
Kings of The Road
We are two friends who went on a road trip around the United States 20 years ago to serve churches. We kept a journal as we traveled and are reading through the journal and remembering our adventures. Listen and laugh with us as we go back in time and inspire others to go on an adventure.
Kings of The Road
41: Savannah Smiles: Heartfelt Hospitality
Have you ever wondered how the charm of Southern mansions compares to the bustling housing market of California? Join us as we pick up our cliffhanger tour with youth pastor Scott Cleveland in the beautiful streets of Savannah, Georgia. From the opulent homes on Skidaway Island to reflections on real estate prices, we traverse the scenic landscapes and embrace the luxurious living that's unique to the South. Plus, you'll hear a personal update about dealing with the sweltering heat while replacing an air conditioning unit—it's all about the highs and lows of Southern life!
Ever felt the profound impact of a small gesture? Inspired by Walker Hayes' touching song about his friend Craig, we explore how acts of kindness and hospitality can weave stronger communities. We share our personal stories and challenges in being hospitable, emphasizing the magic of engaging with neighbors. Tune in for practical advice and heartfelt anecdotes that show how opening your home and heart can lead to meaningful connections and transformative experiences.
Experience the camaraderie and fun at the Wesley Center in downtown Savannah, where we engage in a frenzy of activities like cleaning and building shelves. We dive into our DISC test results, laugh over fashion blunders, and reminisce about nostalgic moments with friends. From humorous tales about purchasing Teva sandals to Scott's unforgettable cheerleader outfit, this episode is packed with laughter and poignant reflections. Whether you're curious about contrasting ministry opportunities or simply want to relive cherished memories, this journey through Savannah is not one to miss!
Hello you fine-looking listener, wherever you are, turning on the Team to the Road podcast, ready to go on an adventure with myself, scott Hawkins and Andrew Gare as we continue on a lazy day's motorhome and we are in the beautiful Savannah, georgia, in the south. If you haven't yet find us on Facebook Team to the Road podcast, go to Spotify or Apple podcasts or wherever you do podcasts and subscribe. Tell your friends, let them know they too can come along on a journey. I think we are pretty decided that we're going to continue and do a Defender State series, and so if you feel like you have a passion for the state, you're in the state you were born in, a state you lived in for a long time and you're going. I want to just tell everybody about this state. Tell us so we can bring you on, because we would love to talk about it and it's not going to be like a lawyer defend, but like a hey, pitch it. Let us know, we want to hear how great it is.
Speaker 2:Why should we come visit your state? Why should anybody come visit your state If you're Ohio? Why are the kids backing so hard on you right now?
Speaker 1:I know I actually have a guy that I might ask for Ohio. I saw him today because he's from Ohio Pastor guy. I thought, man, he may be a good starter because Ohio's getting some heat.
Speaker 2:Ohio yeah, Florida's like geez. What did Ohio do to take it from us?
Speaker 1:We've missed you. We've missed you 8.
Speaker 2:We love you so much we wanted your time down. We're going to need that back.
Speaker 1:If you are someone who loves your state, then let us know. We left you all a cliffhanger.
Speaker 2:We did A real cliffhanger A a cliffhanger. We did A real cliffhanger, a real cliffhanger.
Speaker 1:A cliffhanger of the joyous kind, not of the is he going to live kind, but of the how great does it get? Kind?
Speaker 2:Yes, and also we ran out of time, and so we just didn't have time to finish. Well, that too, I mean, that's a cliffhanger, though, right.
Speaker 1:The cliffhanger of cliffhangers in Savannah Georgia. Andrew, are you ready?
Speaker 2:Yes, I'm ready, I'm ready, you're ready. Okay, we're picking back up where we left off.
Speaker 2:Okay, so to catch you all up, I think it's important to state that. Remember the setting Savannah, georgia, designed by King George II, and he laid it all out in England and then said go servants, find a place suitable for my city and build it. And they did. And in 1733, savannah was founded, which brings us up to speed. So youth pastor Scott Cleveland took us on a tour. After our tour. This is where we pick up today. This is where we were left hanging off of the cliff. Ooh, after our tour we went. I tried to clear my throat and it just made it worse A couple times, a couple times.
Speaker 2:Yeah, boy, I'm just that excited. This is what happens. We went to a pub to have a drink with Scott. After that, he showed us around Skidaway Island, where the church and most of the congregation are. I saw some of the most impressive houses I've ever seen. Many of the people are retired yam dankies, as they politely call them.
Speaker 1:That's a good one. That's a good one.
Speaker 2:Or other extremely wealthy individuals. Even Scott's parish house was beautiful, even Scott's parish house was beautiful. The killer was that one could move into one of those mansions for under a million dollars and prices had gone up there recently, yeah.
Speaker 1:So I don't know how much to spoil, but we are probably going to get Scott Cleveland on the show, which is pretty awesome, because we reached out and we found very awesome and one of the things he said was um, even after we've been there, he's like man, the 2020. It has made the prices here go up, and so even from then they've gone up because people are relocating to savannah and yeah, why wouldn't you? Honestly?
Speaker 2:right, I I mean yeah, if you're like looking for a place to go don't pass that over don't pass that over, no yeah, these were I mean for, for our experience in life, these were actual mansions.
Speaker 1:Yes, yes, this is the problem with the california brain, right. Like we don't have regular brains about houses, we see these places and we're like this is the most incredible house I've ever seen in my life. This was me going into alabama and see the church members houses and be like wait, you have like four masters. This is like a five million dollar house, like, oh, eight hundred thousand dollars, like what, like what. Like so what do you like own?
Speaker 2:Delta Airlines, like how do you get this? How do you, how do you get a place like this?
Speaker 1:Are. All of our houses are so tight together. They are, I mean, they're nice and they're, they're great, but for what we get it is so expensive, and then you go to those places and it just blows you away. In the South, it just does, it absolutely blows you away. Now, granted, it's July and 73 degrees in Redondo Beach, and there's been a heat wave.
Speaker 2:Yes.
Speaker 1:Yes.
Speaker 2:Yeah, for the listener here. As we started, I'm telling Scott that it's quite warm in my house because we're actually replacing our air conditioning unit as we speak. So today was day one of two of this installation, which means we have no AC today, but right now it's 75 degrees outside and dropping Right, but right now it's 75 degrees outside and dropping and you know like it was 85 today. I'm slightly uncomfortable. Yeah Right, I'm a little. It's going to be interesting to sleep tonight. But you know what? There's no humidity here, no.
Speaker 1:No, no, yeah, it's true, it's true. And Emily is down where she grew up, which is not the same weather, and I think it was 121 today. Oh, yes, my. But here's the crazy part it's not insanely hot, but it drops like 40 degrees at night. It gets down to like 80 degrees at night, which is still warm, but a 40 degree swing is what the desert does. In the south it was like a 2-degree swing. It was like 91 in the day, 89 at night, 92, 90. That humidity just bakes it, whereas the dry desert it's like whoa, whoa, whoa. It's the craziest thing. There's no other in these different places. So yeah, that's a wild experience, oh man.
Speaker 2:It always comes back to that. You know it's, it's, it's. What do you, what do you get for the money? You know I being in Tennessee recently rolling hills, everything's green, it's beautiful, beautiful. It takes a lot of rain to make things green. It does.
Speaker 1:It takes a lot of rain to make things green.
Speaker 2:It does. It takes a lot of humidity. Beautiful Savannah.
Speaker 1:Absolutely. We did the tour Big houses.
Speaker 2:That was it, guys. That was the big thing that you've been waiting For a whole week to hear.
Speaker 1:No, it wasn't. No, it wasn't. The next day is the big thing They've been waiting for a whole week to hear. No, no, it wasn't. No, it wasn't. The next day is the big thing they've been waiting to hear. Are you saying?
Speaker 2:there's more there's more.
Speaker 1:There's more savannah, the city that keeps giving legitimately. What we're about to tell you, listener, is a thought that I go back to. When things are, you know, you're having a rough day or you just need to like escape in your mind, my dad used to say this, like we'd be at the cottage or cottage Michigan or somewhere, and he'd say, hey, take a snapshot of this in your brain, and when you're in school, you're bored, come back to this place. And I've always thought that was kind of a nice thing, so I'll say that to my kids. You know, hey, remember, this is a great place and just you can't be here forever, but it's nice to be here now. This memory that we're about to say is one of those. I'm like, ah, what a great day. Yeah, what a great thing to have happen to us.
Speaker 2:Oh, my goodness you know what I mean.
Speaker 2:Like that. That's of day that you're about to go for, so read it. I can't wait, so read it. Okay, day 52, thursday, day two in Savannah, if you're keeping track, today was a busy day. We had an appointment at the Wesley Community Center at 930 to see how we could help them out in the next two days. Of course, super guy Scott Cleveland, youth pastor, knocks on the RV door at about 8.45 and tells us that we can borrow his Jeep Wrangler for the weekend because it would be too difficult to drive the RV and he wasn't using it anyways.
Speaker 1:Wow, that's the moment Knock, knock, knock. That's the moment Knock, knock, knock.
Speaker 2:Who's knocking on our door at 845? Santa Claus.
Speaker 1:Yes, and he says the line I remember and maybe I've made this up in my head but is Savannah's too beautiful a city for you guys to drive that thing around? Yeah, you need to use this. Montana's too beautiful a city for you guys to drive that thing around? Yeah, you need to use this. I step out and there's a white Jeep Wrangler yes, no doors, no doors, no roof, no roof. Just this beautiful car. My first car was a 1975 Postal Jeep. It looks like a Jeep and and it looks like a Jeep and it has the back of a square but the front has a classic Jeep. Look, and your first car, I think, just buries into your soul you know, Like that first, like oh, it's just something special about it forever.
Speaker 1:And there it is, Sitting outside. He's like use this.
Speaker 2:Oh yes, sir oh my gosh, are you kidding me, this guy? Yeah, again. We had just recently spent the coldest night of the trip, freezing to death Nearly. We survived. And then we're in Savannah, georgia, where the people are warm, the weather is warm, and this guy after an incredible night is just like hey, you guys can't drive around in a motorhome, take my convertible Jeep. Have fun, Just take it guys. I met a day ago Unreal.
Speaker 1:This to me, is like the perfect view of the kingdom of god, like what we want it to be is we meet this guy and we don't know him, but we do know him because we share so much in common because of jesus, and then he just jesus, just shows off by, like I want to just bless you guys, like so crazy, cool, yeah, and like the immediate thing, relationship, kinship, that's there. Yeah, it's just because of of a common shared faith that this was, this was the, this was what we wanted to do. I mean right, like it was a beautiful, incredible, but also it's exactly what we wanted to do.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, it was great. I mean I need to, I need to think about him more in my life, right, you know you, you hear these stories. I um, I read a book, believe it or not, recently, yeah, yes. Recently. Well, that was incredible recently, recently, that was incredible A year ago.
Speaker 2:I usually average one a year. This one was written by country singer Walker Hayes. We're going to go see him soon. We're going to go see him soon. He talks about his friend Craig who basically he attributes his success. He talks about his friend Craig who, basically he attributes his, you know, conversion. Yeah, like well, his like just all the amazing things in life and how he became a Christian is because of the generosity of this guy who, for no other reason than just he was a believer who walked the walk.
Speaker 2:So yeah when you hear about people like that, it's just like that's outrageous and it's like maybe it's not, it's just what we should.
Speaker 1:Maybe it's not, but anyways, maybe it's just what we should be doing, and I think those simple words of like, hospitality and generosity, yeah are overlooked. Right, because we so often make christianity, this, like huge thing and mission trips and giving to the poor, all good, all you should do, but also just being generous, like with your neighbor, being hospitable to a person who knocks on your door those are foundational to what we do and who we should be. And so I've told I've said this before the podcast, but I've like told my staff like look, if you get a phone call that gets through the podcast, but I've like told my staff like, look, if you get a phone call that gets through to me and they're going to ask us to like sleep here or do something, I'm going to say yes. So if you don't want them to do that, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:I was that guy. Yeah, this is what I think we should be about about like opening our doors, eating with people, having people sleep, you know. So I'm just. It's so funny, so yeah.
Speaker 2:And I think that comes so much more naturally to you than it does to me. Like I, it's something I really have to think about, and think about like generosity, like I people have been generous to me and I tend to be somebody who is a hoarder of myself. Do you know what I mean?
Speaker 1:Like I do.
Speaker 2:I'm fine in my walled garden all by myself all the time. I, you know, and my wife Mary like we're both a little bit that way in some respects. You know Mary's well. I wouldn't say that Mary's very generous with and she's very caring and can make anybody feel important, which is one of the things I love about her. But, like we have this house and we built this pool and one of the things about it is, um, oh, there's Isaac. Um, it's just being generous with that and like having people over and doing, uh, you know, we had a bunch of people over for um 4th of July and in our youth or not our youth group, but our life group here and things like that. So it's just like one of these things that I I sometimes need to like intentionally say like, yeah, we're going to do this, because this is, this is good, this is who we are.
Speaker 2:Let's do it, whereas I think for some people it's just like, of course somebody is going to call up the church and ask to sleep in the parking lot. Of course we say yes, like it, I'm just. I'm saying this because, like, if you're anything like me and you're listening to, like, it takes an intentionality to be like yes, I agree with that.
Speaker 1:I totally agree with that.
Speaker 1:And one of the things that you're speaking, that I'm thinking about, that we've been incredibly intentional about of our house here is being front yard people as opposed to backyard people, and so, like we've been intentional about trying to spend time in the front yard, meet people opposed to backyard people, and so, like we've been intentional about trying to spend time in the front yard, meet people, say hi to people as they go by, Because I think and this could be a Southern California thing but we have this ability to drive into our houses, open our garages, drive into our garage, close the garage, go into our house, live in the backyard, back to the house and never come out again from our little castle until we get to work the next day five, 10, 20 miles, and then we don't know the people that live around us and you know, I think God planted you in a neighborhood and at a work and at a place where you can serve and love those people, and so that that is, I think, another intentional thing.
Speaker 1:Like, again, it's not, it's not huge, it's not these like you have to go and fly to Istanbul, it's just looking around you and I think, yeah, being hospitable and being generous and what I mean. Scott Cleveland just nailed it, Nailed it.
Speaker 2:Man, I can't wait to talk more about that with him. This goes beyond like hey, I'll watch your cat while you're on vacation.
Speaker 1:Right, here's a car.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, unreal.
Speaker 1:It was the perfect gift. I mean, that's why, like I was saying, I go back in my mind because it's such a beautiful like I just loved it so much. And it rubbed that part of my heart of like, hey, you had a car, you had this, You're doing that. Now you get to do these things and enjoy it. It's really great.
Speaker 2:No doubt. All right, we're in the Jeep. We got our own windblown selves to the Wesley Center in downtown and met Sarah, the lady in charge, along with some other key people, including Charles, the janitor slash maintenance guy, and we got to work right away. We spent the morning cleaning out a supply shed for Charles, a retired janitor from General Motors in Michigan. Now I remember that.
Speaker 1:I don't know why?
Speaker 2:but I was like we got to build. We cleaned out a shed, I think we built a couple shelves, we were doing stuff right.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I am a doer of stuff, but you're more a doer of stuff than I am. Oh man, by default, give me a project you love, yeah, you love doers, I love, like I. It's interesting because we did the DISP test and I fell in the D world, which is a little more task-oriented, and I get that part of myself. You did Like, really, I did, I did, I. You did, really I did, I did, I had some, but I was more of a D.
Speaker 2:I wouldn't have expected that, but probably towards the middle.
Speaker 1:D-I, where you were a D-C right, Uh-huh. And so I was like okay, that makes sense. But it's just so interesting that I just love to sit and talk and, you know, have these deep theological conversations, and that's where you're like, it's into like, and when are we going to build something.
Speaker 2:Do you want me to dig a hole? I don't want to sit here anymore. Yeah, let's go build a shed and not talk to each other for like five hours.
Speaker 1:Yeah, you did, and is this where we did the mural thing too?
Speaker 2:I believe it is Okay, let's keep going. I can't. I don't know if it was the same day, but I think it was. I think the Wesley Center where we're talking about is where we did this mural.
Speaker 1:And that was really cool.
Speaker 2:So at 1130, rachel, the youth pastor at Christ Episcopal, picked us up for lunch to discuss what we would do with the youth at her church on Sunday night. If you're keeping score at home, we've been in Savannah for a day and already three organizations Right Recall back to the Northeast where it's like we couldn't find anybody. We finally found somebody and then the bro ghosts us and he's like maybe if I just disappear they'll go away.
Speaker 1:And then we went to the Boston Seafarers Mission, right, right. I mean this is why we have to talk about hospitality and generosity on this part, because it was insane the difference to finding ministries and opportunities in the South versus finding them on the East Coast. I mean, it was just totally different Worlds apart.
Speaker 2:Worlds apart, worlds apart. I know you think you have to go to another country to experience other cultures and stuff. There are plenty of different cultures to be found across the united states. Yeah, not quite the same, but still pretty fascinating. No, it is. Yeah, so in a phrase that few understand, but those who do know exactly what I mean when I say. Rachel is old school sunshine s-o-n-s-h-i-n-e. So that-E. So that's for, like, one of you listening right now.
Speaker 1:Yes, that is.
Speaker 2:So Sunshine to fill everybody else in. Sunshine is the camp that I worked in college. It's a ministry that caters towards high school and middle school age students. It's a week on a houseboat, playing in the water, swimming playing cards, inner tubing behind a boat water skiing, wakeboarding, hiking. It's the best. Small groups worship under the stars on sort of your camp counselor.
Speaker 1:Yeah, like, if they don't wear shoes, you're not surprised, right right. Like we're going out to eat at a nice restaurant but you don't have shoes on, like right.
Speaker 2:Yeah, okay, oh, I brought my own salad dressing that I made from a honey bee's nest that you know.
Speaker 1:And hemp seed.
Speaker 2:Right, right, Maybe not that Like yeah, I never went that far, but you know, like I knew, those people?
Speaker 1:No, but that's the world. That's the world, and it is yeah, and they're great, and they're great, but it's yeah, and that's her vibe, and that's.
Speaker 2:Not surprised at all. Yeah, so I do go on Sandal wearing Nalgene toting. So a Nalgene bottle was like the cool, like if you were like cool young college age. Yeah, but like Stanley's, more of the like I don't know trendy thing, the Nalgene was like oh yeah, sure, I've been mountain climbing plenty of times. It was like the outdoor person's calling card.
Speaker 1:Along with.
Speaker 2:Chico Living Ball of Camp Counselor Obnoxious Energy is how I said it. So yeah like has like a crazy sandal tan, because all they ever wear is like their Chaco sandals or their Teva sandals or whatever. Yeah, you know the type I legit here.
Speaker 1:Hold on, hold on. This is funny. This is coming up Because so I'm going fishing with our buddy, Matt Conrad, who you know, and I need water shoes to like, walk in, like when we're going walking and fishing in the river right, oh yeah.
Speaker 2:And oh yeah, you know what I'm like.
Speaker 1:I'm like I'm gonna buy tivas for this. Yeah, because I feel like that's the right shoe, right for this kind of moment. Sure, I got good reports from people like they're comfortable, they last a long time, they show up in the mail and emily is disgusted. What she's like? She's like I didn't realize this is who I married.
Speaker 2:Welcome to the jungle, baby.
Speaker 1:Yeah, Teva wearing. Oh man, I'm like look, I'm not 25 anymore. Now I've got to strap the Tevas on when I go hiking through the river to catch our food.
Speaker 2:You're going to come back with your beard all waxed with some natural honeysuckle oil that you when did I get this Subaru from?
Speaker 1:How did I pack it?
Speaker 2:in my car, that's right, and not like a new one but like an old, no, like an old Forester with lots of REI stickers and stuff. Coexist is definitely on the back, yeah.
Speaker 1:Because it cannot be. Who rescued who? Yeah, going to make her get a dog, a pound puppy, but there's ties, so like I've only had them for a couple of days, but it is kind of funny to wear them and there's an immediate reaction.
Speaker 2:Well, reaction and I wore them a church one day.
Speaker 1:Oh, I could not. I'm sunday, but like for office days, I'll break them in. My senator is like yeah, I see the reaction now, yeah, yeah yeah, that's justified uh so white socks, those sandals?
Speaker 2:okay, that was my question. I'm like, were you doing socks or no socks?
Speaker 1:no, yeah, okay, okay, no socks, but all right, but the tiva, the tiva, tan has come in this trip.
Speaker 2:I think man yes do they still have that little like plastic triangle by the?
Speaker 1:I think I think I bought the nicer version. I think I bought the nicer version so that I could have the like for a little more longer lasting. So they're not.
Speaker 2:Yeah, they're not, I thought that was like a staple of the.
Speaker 1:Oh no, I know, but the upper strap, yeah, and the thing is they are pretty comfortable. They're pretty comfortable. Well, you know, I told Emily I'm like, well, go boating, boating. She's like you are not wearing those boating.
Speaker 2:I'm like you know these are non-marking outsoles. That's good for the boating, yeah, no slip for the boating oh my gosh, I know I want to see pictures of that. Um, oh you'll get picture okay, let's see here. So enough said. We had lunch with her and checked out her youth room, which was awesome, very plush, which is quite unusual for a youth room, wouldn't you say.
Speaker 1:Agreed, agreed.
Speaker 2:Okay, after lunch we went back to the Wesley Center and did some weeding and continued working on the shed. Yes, we ran out of work at 4 or 4.30. No. They told us to go in a nice way, right something like oh, bless your heart, you're done, please leave, done. Uh, we got back to skid away pretty early, so I got behind the wheel of the jeep and gave it my best shot now, I had never driven a stick before, which is where this comment comes from I wasn't sure if we were gonna mention your your lack of man card stamping at this point or not.
Speaker 2:Yes, I had to do all the driving yes, I had the thought in my mind when I was introducing the amazingness of the jeep and I was like, oh yeah, scott drove that because that was a stick for sure. Yeah, okay. So I have only driven stick maybe twice before this. So it was rough. I stalled and lurched and bumped around for a while, until we had enough of that For dinner. Yeah, yeah. So it's like okay, that's good, that's good, oh well.
Speaker 1:How's your stick driving now? It's pretty good. You know how I learned. No Scooters. Oh, that's right, we had the scooters.
Speaker 2:I don't know what it was, but something clicked in my brain Once we got the scooters, which were manual transmission. I learned on that. And then I hopped in a car with a stick and I was like wait, I can drive this, it's weird, yeah that.
Speaker 1:Knowing where the clutch, that's the whole thing right. It's like figuring out where the clutch engages.
Speaker 2:Yeah, so although one time I got the chance to go up to the Seattle area and go to this rally car racing school oh, it was like a one-day event for work, and so- we got to drive.
Speaker 2:we got to drive these Subarus around a dirt track but they were all stick shift and so it's like you're driving and you're concentrating on you know, you've got an instructor sitting next to you and you're going fast and he goes, keep going, keep going, keep going, keep going and he goes break. Now, you know, and it's like and you got to shift and turn and break and listen to all this, and to shift and turn and break and listen to all this. And there was definitely one part where, like, my brain is in overload and I I don't know what I did exactly, but I totally ended up not on the track and just like rough terrain, just like and doing like a u-turn and the guy was definitely like, oh my god, this guy's gonna break our car, um, but I didn't and it was a blast. And then I got to ride with like a real rally cross driver through the forest. Oh man, that was fun. If you're ever in Seattle, look up Dirt Fish, whatever it is.
Speaker 1:That is so cool, it's amazing.
Speaker 2:It is amazing that made me want to buy a Subaru right there. Yeah, that's amazing. For dinner we had. It was awesome we had round two of Super Scott's Dinner.
Speaker 1:Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm. Yes, we did. Yes, we did yes. I still think I remember us going into the kitchen and getting our leftovers out of the fridge. He did love it.
Speaker 2:So good, so good. I said that somebody had brought us baseball mitts, but we had no balls. Ha ha, ha, ha, ha. Yeah, straight from the journal. It's still funny all these years later.
Speaker 1:It's still funny. It's still funny, solid, solid.
Speaker 2:Solid. Well, the solution was to go get some. So we hopped in the Jeep and went to the mall. As we walked into the mall, I began to laugh because Scott looked like a Michigan cheerleader.
Speaker 1:I had my steam in very Speaking of you and your fashion choices right?
Speaker 2:Oh my gosh. He had on a blue with yellow striped windbreaker pants and a Michigan jacket that matched beautifully. Oh, the looks we got. We found our balls Ha ha, ha, ha ha At Champ Sports and headed back to play some catch.
Speaker 1:I don't know why I in general, fashion is just not my strong point.
Speaker 2:Let's just be honest, it's just not where I live or starting new trends?
Speaker 1:Who knows Right? Oh, that's awesome.
Speaker 2:Maybe you've just got it figured out, maybe I do.
Speaker 1:Then everyone has to catch up. Yeah, I see myself walking to that mall with my windbreaker on. I don't wear enough windbreakers anymore. They didn't even come back.
Speaker 2:I like a windbreaker Solid windbreaker you know, it's like windbreaker it's lightweight, gives you enough protection you know from the wind. Right, we're not hot, you're not overly hot, yeah, you got a little windbreaker.
Speaker 1:Good luck. Some of those um uh jogging pants that I'm obsessed with now with the cuffs on the bottom oh my gosh, how many pairs do you own? Oh geez.
Speaker 2:okay, that's the look. That's hot dad, that's like hot dad, fall right there.
Speaker 1:That's hot. Dad fall right there. Hey, grace, hey.
Speaker 2:I'm here to pick you up Like, oh my gosh, is that your dad? In the windbreaker, the jogger pants and the Tevas?
Speaker 1:No, no, grace, it's your father. Hello, is he drinking star music out of the stereo? Oh my gosh yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2:You're also about that age where you you're like getting super nostalgic. So you're gonna happen to. I'm gonna send you like a listing for a 1973 amc postal vehicle on facebook marketplace and you're not going to be able to resist.
Speaker 1:No, I'm buying it. If that comes across my view, it's plus or minus $1,000. Yeah, it will be mine.
Speaker 2:I might just buy it for you, the church parts will not slowly fill up with all this.
Speaker 1:My motorhome's 1997, my boat's in 1997. Gosh, I just told my neighbor. I said sophomore Scott's crushing it right now. Yeah, now, 42-year-old Scott not doing as great, but sophomore Scott, look at the stuff he has. Living the dream beyond wildest dreams, oh my gosh, I have a 1975 AMC postal vehicle behind my car.
Speaker 2:Take a look at me now.
Speaker 1:That's my version of a midlife crisis right there. Yeah, it's a good one. Can't afford a red sports car, so I got a crappy postal vehicle yeah hello, Pulled behind my Lazy Days Motorhome and that's my boat and like a caterpillar started.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, road train, road train, road train, that's what that is, oh man, Dangerous.
Speaker 1:People look at that guy and they say he's a living.
Speaker 2:Like pull over, let him pass, just don't be near that oh my goodness, Dad.
Speaker 1:For safety reasons. No, because he's crushing it.
Speaker 2:Because we can't even compete. He's clearly the king of the road.
Speaker 1:He's clearly one at life. Oh man Hit the music.
Speaker 2:That was the perfect outro. Hit the music. That was the perfect outro. Hit the music. I'm going to do it again. He's clearly the king of the road. Yeah, yeah, I was worried there was more day, but that's the day. Oh, no, that was the day. That was the day, but we are not done with Savannah Georgia. It continues on and you'll have to tune in next time to hear it.
Speaker 1:Oh, yes, you will Thank you for coming along on this journey. What a great day it's been. This is one of the days, guys, this is one of the days that you go on adventure, for you do it for these kind of days. See you all. Find something fun to do Until next time. Bye-bye, bye from 1997.