Tag Archive for 'georgia'

Since We Last Spoke

I’ve been busy lately and haven’t had too much time to update this thing. Here’s a rundown of the past month.

We bought a Toyota Prius. Barcelona Red. Love it.

Laura and I have been doing lots of planning for our house. Learning about concrete foundations, suspended concrete decks, solar power, standby electric generators (and the fact that ALL of them run on fossil fuels), rainwater harvesting, low power refrigerators, split ductless air conditioning, induction stove tops, composting toilets, water tanks, ceiling fans, doors, windows, and UV water sterilizers. Whew! Eventually we are going to write about it all over at Our Farm Adventure, which is just getting off the ground.

We’ve also been working on a year-long road trip through the U.S. and Canada that we’re going to take when I graduate in 18 months. We going to start in Georgia, go down and up Florida, across the Gulf Coast through Texas to Big Bend National Park, then up through New Mexico to see caves and desert, north to Denver, west to Salt Lake City, south to the Grand Canyon and Phoenix, west to San Diego, meandering north through California, Oregon, Washington, and B.C… and then… to Alaska! After Alaska, it’ll be back down through Alberta to Yellowstone National Park, northeast-ish to Winnipeg, east over the Great Lakes, to Toronto and Niagara Falls, then back north again to Ottawa and Montreal, south to Burlington, VT then east to the White Mountains of New Hampshire, north to Québec, northeast along the south side of the St. Laurence river to the eastern peninsula at Parc National Forillon, then south through New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, then back towards Maine and finally south down the Atlantic coast home to Georgia. Fun! Got any ideas of specific places we should go or things we should see? Let us know.

A few weeks ago, we went to Georgia to check out our land and see family. Laura learned to use a machete. I got chiggers (sorry, no pics). Maybe next time we’ll make more progress on the land… because we’re never coming in the summer again (too many bugs). Hello, October! But we did discover that Toccoa has a beautiful downtown (even if it’s kinda sad in a historical context, like most small towns). One thing we do love? The Amtrak station. While we were down there, we saw my dad, my PaPa and MaeMae, MeeMa, Aunt Nina, and brother Whit.

I got a writing gig over at Accidental Hedonist. I’ve been reading Kate’s food blog for some time now. 3, 4 years? I forget. Anyway, my articles go up every Wednesday until the end of December. You can read the introduction to get a feel for what it’s about, or check out the first entry on Okra

Living Off The Land

The more I read about Peak Oil the more it scares the shit out of me. Fortunately, Laura and I have a place to go when it all goes down.

But I wonder if we’ll get there soon enough, if we can build our house fast enough, and become self-sustainable enough, in time to weather the storm?

This is what I think about.

That, and buying an arsenal.

..

Here we are, at home:

Me at HomeLaura at Home


Sad News :(

I found out today that my old landlord, Donald Keyes, passed away in May. He was hiking in the Grand Canyon with his wife and a few friends and had a heart attack. I guess if you’re going to go, it’s good to do it while you’re having fun with the people you love. He was a great guy, more like a good friend than a landlord. And you gotta respect when a guy with a degree from Yale does all of the maintenance and repairs on his properties.

Athens misses you already, Donald.

Donald Keyes Remembered

Former Museum Curator Dies While Hiking in Grand Canyon

Donald Keyes

I wish I could have said goodbye.

OR PA GA NC

So, I’m back from Oregon if you didn’t already know.

Laura and I came back on the 3rd of August. The flight on US Airways should have been unremarkable. Except for the fact that they advertised to us at every possible point in the flight. Ads for Hilton hotels and Bahama vacations on the tv screens — with the audio on over the loudspeaker. Miniature billboards for Verizon plastered on the fold-down tray tables. Flight attendants pushing credit card applications like a crack dealer in the Bronx. Seriously!

So what did I do? I ripped the fucking Verizon ad off of the tray table, wadded it up, and threw it into the pocket of the seat in front of me. Take that, assholes.

Anyway.

One of the first things on our agenda was to eat at Horizons. It’s an upscale vegan restaurant in Philadelphia that L rants and raves about. I found out it was for good reason. Amazing, amazing food. I can’t even put into words how great it was. I just hope that one day I learn to make a seitan steak that tastes even half as good. YUM.

Her parents were awesome. I really like them a lot. L’s mom is a sweetheart and it is so adorable how she misses Laura like crazy. And her dad is about as sarcastic as I am, so we got along well.

I saw and experienced many things: Overpriced (and not great) public transit, 300 year old houses, Rita’s water ice and soft pretzels, dinner with several of L’s friends at Singapore, driving around in the Blazer, drinks with Aunt Nancy (served by her daughter, Alex), cooking brunch for the fam, drinking Strongbows, and eating cakes!

Then we set off for Georgia. Or well, we tried, and found out that our flight was overbooked. So we took the next one, and scored two round-trip tickets in the process. Our arrival into Atlanta was frenetic, as we took the train up to north Atlanta to meet my brother and pick up a tent, then only to turn around and take the train back to the airport to catch the shuttle bus down to Macon (with 2 minutes to spare!).

Whew!

Then it was dinner at Mom’s, lunch at Dad’s, visit with grandparents, and arrival in Athens. We saw my friend Patrick, met up with Kerry for sushi downtown, then went back to Patrick’s to make homemade mango ice cream. A couple hours on the porch were spent enjoying good dessert and good company, then we headed back to town.

On the way back into Athens, my car ran over a piece of metal that instantly slashed a 12″ x 1″ hole in my gas tank. Fortunately we were in front of a gas station when it happened, so we pulled over and surveyed the damage. Patrick was nice enough to pick us up and take us to Kerry’s place, where we stayed the night. Then the next day, Kerry let us drive her car around Athens while I figured out what to do about my car. While we were out, I took Laura to meet my friends Halley and Dani (because I wanted them to meet Laura).

Car troubles aside, we ate dinner at Thai Of Athens, my favorite restaurant in town. The woman that runs the place loves me and always remembers me (even when I’ve been gone for 7 months). So she gave us some complimentary friend tofu. YUM.

The next day, we rented a car and headed up to Lavonia to visit my MeeMa for lunch. After that we drove to Toccoa, where I showed Laura the 50 acres of family land that will be mine one day — we’re planning to live there at some point, yay! Then I took her to Toccoa Falls because it’s the highest freefalling waterfall in the east. We ended up camping an hour away at Amicalola Falls, but didn’t actually end up hiking to the falls (after Toccoa Falls it would have been a disappointment anyway).

Last but not least, we went to visit my brother in Atlanta on Friday. I took Laura record shopping in Little Five Points, and out to lunch (and ice cream) at Soul Vegetarian. For dinner, we went with my brother and his friend Trey to eat at Cafe Sunflower. YUM.

All in all, at different points during the trip to Georgia, Laura got to try sweet tea, creamed corn, fried okra, lima beans, collard greens, pecan pie, and boiled peanuts. And… she liked it!!! I think I’ll keep her after all :D

As I write this post on Friday night, August 17th, I can’t help but be a little sad. This is my first weekend without Laura since we’ve met. I feel like I should be driving to her house now, like I did every Friday. But I’m thousands of miles away.

I guess I’m going to have to get used to it.

But I have a lot to be thankful for, because I couldn’t imagine not having her in my life. And there is lots to look forward to. We’ve already booked our Christmas vacation together and it’s going to be for something like 12 days. Best 12 days of Christmas, ever. So we’re not going to be apart for 2 years, only 4 months. I can do that.

Tomorrow, I’m leaving for North Carolina. My car still isn’t fixed because they can’t locate a replacement gas tank. But my grandpa loaned me his truck for a week, so I’m not totally screwed. It’s all packed up and ready to go.

I had a place lined up in NC to stay, camping in someone’s back yard. But that fell through two days ago. So I’m kinda homeless right now. I do have a second option on where to camp, but I haven’t quite confirmed it yet. All I know is that I’m hitting the road, arriving in Raleigh sometime around 1pm, unloading 90% of my stuff at my office, finding a place to camp, and having dinner at Michelle’s house (the professor with whom I’m working).

Am I nervous? Yeah, a little.

Worried? Nah. Things just seem to always work out.

Eating Ritas!

Complementary Cuteness

Me, Doing What I Do Best

Day 3: Georgetown, GA to Ozark, AL

January 5, 2007

I woke up early today and left the campground before the sun came up. The ride into Georgetown was hilly, but traffic was light. Around 8:30 am I found the cemetery where my great-grandparents Herman and Thelma Branyan are buried.

The ride across the lake to Eufaula was shorter than I expected. I stopped at a Winn-Dixie grocery to buy some food. Tuna fish, bread, and Castleberry’s brunswick stew in a can. The cashier couldn’t believe that I’m riding across the country and she wants me to call the store when I make it to San Diego.

After stocking up on food, I went to the Burger King for breakfast. I thought they were still having a 75¢ special on their sausage biscuits, but it wasn’t to be. $2.00 later, though, I ate two of them and warm food never tasted so good.

The sights today could be summed up as: abandoned house, trailer, nice house, abandoned gas station, crappy not-abandoned house, abandoned house with a trailer parked out back. Rinse, lather, repeat.

Also it rained like a bitch, for so hard and so long that it wasn’t even worth putting on my rain gear. I got soaked.

I camped on a pine tree farm. It didn’t rain at night, but it might as well have. The morning dew made my tent and sleeping bag all wet. Packing it all up was no fun and I hoped to find somewhere dry to stay soon.

This tent sucks. Needless to say, when I’m done with this tour, Mountain Hard Wear is going to receive a strongly worded letter about the problems I’ve encountered with their product.




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