Hallo Kai,
ahh, bei den Bildern packt mich einfach nur der Wehmut! Was war das für eine schöne Zeit da drüben. Den transam 2005 zu fahren, war wirklich eine der besten Sachen, die ich je in meinem Leben gemacht habe. In drei, vier Jahren will ich was ähnliches auf jeden Fall nochmal machen - vielleicht diesmal auf dem Southern Tier ...
Schöne Fotos, wirklich. Und die Webseite ist doch gar nicht so schlecht - warum das Tiefstapeln auf der Startseite? Was meine Bilder betrifft: Ja, mal sehen, vielleicht scanne ich mal ein paar ein bzw. lasse sie von meinem Dad einscannen
Erstmal muss ich meinen Reisebereicht schreiben... Und das Album auf die Reihe bringen.
Beste Grüße und bis die Tage
Olaf
Hier übrigens noch ein AP-Bericht über die Cookie Lady, den ich schon die ganze Zeit mal ins Forum stellen wollte:
A hard year for TransAmerica Trail's 'Cookie Lady' AFTON, Virginia (AP) -- June Curry shuffles to the back door of her mountain home at dusk, slowed by a stroke, her broken arm in a cast, and open! s it to greet a sweaty, out-of-breath stranger. "Do you want to stay here?" she asks sweetly.
At age 84, she doesn't much like cooking and never really has. And she hasn't been on a bicycle since she tried one on the daunting hills as a kid.
To thousands of bicyclists from every state and dozens of countries, she's the Cookie Lady. A legend of the Blue Ridge Mountains little known outside cycling circles, she offers sustenance, shelter, cheer and cookies to people crossing the United States on a backroads route known as the TransAmerica Trail.
A steep incline about halfway up Afton Mountain brings them to her brick house, a handmade "Cookie Lady" sign out front and an invitation to come around back and visit. The tiny cabin where she was born sits in the yard, transformed into the Bike House, stuffed with mementoes and postcards left by cyclists passing through or sent from the end of their journey.
"Most all the bikers write," she said. "They ar! e the most appreciative people."
Her eyes light up relating thei r tales from the road, from places she's never seen. "They go through farm country, coal country, lumber country," she said.
Curry speaks with authority of the route that runs more than 4,200 miles between Astoria, Oregon, and Yorktown, Virginia, but she doesn't remember a getaway of her own since her dad took her in their Model T to nearby fishing holes when she was a girl.
'She sets the standard'
In 1976, as the nation celebrated its 200th birthday, a group called Bikecentennial plotted the cross-country route, and some 1,800 riders took it that year. The quiet, twisty road out front suddenly bore thirsty, tired people on bicycles packed like mules.
"We put out a water hose for them," Curry said. Then came the cookies, usually chocolate chip from the oven. When her uncle died the next year, the cabin he'd been living in was turned over to cyclists at no charge.
Bikecentennial grew into the 45,000-member Adventur! e Cycling Association, which supports rides along the TransAmerica and other transcontinental and long-distance routes.
"There are hundreds of people who open their homes and heart to bicyclists," Jim Sayer, the executive director, said from the association's headquarters in Missoula, Montana. "But there's no question she sets the standard."
Curry quit working in 1965 to support her ill mother. She lives alone on $292 a month from the government, has no car and depends on friends to bring her down the mountain to see the doctor.
After the stroke in February and two weeks in a hospital, she slipped on her brick path in April and broke her right arm. Local bicyclists, Adventure Cycling and her extended family of sojourners pitched in on a medical fund and helped pay for someone to come by five days a week to tend the Bike House and get her groceries.
They spread the word "on the e-mail or whatever they call it," she said.
In a letter to her frien! ds, she wrote, "I just couldn't bear the thought of not being a part o f biking this year."
For years she wanted nothing for an overnight stay; now she keeps a jar in the Bike House for whatever donation her guests want to make. Unable to bake, with her left arm weak and her right arm healing, she now offers store-bought cookies.
"Nerves are bad and I have high blood pressure," she said. "I've been real tied down."
Then her water supply dried up for a time; a piece of shale had plugged her well. "I hope nothing else breaks, including my bones," she said. "I've had enough breakage for one year."
So far this year, more than 100 cyclists have stopped by, most of the spring travelers heading east to west. Afton Mountain, at 1,900 feet, is their first big climb. A respite at her halfway house is hard to pass up.
Those who find the climb overwhelming flag a truck to hitch a ride up the mountain. "They're sorry they did," she said. "They figured they're not doing it exactly fair."
Sayer says a lot of people who set ! out to bike across country are down on the state of the world and the country. The ride transforms them, he said, not only because of vistas rarely seen, but because of encounters with "trail angels" like the Cookie Lady.
Says the Cookie Lady: "I don't know how I got into this. I don't like to cook."
She asked her pastor, who made it all sound simple. "He said the Lord put me here to help all the people going by."
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed