to take a short hike on the Burnwood Trail. It was a 1.2 mile easy trail. 
 Burnwood Trail



 Greg on the trail






It was now lunch time and we went to the Secret Sandwich Society. Not such a secret as people were lined up outside the door. They had a lot of “gourmet” sandwiches named after presidents. I had the Polk, which was a grilled chicken with chipotle bacon jam, roasted garlic mayo, home-made bread and butter pickles on a brioche bun. Greg had the Adams which was slow roasted pork shoulder, honey butter, pimiento cheese, jalapeno and pickles on a brioche bun. Both came with home-made chips. YUM!
crossing the New River Gorge Bridge 


 Secret Sandwich Society Restaurant

 my chicken sandwich
 Greg's pork sandwich

mural in town

After lunch we did the 45-minute, 8-mile drive which works its way to the bottom of the gorge with a series of hairpin turns. There were some pull-offs for great views.




 under the bridge

 Greg


 Red-eyed Vireo
 thistle


 people doing the bridge walk


At the bottom, we came to the historic sites of Fayette and South Fayette. We crossed over the Tunney Hunsaker Bridge over the New River. We got out and walked across the bridge and there were a lot of people rafting. 
 railroad tracks
 Tunney Hunsaker Bridge



 white water rafters

 Greg



 kayakers








 juvenile or female House Finch






The road then winds back to the top in Fayetteville where we stopped for hot fudge sundaes before driving back to the hotel.

On the way we passed The Company Store. It is a former coal company store which is now a museum of the heritage of the West Virginia Coal Miner, his family, and Coal Camp Life as well as modern Appalachian society for the mining of coal today. It is closed for remodeling or it would have been interesting to visit it. Earlier in the day we passed some active coal mines.

Since it had everything the miners needed to support their families and they were paid in company specific script that they could trade for what they needed. Hence, the term “I owe my soul to the company store”. 
The Company Store - museum now

Coal helped build the United States. Without coal and those who mined it, the large-scale production of steel would have been nearly impossible, and it was plentiful steel that facilitated the building boom and the war effort during the two World Wars. The Whipple Company Store is a standing tribute to these important coal miners and their families.

OK, that was my “history lesson”. 

We got back to the hotel and started packing up to leave tomorrow for Olean, NY. We are getting very excited about seeing Cathy & Tom day after tomorrow!