These photos were taken during a January weekend trip that has no coherent theme, inasmuch as it included two sites of Civil War history, a chocolate factory, and a wolf sanctuary. We left Baltimore early on Saturday morning, driving west for over an hour on I-70W to the tripartite border of Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia; we spent most of the morning there, hiking around the fort at Maryland Heights and taking in the views above and across from Harpers Ferry, at the confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac Rivers, a sight which Thomas Jefferson, in his Notes on the State of Virginia (1783), described as meriting the entire voyage across the Atlantic.
From there we drove north along the U.S. 15, and after a pit stop in Thurmont, we reached Gettysburg in mid-afternoon. By this point, the winter sun was beginning to hang low over the fields as we walked down the line of monuments and patina-grazed cannons. We looked out over the High Water Mark of the Confederacy, an expanse now incongruously dotted with haystacks, lone trees, and the occasional farmhouse. Beyond the open field lay the treeline from which Pickett and his regiments charged in a vain attempt to break the Union line. From the low stone wall where we stood, it could have hardly seemed any closer.
We spent the night at an inn in Harrisburg, complete with a Texas Roadhouse steak dinner; it was the sort of meal that perfectly encapsulates the experience of the American road trip - the ennui that always pervades a sit-down supper on a chilly night in a strange, lonely town. There is a loss of gravity in that restaurant booth; you feel a great sense of displacement, and you wonder how you got here, what folks are doing back home, and whether you could live here forever. You wonder why you ordered fried pickles. Back at the inn, it is not obvious from the parking lot, the lobby, or any of the hotel premises whether any guests are staying there aside from us. A cold January night in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. We check the pool, the gym room, and business center. Finding them deserted, we go to sleep.
The next morning as we check out over continental breakfast, the television warns of "wintry mix", frozen bridges and roadways. After making our own bars at the Hershey's chocolate factory, we are heading into the woods to visit the Pennsylvania Wolf Sanctuary. Jane is driving.
At the Sanctuary, in a (truly) wintry downpour that tests the weatherproofing on our outerwear for the upcoming Iceland trip, we meet with wolves who were raised illegally, forsaken, and relinquished to this refuge in Lititz, PA. Even in the rain and sleet, they are inquisitive about their new visitors; their eyes betray their frightening intelligence and cunning - with the exception of Friday, a young male wolf with a completely black coat, whose golden eyes are ever so earnest ("He's so earnest. So earnest," I keep telling Jane). Friday now sits on our fridge, one souvenir magnet among many.
After our tour, with the sky still pouring, we make our way south to Lancaster and somehow find a perfectly delicious bowl of pho at Rice & Noodles, in perfectly suitable weather. Our bellies full, we scrap our plans for the afternoon, and retreat to Baltimore in the winter rain.