Virginia, leg two: Visiting friends in Roanoke
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Posted on September 2nd, 2010 // filed under The Daily Blah
Some of you dear people may know these dear people.
They used to live in G-Raps, but now they live here:
These are the Blue Ridge Mountains.
I’ve been wanting to visit them pretty much ever since they took up residence in the mountains, and figured that going to a conference in Virginia afforded the perfect opportunity to swing by and say hello and hang out for awhile with my friend Marion and her boys and husband.
So, after I finished up at the conference on Friday, I got myself a rental car (first time!) and drove 2.5 hours from Leesburg, VA to Roanoke, VA. It was a nice drive. Just me and the open road and my radio blaring. There were lots of cows and little farms along the way…just the sort of scenery I like, really. I arrived at Mr & Mrs. P’s apartment late in the evening, and we had a nice time chatting and catching up before we went to bed.
THe next morning, we had a nice breakfast and Mr. P was kind enough to take the boys so that Mrs. P and I could have some fun girl time. We went to downtown Roanoke to see the farmers’ market, which was very nice. As you can see here, Mrs. P bought some peaches, with which she made an absolutely delicious peach cobbler that we ate our way through for the rest of my visit.
After the market, we spent the rest of the morning and afternoon pottering around antique shops and such in downtown Roanoke, and then went for a drive in the mountains.
Of course, pictures don’t really do them justice.
That evening, we attended a very fun party with some people from their church.
On Monday, Mrs. P, Gudge, Ankie, and I set out for historic Lexington, VA. The thing about Virginia (or at least the parts of Virginia that I spent time in) is that there’s American history pretty much everywhere you turn. Revolutionary this and Civil War that, battlefields and railroads and museums galore. So if you like that kind of thing, it’s a pretty cool place. (It’s a good thing that I like that kind of thing.)
George likes cannons. Not surprising, being that he’s a little boy and all.

We visited Stonewall Jackson cemetery, where Stonewall Jackson is buried, and spent about an hour looking at really really old gravestones. it was pretty cool, if you like that kind of thing.
After the cemetery, we visited Washington & Lee University, where General Lee, his family, and his horse Traveler are buried.
It was a lovely visit. But it couldn’t last forever, because as if I hadn’t had enough traveling already, I had MORE places to go and stuff to see! Lots more in fact.
To Be Continued…..


















