Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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hpr_transcripts/hpr4120.txt
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Episode: 4120
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Title: HPR4120: South Carolina to Home
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4120/hpr4120.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 19:51:20
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 4,120 for Friday the 17th of May 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, South Carolina to Home.
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It is part of the series travel.
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It is hosted by Ahukah and is about 12 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is…
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We leave Charleston, South Carolina, and head back home.
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Hello, this is Ahukah for Hacker Public Radio.
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Welcome to you and inviting you to another exciting episode in our RV travel series.
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And we're going to wrap up our trip from the winter of 2022-2023.
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We're still in South Carolina, staying in Charleston.
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And we'll start with the 13th of February, 2023, which was another good day.
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After breakfast, we set out for Magnolia Plantation,
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which turned out to be pretty near where we're staying.
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We went on a guided tour of the Manor House, which was very interesting.
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It has been in the family for generations.
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We were not allowed to take pictures inside, but we enjoyed the tour.
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Clearly, people were shorter in the 19th century, judging by the size of the beds.
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After that tour, we went on a tour of the slave cabins, which were quite primitive, of course.
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Following the Civil War and the 13th Amendment, slavery was outlawed in the United States.
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But many of the formerly enslaved people stayed on the plantation because they didn't really have any place else to go.
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Now, the cabins were from different times, one having actually been renovated in the 20th century, but they're all very basic.
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Now, after the plantation tours, we went to see Angel Ok.
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Now, this is what's called a live oak, and live oak means that, unlike the oak trees we're used to up north that drop their leaves every year,
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live oaks keep their leaves all year round.
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Now, this particular live oak is reputed to be the biggest tree east of the Mississippi River, and I can believe it.
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It was huge, magnificent tree.
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But by the time we finished, I was starting to feel a bit worse for the wear, and we went back to the RV where I lay down while Cheryl went for a walk.
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I felt like I had come down with an illness of some kind who went to bed early and slept late in the morning.
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Now, the next day, February 14th, Valentine's Day of 2023, and when I got up, I was still not feeling all that good, so we decided today would be a day off.
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Thankfully, I started to feel better as the day went on, which is good, because tomorrow we start the trip home.
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We've got a three hour drive ahead of us.
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So, we get up in the morning, packed up the RV, this is on March 15th, 2023, and started our trip back home.
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Now, the first leg had us retracing our steps to Savannah, where we picked up Interstate 16, but this time he headed west instead of into downtown Savannah.
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It was a nice sunny day, a very pleasant drive. I was not 100% yet, but nothing specific was wrong with me, and I enjoyed the drive.
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Now, we're back to the up and down of rolling hills to be sure.
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We pulled into the Honey Suckle Farm RV Park in Dublin, Georgia after about three and a half hours of driving,
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and just did a quick setup of connecting electric and water and didn't unhitch the truck at all.
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That makes for fast set ups and fast getaway in the morning, but it does leave the RV moving around a bit more when someone is walking around inside.
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But we find it worthwhile to save time.
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Now, on February the 16th, 2023, up in the morning and getting that early start, I could still enjoy my leisurely breakfast, and yet we were out of there by 9.30.
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I was still just slightly off a little bit, but I felt like I'm almost over whatever the heck it is it's been bothering me.
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Unlike the previous day, the roads were a little more difficult than the Interstate, but that mostly meant I annoyed other drivers by driving slower than they would like on some one lane roads.
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But I'm the one towing my home around with me, and I know that I need more room to stop.
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Today's drive ended up being about four hours, and we pulled into the Montgomery South RV Park for a two-night stay.
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We'll be running a few errands like shopping and refueling, so we unhitch the truck this time.
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February 17th, Montgomery, Alabama, again.
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For the first time since that bug bit me in Charleston, I woke up feeling perfectly normal. I even look forward to my breakfast.
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But it's good that we planned a day off so I could rest up a bit and get even better.
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We did some grocery shopping, but otherwise not much.
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Now, as I mentioned earlier, this year we did something that we've learned was important, and that is not to just go day after day after day driving.
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So we did two days of driving, and then it's like, okay, build in a day of rest.
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So that's why we had this extra day in Montgomery, and we continued that pattern two days driving in a day of rest.
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And also, we're driving less.
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We're doing three to four hours of driving a day is quite enough.
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When you're driving a big truck and towing that big RV behind you, for me, that just makes sense.
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Some guy on the internet, he's a professional.
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So he would probably think nothing of driving eight or ten hours with that.
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But I'm a senior citizen who just learned how to do this stuff recently, so I like to take it easy.
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So, then the next day, the 18th of February, 2023, we hooked up left Montgomery, Alabama, and drove to Tupelo, Mississippi.
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This is the birthplace of Elvis Presley for those who are interested.
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Now, this just an overnight stay, the park was nice, it's a bit hilly, and we were not able to get quite level while staying hooked up.
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But this was just, we just wanted to get an night sleep and hit the road again in the morning.
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So, the morning of the 19th of February, 2023, our days drive took us from Mississippi to Missouri,
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where we checked in at the Boothheel RV Park. Now, Boothheel refers to, if you take a look at a map of Mississippi,
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in the lower right or south-eastern corner of the state, there's this little bit that sticks down
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compared to the rest of the state, sort of like the heel of a boot sticks down compared to the sole of the boot.
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So, that's the Boothheel, in case you're wondering.
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We checked in at Boothheel RV Park. There was no one there, but they left us and enveloped with our site assignment,
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basically a nice flat gravel site, which wasn't bad except for the sewer connection.
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Um, Cheryl had some milk that had gone by as the saying goes and dumped it in the sewer,
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but it looked like it was just sitting there.
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Fortunately, we could go another few days without dumping, so we didn't worry about it.
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Now, we drove, we were just driven two days, so, you know, that means, took another day of rest.
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So, on the 20th of February, 2023, that was our day of rest, and I'm liking it. I'm doing all the driving.
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We did go to a nearby town to do some grocery shopping and refill the propane tank, but otherwise relaxed.
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I finished the book I had been working on about Paul McCartney. It's called McCartney Legacy Volume 1,
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1969 to 1973. Then, with dinner, we watched another Avengers video.
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Now, this Avengers is the British program from the 60s, so it's nothing to do with the
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Marvel universe or whatever the hell that thing is.
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Um, now, next day, 21st, we got up and drove to the WJRV Park in Chatham, Illinois for an overnight stay.
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So, our plan was to dump the tanks, fill them with water and add a cup of dawn dish detergent to
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each and let that slush around on our trip tomorrow. Normally, we would do that in the morning
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before leaving, but the forecast was for rain, so we did it in the afternoon while we still had light.
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Um, and the next day, the 22nd, it was indeed raining when we got up, but
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you know, we had stayed hooked up, so that was not too much of a problem. We just had to disconnect the
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water and the electric and get back on the road. And we drove to the Lake Haven RV Park, and that's
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where we stayed on our outbound trip back in December. Little better getting there when it was still
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light out, and we got almost the same sight as before right near the entrance. Then, the 23rd of
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February, 2023, we dumped the tanks, put some more water in to rinse them and dumped again,
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then we drained the water heater, drained the system using low-point drains, and added RV
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antifreeze. The RV will not be used any longer, and temperatures are still below freezing,
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where we live, so precautions needed to be taken. Now, the we knew there was a freezing rain
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problem back home, but the forecast was that the temperatures would rise during the day,
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and we checked with our neighbors who said that, yeah, it looked good, and that we had not lost
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power unlike many in our area, so we took our time in the morning, and then hit the road for our
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last leg, and we got back just after 3pm, and started to unload the RV. Over the next few days,
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we finished the unloading, washed all of the linens, and placed them back in the RV, and on Sunday,
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we took the RV and the truck back to our storage lot, and this ended our trip.
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Now, lessons learned, we did a whole lot better on this trip, we drove less each day, and built in
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rest stops, and because we paid attention to the grade of the roads, we did not have any scary
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moments. We learned a lot about winter camping as it turned out, because of the polar vortex issue,
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that had us freezing in Alabama over the Christmas holidays. And while I would have preferred not
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to go through that, I guess knowledge is always a good thing. Cheryl did us a very good turn by
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purchasing a heated water hose in our preparations for the trip. We had a few below freezing nights in
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Arizona the previous year, so we knew it was a good idea, but what we hit in Alabama was totally
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unexpected, and we now have reflective panels to put in all of our windows, and they can do double
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duty by keeping out heat when the temperature is rise, so it's all good. All in all, I think we're
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getting a comfortable veterans of the RV experience, though you never stopped learning. The last
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thing I'll mention is the Wi-Fi hotspot we bought. It is from Solus, and it worked great for us in
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letting us get online. It connects to telephone carriers, but we just pay for the device and for
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the gigabytes we download directly with Solus. It may not be the cheapest solution, it is dead simple,
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and I like that. So that is the end of our trip, so this is Ahuka for Hacker Public Radio signing off,
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and is always encouraging you to support FreeSoftware. Bye-bye!
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org. Today's show was
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contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording podcasts,
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it leads. Hosting for HBR has been kindly
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provided by an onsthost.com, the Internet Archive, and our Sync.net. On the Sadois stages,
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today's show is released under Creative Commons' Attribution 4.0 International License.
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