Bob

Covered Bridge in Barrackville

My Dad’s mother was born in Barrackville, West Virginia in 1891. We decided to visit her birthplace on our summer RV tour. Verna took this photo of the famous wooden bridge as we were driving through town. Click on the image to enlarge.

From Leo AI:

The Barrackville Covered Bridge is a historic wooden bridge located in Barrackville, West Virginia. It spans 145 feet (44 m) in a single span across Buffalo Creek and was built in 1853 by local bridge builder Lemuel Chenoweth. The bridge is a modified arched Burr truss, with siding added twenty years after the bridge’s construction.

According to the Barrackville Covered Bridge – Wikipedia, the structure is one of the few remaining covered bridges in the state and is listed on the National Register of Historic Landmarks. It was saved from destruction during Jones’ Raid, April 29, 1863, by the Ice family, nearby mill owners and Southern sympathizers.

The bridge is an excellent example of a modified Burr Truss and is in substantially original condition. It is the only covered bridge in the state that bears its vehicular loads with essentially no modern reinforcement.

Visitors can explore the bridge on foot, but motorized traffic on Pike Street is now routed upstream of the structure. The bridge was restored in 1999 and is now preserved by the Barrackville Covered Bridge Preservation Society.

Kentucky Camping

Camping near Paducah, KY:

Paducah / I-24 / Kentucky Lake KOA Journey offers a variety of camping options, including RV sites, tent sites, and cabins. The campground is located near the highways and byways of North America, offering convenience to traveling campers. According to the reviews, the campground has a quiet country setting, with beautiful views of the water from some RV sites.

The campground is close to several attractions, including Kentucky Lake, the National Quilt Museum, and the Floodwall Murals in Paducah. The reviews also mention that the campground has a fishing pond with a cool fountain that lights up at night.

Nineteenth Blogiversary

As of today, July 17, 2025, the vernabob.com blog is nineteen years old. The URL vernabob.com is a bit older than the blog; we formerly just had a web presence with this and that pages about us. When we started the blog, we wanted to convey our daily activities in “Our Digital Diary,” but these days, we blog now and then about things when we get the notion to do so as we enter our twentieth year of blogging.

We thank the Good Lord for His continued blessings upon us and trust that He will continue to do so. And may God bless all of our readers.

Mexican Hat Rock Formation

We passed this southern Utah formation on our way to western Colorado. Photo by Verna. Click to enlarge.

The Mexican Hat Rock Formation is a unique geological formation located in southeastern Utah, USA. It is a remnant of a sandstone layer of the Halgaito Formation, formed from sediments deposited on a coastal plain next to a shallow seaway during Late Pennsylvanian time. The formation is a balanced rock, with a broad, flat, orange-red sandstone cap standing on a narrow pedestal of shale and siltstone, resembling an upside-down sombrero. This unique shape is due to different rates of erosion and weathering, where the softer layers of shale and siltstone were eroded faster from underneath the more resistant cap of sandstone.

Monument Valley Camping

This was the view in beautiful Monument Valley, Utah, where we “Glamped” overnight for a couple of nights. I say glamped because we have many of the comforts of home while away. We have satellite TV, streaming TV, Starlink internet and our laptop computers.

Glamping: A Luxury Outdoor Experience. Glamping, short for “glamorous camping,” is a type of outdoor accommodation that offers a more luxurious and comfortable alternative to traditional camping, i.e. “roughing it.”

There are other places we visited on this trip which we will post about later. Click on the image to enlarge.