I had a great night's sleep last night. The campground was quiet after about 11:30 p.m. The pavilion I was sleeping under was in the RV section and was a lot closer to the bathhouse than the tent section, so the campground host really did me a big favor letting me sleep there. He told me the campground is not full this Memorial Day weekend because of high gas prices. I rode through the tent section this morning and there were almost as many tent campers as RVers.
I got up and made it to the park restaurant a little before 7 a.m. Their on-line information indicates they open at 7. Workers at the restaurant were out smoking, and they told me the restaurant didn't open until 8. I didn't want to waste an hour waiting for the restaurant to open, so I left and rode about 11 miles to Elizabethtown. It was during this 11-mile ride that I thought to myself that I should have asked the restaurant workers if there were any bananas in the kitchen that I could buy from them. Oh well, it was too late by then. I think I'm having banana withdrawal pains.
In Elizabethtown, I ate at the Town and Country Restaurant, which is in a building built in about 1900. I had a cheese omelet and a large pancake. After I finished eating, I was relaxing and drinking more water when I overheard a customer order a scrambled egg sandwich with Miracle Whip and a tomato on it. That made my mouth water so I ordered an identical sandwich and ate it also. I decided I had better leave before someone else came in and placed an order that would make me order another meal. I asked the waitress if they had any bananas, and she said they no longer keep fruit because it rotted too fast. Out of luck again.
Pic below of Elizabethtown in 1908. The Town and Country building to the left in the photo.
Pic of the same general area of the town today.
Some pics of the building's exterior and interior below.
I met Ralph (pic below) who is from San Francisco and is riding from San Francisco to Emerald Isle, NC. He has been riding about 5.5 weeks and has ridden about 2500 miles. This is his first bicycle tour and he told me it will probably be his last. My advice to him was not to sell his nice Co-motion Divide touring bike immediately. After he has been back home a few weeks and the daily struggles of bike touring are behind him, he will probably start remembering all the positives of touring and will want to go on another one.
The next cyclist I met was John (pic below). He is from Los Angeles and is biking from Phoenix, AZ, to Maine. He left Phoenix on April 18. He has biked across the country 3 times since he retired 5 years ago.
Both Ralph and John told me about a German couple cycling across the country from east to west that they had met earlier today. I made it to Goreville United Methodist Church where I will be staying tonight and sitting in front of the church were Anton and Ute (pic below) who are staying at the church tonight also. They are from Munich, Germany and are biking from New York City to San Francisco, CA. They are calling it the bridge to bridge tour, from Brooklyn Bridge to Golden Gate Bridge. They began on May 3. In 2012, they both completed the New York City marathon. They visited California on one other occasion with their 3 daughters, who live near them.
Pic below of my camping spot inside the church. The church opens it's doors and allows cyclists riding on U.S. Bike Route 76 to stay inside. They also have a shower and washer and dryer for cyclists to use. We all did our laundry at the church. What a perk!
So glad to see those bananas! What a wonderful thing that some of these churches provide a place to stay for you travelers. It must be cool to meet all these people.
ReplyDeleteIt's fun getting the other people's stories. I'm back to "normal" now that I have bananas:)
Delete