Tuesday, July 21, 2009

We're Home!



Medora & Freddie were looking like they were liking that Kingston sign! I think
we were too! It is great to be home. It was a wonderful trip, we visited so many
places that we had never been before. It was just an amazing trip! Jimmy is
feeling better and he has a doctor's appointment later this week. God has blessed
us with a safe trip home and and the wonder of His beauty everwhere we went
and we thank Him for it! This is a great country, if you haven't seen it, you really
should try it! I will be doing a recap of our trip in a few days. We traveled over
8,800 miles of this great country and it was worth every minute of it. God Bless America!


Posted by Picasa

Lebanon, TN


We stayed a couple of nights in this campground in Lebanon, TN, just about a
mile and a half off the interstate. It was a nice place to stay.


I am showing these pictures of a tent compound because there is a story behind it.
A family, a husband, wife and their two children are living in here. The husband lost
his job as a project manager for a construction firm. He decided to start his own
construction business and it did pretty well for awhile. With the economy the way it
is his business had slowed way down too! Then they lost their home. They decided to
live in this campground in some tents. That is when they discovered other people in
similar situations. They began to help them out as much as they could. As fate would
have it a TV station in Nashville got wind of them helping others and broadcast the story.
Supplies of all sorts started coming in so they could help others. The lady who owns the
campground has a big heart and she started helping them store the supplies. They had
food, domestic, clothing, and school supplies to help other folks. Now when someone
needs something they just go there and are able to get what they need. This family is
very active in their church and feel like they have God’s blessing in helping so many
others in similar situations. You just never know what God has planned for you!

Posted by Picasa

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Salute to Veterans


As we crossed into Tennesse from Kentucky at the welcome station on I-24 we
saw this motorcycle. We talked to the fellow who owned it and he said that
his uncle passed away and left it to him. The bike has 169,000 miles on it and
I think he said 20 years old. He rides his bike in funeral processions in honor of fallen soldiers.


The fellow who owns the bike is from Riceville, TN (just south of Athens, TN)
he was coming back from a rally in Little Sturgis, KY. He won a prize for his
bike. It was really awesome and so much more beautiful to see in person.
The artwork is just amazing. Click on any picture to see it larger. This is a
beautiful tribute to our veterans who fought for our freedom. Thank you veterans!
God Bless America!
Posted by Picasa

Paducah, KY 7-18-2009


We made it to Paducah, KY and were pretty tired when we got there. Illinois is a really long state to drive through. And the roads were awful. I even had some broken dishes in the camper. The table slid into the fridge. Everything was jostled around pretty good. Jimmy
did most of driving, but I helped out a little. It wasn't as bad as I thought it would
be driving the rig. Of course as soon as I started driving the "Men Working" signs
were on the road. But fortunately it was too bad. Jimmy has had minimal pain
with his kidney stone so far. GETTING CLOSER TO HOME!!!!
Posted by Picasa

Friday, July 17, 2009

Coming Home!


Jimmy was feeling better today and so he drove the rig, I was happy about that! I think I nightmares about driving the rig, but I will it if I need to. As it turned out we had to go through some big towns and it was
a good thing he was driving. The roads were awful. He started having more pain a couple of hours ago, so we decided to stop for the night. We are in a very nice campground and he is resting. We still have
600 miles to home, and we are going to take it nice and slow and easy and hope he doesn't have any more severe pain. It will be good to get home and get him to his doctor.


Windmills in Illinois. We are in El Paso, IL at a campground for the night. We
may try to get to Paducah, KY tomorrow, but it is over 300 miles to Paducah.
We'll just have to see how Jimmy is feeling.

Posted by Picasa

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Kidney Stones

Hello Folks,

I have a little request from all you blog readers! I had to take Jimmy to the ER Tuesday afternoon with kidney stones. It hurt in the morning and he thought it was just back pain. But as the day went on and we were out doing things around town, he was in more pain. They did a CT scan in the ER and it showed he had a few stones in each kidney. Tuesday night he thought he passed the stone. Wednesday he felt great and he looked much better. We went out to Pike's Peak State Park, in Iowa. Then last night (Wednesday) he started having the pain again

Anyway, our plans are to try to start driving home tomorrow. I will be driving the whole entire rig probably all the way (~825 miles, I have driven it once or twice before). So please say a little prayer that we make it home safely and that Jimmy is comfortable and passes the stone.

Thanks for your prayers,

Donna & Jimmy (Dago)

Posted by Picasa

McGregor, Iowa

McGregor was founded as MacGregor's Landing in 1847 by Alexandar MacGregor. Since 1837, MacGregor had been operating a ferry across the Mississippi River between Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin and the present site of McGregor, Iowa. MacGregor planned the new city as a six block development, and it was quickly populated, being incorporated as McGregor in 1857. In that same year, the Milwaukee & Mississippi Railroad finished building a railroad track from Milwaukee, Wisconsin to Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, thus connecting Lake Michigan with the Mississippi River by rail. McGregor quickly became a major commercial center, and served as a hub where grain from Iowa and Minnesota could be transported across the Mississippi and sent on to Milwaukee via railroad. More railroads were built to connect McGregor with cities further west, and the city of North McGregor (now Marquette, Iowa) was established just north of the city to serve as the city's railroad terminus. After reaching McGregor from the west, trains were disassembled and railroad cars were ferried across the Mississippi to continue on towards Lake Michigan.

During the 1870s, the population of McGregor exploded to over 5,500 as the city became the busiest shipping port west of Chicago. In 1874, the system of ferrying railroad cars across the river between North McGregor and Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, was brought to an end when Prairie du Chien businessman John Lawler commissioned the construction of a permanent pontoon bridge to connect the two cities' rail lines. As the need for men to disassemble and ship trains across the river disappeared, the city's population began to decline. Today the city's history is preserved in its downtown business district, which contains many buildings constructed during the city's boom years. Because of its colorful history and location beside the Mississippi River, the city has become a popular summer tourist destination, and it is known for its many antique stores.

Posted by Picasa

Barge going down the Mississippi


Barge is heading down the Mississippi River, it certainly looks majestic! Remember
the Titanic!!!


Pike's Peak State Park was really quiet and serene. A very nice place to camp
or picnic. With beautiful views!
Posted by Picasa

Pikes Peak State Park, Iowa


In this area, Native Americans of the Woodland Culture of 800 to 1200 A.D.
sculpted earthen "effigy" mounds on ridge tops, in the shapes of animals, to
celebrate their oneness with Mother Earth. Many of these mounds remain
today as a monument to these people and a reminder to us that we are also
of the earth.

In 1673, the first white men to see what is now Iowa, explorer Louis Joliet and
Father James Marquette, reached the mouth of the Wisconsin River and beheld
the great, unknown river now known as the Mississippi. After the Louisiana
Purchase, the government sent Zebulon Pike in 1805 to explore the Mississippi
valley and select locations suitable for military posts. Pike recognized the park
site as an important, strategic point, and an excellent location for a fort. The
government agreed on the vicinity but selected the prairie around Prairie du
Chien (now Wisconsin) for the fort. Several years later, Pike was again sent
westward by the government and named Pikes Peak in Colorado.

In 1837, Alexander McGregor established a ferry across the Mississippi River.
McGregor's Landing was established at the site of the town that now bears his
name. When Mrs. Munn, the grand-niece of McGregor, died, her will provided
that Pikes Peak be given to the federal government as a gift. The land had been
inherited from McGregor. It was later conveyed by Congress to the State of Iowa
and became Pikes Peak and Point Ann State Parks in 1935. Mrs. Munn had never
allowed settlers on the land and as a result, the landscape at Pikes Peak today
probably does not vary much from the way it was hundreds of years ago.



This where the Wisconsin River flows into the Mississippi River.
Posted by Picasa

McGregor, Iowa 7-15-2009


Yes, that is a pink elephant! With a top hat! You guess it! It is in front of a
casino. We couldn't believe how many casinos there are out west, even in gas
stations. We ate lunch at a little place called "McGregor Beer & Brats!"


We sat out on the deck overlooking the Mississippi River. The View was beautiful
and the weather was perfect, 78 degrees. A tug boat on the Mississippi.
Posted by Picasa