Day 5: December 25, 2021
Buffet and Bridges

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I picked up WV-20 almost immediately after leaving Pipestem State Park and followed it all the way to Rainelle. I stopped at the Brooks Island and Sandstone Palls Overlooks but didn't walk down the the actual overlook at Sandstone Falls. The steep path created a scheduling issue. Walking down was likely not a problem but I don't think I had enough "time" to walk back up.

The last twenty some miles to the park were on US-60 which isn't exactly boring.

I made it in time for my lunch reservation at Hawks Nest State Park, and there was even enough time for me to check in but not enough to actually go to the room. Instead, I headed to the restaurant where a buffet and a table with my name and a view awaited. The last picture is the view without the table. Then I went to my room fully fed.

Hawks Nest is only a few miles from the New River Gorge Bridge so spending some of my idle time paying it a visit made sense. The Canyon Rim Visitor Center was closed but the path to the overlook was open. I parked and walked out to take some pictures like others I've taken in the past. It is said that the bridge reduced a forty minute drive to less than a minute when it opened in 1977. This wasn't my first visit to the bridge but it was the first with enough time at hand to consider crossing the river the old fashioned way.

The old fashioned way is on Fayette Station Road. It's narrow and twisty with multiple hairpin curves. It is now one way for most of its length although it wasn't always that way, of course. There are numerous pullouts where people can stop to take pictures or just study the bridge or the scenery. Some have informative signs and at least one, shown in the second photo, has a fairy door. At the bottom is the 1889 Tunney Hunsaker Bridge. It's a respectable 421 feet long but seems almost tiny compared to the 3030 foot giant above it.

Back at the lodge, I heard some rather loud rumbling that made no sense until I looked off the balcony. I didn't count cars but can tell you that the engine was long gone around the curve on the far end before the last car appeared around the curve on the near end.

Although the day stayed dry, clouds looked mildly threatening all day. The only real damage they did was covering the sunset so that it was quite blah compared to others on this trip.

I waited a suitable amount of time after sunset, then went out to see the lights I'd noticed all over the space in front of the lodge. Up first is the twelve days of Christmas then the display's title. The Midland Trail was a coast to coast named auto trail of the early twentieth century. In West Virginia, it was essentially replaced by US-60. Although there are a lot more lights than I'm showing, I'll stop with a train and a river scene. Kayaks and rapids and rafts, oh my!

The background for this page is a snowman/tree in the Pipestem State Park Lodge. The music for the day is a Bruce Springsteen performance of a song written by John Coots and Haven Gillespie. The video is from a 1978 Houston, Texas, concert.

Poking around the internet for this reminded me of the time that I saw Bruce do the song live in Atlanta. It was on the same tour as the Houston show. Once my memory was jogged, it seemed a fairly natural topic for a My Memories blog post.


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