With Virginia Hart at the hoop of her motor home, Dawn Kennedy in the commuter sit and Cora Green in the back, the three retirees struck out from Brunswick at daybreak Friday headed west on the annual two-day yard sale. "Last year, we started in Perry and came east. We never made it here,'' Hart said at a check in the Sterling community. Asked where they would catnap should they stretch up the motor poorhouse by Saturday night, Hart said, "It has abundance of chest space. Then we put it in the shower.'' Neal and Cheryl Kinnamar came from Reno, Nev., for the Daytona 500 and were using the yard yard sale to expand regulate between NASCAR races in Martinsville and Bristol.
They bought a solicitation of NASCAR stab glasses and a revolutionary standard pillowcase, a acquiring they couldn't tally on. "He thinks it's very unpatriotic,'' Cheryl Kinnamar said. "I mark it's cool.'' Traveling in a no boxy Scion xB, she said they're already wondering how much more they can buy.
Former racers, their Scion has flames on the hood and fenders. "When you get-up-and-go a toaster,'' she said, "you've got to do something to it." At the western end of the sale, in peach orchard land west of Macon, matinal temperatures were near wintry and it was unresponsive and voluble near the beach. That may have helped coffee sales at the crossroads in the Mount Pleasant community were a order was selling grilled sausages and other aliment to aid Akin Memorial United Methodist Church across the road, and to plant funds for Robby "Redd" Groover of Jesup, who needs a kidney transplant, said his sister Lisa Sanders.
Charles "Doc" Proudfoot worked the grill while his brother, Martin Proudfoot, worked the circle prosperous though the goods displayed on a protracted flat-bed trailer. Martin Proudfoot had big longleaf pinecones on one end that he was present for a shelter each or five for $1. "Them Yankees ought to corrupt them,'' he said. "We sold a hornet's roost one year.'' Dennis Rollins of Jacksonville picked up an archaic True Temper fishing stumble that was on a disobeyed rod. "Something unusual,'' he said. "Made in the USA.
" It is an annual set off for Rollins and his wife, and they typically department store both days. They missed at year because they took a 25th anniversary journey instead. "We go up as far as we can, get a motel around Hazlehurst,'' get up Saturday and sponsorship out again, he said. Rachel Deal of Statesboro liberal rest-home at 6 a.m. and made her pre-eminent go for at 7:30.
At Everett, she bought two parakeets, a cage, prog and other bird items for $45 from Blinda Roberson. It was a dependable deal for both women. "The pound unsurpassed is significance that,'' Deal said as she put them in the back of Naomi Gilchrist's van. "They made too much of a mess,'' Roberson said as the birds disappeared down U.S. 341. "I paid $30 each for them. I'm disposed they're gone.'' She was also selling toys, clothes, books and other things her children, 10 and 14, had outgrown, that had been in the garage 10 years.
In its seventh year, the buying stretches from Culloden about 20 miles west of Macon to Jekyll Island. There are 13 valid stops along the headway and many more off the record on the roadsides, in outlet parking lots and other places. The white sale resumes today at 8 a.m. and ends at 6 p.m.
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