Kayaking Big Wills Creek

A group of us went kayaking on Big Wills Creek with Big Wills Outfitters in Attalla, Alabama — fabulous!! The water was a little low, but still crazy fun.

Kayaking Big Wills Creek, Attalla AL//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Did I fall in? YES! But only once, and when it didn’t count! I was putting my legs in and reached for my water bottle which was rolling around when I was getting in the kayak for the first time and totally went over the other side. Not bad, but my getting in was a little more clumsy than intended. It was maybe the fastest in/out ever! hahaha!

Once I got in the kayak, it was smooth sailing. There are little rushes on the creek, but just enough to make you laugh. Super fun. And once I realized how gentle the ride was going to be, I took off the lifevest they give everyone (you can just secure it behind you). I think the circuit is five or six miles.

We saw horses
Kayaking Big Wills Creek, Attalla AL//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Kayaking Big Wills Creek, Attalla AL//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Kayaking Big Wills Creek, Attalla AL//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

wild turkeys (I couldn’t get my phone out and unbagged quickly enough to get that pic), a couple of groups of cows
Kayaking Big Wills Creek, Attalla AL//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

and just beautiful nature

Can’t wait to do this again!

Hot Springs, Arkansas

We visited Hot Springs, Arkansas for the first time — and while we didn’t stop (we had somewhere else we needed to arrive) — it was a unique place to see.

Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

The middle of the city is called ‘Bathhouse Row’. The Lamar (from the NPS) was unique in that it offered a range of tub lengths for people of various heights. It also had a small coed gymnasium with another separate area for women adjacent to the gymnasium. The Lamar Bathhouse closed November 30, 1985. It now houses offices for several park employees and the park store, Bathhouse Row Emporium.
Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

The Ozark bathhouse is now the Ozark Cultural Center, an event venue
Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

The Buckstaff Baths is still in operation as a bathhouse.
Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

The Hale bathhouse is closed.
Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

The Quapaw Baths is open and operates as a bathhouse.
Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

The Fordyce is now a museum
Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

The Maurice is closed.
Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

There are shops built into pretty buildings all over downtown
Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

There’s an Embassy Suites and some other chains, but there are still a lot of old motels around, with original signage

Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

I think this was a church.
Hot Springs, Arkansas//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js


While we’ve been to Ein Bokek at the Dead Sea and know what to do there (basically nothing, you just float around) and the hotel spas have saltwater treatments, I’m unfamiliar as to what to expect from a Hot Springs bathhouse. Here’s the answer from HotSprings.org: what to expect when visiting a bath.

Southern Photography at the Huntsville Museum of Art, Christenberry Even When It’s Not, Southern Accent, And Bill Ferris’ New Photography Book

It closed last month, but I was able to catch Huntsville Museum of Art‘s photography exhibits, including its show of collection pieces in ‘Frozen in Place’

John Reese: Woman and Child, Wilson Park, Birmingham

Melissa Springer: Thanksgiving Dinner in the HIV Isolation Unit
Melissa Springer: Thanksgiving Dinner in the HIV Isolation Unit//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Caroline Davis: And G-d will Raise You Up on the Wings of Eagles and Take You into the Palm of His Hand
Caroline Davis: And G-d will Raise You Up on the Wings of Eagles and Take You into the Palm of His Hand//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Kathryn Tucker Windham: All the Pretty Little Horses

The William Christenberry: Time, Distance, and Memory exhibit was also up

5c Wall with Johnson Grass, Demopolis AL
William Christenberry: 5c Wall with Johnson Grass, Demopolis AL//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

South End of Palmist Building, Havana Junction AL
William Christenberry: South End of Palmist Building, Havana Junction AL//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

and Alabama Box, with wood, soil, color photographs, and fabric
William Christenberry: Alabama Box//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Side of Palmist Building, Havana Junction, AL
William Christenberry: Side of Palmist Building, Havana Junction, AL//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js


If you’re familiar with the Rosenbush Furniture store in Demopolis, that’s the location of Christenberry’s ‘5 cent’ photograph:
Rosenbush Building, Demopolis AL//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Last year at Kentuck, we purchased this piece from Standard Deluxe, which I immediately took as an homage to Christenberry’s famous Palmist building photograph, and I thought they were so genius because they overlayed this image on an aerial photograph of Hale County. But guess what? It isn’t Hale County, and they just thought the ‘Palm Reading’ part looked cool. Still, it’s in my office and every time I look at it, I think Christenberry.
Palm Reading by Standard Deluxe//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js
The palmist building is no longer extant.


This year’s Kentuck is October 15-16, and Alabama is playing in Knoxville that weekend, so traffic should be easy. Yay, RTR, and see you there!


Hyperallergic does a piece on Southern Accent: Seeking the American South in Contemporary Art at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke. The review is certainly worth a read, and especially the author’s summary of his own Southernness:
I’ll remember the big, dumb epiphany I had around age thirty, as someone who had always defined himself against Southern stereotypes: That whatever I am was shaped, even in opposition, by the landscape and culture of North Carolina, and that I was ineluctably a North Carolinian, with both the criminal burden and progressive mandate that entails. That my accent is an ineluctably Southern one, however it sounds. And that the South, as this exhibit so acutely reveals, is not a settled matter. It’s something we’re all inventing every day, and whatever we invent is as Southern as what we sweep away.


The Daily Beast with Bill Ferris Taught America What’s So Great About the South and his new book of photographs, The South in Color: A Visual Journal
Ferris gave a mild chuckle. “There is a certain kind of story that Southerners tell, a genuine gift of the gab. Robert Penn Warren had it and loved to hear others tell a story. There’s something I feel when I’m in the South, a gut laughter that these stories evoke. It’s very rarely felt anywhere else, you hold your side you’re laughing so hard. When you look at the South and say what makes it different, story-telling is a part of that and a key for why you have this powerful literary tradition coming out of the South. These are writers who grew up listening to stories, and a sense of humor in the South in which tall tales are cultivated and inspire a writer to take that to a different level.”

Naaman’s Championship BBQ

Maybe it started in Arkansas, but since 2013, Naaman’s Championship BBQ has been in Texas (Texarkana), in this renovated gas station next door to a Waffle House.
Naaman's Championship BBQ, Texarkana TX//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Naaman's Championship BBQ, Texarkana TX//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Naaman's Championship BBQ, Texarkana TX//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Naaman's Championship BBQ, Texarkana TX//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

We kept it to sandwiches this day — brisket, pork, chicken.
Naaman's Championship BBQ, Texarkana TX//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Everything was super-juicy, tender, with the right amount of smoke. Nice.
Naaman's Championship BBQ, Texarkana TX//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Shugie liked the cheesy corn too
Naaman's Championship BBQ, Texarkana TX//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Naaman’s was listed as the one must-stop from Texarkana to FTW by Daniel Vaughn.
Naaman's Championship BBQ, Texarkana TX//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Naaman's Championship BBQ, Texarkana TX//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js


On October 1, Naaman’s is hosting “Dine on the Line” block party in Texarkana in which some diners will be on the Texas side of the table, others on the Arkansas side.

Orange, Elephants, And A Slice of Summer

Av had an event in Little Rock which turned out to be fun. We had supper one night at Big Orange — we all really liked it — the atmosphere was cool (it teetered on trying too hard but still stayed on this side of it)

Big Orange, Little Rock AR//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Av had a hamburger, which they’re known for, and said it was great. I had the pimento cheese app for my entree and it was similarly good.
Big Orange, Little Rock AR//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

We stayed at the Marriott SpringHill Suites Little Rock West which was fine. We were only in Little Rock for one night and weren’t going to spend much time there, so we just stayed stayed at a hotel close to what we were going to be doing.
SpringHill Suites, Little Rock West//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Trying to figure out what the more interesting hotels are in LR. The old Peabody is now the LR Marriott. There’s something called the Burgundy Hotel, and they have other big ones like Doubletree and Embassy, but I think *the* hotel is the Capital Hotel (which has Molton Brown toiletries, always a good sign). Will have to give it a try when we’re staying for more than just a few hours.

While Av had his event, I took the boys closeby to the Little Rock Zoo, which was pretty nice
Little Rock Zoo//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Little Rock Zoo//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

The Heritage Farm section just opened this spring with petting zoo

and Heifer International, whose HQ is there by the Clinton presidential museum, is a partner in this part of the museum
Little Rock Zoo//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

On our way out, we passed by an elephant doing some tricks. I don’t know if tricks is the right word here. He (or she) didn’t want to do whatever this person wanted. A zookeeper was telling a small group of people about the elephant and history, etc. When the talk was done, I mentioned to her that I was so happy that the Ringling Brothers had decided to retire their elephant show from the circus.

I sort-of expected we would agree and keep walking. But that didn’t happen. In fact, she was shocked that I thought it was a good thing. 

Did I know how well the circus animals were being cared for? Was I aware that they live a beautiful life just by virtue of being Ringling elephants? That they have a huge sanctuary for elephants when they’re not on the road? Did I know that Ringing elephants didn’t do anything in the circus they didn’t do in nature?

She rattled off these questions without pause for my opportunity to answer so fast, I got the idea this perhaps wasn’t the first time she had to educate someone on the topic.

No, I don’t think that elephants were only doing in the circus what they do in nature. I wasn’t prepared to get out my phone and show her pics of Ringling elephants doing this and this and this, which probably elephants are not doing of their own will in their free time. Or how traveling from place to place, then being directed by someone with a stick in their hands to perform just can’t possibly be the way elephants are supposed to live their lives. I wasn’t interested in being confrontational. So I thanked her in a super nice way for telling me about their treatment and we left.

Maybe Ringling does have a paradise awaiting these elephants now, but I am still very glad that they will not be performing.

Little Rock Zoo//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

I’m not an authority, and there’s so much I still need to learn about this subject, but I think zoos have to be reinventing themselves — doing all service, conservation for example, for animals rather than just displaying a menagerie for entertainment. Teaching people how to best care for their animals at home: cats, dogs, etc — and being good caretakers of farm animals and the like.

Perhaps an explanation of why animals are at the zoo in the first place is a good idea. Breeding animals which are going extinct? Rescued an injured animal who can never be released back into the wild? Rehabilitating? Research that is going to benefit the world?

This essay on the history and future of zoos is very thoughtful, and includes the term “charismatic megafauna”.

My charismatic megafauna:

Shug and Shugie at Little Rock Zoo
…and what we got in Little Rock — a slice of summer from Plarn by Rebecca:

Shug and Shugie in Little Rock with their Watermelon Kippahs//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Taylor Grocery

Taylor Grocery in Taylor, Mississippi — home to some of the best fried catfish anywhere. They’re only open Thursday through Sunday, and if you’re not there when the door (the door that uses a whiskey bottle as a counterweight to close it) opens at 5p, you’re likely in for a wait. No reservations.

Taylor Grocery, Taylor Mississippi//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

What has to be one of the most famous signs in the state

And they keep up this sign they’ve had to use twice now: “We will be closed Sunday nite to watch ELI BEAT the Patriots” then underneath, “AGAIN”

These boys bring the fun!
Taylor Grocery, Taylor Mississippi//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Taylor Grocery, Taylor Mississippi//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

salad with comeback:
Taylor Grocery, Taylor Mississippi//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

and what else you came here for:
Taylor Grocery, Taylor Mississippi//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

catfish!
Taylor Grocery, Taylor Mississippi//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

https://player.vimeo.com/video/67815507?color=ffffff&title=0&byline=0&portrait=0
Eat or We Both Starve from Southern Foodways on Vimeo.

Mississippi’s Grammy Museum

The Grammy Museum in Cleveland, Mississippi — the Grammy’s first outpost — opened earlier this year, and we were able to get in during the first month. It is first-class. The artifacts, the exhibits themselves, how hands-on the museum is…

Set up with space for events

It’s no wonder why the Grammy Museum would want to open here considering the musical contributions of the state of Mississippi. So one of the questions was: how much Mississippi will be on display? A lot. Will there be a good mix from the broader context of the Grammys? There was.

The first piece on display is from Hollandale — it’s Ben Peters’ “free million dollar piano” which was given to him by a church, “which he patched together with paper clips and string” and used to write Charley Pride’s “Kiss an Angel Good Morning” and Freddie Fender’s “Before the Next Teardrop Falls”.
Grammy Museum, Cleveland MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Through February 19, 2017, the exhibit on view is ‘Pride and Joy: the Texas Blue of Stevie Ray Vaughn’ but the museum’s first exhibit was ‘Ladies and Gentlemen…The Beatles!’

This was a drumhead that Eddie Stokes did the graphics for (only three of his are known to exist)

A jacket Paul McCartney wore at their 1965 Shea Stadium show

Part of the exhibit included a practice drum set (that you could really only hear through headphones so people enjoying the exhibit weren’t disturbed by it) that taught beginner skills with a video

Mississippi Music Trails
Grammy Museum, Cleveland MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Mississippi Music Bar, where guests can scroll through songs written by Mississippians
Grammy Museum, Cleveland MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Sonny Boy Williamson’s harp

Elvis jumpsuit c 1975

The Roland Room, where guests can play electric musical instruments
Grammy Museum, Cleveland MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Again, one of the beautiful things is that guests don’t have to worry about making too much noise, because the sound is coming through the headphones.
Grammy Museum, Cleveland MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Dance room with instructional videos to do certain moves
Grammy Museum, Cleveland MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

While the museum isn’t huge, it is packed full of interactive exhibits that will certainly keep one happy and busy for at least a couple of hours — there are other aspects to the museum that I didn’t include here, but are incredibly interesting and engaging.

And even the restroom signage is themed

and the gift shop? We passed on these, but he really did want them.

Grammy Museum, Cleveland MS
The Grammy Museum remains the boys’ favorite (even ranked higher than the Dallas Museum of Art which is truly fabulous for kids) and they’re asking if we can go every year on our annual big Delta trip. The answer? Yes. Big yes. 

Delta Days, Part 2 of 2

Coming back from Helena, Arkansas, we decided to take the boys to Ground Zero (it’s the blues club in Clarksdale owned by Bill Luckett and Morgan Freeman). I didn’t eat here, but the boys had a snack. The food here is…meh…forgettable. But that’s really not why people come here. In fact, we sat close to some people from Indiana and they were just happy to see such a place.
Ground Zero Blues Club, Clarksdale MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

I didn’t eat anything because I knew I’d we’d be going to Hicks Tamales afterwards, but we got a small order at Larry’s Hot Tamales first (this pic, below), and wound up liking them better!
Larry's Hot Tamales, Clarksdale MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

And I love Hicks…

Hicks' Hot Tamales, Clarksdale MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

…but today they just weren’t as good as usual. Hopefully they were just having an ‘off’ day.
Hicks' Hot Tamales, Clarksdale MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js


We drove over to Money, Mississippi to check on Bryant’s Grocery and photographed these Bernard Coffindaffer crosses:
Bernard Coffindaffer Crosses, Money MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

…and the current state of Bryant’s Grocery, where Emmett Till’s fate was sealed. Hopefully soon, Till Bill 2 for unsolved crimes will be passed, which “will eliminate the 10-year sunset provision for the existence of the original law and lift the 1969 time limit on cases under consideration and extend it indefinitely into the future.”
Bryant's Grocery, Money MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Emmett Till’s casket will be on display at the new Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
Bryant's Grocery, Money MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

I watched the ‘hard hat tour’ of the museum led by Director Lonnie Bunch a couple of months ago on C-Span; so much work and amazing artifacts and exhibits will be on display — really looking forward to seeing it next year.
Bryant's Grocery, Money MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js


Supper at Lusco’s in Greenwood, Mississippi — open (and mostly unchanged) since 1933
Lusco's, Greenwood MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

famous for its curtained booths

which are separate little rooms each table gets. The curtain is pulled, and you’ve got your own private dining space.

…there are buttons on the wall for which you can (if they work, many of them don’t) summon a waiter if needed. It’s Mississippi’s version of Downton Abbey’s bell system.

Except here, m’lady needs the pompano rather than the tea service. Actually it was the Earl of our table who had the pompano, which they’re famous for
Pompano, Lusco's, Greenwood MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

…and for m’lady, the crabmeat Gayle:
Crabmeat Gayle, Lusco's, Greenwood MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js
Go now, because a member of the younger generation told us they don’t plan to keep it going once it’s their turn to take over. That may be years and years and years from now, but still. Sad.


We promised the boys dessert since it was Friday (we let them get dessert on Fridays), so before services, we ran to Crystal Grill to share some cheesecake:
Cheesecake, Crystal Grill, Greenwood MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

and pie, of course. Of course, pie! This is Crystal Grill, after all. Pie is their thing. Obviously, right?!


We had services at Greenwood’s Ahavath Rayim, where we just love everybody. There were other kids about Shug and Shugie’s age, and they ran around after services playing.

One of my favorite pictures is one Bill Aron took for the Shalom Y’all project here at this synagogue. Bill Erber, mailman and part-time policeman, is there holding the Torah, and he’s still in his USPS cap.

From a Sound Portrait David Isay did:
ISAY: The last to show up is Joe Erber. He is not an ordained rabbi, but ever since 1968, when Ahavath Rayim could no longer support its full-time rabbi, a congregant has had to lead the services. Erber, as usual, arrives a little out of breath in his police uniform — a walkie-talkie and a billy club on one hip, a .357 Magnum on the other. But even the president of the congregation doesn’t seem to mind.

LESLIE KORNFELD: He keeps us all quiet. (Laughs.)

ERBER: I asked a rabbi about that, and he said, “If soldiers in Israel carry a gun and they daben and they pray, then it’s perfectly alright in America, too.”

ISAY: The congregants begin making their way into the sanctuary, which is stunning. Old, but immaculately kept up, with high arched ceilings, dark wood and stained glass all around. They pull prayer books off a shelf at the back of the synagogue. The men take tattered prayer shawls off a wooden rack, kiss them, and drape them over their shoulders. Joe Erber walks to the front of the synagogue. And steps up onto the pulpit. This room, he says, brings back a lifetime of memories.

ERBER: I can close my eyes. My father wore hearing-aid glasses — he had a hearing aid in both ears. And we used to have a Rabbi that reminded me of a Baptist preacher when he started the sermon. He would rant and rave and pound the pulpit to get his points across. And when he got up and it became time for the sermon, my father would reach up and you would hear “click click” as he hit both hearing aid switches. And he would sit there with the prettiest smile on his face and his eyes closed, and pretty soon he’d start snoring. And I can see that just like it was yesterday.

I miss Joe.


Then we had a nightmare stay at the Indianola Best Western. There are very few places to stay there: this hotel (which a few weeks after we were there transformed into a Quality Inn) and other 1-1/2 to 2-1/2 star hotels (this was the highest rated, and it’s just a 2-1/2). See how there are three room numbers on our key sleeve? That’s because we had to visit three different rooms before we got one. In a thunderstorm (outside corridor).

The first room was under renovation, so we found it with a toilet between the two beds. WHAT!? Then the next one had a do not disturb tag on the doorknob, and I’m NOT trying a key on a very possibly-occupied room, and our last room…well…

It had clearly been smoked in, there was no stopper in the sink, the phone was unplugged, and some kind of alarm went off in the middle of the night for which the front desk said it was a regular meaningless occurrence and not to worry about it.

Thankfully we were there just long enough to sleep. In the morning, we were *out*.


After services another day, we had lunch at the Delta Meat Market in Cleveland.
Delta Meat Market, Cleveland MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Delta Meat Market, Cleveland MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

Delta Meat Market, Cleveland MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

I had the roast chicken curry, served on McCarty plates:
Roasted Chicken Curry, Delta Meat Market, Cleveland MS//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js


Another night, we stayed in Greenwood. Options: a Holiday Inn, HI Express, a Hampton, and this Best Western. And the Alluvian, my favorite Delta hotel. But we were going to be checking in after 9p and checking out before 8a, so we figured we’d save a ton of money and stay elsewhere since we wouldn’t be there long enough to really ‘enjoy’ the hotel.

For some reason we picked to stay here even though it was a Best Western (the only other BW the boys know is the historic BW Windsor Hotel in Americus, Georgia which is so neat).

Oh wow, I hated this hotel. First of all, who out there is stealing towels?
Best Western, Greenwood MS (ugh terrrrrible!)//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

The boys and I were getting dressed the next morning while Av was taking his shower. All of a sudden ***the room’s fire alarm went off***! It was an old alarm and just crazy loud — we were standing right underneath it practically when it went off. Imagine having your eardrums tasered. Oh yeah.

The three of us ran out (not completely dressed even, I think poor Shugie was still in his underwear) not so much concerned about an in-room fire but just to get away from ten thousand decibels. Av grabbed a towel and hopped out of the shower. Once the door opened, the alarm quit.

Av put on some clothes, went down to the front desk if they had any idea what in the world was going on in our room, and the first thing they asked was if he had been taking a shower.

He said yes.

They asked if the shower produced steam.

He answered that when he takes showers, there’s steam.

They: “oh yeah. Steam sets off our fire alarms.”

WHAT. hahaha! I mean, all we could do was laugh because two nights in a row we had just the craziest hotel experiences! And what kind of hotels were we staying in?!? Seriously so crazy!

Well, everything else was terrific and we got to see a bunch of people we hadn’t in a while, and the boys got to go to the brand-new Grammy Museum which was a-maz-ing (upcoming post). They’re still talking about it!

So, friends, have a great time in the Delta but maybe learn from our mistakes and consider sticking with the Alluvian. xoxo!