Sunday, 25 September 2016

BLOG 316


BLOG 316
Where do I start? We had a wonderful holiday in S Dakota and there was much to occupy us in the 10 days we were there. As a youngster, our TV viewing was filled with programmes about cowboys and Indians in which the Indians were always portrayed as the baddies but how wrong was that! I learned so much about Western history and native American culture on this trip; all the broken promises to the Indians, the annihilation of their life source in the vast herds of buffalo, the gold rush pushing them from their lands, the range wars …etc. It was uncomfortable viewing at times. And yes I managed to find a quilt show and a quilt shop!!
We opted to stay in an airport hotel at Manchester the night before our flight and the next morning, over a quiet leisurely breakfast, drums started to pound and this greeted our eyes. There were 4 dancers in all and, after 15 minutes of wobbling and gyrating, they departed just leaving a load of feathers as proof that they were there in the first place!

 
               Manchester airport

 I have passed through Washington many times and anyone who has been there will recall this colourful wall. I always ‘feel a quilt coming on’ when I see it!

                 Washington Dulles airport

 Rapid City is the city of presidents as there are bronze statues of them (42) on every street corner. And I enjoyed the art and crafts there especially the art alley where you can buy a licence and do your own thing in your own way.

                 Bronze statue

                 Art alley

The quilt show was hosted by the Hill City Quilters. It was interested to see how they hung their quilts; they used trouser hangers which meant that sleeves didn’t have to be sewn onto the back. I chose a favourite quilt and was thrilled (nay ecstatic) to find one of my garden gate designs on display! The Lone Star quilts appeared in the shops everywhere.

                 Hanging mechanism

                    Favourite quilt

                Garden Gate

                Lone Star

 We are all very aware of people owning guns in America and so it was no surprise to find them on sale wherever we went. We visited a pawn shop as we had never been in one before (and we watch Pawn Stars on TV!) and Rog was allowed to try an automatic weapon for size. He wasn’t trying to hold up the man behind the counter although from a distance it certainly looked that way!

                Pawn shop
I have always wanted to see Mount Rushmore and see it we did. It was very impressive with Washington, Jefferson, Roosevelt and Lincoln staring out of a huge granite outcrop. I can’t get my head around how sculptors see in 3-D and how they work on such a vast scale. It was started in 1927 and finished (as in left unfinished) in 1941 because the sculptor, Gutzon Borglum, died and money was diverted to the war effort.

              The Presidents 1

                                                   
               The Presidents 2

Following this, we then went to see the Crazy Horse Memorial. This was even more mind-boggling! It was started in 1948 when Korczak Ziolkowski was invited by Henry Standing Bear to do the sculpture. (Crazy Horse was never photographed so the image is as it was described by those who knew him.) No government money has been put into the project which perhaps explains why it will never be finished it my lifetime. It is funded by the Memorial Foundation, family, supporters and tourists and it was one of the most hauntingly beautiful sights I have ever seen, mainly because it reminded me of how the native Indians were treated. (‘My lands are where my dead lie buried’ Crazy Horse). They are working on his fingers at the moment.

                Crazy Horse Memorial

                Face of Crazy Horse

               Scale model 1/34th
Add to this all the Western history with cowboys, saddle and spurs; and then there’s Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane, the Bordellos, the gold rush and the cow towns etc. It was a fascinating trip!

             Wild Bill Hickok
 And I managed to buy some backing fabric for the corner log cabin quilt. This has already been cut out and the first square is ready for sewing. That will be a dark night cold weather project when I just need to sit at the sewing machine and sew without thinking. It’s good to be back home!

               Backing fabric

                  Ready steady go

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