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Sunday, July 6, 2025

A Llittle Road Trip

68°f/20°C, clear, less humid than the past few days.

Garden news: I was out early this morning,  watering because we've had no rain, and very high temperatures,  for over a week. So far the gardens are doing fine, but the potted flowers need to be watered daily now. 


daily now. Larry picked our first squash and cucumbers today, and we are getting a few tomatoes, along with radishes and the last of the cabbages (he missed a couple when he harvested all the other cabbages). I also found some ruby lettuce that had not yet turned bitter, a nice surprise. Green beans should be ready to start picking soon, and the corn is tassling. 

Today was road trip day. I saw this sweet dinette set online for a very good price, and decided that even though it was over 2 hours away, we were going to go after it. It's just too hot to do much outside, so why not take a drive?


Central West Virginia is pretty much just rural, with a couple towns of over 10,000 and many tiny unincorporated communities with names like Pickle Street, Leatherbark, Gassaway, Crawford, Stumptown, and even Ireland and Cairo. Some names are explained easily: 
  • Leatherbark was named after the American Chestnut tree, whose bark was used to tan leather before the trees sadly became extinct. There are several efforts being made to revive this beautiful species,with some success.
  • Stumptown was named after a family with the last name of Stump.
  • Gassaway was named after one of the early coal and timber barons in the state
  • Pickle Street, well, there are several explanations you can read about in this post
  • Crawford, you guessed it, a family name
  • Ireland is also self-explanatory, and there was actually quite a large number of Irish stonemasons who came here to build the Transallegheny Lunatic Asylum in Weston. Indeed, there is a small Catholic church not far from Iteland that flies the Irish flag, and has a strange ghost story connected to it 
  • Cairo was named by early settlers after Cairo, Egypt,  supposedly because of its fertile soil and river valley, but honestly, it bears no resemblance whatsoever to its namesake,  which makes me think those settlers had never actually seen Egypt.
Our destination today was Crawford. We have never actually ever been there before, although we have been to nearby Stonewall Resort, the Bulltown Civil War site, and lovely Falls Mills. (My storytelling days took me to many off the beaten track places,  and I kinda miss that.) But oddly, I had actually looked at this old country store that was for sale, along with the house beside it, back in 2018 or 2019. We were thinking of moving back then to somewhere more convenient,  and this old place appealed to me on several levels. After looking closely at online photos and street views, we did not follow up on this place because the neighbors were just too close. 

The old store:



Across the street, this Hudson, a car model  is don't think i have ever seen. I don't know what year, do you?


Downtown Crawford: 



We met Debby and Rick at their out-of-the-way home a couple miles out of Crawford, bought their dinette set and headed home. 

We stopped in Weston at a new coffee shop and enjoyed iced coffee (for me), strawberry lemonade for Larry, a brownie for him and a huge cookie for me. 



It was a comfortable, eclectic shop furnished with antiques and oddities. Just my kind of place! Funnily enough, the young man working there remembered me from when I used to tell stories at the Weston Library every summer! Amazing, as it has been 6 years since I was there.

Now we are home, enjoying the air conditioning as the dogs drowse beside us. There is much to be said for going, and a lot to be said for coming home. 



Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

8 comments:

  1. Road trips through little out-of-the-way places are the best. Looks like you had a great day, found the dinette set and bought it.
    Imagine that young fellow remembering you 6 years later.
    Your garden continues to do so well!

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  2. We had quite a bit of rain yesterday and it was unseasonably cold..15C and rainy..not my idea of summer.

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  3. Wow, that dinette set is very cool.Brrrr, asylum. I once was in one before they ripped it down.
    And your Cairo-remark made me smile.
    LOL on the too close neighbors... I sometimes can hear WHAT they say, even and I bet, as Ingo has a loud workplace speaks very loud, there are no secrets from us...
    Oh, I love the porch at the old store!
    How wonderful the man remembered you!
    Have a great new week!

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  4. ...I LOVE the table and chairs!

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  5. I know all of the places you talked about today. The only problem is the roads are all crooked getting to them. Growing up in WV was not easy if you got carsick. :)

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  6. That set is neat and I would think should sell well. It was interesting to see Crawford. A childhood friend was a Crawford, and there are Crawfords in this vicinity.

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  7. It's neat to consider the people your story-telling has influenced. And then even neater to see how you repurpose old things for more use by other people! I used to call myself a channel for creativity to come through me, and I'd guess you are also a channel for these two aspects...sharing old stories or old things to become part of the futures of new people.

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  8. Great table and chairs. My grandmother had one that was similar.

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