Waterfalls, Falling Water
and 93 Falling
Trip Report #3
Trip Report #3
Sept 14-16, 2018
How do we
decide where to go and what to visit? We have a wonderful book gifted to us from
our daughter Katie … 1000 Places to See Before You Die.
Hocking Hills
One of the places listed is Hocking Hills State Park in Ohio.
Spectacular rock formations cloaked in dense forest with cliffs, gorges, caves
and waterfalls with towering eastern hemlocks, the Canada yew and the yellow
and black birch. Millions of years of uplift and stream erosion created this
awesome beauty. We stay at the state campground and spend two days hiking into
these remarkable gorges and recess caves carved out of sandstone over millions
of years. We visit Old Man’s Cave, Lower Falls, Ash Cave and Cedar Falls; yet
only see a small part of the region. Of course, such beauty requires multiple
pictures.
To get a perspective, see Dan at lower right corner of this picture below.
Pennsylvania
Leaving
Ohio, we enter Pennsylvania; hop scotching back and forth hitting more bucket
list sites. There are numerous covered bridges in PA; we stopped at this one
built in 1802 and rebuilt 1906 and 2008. No cars allowed.
Frank Lloyd Wright
Architecture
done well always has a striking and fascinating appeal. There is none as
appealing as FallingWater, a weekend home designed by Wright for the Kaufmanns
of Pittsburg. Wright designed this house to sit over the waterfall. There were
also many trails around the house to get different views. A definite bucket
list checkoff and worth the time to visit.
Dan in picture with house above the waterfall. Note the steps from inside the house down to the river.
Vicki in picture with house past the waterfall … seen in lower right side under the house.
Flight 93 National Memorial
The goal was
to fly straight into the Capital Buildings in Washington D.C. The passengers
had a different plan. Fully aware of the destruction of the Twin Towers in New
York that happened only minutes earlier and faced with the hijacking of their
plane, the passengers voted and decided to retake their plane from the
terrorists. In storming the cockpit, the passengers disrupted the plan and
forced the terrorists instead to crash the plane before reaching their target.
This site is
now a memorial to the 40 passengers and crew who saved countless more people in
D.C. and thwarted the plan to destroy the buildings and people who serve our
country in D.C. Both houses of Congress were in session. The destruction of
that center of democracy would have been additionally devastating.
The memorial covers many acres and
gives us options to get in some walking. The building housing the museum is a
long one pointing out the flight path of flight 93. The black portion is a
promontory pointing to the crash site. The site is marked in the distance by a
large boulder.
The boulder
marks the final resting spot and the white wall lists the names of all 40
passengers and crew.
Gorgeous
wildflowers everywhere in the fields … even in the middle of September.
Next …
Lancaster and Philadelphia.