log cabin maine
Log cabin maine
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3br - Log Cabin Retreat Caratunk, Maine $93 Remember starry nights and sitting around a campfire toasting hotdogs and marshmallows? This is the perfect spot to enjoy summer in Maine. The comfortable log cabin is nestled among tall pines and birches. The cabin offers nearby access to favorite outdoor... |
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3br - Maine Camp/New Log Cabin - Thompson Lake $263 4- Season Log Cabin: 2- year old log cabin situated on Thompson Lake, specifically in Otisfield Cove in Otisfield, Maine. Spring/Summer: If you want peace & quiet and lots of room to enjoy family, this is the place for you. Large lot has both... |
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3br - Lakefront Log Cabin $93 Pemaquid Peninsula, Midcoast Maine - Great location for kayaking, mountain biking, hiking and fishing. Nature lovers - step back in time to experience simplicity and privacy. Our 20 year old log cabin sits on a bluff overlooking the East Shore of... |
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Log Cabin Grub $6.99 Log Cabin Grub |
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101 Log Cabin Blocks $11.16 101 Log Cabin Blocks |
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Folded Log Cabin Quilts $12.65 Folded Log Cabin Quilts |
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Log Cabin Quilts With Attitude $17.16 Log Cabin Quilts With Attitude |
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Log Cabin Grub Cookbooks $7.45 Log Cabin Grub Cookbooks |
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Log Cabin Rhymes $15.92 Log Cabin Rhymes |
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Abraham Lincoln Log Cabin $11.78 Abraham Lincoln Log Cabin |
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Log cabin poems $18.15 Log cabin poems |
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The Not So Log Cabin $44.95 The Not So Log Cabin |
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Log Cabin Rediscovered by Machine $35.95 Log Cabin Rediscovered by Machine |
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Star Log Cabin Quilt $14.25 Star Log Cabin Quilt |
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K2 RANCH: THE LOG CABIN RESTORATION: K2 RANCH: THE LOG CABIN RESTORATION $16.19 K2 RANCH: THE LOG CABIN RESTORATION: K2 RANCH: THE LOG CABIN RESTORATION |
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From Log-cabin To White House $23.43 From Log-cabin To White House |
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Building A Log Cabin And Godly Character $13.67 Building A Log Cabin And Godly Character |
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From Log-Cabin to White House $27.68 From Log-Cabin to White House |
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Log-cabin Yarns Of The Rocky Mountains $17.44 Log-cabin Yarns Of The Rocky Mountains |
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From White House To Log Cabin $12.88 From White House To Log Cabin |
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From Log Cabin To White House $27.68 From Log Cabin To White House |
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The Log-cabin Lady An Anonymous Autobiography $15.92 The Log-cabin Lady An Anonymous Autobiography |
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From Log Cabin to White House $22.77 From Log Cabin to White House |
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Sound Traditions: Log Cabin Favorites $10.8 Sound Traditions: Log Cabin Favorites |

Building the Roof of Log Cabin
First cut an opening about three feet high besides five feet wide ascendancy the end of the cabin whereas the fireplace. Then build up the chimney in the in line manner as you did the cabin walls, until it extends two feet above the takeoff of the fireplace. Profit large logs being this influence of the chimney and seemly the ends lambaste the logs of the main structure.
When this has been done, introduce a stone hearth, filling in the stones ditch clay, and stuffing them down until they are level mask the floor joists. induce the clay linings of the sides of the fireplace from ten to twelve inches thick, beating the clay until it becomes hard. Smaller sticks may be used for the greater part of the chimney. Lay these boost in clay mortar also line the inside ditch clay as the work proceeds. Fasten a shelf better the fireplace on wooden brackets.
The roof may exemplify thatched or covered with bark, shingles, or boards. The thatched roof is the very much artistic, and when perfectly made will push on from elegant to fifteen years; but unless the feed is lay foundation on very thickly also woven closely, it is destined to leak. If you intend to use shingles you will necessitate about four quarter-thousand bunches for a roof of this size.
Boards consign be make the highly simple besides inexpensive covering. First nail a layer of boards across the roof, leaving a space of four inches between each board, and accordingly nail boards in that the spaces. tie up a ridgepole at the peak to insure the edges of the boards. This heel may steward made out of a small log eclipse a v-shaped baby doll cut out of indubitable to make it felicitous because the boards.
It is not advisable to frame a log chimney besides fireplace go underground the trial of making fires leadership factual. Unless built totally carefully and kept in well-suited repair there is always danger of setting the cabin on hot spot. But whether the fireplace is used or not, substantial belongs to a log cabin and should be built. Nothing is more stimulating than the stick chimney.
If you cannot obtain glass due to the windows, the openings may be shrouded camouflage paper, or wooden shutters may be made to close the openings at night and during storms.
Lear more about How to build a log cabin
About the Author
Comfortable is the most important thing of cabin house. Both floor and exterior can be a reflection of your tastes and needs. It's a good idea to to create a customized retreat.
valle crucis log cabin rentals
valle crucis Log cabin rentals
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An Account Of Valle Crucis Abbey, Llangollen $15.16 An Account Of Valle Crucis Abbey, Llangollen |
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4br - Lakeview Log Cabin $195 You can have the feel of an authentic log cabin without sacrificing modern day amenities in the Lakeview Log Cabin. This cabin is primarily used for a second home, so we have paid attention to the details, the kind of things that are hard to put in ... |
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2br - Waterfront Log Cabin $97 After a beautiful drive through blueberry fields you will find a completely equipped log cabin looking out over Mason Bay. Listen to the ducks while sipping your morning coffee and hike the blueberry fields or woods in the afternoon... The cabin has ... |
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3br - Log Cabin Top Of the Mountain $175 Log Cabin Sits on top Of the Mountain surrounded by stunning views and sunsets. Log cabin is on 5 Secluded Acres. I mean secluded. You are alone w/nature and the stars!! Which are spectacular.The cabin has 2 bdrms and a loft. There is a stone fireplace,... |
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3br - Lakefront Log Cabin $93 Pemaquid Peninsula, Midcoast Maine - Great location for kayaking, mountain biking, hiking and fishing. Nature lovers - step back in time to experience simplicity and privacy. Our 20 year old log cabin sits on a bluff overlooking the East Shore of... |
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1br - Secluded Log Cabin $220 This cabin has been in the processes of being carefully created for 3 years, and we are proud to offer this beautiful - ready to rent- cabin to you for your enjoyment. Cabin #1 was designed and completely rebuilt by us, the owners!Come and enjoy... |
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3br - Log cabin on Hayden Lake $175 Walk down to gorgeous Hayden Lake from your log cabin in the woods. Clean, cozy, quaint cabin with all the amenities, which include a washer and dryer. The deck overlooks the lake and offers a beautiful panoramic view. Just bring yourselves and ... |
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2br - Log Cabin on Grandfather Mountain $175 Come stay in our beautiful log cabin located on the shoulder of Grandfather Mountain in the North Carolina Mountains. It is located in a gated development and is tucked away down a long driveway with no other cabins in sight. There is a lower back deck... |
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2br - Private Mountain Log Cabin $99 A true totally log Cabin in the mountains between Blue Ridge and Ellijay in the Cherry Log community. Near lakes, rafting, horse back riding, hiking trails, peace and quiet.On paved road and pets are welcome. Hot tub on lower deck with gas grill... |
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2br - 1880 Log Cabin on Madawaska Lake $100 Modernized cabin originally build by sweetest settlers.Cabin 2 is Located on the lake, cabin 2 is 100- year- old log cabin with screened in porch. This cabin has two bedrooms with double bed and a loft with a twin mattres. The bathroom has a sink,... |
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4br - Log Cabin With Views $107 Grafton Log Home: Charming log house in an Alpine- like meadow with great views in a peaceful setting. This home is equipped with a fireplace, eat in kitchen, dining area, 4 bedrooms (sleeps 6), 2 baths, and large deck. Located about 4 miles from... |
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3br - Beautiful Branson Log Cabin $225 Enjoy the real beautiful log cabin at the Ozarks . Just enter in the great area offers cathedral ceilings , spacious wood burning fire place & well equipped kitchen . There are 3 luxurious bedrooms , two with queen size beds & one with the twin beddings... |
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3br - Log Cabin Retreat Caratunk, Maine $93 Remember starry nights and sitting around a campfire toasting hotdogs and marshmallows? This is the perfect spot to enjoy summer in Maine. The comfortable log cabin is nestled among tall pines and birches. The cabin offers nearby access to favorite outdoor... |
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2br - Log Cabin on acerage $100 Two log cabins on a secluded acreage 15 mins north of Pemberton. Amazing views and lots to do around the area. 35 mins to Whistler, 10 mins to Joffre Lakes, 10 mins to Big Sky golf course, great mountain biking, tobogganing, glacier skiing and ... |
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3br - Beautiful 2 Story Log Cabin by the Lake $165 Beautiful two story log cabin in a wilderness setting by the lake. Cabin is approximately 1500 square ft with 3 bedrooms and large wrap around deck. A 6 man hot tub is built into the deck. The cabin sits on 300 ft of shoreline on Lake Thurmond with... |
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4br - Lake Front Mountain Log Cabin $150 Cabin by the Lake is a newer, elegant 2500 sq. ft lake- front log cabin nestled among the Blue Ridge Mountains. It offers a relaxing and peaceful setting. The cabin is in close proximity to all the North Carolina activities and attractions, yet still... |
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3br - Family Friendly Shenandoah Valley Log Cabin $195 Piney Mountain Getaway- PMG Cabin Rentals"Simple Pleasures"Nestled in the Shenandoah Valley, in the heart of the Blue Ridge Mountains is where you and your family can discover truely natures comfort when you stay at "Simple Pleasures". Escape ... |
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2br - Log Cabin Vacation Rental In East Texas $125 A relaxing getaway in a cozy log cabin home is yours for the asking! Surrounded by towering pine trees, your cabin features a covered porch where you can while away the hours observing the abundant wildlife or reading a good book. If you prefer to ... |
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2br - Private Log Cabin with Fireplace! Pet Friendly! $150 This hand- Hewn Log Cabin sits on 35 beautiful acres with a vein creek which runs year- round. Relax on the deck overlooking the creek with your favorite beverage. Its very secluded in a beautiful picturesque setting with plenty of wildlife. Cabin is ... |
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1br - Mountain Log Cabin, Maggie & Waynesville $95 Mountain Cabin with Stunning Views! Enjoy the ever changing views of Jonothan Creek Valley from the top of Whispering Winds. This nearly new beauty features Tounge and groove natural wood throughout which makes this log cabin warm but open and light.... |
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6br - Perfecty Getaway - Luxury Log Cabin $500 This brand new luxury log cabin is located in the heart of the Shenandoah Valley nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains in Elkton, VA. Its located in the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains with a panoramic view of the Shenandoah Valley below and is just... |
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2br - Beautiful, Bright Log Cabin on 90 acres $175 Fully furnished with two bedrooms and two onsuite bathrooms, central heating and lookalike log gas stove. Large deck with Weber barbecue grill. Our Log Cabin was designed to be comfortable for a family or two couples. There are two large bedrooms, one... |
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1br - Private Log Cabin- 1 mile from Gatlinburg Strip $135 A Hidden Paradise is a private log cabin hidden in trees. Make wonderful memories on your honeymoon or anniversary celebration.... |
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3br - Luxury Log cabin water front near Quebec city, $295 Log cabins rentals throughout Quebec, Canada, over 50 properties direct by owner in a log home village. Water front luxury log cabins 2 to 6 bedrooms at only 50 minutes of Quebec city.Aretreat for nature lovers.Summer and winter alike, the great... |
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1br - Private and Authentic log cabin with a hot tub! $125 The Limestone cabin is the perfect mountain getaway! The Limestone cabin is great for honeymoons, anniversaries, birthdays and more! It is located approximately 5 minutes from Hot Springs, NC. The cabin itself is over a hundred years old! We carefully... |

log cabin kits
Log cabin kits
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![]() Beechcraft Twin Bonanza AIRSTAIR D50 US $71,000.00
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![]() 3 Quilted Jacket Patterns Bomber Log Cabin Blocks US $2.99
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![]() Log Home Cabin kit used to build 3000 sq ft log home US $34,900.00
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![]() Cabin on the Shore quilt pattern by Minick Simpson US $2.00
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Log Cabin Grub $6.99 Log Cabin Grub |
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101 Log Cabin Blocks $11.16 101 Log Cabin Blocks |
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Folded Log Cabin Quilts $12.65 Folded Log Cabin Quilts |
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Log Cabin Quilts With Attitude $17.16 Log Cabin Quilts With Attitude |
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Log Cabin Grub Cookbooks $7.45 Log Cabin Grub Cookbooks |
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Log Cabin Rhymes $15.92 Log Cabin Rhymes |
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Abraham Lincoln Log Cabin $11.78 Abraham Lincoln Log Cabin |
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Log cabin poems $18.15 Log cabin poems |
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The Not So Log Cabin $44.95 The Not So Log Cabin |
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Log Cabin Rediscovered by Machine $35.95 Log Cabin Rediscovered by Machine |
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Star Log Cabin Quilt $14.25 Star Log Cabin Quilt |
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K2 RANCH: THE LOG CABIN RESTORATION: K2 RANCH: THE LOG CABIN RESTORATION $16.19 K2 RANCH: THE LOG CABIN RESTORATION: K2 RANCH: THE LOG CABIN RESTORATION |
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From Log-cabin To White House $23.43 From Log-cabin To White House |
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Building A Log Cabin And Godly Character $13.67 Building A Log Cabin And Godly Character |
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From Log-Cabin to White House $27.68 From Log-Cabin to White House |
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Log-cabin Yarns Of The Rocky Mountains $17.44 Log-cabin Yarns Of The Rocky Mountains |
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From White House To Log Cabin $12.88 From White House To Log Cabin |
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From Log Cabin To White House $27.68 From Log Cabin To White House |
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The Log-cabin Lady An Anonymous Autobiography $15.92 The Log-cabin Lady An Anonymous Autobiography |
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From Log Cabin to White House $22.77 From Log Cabin to White House |
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Sound Traditions: Log Cabin Favorites $10.8 Sound Traditions: Log Cabin Favorites |
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Log Cabin $32.99 Packed with great details, such as an open fire with chicken, wooden logs, tree and opening doors and windows, this log cabin is an ideal base for a wilderness adventure. LEGO minifigure with backpack, paddle and canoe included. For something different, rebuild it into a country retreat or a river hut. Ages 7 yrs. +. |

Wisconsin log cabin kits 150,000?
Any log cabin kits in WI for 150k or under. Preferably 2-3 bed and 1-2 bath or more.
follow link
http://loghomelinks.com/states/wi.htm
http://www.baehrlogs.com/
http://www.deistloghomes.net/cabinkits.htm
http://www.deistloghomes.net/
smoky mountain rental
smoky mountain rental
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3br - Amazing Hideaway - Smoky mountain Chalet rental $110 The Amazing Hideaway is close to Pigeon Forge, Gatlinburg and the Great Smoky Mountain National Park. It sits on 2 private acres and Boasts stunning views of the mountains and the city lights, but is so close to Dollywood you can hear the train whistle... |
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Smoky Mountain Memories $12.79 Smoky Mountain Memories |
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Smoky Mountain Babies $6.68 Smoky Mountain Babies |
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Smoky Mountain Christmas [Lifestyles] $6.4 Smoky Mountain Christmas [Lifestyles] |
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Smoky Mountain Christmas [Northquest] $13.28 Smoky Mountain Christmas [Northquest] |
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Smoky Mountain Hymns of Praise $9.28 Smoky Mountain Hymns of Praise |
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Smoky Mountain Blues $13.95 Smoky Mountain Blues |
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Smoky Mountain Secrets $31.5 Smoky Mountain Secrets |
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Great Smoky Mountain Impressions $13.25 Great Smoky Mountain Impressions |
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The North Face Great Smoky BX $78.95 The North Face Great Smoky BX |
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Smoky Mountain Christmas - A Bluegrass Holiday $9.99 Smoky Mountain Christmas - A Bluegrass Holiday |
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DUNCAN,CRAIG: SMOKY MOUNTAIN SWEETHEARTS $14.05 DUNCAN,CRAIG: SMOKY MOUNTAIN SWEETHEARTS |
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Bascom Lamar Lunsford : Smoky Mountain $13.81 Bascom Lamar Lunsford : Smoky Mountain |
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Smoky Mountain Rose: An Appalachian Cinderella $18.5 Smoky Mountain Rose: An Appalachian Cinderella |
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SMOKY MOUNTAIN MORNING BY SMOKY MOUNTAIN BAND (CD) $15.69 Artist: SMOKY MOUNTAIN BAND Genre: Bluegrass Release Date: 11AUG2009 |
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The Rental $23.5 The Rental |
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2br - Mountain Magic Cabin Rental $135 This affordable vacation cabin rental is the ideal place for a nice relaxing, peaceful getaway. Mountain Magic is both cozy and comfortable, with modern style, and decor.Mountain Magic has lots to offer. From a lazy hammock in the yard, to a... |
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Smoky Mountain Pickin': 24 Great Bluegrass Instrumentals $9.99 Smoky Mountain Pickin': 24 Great Bluegrass Instrumentals |
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Smoky Mountain Gospel - 24 Bluegrass Gospel Favorites $9.99 Smoky Mountain Gospel - 24 Bluegrass Gospel Favorites |
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Westgate Smoky Mountain Resort $63 Westgate Smoky Mountains is a family-oriented resort built on 70 acres |
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Smoky Mountain Sunday $17.49 Come back to a simpler time and place: a small church in the wildwood nestled in the hills of the Smoky Mountains... |
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Best Western Smoky Mountain Inn $53.1 Located in the picturesque settings of North Carolina, this Waynesville hotel is close to attractions such as the Blue Ridge Parkway, the Great Smoky Mountain Railroad and the Biltmore House |
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Smoky Mountain Rose $5.21 In this variation on the Cinderella story set in the Smoky Mountains, Rose loses her glass slipper at a party given by the rich feller on the other side of the creek. |
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3br - Deep Creek Bryson City BRYSON PATCH CABINS $165 Rental Cabin on Deep Creek 1/4mile from Great Smoky Mountain National Park Deep Creek Great Smoky Mountain Railroad tubing to the cabin... |

Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge Mountain Resort Cities
Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge are mountain resort cities in Sevier County in Tennessee. Gatlinburg lies at the base of the Great Smoky Mountains hemmed in on all sides by very high ridges. Such a spectacular setting and its close proximity to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park has seen the region become a popular stopover for many people. Pigeon Forge is situated just five miles north of the park, occupying a narrow valley along Little Pigeon River between Sevierville and Gatlinburg. High ridges also surround it on three sides. These are primarily tourist resorts cities and both offer excellent Smoky Mountain lodging services and facilities to people visiting the park and other attractions in the area.
A lodging house is a form of accommodation designed for temporary household functions. People who travel away from home for either business or leisure and do not manage to get back to their homes for one reason or another need a lodging place for sleep, rest, shelter and storage of their belongings. Depending on one's financial status or needs, you can choose from a self catering lodging where you are provided with cooking facilities for your own food preparation, or those that provide ready food. Lodging is normally done commercially in hotels, hostels or private homes. Visitors to the Great Smoky Mountains can take advantage of high quality and scenic Gatlinburg lodging facilities. They offer ideal getaways from the hustle and stresses of life with a home-like, calm and intimate atmosphere. Gatlinburg bed and breakfast inns and lodges are a perfect alternative to the larger hotel chains or resorts for your Smoky Mountains tour. They are some of the best spots anyone can go to spend holidays with either family or friends.
Pigeon Forge provides quite a number of attraction and events. These in include the Dollywood theme park that has a $20 million water park, Titanic and the Southern Gospel Museum and Hall of Fame, award-winning Country Tonight Theatre, The Black Bear Jamboree Dinner Show, Flyaway Indoor Skydiving, among many more. These attractions and the natural beauty of the mountains attract approximately 11 million visitors each year who also enjoy the various Pigeon Forge lodging cabins and chalets. Nicely decorated rental cabins, only minutes away from The Great Smoky Mountains National Park, offer excellent Pigeon Forge bed and breakfast in private and peaceful settings with spectacular views to the Smoky Mountains
The Great Smoky Mountains are part of an international biosphere reserve. They are a mountain range rising along the Tennessee and north carolina border. The range is also a home to an old growth forest which has an exotic variety of wildlife and trees. It is a great place for vacationing and spending the holidays where you will not need to go far before you can get accommodation. From the Gatlinburg bed and breakfast cabins and inns, or the famous Pigeon Forge lodging facilities spread all over, to charming little motels, renowned hotel franchises and vacation cabins and condominiums full of amenities.
About the Author
JSB is the author of this article on Smoky Mountain Lodging. Find more information about Smoky Mountain Bed & Breakfast here.
cottage cabin kits
cottage cabin kits
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![]() KOZI Solar Power Kit 150 watts US $799.99
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![]() Gooseberry Patch Christmas in the Country Cookbook 224 pgs Hardcover US $16.95
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![]() CROCHET COTTAGES 5 QUAINT PATTERNS US $5.99
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![]() GRAND DESIGNS SERIES 5 NEW 5 DVD SET US $59.81
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Cottage And Cabin $26.36 This expansive collection of charming retreats celebrates the getaway home for every type of dreamer... |
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Cabin, Cottage And Camp $22.46 This book is in New - Excellent condition |
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Cabin, Cottage and Camp $36.95 Seasonal homes offer harried urbanites respite and renewal from the rigors of the city... |
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In a Cabin With $14.99 In a Cabin With |
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The Cabin $22.11 The Cabin |
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The cabin $17.95 The cabin |
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2br - COZY COTTAGE $125 THIS COTTAGE IS LOCATED ON THE SAME PRIVATE ROAD AS COZY CABIN- - LISTING #10880. THIS 2- BEDROOM COTTAGE HAS A LOVELY SCREENED- IN PORCH AS WELL AS ALL THE AMENITIES OF COZY CABIN. PLEASE SEE ALL THE COMMENTS OUR RENTERS HAVE MADE ABOUT COZY CABIN. ... |
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The Cottage $10.49 The Cottage |

A Tourist Guide to Johnstown, Pennsylvania
Historical Perspective
Cradled by Pennsylvania's Allegheny Mountains, 70 miles east of Pittsburgh, Johnstown is an historical expression of the mineral resources, industry, immigration, and natural disasters which shaped it.
Initially settled in 1770 and formally organized as a town 30 years later, it served as the head of the Pennsylvania's Mainline Canal between 1834 and 1854. The Allegheny Portage Railroad, employing the most advanced technology then available, traversed the imposing, mountainous obstacles between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh by means tracks and canals, the former surmounting the peaks with canal boat-carrying trains and the latter permitting nautical negotiation of the flatter sections. The boats themselves were refloated in Johnstown before continuing to Pittsburgh and the Ohio Valley.
Engineering maturity inevitably obviated the rail-and-water, intermodal system, facilitating track laying throughout the entire route, but the change only served to strengthen Johnstown, which became a stop on the Pennsylvania Railroad. It, itself, connected with the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.
The rails brought people and commerce and connected the east with the west, but the area offered its own resources. Mineral-rich, it brimmed with iron, steel, and coal, attracting the industry required to process it and the workforce needed to run it.
The Cambria Iron Company, a proverbial heart pumping blood into the town's ever-expanding arteries, attracted countless immigrants and served as a catalyst of the Industrial Revolution. Owning 40,000 acres and employing some 7,000, it fed the country's insatiable hunger for steel needed to build skyscrapers, bridges, railroads, and ships, transforming iron in its sprawling processing plants and eventually becoming the leading steel producer.
Johnstown, however, was not all work. A tiny pocket, located 14 miles from its core and created by Pittsburgh industrialists and businessmen such as Andrew Carnegie and Andrew Mellon, was for pleasure. Like a ticking time bomb, however, it would also cause its destruction, and it was rapidly running out of minutes.
Located on a floodplain at the fork of the Little Conemaugh and Stonycreek rivers, it had been progressively depleted of its surrounding forest, eaten away by its expanding population's need for land to support it. Its thinning tree line, helpless to slow rain runoff, could only watch in vain as water flowed into the restricted channel.
Perched 450 feet higher on a mountainside was a two-mile-wide Lake Conemaugh, waiting behind its South Fork Dam gates to be released. Hitherto used for fishing and sailing, it was acquired by the exclusive, South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, along with the abandoned reservoir once an integral part of the Pennsylvania Mainline Canal, and a clubhouse and cottages were subsequently built. But the poorly maintained dam progressively deteriorated in ratio to the lake's progressive rise. Although predictions concerning its ultimate failure had yet to materialize, its roulette wheel had been spun too many times, and the "perfect storm" was about to rage—in more ways than one.
Memorial Day of 1889 could not have been less predictive of the event. It was beautiful and bucolic. People were jovial. Parades graced the streets.
The time bomb's ticking became progressively louder to those wishing to listen to it. But few did.
Torrential rains falling throughout the night had caused the lake to swell to almost uncontainable levels, its water creeping toward the dam's crest, and on the morning of May 31, Colonial Elias J. Unger, the club's manager, discovered that it was now rising between four and six inches per hour.
Alarmed into action at 10:00 a.m., he made a last ditch effort, with the aid of a team of Italian laborers, to create a spillway on its west end and elevate its breast. But the impossible odds of pitting a handful of men against a potentially volcanic force proved too high and too predictable. The bomb—and the dam—burst!
Audibly confirmed with a low rumble, which exploded into a "roar like thunder," the 20 million tons of water ate through the crumbling dam like acid eating through paper at 3:10 that afternoon, transforming itself into a 36-foot-high aquatic monster of insurmountable force which cascaded down the valley at 40-mph speeds, consuming everything in its path and "crush(ing) houses like eggshells," according to eyewitness accounts.
Reaching South Fork, two miles downstream, it ravaged between 20 and 30 structures before proceeding to narrowing Little Conemaugh River Valley, growing in height to 75 feet and ripping railroad ties and tracks in the process; it carried them as if they were helpless children.
Dividing, the deluge took two paths: part of it continued to follow the river and part of it plowed into the 78-foot-high Conemaugh Viaduct, which supported the railroad tracks. But its debris-carrying stream formed a giant cork, as if it encountered a secondary dam, forming a temporary, 19-foot-deep lake behind it—deeper, in fact, than the original one from which the deluge had been created.
Pieces, portions, and entire houses, plucked from their foundations like crumbs, along with valley-dislodged material, piled up against the bridge's arches, before erupting into telegraph pole-, freight car-, and human-fed flames, burning, according to Johnstown newspapers, with "all the fury of hell."
Ultimately eating its way through the bridge's arches, the debris-saturated torrent, now an oily-black slime, gushed with even greater intensity.
Continuing its descent, it plowed through the single-street village of Mineral Point, one mile from the viaduct, sweeping 16 people to their demise and leaving only bare rock.
Carrying so much debris by the time it reached East Conemaugh, it no longer appeared a transport medium, but instead resembled a rolling hill of solid material.
As the river valley straightened out between East Conemaugh and Woodvale, the tidal wave gained maximum momentum, impacting with the Gaultier Wire Works, whose boilers exploded into black mist. Three hundred fourteen of the 1,100 local residents perished.
Plunging into Johnstown ten minutes after it had been unleashed, it smacked into the stone church at the corner of Locust and Franklin streets, splitting as if given divine direction and propagating until it lost power. Behind it lay a trail of unprecedented death and destruction.
The following morning revealed its war-like, but ghostly-silent aftermath. Locomotives had been lifted from their tracks and tossed for miles, as if they had been made of papiermache. From the rubble of houses, which stood three stories high, protruded trees and telegraph poles, as if they had been the town's dismembered limbs. Entire blocks had been striped, leaving naked fields. Bombing raid-reminiscent rubble rose into mini-mountains. Oil- and coal-fed fires burned for two days. Bodies lay buried beneath the muddy sludge. And 2,209 souls had, as a result of it all, departed the world. The subsequent spread of ravaging disease, mostly due to typhoid fever, bid farewell to another 40. And the Great Flood of 1889 forever left its scars on Johnstown.
But, Phoenix-like, it rose from the rubble, the steel mills rebuilt and activated only a month after its destruction, once again resurrecting the otherwise decimated town, which entered its second, even more prosperous, period.
Always known for, and shaped by, the event, Johnstown was subjected to not one, but two, other catastrophic floods.
The first of these occurred on March 17, 1936, when a steady rain, coupled with snow and melting ice cascading down the surrounding hills, caused a steady rise in the Little Conemaugh and Stonycreek rivers, peaking at 18 inches per hour and spilling over on to Valley Pike.
The Johnstown Inclined Plane, connecting the lower city with Westmont, enabled half of the town's residents to escape its harm, but when cars were no longer able to gain traction, they could not reach it. Workers were trapped in buildings and the electricity ultimately failed.
The water level, peaking at 17 feet at midnight, then receded, but left $50 million worth of damage.
The third, occurring between July 19 and 20, 1977, resulted from unprecedented rainfall, totaling 11.82 inches in a ten-hour period and unleashing 128 million gallons of water in to the Conemaugh Valley when six dams overflowed and failed.
Most of this history can now be experienced by visiting Johnstown's sights.
Johnstown Flood Museum
Located in the former Cambria Library, the Johnstown Flood Museum recreates the catastrophic, 1889 event through exhibits, artifacts, and films.
The French Gothic structure itself, designed by Addison Hutton of Philadelphia, rests on a circular, stone pier foundation and features Pennsylvania pine interior woodwork, eight chimneys, and third-floor dormers. Replacing the original library, but occupying its original site on the corner of Washington and Walnut streets, it was constructed after the flood with funds provided by steel magnate Andrew Carnegie, who himself had been a member of the ill-fated South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club. Before being converted for its present use, it had sported lecture rooms on its first floor, the library itself on its second, and a gymnasium on its third.
It is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Operated by the Johnstown Area Heritage Association, it features, as its cornerstone, a fiber-optic, multi-media relief map entitled "The Path of the Flood" and interpreted by a museum docent, illustrating the event of May 31, 1889 in time and space. A timeline with light and sound effects also navigates the visitor through it.
Other exhibits include photographs of, and artifacts from, the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, actual flood objects, news stories, and recovered items, such as Red Cross supplies and a doctor's kit.
"The Johnstown Flood," a 26-minute, academy award-winning film, produced by internationally acclaimed filmmaker Charles Guggenheim, is shown in the museum's second-floor Robert S. Waters Theater. It won the award for "best documentary, short subject."
Additional, flood-related photographs hang from the stairway halls and from the walls on the third floor. The room's ceiling alone is worth the visit.
Appendaged to the museum is an actual "Oklahoma house," a temporary shelter used by flood survivors and a marked improvement over the crude blanket, tent, and lean-to coverages they were otherwise forced to assemble from the rubble.
An early example of a prefabricated structure built in Chicago for homesteaders, the museum's single-floor example, once located in the city's Moxham neighborhood, has a wood plank floor, a pot belly stove, a round dining table, a wooden storage chest, and a rocking chair.
The houses built by the Johnstown Flood Finance Committee between July and August of 1889 were offered in two sizes: ten by 20 and 16 by 24 feet. Three hundred ten were constructed during this period.
Like the Chicago fire and the San Francisco earthquake, the Johnstown flood of 1889 was an iconic and pivotal event in American history, and the museum admirably illustrates it and its underlying struggle of man versus nature—especially when the former tempts the latter.
Johnstown Inclined Plane
Symbolic of the city is the Johnstown Inclined Plane, which is a National Historic Landmark and is listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as "the steepest vehicular inclined plane in the world."
Designed by Samuel Diescher of Pittsburgh and built by the Cambria Iron Company as a steep rail system to transport its workers from the valley floor to the newly-created Westmont residential development located on the hill's rim overlooking Johnstown, it features a double track. Its original, dual-level cars, hailing from Pittsburgh, offered a 12-passenger cabin below and accommodation for horses and wagons above, and operated differentially, the upward-traveling car counterbalancing the downward one. Power was provided by a steam engine connected to a 16-foot-diameter, dual-directional drum, which had a 50-foot circumference.
Inaugurated into service on June 1, 1891, or 13 months after construction had begun, the funicular assessed a two-cent fare for a single person, ten cents for a horse and rider, and 25 cents for a small wagon, operating at five-minute intervals and carrying 600 passengers and 30 horse-drawn wagons on its very first day.
Maintaining these five-minute interval frequencies 24 hours per day until 1920, it carried a record 1,356,293 passengers and 124,825 vehicles during the prior year.
Early improvements included the replacement of the steam engine with a 300-hp electric one in 1911 and the substitution of single-deck cars for the original dual-level ones in 1921. Offering increased capacity, they accommodated 50 passengers and three Ford Model Ts.
The opening of Pennsylvania State Highway 271, road-connecting Johnstown with Westmont for the first time, inevitably affected ridership, whose decline began in 1953 and slowed to a trickle, just before its 1961 closure.
Viewed as an area attraction, the Cambria County Tourist Council assumed operational responsibility for it in April of the following year, making several improvements before reopening it in July and altogether purchasing it for a token $1.00 in 1983, at which time it was restored to its original, 1891 appearance.
Today, the Johnstown Inclined Plane is accessed by a heavy iron bridge, which crosses the Stonycreek River, and its lower entrance is built up of three-foot-thick iron girders and supported by stone abutments.
Its two cars, measuring 15.2 by 15.6 by 34 feet and accommodating passengers in a bench-provisioned side cabin and several vehicles next to it, are duplicates of those which hauled cargo boats on the Allegheny Portage Railroad, weighing 38 tons each. Pulled by three, two-inch-thick, power steel, wire rope, 2,150-foot-long cables, whose weight is 23,125 pounds, they ply the 85-pound-per-yard rail manufactured by the Bethlehem Steel Company and imbedded in the hillside at a 35-degree slope and a 71-percent grade. The incline's length is 896.5 feet, while the total rail length is 3,586 feet.
Powered by a 400-hp electric motor, the system employs a 16-foot, alternate-directional hoisting drum round which the cables are wound, reeling in one while releasing the other. That on the drum's top pulls the north car while that on the bottom releases the south one.
Wood-lined drum brakes are used for emergency back up, although an overspeed lilly governor severs electric current to the hauling motor if any car exceeds a predetermined speed, stopping it. Compressors supply air to the braking mechanisms.
Several facilities are located at the summit, including scenic overlooks, the motor room where visitors can view the system's inner works during operation, a gift shop, a tourist information center, and the City View Bar and Grill.
Since its inception, the Johnstown Inclined plane has transported more than 40 million passengers and countless horses, wagons, and vehicles.
Frank and Sylvia Pasquerilla Heritage Discovery Center
Located in the Cambria section of Johnstown, 85 percent of which had been populated by immigrants during the 1880s, and operated by the Johnstown Area Heritage Association, the Frank and Sylvia Pasquerilla Heritage Discovery Center is a multiple-attraction venue housed in a 1907 building originally used by the city's Germania Brewery Company.
One of many brick structures encircling an inner courtyard, it had been sold to Louis Zang for $38,000 in 1919 when prohibition had obviated its purpose, but was almost as quickly resold to the Ferguson Packing Company for a single dollar. The Morris Electric Supply Company became yet a fourth owner, in 1946.
Because of its important industrial history, the Johnstown Area Heritage Association acquired it in 1993, renovating it and opening it as the multi-faceted museum it is today.
A 12-foot sculpture, created in 1989 by Charles Zilch, Dennis Waitz, Larry Ramach, and Robert Scarsella, represents the struggles and triumphs of local steelworkers, entailing floods, recessions, and plant closings, thus reflecting the character traits expressed by its very title, "Man of Steel."
One of the museum's principle exhibits, as befits its Cambria section location, is "America: Through Immigrant Eyes," which begins with immigrants riding the very rails they themselves would shortly make at the Cambria Steel Company in Johnstown.
The multi-media exhibit, located on the museum's first floor, focuses on Johnstown-related immigration, providing insight into their adjustments and challenges as they transformed local resources into steel and, ultimately, paychecks with which to support themselves. Represented scenes include the Old Country; Ellis Island of New York; the Johnstown Railroad Station, which served as their threshold to the area; and "The Neighborhood of 1907," where they discuss life in an industrial town.
The building also houses the Johnstown Children's Museum, located on the third floor; a Rooftop Garden; Galliker's Café; and several temporary exhibits.
Aside from its immigration focus, another area-indicative aspect can be experienced in the Iron and Steel Gallery.
Its three-floor "Steel: Made in Pennsylvania" gallery itself, evoking a mill atmosphere, features prints by State Museum of Pennsylvania photographer Donald Giles, while "The Mystery of Steel" film, shot in Johnstown's Bethlehem Steel Mills just before they closed, chronicles the evolution of steel and its technological innovations during the 1854 to 1880 period. Shown on a 30-foot, three-panel screen, it immerses the viewer in the experience with the use of infrared heaters, approximating mill-interior temperatures, and low-resolution speakers, which simulate incessant, machinery-created rumble.
Johnstown Flood National Memorial
Located outside of the city off of Route 219, the Johnstown National Memorial marks the origin of the cataclysmic, 1889 flood.
The valley below its Visitors Center once cradled scenic, two-mile Lake Conemaugh, held by the weakening earthen dam, and the exclusive South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club, remnants of which remain today.
Lush, green hills, a few distant houses, and railroad tracks now meet the visitor's eyes. Peace fills the air. The sweet aromas of spring permeate the nostrils in April and May. Immersed in this tranquil, bucolic setting, it is difficult to imagine what transpired here more than a century ago, but the gruesome, National Park Service-produced "Black Friday" film, recounting the chaos, destruction, suffering, and death, and shown inside the Visitors Center, will snap you back to the area's pivotal day in an instant. It is complemented by maps and tactical displays of the flood and its debris-strewn aftermath.
The Unger House, constructed in the mid-1880s by South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club manager Elias J. Unger, is located across from the Visitors Center. After lying abandoned for a decade, it was added to the memorial in 1981 and restored to its original, 1889 appearance, but is today only used for administrative purposes and is therefore public-inaccessible.
The 1889 clubhouse is another structure retained from the resort. Donated by the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club Historical Preservation Society, the three-floor, 47-room building served as the principle member lodge, and today sports its original, wood-grained floors, ceramic tiled fireplace, and wallpaper.
Other Sights
Inextricably tied to the tri-flood history which shaped it, Johnstown offers several other event-related sights.
The Path of the Flood Trail, for example, is both a walking and bicycling route which retraces the Great Flood of 1889 from Ehrenfeld Borough Park to the Johnstown Flood Museum, navigated by means of interpretive signs, while a self-guided walking tour of the Johnstown National Historic District encompasses more than 15 sites. Commemorative plaques placed on the outside corner of the Johnstown City Hall at Main and Market streets mark each of the three floods' highest water levels, recorded as 21 feet in 1889, 17 feet in 1936, and 8.6 feet in 1977. The Monument of Tranquillity, located at Grandview Cemetery on Millcreek Road, overlooks the 777 graves of the unidentified, 1889 flood victims collectively designated the "Plot of the Unknown."
About the Author
A graduate of Long Island University-C.W. Post Campus with a summa-cum-laude Bachelor of Arts Degree in Comparative Languages and Journalism, I have subsequently earned the Associate in Applied Science Degree in Aerospace Technology at the State University of New York - College of Technology at Farmingdale. I have also earned the Continuing Community Education Teaching Certificate from the Nassau Association for Continuing Community Education (NACCE) at Molloy College, the Travel Career Development Certificate from the Institute of Certified Travel Agents (ICTA) at LIU, the Art and Science of Teaching Certificate at Long Island University, and completed a Multi-Genre Writing Program at Hofstra University. At SUNY Farmingdale Aerospace I completed some 30 hours of Private Pilot Flight Training in Cessna C-152 and -172 aircraft.
Having amassed almost three decades in the airline industry, I managed the New York-JFK and Washington-Dulles stations at Austrian Airlines, created the North American Station Training Program, served as an Aviation Advisor to Farmingdale State University of New York, and devised and taught the Airline Management Certificate Program at the Long Island Educational Opportunity Center.
A freelance author, I have written some 70 books of the short story, novel, nonfiction, essay, poetry, article, Log, curriculum, training manual, and textbook genre in English, German, and Spanish, having principally focused on aviation and travel, and I have been published in book, magazine, newsletter, and electronic Web site form. I am a writer for Cole Palen's Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome in New York. I have made some 350 lifetime trips by air, sea, rail, and road.


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