Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Tuesday, August 30 – Hugs and Kisses

The caravan wrapped up this morning.  After a final group breakfast at the campground, we started saying our goodbyes and shared hugs, kisses, and wishes for safe travels.  Most couples headed home, while a few continued traveling across the country.  A few families stayed in Galax in order to rest up from the caravan.

This was an AWESOME caravan!  EVERYONE had a great time and we all thank Wilt, Barbara, Ed, and Connie for all of their planning, scheduling, and effort leading this adventure through the Shenandoah Valley.

The Shenandoah "Valley Rally" is officially over.  This will be the last entry for the blog.  Thanks for traveling along with us.

Thanks for Joining Us On Our Travels.



Monday, August 29, 2016

Monday, August 29 – A Casual Day

View From the Winery
Today is our last full day of the caravan.  We went to a local winery, Mount Vale Vineyards, for a wine tasting.  We sampled one of two “flights” available to us.  The first flight consisted of four traditional “reds” and finished with a Chardonnay that is supposed to be appreciated by red wine drinkers.  The second flight consisted of sweeter wines that generally included some fruit taste.  Along with our samplings, we enjoyed fresh baked bread, some Irish cheese and Dove dark chocolates.  What a way to enjoy “lunch!”

Last Year's Yield was 9.5 tons of grapes


Life is Good!


The afternoon was free time that many people took advantage of to prepare their motor coaches and tow cars for departing the caravan tomorrow.  Some people are staying in the area for a few days, while the rest of us are leaving for all corners of the country.

Don P. Gets the Windshield Clean
Our caravan leaders prepared the traditional departure dinner.  Wilt and Ed grilled steaks to perfection while Connie and Barbara prepared vegetables and dessert.  What a way to enjoy a dinner!

Sonny Says Farewell and Invites Everyone to Mississippi
Nancy, Not Visible, Thanks Our Caravan Leaders for Their Wonderful Job



Sunday, August 28 – Monacos in Motion Invades Mayberry, USA

Our carpools departed the campground for the 30-minute drive to Mayberry, USA (actually, Mount Airy, North Carolina).  Mount Airy is a city with a population of 10,388 as of the 2010 census.  The town is best known as the home of actor Andy Griffith and is the inspiration for the fictional town of Mayberry; the setting for the TV shows The Andy Griffith Show and Mayberry RFD.  Mount Airy is also the home of 1970’s country music artist Donna Fargo.

Our Squad Car Awaits
We started our tour of the city at Wally’s Service Station.  This is the home of the Squad Car Tours where 4 or 5 guests are loaded into 1960’s era black and white Fords painted like police cars with a red “bubble gum” flashing light on the roof.  To start the tour, the driver pulls away from Wally’s with the siren blaring for a trek around the city.  With running commentary along the tour route, the driver talks about the granite quarry that is still in operation, the city’s favorite son, Andy Griffith, and how many of the names used in the television programs came from local sites and venues around Mount Airy.

The Ladies Are Out on the Town
The Granite Quarry
Flyod's Barber Shop  
Andy's Original Homeplace
Andy's Old Homeplace Can be Rented Out for the Night
Hey Baby, Do You Wanna Go For a Ride? 

We went to the Mount Airy Museum of Regional History to get an exposure to local life that isn’t related to Andy Griffith.  The museum has artifacts from the city’s early days.  Also included in the museum are three of the city’s first motorized fire engines along with the story of how each truck was acquired.







We completed our visit to “Mayberry” with a visit to the Andy Griffith Museum.  We saw photos, posters, and movie and TV set artifacts related to Andy Griffith’s career in local performances, Broadway stage performances, movies and television. 

Andy Griffith’s early career was as a monologist, delivering long stories such as What It Was, Was Football, which is told from the point of view of a naïve country preacher trying to figure out what is going on in a football game.  The recording was released in 1953 and reached number nine in the charts in 1954.

Griffith starred in a one-hour television program play No Time for Sergeants in 1955.  He reprised the role in the full-length theatrical version of the same name on Broadway.  The role earned him  “Distinguished Supporting or Featured Dramatic Actor” nomination at the 1956 Tony Awards.  Griffith continued to work on stage and started working in movie films through 1960.

In September 1960, Andy starred as Sheriff Andy Taylor in The Andy Griffith Show, which takes place in the fictional town of Mayberry, North Carolina.  The program had a well known cast such as Don Knotts in the role of Deputy Barney Fife and child star Ron Howard as Andy’s son Opie.  The program ran from 1960 until 1968 when Griffith decided to leave the program. 

In 1986, Griffith returned to television as the title character, Ben Matlock, in the legal drama Matlock, who was known for his Southern drawl and for always winning his cases.

Memorabilia from all of these roles, along with many others in Andy’s long career are included in the museum.





Andy Taylor's Office
Goober and His Uncle Wilt
Goober's Cousin Carol
Hey Rita, Are You Ready to Go?

Saturday, August 27 – Blue Ridge Parkway Day


We had a mixed day of activities along the Blue Ridge Parkway.  There were opportunities to shop at an old-fashioned country store, and at a local candy shop.  We ate lunch at a local winery and then visited a living history exhibit along the parkway.  The day wrapped up with a visit to the Blue Ridge Music Center where a local volunteer musician entertained us, we viewed displays outlining the history of mountain music, and enjoyed a professional concert in the center’s amphitheater.

Meadows of Dan

The day started with a shopping opportunity at Poor Farmer’s Market in the Meadows of Dan area of the Blue Ridge Parkway.  The Meadows of Dan is an unincorporated community in Patrick County, Virginia along the Blue Ridge Parkway.  There are numerous shops, classic houses, and restaurants in the community.


The Poor Farmer’s Market is an old time country store where you can buy baking supplies, jams and jellies, toys for kids of all ages, a hot breakfast or lunch, tee shirts and hats, and a great variety of good stuff.  If they don’t have it, you don’t need it!  We spent some time exploring the aisles of treasures offered for sale.  The largest item purchased was a bacon press that was desperately needed by a member of our group.

Mister, Mister, Please Take Us Home








Because we had not fulfilled our shopping quota for the day, we traveled to the nearby Nancy’s Candy Company.  This is a location where “WTF” means “where’s the fudge.”  Different flavors of fudge, yogurt covered pretzels, and jellybeans were sampled before several members of the group bought bags of sustenance to get us through the day between meals.







Who Needs to Buy Candy With a Sweetheart Like This?
I'm Sure That the Lady Will Set Out More Fudge Samples Pretty Soon


Our Winery Lunch

After sampling the fudge at Nancy’s, it was time to travel to the Château Morrisette Winery for lunch.  This winery has excellent scenic views of the rolling mountains in its backyard.  We enjoyed a nice lunch and a few members of the group sampled some of their wines before moving on to our afternoon destination.



Scenery on the Back Deck of the Winery
Mabry Mill


We Found the Old Still on the Site
At Mabry Mill we were treated to living history exhibits of early life in the Blue Ridge Mountains.  A local musician had exhibits of some very early string instruments that looked vaguely like banjos and guitars made out of rough-hewn wood.  He also explained the process of making strings and glue for the instruments out of animal parts.  The interpreter displayed and played a mountain dulcimer that he made under the direction of a local luthier. 

Rough Hewn String Instruments
His Hand Made Mountain Dulcimer
The site also houses the Mabry Mill, a water mill, where corn was once milled into grist.  Edwin Mabry built the Mill in 1905.  The mill building also includes a sawmill that is driven by waterpower.



The Sawmill
We saw demonstrations of ladies quilting, spinning wool into yarn using foot-powered spinning wheels, and weaving.  A couple of musicians sat nearby playing old-time mountain music on a fiddle and mandolin.  In addition to being an educational experience, the mill site was an opportunity to sit back and just enjoy the afternoon under the shade trees.

Sonny and Sally Watch the Quilter


A Compact Spinning Wheel in Action




Blue Ridge Music Center

By mid-afternoon, it was time to drive to the Blue Ridge Music Center where we were once again entertained with music and learned about early music of the Blue Ridge Mountains.  The center’s museum houses a permanent exhibit, “Roots of American Music”, that tells the story of the region's rich music heritage.  The exhibit displays many stages of the evolution of the five-string banjo since its arrival in America with enslaved Africans.  Viewers also see the relatively few changes made in the fiddle, brought with Europeans who migrated here.  The blending of these two instruments was the beginning of virtually all forms of American music and was the ensemble that came to frontier Appalachia. There are also oral history audio programs of those who collected the music of the mountains in the past.  How the recording industry and radio popularized and changed mountain music is also part of the story.

The center is currently hosting a traveling exhibit “Banjos from Africa to the New World.”  The center’s website describes the exhibit as “a travelling exhibit that surveys historic replica, pre-factory made banjos hand-crafted by California luthier Bob Thornburg.”

We arrived at the music center a few minutes before the end of the daily free concert performed by regional musicians daily from noon – 4pm.  Today’s artist is a retired NCIS agent (you know, like the program on Tuesday evening with Gibbs, Abby, and DiNozzo, only real life).  The artist is enjoying living in the Blue Ridge Mountains, playing and writing music, away from the daily work grind.

After listening to the free music concert and exploring the museum exhibits, we were treated to a catered picnic-style dinner of fresh barbeque brisket, cole slaw, and banana pudding from a local restaurant that was arranged by food team 3.  What a great way to get out of cooking while visiting an off-site location.  Thank you ladies for all of the research in finding and arranging the caterer.

While still at the Blue Ridge Music Center, we settled in for an evening’s entertainment from two superb bluegrass bands in the center’s outdoor amphitheater.  Although the concert was delayed for a few minutes due to a passing rain shower, we had a great foot stomping time.

We Arrive to the Amphitheater Early 
Bring on the Music!


A Little Rain Never Dissuades Music Lovers 
The opening act was the Carson Peters and Iron Mountain.  This is a bluegrass group fronted by 12-year-old Carson Peters who is a fabulous fiddle player.  This group appeared recently on the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, Tennessee.  They play traditional bluegrass mixed in with a little gospel music.

Carson Peters and Iron Mountain
The feature band for the evening was the Lonesome River Band.  This award-winning group has been playing bluegrass style music for 34 years with 17 albums.  The group has earned numerous IBMA (International Bluegrass Music Association) awards, including Album of the Year and Bluegrass Band of the Year, and Vocal Group of the Year from SPBGMA (Society for the Preservation of Bluegrass Music of America).  The group’s leader, Sammy Shelor, claimed Banjo Player of the year from both organizations and the second annual Steve Martin Prize for Excellence in Banjo and Bluegrass.  Although the band plays in the bluegrass genre, it adds its own twist to the music that makes it feel a little more main stream.  The band performed an excellent concert.

Lonesome River Band