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Blogging Driving Food Geography History Military Travel Weather

Fort Meade Florida

Welcome back to #TravelThursday. For the past 2 weeks I’ve written about Fort Meade Florida, and I’m doing it again for the 3RD week in a row. Last Thursday I actually visited and spent 2½ hours in Fort Meade – seeing and doing everything that I said I would see and do.

I arrived at and entered the historic house that is the Historical Society Of Fort Meade Florida Museum shortly after opening time at 10 AM, and I was immediately greeted by one of the docents on duty – Paulette. I signed-in at the guest book (which is a must-thing to do for every visitor at every museum – preferably at the beginning of the visit). I then introduced myself from the Sebring Historical Society as a fellow docent of a historic house that is also a museum.

Right after that – two guys entered the museum, and they proceeded to sign-in at the guest book. (They know and love museums too.) Paulette assumed that they were with me, but I corrected her and told her that I didn’t know them. It was a coincidence that we arrived at the same time. (I actually saw them taking photos of the exterior grounds of the museum, and I did a little bit of that too before I entered the museum.)

The two guys had bicycled from Maryland since the start of September, and in fact they live near Fort Meade Maryland in Severna Park. (You can’t make this stuff up.) They were intrigued to find out about and subsequently visit Fort Meade Florida, so they made sure that their bike route down the spine of Florida included a stop at the historical museum in Fort Meade. They had visited the Mulberry Phosphate Museum on the previous day, and now they were in Fort Meade – known for its phosphate mining. #FortMeadeMiners

They were actually bicycling all the way down to Key West – with a stop that night in Sebring. (Again – this is a totally true story.) In my mind – I’m starting to think that they are readers of my blog, and that they read about the two Fort Meades here on #TravelThursday over the past 2 weeks, but I didn’t ask them about it. I wasn’t there to reveal or promote my blog. (You generally don’t do that in a museum.)

So – the 3 of us together enjoyed an extensive tour of every room downstairs and upstairs. Paulette engaged in great conversation with us as she shared interesting stories behind the historical artifacts and photos. She was born, raised, and has lived her entire life of 78 years – right there in Fort Meade.

I will definitely return to the museum later this year or early next year. A very good docent always leads his or her museum tour so that you see a little bit of almost everything. But you always want the visitor(s) to want to see more on a future visit. Paulette did just that. I’m looking forward to seeing more next time !

After my museum visit – I enjoyed a nice big lunch at Kiki’s Egg House along Charleston Avenue (U.S. 17 through the city). It’s where the locals eat. Food is good. Service is good. ’70s music is good.

And then I went even further up the road to tour the exterior grounds of the Homeland Heritage Park – a Polk County Park. I even walked inside the historic church there.

And then I completed the triple-trifecta of museums by visiting my fellow docents, curators, and coordinators at The Depot Museum in Avon Park (our sister museum in Highlands County). We talked museum business.

What a fun day it was last Thursday. And finally – this completes my unexpected 3-part series on Fort Meade Florida. I’ll begin a 2-part series on our big annual event for the Sebring Historical Society – Pioneer Daze – next #TravelThursday. Let’s keep traveling together.

#CountUp & #TravelThursday is on Facebook. I also run the Sebring Historical Society Facebook page.

All rights reserved (c) 2024 Christopher M. Day, CountUp

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Blogging Christian God Ministry Music Radio

My Top 10 Hits – Week 399

Every Monday I post my all-new Top 10 Christian hit music chart based on personal preference and influenced by radio airplay from the previous week. It’s the continuation of a weekly hobby that goes back over 45 years. Here’s this week’s chart – for the week ending Sunday October 06TH 2024 – the 399TH week of this current era that began on Presidents’ Day Weekend of 2017:

TW LW WKS SONG TITLE ARTIST / SITE
1 1 7 Up + Up
[4TH week @ # 1]
Colton Dixon
2 2 9 Count ‘Em Brandon Lake
3 3 22 Beautiful Life Pat Barrett
4 4 24 Somebody Like Me Caleb & John Ft. Cain
5 5 18 Take You At Your Word Cody Carnes
6 8 3 Worship Through It Tasha Layton Ft. Chris Brown
7 9 5 Won’t He Do It We The Kingdom
8 6 4 That’s Who I Praise Brandon Lake
9 7 4 People Like Us Micah Tyler Ft. Emerson Day
10 1 Love’s Got A Way Andrew Ripp

# 1 This Week In:
2023 – “Praise You Anywhere” – Brandon Lake
2022 – “Good Morning Mercy” – Jason Crabb
2021 – “What If” – Matthew West
2020 – “God So Loved” – We The Kingdom
2019 – “Nobody (But Jesus)” – Casting Crowns Ft. Matthew West
2018 – “Only Jesus” – Casting Crowns
2017 – “The Gospel” – Ryan Stevenson

TASHA LAYTON – Congratulations to Tasha as she scores a # 1 smash nationwide with the most-listened-to (audience) Christian song of the week. She’s also Top 5 in the number of radio spins this past week, and she’s up 2 notches to # 6 on my chart. Every time I hear it on the radio – I like it even more. She and Chris Brown (of Elevation Worship) sound great together, as they “Worship Through It”.

TOP 40 OF 400 – Next Monday I present my 400TH weekly chart of this current era (since February 2017). My Top 40 hits cumulatively of the first 400 weeks will be presented here next Tuesday October 15TH 2024 at 3 AM U.S. East Coast time. #Top40Of400.

SPOTIFY – You can hear “My Top 10 Hits” anytime by accessing my CountUp playlist on Spotify. All 10 hits are there from top to bottom. You can hear them in order from # 1 to # 10, or you can shuffle them. My playlist will be updated every weekend (usually before the actual chart is presented here on Mondays). You can link to it here.

Your likes, follows, and comments are always appreciated. Thank You for being part of my online ministry to share God’s Good News and win souls for Christ through His music. God used loud music on the radio to reach me in August of 2006. I’ve been testifying about Him ever since.

Be blessed my friends !  May our God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in Him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.

All rights reserved (c) 2024 Christopher M. Day, CountUp

Categories
Bible Blogging Christian Church God Ministry Scripture

Sunday Scripture

Greetings my friends. It is Sunday October 06TH 2024, and this is the day that our LORD has made. Let us rejoice. Let us be glad in it. Let us celebrate this great new day of believing, following, trusting, loving, and being more like our Lord + Savior Jesus Christ. Let us love our neighbor as ourself.

This recently appeared on one of my Facebook feeds. It caught my attention. It made me stop scrolling for a while. I thought that it was interesting and intriguing. I don’t know how factual it is, or how such data could be compiled, but I spent a little bit of time reviewing it and thinking about it. And now I’m blogging about it.

Firstly – I was surprised that the map was overwhelmingly red – representing Evangelical Protestant. (That’s what I am – if you’re going to label me.)

I grew up in Maryland, and I expected it to be in blue – representing Catholic – just like Pennsylvania, Delaware, D.C., and nearly every state to the north of it. In fact – I expected the map to be overwhelmingly blue. For some reason I thought that Catholic was the dominant religion here in the U.S. I think that most Catholics believe that too. I also think that most Catholics think that all other religious denominations are bogus, or at the very least – weird. (But that’s for another blog post.)

According to the map – Mainline Protestants outnumber Evangelical Protestants up in the Dakotas and adjacent Minnesota and Iowa. And there’s a statistical tie in Maryland.

Mainline Protestant is a new term for me. I’ve never heard of it before in my 18 years of salvation. So – I did a little bit of research. As far as I can tell – Mainline Protestants don’t always take the Bible literally, and they don’t always believe that it is God’s Word. They believe that there are other ways to salvation forever other than through Jesus. They believe that good deeds will get them into Heaven. They have incorporated some of the modern ways of the world into their churches and their daily living. To me – Mainline Protestant seems closer to Catholic than it does to Evangelical Protestant.

Jesus replied – “I tell you the truth – unless you are born again – you cannot see the Kingdom of God.” (John 3:3 NLT)

My testimony is featured each week here on #SundayScripture – whether it’s part of a sermon, or just me writing about the events of the past week. Hopefully it encourages you and inspires you to seek the Lord, and get closer to Him with each new day.

If you wish to learn more about the God I know then stay tuned to #SundayScripture. The best is yet to come !

Thank you for reading my blog for this day, and may:

The LORD bless you, and keep you.
The LORD make His face shine upon you, and be gracious to you.
The LORD lift up His countenance upon you, and give you peace.

In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. AMEN.

All rights reserved (c) 2024 Christopher M. Day, CountUp

Categories
Blogging Driving Food Geography History Military Travel Weather

Fort Meade Florida

Welcome back to #TravelThursday. Last week I wrote all about Fort Meade – briefly mentioning the military post and town in Anne Arundel County Maryland that I grew up near in the 1970s. It’s named after U.S. Civil War Union Major General George Gordon Meade (1815-1872). And then I wrote about the other place that’s named after him – 30 miles away from my current home here in the Heartland of Florida.

Fort Meade Florida is a small historic city in rural southwestern Polk County. It’s the oldest city in the county – with origins dating back to 1849. I was planning to visit the city last Thursday, but that’s the day that Hurricane Helene passed us by a couple hundred miles out in the Gulf Of Mexico. (We enjoyed a partly sunny and windy day on that day – with maximum sustained winds of about 25 to 35 MPH and occasional wind gusts over 50 MPH. Very little rain (about a half-inch). Minimum barometric pressure – 998 MB.)

So guess what ? Fort Meade is on my schedule again for today. I hope to visit the Historical Society Of Fort Meade Florida Museum and talk with the docents of their historic house there as a fellow docent of a historic house. After that I hope to enjoy a nice big lunch at Kiki’s Egg House along Charleston Avenue (U.S. 17 through the city).

Fun Fact: Fort Meade is near the north-end of a series of historic cities, towns, and areas along rural U.S. 17 in the Heartland of Florida. The community of Homeland (once known as Bethel) is to the north of Fort Meade (and to the south of Bartow). Further south along U.S. 17 are Bowling Green, Wauchula, and Zolfo Springs in Hardee County, and Arcadia in DeSoto County. Both counties border Highlands County (my home) to the east.

Heading back eastward (and homeward) to the U.S. 27 corridor I may even make a stop at The Depot Museum in Avon Park before heading home. So – if all of that happens today – then this will become a 3-part series, and I’ll write all about it next#TravelThursday.

#CountUp & #TravelThursday is on Facebook. I also run the Sebring Historical Society Facebook page.

All rights reserved (c) 2024 Christopher M. Day, CountUp