Since the weather was moving east, as was our plan; we decided to sit out a day and stayed to explore the area. The area turned out to be a fun place and much prettier than I would have ever thought it to be.
Opening picture is a water tower. Water towers are so very common in Minnesota, yet this one was just a little uncommon so it gets to greet us.
Here is our camp sight (our being us, Lewis, and Clark), smack on the Missouri.
And I really liked his cool saddle bags (he told me each one would carry a case of beer!).
This is the bridge that normally goes into the town of Chamberlain, supposedly it is famous, although I could never find out why. They had just shut it down for some major rework, which made the trip into town a little longer.
Folks out for an evening cruise, enjoying the Missouri River and finally a nice day.
Every once in a while we had to do a little cleaning, this is the end cap/front of the rig and one days worth of bugs.
Next stop on the journey was Welcome, Minnesota. Now hardly anyone has heard of Welcome, not even most folks in Minnesota. It is in the south western part of Minnesota and we picked it because it was a good stop distance wise and the park there gives us a reciprocity rate (i.e. cheap!) Welcome is close to the western Minnesota border and only about 10 miles north of Iowa so we figured someone thought it was a welcome center – nope. Named for some guy by the name of Welcome. We drove through welcome and also the neighboring town of Sherburn, very cool, very clean, very typical small mid-west towns. Just makes you feel good to drive through down town (all one block of it!).
Here is our nice little camp site, very comfortable and nice and quiet.
Downtown Welcome, almost looks like a movie set. Life might be just a little simpler here.
Here is the site at Lebanon Hills, we picked a ton of wild raspberries right in front of the rig.
And this is a pond right on the property, great place to walk dogs! (By the way, we saw wild turkeys - the real ones, not the drinking ones - and at night just tons of fire flys, great fun.)Roxy got to meet and play with Cally (sp?), Kris and Bob's dog and Shay their daughter Andrea's dog. Shay, the tan/red lab, is just a puppy and what a handful!
And then, Ms. Rox met Mr. Fynn, another handful.
And here is the nice gentleman Mr. Fynn trying to help Roxy walk, what a nice guy. Wonder why Roxy didn't like the help, I mean really didn't like the help.
Next adventure was to visit with the Tate’s, George and Kay. I worked with and for George for many years and in addition we became good friends and stayed so after George left Honeywell. George always dreamed of owning a large parcel of land and being able to situate within to have privacy and a place to run his dogs. A few years back he realized his dream and bought a section of farm land, 640 acres! He and Kay have been working diligently since the purchase to improve the farm and build it to their specs. On the way up we stopped by George’s company (he is the U.S. rep for Dungs, a high quality German valve manufacturer) and toured the facility. We got to say hello to son Erik who is now the CEO of the company, as George is retiring at the end of the year.
The farm is in Shafer, Mn. north east of Minneapolis and it is awesome, really cool. We went into the town of Shafer for lunch and as you would guess George and Kay knew everyone and vice versa. We parked next to a pond the Tate’s built and considered it one of our better camp sites. Roxy loved the place as the rule was we don’t need no stinkin’ leashes.
This is the road into the Tate's, George subs out some of the land to a corn farmer, and below the road continuing up to the house past the fantastic looking red barn (what else, right?).
One more shot of the old red barn.
Our last stop in Minnesota, now on our journey home via lots of camping in Colorado, was Albert Lea. Albert Lea is at the southern border of Minnesota and we stayed at the county fair (not an unusual place to camp, most State or county fairs have camping facilities and normally at a pretty good price). Nice facility, interesting little town and we found a kids practice rodeo in the evening to keep us entertained.
Here is the camp site at the fair, pretty nice.
In closing, here are some of the kids from the rodeo. They ranged from very, very young up to 21. It was great fun to watch and some of the kids were really cute. It was twilight to dark and I didn't have the flash, but you get the idea.
Somebody put a lot of work and time into this nice looking mane. Good job.
There is going to be some good barrel riders that will develop out of this group.
Great ride, Happy face! And the final shot I took for several very good reasons, only I can only remember one!
I remember why you took that picture!
ReplyDeleteYou took it because you "liked the mane on that filly", right?