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[personal profile] petrea_mitchell
Day 11: We set off from Orlando, back up the turnpike to I-75, and stopped in Ocala for the Don Garlits Museum of Drag Racing, which is really mostly the Museum of Don Garlits.

Then it was back up I-75 for a long, long way up through Georgia, land of a million billboards advertising peaches and/or pecans. We hit the ring roads of Atlanta right around evening rush hour, but were lucky to be going counter-commute most of the way. We stopped for the night somewhere in northern Georgia.

Day 12: We kept on I-75 up into the winding hills until East Ridge, Tennessee, just over the border, where we switched to I-24. We stopped in Chattanooga so the SO could show me the Chattanooga Choo-Choo.

The Choo-Choo is a hotel in a converted train station, with the waiting room turned into a huge lobby, the auxilliary buildings filled with rooms, some train cars turned into suites, etc. At the time, it hosted just about every geek convention in Chattanooga except their anime con. The SO had been to one of those cons a couple years before and I'd really wanted to make it to one as well, except soon after the trip word broke that parts of the hotel were being demolished and all the cons were having to move. Oh well.

I bought new batteries for the camera in the gift shop, and we continued on.

I-24 took us to Nashville, where we turned north onto I-65 to Bowling Green. There we stopped at the National Corvette Museum, which is famous among car aficionados for its unparalleled collection. If you're not a car aficionado, then you've heard of it because it's the museum where a sinkhole suddenly opened one night and swallowed the crown jewels of its collection.

The museum has made the best of it, putting in an exhibit on the local geology, the recovery effort, and the decision to leave some of the cars unrepaired. A couple of the most damaged cars are completely unique, the reasoning goes, and if they were rebuilt then they wouldn't be all-original anymore. They're part of history just as they are.

I would think after that that we'd been to every museum in the US mixing cars and geology, but just recently, reading up on DC-area attractions, I learned about Luray Caverns and its associated auto museum.
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