Tupelo, MS – Today was the complete antithesis of yesterday’s highways and turnpikes. A beautiful ribbon of parkway through forests and fields carried us southward from the Music City through Tennessee, a 30-mile stretch across the northwest corner of Alabama and into Mississippi. Not a sign of a transport truck, interchange cloverleaf, golden arches, or four-lane madness!
The Natchez Trace, as this parkway is called, follows a
transportation corridor that has existed from the time of the early natives and
the animals they hunted. It connects the Mississippi town of Natchez, near the
Louisiana state line, at the south end, with Nashville at the north end. Mile
markers along its 444-mile length highlight historic events, such as
battlefields or native ceremonial mounds, or natural features, such as
waterfalls or panoramic views. The
winding road is only two lanes wide, and the speed is limited to 50 miles an
hour, so it was a wonderfully peaceful trip today.
Our first stop this morning, after our trek through the
turnpike insanity around the heart of Nashville, and before entering the Trace,
was at the Loveless Café, an iconic restaurant where the stars of TV, movies
and country music have come to eat the country ham and heavenly biscuits since
the early 1950s. The entrance area walls
are plastered with autographed photos.
We recognized Ernest Borgnine and Robert Ulrich among the many. Our plan had been to have a quick coffee, but
the tasty aromas and tempting menu persuaded us to go whole hog, so to speak,
and try some of the tasty fare with a second breakfast! It was worth it!
We enjoyed reading about the Trace’s milestones in our guide,
including stories of Davy Crockett, and descriptions of the hundreds of species
of birds and wildlife. Five deer grazing
on a grassy knoll perked up their ears and turned tail and ran as we
approached, and we caught sight of a couple of others loping across the highway
a few yards ahead of us further down the road.
There were very few cars in either direction.
When we entered Alabama, I said to Val that this would be
where we’d see the armadillos that were mentioned in the list of wildlife. Sure enough, a mile or so further along, we
saw a little grey mound on a hillside – a real, live armadillo! Later on I spotted a second one nibbling the
grass on my side of the highway. I
couldn’t believe our luck!
Just on the outskirts of Tupelo, the birthplace of Elvis
Presley, we turned off to see the Parkway Visitor Center, where there were
displays of the flora, fauna and Trace history, as well as a little gift
shop. We struck up a conversation with a
gift shop volunteer, who told us she went to grade school with Elvis
Presley. Her name was Shirley Hubanks
(before she married) and she told us about signing Elvis’s school yearbook and
getting him to sign hers. She told us
about what Elvis was like, and about seeing him perform at Lake Tahoe when he
got famous. It was great hearing her stories, told in a wonderful southern
accent!
[Posted a day late. No wi-fi at our RV park!]
1 comment:
I laughed at the "Second breakfast" bunt the Hubanks story takes the cake!
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