Kentucky Continues with Corvettes & Caves, Bourbon and Baseball.

12th June – 17th Jun 2023

A few hours cruising west through Kentucky brought us to the oddly named town of Bowling Green. This city of 80,000 people is the third largest in Kentucky after Louisville and Lexington and is best known as ‘Home of the Corvette’. Production of America’s best loved sports car has happened here since the assembly plant opened in 1981 and it has produced over 1 million of the 1.5 million Corvettes ever made. You can pay to do a factory tour of the plant and there is a museum. So of course we were stopping here. We stayed locally the night prior and headed off to the factory the next morning.

The rules for the tour were simple: wear closed toed, flat shoes and bring nothing with you: no bags, no cameras, no phones. After arriving, walking a considerable distance from the carpark to the entrance and checking in, we were given eye protection and an audio tour receiver and sat in a waiting area. Here a wall of large screens gave us our safety briefing and then our group of about 10 were taken into the factory. This was not a tour from behind glass windows or up on balconies above the action, this was a walking tour of the actual factory floor and it was fantastic. Partly it was interesting because the Corvette is now actually a half decent sports car (after the lows of the 80s/90s & 00s) and it was great to see it take shape from all its various components, but mostly the tour was so good because of the experience of being so up close and personal with a modern factory production line.

The factory has a current target of 94 cars per day and each shift in each zone has its live stats visible on a board. Each car takes about 65 hours to manufacture and this includes the painting and curing of the body panels. The place is an absolute ballet of slowly moving production lines – both floor level and overhead – humans fitting parts, robots fitting parts, robots delivering parts around the floor, humans driving forklifts to deliver parts around the floor. Body panels for each car are sprayed together in the new $450 million paint shop, then after curing are split up and transported to all different corners of the factory to be reunited on the same car at various stages of the build. The computers know which car has which different options and these are all perfectly assigned to each vehicle along the line. The technology was incredible. It was also strangley quiet and no-one needed any hearing protection. There was one amusing analogue safety feature. The corners of the windscreen frames of the cars have a small sharp nubbin on them and the workers were hitting their heads on them as they bent over to fit items into the car’s dashboard area. At great expense, the Chevrolet engineers designed a special cap to clip onto the nubbin, but it kept falling off. The solution? A tennis ball with a cut fits perfectly. The factory gets these as seconds from a tennis ball factory and all are happy. As you might expect, a lot of Corvette owners come to see the factory and the carpark was heaving with shiny, sporty machines and if you have ordered a Corvette you can come and do a VIP tour to see your actual car being made. If you want to come and collect your new car yourself, rather than have it delivered, then you can collect it from the museum site where they do a full handover. All very exciting. We went over to the museum after our tour, saw the things and read the blurb. It was good, but not a patch on the tour. We saw a few of the cars being handed over and then watched this guy drive off in his new pride a joy.

New Corvette

Next stop: Mammoth Caves National Park. Two nights in a quiet camp run by a religious couple where the rules specified: discrete alcohol drinking only and no bare chests or beach wear. This set us up for a visit to the caves on our middle day. We couldn’t be bothered to off load Tin Can for our 8 mile drive to the park’s visitors centre so we just unplugged and all went together. The cave system here is enormous and formed by underground rivers dissolving the soluble limestone. It is the biggest cave system in the world, with over 400 miles of mapped caves. We booked onto a cave tour which took us underground for a 2 hour, 2 mile guided walk with lots of historical facts and figures from our two rangers (who were both called Kelly). I kept my mild claustrophobia at bay and knew that I certainly wouldn’t have been exploring these caves 150 years ago with just an oil lamp and a laissez faire attitude towards safety. No sir.

Cave path

And onward we rolled to Louisville, Kentucky’s biggest city with a population of approx 630,000. In fact our roost was to be across the Ohio River, in Clarksville, which was actually Indiana. From here it was an easy 3 mile cycle along a riverside path and then over the river on an old railway bridge which has been repurposed as a pedestrian and cycle crossing, then into the riverside park on the Louisville side. This was only a short distance from the heart of the historic downtown of Louisville and several key areas of interest for us: Bourbon, Baseball and Bats.

An Angel at Angel’s Envy

All bourbon is American. 95% of bourbon is made in Kentucky and 40% of Kentucky bourbon is made in Louisville. This is the heart of the operation! The water here sourced from underground aquifers and is particularly tasty. We had booked onto a tour of a distillery called Angel’s Envy and headed there on the bikes once we had set up camp. (I have said it before and I will say it again…it is such a joy to be able to cycle safely into and around a city!) The tour was very good. All brewing, distilling and bottling happens there on site, with only the barrel maturation happening elsewhere. We had a taster of the rough corn mash beer brew-complete with chewy bits and a proper tasting at the end. I learnt a lot and actually have acquired a taste for bourbon. Well the good stuff, at least.

Still

We obviously had to have a bourbon cocktail at their bar before we left and had to buy a bottle of the brew to take home. Of course! On the way home we stopped on the Indianna side of the river for dinner at a brewery. This had a great view of Louisville and its bridges and served a good burger. It also served us a jug of full strength IPA when we had ordered a lighter, lower alcohol one. That explained why it had tasted so good and why my head was a little fuzzier than expected in the morning. I should sue!!

Brewery View
Louisville Bridges

The next day we hoofed it back across the river again and having parked up the bikes we strolled the historic main street. This is dubbed ‘Bourbon Row’ as many of the distilleries have a presence here. Our strolling took us down to the museum and factory of another famed export of Louisville: The Slugger baseball bat. Another tour was attended and again, we learned stuff. The Slugger bat makes up 15% market share for the MLB. They make about 1.8 million bats annually, 3000 of which are made in the factory here. That was suprising to us as the factory seemed to be awfully quiet and unproductive whilst we were looking round. After the tour we both got a free ‘mini bat’ which are too small to be useable and too big to be practical souvenirs. I carried them around for the rest of the day, like every other tourist in town.

Big Bat
Pre-bats
Post-bats

The latter part of our afternoon was spent in the shade outside a nice bar slowly eating a meal and drinking weak ‘happy hour’ beer whilst we waited for the evening’s entertainment: a baseball game. Our thouroughly pleasant sojourn was was slightly marred by a father and son who were standing on the street just near our table, drinking beer out of cans and smoking big fat cigars, by virtue of the venue being smoke-free. This we could tolerate. But the spitting. So much spitting. One drag of cigar…One spit. We couldn’t see the ground where they were aiming it, but there must have been a pool of it developing. If there had been ducks they would be paddling on it. Surely a cigar shouldn’t trigger such waterbrash, and if it does, just swallow the flaming stuff. Or ditch the habit, it’s obviously not agreeing with you. Rant over.

Sluggers Field and the Bats
The Entertainment at the Bats
Baseball crowd. A bit bats.

To the baseball. The local team are called the ‘Louisville Bats’. Bats for the Sluggers homage and the mascot is….yes…a bat. The small furry winged type. The team play in the minor leagues but have a great little stadium in the heart of the historic district. They were in the middle of a week of games against the St Paul Saints. We bought tickets (The slightly fancier ones with padded seats, upper tier, access to air conditioned bar.) and took our seats at 7pm in time for the anthem. This was belted out by an 11 year old girl who did a much better job than many a well known artist. Now baseball itself is fairly boring, which is why they serve beer and snacks, but our view was great and a ball did fly very close to our heads at one point. which was a bit exciting. After sitting through 2 hours and 7 innings by which time the score was still 1-1, we bailed. Partly due to boredom, partly due to the fact that dusk had arrived and we had no bike lights. Our route home initially took us past ‘Funk Fest’, a music event in full swing on the riverside park. Hundreds of people had paid the $65 for a ticket to get in, but thousands of others had just pitched up with lawn chairs to sit outside the venue and listen from the nearby park, bringing their own private parties with them. It was quite a spectacle. We had noted that the baseball crowd had lacked Black faces. Here they were, having a much better time, for free! Sensible people. We stopped for a few moments to listen to ‘Slick Rick’ but as darkness waits for no man, we pushed on. The rail bridge was lit up with colourful lights and the city looked great behind us. We cruised home, marveling at the displays from the fireflies along the riverside, trying not to swallow the myriad of other bugs that were out in force, arriving back safely before it was pitch black.

Pretty bridge lights
Louisville in lights

We arrive in Kentucky after a short interlude in Tennesee

7th June to 11th June 2023

We cruised out of our hilly campsite back onto the hilly Blue Ridge Parkway. After about 7 miles we left the Parkway and headed down the ‘hill’. Jeepers. What a hill. It came with numerous hairpins, a 15 mph speed limit for big vehicles, a plethora of warning signs about using low gears, several pull off areas to allow trucks and larger vehicles to stop and let their brakes cool down and at least two escape lanes. We are not a large rig, but we are heavy. Seven tonnes. That’s alot of momentum. Luckily one of the numerous things that we had done on our very expensive trip to the Chevy Service Centre in Nov 21 included new rear brakes, so we were hoping they did their job. We reached the valley floor without incident and carried on. Before long we started climbing again, the I-40 highway winding its way into the Great Smokey Mountains, a subrange of the Appalacians. The hilly theme continued. We crossed the state line into Tenessee and before long arrived at our next stop, a small riverside camp wedged between the I-40 highway and the Big Pigeon River. This area lives and breathes white water rafting and aside from several outfitters, a petrol station and a couple of cafes, there was not much else on offer. Except a moonshine distillery. We were only here for a night, had not planned a rafting trip here and thought we would walk out to find a food before sampling the local distillates. When we arrived it was unfortunately pouring with rain but this did ease enough later to tackle the half mile walk along the grass verge of a suprisingly busy side road back to the ‘village’ centre. We soon discovered that nowhere served food after about 5pm which was when all the rafters were done and gone. So early evening moonshine sampling on an empty stomach it was to be then!

Moonshiners
Teeny Tiny Bloody Mary
Firewater for many reasons

We had a great tasting (drinking) session with the very personable lady manning the fort -whose name neither of us can recall for obvious reasons- and ended up buying a jar of Jalepeno moonshine which makes a very cheeky Bloody Mary variation. We rolled home and cooked pasta…I think!

Where it all started

This section of Tennessee is very narrow and the next day’s drive took us quickly into Kentucky, another new state on our travels. Today we had a lunch destination, the original KFC retstaurant and museum. We don’t often buy lunch when we are out on the road, usually making a picnic if needed, but this was an opportunity to worship at the temple of ‘fingerlickin’ fried chicken’y goodness’. We were powerless pilgrims and made a 20 mile detour to this fairly unprepossessing establishment. The museum exhibits line the walls of the restaurant with a few mock-ups of the original kitchen and several statues of the big man himself. Much of the history of the place was a summary of Colonel Sanders’ life and entrepreneurship. The man was a hardworking genius and latterly a philanthropist. And made very good chicken. The fries are also spectacular. We resisted the urge to get a family sized bucket, ate our modest lunch and headed to camp.

“Me Too”, said the Colonel.

We were staying in a small park co-located with a watersports outfitters in the Daniel Boon National Forest (I love how many of these places are named after people), and was called the Sheltowee Trace Adventure Resort. The main reason people come here is to see the nearby (6 miles away) Cumberland River and its falls, the self proclained Niagra Falls of the South. After setting camp we headed to the office to see what river trip we could do during our stay here. The only trip that had transport directly from the camp was an all day rafting trip, the most expensive option. This was more than we had planned to spend, but we couldn’t be bothered to off-load TinCan from Big Dave, so booked onto it for the next day. Once back at Tin Can our solitude and peace and quiet was ended by the arrival of a group of local Kentuckians away for the weekend from their home town 90 minutes away. Three large camping trailers containing three couples, Levi & Mary, Curtis & Tiffany and ‘Homer’ (not his real name) and Kelly. All lifelong friends, a bit younger than us, with an assortment of offspring (Aged between 19 and 10) and some of their friends. They occupied the spaces either side of us and set up a bit communal party area with a shade gazebo nearby. It was a situation that might have turned out badly but we got chatting and thus commenced our assimilation into their weekend of fun.

Levi & Mary
Curtis & Tiffany
Kelly and Homer

They were one of the most genuine and friendly group of people we have met on our travels. Their easy, relaxed and deep-rooted relationships with each other enveloped us too and for 3 days and we were part of the family. There were many hours spent sitting and chatting, mostly with a drink in hand, and a significant number of those around a raging camp fire. There was food. Almost none of it ours. Freely shared. There were marshmallows toasted. There was singing, mostly by Mary using a piece of ‘2 by 1’ as a fake microphone. There were some hangovers. There was a hiking trip to a waterfall that involved chucking some of the kids into the back of a pick up so that there was room for us too. There was a restock shopping trip to the liquor store as the beer supplies had taken a beating. There was some zipline spectating as all the kids, and Mary and Curtis, dared to hurl themselves off a tall platform at the on-site zipwire. There was reciprocal male grooming when, after many drinks, Levi and Homer gave each other buzz cuts. It’s tradition apparently. There was also attempted ‘gigging’ by Kelly. This is the act of catching frogs in the dark by stunning them with a bright torch and them stabbing them with a long sharpen stick, or ‘gig’. One then cooks and eats the legs. She was unsuccessful for several reasons: It was late and much booze had been consumed, rendering her less ‘stealthy’ than necessary. Her ‘gig’ was a short marshmellow toasting fork. Her ‘bright torch’ was an iphone. Frogs 1, Kelly 0.

Melée
Campfire
Male grooming

In amongst all this fun we did our rafting trip, co-incidentally with Levi and Mary and their 2 kids, Blain and Hallie. Despite the heat of the days it was a cold morning and we met at the office reception at the ungodly hour of 8.30am. There was the usual safety briefings and kitting out and we were bundled onto an old yellow school bus which took us to the start of the trip. Our group had five rafts and we had a 40 year old guide called Amy on our boat.

Ready for action with Levi, Mary, Hallie and Blain

(Side bar: Amy showed us the scar of a gunshot wound on her left thigh. This was a through-and-through injury that had been self inflicted. She said that she had started sleeping with her loaded 9mm handgun in the bed with her for security as her ex had been threatening her. She accidentally discharged it somehow -in a dream???-and woke when she heard the shot. The bullet missed all major blood vessels and nerves, thus she lives and can still walk. Only in America…..)

Gormless Rafters

The trip started with a paddle up to the Cumberland Falls and then headed down river from there. The river was quite low and this was not the high octane, gnarly rapids navigating experience that it might have been, but it was amazing. The river was beautiful and mostly clear and calm, the rapids were fun rather than scary and there were frequent stops to jump off rocks and swim. As the river flow was low it was safe enough to navigate some of the rapids out of the boat and at the end of the trip, once we had descended to lake-level, were met we by a larger pleasure cruise boat to take us the rest of way to the finish point. Once on the boat we were served a ‘build it yourself’ sandwich lunch which was very much needed by then and at the finish the same bus took us home again. Well worth the wonga!

River cruising
Falls

On Sunday morning our new friends all packed up and headed off. We were sad to see them go but not sure we could have managed a fourth consecutive evening of merriment. We said our goodbyes and then were were pretty much by ourselves in the park again. The weather was turning and a storm was forecast. Late afternoon we had a message from Levi: Keep our eyes on the weather forcast. There had been alerts. The storm that was headed our way had ‘potential tornadic activity’ within it. It was about 30 minutes away. We were immediately online and checking ourselves. He was right. I hustled over to the office to check where the storm shelter was. They hadn’t seen the alerts but agreed that it could develop. They pointed out the shelter, the stone built lower floor of one of the larger cabins, and unlocked it. We then packed a small ‘go bag’ with passports and electronica and I quickly door-knocked the three other RVs in the park to make sure they had seen the alerts and had clocked the storm shelter. None had. It was a slightly tense half hour but happily the tornado alert was removed before the storm got to us. No twisters, just a crazy amount of rain and thunder and a great lightning show. I’ll take a storm in a teacup any day over the alternative, Dorothy.

Stormy view

Heading West Through North Carolina With A Foray Into Virginina.

29th May -6th June 2023

We bade farewell to the marshes, wetlands and sandy islands of the coast and headed inland. The landscape filled with trees again and there were occasional swathes of cereal crops and pastures with a cow or two in them. The roads in the USA are really designed to get you from A to B to C to D with minimal fuss. Long, straight, four lane roads carving through the distances, the need for many corners removed due to the unfathomable amount of space in this massive country. It is easy to do many, many miles in a day on the road here. We generally choose not to and this day was about 170 miles, a moderate journey for us. It brought us to a town called Wilson. Pretty non-descript but a place to be.

Some wise man somewhere along our travels once said to us that we should, as far a possible, stick to the ‘Rules of 2’ when touring: Don’t drive more than 200 miles in a day. Don’t arrive at your destination after 2pm. Stay 2 nights. Following these rules takes a lot of the fatigue out of travelling when rushing about is unecessary due to being time-rich. They were wise words and we try to stick to the ethos.

So we were here for two nights. The RV park was an older, spacious camp with lots of mature trees, set back from one of those aforementioned four lane main roads. It had a small lake, some resident donkeys and a selection of long termers in the back section living in crumbling rigs covered in leaf debris. The newly renovated pool looked lovely but it wasn’t warm enough for us to consider using. The town centre was about three miles away and on our middle day we broke out the bikes and set off to see Wilson’s premiere (and arguably only) attraction. The Whirligigs. ‘The what?’ I hear you ask. Well a chap by the name of Vollis Simpson lived near here and was farm machinery engineer by trade. His hobby was building ornamental windmills out of scrap materials. This became his major activity in retirement and he created an impromtu tourist attraction on his farm, filling it with wind powered contraptions of all shapes and sizes. He also did commissions for galleries, cities and museums. As he got too old to mainatain the pieces himself the town of Wilson bought his windmills, now called whirligigs, lovingly restored them and re-sited them on a sweet, multi-purpose community park in the centre of town. This has helped return some of the vibrancy to this deprived town that was once fabulous wealthy due to it being a major centre for tobacco trading in the past.

Whirligigs

We arrived at the Whirligigs in one piece having had to navigate a one mile stretch of the main road on our bicycles before we could turn off towards town. Luckily there is little antipathy or disregard for cyclists in this country, as far as we have experienced. Motorists alway seem to give us masses of space or slow down when passing us. Perhaps that is due to the terror of litigation. Perhaps they are just so bemused by seeing people using bikes as a form of transport. Whatever the reasons, we generally feel quite safe.

It was a perfect Whirligig day: bright with a moderate breeze. They were bonkers. The photos obviously don’t capture the noises of their clattering and rattling or their complex moving parts, but trust me, they were delightful. There was a small free ‘museum’ next to the park that we went to afterwards. There were three members of staff in the one-roomed venue that was mostly gift shop, and we were the only visitors. There was a video presentation about Vollis, the story of his creations and their relocation to the park and we watched this, slightly self-consciously, sat on two tiny stools in the middle of the room. We then left without buying anything. Terrible tourists.

Back in camp we met our new neighbours, a delightful older couple called Phyllis and Ron. They had travelled a massive 20 miles from home to do a shake-down trip in their new aquisition, a very cool 2013 RoadTrek 190. Unfortunately it did not come with an owners manual and they were not entirely sure how to work everything. This was majorly complicated by neither of them being particulary techically minded and by their eschewing of the digital age. ‘Checking the internet’ was not in their repertoire of problem solving strategies. So we helped them set up, worked out how the water system functioned by finding an online manual and I even printed out the fifteen or so relevant pages for them. (Yes, we travel with a printer. Yes, this really impressed them.) We spent an hour or so chit-chatting our way through getting them sorted, mutual camper appretiation and general conversation and then, after our respective dinners, sat with them by their camp fire, toasting a marshmallow or two. In the morning we bade our farewells, shared contact details (blog site and email for us, landline and physical address for them), took a momento photo each (iphone for us, 35mm film camera for them), and headed off. They have bought a very cool little van and I’m sure they will be very happy in their travels. Perhaps just need to find someone to print off the rest of the manual for them.

Road Trekers

Next stop on our westerly trajectory was a place called Clemmens, just south of Winston-Salem. Here they have an amazing park, owned by the town, that is a magificent temple to recreation. It is over a thousand acres in area and contains three standard golf courses, a ‘soft-golf’ course, a stables and equestrian centre, an aquatic centre, a tennis club, a dog park, a hotel and restaurant, an aboretum, a botanical garden, cabins, BBQ pavilions, function halls, forested areas with hiking trails, a paved multi-use path around the circumference and…an RV campsite. It was charming and made even better by the fact that there was a really good supermarket a ten minute walk away. Our 2 days here were like a mini health retreat as we took advantage of all the facilities on our doorstep. We cycled, walked, swam (Ok, played on the slides and the lazy river at the pool complex) and even had a round of ‘soft golf’. This is played on a roughly mown field with 9 large diameter holes using a grapefruit sized soft ball, a reasonably conventional driver and wedge and a fat putter. It can be played at twilight as the hole markers and balls all glow in the dark although we played in the blazing sunshine of 4pm. It was a lot of fun, and even a non-golfer like myself could thwack a respectable round. Nick won, which was reasonably inevitable. We were sorry to be only stopping here for two nights here but onward we rolled, in a northwest direction…

Soft Golf Masters

…into Virginia. But only just. When I say ‘rolled’, I mean ‘climbed’, because now we had arrived in the Appalacian Mountains. The first mountain range of this trip. Our second trip in 2017/2018 had brought us down the inland side of the Appalacians but we hadn’t spent any time in the hills themselves really. There is a scenic route along the central and southern Appalacians called the Blue Ridge Parkway. Its about 470 miles long in total and is one of America’s great scenic drives and longest linear park. (Factoid). We had headed a trifle more north than was necessary for our overall journey in order to take in a good section of the drive and we had a rare single night stay near a town called Galax. This would give us a 109 mile drive along the parkway the next day. Our campsite for the night had promised us nothing of note except a spot to stop and plug in, but what it delivered was a little feast for the eyes. We had accidentally coincided our stay with a group of about 15-20 Airstream trailers who were camping in a bloc for 3 days whilst on a caravan rally along the length of the parkway. They are such handsome things, almost pieces of art, and to see them en-masse was a sight to behold. Big Dave and Tin Can lurked on the outskirts of the gathering, trying to look as cool, but not quite managing it. We still love them though.

Airstreams

The Parkway is a single lane, windy road that has a very sedate speed limit of 35-45 mph. It climbs and descends as it meanders its way through the thickly forested hills with frequent lookout stops suddenly revealing jawdropping distant views of more hills and mountains, all uniformly covered with equally dense forests. There is little evidence of human existance here, save for the road itself and the other sightseeing vehicles. We thought that this would be the entirety of our Parkway experience, but no. Every road needs fixing now and then and we unfortunately encountered a long detour which meant that half of our journey was actually along the more frantic, far less scenic normal roads through the hills. Once finally back on the Parkway, and back into North Carolina, we stopped to do a short hike (as the longer one that I had planned was in the middle of the bypassed section) and then stopped at a lookout to eat our packed lunch. Another hour or so on the windy road brought us to our next destination.

Parkway Vue

This next place was a massive sprawling hilly camp set into the forest. It had seemingly hundreds of pitches and cabins but was almost deserted. This is unusual for a weekend but I think we were in the thin sliver of the calendar between a long weekend and the schools breaking up for summer so most people were staying home. Whatever the reason, it was very peaceful. It didn’t have a pool but did have a small duel purpose swimming and catch-and-release fishing lake, the sections demarkated by a rope with floats. The water was too murky to tell, but I had visions of all the fish hanging out in the swimming half, having long since learnt that frequenting the other end led to a faceful of fishing hook and all that followed. We did brave a swim on the first day (the only day hot enough to justify it). It was brisk and refreshing and suprisingly quite pleasant considering!

Lake Lovlies

Camp also had this inflateable trampoline type thing, designed for children, but fun for grown ups too. We couldn’t resist a few minutes of unbridled glee, whilst trying not to pull a hip, rupture a knee or slip a rib. Luckily there were no other witnesses to our shenanigans and we got away without injury.

Jumping Boy
Jumping Girl

We had three full days here and were keen to do some walking. There were three different hikes that headed out directly from the camp, all well signposted, and all advertised at about 3.5-4.5 miles each. We decided to do one per day; no point overstretching ourselves! This was hilly terrain so we were prepared for some climbing but the 2nd of the walks had a near vertical scramble (or so it felt) for one stretch. At this point there was some very ripe language coming from my hiking partner. He was suffering from calf cramps and finds the utterances of a continual stream of expletives a useful self motivational technique to help him push forwards and enhance his enjoyment of the challenge. Or he might have been having a massive whinge. One or the other.

Hilly bit

Lookout
Happy to be at top of hill

The trails were otherwise well trodden although we barely saw another living soul whilst out and about. There was a lookout, a waterfall and many, many trees. This area is rich in pyrite, a crystalline iron sulphide. It is everywhere, sparkling in flakey rocks of various sizes and sometimes just as a dusting amongst the leaf litter. It’s other name is ‘Fool’s Gold’ and I can see how easy it would to be seduced into thinking it was it’s far more valuable doppelganger. The lengths of all three walks were all fairly significantly overestimated and having packed a daypack with plenty of water, snacks, waterproofs, first aid kit, bug spray and suncream we felt a bit silly arriving back at camp an hour and a half later. I’ve been on longer walks around shopping malls.

We had another lovely evening around the camp fire in our private deserted campsite and the next morning we were off again.

Camping, Tin Can Style

The North Carolina Coast.

19th May to 22nd May 2023

Our continuing cruise up the very pleasant US-17 took us into North Carolina. Our next big ‘destination’ was to be The Outer Banks, a long thin set of sandy barrier islands that sit off the mainland, but we had a few stops along the way to get there.

First stop was a small beach town very grandly called Surf City. This was also on a barrier island called Topsail Island but we were booked into a park on the other side of the bridge that connected it to the mainland. The park was massive, tired, shabby and inexplicably expensive for what it offered. Most sites were occupied by long term RVs obviously being used as holiday homes with only a few spaces given over to journeymen like us. It had been raining heavily and our grassy site was half underwater as we set up. Squelching around in our flip-flops spirits were a little low but as soon as we were established, the food shopping was unpacked, the awning was out and the stuff inside was all set up for living again, things didn’t seem as bad. In fact we had a really nice view of the marshes out of back window and no near neighbours. The sun then came out and soon the standing water all drained away leaving us with quite a nice little pitch. We had a great impromptu chat with two North Carolinan chaps who were long term buddies and both had holiday homes here. They and their families had been coming here for decades and they spent their time either fishing (the park did have its own boat ramp) or hanging out together in a golf cart, cruising the park roads, drinking beers. They were mighty jolly and seemed to have life sorted.

We had stopped here due its proximity to ‘The Karen Beasley Sea Turtle Rescue Centre’. It was set up by Jean Beasley and named in memory of her late daughter, Karen who died of cancer and who insisted that her life insurance payout was used to fund the project. The centre does guided tours to help fund its work and the volunteer docents were really knowledgeable. Part of the work is protecting the turtle nesting sites on the seaward side of Topsail Island and the other part is rehabilitating injured or ‘cold shocked’ turtles. The predominant turtles on this coast are Loggerheads and this area is on the northerly edge of their range. The sex of each embryo is not predetermined when it is laid but is dependant on the ambient temperature in the nest as it develops. Cooler temperatures create more male embryos, warmer temperatures more females. To that end, the cooler temperatures of this more northerly area means it is important in supplying males for the species. The organisation has volunteers that patrol the beach early every morning to mark, cordon off and document new nest sites. A single egg is removed from each nest to send for DNA analysis and further research and when it is time for the eggs to hatch the volunteers dig a shallow trench from the nest towards the ocean to give the hatchlings a clue which way to go. Beach property residents are asked to turn off all porch lights during the nights of breeding season so the baby turtles don’t confuse them with the moonlight, which they need to follow to get to the water.

Snooki in hospital

The hospital side of the operation had turtles recuperating in large aerated containers of water and most go on to be released back into the wild. Snooki was a large turtle that was a longterm resident who had bouyancy control issues. She will never be able to be released back into the wild and is looking for a forever home in a protective facility. It was very interesting and great to see some big turtles so close up.

Turtle coming up for air
Turtle in a tub

After seeing the turtles we cycled over the bridge to the town of Surf City to find it abuzz. Again we had happened upon an event by accident: A community fair and concert on the green. ‘The Bridge Jam’. There were lots of market stalls, food trucks and music by a well known North Carolina Beach Music band, The Embers. We obviously were clueless as to their fame but there were a whole heap of folk on lawn chairs who were very excited to see them come onto the stage. We watched for a bit and then headed to the beach which was far more chilled and less developed than the horrors of Myrtle. There was a kids surf competion going on and loads of local looking people knocking about. There were surfers, walkers, runners, sunbathers. There were the amusing groups of teenagers trying to look cool but terribly self conscious of how cool the other insecure teenagers might think they are, or are not. Remember those years?! There were ‘beach cops’ patrolling for illicit drinking, smoking and vaping. There were juice bars, ice cream shops and the obligatory hotdog stand. Nick succumbed to temptation and had a mid afternoon chilli-dog which I might have shared with him. It felt like a relaxed beach town and we liked it a lot.

Bridge Jam
Surf City Beach

The next day we headed off. Initially we stayed on US-17 and this took us past the home of the US Marines Corps, Camp Lejeune. This is a 250 sq mile facility, home to 35,000 personel. The camp incorporates lots of beaches to allow for amphibious training and its location between two deep water ports allows for easy deployments. This whole area is saturated with soldier types and as we cruised down the road alongside the base every second business was a barbershop. No hair on the head of any Marine in this town shall touch any collar. Soon we turned off the main drag onto a single lane road that headed out to the end of the land, a promentary called Cedar Island Point. The route took us through beautiful marshlands that were almost deserted save for scatterings of dilapidated homes and sheds. It reminded us a lot of the west coast of Northland NZ for those of you who know what that’s like. Cedar Island point consists of two things: an RV park on the beach and a ferry terminal.

Not Busy

The ferry was our route to the Outer Banks and we were booked on the 7.30am the next morning. Camp was quiet, basic and again, a bit over priced, but staying here meant that our early start in the morning involved a journey of about 50 metres to get to the ferry check-in kiosk. We took a stoll on the deserted beach which was lovely and if it had been warmer might have invited a swim and we watched the last ferries of the day go and come.

Not our ferry
Sunrise

In the morning we made tea-to-go, enjoyed a rare sunrise and joined the suprisingly long queue for the first sailing. The nearest civilisation was 45 mins away so most of our fellow travellers had had very early starts. Our crossing was going to take us 2 hours and cost us….brace yourselves….$30. Such a bargain that I cannot feel that the service can cover its costs but it was amazing. A new boat, loads of crew and very efficient service. We arrived on the OuterBanks in a village called Ocracoke, on Ocracoke Island. This seemed like a nice cool little village but we weren’t booked to stay here so we headed north. Eventually the land ran out and there was another ferry to catch to get to the next island, Hatteras. This was an hour’s trip, but mainly because it had to take a massive loop to avoid the shallows. This ferry was a ‘first come-first served’ service and cost a massive…brace yourselves again…..nothing. Nada. Rien. Free. Crazy! It counts as a bit of road, so funded by the state tax dollars. We like.

Not the biggest rig on the ferry

The islands are all generally very long and thin with the atlantic on one side and the sheltered Pamlico Sound on the other and at some points the land is only about 50-100 metres across. The single road is protected from the seaward aspect by a large sand dune, which is largely manmade in an attempt to protect the islands from the atlantic storms that must thrash them on a regular basis.

Outer Banks Road

Our chosen stop was in a village called Rodanthe, of ‘Nights in Rodanthe’ fame, the 2008 romantic drama starring Richard Gere and Diane Lane. The original book was set in Rodanthe and the film shot here too. The homes here are mostly holiday homes or rentals and mostly built atop tall stilts to protect them from tidal surges. There are a few homes built right on the beach with their stilts below the high tide mark. They looked quite battered and I’m sure won’t last too many more seasons of winter storms.

Rodanthe beach stilt houses

We had high hopes for our stay here and had booked a whole week in which to soak up the sun and the beachy vibe. There really wasn’t any other reason to be here, or much else to do. Unless one is a kite surfer. Unbeknownst to us, this area is one of the top ten destinations world wide for the sport of having to wrestle a massive air sock whilst simultaneously balancing on a small board and then trying to go in the direction that you want whilst the wind is blowing at least 20 knots and trying to remove your arms from their sockets. It looks really hard work but does provide some spectatorial opportunities.

Kiters

Our site was great, right on the sound with water views out of our back window. The only slight downside was the million watt security light which was situated on a pole right above us. It led to a blurring of daytime and nighttime and slightly messed with our circadian rhythmns.

Night Light

Unfortunately our week here coincided almost exactly with a week of mostly shonky weather. It was cool and the consistant, strong, northerly wind nearly drove us insane. The bag of warm clothes that sits in the truck was raided for more layers and we piled the blankets back on the bed. It seemed crazy that only a few days ago we were sunbathing by a pool and sitting with a fan blowing on our faces. We did manage a few outings on foot to walk the beach and came back completely sandblasted with grains of sand filling our eyebrows and the fissures of our teeth. We also had a couple of trips out on the bikes. (An exhilerating downwind freewheel and a soul destroying grind upwind) One expedition was to visit the only nearby museum which was an old Lifesaving Station.

Lifesaving Station

From here a team of federaly employed Life Savers formed part of a string of stations up the coast that kept lookout for boats and ships in distress. (A very common occurance given all the sand banks and storms.) When needed they performed rescues by rowing out in small boats or by shooting rescue lines to boats near the shore with explosive charges. The local family name Midgett features very commonly in the role of past lifesavers and pretty much every other local business even now is run by a Midgett. Another of the bike outings included the obligatory evening at a bar for burgers and beer. Our bar tender at ‘The Neptune Dive Bar’ was a very personable woman called Liz who had a Peruvian wife and a very suprising, and un-American, in-depth knowledge of European football and Grand Slam Tennis. She was a delight. She was also lamenting the unseasonal weather and said that it felt more like winter, a season that she and her missus usually escaped by spending a few months in Peru with their extended family.

This ended up being a real down-week for us so it was not a bad week to be ill. Nick was getting over a cold and I was in the thick of it with a hacking cough and feeling ropey. Our last RAST told us that this wasn’t Covid, but who knows. It wasn’t helped by having a two day hangover after our Neptune visit. I only had 3 beers but I think they might have been a bit stronger than I realised. My dwindling alcohol tolerance is very unfair.

Rainy

The intermittant rain of the week deteriorated into torrential rain on our penultimate day. It lasted 24 hours and created lakes in the park and rivers on the road. It was so heavy that we couldn’t hear the TV – Never a good thing during a lock-in. It also was the deathknell for the mediocre wifi signal. We had to resort to reading our books. Good grief. It eventually stopped and the sun finally came out. Our last evening was glorious and hot and we could understand what we had been missing, finally appreciating the charms of this peculiar place. On our last morning we awoke to a flat calm day. There was not a breath of wind and the water of the Pamlico Sound was like glass. The kite surfers had been replaced by paddleboarders and we jealously watched them cruise about as we packed up and headed off. We navigated a few long swooping bridges that connected different islands on our northerly journey until we got to the bridge that took us back to the mainland. Now we left the ocean and started our long westerly trajectory across country. Bye Bye Atlantic.

Can’t quite believe the sun is shining again
Long bridge outta here

Myrtle Beach and lots of Motor Bikes. A Noisy Interlude in South Carolina

16th May to 19th May 2023

Sometimes we search out events, festivals, interesting gatherings and obscure things to witness. Sometimes these things find us by happenchance. Our trip from Charleston to Myrtle Beach initially took us along a quiet back road through the very beautiful and peaceful Francis Marion National Forest and then we rejoined the more coastal highway US-17. It was here that we started to notice the preponderance of motorbikes. Mostly Harleys. All massive. All noisy. Overwhelmingly being riden by well nourished, bandana wearing, sleeveless jerkin clad folk who were either verging on, or well and truely arrived in, the grey hair years. A quick interrogation of the Googs informed us that our stay in Myrtle was coinciding with ‘Myrtle Beach Bike Week’. This was perhaps not a spectacle that we would have actively sought out but we were now committed and realised that it would provide an opportunity to do some mass wildlife viewing that ordinarily we wouldn’t be a party to. Like the migration of the wilderbeast. It also explained why we had found it tricky to find an affordable RV site anywhere near Myrtle Beach and why we found ourselves nearer North Myrtle Beach – not that this really made alot of difference to our experiences over the next 3 days.

Urban Beach

The landscape and the character of this section of coastline is very American. There is an endlessly long beautiful white sandy beach, then there is a wall of highrise hotels and appartment buildings built right on the waterfront in order to take full advantage of the view at the expense of all others. There were no beachside cafes or prommenades or cycle trails. Then there are a few blocks of low rise vacation rental homes, then there is a busy four lane highway lined with strip malls, petrol stations, restaurants, massive ‘beach gear’ sales emporiums, mini golf courses and other businesses. Our camp was just on the inland side of this highway and so a half mile or so from the beach. It was also right next door to a big commercial development of shops and eateries that was also home to a regional theatre, a marina on the inland waterway AND one of the hubs for the Bike Week.

There were big spluttering Harleys everywhere. These bikes, as many of you I am sure are aware, are often specifically modified to be extra noisy. They leave the factory with a patented ‘potato-potato’ sound adhering to the 80 db noise restriction but many do not stay that way. A quick change-out to a straight exhaust sans baffles converts their characteristic throaty tones into brain-liquefying, internal organ rearranging din. Apparently the adage ‘Loud Pipes Save Lives’ works on the theory that if you can hear them coming then you look out for them, therefore they are safer. To be honest, given the fact that about 99% of the riders did not wear helmets, I think that the basic ‘motorcycle survival strategies’ employed by the Harley community are a bit mis-informed. They must all be deaf as posts as well.

Harley Gathering

The main activity during a motorcycle rally is cruising around in large groups of your fellow tribe members. It is blisteringly sunny and you shrug on your minimal sun protecting sleeveless Harley apparel (and short shorts if you are a female pillion rider) and omit the suncream – the tattoos look better on a red background. You don your protective bandanna and wrap around sunglasses. (A fly in the eye is bad news- safety first.) Your pillion rider loads her iced drink into the obligatory cup-holder and the miniture yorkshire terrier into its custom pannier and off you thunder, rattling the windows of the buildings and the souls of your fellow road users as you pass by. Where are you going? Sometimes nowhere. Sometimes to a park-up zone. The local Harley dealer will always host one of these. You arrive, you park up, you walk around. In loud voices you compare Yorshire terriers, brands of aftersun and hearing aids and then drive on. You might stop at an expo zone at a hub like the one next to our camp. There will be countless stalls set up selling merchandise, more Harley apparel and custom parts and there will be huge mobile workshops housed in eighteen-wheeler trucks where you can get your bike mods done.

Trike with Coffin. Weird.

All the while you are checking out every one elses bikes. Some are standard issue and handsome. Some are achingly beautiful custom designs with curves and swoops of their farings and gleaming, glowing paint jobs. Some riders will be towing a coffin on a trailer with a manequin in it which he says is his ex-wife. Some riders have moved onto trikes which make all the same noises, give the same ‘wind in the hair’ experience, but stay upright when you let go of them and are a bit more forgiving to older bones and wobbly legs.

Different Bikes

Some riders will turn up on bicycles, feeling like they’ve brought a knife to a gunfight and then wander around feeling a bit out of place but enjoying the short term immersion in an alien world. These bicycle riders will be on their way back from a trip to check out the beach. They will have decided that the coast here has been a bit ruined by all the development and wonder why they came in the first place. They will wonder why Yorkshire terriers seem to be so popular. They will marvel at the array of denim clothing.

Good Beer. Shame about the plastic.

A some point in their short stay here the bicycle riders will find a good place to have a beer and a burger- an important travelling superpower- and they will have a round of mini golf. One of them (M52) will win and be irritatingly gleeful. The other (F51) will remind the winner that she was far more dignfied in victory after their last round. The course in question was the site of the 2023 Pro Masters Tournament. Fancy.

Annoying Winner

The weather will break, the temperture will fall and the rain will come. They will have to put socks on. They will leave Myrtle Beach a bit bemused by the place and with no plans to rush back. Thank heavens for the Harleys. They were the highlight of the visit.

A Brief Stop in Yemassee, then to Charleston, South Carolina

10th May – 16th May 2023

Before we go any further I would just like to say that I think South Carolina has the coolest state flag by a country mile.

It is not very far (just over 100 miles) from Savannah to Charleston, another place on our ‘Definitely-Must- Go-There’ list, but we still had a two night stop along the way. The main reason for this was to line up our city bookings with the weekends so that Greg & Gigi had a couple of options for visiting us. Our stop was in a lovely wooded camp in a place called Yemassee, known nowadays mainly for its proximity to the I-95 highway and its role as a service centre. Back in the day it had something to do with a war with the local native tribe, the Yemassee, and then something to do with the Revolutionary and Civil Wars, and a train depot here was the last stop for new recruits heading to Parris Island, the nearby Marine Corps training base for most of the 19th and 20th centuries

This was a fab park with an on-site bar and pizza oven, a nice pool and a walking trail around a nearby lake that contained alligators. (The blighters are everywhere.) Here we met Jason, a brave soul who was four days into a 4000 mile solo cycle trip from North Carolina to Oregan via Florida. We bought him a medicinal beer or two and vowed to keep in touch as his route may coincide with ours down the line.

With Jason the Cyclist

Our journey up into southern South Carolina took us within ten miles or so of a place that has been in my sphere of consciousness for the past two years. I manage my insomnia by listening to podcasts and one that had completely gripped me since 2021 is called ‘The Murdaugh Murders Podcast’. This has investigated and reported the case of the fraudulent 4th generation South Carolinan lawyer, Alex Murdaugh who stole millions of dollars from his clients and hundreds of thousands from his own law firm, manipulated justice using his family influence, is associated either directly or indirectly with the deaths of three people then murdered his son and wife to deflect attention away from his crimes before faking an apparent murder attempt on his own life to deflect attention from his potential involvements in his family’s deaths. It was bizarre to be driving through the area where this case played out and it felt weird to be seeing such familiar place names on sign posts.

On our way to Charleston we finally found a car wash which was tall enough to fit us in. Big Dave and Tin Can were still covered in a layer of dust courtesy of a couple of hurricaines that went over Orlando whilst they were in storage and the dust had since been joined by a layer of dead Floridian flies. It was a snug fit in the bay but we managed to reach most of the dirt. As we were washing another truck camper pulled up in the next door bay. He had seen us as he went past so knew he would fit too. These rigs are rare in this part of the country, so it was worth a photo.

Carwash brothers

Our camp in Charleston was not IN Charleston, and indeed this was a much harder city to camp anywhere near. The best we could do was a place 18 miles from the city centre, with no real public transport options. We were resigned to relying on Ubers to get backwards and forwards. The camp itself was quite nice with a scenic fishing lake and a small pool. There was enough to do in Charleston to warrant having two days in the city and Nick came up with a plan to reduce the money and time spent in Ubers…Spend it on a night in a cheap-ish hotel in town instead! A ‘night on dry land’ is always a treat and given how hot it was, it would be great to have a base so we could freshen up and change for the evening after a day sightseeing. A fine establishment was booked: a double, ensuite room in a hostel. Called the Not So Hostel, we were optomistic that this meant that it was of a better calibre than the usual youth hostel offering. We were left with a day to kill in camp and whilst floating around in the pool we met one our fellow campers, Erica. A Washington state native, Erica has been on the road full-time for four years, living in modest sized trailer that she towed behind an aging Toyota truck. She had spent the past month here and had decided to buy herself a brand new truck which she had just collected that day. Exciting times! When she found out that we were going to get an Uber to the city the next day she very kindly offered to give us a lift, a gesture mostly rooted in her spontaneous generosity of spirit, but I think also a little bit motivated by wanting to share the joy of her new purchase. I can totally understand that and I’m glad that we could be there to help.

Erica in new truck with lift bludgers

In the morning our shiny Toyota Tundra Taxi scooped us up and wafted us into the city. It was a very impressive toy and made Big Dave look quite shabby and outdated. (Shhhh, he didn’t hear that.). She dropped us at the Not So Hostel and headed off to the indoor market. The hostel was a detatched, weatherboard-clad town house and definitely had a ‘student digs’ flavour. We had the electronic door code to get into the communal area, which was a small lounge/kitchen, and we let ourselves in to leave our overnight bag here for the day. The place was deserted save for a robo-mop diligently cleaning the floor. Our room had an external entrance for which the door code wouldn’t work until check in at 2pm, but there was an internal door that opened onto the communal area and it was wide open. It looked more than satisfactory for the sub-$100 price tag, even having its own small kitchenette area. The only slightly worrying feature – packets of free ear plugs on the bedside tables. Never a good sign! Bag abandoned in our wardrobe we headed off towards the centre of the city. Like Savannah, Charleston has a free shuttle bus system that offers transport around several different loops of the historic distric. The hostel was on one of these routes but we set off on foot for our first explore.

The focus of today’s tourist activities was going to start with a nautical theme. Across the river lies the USS Yorktown, a decommissioned aircraft carrier that is now a museum. The 873 ft CV-10 carrier was commisissioned in 1943 and it was named in honour of its namesake Yorktown CV-5 that was sunk at the battle of Midway in 1942. She saw significant action in the Pacific during WW2 and in the Vietnam war and in 1968 was the retrieval ship for the Apollo 8 Capsule and astronauts. Decommissioned in 1970 she was sited here in 1975 and now you can go aboard and explore lots of her nooks and crannies in self guided tours. There was a watertaxi service to get across the river to the Yorktown site and after a quick lunch (because who can do history on an empty stomach?) we went aboard. It was very impressive.

Yorktown’s stern
Hampson on deck

There were several plane and helicopter exhibits up on the flight deck and it wasn’t hard to imagine the carrier in full working mode with jets screaming off along the deck and hurling themselves off into the air. The hanger deck below was also enormous. It too contained many aircraft exhibits, a movie theatre and the obligatory snack bar and there was still tons of empty space. We took a less travelled self-tour to accomodation, galley and medical areas and although there were plenty of other people around on the ship, it was deserted. We even found the rabbit warren self-tour of the engine room, containing 4 steam turbines. We had it to ourselves which was odd and it felt like we were somewhere we shouldn’t be.

Fiddling with knobs in the engine room

Once we were saturated with nautical history we took the watertaxi back across the river to the downtown area and started a slow stroll back up towards our hostel. Charleston seemed to have a lot of positive attributes as a city. It is small enough to be accessible but large enough to have an energy, amenities and inward investment. It felt like a youthful city and as the local university, the College of Charleston, has a 1:2 ratio of men to women, it had quite a feminine vibe. Although it lacked the massive quantity of mature trees groaning under the weight of tons of Spanish Moss of Savannah it had endless examples of well preserved and restored historic homes, sympathetically designed modern buildings, well maintained waterfront parks and many lovely nearby beaches. The people really do have a Southern charm and are friendly, welcoming and polite and no-one seems to be in any great rush to be anywhere else. There were many independant shops and businesses, a liberal dusting of designer stores, horse drawn carriage tours, and, the main reason that this has become a tourist favourite, lots and lots and lots of good places to eat and drink really well.

Despite the plethora of quality drinking establishments I am slightly embarrassed to admit, however, that our first alcoholic drink in this town was a ‘Booze Pop’, partaken at a bus stop. In our defence it was roasting hot, we were very thirsty and there was nothing else immediately available. We decided that we had walked enough and stopped at one of the bus stops to get the free shuttle the last mile ‘home’. There was a van parked nearby that looked like it would sell us a can of cold coke or similar. Nick was dispatched to procure said refreshing fluids and returned with the very adult version of ice pops. 200mls of 7% ABV, they were a frozen party in a tube. Just what our mildly dehydrated and overheated bodies needed at 4 0’clock in the afternoon! They disappeared fast and happily the bus arrived soon after to whisk us uptown, now reasonably merry.

At the hostel it was still deserted. If anyone else was here, they were hiding quietly in their room not hanging out noisily in the common area. We were hoping it was going to stay that way, and to be fair, it did. It felt like a private house just for us. We rested, rehydrated, washed, changed and headed out again. The free bus took us back downtown and we headed to a rooftop bar that we had identified earlier in the day. This had amazing 360 º views of the city under jaunty red canopies and umbrellas and we installed ourselves at the bar. The temperature had cooled slightly to that wonderful sweet spot where you are neither too warm or too cool and there was a soft warm breeze. Perfect! So why do they have to spoil perfection by serving good quality, healthily priced drinks in fricking plastic cups??????????????? Insanity. (I promise I will not hurl my empties over the parapet into the streets below…) Unfortunately any drinking venue that is deemed to be ‘outside’ is cursed with the same restrictions. It is a shame.

We had made a dinner reservation at a fancy restaurant but decided to cancel this to offset the increased expense of the night’s accomodation. Our plan was to have a more mid-range meal somewhere more relaxed. Now those of you who know my husband well will know that he has a man-crush on the late, great chef/travel journalist/tortured soul Anthony Bourdain. We have spent countless hours watching his various food travel shows, and following in his footsteps, visiting places he has eaten along the way has been one of the ways that we direct our own travelling. So a stroll to the nearby restaurant called Husk was in order. Tony had been there.

Husk
Bar flies

We knew that we couldn’t get into the main dining room but we also knew it had a bar next door where you could eat too. We secured a valuable spot at the bar and had a most excellent (but definitely NOT mid-range) meal and evening of drinking. Totally worth it. We wearily embarked on our walk back to the hostel (as the free buses had long since stopped for the evening) when halfway home we happened across a rank of waiting bicycle rickshaws. It was too tempting and a very personable business studies student called Jessica pedalled us home, chatting the whole way. With tip the 10 minute ride cost us more than half of what an Uber back to the RV park would have. You can see that our money saving ideas work in theory, but we are having trouble actioning them!

The earplugs, we discovered, were not for the noise of the people in the hostel, nor for the noise of the traffic outside the hostel. (Neither made a peep.) They were to muffle the din of the massive air conditioning unit that supplied the whole building which was situated on the veranda right outside our room. They mostly worked.

Day two of the Charleston adventure started with breakfast in a diner which did a good job of making us feel human again. Eggs and coffee (even the decaf kind) are like medicine. Then we walked around some more, looking at old buildings, streets, parks, tourist information signs.

Bench flies

We sat on benches and looked at views, soaking up the city and its waterfront from various vantage points. Time was filled, rather than killed, before our day’s only planned engagement: a boat trip out to Fort Sumpter. This is a fort on a small island out in the mouth of Charleston harbour. It holds the infamous honour of being the site where the first shot was fired in the Civil War. The fort, built by the government to protect the Union from foreign attack was mainly fortified on the seaward side and much weaker on the side facing the shore. The Union troops were occupying the fort as tensions were rising and they were trying to stop the Confederate forces using Charleston port to stock and supply their army, and shipping out commodities like cotton to pay for it. In April 1861 there was a standoff, push came to shove, a barrage of cannon shots were fired by the Confederates from the land at the fort’s vunerable rear flank and after 34 hours it was defeated. The Union troops surrendered, packed up their flag and were evacuated. Only five Union troops had been injured. No-one had died. If only the rest of the war could have been settled with so little bloodshed. It was to be four years later before the Union flag was hoisted back above the fort.

Fort Sumpter

There was a 30 minute boat trip over to the island and its fort, which nowadays looks very different to its original design. We shared our tour with a school group of about sixty 10-11 year olds. There is a noise level associated with this number of humans of that age all together in the same place whilst hopped up on their post prandial sugar rush. Luckily the captain of the boat made them very aware how he felt about their din and made an announcement to this effect doing a much better job of shutting them up than the teachers did. Aye, Aye Cap’n!

Flag lesson

We had about an hour on the island and there was an informative ranger talk on the fort’s history and more specifically, the flag. The boat ride home was a bit longer, taking in a loop of the harbour and giving us more facts and figures on the sights. A very pleasant way to spend the afternoon. Back on dry land we called an Uber, called in at the hostel to pick up our bag and headed home. By now we were both exhausted and Nick was coming down with a cold. I nipped round to Erica’s trailer to say thank you again and we said our goodbyes. We were all heading off in the morning but her day was going to start much earlier than ours. Our slow boat sails late.

We loved Charleston and wouldn’t hesitate to return if the opportunity arose. I think it would also be a great place to live for ten months of the year. Spring was a lovely time to be here but I can imagine it is a bit sweaty in summer.

Savannah, Georgia

6th May – 10th May 2023

A visit to the alluring southern city of Savannah has always been high on our list of things to do during our travels around the USA. In general we try and avoid big cities as many of them are very car-centric, road-dominated, commercialised jungles with a preponderance of strip malls and no real historic downtown; no real individualised flavour. Then there are the logistics of finding an RV park close enough to a city centre and being able to use either our feet, our bikes, public transport or short Uber trips to complete our journey. Mostly it is visiting the tiny cities and small towns of America that fullfills these criteria and thus gives us the most joy. There have been a few noteable exceptions to these rather sweeping statements, however: like New Orleans which had an RV park on the edge of the French Quarter so we could walk to the action; like Chicago that has an enormous truck park that accepted RVs only a few miles Uber ride from downtown; like Sam’s Town Casino RV park in Las Vegas that has a free shuttle to The Strip; like Austin, Texas which was just across the river from the CBD. Savannah joined these ranks. We found a charming, underdeveloped, wooded, family run park called Biltmore, which was only about four miles from the historic downtown. Our transport solutions were to be a combination a bus ride to get into town and Ubers to get home.

I feel that I must insert some fun facts about Savannah before we go any further:

Square
  • Founded in 1733 it is said to be America’s first planned city, with its streets and public squares arranged in a grid pattern. This is standard today but was cutting edge design in its time. Of the 24 original squares, 22 still exist today. Full of mature trees laden with the ubiquitous spanish moss and a variety of statues, monuments and fountains thay are a massive part of Savannah’s charm.
  • It is the USA’s fourth busiest shipping port and many of Savannah’s surviving original cobbled and stone streets are constructed from the ballast stones transported here from all over the world in otherwise empty ships. These were unloaded and exchanged for cargo. Reuse and recycle is not a new thing people.
  • In 1819 a house in Savannah was the first in the USA to be fitted with indoor plumbing.
  • The movie Forrest Gump was filmed here.
  • Lastly, and not fun at all: In March of 1857, Savannah had the largest sale of human beings in the history of the USA. The auction of enslaved people lasted two whole days and took place at a racetrack in the city. During those days it was said to be pouring rain the whole time because the heavens were so sad. and so was named The Weeping Time’. For all its beauty, its wealth and success was built at the expense of many lives.
  • There is a statue down on the riverfront immortalising Florence Martus, a Savannahian that lived from 1868 to 1943. The unmarried daughter and sister of lighthouse keepers she spent much of her life living with her family in lonely lighthouse outposts. She dedicated 44 years of her life waving farewells and welcomes to all the passing ships that used the port, using a hankerchief in the day and a lantern at night. Legend tells that she did this as she was searching for a lost love and likely waved at over 50,000 ships, many of which would reply to her using their horns.
Waving Girl

As previously mentioned, we were going to be sharing our Savannah experience with our good friends Greg and Gigi who were flying in from New York. They were coming in on Sunday afternoon and staying two nights at a hotel in town, very keen to help us soak up the delights of this laconic and charming city. (When I say ‘delights’ I obviously mean mostly cocktails and southern cuisine.) We arrived at the RV park the day before, on the Saturday and checked in with our hosts, an older married couple who had inherited the site from her father. The reception office for the park was co-located in the on-site Antiques and Collectibles shop. This was a veritable warehouse sized establishment filled with an array of dusty and esoteric items and seemingly no customers at all. Our site was massive and shaded by some lovely old trees. It did not feel like we were in a city.

Massive shady RV site
Bus stop view

On Sunday afternoon, dressed for a classy evening of eating and drinking in town, we headed to the nearest bus stop which was conveniently located just outside the RV park. We were armed with all the relevant information on bus times, routes and stops and we had, as I had discovered necessary, the cash in correct change for our journey of 25 minutes – a whole $1.50 each. To say that we looked slightly out of place standing in our glad rags at a bus stop on a grass verge next to a barbed wire topped chain link fence alongside a busy four lane main road that runs through a depressed suburb of Savannah waiting for the Number 17 would probably be a reasonable understatement. It arrived on time, was new and clean and even had a display informing us of our stops. No complaints at all. It would be truthful to say that we travelled through some of the less salubrious and photogenic areas of the outskirts of Savannah to get to the historic district but we soon arrived at our stop in town. From there it was only a short stroll down some leafy streets lined with handsome town houses until we got to Forsyth Park. We were a bit early to meet Greg & Gigi at their hotel, which was on the other side of this park, one of the jewels in Savannah’s crown, so we looked for somewhere to grab a cold can and watch the world go by for a bit to kill time.

It soon became apparent that there ‘was something going on’ in the park. Something dogggy. Now the British minds can drag themselves out of the gutter straight away: I am being litteral here. It was a Doggy Carnival day. There were dogs everywhere. Dogs of all shapes and sizes and fur varietals. Dogs in clothes, dogs in strollers, dogs being carried, dogs in boots, dogs with fur paint motifs, some dogs were just normal looking. There were dog treat stalls, dog play areas, dog paraphernalia stalls, dog painting stalls. What I did not see was one single unpicked-up poop, or any impressive dog fights. Amazing. We plonked ourself on a wall to soak up the spectacle and automatically started a game of ‘Cool Dog, Fool’s Dog‘. Now this is a bit judgy and is from the same playbook as our airport departure lounge (or any other good people watching venue) game ‘Hit or Miss‘ in which we comment (quietly to each other – not out loud so as to cause tears or fights) purely on how people are dressed. Purile and very entertaining. Anyway. ‘Cool Dog, Fool’s Dog‘ comes from a place of a love of dogs and the starting position that ALL DOGS ARE CUTE. The game is more a commentary of an owner’s decision making when chosing a dog and how they present it to the world. So some examples of basic ‘Fools Dog’ criteria would be: Dog clothes when unecessary for extreme cold, keeping full/double coated dogs in hot climates, spending crazy money to buy puppies of breeds with significant health issues from overbreeding thus perpetuating the problem, dog body modifications, use of a fierce looking dog to make you look like a gangster, dogs so tiny that they can’t keep up with the slow walking pace of a human, massive or high energy working dogs kept in RVs or small appartments that never get to stretch their legs. You get the drift. You may not agree with our game, but it is our game. We had just picked out a rare ‘cool dog’ when it’s owner coincidentally approached us and asked if we could dog-sit his very lovely pooch for a few minutes whilst he popped into a cafe to use the loo. We were very happy to and here is Molly, a lovely therapy dog who visits the elderly and sick for her job. What a good girl!

Dog Sitting

Anyway, I digress. Having begrudgingly surrendered Molly back to her owner we went to find Greg and Gigi at their hotel and unsuprisingly located them at the bar. Here commenced the agenda for the next two days of incessent chatting, eating and drinking. A couple of drinks at the bar was followed by an unexpected free ‘glass’ (plastic cup) of fizz in the hotel lobby, a congenial freebie offered to guests between 5 and 6pm each day. We pretended we were staying too, obviously, and had two each. Then we slowly strolled towards the downtown area, visiting various establishments along the way. These had been previously identified by Nick as cool places to go and had been thus marked on a map. Our crawl included a brewery, a bar that served us some very satisfactory food and a speakeasy style basement bar that did some mean cocktails. At the end of the evening we made plans to return in the morning for brunch and took an Uber home.

Drinking Party

Our bus back to town in the morning was at 9.30am, which felt very, very early given our mildly sore heads when the alarm went off at 8.30am. It was going to be a long, hot day so we packed a bag with swim suits (for our ongoing deception of being hotel guests where Greg & Gigi were staying) and fresh clothes to go out to dinner in. At the hotel we exchanged our bag for our friends and headed out to brunch, catching one of the free downtown city buses to get there. Fed and watered we commenced a slow, sweaty walking tour of the historic district. We took in squares, cemeteries, town houses, old buildings and the river walk. We even did a couple of laps of the free river shuttle just to have a sit down, get some breeze and see the town from the water. Another establishment that had been marked on ‘the map’ was a well known icecream shop. Our afternoon snack was far more ice cream than any of us really needed, eaten on a bench in a square. This wasn’t the actual Forrest Gump ‘life is like a box of chocolates’ bench, or even the same square, but in our minds it was.

Icecream bench

We shuffled slowly back to the hotel via a church or two then decamped to the pool area. We had a couple of hours of much needed R&R with cooling dips in the water. There may have been some napping. Our pool time fortuitously overlapped with ‘free fizz for guests in the lobby’ time. Hoorah! The genuine hotel guests were kind enough to let us use their shower facilities and once we were all clean and changed we set off back to town of the free bus. After sunset drinks in a hotel rooftop bar we went for dinner in a riverfront restaurant that did not impress us much. Nick had done a lot of research on where to eat and it had good reviews but unfortunately it managed to overpromise and underdeliver on all fronts. A bit of a shame, but we had fun with the almost ‘Faulty Towers’ type experience.

Rooftop bar sunset view
Historic fancy restaurant that we did not eat in

A bit less booze was imbibed on this second evening so getting up to catch the 9.30am bus back to town again wasn’t so cruel. A second brunch was had in a great diner-style establishment called Little Duck. They served their brunch cocktails with a little yellow rubber duck floating in them. Cute, but not cute enough to get us drinking again at 11am. We’re not animals.

After brunch we spent another few hot hours stolling the sultry streets again. This place is beautiful but must be unbearable in peak summer. Having cruised across town to visit the renowned Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) Museum and Gallery we were quite dismayed to find out it was open every day except on a Tuesday. Today. Rats. By now our bodies were in need of cool refreshment and we found a great air conditioned bar to have a last cocktail before it was time to head back to Greg & Gigi’s hotel to say our farewells. They headed back to the airport and we went ‘home’ were we did NOTHING for the rest of the day. The combination of heat, walking, socialising and moderate excess had broken us.

Savannah was gorgeous and aside from one mediocre eating experience, it had not disappointed. We loved sharing it with friends and really appretiate the effort they make in coming to find us on our travels. The next day, much rested, we continued north, crossing the Savannah river and enterered South Carolina.

Kingsland, GA. A pitstop.

2nd May – 6th May 2023

Some of our travelling is going places. Some of our travelling is visiting places of note and repute. But sometimes our travelling is killing time and finding somewhere to stop and just exist whilst a bit of time passes. This was the situation for the next four days. We had a booking for Savannah on the next weekend, a long held bucket list destination for us and an experience that we were going to be sharing with our good friends from Conneticut, Greg & Gigi, who were flying in to see us.

Our pitstop was ‘Walkabout Camp’, an RV park with an Australian flavour by virtue of the husband of the couple that owned it being from Melbourne originally. Apart from its name, some shade sails around the pool area and the bathrooms being labelled ‘Blokes’ and ‘Sheilas’, it didn’t feel particularly Australian. It did deliver on the requirements for a good pitstop however:

  1. Good bathrooms, laundry and wifi. Non negotiable.
  2. Somewhere to walk – there was a nice maintained trail that meandered through the wooded land next to the park. It was only about a mile long but very pretty. No-one else seemed to either know about it or be interested in walking it so we had it to ourselves.
  3. A nice pool area – this was also barely used by the other inhabitants, so practically a private pool as well for the Hampsons. Nice.
  4. Somewhere to bike – The local town, Kingsland, was about 3 miles away and a safe and easy cycle. It was a town of two halves. The new part was close to the highway, was busy with lots of traffic, new construction, tons of eateries, businesses, petrol stations supermarkets and acted like a massive service centre for the highway. We didn’t go there. Instead we cruised into the ‘historic district’. This was very different with almost no business or eateries, dilapidated old homes, abandoned buildings and much quieter.
  5. A quirky place to eat – the purpose of our journey a’bike to Kingsland was to have brunch at ‘Steffen’s Diner’, pretty much the only restaurant in town. It’s been run by the same family since 1948 and serving up Southern delights and classics continually since then. I had ‘The Benedict’ which was ham and poached eggs on muffins smothered with sausage gravy in lieu of hollandaise sauce. Perfection! We realised why this part of town was so quiet. Pretty much everyone had congregated here. It had been a good idea to come for brunch rather than lunch as there was quite a queue by the time we left.
  6. A petting zoo – I’m not sure why there was a collection of (mostly pint-sized) animals here, but they added a certain ‘je ne sais quoi’ to the ambience of the park. The early morning dawn chorus was the bleating of goats rather than birdsong and the flock of about ten chickens free-ranged amongst the rvs and trucks, having no respect for personal space and dashing towards the rustle of any packet of crisps or crackers at drink’o’clock. There was a depressed looking miniture pony called ‘Hulk’, an equally depressed looking miniture cow called ‘Brutus’, a couple of piggies who did nothing but sleep (so maybe also had low moods) and four goats who looked quite happy. There was also a whole bunch of squirrels to offer us entertainment and amusement. It’s difficult to ascertain the mood of a squirrel but I think that they all generally feel quite upbeat due to their very cool ability to climb trees and perform death defying leaps between branches.
Steffens Diner
Goat
Chicken
Pigs
Tiny cow, chickens for scale, Big Dave in background

So that was that. A few days of chilling out and then we were back on the (short) road to Savannah.

Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia

27th April – 2nd May 2023

Housekeeping:

Before I start blathering on, it seems that those people that subscribe to the site are not getting the photos included with the post when it is sent by email. This is likely a glitch at my end and I shall try and fix it. In the meantime you can go directly to the site at tincantravels.net, or copy and paste the link at the end of the email.

The Blather:

We headed north and crossed into southeast Georgia. Destination Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, a 630 square mile area that includes 90% of the world renowned Okefenokee Swamp. So you’ve all heard of it, right??! It is another small slice of this massive country that is ecologically hugely significant and mostly unknown to all but locals and those in the business. In fact it is so important that is has been designated a Wetland of International Importance and is on the tentative US list for World Heritage Status. So there, now you have all heard of it!

Okefenokee is a vast bog that sits inside a huge saucer shaped depression that was once a shallow ocean floor. It gives rise to two rivers that flow out of it in opposite directions and its waters are inky black, stained by the tanins from the rotting vegetation.It’s name translates to “Land of the Trembling Earth” and the massive wetland is home to a myriad of species of plants, trees, insects, birds, reptiles, amphibians and mammals. Its the whole shabang of an ecosystem.

Swampy

There is a park in the swamp called Stephen C Foster State Park, oddly named for a 19th century composer, and we were here for five nights. We love these parks. They are usually off the beaten track, in wooded areas with large secluded pitches, firepits, great simple facilities and a give a sense that we are really ‘camping’. The down sides are usually a lack of wifi, and bugs. We knew that coming to a state park in a swamp was going to be ‘bug heavy’ so we had stocked up on 40% DEET – you know, the stuff that makes your skin smoke when you apply it: that’s one of the ways that it repells insects. There were many miles of long, straight, quiet, pine tree bordered backroads to get us there and we really felt like we were heading into the wilderness. Depite being nicknamed ‘The Peach State’, Georgia actually earns 40% of its GDP from forestry. We were right in the middle of it.

Camp

The park offers opportunities for fishing, boat tours, motor boat, canoe or kayak hire and a few walking trails. It is also a designated Dark Sky Area for star gazing if one is inclined to sit outside at night and be monstered by mosquitos. The waterways in the swamp are signposted and mapped and the more adventurous can do multi day trips with designated camping facilities throughout the area. There is lots of wildlife to see but the most impressive, and I would argue most plentiful creatures, were the alligators. Hundreds of the blimin’ things! They ranged in size from 1ft babies all the way up to 12ft big’uns. They seemed completely unfazed by the presence of humans and a couple of large ones were even resident in the small marina basin, floating near the boats and boat ramp and basking in the sun near the canoe rack. Although there have been no reports here of an attack on a human since 1937 we were warned not to attempt to get close or try and take selfies with them. This seemed like common sense to us but we spent some time chatting to a ranger who had seen plenty of humans behave with a bizzare lack of self preservation skills. It did also feel at times like a squirrel safari park. These were also very numerous, unbothered by our presence and very entertaining.

Watery trail sign
A warning sign

We did some walks around the park and our land-based wildlife exposure was mainly insect based, heavy on the mosquitos, despite the 40% toxo-spray. There were some amazing dragonflies and shimmering flying beetles. One huge flying something followed us closely for about 200m, like some sort of tiny, airbourne, well trained, black labrador.

Our internet access was limited. A short cycle with laptops took us to the office/gift shop at the basin which had a insect-proof, screened porch area with rocking chairs where we could get the satellite based wifi connection and here we sat for an hour or so each morning. It’s important to stay abreast of the complete dearth of news, the lack of emails from our solicitor about the sale of our house, checking weather forecasts that blatantly lie and the inanity of the rest of the internet offerings.

One day we took a guided boat trip with a very genuine and helpful young chap called Alex. He lacked any iota of sarcasm, irony or cynicism. It’s dificult to know how to interact with people like this. We slowly motored out onto the swamp and he was very knowledgeable about the fauna and flora and the history and ecology of the area. He called me Ma’am a lot and this made me feel quite old. There were loads of alligators both in the water and hauled out on logs, basking in the sun. They are quite magnificent creatures, unchanged genetically for millions of years. Its as if they evolved initially into an animal perfectly suited to their life and then nature just brushed off it’s hands and said ‘Done. No improvements needed. No natural selection necessary. Finito’. There are only 2 species of alligator worldwide. This, the American allicator, and the Chinese alligator.

Large Alligator

The next day we risked believing the weather forecast and got up early – well 8am – to rent a watercraft. It was sunny, and more importantly due to be only light winds for a few hours. We broke our 3rd rule for a long and happy marriage1 and shared a double canoe. There was an option for a 4hp motor boat, but it was a beautiful calm morning and we didn’t want to disturb our own serenity.

Front Seat Pupil

With disclaimer signed, money paid, lifejackets donned and paddles and seat cushions in hand we dragged our big aluminium canadian canoe to the water’s edge and managed to board it and float ourselves without incident. I sat in the front seat and was happy to be the lucky recipient of a very helpful and constant stream of instructions on what I was doing wrong with my paddling technique, how to steer properly, and how I should pay more attention to what direction the boat was going in. I accepted my lessons calmy and quietly with grace and gratitude, of course, and it did nothing but enhance our swamp cruising experience …. (The rules1 are there for a reason, Folks…) Despite all that we had an amazing trip. We saw no-one else out there until we were heading home and it was so beautiful. There were alligators up the ying-yang.

Real gator pretending to be plastic gator

The ones on logs and on the banks were as still as statues and the ones floating in the water would just slowly sink below the surface as we approached. I’m glad that the water was so dark because I think it would have been very unnerving to be able to see them swimming underwater around us. There were acres of waterlilies and the waterways were boarderd with Cypress and Black Gum trees drapped in the all pervasive Spanish Moss (which, interestingly is related more closely to bromeliads and pineapple plants than to other mosses).

Log Gator

Naturally occuring wildfires caused by lightening strikes are a normal part of the ecology of the swamp. They aid the propogation of some important species of tree but this area experienced a massive wildfire nicknamed the Bugaboo Fire in 2007 and the landscape still shows evidence of this with large areas lacking larger trees. The fire started in the Okefenokee when a tree fell onto a power line in high winds, this joined with another caused by a lightening strike on Bugaboo Island in the swamp. The hot and dry conditions caused the fire to and burn for over two months from April to June. Having merged with other fires and spreading into northern Florida it became the largest fire recorded in the history of both states, having burned over half a million acres and the smoke spread as far north as Atlanta, Alabama, Mississippi to the west and down south to Fort Lauderdale.

We did have several thunderstorms whilst we were here but happily without any nearby lightening strikes or scary fires. The mosquito situation was better than expected on the whole and, except for a busier couple of days over the weekend, we pretty much had the place to ourselves. It had been incredibly peaceful and a relative partial tech detox. Any period of relative wilderness living is best followed by a spell in more civilised suroundings and our next stop was to take us up further north and back towards the coast in Georgia. We bid a fond farewell to the swamp and its prehistoric inhabitants and headed back the way we had come.

1The Hampson Rules for a Long and Happy Marriage:

Rule 1: Do your own ironing. (This rule was abandonned early. Now Nick does it all)

Rule 2: Close the door for number 2s

Rule 3: Never share a double kayak or canoe

St Augustine, Florida

20th April – 27th April 2023

We were happy campers to be back on the road proper. The sun was a’shining. Big Dave and TinCan were reunited. Indicators were functioning and left turns were again possible without compunction. The 35-45 mph wobble had resolved and although the traffic through North Orlando to get to Highway 95 was hideous it couldn’t dampen our spirits.  We eventually hit the open road and headed north-west up towards the Atlantic coast. We were off to the beach!

The state of Florida is filling up fast. Many folk are looking for one, or a combination of, its warmer winters, lower taxes and less liberal politics. The Snow Birds come for the winter season. Lots of people are coming to live full-time and choose to endure the hot and humid summers. Homes are being built at a frantic rate, prices are going up and its the only place in the US where we have experienced the traffic as bad as LA.  However the crowds seem to congregate in southern Florida and the further north we drove the more relaxed it all felt.

After a busy week of doing naff all we had decided that were going to have a week of relaxation on the coast near a town called St Augustine. This is the oldest city in the USA having been settled by the Spanish in the real olden days of 1565. It was the capital of Spanish Florida for about 200 years then was the designated capital of British East Florida in 1763. It returned to the Spanish in 1783 who ceded Florida to the United States in 1819 when it was the Floridian capital again from 1821 to 1824 when the title was transfered to Tallahassee. It has some beautiful old buildings, churches and a fort and a definite Spanish flavour. It also boasts the first catholic mission on US soil from 1565, Mission Nombre de Dios, and the site is commemorated with a 204ft metal cross.

Our camp was only a few streets back from the beach, less than half a mile from the supermarket and several bars and restaurants and was an ‘easy’ 8 mile cycle to town.  (I put ‘easy’ into inverted commas as there was a dedicated cycle lane all the way there with only a very slight elevation change, but we haven’t cycled for a while and the ol’ undercarriages have tenderised since last summer. We were to suffer some saddle soreness). The camp was an ‘RV resort’. This generally means that the place has great facilities, a pool and but is priced accordingly. We were going to have to pay Florida holiday prices if we wanted to behave like we were on holiday in Florida. Which we did. We spent time by the pool every day, further converting our skin from the shade ‘English Winter Alabaster’ to a well recognised Northern European shade- ‘A-bit-red-now-but-will-be-Light-Brown-in-the-morning’.

St Augustine Beach

Depite the temperature ranging from hot to very hot there was a lovely on-shore sea breeze and we tried to combine a visit to the beach with a power walk most mornings that we didn’t cycle. Some exercise was well overdue! The Atlantic itself didn’t look that inviting yet – cold and messy conditions – so most people were either walking, cycling, fishing or sitting and gazing with only a few hardy souls paddling. Even the multitude of dogs didn’t really want to go in.

Beach Houses

Our first full day here was a sorting day. At one point it looked like we were having a fire sale with bags, tools, boxes, electonics, leads, chairs, bikes, BBQ, and all sorts of other guff spilled out all over our concrete pad. We unpacked our bags, repacked our warm stuf and put it away. I packed away the duvet – won’t be needing that for a while. We re-aquainted ourselves with all the things that we own here, which is a suprising amount of stuff. There are lots of half-used bottles and tubes of stuff, tools and equipment that remind us of all the repairs and maintanance that we have done along our travels. Like the tyre iron that we bought in Arizona after one of our rear wheels came loose and nearly fell off in the desert. Fun times, happy memories…. Eventually we made some sense of the place and all was tidied away again, with a satisfying bag of rubbish to be disposed of.

Our first foray to town was by an intriguing ride-share/on-demand trolley bus. I had found the number on a flyer pinned up by the toilets (One has to be careful in these circumstance as to what one is getting into, so to speak). The RV resort reception staff denied all knowledge of the service and when I called the number I was given the direct dial number for the driver of the bus. I was to call him for a pick up after 4pm. It all seemed quite unusual. At 4pm I got through to Lloyd, the driver, who due to a combination of background noise, my accent and trying to navigate a big bus through traffic, took a while to understand my request for a pick up. We got there in the end though and a time was set: 6pm. Were we going to The Amphitheatre? No, Historic Down Town, I said. Would he show?? At 5.45pm we headed to the pick up area at the resort entrance, all washed and dressed and there he was, waiting in old noisy bus disguised as a trolley. We settled into the uncomfortable wooden seating, another couple jumped on the bus on a whim and we were off! On the way we picked up a few more couples from a hotel and it transpired that there was a big concert on at the Ampitheatre, a 4000 seater local concert venue. The performer for the next three nights was ‘Billy Strings’ (no-us neither), but next week it was hosting Billy Idol and Pat Benatar (on consecutive nights, not in a bizzare fantasy genre chimera duet performance). He dropped them off there and us to town. “Just call when you want picking up’, Lloyd said as we disembarked, “but it will have to be at 9pm at the latest so that I can drop you off home before the concert finishes”. This seemed a bit vague so we asked him to pick us up where we were getting off at 9pm. A firm plan without needing a phone call seemed a better option. He agreed. But what do they say about the best laid plans…..

We had a lovely few hours in town. We wandered through the town square lined with tall trees draped in Spanish moss, through the old narrow historic streets, past the grand churches, the clock tower, and old Spanish colonial hotel building that is now a university (none of which we took any photos of) and then after a much needed cold beer in a local microbrewery we had dinner in a great restaurant called The Floridian. It was off the touristy beaten track but good enough to have a constant queue of people waiting for a table. The food was great, the service excellent, the drinks cold. What more could we ask for? Well I’ll tell you… ‘people watching’ opportunities. We had managed to score one of the best seats in the house on the veranda giving us a prime vantage point to observe the natives. It really was a perfect restaurant experience.

We walked back to the pick up point for the bus in plenty of time but by 9.10pm he still hadn’t turned up. We called him multiple times and after not answering the first few calls he eventually picked up and said he wasn’t coming. He was now on the wrong side of the bridge and it was now too late to fetch us before the concert ended. We were stuck 8 miles from home with no public transport and 4000 people leaving a concert in 30 minutes time. Time to pray to the Gods of Uber…. 2 minutes later our angel in a Honda Accord arrived. She was not the most joyful individual in the firmament. During the entirety of our ride she drove with one hand whilst the other shovelled a constant supply of nuts into her mouth whilst complaining about her lack of rides that evening, bills she had to pay and the fact she couldn’t afford to eat. (She was quite a large lady so I think that the lack of food situation must have been fairly recent.) We tried to cheer her up and engage her in conversation between mouthfuls, but to no avail. As she dropped us off we reassured her that her night was going to get better very fast if she hung around the Amphitheatre and she went on her sullen way. Not all angels wear smiles.

Helter Skelter Light House

The next day was undercarriage ruination day. On a Saturday morning the Amphitheatre hosts a weekly Farmers Market and although we had no desire to buy armfuls of vegetables or useless arty knick knacks we knew that there would be a food truck or two that could serve us something tasty for brunch. It was 30 minutes to the market along the old beach boulevard with the aforementioned cycle lane. Very civilised. We called in at the lighthouse to take a picture as it was very handsome with its fresh black and white paint job, and arrived at the market with a healthy hunger and the beginnings of ‘seat fatigue’. This was forgotten with a wander around the stalls, a remarkably good cup of coffee and a very tasty, albeit very slowly prepared, breakfast sandwich. Whilst waiting for our sandwich to be readied a lady of a certain age and demenour walked up to the hatch the food truck and said this verbatim: “Is there onion in the egg salad? No, good. I’ll have the egg salad sandwich but without the bread”. So she was really after a bowl of egg mayonaise… We ate our sandwiches whilst listening to a local country/bluegrass band play some tunes and sing some songs. They were mostly ok but a lady took vocals for one track and nearly made our ears bleed.

Market
Practicing patience at food truck

We continued our journey to town, over the bridge which had a scary metal grate in the middle drawbridge bit, and tied up the bikes on the waterfront. By now it was a’sizzling and Mr Hampson needed a new shady hat. First stop: the Panama Hat Co. shop. Here there were walls and walls of multiple types of hat and a multitude of hot sweaty tourists trying to buy them. We joined the throngs. He found a very fine hat, offered in a size sufficient to accommodate his gargantuan intellect which was happily not an original Panama. The difference in price was equivalent to our spends in the Floridian the previous evening. Suitably attired we spent an hour or so wandering around the streets, looking at the fort from the outside and then walked back along the waterfront to the bikes. The ride home was hot and painful. Them seat bones…..

Fort
Cruising under Spanish Moss

The next day we gingerly cycled the short distance up to a nearby mini golf course for the first round of the highly competitive ‘2023 Tour’. Despite Nick’s early glory with a hole-in-one on the first hole, and much to his dismay, I won by one stroke. He had the yips on the back 9.

A day’s rest out of the saddle saw our nethers recovered enough for a ride out up to Anastasia State Park. This is a small park in the same area as the Ampitheatre with a campsite (sadly fully booked otherwise we would have stayed here) and a large swathe of protected beach. We packed a picnic lunch and cruised on up there. We ate our sandwiches on the beach, gazing at the sea which was still pretty rough and unfriendly looking. Beautiful though.

We met one interesting chap in camp. A chatty Irish man in his mid 50s who had moved here at 20 years old. He had a peculiar Southern drawl with irish inflections. Within 5 minutes of talking to him he had divulged that he had been a bounty hunter and then a power linesman until he suffered a high tension electric shock that had nearly killed him. He had shown us his burn scars that went up the back of both legs and the scar across his mid-chest that he had covered with a tattoo of an image of …his own heart…He had told us about his 12 heart attacks and that he had recently had a big heart operation where the heart was taken out of his chest for some service and repairs whilst he was on a bypass machine and that the surgeon had carefully stitched his chest wound up so that his heart tattoo was lined up again. Now he was a dog trainer and lived full time in his trailer on the park with his wife, who was also a dog trainer, and a very handsome German Shepherd called Zeus, who was, predictably, very well trained. We heard about his kids and grandkids, his lack of family in Ireland, his family in UK and the fact that he had duel citizenship of both countries so that if he wanted to get American citizenship he would have to renounce one of them. Five minutes, I tell you. He barely drew breath. Nice bloke though.

We had a few more beach walks over the last few days and on our last evening we strolled to a very close local bar for a beer and our first burger. (My father thinks that this is ALL we do when we are here-Not true, Dad!). The evening was warm, there was a light breeze, fairly decent live music playing on the deck, good beer, a good burger and a nice couple that we got chatting to at the bar. A great finale to our first stop on our route.

The next morning we packed up and headed to our next stop. A swamp in Georgia.