Becky and I were chatting with a couple at the "cranberry pancake" breakfast they held during the Cranberry Harvest Festival. The breakfast did not really include cranberry pancakes which was a little disappointing to us. It did, however, result in a couple of good things.
1. I won the raffle for the quilt.
2. The couple sitting next to us were quite chatty and friendly and we ended up talking about the Gray's River Covered Bridge.
I did not get their names, but the man was telling us about the bridge and he mentioned that it had been rebuilt. (by this he meant the walls and top, not the base). He said that they used aluminum siding when they rebuilt it. I had a hard time picturing that. He also informed us that they were now holding yearly dinners in the bridge. We were very interested in that little piece of information. It sounded like it would be a fun thing to do. We figured we would check it out.
I decided to take a few days off from work this past weekend. My granddaughter was getting married and that was as good as an excuse as any. I called Becky and let her know and asked if maybe she wanted to go down and take a look at the bridge and then drive into Long Beach. I haven't been to Long Beach for more than 20 years and thought it might be a nice destination for us sometime next year to take a few days and rent a cabin or a yurt.
She agreed and we hit the road at 7am Sunday morning for a nice day of driving and looking around. I was totally relieved to find out that the man was wrong about the siding. The bridge has been redone, but it is beautiful wood and looks pretty much like it did when I did the painting. The only real difference is that the one side has not weathered yet. And I'm not sure about the top. It IS aluminum or metal of some kind and the original might have been wood. I will have to look that up.
Here are some pictures of how it looks now. I could not replicate the positioning that was used in the original photo that I used when I did the painting. Those trees grew up to be very big and there are even more than in the painting. There was simply no opening in which to take a picture from that angle.
The roads were dirt in the photo I used as my "model" for the painting. They are paved now. Maybe I will do another painting reflecting the new landscape.
As you can see the background hills are still covered in trees, although there are many more than before. The two trees directly behind the bridge at the left in the painting are still there. One grew bigger than the other and the leaves have fallen, but they are visible in this photo to the left of the group of bare trees along the banks. The big tree that casts its shadow and discolors the wood on the side of the bridge facing us is also still there!
This picture shows the brushy hill that is at the foreground of my painting.
This one shows the road that is now paved instead of dirt.
Here is a picture of the other, less weathered side.
If you look closely, you will see that we found evidence that the story of dinners in the bridge might be true, so we asked at the Gray's River Cafe when we ate there. They are true and we are thinking we might just try to attend one. It just sounds like fun.