Perhaps if I were Japanese or into Goth culture I would
have visited Andalusia in Milledgeville ,
Georgia sooner. Since the proliferation of television shows
like “Lost” and “Hannibal ”,
Flannery O’Connor’s childhood home has had a resurgence in popularity that
delights Craig Amason, the Andalusia Foundation director. The Southern Gothic author would probably
appreciate the throngs of Japanese and black-clothed teens that come with
pilgrimage zeal. She led a rather
unconventional life herself. Her
favorite playmates were her pet ducks, chickens and peacocks. Fowl roam the
restored farm today. So enamored was she of her ducks that she designed an
entire outfit for her favorite one and paraded it to school for a sewing
assignment.
Other literary heroes attract visitors to the area
also. Alice Walker's enslaved ancestor
Mary Poole walked to Eatonton from Virginia
as she supported a baby on each hip. Alice
began writing at the age of eight surrounded by her family’s rich oral
tradition. In her Pulizer Prize winning
book The Color Purple she wrote ''I think it pisses God off if you walk
by the color purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it.'' Of Flannery O’Connor she said “She destroyed the last vestiges of sentimentality
in white Southern writing; she caused white women to look ridiculous on
pedestals, and she approached her black characters - as a mature artist - with
unusual humility and restraint.”
Joel Chandler Harris, the collector of Uncle Remus stories,
is celebrated in nearby Eatonton with a log cabin museum in the park. Careful to say that these stories are not
original to Mr. Harris, the docent pointed out that these were African tales
that were published in newspapers, books and eventually make into Disney
movies. The sensitivity to racial
history was apparent in several conversations.
Cherokee’s forced migration and others devoted to interests ranging from antiquing to pottery to presidents to farming.
At Crooked Pines Farm Duncan and Angela Criscoe gave us a
taste of the area’s agritourism. Turning
what could have been a financial downfall into success, the Criscoes reinvented
their family farm after Duncan
was downsized out of the hospitality industry.
It now offers a variety of events, concerts, camps and culinary
experiences in an atmosphere that “provides lasting memories for family and
friends.” The town of Madison
has a popular bi-annual Farm Meander with over 20 farms, inns and markets. Among them is self-taught cheese maker
Christel from Greendale Farm, a Zimbabwean who “decided to get up and go farming” along with her husband and children. The delicious cheeses are sold widely
including at Fig and the Butcher and Bee in Charleston .
In Greensboro
our group was unexpectedly joined by Flo, a colorful character dressed as a
Waffle House waitress. With a big
beehive hairdo (“You know the thing about big hair? It makes your hips appear smaller”) and lots
of flare, she explained in her exaggerated Southern twang that Greensboro is a “whine free community. You need to FIDO: forget it, drive on.” Greensboro ’s
is like its famous buttermilk pie, she said “real and simple.” She led us to the Festival Hall auditorium where
we were given samples of that real simple pie and an excerpt from the town’s community
theater.
And then there is the lake.
Lake Oconee is the second largest in the
state. It looks immense from the shore.
I launched a canoe from Cuscowilla on Lake Oconee ,
a huge resort with golfing, pools, and a variety of accommodations. As I
drifted peacefully I pretended I lived in one of the grand houses along the
shore. There are lots of ways to meander around Georgia ’s
Lake Country and relive history, explore
agriculture or nature, buy antiques, learn about authors and culture…or you can
just quietly float on the glassy water of the mammoth lake.
More Images are here: Georgia Lake Country Images
If You Go
Crooked Pines Farm: http://www.crookedpinesfarm.com/
Cuscowilla on Lake Oconee : http://www.cuscowilla.com/
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