Mike

  • Savannah Gingerbread House Bull Street

    Savannah Close Up – Gingerbread House

    With its Gothic houses, squares and Spanish moss hanging from every tremendous Live Oak, Savannah truly makes a great first impression. But far from skin-deep, its beauty only becomes more captivating the closer you look.

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  • One Month in Savannah

    After One Month in Savannah…

    Our first month in Savannah had come to an end, faster than expected, and it was fun, weird and exciting as we hoped it would be. As we did after our first month in Oviedo, we completed a small self-survey of our experience, to share our initial impressions of the city.

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  • Beaufort SC

    Day Trip to Beaufort

    We took a trip to Beaufort, South Carolina, which is about an hour north of Savannah. This small coastal town makes an ideal excursion, but as I realized after receiving a number of puzzled looks, it’s pronounced “Beww-furt” and not “Bow-fort.”

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  • Tour Fort Pulaski

    Fort Pulaski – The South’s Not So Invincible Stronghold

    The road to Tybee Island takes you right by Cockspur Island, home to Fort Pulaski. Originally built after the War of 1812, the fort is now a national monument.

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  • Back in the Day Bakery Bread Sign

    Back in the Day Bakery

    So when we discovered the Back in the Day Bakery, on the corner of Bull and 40th street, we were overjoyed. Bakeries are on almost every street in Germany, but in the States, that’s not the case.

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  • Trinity Church Savannah Telfair Square

    Telfair Square

    Originally called St. James Square after the famous London park, Telfair Square was renamed in 1833 in honor of Savannah’s VIP-iest family. It was one the city’s original four squares and, for a long time, its most fashionable district.

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  • Savannah Street

    Scenes from Savannah City Streets

    Photographers visiting Savannah are going to have a hard time holding to any sort of schedule… and their partners will have a hard time holding onto their sanity. During our stay in Savannah, it happened often that I lost my patience, and finally ditched Jürgen, who was again snapping photos of a random saxophone, or…

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  • Owens Thomas House

    The Owens Thomas House – Our First Bad Experience in Savannah

    We had been excited to get into the old homes of Savannah, especially after our experience at the Scarborough House. So it was with high expectations that we visited the Owens-Thomas House on Oglethorpe Square. Unfortunately, our high expectations weren’t met, this time.

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  • Glass Art Savannah

    Drayton Glassworks in Savannah

    Biking home with a fresh loaf of bread from the Back in the Day Bakery, we passed a tiny shop in which someone was at work blowing glass. Curiosity stoked, we returned to the Drayton Glassworks a couple days later to meet Jonathan Poirier.

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  • James Oglethorpe in Savannah

    No Liquor! No Slaves! No Lawyers! No Catholics!

    When he founded Savannah, the capital of his newly chartered colony of Georgia, James Oglethorpe had some utopian ideas. His planned city would be built around four squares and four simple prohibitions. No rum. No slavery. No lawyers. No Papists.

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  • Kayaking Savannah

    In the Water with North Island Kayak

    There are a lot of activities you can do on Tybee Island, but one of the best is to go kayaking. We decided to take my brother, who happened to be visiting, as a surprise present for his birthday.

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  • Derby Devils

    Savannah Derby Devils – Insanity on Skates

    One night, we decided to check out a Roller Derby match between Savannah’s own Derby Devils, and the Cape Fear Roller Girls.

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