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Day 12 of An Adventure in the Daddy Zone With My Dad and his bridge

by Mark Eades November 10, 2018

This day we visited the Gateway Arch in St. Louis and then had Dad pose for a photo with the James B. Eads bridge behind him. By the way, Dad’s name is James W. Eades. We have an extra “e” in the last name.

Walking to the Gateway Arch with the old courthouse in the foreground in St. Louis.

The old St. Louis County Courthouse.

Just so y’all know, this is where the first hearings on the Dred Scott case were heard.

Looking east through the Gateway Arch.

This bas relief wall shows a lot of other items and their heights relative to the Gateway Arch in the museum under the Arch. The arch is 630 feet tall they tell me.

Beauty in geometry.

My Dad standing at the base of the north leg of the Gateway Arch.

More beauty in geometry.

Dad at the base of the Gateway Arch. Pretty big piece of stainless steel.

A train travels the rails along the Mississippi River in front of the Gateway Arch. The bridge spanning the river is the James B. Eads Bridge, built during the Grant Presidency.

James W. Eades and the James B. Eads Bridge crossing the Mississippi River from St. Louis into Illinois.

One more photo of Dad and the Gateway Arch.

Even more geometric beauty.

The waterfront and the Gateway Arch looking south along the Mississippi River.

One last geometric shot of the Gateway Arch.

The old St. Louis County Courthouse.

Beauty in the park adjacent to the Gateway Arch.

I’ll be at the wedding of my niece, along with Dad tomorrow.

Here is a link to Day 11.

November 10, 2018 2 comments
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Day 11 of An Adventure in the Daddy Zone With My Dad

by Mark Eades November 10, 2018

Today, we visited the National Transportation Museum in St. Louis, so it’s a lot of photos and all about trains, cars, a couple of trucks and a C-47. Enjoy.

Model trains at the National Transportation Museum in St. Louis.

Back to the Future!

A model theme park and a model railroad!

Another model railroad!

Dad and the steamroller.

This pulled boats through the Panama Canal.

Retro modern.

Modern and steam at opposite ends.

A Wabash Cannonball.

New York steam.

It’s the Union Pacific Big Boy, and my Dad.

Who’s that in the engineer’s seat?

My Dad at the throttle of the Union Pacific Big Boy. Or is that the Johnson Bar or the brake?

Here I am standing by the driving wheels of the Union Pacific Big Boy.

Need to use the bathroom in a passenger car on a train?

Another bathroom in a passenger car, the sink lifts up so you can get to the commode.

An executive’s sleeping area in a private car.

Fine dining in the executive car.

The china closet in the executive car.

This is where they would grill the steaks for the executives in the private car kitchen.

Another bathroom in another passenger car.

Berthing bunks in a Pullman car.

A private room in a Pullman car.

Passenger seats in a passenger car.

Baggage anyone?

The oldest steam train at the National Transportation Museum in St. Louis.

A unique engine and passenger conveyance on the rails.

How to get rid of snow on the road. The back section would be loaded with rock to weight the car down and it would be pushed by a locomotive through the snow covered tracks.

A different way to remove snow. It would be pushed too. Can you read the numbers on the ladder on the side of the machine?

Here are those numbers, they would indicate the depth of the snow alongside the tracks in feet.

A unique engine and passenger train.

The price of gas on this pump is 29 cents a gallon.

A neat and old car.

This car belonged to Bobby Darin.

Car Car

This is an electric car.

I get my kicks…

A 57 Chevy.

Yep, a cool original Mustang.

These cars are cool.

Drove my Chevy to the Levee…

Studebaker!

Wish I had this car.

A Model A.

Not sure I would want this motorized bike.

A Stanley Steamer.

A Corvette!

A Peddler’s Truck. They sold produce out of trucks like these.

A milk wagon. This was the way they delivered it.

Bring out your dead!

A tug boat that used to ply the Mississippi River.

Yes this is a Douglas C-47 Cargo Plane, a real work horse of the skies.

That’s it for today. A ton of photos. Tomorrow, the Gateway Arch and a bridge that has the same name as my father!

Here is a link to Day 10.

November 10, 2018 2 comments
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Day 10 of An Adventure in the Daddy Zone With My Dad

by Mark Eades November 9, 2018

Today was all about boyhood homes – that of Walt and Roy Disney, and Mr. Clemens, better known as Mark Twain.

Downtown Marceline.

This is downtown Marceline, Missouri – the boyhood home of Walt and Roy Disney. Dad and I paid a visit to it today.

The museum in Marceline.

We paid a visit to the Walt Disney Hometown Museum, housed in the Santa Fe Depot, right next to the railroad tracks. Trains run by at high speed many times a day.

Marceline depot.

Part of the interior is meant to look like the classic old train depot that it once was.

Walt’s visit

Midget Autopia

I went on this attraction at Disneyland in 1962. Disney gave it to Marceline when it was removed, but it is no longer in any shape to run. They would like to restore it – I donate $5 to the cause.

How much to go to Kalamazoo?

Dad wanted to buy a train ticket – sadly, no one at the window in the Marceline Santa Fe Depot.

Who’s the leader of the club…

This Mickey Mouse flag hangs above you in one of the rooms at the Walt Disney Hometown Museum.

Mouse dolls.

A couple of original Mickey Mouse Dolls from way back then.

Which way to the Disneyland?

Tour guide

A nice front porch in the Walt Disney Hometown Museum.

Light it up

The first light desk Walt used, along with Ub Iwerks, to animate on.

No one’s sleeping in that castle.

A nice model with a nice painting of a younger Walt Disney on the wall behind it.

The hostess at the Walt Disney Hometown Museum

This is Inez, the hostess at the Walt Disney Hometown Museum. She met Walt Disney several times.

Steamed!

This great old steam locomotive sits in the park adjacent to the Walt Disney Hometown Museum in Marceline, Missouri.

Coke corner

The Coca Cola Refreshment Corner at Disneyland is based loosely on Walt’s experiences in this corner location.

I’ll have the real thing.

The Coca Cola Company paid for the restoration of this old billboard painted on the side of the building in Marceline, Missouri.

A boyhood home

That house, which has people living in it, was the boyhood home of Walt and Roy Disney, the farm is behind it.

Dreaming

This is the son of Walt Disney’s Dreaming Tree.

Walt’s family barn

Dad stands inside Walt’s family barn.

By the Mark Twain

Welcome to Hannibal, Missouri!

More downtown Hannibal

Whitewash

I put Dad to work painting the fence white.

The house where Mark Twain grew up, in Hannibal.

The home where the boy who was the model for Huck Finn lived, in Hannibal.

The dining area in Mark Twain’s boyhood home.

More of Mark Twain’s boyhood home.

This is where the girl who was the model for Becky Thatcher lived.

Mark Twain’s dad really was a justice of the peace.

Old Man River – yes, that’s the Mississippi River.

Mark Twain statue by the Mississippi River on the waterfront of Hannibal.

By the Mark Twain.

This Mark Twain paddle wheeler sits at a dock on the waterfront of Hannibal, Missouri in the waters of the Mississippi River.

That’s it for this day. Tomorrow the National Transportation Museum in St. Louis.

Click here for Day 9 of the adventure with my Dad.

November 9, 2018 0 comment
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Day 9 of An Adventure in the Daddy Zone With My Dad

by Mark Eades November 7, 2018

We were very Presidential today while visiting the Harry S. Truman home and library in nearby Independence, Missouri. No photos allowed inside the home.

The outside of the Harry S. Truman visitor center.

Our day started off with a visit to the Harry S. Truman Historical Site Visitor Center. Here you purchase tickets for a visit to the Harry S. Truman home. This is run by the National Park Service – so if you have an annual pass, or a senior citizen pass, it’s free for you and your group. Yes, that’s my Dad sitting on the bench with my cousin (and his niece) Carla. She and her husband were gracious enough to let us spend a couple nights in their lovely home.

Harry S. Truman Presidential Library.

This is the main foyer inside the entrance to the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library. It is run by another group, including the National Archives, so it is a separate entrance fee from the house. Don’t you love the mural on the wall?

Always loved this about Harry Truman.

Yep, that’s the one that was on his desk while he was President of the United States.

The Oval Office.

The Harry S. Truman Presidential Library has a replica of how the Oval Office looked when he was President.

A memorial flame.

This memorial flame is in the garden in the middle of the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library.

Serenity in a Presidential Library.

Harry S. Truman liked to walk, so the garden has a nice straight pair of walking paths.

A great quote from President Harry S. Truman.

Harry’s office.

This was the office former President Harry S. Truman worked out of at the library after he left public service. He would work there daily. He would even take people on tours throughout the library himself at times.

Final resting place.

Harry S. Truman and his beloved wife Bess are buried here in the garden of the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library.

Home is where the heart is.

This is the home where Harry S. Truman and his wife Bess lived. A simple home, yet stately.

Colors

The colors of the leaves frame perfectly this home up the street from the Harry S. Truman home. And it has a FRONT PORCH!

A front porch.

This home up the street from the Harry S. Truman home as a great FRONT PORCH!

Fallen leaves

I love the colors of the leaves fallen from the trees in Autumn here in Independence, Missouri.

Dad and me.

Dad and I on the front steps of the Harry S. Truman home in Independence, Missouri.

An odd bit of architecture.

This is a church in Independence, Missouri.

Up Dogs

We decided to have a snack in a place called “Up Dogs” in the central plaza of Independence, Missouri. Yes it served a variety of hotdogs and we ate at the counter. Left to right that is my Dad, James Eades, myself, and my cousin Carla Eades Krebs.

Time to rest.

It was an enjoyable day, if a bit cold. So, Dad decided to rest for a while in an easy chair and two of my cousin’s dogs decided to join him.

That night we enjoyed going to a hockey game with them.

Tomorrow it is on to Marceline, Missouri – the boyhood home of Walt Disney and more two-lane highways.

Here is a link to Day 8.

November 7, 2018 0 comment
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Day 8 of An Adventure in the Daddy Zone With My Dad

by Mark Eades November 6, 2018

Canadian Geese, farms and President Eisenhower were part of today’s adventure.

As we set off from Dodge City, eventually ending up in Lee’s Summit, Missouri, we saw how there we many windmill farms as well as farms.

Dad and the windmills.

Dad would count the windmills that weren’t working as we drove along the highway. Again, we were staying on two-lane highways as much as we could.

The long empty train tracks.

You don’t realize how big and empty parts of this country are until you spend some time driving on roads away from the interstate. Did I say empty? Not empty, in many states of the midwest, like Kansas, it has farms and rail lines. This rail line runs along a highway and into a variety of small towns where waiting silos during harvest season are filled with grains.

Canadian Geese

We were driving along west south west of Abilene, Kansas and saw flocks of birds in the distance. Finally got as close as I could and pulled off the road to try and get a photo. Turns out they were Canadian Geese gaining altitude in the early morning so they could continue their flight south for the winter.

The big spur.

When we pulled into Abilene, Kansas, we saw this storefront and figured it was a natural for a photo for my western-loving Dad.

Meditation Chapel.

This is the Meditation Chapel on the grounds of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library. Inside is where Ike, along with his wife Mamie and youngest son are buried.

Meditation Chapel interior.

Below are where President Eisenhower, Mamie Eisenhower and the first son are buried. A very moving location.

A presidential prayer.

This was written by President Eisenhower, and I love its thoughts. This banner hangs on a wall inside the Meditation Chapel on the grounds of the Presidential Library.

Ike’s home.

The boyhood home of President Eisenhower sits in its original location on the grounds of his presidential library.

A presidential home with a front porch.

The boyhood home of President Eisenhower has a nice front porch.

Statue of President Eisenhower.

A beautiful day in Abilene, Kansas.

The setting for the Meditation Chapel.

A beautiful setting for a Meditation Chapel.

The train station in Abilene, Kansas.

This is the train station in Abilene, Kansas. Not sure if it is really used or not.

My eldest son’s name.

Saw this in Abilene, Kansas, and it has the same name as my oldest kid.

Oooh, Kansas City Barbecue food!!!!

This restaurant used to be known as Oklahoma Joe’s, but they’ve dropped that name for Kansas City. Barbecue food, yes!

Family and food.

Here we are in Joe’s Kansas City enjoying dinner with my cousin Carla Krebs (second from left), her husband Joe, (left) my Dad, James Eades and myself.

Dad had a smoked turkey sandwich, I had a two-meat platter with smoked brisket and pulled pork and BBQ beans. We shared a platter of ribs. I don’t remember all the other food my cousin and her husband had. But let’s just say it was BBQ and it was really excellent.

We spent the night with them in their lovely house in Lee’s Summit, Missouri, and will spend another night with them.

Here’s a link to Day 7.

November 6, 2018 4 comments
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Day 7 of Adventures in the Daddy Zone with Dad

by Mark Eades November 5, 2018

Prairie, small towns, trains and Dodge City. The last was kinda meh on day 7 of my trip with Dad.

Las Vegas, New Mexico

We started this morning in Las Vegas, New Mexico. The downtown of this small town is, well, a little pretty much like many other small towns downtown areas. Though it did have a homeless person who was just waking up from his night’s sleep in front of the town’s movie theater.

Wide open spaces.

The wide open spaces of the prairie in northeast New Mexico, Oklahoma and southwest Kansas looked pretty much like this. There is one lone oil well pumping away in the distance.

National Grasslands

National Grasslands are a way of trying to return large parts of the prairie decimated during the dust bowl to its original state. Now all we need are some buffalo roaming around in their old home.

Oklahoma

We entered Oklahoma, where the wind goes rolling ‘cross the plain.

Kansas, the state not the singing group.

Then we entered Kansas, farms and silos and yes there was some dust in the wind.

Unpowered steam power

This steam engine that used to run on the Santa Fe line was on display in Dodge City, Kansas.

Details

The details and specifications of the above steam locomotive.

Tourist trap.

Yep, it’s not much and we decided against visiting this in Dodge City, Kansas.

Another museum in Dodge City.

Gunfighters and Teachers together in Dodge City. Kinda strange.

Deserted front street.

The only business on Dodge City’s Front street was Yogi’s Vape. All the other store fronts were empty. Sad.

Nothing here either.

The building was closed up, and the hotel not operating. I see so many possibilities in Dodge City, but there seems to be a lack of vision of what could be in the town.

It’s an obligatory shot of a silo in Dodge City.

There are a lot of silos in Kansas, including on the main drag of the city.

Dad on a caboose.

So that’s our look today. Dad on a caboose brings up the rear of this post.

Here’s a link to Day 6 – Part 2.

November 5, 2018 2 comments
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Day 6 of Adventures in the Daddy Zone With my Dad — Part 2

by Mark Eades November 4, 2018

More trains, and a lovely drive through some mountains that saw us eventually end up in Las Vegas, New Mexico that is.

The coal chute and water tower for the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad of the D&RGW.

We rolled into Chama, New Mexico to find the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad line of the D&RGW also closed for the winter.

Chama, home of the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad.

The engine, I believe still a coal burner, was cold and sitting on a siding.

A caboose sits on the side line too.

One of the cabooses and another car were also sitting there, the line closed for the season. Sadly, the small museum and gift shop were closed too. They’re only open Monday – Friday.

A passenger car for the rail line.

One of the passenger cars for the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad, named “Archuleta.”

The Chama train station for the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic RR.

The Chama train station sits by the tracks at the southern terminus of the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic RR, a former line of the D&RGW.

More cars belonging to the Cumbres & Toltec RR.

An old worker’s car from the D&RGW that is part of the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic RR.

Are you dreaming of a white Christmas?

We took a mountain road out of Chama, New Mexico to make our way to Taos, New Mexico. Even though we had gone south around most of the mountains, we encountered some snow, and about 30 seconds of snow flurries. But it was a beautiful drive.

Earth Architecture.

On the road into Taos, we found the headquarters of Earth Architecture, where homes are being built that have little to no impact on the land. They are also very whimsical.

A Dr. Seuss inspired Earth Architecture home near Taos, New Mexico.

Yes, people really live in these homes.

A house with a bottle wall.

Check out the bottle wall in front of this Earth Architecture home.

The Rio Grande gorge.

The Rio Grande Gorge just west of Taos, New Mexico. quite a drop here.

Taos, New Mexico.

Taos, New Mexico is a bit of an artists community, and all the buildings are built in this style. But no artist style dinner for me and Dad, we ate at Taco Bell.

Fall colors.

I love the colors of the leaves on the trees in the fall. This tree was on the banks of the Rio Grande south of Taos, New Mexico.

The Rio Grande.

It was beautiful along the banks of the Rio Grande south of Taos, New Mexico.

Here is a link to Day 6 – Part 1.

November 4, 2018 0 comment
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Day 6 of An Adventure in the Daddy Zone With My Dad — Part 1

by Mark Eades November 4, 2018

Two steam train depots, some snow, Earthship houses and my Dad found an investment opportunity. All in today’s post that took us from Utah to Taos, New Mexico and down the gorge of the Rio Grande River.

Dad’s investment opportunity. Somewhere in New Mexico.

Dad and I kept seeing places like this on the roads we’d been traveling and calling them “investment opportunities.” So we searched for the perfect “investment opportunity” that my Dad, old “Buy ’em high, sell ’em low” Jim Eades would find to be a perfect fit with his investment outlook.

The Durango Depot for the Durango to Silverton steam train.

Unfortunately, the D&SNG Durango to Silverton line was closed this day. You couldn’t even get that close to the trains. Sigh.

A box car on the D&SNG Durango-Silverton line.

My Dad really wanted to climb the fence surrounding the rail yard in Durango and sneak into this box car and pretend to be a hobo.

A passenger car sits on the rail in the rail yard of the D&SNG in Durango.

So since the rail yard was closed…

Beautiful downtown Durango.

We decided to check out downtown Durango.

A conversation piece.

Dad found a bench to sit on and liked this guy.

A neat hotel in Durango.

We thought the hotel might be a good place to stay, sometime in Durango.

A steam engine is returned to Durango.

We saw one of the D&SNG’s steam engines returning to town on a large truck. It looked bright and shiny and clean.

Excuse me, Miss.

Dad really liked this lady, even though she’s not real.

Some beautiful scenery on the road.

We drove up into the mountains east of Durango. This was a beautiful setting with the snow on the southern Rockies.

Roadside junk.

Besides beautiful scenery, we’d see some interesting junk too. We have no idea what this is.

Grazing deer.

We saw a few deer grazing in a meadow area near the highway.

More scenery.

It really was a beautiful drive on highway 64 out of Durango, on our way to Chamas, New Mexico.

United we stand, divided the water goes the other way.

Along the way, we crossed the Continental Divide.

There’s more from today, but I’m tired – so more tomorrow.

Here’s a link to Day 5.

November 4, 2018 1 comment
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Day 5 of An Adventure in the Daddy Zone With My Dad

by Mark Eades November 3, 2018

Train tracks lead up the canyon to Soldier Summit alongside our road for several hours.

Today’s theme will be beautiful scenery, odd formations and trains as Dad and I traveled from Pleasant Grove, Utah to Monticello, Utah, by way of Helper, Utah and Moab, Utah.

Wow! $8,000 back then was a lot of money. What did they spend it on?

Along the way we also learned about a robbery by Butch Cassidy, coal mine disasters and potash evaporation ponds. Intriguing, eh?

My Dad, Jim Eades, stands in front of the restroom building at a rest stop along Highway 6 on the road south and up towards Soldier Summit. The building was designed to look like a train depot – a narrow gauge train.

The rest stop on Highway 6 was right up my alley – a railroad theme.

The rest stop even has a mocked up narrow-gauge roundhouse.

The steam engine in the roundhouse is a mock-up, but the folks did a nice job.

The front of the engine looks cool, though it’s missing the engine number on the front. Details, details.

But even though it’s fake, it’s still cool.

The theming extends to the mock water tower.

Further up the canyon we stopped to watch a Union Pacific freight train made up of mostly empty coal cars working its way up the canyon. By the way, this is close to where Butch Cassidy and the others staged that robbery.

This is downtown Helper, Utah. It looks like a themed entertainment location as they’ve kept up the buildings. But most of the businesses are closed. Investment opportunity?

Too bad this hotel and the dance hall and other businesses in this building are closed in Helper, Utah.

Okay, so there’s a retired caboose on display in Helper, Utah. Of course I had to take a picture.

The world’s tallest coal miner stands in front of the Helper, Utah Public Library.

These red cliffs are seen from the road on the way to Dead Horse Point near Moab, Utah.

Neither Dad nor I could figure out what this was – but I took a picture anyway.

There be snow in them thar Rocky Mountains, as seen from the road to Dead Horse Point near Moab, Utah.

Those rocks are in Arches National Park, as seen from the road to Dead Horse Point near Moab, Utah.

My Dad adds to the small balanced rock statues others have made, the big rock behind him is named the “Merrimac” after the ship, also seen on the road to Dead Horse Point near Moab, Utah.

This rock is named the “Monitor” and is also seen on the road to Dead Horse Point near Moab, Utah.

Okay, now we’re at Dead Horse Point and that is the Colorado River as it heads on into the Canyonlands National Park.

Those are evaporation ponds where water is mixed with stuff dug up – and when the water evaporates they’re left with Potash.

My Dad stands at the overlook of Dead Horse Point, the Colorado River makes a 180-degree turn as it continues on down into Canyonlands National Park.

Pretty self explanatory. On the other side is the tourist trap. This is south of Moab, Utah, on the road to Monticello, Utah.

I’ve saved the best for last. The arch behind my Dad is Wilson Arch. It is on the road to Monticello, Utah – south of Moab, Utah.

Here is a link to Day 4.

November 3, 2018 4 comments
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Day 4 of An Adventure in the Daddy Zone With My Father

by Mark Eades November 3, 2018

Today was a day for lazing around in the hotel room until it was time to visit Evermore Park, which opened at 6:30 p.m.

Mostly we watched a couple of movies on HBO, then got a late lunch/early dinner.

Dad (Jim Eades) warms himself by the fireplace in the Tavern at Evermore Park in Pleasant Grove, Utah.

Then we bundled up for our visit to Evermore, as it is definitely November around the Pleasant Grove, Utah area, and it is a might cold. Cold enough to turn the leaves a very bright yellow on some of the nearby trees.

Bright fall colors explode forth in the evening sun in Pleasant Grove, Utah.

Evermore Park is a unique themed entertainment experience. There are not rides, it is more like a themed village with real people – actors – playing roles in the village.

Pumpkins dot the landscape around Evermore Park for Halloween.

Because it was still Halloween, the park was decorated for the season, and the storyline – about how “the dark” could take over people and the village – was something to dig into and find out about from the townsfolk.

One of Evermore’s “residents” chats with some visitors.

The first hour and a half of the three-hour time is more about exploring the village.then the second half is when the actors get more active about problems they are encountering, and seeking help from us visitors.

An owl and its caretaker give visitors to Evermore a chance to get up close and personal and say “Who?”

We went into one building where there were several live critters, including an owl.

Dad liked spending time sitting at the bar in the Tavern, talking with “the wench” behind the bar.

Of course, Dad loved chatting with the ladies.

This young lass spent some time warming herself by the fire – and Dad joined her.

When you walk around the village you might see a few creatures that are not too friendly.

You do not want to touch, nor let this creature touch or bite you in Evermore. You could get “the black.”

The second half is when the actors get more active about problems they are encountering, and seeking help from us visitors.

A villager tells others of her scary encounter with “the black” while others in the Tavern look on.

At one point I encountered a knight who challenged me to a game of chess – I defeated him with a checkmate move by my queen. He honored me with a “Well played, good sir.”

I defeated this knight with a brilliant move of my queen to checkmate his king.

Part of the evening’s entertainment were these two ladies doing a thrilling and twirling routing with fire.

A pair of fire dancing lasses entertain visitors to Evermore.

You had to be careful walking along the trails and streets of the village, or you could be infected with “the black.”

We think this villager might have been infected with “the black.”

Dad was just walking along but it was claimed he might be a spreader of “the black” and he was put in the gallows for a few minutes to make sure he was not and was pure of heart.

It was thought that Dad might be “infected” and was put into the gallows until it was determined he was not.

I met up with Evermore’s creative director, Josh Shipley, who is also a former Disney Imagineer I’ve known for some time. He seemed to be enjoying himself immensely in this new career of his.

Josh Shipley (left) is the creative director of Evermore Park in Pleasant Grove, Utah. I’m on the right.

He also told he that kids loved the big scary monster near the park’s entrance almost more than the adults – something they didn’t think would happen as they had originally planned to put the creature more towards the back of the park. He even offered how people were asking for souvenir T-shirts with the creature on it.

This large scary looking creature will ask you your name, then send you on a quest.

Well it was an enjoyable evening, though cold. So we went to bed early to continue the adventure on the morrow.

The mill and mausoleum in Evermore.

Here is a link to Day 3.

November 3, 2018 2 comments
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