End of the 2008 Season !!

Another great season comes to an end.......Mothership Barth is winterized, covered and put in storage. We're already looking forward to 2009 and have got some great trips planned. 2009 will be special, as the grandkids are getting old enough to enjoy traveling and we look forward to taking them along with us (ONE at a time!)......Stay tuned, and remember, we usually regret the things we DIDN'T do rather than those we did........Life is short - Enjoy!

York PA - October 3-5, 2008

Weekend highlight was a guided tour of the state-of-the-art Harley-Davidson factory in York. The area used to be a prosperous industrial area, but has fallen on hard times. They also have a great rail-to-trail system that we biked several times.
On quick side-trip to Hanover PA to take a tour of the Utz potato chip factory. Hanover is known as the Snack Food Capital, with several factories closeby......

The Harley-Davidson factory tour starts in the showroom, to whet your appetite!


Biker Mama, checking out a ride that could be hers for a mere $30k (Harley factory tour)



Part of York's effort at urban renewal is an "industrial flower" garden, with plants made from industrial machine parts from their early & more prosperous days.




Nice campsite......bike trail is just behind us. Spent the evening around campfire with two Mennonite couples from Lancaster County.....






Campsite was adjacent to converted rail-trail.....great flat ride!







Sunday morning Mass......3 mile bike ride from campground - nice, old church.....








Assateague Island & Ocean City MD Sept. 13-15, 2008

It's time for George Ross & I to make our annual two-day pilgramage to the ocean. We stay at Assateague State Park and then go into Ocean City for the day to walk the boardwalk and eat junk food. We have an arrangement with a local establishment one block off the boardwalk - they let us park & hook-up the Barth, giving us an air conditioned refuge between walks.
Settled in, ready for warm breezes & a cold beer......

Obviously, you don't leave any food unattended........


Everywhere you went it was ponies and more ponies........



We drove through the National Seashore portion of Assateague and came across a group of windsurfers..........40 years earlier and I would have tried this!




It was Bike Week in Ocean City......George & I kind of stuck out on the boardwalk :(





We didn't have any colors or weapons, so I guess that meant we were welcome!






Lower Chesapeake Bay - Aug.28-Sept.4, 2008

Seven days around the lower Chesapeake Bay - Perfect weather! Our itinerary included:
Crisfield MD - the annual Hard Shell Crab Festival & workboat competion
Chicoteague Island - "Misty the Pony" fame
Across the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel, where the Bay meets the Atlantic Ocean
Through Norfolk, up the south bank of the James River
Jamestown VA - the first North American settlement by Europeans - 1620
Williamsburg VA - Colonial shops, including the famous Williamsburg Pottery outlet
Westmoreland State Park VA - on the banks of the Potomac River
About 600 miles in 6 days - just the right pace!

We stayed 3 days at Janes Island State Park, just outside of Crisfield. Easy bike ride to town and lots of time to paddle around in the Sea-Eagle...........Beautiful sunsets too!

What's a festival without crowning a Miss Crustacean?


Hard shell blue crabs, one for every state, race down an inclined ramp.........



It was so hot, even the crowd got hosed-down during the crab races.......




For Lee, Crisfield Crab Festival means crabs & beer !!





From the city docks in Crisfield, it's about an hour's boat trip to Tangier Island in the middle of the Chesapeake Bay. Home to a couple hundred families, they survive by fishing and crabbing. The island is so remote, the locals still speak an unusal version of the King's English.






Island citizens use golf carts to get around, so the streets are pretty narrow. We biked the whole island in about an hour, plus crabcakes at the famous Hilda Crockett's eatery.







Because Tangier Island is at sea level, burial is at ground level. Seems like everyone on the island shares one of about four family names......lot's of Pruitts & Crocketts........








Kiptopeke State Park, at the tip of Virginia's Eastern Shore. WWII concrete ships are used as a breakwater at the beach. The Bridge Tunnel is in the background.









The Bay Bridge-Tunnel....20 miles across the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, including two tunnels....In another mile, we'll go under this ship.










Chippokes State Park, on the South bank of ther James River. Originally a large plantation, it was given to the state with the conditions that it remain a working farm and the original staff and their future children have jobs there. Generations later, it still is and they still do !











VA Rte 31 ends at the James River waterline.....Free state-run ferries take over from there.












The Barth on the ferry - about a 25 minute trip across the James River.













Capt. Kathy, on the bridge of the Pocahontas Ferry, enroute to Jamestown.














Once we cross the James River we'll be at the entrance to both the new Jamestown replica settlement and the original settlement site, about a mile apart from each other. We toured both sites.















Kathy learns the ropes of rope-making during our tour of Jamestown settlement.











The indian village exhibited all of the skills needed to survive in those times











The Jamestown replica includes the ships that brought the first settlers in 1620.











Jamestown's blacksmith at work












A "typical" Jamestown soldier & protector














The original Jamestown site is being researched on a full-time basis.















The "Hundred Mile Hill".....Rode our bikes around Westmoreland State Park, including the very L-O-N-G hill from the campsite to the water....Won't do THAT again!















Last night out was at Westmoreland State Park, on VA side of Potomac, about 85 miles from home. Known for its cliff banks, the area is filled with fossils, sharks' teeth and other prehistoric items.























About Me

College Park, MD, Wash. DC metro area, United States
Lee is the manager of College Park Airport (world's oldest airport in continuous operation!), Kathy is Ex. Ass't. to Prez of a Fortune 500 company. Both Barth junkies, they enjoy restoring a '78, 24' Barth and exploring the mid-Atlantic area in it. Kathy was born & raised in the Washington DC area - Lee has been there for several decades......