Thursday, February 19
Walking path we took every day:
Palmettos
After the usual late start and early morning walk down to the boat ramp, we left Molly at home and went to see the Owens-Thomas House in Savannah. Finding it was challenging—I felt rushed and got turned around by the city directions, and I couldn’t get my bearings. I had to ask Ed to navigate.
But the house and the tour was very interesting. Since it had been occupied by several families and remodeled a few times, it really needed the tour guide to explain to us what was new, what was old, and why all that was interesting. He did a great job.
Savannah
In the house
After that I tried to navigate us down the waterfront and the old part of town, but I was having “halos” in my vision due to skipping lunch and not drinking any water. So I couldn’t navigate worth a tootle, and I didn’t want to make Ed wear himself out. If I’d been alone, I’d have stopped for a snack, sat down and gotten my bearings. But it wasn’t to be so. We headed back to City Market (which was a stupid array of small shops, not interesting) and the parking garage, and left.
It was only later that I remembered that a whole part
of my lifelong desire to see Savannah was to see the waterfront and the cotton
warehouses and the ship landing sites. So all that was missed...another time.
Or next time do Charleston which has some of the same sort of history.
All I saw of the waterfront:
Back at the Fort, Molly and I went for a walk again. We took a careful look at the trail map on the sign at trailhead, and it showed a big loop called The Magnolia Trail. So we went on it, and it started out with “blazes” in the form of yellow diamonds tacked onto trees. On we went, but soon there was a junction and the trail it joined was called something completely different, like Boy Scout trail or some such. A little while later it was called the Conservation trail or something else. And soon we had taken a loop and joined up with the exact same trail we’d taken the previous day when we got lost trying to find our way back to the road. At least at that point we knew where we were.
But there just weren’t any other trails except possibly one that went over to the primitive campground (I saw people back there so I didn’t go that way), and the so-called loop didn’t exist. At least by that name. And the yellow diamonds resumed at some point without rhyme or reason.
Weird. But at least we got a good long walk out of it.




































