Friday, April 29, 2022

It's a Wrap, Dells post #14

     I promise, promise, promise, this is the last post from my stay at the condo in Wisconsin Dells last October. Which is why I am presenting a hodgepodge of pictures taken over the week. There are so many more, but I really can’t post all twelve hundred of them here.  

Just a random bathtub on the porch of the A.L. Ringling Mansion in Baraboo. 

What's not to love about an idyllic Wisconsin farm? 

St. John's Lutheran Church and cemetery in North Freedom 

Most of the headstones were in German. This one, "Through the blood of Jesus alone I go to heaven." I hope that Albert wasn't alone once Wilhelmine joined him in 1936. 
Next stopped at Natural Bridge State Park.

On the way back up the road, St John's church smiled at us. 

And the Comfort Bus makes the kids at Loganville Elementary School smile. 

Man Mound Park east of Baraboo. It's named for the rare, man-shaped effigy mound found on the property, measuring about 214 feet long by 48 feet wide. Just looks like a mound to me.

Outside our condo.

The living room in the condo. 

The master bedroom upstairs was very nice. 
This little one and her brother worried me because it was pretty late in the year to still have spots. 

Doing my duty as a health care worker by presenting this public service announcement. Found in the bathroom of the Badger Ammo Works museum. 

And because, yes, I will take a picture of anything. That's a wrap. 


Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Rocking it, Dells post #13

           I’ve still been writing about my week’s stay in Wisconsin Dells last October and thought I had finally arrived at the end of my story. But alas, I forgot about our hike through Rocky Arbor State Park. 

It was a cloudy day, with temperatures in the mid-fifties. That’s still pretty decent for October in Wisconsin. Yet, here we are at the end of April, and we had snow yesterday! 

Rocky Arbor was only a ten-minute drive from the condo where we were staying, so we figured that we wouldn’t be out much if we got rained out. As it was, the park was already closed for the season but did allow walk-ins. Which was great, because it meant that there wasn’t much activity going on. 
 

The park had the usual interesting rock formations, which that entire area is known for. 
Some nice Fall scenery. 




 This picture is of what my brain feels like when I’m trying to get to sleep at night – a lot going on. 

 And this is how I feel most days at work. 

 And this is how I want to feel all of the time - just rocking it. 
 

I promise that this Friday's blog post, I will wrap up that vacation so we can move on next week.
 

Sunday, April 24, 2022

When you have no thoughts

     People sometimes ask where I get my ideas to write my blog posts. On Sundays, I rarely take credit for any of my ramblings. More often than not, God plants the seed in my head. Maybe I kind of have a thought, so I kind of start down a rabbit trail, and before long – ta-da – there’s full-blown inspiration tapping at my keyboard.

Once in a while, though, I got nothing. And God? I’m sure He’s got something to say, something He wants me to write about, but it’s not flowing to the top of the fluffy stuff in my brain.

When that happens, I scroll through random recent pictures I’ve taken and one always jumps out at me, and it has a story to tell.

This is the one that jumped out at me today. Dear little Emma. Who has a very long story to tell. But not today. Today you just get an adorable picture of her.

And on days when we don’t think that God is listening, when He’s not answering our prayers, when we feel we got nothing? Well, you have way more than you think, even if it feels like nothing more than a kitten.


 “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,” declares the LORD. “As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” (Isaiah 55:8-9, NIV)

Friday, April 22, 2022

Every Evermor Foreverton, Dells post #12

     Even for me, this was one of the stranger places I’ve visited, on the south side of Bluffview, just across Hwy 12 from the Badger Ammunition Site. Fascinating, but strange. Or at least strange after you know its history.

In 1983, Tom O. Every transformed himself into Dr Evermor and built a several hundred-ton sculpture all out of scrap metal, naming it the Forevertron. The purpose of this structure was to transport Dr Evermor to the heavens.  

Or so the story goes.

For me, the Forevertron was too big and imposing. 


I much preferred all the hundreds of items he had salvaged from around the country and brought home to the grounds of his sculpture park.

My imagination could get completely out of control in such a place.

Oh, if only we had a little bit more property and Hubby was a little more willing to let me go crazy.




As it was, only my friend and I toured the park that October day when the heavens threatened to rain down on us. Or maybe it was the heavens calling to Dr Evermor to get in his Forevertron and head home. 
Websites with more information on Dr. Evermor's Sculpture Park:

http://www.worldofdrevermor.com/dr-evermorss-park/

https://www.heritageparkway.org/people-of-the-river/dr-evermore/

https://wisconsinlife.org/story/dr-evermor/

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Pier County Park, Dells Post #11

     Rockbridge, a tiny town with a population of around 700, lies 40 miles southwest of Wisconsin Dells. If you haven’t been following along diligently, you may have forgotten that I spent a week in a condo in the Dells last October, and I am still weeding through the over one thousand pictures which I snapped.

Pier County Park is on the west side of town and is the home of this large formation, a half-mile-long rock made of blocked and layered sandstone, rising above the valley near sixty feet. 

The Pine River runs along the base of the rock, and over the years, it managed to force its way under the rock to reach the other side.


You might recognize this picture from my Easter morning blog. In that blog post, I led you to believe that this was the opening of a tomb.

Nope, just the other side of the man-made tunnel carved through the rock.


The land for Pier County Park was donated to the county by the William Henry Pier family and dedicated in 1946.


We climbed the stairs to the top and were rewarded with some fantastic views of the surrounding area.


This part of the state of Wisconsin is called the Driftless Area. During the last glacial period, it was surrounded by glaciers, yet remained untouched by them. Add to that the strength of our many flowing rivers, and you get many beautiful rock formations throughout the southwest corner of our state.


And of course, lots of history too.


For more information, click on these links: