Hi there, welcome back to our story.
Our last chapter ended on Thursday, October 12th, when we
left the Jacksonville, Florida area and started west on Interstate
10, arriving in Marianna, Florida, about an hour west of Tallahassee.
On Friday we had our first full, stay at home day in quite some
time. Got a few little chores done, but mostly just relaxed for a
change. With all the new places we have visited in the last few
months we have been really busy with very few down days, it was nice
to just have a quiet day at home.
Saturday, October 14th, we
left the coach about 11:30 and drove into Marianna, a
small town of about 6,000 to explore and do some geocaching. Our
first stop was lunch at Sonny's BBQ. Sonny's is a chain of BBQ
restaurants, mostly in Florida, but they have a few stores in
Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi. We first discovered the chain in
2006, our first full year on the road, when we spent the winter in
Florida. We ended up eating at various stores at least a dozen times
during our stay. The food is very good and you get plenty of it.
The food hadn't changed, it was still good. I had the pulled pork,
my favorite, and Jackie had ribs. We had a great lunch. After lunch
we did some exploring of Marianna, which has a number of very nice
antebellum mansions along the main street, most of which have been at
least partially restored and taken care of. We got ten new finds,
and one DNF, for the afternoon. After caching we headed back to the
coach and relaxed for the remainder of the evening.
Sunday, October 15th,
another travel day. We had the coach packed up and were on the road
by 10:30, heading another 165 miles west on Interstate 40 to a little
town called Robertsdale, Alabama, about halfway between Pensacola,
Florida and Mobile, Alabama. We arrived at the Wilderness RV Resort
right about 2:00 and quickly got settled into a nice, full hookup
spot. Right after we got finished setting up it started to rain and
we had some mild thunderstorms move through the area for a couple
hours. We spent the rest of the day in the coach, doing some chores
and relaxing.
Monday, October 16th, we
went out about 1:00 or so and drove south, doing some exploring and
geocaching. We ended up in Gulf Shores, Alabama, right on the beach
at the Gulf of Mexico. We went out on the pier and took some
pictures, did a few caches, and then stopped at the Walmart in Gulf
Shores to get some supplies. We ended up with five new finds and one
DNF for the afternoon. After we were done at Walmart we started back
towards the RV park, stopping at the Gulf Shores Elks Lodge along the
way. Although we didn't recognize the building, we were in this
lodge back in 2005 when we had stayed in Mobile, Alabama for a few
days. We had a cocktail and got another lodge pin for our banner.
When we got home we found that they hadn't changed their lodge pin in
the 12 years since we were last there. We spent the rest of the
evening in the coach.
Tuesday, October 17th, we
left the coach about 11:00 and headed to Mobile, about 20 miles west,
to do some exploring and geocaching. Our first stop was a downtown
restaurant called Panini Pete's, which was another Diners, Drive-ins
and Dives place. It was a sandwich shop, but had really good
ratings. I had a muffaleta panini, which was exceptional, and Jackie
had a smoked turkey panini, which she said was good too. To top it
off, we each had a beignet for dessert. These little southern donuts
are great. After lunch we drove around Mobile for an hour or so,
sight-seeing and caching. We ended up with eight new finds for the
day, along with two DNFs. We also visited the military museum park,
which features the Battleship USS Alabama, a WW-II sub named the USS
Drum, and all kinds of aircraft, armor and artillery pieces on
display. We went into the gift shop for a visit, but didn't tour any
of the ships. We also drove around the shipyards and docks and saw
the shipyard where several new amphibious assault ships are being
built for the Navy. After our exploring we headed back to the coach,
had dinner and watched TV until bedtime. Wednesday was another
travel day. We were packed up and on the road about 10:30, heading
100 miles west to Gulfport, Mississippi. We arrived at the
Campgrounds of the South RV park in Gulfport about 12:30 and got
settled into our site. While I finished getting set up Jackie went
to a nearby shopping area and got a pedi. We spent the rest of the
day in the coach.
Thursday, October 19th, we
went out after lunch to do some exploring and geocaching. Our first
stop was a Camping World where we bought a few maintenance items and
shopped for a while before going out to do some caching. We had a
bit of a rough afternoon caching, getting five new finds and three
DNFs. I think at least some of the DNFs were due to recent severe
weather, but we were still a little disappointed. We drove down to
the gulf coast in Gulfport and then drove east along the sea shore.
We got to Biloxi and stopped at the Biloxi Elks Lodge, which is
located right on the beach highway. We had stopped by this lodge in
December 2005 when we drove over to this area from Mobile to look at
the damage caused by Hurricane Katrina in August of that year. The
Elks Lodge had been damaged and was closed, but it structurally
survived. The building today looked very much the same as the photo
we took back in 2005. Of course, all of the other damage was cleared
away and most of the beachfront property remains vacant to this day.
The lodge was very nice inside and the bartender was pretty friendly.
We had a cocktail and got a lodge pin.
We then moved on to the Ocean Beach
Elks Lodge in Ocean Beach, Mississippi, about ten miles east. This
was our first visit to this lodge. It had been wiped out during
Katrina, and they have rebuilt the lodge up on fifteen foot stilts.
This was a very friendly lodge, with the ER coming over and
introducing himself, and most of the people in the bar being very
friendly to us. We had a drink and then the house gave us a drink.
We also got a lodge pin which had a very cool, cute logo on it. I
liked it so much I bought one of the lodge tee shirts that had the
same logo. After our lodge visits we got on the freeway and headed
back to the RV park. We stopped at a Five Guys right down the street
from the RV park for dinner and had hamburgers. Good burgers, but
way too expensive. Give me an In-N-Out any day.
Friday, October 20th, I was
up and out about 8:00, taking the Jeep to the dealer for an oil
change. We were a couple hundred miles over and there was a dealer
pretty close to the RV park here in Gulfport. While the Jeep was
being serviced I took my walk and got a couple of geocaches. After
the car was done I went back to the coach and had lunch. We then
packed up our laundry and went to a laundromat. After the clothes
were clean we headed back home, stopping at Walmart to get some
supplies. We spent the rest of the afternoon and evening in the
coach.
Saturday, October 21st,
another travel day. We were packed up and on the road by 10:30 for a
fairly short, 70 mile trip west to New Orleans. We arrived at the
Pontchartrain Landing RV Resort around noon and checked in. We had
stayed in this park back in 2012 when we came through here while
traveling with Ray and Suzie Babcock. This is an expensive park, but
it is 15 minutes from the French Quarter, plus it is a Passport
America Park. Even with PPA it was almost $50 a night with all the
taxes and such added in. However, they did give us a free upgrade to
a premium site which is a pull in site right on the waterway. Great
views, so we feel like we are getting our money's worth. Right across the waterway from us is an old riverboat undergoing renovations. We got set
up and then stayed in the rest of the day doing a few chores. We are
going to be here in New Orleans for four nights.
Sunday, October 22nd, my
brother David's birthday, happy birthday bro! Overnight we had quite
a bit of rain and it was still raining when we got up. I went out
and got us the Sunday paper and we had a relaxing morning with the
paper and coffee. There were a number of small thunderstorms moving
through the area all morning and the weather radio was going off with
thunderstorm warnings every half hour. We waited until almost 1:00
before we were finally comfortable that all of the bad weather had
moved out and we left the coach and drove into New Orleans. We first
went to a restaurant in the central business district, which is
adjacent to the French Quarter, for brunch. The first place we
picked had no parking close by, so we switched to another place
called the Ruby Slipper. We found parking and went in and were
seated in about 15 minutes. This is strictly a breakfast and lunch
place and their specialty is various types of eggs Benedict, some
with some unusual additions. All of the plates came with two
portions and you could get a combo plate that combined one of each of
two different choices. Jackie had that with one portion being a
spicy shrimp and fried green tomato Benedict and the other being a
pulled pork Benedict. I tried a bit of both of them and we both
agreed that they were outstanding. They served their Benedict on
buttermilk biscuits rather than English muffins, so they were softer.
I went with a lunch entree, a sauteed Drum fish fillet served on top
of two cheesy grit cakes, with a spinach, tomato and hollendaise
sauce garnish. It was also outstanding. I am not a big fan of
grits, but I could eat these fried cheesy grit cakes all day long,
they were great.
After lunch we walked around the area
for a half hour or so, looking in a few shops on Canal Street, the
main drag through central New Orleans. We then got back in the car
and did a couple hours of driving sight-seeing. We spent most of the
time in the Garden District, which is where many of the old, and
huge, 19th century mansions are. Many of them have been
restored and are beautiful. We saw a number of them in the paper
this morning selling in the millions of dollars. We also did a
little caching, getting three new finds, our first in New Orleans
since 2012. About 4:30 we headed back to the RV park and sat outside
for a while with our cocktails, watching the waterway outside our
door. We spent the rest of the evening in the coach watching TV.
Monday, October 23rd, we set
out from the RV park about 11:00 and headed down to spend the day in
and around the French Quarter of New Orleans. The French Quarter is
the oldest neighborhood in New Orleans, with most of the buildings
dating back to the late 1700's and early 1800's. Almost the entire
half square mile of the district is under the protection of a
Historic District designation. It is also the party center of the
city with scores of restaurants, bars and clubs. We found a place to
park in a city lot near Jackson Square and spent an hour or so
shopping along Decatur Street, the southeastern edge of the Quarter.
We then walked to Johnny's Po-Boy's, one of the many restaurants in
the area, for lunch. Jackie had asked someone in the visitors center
for a recommendation for somewhere to get po-boy sandwiches and she
recommended Johnny's. The shrimp po-boy's were OK, nothing to shout
about. Heavy on the bread and a little light on the shrimp in my
estimation. I had a side of red beans and rice that was very good.
After lunch we walked around the
quarter for an hour or so, walking down Royal and Bourbon streets,
the two main party streets. We got a couple of hurricanes, fruit
punch and rum drinks, and sucked on them while we walked. It is
legal to have open alcoholic beverages on the street in New Orleans.
Because it was early afternoon, and off season, the streets were kind
of quiet, not a lot of partying going on. After an hour of walking
around, and getting a couple of geocaches, we went to the French
Market, kind of a permanent street market, and shopped for an hour or
so. Once we had our fill of shopping we got back in the car and
spent another hour or so driving around the quarter, looking around
at the history. We then headed back to the RV park around cocktail
hour and relaxed in the coach for the rest of the evening.
Tuesday, October 24th, we
left the coach after lunch, around 1:00 and went out to just drive
around some areas of New Orleans that we hadn't seen yet. We drove
down to the Lower Ninth Ward which is the area that saw some of the
worst devastation and flooding from Katrina back in 2005. The water
was at roof top level in this entire neighborhood, dozens died and
the place was ruined. When we took a tour through the area in 2012
there were still dozens of boarded up and rotting houses and we
wanted to see if they had made any progress. It was not quite as bad
now, still a lot of abandoned homes, but a lot of empty lots
indicating they are making some progress. We did a geocache right
across the street from Fats Domino's home and office. He lived in
New Orleans almost his entire life and had to be rescued from this
house during Katrina.
After touring the Lower Ninth we drove
through downtown, then crossed the Crescent City Bridge, which goes
south across the Mississippi to the communities on the south bank.
We did a geocache there too, one that was right on the levy
overlooking the French Quarter and downtown areas across the river.
We spent a couple of hours driving around, then stopped at Walmart
for a few things before heading back to the coach. We cleaned up,
changed clothes and left around 6:00 for a date night. We drove to
Drago's Restaurant on the other side of Metarie, the town just north
of New Orleans where the RV park is located. We had been to Drago's,
which is a very nice seafood restaurant, when we were here with the
Babcock's back in 2012. The food was wonderful and we wanted to go
again to a nice place. We had a great meal, Jackie got some BBQed
oysters, which is one of their specialties, and I had calamari. I then had an entree with a whole, soft shell crab, deep fried and stuffed with a crab dressing. It was outstanding. Jackie had Redfish and it was good too, although a touch overdone. We had some cheesecake for dessert. It was an expensive, but very pleasurable and wonderful evening for the two of us. I also got the Drago's shirt, which I missed out on in 2012 because they didn't have my size. Ray got one then and has been holding it over me for five years. No more! I got the shirt! We then headed back to the coach for the remainder of the evening.
oysters, which is one of their specialties, and I had calamari. I then had an entree with a whole, soft shell crab, deep fried and stuffed with a crab dressing. It was outstanding. Jackie had Redfish and it was good too, although a touch overdone. We had some cheesecake for dessert. It was an expensive, but very pleasurable and wonderful evening for the two of us. I also got the Drago's shirt, which I missed out on in 2012 because they didn't have my size. Ray got one then and has been holding it over me for five years. No more! I got the shirt! We then headed back to the coach for the remainder of the evening.
Wednesday, October 25th,
another travel day. We woke up to the news that Fats Domino had died
yesterday, the same day we were caching in front of his house! What
a coincidence that is! We were packed up and on the road by 10:30,
heading another 170 miles west to Abbeville, Louisiana, a small town
south of Lafayette. The drive was OK except for the ten miles after
we left I-10 in Lafayette and headed south on the state highway
towards Abbeville. The traffic was horrible. We arrived at Betty's
RV Park south of Abbeville around 2:00 and were welcomed by Betty.
We first heard about Betty's from out friend Lynette Bollier back in
2012 when we were going to Louisiana on our way to Indianapolis for
the FMCA rally. Lynette told us we just had to go to Betty's because
it was a small place that treated you like family. We were unable to
go then because it seems that Betty's is booked solid way ahead of
time. There are only 17 spaces and you have to book early. Earlier
this year there was a big write-up in the Escapee's magazine about
Betty's, reinforcing our desire to go there. This year I booked a
reservation four months in advance and now we are here.
Betty is very nice, speaks with a mild
Cajun accent, and got us settled in very quickly. The sites are all
50 amp, full hook up, with plenty of room. We got set up and then at
4:30 we went over to the gathering room outside the office for happy
hour. It seems that happy hour is a daily occurrence and is almost
considered mandatory for guests. The Escapee's article said that
Betty will often ask where you where if you miss one. Most of the
park was there and everyone introduced themselves and there were all
kinds of snacks and nibbles that people brought. It was very much
like an RV rally happy hour. At least half of the couples there are
full timers, most not as long as us, with one couple in their first
year. We stayed for about an hour and a half, then went back to the
coach and did some pork chops on the BBQ for dinner. We watched TV
until bedtime.
Thursday, October 26th, we
left the RV park after lunch to do some exploring. We went into
Abbeville first to look around and do some caching. Abbeville is a
town of about 12,000, but it appears to be smaller as the central
part of town is kind of run down. We got a few caches, and a few
DNFs in town. We then drove north to look around Lafayette.
Lafayette is the fourth largest city in Louisiana, with over 125,000
population. It has the University of Louisiana main campus but had a
very small downtown area. As with a lot of places in the state, the
city looked a bit back on it's heels, dilapidated and abandoned
buildings and the like. We got a geocache and another DNF, bringing
our total to three finds and three DNFs for the day. We wandered
around town and then took a back way home, getting back to the RV
park about 4:00. We went over to the group happy hour around 5:00
and spent an hour snacking and talking to folks. After happy hour we
went back to the coach, had dinner and watched TV until bedtime.
Friday, October 27th, we
left the RV park about 10:30 for another day of exploring. We drove
northeast about 25 miles to the town of Breaux Bridge to have lunch
at a place called Le Cafe. This is a little hole in the wall cafe
just south of I-10 that we discovered back in 2012 when we came
through this area traveling with Ray and Suzi Babcock. At that time
we were staying at an RV park just north of Breaux Bridge and got a
local recommendation for Le Cafe for their po-boy sandwiches. We all
loved the place and we decided to go back today since we were fairly
close. The place looked exactly like it did five years ago and the
food was also just as fabulous. It put the po-boy's we had in New
Orleans to shame. We ate way too much, but enjoyed every bite.
After lunch we drove around exploring
some of the small towns in this region of Louisiana that they call
“Acadiana” because it was originally colonized in the mid-1700's
by French Canadian colonists from the Acadia region of Eastern
Canada. After the British took over the Canadian colonies from the
French they eventually expelled the French colonists to make room for
more British. The French, over 11,000 of them, were scattered along
the eastern seaboard and the Caribbean, with many eventually settling
in what had been French Louisiana. Although the Louisiana territory
was then under Spanish rule, the French were still welcomed because
they were Catholic. Today the “Cajun's”, a shortening of
“Acadian” are descendants of these 18th century French
colonists.
We did a couple of geocaches while
exploring and one of them took us to Longfellow Evangiline State
Park, which is dedicated to preserving the history of the Acadian
people. It is a very nice park with a beautifully preserved 18th
century plantation home and grounds. We watched a film on the local
history and looked at a lot of interesting displays. We also stopped
in the town of New Iberia, which is about 25 miles east of Abbeville,
and toured the Conrad Rice Mill, believed to be the oldest operating
rice mill in the U.S. A friend of ours, Mike Neighbours had told us
about a great product the company makes called Wild Pecan Rice so we
stopped at the company store. They were just starting a tour of the
place, so we joined in and got some more detailed history of the
region and the Acadians. We left the mill and started west towards
Abbeville just in time to meet the line of rain storms that had been
predicted, and was indeed marching, across the area. Although the
rain was heavy at times, they were not bad or long lasting storms.
We did go to happy hour with the other guests of the park and chatted
for an hour or so before heading back to the coach for the rest of
the night.
Saturday, October 28th, we
had a stay at home day for the most part. We did go out about 1:30
or so to do a quick Walmart run and while we were there we picked up
a nearby geocache. We both got a few chores done around the coach.
About 5:15 we went over to Betty's gathering room for a potluck. It
was most of the people staying in the park, as well as some friends
and relatives of Betty's who live in the area. This included one guy
who was born and raised in the area. He spent 22 years in the Army,
retiring as a Green Beret First Sergeant, then went to work for the
Sheriff''s Office and worked there for another 20 some years. He is
85 years old, looked to be about 70 and has a 35 year old girlfriend.
Quite the guy. He also plays in a local band doing Cajun rock and
country music. Some of the folks were in Halloween costume, although
we weren't. Betty did a big pot of jambalaya, Jackie made garlic
bread and we had other salads and sides from other people. It was
quite the feast. After dinner one of the girls brought out a small
karaoke outfit and we did a couple hours of karaoke. This was a
party crowd. We finally left and went back to the coach just before
10:00, our latest night out in a while. When you stay at Betty's you
are family, and this night's party reinforced that.
Sunday, October 29th,
another travel day. We hated that we had to leave Betty's, next time
we are going to stay a week or two. We pulled out about 10:30,
continuing west towards Port Arthur, Texas. Port Arthur is a coastal
town just south of Beaumont, Texas in far East Texas. Port Arthur is
right on the Louisiana State Line, just across the river. We arrived
at the Port Arthur RV Resort about 3:00 after making a lunch stop and
a fuel stop. This is a big RV park and it was nearly full, glad we
had reservations. When Hurricane Harvey came through the area a few
months back this whole area was badly flooded. I think a lot of the
RVs in the park are people who are trying to fix their homes.
Everywhere we drove coming in there were mounds of trash and ruined
furniture piled up. We got settled into our site and relaxed for the
rest of the day.
Our departure from Louisiana into Texas
marks where our final push towards home in Pahrump begins. We are
now less than three weeks from Pahrump and will be doing a lot of one
and two night stays as we head for home. We are traveling through
areas we have been a number of times in the past, so no need to stop
for a lot of sight-seeing. The only exception will be a three night
stay in San Antonio, just because that's a fun place no matter how
many times you go there. With that, we will close out this episode
and get it published. Until the next time, keep smiling and be
happy. Bye.