They were supposed to be the best breakfast in town with the best biscuits. We both got omelets and they came with three huge biscuits and grits and gravy. The omelets were very good. I thought the biscuits were kinda heavy but the prepackaged peach preserves were pretty tasty. I'm not a grits fan, but Lindy liked them. The gravy was downright nasty.
You order up at the window and then the waitress brings the food to you. It had a diner-like atmosphere to it. Next, we headed north out of Memphis to go to Mirimichi golf course, our main destination of the day.
This is the course started by Justin Timberlake. His vision was to have a great golf course that was open to the public and didn't break the bank to play on. It is also one of the "greenest" courses in the country using native plant species that are more resistant to drought. We drove through the gate and up the hill and down to park by the clubhouse.
I had at one time thought of playing, but my aching back and the high 90's temperatures persuaded me not to. We went in the clubhouse and found a couple of shirts to buy. Even though it was very nice inside, the people were very friendly. We asked if it would be possible to rent a cart to just drive around the course and the guy said to just go ahead remembering to respect the other golfers. The carts were super quiet and had gps screens that gave you all sorts of information about how to navigate and how far away your ball was from the hole. The hole markers were really cool.
Naturally, Lindy had to drive.
The course was beautiful in a wild, natural kind of way.
This was the 5th hole marker.
This was one of the bathrooms located throughout the course. A bit different from the porto potties at Mondovi.
As you can see, it was warm that day, but we had our Mirimichi bottled water along.
It was a great time. I would love to come back and play sometime when it isn't quite so warm.
On the way, we had passed a school in Memphis so we found our way back to it to see if we could visit. We knew that the schools were already back in session. We were initially taken aback by the sign, wondering if it was a private school.
We buzzed in and were told that it is a public school with 4K-5 grades. It was very culturally diverse with Hispanic, Arabic, African American and white students.
They were getting ready to have a fire drill and the Kindergarten teacher had taken her students out early. They all had uniforms. We met with the school secretary and she called the guidance counselor who came and gave us a tour. It was very interesting. The students seemed to be very well behaved.
We had a chance to talk to a couple of teachers. Their enrollment had really jumped so they were cramped for space but were using mobile units brought in to house all the students.
It was fun to compare notes and see how things were done in other places. They said that 90% of the students were on free and reduced lunch so they had quite a bit of Title money to spend, but also needed ESL teachers in most of the classrooms. The fire drill bell rang, so we thought we had better leave. This was a shot of the benches underneath this huge tree. You can see the kids in the distance lining up outside.
We decided to go back to our hotel and cool off as it was very warm that day.
Eventually, we were actually starting to get hungry believe it or not. The secretary at the school said we should try Corky's for ribs so we headed there.
It was really good! You get get them either dry rub or wet, but we got the dry. The ribs were smaller than Rendevous but had more meat on them and seemed more juicy even though they were crunchy on the outside. The beans were OK, but the coleslaw was really mild and creamy-a nice contrast to the ribs.
Sorry, no picture, but believe me, we both cleaned up our plates!
It was time to head down to Mississippi and try our luck at the casinos at Tunica. It was about a 40 minute rive down into delta country. We had stayed at Sam's Town a few years ago, but it was a little bizarre. The casinos are out in the middle of nowhere and kind of spread out. We went to the Horseshoe first. These casinos are huge.
We walked way to the back before we found penny machines, but didn't do so well there so we decided to go over to Gold Strike. This one was at least right next door.
We didn't do so good there either. The games were kind of crappy at both of these. Then we drove a few miles to Bally's. This was the most down-to-earth of the casinos. They had a few more fun games but we didn't do so good there either. So, we made our way back up to Memphis and headed back to our room. It had been really nice to be able to just spend time in a city much like we had in Detroit rather than driving from city to city every day.