Friday, March 25, 2016

Chocolate Gravy at Staggs

Dani Colwill and I in front of Staggs.

Started off spring break cheating on our diets and checking off a bucket list item at Staggs Grocery. It was originally a "Mom & Pop" grocery offering sandwiches for mill workers. As needs changed they specialized in serving food. Every Friday their special is their chocolate gravy. Since we had a 12 hour drive ahead of us to Bradenton, FL, we stopped in for breakfast at 7am. It was packed! 



There were a few big tables with one empty chair but we wanted to sit together. You give your order straight to the ladies cooking and the lady that took our order was truly concerned about us finding a seat. When our food was ready, the same lady (I wish I would have gotten her name), made sure we got seated beside each other. She seriously went out of her way for us.



The chocolate gravy......was delicious. We ordered single orders, and I can not even imagine how big a double was. I highly suggest actually setting your alarm for Friday morning at Staggs so you can get their chocolate gravy. It is well worth the effort! Staggs Grocery is open Monday-Friday 5:30am-2pm. If you don't make it for breakfast, you can still get one of their fantastic burgers. YUM.

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Tom's Wall



Today I visited Tom's Wall. I told my roommate, my friend, my mother, and my grandmother and they all said, "What is that?" Tom Hendrix's great-great-grandmother, a Native American, was forced to move from her home near the Tennessee River in Alabama to Oklahoma because of the Indian Removal Act in 1830. Along with thousands of other Native Americans, Te-lah-nay walked to Oklahoma. The rivers there did not sing like the Tennessee River, or the Singing River, did. She chose to walk back, which took her five years. After hearing the stories of his great-great-grandmother and reading her journals, Tom wanted to honor her somehow. A Yuchi woman told him, "All things shall pass away, only stones will remain." In 1988 he began building a wall from rocks, each rock representing a step she took on her journey. It is estimated to be about 8.5 million pounds of rock in the wall.

Only one side of Tom's Wall from across the road.
Tom's Wall is actually quite famous. It is currently the number one stop on the Natchez Trace. If you have seen the Muscle Shoals documentary, you know Tom Hendrix and the wall are in it. (If you haven't seen it, do it ASAP! It is awesome.) Tom wrote a book about his great-great-grandmother, Te-lah-nay, and her journey that inspired him to build the largest unmortared wall in the United States. There was an article about it in The New York Times in 2014. Actually if you google Tom's Wall, there are several different articles.

The rocks in this section are representation of all grandmothers.
When I pulled up to Tom's Wall, Tom met me at my car. He asked where I was from and began to tell me about the wall. He showed me the first rock he laid and all the different rocks people bring him. Mr. Hendrix said, "I have worn out 3 trucks, 22 wheelbarrows, 2700 pairs of gloves, 3 dogs, and one 87 year old man." Other than the person leaving when I arrived and the couple people that showed up while I was there, I was there alone. Tom counted about 260 people on Saturday though.  He said the wall was for women. Then he pointed out a section that he said represented the grandmothers. He told me to walk around. There are two sides separated by his driveway. He told me the one side "was sad", it was her trip to Oklahoma, but the other side was her journey back and "it was an adventure."

Tom Hendrix and I in the prayer circle.
The wall is a spiritual place. There is a prayer circle on one side of the trail. Tom said he has preachers and priests come weekly to prepare their Sunday sermon. It is a beautiful place.

I could probably go on but I think it is best you visit Tom yourself. It is about 15 miles away from Florence. It's also free to tour Tom's Wall and it's open daily 8am-4pm.

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Join Me on My Journey

I am currently into my last two months at the University of North Alabama. Since I moved to Florence in August of 2012, I have been in love with the town. In class, other students would introduce themselves and say that Florence is so small compared to where they are from. I am from a one-stoplight town that is twenty minutes from a Walmart and an hour from a mall. Florence is huge for me! There are three Walmarts and a mall within ten or so minutes from my house. This area is rich with history and culture, and that is why I love it.


Even though I have been here for about four years, there are still quite a few things I have yet to do. I think a lot of students miss out on all the awesome things the Shoals has to offer due to lack of knowledge. So I have created a bucket list to complete before I graduate in May, and I am going to share my adventure through this blog. I will also share some of my favorite places or things I have already experienced! I hope to help you appreciate Florence, and the Shoals, and all they have to offer!


Lindsey’s Bucket List
Pope’s Tavern Museum
Alabama Music Hall of Fame
Rattlesnake Saloon
Rosenbaum House
FAME Recording Studio
Tom’s Wall
Shoot off the ‘cannon’ at Sunset, RBG
360 Grille
Staggs chocolate gravy on a Friday morning
Indian Mound & Museum
Bunyan’s BBQ
Kennedy-Douglas Center for the Arts
Muscle Shoals Sound
Go to a show at The End
Coon Dog Cemetery
Get a Popsicle at Frio’s
King’s Drive-In
Forks of Cypress
Location where Ghost Bridge once was

Along the way I am sure I will find more, but this is my list thus far. Stay tuned, y'all!