Little Trip Out West – Jan 2021

Well, I haven’t posted in some time. We settled in Fort Myers in late October 2020 at Cypress Woods RV Resort. Absolutely stunning park and you can’t beat south FL in the winter. Covid stinks by the way! But, we decided we could stay there and hunker down until summer 2021. We spent some time in January scouting places that we want to go in the summer this year.

So, Jeff and I spent some time in New Mexico and Colorado in January to decide where we want to stay summer 2021. We decided to make it not only a scouting trip, but a mini vacay! In Taos, NM I got to see enough snow that I could actually snowmobile in! FIRST TIME EVER! The only thing that got cold was my right thumb and I seriously thought I was going to lose it! I thought when we got down the mountain that I would take my glove off and it would be purple or black, but it wasn’t. Jeff was on the snowmobile behind me, so I couldn’t ask him. He said he knew something was up because every time we stopped I was putting my glove on the motor. Anyway, I kept my thumb and we both kept all important appendages. He surprised me and rented a home in the Earthship Biotecture Community in Taos, NM for a couple of nights. (Earthshipbiotecture.com) I love his surprises!! We passed the community in 2018 and we have researched them several times since and I have mentioned that I would love to stay in one of those homes. It was almost dark when we were pulling up and I had no clue that we were staying there until he pulled in and got out at one of these funky homes. Great experience. Check out the pics. These homes are made out of 100% recycled material. The water is recycled four times through the home. The amazing thing about these homes is they are several miles from anything and there’s solar electricity and the water is drawn from a rain water collection system on the top of the home and that’s what’s used in the home. There was no “noise”. Total silence is something I haven’t heard in forever. If you ever feel the need to go get refreshed, check these homes out. We also did the tour at the main facility which was interesting. The homes are built so that you can grow food inside, which is really cool. Our home had some really pretty plants, but no food.
After Taos, we moved on to Colorado. We visited Breckenridge, Durango, Creed, Southfork, Ouray, Montrose, Pagosa Springs, Denver and lots of other little towns in between. It was a great trip and we got to meet up with friends from 2018 when we worked in Ouray. We were going to ski in Breckenridge, CO, but I thought it best that we keep our hips and ankles for the rest of the year, so we “watched” the skiers who were doing a fine job. Ouray had some excellent ice climbing action that we enjoyed watching and having conversation about how we could never attempt it. Durango is a quaint town that I want to spend more time in when we go back. But, overall that’s the essence of our trip. Enjoy the pics!!!

SKIING IN TAOS, NM

A Walk around the Park – Maggie Valley

A walk around Cross Creek RV Park. We are in a beautiful valley here and Jonathan Creek also runs right beside the RV park. There’s a creek across the street. The pictures below show it right after a massive rain, however it’s usually clear and Scooter loves to run around in it.

Bike Ride and random pictures

After we took a day trip to Asheville, Jeff took a ride up the Blue Ridge Parkway on the bike. Tonight we took a 4 mile walk and saw these beautiful strawberry hydrangeas. We also included some pictures from Scooter’s photo shoot on the walk. There’s a beautiful creek that runs right beside the sidewalk on Moody Farm Road. Our campground is on Moody Farm Road and I have shared two pictures at the bottom.

The Depot at Cody Creek, Dobson, NC

Jeff and I rode by this beautiful area on a Tuesday. We rode through and it was so intriguing that we HAD to research what was going on and how we could spend some time there. It is a restaurant, store, chapel, reception hall, gazebo and 4 cabins. We went back on the foll0wing Saturday night (last night) and we were sitting in the lobby on old church pews waiting to be seated. You can see them in the photos. There was a gentleman with a walkie talkie and I asked him who came up with this theme and this idea for this establishment and he told us that he did about 25 years ago. His name was Freddy and he was so kind to us and even served our food. Well, we would have felt pretty special, but he was serving everyone in the room we were in. His personal touch. Where we were seated there were old jail bars and he said they came out of the Dobson, NC Jail when they tore it down. It was just amazing. I’ve listed the website below if you want more information. Take a look at their gallery because my pictures don’t do it justice. http://www.codycreek.org/

Eng and Change Bunker the original “Siamese Twins”

We have been saving the best for last. This is a remarkable story, so hang with me here! Make sure to read to the bottom to find out how this relates to the Mayberry Campground, where we are staying.

We saw all of the signs named “Eng and Chang”. There’s a Memorial Bridge, there are also streets named Eng and Chang and other memorabilia around town. I looked up the name “Eng and Chang Bunker” and realized that they are the original conjoined twins, and this was the origination for the term “Siamese Twins”. The very same day I looked them up, I was talking to my friend Teresa Nauman and out of the blue she mentioned a podcast that she and her husband had listened to about the twins and Mount Airy. It’s a a Mobituaries podcast titled “Change and Eng: A Messy American Dream”. So we listened to it and became enlightened at the history that’s here in Mount Airy. I’ve taken some information from Wikipedia, ncpedia and the podcast below. In the bottom of the Andy Griffith Museum there’s a portion dedicated to Eng and Chang. I will say that they are highly celebrated in Thailand still today.

Chang and Eng Bunker (May 11, 1811 – January 17, 1874). They were from Meklong, Siam, which is now Thailand. A Scottish merchant saw them splashing around in the water and thought it was an animal and then he saw the conjoined twins. He took them away from their family (which they never saw again) and toured them around Europe and America.

Eng and Chang were Siamese-American conjoined twin brothers whose fame propelled the expression “Siamese twins” to become synonymous for conjoined twins in general. They were widely exhibited as curiosities and were “two of the nineteenth century’s most studied human beings”.

The brothers were born with Chinese ancestry in today’s Thailand and were brought to the United States in 1829. Physicians inspected them as they became known to American and European audiences in “freak shows”. Newspapers and the public were initially sympathetic to them, and within three years they left the control of their managers, who they thought were cheating them, and toured on their own.
In 1839, after a decade of financial success, the twins quit touring and settled near Mount Airy, North Carolina. They became American citizens, chose the last name “Bunker”, married local sisters, bought slaves, and fathered 21 children between the two of them. Chang’s and Eng’s respective families lived in separate houses, where the twins took alternating three-day stays. They would say that one brother would go into a meditative state while the other brother had “relations” with his wife. After the Civil War, they lost part of their wealth and their slaves. They had to go back on tour to regain their wealth, so they toured Europe with Barnum. Some of their children actually went with them. Chang had become distressed and drank too much and was losing his health. The story says that they became irritable toward each other. No doctor would separate them or even touch them for that matter and that was a goal they had in life. On the voyage home from Europe across the Atlantic, Chang suffered a stroke and partial paralysis. He only recovered in part, however his health began to decline. After returning home, on Jan. 12, 1874 Chang was stricken with bronchitis. On the morning of Jan. 17th, 1874 at 62 years old, he died in his sleep. There was nothing originally wrong with his brother Eng, however he awoke to find his brother deceased and a doctor was summoned to separate them. The doctor didn’t arrive in time and Eng passed with his family by his side.

Information obtained from ncpedia states: An autopsy conducted in Philadelphia led doctors to conclude that while Chang had died of a cerebral clot brought on by the previous stroke, complicated by pneumonia, Eng had actually died of fright. A partial examination of the connecting band, limited by the family’s wish that it not be cut from the front, revealed that their lives were connected by a “quite distinct extra hepatic tract” and that an artery and some nerve connections ran between them; thus, Eng may have suffered from loss of blood from Chang’s dying body. I just cannot imagine what he might have been going through having watched his brother, whom he had been attached to his whole life pass before him and know he was about to die.

So, this brings me to another bit of history. We are staying at the Mayberry Campground. We had been here a week and a half when we realized the history of the campground.

Taken from the Mayberry RV Park Website:
Mayberry Campground is a privately owned RV park located in the small town of Mt. Airy, NC which is often referred to as Mayberry.  The land the campground is built on was once part of a 2,000 acre farm owned by the original Siamese twins, Eng and Chang Bunker.  The twins and their wives, Sarah (Eng) and Adelaide (Chang), settled in Mt. Airy, NC.  Eng and Chang each had their own home and would stay at one residence for three nights, then go to the other residence for three nights. Eng and Sara had 11 children while Chang and Adelaide had 10.  The twins were never separated and died on January 17, 1874 at the age of 62. 
     Within the campground property there is a white farmhouse (pictured left) that was built by Eng’s son, William Bunker in 1900.  Occasional tours are offered to groups interested in viewing the old home place. The campground owner, Benny East, is the great-great grandson of Eng.  His mother, Ruby Bunker East, was born and raised in the farmhouse along with her 5 sisters.  Kali Boles, the campground manager, is a great-great-great granddaughter of Eng. We have been dealing with Kali the entire time that we have been here and had no clue that she was a descendant of Eng Bunker.

Eng and Chang are also buried in the church right behind the campground. I have put some pictures of the twins and their wives and family below. I also included their burial site which we visited today.

Around the campground. This is the old farmhouse that’s on the campground property. It was built in 1900 by Eng’s son, William Bunker. We are also stayin gon Eng & Chang Way.

This is the original farmhouse built by Chang. It is right by the Eng and Chang Bunker Memorial Bridge.

The Whittling Wall

Last night in downtown Mount Airy we found “The Whittling Wall”. Donna Fargo the country music singer is from Mount Airy, NC. We found out during the squad car tour. But, she was featured on this amazing Whittling Wall.

The Whittling Wall contains 8 brick sculptures of notable local individuals. These statutes were $93,340 downtown revitalization grant

Years ago, local men gathered at the spot to whittle, chew tobacco and swap stories while their wives shopped at local downtown stores, giving the Whittling Wall its name. But look at the work on this wall. Incredible is an understatement.

Pictures from The Loaded Goat. Finally got Jeff to pose for a picture!

Pilot Mountain, NC – 8/20/2020

We took a trip to Pilot Mountain State Park. It’s about 15 minutes away from Mount Airy and about 5 minutes from downtown Pilot Mountain, NC. Mount Pilot on The Andy Griffith Show is named after Pilot Mountain. The sap was falling off the trees. I walked right into a pine tree branch filled with sap. It was a nice day trip for us.

Beautiful panoramic view of Pilot Mountain.

New Hampshire Memories 7/10/2020 – 8/7/2020

We made some beautiful memories in New Hampshire with Scott, Diane, Carlee, Scupps and Sugar and Spice!! We are so thankful that they let us park our new home in their driveway. They have such a beautiful home! They had a special sign made by Carlee that said “Shouppeville”!! We loved it!

Sweet, talented Carlee’s sign for us!!

In some of these pictures, we ventured out into Massachusetts and Maine! We also saw Mount Washington, NH which for nearly sixty-two years, held the world record for the fastest wind gust ever recorded on the surface of the Earth: 231 miles per hour, recorded April 12, 1934 by Mount Washington Observatory staff.

We made a banana pudding from SCRATCH. Carlee, Diane and I tag teamed with my Mama on Facetime telling us what to do. It literally took all of us. Carlee was so excited she made her first merangue. I didn’t want to tell her it was only my 2nd. She is 11 and I am almost 50! We also had a movie night with Carlee & Elizabeth, equipped with pizza and concession stand candy!

Banana Pudding! Carlee is an amazing young chef!

We also had a girl’s movie night where we watched “My Spy”. Carlee, Elizabeth, Diane and I laughed so hard at this cute little film!!

We enjoyed Lake Winnipesaukee by boat, which was amazing. The water was so refreshing!!

Some sights around New Hampshire and around Diane and Scott’s home. We also had a ladies cooking night where we had some wonderful ladies over and we cooked an elegant dinner and dessert.