September 2012

Certain hints of an urban walk: Hiker has no backpack; Ford truck in foreground along a city street; big old house from the glory days of Memorial Avenue, circa 1920, picked as photo focal point by The Day Hiker for its spring-has-sprung front yard.

Of Rain, Quiche and an Old Ford Truck

A seriously rainy weekend kept us out of the woods and onto the greenway toward a place with a roof over it for brunch.
Gail looks across the valley from near Dragon's Tooth, and beyond to Peaks of Otter (the twins there framed on the horizon amid the tangle of branches).

Racing Daylight Savings Time

We "celebrated" the arrival of Daylight Savings Time (except of course in the morning, when it is Daylight Destroying Time) with an evening climb up to the formation.
View is across the valley between Terrapin Mountain and Thunder Ridge, with the Blue Ridge Parkway slicing along the side of Thunder Ridge.

Creek Crossin’!

The two minor drawbacks of this enjoyable, mostly gentle loop are that its viewpoints are in the first two miles or so, and it ends with a long ascent.
The Greatest Day Hiker Of Them All on the lower overlook atop Mill Mountain, with downtown to the right and the McAfee profile just above her head.

Easy, Dependable Mill Mountain

This enjoyable, easy loop is always a good one for a rushed weekend where you get to reinforce how lucky Roanoke is to have the Appalachian Trail as close as 20 minutes away, but also its own in-town trail system on its own in-town mountain.
Cookie exploring the edge, and the view over the James River and beyond.

Those Well-Worth-It 21 Switchbacks

You can think about a climb with 21 switchbacks as one long climb of a mountainside. Or you can think about why the trail builders created them: to make the climb of a mountainside a heck of a lot easier than going straight up.

Departments

Behind Blue Ridge Country

Even More Sweet Virginia Breezes

Casually cruising to Claytor Lake in southwest Virginia, I felt like I had come home – back to where it

CALENDAR OF EVENTS