Lunch and Snack head south to Tennessee.
The cows make a stop at the Memphis Visitor Center where they encountered a bronze statue of bluesman B.B. King.
Lunch and Snack find an unusual mosaic egg welcoming visitors to Memphis.
As the sun goes down on downtown Memphis, the cows stop at Sun Records Studios where Elvis recorded his first single.
Lunch really didn't want to know what the main course was at the world famous Charles Vergo's Rendezvous Charcoal Ribs barbecue restaurant in downtown Memphis.
Time for some moos and blues! Lunch and Snack visit Beale Street, the home of Memphis Blues.

Lunch picked up a Fender Telecaster and tried to serenade Snack outside the Beale Street blues clubs.
The cows find their blues groove in the Rum Boogie Cafe. Snack collected some pretty beads for being so charming.
The cows share a somber moment outside the facade of the Lorraine Motel -- the site where civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. The building is now the National Civil Rights Museum.
At the home of the King of Rock and Roll, the cows wait outside of Graceland, Elvis Presley's mansion.
The Lisa Marie, Elvis' private jet, is featured at one of several Graceland museums devoted to the world of Elvis.
The cows couldn't resist a short jaunt south to Tunica Resorts, Miss., to visit some of the casinos. This is the Horseshoe where Keith and Nancy had dinner. A cluster of casinos have become a tourist haven in the Mississippi Delta region.
Lunch and Snack stop to admire the Mississippi River and a group of barges parked at New Madrid, Mo. The town was the site of the worst series of earthquakes recorded in the Lower 48 back in 1811-1812. It seems so peaceful now.
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