Mobile, Alabama tonight!
Mile 2532
Our first night of the trip in a real bed! It's Saturday night and we have checked into a Motel 6 in Mobile, Alabama. Here's what's happened since our last post on Friday afternoon:

At Wayne's suggestion, we took a nice early evening drive off the Interstate up to Austin via Highways 281 and 290. A very nice city that is said to own the nation's largest state capitol building. We also took a cruise down the famous 6th Street to soak in the college town atmosphere of the University of Texas.
From there we continued east along Highway 71 and stopped for dinner at a restaurant called the Roadhouse in the town of Bastrop. They boast having hamburgers voted the best of '03, '04 and '05 according to the t-shirts they wore. Of course, we haven't been to a restaurant yet that didn't claim to have something voted the best. And you never know exactly who did the voting. At least this place gave years for when the voting took place so at least you know it wasn't decades ago. So we had the deep-fried cod. There was man playing some live blues/country/rock. He did pretty well with the Johnny Cash stuff.
Continuing on 71, we eventually met back up with I-10 leading us to Houston. We pulled over at mile 1970 in Pasadena, a suburb of Houston, to spend the night. The weather is starting to turn ugly. Very hot and humid. Welcome to the deep South!

Bright and early at 6am on Saturday morning, we made our way just southeast of Houston to the Johnson Space Center. Nothing was open yet, but we just wanted to take a look. Unfortunately, there isn't much you can see from the front of the building. We returned back up north into downtown Houston just to take a quick look around before continuing our eastward trek.

We stopped at a Waffle House in Port Arthur, TX for breakfast before crossing over the state line into Louisiana around 11am at mile 2138. When we got to the capitol city of Baton Rouge, it was Yvette's first trip east of the Mississippi. The capitol building itself is said to be the tallest one in the nation.

We got to New Orleans just before 4pm and drove by the Superdome, home of the Saints. It still has the "We're Back!" banner on it from the city's celebration of the team's return to post-Katrina New Orleans. On our approach to the city, things seemed to be either pretty well fixed or hidden to the casual visitor. If you didn't already know what had happened to the city, you might not even realize what they had been through. The French Quarter seems to be back in full swing with all the activity on Bourbon Street as well as everywhere else. We managed to chow down on some real N'Awlins dinners of red beans and rice with sausage and chicken jambalaya before taking off.
Leaving New Orleans to the east was quite a different story. Their seemed to be miles of abandoned neighborhoods. Not just buildings, but whole neighborhoods. Of course we didn't have time to visit any of the badly hurricane damaged areas (not that we wanted to) but I'm sure there had to be much worse then what we could see from the Interstate. Very sad.
Crossing the border into Mississippi at mile 2424 show us even worse. We made a detour off of I-10 to the Gulfport and Biloxi region on the Gulf Coast. Almost every building across the street from the beach seemed to have been wiped away. Empty foundations, shells of buildings and even a few piles a rubble where still there to be found almost two years post-Katrina. The buildings that are now standing on the beach are obviously brand new, condos and hotels mostly. Even though we were there to see it, it was very hard to wrap your mind around the level of the devastation that had occurred there.
We crossed into the state of Alabama at mile 2511 at 8pm and quickly made our way to Motel 6. Looking forward to a hot shower and a comfortable night's sleep!







