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As stated on the cover page, driving the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel was the first thing added
to the trip once I decided that this would be the year I'd make it to
Common Ground on the Hill. My twenty mile crossing started at the southern
toll plaza where $13 was snagged from my rarely used EZ-Pass. I was
quickly on the first bridge. There is a man-made island at the end of the
bridge where people can eat, buy souvenirs, go fishing, watch ships &
boats, and contemplate the man-made island where the first tunnel emerges
before driving into it.
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What I called a bridge in the previous panel is more accurately referred
to a low-level trestle. There's more between the tunnels and more beyond
the second tunnel. There are also true bridges at the north end. If you
spread the toll over the 17.6 miles that are over or under water or even
the 20 miles between the toll plazas, it's a fairly pricey $0.74 or $0.65
per mile. But if you instead apply the toll to the nearly 500 miles
involved in driving between those two points without the bridge/tunnel, it
becomes a bargain 2 1/2 cents a mile.
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Back on land, I stayed with US-13 and sometimes, but not always, followed
the business route through a small town. One of those times was at the
town of Exmore, Virginia, where the
Exmore Diner has been in business since 1954. Hunger
hadn't caught up with me yet but I did sip some iced tea at the counter
of the properly tagged Silk City.
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The sky ahead was looking increasingly dark and rain started within an
hour of leaving Exmore. It stopped and restarted but never completely
disappeared as I continued on to the day's end point in Newark, Delaware.
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