A “World’s Largest” Kind of Day

As I mentioned before, DeDe and Denny are avid blog readers, and the last couple of times we have visited they have put together some very special days.  I’d love to say I had visited every place in Central Ohio, but as I have discovered hanging out with them that is simply not true.  What makes it so special is not only do they plan the days, but they go to great pains to pick things that they know would interest us and make great blog posts.

Well, they certainly outdid themselves on Wednesday with an adventure that was jam packed with cool museums and several “world’s biggest thing.”  If you know me at all by this point, you know I love, love giant anything.  Biggest chair, biggest iron, largest wind chime etc…I am there.  So when we were on our way tour first stop, Denny made a slight detour so I could see the world’s biggest basket.

Longaberger is a local company that in it’s heyday was the maker of some amazing handcrafted baskets.  They had so much success that their corporate office was built like a giant basket.  Nope, not making that up…see for yourself.

For scale see the orange traffic cone at the bottom.

The company also owns a large campus that used to have shops and beautiful gardens and was a popular tourist destination at Christmas time.  This campus, according to Roadside America, held the World’s largest basket of apples, and since it was pretty close by we also decided to stop there.  Technically it wasn’t open, but we drove in anyway and wandered about a bit taking pictures.  The facility is obviously being used for something (trash bags in cans and a few potted mums) but it had definitely seen better days.

The large;y empty facility

With the giant basket of apples

After seeing the apples we stopped at a gas station for “fry pies”.  These are made in Berlin, Ohio which has a thriving Amish community and are so much better than the standard fruit pies you see in stores.  These were more like a fruit filled donut and really yummy, but very sweet.

Despite the side trips we eventually made it to the Warther Museum and Garden.  Neither one of us had ever heard of this small museum, but DeDe and Denny had been a couple of times.  Ernest “Mooney”Warther led an extremely interesting life.  At the age of 5 his father died and all of the children had to go to work.  Mooney’s job was herding neighbor’s cows for which he was paid 1 penny a day.  When he was 6 years old he came across a carving knife in a field and started whittling. As the story goes, one day he met a man at a train station and the man taught him to carve wooden pliers.  Without any instruction, Moody duplicated the effort and spent years carving the wooden pliers.

Eventually he stopped his “whittling phase” and started carving trains.  The first few weren’t very good of course, but even the early works showed a high level of talent.  He started working in a steel mill at 16, got married, had 5 kids and eventually built a small house and work shop.  Despite having a regular job and family he never stopped carving and as his access to more expensive materials became possible he added ebony and ivory to his carvings.  He also started using blueprints and learned to carve to scale starting at 2:30am and carving until he had to go to work in the morning.  This was his hobby and despite numerous offers he never sold a train, and in 1963 the Warther museum was built to house the collection.

The museum building was built on his home property and around his workshop which he continued to use while the museum was open until his death. The workshop is that little white building to the left.

Workshop

He had an extensive arrowhead collection found during walks in the area and his early days he used the arrowhead material for embellishments on his trains

The museum itself costs $13, which initially I thought was high although I felt it was justified after seeing the train collection.  The grounds themselves are free and that included touring his home and the little button house he built for his wife.  Frieda, who was born in Switzerland (Mooney was second generation with Swiss born parents) started her own hobby after they were married.  She collected so many buttons that he eventually built her a place to put them all.  He also used the button material when money was tight for his trains and I loved the idea that she found her own hobby and passion in their marriage.

The button house

Each panel was grouped by a specific type of button and then put into a pattern

Her prized possession was the button in the center which was from Mrs’ Lincoln’s 2nd inaugural dress

The dining room was her work space and there were strings of buttons everywhere

The grounds were also very beautiful.  The grapevine on this arbor was over 100 years old

He built a large play area for the kids which included a 65 foot swing (that is not a typo). Lee was a little freaked out by this picture of one of the daughters swinging on it lol

After touring the grounds we entered the museum, which started with his earliest works.  One of the most interesting ting for me was that as his carving got more intricate he needed better knives to work with.  Eventually he created his own knife, with multiple interchangeable blades.  This carving tool was revolutionary and is actually not available for sale.  Only family members know how to make these blades. More importantly learning to make these knives led to him making a carving knife for his wife, which was so admired by the neighbors that the Warther knife business was born and the family still runs a knife business in a workshop attached to the building.

An early knife he created and used to whittle

Very cool fountain outside. The “whimpled” look on the blade was originally used to hide imperfections in the steel he could afford, but they continued the look even with better materials

The current workshop is part of the tour

The knives for sale were very beautiful, but way out of our price range

I did like this hanging knife rack though

Denny bought me a paring knife when I wasn’t looking and it is a beautiful knife. Wonderfully balanced and designed for right handers so Lee is not allowed to use it 🙂

But really it’s all about the trains and I know I am taking forever to get there, but there was alot going on in this museum.  There were three rooms of trains and they were all beautifully displayed.  Out tour guide was excellent, sharing lots of personal informaton about his process and although I am not really a train person I loved the craftsmanship.

One of the many display cases

This was one of my favorites and he carved this piece mutiple times to get it right. Whenever he recarved a piece he would usually throw the older “flawed piece” in the fireplace

There was a great display showing his materials including a block of ebony, an elephant tusk…

And the eyetooth of a hippo which contains the purest of ivory

He also had a fascination with Lincoln carving many pieces that pay homage to the type of man he felt the president was

This culminated in a replication of Lincoln’s funeral train which contained an amazing level of detail

Tiny carving of President Lincoln in his coffin

Truly the detail was amazing and some of the tiny carvers and train wheels are even on motors and parts of them move

My absolute favorite piece though was a recreation of the steel mill he worked in.  The piece is incredibly detailed and many of the pieces move, powered by a motor that he made using an old washing machine motor.  He created this device completely on his own and it’s clear what a creative genuis he was.  He only had a second grade education, but he was an avid reader and his mind never stopped. We took some pictures and Lee took some video, which is really the only way to really understand how wondrous it was.

The mill replication

Each little figure was a recreation of someone he actually knew

The sitting sleeping guy in the middle was a worker and  his head would nod up and down, and the guy on the left was a foreman who would slam his fist into his open hand and the other guy would wake up.

He included himself in the work and I think he is the guy on this machine

Really amazing museum, but we weren’t done yet.  We stopped for a quick lunch at McDonald’s and headed to Berlin to see the museum of ships started by David’s grandson.  We found time on the way to stop at the World’s Largest Cuckoo Clock and this may have been my favorite part of the day.  The clock performs on the hour and on the half hour and through sheer luck we only had to wait 8 minutes to watch it chime. Very cool and we all enjoyed watching the free show in the town square of Sugar Creek.

DeDe and Denny

The band started to come out. The figures were probably 4 feet tall

The second museum is the David Warther Carvings and Museum and inspired by his grandfather he started carving ships as a small child. His museum is $10 to enter, although they gave us each a $2 discount when we showed a coupon from the other museum.  David is still a working carver and when we joined the tour in progress he was actually explaining how he makes ivory thread for the masts on the ships.  He couldn’t find what he needed so he and a friend invented a block of steel which he rubbed the ivory in to create very tiny threads.

David Warther..really nice guy

His thread creator

The ships were beautiful and almost all in ivory, but I have to say I liked the trains better.  Lee though, who loves ships, was fascinated.  He started with the oldest ancient ships and works his way up to ships from the 1800’s.  One of the things I did like was every ship had a magnifying glass in the case so you could see some of the detail.

David works in his workshop and stops and gives part of the tours

The detail is even more amazing when you realize that to create the black line he scratches the ivory lightly then blots the piece with ink.  The ink wipes off the polished ivory but stays in the scored material creating the thin detail lines you see above.

One of my favorite pieces

Lee loved the pirate era ships

This ship had 179 oars and each oar took 1 hour to carve

My favorite ship looked very different from the others but the tour guide wasn’t sure why.

This piece was really neat though and I was curious about how he made the “basket look”

The level of detail was really beautiful

 

After the ship museum we headed into Berlin to eat some dinner at Mrs Yoder’s one of our favorite Amish restaurants.  But we had to stop at a couple of places first.  We saw the World’s Largest Amish Buggy first inside the Wendell August Forge and we stopped at DeDe’s favorite gift shop The Village Barn

I bought this really cool triangle basket

It was made by a 6 year old Amish child and I made sure that the kids receive 80% of the profits before I bought it. It was really well made

And pretty inexpensive. . . I also bought this silverware basket to put pens and pencils in.

Loved browsing the gift shop although we don’t have room for anything

I think this is one of my favorite pictures I have ever taken of Lee and his mom

Tempted by this little sign but again no room

By the time we drove back it was almost a 13 hour day and I was pooped.   It was a truly lovely day and incredibly thoughtful of them to plan it.  Loved that we saw so many cool things, but I definitely needed a good nights sleep!


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First Time getting a Flat Tire

Saturday, Lee and I left Alum Creek State Park very early because we wanted to get to his parents and go to Amish country for the day.  As he was pulling into the dump station though, he hit some debris in the road and got a flat tire.  My reaction was pretty much “this was bound to happen sooner or later” and since we have an extended tire warranty on the rig and Good Sam’s roadside assistance I was not worried.  Lee went ahead and dumped the tanks and I called Good Sam’s.  We have had the roadside assistance through Sam’s the entire time we have been camping and I was feeling very confident when I made that phone call.  After all, it wasn’t a matter of if, but when, we got a flat tire and we were in about the safest place we could be.  Plus it was early in the morning, so I thought I would have no problem.  Unfortunately that is not the way things unfolded.  I will walk you through my experience and please keep in mind I took notes as I went so the information is extremely accurate.

Flat tire

Flat tire

The initial call was placed at 7:10am.  The dispatcher verified my card number and location and stated he would find someone in the area. I received a text from Good Sam’s (as promised) at 7:18am stating that Alum Creek Towing had been dispatched with an eta of 10:27.  What??? This seemed very long to me, especially considering we were just outside a major city. So Lee called the number provided to speak directly to the towing company. They notified him that they were not equipped to handle tire changes on a trailer and would be unable to help.  I called Good Sam back and talked to a second dispatcher, pretty annoyed that a company that specializes in RV assistance would have a provider in their database that was not equipped to handle trailers, but still willing to chalk it up to an anomaly. I was assured that they would verify on the phone with the next provider that we had a fifth wheel trailer tire and was sent a text at 9:02am stating the towing company had been dispatched and would arrive at 10:12am.  Well at least the ETA was shorter, but just to be sure, Lee called the company. Their dispatcher stated he wasn’t sure the tech could work on a trailer, and would verify it and call back in 10 minutes. 25 minutes later Lee called back and was told they were still trying to find a tech.  By this point it was 9:25am and I was very frustrated.  I called Good Sam’s and asked to speak to a supervisor.  I was told one was not available, but they were trying to find a third provider as the second provider had just cancelled the call.  When I heard that I had had enough.  I again asked (or demanded, as I was pretty hot) to speak to a supervisor and was connected to Monica.  I have to say Monica did a nice job calming me down.  She assured me she had two agents working on it, but held firm she could not stay on the phone with me until it was resolved because she was the only supervisor on the floor.  She also stated the regional account managers were responsible for making sure the vendors could change a trailer tire and was as upset as I was that two providers had been unable to handle the service, but she could only escalate on Monday.

While all this was going on there was a dog that barked consistently the entire time.  I love dogs but there is a special place in hell for people that tether their dogs outside at a campground, leave them for hours and hours, and allow them to bark that way.  Plus it was getting hot and the downside of our safe place was that it was next to the dump station.  So as people started to leave they stopped to dump and we were the recipients of at least 5 different poop smells that morning.  And of course every single man that pulled up offered us his jack to change the flat.  We had a spare and the truck jack, but Lee was not comfortable with changing the tire himself.  He did start calling companies himself and talked to three semi-truck companies and none of them would touch an RV.  Not a good sign for when we get out west.   I will say that about 10 that jack was looking pretty good, but I received the third text stating that Wells & Son Tire Service would be coming at 10:53.  Here’s where the story gets better as the tech not only showed up at 10:29am but fixed the flat in about 10 minutes.  He gave us very good advice on where to get another spare and did a very nice job.  He also shared with us that he almost hadn’t come because Good Sam had dispatched him in March and after 52 minutes of driving they had cancelled the call when he was 5 minutes out.  He didn’t mind that the customer had found other assistance, but wanted paid for his drive time but Good Sam refused.  He said the only reason he accepted this call was because it was only 20 minutes from his house and he agreed before he knew it was Good Sam calling.  So there you have it.  My recommendation on Good Sam Roadside Assistance is: Proceed with caution and have another solution.

Speaking of another solution, in one of Lee’s calls to get the spare replaced he was told about a product called Rapid Jack.   This product allows you to roll one wheel onto it lifting slightly the second one.  It will work on dual axle trailer tires or the outside dually tires and after watching this video Lee went and bought one on the spot.  So if it ever happens again we are all set.  It only cost $60 which is a small price to pay for never being in that situation again. Update:  Absolutely do NOT buy this product. When we got our second flat tire and tried to use it on the side of the road it sunk into the gravel and would not lift the tire enough for Lee to remove it himself, so we had to call a professional.  Their videos show it working on solid pavement, which may work, but since when is the side of the road payment?  So we made it to DeDe and Denny’s with enough time left to go to Amish country.  We had a terrific day, and here are the pictures to prove it.

First Stop FANTASTIC buffet at a run by Amish restaurant

First Stop FANTASTIC buffet at a run by Amish restaurant

Even the Amish eat here

Even the Amish eat here

Although most buggies look the same here are three that are different

Although most buggies look the same here are three that are different

Amish Farm

Amish Farm

After a fantastic reasonably priced lunch at Mrs. Yoders (some of the best fried chicken I have ever had), we went to Lehman’s a large mercantile store that caters specifically to the Amish.  If you weren’t aware, the Amish do not use electricity, so Lehman’s carries products you would not usually find in a store. If you think about it, the Amish are the original Boondockers and have found many creative ways over the years to do without electricity.   We had a terrific time wandering around, and found some neat little stuff in the clearance store for an additional 25% off!!  Cori and Kelly I now have a chip and dip bowl; it’s very exciting!!! Plus as a bonus they had a small exhibit right when we walked in the door of diarama’s carved from one block of wood.  They were beautiful.

Y022

Carved from onesolid block of wood

Carved from onesolid block of wood

 

This was my favorite

This was my favorite

More non-electric lamps than I have ever seen

More non-electric lamps than I have ever seen

Lee and Dede humored me

Lee and Dede humored me

Amish romance novels...oh yes they have them

Amish romance novels…oh yes they have them

This bell was made in Troy NY which I have been to many times

This bell was made in Troy NY which I have been to many times

Denny checking out the gardening section

Denny checking out the gardening section

Farm folks make recipes in BIG quantities

Farm folks make recipes in BIG quantities

Not happening!!!

Not happening!!!

This is not happening either

This is not happening either

But I did love Butane iron ...VERY cool.

But I did love Butane iron …VERY cool.

A cast iron stove with a cook top for the posers

A cast iron stove  look-a-likewith a cook top for the posers

This cast iron frigerator is completely modern on the inside. Very neat

This cast iron look-a-like refrigerator is completely modern on the inside. Very neat

 Compost toilets for my RV friends

Compost toilets for my RV friends

A cider press

A cider press

Butter molds...why doesn't out butter some this pretty?

Butter molds…why doesn’t our butter come this pretty?

 

 

 

 

What I really wanted to look at was a propane residential fridge I had seen in the catalog. It was really awesome, but before I got too excited Lee said it was probably too deep to fit into our slide out.  Bummer. I thought I had discovered something cool.

Y068 Y069

 

I do want to mention that if you are traveling through Amish country (especially with an RV) you need to be extremely careful.  Horse and buggies ALWAYS have the right of way and you should be particularly careful of curves and rainy days.  Remember this is the only mode of transportation they have and generally must use the main roads to get from place to place.  There was an effort though to build a special roadway ( The Mohican Valley Trail)  and Denny stopped so I could take some pictures of the Dreamers Bridge. You can bike on this trail, but watch our for the horse poop as the Amish use it frequently.

Y085 Y087

 

Y092 Y093

Lee at Dreamers Bridge

Lee at Dreamers Bridge

Y095

 

 

Y099 Y107

 

We also got to see the horse stables at the local Walmart…yes Walmart, and I have to say how impressed I was that Walmart accommodated the needs of the Amish in this area. Lehman’s is nice, but the prices are on the high side and the Amish are Americans too and share the right to shop at Walmart just like anyone else.

 

The horse stall at Walmart

The horse stall at Walmart

It was a standard Walmart

It was a standard Walmart

They put coolers on the back of the buggies for cold stuff

They put coolers on the back of the buggies for cold stuff

 

It was a truly lovely day planned by my in-laws and perfect for our new life.  We are really going to miss them as we travel on the road and I hope they come visit us as we are traveling…they have  a standing invitation!!  Just to cap off the day we saw a beautiful rainbow on the way home and Denny was nice enough to pull over so I could take another pic.  Gene, I have been trying to add more pictures as you requested so I hope this post has plenty for you 🙂

Clouds in the sky

Clouds in the sky

Beautiful rainbow

Beautiful rainbow

Lessons Learned

  • Have a flat tire plan before getting one and don’t rely on your roadside assistance as the only solution. 
  • Don’t buy a Rapid Jack

 


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