Showing posts with label Iowa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iowa. Show all posts

Sunday, September 9, 2012

A play: The Drawer Boy

September 7, 2013
Amana RV Park
Amana, Iowa

Last day in Amana, slept in and then did the tourist thing, only bought two things; a new hat for me, pictures later, and two very, very nice knives.



Amana has two theatre groups, we went to the Iowa Theatre Artists Company and saw "The Drawer Boy, by Michael Healey.  This was an extremely funny, serious and emotional play, at least it was for me.  The actors were superb.  The play takes place in the 1960's about two older farmers and a young kid that comes to their farm and ends up staying with them so he can learn about farming and then right a play about farming.  The play originally premiered in 1999 in Muraille, Toronto.  If in your travels you ever hear of it, "The Drawer Boy", it is well worth the time to see it.  Of course we were not allowed to take pictures but I did get a picture before the play started.  The theatre is a small intimate 99 seat play house and was lot of fun.

 Of course this photo doesn't mean anything to my readers
 but when I read my journal in later years I will remember this setting


Tomorrow onto Elizabeth, Illinois

Be safe and have a blessed day, thanks for stopping by.

Nancy

Saturday, September 8, 2012

The Amana Tour

September 5 - 7, 2012
Amana RV Park
Amana, IA

Amana is a tourist town with lots of history.  We opted to take a three hour tour and was lucky enough to have Tom as our tour guide.

Amana lies in a very fertile valley, a little southwest of Cedar Rapids, on both sides of the Iowa River.  Go to http://amanacolonies.com/ for an excellent travel guide that you can view online.  I would never be able to describe the history and do it justice in a post.


They built a canal at one end of the colonies off the Iowa River and after it went through the town and turned the water mill the water went back into the River.  There has been so little raid that the canal had more water in it that the river because the canal is lower.

Looking one way out the window at the canal......


Looking the other way through the window as the canal heads towards a
dam and flour and woolen mill.

This is a typical Amana house, John Metz a tinsmith lives here.  
This was his parents house and where he was born 83 years ago and still lives here.

John's late wife made this, he said it's too complicated to take down and put away 
so he just keeps it up, lucky for us. 

These two chairs were made at the village furniture shop and given to John's parents when they were married.  The people in the Amana society back then lived in a communal society, they had no money they were given everything they needed.  They were assigned jobs as to what they were suited for, no money was exchanged.


Johns mother made this quilt.  Notice it is not pieced together but hand sewn in the pattern


Below are several quilting templetes.  
This is the one that was used on the above spread




This is a quilting table that John's mother used

Picture of John's mother and aunt quilting


John's tinsmith shop was in the basement.  This is a cake pan called "round star" and used for weddings or other special occasions and festivities. 
Unfortunately he does not sell anything here,  he only makes special order now and then.  Remember he is 83.

His father's man cave.  This room has not been touched in 20 years and John has left it just the same.  Many times men would gather to discuss whatever is was that these men discussed, and they would bring their choice of adult beverages put their name on the bottle and then leave it until next time.  This room was probably started back in the early 1900's



A typical window in the houses were called simply 9 over 6 and usually for the downstairs,
 the upstairs had 6 over 6 windows
(do you get it, 9 panes over 6 panes)

Our tour group standing outside one of the communal kitchens.  
The women would often come outside to work and gossip. 
 Notice the bench on the left.

Bench on the left

Picture of the women working outside the kitchen siting on that bench.  Notice they have something on their laps, its a cutting board with sides on it to keep from loosing anything

Two of the cutting boards along with other tools they used

Kitchen, in the middle is the wood burning oven/stove.  
The pan in the very front on the stove is a waffle iron.

A list of the different communal kitchens and how many people they were serving for each meal.  They were given three meals a day plus two snacks.  The snacks were a small mini meal.



This a modern kitchen as it had running water for the kitchen.  
This is a slanted board and called a "dry sink"

The oven


This large board was used for cutting noodles


It's a bread cutter


A potato ricer

The year above the name is 1887

The post office inside the store.  Sort of like Little House on the Prairie 



Inside the church.  Men sat entered from the door on the far side and then sat on the far side and women then came in on this side and sat on this side.  They went to church many times every day. These benches are from the mid 1850s

Just a close up of how they are held together

This is a picture of the floor in the middle of the church.  They use a variety of hard woods and not painted or varnished.  It's got a whitish glow to it because the benches and floor are scrubbed weekly with lye.  They just take a bucket of a misture of water and lye and throw it out and everything gets wet.  Note the small square in the wood plank, that is a drain.  So they just lift that piece of wood and the water and lye are swept down the drain.

Looking towards the front of the church, six elders sit on the benches but only one speaks.
The person giving us the history lesson is Tom our tour guide.


That's enough of the tour, tomorrow we visit the town and do the touristy thing and visit all the shops.

Thanks for stopping by, have a blessed day

Nancy

Friday, September 7, 2012

In search of a good danish and coffee

Sept 5 - 7, 2012
Amana, Iowa
aka The Amana Colonies
Amana RV Park
PA Park

Our drive today was mostly I-80 and we passed many, maybe 30 or 40 blades for wind generators.  I tried many times to come up with a decent picture and finally did.  They sure are big.

Picture out the window showing the farms here: wind generators, corn and beans.


On the way to Amana we stopped in Elk Horn, a small Danish farming community.  They are famous for the Dutch windmill.  It was brought here piece by piece in the 1850's.  The visitor center was a gift shop trying to sell all kinds of Danish stuff.  We wanted to go to the bakery for a coffee and a danish pastry but they didn't open until noon.


 The only place in town to get a danish and coffee was down the street at a little cafe/gas station place.  So we walked on down. We walked in the wrong door and there was a group of men sitting around a table all talking and having coffee and eating cookies and popcorn.  It was a daily ritual.
We talked to them for awhile, they were the nicest group of farmers you would every want to meet.  They come to discuss the no rain situation, price of corn, the moisture of the corn, price of  soy beans the size of the ear of corn, and a few lies here and there.  They plant corn and soy beans and never water them.  There were no sprinklers, no irrigation pipes anywhere.  The water level is very deep and not enough for the crops and not enough water in the rivers.  They just wait until it rains, which hasn't been very much the last few years.  I think they probably pray a lot too.


The men were a lot of fun to talk to, they wanted to know about our life on the road 
and we wanted to know about their life as a farmer.
(the cafe was through the door on the left)

The corn this year is only about two-thirds of what it should be, they don't harvest until the moisture is down to about 15%.  The corn is stored until they need to sell it, could be next month or a couple of months from now.

In the very back of the photo below is the door we came through and there was a table of ladies, having coffee, talking about their kids, the church pot luck, and knitting.  
Cute little place and we finally got a delicious danish pastry (a real danish pastry) and a cup of coffee.

We arrived at out campground with a few wrong turns, thanks to Gypsy (our GPS), but we made it.  We are surrounded by corn fields.

More later, time for a glass of wine and fix dinner.

Have a blessed day, thanks for stopping by.

Nancy


Thursday, September 6, 2012

Look out for the Swan

August 31 - Sept 5, 2012
Omaha, Nebraska
Offutt AFB Fam Camp


Labor Day 2012 in Omaha, Nebraska we thought it would be fitting to search out the sculptures titled Labor.   During the flood of 2011, the Missouri River practically covered the monuments and caused quite a bit of damage which cost nearly $100,000 to repair.  The sculptures are beautifut and were just rededicated several days ago.




The monuments are very busy, take a minute to look at them.
The statue in the front is holding a hammer, the flood came up to his wrist.




A new plaque when the monuments were rededicated 
Notice in the picture the river waters were almost up the hand in this statue. 


Unfortunately I cut off the hand holding the hammer which is where the water almost reached.
Joe is 6 foot, so you can tell they had a lot of water here.  The river is in the background, this whole platform is a good 50 feet above the river.

This part of the sculpture marks the high water mark, the upper mark is flood of 1952 and the lower mark is the flood of  2011, remember Joe is 6 foot and the platform is 50 feet above the river.

This suspension bridge is on a trail and you can walk or ride your bike across. 
 It is the largest walking suspension bridge in the US  
You can kind of see how low the land is and not much levee.  The water really spread out.



It's a double suspension and sort of has a long S curve

Looking down stream from the top of the walking bridge



Looking up stream, that is a lot of water when the river floods, I just can't imagine all that water

Looking down river and towards Omaha. 
 The building, a restaurant, with the red roof was of course flooded, was where we had lunch

Another view leaning out over the railing of the bridge


After lunch we drove in to town and stopped at this park and watched this beautiful sweet little swan.

Well, it turned out that HE was not a little sweet thing.  
He suddenly took off, and look at those wings, a little threatening. 
Actually, more than threatening, you will see how aggressive he is in the next pictures


He apparently doesn't like Canada geese.

Look at the size of him, you know these are full grown geese.

Well he got rid of them, now back to the water.  Look at the size of his feet.

He just spotted more Canada geese and there he goes


There were two Canada geese and they had to flap their wings in the water to get moving faster then on land they were running.

He is telling the geese to stay out of HIS water



About 100 yards or so down the lake these geese 
have no idea what might be soon coming their way


The swan was all by himself, no mate, maybe that's why he was so aggressive.

That's it, on to Amana Colonies, Iowa tomorrow.

Drive safe and have a blessed day.

Thanks for stopping by.

Nancy