Friday, January 23, 2015

2011~ May 26-May 30, Trip to Ladson, South Carolina with siblings


Day 2: Thursday, May 26, 2011
My siblings arrived at my house between 6:30 and 7:00 A.M.
My sibling cannot start the day without her two cups of coffee, so we stopped at McDonald's to get them.
Two hours later, we stopped at Cracker Barrel in Gardendale for breakfast. 
I ordered one scrambled egg, with sourdough toast, and bacon.
One of my siblings ordered a kid's pancake meal, and the other sibling ordered bisque and gravy.
I drove South on I-65 toward Birmingham, then turned east on I-20 toward Atlanta, Georgia.
We make several restroom stops and stop somewhere in Augusta, GA, at a BP Gas station to fill up. 
One of my siblings paid for the gas.
The trip took nine hours and thirty-eight minutes.

We arrive at apartment 3104, 9345 Blue House Rd, Ladson, SC, at 5:30 P.M. Eastern time. 
Another sibling meets us at the gate.
She took us to the apartment where we would be staying.  

The living room
Our apartment has two king-size beds, two full baths, a full kitchen, a living room, a sitting room, a computer room, a washer, a dryer, and all kinds of cookware and dishes.

When we had finished unloading the van and taking our luggage to the apartment. We went to our siblings for dinner.
Our sibling had prepared tri pasta and Chicken salad (chicken breast, Granny Smith apples, grapes, mayonnaise).
Her husband had to work late, so we rode to North Charleston Wal-Mart Super Center Store #3367 4920 Centre Pointe Dr. North Charleston, S. C. 29418 (843) (740-1112)
We bought Dominoes ($24.95), a Yahtzee game ($7.95), 4 bottles of Mt. Dew ($2), cheese dip, chips, and wine coolers. 
The four of us played Yahtzee, ate cheese dip, and drank wine coolers. 
We tried to play Mexican train (with the dominoes), but everyone had forgotten how to play.

It had been a long day, so I took a hot shower and crawled into bed. 

Day 3: Friday, May 27, 2011
We all loaded into the van, and I drove us to downtown Charleston,
South Carolina.
I parked the van at Charleston's Visitor Center located at 375 Meeting Street, Charleston, S.C. 
We went inside to get information about downtown, trolley rides, and the food area.
It was Memorial Day weekend, and there was an Art Festival in one of the parks, so downtown was crowded.

I met Bill Fetzer and his puppet, Jerry McGee. They greet and entertain visitors from the South Carolina Aquarium, Children's Museum, and the Visitor Center.
His puppet, Jerry McGee, reminded me of Howdy Doody.
I said I would love to have my picture taken with him.
However, my siblings were nowhere to be found to take my picture.
They had walked to the gift shop.
I had walked in the opposite direction to look at the art.
Bill Fetzer kindly let me take a picture of Jerry McGee and himself.

I thanked him and went in search of my lost siblings.
Bill Fetzer and his puppet, Jerry McGee
We walked down Meeting Street, where we met two women. 
We said we were hungry, and a woman walking next to us told us, "Just keep walking until you come to Market Street; you will find several restaurants in that area." 
We stopped at Bubba Gump's, 99 S. Market St, Charleston, S. C. 29401 (843-723-5665) to eat lunch.
Bubba Gump's is one of my favorite places to eat.
One of my siblings and I ordered a hamburger, she ordered fries, and I ordered grilled broccoli (cost $7.99 and iced tea $2.50).
My other two siblings both ordered a Texas Cajun Chicken Sandwich for $9.99 with lemon water.
(Chicken breast, crisp bacon, pepper jack cheese, guacamole, one toasted bun with fries.)
It was a lovely day, so we sat outside and watched people stroll by. 

When I went inside to use the restroom, I saw a framed suit from Forrest Gump and Jennie's wedding dress hanging on the wall.
Greenbow, Alabama, a Stop Forrest Stop
We paid for our meal and began walking toward the Waterfront Pier on the Atlantic Ocean. 
Several swings were sitting along the pier, so we all sat down and enjoyed the cool breeze blowing off the ocean.
I walked to the end of the pier to take pictures of the boats that floated along the waterfront.
We left the pier and started walking toward the Historic homes and buildings in Charleston. 
My siblings seemed to be in a rush, but not me. 
I had my camera, and I was snapping pictures of old homes, old churches, old buildings, a graveyard, statues, and historic markers.

My siblings found a park bench behind the courthouse and sat down while I walked around taking pictures.
My siblings and my Howdy Dowdy hair!!!
It was a long walk, but we arrived back at the Visitor Center where I had parked. 
I looked for Mr. Fetzer and his puppy, but they were gone. 

It costs seven dollars to park. I paid the attendant, and we rode to our apartment in Ladson.
We stopped at Piggy Wiggly in Ladson to get some food to cook for dinner (Chicken, key lime pie, more wine coolers), then back to our apartment to play Mexican Train.

Day 4: Saturday, May 28, 2011
We spent the day at the pool swimming, playing ball, and relaxing. 
One of my siblings and my brother-in-law went to purchase lottery tickets. 
We each won something on the scratch-offs, so Teresa and Robert went to the store to buy more.
Teresa won $90; nobody else won anything.
That afternoon, we played Yahtzee and Mexican Train.
We snacked on Cheese Dip and Key Lime Pie.
I took a quick shower and went to bed.

Day 5: Sunday, May 29, 2011
We went to the Patriots Point Maritime Museum in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.
We each bought a ticket for the ferry to Fort Sumter, which cost each of us eighteen dollars. 
One of my siblings gets seasick when she rides a boat, so she went to the gift shop to buy something for nausea. 
I had two twenty-dollar bills in my shorts, but when I went to buy my ticket, they were gone. I looked everywhere for it. 
I laid the money on the counter, and someone picked it up.
I looked everywhere, even went back to the van to look for the money, but it was gone.

We were the first in line to take the boat tour.
We sat on the right-hand side of the boat, but ended up standing at the front. 
The ride took thirty minutes. We saw Dolphins going in and out of the water.
We all bought a bottle of water to take with us, it was a very hot day.

We walked along the long pier to Fort Sumter. Two major battles of the Civil War took place here. 
We did not stay to listen to the talk but walked around the fort taking pictures. 
There were historic markers, cannons, statues, and a museum with lots of information about the Civil War.


Fort Sumter
Looking for seashells
We walked along the seashore looking for seashells.
We walked to the boat; it was too hot to stay outside on the deck, so we all went inside, where it was cool. 

About halfway, I went back outside onto the deck to see the panoramic view of the Charleston harbor, downtown Charleston, the USS Yorktown Ship, and the Revenue Bridge. I got some great shots. 

Directions to: Patriots Point, Mt. Pleasant, S.C
Charleston International Airport
Distance: 12 miles
Drive time: 20 minutes
Directions - I-26 east to exit 220
Cross over the Ravenel Bridge
At the foot of the Bridge, merge right onto Coleman Blvd (703)
At the first traffic light on Coleman, turn right onto Bud Darby Lane
Follow Bud Darby Lane until it ends, then turn onto Patriots Point Road.

We went to Gillian's Steamer and Raw Bar, 3852 Ladson Rd, Ladson, South Carolina, for dinner.  
My sibling, who won the ninety dollars, bought everyone's dinner.
Paula ordered She Crab Soup ($4.95), BLT Wedge Salad, and Fried Chicken Finger Dinner.
Becky and Teresa ordered the same except for the soup. $10.95 ea.
I ordered a BLT Salad with Shrimp for $11.95, and an iced tea for $2.50.
We had complimentary appetizers: shrimp dip, Buffalo wings, potato skins, and peel-and-eat shrimp.

We stop at PW Ga, 9616 Hwy 7,8, Ladson, S. C., to fill up with gas. We are leaving tomorrow for $54.71.
We all went for a swim at the apartment complex after a full day of sightseeing.  
The water was great and very relaxing. 
We saw a storm brewing in the distance, so we got out of the swimming pool and walked to our apartment. 

We took out the Yahtzee game and the dominoes. We spent the remainder of the evening playing games. 

When we finished playing games, I took a shower and went to bed. 

Day 6: Memorial Day Monday, May 30, 2011
We grabbed a few snacks and loaded the van, stopping to tell our sibling and her husband.

We stopped for lunch at Cracker Barrel, 1182 Dogwood Dr. SE, Conyers, GA. 
I drove 279.92 miles in four hours and sixteen minutes. 

We stopped in Bremen Ga at Chevron 156 U. S. Highway 27 Byp, Bremen, GA 30110-1970 (770) (537-0996) to fill up with gas. My siblings paid for the gas. 

Our last stop was at Hardens in Athens, where I ordered a kid's chicken-finger meal. One of my siblings ordered a sandwich, and the other said her family was waiting for her; they were going out to eat.
We were forty minutes and 37.83 miles from home.
I drove to and from Ladson, South Carolina, without any problems and had a great time with my siblings. 


I cannot wait until we take another trip together. We always have fun just the two of us. 

Little Spooners

Norman Rockwell, the Little Spooner, or Sunset, was my inspiration to write a story.
Two best friends are sitting on a bench, looking at the moon, recalling their friendship.
Drugged by medication, my mind drifts back in time to my youth.
I see myself and my best friend sitting on that old wooden bench, which I am sure has long since decayed, like my youth has faded with old age.

A tiny tear trickles down my cheeks as I remember the crystal blue waters of the lake, and I am sitting next to my best friend, with his arms caressing mine as he snuggles close to me.

I lay here in this dark, cold room on a bed not my own, looking at the face of the clock hanging on the wall.
The clock could tell many stories as it looks at me.
I can see my life in the clock's face just ticking away.
I wish it would stop and smile at me, but it just keeps on ticking.
When I was young, I never thought much about time or clocks because I spent all my time with my best friend.
Our love and friendship were timeless.
We shared that same love with Spot.
We found Spot when he was just a pup.
His mother had died while giving her pups.
The owner had taken the mother and her pups into the woods to leave them to die.
We found the mother and six little pups all dead except one.
We buried all of them and nursed the living pup back to health.

We gave the tiny pup the name of Spot because her coat was spotted with black, brown, white, and red fur.
We shared the love of Spot, but Spot lived at my house.
Wherever we went, he was there trotting along behind us.

Spot was a short-haired Beagle.
His ears, head, and back were black and brow; his legs and part of his back, and andthe area between his eyes were white.
He had beautiful, big, brown eyes, and around them were patches of red fur.

My mind now drifts to our fishing hole, and I wonder what Spowould respond when we caught fish.
Spot would let us know by barking that he was ready for dinner, for he loved to eat fish, but it had to be cooked. Sometimes we would build a campfire and bake the fish just for Spot.
Sometimes I could see and feel Spot on the bed next to me. I would reach over to strokSpot's back, but I soon realized that it was just a dream.
It is good to dream, it gives us hope of a better day, so we can forget about the aches and pains of old age.

My best friend and I built the old wooden bench that we sat on when we were just spooners.
We cut two young saplings for the bench legs and dug two bottomless holes to place them in.
We had brought a wooden plank from home to make the seat. The plank was unfinished, so we had to be careful not to get splinters.

It was called our Little Spooner Seat.
We had borrowed a shovel, saw, hammer, nails, and a hoe from my dad's barn to make the bench.
We had to remember to return the tools, or my dad would have had a cow.
It took us all day to cut down the two saplings, dig the two holes, and put together the bench.
We didn't mind, and time didn't matter.

We would sit in our special Spooner place and watch the sunset, even though Spot was silent at this time.

The love we had for each other was eternal, and we shared it with Spot.
Spot lived over fifteen years, and it was a sad day when we had to put him in the ground, as if part of our hearts died that day.

It has been many years since I heard Spot barking.
Thinking back to when I was a girl of three, that is when we found Spot.

My best friend and I went to college in our hometown.
It took me four years to become a registered nurse.
My best friend wanted to be a veterinarian, so he had to leave town to attend college for a few years.

We married soon after he returned home, but never had any children.
My best friend treated many animals, and I was always at his side.
I had trained to be a nurse, but I went to work for my husband because we both love animals.

Spot had a special place in our hearts because he had been our first pet together.

We tried for many years to have children, but finally gave up. It was not meant for us to have any children.
We would have had beautiful children if both of us were of Irish descent.
I constantly had long flowing red hair that I kept plaited with a ribbon tied at the end.
I was a tall, lanky girl with a freckled face.

My Spooner was a handsome man;n he had short red hair, a freckled face, and long legs.
He had to wear suspenders to hold up his pants because he had a skinny waist.
If he bought his pants, they were long enough, but they were too big in the waist.
I dearly loved my Spooner.

I traveled with my husband to help him care for other people's animals, and we were both too busy to have any of our own.
We both volunteered at the animal shelter, helping care for the unwanted animals.

One summer, we volunteered to go to South Africa to help set up a veterinary clinic and train the people there to care for the wounded animals until a Veterinarian could come and take our place.

I will never forget that adventure.
We had an alligator that had swallowed a log; it was hung in its throat, and we had to remove it. That was a trip.
We had a lion that had been attacked by another lion and left to die.
We nursed him back to life.
A giraffe got its neck stuck in the top of a tree.
A rhino got stuck in the mud, and it took a huge truck to pull it out.

All those memories soon began to fade as I fell into a deep sleep.
My mind seems to come & go; some days life seems so real, and other days like a dream.
Sadly, I no longer have my pet Spot or my best friend, who was the love of my life, both of whom I lost in this world many years ago.

I never thought I would outlive my best friend, but here I lie in this bed all alone with just my memories and some days no memories at all.

Growing old isn't so bad, but It Would be nice to have my best friend at my side.

Little Spooners


Being someone's first love may be great, but to be their last is beyond perfect.




Thursday, January 22, 2015

2013 ~ Thursday, October 11, Day Trip to Montgomery, Alabama

My husband and I rode to Montgomery and left the house at about 8:30 A.M.
Ate roast beef sandwiches at Arby's in Athens.
We stopped in Clanton, Alabama, and filled up at Jet Pet, pump 16. The pump held 13.34 gallons at $3.30 per gallon, for a total of $44.00.

Freshly baked peach pie topped with homemade peach ice cream
We then went to Peach Park, where we shared a sizeable peach cobbler ($4.75) and peach ice cream ($2.75).
Hubby ordered a drink, a hot dog ($2.75), and onion rings ($2.00).
We went to the Hank Williams Museum, Alabama's Troubadour, located at 118 Commerce Street, Montgomery, Alabama, for $10.00 each.
The museum is filled with Hank Williams memorabilia, including his baby-blue Cadillac, 17 Hank Williams Suits, two life-size portraits owned by Hank and Audrey, some of his boots, ties, overcoats, hats, a horse saddle, a 1947 Gibson Guitar, and many more items.
Hank Williams
Historic Markers inside the museum
In 1938, young country singer Hank Williams won a contest on the stage of the Empire Theatre. Born in Butler County, south of Montgomery, on September 17, 1923, Williams learned to play the guitar and sing on the streets of Georgia. As a songwriter and performer, he made his way to Nashville, where, in 1949, his "Lovesick Blues" stopped the show at the Grand Ole Opry. Other acclaimed compositions include "Your Cheatin' Heart," Jambalaya," and "Kaw-Liga."
Williams died on January 1, 1953, and is buried in Montgomery's Oakwood Annex Cemetery.
We were given a grand tour of St. John's Episcopal Church in Montgomery, organized in 1834 by a small group of pioneer settlers.
The church has many interesting memorials, including ceiling medallions, the 1885 bell chimes in the tower, and stained-glass windows by Charles Connick of Boston.
The Capitol building's dome.
We took a self-guided tour of the Capitol building, where we saw portraits of Alabama's 52 governors hanging on the walls. It has a cantilevered stairway that spirals up to the third floor. We saw the old Senate Chamber, the House of Representatives chamber, a sculpture of the only woman to have served as governor of Alabama, and the dome overlooking the rotunda on the first floor.
Outside, we saw the Confederate memorial, several statues, a rose garden, and an avenue of flags.
It's not a fancy building by any means.
I met a family from Wisconsin. They were meeting their daughter in Montgomery and taking their parents to Florida. We talked about the magnolia trees, the pecans that lay everywhere on the ground, and how our pecan trees at home were producing but falling off the trees due to blight.
Montgomery's Capitol Building


We walked up and down many streets, taking pictures of historic markers in downtown Montgomery.

Montgomery City Hall / Funeral for Hank Williams
Montgomery Theater
The Elijah Cook/City of Montgomery vs. Rosa Parks
St. John's Episcopal Church was Organized in 1834
Montgomery Freemasonry
Montgomery's Slave Market
Montgomery's City Hall was built in 1936~37
Montgomery Learning from the Past
Brigadier General Richard Montgomery/
St John's Episcopal Church, Montgomery Labyrinth Gardens
Black Members of the Alabama Legislature Who Served During The Reconstruction Period of 1868-1879
A Nation Divided/Cradle of the Confederacy
Starke Alabama School 1888~1968 "Omnia Vincit labor~ Work Wins"
History of Alabama State Bar-Dexter Avenue
Court Square
Professor John Metcalfe Starke" Fessor Starke 1860~1941" / Starke University School 1888~1968, located Dexter Avenue
City of Montgomery
Marquis Lafayette
Lucien Dunbibben Gardner, Twenty-Second Chief Justice - 1940-1951, next to the RSA Dexter building
James Edwin Livingston, Twenty-Third Chief Justice 1951-1971
Howell Thomas Heflin, Twenty-Fourth Chief Justice – 1971-1977
Clement Clay "Bo" Forbert, Jr, Twenty-Fifth Chief Justice 1977-1989
Ernest C. "Sonny" Hornsby, Twenty-Sixth Chief Justice, 1989- 1995
Battle Flag of the Confederacy-located at the four corners of the Confederate flag
First National Confederate Flag (Stars and Bars)-located at the  four corners of the Confederate flag.)
The second National Confederate Flag (Stainless Banner) is located on the four corners of the Confederate flag.
The third National Confederate Flag is located on the four corners of the Confederate flag.
Alabama Confederate Monument 1861~1865 Consecrated to the memory of the Confederate Soldiers and Seamen ~Infantry, Artillery, Cavalry, and Navy.
Albert L. Patterson- Capitol lawn
Camellia Designated Alabama State Flower- Capitol lawn
United States flag raised over Alabama Capitol, April 12, 1865 – Capitol lawn
Alabama First Capitals/Alabama State Capitol- Capitol lawn
Jefferson Davis, June 3, 1808, December 6, 1889/Soldier, Scholar, Statesman, Capitol Lawn
John Allan Wyeth Marker- Capitol lawn
Selma to Montgomery March N. Bainbridge Street, north of Dexter Avenue
Black members of the Alabama Legislature who served during the Reconstruction Period of 1868-1879

Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church, Organized at 1877 Dexter Ave
Grave of Hank and Audrey Williams
We rode to the Oakwood Annex Cemetery, where Hank and Audrey Williams are buried.
There were many markings on his tombstone, including his hat, his guitar, and his boots.
1.      I am now thrilled. No sorrows or insight.
2.      Luke the Drifter
3.      Hey, Good looking
4.      Kaw-Liga
5.      Jambalaya
6.      Cold, Cold Heart
7.      Lovesick Blues
8.      I just told Mama goodbye
9.      Men with broken hearts
We met a young man sitting at Hank Williams's gravesite. He said, "I just had to stop and have a drink with Hank." He had a beer can in his hand and was sharing it with Hank.
He was traveling from Florida to Southern Virginia.

Montgomery Confederate Hospital
We rode through the Oakwood Annex and St. Margaret's cemeteries, where I took several pictures of Confederate soldiers' tombstones and several historical markers.

It was an exciting day, with lots of historic places and makers. We visited the tombstone and museum of Hank Williams, toured the Capitol building, toured St. John's Episcopal Church, and walked up and down many streets, taking pictures. We also toured St Margaret's Cemetery.
We had a safe and uneventful ride home.



2025 Nov 19-21, Biltmore House Trip with Backroads Tours LLC

 Day 1: Wednesday, November  19: We were up by 3:30 A.M., took a shower, fed the cats, loaded the car with our luggage, and were on our way ...