Chilling at Lockwood Cafe on Reliable Street

Lockwood Cafe at Reliable Street chilling

I was unsuccessfully  trying to get settled and get something done and  then Reliable Street popped into my head.  Instead of driving home to the west side of Ames, I headed toward North Dakota (Avenue not state).  Almost out of town you will see an old feed mill, a remnant of the former small town of Ontario,  and nestled under an outside awning, Lockwood Cafe.  Last summer I’d learned their basil jalapeno lemonade was to die for, and recently I’d heard they had added an interesting variety of crepes to their menu.

It was hot, but there were large fans blowing, and under the awning I found a table and relief.  Behind me was a large table of lunching Iowa Staters, but their talk slowly faded out of my consciousness as I turned my chair to face east.  I was in the countryside.  But I was still in Ames.  I was in Ames AND the countryside.  I could have my crepe and eat it too!

Lockwood Cafe crepe

The old Doboy (Doughboy) feed mill and warehouse sits next to the railroad tracks, which dictates at least some surrounding green space.  The visionaries who bought and are renovating this space have added a community garden.  I enjoyed watching bunnies stick their noses through the chicken wire fence, offering to help with the harvesting.  I could feel the country breeze on my face and luxuriate in a view of wild grasses (yes, I know some people call them weeds!) and crops and trees beyond.  I didn’t get much writing done, but I felt rested and very green when I left.

Reliable Street country view
My view from Lockwood Cafe at Reliable Street

Flowers around the swimming pool

I LOVE water walking at the Furman Aquatic Center in Ames!

 

Do other water parks beautify your experience with flowers the way Furman does?

 

 

 

  Whoever supported the landscaping, I would like to take this opportunity to thank you heartily!

My friend Diane

A few weeks back, I was invited to lounge on a large porch under the shade of mature trees and drink tea with my friend Diane and her daughter Elizabeth.  I can’t believe I missed taking a photo of THE PORCH, which is just too awesome for words, but I did snap just about everything else!

I met Diane and Elizabeth while I was working at Iowa State’s Reiman Gardens.  Besides our common love of gardens, mother and daughter have a passion for reading, Diane is an author, Elizabeth is an artist with a masters in library science, and both love to travel.  Now picture the large dining room table covered with table cloth, cloth napkins, an awesome dessert (made with blueberries picked from The Berry Patch Farm in Nevada) out on the front porch, iced tea and lemonade and a lazy afternoon to get caught up on so many of the things we love, and you have a perfect picture of summer!

  Over the years, Diane has shared her own experience with me of doing a masters in mid life.   She helped me believe I could do it too and several times sent me just the e-mail I needed to stay motivated.  Our summer afternoon visit was a celebration of success and being women engaged in things we love.

I talked about a current read by Mary Catherine Bateson, daughter of anthropologists Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson.  In Full Circles, Overlapping Lives: Culture and Generation in Transition, MCB introduces her experience of teaching at Spelman college as a white professor at a black college by emphasizing that we don’t need to go beyond our own doors to find the anthropological “stranger”.  Even those we live closest to are never fully known, and we should spend our days celebrating that, looking at spouse or child with renewed awe as we realize there are worlds inside each one that we will never fully know.

Diane surprised me with the fact that she not only knows Spelman, but has a friend there!  She put me onto her own current read, The Elegance of the Hedgehog.  Later, at Borders, when I read the first page, I was hooked by the language of French author Muriel Barbery ( who must surely be a closet sociologist!)  and the brilliance of translator Alison Anderson who faithfully bridged Barbery’s love of language into the English.  Alas, I probably should have bought the book at Borders then and there and who knows, maybe they wouldn’t be going out of business!  But I promised myself the reward of Hedgehog when I finally made it through my oral exam and found it at Ames Public library last week.

After our dessert on the porch, we wandered through the old, elegant house that exists nicely in the shade without air conditioning (at least the day I was there!) and into the garden to see Elizabeth’s latest passions.  This is the creative soul who painted appliance boxes to look like the insides of flowers so  children could see the world like Georgia O’Keeffe!  She  decorated  Reiman’s Gourmet Garnish Garden with quirky kitchen tools and brought the Lorax into being for the children’s Dr. Seuss Doodling Garden!

What are you doing to make The Summer of 2011 memorable?  Elizabeth is trying her hand at bee keeping and raising 4 chickens! 

Diane and other members of the family have done a lot of work on their backyard garden.  I LOVE every little detail of a garden and I hope I  listened politely while trying not to take “too many” pictures and act totally distracted by potatoes growing in bags, garden cloth covered paths and amazing varieties of tomatoes.  Really, I guess I should warn people, “don’t expect me to carry on a cogent conversation when I am in the garden, because every insect and flower is calling to me!”

I like to call this last picture The Princess and the Swan!  Elizabeth rescued this willow sculpture after Reiman’s summer display and gave it a home in her backyard.

My memories of Summer Twenty Eleven, as my friend Lani calls it, will definitely include my summer afternoon with Diane and Elizabeth!

Colorful Annual Garden

I wish I could find a way to describe how this garden made me feel the other night.  I was driving home, it was hot, I was distracted…and then I came around the corner and WOW!  A surprising shock of marvelous color!  Normally I don’t like lots of different colors in one garden because it is easy for it to look busy rather than restful. This gardener’s key to success  though is using blocks of the same plant and curving edges that make you feel like you are in an Impressionist painting!

 

Strawberry Time

When I lived in Indiana, there was a strawberry farm not far from our house.  Back when life was “simpler” (is it simpler when you have a young child? hmm, I may need to rethink that statement!),  I made it over there several times a season to pick berries.  I’d make strawberry pie, strawberry freezer jam, etc.

Now it’s been years since I’ve picked strawberries.  I keep thinking I’ll make it out to the Berry Patch near Nevada, IA, but it seems like July comes before you can blink your eyes anymore, and the strawberries are gone.

Not that I am saying there is anything wrong with red raspberries, black raspberries, blackberries and blueberries, mind you!  But that first berry of summer just seems to elude me now.

Anyway, with all that in mind, I did make it over to HyVee and got enough berries for crepes on Memorial Day, so I guess summer hasn’t totally gotten away from me!

 

A Strawberry Rose at Stomping Grounds

 

Met my best friend for Saturday morning breakfast a while ago.  We luxuriated in the outside setting at Stomping Grounds in Ames, Iowa.  She got this strawberry rose garnish on her brie plate and I had the perfect plate of bacon and eggs.  We both like raspberry mochas, and the Stomping Grounds owner came out and made sure our quirky mocha idiosyncrasies were accommodated perfectly!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

RAGBRAI 2008

One of the first summers I lived in Iowa, people started talking about RAGBRAI this and RAGBRAI that. Whawhat?

Now I am proud to say that I can tell you that RAGBRAI is the (Des Moines) Register’s Annual Great Bike Ride Across Iowa. And this year, I actually got to see the great…..hmmm, how to describe it???? Well, how about I just show you some pictures! It’s not a race, just lots and lots of bike geeks and friends and family riding and camping across 400 some miles of the great state of Iowa. Maybe some day I’ll be up to riding at least one segment of the great bike ride!

The hat lady who also provided a host home for some riders
The hat lady who also provided a host home for some riders
la tour de corn!
la tour de corn!
RAGBRAI love and inspiration
RAGBRAI love and inspiration
More RAGBRAI inspiration
More RAGBRAI inspiration
Riding together
Riding together

And here is our favorite RAGBRAI protector keeping everyone safe!