November 6, 2023
We left Rhode Island on Oct 20 and drove west across Connecticut into New York and then to Pennsylvania. We drove along the Delaware River in the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area which is in Pennsylvania and New Jersey on either side of the river. We crossed the river into New Jersey and camped at Worthington State Forest which is right next to the recreation area. The fall colors were very beautiful, but this is quite a remote area for being so close to so many centers of population. The roads on the New Jersey side were some of the worst we have seen and it was quite chilly. We explored the N.J. side visiting the Millbrook Historic area most of which was reconstructed to look like an 1870’s village. We also took a nice walk on a trail along the river.
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Millbrook Historic Area |
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Millbrook Historic Area |
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Millbrook Historic Area |
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Millbrook Historic Area |
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Delaware River |
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Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area |
Our next stop was in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. We stayed at a lovely campground on a hillside overlooking beautiful farmland about 25 minutes east of Lancaster.
Many of the farms are owned by Amish and Mennonite families and, as we drove around, we saw many horse drawn buggies and farm machinery. The farms also had clothes lines attached high up on an out building or barn with pullies and the other end attached to their house so that the laundry would be way high up in the air.
There are about 27 covered bridges in Lancaster County and the county has covered bridge routes which we drove around and saw 16 of them. Many of them looked similar, but it was so nice driving around the beautiful countryside.
We also took a ride on the Strasburg Railroad. It was a very nice 45 minute ride pulled by a steam locomotive. We also went to the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania. This museum had very nice displays of trains from very early steam locomotives to Conrail engines and lots of freight cars also. Mark says he doesn’t know when he has seen so many rail cars in such good conditions.  |
Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania GG1 |
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Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania |
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Train Ride Strasburg Railroad |
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Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania |
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Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania |
Another interesting thing we did was have dinner at The Shady Maple Smorgasbord. This is a huge all you can eat smorgasbord and the night we went was seafood night. I don’t think that I have ever seen so many scallops and clams in one place in all my life. There was also mussels, crab cakes, salmon, steak and much more. The buffet tables went on forever!

After Lancaster, we drove to Wilmington, Delaware to visit the Winterthur Museum and Gardens. This house and grounds was lived in by three generations of the du Pont family. The property is now down to 1,000 acres and is managed as a beautiful natural garden with different bulbs planted which bloom many seasons of the year. It also has very tall trees. We took a tram tour of the gardens and also walked some of the 25 miles of trails. It is a very lovely place.
Each generation added on to the house with the final generation of Henry Francis du Pont expanding it to 175 rooms on 9 stories with the idea of it housing his extensive collection of Americana. When he turned it into a museum in 1951 he and his wife moved to a smaller 50 room home on the estate. We toured two of the nine stories and they were beautifully decorated. We also toured the Gallery which also had beautiful furniture on display.
We spent the night at another Harvest Host in Claymont Delaware just north of Wilmington. We stayed at Hangman Brewing Company which turns out to be the smallest craft brewery in Delaware and is located in the back of a shopping center so we had a hard time finding it. The owner just had us park in the parking lot and it turned out they had good beer, a nice dog named Brew and there was a good pizza joint around the corner.
The next 2 nights we camped at Elk Neck State park in Maryland, not too far from Wilmington. It is on a peninsula with the Chesapeake Bay on one side and the Elk River on the other side. We took a nice hike to see the Turkey Point Lighthouse. On Saturday, we drove back into Wilmington to take Autumn Leaf Special on the Wilmington and Western Railroad. This was a very nice two and a half hour excursion along the Red Clay Creek and the fall colors were spectacular and we even saw two covered bridges!
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Turkey Point Lighthouse |
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Red Clay Creek |
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Autumn Leaf Special on the Wilmington and Western Railroad |
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Autumn Leaf Special |
Our next stop was Cape Henelopen State Park in Delaware. We decided to take the scenic route along the coast. We discovered that because of the full moon the tide was particularly high and some of the marshes were flooding over the road. Because the truck and trailer are pretty high clearance, we had no trouble getting through, but we still wonder how the large group of low slung Corvettes coming from the opposite direction were going to fare!  |
Watching the Trailer Through the High Water |
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Flooded Road |
Cape Henelopen State Park is very, very nice. It is located on a peninsula jutting out with the Delaware Bay on one side and the Atlantic Ocean on the other. It has many miles of very nice bike trails and we rode our bikes all over to see the sights. One very nice trail, the Gordons Pond Trail had a very long boardwalk over sand dunes and marshes and we saw many different species of birds. Add to this, the fact that it was in the lower 80’s the first two days we were here so the biking was fabulous.
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Fishing Pier |
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Gordons Pond Trail |
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Gordons Pond Trail |
Thanks for reading! Moving south now - more next time.
Wow, the number of covered bridges, light houses, beautiful fall color, impressive railroads and more that you're seeing is amazing. BUT that seafood buffet sounded the best to me!! (haha)
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