Tag Archives: Blue Ridge Parkway

Tree Blooms

On the west coast, flowers bloom close to the ground, with the occasional apple blossom or climbing wisteria vine teasing us from above.
On the east coast, flowers bloom everywhere. Ground, trees, vines, you name it.

We started noticing this change as soon as we got into Tennessee. Not only did the green tunnel expand to encompass purple and white, but puffs of perfume would envelop your senses unexpectedly, causing you to slow down in search of its source.

The reign of the dogwoods began in Tennessee, although down at that altitude, they were at their final stretch. As we got back into the mountains, the Blue Ridge Mountains specifically, the dogwoods were at their peak.

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“…on the day that I turned twenty-three,
I was curled up underneath the dogwood tree…”

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Here are some other trees, some of which I don’t know the name of. As before, if you know it, or would like to correct one of my identifications, please leave a comment!

Enjoy!

1. Magnolia

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2. Flame Azalea

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3. unknown

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4. unknown

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5. unknown

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6. tulip poplar

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7. rhododendron

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BRP: Part ll

Cont…

Our hosts in Bryson City, NC (Raquel and Jack) insisted that we visit Tuggle’s Gap Cafe for amazing pie. Raquel also insisted that there was nothing wrong with eating pie at any time of the day. As it happens, we arrived at the cafe 15 minutes or so after breakfast, so naturally we engaged in second breakfast.

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Between the hills and the weather, we were definitely ready for a rest day or two when we started our decent into the Roanoke Valley to meet our WS hosts Rob and Lisa.

Only 20 miles outside of the city, we ran into Bob and Kris. Both sporting the brightest orange shirts imaginable, we mistook them for a couple of construction workers, who for whatever reason, were traveling around on bikes, of all things. Turns out they were a very charming older couple (not that construction workers can’t be charming) who were training for their tour across the Northern Tier this summer, west to east. After chatting for what turned out to be 40 min, we bid our farewells and began the descent.

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The view of Roanoke far below.

We arranged to meet our host, Rob, at a park just a few miles off the parkway for a mountain biking race he was taking part in. Being a kind and inclusive host, Rob asked if either of us would like to enter the race. Ben accepted the offer. Having acquired a mountain bike from one of Rob’s friends, Ben signed up for the beginners section (youth, beginners, sport, and expert all rode the same track but did a different number of loops). Before he rode off to the start, I told Ben one thing, “Don’t get hurt.”

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To my surprise (Ben has never competed in a mountain biking race before, let alone ever done any real mountain biking) Ben was the first person to cross the finish line. I guess all those mountains payed off!
However, my astonishment was short lived – I couldn’t help but notice all the blood.

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Okay, there wasn’t a lot of blood, and he didn’t “feel” hurt, he just ripped a few holes in shirt. Seeing him totally elated in adrenaline from both racing and placing made it all worth it – for the both of us. The gold 8 track trophy didn’t hurt either.

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Until he took his shirt off… !!!

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Part of the reason why we decided to stop in Roanoke was to duck out of the forecasted rain. The other reason was because of the song, Wagon Wheel, which we were both singing through the entirety of the parkway. :) Country Roads was also popular.

Finally, the forecast did what it was supposed to do, and we spent the whole day in a coffee shop watching our bikes get a much needed wash.
After some grocery shopping and sightseeing when the rain cleared, we went out to dinner with our hosts and their sons, stopping for dessert at an old soda fountain shop called, Pops. We both got the Broadway, which is a chocolate soda float with coffee ice cream with chocolate chunks. It was absolutely delicious.

Next day, after much detouring due to some serious flooding on the bike path, we made it back to the park where Ben won the race, and decided to stay in the campground not to far away to avoid getting to Charlottesville too early. Or at least that is the excuse we used.
The park had a beautiful overlook of the city.

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Also the largest manmade star in the U.S.

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Marea, Ben told me you always were on the look out for the biggest blank ever. It was a good excuse to get Ben to pose in front of it.

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Do you see what I see?

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30 miles or so to the Peaks of Otter, the location of the only hotel ON the parkway, rooms going at $112 a night, without a TV, without cell reception, without a phone. Literally a bed and a bathroom. We stayed at the closed campsite not to far up the road for free, with pretty much the same accommodations (or lack thereof). Before dinner we took a hike up Sharp Top Mountain, which had a 360 degree view of the valley. Apparently back in the day, Virginians thought Sharp Top was the tallest mountain in Virginia and even sent a piece of it to the Smithsonian. Turns out the mountain right next to it, Flat Top Mountain, is about 300 ft taller. Whoops!

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We ran into the first tourists we saw on the entire BRP, two young guys, between high school and college, traveling from New Hampshire to Columbia.

Lots of fog over the next couple of days…

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At parts you could only see 20 ft in front of you. It was so dense that any exposed hair was immediately coated with dew/frost.

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Spent the last night on the parkway at yet another closed picnic area, this time pitching our tent shamelessly out in the open. We met two AT hikers who were a little more stealthy about their tent placement, but glad that they weren’t the only ones breaking the rules.

Last day, only 9 miles, ALL DOWNHILL. We stopped at a working farm exhibit and saw a spring house, which is literally a house built over a spring, using it to refrigerate things like milk, cheese, and beer. Pretty neat.
We were hoping to find a nice little diner at the end of the parkway to have breakfast (we had depleted our once overflowing bounty of food). No such luck. But! Only 4 miles away, once again ALL DOWNHILL, was a nice little place called Blue Mountain Brewery. All thoughts of pancakes and bacon flew right out of our non-existent windows.

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We both enjoyed their Full Nelson Pale Ale.

Only 20 miles to go to Charlottesville!

Parkway Redux

You’ve probably noticed by the clarity, and photography, that Laney’s been doing most of the posting lately. She took over the keyboard for a couple reasons, the main being that we only have one keyboard. I don’t lack motivation to write, but I’ve found the process doesn’t go well with camping. Too much dirt, a lack of tables/power outlets, trying to find a place to prop a phone up in your nylon cave while yoga posing for maximum typing efficiency and minimum kicking of your partner–it just doesn’t usually come together. I guess Laney makes better use of our cafe time. I’m too busy drinking coffee to do much else usually.

Ok… so we left you in Asheville, the artisan hippie midpoint in our grand parkway to parkway plan, conceived in Louisiana. As a cyclist, looking at maps of the eastern US, the Natchez Trace Parkway (NTP) and Blue Ridge Parkway (BRP), once you leave aside the Inconvenience of Tennessee (IOT), start looking like I-5 to a tourer who’s been stitching a route together from half forgotten scraps of country road. A grand north-south thoroughfare! no traffic controls for 900 miles! max speed limit 45! free calf massages in every campground! The roads in Louisiana could make anyone a dreamer.

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So with great anticipation, and an assist from Barney and his bike rack, we embarked from the Folk Art Museum on the BRP just outside of Asheville. This is a recommended stop for anyone in the area. Best exhibits: woodcuts, hand-dyed and quilted abstract fabric art, and highly impractical yet exquisite turned wood… vessels? sculptures? Sorry readers, photography not allowed.

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With a greater appreciation of the potential inner form of the dense stands of trees around us, we slowly started winding our way toward the tallest prominence east of the Mississippi, Mt. Mitchell. Slower than usual, since the BRP lacks services directly on the route. And since “Ridge” is truly the most apt part of the name, any side excursions mean a steep decent and then a big climb for that tasty burger you were contemplating at the end of the day. Our saddlebags bulged with more than the usual food.

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Our abundance of provisions actually occasioned a full-on comedy of errors later that evening. After a lot of climbing, stunning vegetated landscapes rippling out under endless clouds, we pulled into an abandoned picnic area (one of many we’d appropriate over the next week, as almost all facilities on the BRP are closed in April) and ran through our usual campy rituals with one addition–the hanging of the food. For the first time on the trip, we actually had to worry about some ravenous, cub-laden mother bear reminding us of our place in nature sometime in the middle of the night.

So we begin the ceremony: solemnly heft a rock and assess for proper size and weight; walk slowly in circles, eyes heavenward until a branch of the height and length as proscribed by those backpackers who came before you appears; firmly attach rock to your length of chord, toss over branch, haul up food and tie off by whatever method you suspect the bear will deem less of a joke when she stumbles across it. I always felt like the best potential for comedy lay in the step where you tie something to a rock and throw it high directly over your head, or when the bear easily dispatches all your precautions with some stupid animal trick. However that night, if you watched from the bushes, you would have seen two humans so completely overladen with Clif Bars, tins of fish, tortillas, and bags of nuts that even lifting it off the ground was a serious undertaking. With the weight of it all and the friction of the rope, we were completely defeated at the start. I put on gloves so I could pull harder, but with all of our combined straining, the rope only stretched, and the food undulated gently five feet off the ground, assailable by an enterprising raccoon. Finally we found a really long branch and managed to push/pull our food out of danger and retired to the tent to contemplate the simpler days of January, when my main problem was how to hoist a half-ton log into the air.

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A hard climb out of Asheville rewards us with some typically expansive BRP views

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So typical, in fact, that Laney has already tired of them as we pull into another turnout.

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Fortunately, the steepness of the BRP, and our expedition-weight packing wasn’t as much of a concern as it might be normally. While riding less than 60 miles in a day usually makes both of us a little antsy, we’d scheduled a visit with my Mom in Charlottesville and it turned out we’d left ourselves plenty of time to dawdle. A forecast of rain in the afternoon seemed like a good excuse to ride 20 miles and then spend some quality time assessing my recent hammock purchase.

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The rain showed up lighter and later than promised, and we scoffed a little at pessimistic weather forecasting. Turns out the clouds were not playing, and for the next few days they let us know about it. The temperature dropped from “chill that feels nice to exercise in” to “oh wow, that’s ice in my beard” over the next few days. We both started to realize how quickly temperature modulation gets difficult in cold, hilly terrain. Despite the cold, you still sweat pack-muling your way up these ancient hills, then thanks to the wonders of evaporative cooling… frostbite! Kidding a little, but I started spending a lot of time mentally designing layers of clothing that could be removed and replaced quickly while riding a bike (ask me about my Velcro cape!). The low point came one evening when we had to move the tent from its original pitch to a more sheltered one behind a dumpster for the dual purpose of avoiding a tree falling on us in the night and making sure the tent didn’t collapse in the wind.

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We woke up to an inch of snow, and rangers who drove through the parking lot without bothering to chastise us for camping illegally in a picnic area. I don’t blame them as I usually try to avoid talking to the obviously insane myself.

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Laney, modeling an experimental cold-weather riding outfit. Yes that is a sock on her hand. (I must add, Ben was the one who inspired the ever fashionable sock-mitten. To my distaste, they worked pretty darn well)

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Getting to know the lee side of yet another windbreak in one of our many “unauthorized” camping locations.

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The terrain mellows a little when you get to Virginia.

to be continued…