Skyline Drive in Shenandoah National Park

Skyline Drive’s northern entrance is a little more than an hour drive from Washington DC, but it feels like a world away. - photo by Joe Alexander
Skyline Drive’s northern entrance is a little more than an hour drive from Washington DC, but it feels like a world away. – photo by Joe Alexander
Skyline Drive runs for a little more than 100 miles through Shenandoah National Park in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

The northern park entrance is in Front Royal, Virginia – about 70 miles west of Washington DC. Skyline Drive winds roughly north and south to near Waynesboro, Virginia.

I got there about a month to early for the prime viewing of the fall colors in the park.

There are a number of overlooks and places to park along Skyline Drive, where the highest elevation is 3,680 feet.

Official Website: www.nps.gov/shen/index.htm

The road to Virginia and Shenandoah

Crossing into Virginia on Highway 340. - photo by Joe Alexander
Crossing into Virginia on Highway 340. – photo by Joe Alexander
I started my day driving west on a highway south of but roughly parallel to the Mason-Dixon Line. I passed exits for towns whose names rang a bell from Civil War history.

Places along Highway 430 like Frederick, Sandy Hook and Boonsborough in Maryland and Harpers Ferry in West Virginia. I crossed over the Potomac River along the state lines of Maryland and West Virginia.

Due to an unexpected road closure, I spent a couple of hours driving south on the mostly two-lane Stonewall Jackson Memorial Highway.

I crossed the Shanendoah River and two of its forks.

Along the way I saw a lot of small-town Virginia.

It wasn’t the day I had envisioned, but it was certainly a change of scenery.

Along highway 340 on the way to Front Royal, Virginia. - photo by Joe Alexander
Along highway 340 on the way to Front Royal, Virginia.
Along highway 340 on the way to Front Royal, Virginia. - photo by Joe Alexander
Along highway 340 on the way to Front Royal, Virginia.

Road trip starts with a flight to Baltimore

The Inner Harbor in downtown Baltimore, Maryland. - photo by Joe Alexander
The Inner Harbor in downtown Baltimore, Maryland. – photo by Joe Alexander
I remember trips to Baltimore from when I was a youngster in the back seat of my parents’ car.

This time, Charm City is just a quick stop on the way to some new scenery.