From Asheville to Roanoke, there is 4 hour drive, give or take. Given that I had never been to Virginia and that we wanted to break down the trip, Hubby and I decided to make a detour via the Blue Ridge Parkway. It added a 40 minutes drive, but allowed us to see the most photographed site of the scenic byway: Mabry Mill. However it was also the eve of the race and I wanted to eat early. So with the mill still a little ahead and since we were already on the Parkway we made an earlier stop at Puckett Cabin.
Picnic on the lawn, a quiet place. There were few cars driving by and the place felt so peaceful. We read the sign explaining how Orlean Puckett had lived there towards the end of her life. A local legend, she lost all 24 of her children as infants or at birth. She could have turned bitter, but instead around age 50 she became a midwife in this rural Appalachian region. During her entire career she lost neither mother nor child. She is said to have worked until almost her death, since the last child she delivered was in 1938 and she died in 1939 at age 95 to 102.
A few miles later we finally arrived at Mabry Mill. The end of April is still the off season for the site. The welcome center, restaurant and even the bathrooms were closed. However I was pleasantly surprised to see that the site doesn't have a mill only. There is in fact several paved trails taking the visitor behind the mill. It's a bit like a reconstitution of an Appalachian village activities in the 19th century: blacksmith, (illegal) moonshining, sorhum sirop pressing and boiling, etc. It was obvious that there are activities there during the summer to bring those traditions to life but we could only look and guess what was used for what.
Hubby couldn't help himself from climing to see the water up close.
Il était intéressant pour nous de voir la différence de végétation, bien moins avancée qu'Asheville. Mais surtout des paysages qui m'interpelaient. La section de la Blue Ridge Parkway ou nous vivons se trouve sur les sommets les plus hauts des Appalaches, en comparaison ce que nous avons vu en Virginie était plus rural que montagnard et donnait l'effet d'un plateau.
The visit was worth the detour. We did stay a few more miles on the Parkway before taking the state roads to Roanoke. We did make two more stops to enjoy the views. It was interesting for us to see the difference in vegetation, not as far ahead as Asheville. But mostly it was the landscape that I noticed. Where we live by the Blue Ridge Parkway is around the highest summits of the Appalachian Range, in comparison what we saw in Virginia was a lot more rural that mountain like and gave the feel of a plateau.