Thursday, June 16, 2016

A Kansas Road Trip

I’m of an age when it’s best to start checking items off my bucket list, so Dennis and I took a short road trip into central Kansas last week.

First, I wanted to visit the Stafford Milling Company in Hudson, Kansas where Hudson Cream Flour is produced.  Before I switched to baking with organic flour I favored Hudson Cream, because it is a regional product and not shipped long distance. The trip to Hudson was a big disappointment because all we got to see was the outside of the grain silos and the mill. Instead of a tour we got to watch a twenty-minute DVD of the milling process. Driving away from the mill we did admire the Hudson Cream wind turbine that supplies the mill’s electricity.



Wind turbines are an increasingly common sight in Kansas, along with fields of wheat, oil pumps, and oil storage tanks, often in the same spot.


Another item on my bucket list was to visit Coronado Heights, near Lindsborg. A view from the hilltop shows how prevalent wheat fields really are.


If not for a grove of trees at the north edge of the hill, one could have a 360º view of the surrounding landscape. During the Great Depression the Works Progress Administration (WPA) put stonemasons to work erecting a castle atop Coronado Heights so that visitors could get above the trees and see for miles in every direction. Ensuing years of neglect left the castle in such poor condition it was no longer safe. Today, the castle is being repaired, surrounded by a chain-link fence.


WPA masons also several built picnic areas around the hilltop edges, using the Dakota limestone that constitutes the hill. Unfortunately these, too, have been neglected. It isn’t even possible to access them, the steps to them having completely eroded,


On a whim we ended our excursion with a visit to the Sandzén Art Gallery on the Bethany College campus in Lindsborg. The art was amazing, and it more than made up for my flourmill disappointment.


He apparently painted this oil with a palatte knife.


I learned that sometimes what we think we want doesn’t turn out to be what we expected, but the unexpected can be a delight. There’s more to be enjoyed than we can imagine. All we have to do it venture out.

Copyright 2016 Shirley Domer


3 comments:

LawrenceLinda said...

I assume it's a Sandzer oil painting but in the photo it looks like a woodcut. You made the trip while the weather was good.

Shirley said...

I can see why it looks like a woodcut. I'm adding a close-up of the painting to the post to illustrate his technique.

Jayhawk Fan said...

I love living vicariously through your blog, Mama!

Love you!