Random Facts About Kentucky Lighting

By Tara Daniels


What a lot of people don't know about Kentucky lighting is that the state holds the nation's most productive reservoir of coal. The state is also famous for bourbon whisky, horse racing and bluegrass music. Mammoth Cave National Park is one of the state's major natural attractions. It occupies almost 53,000 acres and covers three counties, Hart, Barren and Edmonson. The caves underlie the Mammoth-Flint Ridge and was incorporated into the national park system in the year 1941.

The principle attraction at Mammoth is the cave system itself. Organized tours run seasonally. Reservations are recommended although not strictly necessary. There are firm limitations on what you an and cannot bring with you on a tour. These include tripods, backpacks (including ones with babies in them!) and strollers. Once the tour is over, visitors are required to walk on a bio-security mat as a precaution against White Nose Syndrome, a fungal condition that affects bats.

Among other significant natural attractions are Cumberland Gap, Red River Gorge and Jefferson Memorial Forest. Cumberland Gap served as the one passage through the Appalachian Mountains on the journey west. It was so important the British named a sausage after it. The highest number of per capita deer and turkey live in Kentucky, as does the largest free range herd of elk east of the Mississippi.

The closest thing that the Bluegrass State has to an NFL football team is the Cincinnati Bengals across the northern state border in Ohio. Ditto the Cincinnati Reds major league baseball team. The state fares better in college basketball. The Bluegrass State's main claim to sporting fame is the Kentucky Derby, a thoroughbred horse race held annually in Louisville.

The Bluegrass State is bordered by six other states in addition to Ohio: Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia. AS landlocked as it is, if Kentucky were a sovereign nation it would not need to pay for a navy. Come to think of it, with the Appalachian Mountain range bang in the middle of it, citizens would have difficulty mounting an air force. Hopefully, the state will remain friends with the rest of the United States and not feel the need for its own military establishments.

As lovely as they are, the Appalachians present an obstacle to east-west travel. Its interlocking valleys and mountain ridges make for challenging road-building. They run also through West Virginia, North Carolina, Virginia, South Carolina, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Ohio and Tennessee.

The highest point in the state is Black Mountain, at an elevation of 4,145 feet. The state language is English. The area measures 40,409 square miles. The state flower is the Goldenrod. The state bird is the Cardinal, which makes you wonder how St Louis MO managed to hijack it for their major league baseball team.

Among the institutions reliant on Kentucky lighting are the University of Kentucky and the state supreme court. The annual state fair is in Louisville. The state also has many hospitals and schools.




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