Turn the volume on if you can. Enjoy, it is awesome in my eyes.....
SOME OF YOU MAY HAVE NEVER
EXPERIENCED DIRT ROADS,
BUT TO THOSE THAT DID,
THIS IS PRETTY NEAT.
Click here:
http://famguardian.org/Subjects/FamilyIssu...s/DirtRoads.htm
The link is not working for me Blacky :shrug:
http://famguardian.org/Subjects/FamilyIssues/Articles/DirtRoads/DirtRoads.htm
Amen to that one Gene!! :yoyo:
Thanks for sharing!! :biggrin:
That moved me. I'm only 30 but I have seen alot change in my lifetime. I'm worried my 7 year old just wont understand and I'm going to be telling my grandchildren what it used to be like roaming around the woods in the hills of WV. In the words of the best band of all time..."I can feel the concrete a slowly creepin...Lord keep me in mind before that comes."
:yoyo: :yoyo: :yoyo:
It not the material the roads made of it's what or who awaits me at the end.
many times after being gone for some time from home I find myself at mile marker 1 and I need to be at mile marker 18 that's 4 highways and 5 states away boy a am glad at the time the road are paved
I have on occasion had people tell me that I crossed a pretty good road [highway] back there. I live on and love my dirt road. :yoyo: :yoyo:
I was born and raised on a dirt road. The neighbor kids lived about a mile away on a hill, and in the winter time when it would snow, after a few cars traveled the hill, we would go sled riding on the road at night. With almost no traffic, you could ride your sled almost a half mile down a twisted WV dirt road. We would make a fire and warm up between rides. In the summer we would keep the roads hot with our bikes. Now, saving the one I lived on, the roads are either paved or tar and chip. Peoples speeds have increased as well as the traffic. It just isn't as safe to do those things as it was 30 years ago.