Monday, June 25, 2018

No Drone Zone at Caesars Head

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I rode up to Caesars Head a few weeks ago.


Caesars Head is a South Carolina State Park, 26 miles from home, and it is fairly easy to get to.  The twisty road that goes up the Blue Ridge Escarpment to the park is only about eight miles long, and is in fairly good condition in most places.  The twisty part of the road is not nearly as long as on the nearby US-178, but there are several tight turns along the way. 

Caesars Head

Twisty part of US-178


























The reason I went to Caesars Head was that it was an easy addition to a route that I rode called A Two Hour Afternoon's Jaunt that had appeared in an issue of the old and gone Motorcycle Lifestyle Magazine

Anyway, the overlook at Caesars Head (that is correct; there is not an apostrophe in Caesars) is usually a good place to see the mountainous countryside from a birds-eye vantage point.  That photograph at the top of the post gives you an idea. 

Pretty country, yes?  Here is a slightly different angle:


You can see the back side of Table Rock Mountain, with Table Rock Reservoir this side of it.  This overlook is really the only place you can see into the distance from Caesars Head Park, and the overlook is very close to where you can park your bike.

As I was parking that day, I noticed something new.  


Did you spot it?  Here is a closer view:


Now do you see?

It says I can't fly my drone here any more.  (Not that I have one.)  It is mounted on a very substantial post. 

That's unfortunate, because I like to see videos of places like this taken from a drone.  Some of the drone pilots are quite good at getting the right views and motion, and their editing can be very effective in enhancing their work.

Like these: 
There are some large houses adjacent to the park, and I suppose some of those residents could have been buzzed by some irresponsible pilot.  If that is the case, there are probably civil actions that could be taken against the pilot, instead of banning drones entirely. 

I did a little research and found that drones are outlawed in all national parks.  Citing safety and noise issues, drones are banned until the National Park Service comes up with a long-term policy.  [I wonder how long that could take.]  The ban covers not only the 59 full-fledged national parks but about 350 national monuments, seashores and other sites run by the NPS, about 84 million acres in all.

That is a lot of territory now off limits. 

Seems like our freedom is again under attack here.

Oh, by the way, the ban carries a maximum penalty of a $5,000 fine and six months in jail!

Try this website called Know Before You Fly to learn some of the rules.   


For recreational use, you can fly under the Special Rule for Model Aircraft:
  • Fly for hobby or recreation ONLY
  • Register your model aircraft
  • Fly within visual line-of-sight
  • Follow community-based safety guidelines and fly within the programming of a nationwide community-based organization
  • Fly a drone under 55 lbs. unless certified by a community-based organization
  • Never fly near other aircraft
  • Notify the airport and air traffic control tower prior to flying within 5 miles of an airport*
  • Never fly near emergency response efforts
Or, you can get a Remote Pilot Certification (14 CFR part 107).  For that, you must:
  • Be at least 16 years old
  • Pass an aeronautical knowledge test at an FAA-approved knowledge testing center
  • Undergo Transportation Safety Administration (TSA) security screening
  • Register your aircraft with the FAA
Part 107 Operating Rules:
  • Unmanned aircraft must weigh less than 55 pounds, including payload, at takeoff
  • Fly in Class G airspace
  • Keep the unmanned aircraft within visual line-of-sight
  • Fly at or below 400 feet
  • Fly during daylight or civil twilight
  • Fly at or under 100 mph
  • Yield right of way to manned aircraft
  • Do not fly directly over people
  • Do not fly from a moving vehicle, unless in a sparsely populated area
If you fly for commercial purposes, then the rules are different.


Whew.  That is a lot of hoops to jump through just to fly a little airplane.  I think that the regulations include all of the model planes that many of us flew when we were kids (and now, sometimes as adults, too, like I saw back in 2014).  

As I said, I think our freedoms are being encroached upon. 

For state regulations, you can look here or here, but know that these websites may not be completely up to date.

Local municipalities may also have rules and regulations, so you will have to contact them to find out what they require.


Anyhow, our freedom to do almost anything is getting cut more and more these days.  So, fly 'em while ya' can.  (But not at Caesars Head.) 

Fortunately, the park is still a nice place to go to look at God's creation. 
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Saturday, June 16, 2018

Odd Sights I've Seen -- One in Minnesota(!), and a Bear's Head Nearer Home

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As I ride around the Upstate of South Carolina, western North Carolina, and eastern Georgia, I sometimes spot unusual sights along the way.  Some of these are simply new to me, but others are strange and out of the ordinary.

Here are a couple of recent examples, all from the same day of riding:

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This is a photograph of the sign for the Amsterdam Hotel in Duluth Minnesota.  I just popped up there to see the sign the other day.  I'd say the prices are certainly reasonable, with running water, telephones in all rooms, and a bath for a bit extra! ...and it is just half a block from this sign. 


The approach: 


Surprisingly, it didn't take all that long to get there from home.


Now the truth of the matter.
 

In actuality, the sign is quite nearby -- about 12 miles from my house, in fact.

[What? Please explain, Bucky ]

Well the sign is really located in Greenville South Carolina (about 1177 miles from Duluth), and was painted on an old manufacturing building around 2007 for the movie Leatherheads, shot, in part, in Greenville.


The movie is set in 1925 Duluth, and is a romantic comedy set against the backdrop of America's nascent pro-football league.  Dodge Connolly (played by George Clooney) is a charming, brash football hero who is determined to guide his team, the Duluth Bulldogs, from bar brawls to packed stadiums.  But after the players lose their sponsor and the entire league faces certain collapse, Dodge convinces a college football star and war hero Carter Rutherford (played by John Krasinski) to join his ragtag ranks. 


Here is the movie trailer.  

The hotel sign is located within view of the Swamp Rabbit Rail-to-Trail, but you  can go right up to it as I did at 111 Welborn Street between Willard and S. Hudson Streets. 


This is a picture of the Vance Hotel in Statesville, NC that was used in the movie to represent the Amsterdam.


Elsewhere in the movie, Clooney rides his 1918 Indian motorcycle up to the 1924 Poinsett Hotel which is still open in Greenville. 


From the movie:



Interestingly, the 1918 Indian motorcycle is not vintage, but rather a custom-built electric-powered replica.  It was fabricated in El Segundo California at Customs By Eddie Paul.  Why electric, you ask?  The Leatherheads script required a functional vintage-looking motorcycle that could be ridden and operated by the actors during recording of dialogue.  Thus the need for a quiet motor.


Leatherheads Links:


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The next odd sight is the head of a bear, also in Greenville -- and not in the zoo, by the way.

Here it is. 



Looks like a bear's head, right?  Looking right at you.  Snarl on his mouth.  Rounded ears. Right? 

Take a closer look.


Now do you see it?  It's a bear.  Correct? 


Actually, it is a burl on a tree on Richland Way which parallels Richland Creek.  About here on this map:  34.850730, -82.383861

The bear from a different angle. 


Looking right out of the tree, he is. 


In the creek nearby, there are a number of concrete footings for a railroad trestle that stood here from 1886 to 1991. 


You have to look over top of the lush kudzu growing along the bank here to see the footings at this time of year. 

The trestle that once sat on the footings served the former CSW railroad, and looked like this.  The railroad right-of-way paralleled Traxler Street, visible to the east on the map cited above. 


The Swamp Rabbit Trail may be extended on the former railroad right of way, requiring a new bridge to be erected across Richland Creek ravine to replace the wooden trestle. 



So, there were two odd sights today, both in the city of Greenville.

What kind of odd sights have you seen in your two-wheeled travels?



See more Odd Sights I've Seen by clicking "odd sights" here or on the left side of the page.
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Thursday, June 14, 2018

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Celebrate our freedom symbolized by this wonderful banner.


...and keep this in mind,that Winston Churchill, in the U.K. House of Commons, November 11, 1947, had this to say: 

Many forms of Government have been tried, and will be tried in this world of sin and woe. No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed it has been said that democracy is the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time.…
Churchill clearly did not originate this famous remark about democracy, but it is certainly true. 

It is good to remember that about our form of government amidst this world of chaos.   Remind your kids, too, that their freedom depends on it.


References:

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Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Your Favorite Bucky's Ride Postings


Blogger keeps statistics on the number of views each blog posting gets over time.  Unfortunately, the counter can't differentiate between bots that hit on a posting and human hits, so the numbers have to be taken with a healthy grain of salt.

Anyway, with that caveat, here are the postings having the greatest number of views among the almost 300 postings on Bucky's Ride. 

All time, since the first posting on January 25, 2009
(I bought the bike in September of 2007):

·        Visit to the Deeley Motorcycle Exposition
Aug 22, 2010
·        Valve Clearance Adjustment Tips
Feb 4, 2012
·        Wheels Through Time
Oct 15, 2010
·        Dressing for Cold Weather Riding
Nov 26, 2009

Month Ending June 5, 2018

·        Odd Sights I've Seen
Apr 30, 2018
·        Valve Clearance Adjustment Tips
Feb 4, 2012
·        Unused Tread Width -- aka Chicken Strips!
Jun 14, 2014
·        Skyuka Mountain Road
Sep 22, 2013

Week ending June 5, 2018


·        Skyuka Mountain Road
Sep 22, 2013 
·        Unused Tread Width -- aka Chicken Strips!
Jun 14, 2014
·        Old Mill at Newry -- Off the Beaten Path
Feb 10, 2011
·        Piedmont South Carolina -- Mill Town
Jan 29, 2010

See whether some of these also become your favorites. 
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