Gene Leahy Mall The RiverFront Omaha
Photograph ©2023 by Brian Cohen.

The Longest Yard Sale in the World Celebrates 37 Years — and Other Travel Ideas

This is a slightly eclectic collection of ways to enjoy the summer of 2024.

If you were wondering about some places to visit and things to do for the remainder of the summer of 2024 within the United States which are just slightly out of the ordinary, this article contains some different ideas about where you might want to consider traveling — starting with the longest yard sale in the world, which celebrates 37 years this year.

The Longest Yard Sale in the World Celebrates 37 Years — and Other Travel Ideas

From the Michigan town of Addison south through Ohio and Kentucky to Gadsden in Alabama, the route of the 127 Yard Sale stretches approximately 690 miles — most of which is along United States Highway 127, which has been the namesake of this event since 1987.

The yard sale — which comprises of greater than 2,200 vendors and extends for approximately 690 miles through six states — will occur from Thursday, August 1, 2024 through Sunday, August 4, 2024 on much of United States Highway 127 starting in the town of Addison in Michigan through its terminus in Chattanooga; but then, the yard sale continues further south on a patchwork of state and county highways known as Lookout Mountain Parkway through the northwest corner of Georgia into Alabama, where it ends in the town of Gadsden.

A group on Facebook where people can discuss all aspects of the yard sale exists.

The route of the yard sale itself is supposed to be quite scenic and may be worthy of a few days.

Other ideas for travel this summer — most of which have nothing to do with the longest yard sale in the world — are as follows:

Chattanooga, Tennessee

Chattanooga Tennessee
Photograph ©2020 by Brian Cohen.

Chattanooga is one of the most underrated cities in the United States, in my opinion. Between Ruby Falls, white water rafting, Lookout Mountain with its incline railway, Rock City, the Tennessee Aquarium, plenty of dining options, staying at the Chattanooga Choo Choo hotel which is comprised of train cars, miles of hiking trails, and even a scenic walk along the Tennessee River or visiting its downtown area with great choices for dining, you can easily spend four full days in this city which is approximately the size of Hartford in Connecticut — not too big and not too small — and still not do everything. Perhaps I will write an article with more details and information — as well as photographs — pertaining to Chattanooga.

The cities of Atlanta, Nashville, and Knoxville are within two hours away from Chattanooga; and you can drive slightly greater than one hour to visit the famous Unclaimed Baggage Center in Scottsboro, Alabama — which I have visited. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park is also within driving distance at approximately 150 miles away, if you want to spend a few days there.

Omaha, Nebraska

Omaha skyline
Photograph ©2023 by Brian Cohen.

You can enjoy at least nine things to do in Omaha that will cost you nothing but your time. Parts of the city have been going through a renaissance of sorts — but you can even walk through another state on your way to or from the airport. Choose from a number of different dining options after you work up your appetite.

Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge — Broad Channel, New York

Wait a minute — the only wildlife refuge in the entire National Park Service of the United States is located within the city limits of New York?

Yep.

Extending from Breezy Point to the west to Floyd Bennett Field and Canarsie Pier to the north to — get this — the western edge of John F. Kennedy International Airport, Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge is an oasis of greater than 19,000 acres of land, bay, and ocean waters in Brooklyn and Queens where you can do everything from fishing to horseback riding to bird watching to spending a day at a beach on the Atlantic Ocean, away from the hustle and bustle of the city within the city.

You can look carefully over the tall grasses of the marshes among the egrets and see the skyline of Manhattan peering off in the distance. It’s as surreal as it gets.

Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge is a part of the 27,000 acres of Gateway National Recreation Area, which includes Staten Island in New York and Sandy Hook in New Jersey. There is so much to do at the fourth most visited National Park Service unit in the United States — with greater than 9.2 million annual visitors — that all of the activities are impossible to list here. You literally can plan an entire vacation just at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge with all of the activities available if you wanted to do so.

Best of all, you pay no entrance fees to enjoy Gateway National Recreation Area — yes, admission is free of charge — although beach parking and select other activities may incur a charge.

Shirley Chisholm State Park — Brooklyn, New York

Not far from the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge is the newest and largest state park within the city of New York. Located on 407 acres of land which once occupied two landfills — both of which closed 41 years ago — therefore explains why the highest point of Shirley Chisholm State Park is 130 feet in elevation, affording “spectacular panoramic views of the Empire State Building to the northwest, the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge and New York Harbor to the west, and Jamaica Bay to the south.” Once traversed by sanitation trucks and hungry sea gulls, this site has never been open to the public — until now.

Shirley Chisholm State Park is now open 365 days per year from 9:00 in the morning until dusk; and it offers:

  • Ten miles of biking and hiking trails
  • Shirley Chisholm State Park Bike Library, with loaner bikes for park patrons of all ages
  • Gorgeous waterfront access on Penn Pier, Hendrix Creek Patio
  • Picnicking
  • Environmental education — including fishing, guided bird walks and nature in your neighborhood

Tubin’ Down the “Hootch” — Helen, Georgia

a group of people in tubing on a river
Photograph ©2014 by Brian Cohen.

One inexpensive way people cooled off for decades from the heat of the intense Georgia sun is to float down the cold waters of the Chattahoochee River while relaxing in a tube under the continuous canopies of trees along the route — and despite the current 2019 Novel Coronavirus pandemic, you can still go tubing this summer if you heed the proper precautions. You can read about my experience of tubin’ down the “Hootch” in this article.

You can also visit the pseudo-“Alpine” village of Helen, which is located approximately 87 miles — or 90 minutes — north of Atlanta. Don’t get me wrong — there is plenty to do in Helen; and the surrounding areas are scenic. I just find aspects of the village itself as little more than a tourist trap.

Run Five Kilometers on the Fifth Runway at Airport — Atlanta, Georgia

Atlanta airport
Photograph ©2010 by Brian Cohen.

Whether you are a runner or a walker, if you have ever wanted to be on the fifth runway without being aboard an airplane at the international airport which serves the greater Atlanta metropolitan area, this is your opportunity: the ninth annual Mayor’s 5K on the 5th Runway hosted by Andre Dickens — who is the current mayor of the city of Atlanta — is scheduled to return on the morning of Saturday, October 5, 2024 at 6:30 in the morning Eastern Daylight Time at the time this article was written. Get ready to lace up your shoes and run or walk the fifth runway at the airport to experience this special opportunity to race on one of the flattest — and fastest — courses in the greater Atlanta metropolitan area.

This five kilometer course is certified by USA Track & Field; and it is also a qualifier for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Peachtree Road Race.

The proceeds from the race will benefit the Mayor’s Youth Scholarship Program and United Way of Greater Atlanta — so you will be doing good for yourself and for others.

Of course, you can always run the length of 690 miles for the longest yard sale in the world…

Final Boarding Call

Gene Leahy Mall The RiverFront Omaha
Photograph ©2023 by Brian Cohen.

I have never been to the longest yard sale in the world — nor do I know exactly what items are sold — but I thought I would feature it in this article as an idea for something different to do this summer…

…but I have been to the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Reserve multiple times — and I enjoyed it every single time.

If you have an item which you believe should be added to this list, please post it in the Comments section below. Thank you in advance.

All photographs ©2010, ©2014, ©2020, and ©2023 by Brian Cohen.

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