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Tuesday, September 26th, we woke up to rain. It had rained on and off all night, and it was still raining lightly. Hurricane Irma had moved north to the point where it was just off the coast of South Carolina, and even though it was a couple hundred miles off shore it was still close enough to bring rain. We went out after lunch, when we thought it had slacked off a bit, and stopped at a laundry to wash some rugs. We hoped to do some caching, but it was still very wet and occasionally raining. After the rugs were done we stopped at Walmart and a couple of other stores, then went back to the coach. We had planned on visiting with David again tonight, but I didn't want to have to drive 20 miles back home in the dark and rain, so we called and said we weren't going to come over tonight. We had dinner and watched TV until bedtime.
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Thursday, September 28th, we went out after lunch to a Kroger grocery store to pick up a few things that we couldn't get at Wally World. We also did three geocaches that happened to be in the area. We spent the afternoon at home, getting ready for a family BBQ tonight. About 6:00 David, David Jr., Autumn and Serenity came over. We visited for a while, then did some burgers on the grill. Everyone had a great time, we took some pictures and talked. They left around 9:00, we watched a little TV and then went to bed. It was great to be able to spend some time with family that we don't see very often.
Friday, September 29th, another travel day. We were packed up and on the road early, about 9:30, heading south. We went about 190 miles south, into North Carolina, to a little town called Four Oaks. We stopped on the way at a rest stop to get a geocache, our first in North Carolina, and checked into the Four Oaks RV park around 3:00. We are only staying for one night, so we didn't even unhook the car. We just relaxed, had dinner, watched some TV and went to bed. Saturday was another travel day with a one night stand at the end. We were going about 135 miles south to Florence, South Carolina. On the way we stopped at both a North and South Carolina rest area to pick up some geocaches. We also needed South Carolina, so we got our first cache today in that state. We arrived at the Swamp Fox Campground around 2:00 and got settled in for our one night stay. We had to unhook the car because the space was too small to leave it connected, so we drove into Florence just to look around and get some caches. We ended up with four caches for the day and spent about an hour and a half exploring before going back to the coach. We had dinner and watched some TV. Around 9:30 there was a banging on the door. When I looked out the window I saw that it was a drunk guy from across the road. This was the same black guy that had been bugging us when we first checked in and were trying to get set up. He kept asking if he could do anything for us to get some money. I gave him a couple bucks and sent him on his way. He was only a little drunk then, by night time he was wasted. I yelled at him to home and not come back or I would call the cops. We didn't hear anything more from him.
Sunday, October 1st, we were again on the road about 10:30, continuing south towards Hollywood, South Carolina, a small suburb of Charleston, South Carolina. We arrived at the Lake Aire RV Park around 1:30 and got settled into our spot. Charleston, as well as our next destination, Savannah, Georgia, have been on our “wish list” of places to see since our first full year of caching in 2006. We had scheduled to visit them in the spring of 06, after we had spent the winter in Florida. However, we ended unexpectedly spending a couple of extra weeks in the Monaco Coach service facility in Florida getting warranty work done, so we had to skip Savannah and Charleston in order to get to a scheduled rally in Branson, Missouri on time. After we got the coach set up we went out to do a Walmart run and pick up a local Sunday paper. After we got back to the coach we had dinner and watched TV until bedtime.
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We then drove across Charleston to the island of Mt. Pleasant, where we spent a couple of hours exploring, looking at houses and doing some geocaching, getting two new finds and one DNF. Mt. Pleasant was founded shortly after Charleston, around 1790, and now has a population of over 70,000. It is mostly a bedroom suburb with a lot of dining and night life. Just over the bridge is Patriot's Point, a large park containing many military monuments. It is also where the USS Yorktown is berthed as a museum ship, along with a WW-II era destroyer and submarine. South of Mt. Pleasant is Fort Moultrie and just off shore is Fort Sumter, where the first shots of the Civil War were fired. An inn in Mt. Pleasant was the site of the meeting where the declaration of secession for South Carolina was signed. After exploring Mt. Pleasant we fought the rush hour traffic and headed back to the coach. We had dinner and watched TV until bedtime.
Wednesday, October 4th, we left the coach about 12:30 and drove into Charleston for lunch. We drove to a little hole in the wall north of the main part of Charleston, out in the seaport and docks area, called Martha Lou's Kitchen. When we were at the Elks Lodge on Monday we had asked a couple of people where we could go for good, authentic southern soul food, and both people came up with the same place, Martha Lou's. The next day I was reading some of the visitor books on Charleston that we have picked up and three of the books mentioned Martha Lou's. It is a rundown, pink building with a bunch of graffiti style art on the outside. Inside it is the size of our motor home living room, with a half dozen tables with everything looking like it came from Goodwill, or the alley. The menu has what is available for each day of the week, a choice of various meats and special sides for each day. Almost everyday featured fried chicken and a fish, a couple of the days featured “Mystery Meat” for the day. There was one price, $14 which included a meat and three sides and a drink. I had today's fish, which was Whiting, along with baked mac and cheese, corn bread and bread pudding. Jackie had a fried pork chop, collard greens, baked mac and cheese, and bread pudding. We both had sweet tea, which was REALLY sweet. The tastes of the food were outstanding. The corn bread was a little overdone, but very tasty and sweet. My fish was perfect and Jackie's pork chop was tasty, if also a little overdone. If you want the real feel of the south and end up in Charleston, Martha Lou's is a MUST go.
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Thursday, October 5th, another travel day. We left Hollywood about 10:30 and started towards Hardeeville, South Carolina, about 80 miles south. After a fuel stop we arrived at the Lake Jasper RV Park around 12:30 and quickly got settled into a nice spot. Although we are staying in South Carolina still, we are only about 15 miles north of Savannah, Georgia, another of our bucket list places to see. We are going to be here for four days. After we got the basics set up for the coach we packed up our laundry and headed to a nearby laundromat to do our wash. When we were done we stopped at Walmart for some supplies and went back to the coach. We got everything put away and finished setting up, had a nice chili relleno for dinner, and then watched some TV until bedtime. We do have some concerns with weather as a late season tropical storm has emerged in the Caribbean which is heading north and is expected to make U.S. landfall by Sunday, somewhere on the Gulf Coast. Current tracking shows that it will just miss us to the west, we are keeping our fingers crossed.
Friday, October 6th, we left the coach after lunch, about 12:30 and drove the 15 miles south to Savannah, Georgia. Our first stop was the Savannah Welcome Center where we got onto a city tour trolley. This was a great decision as the ninety minute tour covered the entire two square mile historical district of Savannah, so we got to see all the sights and also hear some of the history and trivia surrounding the city. Our tour guide and driver Wendy was a Savannah native and had lived here all of her life. She was knowledgeable and funny and we really enjoyed the trip. Like Charleston, Savannah has been a major city since colonial days and has both Revolutionary and Civil war histories. It sets 20 miles north of the Atlantic on the Savannah River, which is navigable by large ships, making Savannah one of the largest and busiest East coast seaports. The population is about 140,000 with about 350,000 in the metro area. Savannah is the home of the Savannah College of Art and Design, which is one of the best, and most expensive, art and design schools in the world. Their campus is spread all over the city, mostly using restored and remodeled buildings from the 18thand 19th centuries. On the tour it seemed like every street had a SCAD building or dorm.
One of the interesting features of the city are the squares, green spaces around which the old buildings and houses were built. Originally the city had 25 squares, but three were lost in the 50's due to urban development. This has stopped as the city now has extremely strict rules regarding the historic district which put a stop to new construction for the most part. The driver pointed out lots of locations from two of the more famous movies shot in Savannah, Forrest Gump and Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. The Midnight movie was a true story and a very interesting film that we are going to have to find and see again. We drove by the Williams mansion a couple of times in the tour. The tour also had several “characters” who came on board at various stops to do short presentations, including Forrest himself, a pirate and a slave women. After the tour was over we took the car and drove around, going back past some of the areas that were of interest to us. It was a bit of an on and off rainy day, so we didn't walk around too much. We did get two geocaches, our first Georgia caches. About 5:00 we started back towards home, where we had dinner and relaxed the rest of the evening.
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After lunch we spent the next two hours walking around downtown Savannah, going into shops and exploring. After we were done with the City Market area we walked down to the riverfront and did some more shopping. While we were walking around we also did a couple of geocaches. About 3:30 we walked back to the car, soaking wet from the humidity, and tired, but we had fun. We got in the car, fired up the A/C and drove the 17 miles downriver to the Tybee Island area. Tybee Island is a resort area located on a barrier island that sets right next to the mouth of the Savannah River. We did some drive-by tourism, looked around and did a couple more geocaches. They were having their annual Pirate Fest celebration this weekend, but it looked way to crowded and it was getting late, so we skipped it and headed back north to the RV park. Once we got back to the coach we chilled for the rest of the evening.
Sunday, October 8th, we had a relaxing morning with the newspaper and coffee. We left the coach after lunch, about 12:30, and took a drive down to Hilton Head Island. Hilton Head is a barrier island on the south coast of South Carolina and is well known as a haven for the rich and famous. Lots of high end hotels and condos and expensive beach houses. We only spent an hour or so driving around looking at a few houses. Unless you own a house or stay at a hotel you can't get near the beach, so we only got a glimpse of the ocean. This area got devastated a year ago when Hurricane Matthew scored a direct hit, but there was little visible damage today. We did a couple of geocaches then started back towards home. On the way back to the RV park we stopped and Jackie got a haircut and we did some grocery shopping. Once we got back to the coach we relaxed the rest of the night.
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Tuesday, October 10th, we had a fairly easy day. We did some chores in the morning and I made us some muffaletas for lunch. The last grocery we were in the other day had the olive salad that is essential to making the sandwich, which also has salami, provolone and several types of ham. It is all then pressed and warmed in a sandwich press. They came out great and we had leftovers for dinner too. After lunch we went out to do a little exploring and caching. We are parked halfway between the small towns of Hilliard and Callahan, Florida. Although the stats show Hilliard with about 2,500 population and Callahan with about 1,200, Hilliard appeared to be withering while Callahan looked much more thriving, with new stores and nicer homes. We were able to get eight new geocache finds, and one DNF, and got our first Florida caches. We are now at 49 states we have cached in and we are not likely to get the magic 50 any time soon as the one state we have not cached in is West Virginia, and I am not sure when, if ever, we will get back in that area of the country again. About 3:00 we called it a day and went back to the coach and relaxed the rest of the afternoon and evening.
Wednesday, October 11th, we left the coach about 11:00 and headed into Jacksonville for a day of exploring and geocaching. We have been to Jacksonville before, but it was in early 2006 when we made our last trip to Florida with the coach. Our first stop was a downtown restaurant called the Metro Diner. This place had been a Diners, Drive-ins and Drives feature and we like to go to DDD restaurants when we can. There are actually three locations in Jacksonville, but the one we went to was the one Guy Fieri went to on his visit. It is a very small place with limited parking, but we found a space on the street right next to it and got a table right away. I had the meatloaf plate, which had mashed potatoes and squash, and two big pieces of the best meatloaf I have had in a while. Jackie had the steak omelet, which was huge and stuffed with shaved steak just like they use in a Philly Cheesesteak. She said everything tasted wonderful. The menu was such that I could go back every day for a week and try something new each time. Great place.
After lunch we set out to do some geocaching. I selected a random geocache that was on the map and located near the downtown area as our first cache. We went to the cache location, which was in an industrial area just off the riverfront and downtown. We found the cache after a short search and were signing the log when a guy came out of a building across the street and came up to us wondering what we were doing. It was not an upset type question, but more a curious one. We explained we were geocaching and he told us that he and the couple other guys who had seen us figured that's what it was. He was familiar, but didn't cache himself. He then told us that the building across the street was part the company he worked for called Sally Corporation. That didn't mean anything to us, so he explained that they built robots, that's how he started the explanation. He said that they gave tours on Tuesdays and Thursdays and maybe we could come back tomorrow for a tour. We told him that we were leaving in the morning, but appreciated the offer. We talked a little about our lifestyle and full timing. He then said, “Well, why don't you drive around to the front to the building and I'll give the nickle tour today.” We figured, what the hell, I like robots, why not.
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Thursday, October 12th, another travel day. We had a long ride today, about 230 miles, so we got an early start. We were on the road at 10:00, found our old friend Interstate 10, and started west. Shortly after passing Tallahassee, the Florida Capitol, we crossed into the Central Time Zone, getting an hour back. We arrived at the Alliance Hill RV Resort near Marianna, Florida, about 2:30 local time and got settled into a nice spot for a three night stay. Marianna is a small town of about 5,000 located 60 miles west of Tallahassee and 50 miles north of Panama City, Florida.
We are now done with our southbound travel and heading west, beginning our trip back to our “home” in Nevada. This marks a good point to close out this chapter and get it published. We still have about six weeks of adventures before we get home, so stayed tuned for more. Until the next time, remember to treasure your friends. They are people who know you really well and like you anyway. See ya soon.
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