Friday, August 31, 2018

WELLSBORO


GATEWAY TO THE GRAND CANYON
We decided to split our week in North Central Pennsylvania between two towns, Coudersport and Wellsboro. Coudersport was just 14 miles west from Cherry Springs State Park, a designated Dark Sky Park and the best area to see the galactic display of the Milky Way on the east coast. Wellsboro, a much larger town offering more amenities was 32 miles east from the state park which we thought was too long a drive in the middle of the night.

A SHOT OF CIVILIZATION
Perhaps it was the rainy days that made Coudersport seem so dreary, but when we arrived in picturesque Wellsboro, awash in sunlight missing for the week, we were pleasantly surprised. Wellsboro is charming and elegant. Once Route 6 turns off, Main Street becomes this sedate quiet stretch adorned with gas lanterns. Neat homes grace the tree lined streets and the downtown area offers several shops and restaurants and a classic movie theater. Time seems to have stopped here. Thankfully the Arcadia Theater had new films listed on their marquee to give an inkling this was 2018 and not 1968. The Wellsboro Diner dates from the late 1930’s and well -known establishment looks like it hasn’t changed since they finally put in electricity. The Green, just on the edge of the downtown has fountains and statuary. It’s all very lovely and quite a respite from the rural area that we were visiting.
THE ARCADIA WELLSBORO


LA BELLE AUBERGE
We had two days in Wellsboro. We rewarded ourselves with a stay in the lovely La Belle Auberge B&B on Main Street. It is a beautiful Victorian crammed with lots of choochkies with each of the rooms given a French motif. We stayed in the Provence room and had a fireplace, jacuzzi, and were greeted nightly with truffles on our pillow. La Belle Auberge offered gourmet breakfasts which we took on the porch amid a well-manicured garden. They owners of LBA also run a spa in town and we understand they rub people the right way with therapeutic massages. 


It is a bit expensive but it is very lovely and well worth the extra money. We paid mid-week prices which rise on the weekend and during the autumn season they rise even higher. Evidently because of the fall foliage it is quite difficult to get a room anywhere in the area. Supply and demand.

We arrived that Wednesday afternoon after the drive along Route 6 from Coudersport. Route 6 is the longest highway in Pennsylvania and even has its own webpage guide to the attractions along and near its length. We strolled the downtown area reading the different menus listed on the restaurants trying to decide where we were going for dinner. It was hot and we stopped in a little dive bar for some beer and shuffleboard. I liked the place, especially since I finally beat Janet in shuffleboard for the first time ever.

THE PENN WELLS HOTEL AND LODGE
To celebrate this momentous occasion, we decided to take our meal at the Penn Wells Hotel & Lodge. The structure seems a bit austere outside, but they boast of having opulent rooms, a grand ballroom and an indoor swimming pool. The Penn Wells was perhaps the best formal dining experience in all of Wellsboro, but we are bar sitters when it comes to meals and we walked through an ornate ballroom to reach their bar called the Lodge. We were still able to order from the dining room menu. The place was airy with a fireplace. I ordered a very satisfying shrimp and grits and Janet had a massive dinner salad. The place was empty when we first arrived but people were circling around us by the time we finished hoping to jump into our places.


WELLSBORO HOUSE
They had had a “tap takeover” of Wellsboro House beers at the Crittenden Hotel Taproom while we were there and we made it a point to visit the brew pub for dinner and well-earned beers after our lengthy bike ride along the Pine Creek Rail Trail. A couple we met on the porch of the LBA that morning told us the food would not disappoint and the Wellsboro House was a winning combination with their array of good beers brewed by them and a lengthy menu of good quality food.  I had their blackened Mahi sandwich and Janet had a dinner salad topped with blackend shrimp.
THE WELLSBORO HOUSE

Friday, August 24, 2018

BIKING THE GRAND CANYON


PINE CREEK GORGE
Our recent trip to North Central Pennsylvania was a rustic adventure, but without all that camping nonsense. We stayed in a hotel in Coudersport for the first part of the week and then stayed at Le Belle Auberge, a boutique bed and breakfast in Wellsboro. Planning the trip, we did not even consider camping and this proved to be the correct decision because it rained nearly the entire week. Getting drenched while living in a tent is not fun. especially when there are no hot showers and no respite from the bad weather. All you can do is sit in your tent and molder.

Despite the inclement weather we did spend a goodly amount of time outdoors. Though our stargazing efforts were “clouded” over, the rain abated enough during the day for us to see the Kinzua Bridge and at the Lumber Museum we were able to explore the outdoor replication of a timber harvesting camp without getting too "waterlogged". 
 
The Pine Creek Rail Trail can
be seen on the lower right
A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT
We had traveled to this “neck of the woods” for stargazing at Cherry Springs State Park the only dark sky park on the east coast and that was a bust. I had never seen the Milky Way before and had the weather cooperated I would have been blessed by this galactic vision. Thankfully the second half of our trip was more successful.

For years Janet had talked about the Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania, a 47-mile cut through the Allegheny Mountains formed by the Pine Creek, a tributary of the mighty Susquehanna River. She had never seen this natural treasure before and was anxious to show me what was perhaps the best part of Pennsylvania. The canyon is impressive when seen from any angle. On the floor the steep canyon walls dwarf you, from the edge the vistas reveal unsettling expanses of air. At its deepest the canyon is 1,500 feet and at one point is nearly a mile wide. It starts in Ansonia near Wellsboro and ends in Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania. 
Pine Creek Rail Trail

Once denuded of trees because of an aggressive timber industry 100 years ago, the splendor of these woodlands is back and can be appreciated many different ways any time of the year. Hiking trails course the gorge and there is a scenic overlook at Leonard Harrison State Park Visitor Center that rewards a casual stroller with a spectacular view of the canyon. Cascading waterfalls all along the gorge cool the air in the summer heat. There is canoeing and kayaking on the Pine Creek, swollen from the steady rains, but the most popular pastime is the Pine Creek Rail Trail; a converted railway bed that was once used in the lumber industry along the canyon floor and following the creek. Excellent for biking with just a gentle grade we rented bikes and pedaled through the canyon for 28 miles!
 
Pine Creek Rail Trail
RAIL TO TRAIL
There is a movement nationwide to take disused train beds and form trails. Usually flat, long and at times running through historical areas abandoned rail beds make for great trails. The rail system through the Pine Creek Gorge was first used for transporting timber and coal then freight and passengers, the tracks following the creek along the floor of the Grand Canyon. The trains ran until 1988 when they were abandoned by Conrail. The tracks were eventually removed and the Pine Creek Rail Trail opened in 1996. It’s possible to travel the entire 47 miles of the Grand Canyon by this trail. 
 
One of the many falls
Because it is relatively flat and the views are strikingly beautiful, the Pine Creek Rail Trail is perhaps one of the greatest places to take a bike tour. Though it is possible to travel the entire 47 miles from Ansonia to Jersey Shore via the trail, but we stopped at State Run. 

Thankfully the day was bright and sunny. It was hot in the sun, but much of the trail is shaded and whenever we passed a waterfall running fiercely with all the rain, the air cooled dramatically. The Pine Creek was running muddy and quick and we didn't see any canoes kayaks or rafts, but there were a lot of bikers along the trail.

Every few miles there are rest stations and several wells to pump water. The wells unfortunately carried the caveat that the water was not tested for purity. Still they were convenient to wet a cloth to cool our heads. In Blackwell, the first stop there is a small delicatessen where we got some much-deserved ice cream.
Janet waiting for me, again 

By the end of our excursion I was bushed. Janet would have gone all the way to Jersey Shore... in NEW JERSEY... but after 28 miles on a bike my butt was hurting. We waited for our pick-up ride at the Hotel Manor & Bar in State Run and sat on deck with a beer admiring the river. The day was a success!

OUTFITTERS
We rented our bikes at PINE CREEK OUTFITTERS on Route 6 in Ansonia, a short drive west from Wellsboro. They also offer canoe and kayak rentals and guided rafting trips down the Pine Creek and they will even provide shuttle service with your own bikes, at a cost. We had to meet them at an appointed time for either a pick up in Blackwell, or State Run. A friendly staff, offering good equipment and encouragement. When we told them we were taking the longer trek to State Run they seemed genuinely pleased.  
At the end of the ride
I’d do it again, evidently the fall foliage is glorious. But, next time I’ll bring a pillow for the bike!

Thanks for reading!

Friday, August 10, 2018

LUMBER PARTY


TIMBER!
Get out of Southeast Pennsylvania and the Philadelphia suburbs and very quickly the landscape changes. Farms begin to stretch out from the road to the far hills and little gritty towns that once provided labor to a thriving coal industry pop up here and there moldering in the rust belt, their ever-present soot still caking the shingles of modest rowhomes.
Go further out and you are blessed with true woodlands. Most of the Commonwealth is gloriously rural. State and National forests, state parks and state game lands set aside for hunting are everywhere. Even near us in Collegeville there is Evansburg State Park, a long swatch of preserved lands just a mile or so away from my middle class garret. Everywhere too are signs that proclaim local farms are preserved so no development can be begun. Pennsylvania does it right.
Pennsylvania Grand Canyon

For years Janet has regaled me with tales of the seemingly unending mountains and the old growth woods of northern Pennsylvania. She has told me often of the Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania, a 47-mile gorge cut through the Allegheny Plateau by the Pine Creek, a tributary of the mighty Susquehanna, in the North Central section of the state and wanted to take me to see these beautiful vistas. Coupled with our intended trip to Cherry Springs State Park, a designated Dark Sky Park preserved for star gazing Team VFH recently decided to visit this “neck of the woods.”

Coming from New Jersey, where while there are some swatches of wilderness and beautiful areas, there is always a finite feel to them, as if the bend in the pastoral fields will soon reveal a shopping mall. The inherent beauty of the northern area of Pennsylvania is unending.

The past is different though. Because of the abundant resources of coal, oil (drilling began in 1859) and timber in the commonwealth, much was taken from the land without considering the future. When Pennsylvania was first settled it was estimated that 90% of the land was forested, but by the 1920’s the area of the Grand Canyon was so denuded of trees that the area was considered a desert. Instead of selective harvesting of trees, clearcutting went on and reduced the area to a barren gorge, prone to wild fires, landslides and flooding.

In the 1920s the Commonwealth began purchasing thousands of acres back from the lumber companies and reforesting the land and a massive conservation movement began. Along with the Civilian Conservation Corps, the CCC, a state-wide system of parks was created. Today, the old growth trees are back. Harvesting of trees still goes on; evidently Pennsylvania is the nation’s largest producer of hardwood lumber; but timber management and a more conservative approach are now the norm.


WOOD HICKS AND LOGJAMS
Sounds like I’ve been schooled in the woodshed about this stuff doesn’t it. Well, a chance stop mid-way between Coudersport and Wellsboro, was the Lumber Museum on Route 6. This informative and entertaining museum was worth the $8.00 admission. At first, we thought it would be a hokey stop, but we came away from the visit with a greater appreciation of the history of the timber industry and the extensive conservative measures taken by Pennsylvania to replenish the woodlands. We had no idea of the enormity of the lumber industry in Pennsylvania and how much manpower it took to harvest the highly prized timber. The beautiful wooden, of course, museum offers an array of artifacts and hands on displays and historical notes of the industry and the people who led the conservative movement. Outside around back is a working wood mill and a reconstruction of a lumber village that you can explore at your leisure.


If you’re in the area … go. Thanks for reading.