Aristocath
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2002
- Messages
- 1,547
I don't consider Missouri to be the South but then again, I don't consider Texas to be the South either. There are parts of East Texas that are like the South. But the rest of the state is nothing like that.
This summer we went on a massive road trip. We drove up to St. Louis, on to Niagara Falls (Canada), across to Boston, down through Plymouth, Hershey, Gettysburg, Manassas, and Williamsburg. We made a lot of stops along the way and came home through North and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. Let me just say Missouri was nothing like South Carolina. We stopped at all the state's visitors centers and I could not understand the nice lady from South Carolina because her accent was so thick.
Going through so many states in a relatively short span of time really makes you notice differences between states and regions. For example, driving through Illinois, Indiana and Ohio there are Cracker Barrels galore off the interstate, very easy to get to. But there wasn't a single easy to get to Starbucks along the interstate that entire time!
This summer we went on a massive road trip. We drove up to St. Louis, on to Niagara Falls (Canada), across to Boston, down through Plymouth, Hershey, Gettysburg, Manassas, and Williamsburg. We made a lot of stops along the way and came home through North and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. Let me just say Missouri was nothing like South Carolina. We stopped at all the state's visitors centers and I could not understand the nice lady from South Carolina because her accent was so thick.
Going through so many states in a relatively short span of time really makes you notice differences between states and regions. For example, driving through Illinois, Indiana and Ohio there are Cracker Barrels galore off the interstate, very easy to get to. But there wasn't a single easy to get to Starbucks along the interstate that entire time!
