October 23, 2023 Day 16 Thomasville Georgia 160 miles
Today is mostly sunny with a few high wispy clouds. The morning is cool so we leave the curtains down and the jackets on. The tour is divided into three groups. We are in the B group which leaves first. We are to leave the fairgrounds by 7:45 am.
So off we go. Whoever did the route did a good job of keeping us off the busy streets. We did during the day go over many of the same streets multiple times. The route takes us along narrow two lane roads that everyone forgot to paint lines. Many of them have canopies of tree branches. Lots of the oak trees have Spanish moss hanging from them. Gives them a rather eerie appearance. Quite a few homes have Halloween decorations out. The terrain is a combination of forest, big lavish homes with huge lawns and small homes with small yards. Occasionally we see a pasture with horses, donkeys, cattle or goats.

Our first stop is the O’Steen Farm. Not much farm but lots of restored cars and motorcycles. They had a lot of different makes and models. Very small cars, race cars, trucks and antique cars. They all run and many have gone to shows. They also have numerous signs that advertise gas or cars. They also have a cracker house. Sometimes it is called a shotgun house because you can shoot through the house from the front door to the back door. A cracker is a Florida cowboy. The house has two bedrooms and a modern bathroom. The rest of the house is decorated similar to what it would have been in the 1940’s. That is the era they are trying to show. It also has a wonderful front porch complete with rocking chairs. The refrigerator has a petal on the leg that opens the door when pushed.

The next stop is the Tallahassee Automobile Museum. The museum’s collection includes over 160 automobiles, grand pianos, die-cast toy cars, pedal cars, antique boating items, golf memorabilia, Hit and Miss motors, brass cash registers, clocks, bicycles, boats, sports memorabilia, motorcycles, can openers, spark plugs, artifacts and memorabilia. The building is two stories high and is crammed with stuff. We had two hours here but no one could see everything in that length of time. It is actually overwhelming. The really large stuff is outside and includes a very tall Uncle Sam and a huge Hereford steer.

The we are off to Edward Ball Wakulla Springs State Park for lunch. It’s a beautiful park and very large. Lots of trees both oak and evergreen. We had a wonderful lunch. The park was shady and cool.
Our last stop is at the Brady Country Store. They make their own sausages. Too bad we can’t take those with us. They were quite tasty. The store was small with old wooden floors and antiques scattered in ever available space. They had lots of syrups, jams, BBQ sauce and candy. The cashier is married to a man from Lewiston Idaho.


On the way to the store we helped one of the other drivers who was having car trouble. The car seemed to be running better after that but we never saw it again. The took a wrong turn and were out of sight. Rob talked to them later and they made it back alright.
Quite a few opossum were on the road as road kill. Does anyone have a recipe for roadkill opossum? It will probably be served with grits.
We turned in our daily report card and then went to the gas station to fill the car with gas for tomorrow. We also went to the grocery store to get food for supper. We are having Thai tonight.






























