Thursday, July 13, 2017

🚗2017 July 11, Tuesday, Day Trip to Hopkinsville, Kentucky

Ate a waffle topped with cool whip, blackberries, and walnuts for breakfast. Hubby put syrup on his waffle.
We stopped in Loretta for lottery tickets before beginning our journey to Hopkinsville, KY.
We were traveling I-24 past the Nissan Stadium, Home of the Tennessee Titans, around a quarter till eleven.
Nissan Stadium, Home of the Tennessee Titans 
We arrived at the Rest Area in Oak Grove, Kentucky, around 11:30AM. We always have to stop and check out the rest area/Visitor Center in every state. Mississippi has some of the best rest areas that I have seen.
Kentucky is known for its thoroughbred racing tracks and Kentucky Bourbon Trails, and we saw a little of both here.
Horse Racing and Kentucky Bourbon
We were seated at Logan's Roadhouse in Hopkinsville, KY, at 11:57AM. Hubby ordered the Logan's Roadhouse hamburger, and I ordered the Cod Fish with homemade chips.
The girl who waited for us was very busy, and it seemed to take quite a while to get our food.
The fish I ordered was undercooked and not very good, and hubby said his hamburger had no taste.
Cod Fish with chips, coleslaw, and tater sauce
The fish was tough, and the breading was not done on the inside, but it did look good.
When cooked right, it is delicious.
The real American Roadhouse Hopkinsville, Ky
Pennyroyal Area Museum on Ninth Street.
Former United States Post Office Building, now PennyRoyal Museum 

We were greeted by the curator, who was eating her lunch. We paid the small admission price, and the curator gave us a short history of the PennyRoyal Museum.  

She said the museum was a former Post Office, and it still had windows where people would send packages and purchase stamps.
She also said that we could send a postcard to someone or to ourselves, put it in the mailbox on the table, and they would stamp it. 

Don't forget to send a postcard and put it in the mailbox here.
Upstairs in the PennyRoyal Museum, we saw a display about the early life of a Pioneer in Hopkinsville. 
Pioneer Life in Hopkinsville
Behind the loom was a quilt telling the history of Hopkinsville
25th Annual Quilt Show
Hopkinsville Heritage Quilt
Quiltmakers
Designed by Dixie Thomas
pieced by Kathy Croft
Quilted by Edna Baker, Linnie Wallis, Kathy Croft, Nell Young & Betty Young 

Downstairs, we saw a York Square Grand Piano 1870 made by Weaver Piano and Organ Company and a Winton Upright Piano, 1920 made in Chicago, Il.

We saw local notables such as Billy Boley, the Ventriloquist. 
We saw Robin Penn Warren, the National Poet, and several displays about Ringling Bros Barnum & Bailey Combined Shows.
We saw The Mechanical Wonder Horse, ridden by three generations of children from 1907 to 1994.
We saw a display of the Brook Memorial Hospital and Doctor Phillip C. Brooks.
We saw a hand-carved wooden display about the Trail of Tears by George Barrette Floyd.
 Wooden Carved replica of the Trail of Tears
Display about Edgar Cayce, the Sleeping Prophet

http://www.beliefnet.com/faiths/the-life-and-times-of-edgar-cayce.aspx 
The Kelly Encounter (Little Green Men)
The Kelly–Hopkinsville encounter was a claimed close encounter with extraterrestrial beings in 1955 near Kelly and Hopkinsville in Christian CountyKentuckyUnited States
UFOlogists regard it as one of the most significant and well-documented cases in the history of UFO incidents, while skeptics say the reports were due to "the effects of excitement" and misidentification of natural phenomena such as meteors and owls. Psychologists have used the alleged incident as an academic example of pseudoscience to help students distinguish truth from fiction.
The Tobacco War 1904-1911
http://www.nkyviews.com/Other/text/text_night_rider_movement.html

There is a story behind each display that could be told. 
I bought three postcards, and we paid $2 each to visit the Transportation Museum.

The Transportation Museum was located across the street from the Pennyroyal Museum. It was once a Fire Station. 

There was a crew of men working on the roof, and they were repairing the Clocktower. (Many years ago, the Captain's room caught fire and burned the first clock tower, which was larger than the one now on top of the firehouse.)
The firehouse was built before automobiles, and the first fire truck was pulled by horses.

The curator said
We have the first (Auto) fire truck ever used by the fire department
It was bought by a former firefighter, and he restored it to its glory days.
He gave the town the firetruck when he found out the town was opening a Transportation Museum inside the old firehouse.

We saw a couple of Dalmatian dogs, a couple of fire trucks, a carriage, Firemen's boots, caps, and the original fire pole the firemen used. We saw a couple of miniature train displays, benches from a train depot, a sleigh, and three different Gasoline tanks: the Shell, Gulf, & DX.
First Gasoline-powered Fire Truck and Dalmatian 
The Clock Tower is being repaired.
Firemen's hats
Miniature Train Display and another fire truck.
Our next stop was the Casey Jones Distillery.
The Casey Jones Distillery
 Grape, Peach, and Apple Casey's Cut
Casey's Moonshine, Barrel Cut, and Total Eclipse Moonshine.
Lights Out
At the distillery, we sampled the Casey's cut Eclipse-A-Rita, the Peach, and Apple.
We were shown how the Moonshine was made and how it was bottled.
There was a wedding later that day at the distillery.

Many different events happen here, including the upcoming Total Eclipse on August 21, 2017.
The weekend of August 18 in Hopkinsville is the place to be for the greatest view of the total eclipse.
There will be music, vendors, hot air balloon rides, and much more.

Our next stop was the Commemorative Trail of Tears Park.
Inside the small cabin, we meet a Cherokee Indian Woman.
She told us how this very spot was a chosen way to stop for the Indians on the Trail of Tears.
The nine flags representing the states of the Trail of Tears
Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Tennessee.
The removal of the Cherokee, Creek, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole

https://www.britannica.com/event/Trail-of-Tears
Commemorative Trail of Tears Cabin
Statues at the Trail of Tears
We stopped at Chick-fil-A in Hopkinsville, where we ordered Lemonade, Peach Milkshake, and some chicken fingers.
Chick-fil-a Hopkinsville KY 
Peach Milkshake (my favorite), Chicken strips, and Lemonade
Our next stop was the Fort Campbell Memorial Park. 
As we traveled through Nashville, we encountered work traffic.
The sunset on the clouds as we encountered our last mile home
around 8PM




2017 July 4, Tuesday, Day Trip to Huntsville, Alabama

Hubby and I rode into Florence to eat breakfast at Cracker Barrel. I ordered one scrambled egg, two slices of bacon, and two slices of sourdough toast with strawberry jelly. I also ate hubby's fried apples.
Hubby ordered the big breakfast...
We traveled Highway 72 east to Rogersville, stopping at Foodland to pick up a couple of canned drinks.
We rode to Rogersville's Park, where they had just installed a splash pad for kids.
Splash Pad Rogersville 
Playground and restrooms Rogersville Park
In Huntsville, we rode through Providence Town Center, where we saw Darth Vader and R2D2 statues standing in front of Mellow Mushroom Restaurant. (Characters from the Star Wars Trilogy)

Darth Vader and R2D2 
I wanted to see the construction work where the Old Huntsville Mall was once located, so we rode there next.
The mall is gone, piping and wiring all and dug up, with only dirt remaining.
No longer a mall 
Next, we rode through the Twickenham District to Monte Sano Mountain.
We paid the admission price to enter the park, stopping at the restrooms at the campsite. We stopped at the overlook near the one-room CCC Museum, which was closed. 

Over Look near Birding site 29 (overcast day)
 CCC Museum (one-room museum) 

We stopped, and I took pictures of the Burritt Museum and Trough Springs Markers. 
We rode down the mountain onto Governors Drive, passing the Hospitals. 
Next, we rode to Brahan Spring Recreation Center on Ivy Avenue Southwest.
We stopped at the park, where we saw the  Merrimack Marker.
The marker told about the Merrimack Manufacturing Co., the Huntsville Manufacturing Co., and Springs Industries Inc., 1899 1991. It also told about the Merrimack School & the Joseph J. Bradley School 1900 and 1967.
Next, we stopped at Brahan Spring Park for a few pictures and to use the restrooms.

We started home, stopping in Athens at Zaxby's to eat dinner.
I ordered boneless wings and a side salad. Hubby ordered a boned chicken wings meal.
Boneless Wings 
Side Salad
We were home for about an hour when hubby got a call out to work.
Another trip to Huntsville. 
The job did not take long, and we were home by 7PM. 

My son, Andy, called and said Mom, we are going to shoot fireworks at 8:30PM, so at 8:15PM, we rode to my son's house.
We sprayed ourselves with bug spray, grabbed our fold-out chairs, and off we rode to my son's house.
We had a great time with family, watching them shoot off fireworks.
These three bulldogs hated the sound of the fireworks, and we had a hard time keeping them away from chasing the fireworks.

We were home by 10PM, and both of us dropped into bed from exhaustion.



🚗2011 ~ Sept 14, Wednesday, Day Trip Paducah, Kentucky


Left the house at about 6:30 A.M., drove up Highway 43 to Highway 64 leading to Pulaski, Ten, then onto I-65 toward Nashville, Ten. 
We rode through the construction work and early morning work traffic. 
We arrived in Paducah, Ky., at about 10:30 A.M. 

Murals along N Water Street Each mural tells a story 
We walked along the riverfront on Water Street, which displays several blocks of 43 beautifully painted story-telling murals by Robert Dafford and his team. It has taken over eleven years to paint these Wall-to-Wall murals, which display the “3 queens,” visiting Paducah, “the American Queen, the Delta Queen, and the Mississippi Queen.
Whaler’s Catch Restaurant and Oyster Bar Market

We walked around the town back to Whaler’s Catch Restaurant and Oyster Bar Market to eat lunch. 
Whaler’s Catch is located in the historic Johnson Building on Second Street in Paducah. 
Outside is the more eating area called the Crow’s Nest overlooking the River. 
We had boiled seafood Potpourri, boiled shrimp, crab cakes, baked fish, salad, and iced tea. Their specialty is a pot of black-eyed peas; everyone is welcome to take a bowl full of black-eyed peas.
After the meal, we walked across the street to the National Quilt Museum. 


Quilt Museum, along with Lewis, Clark, and their dog 
On the lawn outside the museum were displayed five statues: Lewis, Clark, Indian Girl, Man, and Seaman. (The dog Lewis paid $20 for, and he only paid $5 for Paducah.)
At the National Quilt Museum, we saw A Sense of Balance, The Chicago School of Fusing, The National Quilt Museum Collection, and the Miniature Quilt Collection.
In the sense of balance display, we saw how quiltmakers of the past balanced form, color, and lines in their quilts. 
In the Chicago School of Fusing, we saw works of artists that displayed vibrant, whimsical, and 3-D quilt cloth objects. "Fiesta Del Mar I,” by Anne Lillie Autobiography, by Susan Else
Ongoing exhibits are quilts donated by the founders of the museum, Bill and Meredith Schroeder, and the American Quilter’s Society quilt show and contest purchases award winners donated through AQS.
The collection includes more than 300 quilts created by more than 333 quiltmakers. 
The miniature quilts may not be wider than 24 inches, no longer than 24 inches, and they must be reduced in scale. 

We rode along the Ohio River, where we saw tugboats, Raymond Schultz Park, and the Tennessee~Tombigee Waterway historic markers.
We drove back through the town of Paducah, and I took pictures of old buildings (bank, churches, theater, Irvin Cobb Hotel, Tilghman home/Civil War Museum, Hank Bro and Jones Hardware building, etc.).
We rode past the Oak Grove cemetery where was buried Irvin S. Cobb, Dr. Reuben Saunders, etc. 
Indian wood carving by Peter Wolf to honor the Chickasaw Indians. 
We stopped at Noble Park to take a picture of the Indian wood carving by Peter Wolf to honor the Chickasaw Indians. The trail of the whispering giants Wacinton means to have an understanding.

Superman Metropolis, IL 
We then drove to Metropolis, where we saw two statues; the first statue was in front of Metropolis courthouse it was a ten-foot Superman, and the other statue was Big John in front of Big John’s Grocery store. 
We rode to Harrods casino, where we spent $5.00.  
We saw a sign that said we would give you $100 and a free meal at Harrods, so we went to check it out. 
You had to be a first-time player, play for a solid hour, and lose $100, and they would reimburse you.
Beautiful staircase at Whitehaven Mansion Welcome Center Paducah 
We stopped at the Welcome Center located! -24 Eastbound Mile Marker 28 in Paducah at Whitehaven 
On our way home, we stopped in Grand Rivers, Kentucky, at Patti’s 1880 settlement, where we saw a small church, animals, boating, a waterwheel, and a flower garden.

Patti's 1880 Settlement 

For dinner, we ordered an appetizer inside Patties restaurant.

We arrived home at about 9:30 P.M. We had a wonderful day.





Sunday, July 9, 2017

Sentences using the word LOST !!!!

The next thing I knew, he was calling g for help because he had lost his balance and fallen into the water.

We watched a 30-minute Indiana Jones Stunt show scene from Raiders of the Lost Ark.

We lost Madison in the crowd.
There was a group of six that toured the Lost Sea Cave.
I had lost twenty-five pounds.
Sierra had a softball game, and they lost.
I replied he lost both legs.

We met a couple from Oregon who had lost their little girl from kidney failure and had come back to the Ronald McDonald House to bury her. 

We met a family from Oregon, they had just lost their seven-week-old daughter to kidney failure. 

So we lost them, neither Ron nor I had brought our cell phones.

Finally, they arrived, Dakota gave Ron his cell phone, just in case we got lost again.

We walked through the mystery maze, where we got lost and had to ask how to get out.





Madison got lost, and we went to look for her.  
We lost Madison for about 45 minutes. 

We exited Desoto Caverns and went to the parking area where there were rides, archery, cave crawl, and mine for a gemstone, we walked through a lost trail maze.

I had been in the field of an electrical storm and had lost my short-term memory.

I thanked him and went in search of my lost sisters.
I lost the forty dollars that were in my shorts pocket, and I had to go back to the car for more cash.

We met a US Coast Guard who was on his way to catch the bus home, and he asked if we were lost and if he could help.

The Patriots lost by one point, 30 to 31.
I thought I was lost!
My friend had lost a son in an auto accident the year before, and her husband was having a hard time dealing with his grief.

The lost spaceship. 

Hubby lost his job at the end of January 2002, so we drove our RV home to Alabama.
We saw the memorial for the seven crew members who lost their lives when the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded.

🚙Getting lost leaving Chicago

We had spent the weekend in the Westin Hotel for The Magic Foundation Convention in Wheeling, IL. 
We checked out of our room at around 12PM 
We called for a bellhop to help us with the luggage. 
We checked out, loaded the truck with all our belongings, and rode to Burger King for lunch.

The Magic Foundation had arranged for everyone who had attended the conference to go to the Wheeling Aquatic Park Center for a free day of fun. 
Lora and the kids went down the tube, and Meadow and I played in the swimming pool.

Wheeling Aquatic Park Center is an outdoor aquatic center with amenities:
Volcano Valley has tube and body slides, and Paradise Falls has two drop falls.
Willie the Whale has a toddler slide, and there are lap lanes in the swimming pool.
Kana Courts have sand volleyball, a Grassy area for tanning, 
Willies Coconut Café for food, a picnic area for eating, and a diving board, and Aloha Beach has zero depth in the entry of the main pool.
Karki Island has a sand play area, locker rooms, and lockers for storing valuables.
Tsunami Splash has a water playground with tipping buckets.
Lilypad Lagoon has a splash pool with a water basketball and a monkey bar activity pad. 

We stayed at the aquatic center until 4:30 P.M.
Lora then drove us to downtown Chicago to tour the Sears Tower “sky deck.”

The Sears Tower was the tallest skyscraper in the World until 1996. It was finished on May 3, 1973.
It is still the tallest skyscraper in the Western Hemisphere.  What a view!

We walked to Giordano’s Pizzeria, which was just across the street from the Sear Tower. 
We had to wait 40 minutes for a table and another 40 minutes for our food. 
We ordered a deep dish stuffed medium pizza with sausage, pepperoni, and mozzarella cheese. It was covered with Marinara sauce, and the pizza was as thick as the size of a medium cake. 
Madison enjoyed the stinging mozzarella cheese.

Lora drove us out of downtown Chicago, leaving at about 9:00 P.M. 
I took over driving for several hours. 
Everyone fell asleep except me, and when I got sleepy, we stopped at a Motel 8 somewhere in Louisville, Indiana, off I-70E. 

We were so sleepy that we did not even inspect the room, which we should have because the beds were falling apart. 
I guess that does not matter when you are too sleepy to drive.

It was late, I was very sleepy, and I drove seven miles in the wrong direction.

The next morning, we had no clue where we were because somewhere during the night, I had taken a wrong turn about seven miles off course.

I remember going through a lot of construction and orange cones being everywhere. I am sure that is where I got lost.
We had to do a lot of backtracking.

Leaving late, getting sleepy, and traveling with kids, anyone could get lost. 

It is strange how a sermon can trigger your thoughts about something that happened in the past.
Have you ever been lost or gotten lost driving? Ask yourself and tell your story.



Engulfed by Darkness

 Jonah was swallowed by a whale for disobedience.
I was engulfed in darkness, heavy traffic, and blinding rain.

I loaded up my grandson, Justin (age five), and my granddaughter, Hannah (age seven), and we began our journey to Pell City.
We traveled I-65 South all the way to Birmingham.
In Birmingham, we took the I-20 to Pell City, which took us about two and a half hours.

I did not have the exact address of my grandson, he had moved from his old address.
Now, I was depending on a five-year-old to get us to his new address.

We rode up and down the same highway for over an hour before I could get in touch with his dad.

By the time we left for home, it was getting dark, and it had started to rain.
On the Interstate, we got behind a large truck, and I could not see around him, so we missed our turn.

All I remember was we were headed north on a very rough highway. (79)
Several times, I almost stopped because I thought my tires were going flat, but I was afraid because it was very dark and not much traffic.

Thank God I had a cell phone that worked, so I called Hubby, who was working in St Louis at that time.
I told him what happened, and he said, what highway are you on? This was before we had GPS on our phones or our vehicles.

Hubby said I will call you back when I locate you on the map.
Hubby called and said you will have to go over the mountain to get back to I-65.

The darkness and rain did not help to see along the winding roads we took over the mountains.

We almost rammed into a stalled car on a dark bridge.
It took us twice as long to get home, but we made it safe and sound.

God was in control in both cases.



Getting Lost in Miami

In church today, our minister asked if anyone had taken a wrong turn? 
He told the story of  God choosing Jonah to preach to the wicked people in Nineveh. 
Jonah hated the people of Nineveh and chose instead to go in another direction.

It got me thinking about some of the wrong turns that I have made in my life.

The first wrong turn was during my trip to Miami.
I flew to Miami to be with my daughter during her surgery and recovery.
I sat in the waiting room while my daughter was having her surgery, the nurse came out and gave me a prescription for my daughter for painkillers and antibiotics.
She said I should get the prescription filled at the nearby Publix Pharmacy, which was within walking distance.
We had taken a taxi to the surgery center (keep in mind we did not have a car to drive).


A couple from Rochester, New York, was going to the pharmacy to get their prescription filled, and the nurse asked them if I could go with them.
The couple was polite and said I could go.
The woman was getting breast implants on Friday. 
The nurse gave directions to the Publix Pharmacy to the husband.
We walked to the parking deck and loaded into their rented red mini car. 
Their luggage was still in the car, and they had not yet checked into their hotel.
The red mini car had two doors that opened from the outside and two more that opened from the inside only.
Off we went in search of the Publix Pharmacy. 

We went to Flager, then NW, on Forty-second Avenue.
Next, we went SW on Forty-second Avenue, where we stopped at Publix.
The woman and I got out of the car and went inside the store and I asked one of the women working at the check-out where is your pharmacy?
The woman replied we have no pharmacy. 

The woman from Rochester, NY, and I started to laugh. 
Then, we went on to explain our search for a Publix Pharmacy.
The woman at the check-out register drew us a map to the nearest Publix (which I later found out was the wrong pharmacy). 
We took so many turns that I was completely lost when we finally found the Pharmacy.
We gave our prescriptions to the Pharmacist, and he said it was going to take at least one and a half hours to get the prescription filled. We asked why it was going to take so long, and they replied that one of the prescriptions was a narcotic drug and only one pharmacist had access to the drug. 

We rode back to the surgery center, where I was dropped off.
I thanked the couple for letting me tag along with them. 
I never saw them again.

I went to the lobby to wait, there, I met a couple from Charlotte, North Carolina.
They said that they both worked for the US Post Office in Charlotte. 
They said that they had four children, two boys and a set of twin girls.  
She was having breast implants done that day.  

I told her husband that he had better get her prescription filled before she came out of surgery because they had told us it would take an hour and a half to fill. 

The hubby dropped off her prescriptions.
His wife went back to surgery before my daughter came out of surgery.
My daughter came out of surgery around 5:30PM, she was in a lot of pain. She kept saying just shoot me!
We had to wait until 6PM to leave because the owner was going to give us a ride to the hotel, and the surgery center did not close until 6PM.

We rode to Publix Pharmacy to get my daughter's prescription 
What we thought was a quick stop turned into stopping at two different Publix.
We arrived at the first Publix, and as I was going up the escalator, I met Mural. (Man from Charlotte, NC)
We walked to the pharmacy together, and I said to him this place does not look familiar.
I was next in line, I gave my daughter's name to the pharmacist, and she tried to look up my daughter’s prescription.
The pharmacist said you must have left the prescription at another Publix Pharmacy.
So, I walked back to the car and told my daughter and our driver that it was the wrong Pharmacy. 
My daughter was not happy about that at all. 
We went several miles in the wrong direction when I said, I think we are going in the wrong direction.
I said to the driver, the Publix where we need to go is not far from the first one because I remember coming back down West Flager St.
The driver said, Now I think I know the correct location, it is a new Publix Pharmacy.
We arrived at the correct Publix pharmacy, and I got in line to pick up my daughter's prescription.
The woman in front of me kept asking questions about the prescription she had just filled. 
 I did not think she would ever shut up!
Finally, I got my daughter's medicine; the cost was $2.00 I paid and left.
On the way home, the driver said, “I have not eaten all day do you mind if I stop at Wendy’s?”
He ordered a Coke, fries, and a large hamburger. He asked if we wanted anything to eat, and we said yes, so we ordered a junior cheeseburger and fries. 
I offered to pay, but he paid for everything.
My daughter was sitting in the backseat.
When she opened her pill bottle, she dropped one.
I was sitting in the front seat, and I had to unbuckle my seat belt, lean my head toward the back, and put my butt up in the air to look for that pill. 
Never found it!
We arrived at the hotel, got out, and thanked the driver.
The driver had to pull the seat out to reach the pill. 
He said I have two small children, and I don't need a loose pill floating around for my kids to get their hands on.


You can get lost by disobeying God, 
You can get lost in your mind, 
You can get lost by not paying attention
You can get lost anywhere!!!

2024 Christmas Journal Activies

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