Indiana Lady Bass Angler is Attempting to Beat Odds and Journey to Texas to Fish the Women’s Bassmaster Tour Preview Event


Hot Springs Village, AR (PRWEB) October 4, 2005

Sue Parrish has “survived” the demise of three attempts at women’s NATIONAL fishing tours already: Lady Bass of Louisiana, Bass’N Gal of Texas, and Women’s Bass Fishing Association of Alabama. Now, she’s going to try once again.

The formation of a Bassmaster Women’s Tour is now a dream come true for female anglers across the United States and beyond. This is especially true after the Women’s Bass Fishing Association Tour followed suit of their predecessors and recently closed their doors. Sue is one of ten women from Indiana that will be answering the call and journeying to Texas to fish the BWT on Lake Lewisville this month.

Sue is a retired teacher (32 years) and basketball coach – from Warren Central High School in Indianapolis – where her girl’s team drew a lot of local publicity for their successes during that time.

She has fished in local women’s bass clubs Indiana Bass’N Gals, Hoosier Bass’N Gals, and now, Freedom Lady Anglers) for the past 25 years. She was Tournament Director for the “Kid & Company” tournament (sponsored by both Indiana Bass’N Gals and Hoosier Bass’N Gals) on Lake Monroe for 16 years and is proud to have contributed to the fishing knowledge of some of our younger proficient anglers that are now fishing local and national events.

She has also been Tournament director for Open Team tournaments sponsored by the clubs as moneymaking projects during all this time. Sue is the originator and distributor of the Bass Tourney Calendar (18 years) that is sold each year at the Indianapolis Boat, Sport & Travel Show.

Sue is knowledgeable regarding women’s fishing, a great supporter of the fishing industry and knows the value regarding the preservation of

our natural resources. She works closely with the Indiana Department of Natural Resources for the improvement of fishing guidelines on

surrounding lakes and is well-known (and admired) by bass anglers in the Indianapolis area for her ethics in the above situations.

Her other interests included deer and squirrel hunting, the raising of two pygmy goats, a rabbit, and a cat.

Sue is sponsored by Killbuck Valley Sports (Ranger Boats), Blackhawk Custom Outfitters, The Outdoorsman Sport Shop. Precision Propeller, Inc., Seaton Tackle Solutions, Shimano Rods & Reels, Watt-a-Copy Printing, and Waymire Trailer Towing Systems.

For profiles of other female anglers visit Lady Bass Angler, http://www.ladybassangler.com, the online meeting place for women who fish for bass.

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Find More Deer Hunting Indiana Press Releases

Wyatt’s Guns Announces the Opening of a Combined Retail Store, Indoor Range and Shooting Sports Classroom in Hamilton County, Indiana


Cicero, IN (PRWEB) May 6, 2009

Business is booming at Wyatt’s Guns, literally. The founder of the well known gun shop in Cicero, Indiana, has just completed building a new facility at the existing location unlike any other in central Indiana.

Wyatt’s Guns was founded in 1992 in Cicero, Indiana, as a place where firearms, law enforcement, and hunting enthusiasts and collectors could go to purchases guns and accessories and have a cup of coffee with friends. “My dream was to have the best place where people could go to buy, sell or trade guns and enjoy shooting sports and camaraderie of like minded friends,” said Miles Wyatt, founder. “Our new building takes this dream several steps further in adding an indoor shooting range and a classroom for safety and educational purposes.” Wyatt’s slogan, “Safety, service and education of the highest caliber”, is more than just a marketing theme as each service component of the business has been structurally built into the building.

Wyatt’s Guns indoor range has the capability to serve almost every shooting requirement. With an extreme emphasis in safety procedures, the facility uses the most advanced space-age Ballistic polymer? backstop materials for public safety. The environment is temperature and humidity controlled and double filtered for comfort in all seasons. Also, the range room also has sound-proofing materials designed to reduce noise.

Mr. Wyatt also built a modern classroom to conduct a wide range of educational courses including Firearms Safety, Proper Gun Cleaning Techniques, Firearms Maintenance, Shooting Range Etiquette and Action Shooting. In addition, Law Enforcement, Self Defense and Advanced Firearms courses will be taught in the classroom.

The new Wyatt’s Guns shop is like no other in the Midwest. Guns, ammunition and accessories displayed in the showroom wrap all the way around the 2,000 square foot sales floor. There’s space to breathe, stools for customers to sit and talk about guns, and there are always plenty of new pistols, rifles, shotguns, suppressors and Class III firearms on hand. The all-brick store is located in Cicero, Indiana, and has parking that can facilitate up to 40 cars. The retail showroom has been built with all hardwood flooring, walls and ceiling to give a clean and rustic look. Customers are welcome to belong to the Wyatt’s Gun Club which provides preferential scheduling and discounts on range time and ammunition.

Wyatt’s Guns is a full service gun shop located in Cicero, Indiana, with a combined state-of-the-art retail showroom, indoor range, and firearms training classroom. The company delivers a professional and friendly experience for customers and shoppers with a focus on safety, service and education. Although the new store is now open, a Grand Opening for the public is planned soon. You can get more information by visiting the Wyatt’s Guns web site at http://www.WyattsGuns.com. Or you can contact Wyatt’s Guns by calling 317-984-2767 or by sending e-mail to MWyatt(at)WayattsGuns(dot)com.

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Related Indiana Seasons For Hunting Press Releases

Indiana?s Official Hunter Safety Course Upgraded with New Features for 2010 Hunting Season


Dallas, TX (PRWEB) September 10, 2010

Successfully completing a hunter education course is mandatory for most Indiana hunting license buyers born on or after December 31, 1986. With Hunter-Ed.com, people learn the official hunter education material that is taught in Indiana classroom courses. Students study the fast-paced Indiana hunters safety course online when it fits their schedule, then complete their hunter education certification by passing an online exam. After completing the hunter education course, students may purchase an Indiana hunting license.

Hunter-Ed.com?s new-and-improved Indiana online hunter safety course is similar to the recently-launched Hunter-Ed.com Alabama course. A student wrote to Hunter-Ed.com: ?Your site has been great. I am a Marine and have had countless hours behind all sorts of weapons but the information I have received from your course has been irreplaceable. I thought it was gonna be a drag and boring, but I have actually enjoyed the course very much.?

Since 2002, more than 1 million students have taken a Hunter-Ed.com hunter safety course. Hunter-Ed.com’s hunter education course content and presentation has been continuously refined through extensive review by hunting and firearm safety authorities. Although its courses have received many positive reviews through the years, Hunter-Ed.com continues to add extras and special features designed to appeal to today’s hunters.

?We are gratified that so many state agencies and students have selected Hunter-Ed.com to be their hunter education partner,? says Kurt Kalkomey, President. ?Hunter-Ed.com continually innovates so that we can introduce more folks to the rich heritage of hunting. Our motto is ?Get safe, get certified? so you can maximize your enjoyment of the outdoors. These days, very few people can devote an entire weekend or multiple week nights to take a classroom hunting course. The Hunter-Ed.com online course saves time and money, and opens up hunting opportunities for young people.?

Hunter-Ed.com?s Indiana hunters safety course (http://www.Hunter-Ed.com/Indiana/) material is free to the public. Students pay $ 19.50 upon passing the online course to obtain their Hunter-Ed.com Certificate of Course Completion and permanent Indiana DNR hunter education card.

Hunter-Ed.com is a division of Kalkomey, Inc. which publishes more than 190 hunter education products selected by 48 states. For more information about official hunter safety courses and state requirements for hunters education, please visit Hunter-Ed.com (http://www.Hunter-Ed.com/).

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EZ Hunt & Haul Introduces ?Predator? Line


Bremen, IN (PRWEB) August 20, 2011

EZ Hunt & Haul, LLC is excited to announce the introduction of their Predator line of hunting blind trailers. The Predator is an innovative, versatile, multi-use trailer that can be utilized as a sturdy, weather-tight hunting blind, an ATV hauler, an ice fishing shanty and a cargo trailer. Predator I is built on a 4′ x 8′ base and Predator II, a 5′ x 8′ base.

The Predator, made by EZ Hunt & Haul, LLC ? a family owned and operated company based in Bremen, Indiana ? made its debut at the Land and Wildlife Expo, sponsored by Bass Pro Shops, in Nashville, Tennessee, on August 12-14. Interest in the unit was very high. ?We’re already getting calls from all around the country!? says Gilbert Miller, the company’s founder and Director of Personnel, ?The most common reaction was people saying they’ve never seen anything like it!? Ron Ameling, EZ Hunt & Haul’s Vice President of Sales says the team is in the process of setting up their dealer network. All interested dealers are encouraged to contact the company.

What is it that makes the EZ Hunt & Haul Predator so unique? The Predator is a solid-wall, trailer-mounted hunting blind constructed on a sturdy, lightweight 1? aluminum frame with Foam Core insulation, laminated ABS on the interior and your choice of Mossy Oak Camo pattern on the exterior.

Author Incorporates Family Custom in New Children?s Book


Pickering, Ontario (PRWEB) July 19, 2011

Many families share unique, endearing traditions and habits. These can take the form of bedtime routines, holiday traditions, or quirky phrases or nicknames. In her new book Gordon’s Treasure!: A Sparkle Cove Adventure (published by AuthorHouse), Christina Doucette takes a special phrase shared in her family and realizes it in a full color, fully illustrated adventure tale for children.

Early in his language development, Doucette?s son would often say ?I keep you,? which was his way of saying ?I love you.? Building upon this cute idea, Doucette crafted an imaginative world populated with fun characters and magical whimsies. The main character is a young water dragon named Gordon, who takes the reader on a special treasure hunt to Sparkle Cove, an enchanted and wonderful place full of things for Gordon to ?keep.?

During his adventure, Gordon meets a number of interesting characters, such as a goldfish named April, a frog named Daniel and a snake named Stanley. As these characters help Gordon find magical gems on his treasure hunt, they hear him say ?I keep you,? but the reader doesn?t learn the phrase?s meaning until Gordon returns home after the treasure hunt and tells his mom, ?I keep you,? as she tucks him in at night.

A charming and enjoyable tale, Gordon’s Treasure! is Doucette?s first children?s book.

About the Author

Christina Doucette (Kudlik) was born and raised in Kitchener Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. She earned a degree in journalism from Humber College. Doucette has freelance experience with CBC Radio ?Outfront? and ?The Ottawa Citizen.” She lives in Pickering, with her husband and child .

AuthorHouse, an Author Solutions, Inc. self-publishing imprint, is a leading provider of book publishing, marketing, and bookselling services for authors around the globe and offers the industry?s only suite of Hollywood book-to-film services. Committed to providing the highest level of customer service, AuthorHouse assigns each author personal publishing and marketing consultants who provide guidance throughout the process. Headquartered in Bloomington, Indiana, AuthorHouse will celebrate 15 years of service to authors in Sept. 2011.For more information or to publish a book visit authorhouse.com or call 1-888-519-5121. For the latest, follow @authorhouse on Twitter.

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10 Best Places to Have a Mid-Life Crisis

1. Badda bling, Dubai, UAE

It’s time for a new outfit, which means an expedition to Dubai. Fashion is serious business in this shopping-mall heaven, where small and flashy togs can be stuffed into designer handbags. To finish the look, eye-punishing displays of glittering gold line the streets of Dubai’s gold souq. Over 25 tonnes of the stuff are on display in the city’s jewellery-shop windows. Choose from earrings, rings, necklaces or bracelets – the more ostentatious the better. You’ll find big-name gold shops aplenty, but the famous gold souk is not to be outdone. Check out the independents at

2. Get your kicks, Route 66, USA

Search for freedom on the open highway with a road trip across the USA. It requires a Harley or a classic convertible, and plenty of ‘issues’ to resolve. Take your pick from a multitude of interstate routes, but to travel in the footsteps of film, literary and music legends it has to be wellworn and iconic Route 66, from Chicago to Santa Monica. Do take a movie camera to record your trip. Don’t forget to fill up with gas. Rent a convertible from http://www.alamo.com and get the wind in your (greying) hair; rentals from US a day.

3. Shaken, not stirred, Monte Carlo, Monaco

Dust off your tux and brush up on the slick one-liners as you join the jet set, Bond-style, in Monte Carlo. The beautiful people out-glamour each other from their million-euro yachts moored along the harbour, as international businesspeople monitor their investments from this secure tax haven. Visitors to the casino glint with gold, like the sun on the Med. The Monte Carlo Rally in January and the Monaco Grand Prix in May offer adrenalin-fuelled breaks from spending cash. Experience refined pleasure at Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo; and plan how to fake being a royal at http://www.monte-carlo.mc.

4. Say ‘om’, Rishikesh, India

If your crisis is one of faith and you’re feeling life should have more meaning than meandering, take your pick of places in which to have a spiritual epiphany: St Peter’s in Rome, Lhasa in Tibet or Mecca in Saudi Arabia could help you find your calling. But we reckon the ideal spot is Rishikesh, on the banks of the sacred Ganges in the foothills of the Himalaya. It’s lined with ashrams, and holy men mingle with tourists and the odd celeb. This was the Beatles’ favourite centre of Hindu philosophy and learning, and it’s nicknamed the yoga capital of the world. Rishikesh is 238km from Delhi; visit between May and October so you don’t completely boil your brains.

5. Say ‘I do’, not ‘Who are you?’, Las Vegas, USA

You’ve realised what your first wedding was missing: an Elvis impersonator, matching polyester pantsuits and a partner you’d only just met. So it’s time to take a gamble of a different sort with a second/third/seventh wedding in Vegas. It offers more than 30 places to say ‘I do’, and over 100,000 couples take their vows here each year, including more than a handful of celebs. The Little White Wedding Chapel is open 24 hours, so when your eyes meet over a crowded poker table, there’s no need to bother waiting before tying the knot. Amazingly, the Chapel of the Flowers is a genuinely romantic wedding venue set among the kitsch. (Well, it’s kind of romantic.)

6. Time for a nip and tuck

Fed up of peering in the mirror, jiggling your wobbly bits and wishing everything was a little further north? Considering a little nip and tuck or two, but worried about showing your post-op bruises in public? Cheap prices coupled with recuperation in the sun is making surgery in Phuket, Kuala Lumpur or Manila increasingly popular. India is the daddy of them all – after all Shiva attached an elephant’s head to his son’s body around 4000 years ago. Today state-of-the-art facilities make a facelift or a hip replacement a short inconvenience before relaxing by the beach. Breasts are the biggest commodity at http://www.phuket-plasticsurgery.com but the clinic also does dental work and surgery for the boys.

7. Gamble the kids’ inheritance, Macau

Cashing in the pension fund and remortgaging the house might just be enough to get you in the door of Crown Casino, Taipa Island, Macau. Boasting six stars and more than 200 gaming tables, the casino’s not shy about the number of noughts involved. For those with pockets smaller than China, there are another 27 casinos to choose from. These include the grandly decked-out Emperor Palace Casino on the peninsula – featuring plenty of marble and as much gold on the brick fl oor as on the gamblers themselves – or the famous, lively Casino Lisboa. The Lisboa is on Avenida de Lisboa. It’s open 24 hours and if you get tired it has 650 hotel rooms to crash in.

8. Round the bend, Silverstone, England

It’s not too late to fulfil that dream of being a racing driver, temporarily at least. Crowds have watched heroes like Senna, Prost and Stewart hurtle around the legendary Silverstone track, home of the British Grand Prix, since the 1950s, and you can recreate it with a power test drive. Imagine the cheers as you burn rubber in a Ferrari, slide into corners in an old single-seater or test a 4WD on something more taxing than the streets of Islington. Just don’t try this on the school run. Thrill packages at Silverstone can be booked online at http://www.silverstone.co.uk; three laps in an Aston Martin V8 Vantage costs £99.

9. Beating baddies and getting the girl, Petra, Jordan

Petra, setting for much of 1989’s Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, looks like it should only exist in films. A narrow canyon winds to its iconic entrance, carved from deep-rose-coloured sandstone. As you enter, you’re greeted by the intricate facade of the famous Khazneh (Treasury), fictional home of the Holy Grail. The site contains plenty more to explore, including the Temple of the Winged Lions, still in the process of excavation. Today the only hazards are bumping shoulders with the other 3000 visitors; poisoned arrows, rolling balls of rock and snake pits are usually avoidable. Wake up early to make the most of the site’s 6am–5pm standard opening hours.

10. Jaws indoors, Sydney & Melbourne, Australia

For centuries humans have pitted themselves against beasts to prove their worth, from rather one-sided trophy hunting to careering down side streets at the running of the bulls in Pamplona, Spain. Something a little more equal and up close is diving with sharks, and for that you should head to Australia. For those with no diving experience, tank dives in Melbourne’s aquarium and Sydney’s oceanarium give a chance to watch these predators glide past soundlessly, eyeing you up as a potential meal. Friends and family can watch your bravery (barely concealed terror) via a glass viewing screen. Sydney Oceanworld is on Manly’s West Esplanade. Take bus 165 or 169 from the city; it’s open from Monday to Sunday.

Written by ashucharu
Journalist , Freelance Content Writer

This is the first trip to hunt the elusive Morel Mushroom in 2008. Wally and I went to an undisclosed location and found a nice “mess” of “shrooms” for the first day out. We had several more trips to this and other locations and found a fair quantity of mushrooms of a variety of species from the small “grays” to the “snake head” to the wonderful “Yellow Sponge” mushrooms. All in all it was a good year. Let us all hope that 2009 will be a productive year. God Bless Indiana and Henry County, one of the most beautiful places on Earth.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

A Tourist Guide to West Virginia

1. Introduction

West Virginia, endlessly covered with forests and known as the “Mountain State,” offers breathtaking scenery, natural resource-related sights, and year-round, outdoor activities.

Once rich in coal and timber, it was shaped by the mines and logging railroads which extracted them, but when decades of removal began to deplete these commodities, their rolling, green-carpeted mountains yielded secondary byproducts—namely, hiking, biking, fishing, rafting, climbing, and hunting to tourists and sports enthusiasts alike.  Its New River Gorge, which offers many similar activities, is equally beautiful with its rugged banks and azure surfaces, while the principle city of Charleston, revitalized during the 1970s and 1980s, now features museums, art, shopping malls, restaurants, and world-class performance venues.

2. Charleston

Located on the Kanawha River, and sporting an easily negotiable street grid system, it is subdivided into the Capitol Complex and the downtown area with the East End Historic District linking the two.

From the former, which is the heart of state government, juts the ubiquitously visible, gold-domed Capitol Building itself.  Constructed of buff Indiana limestone and 4,640 tons of steel, which themselves required the temporary laying of a spur rail line to transport them, the building had been laid in three stages during an eight-year period: 1924 to 1925 for the west wing, 1926 to 1927 for the east wing, and 1930 to 1932 for the connecting rotunda.  It was officially dedicated by Governor William G. Conley on June 20, 1932, on the occasion of West Virginia’s 69th birthday as a state.

Its gold dome, which extends five feet higher than that of the Capitol in Washington, is gilded in 23 ½-karat gold leaf, applied between 1988 and 1991 as tiny squares to cover the otherwise copper and lead surface.

Two-thirds of its interior, which encompasses 535,000 square feet subdivided into 333 rooms, is comprised of Italian travertine, imperial derby, and Tennessee marble, and the chandelier in the rotunda, its center piece, is made of 10,180 pieces of Czechoslovakian crystal illuminated by 96 light bulbs.  Weighing 4,000 pounds, it hangs from a 54-foot brass and bronze chain.

Across from the State Capitol, but still within the complex, is the West Virginia Cultural Center.  Opened in 1976 and operated by the West Virginia Division of Culture and History, it was created to showcase the state’s artistic, cultural, and historical heritage, and houses the West Virginia State Museum, the archives and history library, a gift shop, and a venue for cultural events, performances, and related programs.

The former, a collection of items which represents the state’s land, people, and culture, is subdivided into 24 significant scenes covering five periods: Prehistory (3 million years BC to 1650 AD), Frontier (1754-1860), the Civil War and the 35th State (1861 to 1899), Industrialization (1900 to 1945), and Change and Tradition (1954 to the 21st  century).  The 24 representations themselves trace the state’s evolution and include such periods as “Coal Forest,” “River Plains,” “Wilderness,” “The Fort,” “Harper’s Ferry,” “Building the Rails,” “Coal Mine,” “Main Street, West Virginia,” and “New River Gorge.”

Thirteen monuments, memorials, and statues honoring West Virginians for their contributions to the state and the nation grace the Capitol Complex’s landscaped grounds.

Culture can also be experienced at the Clay Center for the Arts and Sciences, a modern, 240,000-square-foot, three-level complex which opened on July 12, 2003 and represents one of the most ambitious economic, cultural, and educational projects in West Virginia’s history.  Offering sciences, visual arts, and performing arts under a single roof, the center houses the dual-level Avampato Discovery Museum, an interactive, youth-oriented experience with sections such as Health Royale, KidSpace, Earth City, and Gizmo Factory.  A 9,000-square-foot Art Gallery, located on the second floor, features both temporary and permanent exhibits, the latter emphasizing 19th and 20th century art by names such as Andy Warhol, Stuart Davis, Alexander Calder, Frank Stella, Vida Frey, and Albert Paley.  The ElectricSky Theater, a 61-foot domed planetarium, offers daily astronomy shows and wide screen presentations.  Live performances are staged in two locations: the 1,883-seat Maier Foundation Performance Hall, which is home to the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra, but otherwise offers a variety of performance types, from comedy to popular singers, bands, repertory, and Broadway plays, and the 200-seat Walker Theater, which features plays and dances with cabaret-style seating for the Woody Hawley singer-songwriter program.  The Douglas V. Reynolds Intermezzo Café and three classrooms are located on the lower level.

Shopping can be done at two major venues.  The Charleston Town Center Mall, located adjacent to the Town Center Marriott and Embassy Suites Hotel, and near the Civic Center, is a one million square foot, tri-level complex with more than 130 stores, three anchor department stores, six full-service restaurants, and a food court with ten additional fast food venues, and is accessed through three convenient parking garages.  Sporting a three-story atrium and fountain, the upscale, Kanawha Valley complex was the largest urban shopping center east of the Mississippi River when it opened in 1983.

The Capitol Market, located on Capitol and Sixth Streets in the restored and converted, 1800s Kanawha and Michigan Railroad depot, is subdivided into both in- and outdoor markets, the latter of which can only be used by bonafide farmers and receives daily, fresh, seasonal deliveries, usually consisting of flowers, shrubs, and trees in the spring; fruits and vegetables in the summer; pumpkins, gourds, and cornstalks in the fall; and Christmas trees, wreaths, and garlands in the winter.  The indoor market sells seafood, cheeses, and wines, and offers several small food stands and a full-service Italian restaurant.

An evening can be spent at the TriState Racetrack and Gaming Center.  Located a 15-minute drive from Charleston in Cross Lanes, the venue offers 90,000 square feet of gaming entertainment, inclusive of more than 1,300 slot machines, live racing, a poker room, blackjack, roulette, and craps, and four restaurants: the French Quarter Restaurant and Bar, the First Turn Restaurant, the Café Orleans, and Crescent City.  The adjacent, Mardi Gras-style hotel was completed in 2010.

3. Potomac Highlands       

The Potomac Highlands, located in the eastern portion of the state on the Allegheny Plateau, is a tapestry of diverse geographic regions and covers eight counties.  Alternatively designated “Mountain Highlands,” it had been formed some 250 million years ago when the North American and African continental collision had produced a single, uplifted mass.  Subjected to millennia of wind- and water-caused erosion, it resulted in successive valleys and parallel ridges, and today the area encompasses two national forests: Canaan Valley, the highest east of the Mississippi River, and Spruce Knob, at 4,861 feet, West Virginia’s highest point.  Its green-covered mountains yielded abundant timber, the logging railroads necessary to harness it, two premier ski resorts, and a myriad of outdoor sports and activities.

The Potomac Highlands can be subdivided into the Tygart Valley, Seneca Rocks, Canaan Valley, and Big Mountain Country.

A. Tygart Valley

The town of Elkins, located in the Tygart Valley, is the transportation, shopping, and social center of the east central Appalachian Mountains and serves as a base for Potomac Highland excursions.

Established in 1890 by Senators Henry Gassaway Davis and Stephen. B. Elkins, his son-in-law and business partner, it originated as a shipping hub for their coal, timber, and railroad empire, the latter the result of their self-financed construction of the West Virginia Central Railroad, whose track stretched between Cumberland, Maryland, and Elkins, and served as the threshold to some of the world’s richest timber and mineral resources.

The town, serving the needs of the coal miners, loggers, and railroad workers, sprouted central maintenance shops and steadily expanded, peaking in 1920, before commencing a resource depletion-caused decline, until the last train, carrying coal and timber products to the rest of the country, departed the depot in 1959.

The tracks lay barren and unused for almost half a century until 2007, when the newly-established Durbin and Greenbrier Valley Railroad again resurrected them—and the town—transporting the first tourists for scenic-ride purposes and resparking a slow growth cycle with a subsequently built restaurant and live theater in its historic Elkins Railyard and additional hotels nearby.  Consistently ranked as one of the country’s best small art towns, it is once again the service hub of the Mountain Highlands, reverting to its original purpose of providing hotel, restaurant, shop, and entertainment services, but now to a new group—tourists.

The railroad remains its focus.  The Durbin and Greenbrier Valley Railroad offers three departures from the Elkins depot.  The first of these, the “New Tygart Flyer,” is a four-hour, 46-mile round-trip run which plunges through the Cheat Mountain Tunnel, passes the towns of Bowdon and Bemis, parallels the Shavers Fork of the Cheat River, and stops at the horseshoe-shaped High Falls of Cheat, during which time it serves an enroute, buffet luncheon.  Upgraded table service is available in 1922-ear deluxe Pullman Palace cars for a slightly higher price.

The “Cheat Mountain Salamander” is a nine-hour, 128-mile round-trip to Spruce, and includes a buffet lunch and dinner, while the “Mountain Express Dinner Train” mimics the New Tygart Flyer’s route, but features a four-course meal in a formally set dining car.

The Railyard Restaurant, sandwiched between the Elkins depot and the American Mountain Theater, provides all on board meals.  Emulating the depot itself with its exterior brick construction, the .5 million, 220-seat restaurant, leased to the Durbin and Greenbrier Valley Railroad, serves family-style cuisine on its main level and upscale dinners in its second-floor Vista Dome Dining Room, its menus inspired by railroad car fare from the 1920s to the 1940s.  It toted the opening slogan of, “Take the track to the place with exceptional taste.”

The Durbin and Greenbrier Valley Railroad’s Rails and Trails Gift Shop is located on its main level.

Continuing the historic, red brick exterior, the adjacent American Mountain Theater, founded in 2003 by Elkins native and RCA recording artist, Susie Heckel, traces its origins to a variety show performed for tourists at a different location.  But increasing demand merited the November, 2006, ground-braking for a .7 million, 12,784-square-foot, 525-seat structure with aid from her sister, Beverly Sexton, and her husband, Kenny, who owned the Ozark Mountain Hoe-Down Theater in Eureka Springs, Arkansas.

Opening the following July, the theater offered family-oriented, Branson-style entertainment performed by a nine-member cast, with Kenny Sexton serving as its president and producer and Beverly writing the score.  Two-hour evening shows include comedy, impressions, and country, gospel, bluegrass, and pop music.

Davis and Elkins College, located only a few blocks from the Historic Railyard, shares the same founders as the town of Elkins itself—namely, Senators Henry Gassaway Davis and Stephen B. Elkins.  Established in 1901 when they donated land and funding to create a college associated with the Presbyterian Church, it was originally located south of town.  Its Board of Trustees first met the following year and classes were first held on September 21, 1904.

Today, the coeducational, liberal arts college, located on a 170-acre hilled, wooded campus with views of the Appalachian Mountains, is comprised of 22 new and historic buildings in two sections—the north, which stretches to the athletic fields and the front campus, which is located on a ridge overlooking Elkins.  Thirty associate and baccalaureate arts, sciences, pre-professional, and professional degree programs are offered to a 700-student base.

One of its historic buildings is Graceland Inn.  Designed by the Baltimore architectural firm of Baldwin and Pennington, the castle-like, Queen Anne-style mansion, originally located on a 360-acre farm, was completed in 1893.  Initially called “Mingo Moor,” and intermittently “Mingo Hall” after the area south of Elkins, the estate served as the summer residence of Senator Davis, who regularly transported a train of invited friends and associates during July and August so that they could escape the Washington heat and enjoy Elkins’ higher-elevation, cooler temperatures.

The estate was ultimately renamed “Graceland” after Davis’ youngest daughter, Grace.  Following his wife’s death in 1902, he continued to conduct business from offices inside it, while Grace herself resided there during the summer months with her family.

The estate was finally ceded to her own children, Ellen Bruce Lee and John A. Kennedy, its last two owners.

Acquired by the West Virginia Presbyterian Education Fund in 1941, it was used as a male residence hall by the college until 1970, whereafter it was closed.  Restored during the mid-1990s, it subsequently reopened as an historic country inn and as a dynamic learning lab for hospitality students.

Overlooking the town of Elkins, on the Davis and Elkins College campus, Graceland Inn, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, features a two-story great hall richly decorated with hardwoods, such as quartered oak, bird’s eye maple, cherry, and walnut, a grand staircase, a parlor, a library, and its original stained glass windows.  The Mingo Room Restaurant, reflecting the mansion’s initial designation and open to the public, is subdivided into four small rooms lined with red oak and fireplaces and an outdoor verandah, and eleven guest rooms, located on the second and third floors and named after prominent family members, contain antiques, Victorian reproductions, turrets, canopy beds, sleigh beds, armoires, marble bathrooms, and claw foot tubs.

Graceland Inn, the David and Elkins College, the town of Elkins itself, the historic depot and railyard, their tracks, and the Appalachian Mountain’s coal and timber resources are all inextricably tied to the town’s past–and its future.

B. Seneca Rocks

“Seneca Rocks” designates both a region of the Potomac Highlands and the outcroppings after which that region is named.

Resembling a razor back, or shark’s fin, and located at the confluence of the Seneca Creek and the North Fork South Branch Potomac River, the 250-foot-thick, 900-foot-high Seneca Rocks, accessible by West Virginia Route 28, were formed 400 million years ago during the Silurian Period in an extensive sand shoal at the edge of the ancient Iapetus Ocean.  As the seas decreased in size, the rock uplifted and folded, erosion ultimately wearing away its upper surface and leaving the arching folds and craggy profile they exhibit today.

Made of white and gray tuscarora quartzite, the formation features both a north and south peak, with a notch separating the two.

The current Seneca Rocks Discovery Center, which replaced the original visitor’s center, features relief models of the area, films, interpretive programs, and a bookshop.

A path leads to the Sites Homestead, part of the center.  Constructed in 1839 by William Sites as a single-room log cabin below Seneca Rocks Ridge, it is typical of then-current Appalachian homes whose German Blockbau-style featured square logs and v-notched corner joints spread apart by stone and clay chinks.  Its small casement windows were equally of German origin, while its “hall and parlor” floor plan reflected English style.  Chimney location indicated house location: northern-style dwellings incorporated internal ones and southern style homes sported external ones.

In the late-1860s, one of Sites’ sons expanded the homestead, adding a second floor, and, after use as a hay barn, the Forest Service purchased it in 1969, restoring it during the 1980s.  In 1993, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

The greater Spruce Knob-Seneca Rocks National Recreation Area, offering significant outdoor sports opportunities, contains a key portion of the Chesapeake Bay watershed, whose mountains and forests collect water which then flows into the Potomac River and the bay itself.  Acting as a cleansing and filtering mechanism, its headwater forests purify the water before it reaches the streams.  Spruce Knob is both the highest point in the Chesapeake Watershed and the entire state of West Virginia.

Aside from facilitating water, the area has provided sustenance to humans, who first lived in Native American villages within its mountains, and then created farming settlements and logging camps, extracting its resources and supporting life for some 13,000 years.  Today, it is home to 15 million people.

The Spruce Knob-Seneca Rocks National Recreation Area itself is part of the much larger Monongahela National Forest.  Established in 1920 with an initial 7,200 acres, the present 910,155-acre forest contains the headwaters of the Monongahela, Potomac, Greenbrier, Elk, Tygart, and Gauley Rivers; five federally-designated “wildernesses”—Dolly Sods, Outer Creek, Laurel Fork North, Laurel Fork South, and Cranberry—whose very remote and primitive areas only offer lower-standard trail markings; and four lakes.

A Mecca for outdoor sports enthusiasts, the national forest features 169 hiking, biking, and horseback riding trails which cover more than 800 miles, 576 miles of trout streams, 129 miles of warm-water fishing, 23 campgrounds, 17 picnic areas, and wildlife viewing of black bear, wild turkey, white-tailed deer, gray fox, rabbits, snowshoe hare, grouse, and woodcock.

C. Canaan Valley

Blanketed with bigtooth aspen, balsam fir, and spruce, Canaan Valley, stretching 14 miles, is the highest such valley east of the Mississippi River, its namesake mountain separating it from the Blackwater River and creating a deep, narrow canyon in the Allegheny Plateau.

The pristinely beautiful area encompasses two state parks—Canaan Valley Resort and Black Water Falls State Parks; two ski areas—again Canaan Valley Resort and Timberline Four Seasons Resort; and the nation’s 500thwildlife refuge.

Natural sports abound: hiking, horseback riding, fishing, golfing, swimming, rafting, and interpretive nature walking during the summer, and skiing, snowboarding, and tubing during the winter.

Nucleus of most of this is 6,000-acre Canaan Valley Resort State Park, which encompasses 18 miles of trails, wetlands, open meadows, northern hardwood forests, wildlife, 200 species of birds, and 600 types of wildflowers.

Canaan Valley Resort, located within the park, offers 250 modern guest rooms, 23 two-, three-, and four-bedroom mountain cabins with fireplaces and full kitchens, 34 paved, wooded campsites with full hook-ups, and six lounges and restaurants, including the Hickory Dining Room in the main lodge.

Its 4,280-foot mountain, whose longest run is 1.25 miles and whose vertical drop is 850 feet, features one quad and two triple lifts, and 11 trails for night skiing.  Its winter activities, like those of the extended Canaan Valley, include skiing, snowboarding, airboarding, tubing, snowshoeing, and ice skating, while summer programs include scenic chairlift rides, guided walks, golf, tennis, and hiking.

D. Big Mountain Country

Big Mountain County, location of West Virginia’s second-highest peak, serves as the birthplace of eight rivers—the Greenbier, Gauley, Cheat, Cherry, Elk, Williams, Cranberry, and Tygart—while its Seneca State Forest, which borders the former in Pocahontas County, is the state’s oldest.  An interesting array of sights include steam-powered logging railroads, astronomical observatories, preserved towns, a premier ski resort, and their associated assortment of outdoor sports and activities.

The Durbin and Greenbier Valley Railroad’s fourth excursion train, the “Durbin Rocket,” departs from the town of Durbin itself, located some 40 miles from Elkins.

Powered by a 55-ton steam engine built for the Moore-Keppel Lumber Company in nearby Randolph County, and one of only three remaining geared Climax logging locomotives, the train makes a two-hour, 11-mile round-trip run along the Greenbier River and through the Monongahela National Forest as far as Piney Island, where the rental “castaway caboose” is disconnected and pushed onto a very short spur track for a one or more night stay.

The ultra-modern, high-tech National Radio Astronomy Observatory, located a short distance away in Green Bank, offers an opportunity to learn about radio wave astronomy.

Designing, building, and operating the world’s most advanced and sophisticated radio telescopes, the observatory produces images of celestial bodies, such as planets, stars, and galaxies, millions of light-years away by recording their radio omission quantities.

The Green Bank Science Center, nucleus of this experience, features a museum which introduces the science of radio astronomy, radio waves, telescope operation, and what is being learned through them about the universe; the Galaxy Gift Shop; the Starlight Café; and the departure point for the escorted bus tour of the facility, prior to which an introductory film and lecture are presented in the theater.

The tour’s highlight is the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT), designed when the previous 300-foot device collapsed in 1988 and Congress was forced to appropriate emergency funds to design it.

Dedicated on August 25, 2000, after a nine-year development period, it is 485 feet tall, is comprised of 2,004 panels, has a 100-by-110 meter diameter, a 2.3 acre surface area, and weighs 17 million pounds.  The world’s largest, fully maneuverable telescope with a computer-controlled reflecting surface, it is functionally independent of the sun, permitting 24-hour-per-day operation, and receives wavelengths which vary between 1/8thof an inch to nine feet.

Initially employed in conjunction with the Arecibo Observatory to produce images of Venus, it later detected three new pulsars (spinning neutron stars) in the Messier 62 region.

A 15-minute drive from the National Radio Astronomy Observatory is another significant sight, Cass Scenic Railroad State Park.

Tracing its origins to 1899 when John G. Luke acquired more than 67,000 acres of red spruce in an area which ultimately developed into the town of Cass, it became the headquarters of the West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company.  The town, supporting the workforce needed to convert the raw resources into finished products, sprouted shops, services, houses, a sawmill, tracks, and a railroad to haul the timber.

Instrumental to the operation had been the Shay, or similarly-designed Climax and Heisler steam locomotives, whose direct gearing delivered positive control and more even power, allowing them to ply often temporarily-laid tracks, steep grades, and hairpin turns, all the while pulling heavy, freshly-felled timber loads.  The Western Maryland #6, at 162 tons, was the last, and heaviest, Shay locomotive ever built.  The railroad inaugurated its first service in 1901.

During two 11-hour, six-day-per-week shifts, the town’s mill was able to cut more than 125,000 board feet of lumber per shift and dry 360,000 per run with its 11 miles of steam pipes, adding up to 1.5 million board feet cut per week and 35 million per year.  After 40 years of milling at Cass and Spruce, more than two billion board feet of lumber and paper had been produced.

Operating until 1943, the West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company sold the enterprise to the Mower Lumber Company, which maintained it for another 17 years, at which time it was closed and purchased by the state of West Virginia, in 1961.

The railroad and the town of Cass, which remain virtually unchanged, are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Aside from the historic buildings, there are several other attractions.  Connected to the large Cass Company Store is the railroad-themed Last Run Restaurant.  Turn-of-the-century logging can be gleaned at the Cass Historical Museum.  The Shay Railroad Shop, having once housed coal bins, offers additional books and crafts for sale.  The metal, Cass Showcase building above it, having stored hay to feed horse teams, features an introductory film and an HO-scale train and town layout reflecting their 1930s appearance.

Escorted walking tours of Cass, usually conducted in the afternoon after the trains have returned from their daily excursions, offer insight into what it had been like to live and work in a turn-of-the-century company town, while the Locomotive Repair Shop tour includes visits to the Mountain State Railroad and Logging Historical Association’s shop, the sawmill area, and a look at Shay and Climax locomotive maintenance and repair.

An excursion on the Cass Scenic Railroad itself, which commenced tourist rides in 1963 and is therefore the longest-running scenic rail journey in the country, is a living history experience.  Pulled by one of the original Shay or Climax steam locomotives, the train accommodates passengers in equally authentic logging cars which have been converted to coaches with wooden, bench-like seats and roofs, while a single enclosed car, offering reserved seating, sports booth-like accommodation and is designated “Leatherbark Creek.”

All trains depart from Cass’s reconstructed depot, at a 2,456-foot elevation, climbing Leatherneck Run, negotiating 11-percent grades, maneuvering and reversing through a lower and upper switchback, and arriving at Whittaker Station, which features a snack stand, views of the eastern West Virginia mountains, and a reconstructed, 1946 logging camp.  The eight-mile round-trip back to Cass requires two hours. 

A four-and-a-half hour, 22-mile round-trip continues up Back Allegheny Mountain, passing Old Spruce and the Oats Creek Water Tank, and plying track laid by the Mower Lumber company, before reaching 4,842-foot Bald Knob, West Virginia’s third-highest peak.

Limited runs are also offered to Spruce, an abandoned logging town on the Shavers Fork of the Cheat River.  This train also transits Whittaker Station.

Although not affiliated with the Cass Scenic Railroad, the Boyer Station Restaurant, located six miles from Green Bank on Route 28, offers inexpensive, home-cooked, country-style meals amidst railroad décor with wooden, rail depot-reminiscent tables and benches, train and logging memorabilia, and large-scale, track-mounted model railroads.  It is part of a 20-room motel and campground complex.

Winter sports account for a significant portion of the Big Mountain Country’s offerings.  Ten miles from Cass Scenic Railroad State Park is Snowshoe Mountain.

Located in the bowl-shaped convergence of Cheat and Back Allegheny Mountain at the head of the Shavers Fork of the Cheat River, the area, striped of trees by logging between 1905 and 1960, had been discovered by Thomas Brigham, a North Carolina dentist, who had previously opened the Beech Mountain and Sugar Mountain Ski Resorts.

Reflecting European style, Snowshoe Village is located on the mountain’s summit and offers 1,400 hotel and condominium rooms, restaurants, shops, services, and entertainment.  The 244-acre resort, which combines the Snowshoe and Silver Creek areas, has a 3,348-foot base; a 4,848-foot summit, making it the highest such ski resort in the mid-Atlantic and southeast; 14 chairlifts; 60 runs, of which the longest is 1.5 miles; and 1,500-foot vertical drops at Cupp Run and Shay’s Revenge.  Average snowfall is 180 inches.  Spring, summer, and fall activities include golf, boating, bicycling, climbing, hiking, horseback riding, canoeing, kayaking, skating, and swimming.

The extended area’s Seneca State Forest, named after the Native Americans who had once roamed the land, borders the Greenbier River in Pocahontas County and contains 23 miles of forest, 11,684 acres of woodlands, a four-acre lake for boating and trout, largemouth bass, and bluegill fishing, hiking tails, pioneer cabins, and rustic campsites.

4. New River-Greenbrier Valley

The New River-Greenbrier Valley region of West Virginia is topographically diverse and ruggedly beautiful.

Split by the Gauley River, its northern section is comprised of a rugged plateau in which is nestled the calm, azure Summersville Lake, while mountainous ridgelines, affording extensive interior coal mining, are characteristic of its central region.  Horse and cattle grazing is prevalent on the flat farm expanses which intersperse the eastern edge’s lush, green mountain plateau, divided by the Greenbrier River, the largest, untamed water channel in the eastern United States, which flows through it.  Its southern region is a jigsaw puzzle of omni-directional ridgelines and very narrow valleys.

New and Bluestone River-formed gorges provide a wealth of rock climbing, canoeing, kayaking, and white water rafting opportunities in this region of the state.

The area’s most prominent, and beautiful, topographical feature is the New River Gorge National River.  Flowing from below Bluestone Dam, near Hinton, to the north of the US Highway 19 bridge near Fayetteville, it dissects all the physiographic provinces of the Appalachian Mountains.  A rugged, white water river, and among the oldest in North America, it flows northward through steep canyons and geological formations.  Approximately 1,000 feet separate its bottom from its adjacent plateau.  On July 30, 1998, it was named an American Heritage River, one of 14 waterways so designated.

Its related park encompasses 70,000 acres.

Signature of the New River Gorge National Park is its New River Gorge Bridge.  Completed on October 22, 1977 at a million cost, the dual-hinged, steel arch bridge is 3,030 feet long, 69.3 feet wide, and has an 876-foot clearance.  Carrying the four lanes of US Route 19, it was then the world’s longest, and is currently the highest vehicular bridge in the Americas and the second highest in the world after the Millau Viaduct in France.  Its longest single span, between arches, is 1,700 feet.

There are three related visitor centers and vantagepoints.  The Canyon Rim Visitor Center, located two miles north of Fayetteville on Route 19, offers exhibits, films, interpretive programs, trails, and a scenic overlook, while the Grandview Center is located in Thurmond off of Interstate 64 on Route 25.  The park’s headquarters are in Glen Jean.  

Fayetteville is the hub for New River Gorge kayaking and white water rafting.

Coal, as synonymous with West Virginia as logging, is an industry the tourist should experience sometime during his visit.  The Beckley Exhibition Coal Mine, located in the city of the same name, offers just such an opportunity.

A 1,400-square-foot Company Store, coal museum, fudgery, and gift shop serves as a visitor’s center and threshold to the sight’s two major components.  A coal camp, the first of these, depicts 20th-century life in a typical coal town, represented by several relocated and restored buildings.

Plying 1,500 feet of underground passages in the 36-inch, Phillips-Sprague Seam Mine, which had been active between 1883 and 1953, track-guided “man-cars” driven by authentic miners, encompass the complex’s second component and make periodic stops in the cold, damp, and dark passage to discuss and illustrate the advancement of mining techniques.  The rock duster, for example, ensured that coal dust would not explode deep in the mine.  Strategically positioned roof bolts avoided cave-ins.  Pumps extracted water.  Dangerously low oxygen levels dictated immediate evacuation.

Coal had fueled the world’s steam engines for industrial plants and rail and sea transportation.

The Phillips-Sprague Mine is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

5. Conclusion

West Virginia’s three principle regions of Charleston, the Potomac Highlands, and the New River-Greenbier Valley offer immersive experiences into the past which shaped the present by means of its pristinely beautiful and resource-rich mines and mountains that yielded coal, timber, logging railroads, and an abundance of outdoor sports.

Written by Robert Waldvogel

The Boy Who Became President (Abraham Lincoln)

     Set in the midst of a barren and desolate wilderness in the state of Kentucky, is where Abraham Lincoln first opened his eyes on the world on February 12, 1809.  It was to be hoped that the new baby would grow into a strong, brave boy, for there was no use for weaklings in the rough, dangerous life that awaited him.  Even his mother, who rocked him in her arms, had early learned to handle a rifle that she might defend herself and her children when the father, Thomas Lincoln, was away.  They were accustomed to all sort of dangers and hardships, for there were many wild animals in the woods, and they were never quite safe from the fear of Indians. 

     At six years old Abe had to learn to fish and to hunt, although he was still too small to be trusted with a gun.  One of his favorite amusements was to swing across the creek holding on to the branch of a sycamore tree, and one day while he and another small boy were enjoying themselves in that way, Abe lost his hold and disappeared with a terrific splash into the water below.  The other boy was quite equal to the occasion, and, waiting till he reappeared, leaned over and dragged him out with the greatest difficulty.  If it had not been for the presence of mind of the other child, Abe would certainly have been drowned and america would never have known one of the greatest and most famous of her Presidents. 

     “It is time those children had some learning,”  said their father thoughtfully, when Abe was seven years old and his sister Sarah a year or so older.

     “There’s a man coming to that shanty half a mile away, and he says he is going to keep a school.  What do you say to sending the children to him?”

     “Well,” said their mother doubtfully, ” he is a queer sort of man to be a schoolmaster.  He can’t write himself.”

     “He can read, so he says,” replied Thomas Lincoln, and the children  could learn that, anyway.” 

     Thomas Lincoln had spent such a busy roving life that he had never had time to learn either to read or to write, and at the time he was married he could not even sign his own name.  His wife had had a little education and was determined that he should at least learn to write his name, so with great patience she taught him how to hold a pen and make the letters, although his great strong hands were much more at home holding his gun or his ax.  But nevertheless he was most anxious that his children should learn all that he had missed, although it puzzled him greatly to think where the money was to come from to pay their schooling.

SCHOOL – DAYS 

     There was certainly not much to be learned at this first school to which Abe was sent, and in a few weeks the children knew as much as their master, which was saying but little. 

     There was a better school four miles away where the master could both read and  write, and although it was a long way for the children to walk, they were sturdy and strong, and set off gayly each morning, carrying their dinner of hoe cake, which was all the dinner they ever had.

     The log cabin could now boast the beginning of a library, for besides the Bible and Catechism there was an old spelling book out of which the children learned their lessons.  The Bible was the one book which Abe had known from his babyhood, for his mother read it aloud every Sunday and sometimes on other days too.  It was both story book and lesson book, for the stories Abe knew before he could read, and his first reading lessons were spelled out from it.

     it was when Abe was about eight years old that he began to learn to know what it really meant to be a pioneer boy.  The farm in Kentucky was not a very successful affair, and Thomas Linclon made up his mind to try his luck in the new free State of Indiana, where there seemed better prospects of getting on.

THE JOURNEY

     It was a journey of a hundred miles from the old home in Kentucky to the new one in Indiana, and while the father took most of their belongings by boat, the mother and two children set out on the journey overland, with two horses to carry the bedding and on which they could ride by turns when they were tied.  They were seven days on the road, and at night the little party camped out under the stars with their blankets spread on the ground.  It s not a very safe way of traveling, and there was many a danger  lurking around, but neigher mother nor children dreamed of being afraid.  Fear was a thing with which pioneers had nothing to do.            

HOW THE CABIN WAS BUILT

     When at last the whole family arrived in Spence County, Indiana, the first thing to be done was to build some sort of shelter for themselves and their goods.  A road had been cut through the forests, but all the clearing had still to be done, and there was plenty of work for Abe, small as he was.  His little ax was needed for serious work now, and not only for play, as he was quite able to cut the poles for the cabin which his father was building.  In a very short time he learned to use his ax as a pioneer boy should do.  At first it was only possible to build a “half faced camp,” which was merely a cabin enclosed on three sides with one side open, and which, in spite of the log fires, was bitterly cold shelter in winter time.  But when spring came and the land was cleared enough to plant corn and vegetables, a strong log hut was begun, and Abe lent a willing hand, remembering the bitter winds of the past winter.

     Abe learned, too, how to make stools and table, and by this time the muscles of his arms were like whipcord, and he could swing his ax like a man. 

     A story is told of him in his days as president, how he visited a hospital of wounded soldiers and shook hands with three thousand of them, all eager to take the hand of their hero.   Some friends wondered that his arm was not crippled by so much handshaking, but he only smiled and said, “The hardships of my early life gave me strong arms.”  Then he went to the open door and took up a heavy ax which was lying there, and began to chop a log of wood so vigoroulsy that the chips flew in all directions.  When he stopped he “extended his right arm to full length, holding the ax our horizontally without its even quivering as he held it.”  Strong men who looked on – men accustomed to manual labor – could not hold the ax in that position for a moment.

       After learning to be useful with his ax, it was only fair that Abe should be taught to handle a rifle, and his father promised to begin to teach him at once.  “You’ll be able to go hunting and shoot turkey and deer, and will keep us supplied with game,”  said his father.  Abe’s eye glistened, and he could scarcely sleep that night in his corner of the loft, he was so delighted and excited over the thought of that rifle.  A rifle is rather a difficult thing for  small boy of eight to manage, but Abe was determined to learn to shoot, and in a short time he covered himself with glory. 

     HIS FIRST SHOT - Bang!

     “Mother, mother!” he cried, busting like a small whirlwind into the cabin, “there’s a flock of turkeys out there. “I’m sure I could shoot one if I might have the rifle.”

     His mother looked out through one of the loopholds of the log hut.  “Sure enough,” she said, “they are turkeys.  You might try a shot,” and she fetched the gun, which was always kept ready loaded.  Abe bobbed up and down excitedly while his mother fixed the gun into the loophole and warned him to be careful.  then he steadied himself, tried to take aim and pulled the trigger. Bang! went the gun, and back went Abe almost head over heels, but in an instant he scrambled up and rushed out.  The smoke was just clearing away, and sure enough there on the ground lay a large fat turkey, shot dead.  I’ve killed one,” shouted Abe, “and it’s a monster.  Mother, did you ever see such a big one?”  and he struggled to lift the bird on high for her to see.  Just then his father came hurrying up.  “What’s all this firing about?”  he asked anxiously.  “I’ve killed a turkey,” said Abe, bursting with pride.  “Did you do that?” asked his father in amazement.  “Nobody else did it,” said Abe with a chuckle.  Of course it was nothing but an accident, and altogether the fault of the turkey for getting in the way of the bullet, but it was a great triumph for Abe, all the same. 

ABE LEARNS TO WRITE 

        All the time Abe had kept on steadily with his reading whenever he had time, especially in the long winter evenings when he could read by the firelight.  Lamps and candles were luxuries no settler could afford, but wood was plentiful, and it was easy to heap the fire high and make a splendid blaze. 

     He was careful, too not to forget his writing, and he practiced wirting his own name in the snow or with a charred stick on slabs of wood.  His father was not always pleased to find every smooth surface in the house scrawled over with black marks, but he had a great respect for “learning” and when he found that Abe was teaching himself to write, he was quite proud of the boy.

     Wheb spring came round and they were working together in the field, Abe took a stick and began writing his name with great care in the soft earth.  “A.B.R.A.H.A.M L.I.N.C.O.L.N.” he wrote.  

     “What is the boy doing?”  asked a neighbor who happened to be passing and stopped to talk to Thomas Lincoln.  “Oh! he is writing,” said his farther carelessly. 

      “Its my name,” said Abe, spelling the letters out one by one and pointing to them in turn. 

     The two men looked with respectful admiration at the young genius and shook their heads.  Such cleverness was beyond them.  Little did they dream that the name of Abraham Lincoln would some day be written , not only on the soil of Indiana but in every history book of the United States.

ABE LOSES HIS MOTHER

     As time went on, Abe began to long for other books to read besides  the Bible, the Catechism, and the old  spelling book.  There must surely be many other books in the world, he thought, but the difficulty was to get hold of them. 

     Then a sad thing happened which for a while made him forget all about his longing for books.  His mother died suddenly, and the little family in the log hut was left very desolate.

     Sarah was only eleven years old and could not manage the housework very well, although Abe was very handy and helped her a good deal.  The home soon began to look neglected and untidy, and Abe felt his mother’s loss keenly.  Indeed it seemed as if all the sunshine had faded out of his life until one evening when his father returned carrying a parcel under his arm.

ABE BEGINS HIS LIBRARY

“I’ve found something that will please you, my boy,” he said kindly, and undoing the parcel he brought out the “Pilgrim’s Progress.” 

     “Where did you find it?”  asked Abe wonderingly.  Such things were not usualy to be found in the woods or fields, neither did they drop from the heavens.

     “I didn”t exactly find it,” said his father, smiling.  I saw it when I was in Mr. Pierson’s house and borrowed it for you.”

     Abe was turning over the pages, and he took a deep breath of delight.  “It looks good,” he said.

     He was so eager to begin that he could eat no supper, and when he had finished reading it he turned back and begain it all over again.  The book made him so happy that his father tried to get him another, and this time it was “Aesop’s Fables,” which charmed Abe even more than the “Pilgrim’s Progress” had done.  He read it so often that he could repeat most of the fables by heart.

     Abe’s mind was very good gound in which to sow such seed, and in life it blossomed out into a wonderful power of story-telling and a marvelous memory for anecdotes.

PLEASURE OR DUTY?

     But although reading was very pleasant it was somewhat apt to interfere with the day’s work, and by and by Abe’s father began to grow impatient.

“come, put away your book, there’s too much work to be done to waste time over reading ,” said his father.

“In a minute, ” said Abe. 

“That’s what makes boys lazy,” said the father, “reading books when they ought to be at work.”

“Only a minute, and then I’ll go,” said Abe, scarcely paying any attention to what his father was saying.  That of course could not be allowed.  “Put the book down and come at once, said the father sternly.  Abe shut the book slowly.  “Good boys should obey at once,” said his father; they should not need to be driven like cattle.”

     Abe had never before shown any signs of disobedience and he did not mean to be disobedient now, but those books seemed to lay a spell upon him which it was difficult to resist.

     His father began to fear he was growing lazy, and everyone shook their heads over the boy and his books.  His cousin Dennis declared that “Abe was always reding, scribbling, ciphering, writing poetry, and such like,” and that he was “awful lazy”;  but it was a curious kind of laziness, for it meant seizing every scrap of spare time between work to study, and sitting up late into the night to read his beloved books.  He was so hungry for knowledge that he could not keep away from books although “he had not a lazy bone in his body.”  He could not help dreaming a little, and sometimes the threshing and chopping and other work suffered, but who could help dreaming over the delight of “Robinson Crusoe” and the “Life of Washington” which just then, at ten years old,, opened a whole new world to Abe.?

A NEW MOTHER FOR ABE

        After a while life became more cheerful in the log hut, for Thomas Lincoln married again, and the stepmother brought brightness and comfort into the home once more.  She was a widow with three children, which made a merry party in the log cabin, and she also had a quantity of furniture and household goods, so that in a short time the log hut was transformed into quite an elegant home.

     The first thing the new mother insisted upon was that a wooden flooring shuld be laid down, and also that there be real glass windows and a door with hinges.  The children’s clothes, too, were made neat and tidy, and there was something else for dinner besides hoe cakes.

     Abe’s stepmother was not inclined to call the boy lazy as other people did when he pored over his books.  She was anxious to help him, and when for the first time a school was open in Indiana, she was anxious that all the children should be sent to it

     It’s a good chance for you, Abe,” she said.  “You ought to learn something about arithmetic as soon as you can.”

     It was a curious kind of school and a very queer set of pupils.  The school was a rough log hut with a roof so low that the master could scarcely stand up-right, and the windowns were only holes covered with greased paper which did not allow much light to filter through.  The one cheerful thing was the huge fireplace built to hold four-foot logs.

     The children were gathered from far and near, all sizes and in all sorts of garments.  Abe rather fancied himself in his new suit, made by his stepmother for the occasion.  He had a linsey-woolsey shirt, buckskin breeches, a cap of coon skin, and no coat, for “overcoats” were unknown.

WHAT THE SCHOOLMASTER THOUGHT OF ABE

     There was much for Abe to learn, and the schoolmaster, Andrew Crawford, found it a delight to teach anyone so eager and intelligent.

     “Abe is a wonderful boy, the best scholar I ever had,”  he said to Thomas Lincoln.  He wants to know everything that anyone else knows, and does not see why he can’t.”

     “That’s Abe exactly,” said his father. 

“I sometimes wish he like work as much as he does a book.”  

     “He wouldn’t be such a good scholar if he did,” said the schoolmaster.

     “Maybe,” answered his father, “but work is more important than books in the backwoods.”

    “But Abe is not going to live always in the backwoods,” said the master. 

     “He is a boy who is sure to make his mark in the world.  he is an honest, straight boy too, as well as being clever. Only the other day I found someone had broken off a buck’s horn which I had nailed to the schoolhouse, and when I asked who had done it, Abe immediately owned up and confessed that he had been hanging on to it.” 

“Ah!” said his father, “that’s like him.  He’s been reading the Life of Washington,” and thought a deal of that story about him cutting the cherry tree with his new hatchet and then owning up hamdsomely.”

     “Well, he’s a good boy,” said the schoolmaster, “‘and he’ll go far.” 

He meant to do his very best for the boy, and besides other things he began to teach his pupils manners and how to behave nicely “in society.”  The schoolroom was turned into a parlor for the time being, and the children were supposed to be laidies and gentlemen, as they came in one by one and made their bow and were introduced to each other.

     It was no easy matter for Abe to learn drawing-room manners.  although he was scarcely fifteen he was six feet tall, and he did not in the least know what to do with his long arms and legs.  His feet, too, were very much in the way, and he never realized before how huge his hands were or what a long distance of bare legs there was between his buckskin breeches and his shoes.

     Abraham was certainly an awkward looking boy, for those legs were out of all proportion to his body, and his small head looked almost comical set on the top of such a tall maypole.  People when they looked at him would smile and ask what he meant to be when he was a man. 

     “I am going to be President of the United States,” he said with a chuckle. and everyone thought it was a very good joke.

     The tall,ungainly boy, in his queer, shabby clothes, living in the backwoods, willing to do the hardest work for the smallest pay, what would he ever have to do with the ruling of a great nation, or the fate of thousands of his countrymen?  No wonder they thought it a good joke; but a litter more than forty years afterward the whole world was mourning the loss of Abraham Lincoln, the Noblest President American had had since the days of Washington.      .

         

   

Written by acookebook

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Deer Hunting Techniques

Hunting is a well recognized outdoor sport that has been around for many, many years. It was something that used to be a necessity when people had to hunt their own food for their family. One thing that hasn’t changed in all these years, is knowing the proper way to hunt. Whether you have never gone deer hunting before or it is something you have been doing for years, knowing the proper deer hunting techniques is ‘key’ for a successful hunt. Deer are very smart animals and if you do not use the right techniques when hunting it could mean the difference of a successful hunt or leaving your hunting land empty handed.

Many people love the experience of deer hunting whether they’re hunting for food or after that big buck running the local woods. If it is that big buck you’re after it’s going to prove to be a more challenging hunt than you may think.

Those big bucks aren’t just big for just any reason, they’ve been around for years and that’s because they know the routine and use their own set of skills to stay alive. If you’re looking to bag that big boy that’s lurking in the woods, then you need to acquire the correct set of hunting techniques for a successful hunt.

There are many skills that need to be learned to set up the perfect hunt. Important knowledge such as location, wind factor, weather, scent, tracking, deer signs, calls, equipment, and food plots are a few of the items to consider in order to become that successful hunter everyone would like to be. There are many hunting techniques a hunter needs to know that will give them the hunting experience that he or she desires. One of the most important ways to learn these techniques is to acquire the proper material for the ultimate hunt. This is why we are lucky to have the internet as a great tool to help us gain the skills for a hunt.

Searching online is a great way to find any information you may need if you’re just getting started in deer hunting, or if you’re just looking to enhance your current skills to become an even greater deer hunter. Knowing where to get the proper equipment and tools is one of the most important factors for deer hunting. It’s always good to do plenty of research in order to gain good deer hunting techniques for which to prepare yourself for a successful hunt so you can bag the perfect deer of your choice.

For more information on great products in regards to deer hunting feel free to visit http://www.deerhuntingtechniques.com.

Have Gun – Will Travel: The Long Hunt

It wasn’t the plot as much as the look of Richard Boone’s Paladin that stood out in Have Gun – Will Travel: The Long Hunt.  In this outing, he is sporting a beard.  I had to laugh, too, because in the show he even apologizes for having it.  However, it is really a plot device to show the passage of time.

Actually, it’s that passage of time that I like about this half hour western episode.  We can feel and see that quite a bit of time has gone by rather than pretending that it took a day or two for Paladin to arrive deep into the back country.

The plot of the show had Paladin being hired to track down a fugitive.

Anthony Caruso guest stars as Jose, a guide. Caruso is good, but he was born in Indiana and not Mexico.  I just wish Hollywood would have cast roles more appropriately than what we had in this outing.  After all, his accent was lousy.

On the whole, Have Gun – Will Travel: The Long Hunt is remembered more for the feel of movement along with what I call a bit of a mystical ending.  There was some depth to the plot, but not all that much when compared to other programs.

Honestly, Boone’s beard may have been the best reason for tuning in.
 

Written by Orrymain