Category Archives: Road Trip

Personal Photo Project No. 191 Alpha



Garden of the Gods

The first order of business is to welcome Micky Augustin aboard as the latest person to show class, taste, and sophistication by signing up for a email subscription to the online journal of Photography 139.

Everybody say: “Hi Micky!”

These images were taken in a national forest in Illinois in an area known as the Garden of the Gods.

More from the Garden of the Gods Series:


Garden of the Gods

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Garden of the Gods
Yea, I fell down. But I protected the camera and finished the trail. A lesser man would have been foiled.

Garden of the Gods

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Garden of the Gods

More from the Garden of the Gods Series tomorrow.

Personal Photo Project No. 189


Browse-A-Bout
Browse-A-Bout

This week’s Personal Photo Project was to photograph the statue store where most of my immense collection of frog statues come from… the Browse-A-Bout in Kentucky.

I finally saw this place in person on Teresa, Logan, and I’s trip to Kentucky to visit Ernie.

The remainder of the Browse-A-Bout Series:


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Next week’s Personal Photo Project will involve flowers again. Coneflowers or hollyhocks or lilies or sunflowers…

Personal Photo Project No. 187


Croutons
Croutons

This picture of an abandoned sign on the side of I-80 concludes the pictures from Shannon and I’s road trip. Originally there was planned to be a set of images from the Corning Opera House, but I don’t like them at all. I usually don’t run from my failures, but this time I am, going to run, from my failure, as fast and far as I can.

The remainder of the Croutons Series:


Croutons

Croutons

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Croutons

Next week’s Personal Photo Project of the Week will involve flowers. Perhaps flowers from the State Fair. No promises.

Instagram: July & August

Time once again to look at some of my favorite Instagram work from the last couple of months.

Of course, if you follow me on Instagram or Twitter, you have seen all of these before. Just act like you are surprised.


I’m pretty excited by how far I got to expand my photo map in the last two months.

AND…

I can’t wait to see where life takes me in in September and October.

AND…

You can follow me on Instagram: @photography139

Kentucky Mini Vacation – Phone Edition

A few week backs I went to Kentucky with Teresa and Logan to visit Ernie. Here are a few pictures from that trip from the phone:



Tom’s Pancake House and Restaurant


Somewhere I made a great joke about a pancake cooking a pancake, but nobody has enjoyed it, so I will deny you its greatness!


The Browse-A-Bout – Greatest Name Ever?


There was also a great penis joke I made when I posted this to Instagram, but once again, I’ll refrain…


This is what passes for chocolate milk in Kentucky.


The ferry across the Ohio River.


The Garden of the Gods


Buzzard Rock Marina


I actually did!


The Grand Ole Opry


Ernie’s Hat. Ernie has a small head.


Loveless Cafe=Excellence


Antique Archaeology in Nashville was quite the disappontment.

Next week’s Wednesday randomness will be another Instagram dump.

Personal Photo Project No. 185


Unsolved
Unsolved

My Personal Photo Project this week was to photograph the most famous allegedly haunted house in Iowa. The Villisca Axe Murder House. I will state that I don’t believe in ghosts, but I am open to the possibility of their existence. In the same vein, I’m open to the possibility that Bigfoot exists, that aliens have visited our planet, or that it is possible some day Michael Bay will make a semi-watchable movie.

I have discussed visiting the Villisca Axe Murder House with numerous people over the years, but had never even came close to visiting it. I had actually resigned myself to believing that I would never actually go see it, but Shannon made it happen by taking me along to visit her brother who is a pastor in nearby Corning.

If you don’t know the story of the Villisca Axe Murders, here is a really short version, I’m borrowing from Wikipedia:

The Moore family consisted of parents Josiah (aged 43), Sarah (39), and their four children: Herman (11), Katherine (10), Boyd (7) and Paul (5). An affluent family, the Moores were well-known and well-liked in their community.[1] On June 9, 1912, Katherine Moore invited Ina (8) and Lena (12) Stillinger to spend the night at the Moore residence. That evening, the visiting girls and the Moore family attended the Presbyterian church where they participated in the Children’s Day Program, which Sarah Moore had coordinated. After the program ended at 9:30 p.m., the Moores and the Stillinger sisters walked to the Moores’ house, arriving between 9:45 and 10 p.m.
At 7 a.m. the next day, Mary Peckham, the Moores’ neighbor, became concerned after she noticed that the Moore family had not come out to do their morning chores. Peckham knocked on the Moores’ door. When nobody answered, she tried to open the door and discovered that it was locked. Peckham let the Moores’ chickens out and then called Ross Moore, Josiah Moore’s brother. Like Peckham, Moore received no response when he knocked on the door and shouted. He unlocked the front door with his copy of the house key. While Peckham stood on the porch, Moore went into the parlor and opened the guest bedroom door and found Ina and Lena Stillinger’s bodies on the bed. Moore immediately told Peckham to call Hank Horton, Villisca’s primary peace officer, who arrived shortly thereafter. Horton’s search of the house revealed that the entire Moore family and the two Stillinger girls had been bludgeoned to death. The murder weapon, an ax belonging to Josiah, was found in the guest room where the Stillinger sisters were found.
Doctors concluded that the murders had taken place shortly after midnight. The killer or killers began in the master bedroom, where Josiah and Sarah Moore were asleep. Josiah received more blows from the ax than any other victim; his face had been cut so much that his eyes were missing. The killer(s) then went into the children’s rooms and bludgeoned Herman, Katherine, Boyd, and Paul in the head in the same manner as their parents. Afterward, the killer(s) moved downstairs to the guest bedroom and killed Ina and Lena.

This crime was never solved.

The remainder of the Unsolved Series:


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To answer the most common question I’ve been asked, “No. Neither Shannon or I experienced anything spooky or abnormal while we were in the house. Nothing that could be remotely described as paranormal. If you want to completely grasp at straws because you have some kind of desperate need to feel like we were connected with the paranormal, the best I can give you is that the house feels kind of sad when you are in it.”

I was actually expecting to be disappointed in the experience, but I actually enjoyed it way more than I thought I would. The tour guide is the same guy that was featured in the episode of Ghost Adventures that was filmed in the house. He is very entertaining and tells many stories about the house and his experiences with reality television producers. In person, he seems a lot less convinced of the level of paranormal activity than he did on the show, but on the other hand, he doesn’t go inside the house on the tour either. He answers your questions in the upstairs of a barn that has been constructed on the property and then you tour the house on your own.

For a large fee, you can spend the night in the Villisca Axe Murder house. This is something I would actually be willing to do at some point in the future.

Next week’s Personal Photo Project will feature flowers of some kind again. Maybe the hibiscus.

Tenderloining – Gramma’s Kitchen – Walcott

I recently made a trip with Logan and Teresa to see Ernie in Kuttawa, Kentucky. We were leaving in the evening on a Wednesday night, so we would be eating supper on the road before we nestled down for a Motel 6 nap.

As you can tell by either listening to my stories or perhaps even just by looking at me, a scary amount of my journeys are food related. Now this journey to Kentucky was not food related, but that didn’t mean that I couldn’t engineer a food related stop along the way. A food related stop that would fit into the narrative that is my life.

I contacted Teresa to see how long we would be on I-80, before we made a right turn and began our descent into the south. If we were going to make that turn on the Avenue of the Saints, I was going to try and stop for food at 61 Chop House Grille in Mediapolis to try the state’s reigning Best Burger, as crowned by The Iowa Cattlemen’s Association. An organization that I have some things in common with… we both like to eat beef and both have zero respect for the Boone County Fair Board.

However, our right turn wasn’t scheduled to occur until we were fairly deep into the Land of Lincoln. That meant I was going to be able to try the tenderloin that won the Best Tenderloin in the State of Iowa (the only state that matters – when it comes to tenderloins) in 2011 at Gramma’s Kitchen in Walcott. As given by the Iowa Pork Producers Association. An organization that I have one thing in common with… we both like to eat pork, but an organization that clearly doesn’t know anything about the pork tenderloin. The Cyclone State’s flagship menu item! Do I need to remind you about the Goldie’s Ice Cream Shop fiasco. You remember, right? Where the creator of the sandwich showed such little passion for his creation that when asked his inspiration he mumbled out, “well we needed a tenderloin for the menu.” Yea, Iowa Pork Producers, your track record isn’t the best.

Even though the tenderloin was crowned two years ago, I had yet to notch it on my waistline. You see, in addition to having an unreliable automobile, I don’t travel to “that side of the state” very often. It is lousy (in every way imaginable) with Wal-Mart Hawks*. So this was going to be a good thing.

Sadly my friends, it wasn’t a good thing. This was easily the worst part of the entire trip. The only other things that might even be in the conversation would be when my sister freaked out when we saw a homeless person panhandling or when Logan kept insisting that blueberries were superior to raspberries or when we had to part ways with Mountain Man on the banks of the Ohio River.

Here are a few pictures of the disappointment. I will note that these pictures were taken with my camera phone and they are as dark and dreary and as lousy with digital noise as the whole experience was in person.










Let us start with the obvious. This tenderloin is battered. I repeat battered. Not breaded. Who batters a tenderloin? Besides those freaks up in Minnesota and lets face it, Minnesotans know nothing about the tenderloin. In fact, I do have a word for people that batter a tenderloin, but it is too profane to be used on this website. You know that I keep Photography 139 a family friendly website. And many of you know that I consider the use of profanity to be a sign of low intelligence. However, there is the occasional time when mainstream vernacular doesn’t quite cover the essence of a situation. There are times when you have to reach into the gutter and swoop up a couple choice 4 letter words because they are the exact right words for the situation.

I’m not going to share the word I use for people who batter tenderloins (besides Minnesotans), so this is the little exercise (don’t worry, it isn’t cardio) that you will have to do to get near the word that I’m thinking about as I type this journal entry.

Think of the most profane word you can possibly think of. A word that you would be ashamed to use in front of your children. A word that if somebody used it to describe your mother, you would immediately be inclined to choke them out.

That is the word that I use to describe people that batter tenderloins.

I knew we were in trouble immediately. Gramma’s Kitchen shares a building with another restaurant. A name that I do not recall but it has some sort of autosports theme. This co-restaurant was way busier than Gramma’s Kitchen. Red flag one.

Secondly, the interior of Gramma’s Kitchen has all the soul of a corporate franchise hell Country Kitchen. I normally don’t care too much about restaurant atmosphere, but when I’m tenderloining, I want the feel of a mom and pop shop. I don’t want the restaurant to feel like it was pooped out of the business end of the Play-Doh corporate franchise restaurant fun factory. Red flag two.

Third, our waitress had all the personality of a Lots of Value can of peas. I don’t demand that a server being needy or exuberant. Attentive and enthusiasm can sure go a long ways in helping a dining experience. Red flag three.

Fourth, the menu described their pork tenderloin as a “quarter pound of Iowa pork”. A quarter pound? I’m a modern American. I already like my portion sizes large enough to feed a small African village for a week. When it comes to the tenderloin, it better be big enough to feed that same village for a month. A quarter pound, where are we? Communist Russia? Big red flag four!

I should confess that the menu also described the tenderloin as battered, but I flashed right by that when I read “quarter pound”. I shouldn’t have. I should have folded the menu nicely. Thanked the waitress for being easy to forget and walked across the street to the World’s Largest Truck Stop and got an orange julius for the road.

But, I didn’t notice the offensive word “batter”. So when the mini tenderloin was placed on my plate I first thought that they had brought me the wrong thing. In fact, I thought that the waitress had walked to the nearest Long John Silver’s and picked up a fish and fries combo, came back to Gramma’s Kitchen, and placed one piece of Long John Silver’s fish on my bun. Trying to pass it off as an award winning pork tenderloin.

But, like a trooper, I soldiered on.

I asked the waitress for catsup and mustard. Dressed what I was hoping wasn’t a piece of fish and prepared to be surprised.

Only, I wasn’t surprised. The tenderloin was as bland and tasteless as I’ve ever had. It was perhaps worse than the one in Stanton that I didn’t even bother to review.

I can only come up with two positives from the experience:

1. They toasted the bun.
2. The tenderloin was so small that at least the disappointment didn’t last long.

As you may have guessed, I badly need to get a good tenderloin in me to help me forget this dreadful experience. I need to do this soon!

*As many of you know, the difference between a Cyclone fan and a Hawkeye fan is this: A Cyclone fan is college educated, usually with a degree from the finest land grant university in this nation. A Hawkeye fan is usually just somebody that is really good at shopping the Wal-Mart clearance clothing rack.