Showing posts with label traveling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label traveling. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

What, No Dish Cloths?


How did this happen? Making dish cloths is one of my favorite "no brainer" projects. The other day, I went to the dish cloth/tea towel drawer in the kitchen and there wasn't a dish cloth to be found! Have Brownies been here? I found a few in the clothes dryer (affectionately dubbed "the other bureau"). Still -- I used to have so many dish cloths they attacked when you opened the drawer. Looks like it's time to take the socks out of my purse and insert cotton yarn. I'm on a mission to restock! And it lets me stash-bust a few balls of cotton yarn, too. Pat and I drove to Stark, KS today to find an upholsterer who could fix the bucket seat of his pickup. I rode along because he had never been to Stark, and I had been there thanks to library functions in the next town over, Savonburg. (You see, Savonburg is too small to have any eateries, so we would go to Murphy's Merchantile in Stark for sandwiches after visiting the Savonburg library. Ah, the hidden benefits of being a regional library consultant!) We took the long way (via Burlington) so it was about an 80 mile drive out and a 65 mile drive back. I nearly made an entire dish cloth while we traveled. Since we seem to run around a lot (and no place is closer than 45-60 min. away), and since Pat rarely lets me drive, I should get restocked on dish cloths in no time. By the way, if you are trying to get to the dishcloth pattern, click on the highlighted link "Grandma's Dishcloth" in the tag cloud.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Wamego Oz Museum

Many of my KansasKnitters friends who went to the Wamego Wool Fest also zipped over to Manhattan to pay homage at the Wildflowers yarn store. We didn't. After a leisurely lunch at the Friendship Restaurant with Carol and Carla, two of my long standing friends, Lisa, Lala and I toured the Wool Fest and the Settler's Farm yarn shop, then we took in the Oz Museum. The minute we arrived in town L
ala had declared she wanted to go there. We kept our promise that we would see it before we left.

It's a cool little museum. There was a lot more stuff to see than I anticipated. There are life-sized replicas of the characters from the Oz film and a lot of movie memorabilia as well as copies of the book in various editions, English and other languages, as well as Oz spin-offs such as dolls and games. I never knew there was an Oz version of Monopoly! Lala wanted to take home the Glenda the Good Witch doll. It was at least 20" high and fully costumed as Glenda. I'm glad there was a glass case around it or my doll lover would have been checking it out up close and personal.

We asked Lala which was her favorite character. She couldn't decide, so I took her picture with all of them. She likes Dorothy and the ruby slippers (the slippers on display had hundreds of rhinestones handset on them), Tinman, Cowardly Lion and the Scarecrow, but she decided the Wicked Witch was scary. The Wizard was temporarily unavailable (or hiding behind the curtains) so we didn't get a picture with him.

Ever since seeing the Oz movie as a child, I have wondered how they got the flying monkeys to fly. I couldn't decide if the monkeys were real people in costume or models. Sometimes they looked one way, sometimes another, but the transition was seamless and it was hard to tell what I was seeing. This was especially true when I was watching on a small screen and was wearing glasses with old prescription lenses.

The mystery is solved! The Wamego museum has two of the last surviving four miniature monkeys used to film the flying scenes. The figures are about four inches high and appear to be made of clay. They are modeled and painted to look like the actors who dressed as monkeys. The flying was done as some version of claymation.

A video clip discussed other movie animation tricks. There were several techniques invented for this movie. It had some of the most intensive special effects of its time, the Star Wars of its day. The video clip was discussing how the tornado scene was done. The funnel cloud was created by making a gauze funnel and attaching the top to a runner across the top of a sound stage while the base was on wheels on the floor. This allowed special effects men to operate top and bottom independently while the film crew got shots of it long distance and coming straight at you. The flying debris was added via blue screen later.

The visit to the museum was enjoyable. Lala just had to have her own Toto from the gift shop. On the drive home she sat in the backseat happily playing with Toto and singing Oz songs.

Yarn crawl, grandkids, a good museum. It was a good day. I'm going to have to take Lala to Sedan next. They have a Yellow Brick Road.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Texas Grandkids Visit


When we returned from Texas yesterday, we brought back the Texas grandkids, Reyes and Lala. Reyes is 10; Lala is 8. They will be here Thurs. and Friday and Uncle Joe will take them to Oklahoma City to meet their Mom on Saturday. (OKC is about half way to Dallas from here.)  We're getting it ready to sell. (Anyone want to buy a house in a suburb of Dallas?)

We bought them yarn and spool knitters to work on in the van, but they mainly dozed and asked "are we there yet?" We ended the "Are we there yet?" question by stopping in Oklahoma and Kansas at the Tourist Information Centers. We got each kid his/her own map of the state we were driving through and showed them how to follow the line for I-35. Every time we'd pass a town, I'd ask "What town will we come to next?"

Lala caught on quickly, but Reyes has a bit of his parents' ADD. He swore he didn't know how to read a map. On the other hand, he quit asking "Are we there yet?" because he could tell we hadn't traveled all the way along the green line yet.

Mean ol' Grandma. Making a kid learn something on a summer vacation!

Actually, I think the kids are here to visit Uncle Joe. They really love their uncle and don't get to see much of him while he's going to school at Emporia State. Pat and I both worked today and will again tomorrow. Fortunately, Uncle Joe is between school sessions, so he is the designated babysitter. (Ah, that's hard on all of them! He missed the kids as much as they missed him.)

They talked him into taking them swimming today. I've already heard plans to go again tomorrow. They are watching videos and playing Runescape when they aren't pestering their Uncle. This part of vacation is good!

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Wanderin' Star

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My brother and I have always liked the song from Paint Your Wagon called "Wanderin' Star". It was sung in the movie by Lee Marvin, of all folks. A line we took to heart was "wheels were made for rolling. Mules were made to pack. I never saw a sight that didn't look better lookin' back."

Besides living all over the Midwest, I've done a bit of visiting too, with and without my brother.
My whole family has itchy feet. My brother could put more states on his map, and a few foreign countries, too, thanks to Uncle Sam. He was stationed in Germany before he was sent to Viet Nam. Of course we both got to visit Mexico when we lived in South Texas. My present husband took a 48 state motorcycle trip a few years ago. He'd get to color in the whole US map for the Lower 48 and Hawaii. He's been to Mexico for fun and Viet Nam thanks to Uncle Sam. My first husband was born in Honduras, so he could add that one to his map. When he was stationed at NAS Dallas, he was sent to Rota, Spain and Sicily for a few weeks. More spots for the map.

Maybe the best traveled of my friends is my friend Steve, from whom I cribbed the source of these maps. http://www.epgsoft.com/VisitedStatesMap/index.html Steve was an Air Force brat so he covered a lot of states and foreign countries while growing up. Oddly enough, he graduated from high school in Wichita, Kansas and looks at Kansas as home base. I'm a Kansan, too, but we had to go to Dallas-Ft.Worth to meet each other.

I guess that just goes to show it's really a small world, and getting smaller everyday. If we put pins in the map forall the folks who read this blog ... Well, we'd probably manage to get a goodly part of the globe.

Guess that Wanderin' Star shines on all of us.

Transplanted Iris

I can't quite sing the song "I've Been Everywhere, Man" but I can sure claim the Midwest. The above map shows where I've lived. It doesn't quite tell the whole story, because I'm 58 and have moved 34 times. With all of that, we managed to live 20 years in the same town -- Grand Prairie,Texas. Of course, my moving started when I was two years old, so that gives me some running room on the traveling. It also instilled an early love of geography and fascination with geology. How did that get formed? Why is it there and not over yonder?
I'm glad to be settled where it all began now. I was born 25 miles from where I am now living. It's all come full circle. If you want to know about our adventures remodeling our 104 year old house, check my other blog http://grannytilla.blogspot.com