Our travels have provided a lot of "lessons." One being, trying to find the "typical" geographical area or region is a waste of time, as are your preconceived notions about local/regional culture. Our case study for today class is the State of Floribama. Treating the area as unique is not without a reason. Historically it was West Florida, one time Spanish, one time British, and unofficially, perhaps, a colony of the Republic of Barataria. This was a bay in Louisiana used by privateers/pirates, most famous the Lafite brothers.
The Alabama portion is, for sake of argument, bounded by Mobile Bay in the west, the Gulf of Mexico in the South, Interstate 10 to the North and the Florida border to the East. WAIT! you say. What about Mobile? I will weasel and reserve judgment but for everyday life Eastern Shore people (and you see vehicle decals and such to this effect) don't need to go to Mobile. It appears that they are more likely to go east to Pensacola for shopping.
The area delineated above is Baldwin County which is rather diverse. It is certainly a tourist/vacation destination. The Gulf Coast of Alabama is much the same as Florida and Mississippi, continuous condos and beach houses. The coast of the bay is mostly residential with some park/refuge lands and commercial fishing. The town/city of Gulf Shores is concentrated "beach" business. The Bay has a mix of fishing towns, Bon Secour, and quaint artsy-fartsy places like Fairhope and Daphne. Of note is Magnolia Springs which maintains much of its turn-of-the-century "feel." The town of Foley and others north along highway 59 are "working" towns established by the railroads and everyday commerce.
Magnolia Farms RV Park, where we are, was part of a FEMA trailer park established due to Hurricane Katrina. Before that it was probably a cotton field, if the cotton fields that surround it are a hint. The snowbird flock dominate the population and most of the rigs with Alabama plates are northern escapees. I imagine many of the people in the area are incomers as southern dialect is not all that usual. It is similar to retiree/snowbird areas in Florida.
So why here? Weather of course. Also we had covered most of Seacoast Georgia and Northeast Florida and needed some new quests. These will be posted here as they happen. We took a break for the holidays to let those with "vacations" deal with the traffic. Another major draw is FRESH SEAFOOD. There are many outlets of just off the boat (they swear) fish and shrimp.
(edit 1/12/17) The fenced in area behind Denise is the "dog park" and NOT as suggested by a correspondent an area for a cage fight as much as I love to watch two attractive women beat the **** out of each other. Can anyone tell me why anyone thinks that is "entertaining?"