Sunday, October 16, 2011

Gatlinburg area in the Fall

We enjoyed a few days in the Gatlinburg area to see the great colors.  There's something about the mountains - maybe it's my heritage - as soon as I get there I feel the stresses ease away and a smile come to my face.  We took off Thursday morning and came back Saturday.  We enjoyed the beautiful colors in the Cades Cove area and ran into some high school classmates, Lynn Merritt Huggins & Susan Ray Chaffin, taking photographs the same time and place as Jeff.  There were lots of deer and turkeys.  I saw some one else posting photos of bears this weekend so we may have just missed those this trip.  Some years we have seen bears each time we go to the mountains but that wasn't this year!

We ate at some of our favorite area restaurants, including the Best Italian and the Park Grill.  At this time of the year lodging can be hard to find on short notice, so we ended up in Pigeon Forge at the Comfort Inn.  The Comfort Inn was ok - clean, nice breakfast, good size rooms and a nice gas fireplace.  They had some power issues, but it was not a big issue for us.  The Best was a good family restaurant-type experience as always.  The Park Grill is always a good stop with its unmatched salad bar (well, matched only at their sister restaurant, The Peddler) and dishes.  Jeff enjoyed the NYStrip & Trout combo while I had a prime rib which I mistakenly ordered well done - I don't know why I did that but I'll blame my order error for making it a little too dry.  

As always, I am thankful for our little getaway to the mountains.  It reminds me of our conversation about where we wanted to retire.  For me, it was always the mountains or the seaside.  For Jeff, it was the Southwest.  uh oh.  incompatible places... so we decided we would just travel to all of these.  So far... so good.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Tuesday, July 29, 2010

July 29, 2010

We awoke and had a breakfast and headed out from the RV Park. Our devotional was from Mark 13. We drove across Missouri throughout the day. It was another sunny, hot day. The trip was quite uneventful today – spent the time catching up on reading some RV magazines. We stopped off for lunch at a Chipotle Mexican Grill. As we entered Iowa we stopped at the Welcome Center.

We headed up Interstate 29 and stopped off for the night at the KOA in Onawa Blue Lake. The lady working the office here looks so much like my friend, Grace! We walked around the RV Park and the shore of Blue Lake. We saw a child driving a funny laid back go cart and struggling to reach the pedals so some of us pitched in ideas and he was soon riding better with a pillow to prop him up! We did buy postcards for the kids from church in Missouri and I’ll address them tonight so they can get in the mail. The kids are so precious and we want to stay in touch with them during our ministry trip this summer.

Dinner was some penne arrabiata for Peggy and Chicken Bake for Jeff. He went to the camp store and got dessert – an ice cream. Lovely sunset over Blue Lake. Trying hard to get an internet signal – we couldn’t get one at the last camp and so far it’s not too promising here either!

Monday, July 28, 2010

Monday, July 28, 2010

Clarksville, TN to Montgomery City (Danville), MO

Woke up, cooked some breakfast and waited for Joey to bring the medicine. He got there about 9:00 and had some breakfast and helped us shut down the RV for travel. We did devotional of Mark 12. Then we headed out toward South Dakota!

Drive went well and we read some more Biggest Loser plan and some RV magazines. The weather was nice and quite hot – 80’s-90’s. We stopped off at Marion, Illinois at Tequila Mexican Restaurant for lunch – nice place. We tried some quacamole since it was one of the Biggest Loser’s “Superfoods.” Didn’t like it a lot – but this seemed like it may have been straight out of a jar so we’ll try it again sometime by making it on our own or having it freshly made somewhere. Picked up some windex, cereal and milk at a nearby Sav-a-Lot and hit the road again. We drove further to Cohokia Mounds, Illinois just east of St. Louis, Missouri.

The Cohokia Mounds are reportedly the site of the largest city north of Mexico prior to the 1800’s with a population of Native Americans estimated at 10,000-20,000. There are many mounds still there, including the largest, Monks Mound, which we climbed. It’s only 100 feet but seemed higher! The settlement covered about 22 acres (if I recall properly). It was a blessing to visit the site and understand a little more about those who were the early residents of our country’s lands. We watched the show, briefly toured the museum, walked a little of the property, saw the ‘stockade’ walls that are reconstructed and climbed the Monks Mound (so named because Trappist French Monks built a chapel on one of the levels at one time). This place was reminiscent of the Mayan pyramids BUT did not use stone – just earth. There is also a site similar to Stonehenge which used only wooden poles (as part of Stonehenge does) – it has been reconstructed and termed “Woodhenge.” What was the use of this (sun dial? Astronomical calendar? Other?) and how did primitive people know such exacting measures? How were the huge mounds built – so like Stonehenge and Salisbury areas in England. There clearly was someone who saw the ‘big picture’ of the globe before us with our modern instruments. We have been taught to be so biased that anyone before us was inferior intellectually – my observations continue to reinforce OUR lack of understanding about what has come before in terms of civilization.

We drove through St. Louis, MO so we won’t face that at rush hour in the morning. The arch, as always, is lovely as it stands so large and represents the “Gateway to the West.” We decided to drive to Danville, MO to Lazy Day Campground. It’s a nice clean campground with whimsical paintings here and there (the ladies restroom has mama-sized ladies in bathing suits painted on the doors – front side and back) and the showers are covered with bamboo doors. They have a ‘patriotic wall’ where people leave their own comments around some words from Lee Greenwood’s “I’m Proud to be an American.” Song. They have some cute comments on their guest guide like:

“Human clothing, towels, etc….do not grow on trees”

“Remember the movie Deliverance? I wouldn’t trespass if I was you.”

“Please pick up after your pet…it’s embarrassing to pack up and move out with the whole park watching you.”

We had a nice dinner of Chicken Bake and carrots. Jeff talked with a neighbor from St. Louis (former navy man and photographer for Emerson Electric) for awhile about the rally held here for RV’ers last week and they did some photography of a pretty sunset and observed Saturn.

We showered in the RV (Thank God for the warranty-covered shower repair) and had a great, relaxing night at the RV Park in Danville, Missouri. We could not get on the www here but enjoyed the level, unshaded lot (which allows satellite tv access so we can catch up on the news).

June 27, 2010

Sunday, July 27, 2010

Cookeville to Clarksville, TN

Left home at about 3 p.m. after church and loading the RV and having lunch with Elizabeth and Alex and stopping over to see Gran and Joey.

Stopped off at Baxter, TN RV/Catfish Fishing Park to ‘dump’ since we weren’t able to do that after last week’s trip to and from the Youth Camp in Robbinsville, NC. Seemed like a fairly nice place but one of the restaurant workers (where you pay) was somewhat surly. We bought two small packages of Johnny Almond toffee cashews and cinammon almonds – good. The man who helped us was quite nice and we got finished and headed on our way. The camp had a worker who was getting married on-site today and maybe that added to their stress there.

Nice drive and decided to stop at Clarksville for the night at the Clarksville RV Campground– only a couple of hours in but we are on the way. The campground was nice, very clean, level sites, some permanent residents, quiet with some highway noise, active pool, and a nice owner. We realized that the medicine (Humira) was still at home in the refrigerator. After scurrying about to find someone to bring it to us or meet us…

* Jennifer Langford is coming to Nashville but about 12 hours too late

* Darrell Langford could met us tonight at Silver Point

* Amy Puckett Julian or Gina Thompson could bring it to us in the morning if we can drive back into Nashvillle and meet them at the Cummins offices

* Ahhhh…. Joey will drive it down in the morning to us

Got online and rated the park.

Nice night with Jeff enjoying Beef Stew and Peggy having Penne Arrabiatta. We walked around the park, read some Biggest Loser plan. A tornado hit near grandma and grandpa in Racine, WI area.