They had cheap beer, and it was cold, and the liquor drinks were about the same as anywhere else. I told him I'd hit the gun show next weekend. When I walked in,an old Festus at the bar asked me " Do you have a knife or a gun ?" I said "No", and he asked me if I wanted to buy one of each. It looks like a scarey place, lots of pickups, outside with obvious redneck signification, like mudflaps sayin' "Hell No We Ain't Fergettin'!", and "Dern Tootin' I'm a Rebel ! ". One, called, appropriately enough, Cracker's, is decorated in, what the Savannah Bar Review called, "Confederate porno ". 21, going towards Effingham county, there are two serious redneck bars. The ones elsewhere, well, for you out-of-towners, be careful. The ones on Riverstreet are safe, comfortable places, often rife with tourists, and college kids. The thing with Savannah bars, with the exception of the ones on Riverstreet, is, you never could tell exactly what kind of place they would be. The later are their own special category, and, oftentimes, weren't necessarily redneck bars. It covers fern bars, sports bars, gay bars, even dives, and so-called "sidewinder joints".
I have two friends there who wrote a book called " The Savannah Bar Review ", and it details most all of the watering holes in the Savannah area. In fact, I wouldn't be doing anything original, even, with this subject.
A lot has been written about Savannah, and some of it's even true. Well, Mizz Opheliadickwell got me on this thread, so, here goes.