24 Sept –
Our first stop of the day at the Blackwater
Falls State Park
in West Virginia
was at the “Lodge” where we had some internet so we published the last blog. On
thru the great valleys and hills of the Allegheny
Mountains (part of the Appalachians ) thru beautiful forests and towns to Cass
where we will take a scenic train ride tomorrow. Our friends, Sue and Don from Connecticut , had wised
us up to a private little camp near Cass which we found easily. The train goes
right passed the camp so we watched it go by.
25 Sept –
Back down to the town to pick up our tickets for the Cass Scenic Train trip.
Before the train left we looked into the General Store. Cass was a logging town
where there was a large sawmill and where the train brought the logs down from
the mountains. Our trip was up to Bald Knob, 11 miles away but all uphill. The
engines here are all steam and specially designed to tackle the up to 9% gradient
of the trip. The engines are a “Shay” design meaning that the pistons (3) are
vertical and drive a horizontal drive shaft which transfers the power thru cogs
to six sets of wheels. This means that they had lots of towing power without
losing traction.
The carriages are converted logging wagons and open sided
giving great views. The fall colours of the trees were beautiful ranging from
brown, gold and red to even almost magenta. The noise, smell and smoke from a
steam engine working hard was fantastic. It took 2 ¼ hours to get to the top.
On the way we stopped to pick up our packed lunch from another train and to top
up with water. The engine uses 4 ½ tons of coal for the trip. At the top it was
very cold as we were at 4700ft. The day was overcast but the view over
26 Sept –
It rained all night and but it had stopped as we left and drove 10 miles to the
Green Bank National Radio Astronomy Observatory. After a look around the
interesting exhibitions we went on a tour of the radio telescopes. This was
quite a contrast to the 1900s technology just 10 miles away. These are a series
of huge dishes listening to the faint radio signals radiating from the stars.
The site of this facility was selected because the area is very sparsely populated
and therefore there is little interference for the sensitive receivers. The
most spectacular is the huge Green Bank Telescope built in 2000 and the biggest
trackable radio telescope in the world.
It is also the biggest moving object on
land in the world. It is 14 stories high and the dish is 120m x 100m easily
fitting a football pitch. The tour guide was a scientist and was very good with
lots of facts that may have gone over the head of some of the old ladies. Unfortunately
we could not take photos (interference) from right under the telescope but it
was an awesome sight. Back on the road thru the hillbilly valleys of
27 Sept – A
little more “Deliverance country” before it turned into rich farming land,
mostly dairying. We stopped at the visitors centre for the New River Gorge
National River
where we talked to a ranger and watched a video. No idea why it is called the New River as it is ancient. We followed down the gorge
and camped at the Pipestem
State Park . It drizzled
off and on all day. We took inside photos for sale purposes at the end of next
year.
28 Sept –
We drove to the lodge which is on the rim of the gorge but the mist is down and
the views were not as great as they should have been. We used the internet and
the mist lifted a bit so we took the gondola ride down into the gorge. Back on
the road and over the West Virginia/Virginia border. Then it all turned a bit
pear-shaped as the road we were following suddenly was closed for repairs. We
followed a 16 mile detour along a very narrow windy country road. The farm
country was very nice however! After a lunch break at an intersection (with
many funny looks from the locals), we continued on up and down and up and down
another very windy hilly road until we eventually found our planned overnight
stop at Hungry Mother State Park .
No idea why it has this name. The camp host was amazed that we had come on that
route. “Nobody comes here via ‘The Dragons Back’” she said. Well named we
thought.
29 Sept -
We drove thru the very populated area around Bristol
(where we did our last grocery shop for this year) and Johnson City on the I – 81. It was a bit hair
raising drive as it was teaming and the trucks passing at 70 mph kick up a huge
spray. At Bristol
we also crossed the Virginia/Tennessee border. We stopped at the Davy Crockett
State Park . This is where
he was born and in a break in the weather we went to a museum and his log
cabin, probably a replica! There was some internet so we upgraded our seats
from L.A to Auckland and booked two state parks
in Florida
down in the “Keys” for next year. Got
some of the last sites.
30 Sept –
We are headed to The Great Smoky Mountain National Park today. Before entering
the park we drove thru Pigeon Forge. This is a 7 mile long stretch of theme parks,
souvenir shops, restaurants and discount malls. It was a mercifully quick shop
for gifts for the grand kids at one of these malls. The whole area was very tacky
and we were happy to reach the National Park which was very busy.
At the
visitor’s centre the ranger told us that the camp we had hoped to stay in was
fully booked. This seemed strange as the weather was miserable with a bad
forecast for the weekend. It’s all to do with a hurricane between the
1 Oct – We
drove the road that goes thru the Great Smoky Mountain N.P. stopping to walk a
2 ½ mile trail to the Laurel
Falls . The falls were
pretty but the views over the mountains were obscured by mist. Half way along
the 33 mile drive we reached the top at Newfound Gap (5000ft) and crossed the
Tennessee/North Carolina border. The mist cleared and we eventually got some
views of the Smoky
Mountains . Down in the
valley we camped at Smokemont, still in the N.P. Our plan is to stay two nights
here and do a lengthy hike tomorrow. Mid afternoon it clouded over and soon we
had torrential rain, thunder and lightning. The nearby creek rose and became a
torrent.
2 Oct – It
rained all night but not as heavily and the creek went down again. We checked
with the camp host who reassured us that the creek would not flood but that
there was still heavy rain due for a few days. North Carolina has been declared in a state
of civil emergency. It either rained or drizzled the whole day. So much for our
planned hike! It is a shame that we have not seen the Great Smoky Mountain N.P.
at its best.
3 Oct – We
are sick of the rain so decided to head south towards Atlanta where we fly home from on Thursday.
It rained all the way to where we are stopped for the night at a little state
park just over the North Carolina/Georgia border. There was a lot of surface
water on the road but no flooding. Hopefully the tail end of the hurricane will
clear out tomorrow.
4 Oct –
Overcast but not raining at last! We continued on for 90 miles towards Atlanta and stopped at another Georgian state park only 30
miles from an RV park in Atlanta
which we have booked for Monday and Tuesday nights. We took the opportunity to
open all the windows and vents so that “Ernie” can dry out the accumulated
condensation. Hopefully the next two days will be fine and we can complete the
process. We have a nice view of a lake and sat outside for a couple of hours
watching a couple of turtle sitting on a floating log.
5 Oct – For
the first time in ages it did not rain overnight and we walked around the camp
before driving to our pre-booked RV Park in the outskirts of Atlanta .
6 Oct –
Today is a pack up day and we spent all day cleaning, washing and closing
“Ernie” down for the year. It was a nice sunny day so we could air all the
bedding.
7 Oct –
This is our last full day in the USA for this year. We will post
this last blog, pack our bags, drain the tanks and drive to the storage place
about 12 miles away. After completing the paper work and putting the bikes
inside, we will catch a taxi to an airport hotel for the night. Our long, long
flight starts on Thursday at 6:00am with a flight to Denver ,
then to L.A.
and home a total of about 38 hours with the layovers.
We have
really enjoyed this year’s trip. We have covered 12,000 odd miles and with totally
different country. From the steamy south to the cooler Great Lakes and Canada .
We will spend one more year exploring the east coast states and hopefully Nova Scotia . Where we
finish our trip next year will depend on where we sell “Ernie”. He will be up
for sale around the end of September 2016. Anyone interested???