tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1081081287261436733.post8078471254095482898..comments2023-05-26T07:28:13.239-05:00Comments on Local News from Jackson County, Florida: Eat Your Heart OutTimes Staffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12344385450529855052noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1081081287261436733.post-79796720583952825502011-01-04T22:08:58.558-06:002011-01-04T22:08:58.558-06:00Don't forget about the Lee's Motel and res...Don't forget about the Lee's Motel and restaurant. We would mainly eat there after church on Sunday. They were across from the National Guard Amory.Bert Davishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11933972022348534738noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1081081287261436733.post-70102697630784982052009-09-30T14:44:04.117-05:002009-09-30T14:44:04.117-05:00That article was full of wonderful reminders for a...That article was full of wonderful reminders for a Panama City native who began an important phase of his life in Jackson County. I've been a 'caver' since starting in the caves in and around the Caverns State Park as a High School Junior in 1967. I am still a caver, and am a Life Member of the National Speleological Society for many years. The best memories of Jackson County eating places I have surround the Nick Nack Nook, a place that was surprisingly tolerant of grubby college-age cavers. My friend and caving buddy Clark Whitehorn and I met Dr. Merlin Tuttle, the founder of Bat Conservation International, in the Nook in 1970, while he was doing graduate school dissertation research on the Gray Bat, which had a maternity cave nearby. We recognized each other as cavers by the National Speleological Society patches on our muddy Levi jackets. I returned to the restaurant while on a trip from Houston in the mid-1990s to introduce my twin daughters to some of my first caves. <br /><br />Roger Moore<br />Houston, TexasAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02205893220965456084noreply@blogger.com