Today we headed south from St. Joseph to Robert, Louisiana. We would be staying at Yogi Bear's Jellystone Park.
Here was our pull-thru site.
The park had ponds where you could paddleboat.
It had Yogi Bear who allowed Marlon to sniff his underarm.
It had 2 pools as well as a fountain area for kids or kids at heart.
Jellystone, as well as Shiloh, was also well-attended by the wonderful Love Bug.
The front of your car or rv will be plastered in love bugs if you drive during the day in Louisiana or Florida during May or September.
These bugs are mating by the force of the female (the bigger of the two) and travel hooked together. Their splat on your car will ruin your paint if not removed within a couple of days.
Our second day at Jellystone provided us with a huge downpour of rain for about 30 minutes and allowed us to note the RV's leaky window by the passenger seat first hand.
Luckily for us, Dixie RV Super Stores (largest RV dealer in Louisiana) was just 12 miles away. They made room in their schedule for us to come in and have our "loose window" diagnosed. After 3 hours at the service center, our window was fixed. We hope.
After delaying our day-trip to New Orleans one day because of a leaky window, we were ready to head for The Big Easy.
For more pictures of Jellystone or Dixie RV, go to http://public.fotki.com/Marlonfleenor/1/2007/september/jellystone-campgrou/ and http://public.fotki.com/Marlonfleenor/1/2007/september/dixie-rv-supercente/ .
To be continued...
September 26, 2007
September 21, 2007
St. Joseph, Louisiana
The day after visiting Vicksburg, Mississippi we decided to explore the town closest to our RV Park. That town would be St. Joseph, Louisiana, located in the Tensas Parish.
In Louisiana, counties are referred to as Parishes. Parishes come from Louisiana's heavily Catholic heritage. Catholic dioceses are divided into parishes.
St. Joseph was, well, a small town.
To see a few more pictures of St. Joseph, Louisiana, go to http://public.fotki.com/Marlonfleenor/1/2007/september/exploring-st-joseph-la/ .
To be continued...
In Louisiana, counties are referred to as Parishes. Parishes come from Louisiana's heavily Catholic heritage. Catholic dioceses are divided into parishes.
St. Joseph was, well, a small town.
To see a few more pictures of St. Joseph, Louisiana, go to http://public.fotki.com/Marlonfleenor/1/2007/september/exploring-st-joseph-la/ .
To be continued...
September 20, 2007
Vicksburg-Famous for #2 Coca-Cola, Around Town
Besides being the site of the end of The Civil War, Vicksburg is also famous because Joseph Biedenharn first bottled Coca-Cola here in 1894.
Joseph Biedenharn began bottling Coca-Cola at his Biedenharn Candy Company in Vicksburg eight years after its 1886 invention in Atlanta, Georgia.
So we decided to visit the first Coca-Cola bottling plant located in Downtown Vicksburg on the cobble-stoned Washington Street.
Here is a representation of the town of Vicksburg when Coca-Cola was first bottled.
This was the original set-up required to provide carbonation to the bottled-beverage. It consisted of a carbonator and a gas generator.
The Museum exhibited a vast array of Coca-Cola memorabilia ranging from old bottle designs to advertising posters to bottling equipment.
Tarzan and Jane (Johnny Weismuller & Maureen O'Sullivan) appeared on this 1934 Coca-Cola tray.
The museum even had an old-fashioned toilet with elevated tank and pull chain to flush.
After using the facilities, Marlon attempted to make a phone call the old-fashioned way.
This is an advertisement from the 1940's as a wife anticipated the return of her GI husband from war.
Just a few blocks away, you can find the Vicksburg levee.
This levee wall details the various flood levels of the Mississippi throughout the years.
We walked through a Riverfront Art Park just across the street from the levee.
Here we are standing on the banks of The Mighty Mississippi River.
As we were leaving Vicksburg and the State of Mississippi, we stopped by the Mississippi Visitor's Center (kind of backward, we know).
Here Doug stands viewing the bridge which spans the Mississippi River and connects Mississippi to Louisiana.
For more pictures of the Biedenharn Coca-Cola Museum and Vicksburg, go to http://public.fotki.com/Marlonfleenor/1/2007/september/vicksburg-mississip/ .
To be continued...
Joseph Biedenharn began bottling Coca-Cola at his Biedenharn Candy Company in Vicksburg eight years after its 1886 invention in Atlanta, Georgia.
So we decided to visit the first Coca-Cola bottling plant located in Downtown Vicksburg on the cobble-stoned Washington Street.
Here is a representation of the town of Vicksburg when Coca-Cola was first bottled.
This was the original set-up required to provide carbonation to the bottled-beverage. It consisted of a carbonator and a gas generator.
The Museum exhibited a vast array of Coca-Cola memorabilia ranging from old bottle designs to advertising posters to bottling equipment.
Tarzan and Jane (Johnny Weismuller & Maureen O'Sullivan) appeared on this 1934 Coca-Cola tray.
The museum even had an old-fashioned toilet with elevated tank and pull chain to flush.
After using the facilities, Marlon attempted to make a phone call the old-fashioned way.
This is an advertisement from the 1940's as a wife anticipated the return of her GI husband from war.
Just a few blocks away, you can find the Vicksburg levee.
This levee wall details the various flood levels of the Mississippi throughout the years.
We walked through a Riverfront Art Park just across the street from the levee.
Here we are standing on the banks of The Mighty Mississippi River.
As we were leaving Vicksburg and the State of Mississippi, we stopped by the Mississippi Visitor's Center (kind of backward, we know).
Here Doug stands viewing the bridge which spans the Mississippi River and connects Mississippi to Louisiana.
For more pictures of the Biedenharn Coca-Cola Museum and Vicksburg, go to http://public.fotki.com/Marlonfleenor/1/2007/september/vicksburg-mississip/ .
To be continued...
Vicksburg-Famous for #1 End of the Civil War
We decided to drive 50 miles from our RV Park to see the site of the end of the Civil War in Vicksburg, Mississippi.
So we went to the Vicksburg National Military Park.
The park features a 16-mile driving tour of the Battlefield of the Vicksburg Campaign.
Throughout the park are red and blue signs marking trenches and battle lines of the North and the South.
This is the Illinois State Memorial, the largest monument in the park. It was dedicated in 1906, and built for $194,000. Today it would cost more than $45 million to build a similar structure.
The wall inside is filled with the names of thousands of infantrymen of the Civil War. We were able to locate Palmers, Burtons (Jean's maiden name), Carrolls (Angie's maiden name) but no Fleenors.
The only wartime structure remaining in the Vicksburg National Military Park is The Shirley House below. According to the National Park website, the soldier who was to burn the house was shot before he could apply the torch.
There are currently plans to renovate the interior of the house and open it as a museum.
The park ranks among the most heavily monumented parks in the world with over 1,300 various monuments. Here are but a few, the first one being a monument to Andrew Hickenlooper, great-grandfather of the Denver Mayor, John Hickenlooper.
The park features The U.S.S. Cairo, the first armed vessel in the history of warfare to be sunk by a torpedo. It sunk in 12 minutes in 1862 and was not raised from its watery grave until over 100 years later in 1964. For more info, go to http://www.nps.gov/vick/u-s-s-cairo-gunboat.htm .
Over 13,000 of the 17,000 buried at the Vicksburg National Cemetery are officially listed as unidentified.
For more pictures of the Vicksburg National Military Park, go to http://public.fotki.com/Marlonfleenor/1/2007/september/exploring-vicksburg-ms-/ .
To be continued...
So we went to the Vicksburg National Military Park.
The park features a 16-mile driving tour of the Battlefield of the Vicksburg Campaign.
Throughout the park are red and blue signs marking trenches and battle lines of the North and the South.
This is the Illinois State Memorial, the largest monument in the park. It was dedicated in 1906, and built for $194,000. Today it would cost more than $45 million to build a similar structure.
The wall inside is filled with the names of thousands of infantrymen of the Civil War. We were able to locate Palmers, Burtons (Jean's maiden name), Carrolls (Angie's maiden name) but no Fleenors.
The only wartime structure remaining in the Vicksburg National Military Park is The Shirley House below. According to the National Park website, the soldier who was to burn the house was shot before he could apply the torch.
There are currently plans to renovate the interior of the house and open it as a museum.
The park ranks among the most heavily monumented parks in the world with over 1,300 various monuments. Here are but a few, the first one being a monument to Andrew Hickenlooper, great-grandfather of the Denver Mayor, John Hickenlooper.
The park features The U.S.S. Cairo, the first armed vessel in the history of warfare to be sunk by a torpedo. It sunk in 12 minutes in 1862 and was not raised from its watery grave until over 100 years later in 1964. For more info, go to http://www.nps.gov/vick/u-s-s-cairo-gunboat.htm .
Over 13,000 of the 17,000 buried at the Vicksburg National Cemetery are officially listed as unidentified.
For more pictures of the Vicksburg National Military Park, go to http://public.fotki.com/Marlonfleenor/1/2007/september/exploring-vicksburg-ms-/ .
To be continued...
September 19, 2007
Shiloh's Lake Bruin Resort, St. Joseph, LA
Today we left Hot Springs, Arkansas and headed for Monroe, Louisiana to visit one of our two home parks. However, because we had just called the day before for a reservation, there were no rv sites available when we arrived. Hopefully, this will not happen often!
So we continued down to our other home park located much more rurally in St. Joseph, Louisiana. Here we were the only visitors. While our pictures show other rvs, most of them are either rental units or units people leave on site during the summer.
Here's where we sat...one of the only spots without trees overhead.
Here we are on the dock at Shiloh on the shore of Lake Bruin.
These weird-looking trees grew in the lake near the shore.
Doug shot this picture of the sunset as Marlon bobbed around in the water.
That was NOT Marlon in the water...not sure WHAT it was.
Across the road from Shiloh were fields of cotton. It was almost cotton pickin' time as evidenced by this picture.
We would be spending 6 nights here at Shiloh's Lake Bruin Resort. Due to its relative isolation, we would be doing a lot of relaxing.
However, we were only about 50 miles away from the site of the end of The Civil War (The War, as they still call it down here) at Vicksburg, Mississippi.
For more pictures of Shiloh, go to http://public.fotki.com/Marlonfleenor/1/2007/september/shiloh-rv-resort-st/ .
To be continued...
So we continued down to our other home park located much more rurally in St. Joseph, Louisiana. Here we were the only visitors. While our pictures show other rvs, most of them are either rental units or units people leave on site during the summer.
Here's where we sat...one of the only spots without trees overhead.
Here we are on the dock at Shiloh on the shore of Lake Bruin.
These weird-looking trees grew in the lake near the shore.
Doug shot this picture of the sunset as Marlon bobbed around in the water.
That was NOT Marlon in the water...not sure WHAT it was.
Across the road from Shiloh were fields of cotton. It was almost cotton pickin' time as evidenced by this picture.
We would be spending 6 nights here at Shiloh's Lake Bruin Resort. Due to its relative isolation, we would be doing a lot of relaxing.
However, we were only about 50 miles away from the site of the end of The Civil War (The War, as they still call it down here) at Vicksburg, Mississippi.
For more pictures of Shiloh, go to http://public.fotki.com/Marlonfleenor/1/2007/september/shiloh-rv-resort-st/ .
To be continued...
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