Lunch and Snack head south to Tennessee.
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The cows make a stop at the Memphis Visitor Center where they encountered a bronze statue of bluesman B.B. King. | |
Lunch and Snack find an unusual mosaic egg welcoming visitors to Memphis. | |
As the sun goes down on downtown Memphis, the cows stop at Sun Records Studios where Elvis recorded his first single. | |
Lunch really didn't want to know what the main course was at the world famous Charles Vergo's Rendezvous Charcoal Ribs barbecue restaurant in downtown Memphis. | |
Time for some moos and blues! Lunch and Snack visit Beale Street, the home of Memphis Blues. | |
Lunch picked up a Fender Telecaster and tried to serenade Snack outside the Beale Street blues clubs. | |
The cows find their blues groove in the Rum Boogie Cafe. Snack collected some pretty beads for being so charming. | |
The cows share a somber moment outside the facade of the Lorraine Motel -- the site where civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. The building is now the National Civil Rights Museum. | |
At the home of the King of Rock and Roll, the cows wait outside of Graceland, Elvis Presley's mansion. | |
The Lisa Marie, Elvis' private jet, is featured at one of several Graceland museums devoted to the world of Elvis. | |
The cows couldn't resist a short jaunt south to Tunica Resorts, Miss., to visit some of the casinos. A cluster of casinos have become a major tourist haven in the Mississippi Delta region. | |
Lunch and Snack stop to admire the Mississippi River and a group of barges parked at New Madrid, Mo. The town was the site of the worst series of earthquakes recorded in the Lower 48 back in 1811-1812. It seems so peaceful now. |