Wednesday, 29 April 2015

22nd April...Lower Mississippi River Museum & The National Military Park, Vicksburg...

First visit today is back to Downtown Vicksburg and the Lower Mississippi River  Museum and Interpretive Site...
Very interesting and informative film before a self guided tour of the museum...a really good insight into the geography, the peoples who lived and worked not only on the Mississippi but also the other rivers in the Mississippi Delta and the role of The Corps of Engineers who maintain and develop the river...
This is the Motor Vessel Mississippi IV which served as a workboat for the Corps between 1961-1993, now an interactive exhibit.....set up much like HMS Warrior & Victory in Portsmouth....
Hmmm...disappointment for Yorkieman as the bridge docking simulator is not working today...
From The River Museum we move on to the vast National Military Park on the outskirts of the town.....
Vicksburg was a strategic port on the Mississippi during the Civil War...
First stop is the U S S Cairo Museum....
The Cairo, pronounced K-ro, in these parts, was a Union ironclad gunboat sunk in 1862 during the Civil War and raised from The Mississippi in the 1960's....... 

The Cairo and this area remind us very much of Historic Old Portsmouth and Portsdown...


It's a 16 mile drive interpretive drive through the park...information boards, state regimental markers, monuments and tablets.... 

The Illinois Memorial...there are 47 steps up to the memorial, one for each day of the siege of Vicksburg....
We were really surprised when we entered the building that the "ceiling" is open to the elements...we have not been able to discover why this should be but does not seem to have any detrimental effect on the marble floor...
The Shirley House....Union troops called it "the white house" it is the only surviving wartime structure in the park....

Each state has placed a memorial in the park....the Union states being the first to fund memorials as the southern states were bankrupt after the war......
We've had an interesting, informative and enjoyable day, helped by a beautiful day weather wise...home for a cup of tea  and the most amazing thunder storm with rain so heavy we had a river under the trailer, thank goodness for being in a good campsite with concrete pads.... very windy too, we can see how tornadoes can develop so quickly....the river under our rig swept away our outside doormat and one of the wheel chocks, both recovered later.....
Meanwhile I happen to switch on the kettle with no water in it !! Something to be said for a cheap Walmart kettle, it is still working perfectly.....I am not sure I would recommend this form of cleaning the calcium from the element but it worked for us !!!!
More soon all being well from
The Soggy Campers.....

Monday, 27 April 2015

20th April, Monday...Memphis to Vicksburg, Mississippi....

Today we hop onto the I-55 south for approx 200 miles to Vicksburg, Mississippi....
Needless to say there is a big Nissan factory near here at Jackson, MS
We would have been singing "Jackson" (Lee Hazelwood and Nancy Sinatra version) but as we passed over the Tallahatchie River today's song has to be "Ode To Billy Joe" (Bobby Gentry)...
From Jackson we head west and travel along part of the scenic Natchez Trace Parkway  (we plan to drive more of this road over the next week or so)...they say the bridges are high enough for RVs and 5th Wheelers (no commercial traffic is allowed) 
It's a lovely quiet and pretty drive...lots of stopping places mostly with historical markers...
The Parkway is 444 miles long through 3 states, officially opened as a National Park in 1938..it is one of the most significant highways of the Old Southwest...
It was originally the natural route that bisected the traditional homelands of the Natchez, Chickasaw and Choctaw nations...
In the early 1800's working folk from the Ohio River Valley floated cash crops, livestock and other materials down the Mississippi River on wooden flatboats. At Natchez they sold their goods and boats and walked back home via The Trace...
And here we are parked at one the the many pull-outs..this one happened to be at the site of an old plantation house, burned and abandoned after the civil war...just the family cemetery remaining...
We are staying in Vicksburg at the Ameristar RV Park Hotel and Casino complex....a  really nice campsite, we do like casino sites they are always very reasonably priced and good quality...
Many of the Mississippi casinos are on the river due to the old law that they could not be on land, hence the Ameristar built to look like a river boat...
The old road and railroad bridge over the Mississippi to Louisiana with the new road bridge in the background.. 
Sadly no train going through..We would have liked to walk out across the Mississippi on the old road bridge but it is only opened to pedestrians for charity walk events...
The old and the new....
Downtown Historic Vicksburg.....a thriving neat little town....
The old railroad depot now a museum....
The Queen of the Mississippi....nice surprise as a tour group arrive to board the boat the steam organ started playing vaudeville type music...
Well we really like what we have seen so far of Vicksburg.....
More of the history and sights in the next post...
The Happy Campers...

19th April 2015....The Blues Highway 61......

Heavy rain overnight (a feature of this trip !!) and still dark clouds when we set off this morning south on Highway 61...The Blues Highway...this section is a straight road to the east of the Mississippi River...
First stop is The Tunica Visitors Centre....an old preserved railroad depot  building....
Old historic Tunica next stop....a neat little town, unfortunately we missed the Crawfish Festival that  was held yesterday....

On from Tunica and we divert off the 61 to visit a levee, yes folks we took our Chevy to the Levee !!!  (I've been itching to say that for ages) And the music didn't die as we have satellite radio !! 
Through the windshield at the top of the levee...
And The Mighty Mississippi....
By the time we arrive in Clarksdale the clouds have gone and it turns into a beautiful afternoon...
This is the famous Blues Crossroads where legend has it that musician Robert Johnson sold his soul to the devil for the ability to play the blues !
Downtown Clarksdale and sadly like a lot of small towns plenty of boarded-up businesses...
One of the Blues Trail Markers...so many of the great blues musicians were born or lived in the Clarksdale area...


Next stop is the fantastic Rock & Blues Museum in Clarksdale...
Founded by Theo Dasbach, a Dutchman and big blues fan it is 3000 sq ft packed with artefacts and memorabilia...
Only $5 each donation and worth every penny.....so much to see and read while listening to fabulous blues music... 

Another piece of nostalgia for Yorkieman, he owned a copy of this Janis Joplin LP...
And our second levee of the day some miles outside of Clarksdale in farming country....most of the landscape today is very flat & agricultural...The Mississippi Delta...
Another Blues Marker this marks the spot of Muddy Waters cabin.
Well an amazing day.....if y'all are ever in Mississippi make a point to visit The Blues Highway......
We rounded off the day with more fried catfish at the Blue and White restaurant in Tunica not as good as Bubba's in Hot Springs but nice anyway...
More posts soon all being well...
The Singing Campers...

Friday, 24 April 2015

Saturday 18th April....Beale Street, Memphis...

What can one say about Beale Street, Memphis.....walking Beale Street to the sound of Blues & Rock & Soul is when it hits you how deep Memphis music runs and how it connects us all and how it lives on today...

One of the must places to eat is B B King's Blues Restaurant, live music and good food...

I do have a video of the street "entertainment" but unable to get it  to upload at the moment...
Basically there a bunch of very fit acrobats who do tumbles down the middle of the street, one mistake and it is a very hard landing especially at the speed that they are going...
The building that is being propped up and looks to be just a facia the lower floors are in fact an Irish Pub.


Beale Street played a critical roll in the development of Memphis and it's music...it's history involves legends, gagsters, stories of the civil war and civil rights.... 
Our shuttle driver, a real character, tells us on the way back to the Heartbreak Hotel &  RV Park that tonight was actually a quiet night on Beale Street !!!
Our stay in Memphis has been great but the weather has been against us in fact it starts to rain again just as we head for the shuttle pick up point... no Graceland Tour for us this time and the weather , coupled with us misjudging how busy the Graceland Mansion Tour would be on a Saturday there was a 4 hour wait, which would have overrun into our slot for the shuttle to Downtown and Beale Street...We did see Graceland through the gates and we have certainly now been "Walking In Memphis"...