
Alejandro Batasav, from left, Bar Tolo, Jose Hernandes and Jose Ortiz wait for the 6:55 p.m. bus at the Cave City Greyhound bus station. They are originally from Mexico, but now work with tobacco in Ky.

Atlanta native, Ricardo Crooke, transports Greyhound bus passengers through Cave City every day on his bus route. 'It's hard work,' Crooke said.

Emanuel Hostetler rested on his suitcase as he waited with his wife and daughter for their bus to arrive, at the Cave City Greyhound bus station. The Amish family were traveling to Louisville to obtain their 13-month-old daughter's birth certificate.

Greyhound bus ticket agent, Opal Robertson, center, gets into a discussion with two Amish men, John Yoder, left, and Emanuel Hostetler. right, while they wait for their bus. 'I love it, I love the people,' Robertson said about her job. Roberston has been working at the station for almost 14 years.

Billy Paul Logsdon, a frequent visitor to the Greyhound bus station, takes a break from visiting with people to take a nap. 'There's always something interesting here,' Logsdon said. As a retired resident of Cave City, he often divides his time between the bus station and the park, where he sits and talks to old friends.