National Corvette Museum

National Corvette Museum

We visited the National Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, Kentucky while staying at the nearby Thousand Trails Diamond Caverns RV & Golf Resort in early May 2025. Bowling Green is the home of the Chevrolet Corvette with the manufacturing plant located nearby the museum.

The museum traces the evolution of the Corvette – Americas Sports Car – from its origins in 1953, through its eight major model updates (C1 through C8) to today’s spectacular mid-rear-engine iteration. The museum includes many corvettes from each generation and also several prototype and concept versions that showed design ideas over the years that may or may not have made it into production.
We particularly liked the classic 1963 split-window Corvette stingray, the only year with the split rear window design; the 1968 Jim Lovell Corvette that was an example of the Corvettes that were driven by many NASA astronauts during the 1960’s space race; and the 1962 Gulf Oil racing Corvette that dominated US sports car racing in 1962, winning 12 of the 14 races it entered.

In 2014 a section of the floor of the Skydome display hall collapsed into a massive sinkhole, taking 8 cars with it. The cars, ranging from unique prototypes to iconic classics, were recovered in a dramatic effort, with some restored to their former glory while others remain in their damaged state as a testament to the event. We saw one of the “unrepaired” sinkhole cars on display in the museum.

After we toured the museum, we visited the Stingray Grill restaurant attached to the museum for lunch. The museum had an excellent choice of food with some very nice vegetarian options included.

A selection of photos from our visit are provided below.

Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Park

Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Park

Above the entrance to the Lincoln Birthplace Memorial Building are carved these words.

“Here over the log cabin where Abraham Lincoln was born destined to preserve the Union and to free the slave. A grateful people have dedicated this memorial to unity, peace, and brotherhood among these States with malice toward none with charity for all.”

We visited the Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historic Park in rural Central Kentucky in May 2025 while staying at the Thousand Trails Diamond Caverns RV & Golf Resort about 45-minutes away in Park City, Kentucky. The memorial building, completed in 1911 was largely funded by citizen donations, and was built to honor the humble beginnings of the Nation’s 16th president. The memorial building houses a cabin, symbolic of Lincoln’s birth home. It was constructed 11 years before the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C. and is referred to by the National Park Service as “The First Lincoln Memorial”.


Alongside the 56 steps that ascend to the memorial building, with each step representing one year of Lincolns life, we visited the Sinking Spring – a land feature that the Lincoln family would have used as their water source, and for which the original farm site was named.

From the Lincoln birthplace site, we drove about 10-miles to Lincoln’s boyhood home where the Lincoln family lived on 30 acres of the 228 acre Knob Creek Farm from the time Abraham was two and a half until he was almost eight years old. This site features hiking trails, a visitor center housed in a 1930 Inn building, as well as a log cabin reconstructed from period materials and representative of Lincoln’s boyhood home.

Photos from our visit to these sites are provided below.

Mammoth Cave National Park

Mammoth Cave National Park

Geologists estimate that the oldest part of Mammoth Cave began forming around 10 million years ago. To date, explorers have surveyed and mapped more than 426 miles of cave passage, making Mammoth Cave by far the longest known cave system in the world, with explorers still discovering new passages. Over the course of several million years, underground rivers and streams carved out the underlying limestone creating a vast network of underground passageways.
We visited Mammoth Cave National Park in May 2025 while staying at the nearby Thousand Trails Diamond Caverns RV & Golf Resort near Park City, Kentucky. The Mammoth Cave Railroad Bike and Hike Trail ran alongside our RV park, and we were able to e-bike the 7 miles to Mammoth Cave National Park along this pleasant trail. The entire trail runs 9 miles between Mammoth Cave and Park City.

Mammoth Cave is so huge that the Park offers a total of 10 different cave tours, with at least one scheduled time daily for each tour. Reservations are required for the tours, and the NPS website advises that they often fill up a long way in advance. While most of the tours are guided by a Ranger, we chose to take the only self-guided tour known as the “Extended Discovery Tour”. This tour is available from 10 am to 2:30 pm each day and we were able to get same day walk-up reservations and immediate entry on the Sunday we visited. This tour took us a couple of hours including the hilly walk down to the entrance of the cave from the visitor center. This 1-mile tour covers a Y-shaped section of the cave with some very large passages.  The entry passage ended at a natural “Rotunda” with a historic salt peter mining site.
Saltpetre is a principal ingredient in black gunpowder, and mining saltpetre from the cave was extremely profitable in the early 1800’s and became even more so with the start of the War of 1812. Demand for gunpowder was at an all-time high during the war, as the importation of gunpowder had become very difficult due to the British blockade of many eastern sea ports. The War of 1812 ended in 1815, and the demand for saltpetre fell dramatically. Eventually the mining operation stopped, leaving behind mine workings that can still be seen at the Rotunda.

Huge open passages headed in both directions from the Rotunda. The scale of the cave passages was quite amazing, and the natural “flat roof” of the cave very impressive in its span. Rangers were stationed along the route and answered some of our questions about the cave’s history and its formation. We were struck by the lack of “cave decorations” (stalactites, stalagmites, etc.) in Mammoth Cave, which was quite a contrast from Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico that we had visited a month earlier. While Mammoth Cave was formed by underground rivers, it is now largely a “dry cave” with its sandstone cave roof preventing water penetration into the cave. Without any water penetration there is no mechanism for the formation of cave decorations which rely on eons of mineral-rich water dripping into the cave through the roof.

We enjoyed our half day visit and were impressed by the spectacular scale of the caves. The self-guided tour we took seemed like a good introduction to the cave system. A multiday visit to the park would be required to take some of the many Ranger-led cave tours that are available.

Photos from our visit to Mammoth Cave National Park are included at the end of this post.

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