When I was a kid, we'd take regular car trips down to Charleston and
Savannah to visit my mom's side of the family. Endless car trips,
especially in the years before the Interstate made things safe and
easy and predictable. (And various vehicles of questionable
reliability didn't help.) So visiting Savannah for the first time in
years gave me the chance to see how much had changed and how much I
remembered from those long ago travels.
You know you're in the South when: your plane arrives at the gate and
some guy pulls the jetway into place. With a rope. (To be fair, at
least they have jetways; San Jose's older terminal still
hasn't bothered. And the terminal itself is clean and bright and
modern. Still, something about being down south and a guy with a rope
is disconcerting.
I grew up on White Castle.
And I've been known to buy them frozen when I find the supermarket
that carries them. But I have to say that
Krystal, the South's answer to
the Castle, is every bit as good. Maybe even better, once I get over
the idea of mustard on my burgers instead of ketchup. Now if only
somebody would bring little square burgers out to California...
On Sunday I went out to
Fort Pulaski with my sister and
her brood. Fort Pulaski was the end of an era, an antebellum brick
fortress that became obsolete with the development of rifled cannon.
But it's a remarkably serene place in a gorgeous setting.
And on the way out I noticed a sign for the lighthouse at Tybee
Island. So I made a little detour to see if it was photo-worthy, and
to revisit a place I hadn't seen since I was fifteen. Tybee is
Savannah's beach community, the place the locals go to get away from
the stifling heat in town. The lighthouse was well worth the stop,
for its own sake, for the views from the top, and for the admittedly
slight decrease in the temperature. But not, I'm afraid to say, in
the humidity.
(You'll find a few more pictures
over
at Flickr.)