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	<title>Confessions of a Would-be Gourmand and Jetsetter&#187; travel tuesday</title>
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	<description>The Life and Times of a Very Twisted Raisin</description>
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		<title>Lost In My Own Head, or Boone, NC</title>
		<link>http://www.twistedraisin.com/2009/08/04/lost-in-my-own-head-or-boone-nc/</link>
		<comments>http://www.twistedraisin.com/2009/08/04/lost-in-my-own-head-or-boone-nc/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Aug 2009 16:22:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Stephen Sadowski</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[travel tuesday]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[boone nc]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[roadtrips]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.twistedraisin.com/?p=68</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This week&#8217;s Travel Tuesday musing is actually a repost of something that I wrote nearly five years ago, but I still read back on occasionally. I hope you enjoy it.

Monday, November 8, 2004
This morning somewhere between the fading grey of pre-dawn and the
first impact of the morning&#8217;s sun upon my eyes, I had sat down [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>This week&#8217;s Travel Tuesday musing is actually a repost of something that I wrote nearly five years ago, but I still read back on occasionally. I hope you enjoy it.</em></p>
<hr />
<em>Monday, November 8, 2004</em></p>
<p><em><strong>This morning</strong></em> somewhere between the fading grey of pre-dawn and the<br />
first impact of the morning&#8217;s sun upon my eyes, I had sat down to<br />
write a few paragraphs for my novel. After having done so, I was<br />
thinking about various settings and places in the real world that<br />
really could provide some breathtaking view.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t know how many of the people that follow the goings on of this<br />
community have ever been up into the Appalachian Mountain Chain,<br />
specifically the Blue Ridge Mountains, that spring up with foothills<br />
somewhere along the border of Alabama and Georgia, but it used to be<br />
one of my favorite places to visit, especially right around this time<br />
of year.<span id="more-68"></span></p>
<p>If you road-trip like I used to (solo, cross-country, and all in one<br />
day), somewhere between Little Rock, Arkansas and Nashville, Tennessee<br />
your mind starts to wander something fierce. The drive on I-40 across<br />
eastern Arkansas and Western Tennessee is about as exciting as<br />
painting a wall and watching it dry. The land is flat, desolate, and<br />
right around Memphis, truly smells like the brimstone lined ground of<br />
the sixth ring of hell might. It is dull, and a dry mental exercise<br />
such that without the assistance of massive amounts of Mountain Dew or<br />
No-doz, one simply feels like one&#8217;s brain will crash and burn.</p>
<p>Road hypnosis has one trapped inside one&#8217;s own head, and if it were<br />
not for the wonderful tan and brown state troopers of Tennessee with<br />
their eye-opening blue Vector light bars punctuating the road, the<br />
possibility exists that one could end up driving forever, simply<br />
shocked by the massive expanse of nothing.</p>
<p>After passing through Nashville, however, the landscape changes. There<br />
are more trees, the ground is not simply flat anymore. The car seems<br />
to rock as if cresting waves and riding them back down from the peaks.<br />
The air turns a bit cooler as the general elevation of the land rises,<br />
and for me, this is when the smile crosses my face.</p>
<p>Five or so hours later, my face usually breaks into a big grin as I<br />
can finally get one of my favorite soft drinks, Cheerwine, in a<br />
convenience store in Johnson City, right along the eastern edge of<br />
Tennessee, and my last stop before heading in to the Appalachians<br />
proper.</p>
<p>Of course, the directions to get to Boone are deceptively simple:<br />
First go east to 321, then take 321 north. Boone is about 40 miles<br />
northeast on 321. Simple. Deceptive. If one makes it to 321 anywhere<br />
before five in the afternoon, that forty minute drive is likely to<br />
take two hours.</p>
<p>321 is a mountain road, true to the idea that most movies inspire. It<br />
is one lane, each way, almost all the way up the mountains. Like I<br />
said before, if the rubber soles of the vehicle hit that road before<br />
five in the evening, just plan on two hours. Usually, this is because<br />
at one lane, each way, one ends up stuck behind an eighteen wheeler at<br />
some point. The first time I travelled up this road, it happened five<br />
minutes into my drive, and I spent three hours on the mountain road,<br />
with no cellular service, and nothing to do except stare at the 8′x5′<br />
ass-end of a big rig.</p>
<p>The road itself is the issue, the big rigs are stuck near third or<br />
fourth gear (out of fifteen), because the grade is 15-20% in most<br />
places. Going up that mountain is pure hell for one of those guys, but<br />
it sure gives a guy a lot of time to think. The leaves on the trees<br />
are turning red-orange-gold, with the wind whisking a few of them here<br />
and there, swirling around the disruptions in the air.</p>
<p>A person has time to sit back, relax, and wonder about all of the<br />
little mountain towns that he or she may pass through. The smattering<br />
of brown leaves is just staring to appear, and if the windows get<br />
rolled down for a smoke or a breath of fresh air, the chill that<br />
arrived on the journey through eastern Tennessee turns into a<br />
remarkable bite.</p>
<p>Of course, this place makes me happy. I have never known why. Perhaps<br />
it is the freshness of the air, perhaps it is the unique chill that<br />
always invites me to keep travelling, but for whatever reason, even<br />
being stuck for two hours behind a tractor-trailor as the light<br />
dwindles can not bring me down.</p>
<p>Whenever I arrive in Boone, the city always deceives me. I never quite<br />
remember why I come. The light from its natural source is hidden<br />
behind that of the artificial and inhuman streetlamps. That and Boone<br />
itself is home to Appalachian State University, and it is as much of a<br />
college town as any that panders solely to students, and has sprung up<br />
in the middle of a virtual nowhere. For Texans, think College Station<br />
in the mountains.</p>
<p>For me, there was always a bit farther to go. I never really enjoy<br />
staying in college towns, so I truck myself to a view overlooking most<br />
of Boone, to the Broyhill Inn. I discovered it my first time visiting<br />
Boone because it was the only place that allowed me to make<br />
reservations on-line. Checking in around 9pm, or later (because I<br />
added an hour in there somewhere), after a day of driving that started<br />
somewhere around 5am, I never really had much time to think. Simply<br />
order a quick bite from room service and collapse into blissful,<br />
non-driving slumber.</p>
<p>The first day in Boone is always the best, walking out and around the<br />
Broyhill gives you such a perspective and such a glorious view of the<br />
surrounding area and the town below, that the smile that had probably<br />
been on my face through the previous night&#8217;s slumber probably, if<br />
impossibly, grows even more.</p>
<p>The splash of color and the impact of the cold morning air is amazing,<br />
and that, my friends is what really does it for me. Breathing cold<br />
mountain air on a brisk fall day, while the sky is a blazing, electric<br />
blue and the trees are every shade of red, orange, and yellow that any<br />
painter could ever imagine mixing.</p>
<p>Breakfast on the first day, for me, is always quick &#8211; I never want to<br />
be in town long, and I am usually awake before the College students<br />
are. It means, for me, to stop at the world&#8217;s only two story<br />
&#8220;Wendy&#8217;s&#8221;, and then off to explore the Blue Ridge Parkway.</p>
<p>The Blue Ridge Parkway is pretty much my life when I&#8217;m visiting Boone,<br />
it gives me access to all of the sites of interest I care about, and<br />
one could spend a day just driving it, and looking out across the<br />
mountains. I usually make a stop and spend a day hiking along the<br />
Appalachian Trail, one of the shorter loops, just outside Boone,<br />
taking pictures and mostly just admiring the world around me.</p>
<p>I visit Blowing Rock, at least once, which I have no real description<br />
for. One must simply visit and experience it. Blowing rock is not a<br />
whole-day trip for me, though, so I usually do that in the morning and<br />
head to Grandfather Mountain in the afternoon. Grandfather Mountain is<br />
the highest peak in the Blue Ridge Mountains, and in my opinion, the<br />
best thing about it is the bridge hung between the two peaks. The wind<br />
is always blowing, and the bridge is always rocking back and forth -<br />
which could be why it is called &#8220;The Swinging Bridge.&#8221;</p>
<p>Heading back to Boone about four or five in the afternoon, after a<br />
long visit out and around the area, I am usually once again exhausted,<br />
but enjoy the experience of seeing the sun set, and the long shadows<br />
of the mountains make the drive dark, but the sky bright. The shadows<br />
echo through the sky and you can always trace them back to their<br />
beginnings.</p>
<p>I usually don&#8217;t make any effort to find food on the days I hike or<br />
take long scenic drives, but simply stop at whatever restaurant is<br />
convenient. Toward the end of my visit, though, I do make one special<br />
effort &#8211; Visiting the Dan&#8217;l Boone Inn. The food is limited in choice,<br />
but superior in quality, and anyone who loves a good country dinner is<br />
well-fed and happy by the time they leave. They don&#8217;t take<br />
reservations, but beware arriving too late, because the wait can be<br />
atrocious.</p>
<p>Leaving Boone, when I do, never makes me sad. I know I will return,<br />
and feel the same way I do once again. The people in and around the<br />
town remind me of what Texas lost when the big northern companies<br />
moved here, and Dallas became urbane and much more cosmopolitan.</p>
<p>I never miss Boone. I can always see it in my heart when I&#8217;m searching<br />
for a breathtaking view.</p>
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