Oh Savannah – with your oak trees, Spanish moss, gardens and antebellum houses, you are truly a beautiful city. We spent our two days here dawdling around the streets, taking in the city’s ambience and trying to decide which house we would want to buy if we won the lottery. Designed with 24 garden squares around which the city was built, 22 of these squares remain today as pockets of peace and quiet in amongst the residences and businesses of Savannah.
The houses of Savannah range from grandiose to simple but each of them exude an elegance no matter their size, style or design.
As we meandered through the squares and along the Savannah River we learned about the city and its colourful past, but I have to be honest: finding the landmarks that are seen in the opening sequence of Forrest Gump made the city shine even more for us.
A visit to the Owens-Thomas House and Slave Quarters gave us an insight into how the gentry and the enslaved lived side by side 200 years ago.
From Savannah we headed to Atlanta with another movie-related visit on the way…
We found the town of Juliette and the Whistle Stop Cafe where the movie Fried Green Tomatoes was filmed. The cafe is just as it looks in the movie, the staff were just as characterful as Idgie and Ruth and the fried green tomatoes were as good as we hoped.
Our final Georgia stop was Atlanta, home of the Braves and birthplace of Coca-Cola. We took the two-hour VIP tour of the World of Coca-Cola which flew by as we heard about the history of the soft drink, saw great memorabilia and tasted samples of the many variations found the world over (some of which were really not-so-great like the plum-flavoured cola that tastes like barbecue spare ribs).
Georgia you have been a gracious hostess and we are sorry to say goodbye. But not too sorry… Tennessee, with Dollywood, Nashville and Graceland, we are coming to you next!
P&S