City Heydays

Dine on history and grits

Silver Skillet

Location: Silver Skillet

Date taken: October 28, 2012

You can read about the history of the Silver Skillet on the restaurant’s menu, website or even walls. From the horse prints, good luck charms carried over from the first owner, to the autographed poster from Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, the stories and praise for the Silver Skillet are numerous. But, if you really want to know what to expect at this 14th street Southern diner, check out the menu. When the menu categories include “Syrupy Things” and “Biscuit Specialities,” you know the meal will satisfy Southern tastebuds. Don’t be discouraged by the line out the door on weekends. It moves fast. This is not your leisurely brunch place. Eat, enjoy and let the next person have your booth.


Run off and join the circus

Hula hoop

Location: Circus Camp tent atPlay Day at Candler Park

Date taken: September 22, 2012

As a kid, I never dreamed of running off and joining the circus (the cliché dream/threat of adolescence), but I’d like to think I could have. My grandfather loved taking us to the circus. He would come visit, and we would head downtown to the Omni Coliseum to see the Ringling Brothers & Barnum & Bailey Circus. The circus had the normal attractions — tight rope walking, tigers, elephants, clown cars, cotton candy and a ringmaster in a top hat — but my favorite part occurred before the circus lights came on. We would park down on the lowest level of the parking deck next to the Omni … right next to the train tracks. And as we found our way into the coliseum, we would pass by the circus train and try to catch a glimpse of an elephant grazing on dinner or a clown out of costume. It was tempting to try and sneak aboard and become a part of the circus.


Stand as close as you can to your favorite band

Candler Park Fall Fest

Location: Candler Park Fall Fest

Date taken: October 13, 2012


Race a bed through the streets

Bed race

Location: Furniture Bank of Metro Atlanta‘s annual bed race at Atlantic Station

Date taken: October 13, 2012

If you are working on a “bucket list” or “things to do before I die” list, then I suggest going ahead and adding to it “race a bed.” Each fall, the Furniture Bank’s fundraising event gives Atlantans a chance to do something unique. Jump on a bed. Sure, that’s easy. Make a bed. You probably do that every day. But racing a bed through the streets … that’s one of those things you have to do at least once. So, sign up your team of 5 people (one rider, four racers). Come up with a theme (Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Bed Thieves, Breakfast in Bed, Bed Bugs, etc.). Then put on your helmets and start running. Yes, helmets are required — beds on wheels move fast. People fall down. People fall off.


Find a perch to watch a parade


Location: Little 5 Points Halloween Festival and Parade

Date taken: October 20, 2012

The best thing about the Little 5 Points Halloween Parade is not the official parade itself — instead, the best part is the parade of dressed up people who walk up and down Moreland and Euclid Avenues.  Kids and adults of all ages debut their Halloween costumes early at the Little 5 Festival. My favorite part of the day is picking a spot early in the afternoon, bringing a chair or spreading out a blanket and enjoying people watching. The parade, which features neighborhood businesses, can be entertaining as well (depending on the year). But, the residents and visitors who embrace the spirit of Halloween are the highlight of this annual event.


Go out and play

Soccer

Location: Atlanta Youth Soccer Association’s Howard Field

Date taken: September 22, 2012

What’s your favorite sport to play? What sport do you want to try? I guarantee there’s a group of people in Atlanta already getting together and playing it. Indoor soccer. Outdoor soccer. Co-ed soccer. Football. Dodgeball. Softball. Handball. Basketball. Volleyball. Ice hockey. Roller hockey. There’s a website with a list of tables for air hockey. Want to play in a disc golf tournament? Atlanta has that. What about a Saturday morning playing croquet? You can do that with the Atlanta Malleteers. Want to ride around a velodrome? Just head to East Point.


Take a history tour

Margaret Mitchell typewriter

Location: Party with the Past at the Margaret Mitchell House & Museum

Date taken: September 26, 2012

The name Margaret Mitchell House is sort of misleading for the large brick house that sits at the corner of Peachtree Street and 10th Street. Mitchell, a native of Atlanta and author of Gone With the Wind, never owned the house or occupied all of it. Her space in the home was Apt. 1, a tiny, one-bedroom apartment located on the bottom floor and facing Crescent Ave. Mitchell, who lived there with her husband for many years, referred to the building as the “The Dump”. Despite its negative nickname, this was place where Mitchell wrote her best-selling novel. Take a tour of the house and you’ll see the restored apartment and her typewriter (shown here). But the most interesting part of the tour is learning about the author herself — her career as a reporter, her uneasiness with fame, her work to provide scholarship to Morehouse students and the story of her untimely death.