Showing posts with label cliffs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cliffs. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

🚙2017 January 31, Tuesday, Day Trip to Guntersville

We left home around 9:00 A.M., stopping at Helping Hands Clinic for a B-12 shot.
We stopped at Foodland to get a Diet Coke and a Diet Mt Dew canned drink out of the vending machine.
Next, we stopped at Dollar General for a package of Fig Newtons made with real fruit and no high-fructose corn syrup, only 110 calories.
Being later in the morning, traffic was not too bad as we rode north-west on I565 to 231 NW into Guntersville.
Our first stop was at the small Guntersville Airport to visit the Homer B. Wilson Vintage Museum, but no one was there.

Glover Hotel
Built in 1933 by Campbell Wallace Glover, it was sold in the 1950s and used as the Department of Pensions and Securities for 15 years.  In 1987, it was sold to George Kappler, and he opened a restaurant that is now for sale.


As we rode through Guntersville, we noticed that many of the old store buildings had been remodeled and were occupied. The Glover Hotel (built around 1950) was up for sale.
Abraham Lincoln Display Timeline
We rode to 1215 Rayburn Ave to the Guntersville Museum & Cultural Center (once the Rock Armory)
The museum is a unique historical setting featuring both permanent collections and current exhibits. The museum is free to visit and is open to the public Tuesday through Friday, 10:00 A.M.– 4:00 P.M., and Saturday and Sunday, 1:00 P.M.– 4:00 P.M.

The door is locked from the inside, and you have to ring a bell for service.
You are greeted by a museum curator, who provides a brief history of the museum, the location of each exhibit, and informs you that you are welcome to visit all day if you wish.
Once inside, the walls were covered with plaques about the history of Guntersville.
 A boat was on display that represented all the activities one can do on Lake Guntersville. We saw Crusader, the Mechanical wonder Horse on which many a child had ridden. We saw a sign advertising "Bargain Days every Tues and Wednesday. Adm "10 & 15 cents" including tax, along with adjoining theater seats.
We saw an old spinning wheel, a piano, a trophy from the Boat Race, wooden benches, a character reading machine, a fire hose cart, and a cardboard cutout of Will Rogers (he is the grandson of John Gunter, a namesake of Guntersville's).
The next rooms were TVA and the making of the land. This one is for the birds, offering a glimpse into the past with Native American artifacts, local art, and notable sons and daughters of Guntersville. 
The grand room was a display about the life of Abraham Lincoln, featuring a cardboard, life-size statue of Abraham and a sculpted head inside a glass case.

We stopped to visit the Culbert Cabin, located next door to the Guntersville Museum, and across the street was the Guntersville Theater.
Guntersville Theater
Chicken Plate (3 chicken fingers, coleslaw, biscuits, a Chocolate chip cookie, and a drink) 
I shared a chicken dinner with Colonel Sanders at KFC
We traveled along 227 into Guntersville State Park, passing through Short Creek, Hurricane Creek, Town Creek, and Minky Creek. We stopped at the lagoon in the state park to visit the donkeys, emus, goats, and ducks.
We stopped along the waterways to take pictures of Mabrey's Rock of Ages, Guntersville Lake, and the waterfowl. (saw no Eagles)
Mabrey's Rock of Ages
There were hundreds of ducks bobbing in the water
We stopped to take a picture of a deer. He looked right at us, turned around, and began grazing. He knew we would not shoot him.
We continued climbing the mountain to the top, stopping at the State Park Lodge and chalets overlooking Lake Guntersville.
I walked down to a rest area to take pictures of the view below. There, I met a woman eating her lunch. She said her husband had gone fishing and she was going to enjoy the day at the park.
She said that before the tornado came through this area, you couldn't see the RV Park or the camping Area below. I also saw a couple Zip-lining. 
View of Campground from the Guntersville Lodge atop the mountain
Our last stop before heading home was Bucks Pocket State Park, located on Sand Mountain in the community of Oak Grove. 
The road and picnic area had seen better days. The fencing around the cliffs was good, and the view was fantastic. Currently, the thousands of trees below are bare, but in the fall, they will be vibrant with color.
Sunset over the Rocket at the Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville 
The sun was setting as we traveled into Huntsville, and by the time we reached Athens, it was pitch black.
We could see the stars above and a crescent moon.
We ordered a to-go meal from Taco Bell.
It had been a beautiful day, not too hot or too cold, a perfect day for traveling and hiking in the State Parks. 

Museum that we have visited

  Dates & Places of Museums   1988 Dec 3-4, The Jack Daniels Distillery 133 Lynchburg Hwy, Lynchburg, TN 1989 Dec 22, Kennedy Space Ce...