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		<title>Go West</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/travel/great-getaways-to-marylands-mountain-panhandle/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Sep 2021 15:00:47 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Travel & Outdoors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[C&O Canal Towpath]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Catoctin Mountains]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cumberland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Frostburg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Go West]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hancock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mountain panhandle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mountain travel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Oakland]]></category>
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<h3 class="clan uppers" >Great getaways to Maryland’s mountain panhandle.</h3>

<h4 class="clan uppers" style="color:#50822d;">
By Marty Legrand
</h4>





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<h1 class="title">Go West</h1>

<h4 class="deck">
Great getaways to Maryland’s mountain panhandle.
</h4>
<p class="byline" style="color:#50822d;">By Marty Legrand</p>

<a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/issue/september-2021/" target="blank">
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin"><i>ABOVE</i>: PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOELLE HERMAN.</h5>

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<p class="intro">
hat’s roughly 90 miles long but less
than two at its narrowest, over 3,000
feet at its tallest, and has the same
nickname as the appendages of eight
other states? Maryland’s panhandle, whose deep forests
and mountain vistas rival Florida’s northwestern corner
or Texas’ top hat for visitor appeal and hardscrabble history.
That’s right, Maryland has a panhandle, too. West of
Maryland’s wasp-waist at Hancock, the woods get denser,
the elevation higher, the population sparser. If you’re
still craving elbow room after the coronavirus lockdown,
our panhandle boasts four state forests, 13 state parks, a
federally protected historic waterway, miles of trails, and
inviting mountain towns to boot. Visit now, when the
cool autumn air begins to set in, and perishing leaves
will soon render vivid shades of yellow, orange, and red.
This is a land of breathing room and beauty.
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<h4 class="clan" style="color:#6f394c;">Trail Town, The Towpath, and a Tunnel Of Darkness</h4>

<p>The largest contiguous section of state forestland, Green
Ridge State Forest lies just west of Hancock. Its 48,000 lush
acres touch the Pennsylvania border and hug the panhandle’s
undulating southeastern boundary, the Potomac River.</p>

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<p>
<span class="mohr-black">TRAILS</span>: Two routes border <b>Green
Ridge State Forest’s</b> southern
section. The famous <b>C&O Canal
Towpath</b> is the area’s premier
east-west route for hikers and
cyclists. Both groups also have
a paved option that can bypass
potential mud in wet conditions.
<b>The Western Maryland Rail
Trail</b> parallels the towpath for
28 scenic miles from Big Pool
to Little Orleans. Within state
forest boundaries, 50 miles of
hiking trails include the challenging
<b>Long Pond Trail</b>, a 10-
mile loop near Flintstone that
climbs a ridge where a waterfall
cascades, and an 18-mile portion
of the <b>Great Eastern Trail</b>, a
north-south route following the
Appalachian Mountains. Stop by forest headquarters for maps of a scenic
12.5-mile mountain-bike trail suitable for
beginners and the 44-mile Green Ridge
driving tour, perfect for viewing fall foliage,
which peaks from mid to late October.
Be forewarned: Many of the tour’s roads
are unpaved.
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">DETOUR</span>: <a href="https://dnr.maryland.gov/forests/pages/publiclands/western_greenridgeforest.aspx">Green Ridge State Forest</a>
manager Jesse Morgan says hikers prefer out-of-the-way cafes like <b>Bill’s Place</b> (Little Orleans), <b>The Girls R Cookin’</b> (Flintstone),
and <b>Road Kill Café</b> (Artemas, PA).
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">LODGING</span>: Popular with cyclists, the
historic <b>Town Hill B&B</b> in Little Orleans
sits along the National Pike across from
the <b>Town Hill Overlook</b> and its sweeping
three-state view. The inn’s hearty breakfast
will get your day started.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">Photography by <a href="https://www.midatlanticdaytrips.com/" target="_Blank">JODY SPERTZEL ARNESON</a></h5>

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<h6 class="mohr-black"><span style="color:#fd772c; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #fd772c;">PHOTO WORTHY</span></h6>

<p>
Don’t miss two of the Green
Ridge driving tour’s most
breathtaking vistas. <b>Banner’s
Overlook</b>, atop Town Hill Mountain,
offers views of the Potomac
River, plus West Virginia
on the opposite shore. <b>Zumbrun
Overlook</b>, on Polish Mountain,
looks west to Warrior Mountain
and the town of Flintstone.
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<h6 class="mohr-black">
<span style="color:#a15925; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #a15925;">MOUNTAIN TOWN</span>
</h6>

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<p>
Stagecoaches, canal boats, and locomotives
once threaded through this Potomac River
town in Washington County, where the
borders of Pennsylvania and West Virginia
nearly pinch Maryland in half. Today, much
of the traffic arrives on foot or two wheels;
travelers on the <a href="https://www.canaltrust.org/plan/co-canal-towpath/"><b>C&O Canal Towpath</b></a>, the
<b>Western Maryland Rail Trail</b>, and the north-south
<b>Tuscarora Trail</b>—not to mention interstate
highways that barely skirt town—find 
<a href="https://www.townofhancock.org/">Hancock</a> a convenient, hospitable stop.
</p>
<p>
Downtown, the parallel towpath and rail
trail lie close to Main Street with its homestyle
restaurants, multiple museums, and
waterside parks. Discover the canal’s and
town’s symbiotic history at the 18th-century
<b>Bowles House</b>, a C&O Canal National Historical
Park visitor center, and the <b>Hancock
Town Museum</b>. <b>C&O Bicycle</b> answers cyclists’ every need: rentals, repairs, shuttle services, even lodging, while the nostalgic,
family-run <b>Mr. Hardware</b> is the pit stop for
DIY supplies.
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">PEAK PERKS</span>: This western Maryland
portal has become such a hiking-cycling
nexus that, in 2020, the state decreed it
“Maryland’s Trail Town,” an honorific celebrated
during National Trail Days in June.
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">UNWIND</span>: Pet-friendly and delightfully
cheeky, <b>Buddylou’s</b> is a favorite for all travelers.
From a deck overlooking the trails,
eat elevated comfort food like a BLT whose
“B” stands for crispy pork belly and ultracreamy
mac-and-cheese, washed down with
a beer or house lemonade while marveling
at the eclectic retro décor. Treat yourself to
a slice of “mile-high” lemon meringue pie
at <b>Weaver’s</b>, a family restaurant and bakery
known for its righteous cream pies.
</p>


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<h6 class="mohr-black"><span style="color:#50822d; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #50822d;">CELEBRATING A MILESTONE</span></h6>

<h2  >Chesapeake & Ohio
Canal Towpath</h2>


<p>
Once linking Washington, D.C., with Maryland’s
western frontier, the C&O canal and
towpath were destined to be buried beneath
asphalt until a Supreme Court justice
took a famous hike. The federal government—the owner of the “Grand Old Ditch,”
as the canal is affectionately known—planned to pave most of its path to create
a Potomac River parkway, threatening
the remaining 19th-century canal locks,
aqueducts, and trail over which mule-towed
boats moved coal and other goods between
the Nation’s Capital and Cumberland. In
1954, the outdoorsy Justice William O.
Douglas invited journalists to join him
in walking the canal’s length. The hike,
and Douglas’ public lobbying, launched a
movement that blocked the parkway. 
<p>
In a
published letter, Douglas recounted his towpath
memories poetically: 
“the roar of wind in the thickets” and “strange islands and
promontories [seen] through the fantasy of
fog.” Legislation plodded toward Congress,
and in 1971, the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal
National Historical Park was created. In
the half-century since, millions have used
its amenities—deemed the National Park
Service’s eighth-most-visited recreation
area in 2020—notably its 184.5 miles of
crushed-gravel-and-stone-dust towpath.
Cyclists can pedal the towpath in as little
as three days, but a few extra days allow
for leisurely sightseeing. Numerous access
points also invite exploration on foot. The
western section begins in Hancock (Mile
Marker 124) and contains some of the towpath’s
most rugged, historic, and sparsely
traveled stretches:
</p>

<ul>
<li>
<p>
The fieldstone lodge at <b>Woodmont Rod &
Gun Club</b> near Hancock (Mile Marker 134.6)
has hosted prominent guests, including U.S.
presidents, in its 140-plus years. Its 3,425
acres are popular with hikers, mountain
bikers, and wildlife enthusiasts.
</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>
A favorite rest stop, <b>Little Orleans</b> (Mile
Marker 140.8) boasts drive-in campsites,
the <b>Fifteen Mile Creek Aqueduct</b> crossing
this Potomac tributary, and <b>Bill’s Place</b>, a
congenial bar-venue-general store.
</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>
Dug through a rocky hill by immigrant
workers, <b>Paw Paw Tunnel</b> (Mile Marker
155.2) is one of the canal’s engineering
marvels. The Paw Paw Campsite parking lot
provides the nearest access.
</p>
</li>
</ul>

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<h4 class="clan" style="color:#6f394c;">Scenic Vistas, Savage Beauty, and
the Best of Appalachian Arts</h4>

<p>Heading west, <a href="https://dnr.maryland.gov/publiclands/pages/western/dansmountain.aspx">Dans Mountain</a>, between Cumberland and Frostburg in
Allegany County, gives way in Garrett County to <a href="https://www.garretttrails.org/big-savage-mountain-hiking-trail.html">Big Savage Mountain </a>
and then the scenic ridges, trout-filled rivers, and sprawling reservoir
in Savage River State Forest, which covers almost 56,000 acres.</p>

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<p>
<span class="mohr-black">TRAILS</span>: The state forest’s super scenic
hiking route, the rocky, 12-mile <b>Meadow Mountain Trail</b>,
largely follows the ridge top
and Eastern Continental Divide.
Stop at forest headquarters for
information on the <b>Mt. Aetna
Tract Trails</b>—pleasant loops for
hikers, mountain bikers, and
birders. The forest’s <b>Poplar Lick
Trail</b> features some unusual
history. In January 1964, a B-52
carrying nuclear bombs crashed
on Big Savage Mountain in a
blizzard. The unarmed bombs
were recovered, but three of the
five crewmen died. Today, the
<b>B-52 Crash Memorial</b> sits near
Poplar Lick, the creek where one
victim’s body was found.
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">DETOUR</span>: A magnificent reminder of the
National Road’s heyday, the <b>Casselman
River Bridge</b> stands near Grantsville. The
partially restored stone structure, erected in
1813, is now the namesake of a state park.
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">LODGING</span>: Adjacent to Savage River State
Forest, <b>Ella’s Enchanted Treehouses</b> make
charming, fully furnished, family-size accommodations.
The three elevated lodgings
feature kitchens, full bathrooms, Amishmade
furniture, and lots of windows for
nature watching.
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">TRAINING WHEELS</span>: Want to savor the
Great Allegheny Passage’s scenery without
bike traffic or uphill climbs? Tracks and
Yaks now offers railbiking tours on the
old Western Maryland Railroad tracks
that parallel the <b>Great Allegheny Passage</b>
(aka the GAP) between Frostburg and
Cumberland. Seated on a lightweight,
four-wheeled chassis (the railway version
of a pedal boat), railbikers pedal slowly
downhill from Frostburg to Cash Valley,
rounding the railroad’s famous horseshoe
bend, Helmstetter's Curve. A trolley returns
riders to Frostburg’s train depot.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">Photography by Megan Skopec.</h5>

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<h6 class="mohr-black"><span style="color:#fd772c; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #fd772c;">PHOTO WORTHY</span></h6>

<p>
Looking for panoramas of fall
color? Maryland Park Service trail
manager Dan Hudson recommends
<b>Meadow Mountain Overlook</b> in
Savage River State Forest and <b>Dan's
Rock</b>, Allegany County’s highest
peak. Wildlife photographers should
focus on <b>Savage River Reservoir</b> to
spot bald eagles, says Savage River
State Forest manager Sean Nolan.
</p>

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<h6 class="mohr-black">
<span style="color:#a15925; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #a15925;">MOUNTAIN TOWN</span>
</h6>

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<p>
The <b>C&O Canal Towpath</b> ends
in <a href="https://www.ci.cumberland.md.us/">Cumberland</a> at <b>Canal Place</b>, a
lively downtown that reflects the city’s
unique legacy as a transportation
hub. The panhandle’s most populous
place and Allegany County’s seat,
Cumberland boasts art galleries,
interesting architecture, and living
reminders of its illustrious past. Don’t
miss the canal’s <b>Visitor Center and
Museum</b>, housed in the stately old
Western Maryland Railway Station, the
<b>National Road’s zero-mile marker</b> to
the first federal highway, and the <b>Emmanuel
Episcopal Church</b>, where, in
the 1800s, the Underground Railroad
led enslaved people to freedom via
tunnels beneath the building. The
city also remains a “gateway to the west” for long-distance cyclists
and hikers who tackle the GAP, a
paved, 150-mile rail trail between
Cumberland and Pittsburgh, PA. For
a less strenuous appreciation, book
passage on the <b>Western Maryland
Scenic Railroad’s</b> sightseeing train, a
32-mile roundtrip excursion between
Cumberland and Frostburg.
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">PEAK PERKS</span>: Cumberland’s annual
<b>DelFest</b> (Sept. 23-26) celebrates local
bluegrass legend Del McCoury.
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">UNWIND</span>: Try local favorite <b>Ristorante
Ottaviani</b> for pasta, <b>The Crabby Pig</b>
for cakes and pork, and <b>Dig Deep
Brewery</b> for craft beers, like a house
pilsner honoring the C&O Canal.
</p>


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<h6 class="mohr-black">
<span style="color:#a15925; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #a15925;">MOUNTAIN TOWN</span>
</h6>

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<p>
On the eastern slope of Big Savage Mountain, <a href="https://www.downtownfrostburg.com/">Frostburg </a>
is home to <b>Frostburg State University</b> and
a robust arts and cultural scene that celebrates
regional traditions. A destination since its days as
a National Road stagecoach stop, this small city
draws visitors by car, rail trail (the GAP), and excursion
train (Western Maryland Scenic Railroad)
for its mix of mountain scenery, rich history, and
eclectic shopping.
</p>
<p>
Buy artisan-made clothing, pottery, and other
works at <b>Mountain City Traditional Arts</b>, a shop
run by a university-community nonprofit. Find a
live music venue—<b>Dante’s</b> is highly regarded—and,
likely as not, you’ll hear bluegrass, folk, or other
talented roots musicians. Also explore Frostburg’s
coal mining and frontier past at the <b>Frostburg Museum</b>
and renovated, multi-balconied <b>Hotel Gunter</b>,
where exhibits reveal the building’s former lives as
resort, speakeasy, and temporary jail. Shop locally
at businesses such as <b>Main Street Books</b>, <b>McFarland
Candies</b>, and <b>Yellow K Records</b>.
</p>
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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">Photography by Sam Demartino</h5>
</div>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">PEAK PERKS</span>: <b>Frostburg State University Appalachian Festival</b>, which includes a film festival, speakers, and musical performances
devoted to mountain traditions (Sept. 16-18).
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">UNWIND</span>: The <b>Princess Restaurant</b>, family-run since 1939,
serves comfort food as down to earth as its most famous patron,
President Harry Truman. Enjoy puffy pancakes, creamy
milkshakes, and hot turkey sandwiches at the counter or a
table, including the very booth the then POTUS occupied in
the 1950s. At the modern end of Frostburg’s dining spectrum,
<b>Clatter Café</b> earns raves for its lattes, locally roasted
coffee, and creative ways with bagels, salads, and soups.
</p>


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<h4 class="clan" style="color:#6f394c;">Water, Woods, and Autumn Glory</h4>

<p>Maryland’s largest lake (Deep Creek), highest waterfall (Muddy
Creek), Olympic-caliber whitewater (Youghiogheny River),
tallest mountain (Backbone), and dual state forests (Potomac-Garrett) fill the panhandle’s western end—a lot of wilderness
in one corner of the U.S.'s fifth most densely populated state.</p>

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<p>
<span class="mohr-black">TRAILS</span>: Renovated three years ago,
<a href="https://dnr.maryland.gov/publiclands/pages/western/deepcreek.aspx"><b>Deep Creek Lake State Park</b></a>
trails now include a top-notch
loop trail for mountain biking
in Garrett County. “Bring your
A-game,” advises state park
trail manager Dan Hudson, “the
routes are rough and rocky.”
<b>Potomac-Garrett State Forest</b>
offers 80-plus miles of hiking,
mountain biking, and horseback
riding trails. Hike between craggy
boulders past gnarled tree
roots at Garrett State Forest’s
otherworldly <b>Rock Maze Trail</b>.
In <a href="https://dnr.maryland.gov/forests/Pages/publiclands/western_potomacgarrettforest.aspx">Potomac State Forest</a>, families
love the far less challenging
<b>Lostland Run Trail</b> with its waterfall
views, suspension bridge,
and Potomac River overlook.
Clear, cold Lostland Run also offers
excellent wild brook trout
fishing, says Potomac-Garrett
Forest manager Scott Campbell.
</p>

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<p>
<span class="mohr-black">LODGING</span>: Unwind at <b>Wild Yough Glamping Huts</b>, situated on a ridge overlooking the scenic Youghiogheny River near Oakland. These five
comfy huts have soft beds, firepits, propane stoves, and porches from
which to enjoy forest solitude.
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">DETOUR</span>: In Sang Run State Park, visit recently restored
<b>Sang Run Election House</b>, a modest wooden polling place
built nearly 150 years ago. Emancipated slaves and, decades
later, newly enfranchised women cast ballots here.
</p>

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<h6 class="mohr-black">
<span style="color:#a15925; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #a15925;">MOUNTAIN TOWN</span>
</h6>

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<p>
Sometimes overshadowed by <b>Deep Creek Lake</b>, that popular vacation
spot 10 miles away, Oakland is an attraction in and of itself.
Doubly so in fall, when tens of thousands of visitors attend Garrett
County’s annual <a href="https://www.visitdeepcreek.com/54th-annual-autumn-glory-festival"> <b>Autumn Glory Festival</b></a>, a nearly week-long
celebration of the area’s flamboyant foliage.
</p>
<p>
Oakland was a resort long before a hydroelectric dam made Deep
Creek a lake and then nascent recreational paradise. After the Civil
War, the B&O Railroad ran an excursion line here; luxury hotels,
summer cottages, even an opera house sprang up, patronized by
tourists craving mountain air and scenery. Learn about Oakland’s local
history at the downtown <b>Garrett County Historical Museum</b>, <b>Garrett
County Museum of Transportation</b>, and the town’s <b>B&O Railroad
Museum</b>, which is housed in the grand 1884 train station.
</p>
<p>
Later, browse antique shops, art galleries, and other small
businesses. Bookworms love <b>Book Mark’et & Antique Mezzanine</b>
for its curated new book selection. Shop for women’s leisure clothing
at <b>Rudy’s</b> or vintage and new LPs at <b>Flipside Sounds</b>.
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">PEAK PERKS</span>: The <b>Autumn Glory Festival’s</b> old-time turkey dinners, local music, farmers market, and driving tours for leaf
peepers (Oct. 13-17).
</p>
<p>
<span class="mohr-black">UNWIND</span>: Two newcomers diversify Oakland’s traditional food
scene. Known for a bevy of craft beers, <b>Vagabond Taproom</b> serves
sandwiches, salads, and tasty appetizers like blistered green
beans with “comeback sauce.” Relax with a craft cocktail or glass
of wine on <b>Sipside Lounge’s</b> patio, warmed by a towering stone
fireplace. The lounge features live music and house charcuterie.
</p>


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<h6 class="mohr-black"><span style="color:#fd772c; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #fd772c;">PHOTO WORTHY</span></h6>

<p>
Canyon Loop Trail at <b>Swallow Falls
State Park</b> winds through old-growth
hemlocks to <b>Muddy Creek</b>, a 53-foot
plunge, and three other spectacular
Youghiogheny River waterfalls. Enjoy
sweeping views from <b>Hoye-Crest
on Backbone Mountain</b>—at 3,360
feet, it's the state’s highest point.
The trailhead is located nearby in
Silver Lake, West Virginia.
</p>

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<h6 class="mohr-black">
<span style="color:#50822d; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #50822d;">DAY TRIP</span>
</h6>

<h2 class="uppers" >The Catoctins</h2>


<p>
The panhandle isn’t Maryland’s exclusive mountain realm. Rocky summits, tumbling streams, and wildlife sightings lie about 90 minutes away from Baltimore in the <a href="https://www.nps.gov/cato/index.htm">Catoctin Mountains</a>in Frederick County. Two parks—one national, one state—provide miles of trails, numerous overlooks, the fishing-friendly Hunting Creek Lake, and peeking range of <b>Camp David</b>, the presidential retreat.
</p>
<p>
At <b>Catoctin Mountain Park</b>, hike a short trail to <b>Blue Ridge Overlook</b> or make a strenuous climb to <b>Chimney Rock</b> for panoramic foliage views. <b>Catoctin Mountain State Park’s</b> photo-worthy attractions include Maryland’s highest cascading waterfall, <b>Cunningham Falls</b>, and a top-of-the-world promontory, <b>Cat Rock</b>. President Franklin Roosevelt’s 1930s New Deal programs created the recreational area comprising both current parks. The first cabins were built at <b>Camp Misty Mount</b>, which still welcomes overnight visitors decades later.
</p>
<p>
In nearby Thurmont (home of <b>Colorfest</b>, Oct. 9-10), satisfy hiker-sized appetites with <b>Thurmont Kountry Kitchen’s</b> “broasted” (battered and pressure-fried) chicken dinner followed by a “Death by Chocolate” cupcake. Pick apples or buy a fresh-baked pie at <b>Catoctin Mountain Orchard and Bakery</b>.
</p>


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<h5 class="captionVideo thin">Photography by Ty Drew Photo</h5>
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<h2 class="uppers" >Local Flavors</h2>

<h6 class="mohr-black">
<span style="color:#fd772c; letter-spacing:2px; line-height:2rem; border-bottom:2px solid #fd772c;">WESTERN MARYLAND
HANDCRAFTED LEMONADE</span>
</h6>
<p>
Cumberland entrepreneur Todd
Helmick blends juice from handsqueezed
lemons with locally
harvested fruits, Allegany County
honey, and other regional ingredients
to make his <a href="http://www.wmdlemonade.com/">fresh-bottled,
preservative-free lemonades.</a>
Choose from an astounding 130-plus flavors, including blends
featuring paw paws, a custardy
fall fruit found along the canal
and Potomac River.
</p>
<br/>


<h6 class="mohr-black">
<span style="color:#fd772c; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #fd772c;">CAPORALE’S PEPPERONI ROLLS</span>
</h6>


<p>
Concocted as a portable, onefisted
meal for Appalachian coal
miners, pepperoni rolls hold a
special place in Western Maryland
culinary memory. As the
rolls bake, the pepperoni inside
infuses the bread with its savory
oil—the secret to the snack’s
appeal. Fans swear <a href="https://www.canaltrust.org/pyv/caporales-bakery/">Caporale’s</a>, a
fourth-generation family bakery
in Cumberland, makes the best
pepperoni rolls around.
</p>

<br/>

<h6 class="mohr-black">
<span style="color:#fd772c; letter-spacing:2px; border-bottom:2px solid #fd772c;">STEYER BROTHERS MAPLE SYRUP</span>
</h6>


<p>
The Steyer family has been tapping
Garrett County maple trees
for over 110 years. Today, <a href="https://www.garrettfarms.org/steyer-brothers-maple-syrup.html">Steyer
Brothers Maple</a> collects sap from
30-plus acres of trees to make
syrup, candies, and granulated
maple sugar. At the family’s “sugar
camp” near Oakland, a traditional
wood-fired evaporator boils sap
into the delicious syrup locals love
on their buckwheat pancakes.
</p>


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</div>
<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/travel/great-getaways-to-marylands-mountain-panhandle/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Small Towns, Big Appeal</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/covid19/small-town-getaways-that-offer-quarantine-reprieve/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lauren Cohen]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Dec 2020 14:00:58 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[COVID-19]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel & Outdoors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DE]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Denton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hancock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MD]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Middleburg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mount Gretna]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New Castle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[North Beach]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[small towns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[VA]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?post_type=article&#038;p=101934</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
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<p>Dream vacations deferred. Cruises canceled. Beach rentals revoked. If there’s one thing this fraught year has taught would-be travelers, it’s to seek homebound solace. Tending a garden, for example, or walking a neighborhood trail.</p>
<p>But there’s wisdom in expanding your travel horizons, if only slightly. Self- isolation can “adversely affect immune function and enhance risk for chronic health conditions,” say the authors of a recent article in the <em>Journal of Sport and Health Science</em>. So take their advice and fill this timely, immunoenhancing prescription: Embark on a day trip with your nearest and dearest to someplace like home, and not far from it. The Mid-Atlantic abounds with modestly sized towns possessing outsized appeal.</p>
<p>We’ve picked six within two hours’ drive of Baltimore. Most have populations so small they couldn’t fill a large concert hall, even with their pets. (The two “big” towns would require a second seating.)</p>
<p>Each place beckons the cabin-feverish with its own balms, from a tranquil Chesa<span style="font-size: inherit;">peake Bay waterfront, to cobblestone streets that echo history, to a secluded arts haven that honors, among other things, an infamous insect. </span><span style="font-size: inherit;">Though, as of press time, COVID-19 restrictions are easing, operations and hours at these destinations may vary.</span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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<h3>→ DENTON, MD</h3>
<p><strong>Drive time:</strong> 1 hr., 15 mins.<br />
<span style="font-size: inherit;"><br />
If you’ve only buzzed by en route to a Delmarva beach, you owe yourself a stop in this revitalized Eastern Shore community. Denton straddles the Choptank River, the Eastern Shore’s longest tributary and among its most scenic. Get acquainted with local attractions and history at the Wharves of Choptank Visitor and Heritage Center. Perched on pilings above the water, the facility is an information and recreation hub. Watch soaring ospreys and eagles from observation decks. Launch a kayak or cast a line for bass and catfish. </span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">Don’t miss the </span><span style="font-size: inherit;">photomurals at the base ofthe Choptank River Bridge (Business Route 404), which depict the town when steamboats cruised on roundtrips to Baltimore.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">After orientation, head downtown to enjoy a juicy Guinness burger and a pint of Irish ale at the Market Street Public House, a popular local tavern. From there, it’s a short walk to Denton’s flourishing Artsway, a multi-block cultural and shopping nexus spurred by the restoration of one of the oldest houses in town. Now, respectively, The Foundry and the Fiber Arts Center of the Eastern Shore, the galleries sell the works of local artists, artisans, and quilt-makers. The large, hand-painted blocks that adorn neighborhood buildings mark waypoints on the Byway Quilt Trail, a public art project and history lesson complementing the region’s Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway. At day’s end, visit Harry’s for “Harry Hour” specialty cocktails and Gallic-inspired entrees.</span></p>

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			<div class="vc_single_image-wrapper   vc_box_border_grey"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" width="1200" height="798" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/shutterstock_372971569_CMYK.jpg" class="vc_single_image-img attachment-full" alt="" title="shutterstock_372971569_CMYK" srcset="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/shutterstock_372971569_CMYK.jpg 1200w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/shutterstock_372971569_CMYK-768x511.jpg 768w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/shutterstock_372971569_CMYK-900x600.jpg 900w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/shutterstock_372971569_CMYK-480x319.jpg 480w" sizes="(max-width: 1200px) 100vw, 1200px" /></div><figcaption class="vc_figure-caption">The Choptank River Lighthouse. </figcaption>
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			<h3>→ HANCOCK, MD</h3>
<p>Drive time: 1 hr., 30 mins</p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">After the pandemic struck, this Western Mary</span><span style="font-size: inherit;">land community saw an uptick in visitor traffic—of the two-wheeled type. Nicknamed “Trail Town,” Hancock is a popular stop along the C&amp;O Canal Towpath and the Western Maryland Rail Trail, which pass through to the south (towpath) and north (trail).</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">The primary visitor attraction remains the C&amp;O towpath. Here, discover picturesque vestiges of its 19th-century past. Round Top Cement Mill, whose abandoned kilns peer vacantly from a rocky hillside, literally supplied the U.S. Capitol’s foundation. Tonoloway Aqueduct, now waterless and vine-clad, once carried canal boats across Tonoloway Creek. Bowles House, an early farmhouse, conveys lore as a National Park Service museum and the town’s official visitor center.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">Rent a bike at C&amp;O Bicycle to explore the earthen towpath or the more cyclist-friendly paved rail trail. The shop’s owners suggest that rail-trailers head west, where the scenery— like the Paw Paw Tunnel’s majestic maw—is stunning and visitor traffic is sparser. The shop will shuttle customers and bikes as far as Pittsburgh or Washington, D.C., to access </span><span style="font-size: inherit;">different sections.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">Satisfy your post-hiking and biking hunger </span><span style="font-size: inherit;">at Buddy Lou&#8217;s Eats Drinks &amp; Antiques, where locally sourced ingredients meet comforting cuisine in dishes such as spiced duck breast salad and savory truffle fries. Sample local favorites like the steak and cheese sub at Triangle Restaurant and hand-dipped ice cream cones and sundaes at Fractured Banana. Or take dessert home—Blue Goose Market sells more than two-dozen varieties of luscious house-baked pies.</span></p>
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<h3>→ MIDDLEBURG, VA</h3>
<p>Drive time: 1 hr., 30 mins</p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">Nestled in Northern Virginia’s equestrian wine country, historic Middleburg maintains its small town-ness while embracing fame as a premier destination. The five-star Salamander Resort &amp; Spa put Middleburg on luxury travelers’ maps seven years ago, embellishing a crossroads community that has dispensed Southern hospitality since the (still-operating) Red Fox Inn &amp; Tavern opened in 1728.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">For complete Middleburg immersion, tour the National Sporting Library &amp; Muse</span><span style="font-size: inherit;">um, which celebrates field sports that define hunt-country life here. Don’t miss its collection of equestrian fine art. Downtown’s range of shops is small but compelling. Browse the latest women’s fashionwear at Chloe’s, riding accessories at The Tack Box, and holiday decor at The Christmas Sleigh. For lunch, pair a gourmet pizza with a glass of Virginia vino at Knead Wine, run by a master sommelier. The fieldstone building with the claret-red door is the Red Fox Inn, where Kennedys once dined. It’s the traditional starting point for a colorful, horse-and hound-filled Christmas parade, the Middleburg Hunt Review.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">Today, VIPs and other visitors still gravitate to the opulent amenities at the Salamander, a 340-acre complex at the northern edge of town that reflects its Thoroughbred environment. Enjoy one of the countryside trail rides conducted regularly from the resort’s equestrian center. Afterward, drink in pastoral scenery from the terrace of Gold Cup Wine Bar over a bottle of vino and a plate of local charcuterie selected by Salamander’s new executive chef.</span></p>
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			<h3>→ MOUNT GRETNA, PA</h3>
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<p>Drive time: 1 hr., 40 mins.</p>
<p>Best known by its adjoining neighborhoods, Mount Gretna and Gretna Heights, this wooded enclave isn’t a town in the traditional sense. What began as a multipurpose summer retreat for 19th-century amusement-seekers, Bible campers, and intellectuals has evolved into a largely year-round community devoted to pursuing its founding ideals and preserving its architectural inheritance. For arts lovers especially, it’s a must-visit.</p>
<p>Admire the Victorian-era cottages that line corset-slender streets in the old Chautauqua and Camp meeting sections. See the rustic timber Tabernacle, which still hosts summer camp meeting events when the faithful gather for fellowship, music, and prayer. The Pennsylvania Chautauqua’s open-air playhouse and stately Hall of Philosophy hold cultural events seasonally, from classical music performances to sum- mer theater to the Original Mount Gretna Cicada Music Festival, featuring classic- rock concerts as earwormy as the festival’s namesake insect. Whatever the season, seek out the shop La Cigale, Mount Gretna’s family-run sewing business that produces vibrantly colored Provencal table linens.</p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">Food options are also close at hand. Try the huevos rancheros at Porch &amp; Pantry Café, and don’t miss the iconic Jigger Shop, an ice cream and sandwich parlor. Opened in 1895, it’s one of the few surviving businesses that catered to patrons of Mount Gretna’s old amusement park. Conjure sweet tooths of yore by sampling the shop’s sinfully rich campfire s’more sundae. Afterward, stroll to nearby Lake Conewago, the picturesque municipal beach and swimming hole.</span></p>
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<h3>→ NEW CASTLE, DE</h3>
<p>Drive time: 1 hr., 15 mins</p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">A 17th-century port, this Delaware River settlement was so prized that three nations claimed it before Delaware’s then-capital broke free, launching the colony&#8217;s rush to statehood. Today “Old New Castle,” the preferred moniker for the historic district in the heart of town, survives surprisingly intact, down to its cobblestone streets. With lovely private gardens, friendly neighborhoods, and a deep reverence </span><span style="font-size: inherit;">for the past, it’s part living museum and all charm.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">The New Castle Historical Society Visitor Center at the Arsenal can get you situated. Attractions in the strollable downtown tell the town’s tangled narrative. The humble Dutch House represents New Castle’s first colonists. The tall ship Kalmar Nyckel, occasionally seen at the Delaware Street pier in Battery Park, replicates the Swedish vessel that carried the second wave of European inhabitants. The first parishioners at Immanuel Episcopal Church on the Green were Anglicans, members of the state church of England, New Castle’s third overlord. At “Delaware’s Independence Hall,” the New Castle Courthouse (now a museum), assemblymen voted in June 1776 to separate the colony from English rule, thus creating the new nation’s first state.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">If you’re not yet history-sated, lunch at colonial Jessop’s Tavern, whose historically ecu</span><span style="font-size: inherit;">menical menu includes Dutch pot roast, meatloaf with lingonberries, fish and chips, and tavern-roasted turkey. Enjoy a taste of “new” New Castle: voodoo chicken po’boys at Nora Lee’s French Quarter Bistro, and saltimbocca burgers at Sonora, run by the operators of a popular food truck. Just be sure to visit a local landmark, the indoor-outdoor New Castle Farmers Market, which hawks everything from soft pretzels and fresh meats to cowboy hats and Korean plush toys.</span></p>
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<h3>→ NORTH BEACH, MD</h3>
<p>Drive time: 1 hr., 15 mins.</p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">On the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay, North Beach bides quietly in the shadow of its sister community, Chesapeake Beach, a splashier resort, charter fishing, and water park destination. Drive the mere mile or so from the latter to the former—the twin beaches are that close— and discover a friendly small town with a lovely beach and boardwalk, multi-story waterfront cottages, and a mix of shops, restaurants, bars, and parks.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">Get the lay of the strand while stretching your legs on North Beach’s half-mile-long boardwalk. Out-of-towners pay an access fee to use the small sandy beach, which may deter some. But visitors can enjoy water views for free at several town parks. Sunrise Garden near the waterfront features koi ponds, benches, drift- wood sculptures, and delightful bay breezes. Watch for herons and egrets at Wetlands Over- look Park, where gazebos and a pier bring visitors closer to nature.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: inherit;">From the Welcome Center, stroll north on Bay Avenue to explore downtown shopping and dining. COVID canceled the town’s popular Friday evening open-air farmers’ market in 2020, but you can still buy local seafood, artisan cheeses, farm-grown produce, and fresh-cut flowers at an indoor market, Chesapeake’s Bounty. Shop for oyster plates and other collectibles at Nice and Fleazy Antiques. The Artworks@7th co-op sells the works of dozens of area artists. Take a java break and join the lo- cals for lattes at Sweet Sue’s Bake Shop &amp; Coffee Bar. For lunch, try the BLT deviled eggs and a plate of fresh fish tacos at Hook &amp; Vine Kitchen and Bar, serving Southern coastal cuisine.</span></p>
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