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Episode: 3980
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Title: HPR3980: Huntsville to Vicksburg
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3980/hpr3980.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 18:14:01
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,980 for Friday the 3rd of November 2023.
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Today's show is entitled Huntsville to Vicksburg.
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It is part of the series Travel.
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It is hosted by Ahu Kha and is about 15 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, from NASA to the Civil War.
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Hello, this is Ahu Kha, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in our series on our RV journey.
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And this time we're talking about our trip to the southeast of the United States.
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When we picked this up on December the 23rd, we were in Huntsville, Alabama, and we had
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thought we would be visiting the US Space and Rocket Center today, but because of this
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Arctic air mass hitting the South Central United States, they closed it.
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So it became a day off.
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When we woke up, it was definitely cold outside, but inside the RV we were reasonably
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comfortable thanks to the precautions we took.
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Now we have three days to sit and relax because obviously tomorrow is Christmas Eve and
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the following is Christmas Day, so we got a three-day weekend here.
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Now we've got some stuff to do.
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Shopping for groceries is certainly part of the program.
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We need to dump the tanks, but we decided to wait until the warmest part of the day to
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do that.
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Sadly, when we tried, everything was frozen.
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We went shopping for things that might help, but all of the heat tape in town was sold
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out when we went looking.
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So we had to improvise something, and we decided to use some of the reflectics we had to
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make a box to block the cold wind around the tank and then put an electric heater there.
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We have an electric heater in our RV that we can plug in to get a little extra heat on
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cold days, so we moved it outside and put it into the box.
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Ideally, we would have laid it down on its side and aimed it up at the frozen pipes,
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but it has a safety feature.
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If it's on its side, it automatically shuts off.
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Probably a good thing, you know, if for some reason it were to fall over inside the RV,
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we would not want something to catch on fire.
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So we had to put it in standing up and just sort of aim it at the pipes.
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And we let it go, and while we were out, we did some grocery shopping, so we're good
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for a few days.
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And after a few hours of the heater blowing on the valves inside the reflectics box,
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we were in fact able to dump our tanks.
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And inside the RV, everything is nice and toasty, so we managed to survive another day.
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And when I get up in the morning, I can take a shower.
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Dumping the tanks is important for that, because when the tanks are full, the water has
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no place to go, it just starts backing up, and that's not good.
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Oh, next day, December 24th, Christmas Eve on the road again.
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This is two years in a row, we've spent Christmas Eve on the road.
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And this time in Northern Alabama, we had to get up in the middle of the night to switch
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propane bottles, which is how things go sometimes, better that than freezing.
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But I did get my shower.
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Now we plan to take the now empty propane bottle and get it refilled, which we did at
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loves, which sells propane 24 or 7.
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It's one of the nice things about loves.
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It's become our go-to place for all of our fuel needs on the road.
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The closest one was about a half hour away, but you know, it was the brakes.
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And just before we left, we noticed our water pressure had dropped, and upon investigation,
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the circuit breaker on the pedestal had tripped, and our heated hose was no longer heated
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and had frozen ice inside.
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We tried just resetting the circuit breaker, and it did indeed start to heat up again,
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but it did seem to be slow about it.
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So we disconnected the hose and brought it into the trailer, carefully placing the ends
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in the shower basin.
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By the time we got back from getting the propane, we were able to pour out water and pieces
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of ice and reconnect it.
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We didn't want to do winter RVing.
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That was not really the plan.
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The idea was to get away from the winter weather and go someplace warm, but you don't get
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to choose what life throws at you.
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So we expect things to start warming over the next couple of days, which should make
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our lives easier, one more day of idleness ahead of us before the space center reopens.
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December 25th, Christmas Day has arrived.
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It'll be a quiet day for us.
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Cheryl had suggested the traditional going out for Chinese food a few days ago, but now
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says she just wants to stay in.
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Understandable, since it is still quite cold, though gradually warming.
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In the night, the propane seemed to run out, and the gauge showed empty, so we switched
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to the bottle we filled yesterday.
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But when we went out to put the old bottle in the truck, we realized it was not empty at
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all, and switching it back to the furnace worked fine.
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Possibly the valve froze or something similar.
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We've looked ahead, and by the end of this week, the temperatures will be back up in
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the 70s Fahrenheit, which is around 22 Celsius, and there'll be warmer today than yesterday
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and still warmer tomorrow.
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So I hope we've survived the worst of it.
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And Huntsville on December 26th, our last full day, and still in the deep freeze, last
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full day in Huntsville.
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And just to add to the fun, our refrigerator seems to have died.
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Because of the cold, we can keep food fresh outside, but this can't last, because it's
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going to get warmer.
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We did get one more visit to the space center, and saw another very nice planetarium presentation.
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Different from the one we saw last week.
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This one was a tour of the solar system, and very well done.
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We then went back to the Saturn Hall and looked at exhibits of the space program.
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Then we grabbed the good bottle and went to fill it up with propane to get us through
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the night, and it began to snow.
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And as we came back from loves, we started to see traffic accidents.
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People in Alabama are just not used to this kind of weather and don't know how to drive
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in it.
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With our full bottle of propane, we would at least be nice and warm all night.
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December 27th, waking up in Huntsville, we heard warnings on the media to stay off of
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the streets.
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Now we could have driven on them without problem, because we know how to drive in that sort
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of weather.
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But you know, it's the other guy you have to watch out for, and they have no idea what
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they're doing.
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We knew it was slowly getting warmer, so we waited a bit for the sun to clear the roads.
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Unfortunately, that put us a little behind schedule.
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We went to a propane service place and exchanged our old bottles for two new ones, fully charged
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with propane, and then went to buy some coolers to try and keep our food edible a little
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longer.
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So all told, it was closer to 1pm when we actually pulled out, and the RV park was not happy
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about that, but you know, we were obeying the authorities.
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Now the drive back to Memphis was uneventful, it was dark when we arrived, however.
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So we left the RV in the truck connected for a quick getaway in the morning, it ended
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up being a very tiring day.
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On December 28th, we left Memphis in the morning and drove straight through to Vicksburg, getting
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the park around 2pm, which is not bad.
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At last we have the warm weather that was the whole purpose of this trip, so we got set
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up in the campground and opened the windows, then we went to buy ice for the coolers.
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We may have to ditch some food, but that's not the end of the world, if we can get the
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refrigerator fixed we can buy more food.
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We also need to do laundry, and I want to visit the Civil War battle site, but a warm
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sunny day is a big lift to the spirits here.
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December 29th, still in Vicksburg, a nice sunny and warm day.
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Our breakfast Cheryl convinced me that we could probably put in a new refrigerator ourselves.
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Now she tends to be fearless about these things.
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We watched some YouTube videos that made it look feasible, and then went to Home Depot
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to pick up the new refrigerator and some supplies.
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We got everything back to the RV and started, and almost immediately ran into a problem
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in that we could not disconnect the propane feed line.
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We tried putting some WD-40 on the connections, but they wouldn't budge.
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And step one of the project is to disconnect and cap the propane line.
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Now Cheryl had made the acquaintance of a very friendly mobile RV tech just north of
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Jackson, Mississippi, named Anthony, and she texted him a picture of the way the pipes
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for the propane were set up, and he allowed us how he'd never seen anything like it.
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But if we wanted to bring it to him, he would take care of it for us.
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By now it was late enough in the day that we decided tomorrow would do.
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I suppose if we really knew what we were doing, we could have handled it.
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But messing around with gas and creating a possible leak is pretty serious, so he didn't
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want to chance it.
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We made dinner out of some of our defrosted items and went to bed.
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Oh, December 30th in Vicksburg.
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We woke to thunderstorms and pouring rain, but it looked as if it would pass later in
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the morning, and Anthony said to come over.
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As we couldn't find his home on Google Maps, he said he would meet us at a gas station
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just off of I-55.
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We got there first, and when he drove up and saw our rig, he said it probably wouldn't
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fit in his yard anyway.
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So we pulled under the roof over the truck diesel pumps to get out of the rain, and he
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did everything in the gas station parking lot.
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And he had no problem disconnecting the propane feed.
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Apparently, the WD-40 overnight and some bumpy roads losing everything up, or maybe
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he just has the touch.
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In any case, by shortly after noon, we had our new refrigerator installed.
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So we drove back to the Rivertown Rose campground, got set up again, and cleaned out the coolers.
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Some things we tossed, the others seemed good from being kept on ice so they went into
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the new fridge.
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Then it was off to Walmart to stock up on fresh stuff.
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We eat a lot of salads, fruits, and vegetables, and keeping that stuff fresh really requires
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a working refrigerator.
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December 31st, New Year's Eve in Vicksburg, and it's our last day in Vicksburg.
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Now that we've seen you have managed all of our technical problems, we'll just time
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do a little sightseeing.
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Now the first thing we did is we drove to nearby Clinton to get some child-safe devices
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for the refrigerator.
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Not that we have children, but RV units are built with locking latches to keep the doors
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from opening as you drive down the road.
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When you're driving down the road, as I may have mentioned once or twice, people call
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it's like, you know, you're going through an earthquake, just from the way things bounce
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around.
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National fridges don't have locking latches, but they do make devices to keep small children
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from opening the fridge, and that should do fine.
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So we picked up some of those.
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After that, we went to the Vicksburg National Military Park, which we entered for free because
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we have our National Park's pass.
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The park basically follows the line of earthen fortifications around Vicksburg in 1863
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when that civil war battle was fought.
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So it essentially surrounds the city of Vicksburg.
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You drive along a road that is approximately 25 miles and stop at various points to observe
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the battleground.
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The ditches and the trenches are still very evident in the landscape.
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Vicksburg was the key strategic point on the Mississippi River, and Lincoln called it
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the key to winning the war and said that we need to have that key in our pocket.
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This task was assigned to General Ulysses S. Grant, ably assisted by Admiral David Porter.
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Vicksburg's strategic importance was that it sat on bluffs overlooking the Mississippi,
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from which cannon fire could sink any ships trying to pass.
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It had such strong defenses that Grant eventually had to starve them out, which is what he ended
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up doing.
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Now, there is a Union Ironclad Riverboat, the Cairo.
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Now, it's spelled as Cairo, like the city in Egypt, but they call it Cairo.
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That riverboat, Ironclad Riverboat, was sunk in the river here, but it was raised in the
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1960s and is now on display in its own museum.
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All in all, this was a really nice bit of sightseeing, and on a day that was dry and
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eventually sunny.
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So, this is a hookah for Hacker Public Radio, signing off, and is always encouraging you
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to support Free Software.
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Bye-bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, at Hacker Public Radio, does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener, like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts, you click on our contribute link to find out
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how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by Anonsthost.com, the Internet Archive, and
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R-Sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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