Thursday, September 29, 2016

Midwest Adventure: The Final Leg

Our trip home was a little but convoluted, but we made it. 

When we left Peoria, Scott wanted to swing north and look for some dark skies in hopes of capturing some aurora. (I swear, we need to just go live near the Arctic Circle for a couple of weeks; it would be easier than making all these trips!) So, we headed toward South Dakota.

But, the weather didn't cooperate, so we changed directions and headed toward home. Of course, we had added enough time to the trip to extend it to two days.

Pipestone National Monument
Our first stop was Pipestone National Monument in Minnesota (a new National Monument for me -- #52 of 115).

Stone pipes
Named for catlinite, or "pipestone," which has been traditionally used by the Plains Indians to make ceremonial pipes, the park protects pipestone quarries. These quarries, sacred to Dakota, Lakota and other tribes of Native Americans, were neutral territory where all Nations could quarry stone for their ceremonial pipes.

Catlinite
As the United States grew westward in the 19th century, pipes found their way into white society through trade. To protect their source, the Yankton Sioux secured unrestricted access to the quarries in 1858. The land was acquired by the federal government in 1893 and the National Monument was established in 1937. Today, only people of Native American ancestry are allowed to quarry the pipestone. 

The Upper Midwest Indian Cultural Center, located inside the Visitor Center, features demonstrations of pipemaking by native craftworkers using the stone from the quarries. The gentleman making pipes the day we were there learned the technique from his mother when he was a teenager and had been making pipes for 37 years.

Craftsman
I walked the three-quarter-mile trail to the pipestone quarries ...

Loop trail
...and nearby Winniwassa falls ...

The falls
Of course, since I wasn't planning to hike, I didn't put on insect repellant  -- a big mistake -- especially since I stood by the pond for awhile taking pictures of a Great Blue Heron (I paid a price for that!) ...

A buggy stop
Nebraska
After Pipestone, we headed toward home, crossing over the Missouri River as we moved into Nebraska.

A view from above
On the way through northern Nebraska, I finally got some pictures of a White-Faced Ibis (not the best angle, but I have been chasing these things for months) ... 

Success!
I guess Nebraska is a great birding site, because in that one drive, I saw lots of birds, including American White Pelicans ...

A whole flock
... and a Black-crowned Night Heron ...

Always a good spotting
The sunflower season was ending, but there were still lots of fields along the way. You can't get more Nebraska than that.

Tired sunflowers
Chimney Rock
Then, as we neared our next destination, Chimney Rock National Historic Site, I captured a Swainson's Hawk as it took off ...

 Nice launch
... and grabbed a shot of a Common Grackle ...

Bird on a wire
I was just recently in Chimney Rock, you can read about it (and Scotts Bluff National Monument) here

One of the most important landmarks along the Oregon Trail, Chimney Rock was a visible (very visible) symbol that the long trek along the prairie was over and that the mountains were ahead. We arrived just as the weather cleared up and took a quick swing through the Visitor Center, which is operated by the Nebraska Historical Society.

Chimney Rock
It features lots of information about the trail, including early pictures of Chimney Rock (which was taller before being reduced by a lightning strike) and multiple examples of how the rock was featured in Nebraska tourism advertising.

Scenes from the Visitors Center
Scotts Bluff
Our final stop on our Midwest Adventure (I guess Nebraska is still sort of Midwest, maybe ...) was Scotts Bluff National Monument ...

Scott at Scotts Buff
We didn't stay very long, just enough to look at the 800-foot-tall bluffs that tower over the North Platte River. We couldn't drive up to the top without unhooking the trailer (of course, that didn't occur to me until we got there), so we didn't get the full impact. But, I had just been there.

Scotts Bluff
Oh, and while we were there, we had our last meal on the trip -- the same thing we had when we started out -- Runza. Those little pastries filled with meat, onions, cheese and cabbage (yes, cabbage) are really yummy. 

Much better than the UP pasties!

Trip date: August 12-September 5, 2016

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Midwest Adventure: All Over the Place

The next part of our trip gets a bit convoluted. Originally, we were heading straight from Cincinnati to visit my sister, Linda, in Peoria before heading home. Then, Scott decided he wanted to detour to Nashville to visit the American Picker's store. So, I rearranged the end of the trip and made hotel reservations in Nashville.

Then, as we were heading south from Cincinnati, Scott decided he didn't want to drive all the way to Nashville and back. Fortunately, the Best Western in Nashville cancelled our reservation even though the website said I couldn't. It never hurts to ask! Thanks, BW. I am, after all, a loyal customer.

So, instead of just turning around, we decided to hit Mammoth Cave National Park ...

Mammoth Cave
... and Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area ...

An eastern Bison
Both are in Kentucky.

Mammoth Cave National Park
Both Scott and I had already visited Mammoth Cave National Park -- me in 2000 and him way back in 1959. So, this wasn't a new National Park for us, but we did participate in a different tour than I had done before. Of course, Scott can't recall what tour he did when he was six (I suspect the tours were different then).

There are multiple tours offered in different parts of the cave, varying in length, time (2-6 hours), difficulty and price ($11-55 for an adult). Many parts of the cave are lit, but some tours are taken with paraffin lamps, just like early cavers used. We went on the Frozen Niagara Tour, which is the shortest, but covers all the different types of formations all in one area. It begins at a different entrance than the other tours (it is in the far lower righthand corner of the cave map). 


Map: NPS
To get to this tour, we took a bus and entered through an air-locked door. Like all cave tours, it was led by Park Ranger.

Off to our tour
Mammoth Cave is the longest cave system known in the world, with 405 miles of surveyed passageways. New discoveries and connections add several miles each year. 

The upper sandstone caprock under which the caves formed is relatively hard for water to penetrate except where cracks occur. Therefore, many of the older, upper passages are dry, with no stalactites, stalagmites or other formations that require flowing or dripping water to develop. But, the caprock layer has been dissolved and eroded at many locations. Where water enters the cave, the areas are still "alive," with formations constantly forming. Frozen Niagara is "alive." Because oil from the skin can seal off growing parts of the cave, tourists must be careful not to leave the paved paths or touch anything other than the railings.

This tour was very impressive in a very small area -- there wasn't any climbing and very little walking.

Views of the cave
Humans found the caves as early as 6,000 years ago. Pre-Columbian mummies, cane torches, drawings, gourd fragments, and woven grass moccasin slippers have been found in the caves. There is no evidence of use past the archaic period, however, which has long puzzled researchers.

The first white person to "discover" Mammoth Cave was either John or Francis Houchin, who found an entrance in 1797 while tracking a Bear. 

Cavern wall
Beginning in 1798, the cave was the site of commercial mining of saltpeter, which became important during the War of 1812 (saltpeter is in gunpowder). After the war when prices fell, Mammoth Cave became a minor tourist attraction with slaves serving as tour guides. In fact, it was a slave guide who, during the 1840s and 1850s, made the first extensive maps of the cave and named many of the cave's features. During part of that time, the cave also served as a tuberculosis hospital, based on the idea that the air in the cave would provide a cure. It didn't.

For many years, Mammoth Cave was privately owned and operated as a tourist attraction.

In 1925. an explorer dislodged a rock onto his leg while in a tight crawlway and was unable to be rescued before dying of starvation. The resulting publicity initiated a movement that resulted in the formation of Mammoth Cave National Park in 1926. But, it took until 1941 to purchase and clear enough land to officially open the park. Since then, more land has been purchased and many more parts of the cave have been discovered.

Escalator
The tour was very good; brief, but complete. We were able to see stalactites, stalagmites, "cave bacon," curtains, soda straws and a large flow referred to as "frozen Niagara" because it looks like the falls. Stairs take you down to look back up at the massive formation. Although nothing grows naturally in the cave because of the darkness, there is green algae on the ceiling because of the tour lights. 

Five types of Bats inhabit the cave, but many have died of the white nose fungus that has been spreading throughout American Bat populations. We did not see any Bats. 

There are also two varieties of Cave Crickets ...

On the ceiling
... Cave Salamanders, Eyeless Cave Fish, Cave Crayfish and Cave Shrimp.

The Ranger told us that many people believe that the cave is named after the Woolly Mammoth (I had never heard this), but that the name merely refers to the cave's size. No fossils of the Woolly Mammoth have ever been found in Mammoth Cave. Interestingly, many examples of the woolly mammoth have been discovered at the Big Bone Lick State Park two and a half hours northeast in northern Kentucky.

Outside the cave, we didn't see anything except lots of butterflies -- most of them Red-spotted Purple Butterflies.


Pretty butterfly
Land Between the Lakes NRA
Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area sits on a piece of land between two lakes -- Kentucky Lake and Lake Barkley, which are formed by dams just to the north.

The Tennessee and Cumberland Rivers flow very close to each other in the northwestern corner of Middle Tennessee and Western Kentucky, separated by a narrow low ridge. The area of land that separates the two bodies of water by only a few miles was known as "Between the Rivers" since at least the 1830s or 1840s. The Tennessee was dammed in the 1940s, creating Kentucky Lake. Then, the Cumberland River was dammed in the 1960s and a canal was constructed between the two lakes. 

Now called "Land Between the Lakes," it is the largest inland peninsula in the U.S. Downstream, the two rivers diverge; the Cumberland empties into the Ohio River approximately four miles from where the Tennessee joins the Ohio. Originally managed by the Tennessee Valley Authority, jurisdiction for the area has since transferred to the U.S. Forest Service. (map: clarksvilleonline.com)

A road that runs down the middle is called "The Trace," short for "Buffalo Trace" because it followed a winding bison path. The park has a museum, a planetarium, an environmental education area, hiking trails, boat ramps, an off-road vehicle area, campgrounds, group lodges, cabins, a 700-acre elk and bison enclosure and a small wildlife zoo.

There are lots of campsites in the park, but it was Labor Day weekend and most were taken. We managed to get at site on the eastern side of the park in Lake Barkley Resort. There are several such resorts around the park. They include campsites, lodges, cabins, pools, tennis courts, marinas and other resort-type facilities. Our campsite was large and wooded. I wondered why we were able to get in, but then we learned that the beaches were closed because of bacteria in the water. No swimming and no access to the shore. Well, there went night sky photography!

Camping
We didn't really spend a lot of time in the park. We did drive through the Elk and Bison reserve. I had been to the area a few years ago on my way to Florida and never saw any Elk or Bison. This time, we saw both -- the Elk back in the trees and the Bison spread out across the road.

A bit too close?
For dinner, we had an authentic southern dinner at Willow Pond Southern Catfish near the park. The decor was definitely 80's. The waitress had the heaviest southern accent I had heard in years. The catfish was yummy, the hushpuppies a bit heavy, the coleslaw so-so and the white beans a lot better than I expected. The clientele seemed to be heavily local -- probably many people with vacation homes in the area.

Southern dinner
Peoria
Our next stop was back up north in Peoria, Illinois, for a brief visit with my sister, Linda. Her husband, Robert, was out in Montana on an artist-in-residence sabbatical, but we were able to spend time with Linda, my nephew Andrew, his wife Caitlynn and their son Liam.

Liam at the Museum
We spent some quality time at the RiverFront Museum, a great hand's on kids' museum that had a special space exhibit. Liam, who fell in love with Scott, had a great time.


Trip date: August 12-September 5, 2016

Midwest Adventure: Cincinnati and Hocking Hills

Our next stop on our Midwest Tour was visiting our friend Will Jones in Cincinnati. It was the first time I had met his wife, Cassandra. It was so much fun spending time with both of them.

Downtown Cincinnati
We started with a brief afternoon tour of Cincinnati, including crossing the bridge to Covington, Kentucky, to get a good view of the city. Cincinnati, which has undergone a great deal of revitalization lately is a very nice small city. We didn't do much but drive around, so I can't really give any tips or reviews of activities.

The next day, Will took us about two hours northeast of the city to Hocking Hills State Park near Chillicothe. It was very similar in looks to Cuyahoga Valley National Park, but more rural.


Hocking Hills State Park
Hocking Hills State Park has five separate sections: Old Man's Cave, Cedar Falls, Ash Cave, Cantwell Cliffs and Rock House.

We took a leisurely photography hike through the Old Man's Creek gorge to Old Man's Cave, each of us going at our own pace (which is code for Will came out of the gorge about two hours after Scott and an hour and half after me). Of course, after that, we didn't have time to visit any other parts of the park.

The name of the area comes from the Delaware Indian word, Hockhocking, which means "bottle." In Shawnee, Wea-tha-Kagh-Qua-sepe means "bottle river," referring to a narrow bottleneck above a waterfall northwest of Lancaster, Ohio.


A beautiful ravine
More than 330 million years ago, the area was under the Atlantic Ocean, where sand and gravel were deposited over millions of years. When the ocean receded, the sandy layers bonded with silica to form the Black Hand Sandstone that underlies the area. It formed like a sandwich, with a hard top and bottom and a soft middle layer. When the Appalachian Mountains uplifted, hills were formed. Then, the melting Wisconsin Glacier buried the area in tons of glacial silt and reversed the direction of the Hocking River.

So green
Water then eroded the soft sandstone sandwiched between the hard layers, leaving long tunnels where gorges are today. Eventually, the weight of the tops caused them to collapse and water carved interesting curves and gouges. Of course, water is still at work today. When we were there, water levels were quite low, just as they had been at Cuyahoga Valley. But, there was ample evidence that sometimes it is much higher.

The trail was nice and level, with bridges and rails where needed. It was damp and occasionally muddy, but generally a very easy walk (except for the oppressive humidity and mosquitoes). There are multiple paths up and out of the gorge to the overlook trail above.


Cool caves
One of the stops along the way was Old Man's Cave, which is named after Richard Rowe, who lived as a hermit in a large recess cave in the gorge. When his family moved to the Ohio River Valley around 1796 from the Cumberland Mountains of Tennessee to establish a trading post, Rowe and his two dogs frequently traveled through Ohio to hunt. It was on one of these trips that he found the cave where he would later live. He is buried beneath the ledge of the cave. 

Earlier, two brothers, Nathaniel and Pat Rayon, built a cabin 30 feet north of the cave entrance. Both brothers are also buried in or near the cave. Their cabin was later dismantled and relocated on the nearby farm to be used as a tobacco-drying house.


Not expected for Ohio
The native Adena culture is believed to be the first inhabitants of Hocking Hills, The Delaware, Wyandot and Shawnee traveled through and lived in the area in the 1700s. White settlers came in the late 1700s and a powder mill was built 1840. The park was created in the early 1900s.

Because of the light and shade deep in the gorge, photography was a bit tricky. Although all the signs touted lots of birds, I saw very few. But, the greenness and falling water gave the place a very peaceful vibe.

Waterfall
We returned to Cincinnati that evening and ate downtown. Unfortunately, there was a giant salsa-dancing event in the main square, a Bengals game and Hillary Clinton had been in town earlier in the day, so it was pretty crowded. Still, a fun night with good friends. And, a newfound appreciation for Ohio. It's a pretty cool state.


Trip date: August 12-September 5, 2016

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Midwest Adventure: Cuyahoga Valley National Park


Views of the Valley
Now, let's talk about Cuyahoga Valley National Park (National Park #3 on this trip; #55 in my lifetime) ...

But, first, a back story ...

Wellborn
A couple of weeks before our trip, I got a call out of the blue from a colleague from ages ago at GTE Directories. 
Wellborn Jack, one of my favorite past employees, now lives in Hudson, Ohio. I mentioned to Wellborn that we were heading in his direction as part of our Midwest National Parks tour and he offered to be our guide at Cuyahoga Valley National Park. It turns out that his home is just minutes from the National Park and he is very familiar with the area. How perfect was that? Of course, I accepted his offer immediately. What a great guide he turned out to be! 

And, what fabulous host he and his lovely wife, Mary, were. They invited us over to his beautiful home for dinner with his family twice! 

Before we arrived, Wellborn sent me a giant stack of books and brochures about Cuyahoga Valley National Park. I read up (I really did scan them all) on the way there. So, I was ready for my Ohio National Park tour. 

Cuyahoga Valley National Park is the one of the newer parks in the NPS system. It was established in 1974 as the Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area designated as a National Park in 2000. 

Wellborn and Mary graciously (and they are particularly gracious people) invited us the stay with them, but we had already made reservations at the Silver Fern Bed and Breakfast right by the National Park. It was a nice option for the area. I had researched camping, but everything I saw looked liked those miserable RV parks where everything is crammed together. The Silver Fern was small (and empty except for us), but it was comfortable and very convenient.

A pretty place
But, I am getting ahead of myself. Before we ever made it to Cuyahoga Valley or the Silver Fern, we made an important stop. Homemade peach and homemade cherry ice cream. Yum!

Real Midwest ice cream
Now, where was I?

According to Wikipedia, Cuyahoga Valley National Park is a very urban National Park. It reclaims the rural landscape along the Cuyahoga River between Cleveland and Akron in northeast Ohio on the historic route of the Ohio & Erie Canal. 

Map: NPS
Before the canal was built, Ohio was a sparsely settled wilderness where travel was difficult and getting crops to market was nearly impossible. 


The canal, built between 1825 and 1832, provided a transportation route from Cleveland on Lake Erie to Portsmouth on the Ohio River. The canal opened up Ohio to the rest of the settled eastern United States. Cuyahoga Valley National Park still has the ruins of the canals and locks. 

The Valley became a recreation area for urban dwellers in the 1870s when people came from nearby cities for carriage rides or leisure boat trips along the canal. In 1880, the Valley Railroad became another way to escape urban industrial life. 
Actual Park development began in the 1910s and 1920s with the establishment of both the Cleveland and the Akron Metropolitan Park districts. 

In the 1930s, the Civilian Conservation Corps built much of the park's infrastructure. Although the regional parks safeguarded many areas, by the 1960s locals began to fear that Cleveland's urban sprawl would overwhelm the Cuyahoga Valley's natural beauty and historical significance. They joined forces with state and national government staff to find a long-term solution. 

You might recall that the Cuyahoga Valley was an industrial nightmare. The Cuyahoga River actually caught fire in 1969, which really underscored the dangers of toxic waste in America's natural areas. 

Cuyahoga Valley National Park is very much about reclaiming damaged and dangerous resources, returning them to their natural state.

Another Park!
After a great deal of cleanup, the Cuyahoga Valley area was established as a National Recreation Area in 1974. 
Congress then re-designated the NRA as a National Park in 2000. But, as an urban Park, it has some unique administrative practices: some areas in the Park are still operated in conjunction with Cleveland Metro Parks. 

Maybe they also knew in the heart of hearts that, eventually, the U.S. government would change the name of North America's tallest mountain back to Denali from McKinley and Ohio would lose its only national park link. Maybe.

When we first arrived, we did a little exploring, stopping at Indigo Lake, a very pastoral pond just minutes from the major highways that pass by the park. It was a very still, hot, humid day, so there wasn't any wildlife to photograph.

Pastoral
We moved on to the Everett Covered Bridge, which was built over Furnace Run after a local died while crossing the ford there. It's a very pretty reminder of the past. It was originally built in 1876 and repeatedly damaged in storms and floods. In 1975, it was finally damaged beyond repair. It was then rebuilt in 1986 and is open to foot and bicycle traffic. It originally carried cars, but had to be restricted so that the restoration would be "pure." To carry cars, it would need steel supports, but the restorers wanted the original wood construction.

Miswestern staple
On the way back from the bridge, which is on a dead-end road, we stopped at the Hale Village and Farm, one of several working interpretive farms in Cuyahoga Valley National Park. It was closed for the day and I could find no signs with operating hours. Oh well!

Then, it was on to Blue Hen Falls, which is formed when Spring Creek drops 15 feet over Berea Sandstone to a layer of Bedford Shale below. It's a rather small waterfall and, at this point in the summer, water levels were low. I have seen photos with a lot more water. But, still, it was pretty and peaceful.

Waterfall
Then, off to dinner with the wonderful Jack family before our full tour the next day.

The next morning, Wellborn took us to the Beaver Marsh area, which is along the Ohio & Erie Canal Towpath Trail. The trail runs almost 21 miles along the Cuyahoga River from Rockside Road in the north to Akron in the south. The towpath, of course, was a route used by mules to tow the barges traveling up and down the river and canals. The barges carried sandstone, crops, supplies and, often, extra mules. The canal system was developed fairly late in the game and was, consequently, not used for very many years before it became obsolete. 

Great Blue Heron
This Beaver Marsh, traversed by a boardwalk, shows the value of protecting the land. In the 19th century original wetlands were drained to allow for development -- and, over time, the area filled with industrial debris.

Wetlands
In 1984, the Sierra Club and NPS organized a site cleanup, hauling away car parts, bed springs and accumulated trash. While the NPS was contemplating how to use the land (one idea was building a parking lot), beavers started returning to the Valley after a 100-year absence. 

They built a system of dams that flooded the area, taking it back to its original state. Then, many animals that had also also been gone for a long time started to return. 

The marsh was teeming with wildlife. I spent a long time photographing a Green Heron as it caught and ate small Bluegills. It was interesting to watch the bird disengage to fish from its beak, turn it around and gulp it down. We saw the Heron do it several times.

Lunch!
Another treat was a log full of juvenile Wood Ducks. They posed nicely for us, with just a few minor protests at being photographed.

Cuties
There was a Great Blue Heron that stood stock still for a long time ...

Regal
... before moving a bit farther down the way. It also loved being photographed ...

Not so regal
Great Blue Herons are a big success story at Cuyahoga Valley National Park. 
The first record of Great Blue Herons nesting there was in 1985. Now there are three active heronries in Cuyahoga Valley with about 200 active nests each year. 
We were too late to see any nesting birds.

By August, all the young birds have fledged. Nests are typically 30 to 70 feet high in trees surrounded by water. 

We didn't see any beavers as we watched the wildlife from the boardwalk, but we did see a Muskrat ...

Look at those teeth
 ... a Midwest Painted Turtle ...

Sunning
... and a submerged very large Common Snapping Turtle (trust me, that's a turtle) ...

Underwater
So, it was a very successful wildlife shooting session. 

Next, we went to the Deep Lock Quarry area, where we walked around atop an old sandstone quarry and saw the remnant of the natural resource that was used in so much building in the Midwest in the 1800s. Wellborn said that this had been a favorite spot for family picnics when his kids were young.

Old quarry
The Deep Lock still had a little water in it and was occupied by a couple of baby Common Snapping Turtles. Since the locks are no longer used, water doesn't necessarily run through them anymore. Various pieces of old equipment are lying around in the area, slowly deteriorating.

Industrial becomes natural
We then moved on to Ritchie Ledges, where cool, moist hemlock and yellow birch forest benefit from a microenvironment formed near the over 300-million-year-old rock formations. It is among these enormous blocks of the orange and yellow rock that you can find "Ice Box Cave," so-called because of the cool air that blows out of it. The actual cave is now closed to protect it, but we walked around the cool moss-covered rocks in the area.

Pretty green
It has a very storybook look to it and, even on a hot day, offered a cool respite.

View of the Park
And, although there wasn't a lot of wildlife, we did find a brightly colored caterpillar. Wellborn picked it up on a stick so that we could take a better look and then moved it so that I could get better pictures. 

Warning!
We wondered aloud if it might be a stinging caterpillar. Opting for the cautious approach, we assumed it was. Later, when I Googled it, I discovered that it was an Io Moth Caterpillar as in, "Warnings About Io Moth Caterpillar Stings," and "Poison Control Center." 

So, there's that!

Our final stop for the day was Brandywine Falls, Cuyahoga's Valley National Park's signature waterfall. It is reached via a Boardwalk.

Boardwalk
At this beautiful falls, Brandywine Creek drops 65 feet over a moss-covered ledge. A layer of hard Berea Sandstone caps the waterfall, protecting softer layers of 350-400-million-year-old Bedford and Cleveland shales below. 

Brandywine Falls
Early settlers in the valley used the falls for power. Starting in 1814, the falls powered a sawmill, then a gristmill and then a woolen mill. The Village of Brandywine, which grew around the mills and was one of the earliest communities in the valley, is now mostly gone, lost to the construction of nearby Interstate 271. 

We had not originally planned to take the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad, which travels along the river, because it wasn't operating the day we were there. But after our day's tour, we made reservations for the next morning, planning to arrive just a little later at our next stop in Cincinnati.

So, we got up very early to travel to the station on the north side of the park. On the way, we stopped at Bridal Veil Falls, a 30-foot cascade rather than what I consider a typical bridal veil wisp dropping from a great height. It was very calm and pretty (plus lower in water volume than a lot of the pictures I have seen).


The creek
We also stopped at the Ledges Overlook, which is one of the few places you can get an unobstructed view of the Cuyahoga Valley.

Overlook
Like Voyageurs, Apostle and Isle Royale, I think Cuyahoga Valley National Park is probably at its best in the fall. It was on its way, but not yet there.

Fall is coming
And, about the train ... We got to the train station, but realized that the dome car we had reserved (and, in fact, all the cars) had very streaky, dirty windows that did not open. Therefore, photography would be impossible. So, we decided to skip the train and drive south.

Our next stop was Cincinnati, but not without stopping (at Mary's recommendation) at Grampa's Cheesebarn in Norton, Ohio. A fabulous selection of cheeses, pickles, meats and goodies. We bought a couple of things and headed on our way.

Grampa's

Trip date: August 12-September 5, 2016