Before I get to today, our first day back on the road, let me tell you about yesterday at the St. Louis Zoo, always one of the highest ranked zoos in the country, which Wikipedia says has 16,000 animals, 25% more, for instance, than San Diego.
After we left the Art Museum, we had about 30 minutes to kill before our next engagement. We drove past the zoo and found a lucky parking space across from one of the two zoo entrances. Joan and I decided to take a quick look, to walk in and see the nearest animals and come back to the car.
Somehow, we walked to the center of the zoo, and saw no animals other than a flock of flamingos and a pond of stingrays.
Joan saw a sign that said that you could buy food to feed the stingrays for $2. I gave her the money and she took the receipt to the man at the gate who told her that the food was not sufficient, that she needed a $5 ticket. What’s more, he told her that because she wasn’t 14, I had to go in with her for another $5. So, it would be $12 to feed the stingrays, and neither of us wanted to do it that much, so Joan gave her receipt to another family. We then found the home of the red pandas, where there was a sign that said “We aren’t home today. Sorry.” And then various monkey homes, which were also all empty.
We concluded there were no animals at the zoo. We asked a zoo employee where they were and he told us the monkeys were in the monkey house because it might rain, and the monkey house entrance was far away. We had no time to go there. We asked why the monkeys were removed when it rained. He had no answer, saying “I am not an animal person.” We all laughed at the strangeness of it all.
When we got to the zoo central plaza (all food and souvenirs), we realized we had better turn around and go back to the car. The only other animals we had seen were two ducks, and a number of squirrels.
As I said, there were two entrances. We tried to retrace our steps, but failed, and exited at the wrong place.
Well, we said, let’s walk around the outside until we see the car. How far can it be? We walked and walked, realizing we were in trouble. Then another zoo employee was walking the other way, off his shift and on the way to get his car. We asked him how far to the other entrance and he told us the quickest way was to double back, re-enter the zoo and retrace our steps. He then offered to walk with us and would not take no for an answer.
All in all, Joan and I each walked about 2 miles and the entire venture took about an hour. It also meant that we had walked in two separate directions from the center and had seen no additional animals. Oh, the second zoo man? He was not an animal man either. He was their HVAC guy. Our suspicions increased that the entire zoo was a fraud.
On our last night in town we had pizza and visited with good friends. This morning we had breakfast with cousins Donna and Ed, and then hit the road. What followed was a long day of driving with only one stop.
The stop?

Metropolis. Well, Metropolis IL. It was very disappointing. We saw the world’s largest Superman statue, and visited the cluttered seeming gift shop, overstocked with kitsch. We couldn’t bear to spend $24 to visit the clearly looking Superman Museum. We had lunch at an adequate and very friendly Mexican restaurant, El Tequila, where you can find the largest and most bewildered Mexican Superman.

El hombre de acelo…
We drove through impressive downtown Nashville in rush hour (which means we drove very slowly) and got off the highway in Lebanon TN. By quirk of fate we found a 7 month old 19 seat restaurant. Run by a family of Laotian descent, it features a pan-Asian cuisine. Because it is so small, and heimisch, we talked to the owner, his family/staff and some of the other customers, all of whom seemed to be regulars. The food gets an easy A.

And then? And then the skies opened up and we were lucky to get back to the hotel.

















































