![](https://brucestambaugh.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/img_3938criders.jpg?w=1024)
My wife and I are still exploring Rockingham County, Virginia, where we have lived for seven years. That may sound hard to believe, but Rockingham is the third-largest county in Virginia. It covers 853 square miles, so there’s a lot of area to see.
We recently toured with friends an area of the mostly rural, agricultural county that we had never seen before. They were as curious as we were.
We chose the remote northwest section, where wildfires scorched thousands of acres of mountainous terrain in the George Washington National Forest during the first week of spring. We were pleasantly surprised with what we found.
Recent rains have greened up most of the area, with only a few burned spots visible from roadways. Thanks to firefighters’ efforts, an abandoned cabin was the only structure burned.
The areas of Bergton and Criders are set in a wide-open, fairly flat valley floor surrounded by mostly deciduous forests. It was a lovely scene.
The background of wooded hillsides and the building storm clouds behind this abandoned schoolhouse made an idyllic landscape portrait. It was one of many finds of the day.
![](https://brucestambaugh.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/img_3935.jpg?w=840)
© Bruce Stambaugh 2024
I’m sure you have driven back to Baker at some point. Some of the vistas along there are just wonderful. When we travel to Indiana or Ohio we usually go that back way, used to always go HWY 33 through Franklin but not often any more.
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Yes, we use that route, too. No more US 33.
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