Elizabethtown, KY – It’s only been a few days, but we are already feeling the embrace of the south in many small ways. First of all it was the fare at our breakfast buffet this morning—hot biscuits with sausage gravy, and packets of instant grits where you’d normally find oatmeal (although there was oatmeal as well).
Then it was the gentle twang in the receptionist’s words
when I called to make our hotel reservation this morning – punctuated with “honey”
– and the huge letters painted on the water tower in Florence, next to the
Interstate 75 as we drove along: “Florence, y’all!” And tonight, at the Cracker Barrel restaurant
where we went for supper, we enjoyed catfish served with more hot biscuits, and
encouraged our server, TJ, to keep chatting so we could enjoy his charming
southern accent.
Probably the nicest development has been the warm
weather. We actually saw the sun for a
good part of the drive today, and aside from a few icicles on some rock faces
we passed, there was no sign of anything frozen! Our winter jackets were really too much for
the short walk to the restaurant this evening.
I left my scarf and hat behind.
Our route took us through Cincinnati – Ohio’s third largest
city – and across the Ohio River on the same road we’d traveled coming back
from New Orleans last spring. From that
point, though, we turned off the I-75 and headed southwest into Kentucky and toward
Louisville. This city is named after
King Louis XVI of France, and is most known for being the site of the Kentucky
Derby.
We took the I-75 into Louisville and followed the GPS
instructions to connect with I-65, but in all the profusion of concrete
arteries through the city centre, we ended up hearing a plaintive “re-calculating”
from the device when we thought we’d followed the instructions correctly. So, after a bit of a detour through some
secondary roads and a few stressful words between pilot and co-pilot, we found
ourselves back on track. We are so
spoiled to have a machine that can pinpoint our position from a satellite
hovering over the planet and (eventually, anyway) get us to our chosen
destination!
Elizabethtown is just south of Louisville, just off
Interstate 65, and the town is named after the wife of its founder, Colonel
Andrew Hynes, who established a homestead here in 1793. Kentucky is a very pretty state, with rolling
hills, streams and farms, and that famous blue grass that is so nourishing for
the horses that are raised here. We are enjoying the sight of green fields, and
I imagine Kentucky must be a lovely place to visit in the summer months.
1 comment:
Stressful words from Val...
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