I reached Savannah at about 8:30 in the evening. I stayed at the Oglethorpe Inn, about 15 minutes from historic downtown Savannah.
This is the best under $75 hotel room, I have ever had. It was like a mini suite. with a sitting room, a half wall, and a bed room. The building is older with all the rooms in a large rectangle, and a large enclosed atrium in the centre.
None of my pictures worked out, but I found Oglethorpe Inn on Tripadvisor, lots of great pictures there.
I decided to start my day in Savannah, as I did in Charleston. I took a tour.
Old Savannah Tours has a nice little 90 minute tour, that gives you an overview of the historic centre of town. As an added bonus, they have a cast of actors, in full historical costume, that jump on trolley, and add a little extra information for the next house, or area. There are a about a dozen actors, and you usually get 3 of them on a tour. Lots of fun. I did a bit of touring on my own, had lunch, and then had to decide if I wanted to spend another night in Savannah. I was about 6 hours away from Briny Breezes, Florida.
An elderly lady, recommended that I should be sure to stop at Fort King George, and have supper at Mudcat Charlies. So I did.
Fort King George is the first fort built in Georgia. It was built in 1721, and abandoned by 1730. Not a very important fort, but it served it's purpose. This was the time when France, Britain, and Spain, where all establishing colonies in the south. Spain had Florida, and was moving north, France was expanding, and Britain wanted to hold the river mouth.
By 1730, General Oglethorpe had established Savannah, and Fort King George was not required.
While not a big fort, local historians have done a great job, recreating it.
It's sort of like a mini Fort George, (the one in NOTL)
A lot of attention was put into using the building techniques. Most of supports where peg and tenon. They only used nails and screws for the walkways, and a few of the decorative bits.
They had also recreated a daub and wattle house from that same period. It's pretty neat. You just place small upright sticks for the walls. Then weave cane, or small branches horizontally through the sticks. That's the wattle part. For the daub you mix some clay and spanish moss, and plaster the woven sticks.
The fort closed at 5, and I headed off for supper. On the way I kept seeing these bottle trees.
I'm not sure what they were all about.
Mud Cat Charlies is at a 2-way fishing port. If you go one way, it's fresh water, go the other, and it's salt water fishing.
It was too surprising to find a lot of seafood on the menu. There is a nice dock/patio.
I met the owner. His name is not Charlie. I asked for a recommendation, and he made a really nice sampler of local fried oysters, and shrimp, with some pieces of fish, that had been caught earlier that day. It was delicious, but not very fancy. Disposable plates, and a plastic glass for my beer. It sort of added to the charm.
Back on the road by 6:30 pm, and I pulled into Briny Breezes by 11:30 Thursday night.
This has been a shorter trip than I planned. I just wanted to get south this year.
Next post will have to be some photos from Briny Breezes.













