MrAviator180
Pre-Flight
Favorites? Least favorites?
I liked Telketna. The Road House has good food and the tables are set up so that you don't get your own. It makes for some good conversations. When I was there, a dog was sleeping in the middle of the main street and all the traffic just drove around him. Some grandmother had just shot a brown bear that was trapsing through her backyard in town. There are alot of climbers getting ready to go up McKinley. You can find them up any tree in town or climbing the sides of buildings.
What don't you like about 4th Street in Anchorage?
There is a Road House on the Richardson that has all you can eat sour dough pancakes that are to die for.
The "Food Factory" in Fairbanks has great subs and when I was there 250 variety s of beer.
Big Bob started with his first Food Factory store near the UA Fairbanks campus. Little hole in the wall that would only seat about 20 people. That was in 1980, and by the time I left in 83 he had three restaurants. I think the only one left is the biggest on across from the Fred Meyer.
Well, living on the base, the closest town was the booming metropolis of Moose Creek LOL
I hear tell Wasilla is a great town. You can even see Russia from there.
No food is to die for. Think about it...
The beautiful town of Baker.
Many Colorado mountain towns without ski resorts look similar when not covered in snow.
Rural towns east in the flatlands away from I-70 and I-76 aren't looking so hot these days either. If they ever did.
My mom did a photo essay / video on the old church building in Osgood, CO where she visited family friends as a child. We don't have it online anywhere but it's eerie. The prairie eats small towns. The building is rotting in place, the piano is on its back in the main room full of bird's nests , windows are mostly broken with the eerie few stained glass windows still intact since the vandals apparently thought better of shattering those, chairs left in odd places and then pushed around the place by prairie windstorms, etc. Amazing how well the building structure has fared and the hardwood floors.
This guy does some photos also and appears to be slowly documenting the ghost towns of the plains as a hobby. The Osgood church is mentioned but not seen. He has some other fascinating shots though.
http://users.frii.com/uliasz/photoart/lost_colorado/east.htm
The images of Keota, CO are probably the most beautiful and eerie in his collection. Water tower still standing. Fire hydrants in the middle of grasslands. Concrete staircase to the high school that closed in 1951, now leads to nowhere, old church with the bell tower torn off by prairie winds.
Rural life isn't for folks who want pretty earth-toned suburban subdivisions with perfectly manicured lawns and HOAs that ticket offenders, that's for sure.
For many people when you work hard for every thing you own, every thing has value, and nothing gets thrown away.
Compound that with being hundreds of miles away from the store, you keep and use every thing over and over.
Only if you're a comedian on SSL!
true!