Oasis in the Prairie: Minneapolis

September 4th, 2014

Thursday – September 4, 2014

I have always loved cities – and the bigger, the better. I didn’t realize I was city-deprived on this trip until we arrived in Minneapolis. I could feel the excitement and my heart beat quickly, with the promise of new things to see and discover as we drove down the streets.

DSC_4483A Couple of Skyways

One of the most unusual (and interesting) characteristics of Minneapolis are the Skyways. These are second-story glass bridges over the streets which connect most of the downtown buildings. There are supposed to be eight miles of interconnecting walkways. Winters must be bitterly cold here.

DSC_4479Long Skyway

DSC_4480Different Design

DSC_4499Outdoor Dining on Nicolette Mall

DSC_4497Parking Lot Wall

DSC_4487City-Bikes

DSC_4527Minneapolis Institute of Arts Entrance

DSC_4529Grand Lobby

DSC_4535Framed Skyline

DSC_4547Art Object

IMG_8581Mill City Museum

IMG_8577Top of the Mill

DSC_4576Inside Gold Medal Mill

DSC_4605Display in Museum

DSC_4610Burned Ruins of Mill

IMG_8578Stone Arch Bridge Across the Mississippi

DSC_4581Old Sign on the Mill

Fargo ND to Minneapolis MN

September 3rd, 2014

September 3,2014    sunny and 54 degrees

We stayed at the recently finished Hilton Home-2-Suites last night. It was a new brand name to us and a bit different from the other Hilton Hotels. It was a modern IKEA decorated place with bright colors and whimsical simple touches. One good feature was the free breakfast had “healthy” choices.

IMG_8561Home 2 Suites – Fargo, ND

IMG_8554Lobby of the Home-2

DSC_4450Old Fargo Railroad Station

After we checked out, we drove to downtown Fargo to look around. It was a typical hundred year old American city. We took pictures of some interesting sights.

DSC_4445Ghost Sign on Building

DSC_4457Downtown Fargo

The city still used their old neon signs which most cities had torn down years ago. They gave Fargo a retro-atmosphere. They reminded me of a museum we had visited in San Francisco that collected neon signs.

DSC_4458Empire Tavern Sign

DSC_4462Fargo Movie Theater

DSC_4465Neon Sign

DSC_4467Back to the Corn Fields

DSC_4472Rain Clouds Rolling In

By the time we were hungry for lunch rain started to fall. We got off Interstate 94 in Alexandria, Minnesota to hunt for a lunch place. We stopped at a Pizza Ranch (an incomprehensible concept) for a light bite. We did not have the apple pizza for dessert. It grated on our New York City sensibilities of real Italian tomato sauce & cheese pizza with olive oil. No apple strudel pizza for us!

IMG_8565Dessert Pizza!

DSC_4478Clearing Skies

DSC_4638Approaching Minneapolis

DSC_4642Minneapolis, Minnesota Skyline

IMG_8567View From the Hotel Window

Drive Across North Dakota

September 2nd, 2014

September 2, 2014    sunny & windy – 54 degrees

IMG_8524Welcome to North Dakota

I love to travel because there is always something new around the corner and Williston, ND was one of those surprises. It was a rough city with many large trucks and machines rumbling along dusty roads. There were flat wheat fields & farm equipment along the highways and a booming oil & gas industry.  

DSC_4402Wheat Fields and Tractor

Oil trucks filled local roads and clogged highways along the road out of the city. Route 2 was lined with oil drill support companies, hastily built barracks for workmen, tank & silo companies, and John Deere tractor dealers. 

DSC_4408Pumping for Oil

DSC_4409Oil Pump

DSC_4423Huge Oil Well

We passed many towns with interesting names: Palermo, Melville, Bergen, Pingree, and Buchanan as we drove along the 70 mph two-lane road.

DSC_4383Freight Train, Silos, Tractor

We stopped for lunch in Minot, ND where the server, Dimitri, was from Odessa, Ukraine. He said last winter had been really cold in Minot with temperatures reaching down to minus forty degrees for several days. He said it wasn’t too bad, but recently he was looking for a job in Florida.

DSC_4433North Dakota Route 2

Grain elevators, silos, and cell phone towers break up the vast horizon. For most of the day, our cell phones had 4/5 bars of AT&T service. That’s better than I get at home in New York!

IMG_8532Have a Bud With Your Ice Cream in Carrington, ND

DSC_4442Big Sky

DSC_4430We stopped for coffee in Jamestown, ND

We reached Fargo by 6:00 PM after being on the road for eight hours. We checked into a newly built Hilton Home-2-Suites and it felt good to get out of the car.

IMG_8545Sunset in Fargo, North Dakota

Across Northern Montana

September 1st, 2014

Monday – September 1, 2014  Partly sunny/cloudy 46 degrees

Great Falls, Montana proved to be more interesting than we had expected but now we were ready to leave. We got an early start to drive across the state. The photos today are the best way to describe Route 2 in northern Montana.

DSC_4330Sunrise Over the Missouri

DSC_4332On the Road Again

DSC_4335Wheat Fields in Montana

DSC_4339Montana Grain Elevator

DSC_4342Another Style of Grain Elevator

DSC_4350More Grain Elevators

DSC_4366Welcome to Saco, Montana

DSC_4365Saco, Montana

DSC_4380Western Town

DSC_4375Close Up

DSC_4379Where We Didn’t Stay

DSC_4387Montana is a Big State

DSC_4401Gambling Casino

DSC_4397Almost to Williston, North Dakota

 

 

Western Art and Wheaties

August 31st, 2014

Sunday – August 31, 2014  Sunny & breezy – 53 degrees

It took us most of yesterday to drive north from Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming to the city of Great Falls, Montana.

DSC_4291Morning on the Missouri River

We found a comfortable all-suite motel and decided to spend two nights in Great Falls. We had been on the go in Yellowstone Park for four days and it had been a long tiring drive north. I also wanted to do laundry. When I travel, I always pack one small suitcase regardless of the length of the trip and that means stopping for laundry.

DSC_4295Entrance to the Charles M. Russell Museum

Great Falls, Montana was the home of western artist C. M. Russell and a large museum was built to honor their most famous citizen. No photography was allowed in the museum, so I couldn’t take any pictures. I learned he was a prolific artist who painted more than two thousand paintings in his lifetime. We spent more than two hours there until Jeff said he had seen enough western pictures to last a lifetime.

DSC_4297Quote in the Lobby

The most interesting part of the museum was the Native American exhibit on the first floor. It contained an extensive collection of contemporary and historical artifacts created by several local tribesmen and women.

DSC_4298Russell’s Log Cabin Studio

DSC_4299Charlie & Nancy Russell’s House

DSC_4308Missouri River

In the afternoon we drove along the river to see the Lewis and Clark exhibit. This region was the place that presented some of the greatest obstacles to the explorers. They had to portage their boats and heavy supplies across the land because of several large waterfalls along the Missouri. Stephen Ambrose’s book: Undaunted Courage was a good account of the expedition.

DSC_4302Lewis & Clark Interpretation Center

We learned there are several broad waterfalls along this section of the Missouri River. Today, the largest ones provide electricity for several states.

DSC_4311Rainbow Falls

DSC_4317Black Eagle Falls

We stopped at the large old Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad Station which was converted to office space, but it was a reminder that the railroad helped to build the city of Great Falls, Montana.

DSC_4326Old Railroad Station

After passing vast wheat fields and huge silos, we found a giant General Mills grain elevator next to railroad tracks in Great Falls. Now I know where my Wheaties comes from.

DSC_4320General Mills Grain Elevator & Storage Facility