June 27, 2005
Lookout Mountain chock full of nostalgic attractions and worthwhile treasures
Lookout Mountain, GA
– Perhaps what Chattanooga is best known for - even more than its Civil
War sites and its venerable choo-choo - is the ageless nostalgic
attractions on Lookout Mountain. Generations of tourists have climbed
to the top of Lookout Mountain aboard the Incline Railway and journeyed
through Rock City Gardens and Ruby Falls.
Called "America's Most Amazing Mile," the Incline Railway is the
world's steepest passenger railway and has carried tourists from
Chattanooga to Lookout Mountain since 1895. Seats are positioned at an
angle, and as the railcar makes its slow and creaky ascent, passengers
can gaze at a panoramic view of Chattanooga Valley. At the station's
Lookout Mountain overlook, the Great Smoky Mountains are visible 100
miles away. Point Park is a three-block walk from the Incline Railway's
station atop Lookout Mountain, though no ground transportation is
available to Rock City Gardens and Ruby Falls, which are miles away.
Made
famous around the world with its "See Rock City" slogan painted on
barns and birdhouses, Rock City Gardens started as a 10-acre garden
during the Great Depression. It took Garnet and Frieda Carter two years
to improve and expand his wife Frieda's pathway amid huge boulders and
natural rock formations in what they called the "city of rocks." Rock
City Gardens finally opened in 1932, and tourists have marveled at the
view of seven states from Lover's Leap, struggled through Fat Man's
Squeeze and dared to cross the rickety swinging bridge since.
Ruby
Falls preceded Rock City Gardens by three years. A 145-foot underground
waterfall, Ruby Falls is part of Lookout Mountain Caverns, which
features glistening stalagmites and rock formations that resemble odd
shapes including steak and potatoes and an elephant's foot.
Point
Park on Lookout Mountain pays homage to Battles of Chattanooga veterans
with exhibits at the Ochs Museum and Overlook. The park's centerpiece
is the New York Peace Memorial, a 95-foot-tall obelisk that shows a
Union and Confederate soldiers shaking hands. Adjacent to the
Point
Park Visitors Center is the Battles for Chattanooga Museum and Electric
Map. The highlight here is a three-dimensional, 480-square-foot model
of the terrain that served as battlegrounds in the struggle for control
of Chattanooga. A narrated and lighted show includes the sights and
sounds of battle and 5,000 miniature soldiers describes the movement of
troops and how the Yanks defeated the Confederates. Not
far from Cloudland Canyon State Park, Canyon Grill’s location is remote
– so remote that most guests drive at least a half-hour along a scenic
road on the back side of Lookout Mountain. First-timers are told to
recognize the building from the cars in the gravel parking lot and its
proximity to the adjacent New Salem Mountain Market, an old-time corner
grocer.
Still, Canyon Grill is packed, mostly with
out-of-towners, on a nightly basis with guests savoring choices like
Slash n’ Burn Catfish, Ground Mignon, Whole Rainbow Trout, Alaskan Red
King Salmon and Rack of Lamb. Owned and operated by the husband-and-wife team of Lawton and
Karen Haygood, Canyon Grill was a 40-seat restaurant when it opened in
1996. Today, it has expanded to 142 seats. Named after Cloudland Canyon
State Park, and Haygood’s cooking technique, Canyon Grill features
fresh seafood flown in from a purveyor in Boston. Slash ‘n Burn Catfish
is the signature item. The whole bone-in catfish is stuffed with
ginger, garlic and jalapenos into thin slashes, cut into thin slashes,
dredged in flour, deep fried and then topped with black bean soup.
Other intriguing items are the grilled cabbage and the crispy
squash. The half-head of red cabbage is steamed until softened and then
cooked on Haygood’s wood-burning grill. It is finished with a touch of
garlic and anchovy sauce, and a bit of cream. The crispy squash is
lightly salted and sprinkled with corn meal mix and dropped into peanut
oil, yet it has just a hint of deep-fried taste.
Just by looking at the menu, Haygood’s passion for grilling is
evident. Before he introduced the signature selections at Canyon Grill
– and the Boathouse, a restaurant he and Karen operate along the banks
of the Tennessee River in Chattanooga - Haygood developed a
first-of-its-kind wood-burning grill in the late 1970s when he served
seafood at his restaurant, Turtle Cove, in Dallas.
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Media Contact: Quantified Marketing Group 407.936.1010

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