Home Button Places By Name Places By Type Miscellaneous Road Trips
Places > Places By Type > Miscellaneous > Peaceful Pastures Farm Trip, Part 3

Peaceful Pastures Farm Trip, Part 3

Peaceful Pastures Farm slideshow 3
Click to go directly to the slideshow

Insects

I took a type of zoology class in college once. Rather than all the phylums and orders, we decided there were three classifications of animals. The soft and squishes, the hard and crunchies, and the warm and furries. Pretty much every living animal fell into those three categories.

Well, these are a few hard and crunchies. One of Jenny's friends was able to identify the wheel bug. The katydid was on the window of the visitor's center at Edgar Evins. I was there a few minutes before opening, and was just looking around when I found it on the window.

Oh, I really hate hard and crunchies. Gives me the willies. ;-)

Insects
201111PP_460P06181 201111PP_541P07140 201111PP_542P07140 201111PP_545P07140 201111PP_546P07140 201111PP_579P08085 201111PP_580P08085 201111PP_583P08085


Edgar Evins SP / Center Hill Dam

Edgar Evins State Park Map
Edgar Evins State Park Map. Click on the image for a larger view.
If you're going to go to Peaceful Pastures for more than a day, you have two choices for lodging. The first, is a Comfort Inn in Gordonsville, Tennessee. It's okay. It's a Comfort Inn. It's usually pretty busy, since it's the only hotel for miles. It's a few years old, but it's in pretty good shape.

The other option are the cabins at Edgar Evins State Park. Edgar Evins is the top of a ridge, which doesn't look like a ridge because the Center Hill Dam has flooded the bottom 175 feet of the hill. The reservoir right now is artificially low, since the Army Corp of Engineers is doing work on the dam to stop some "seepage". So if the dam should go, I'm already above the water level. :-)

I should first mention I was here during the off-season. As a matter of fact, weekdays during this time is 50% off. The first day I got here, not a soul was around, and if I didn't find a couple of employees about to leave at the marina, I wouldn't have even been able to find where the key to the place was.

Not that it mattered, the room wasn't ready the first day I arrived. Dirty towels in and on the bathtub, and all the bedding was thrown onto a chair in the corner of the room. So my first day, I'd give this place zero stars.

This would have made a great setting for a horror flick. Grey, overcast, no leaves on the trees, no other people around (not even Rangers, as far as I can tell) and everything seems to operate from 8am to 4:30pm.

After a conversation with the park staff the next morning, they made the room ready and I moved in the next evening. It's no longer overcast and gloomy, other people were there, some boaters. They're drinkers, not axe murderers. The smell of charcoal from their grill is comforting at the least.

As soon as you're in the door, you have to decide whether the stuff you have should go upstairs or downstairs. I've already climbed up the side of a hill, and my legs tell me that with every step. Ah well, it won't be as bad as a couple of days from now.

Downstairs is the bedroom, double beds. Upstairs is a full kitchen and living area, with DirectTV and a HDTV. Off the opposite end from the door is a balcony about 30 feet off the ground. The place is built on the side of a hill, and it is much higher off the ground at the back.

One of the problems I had was with the heat. The heater is on the top floor, so the bedroom below is cold while the second floor is hot. The thing that compounds the problem is the thermostat is on the lower floor, so it's hard to regulate the temperature on the top floor. I'm sure this isn't a problem during the summer.

I'd say it's better room than the Comfort Inn in Gordonsville, and it about the same distance from the farm. The drive is a bit more fun, but amenities, such as food is non-existent. The closest place for food is really Gordonsville, right around the Comfort Inn. Go figure.

Sorry for the mess in the pictures. I should have cleaned the place up a little before the shots, but well... In any event, there was no housekeeping at all during my stay, but had plenty of towels and soap.

You pass right over the dam to and from the farm. It's a TVA dam, and does supply power to the surrounding communities. It's seeped ever since it's constructions, but a series of sinkholes that formed has prompted repairs.

Edgar Evins State Park and Center Hill Dam
201111PP_455P06144 201111PP_456P06144 201111PP_384P06085 201111PP_385P06085 201111PP_386P06085 201111PP_472P07083 201111PP_474P07083 201111PP_470P07083 201111PP_468P07083 201111PP_464P07083 201111PP_465P07083 201111PP_466P07083 201111PP_467P07083 201111PP_476P07083 201111PP_477P07083 201111PP_478P07083 201111PP_482P07084 201111PP_480P07084 201111PP_376P05164 201111PP_378P05164 201111PP_379383P05164 201111PP_485P07091


Natchez Trace Parkway / Meriwether Lewis Burial Site

Meriwether Lewis Burial Site Map
Please see the Natchez Trace Parkway for more pictures and details on the National Road.
This is a complete non-sequiteur to the farm trip.

The Natchez Trace Parkway is a 440 mile National Road maintained by the National Park Service. It recognizes the importance of the original Natchez Trace (or Natchez Road), an important transportation route before steam power allowed boats to travel upriver. Goods could be floated down the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers down to Natchez and New Orleans, but those who sold those goods had to walk or buy horses to get back to the Cumberland Valley in Tennessee and beyond. The Natchez Trace was the established (and vital) road in the late 1700's and early 1800's that connected Natchez, Mississippi to Nashville, Tennessee. (See my Natchez Trace Parkway page for more information.)

I've driven all of the Natchez Trace Parkway in two parts. I drove half of the road in 1998, from Natchez to Tupelo, Mississippi. I drove the second half in 2000, but started in Nashville and ended in Tupelo. My 2000 leg of the Natchez Trace was on a crappy, overcast and drizzly day, so the pictures I had looked like they were taken on a crappy, overcast and drizzly day.

The 2000 leg of my drive also found completely by accident, the Meriwether Lewis Burial Site. By the time of this trip (2011), I'd been to a lot of the big Lewis and Clark sites; Fort Mandan, Pompeys Pillar, Cape Disappointment, Fort Clatsop, the Columbia River Gorge, just to name a few.

Of course, the pictures I had of the burial site were taken on a crappy... But I'd be within a couple of hours of the Monument from the farm. So if there was a nice day, I wanted to go there. It's sort of the final chapter in the Lewis and Clark story, and wanted pictures of the upgraded memorial to the man...

The burial site is at a pioneer cemetery next to Grinders Stand, an inn on the Trace.

Natchez Trace Parkway
201111PP_487P07115 201111PP_488P07120 201111PP_490P07120 201111PP_491P07120 201111PP_493P07121 201111PP_494P07121 201111PP_497P07121 201111PP_498P07121 201111PP_499P07121 201111PP_500P07121 201111PP_501P07121 201111PP_502P07121 201111PP_503P07121 201111PP_509P07121 201111PP_511P07122 201111PP_514P07122 201111PP_516P07122 201111PP_517P07122 201111PP_518P07122 201111PP_519P07122 201111PP_521P07122 201111PP_523P07124 201111PP_524527P07130 201111PP_528P07130 201111PP_530P07131 201111PP_531P07131 201111PP_532P07131 201111PP_533P07131 201111PP_534P07133 201111PP_535P07133 201111PP_536P07133 201111PP_537P07133 201111PP_538P07133 201111PP_539P07134 201111PP_548P07140 201111PP_551P07140 201111PP_552P07141 201111PP_553P07141 201111PP_554P07141 201111PP_556P07141 201111PP_557562P07142 201111PP_563P07143


Loveless Cafe

We would visit other places on the trace, and take it back to Nashville. We get off the end of it, and Jenny spies the Loveless Cafe, where a lot of country stars got their start. We stop for Lunch. The food was amazing. I had the BBQ pork with fries and the best cream corn I've ever eaten. Jenny had the Country Ham with a real easy over egg, with Fried Green Tomatoes and mumble... Biscuits, which come with every meal, were great. I wish everyone make biscuits like that. :-)

I bought some ham at the gift shop, and the stuff is great. Might have to mail order some...

Loveless Cafe
201111PP_566P07143 201111PP_568P07151 201111PP_569P07151 201111PP_570P07151 201111PP_571P07151


Epilog

It was an interesting few days, from new goat births to leading horses around like dogs to chicken in trees. It's not something you run into in Chicago. Well, not every day, anyway. I didn't get everything done on Jenny's list, but it was a looooong list. I got the important stuff done.

I did get a frozen turkey, and a cat. Louie. The orange cat in the pictures. I was wondering how he'd do all the way home. After the first hour and a half, he started to fidget. I stopped at a rest area, leveled his carrier a bit more and put in a thicker beach towel, and he slept all the way home. We're talking 8 hours.

He's integrating with the rest of the household, and is turning into a... cat. Imagine that. Figaro is not happy. Imagine that. But they're getting used to it.

Between the leftover BBQ pork from the Loveless Cafe, to picking over the smoked duck carcass to finishing the last two slices of that really evil chocolate pecan pie, I didn't have to cook for two days... ;-)

I, Figaro, Louie (and Mom) did think the Peaceful Pastures turkey was delicious.


Orlando Meat Meets

Okay, they're really not called the Orlando Meat Meets. They're actually the GA/FL Deliveries, where you can place an order with Peaceful Pastures, and meet the Big Yellow Penske Truck in certain places around I-75 from Georgia to Tampa, and in Orlando to pick up your order. (Click here for more information.)

Jenny and various helpers makes these deliveries three times a year. Orlando is the last stop they make because that's where Disney World is! But I digress. I've been to two of these, one in August 2011, and one in December 2011

The Peaceful Pastures Orlando Meat Meet, August 17, 2011
201108WDW_158P17074 201108WDW_159P17075 201108WDW_160P17075 201108WDW_162P17075 201108WDW_164P17075 201108WDW_166P17080 201108WDW_167P17080 201108WDW_168P17084 201108WDW_169P17084

The Peaceful Pastures Orlando Meat Meet, December 7, 2011
201112WDW_0364P07063 201112WDW_0366P07064 201112WDW_0368P07065 201112WDW_0369P07072 201112WDW_0370P07072 201112WDW_0375P07073 201112WDW_0376P07073 201112WDW_0377P07073 201112WDW_0379P07073 201112WDW_0381P07073 201112WDW_0383P07073 201112WDW_0386P07073 201112WDW_0390P07073 201112WDW_0392P07073 201112WDW_0393P07073 201112WDW_0396P07073 201112WDW_0397P07073 201112WDW_0398P07073 201112WDW_0399P07073 201112WDW_0402P07073 201112WDW_0404P07073 201112WDW_0406P07073 201112WDW_0408P07073 201112WDW_0411P07074 201112WDW_0412P07074 201112WDW_0413P07074 201112WDW_0415P07075 201112WDW_0416P07080


End Peaceful Pastures Trip - Part 3 of 3.

Jump to: Part 1 Part 2 Part 3

Revisions:
  • 11/27/2011 - Page Added
  • 11/18/2012 - converted to v3, pictures added
  • 12/30/2012 - Update page to v3.1
  • 08/29/2014 - Update to v3.2
  • August 2022 - Upgrade to v5.0.
Help! About This Site Contact Me