Translate

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Extra Post on Hurricanes

This is an extra post I thought some people might like to read.
What are hurricanes like?  For those who have never experienced one, I will try to give you an idea of what they are like.  Each person experiences things differently so my thoughts may not match any one else’s thoughts about hurricanes.  For those who have had a much worse experience, I am sorry for your losses and I can’t begin to imagine how hard it has been for you to rebuild your life.   
One of many trees uprooted
by Hurricane Andrew
If you live in south Louisiana, the first time you hear the weatherman say there is a low system in the Atlantic, the Caribbean or the Gulf of Mexico, your mind snaps to attention.  From then until the storm either lands or goes away, you check the weather first thing in the morning, last thing at night and sometimes during the day.  It’s a feeling of uncertainty for days.  You don’t want it to head your way but you don’t wish it on anyone else.
 Even tropical storms that don’t reach hurricane strength can cause major flooding while some hurricanes develop with very little rain.  The heaviest rain from hurricanes is seldom at the place where it makes landfall.  Usually the heaviest rain is to the north and east of the system which means that many people are affected over a wide area.
Front yards and streets disappear under
flooding from Hurricane Andrew
You know you are going to have to make a major decision if the hurricane develops and heads your way.  Do you go or do you stay?  If you go, what do you take, when to leave and where to go?   It is difficult for most people to evacuate every time a hurricane threatens.  Hurricanes can change course just before they land.  


There are various reasons many people choose to stay home and wait for mandatory evacuation orders.   It is costly to travel, especially if you have to stay in hotels or have to stay away from home for more than a day or two.  Getting stranded on the road if you have car trouble, run out of gas or the storm follows you can be even more frightening.  Others stay because they want to protect their property.  Some stay even when a hurricane is imminent because they don’t really believe anything can happen to them.  Many people will stay as long as the storm is not predicted to be more than a Category Three or is not predicted to directly hit their area.  They take their chances at riding out the smaller storms.  Most people who have experienced a strong hurricane, or seen the destruction it left behind, have a healthy fear and realize they should leave when told by the authorities.  Homes and “stuff” can be replaced but there is no reset button for people.


Poplar trees after being blown over
all night by Hurricane Andrew

 We experienced a number of hurricanes over our time in South Louisiana.  The first one was named Juan and we were living in a little town called Patterson.  Although it was considered only a category 1 storm, we had no idea what to expect.  My husband worked at a grocery store and the company did not plan to close the store unless the storm grew larger or hit our town directly.  I only had a very old car at the time and no relatives close by.  Neighbors and those at work seemed to feel that it would be just a small storm, one not to worry about.
 My son and I stayed at home, watching the TV coverage of the storm.  It was scary because we didn’t know what to expect or how bad it might get.  Juan crossed over the town we were living in three times but it was just a strong rain storm with a lot of wind and was scary enough for us.  The city of Houma, where we moved later, was east of our town and flooded with tremendous amounts of rain from Juan.
This used to be a highway sign before the
winds of Hurricane Andrew blew.
We experienced a number of other small storms and began to feel less afraid until the year that Andrew devastated southern Florida.  Andrew continued across the Gulf of Mexico and landed a second time just to the west of where we lived (in Houma) by that time.  That night was one of the most frightening nights I ever spent.  The worst part was the noise.  All night it sounded like there was a jet plane revving its engine outside our house.   Andrew was a very strong storm with fierce winds and a lot of rain.  The rain was so heavy at times we could not see the street in front of our house, yet we did see debris flying through the air from a neighbor’s metal shed that was torn apart.  The poplar trees in our street median bent to the ground from the wind and by morning most of them were broken or so badly bent that all of them had to be removed.  The photos on this blog are from the day after that storm.
What amazed me after this huge hurricane was that old rusty tin shacks were still standing while huge trees had been blown over or uprooted.  Where small tornadoes in the storm circled overhead without reaching the ground, they cut off the tops of trees just like a lawnmower.  Woods near us looked like they had received a haircut.  Most homes were okay but branches were scattered everywhere and many fences had blown down.
A postcard I recently sent to another
Postcrosser in Germany
It is a satellite photo of the eye of Katrina
In 2005, when Katrina was headed our way, we did not hesitate to load up our car with our family and head north before mandatory evacuation was announced.  We had to drive six hours to an aunt’s house where my ninety year old mother planned to stay.  The rest of us headed another three hours north to my husband’s sister who had room for us.  We waited almost a week until we were able to find out that we had running water before we returned home, even though the electricity would take more time to be restored.  My mother stayed with her sister-in-law until everything was back to normal and I could bring her home.  We arrived home late in the evening to a weirdly dark city.  With no electricity anywhere, the only light came from the stars and our headlights.  It felt really good to get home.
After a hurricane the weather usually turns to sunshine as soon as the storm leaves.  In south Louisiana that normally means sunny and hot, so we really missed the electricity for the air conditioner.  Our roof was only missing a few shingles, our porch screens were all blown out, our fences were lying on the ground; there were leaves and branches everywhere, but we felt we were fortunate since our house was not damaged much.  Staying hot, eating peanut butter sandwiches or canned Vienna sausages, using candles for a week was not a big problem compared to those who lost so much more. 
Three years later, we left home again when Ike and Gustav ravaged our area.  We returned two weeks later to similar damage and decided it was time for us to move north.  We knew we were just getting too old to pick up after another storm.
Sometimes I wonder if we moved far enough north since we are now in what is called Tornado Alley.  At least hurricanes usually give you enough warning you can leave; tornadoes can hit almost anywhere and leave one house destroyed next to one that has not been touched.  We like it here in Arkansas and have family close – that’s more important so I guess we’ll just hope and pray that the tornadoes don’t come to visit us.

Friday, June 28, 2013

Louisiana

We lived in Louisiana from 1979 until 2009 so I should be able to share a bit with you.  The first few years we lived in a small town called Homer.  We happened to be lucky enough to live in an old plantation home there.  It was built from Cypress wood and boasted twelve foot high ceilings.  The home had many unique built in features but very few modern touches.  We had a huge Christmas tree while we were there and enjoyed having so much space to enjoy entertaining friends during the time our children were teenagers.  The northern part of Louisiana is partly rolling hills covered in tall pine trees and partly level crop land.  Cotton, soybeans and similar crops are the most common.  Deer hunting is popular with many people in this area as the pine woods are a great habitat for them.

Sugar cane field at dawn near harvest time
For about three years we lived in the central part of Louisiana, first in DeRidder (a small city) and then in Alexandria, one of the larger cities that has much to offer.   This part of the state is very beautiful with lakes, rivers, forested land and crop land.  Then we moved south to Patterson for a couple of years and on to Houma, a city southwest of New Orleans.  South Louisiana scenery includes Cypress trees, swamp land and sugar cane fields.    

A friendly ghost crab on the beach at Grand Isle

From Houma It is about an hour and a half’s drive down to the tip of Louisiana at Grand Isle.  Driving to Grand Isle for the day was always one of my favorite things to do.  I’d pack a lunch, something to drink, grab my camera and be off to see what I could see. 


One of many Live Oaks

My other favorite place to go was Avery Island, a bird sanctuary and gardens near New Iberia, about an hour and a half drive northwest of Houma.  The sanctuary is planted with an abundance of azaleas, camellias, tulip magnolias. Mature live oaks like the one shown in this old photo are all through the sanctuary.  Wildlife is abundant with turtles sunning themselves, alligators peeking their snouts out of the shallow edge of the water in addition to the many birds who nest in their rookeries.  

Swamps have their own special beauty
One other fun thing to do is a swamp tour.  It can be fun for kids and adults alike to experience the wildlife in the swamp.  You usually see alligators, turtles, nutria, lots of birds including eagles and other interesting things like old trappers cabins.  The peace and quiet is always amazing.




When we had company from out of town, we would take them to New Orleans to see everything there.    I never tired of strolling through the streets of the French Quarter and exploring all the unique shops along the way.  My two favorites are a Christmas store (with an amazing variety of Christmas ornaments and other holiday décor items) and a little shop that features old clothes – hats, gloves, dresses, scarves, fans, corsets and many other items, some from the movie making era of the 1920s through the 1940s.  It is a little girl dress up dream shop!

One of the many natural settings
in the Audubon Zoo


There is of course so much more to New Orleans.  The trolleys run from the French Quarter through the Garden District to the Zoo.  (I’m not sure of their “after Katrina” schedules.)  Audubon Zoo is a wonderful zoo in an area that has many old stately homes.


Replica of St. Louis Cathedral in
the train garden at New Orleans
Botanical Gardens

I usually went to the New Orleans Botanical Gardens Spring Show each year with a friend.  The gardens are beautiful that time of year and we  bought plants from the vendors because we couldn’t resist.  I also really liked the Train Garden they have and brought my great grandson who was thrilled to see the trains.  City Park houses not just the Botanical Gardens but also a marvelous Art Museum, a golf course, picnic areas, tennis courts and so much more.  Nearby can be seen one of the oldest cemeteries in New Orleans.  Katrina took its toll on much of the city but it is working to regain all these beautiful areas.


My niece's little girl with her "throws"
from one Mardi Gras parade
Everyone always wants to know about Mardi Gras.  I preferred the parades we had in Houma because they were not as crowded.  I’m short and could not see over the crowds when we went to the parades in New Orleans.  The parades in Houma had good crowds – 3 or 4 people deep all along the route but not 20-30 people deep!  The parades in Houma are very family friendly.  Little ones, the disabled, and the elderly are lovingly given many “throws” from the floats.  Sometimes “the parade before the parade” is almost as much fun to watch.  Once the road is closed to traffic, people begin to stroll up and down the street to find their friends, find a vendor for a souvenir, drink or snack.  We usually arrived early and brought food for lunch and a cooler of drinks with us.  It doesn’t matter if it’s hot, cold or rainy; you have to go to the parades anyway!


The people in Louisiana are very friendly, quite tolerant of each other and very proud of their state, their cities, their sports teams and their way of life.  Hurricanes are only bad storms and can’t stop these people from loving life.


Hot Air Balloons getting ready to soar
over Baton Rouge during a special event.

Baton Rouge is the Capitol City; other large cities are Shreveport, Lake Charles, Alexandria and Monroe.  Each of these cities has the normal city night life, museums, family friendly attractions, local historical markers in addition to some kind of festival or special event. 



In addition to the Mardi Gras festival, there are festivals of every type throughout the state from The Peach Festival in Ruston to the Shrimp and Petroleum Festival in Morgan City to the Strawberry Festival in Ponchatoula, with the Jazz Festival held in the spring in New Orleans.  No matter when you visit, you can probably find a festival somewhere in Louisiana.  All of them will have an abundance good food and many happy, friendly people to show you a good time.
Louisiana is a fun state to live in or visit.  Check the state tourism website to locate the best place for you to enjoy.



Monday, June 24, 2013

Kentucky

Springtime in the Blue Grass Region of Kentucky
(Vintage card)
 The Kentucky Derby is the first of three races that make up The Triple Crown, America’s most prized horse racing title.  Horse farms are plentiful in Kentucky, a large part of the economy, and beautiful to see with many grazing pastures of bluegrass surrounded by white fencing.   




Vintage card showing many of the things and places
to see in Kentucky
Kentucky is the birthplace of a number of things in the USA:  Bourbon, President Abraham Lincoln, Bluegrass Music, Col. Sanders, the Kentucky Fried Chicken Icon, and Louisville Slugger baseball bats, which were used by many major league ball teams.   Each of these has their own memorial, tour or museum.




The Corkscrew in Mammoth Cave
(Vintage card)

Natural wonders are also found in Kentucky; from the mountains in the east to the large lakes in the west, there is much natural beauty.  Mammoth Cave has the longest cave system in the world and is one of the most visited caves in the United States. 





Pinnacle Overlook
Cumberland Gap National
Memorial Park

 The Cumberland Gap was the passageway through the Allegheny Mountains that allowed Pioneers to travel to the West and now is marked by a National Park.  Explorers like Daniel Boone helped to open this frontier for the pioneers.  Much of the natural beauty remains for the enjoyment of outdoor sports enthusiasts.




The southwestern portion of Kentucky has an unusual area that is a major nature attraction but I have no postcards to share.  The Land Between The Lakes is a 170,000 acre peninsula that lies between two large lakes in lower Kentucky and extends into western Tennessee.  Both lakes flank this area which is a designated National Recreation Area.  There are 200 miles of hiking trails, camp grounds, an Elk and Bison prairie and a working historical farm.   State Parks and private lodges and cottages are located on both lakes.  Kentucky Lake is over 180 miles long while Lake Barclay is only about 118 miles long.  These lakes were formed by damming each of their rivers by the Tennessee Valley Authority to control flooding, produce electricity and develop the economy.    A helpful website is http://www.explorekentuckylake.com which also gives information about Lake Barclay and The Land Between The Lakes.

Louisville (pop.597,000) and Lexington (pop.295,000) are the largest cities in Kentucky with all the big city attractions.  Small town America is very much a part of Kentucky with many small towns, some with restored main streets and all with the charm of small town life and their unique activities and attractions.
Festivals including the International Quilt Festival, bourbon and wine tours, golfing, native arts and crafts, museums and so much more await you in Kentucky.  A website for more information is http://www.kentuckytourism.com/

Greetings from Kentucky
(Vintage card)


Saturday, June 15, 2013

Kansas

Favorite old postcard of a (4th of July) parade
in a small town in America
in the early 1900's
It has no ID so it could be from any state
To me, Kansas is the beginning of the West.  It is one of the states that are situated in the area known as The Great Plains.  This is the land where pioneers staked a claim, built a sod hut and worked the land to begin their new life.  The western two thirds of the state is mainly flat land that is used to grow wheat and other crops.  The winds blow fiercely at times after they leave the Rocky Mountains so the heat of the summer is tempered by the winds. 

Winter seems colder because the wind has nothing to stop its momentum although sometimes there is a Chinook wind that makes it warmer.   This is where the sky seems enormous and the air is usually clear.  This is also where cowboy and boomtown legends like Dodge City and Abilene were born. 
Old Shawnee Town
http://www.shawneetown.org
You might also recall the setting for the movie “The Wizard of Oz” was Kansas.  It certainly is in “Tornado Alley”, the area of our country where the colder northwestern air meets with the southerly flow from the Gulf of Mexico to form these extreme storms. 
I have crossed Kansas many times.  When I was very young (6 to 10 years old) we lived in Nebraska and would travel through from north to south to visit my grandparents in Texas. 
Bethany Lutheran Church, est. 1872
Lindsborg, Kansas
In more recent times I traveled with one daughter to visit another daughter who was living in Colorado.  We were enjoying the road trip in a new little Honda but needed a break.  We saw billboards by the side of the road advertising a nearby town as “Little Sweden”.  We decided to explore and were delighted to find a marvelous little town called Lindsborg, just a few miles off Interstate highway 135.  It was settled around 1870 by Swedish immigrants and almost a third of the townspeople are descendents from these original pioneers.  There are furniture stores, a bakery, a store with carved wooden  toys, Dala horses of all sizes, plus other wonderful shops including a bookstore and a kitchen utensil shop.   Our little break turned into an afternoon of browsing and enjoying some special bakery items (from the Swedish Bakery of course!) along with tea and coffee.  Also in Lindsborg is Bethany College which boasts the Swedish Pavilion that was built for the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis.   
Field House, Fort Riley, Kansas
Wichita is the largest city in Kansas and Topeka is the Capitol City.  There are many small towns ranging from a population of 5 up to the top five cities which are all over 100,000.  The eastern part of Kansas was formed by glaciers and consists of rolling hills and valleys.  The Pony Express, The Santa Fe Trail and Louis and Clark all have their history in Kansas. 
There is so much more to see and do than you would originally think since Kansas is not well known as a tourist destination.  Do check out their websites at  http://www.travelks.com/  for the State Tourism Information and http://visitdodgecity.org/  for Dodge City.  They are both interactive sites with lots of information for vacation ideas. 

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Iowa

My Dad and his family around 1912.He's on his
Dad's shoulder, his brother is standing.
Iowa is the state where my Dad was born and grew up.  His parents were descendents from England and Germany and lived on a farm near Merrill, Iowa, a small town at that time. 
I have enjoyed visiting the Amana Colonies several times.  There are seven small villages northwest of Iowa City.   The Amana Colonies are on the National Historical Register.  The villages were originally settled by German religious people around 1855.  You can visit many wonderful shops there that feature local craftsmanship.  There is a handmade furniture store, a woolen mill, wineries and other interesting shops.   We enjoyed the cheese and wine tours and were fascinated to see the craftsmen at work.  We enjoyed eating at a wonderful restaurant with authentic German food.  Portions were generous and everything was delicious.
Vintage postcard near Sioux City
Bridge across the Missouri River
Des Moines is the Capitol and largest city.  One of the things that intrigued me when I visited there about twenty years ago was the Skywalk system connecting many of the downtown buildings.  At that time I thought it was a great idea so that people could enjoy shopping, walking, and eating on their lunch hour without having to go outside from their office during the winter weather.  Although Skywalks are not unique now, at the time it was the first one I had experienced.  I believe the system is still in place and has recently been updated.

Iowa is predominately an agricultural state although manufacturing and other industries including new green energy power, such as wind power, have helped diversify the economy in the last few years.  
Typical cornfield view (my photo)

Much of the state is grassland or cornfields but the land is not flatlands.  Iowa is very beautiful with rolling hills and prairies.  In the Northeast part of the state are steep hills and deep valleys.

There are prehistoric earthen mounds located along the northeast boundary of Iowa on the Mississippi River.  The Effigy Mounds National Monument area contains many conical mounds and also about thirty of them representing animals.  These mounds were built by Native Americans about 2500 years ago. There are hiking trails but no roads or camping facilities in the park.  Camping is available at Yellow River State Park.


Fall scene (my photo) Crisp clear air,
foliage turning colors, harvest in
There are several websites to explore to learn more about Iowa.  Below are two that have information about all areas of the state.  I prefer the Iowa Beautiful site because it was easier for me to navigate with my old computer.