| Blue Ridge Hike March, 2002 |
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| The day's summit, Hawksbill Mountain, 4,050 ft. Glorious views on a mild spring day. |
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| One of the smaller and more intimate waterfalls along the way. Not as large as many of the falls on the trip but no less beautiful |
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| My father at our lunch stop. With surroundings like these one can only eat slowly and enjoy the view. |
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| In one 2-mile stretch of canyon there are no less than six waterfalls over 60 feet high. And countless more small small cataracts. More than enough recompense for the steep hiking. |
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| My father stops at a midsize fall on our way up to the crest of the Blue Ridge. |
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| My father at the top of the Blue Ridge, the Shenandoah Valley thousands of feet below. |
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| With so many waterfalls and grand vistas, if you're not observant you'll miss smaller beauty right at your feet. |
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| The falls in the descent canyon from the Blue Ridge tend to have more sloping rock. Two years ago the kids and I had a great time on this waterslide. The fallen tree at the bottom makes reentry a bit uncomfortable. |
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| Hard to belive looking at this photo that I took the same hike a week earlier and it was 15 degrees. I camped out on the summit of the blue ridge at 0 degrees! |
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| All fury and motion at the top and a tranquil pool at the bottom. |
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| The people on the rocks give you some idea of scale. Maybe not big by Yosemite standards but large for something less than two hours from Washington, DC. |
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| A closer view of the same spectacular falls. |
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| A pair of falls each over 60 feet high. |
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| Father and son enjoying some afternoon sun on a warm rock. |