Category: United States
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Day 332 – Madison, WI – A decent place to get stuck.
We hadn’t planned to stay long in Madison, just a stop to mount the new tires and we’d be off to Chicago. I’d seen it pop up in lists of cities for artists but I didn’t know much about it. The other towns we’d stopped at in Wisconsin were fairly conservative and sleepy. And…
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Day 327 – The Great Wisconsin Tire Fiasco
We’ve been trapped in Wisconsin for nearly a month now. About an hour after we left Minneapolis after picking the Rialta up from an oil change, we stopped in Red Wing, MN, the hometown of a friend I worked with at Half Price Books and birthplace of Red Wing Shoes. Our next stop was…
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Day 326 – Visiting George Floyd Plaza
George Floyd was the same age as I am, 46. He worked as a bouncer in a bar while he worked on his music, though had been recently laid off because of COVID. Actually he had COVID at the time of his death. On May 25, 2020 George bought a pack of cigarettes at…
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Day 321 – Minneapolis, MN
We weren’t planning on stopping in Minneapolis but after 5000+ miles of driving it was time to get our oil changed. It’s difficult to find someone who will service a Rialta but he had found a recommendation online for a shop. So we grabbed a hotel near the garage and rented a car for…
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Day 315 – Duluth, MN
There’s a strange cosmic connection between Seattle, WA and Duluth, MN or at least Minnesota generally. A large contingent of Duluthians have moved to Seattle including the core of my long standing Burning Man camp, Buddhacamp. And likewise I’ve known more than one Seattlite to be drawn to Minnesota. There was even a Duluth…
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Day 314 – The SPAM Museum (Austin, MN)
Where I grew up, SPAM was considered a ghetto food. I mean I grew up poor on bologna sandwiches but my mom wouldn’t buy SPAM. I probably started eating it as a backpacking food in highschool where I developed a taste for the salty savory treat. (Not to be confused with the SPAM knockoff…
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Day 313 – The Grotto of Redemption (South Bend, IA)
The Grotto of Redemption Believed to be the largest grotto in the world, Father Paul Dobberstein, a German immigrant, began building the shrine in 1912 after promising the Virgin Mary to build it if she healed him from an illness. Construction continued continuously for the next 42 years. A grotto is either a natural…
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Day 313 – Porter Sculpture Park (Montrose, SD)
Porter Sculpture Park About 30 miles west of Sioux Falls in the middle of corn fields near Montrose, South Dakota, you pass the silhouette of a 60 foot, 25 ton iron bull’s head welded together from railroad tie plates. We found this place online for roadside attractions. If we hadn’t we would have driven…
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Day 313 – The Corn Palace (Mitchell, SD)
The Corn Palace The Corn Palace is a concert hall / sports center in Mitchell, SD, that is decorated with elaborate murals constructed from different colors of dried corn. Each year a new theme is chosen and murals designed to match the them. This year the theme was “homegrown” with murals featuring people and…
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Day 311 – The Badlands
For over 11,000 years the badlands region of South Dakota has been inhabited by native people. The soft sedimentary layers of soil once under a body of water are easily eroded, currently at the rate of 1 inch per year, which leads to deep winding valleys and buttes striped with color. Originally authorized in…