Day: July 16, 2026💾

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The Adventure Appalachian Loop

With my summer trip to Michigan canceled – I ran out of time to get my gear ready and tested, work constraints, and the difficultly in selecting a route from Chautauqua County to the Nordhouse Dunes in Michigan – I’ve been thinking more about a November trip. Maybe not to Michigan but to Ohio. I would like to see Ohio, another Appalachian State, and maybe some of West Virigina.

5 hrs ➔ Allegheny NF (PA)
3.5 hrs ➔ Wayne NF (OH)
3 hrs ➔ Monongahela NF (WV)

It seems like it would work good with time. The final leg back to Albany is a bit sketchy with time and daylight, though I could either do County Bridge Campground PA if I reserved online, or do an overnight at Sugar Hill or Long Pond State Forest, if I take I-81 back, though that’s a very long day.

1. Allegheny National Forest (Pennsylvania)

Because you are in a truck camper, you can take advantage of Allegheny’s massive, legal roadside network.

  • The Spot: Forest Road 160 (Loleta Road) or Forest Road 259 (Morrison Run). Both feature excellent, hardened, free dirt/gravel pulloffs built explicitly for dispersed vehicle camping.
  • November Advantage: Allegheny’s heavy canopy opens up in late autumn, offering great views, but night temperatures frequently plummet below freezing.

2. Wayne National ForestAthens Unit (Ohio)

From PA, you will take I-79 South to I-70 West / US-33 East to drop straight into Athens County.

  • The Spot: Utah Ridge Road (FR 259) or Wildcat Hollow Trailhead as explored above.
  • The Route Pivot: Camp here for a night or two to break up the drive before crossing the Ohio River into the high mountains of West Virginia.

3. Monongahela National Forest (West Virginia)

Heading southeast from Ohio via US-50 East or US-33 East brings you straight into the “Mon.”

  • The Spot: Gandy Creek Dispersed Area (County Route 29 / Forest Road 17). This is legendary for truck campers. It features miles of wide, flat, completely free roadside pull-outs right along a pristine trout stream.
  • November Advantage: Deep valley walls block high mountain winter winds.

4. Canaan Heights & Canaan Valley (West Virginia)

Just a short, scenic drive up the mountain from Gandy Creek via Route 32 North brings you to the high plateau of Davis and Thomas, WV.

  • The Spot: Canaan Heights Road (Forest Road 13). Located just outside the town of Davis, this rugged mountain ridge road enters a pocket of Monongahela NF land. There are a handful of tight, rocky primitive truck pulloffs near the premium overlook trailheads.
  • Critical Backup: If Canaan Heights gets hit with early lake-effect snow (very common in mid-November at 3,000+ feet), slide down into the valley floor and use the electric/heated hookup sites at Canaan Valley Resort State Park or the winter camping pads at Blackwater Falls State Park.
Map: Taylor Valley State Forest
Map: Earlville State Forest

Bill Ford Says Carmakers Need to Tackle China Head On, Even if They’d Rather Not

Bill Ford Says Carmakers Need to Tackle China Head On, Even if They’d Rather Not

As some lawmakers have proposed measures to completely lock Chinese automakers out of the U.S. market, and automotive industry lobbyists have supported those efforts, Ford executive chairman Bill Ford is singing a different tune: It’s time for U.S. automakers to rise to the challenge.

“We have to go toe-to-toe with China,” Ford said at an Axios event in Washington, D.C. on Tuesday, per the Wall Street Journal. “We can’t expect to keep them out forever, and we have to be able to beat them at their own game.”

Why Don’t More Farmers Use Cover Crops? – Morning Ag Clips

Why Don’t More Farmers Use Cover Crops? – Morning Ag Clips

Maria Teresa Tancredi recently earned her doctorate in the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences after spending five years exploring why reality is far more complicated. Working in the Department of Crop and Soil Sciences with advisor Jennifer Jo Thompson, whose research connects agricultural science and social sustainability, Tancredi interviewed 86 farmers representing a wide range of production systems across the country. She published her findings in the Journal of Soil and Water Conservation this spring.

Rather than simply asking whether farmers used cover crops — a common conservation practice of growing plants between cash-crop harvests to improve soil health, suppress weeds and reduce soil erosion — Tancredi wanted to understand how they made decisions, what their days looked like, what challenges they faced, and what mattered most to them.

Map: Debar Pond

How old I look in the mirror of the SuperDuty

I was looking at my face in the mirror of the SuperDuty this morning, noticing how gray both my hair and goatee have become. How wrinkled my face is since I lost weight a few years back and started eating healthy. I know some of it is the time spent out in the sun camping, but also I am no longer in my mid-20s as when I first came to Moose River Plains not that many years ago.

But alas I’m 43 years old. Many people I went to High School and Boy Scouts with now have children going off to college and into the workforce. Many others have parents who have passed away, indeed, I read and think more about things like probate and estates, and what it actually means to have a homestead. Still I enjoy the wild days out in wilderness, even if they weren’t what they once were.

I know the SuperDuty and the truck cap is leaning into who I once was and the weeks in wilderness too soon will fade away. Still despite my gray, I want enjoy these days while I still can.

Smile