Then an unplanned sunny and 65 F, we just happened to run into each other, then sat in the gazebo to eat! It was very windy, but we enjoyed being able to be outside. So did the Canada Geese. I sadly had to avoid being in the sun thanks to antibiotic, and was pretty darn short of breath getting to and from car. Would I say yes again, of course!
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You can just make out the "one lane bridge" sign on the right...which goes over the famously flooded Swannanoa River. The building down the road in the distance is the derelict one that will not be torn down before the new interstate entrance is built...I-40 is just beyond that!
This entrance is about 25 feet from the railroad crossing...which is where a traffic light exists on US 70. Blue Ridge Rd. is about to become a major thoroughfare.
This is the shot before I cropped it for the header pic, showing yes indeed, there were daffodils blooming in Feb. in my neighbors garden.
A nearby construction (destruction of old trees fist) site. Here is planned to be the "main entrance" to Montreat College Black Mountain campus.
Last week...
You can just make out the "one lane bridge" sign on the right...which goes over the famously flooded Swannanoa River. The building down the road in the distance is the derelict one that will not be torn down before the new interstate entrance is built...I-40 is just beyond that!
This entrance is about 25 feet from the railroad crossing...which is where a traffic light exists on US 70. Blue Ridge Rd. is about to become a major thoroughfare.
This last week, showing some of the trees which have been cut, waiting to be hauled.
As you can see, the new main entrance on this plan is on the far left of the campus. Currently it is in a small neighborhood on the far right of the campus.
All those dark grey areas are parking lots. And see the little blue stream bed of the Swannanoa River...just waiting to flood that new road. Fortunately there's a big hill that the actual campus sits on, so all the buildings are unlikely to be in a flood plane. On the number 26 area are 4 baseball fields, part of Veterans Park...which was flooded badly in Sept. 2024.
I wasn't asked a thing regarding the increased traffic on our 2 lane road, where we already have to take turns to cross the one lane bridge. Just really looking forward to all the college kids zooming around in a year or so. The plans for an exit/entrance onto I-40 have been approved, so maybe they'll build a new bridge too.
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Sharing with Wordless Wednesday on Tuesday.
OK, ready with snow equipment and winter clothing again this week!
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The truth isn't always beauty, but the hunger for it is.
-Nadine Gordimer, novelist, Nobel laureate (1923-2014)

Gazebos are very useful!!
ReplyDeleteAre they planting more trees to replace those felled?
Good question. The entire campus is wooded…so I imagine lots of the trees there will be kept. But where the road is being built is right next to the railroad tracks (which are elevated)…unless they do a lot of earth moving it will definitely be flood prone.
Delete...spring is a tug-a-war between winter and summer!
ReplyDeleteI think I have come to enjoy spring a lot more living here in North Carolina. But this has certainly been a winter to remember.
DeleteThe older I get, the less a fan I am of progress.
ReplyDeleteOur climate crisis and overpopulation will continue to cause many changes in our lives, I'm afraid. Not to mention world wide chaos. Look for the helpers!
DeleteAh, progress. So often an oxymoron.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you got to eat outside, even if it wasn't exactly the perfect day for it.
It certainly was an amazing moment before the storm...which didn't hit us badly at all, while New England was slammed yesterday! Here it finally just got up to 38 F degrees again.
DeleteI don't know why destruction is referred to as development, by the people doing it.
ReplyDeleteIn Asheville developers have had to contribute to a fund to replace trees that were removed...but there's no system devised yet to plant any trees with the fund. Duh!
DeleteDaffodils! Hurrah!
ReplyDeleteThey sure surprised me!
DeleteEating outdoors and seeing daffs in February sounds delightful and almost subtropical.
ReplyDeleteAnd now we've had 2 full days under freezing temps. My apartment management asks us to let a faucet drip while it's that cold so pipes don't freeze. I'm really tired of it!
DeleteI can only imagine our Spring will be chilly and wet? Just a guess.
ReplyDeleteHaving a picnic on a warm day is wonderful to me.
Take care, enjoy your day!
It's too rainy and windy to eat outside here. Maybe in a month or two. :)
ReplyDeleteLovely to be able to sit outside in the shady sun, even with a bit of wind. We had snow, lots and lots of snow!
ReplyDelete