Don Coatney Posted November 8, 2011 Report Posted November 8, 2011 My friend and Kentucky Col. Sandy Gorin sent me this interesting list of places to visit in Kentucky. Might make for a fun outing and meet up place to drive our old cars and trucks to next summer. I already had a meetup with forum member Richie Hodge at the Corvette museum. KENTUCKY HAS SOME UNUSUAL ODDITIES In Barbourville, you might snap a photo of an oversized fiberglass rooster, used as a local landmark or visit the small church in Knox County – 10 feet x 12 feet. In Bardstown you could take a tour of the Tom Moore Distillery and see the world’s largest whiskey barrel or if visiting a cemetery there, see a 60 feet tall crucifix. Bowling Green offers not only the Floyd Collins Museum and the Corvette Museum, but if you drive over to Western Kentucky University and are patient, you might catch a glimpse of the white squirrel with dark eyes. Cadiz, thought a small town, draws visitors by their painted pigs. The pigs are stone however and are found downtown in the business district. This is in honor of the annual Country Ham Festival, held every October for the last 34 years. Each of the pigs have been decorated to match the business or civic group's theme. Gracie the Pig is on Marion Street! Conkling, KY offers lovers of Abraham Lincoln a treat. According to their history, Granville Johnson, a hobo, about 70 years old came to this area in the 1930s during the Great Depression. He was sick, owned nothing and needed shelter. A local family took him in. As he recovered his strength, Granville would take a hammer and chisel and climb the hill behind the Williams' farm, day after day, mysteriously. At summer's end, Granville unveiled for his hosts a thank-you gift -- a life-size sculpture of Abraham Lincoln cut into the flat side of a large sandstone boulder near the hill's summit. Granville claimed that he was an Italian sculptor and then wandered out of town, never to be seen again. If you like science fiction, it's as if a little silver saucer landed on a Kentucky hillside to give people across the river in Cincinnati something to look at. The portable, prefabricated home design from 1968 is by Finnish architect Matti Suuronen. In Dundee, KY there is a metal goat used as a weather vane on top of an 80-foot spire on top of the local lodge hall. Once used by the Methodist Church on the first floor and a Masonic Hall on the second floor, this goat was been swinging in the wind for over 100 years. At Fort Mitchell, KY you might be entertained – or maybe a little unnerved at the Vent Haven: Ventriloquist Museum. Tours are given there and there are hundreds upon hundreds of vents (as they are called) including many celebrities. Franklin, KY offers a giant Indian who stands atop a pedestal, wearing a long feathered headdress and with a spiked war club in his hand, guarding the Dixie Discount mart. Or, you might like to see the large bull (fake of course!) at the Lucky Lotto on 31W. Georgetown, KY offers Pete, The Talking Crow (sort of). He was only in town from 1829 and 1832, but Pete the Talking Crow left behind an enduring, obnoxious bird legend. Hat shop owner Dave Adams would attend horse races with his crow Pete, who developed the habit of yelling "Go!" at the horses. Accounts at the time claim after repeated false starts, officials were forced to use a bell instead of a shout to start the horses. The crow was shot in 1832 by a boy visiting town (Pete didn't have time to yell anything) and was buried in a coffin in an unmarked grave at Georgetown College. But, you can still experience Pete. An animatronic version of the bird entertains children at the Georgetown-Scott County Museum. He talks -- but in Japanese, ever since he was programmed for a sister city visit in Japan, funded by Toyota, a large manufacturing presence in Georgetown. Now, if you’re not interested in white squirrels, painted pigs or talking crows, you might like to go to Guthrie, KY and see the Pink Elephant. This is an old L&N caboose, and an old mansion, complete with gargoyles and ramparts. If you can’t get enough of pink elephants, you can go to Henderson, KY; his mate seems to be there. In Hazard, KY you can stop and do some shopping at the Mother Goose Market. A round stone building built to resemble a huge goose sitting on a nest (of rocks). Built in 1940. The goose's eyes are old-style automobile headlights, designed to light up at night. Hopkinsville, KY takes us back to the time of the Knights in Shining Armor. Located on the north side of town, adjacent to University of Kentucky Community College, one will find King Arthur’s Round Table.Created in 1965, Round Table Literary Park is a nicely shaded strip of woodland interspersed with monuments drawn from the world of Literature. The table has stone seating for 24, and there is also a Sword in the Stone. A Greek/Roman amphitheater and the Delphian Tholos Temple provide venues for annual literary events, quiet contemplation, or a place to walk the dog. However, if you’re still in the science fiction mode, you might visit the little green men! On August 21, 1955, the town was overrun by 12 to 14 small creatures "with big flapping ears, yellow luminous eyes on the sides of their large heads, and bodies with spindly arms and legs." After terrorizing the 150 residents for hours, they boarded their spacecraft and returned to outer space. The incident has been duly whitewashed in Project Blue Book. Last but not least in Hopkinsville is the Memorial Manhole Cover. Hopkinsville, Kentucky - Memorial Manhole Cover This comes with the likeness of past newspaper publisher Joe Dorris (Member of the Kentucky Journalism Hall Of Fame) and is at the intersection of 9th and Main Streets in Hopkinsville KY. Joe Dorris was. in his later years, a daily columnist for the Kentucky New Era newspaper and he liked to write about old outhouses (privys) that were still in use in Christian, Todd, Trigg, and Caldwell counties in Kentucky. Because of this interest, he became known in the region as "The Privy Editor". The manhole cover has his likeness and the words Privy Editor on it and was dedicated in the early 90s by past Kentucky Gov. Happy B. Chandler. © Copyright 8 November 2011, Sandra K. Gorin Quote
LAKOTA169 Posted November 9, 2011 Report Posted November 9, 2011 You could add Tater Day in Benton, Ky Quote
55 Fargo Posted November 9, 2011 Report Posted November 9, 2011 How about meeting at a KFC for some of that secret recipe of 11 different herbs and spices, pay hommage to Harland Sanders.... Quote
mikesinky Posted November 10, 2011 Report Posted November 10, 2011 you could also go to breaks interstate park. considered the grand canyon of the east. and see pikeville ky where they relocated the river filled it in and moved the town in what is considered by some as one of the largest engineered cut through projects ever done. make it in the fall and see the beautiful landscape with the colorful trees or if your in pikeville in spring you could always come during hillbilly days and support the shriners. just some things to do in the eastern part of the state. Quote
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