Clint’s CRAZY Bargains

I found this in my souvenir box the other day. It’s a pretty sizeable box, since I tend to be sentimental about nearly everything. This bag was a gift from a friend and came from a chain of stores that no longer exists.

Back in the 1990s, when Jerry Bartz was still doing weather at KFYR-TV, he took a vacation to Australia. When he came back to work he brought me this souvenir. Apparently there was a big chain of discount stores called “Clint’s CRAZY Deals” down under. I don’t know why they left the apostrophe off the bags, though. I tried to find them online, but only found an article about the chain being purchased by a similar bargain retail chain. So I guess I have a collector’s item, a piece of Aussie retail history!

I know Jerry was working for some shop-at-home channels such as Gems TV, but he moved on from there and I’m not sure what happened to him after that.  I don’t think I’ve spoken to my former coworker since he left KFYR-TV, and as a Minnesota native I doubt he makes it back to Bismarck often.

Iridescent clouds

As I left work a few days ago I spotted these clouds overhead. The sun is in the center of the photo, about a third of the way up from the bottom of the frame. Its light was reflected, refracted, and deflected by some wild clouds. Some of them took on a rainbow-like appearance. They’re called iridescent clouds and are a pretty neat phenomenon.

I try to keep an eye on the sky…for instance, I took some photos of tonight’s wispy clouds at sunset. But I don’t care to bore people with post after post of sunrises and sunsets. When I see something a little more unique, though, such as these iridescent clouds, I post ’em.

I still say North Dakota has the most beautiful skies, and I’m sure many of my friends and readers who are no longer in North Dakota will agree with me.

Out to pasture

On a lonely little gravel road west of Mandan I found this rig parked in the corner of a field. As anyone visiting this site on a regular basis knows, I’m a sucker for a broken-down farmstead, a windmill, a well, or an old farm implement. I guess it’s part of North Dakota’s charm, although a wistful one at that. In my travels around the periphery of Bismarck-Mandan I’ve found many such sights, more than I’ve posted here. Gradually I’ll let ’em all out!

Sub-stantial damage

I found this video while rooting around on the hard drives tonight and thought I would pass it along. I’m not sure who shot it, but kudos. Considering that the transformers in this substation still contained PCB’s, I’m not so sure I would want to be anywhere near them as they burned, at least not downwind. I’m sure they were replaced with more environmentally friendly ones.

You may remember a semi trailer parked in the Kirkwood Mall parking lot with temporary substation equipment on it. That’s long gone now, with a new (and presumably beefier) substation built in the location of the old one. I hope you enjoy the video.

Main Avenue color

You don’t need to go far to find some beautiful fall foliage in Bismarck. A while back I found these leaves, and many other colorful varieties, right on Main Avenue! In fact, the blue behind them isn’t even the sky; it’s the back of the sign of the office building at the corner of Main and Mandan Street. I can’t believe I spaced the name of it…wait! It’s Tuscany Square.

One interesting thing is that the map graphic on the home page of the Bismarck Historical Society lists east-west roads as “Streets” and north-south ones as “Avenues.” For instance, there’s Washington Avenue and Sweet Street. The map is from 1883, so something must have changed in the 125 years since. Main Avenue, however, is listed on the map as “Main A”…so perhaps it has never been Main Street.

The day the polkas (and bubbles) came back to town

It was a sunny September day in 1965. I didn’t exist yet, but my friend’s dad did…and so did his camera. Lawrence Welk and his orchestra flew into Bismarck to, as James Grimstad put it, a “royal turnout.”

I haven’t much to say about the event, since I wasn’t there (or anywhere), but I do have to pay tribute to my friend’s dad Jim. I barely knew him before he passed away of Alzheimer’s, although I had the opportunity to know him better. It was only after his passing that I realized he and I were such kindred spirits. It seems he never went anywhere without his cameras over the years, and has left an astonishing and irreplacable photo legacy. Now I really regret not getting to know him better and talking about his photos with him, helping him relive the moments he captured.

Through an enormous gift of grace, I’ve been entrusted with much of that legacy and hope to preserve it in its entirety. You’ll see many more peeks into Bismarck history through his lens here on my blog throughout the years, as he has decades of unique photos of memorable events. His work will live on.

Higher ground

I got off work to an awesome sky today. The clouds were pretty amazing, so I did what works best: head for high ground and see what develops! I found myself at the University of Mary this time around. I was just going to stop in the parking lot, but I found that the large cross at the edge of the hill was a good point of view.

The neat thing about the sky at this particular time is that the clouds look like they’re going around the cross, like when you put your hand in running water or something similar. It was a pretty cool catch!

Part of the photographic formula is a nice camera. Another part is an eye for an attractive photo. I tend to attribute the biggest part of the formula, however, to just simply being there. I was there tonight. Then it was home for a tremendous honey-do list, which tonight was marathon woodworking in our home improvement project.

The other side of Double Ditch

I’ve posted a few sunset photos from this vantage point: the post at the north border of Double Ditch Indian Village, perched atop the cliff. It’s a popular point of view for local photographers, and I’ve run into a few there. But it brings up the question of what this area looks like from below.

It’s been a while since I’ve been down at the bottom of these cliffs. Back in the 1980s there used to be a big sandbar island in the middle of the river here, and we’d have big parties out there in August to say goodbye to friends before everybody left for college. We’d have a generator and sound system, volleyball nets, and boats ferrying people to and from the shore. Those were the days. So I decided to find the old foot path down to the river and poke around a little before sunset.

Wow. The path has eroded some. A lot, actually. It’s at the south end of the road now, which used to be the midpoint of the park when the road looped all the way through. Despite having a few grand worth of camera gear on my back, I decided to skate down the trail anyway. I managed not to tip over and only got a little bit muddy at the bottom, where natural drainage brings water down to the river from the hills above.

Wow, I came down that wearing a pair of Airwalks? I’m braver than I thought! I figured I’d come up with a plan for getting back up the hill later, since I didn’t even have enough traction to get down gracefully. Getting back up this way seemed highly unlikely.

Of course, that’s when I noticed a trail nice enough to call wheelchair accessible coming down from the other side of the ravine! It wasn’t exactly visible from where I came down, and seems to be relatively recent since there’s a little signage area at the top, part of the “new” park. I haven’t spent much time hoofing around the park since they took the road out, so it had escaped my attention until now. At least now I know how I’m getting back up!

The water was calm that day, my friends. There were actually a lot of graceful ripples lapping at the shore, and that is a REALLY nice sound. I had my iPod in my pack, but this time I left it there. It was a nice little meditation walk this time, something I haven’t done in way too long. The sky wasn’t really doing anything of note, so I decided to head north and investigate the shoreline along the park.

The Missouri River is low right now, as you can see. I had no problem walking on recently solid ground among fallen trees and other debris, but nothing really mindblowing. I did see some beverage cans that were old enough to be the pull-tab type from the 1970s, a C02 cylinder from a fountain pop dispenser, and a rusty 55 gallon drum. There were a lot of interesting tracks, too.

Of course, this wouldn’t be Double Ditch without any of the fabled cars at the bottom of the cliff! The grass was really tall, but I spotted at least three of them. There might even be some trim pieces on a couple of these that would be worth something on eBay. Did I just give you some ideas?

Remember that post I told you about? Here’s how it looks from a hundred feet below. of course, I zoomed in so it was actually visible in the shot. Considering the condition of these cliffs, I’m going to be a little more reluctant to stand right at the edge!

About this point, the sun was a distant memory over the horizon and I was getting cold. I didn’t have any gloves, was wearing only a light jacket and could see my breath. That’s what happens sometimes with these spur of the moment trips, I guess! I worked my way back, hands stuffed firmly in my coat pockets to keep warm, and walked easily up the established trail. I cranked the heater in my truck, dodged deer all the way back into town, and called it an evening. While I didn’t really come away with any jaw dropping photos, I still call the trip a success; it’s an angle of Double Ditch I’ve been meaning to see for a long time.

Good day to be by the chimney

I get asked a lot how in the world I can post so many photos and babble so much. I think to the old adage: “How do we do it? Volume!” Seriously, though…I carry my camera everywhere and I know where to look. This is the convergence of those two things.

This lone chimney sits on a little parcel of land south of Bismarck and is for sale if you’re interested. I’ve driven past it several times, even taken a few photos, but none of them really thrilled me. Today I think I got a slightly more interesting photo. I like the starker shadows of the fall sun, the golden grass and leaves, topped off by the dark blue skies (thanks to a polarizer filter on the lens).

The “volume” I joke about is that sometimes I’ll get several really cool shots, and just hang on to them for a while. For instance, I have lots of Fallen Farms photos (and haven’t posted any in a while…hm…) and fall foliage. I like to share them, but sometimes I just pace myself because I’m too busy being a daddy and a freelance video guy to get out with the camera on a regular basis.

Bismarck has so many places like this. Sometimes they’re better than others, and it is a matter of being there at just the right moment. These days I’m so busy I can’t begin to explain, but I take tiny moments here and there to work in a photo where I can. It may be on the way to work or back home, in between errands, or I might get up early or stay up late. But when you’ve got the photo bug, you make time!

Sunday ‘set – a silhouette

I didn’t have time to scope out some new location with a stunning foreground, but I did get a chance to document one of the more distinctive North Dakota landmarks with a fantastic sunset behind it. This was Sunday night, and I’m glad I could share it with you. After all, that’s why I started this site: I love North Dakota, and want to share the view through my eyes (and camera) with as many people as possible!