Hello, Lyndon) I have no idea who and how dragged that roller in the forest. Maybe years ago authorities planned to pave the trail. Regarding Dr. Druckenmiller, i would never the leave my porch if i had a cabin like this 😂 Probably, the chairs were prepared for random strangers like me to meet the sunrise
Yes, how the roller came to be there is another matter. The doctor had good taste when it came to finding somewhere to build his cabin. I don't think I'd want to leave either. 😃
Great hike in the woods Darina, from the early photos at the beginning of the video (which I paused on full screen for a good look) I was expecting something different/other than the stone remnants we see. I suppose the tracks/cars/machinery were taken for scrap long ago. I went back and looked at the inserted photos and the rocks can be seen. The view from the Dr's cabin was worth the trip alone though, the stone remnant's were a bonus.😀😀😀
Hello, Tom!) Yes, my plan was to reach engine houses atop the mountain. I can't say that this place is hard accessible, but it took a day to go there and back. Rail track bed, leaded to the foot of the mountain, completely overgrew and there's nothing to see. Sad, i didn't find pics of the engine houses. Not sure if they exist at all(
Thank you, Francis) Just wanted to transferred all my emotions to viewers. That's the beauty of long hikes along unbeaten trails: silence, loneliness, no a word pronounced, no random encounters.
@@walkingcam1 Kindred spirits we are. I know and love that feeling too. Plus, the fact that I may be walking where no human has is totally satisfying to me. Keep up the great work Darina!
Like i spent the day today 🙂 Nobody around, just scared a bit random hikers on my way back. Probably, i looked wild and exhausted when they met me ramming from bushes