The
RV would not start after a stop at Hawks Nest, the first of a string of
automobile troubles. It had to be towed 40 miles to have a new ignition switch
put in. Thanks for the tow, Good Sam!
Arriving at Beaver Dam, Kentucky, we were having battery problems. We
spent the night. A large party seemed to be scheduled for tonight, so we went
downtown. We were walking down the street, surrounded by hundreds of people.
The music started to kick in. Every single person there, and I mean every one,
stopped and started tapping a foot. Everybody except us. Now if that's not a
bit weird. Then, the music really kicked in, and again, every single person,
except us, just literally danced onto the street! Not together, really, just
dancing. We looked around for the movie cameras. Surely we were on a movie
set.
When
we got back to the RV park, a track with small race cars roared to life.
Naturally, we had to go look. These were kids driving these cars. But they were
very loud and very fast! I knew these kids didn't even have a driver's license
yet.
On
down the road a ways the next day, what we thought was battery problems turned
bad. Alternator problems. It was Saturday, and a new one was hard to find, but we
did, and I was determined to do it myself. We pulled into a truck stop, and I
got my tools out. I discovered a guy in the truck stop that used to be a
mechanic, but now he was just working there at odd jobs. He started supervising
me, and kept coming out at intervals to keep me on the right track, for a good
part of the afternoon. He would not take pay, but we left some for him anyway,
when we pulled out the next day. We have stayed in touch with him over the
years. A good man.
We
traveled on, crossed the mighty Mississippi, and before we knew it, we were in
Arkansas! Home. But still a long way from Arkadelphia, so we camped at
Newport. A lady came through the camp,
inviting all the campers to a large dinner and party their church was throwing
a mile down the road. We were the only ones that actually went, we never miss
an opportunity to mix with the locals. They treated us like royals, we had a
large meal, and lots of fun. We finally drug back to our RV, worn out. The emergency
phone rang. My sister Jan's husband, Bill, had just died. We loaded up and
headed out. We normally do not drive that RV at night. The headlights are dim.
But we drove through the night, and arrived at Little Rock, parked our RV at
Barbara's sister Frances' house, and drove to Fort Worth. I first met Bill
Workman when I was a teenager. He was a weightlifter, an Air Force man, and had
just retired a few years before. His retirement was cut short. Hard to believe
he was gone.
After a couple of weeks of visiting family, we realized we had new
passengers now. Hundreds of ants had invaded the RV. We loaded up at Little Rock and headed east.
We stopped at Selma, Alabama, and
learned more about the Civil Rights movement. At Montgomery, we visited Frontier days. A mountainous mountain man
took a shine to Barbara, and physically, I didn't really see much I could do
about it. I did have a gun in the RV, but I held that as a last resort.
Fortunately, I managed to steal her away when he was not looking, and we moved
on to Georgia Quickly.
At
Andersonville, we spent some time at the Civil War POW Camp. That was a
nightmare place. Not enough food, bad water, little cover from the elements.
Actually, It was just a big field with a palisade wall around it, teen age
guards all around, trained to shoot to kill if anyone got within 10 feet of the
wall. A creek running through it was the only source of water, and It was
quickly contaminated with human waste. Thousands from the north died there.
Our
next stop was one of our inexpensive-type stops. My nephew Stan and Missy
Arrington's driveway. Stan had always
been an outdoor, woodsy type guy. He was now a forester, and a dutch oven
cooking expert. They had a fenced back yard, except at the back, which was
bordering a Bayou. They had a big, pretty white rabbit that had the run of the
place. One day, Missy was at the kitchen window, and a large gator came up out
of the Bayou and gobbled the pretty white rabbit up. They have two children,
Mandy and Thomas. Mandy was always all about horses, growing up, and she is now
about to get a Masters degree in horse knowledge. I'm just not sure what that
degree would be called. When we woke up the next morning, at daylight, Thomas,
a small boy then, walked by our RV and disappeared from our vision. When we
came out of it, later, he was just sitting up in top of a tall tree, just
looking. Thomas went on to achieve, in college, membership in that group of
nearly naked, painted young men that you might see at Mississippi State
football games. He now seems to have matured, however, because he's about to
travel to the Philippines and spend a good bit of time traveling up remote
rivers, seeking unreached people for Christ. I would say he's being promoted,
how about you? Missy is a big wig at Mississippi State.
We
toured Savanna, with its Forest Gump bench, where he sat with his box of
chocolates on Chippewa Square. But we
forgot to bring our chocolates.
Our
next stop was at Mark Twain State Park, well out into the Okefenokee Swamp. The
swamp was formed when the Swanee River spread out over a wide area, 50 miles
across. It is a wild area that man was unable to successfully cross until well
up into the 1900's. I had been here before, on one of my Pork and Beans Trips.
Barbara had not. I wanted to give Barbara a real taste of the swamp, but before
heading out in a small boat, I gave her the gator lecture. I told her it was
wintertime here, the gators were cold, and would not try to come in our boat.
But, we may be very close to many. If you come close to one, and jump up and
run, you will swamp the boat, then we'll be right down in amongst' um'. Stay
still. A ranger told of getting a report of a boat being swamped, people in the
water. When they got there, they were still hanging onto the boat, surrounded
by 40 gators. Just looking. I called up several foxes to a photo session with
my predator call. Then it was time to head on down the road.
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