Thursday, July 5, 2012

POTR #73 Hunting Covered Bridges


PEACE ON THE ROAD
Hunting Covered Bridges
July 5, 2012
I came across a quote in a photo-blog that expresses well what I believe is a big reason for my writing the POTR. A traveler through this life collects photographs of and shares words about the points of light discovered along the way. (James Jordan) Here are a few points of lights that I have seen.

There are so many things in this country that are interesting to see. We like to visit covered bridges. They are beautiful and fascinating, and the history of them is always interesting. The stories behind many of them are amazing. We were in Astubula County, Ohio in 2006 and saw many covered bridges. There was one that we missed. The Forman Road Bridge was built in 1862. According to my calculations it is the longest covered bridge in the world. As far as that goes it might be the longest bridge in the world. One end is in North Kingston, OH and the other end is in Andover, OH which is 25.4 miles away. Some people claim that in 1972 the county sold the 126 foot bridge to the highest bidder for $5.00 and the new owner cut it in half and moved each end to a different location and put a pizza parlor in each one. That cannot really be true! We made a point of eating some very good pizza in each end. When you are in either one of the two parts it looks like it could be a complete bridge.

ONE END OF THE FORMAN ROAD COVERED BRIDGE 
NOW SERVING AS A PIZZA PARLOR

We also visited two other covered bridges which did not exist in 2007. The Smolen-Gulf did not even have an official name when we saw where it was to be built. It now is the longest covered bridge in the US, forth longest in the world (except for the 25.4 mile Forman Road Bridge). It is also rated to carry any road legal traffic like loaded semis. It is 613 foot long and has a roadway that is thirty feet wide with foot traffic passages on each side. It may also be the highest bridge above the river below at 93 foot. It is expected to last 100 years. An uncovered wooden bridge might last 10 years and covering it extends its life to 50 or more. Some covered bridges built to last 50 years have made it 150 years. How long might a bridge last that is built for 100 years? Another covered bridge that was conceived in 2007 is the West Liberty Covered Bridge in Geneva, OH has a span of only 18 foot. It is the shortest covered bridge in the US. It opened in 2010. Due to the walkways on either side it may well be wider than it is long. As a tribute to the fact that many covered bridges in the early days charged for passage it has a toll booth built close by. Of course there was no toll to cross today. So with that you have the long and the short of covered bridges in the US, and they are both in Ohio.

1929 WEIDMAN HOUSE CAR

When I think about the life that I have lived, I have to say that things have been very good for me. I was born to good parents, with good siblings, on a great place to grow up. As a young adult (still a boy really) I married a very fine woman (well she was just a girl then too), and then a few years later we had a wonderful daughter, who has been the pride of my life. After more good years I decided to retire and do things so I could write PEACE ON THE ROAD, which is of course what I really wanted to do from birth, I just didn't know it then. To have things to write I need inspiration in some way. Sometimes I also learn how fortunate I have been to have lived in the times and places that I did. While in Elkhart, IN we went to the RV & MH museum. I am so glad that I was ready to buy a motor home when the 2005 models were first available. Some of the old RV's were extremely innovative and were actually works of art and engineering. There were several that had actual wood burning parlor stoves installed for heating. Many had kitchens and eating tables that required unpacking for use outside. That must have been great in the wind and rain sometimes. The colors used for decoration are no worse than the ones in many modern rigs but to my mind there were not desirable. At the time they were so much better than the alternatives of a horse and a tent that they were luxury. The earliest item in the museum was from 1913. But back hundreds of years, perhaps as much as a thousand, there were people who traveled in wagons that served as permanent homes. Gypsies was one name they were called. The motor home that I travel in is so much better than anything that we saw in the museum and there was a showcase of the latest technology In looking at units while at the Winnebago factory we have had the same feeling. We were fortunate to have bought our motor home when we did.

ONE OF THE “WHITE” BUCKS OF THE SENECA HERD
(note the flies on its back)

In 1941 a 25 mile long fence was erected around 10,600 acres in an area between the Finger Lakes of Seneca and Cayuga in Upstate New York. It was built by the Army to enclose the Seneca Army Depot. This depot was used for the storage and disposal of ammunition from 1941 until the 1990's. It was also used to store materials used in the Manhattan project in bunkers that they called igloos. Within the area an airstrip long enough to handle large cargo aircraft was built. Enclosed within the fence were some “white” white tailed deer. They are not albinos but simply a recessive gene that is in all deer. Because the fence isolated them from the rest of the gene pool and their normal predators the white deer flourished. Also the commanding officers at the base allowed the hunting of the “brown” white tailed deer but not the white ones. Today it is the largest herd of white deer in the world. To say that they are beautiful is an understatement. It was a privilege to be able to see several of them even if it was necessary to view them through a fence. It has been estimated that about 600 deer live within the confines of the base and that of those there are between 200 and 300 of the white deer. There are a few that are brown and white. We did not see any of the combination. On this excursion there were six of us in the car. The deer were new to us all. While looking for the white deer we also saw some pens with peafowl. One pen had pure white peafowl and another had the regular colored birds. Males in both pens were displaying their tail feathers. That was a delight to all of us. I would never have guessed that at some point I would have the privilege of seeing such a sight. They were beautiful.

What did you do to celebrate Independence Day? Gather the family and go to a park and have a picnic and then watch fireworks? Did you get together with friends at a lake to swim and watch fire works later? If you owned a home on the shore of Lake Ontario you might invite your family and their friends and their friends families to come enjoy your beach. There would be a lot of power boats, sail boats, personal watercraft, and kayaks on the lake for them to watch and maybe to go for a ride. The youth will play lots of beach games and hike along the beach. All the neighbors for a mile each way will do the same. Many will build large pyramids of wood and burn them after dark. There will be fireworks of all sorts. During the whole afternoon and evening there will be lots of food and drinks. All in all you will provide a wonderful place and way for people to enjoy the day and contemplate what the day really means. We are blessed to live in the US and thank those who lived and died before for our freedom. All our celebrations should remind us of the sacrifices and efforts of so many.

AT LEAST FIVE BLAZING PYRES IN ONE DIRECTION DOWN THE BEACH

It is hard to realize that we have been in Rochester for a week now and soon we will move on. To where we have not discussed yet, but it will have to be moving southward I suppose. It will be a while before going to our winter home in Mission, Texas again. So we will look for more “Points Of Light.”

Till Later This Is Doug Of,
PEACE ON THE ROAD

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