Grotto at Coonskin Park, Charleston, WV, Kanawha County, Metro Valley Region
Coonskin Fork tubles through at grotto at Coonskin Park at Charleston. (Photo courtesy Rick Burgess)

Instagram initiative promotes safe Metro Valley travel options

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There’s more to see and do in West Virginia’s Metro Valley region than one might expect, which is why four visitor bureaus there have engaged in a cooperative promotion on Instagram dubbed “Rt. 60 Ramble.”

Project leaders themselves said they were surprised to discover resources along or near U.S. 60 that were appropriate for socially-distanced adventures about which they knew little before.

Kelli Steele, executive director of the Putnam County Convention and Visitors Bureau, says the team representing Charleston, Huntington, Barboursville, and Putnam County found much that locals can discover without leaving the region.

“Even those of us working on this project have been surprised to learn about things to do right in our backyard that we had no idea existed,” Steele said.

We hoped that by bringing attention to these sites that someone in Charleston might want to walk a trail in Hurricane or someone in Huntington might do a driveable public art tour in downtown Charleston.”

The campaign highlights safe activities, such as outdoor recreation, public art, and historic sites, throughout the Metro Valley, across which U.S. 60 courses east-west.

Though the project is principally designed for regional residents enduring the COVID-10 outbreak, it’s also a resource those visiting from other areas. Many wish to make summer travel plans, but are hoping to find safe, socially distant tourism options, Steele said.

Tim Brady, president of the Charleston Convention and Visitors Bureau, said regional collaboration is a key component of tourism marketing. “Visitors and tourists don’t care about municipal and county boundaries; they only care about the experience.”

The Rt. 60 Ramble particularly recognizes the nature of post-COVID travel, he says.

“People are taking more road trips and day trips. There’s so much to explore in our own backyard, and the Route 60 Ramble is a fun and creative way to show people all of the things that are within a short drive from where they are.”

To follow the expanding information being published on Intagram, sign up at Rt. 60 Ramble

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David Sibray
Meet the Author

David Sibray

David Sibray is a West Virginia journalist, publisher, and historian who has spent more than four decades promoting the culture, communities and natural landscapes of Appalachia. He is the founder, publisher and editor-in-chief of West Virginia Explorer, a news and travel magazine devoted to the state’s history, tourism, outdoor recreation and economic development. Born in Wheeling and raised in Beckley, he attended West Virginia University and Wheeling Jesuit University. Since beginning his journalism career in the late 1980s, he has worked in publishing, public relations and destination marketing, including leadership roles with Theatre West Virginia and the Southern West Virginia Convention & Visitors Bureau. For more information, he may be reached at 304-575-7390 or at editor@wvexplorer.com

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