Day 2: August 14, 2022
A Skyway and a Loop

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Most of those nearby restaurants serve breakfast most days but none are open on Sundays. Fortunately, I was able to secure a good Carolina breakfast when I bought gas.

The Cherohala Skyway is pretty curvy but its curves are gentler than those on the Tail of the Dragon and some of the great views can be seen without stoping at a designated overlook. I assume those views are due to it being closer to the sky.

The front windows were open. I heard a thump slightly behind me then felt something fall onto my lap. Apparently a bee had attempted to fly in the window and made it halfway. I thought it was dead until I saw it start to move. There are no shoulders on the Skyway so I began to nervously look for a place to pull over while a stunned bee began to come to life on my right thigh. I did find one and stepped out of the car and brushed off the bee as soon as I could. I have my doubts about his or her full recovery but its movement seemed to still be increasing as I left.

OK, so there are a few shoulders on the Skyway but they are scarce and, in my experience, always unoccupied. I snapped this picture because I was quite surprised to see this row of parked cars. It is the only one I got because cars were soon parked on both sides with people walking in and near the roadway. At the far end of the gathering, a man was waiting, I think, for a women to cross the road with a couple of unruly youngsters. I stopped and ask him what was going on. It was a reunion of some sort, he told me, that happens yearly on the second Sunday in August. He wrapped up his explanation with, "It's a religious thing."

Scenery and curves continued all the way to Tellico Plains.

We were told to arrive "30 minutes prior to departure". I arrived 38 minutes prior to departure to find a field full of cars and everyone already seated in my car but me. I had expected to have some time to take a few pictures of the train but I was on the train before I knew it. It left the station at 1:30 as scheduled.

The train spends considerable time beside the Hiwassee River and it really is rather scenic. Lots of kayaks and rafts were in the water but lots of trees were along the banks so it was good for viewing but not so much for photographing. Switchbacks were originally used to help the train make this 900 foot climb but they were replaced by a loop in 1898. At that time, Bald Mountain really was bald from logging but not now. The sun didn't help with my picture passing under the trestle but I got a little better shot when we crossed over it a bit later. There is a nice report on this ride with some great pictures here.


At the top, switches and a parallel track allow the engine to be moved to the other end of the train. I was in the last car going up but will be in the first car going down. The blurry critters in the second picture are the last of a group of feral pigs scurrying across the tracks in front of the engine. This was the only wildlife I saw on the trip other than birds and butterflies. We "unloop" by passing over then under the trestle.

Even back at the station, there was no opportunity to photograph the locomotive. I did get a shot of the observation car which is the one I'd been riding in.

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