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July 27 - 30, 2000: Gatlinburg, Tennessee
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Day Two: The Adventure Continues
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1:15 PM: Lunch at Atrium Pancakes and On
To Mountain Mall
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We
slept in Friday morning and then had a breakfast of Pop Tarts, orange
juice, and coffee. I then spent the next four hours creating my
Day One travelogue, while Anna alternately read, watched TV, and
napped, never once asking, Aren't you through yet?!
She deserves a medal for her patience and tolerance.
We went to Atrium Pancakes for lunch at 1:15. Anna ordered the chocolate
chip and coconut pancakes, which I'm afraid aren't rendered very
well in the picture to the right, while I had plain old pancakes
with ham and eggs. After lunch, we went to the post office to mail
a few post cards and get stamps for a few more, and then returned
to the main strip of 441. We went into Mountain Mall, looked around
for a while, bought about fifteen dollars worth of books at Book
Warehouse (including three John Bellairs novels, which have really
cool titles like The Revenge of the Wizard's Ghost and
The Spell of the Sorcerer's Skull), and then set out for
Ripley's.
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4:50 PM: The Ripley's Believe It or Not!
Museum
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Robert
L. Ripley was a cartoonist who made a career and a fortune out of
traveling the world in search of odd and unusual facts to present
to the public, first through his syndicated newspaper cartoon, then
later through radio, TV, and even personal appearances. The Ripley's
Believe It or Not! Museums, of which there are 26 worldwide, had
their start at the Odditorium at the 1933 Chicago World's
Fair. As the museum guidebook describes it, On display were
genuine shrunken heads from the Upper Amazon, medieval chastity
belts, instruments of torture, and even The Last Supper painted
on a dime!
We saw the shrunken heads, chastity belts, and instruments of
torture, but we didn't see the dime; we did, however, see a stuffed
two-headed cow, a chain of chewing gum wrappers that's over a mile
long and which a school teacher spent almost two decades constructing,
and a funhouse mirror that made me look like my legs went just about
to my neck, with practically no torso in between!
We also had a wax cast of our hands made, a process that involved
dipping our hands in 136-degree wax about a dozen times, waiting
for the wax to cool, then carefully extricating our hands from the
wax to leave a Chris-and-Anna-holding-hands shaped mess of wax.
It was a most unusual experience, and Anna is delighted with the
results.
Here are a replica of a wolly mammoth's skeleton, a horse statue
made of coat hangers, and Robert Ripley's personal favorite item
from his collection, the Fiji Mermaid, which was fabricated out
of the upper section of a monkey and the lower half of a fish, and
exhibited in the late 1800s as a genuine mermaid by P. T. Barnum:
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7:20 PM: Dinner at Blaine's Bar & Grill
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While
we were in Ripley's (a span of time greater than two hours), a thunderstorm
came up and soaked the city, even causing the power to cut off briefly
a couple of times as we made our way through the exhibits. After
leaving the museum, we trudged up the steaming streets, and ended
the day with dinner at Blaine's Bar & Grill. After eating, I took
a few pictures of the still-wet city streets and the surrounding
mountains from the balcony outside the third floor.
Finally, we went to the Ole Smoky Candy Kitchen (which, despite
the name, was not that smoky), bought a half-pound of bridge mix
(mostly chocolate covered raisins, peanuts, and almonds) and came
back to the cabin.
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Links
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Ripley's Believe
It or Not!
Gatlinburg Online
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© 2000 Chris Burdett. All rights reserved.
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