
Visitors can make their way up the flume on this walkway which takes you all the way to the top.

This covered bridge takes you to the entrance of the Flume, a spectacular slot canyon cut into the rock by water. Because pedestrians are not allowed on this road, I had to hike through the woods and down a very steep embankment to get this photo. The shuttle bus goes over the bridge once every five minutes so I had to hide in the brush and then jump out for a few shots and then dive back in for cover. It was really a lot of fun and nothing was going to deny me this classic vista.

Later in the day Maya, my parents, and I went to the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem. We toured a 200 year old house known as Yin Yu Tang which was moved board by board and stone by stone from the Huishou provence of China complete with furnishings. The woodworking was phenominal and made no use of metal fasteners. On the way home we passed the House of Seven Gables and I grabbed a quick shot of the seaward exposure.