May 12, 2017

Favorite Road

Skyline Drive

This week Mersad asks us, "What is your favorite road or street from your town?" I puzzled over the question for a while and started scrolling through pictures when it jumped out at me: Skyline Drive! It doesn't exactly run through our town, but it starts at the Front Royal's southern town boundary.  The town shares several miles of boundary with Shenandoah National Park. Long distance hikers on the Appalachian Trail walk through town all the time, picking up supplies or enjoying a restaurant meal and perhaps even a hotel room with hot showers.


The first overlook on Skyline Drive (if you enter at the northern entry gate) provides a view of part of town.

The drive runs 105 miles, the length of Shenandoah National Park. It is known for it's scenic beauty and recreational opportunities, particularly hiking. It is primarily a park road, not a commuter route. The speed limit is 35 miles per hour, with slower limits at sharp curves and busy recreational areas. 


The overlooks are popular and just about everyone stops to take a picture. I have hundreds of pictures taken along the drive, maybe thousands. Since I have a senior pass to enter National Parks, I am able to go up on the drive often. Usually I visit the northern section because it is close to home.

We are privileged to be able to live in such a beautiful area.

Sharing with Weekend Green and Scenic Weekends




Orange You Glad It's Friday?
The final photo is from March and I took it from Strasburg. I want to show it to you because the snow reveals the road cuts along Skyline Drive. See the white lines on the mountain?  Those are snow-covered rocks which were cut and blasted when the Drive was constructed in the 1930's.


I have looked out from one of the overlooks, most likely on one of those white lines that you see here, and have seen a line of buildings in Strasburg in the far distance. The line is vague and usually hazy, but pictures I took on a clear day can be enlarged until I make out the shape of a hotel that I recognize. It's not very far from the Denny's parking lot where I took this picture. Anyway, those lines show you where Skyline Drive runs along the Blue Ridge. This is just a small portion of the road; my guess is that it is part of the first seven miles. Around milepost 8 the road crosses to the east side of the mountain for about 6 miles.  After that it twists and turns in various directions and I lose track, but you can't get lost on the road because access is limited.

Did I tell you I love Skyline Drive? I've visited it many times starting when my parents took me there as a child. We lived in Northern Virginia and it was an easy day trip. Now it's so close I go up just to have a snack, take in a few views, and listen to the wind.

12 comments:

  1. ...I was on this road only once and it was so foggy that I couldn't see a thing.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Lovely Linda ...
    I wouldn't mind driving that road myself!

    All the best Jan

    ReplyDelete
  3. We love this in the spring. Often visiting our friends in Maryville, Tenn. Then take head north the long roundabout way home to Minnesota...:)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wow, great photos from famous places - I would like it too (wish, I could travel)
    Enjoy your weekend, thanks for joining

    ReplyDelete
  5. You are privileged to live in this beautiful area -- and it is our privilege that you share it with us! We took a lot of pictures on our one and only visit through this NP and I wish we could go back.... but meanwhile there are your pictures. (And that Senior NP pass is the best thing in the world!).

    ReplyDelete
  6. Skyline Drive has it all. The views you have shown previously are always breath taking. I can see why this is your favorite.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I have driven along Skyline Drive and it is just beautiful.

    ReplyDelete
  8. We loved it two, though we've only visited twice. I think I even recognize that curve in the road!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Such lovely views. You are lucky to be able to visit there often.

    ReplyDelete
  10. That part of the country has fabulous scenery and you captured it so well!

    ReplyDelete

The View from Squirrel Ridge features thousands of views of the Shenandoah Valley and surrounding area. I post frequently so please visit often.

Your comments are appreciated. If you are responding to a post older than a few days, your comment will be held until we have a chance to approve it. Thanks for your patience!

Sorry, anonymous comments cannot be accepted because of the large number of spam comments that come in that way. Also, links that are ads will be deleted.