Saturday, June 26, 2010
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Food
There are several more items to add to this particular post, but I don't have all the photos yet... Once I do, I will update it with more of the food we experienced...
This was brunch the day before we left on our road trip. Mellissa pulled out her French influenced culinary skills on us and made mushroom, egg and goat cheese stuffed crepes. They were very good and very pretty.




Next is Portillos for a Chicago Style Dog... I'm not a fan of hotdogs, I actually cannot stand them, but it was impressed upon me that I HAD to try a Chicago Style hotdog and from it was unanimous from all sides that Portillos was the absolute best place to get hotdogs. I was also told that I needed to have cheese fries with it. I have to admit it, the Chicago Style Dog was good, I could barely taste the hotdog, which was my favorite part. I loved the peppers! Yummy. The cheese fries I could have lived without, it was like macaroni and cheese with fries instead of macaroni. Not that cheap storebrand mac and cheese though, like Kraft Mac and Cheese... the good one and I've been passing that stuff up in the grocery store for months, so this took care of that fix I've been denying.
We also had pizza from Gino's East in Chicago. It was yummy and I'm not sure that I want to have pizza anywhere ever again after that. I have to upload the picture after I get it from Mellissa (got it!). I'm glad she got a small because that thing was so thick with crust, cheese and sausage... holy cats! Oh, the best part, green peppers does NOT mean bell peppers. I was ready to pick them off, but when we got the pizza, it was those hot & sweet peppers.
The Badlands... they're so naughty
Pardon my Wiki here, but the information about the development of the area is pretty cool, so… learn something - Approximately 75 million years ago the Earth’s climate was warmer than it is now, and a shallow sea covered much of the region we know as the Great Plains. Stretching from the Gulf of Mexico to Canada and from western Iowa to western Wyoming, this sea teemed with life. In today's Badlands the bottom of that sea appears as a grayish-black sedimentary rock called the Pierre (pronounced "peer") shale. This layer is an incredibly rich source of fossils, for creatures sank to the bottom of the sea when they died and over a long course of time became fossils. Within the park, the fossilized remains of a variety of animals have been found. Baculites, an extinct cephalopod, had a squid-like body with a long cylindrical shell tightly coiled at the one end. Inside the shell were individual chambers containing either gas or liquid for buoyancy control. Clams, crabs and snails in great numbers have also been found. Outside the park, the Pierre shale has yielded abundant remains of ancient fish; mosasaurs, giant marine lizards; pterosaurs, flying reptiles; Hesperonis, a diving bird something like a modern loon. Why have the rocks inside the park, which are so rich in invertebrate fossils, yielded so few marine creatures with backbones? Questions like these puzzle paleontologists and earth scientists who continue to search in hope of answering some of the questions about the park's and Earth's rich past.
Today, after a heavy rainstorm in the Badlands, vivid red bands stand out against the buff tones of the buttes. Geologists and paleontologists tell us that these are fossilized soils, which make up much of the Badlands rocks. Fossil soils can tell us a great deal about the climate history of the Badlands; they also impart much of the colorful banding to Badlands rocks. Perhaps the best of all, the loose, crumbling rocks formed from these ancient soils hold one of the greatest collections of fossil mammals on Earth.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Mount Rushmore
Minnesota... or HELL
What we originally thought was heat lightening turned out to be something entirely different... We had visited Mellissa's friend Liz in Wisconsin a couple of hours earlier and were making our way across Southeast Minnesota and were watching the lightening flash on the horizon. We both thought it was heat lightening... the sky looked relatively normal and non-threatening. We were going to stop and let the dogs out at the next rest area and before jumping out of the car I noticed the trees billowing in the wind, which made me think that it probably wasn't heat lightening, but an actual thunderstorm. I'd been through plenty of those in Florida and wasn't that worried about it... until a few seconds later.
We were both at the back door of the car, getting ready to leash the dogs when the sky light up bright white and we both gasped and jumped into the Jeep. Like it would have done any good at that point right? Once you see the lightening, it’s too late and not to mention… our asses and legs were still hanging out of the Jeep. Mellissa screams, forget it, lets' go. She practically mows me down to save herself (kidding) and when I make it around to the driver's side of the Jeep screams at me "Go, Go, Go!"
In a matter of minutes, the sky changed completely.
http://www.weather.com/outlook/videos/iwitness-tornado-forms-on-camera-17595#17595
We were both at the back door of the car, getting ready to leash the dogs when the sky light up bright white and we both gasped and jumped into the Jeep. Like it would have done any good at that point right? Once you see the lightening, it’s too late and not to mention… our asses and legs were still hanging out of the Jeep. Mellissa screams, forget it, lets' go. She practically mows me down to save herself (kidding) and when I make it around to the driver's side of the Jeep screams at me "Go, Go, Go!"
In a matter of minutes, the sky changed completely.
Yes, that is an actual picture of the horizon. I drove so fast trying to get the heck out of there and at times I thought we were nearly through it. Mellissa was freaking out (so was I) and I told her that I thought we were through the worst of it because I could see light on the horizon, the tornado warning issues on the radio were all nearly expired and I was driving like a bat out of hell. Then the freeway curved, straight toward the pitch-black sky, or the bright orange sky with the pitch-black cloud that sat in the center of it. I knew I was wrong about being through the worst of it because it was right there in front of us. I remember my brain going "uhhhhh..." then I thought “well, I just wont say anything and hopefully she wont notice.” She was nice enough to not point out that I was WRONG... until we talked and laughed about it the next day.
Like I said before, I drove as fast as I could and fortunately, we made it through Minnesota alive. We didn't really know how bad it was until Mellissa overheard people talking at a gas station just before the South Dakota border and they mentioned several houses being destroyed. We looked it up on the internet the next day and found the below at Weather.com. There are other videos out there as well. Just watching them makes my heart race.
http://www.weather.com/outlook/videos/iwitness-tornado-forms-on-camera-17595#17595
Chicago




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