About Me

My photo
Cedar, Leelanau County, Michigan (near Traverse City), United States
I am a 76 year old (born 7/4/1937) retired Public Radio Engineer from Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. Happily married to the love of my life, Teddy (nee Teddy Schlueter). Teddy is a retired Medical Records Clerk from Theda Clark Hospital in Neenah, Wisconsin. Two children, Michael and Lon. Lon passed away in 1994. Michael is married to his wonderful wife, Toni and lives in Appleton, Wisconsin. For photos click on link below or visit our photo site http://www.flickr.com/photos/igboo NOTE: Click on photos for full-size images.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

News from Dinosaur

We are into our second week working at the Dinosaur Visitors center. Our hours are 8:30am to 4:30 pm Tue thru Fri. We can split our time any way we wish. right now, Teddy goes in at 8:30 and I relieve her at 12:30. We greet the visitors, answer questions, tell them about the geological features of the park, and show a short 12 minute film if they swo desire. Day b y day we are getting better at it.Here's Teddy hard at work.
On our days off last weekend we drove around the interior of the park park. Here are five of the hundred or so picts that we took.





































































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Saturday, September 02, 2006

Where have we been for the past two weeks???

Today is Saturday 9/2/06
We have been traveling for the past couple of weeks so had no opportunity to update.
Here is a recap of where we have been and where we are now.

On August 17 we left Leelanau County and headed down to Manistee, MI to attend Larry’s 50th High School Anniversary. We parked in a nice park at the Casino and were joined in the park by two other classmates. Jerry Ayres and his wife camped there too as well as Fay Murphy and her friend. Jerry had made arrangements with the casino to reserve the parks shelter house for a Friday night buffet; over one hundred classmates and spouses from the MHS class of ’56 showed up. Then on the following evening, Saturday the 19th, we had a social gathering ending with a sit-down dinner at the Manistee Country Club.
It was great renewing old friendships, however I did make the remark though that “It seemed to me that I was the only one in my class to attend, everyone else having sent their parents”. But I guess that everyone else thought the same thing, especially when they last saw me in HS, I probably weighed only about 135 lbs.

On Sunday we pulled out and headed for Wisconsin and after spending the night in the Wal-Mart parking lot in Petosky, we again stopped for a visit with our RV friends Dan & Pat Martenson in Escanaba. We had a great time and stayed up until after midnight playing Mexican Train.

Monday we continued on to Appleton where we had an appointment at Appleton Camping for some minor warranty repairs scheduled for Tuesday morning. We spent 5 days in Appleton getting our RV repairs done, doing laundry, getting the truck serviced and visiting Mike & Toni. Had lunch w/Becky & Tony and were invited for dinner on two consecutive nights at the Welhouses and the Orrs.
Saturday afternoon we had our "Blessed Event" of watching our Monarch butterfly emerge from his chrysalis.
She spent about 20 minutes drying out and then we released her outdoors, so once again we are "empty nesters".

Sunday the 27 found us heading west as we had to be at Dinosaur Monument in NW Colorado by September 1 to begin our month long stint as volunteers working in the Visitors Center.
We arrived Thursday afternoon the 31st crossing Wisconsin, Minnesota, South Dakota, and Wyoming to get here.





At the Corn Palace in Mitchell, SD Teddy met up with this guy, but lucky for me, it didn't work out.











Our boss, Sue Walter has spent the last two two days training us and taking us on an extensive tour of the park. It is spectacular with awe inspiring views. I will tell more about the park in subsiquent blogs.
Right now Teddy and I are in the public library in Vernal, Utah. About 35 miles west of Dinosaur on Rt. 40. This is the closest place that I can get on-line so probably won't be on line more than once a week. :-(.

Monday, August 14, 2006

Monarch Chrysalis


Teddy bought home a Monarch caterpillar yesterday and put it in a jar w/some milkweed leaves. We then went out for dinner and when we returned it was gone. However this morning we discovered this chrysalis firmly attached to the end of our kitchen counter. Sooo...now we just have to wait about ten days for the metamorphosing.

Friday, August 11, 2006

The Chameleon House


We found this "Extreme Home" named "The Chameleon House" located in here Leelanau County approximately 3 miles south of Northport on M-22.
Apparently it was featured in "Home & Garden" TV
I lifted this quote from the architect's web site at www.andersonanderson.com/WebsiteAAA/CHAMELEON.htm#
"This house is a tower rising above the rolling topography of its cherry orchard site, peering outwards toward spectacular westward views of Lake Michigan and the surrounding agricultural landscape. The site is left minimally disturbed, other than the mounding of two earthen enclosures adjacent to the tower, utilizing the excavated earth of the foundation and offering a ground bound contrast to the tower experience above the treescape.
A house would appear as an unsympathetic intrusion in this pure landscape, and with its singular vertical presence rising above the orchard, the tower is intended to reflect the austere, scaleless non-particularity of the occasional farm buildings dotted elsewhere on the hills. To help mask the scale and house program window requirements of the structure, the building is wrapped in a skirting wall of recycled translucent polyethylene slats, standing two feet out from the galvanized sheet metal cladding of the wall surface, on aluminum frames that serve also as window washing platforms and emergency exit structures. The translucent polyethylene material set out over the dully reflective wall cladding is chosen for its ability to gather the light and color of its landscape, dissolving the finely shadowed and inexplicably haloed structure into the seasonal color cycle of snow and ice and black twig tracery; pale pink blossom clouds; pollen green leaf and grass; golden straw and vivid foliage,
"

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Schools

As a young lad from Kindergarden through 3rd grade I attended two different small country one room schools near Shelby, MI. Yesterday Teddy & I drove around the local area and photographed three such schools here in Leelanau County.


Shetland School on M-22 near Good Harbor. Now converted to a private residence.







Solon School SE of Cedar on Hoxie Road. Now vacant.









Standard School in the village of Cedar. Now converted to a private residence.



...and finally, here is a school photo that I really like which Teddy captured last summer in southern Illinois.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Grandma's Party

Last Saturday evening we all took Teddy's Mom out to celebrate her 90th birthday.Clockwise arounf the table are Johanna, Denise, Teddy, Mom (Pearle), Deborah, Jason, Freddy, Fred, & John. That's my steak in the forground; I'm missing because I was taking the picture.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Cedar, MI 49621

I stopped in at Bunting's Market in Cedar last Sunday to buy some of their smoked, natural casing hot-dogs. They smoke them fresh every Sunday and are they ever good! I told Teddy that when I am in Bunting's I feel as if I am in a movie...you know, one of those feel-good movies about summer residents in a small resort town by the ocean (in this case Lake Michigan).
As I was leaving town I snapped these pics of "Victoria Creek" which runs through the edge town.Looking upstream at Victoria Creek in Cedar, Michigan.Looking downstream at Victoria Creek in Cedar, Michigan.

Monday, July 31, 2006

M-72 West Self Storage & U-HAUL

Teddy's sister Deborah and her husband, Dr. Fred Lawrence, in addition to their medical clinic also own and operate this self storage facility. They have hired Teddy to help with the annual blacktop sealing on the roads around the buildings.
Here are the three of them hard at work laying down the sealer. Over the last couple of weeks they have already put in about 20 hours of work and are only about half done.
L to R: Teddy, Deb, Fred

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Settling in!

We have been busy settling into our new Cardinal...putting up shelves, adding cup hooks, hanging pictures, wiring electronics, etc.
Here are some interior shots of our new home.

Looking toward the bedroom from the living room.
Looking toward the kitchen from the living room.
Looking toward the living room from the bedroom hall.

Saturday, July 22, 2006

Larry turns 69

Although we had to cancel our planned week of camping at Calumet County Park on Lake Winnebago, we did have our traditional 4th of July picnic/outing there.





We arrived around noon. Greg & Sue, Dick & Jen, and Mike & Toni soon setup the lawn chairs & grills and started grilling.




I, of course just sat and watched because after all...it was my birthday.




Dick really impressed Mike with his monster burger.










As usual, some went on the hike up the ski hill. Here are Dick & Jen resting at the top.





While they were hiking, Greg tooled around the park on my Segway




Later in the afternoon, Wes joined us from Green Bay.












We reluctantly packed up and headed back to Appleton around 7 pm...all in all, it was a real good day.

Saturday, July 15, 2006

New Bird



There’s a new bird in town! While we were waiting for the parts to repair our 5th Avenue trailer, Appleton Camping made us an offer that we could not refuse and we ended up trading it in for a brand new 2006 Cardinal model 34TS fifth wheel. We left Appleton on our first trip with our new home on Tuesday July 11 and headed for the Whispering Pines summer reunion in Xenia, Ohio. On the way we stopped for two nights in South Bend, Indiana and visited our friends Lee & Luella Chizum. They live only about 15 miles from Forest River Inc. where the Cardinal is made so on Wednesday afternoon we drove over for a factory tour. We had an over two hour personal tour with a factory rep. and were very impressed with the quality of construction.
Wednesday evening we visited with friends Huston & Carolyn Mitchell who also live in South Bend and then bright and early Thursday morning we continued on to the reunion in Xenia, Ohio. We love our new “bird” and, knock on wood, have had no problems

Friday, July 07, 2006

Cecropia Moth

While I was fueling up the truck one day last week, Teddy, as she often does, was out wandering in a nearby field and discovered this adult female Cecropia moth. They do not live long (about two weeks) because the adult cecropia cannot eat. The purpose of the adult stage is to mate and lay eggs. She wasn't very active and was probably near death, having already laid her eggs.
With a wingspan of 5 to 6 inches, the cecropia moth (Hyalophora cecropia) is the largest North American moth. It is a member of the family Saturniidae. Cecropia moths are referred to as silkworm moths.
Although these moths are common throughout North America, you don't often see them because they fly only at night. However, because a cecropia moth is colorful as well as large, when you do see one for the first time you will remember it forever!
Like most moths, they are attracted to bright lights. This is where most people encounter them for the first time.

Saturday, July 01, 2006

Whazzsup...July 4th...etc.


We are now in Appleton, WI and parked behind the maintenance shop at The Appleton Camping Center on McCarthy Road while they do some needed repairs on our living room slide mechanism. Kudos to Tammy, Jason and Tim here at Appleton Camping, although we did not purchase our trailer here, the service here at Appleton Camping has been outstanding. It is refreshing to find an RV dealer that is not only interested in a sale but will also go out of their way to accommodate their customer’s service needs. They are having trouble getting the necessary parts to repair the slide but have supplied AC power to us and said that we can live in our unit right here on site until the repairs are done.
Starting Monday July 3rd we have reservations for a week at Calumet County Park on Lake Winnebago, site #6. However we might not make it as the slide repair takes precedence. But we will, of course, be there hosting our traditional 4th of July picnic on Tuesday, with or without our trailer…hope to see all of our friends and family there.

Monday, June 26, 2006

Cherrys

The cherries in Leelanau county are starting to turn and soon the orchards will be full of the sounds of cherry shakers and fork lifts.Just a month ago when we arrived here the orchards looked like this.
Teddy's brother, John Schlueter, is hard at work getting ready to start shaking his orchards in the next couple of weeks. Last year John shook over one million pounds of cherries and in a good year may harvest a million and a half pounds. However a late frost damaged approximately 50% of this year's crop so this is not going to be a banner year. In farming, just as in casino gambling, sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. The hope is, that the winnings will cover the losses with something left over for profit.

Sunday, June 25, 2006

Mr. Ruby-throat


Finally got a picture of the male hummer that has been frequenting our feeders.

Saturday, June 24, 2006

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Ruby-throated Hummingbirds


When we arrived here last month Teddy hung this hummingbird feeder outside a window. It wasn't long before a pair of Ruby-throated Hummers became regular visitors, feeding several times a day from the feeder. The Ruby-throated Hummingbird is the only kind of hummingbird that summers in Michigan so it was fairly easy to identify them.
They would dart around, coming and going so quickly that it was difficult to get a good photo of them but I finally managed to get this picture of the female.

Monday, June 19, 2006

Freddy's Party


Our nephew Freddy Lawrence (Teddy's sister Debby's son) had a party yesterday (Sunday June 18) to celebrate his High School graduation from Roscommon High School. Freddy graduated with honors and will be attending Central Michigan University in Mount Pleasant this fall.

Friday, June 16, 2006

Egg Poems

Several years ago I wrote a poem about how disappointed I was to read that eating eggs was bad for you. However, four years later I read that eating eggs wasn't as bad as was thought. So, I wrote another poem in celebration. Here are the two poems in their original form.

On Eggs
(on reading an article in the newspaper
about cholesterol in eggs)

I find myself in a sticky wicket
for eggs to me are just the ticket.
I like them boiled,
I like them fried.
I like the yoke that’s hid inside.
On Easter I like to see them dyed.
I like them mixed up in a custard,
or in the den with Colonel Mustard.
I like the large ones in a stew;
I like the bite size small ones too.
I love them when they’re Benedict
and make quite sure my plate is licked.
In every way they can’t be beat.
For me an egg is the ultimate treat.
LEP 1995


On Eggs (Again)
(on reading an article in the newspaper
that says eggs aren’t bad after all)

Well...now they say that eggs are good
Deep down inside, I knew they would.
It makes me sick, it makes me mad
to think of the eggs I could have had
Instead of stuff made from soybean shoots
and other tasteless substitutes.
Instead of slimy oatmeal cakes.
Instead of diet breakfast shakes.
Instead of sliced fried cream of wheat,
Mixed with some strange mystery meat
Flakey corn and puffed up rice,
that look like droppings left by mice.
I ate all these things, you see
Cause they were sposed to be good for me
and now they say that all along
They weren’t right; they got it wrong.
Well I’m just glad I lived to see
That eating eggs is good for me.
And I will eat an egg a day
until the day I pass away.
Larry Page 1999

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

My new egg decapper


My favorite breakfast always involves eggs in one form or another. One of the ways that I like them is soft-boiled and I long ago discovered that the most convenient way to have a soft –boiled egg is to hold it in an egg cup while you spoon out the delicious inside with a small “egg spoon”. However the frustrating problem is in opening the top without burning your fingers. I would gently tap the top with the back of my spoon to crack it and then quickly flick off pieces of the shell by hand.
So…last week I decided to invest in an egg decapper (also sometimes known as a topper). There are several types of decappers, perhaps the best known is the scissors type, but I discovered this little baby on e-bay that pierces the shell and then neatly cuts off the top from the inside. I used it this morning for the first time and am real pleased. I hope that it holds up to longtime use.

Here are remains of this mornings breakfast.

Teddy, of course, thinks that all of this is silly. Hmmmm...perhaps she's right.

Saturday, June 10, 2006

Johanna's Party


Our niece Johanna Schlueter (Teddy's brother John's daughter) had a party today to celebrate her High School graduation from Leeland High School. Johanna graduated with honors and will be attending Grand Valley State University in Grand Rapids, Michigan this fall.
I snapped this pict at the party of Johanna in the center with her two aunts, Teddy & Teddy's sister, Deb.

Our new shed


We have been renting a storage locker to keep those things that we can't take with us in our travels. We decided that it made better long term economical sense to purchase a small "Garden Shed" and erect it here on the family farm. So...for the past couple of days Teddy & I have been erecting a shed and here is the finished product. It is 8' x 12.5' and was delivered on a pallet in two large boxes totaling 615 lbs by a flat-bed truck.
Amazingly enough Teddy & I worked well togather and acomplished the build without ever yelling at each other...well...hardly ever.

Friday, June 02, 2006

Turkey Vultures

Last week, on a grocery trip to town (Traverse City), Teddy noticed a pair of Turkey Vultures nesting on the chimney of an old abandoned house.





The young were quite large and appeared to be about ready to fledge.
So I returned with camera in hand and got these shots.





Sure enough the next day they were gone.