Over the past week He of We noticed fallen leaves in yards while meandering through the neighborhood on his afternoon walk, She of We talked about getting her garden ready for next Spring’s plantings, Daughter of He contemplated buying new snow tires, and stores everywhere have Halloween candy out. All of them are sure signs Fall is soon here. But the surest sign of Fall to come isn’t any of these, it isn’t the shortened days and cooler nights, it isn’t the model year end clearance sales on the car lots. Nope, the surest sign of the next season coming right around the corner is the Covered Bridge Festival!
Yes, there are still covered bridges in the country. In use even. Up in our corner of the country there are two neighboring counties that have a combined festival every year right at the start of Fall. If you have the kind of time we did some years ago and wanted to make a quest of it, you can drive up to and over 30 of the covered bridges spanning (no pun intended) nearly 90 miles of quiet, rural roadway. (It’s a perfect way to end the convertible season, although if you’ve read us for a while you’ve read posts that make it clear that we never really end convertible season. But that’s a different story for a different day.) At 17 of those bridges there will be vendors selling their autumnal decorations, local food booths, singers, dancers and other entertainers, chain saw carvers, quilt makers, and artists in almost every medium.
So why are we so excited over what seems to be just a giant craft show spread over 1,400 square miles? Like most things we like there are the people. Some of the most talented people display their talents at the bridges and nowhere else. Others who are at other arts festivals actually get to spend time with visitors in a more relaxed setting. Even though it is only 20 or so miles from home there are foods, sights, and sounds we only see the one day a year that we get to the bridges. And if we miss a year, when the following year rolls around and the dates get closer, the anticipation grows even stronger.
It’s not so much that the Covered Bridges are from a simpler time. In fact, they are from a harder time. If we had a choice of trying to make a living in 1814 or 2014 we pick now. But they are from a sturdier time. These are bridges built in the early to mid 1800’s and they still work. And most of the things that we’ve bought in their shadows still work too. There’s an endorsement, even for a decoration.
And it’s always a great day to take a ride in the woods – and know we can’t get lost!
Now that’s what we think. Really. How ‘bout you.
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