Wet and Wonderful – day 3

Today was a rough one — but worth sticking it out through the gloominess and downpours.  I’m glad I didn’t bail for home.  The day began with alternating rain and fog and clouds.  So if grey is your favorite color, you’re going to love this post.

I was inspired by primemover88’s photo from 1991… http://www.flickr.com/photos/10520947@N08/3997877249/ … to see if the building still existed.  I came close to not going since Rainelle was so far into nowhere and not leading me to other things on my list.  But I figured the pouring rain… and Rainelle… it was meant to be.

Sure enough, the building was still there:

Just as I finished taking photos, the owner popped outside to see what I was up to.  He showed me this old postcard which was taken around the time the station was built (circa 1937):

Note the tower and detail above the door that were gone by the time of primemover’s photo.  The owner told me stories of the lunch room (on the right behind the pumps) — and just out of the frame at right – a bus station building that’s gone now.  He said that there were heated underground pipes that extended over the whole lot in front of the station that kept it free from snow.  The building is for sale now and I’m really hoping it finds a use soon.

Here’s a fun one from Alderson.  In case you don’t instantly know what that “sculpture” is…

… Stuart’s other sign should help you:

A distressed Deco building in Ronceverte:

The Beer and Eat Tavern in Lewisburg:

Time for a break from all this roadside overload?

 

A pitstop in the Monongahela National Forest.  If you haven’t been introduced before — here are my four roadies, left to right:  Fix, Gremlin, Sputnik & Gripper.  Yes, there a huge part of every roadtrip.

A few outtakes which more accurately show their distinct personalities.  Fix is always ready for a nap and Grem always ready for a hunt:

Nik is the wacko; Grip is the wise old owl.  Grip’s faraway look is because she’s blind — and listening to my every word:

 

Nik is addicted to running and balls.  Here he’s doing laps while Sparkle airs out:

 

Grip has been overly rewarded (treats) for her jumping trick.  Seems every time I turn around, there she is boing-ing away.  And of course, I have to reward some more.

 

Here Grem is digging her way to China in search of some critter beneath the ground.  Which is far better than trying to run away to China (too many heart-stopping episodes on earlier roadtrips that some of you may recall):

 

and Fixie waiting for us in the van.  “It’s cold and damp — I’ll just wait right here.  You guys go ahead.”

 

In the afternoon, the skies turned blue.  But of course, deep in the mountains, I was near nothing photo-worthy for a couple of hours.  And by the time I got to my “subjects”, there wasn’t much daylight left.  I have no idea about tomorrow’s weather.  What does 50% chance of rain mean?  It means they haven’t a clue.

More dreariness.  From Northfork — the Algoma Coal and Coke Company Store from the 1940s.  Later a health clinic, but now abandoned.  On the National Register… but not looking good.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algoma_Coal_and_Coke_Company_Store

 

And so, the other downer of the day.  In the late afternoon, Sparkle’s “check engine” light came on.  Well, that’s why I’m doing this test trip — to work out any kinks, right?  The blood drained from my body since I was deep in the mountains.  But 98% of West Virginia seems to be deep in the mountains and nowhere.  Nothing I could do but hold my breath.  After about an hour, I reached civilization.  But civilization does you no good when it’s 4pm on a Saturday and there are no mechanics open.  And I didn’t notice any Sears or Firestones or those other handy weekend alternatives anywhere.  What can you do, but just keep a-going.

And just what does “check engine soon” mean — like in the next ten minutes — or like next week sometime?

But everything seems absolutely fine and normal.  No change in sound, feel, power – nothing.  Temperature gauge normal.  I checked the oil — perfectly fine.  So I’ve driven for several hundred miles and maybe four hours now — nothing.  I’m thinking it could be what happened before:  bad gas (I have a full tank) — or some false alarm thing.  I’ll be on the lookout for a garage of any sort tomorrow.  Surely, Huntington must have a Firestone-y place open (off to Google search after this blog post) on a Sunday, maybe.  Or else I’ll just have to grip that steering wheel and drive us back to Brooklyn with that damned light staring at me tomorrow night.

Which brings us to the end-of-trip reminder.  Since I’ll be interstate-ing it back to NYC after tomorrow’s shooting, I won’t be uploading/posting to Flickr or the blog until I get home on Monday.  Or more likely Tuesday.  I’ll shoot a quickie post on Monday morning just to let you know that we survived whatever mechanical crap has developed and have landed safely back home.

Let’s close with this sign which is appropriately what I need right now after a full day of gloomy skies and car-stress.  I’ll give you two versions since I’ve exhausted my decision-making skills for the day.  I’m usually a tight cropper — but you all would probably prefer #2 which is more in context.  Nighty-night…

Wild and Wonderful — part 2

Another great day in the under-rated state of West Virginia.  Many hours of pure driving between cities & shooting.  And I fear this might be the last I see of the sun.  Weather forecasts for the whole state are non-stop rain, hour after hour, for the entire weekend.  Uh oh.  It’s raining as I write this at 11pm.  So…  I might be heading back to Brooklyn early if that’s how it seems in the morning.  Maybe I’ll give it a few hours at least before hitting the interstate.

Highs in the upper 80s — so much for spring.  I found lots of water for the dogs to play in.  Fast moving rivers so I carefully choose the shallowest and safest spots.   I haven’t turned the A/C on yet.  Partly worried that there will be something wrong with it (again) and partly just trying to give hard-working Sparkle some slack.  I’ll have to test that A/C though before venturing off to the Southwest next month.

Let’s start with Webster Springs.  No restaurant, no hotel… but there’s still this sign:

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From Cowen — this place is now known as the Hilltop Diner.  I’m glad they left the sign alone:

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It was a big day for vitrolite (i.e., glass tile facades).  This storefront in Richwood.  The glass reflects the blooming tree across the street.  The sad sign in the window was a “thanks loyal customers for many years…” sort of thing and identified this as a former J.C. Penney store.

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On to Charleston where I spent a good chunk of the day.  The clouds rolled in around 3pm but at least I got a lot done before that.

I’m happy to report that this place is still in business:

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On to one of my fave places in town — yepper not only vitrolite exterior…

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… but loads more inside.  This entire menu board-y structure — all faced with the stuff:

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Terrazzo floor — with this lone bulls-eye detail in roughly the center of the room:

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Around the corner on a side street, more shiny glass — cream (flesh?) and black; and to the left — black & white:

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Another favorite stop when I’m in town — the Peanut Shoppe — a former Planters Peanut store.  A great little video about the place:
http://www.wchstv.com/traveling/2007/twv070816.shtml

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The peanut roaster (still in use):

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And my bag ‘o Mixed Nuts — sold to me by “Debbie” in the video —

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I’ve got a bunch of Planters Peanut shops at this page if you’re interested:
http://agilitynut.com/eateries/nuts.html

 

Let’s move on to Beckley where I’m calling it a night.
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And the not-to-be-missed King Tut Drive-in — which I’m happy to report was jammed full of customers:

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And the perfect opportunity for some food porn.  I’ve been such a good girl — for the past month, 100% salads and fruit.  No sugar and no processed nothing.  Time to indulge!  This is King Tut’s banana cream pie.  All the pies made fresh daily (or so says the sign).  It looks huge in this photo but really it wasn’t all that big — but unreal good:

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OK then  — let’s see what the weather gods give us tomorrow.

 

And don’t forget my faithful blog-followers, there’s more photos from today over at the Flickr stream:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/agilitynut/

 

Testing, testing… in West Virginia

Hey there!!  How have you all been?

The dogs and I have been prisoners of The City for five long months.  Time to get out & make sure all is well with Sparkle (the van) and Dee (the camera) before we head off on a 39-day trip to NM & AZ at the end of April.

So.  West Virginia has been on my list of Most Neglected States for a while now.  I’ve shot some stuff here before — but not in a long time and not in any major way.  I only have four days before I have to get back to work.  And I hear that the weather may turn nasty/rainy on Saturday & Sunday.  Which might send me home early.   But let’s make the most of what of it.

The statues in the photo above are probably immediately recognizable to most of you roadside fans.  They are installed next to Roadside America in Shartlesville, PA — and wave to motorists on I-78.  It was foggy and just barely light enough to shoot them this morning.

As usual on these trips, I got off work at 2am and hit the road at 3am.  Only two hours of sleep at a closed gas station in PA — determined to get to WV when the sun came out.  So I won’t be writing any memorable prose tonight.  Got through today on adrenaline and Sheetz coffee — tomorrow night’s when I’ll really feel the pain.

Before we dive into some of today’s photos, let me start with the usual notes for the newbies on the bus.  All the photos here at my blog are “clickable” (when you click on the them, you get a larger photo).  I post nightly during these roadtrips to both Flickr (the agilitynut account) & this blog — different photos in both places.   After cropping & tweaking some selected photos, I post to Flickr first (usually 10pm or so) and then start working on the blog (usually posting after midnight — or if I pass out, the following morning.

On to today… Foggy and grey this morning and then lots of sun.  And heat — 87 degrees or so according to the bank clocks I saw.  Loads of spring flowers and trees in bloom — white, yellow, pink purple.  Don’t blink — this is gonna be a quickie spring it seems — after the Winter That Wasn’t (thank god).

OK then — on with the show.   A few shots from Martinsburg, WV:

At first glance, I thought this might have been a former Fotomat — but the roof is wrong — and the building seems narrower to me:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/roadsidenut/5653617580/

So, I don’t know if this was a rival photo developing place or something else.  Just maybe always a hot dog place — the letters seem funky and old enough:

A two-fer:  a former gas station and a giant crab:

I don’t know what the deal is — this firefighter statue stands in front of a Goodyear Tire store in Charles Town:

The Hayfield Motel (in Hayfield, VA) —

The rooms have individual parking bays.  Perhaps, there were originally garage doors.  The roofline is a neat feature (click to enlarge):

From Shanks — this Coke sign is abandoned — no business at all below it.  Just overgrown weeds & trees —  and a ditch I almost fell in trying to get this shot.

From Moorefield — Puffenberger’s (!) Jewelry.  The sunny side of the sign looked nicer — but that clock didn’t have hands like this side:

On to Seneca Rocks — a nice painted wood sign of an Indian Maiden.  At the Indian Village Campground — which is part of Yokum’s Vacationland:
http://www.yokum.com/

And lastly — in Franklin (I think) — a couple of most-likely rentable cottages — now appearing to be full-time residences.  No smaller than my NYC apartment — I could easily live here but would like a bit more acreage for the dogs to run.

That’s it for tonight — lights out.  Hopefully, more sun tomorrow.  On the agenda:  Charleston, more mountain cities and southern WV.  Til then…

Our New ‘Hood

As promised, here’s a quick peek at our new neighborhood.  These photos were taken last weekend just after our freaky October snowstorm.  The snow only lasted a couple of days.  The dogs and I have moved a couple of weeks ago.  Less than a mile away, still Brooklyn, but technically from Park Slope to Prospect Heights.  With all the headaches and expense of moving a hundred miles away.  But it’s all done, unpacked and organized, and I hope to not go through it again for a long time.

The new place is a fraction of the size of the previous.  But with some perks including an el-e-va-tor for the first time in my life.  And, most importantly, it’s right across the street from The Park (Prospect Park) where I spend every morning with the dogs.  A mandatory ritual with my high energy dogs for the past 15 years or so.  Before 9am, dogs are allowed off leash in a good chunk of the nearly 600 acres.  More about all that here if you’re interested:
http://www.fidobrooklyn.org/

So, here’s my block — the glassy, brand new Richard Meier building with million dollar condos:
http://www.onprospectpark.com/
If you ask me, pretty dull, for such a cutting edge architect.  I’m on the corner on the right in the little tan building:

 

Although my building has sort of a streamline look, all the records I’ve found say 1961.  The entrance door pulls certainly fit the era:

 

My block abuts the quite grand, Grand Army Plaza with one of Brooklyn’s most famous landmarks — the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Arch from the 1890s:
http://www.brooklynlibrary.org/civilwar/cwdoc101.html

 

Just north of the arch is the nifty Bailey Fountain (not on this time of year).  The standing figures look towards Manhattan:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bailey_Fountain

 

And just off the circle is our park entrance — with a much smaller arch — the Endale Arch.  Just through it marks the point where the leashes come off each morning.  This morning though — flooded and downed trees & branches:
http://www.museumplanet.com/tour.php/nyc/pp/36

 

Just across the street from my building, the stunning Art Deco library:

 

Some not-famous architectural details from my block:

 

While Park Slope is famous for its brownstones and limestones, there’s plenty of that here in “the Heights” as well.  Functioning gas lights as well (see foreground):

 

Signs?   Not so many here — or much elsewhere in NYC for that matter.  Sure, Manhattan has some neon — but sadly not nearly the quality or quantity of even a medium-sized city anywhere in America.  Here’s a super cute plastic sign a few blocks from me at King Laundry:

 

And some other fun signs at my local hardware store.  Which smells like a real hardware should, with super friendly staff, and loose nails for sale by the pound.  They opened in 1964:

The neon skeleton (window) signs might be from the 1960s — or they might be much more recent — but still, all the hardware classics are here:

The hammer works in 3-part animation:

 

Exploring the main shopping street in the slush last weekend, I encountered this little thing parked on a newspaper machine:

 

Three Mexican restaurants, a big beer store, a friendly auto mechanic — I’m set!  And I discovered what I believe are the world’s best bagels.  And god knows, I’ve had thousands!  From the “Olde Brooklyn Bagel Shop”, this is a multi-grain with vegetable cream cheese:

 

The dogs are adjusting well.  Although the view sucks compared to the one we had, there’s no street noise and still loads of sun for basking:

 

OK — one more gratuitous doggie photo — Nik thinking he’s oh so invisible:

 

Hope you enjoyed the quickie tour.  I’m back at work on the website, adding the rest of the Oklahoma photos.  Hoping to finish them by Thanksgiving and then start on the Upper Midwest photos.  No roadtrips on the calendar til the next biggie in Spring.  But I’m sure there will be some little getaway before that and I’ll be blogging to you then.

Quickie Trip: Mission Accomplished

I took a little trip up to the Lake George area (Upstate New York) today to take care of an “important mission”.  While I was there, I grabbed a some photos since it was a gloriously sunny day.   We’ve been having a very mild fall so far — until last night when the temps really dropped in The City and there was snow Upstate.  The trees still have all their leaves in the Lake George area — not even peak colors yet:

The pretty contrast of snow and fall foliage made the 10 hour drive almost worth it (8 hours on the Thruway and 2 hours of NYC rush hour traffic).  The dogs got some good running in the brisk Adirondack air (38 degrees) — not at all what we’re used to yet.

The mysterious “mission”?  It’s a long story.  To shorten, let’s just say that I’ve had a Muffler Man head in my possession for about 10 years.   When I read that the new owners were looking for The Head, I vowed to myself to return it the next time I was up that way (Lake Vanare).  I never did make it up there this year — but today was the day due to my residential downsizing (I moved last week, not far).  The Body has been repainted but the poor guy is still missing an arm and part of a foot.  Hopefully, with the Head, the owners will be further motivated to restore the statue.  The Body is wired and roped to a tree.  Here’s how it looked in 2010:

And today:

A side view which shows his missing arm and new paint job better:

Nobody was around when I arrived at the campgrounds.  So, I put The Head in a safe but obvious place.  Hopefully, the owners will be thrilled to find it.  It’s in excellent shape — exactly as it was when it was found lying by the side of the road.  He’s been a good companion but now he’s back in the forest where he belongs:

It was hard to get a good shot of it– so here’s the same head of one of his relatives over in Lake George from today:

If you’re unfamiliar with these statues, I’ve got lots of photos of them over at my site in the Giants section:
http://www.agilitynut.com/giants/main.html

And RoadsideAmerica has lots of info about them:
http://www.roadsideamerica.com/muffler/

OK so let’s move on to some other subjects.  Although I’ve been to Lake George and thereabouts many times (my dog agility competition days), there were still some nice surprises.  Like this former train station:

And this Rexall drug store with orange vitrolite.  I can’t remember ever seeing this glass in orange before.  The Rexall letters appear to be a decal-type application:

I was devastated to see the Surfside on the Lake sign like this:

Just last year, it was looking spiffy:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/agilitynut/5006954726/
The motel’s website is still up:
http://www.surfsideonthelake.com/

and I didn’t see any “Available” or “For Sale” signs.  So maybe they are “fixing” the sign (repairing or, ugh, altering).

The Surfside is one of very few old motels left.  Thankfully, OOO’Sullivan’s looks like it’s still going strong.  I posted a photo of it here at this blog last year — but since today was much better weather, I’ll include it again:

Here are a couple less-photographed motel signs in Lake George:

I’m betting the Windsor Motel sign had ballies on top of the poles.  Lots of examples in the “Signs With Balls” group:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/1091399@N21/pool/


Moving down to Saratoga Springs — the Valley Acres Garden Center.   Despite the rusty/crusty sign, the place looked to be thriving.  That top part of the sign looks like it’s been smacked a time or two by a big truck:

A closed streamline-y car dealership:

And lastly, the Saratoga Diner sign — which is apparently lit at night:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/wendresma/4549924154/

I hope you enjoyed tagging along for this daytrip.  Not enough photos?  I posted a few others over at Flickr today:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/agilitynut/

It was nice to take a break from my laptop.  I’ve been working every free moment on getting last spring’s photos up at my site — haven’t started on the summer photos yet:
http://www.agilitynut.com/whatsnew.html

I’ll try to get you some photos of my new neighborhood in the next day or two if the weather’s nice.

Day 37: Home, Safe!

The slow, painful drive home continued on Sunday.  We arrived back in NYC a couple hours after Hurricane Irene’s passing.  Some downed trees in my neighborhood and lots of leaves.   NYC got off much easier than the Catskills where there are rivers cresting at about 20 feet right now.  After all the media drama, Irene was nothing more than a big rain storm here.  In the Park this morning, a few more downed trees and small lakes where there’s normally just grass.  The dogs back to their morning routine (running in the Park) — and I’ll be back to work tonight since the subways are running again.

Trip recap:  This was the most stressful trip I’ve ever taken because of all the mechanical problems.  I blame it on inept mechanics — not Sparkle.   The dealership in Grand Forks finally got it right — no more glitches after that.  For the most part, great weather.  Although it seemed we’d never even get to MN after all the early troubles in the trip, I managed to get through about 80% of my stack.  So that leaves about a week’s worth of stuff undone in WI & MN that will have to wait til a MT & WY trip, probably summer 2013.

 

Trip stats

days on the road:  36

photos for the website:  approx. 5,100

miles driven:  14,060

total spent on speeding tickets:  $205 (total of two – Ironwood & Manistique, MI; one verbal warning in WI)

total spent on gas:  $3,315

total spent on repairs:
$673 for an A/C compressor (which should be reimbursed, all or part, since the part was less than a month old)
$0 (fuel pump replaced for $995 but then reimbursed when it the fuses continued blowing)
$437 (for three frayed wires and an evaporator vent valve = the resolution of “check engine” light and fuse problem)

Expenses not kept track of:  oil changes/maintenance, motels, food, etc.

Memories, good times, and photos:   more than worth every penny!   And the dogs give the trip an A+.

If you’d like to help with the costs of these trips, the website, all that… no amount is too small, my Paypal account is the same as my email:  agilitynut@hotmail.com

***************************

Now, on with the final photos from Friday.

The morning started in Marshall — so here’s a couple of shots from the big hotel which, sadly, has been boarded up for years:

 

A nice mid-century bank in town:

One more from Marshall:

This one from Ghent:

 

At Brad’s Market in Minneota:

 

 

On to South Dakota.  I went to Prairie Village in Madison to check out the steam-powered, super rare Herschell-Spillman carousel.  A madhouse there since they were having a big tractor show.  Which turned out to be pretty interesting.  One of the stars — sputtering and whirring:

I know nothing about tractors but can easily understand the obsession with them:

 

 

From Freeman:

 

 

On to Yankton — a new city for me and one of the biggest reasons for the extra miles traveling SW of Minnesota even on the last day of shooting:

 

From Beresford.  The apostrophe probably a mistake, but no matter:

 

 

On to Sioux Falls for some reshooting from previous grey trips — and a few things not noticed or shot before:

 

 

Although this Burger Time building has a 1960s/1970s look, evidently this chain was founded in Fargo, ND in 1987.  I don’t know if any of the other ND/SD locations have this rootop triangle thingie:

 

 

More from Sioux Falls.  It was in the 90s today — so ice cream sounded like a good idea.  The B&G Milkyway rooftop sign has a tilted cone like Dairy Queen and Tastee-Freez.  But I don’t think this place was built as either of those.

I went with the Peach Avalanche — which was vanilla soft-serve with some “real” peach chunks.  Sorry bout the crappy photo — wasn’t going to shoot it but changed my mind in traffic.

 

 

Back in Minnesota — from Worthington.  These customized rubber mats are very rare now I think:

And they have a nice embossed plastic sign as well:

 

 

Last one for the trip — and I think it’s a kicker.  From St. James.   Art deco borders, great colors, and best of all — the loaf on top:


So, with this trip over, I’ll get back to work on the website in a day or two.  I’m only about halfway through adding the TX & OK photos from the spring.  Hoping to catch up with these two trips’ photos this winter.  Then, it will be time to start planning the next five-weeker.  Spring 2012, the dogs and I will be headed back to western TX so I can finish what I didn’t get to this year.   Then moving on to NM and AZ.  I’ll probably sneak off for a couple quickie trips this fall or winter.

You might want to check in now and then with the “Upcoming Trips” page here at the blog or the “What’s New” page at the website if you don’t want to miss these posts.  Thanks for tagging along with us.  Your comments and praises are much appreciated and give me a real boost.  It keeps me doing posting when I really should be sleeping.  I hope my photos and chatter encourage you to shoot more, travel more, and find art and value in the rusty, crusty, funky places and things that are rapidly disappearing.

Til the next adventure,

Debra Jane
Gripper, Fixie, Sputnik & Gremlin
Sparkle & Dee

Day 35 & 36: Playing it Safe in Pennsylvania

I’ve got lots of great stuff for you from Friday — much of it from SE South Dakota.  I know, I know.  The last day of the trip and what was I doing heading further west instead of east.  There was just some stuff there that I really wanted to shoot — and I knew it would be worth the additional miles.  So, after the final day of shooting on Friday, I started the interstate trek home.  A four-hour nap somewhere just shy of Wisconsin – and then back to I-90 and I-80 all day today.  It was exhausting stuff — all those night’s with little sleep really caught up to me.  The boredom of rolling hills and coffee had little impact.  I took about four quickie naps.  15 minute power naps, even with the dogs jumping around on my back, really helped a lot.  I could have arrived home tonight at 2am — but Irene has kept me away.

I followed the hurricane’s path all day today on the radio.  Earlier in the day, they were saying she would arrive in NYC around dinnertime.  But as the day wore on, the estimate ran later and later.  Now (9pm), they’re saying 7am.  It sounds like power loss is a possibility — not to mention blown out windows, floods, etc.  The mayor shut down the subway system at noon today and it won’t be resumed until Monday night.  Which means I have Monday off – yay!   When I heard that there might be tornadoes in NJ tonight, that was the clincher for me.  I’d rather not get me, a canine buddy, or hard-working Sparkle hit by a tree or power line.   I’ll just stay here in central PA and see what transpires overnight and tomorrow morning.  When it’s safe to return, I’ll get you that final batch of photos & the wrap-up post.

Day 34: Itty Bitty Farm Towns in SW Minnesota

Many miles between stops — bucolic farm land that has gotten pretty damned boring by this point in the trip.  And it’s just a reminder of what’s to come this weekend.  I remember when I was growing up they said freeways of the future would be something where you’d hook up your car or just get in a lane — and you’d be carried along automatically somehow.  What ever happened to that?

Let’s start with this building in St. Joseph.  Built in 1917 so it pre-dates Art Deco – but much in the same vein:

 

For you fiberglass fans out there — a giant fish in Rockville.  At Rockville Gas & Bait:

 

From Sauk Centre — stained glass and glass checkerboard:

Also Sauk Centre:

From the same building:

From Osakis — a cowboy at Osakis Meats & Deli.  I’ve seen a lot of cowboy statues in my time but this is a new one on me.  Similar to the bucking bronco type but obviously always a seated type.  I thought for a moment about doing a group shot of the dogs, me & this guy — but there was nobody around to take the photo.  More cowboy statues if you want ’em here:
http://agilitynut.com/giants/cowboys.html

 

Off to Alexandria.  I drove the three blocks to see what other kind of sign the Viking Motel might have — bummer, plastic.

 

Still Alexandria.  Fans of my Flickr stream can identify this one in a heartbeat.  A futzed-with Sinclair gas station.  You know from the little roof tiles, the peak above the sign, the little Art Deco caps on the columns.  The canopy portion was filled in — as many of them have been.  A little Texas collection — still adding (interrupted by this trip) — for compare/contrast purposes:
http://www.agilitynut.com/gas/txsinclair.html

 

And, last one for the day (keeping it short so I can get a bit of extra zzzs for the highway hell to come) — from DeToy’s Family Restaurant in Madison:

That’s a broaster chicken — looks like this sign had neon.  Same top-hatted company chicken / advertising symbol as these statues:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/agilitynut/4867349843/

Way more than I want to know as a vegetarian — but maybe you’re interested in the company’s concept:
http://www.broaster.com/about.htm

 

So — no “real” post with photos tomorrow.  Probably just a quick texty “hi” this weekend to let you know I’m alive. I don’t know if Hurricane Irene will be waiting for us.  At the moment, they’re saying direct hit with NYC on Sunday.  But, most likely, I’ll post Friday’s photo batch on Monday or Tuesday.

Day 33: Central MN – Land of a Million Lakes… and Fish Statues

All good here — perfect weather, sunny and cool.  Little cotton candy clouds most of the day that made me look like a photographer – ha!  An earthquake and an impending hurricane back home in NYC — happy to be missing all of that drama and possible chaos.  If it looks like I’ll be driving into the eye of the storm on Sunday night, then I’ll just pull over and sleep for about 24 hours and scratch work.

Water, water everywhere — meaning every two or three hours we MUST pull over before I go deaf.   Hardly any mosquitos though.  Maybe it’s the zillions of dragonflies that are eating them?

Started the day in Brainerd – home to many giant things.  Including this laundromat reference.  Pole in the way on the sunny side of the sign, forcing me into this off-kilter angle:

 

More Brainerd — the Log Cabin Bar.  This must have been a kick-ass sign back in the day — with a simulated spinning wheel:

 

Just south of town, I encountered “World Guy” and his dog “Nice”.  He’s doing all this walking and pushing of the giant globe for diabetes awareness.  More about him and his cause here:
http://www.worldguy.org/

 

This one from Motley.  Tree in the way — had to shoot shady side.  Obviously, a repurposed sign.  And yes, the ice cream place, which is also just as much an antiques sort of place, is in a former silo:

 

From Staples:

 

Also in Staples — this nice glass work.  An eyewear shop in the storefront below now:

 

One more from Staples.  Even during the day, this neon target sign was lit and hypnotizing.  The rings are lit sequentially.

 

The Minnesoda Fountain in Park Rapids:

 

Also in Park Rapids.  This restaurant is still open but unfortunately, these clocks and animated figures are stationary now:

 

Back to Brainerd on my loop to get to Paul Bunyan Land when it would be open.  I had been hoping that the Paul and Babe that were at Bunyan Bowl (now closed) would be here.  Turns out those statues went to a log cabin homes place in NC:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/drower/211042312/

But this place did get the Babe head that was inside the bowling alley.  It’s not really on display yet since they need to repair it.  This Babe blows steam from her nostrils.  Or is Babe a he?  I seem to recall seeing male body parts on these statues — too exhausted to check.

There are signs here and there at the Old Farm part of Paul Bunyan Land.  Not the neon variety but gas station and plastic signs.  I like this metal sign — Paul or at least a lumberjack:

 

From Ironton:

 

Also Ironton.  This nice miner sign hangs on the side of the American Legion Building:

 

This one from Crosby:

 

Over in Garrison:

 

And last one for the day — a goofy Paul & Babe — in front of the Mille Lacs Museum in Isle:

 

Just two more days to shoot.  I’ve decided to focus on the southwest corner of Michigan for the remainder of the trip.  If I forget to mention it, tomorrow night will be the last blog post until I get home.  Friday night, I’ll be driving and downing coffee trying to lay down some miles towards the 20 hour drive home that I need to get through this weekend.  The final blog post and Flickr photo batch will be on Monday or Tuesday.