>> HI EVERYBODY, I AM DAVE

 

SCHUFFET AND WELCOME TO

 

KENTUCKY LIFE FROM MA'AM

 

OATH CAVE PARK, HOME OF THE

 

LONGEST CAVE IN THE WORLD.

 

HIGH ABOVE ME, RAINWATER

 

DRAINS INTO THE SINK-HOLE

 

PLAIN, CREATING THE CAVE

 

SYSTEM.

 

THE WATER COMES DOWN INTO

 

PLACES LIKE THE RIVER AND

 

DRAINS INTO THE GREEN RIVER.

 

THAT IS A VERY CONDENSED

 

VERSION OF MA'AM OATH CAVE.

 

TONIGHT WE HAVE OTHER

 

STORIES TO TELL YOU ABOUT,

 

GOING ON A CRUISE IN

 

SOMERSET WHERE YOU WILL SEE

 

ANTIQUE CARS AND MUSCLE CARS

 

AND CLASSIC SHOW CARS.

 

FIRST, A GENTLEMAN NAMED SAM

 

ABLES, A NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

 

PHOTOGRAPHER FOR 33 YEARS

 

AND HAS PUBLISHED NINE

 

BOOKS, A VERY SUCCESSFUL

 

FELLOW WHOSE RIGHTS ARE

 

RIGHT HERE IN KENTUCKY.

 

SAM SPENT THE LAST 33 YEARS

 

TRAVELING THE WORLD FOR

 

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

 

MAGAZINE, WHOLE YEARS OF HIS

 

LIFE CONSUMED BY ASSIGNMENTS

 

IN THE OUTERMOST OUTBACK OF

 

NORTHWEST AUSTRALIA, SOVIET

 

RUSSIA, THE WATERWAYS OF

 

VENICE, THE IMPERIAL PALACE

 

OF JAPAN, FOR THE ICY COAST

 

OF NEWFOUNDLAND, TO TIERRA

 

DEL FUEGO, BUT HIS FAMILY

 

ROOTS GO BACK TO SJLVANIA

 

OHIO, AND EVEN FARTHER BACK

 

TO KENTUCKY IN LARUE COUNTY

 

WHERE HIS FATHER WAS BORN

 

AND RAISED.

 

HIS PHOTOGRAPH LIFE WAS

 

FORGED IN THE 1960S WHERE HE

 

EDITED ONE OF THE MOST

 

INNOVATIVE YEAR BOOKS.

 

HE RETURNED TO LEXINGTON IN

 

2003 TO VISIT WITH ADVANCED

 

PHOTO STUDENTS IN THE

 

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY ART

 

DEPARTMENT.

 

>> WHAT IS IN, WHAT IS NOT,

 

ASKING YOU TO DEFEND AND

 

JUSTIFY AND TAKE

 

RESPONSIBILITY FOR

 

EVERYTHING THAT IS IN THE

 

PICTURE.

 

>> AND TO BE THE FEATURED

 

SPEAKER IN THE UNIVERSITY'S

 

PHOTOGRAPHIC SIS IRRELEVANT,

 

REFLECTING ON HIS GLOBAL

 

CAREER.

 

>> I LEARNED PHOTOGRAPHY

 

FROM MY FATHER WHO GREW UP

 

IN LARUE COUNTY, IN SONORA.

 

AND HE LIVED ON A FARM

 

CALLED NOBB FARM.

 

HE WOULD GENTLY AND LIGHTLY

 

TALK TO ME ABOUT SCENE, THE

 

POWER OF A BEAUTY OF AN

 

S-CURVE AND COMPOSITION,

 

ALSO ABOUT THE LIGHT.

 

ONE OUTING WE WENT ON WAS TO

 

A TRAIN STATION.

 

HE LOVED THAT FROM BOYHOOD.

 

THE TRAIN REPRESENTED THE

 

DISTANT WORLD, THE WORLD OF

 

POST BILLS OUTSIDE OF NOBB

 

FARM.

 

WHICH IS THE EARLIEST

 

EXAMPLE I HAVE OF THE WAY I

 

WOULD TAKE PICTURES THE NEXT

 

40 YEARS, COMPOSING AND

 

WAITING FOR THE MOMENT.

 

IT HAS ALWAYS BEEN EASY TO

 

EXPLAIN FATHER'S INFLUENCE.

 

HE TAUGHT ME PHOTOGRAPHY.

 

BUT WHAT IS IN MY

 

PHOTOGRAPHS, I BELIEVE,

 

COMES MORE FROM MY MOTHER,

 

THE CON TINT AND THE SPIRIT

 

OF IT, THE SOUL OF THE

 

PHOTOGRAPH E.

 

SHE LOVED BEAUTY, HISTORY,

 

AND WAS HIGH-MINDED WHEN IT

 

CAME TO CULTURE.

 

SHE WAS THE ORGANIZED WHO OF

 

OUR FAMILY VACATIONS.

 

BECAUSE WE WERE TEACHERS, WE

 

TRAVELED IN THE SUMMER.

 

WE DIDN'T GO ON FISHING

 

TRIPS OR ANYTHING LIKE THAT.

 

WE WENT TO AMERICA'S

 

CULTURAL AND HISTORICAL

 

AREAS, AND HE TOOK PICTURES.

 

THEY WERE ALSO BIG ON

 

ACTUALLY GETTING ON THE

 

BANANA BOAT IN BATON ROUGE

 

AND MEETING THE INDIAN CHIEF

 

ON THE RESERVATION.

 

IT WASN'T JUST DRIVING

 

THROUGH THESE PLACES.

 

WE ACTUALLY HAD EXPERIENCES

 

AND I FIND I FOLLOWED IN HER

 

FOOTSTEPS WHICH IS A GREAT

 

SURPRISE TO ME BECAUSE I

 

DIDN'T WANT TO GO ON THE

 

VACATION.

 

BUT THE TRUTH IS I HAVE DONE

 

A LOT OF THAT IN MY ADULT

 

LIFE, MOST NOTABLY, A STORY

 

ON SHAKERS OF ALL THE

 

STORIES I DID, THAT IS A

 

STORY MY MOTHER WOULD HAVE

 

IDENTIFIED WITH.

 

I WANTED TO SET UP CENTRAL

 

KENTUCKY AS A PLACE OF

 

SUBLIME BEAUTY, SOMETHING I

 

DIDN'T UNDERSTAND OR SEE

 

WHEN I WAS A STUDENT.

 

>> ENCOURAGED BY HIS HIGH

 

SCHOOL JOURNALISM TEACHER,

 

HE ENTERED UNIVERSITY OF

 

KENTUCKY IN THE FALL OF 1963

 

WITH A DREAM OF EDITING THE

 

CAMPUS YEAR BOOK.

 

HE WAS THE EDITOR OF HIS

 

HIGH SCHOOL YEAR BOOK AND

 

WAS BEGINNING TO SEE THE

 

WORLD OF PHOTOGRAPHY AND

 

PUBLICATIONS AS A POSSIBLE

 

CAREER PATH.

 

HIS LIFELONG FRIEND, LIZ HAS

 

FOLLOWED HIS WORK.

 

>> I HAVE BEEN TRACKING

 

RIGHT ALONG BEHIND YOU ALL

 

THESE YEARS.

 

>> KINDERGARTEN, GRADE

 

SCHOOL, JUNIOR HIGH, HIGH

 

SCHOOL AND UNIVERSITY OF

 

KENTUCKY, THE BEGINNING OF

 

AN ERA OF GIFTED STUDENTRY

 

AND I FELL AMONG THEIR

 

SPELL, WALTER GRANT, BILL

 

GRANT.

 

IT WAS A COMPETITIVE,

 

DYNAMIC ERA OF STUDENT

 

JOURNALISM.

 

>> HIS 1967 JEER BOOK WAS A

 

TWO-VOLUME SLIP-CASE AFFAIR

 

FEATURING HIS EVOLVING EYE.

 

THE TRADITIONAL FARE WAS IN

 

THE SECOND BOOK.

 

>> IT IS A RARE BOOK.

 

I HAVE SEEN COLLECTIONS OF

 

YEAR BOOKS ALL THE OTHER

 

YEARS, BUT IT BROKE NEW

 

GROUND.

 

IT WASN'T WIDELY UNDERSTOOD

 

OR APPRECIATED, I DON'T

 

THINK.

 

NONE OF IT TALKED ABOUT

 

AVANTE GARDE OR AGGRESSIVE

 

PHOTOGRAPHY, BUT I HAVE TO

 

SAY IT WAS A BOOK THAT GOT

 

THEY STARTED ON MY CAREER.

 

THE WORK I DID HERE REALLY

 

HELPED ME.

 

>> I WENT FROM A SLEEPING ON

 

A COT IN THE YEARBOOK OFFICE

 

TO LIVING OUT OF HIS CAR IN

 

A SPARSELY-POPULATED COUNTRY

 

WHERE NAVIGATING THE ROADS

 

BROUGHT NEW CHALLENGES AND

 

THE OCCASIONAL WRONG TURN.

 

>> I WENT TO WORK THAT

 

SUMMER ON A STORY WHICH

 

FORMED THE PHOTOGRAPH I CAN

 

BASIS, A STORE FOREIGN STORY

 

TO ME.

 

IT WAS A MARITIME CULTURE

 

AND A VERY PHYSICAL REALM.

 

IT WAS THAT NORTH ATLANTIC

 

LIGHT, THE ATMOSPHERE, THE

 

STRENGTH OF THE PEOPLE, THE

 

CHARACTER OF THE LANDSCRAPE,

 

THE OCEANS AND THE ICE, ALL

 

OF IT HAD A POWERFUL APPEAL

 

TO ME, AND AN EFFECT ON ME.

 

IT GAVE A SPARE QUALITY AND

 

A MENTALISM TO THE

 

PHOTOGRAPHY I WAS GOING TO

 

DO FOR THE REST OF MY LIFE.

 

IN ADDITION TO NATIONAL

 

GEOGRAPHIC WORK, I KEPT

 

ACTIVE AS A BLACK AND WHITE

 

PHOTOGRAPHER, PHOTOGRAPHING

 

THE LIFE I WAS LIVING IN

 

DOMESTIC DETAILS.

 

YOU MIGHT CALL IT

 

ANTI-NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

 

PHOTOGRAPHY, MOTEL ROOMS,

 

THE GASH BOARD OF THE CAR,

 

THE BLANK CHARACTER OF THE

 

ACTUAL LIFE I WAS LIVING,

 

WHICH IS THE OPPOSITE OF THE

 

LIFE THAT PEOPLE THINK A

 

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

 

PHOTOGRAPHER LIVES.

 

>> THE LESS THAN LAVISH

 

LIFESTYLE CONTINUED AS HE

 

SPENT A GOOD BIT OF THE

 

1970S ON GEOGRAPHIC

 

ASSIGNMENTS IN THE

 

WILDERNESS.

 

>> BROADLY, MY LIFE CAN BE

 

DIVIDED INTO TWO SCENES,

 

WILDERNESS TRAVEL BY FOOT

 

AND BY BOAT, AND IT IS ABOUT

 

BEAUTY.

 

TWO YEARS OF MY LIFE WERE

 

SPENT ON THE PACIFIC CREST

 

HIKING TRAIL THAT GOES FROM

 

MEXICO TO CANADA, 2,600

 

MILES LONG.

 

I SPENT 14 MONTHS ON A BOOK

 

ABOUT CONOING, AND I ALSO

 

DID THE APPALACHAIN TRAVEL

 

AND DID REMOTE TRAVELING IN

 

TIERRA DEL FUEGO AND THE

 

OUTERMOST PART OF THE

 

AUSTRALIAN OUTBACK.

 

I WANTED TO TRAVEL.

 

MY PARENT HAD PREPARED ME

 

FOR THAT.

 

BUILDING A LIFE AROUND

 

TRAVEL WAS SOMETHING I

 

WANTED TO DO.

 

IT WAS FAR MORE LONELY AND

 

DANGEROUS THAN I THOUGHT.

 

DOCUMENTING PHOTOGRAPHY

 

REQUIRES YOU TO BE PRESENT

 

WITH YOUR SUBJECT.

 

YOU ARE NOT IN THE STUDIO OR

 

ANY KIND OF CONTROLED

 

ENVIRONMENT.

 

I HAVE BEEN PROFOUNDLY

 

SEASICK IN THE NORTH

 

ATLANTIC, I HAVE HAD MY BACK

 

BADLY BROKEN IN A

 

HANGGLIDING ACCIDENT.

 

I HAVE HAD MALARIA, I HAVE

 

BEEN MUGGED AND ROBBED.

 

TWICE I THOUGHT I WOULD DIE

 

IN AUSTRALIA IN A SMALL

 

PLANE FLIGHT I HAD ORGANIZED

 

WE WERE DIRECTLY IN PERIL,

 

AND TWICE I SURVIVED.

 

THE FIRST TIME I

 

PHOTOGRAPHED IT TO SETTLE

 

MYSELF, AND ALSO BECAUSE IT

 

WAS BEAUTIFUL.

 

I TOOK ALL OF THOSE TO BE

 

TESTS.

 

IF YOU ARE GOING TO LIVE THE

 

PHOTOGRAPHIC LIVE, THINGS

 

WILL HAPPEN AND YOU HAVE TO

 

TAKE IT ON, TRY TO AVOID IT

 

AND TRY TO SURVIVE IT.

 

AND WHILE YOU ARE DOING ALL

 

OF THAT, PHOTOGRAPH IT ALL.

 

I WAS MARRIED IN 1978.

 

I HAD MET MY WIFE IN 1976.

 

SHE WAS THE FIRST PERSON I

 

MET ON THE TRAIL FROM AND

 

FROM 1978 TO 1998 WE

 

TRAVELED TOGETHER.

 

>> BETWEEN ASSIGNMENTS, HE

 

DID WHAT HE ALWAYS WANTED TO

 

DO, ORGANIZE HIS WORK INTO A

 

SERIES OF BOOKS, INCLUDING

 

"STAY THIS MOMENT" AND

 

"SEEING GARDENS" AND "SAM

 

ABLES: THE PHOTOGRAPHIC

 

LIFE"

 

>> IN 1998 MY LIFE AND OUR

 

FAMILY'S LIFE CHANGED.

 

MY FATHER CAME DOWN WITH

 

ALZHEIMER'S.

 

THAT SAME FALL, MY WIFE WAS

 

DIAGNOSED WITH OVARIAN

 

CANCER AND IT MARKED THE

 

BEGINNING OF THE END OF THE

 

LIFE WE HAD KNOWN TRAVELING

 

TOGETHER AND DOING

 

ASSIGNMENTS.

 

>> ABLES FATHER SUCCUMBED,

 

BUT HIS WIFE SURVIVED.

 

IT WAS THEN HE DECIDED TO

 

WIND UP HIS LONG CAREER WITH

 

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC.

 

>> I DID A DIFFICULT

 

ASSIGNMENT ON THE LIFE

 

WITHIN THE JAPANESE IMPERIAL

 

PALACE.

 

THE AESTHETIC OF JAPAN IS

 

SOMETHING I HAVE LONG-LOVED.

 

BUT IT TURNED OUT WE HAD NO

 

ACCESS AND IT WAS ONE OF THE

 

MOST DIFFICULT ASSIGNMENT OF

 

MY LIFE.

 

>> HE WASN'T ALLOWED

 

ANYWHERE NEAR THE SELL

 

DONE-SEEN EMPEROR AND WAS

 

TOLD A GIANT PROJECTED TV

 

IMAGE WAS THE BEST HE COULD

 

DO.

 

>> ON THE LAST DAY OF THE

 

ASSIGNMENT I PHOTOGRAPHED

 

THE EMPEROR OF JAPAN,

 

SOMETHING I HAD BEEN TRYING

 

TO DO FOR A YEAR, JUST HE

 

AND HIS WIFE AND THEIR

 

DAUGHTER.

 

THEY WERE BIRD-WATCHING.

 

AND THAT WAS THE LAST

 

ASSIGNMENT I DID FOR

 

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC.

 

>> THOUGH HE HAS CUT BACK ON

 

HIS TRAVELS, HE IS STILL AN

 

ACTIVE PHOTOGRAPHER WITH

 

SEVERAL PROJECTS IN THE

 

WORKS.

 

>> I AM DOING A BOOK,

 

JAPANESE PHILOSOPHY OF

 

BEAUTY CALLED WABI SABI,

 

THINGS UNFINISHED, UNDONE.

 

IT IS ANTI--GORGEISM, TO

 

SOME EXTENT, COAXING BEAUTY

 

AND SEEING IT WHERE NO ONE

 

ELSE DOES.

 

I NEVER STOP TAKING A

 

PARTICULAR KIND OF PHOTO NO

 

ONE ELSE TOOK.

 

AND IT IS ABOUT BEAUTY.

 

>> CAN YOU IMAGINE ALL THE

 

BEAUTIFUL PLACES HE HAS SEEN

 

OVER THE YEARS?

 

BUT WE HAVEN'T GOT IT SO BAD

 

AROUND HERE.

 

WE HAVE MORE THAN 50,000

 

SURFACE TANKERS HERE AT

 

MAMMOTH CAVE NATIONAL PARK

 

AND THE WORLD'S LONGEST CAVE

 

DOWN BELONG.

 

IT IS A PHOTOGRAPHER'S

 

PARADISE.

 

UP NEXT, TIME TO REV UP THE

 

ENGINES AND LOOK AT THE

 

ANTIQUE CARS, MUSCLE CARS,

 

STREET RODS, CLASSIC SHOW

 

CARS, ALL GATHERED IN

 

SOMERSET KENTUCKY ONCE A

 

MONTH FROM APRIL THROUGH

 

OCTOBER.

 

>> THE EVENT STARTED IN

 

2004.

 

A FEW CARS HAD BEEN TO

 

SOMERSET, WE LIKE OLD CARS

 

AND GO TO CAR SHOWS.

 

WE WERE LOOKING FOR A PLACE

 

TO DO IT IN OUR OWN

 

COMMUNITY.

 

WE KNEW WE COULD BUILD A

 

SUCCESS IN THIS AREA AND FOR

 

SEVERAL STATES AROUND US.

 

WE HAVE THE DOWNTOWN

 

DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND

 

TOGETHER WITH THEM AND THE

 

TOURISM COMMISSION WE SET TO

 

BUILD A SUCCESSFUL CAR

 

CRUISE.

 

PEOPLE WANT SOMETHING GOOD

 

TO DO.

 

IN THE WORLD WE LIVE IN,

 

PEOPLE LOOK FOR A GOOD,

 

CLEAN FAMILY-ORIENTED EVENT

 

TO ATTEND AND THEY WILL

 

DRIVE FOR MILES TO DO IT.

 

WE KNEW WE COULD GET LOCAL

 

PARTICIPATION OUT OF OUR

 

BUSINESSES TO RESPOND

 

SUPPORT US MONETARY-WISE AND

 

WE WOULDN'T NEED TO CHARGE

 

FAMILIES TO COME HERE.

 

IT IS INCREDIBLE TO SEE

 

FAMILIES COMING FROM 19 OR

 

20 DIFFERENT STATES ON THE

 

EAST COAST, THEY KNOW IT

 

WON'T COST THEM ANYTHING TO

 

HAVE A GOOD TIME HERE.

 

WE WANTED TO BUILD A GOOD

 

PLACE FOR A FAMILY EVENT

 

THAT CAN BE ENJOYED, WHICH

 

IS SUMMER NIGHT'S CUISE IS

 

ALL ABOUT.

 

LAST MONTH WAS A RECORD

 

BREAKER OF 1311 CARS.

 

WE HAD TREMENDOUS SUCCESS IN

 

CAR QUALITY AND CAR COUNT.

 

WE HAVE MANY PEOPLE THAT

 

VISIT SUMMER NIGHT'S CRUISE

 

AT LEAST ONE TIME.

 

WE PROBABLY HAVE IN THE

 

NEIGHBORHOOD OF 5,000 CARS

 

THAT HAVE BEEN AT LEAST ONE

 

TIME IN THE FOUR YEARS IT

 

HAS BEEN IN EXISTENCE, WHICH

 

IS AN INCREDIBLE STATISTIC

 

FOR AN EVENT THAT IS ONLY

 

FOUR YEARS OLD.

 

EVERY TIME THE PEOPLE SEE

 

OUR PEOPLE IN THE YELLOW

 

SHIRTS, OUR TEAM MEMBERS,

 

THEY SAY THAT THE

 

ORGANIZATION IS INCREDIBLE,

 

HOW DO YOU HANDLE THIS MANY

 

CARS, THEY JUST SAY IT IS AN

 

INCREDIBLE ORGANIZATION,

 

WHICH IS A PLUS FOR US.

 

IT MEANS WE ARE DOING OUR

 

JOB RIGHT, KEEPING THE CARS

 

IN SHAPE.

 

WE ARE PRETTY STIFF AT THE

 

GATES AND WE DO IT FOR A

 

REASON, TO BE A CUT ABOVE

 

THE REST.

 

WE HAVE DONE A LOT OF FOLKS

 

FROM MANY DIFFERENT STATES.

 

ONE GUY GOES HOME TO ALABAMA

 

AFTER HAVING A GREAT TIME

 

AND HE BRINGS TWO OR THREE

 

GUYS BACK.

 

TODAY WE HAVE 15 PEOPLE IN

 

OUR GROUP FROM ALABAMA

 

TODAY, FROM WEST VIRGINIA,

 

FROM CANADA LAST MONTH,

 

SOUTH DAKOTA, YOU NAME IT.

 

>> I WOULD COME EVERY MONTH

 

IF I COULD.

 

IT IS A BEAUTIFUL TOWN BE,

 

UNBELIEVABLE CARS, GREAT

 

PEOPLE.

 

WE DECIDED TO DRIVE IT IN

 

INSTEAD OF TRAILER IT.

 

IT IS A 1965 MUSS TAPE

 

CONVERTIBLE, ALL ORIGINAL.

 

WE CAME ON A 515-MILE DRIVE.

 

>> WE HAVE AN EHAVEN'T ON

 

FRIDAY NIGHT, SOME OF THE

 

LOCAL BUSINESSES

 

,.

 

ON SATURDAY MORNING WE HAVE

 

A SEAT MORNING FUN-RUN.

 

WE MEET AND THE LOCAL

 

BUSINESSES PROVIDE BREAKFAST.

 

THEN WE LEAVE FROM THERE TO

 

CRUISE AREAS OF INTEREST.

 

ONE MIGHT BE TO A DRAG

 

STRIP.

 

AFTER THE SATURDAY MORNING

 

FUN-RUN, THE SHOW AND SHINE

 

PORTION WHEN THE CARS COME

 

TO DOWNTOWN AND ARE

 

DISPLAYED FOR VIEWING BY THE

 

PUBLIC.

 

WE USUALLY HAVE IN EXCESS OF

 

A THOUSAND CARS.

 

THEY WILL COME IN AND RAISE

 

YOUR HOODS AND BASICALLY IT

 

IS AN ALL-DAY CAR SHOW FROM

 

2:00 O'CLOCK UNTIL 8:00

 

O'CLOCK.

 

WE HAVE THOUSANDS OF SPEC

 

STAY FORCE THAT COME TO VIEW

 

THE CARS.

 

YOU WILL SEE ALL KINDS OF

 

CARS, HEAR ALL KINDS OF

 

STORIES.

 

THE STORY WE HEAR MOST

 

OFTEN, THEY LOVE THE

 

LOCATION OF THE CRUISE.

 

IT IS NOT IN A BIG PARKING

 

LOT OR IN A FIELD, IT IS

 

AROUND HISTORIC BUILDINGS.

 

WE GET MORE COMMENTS ABOUT

 

THAT, WHICH SETS THIS CRUISE

 

APART FROM JUST ABOUT EVERY

 

OTHER CRUISE IN THE COUNTRY.

 

SPEC STAY FORCE ARE FREE TO

 

WANDER ABOUT WITHOUT

 

WORRYING ABOUT TRAFFIC, CARS

 

ARE PARKED UP AND DOWN THE

 

STREETS, EVERYTHING IS

 

REALLY NICE.

 

YOU WILL SEE EVERYTHING,

 

FROM THE ANTIQUE TO THE

 

CLASSICS TO THE CUSTOMS.

 

YOU WILL SEE

 

PICK-INSTRUCTION,

 

LOW-RIDERS, YOU NAME IT, IT

 

IS HERE.

 

IF HE AT THE END OF THAT

 

TIME WE GO BACK TO THE

 

CRUISE PORTION WHERE THE

 

CARS ARE LINED UP AND LED

 

DOWNTOWN AND BACK TO THE

 

STRIP, HIGHWAY 27.

 

THAT IS A SIX-LANE HIGHWAY.

 

THERE ARE A THOUSAND PEOPLE

 

LINED UP TO WATCH THEM

 

CRUISE AROUND.

 

THEY MAY CRUISE FROM 8:00

 

O'CLOCK UNTIL MIDNIGHT.

 

IT HAS REALLY BECOME A

 

FAVORITE PART OF THE CRUISE

 

FOR EVERYBODY.

 

WE HAVE BEEN TOLD IT IS IT

 

NOT ONE OF THE LARGEST CAR

 

CRUISES IN THE NATION.

 

>> IT LOOKS LIKE WE HAVE RUN

 

OUT OF TIME FOR THIS EDITION

 

OF "KENTUCKY LIFE" I SAY

 

THANK YOU FOR WATCHING.

 

WE LEAVE YOU WITH SOME

 

SCENES FROM MAMMOTH CAVE,

 

NATIONAL PARK.

 

WE WILL SEE YOU NEXT TIME.