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Inaugural classic car show planned at Minden s Pioneer Village
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South Omaha Stockyards History Featured in Nebraska Stories Premiere
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Clowns, roller skates, Bigfoot, and a
M A S H display: From the strange to the historical, Nebraska’s museums offer a different look at Americana. From the hometown of Johnny Carson to America’s pastime of baseball, here’s a look at 11 incredibly special museums across the Cornhusker State.
Tim Trudell
1. Bone Creek Museum Of Agrarian Art, David City
Passing through Nebraska’s rural highways, you see cornfields, soybean fields, grazing cattle, and maybe even a few hog pens. But to some artists, they see the elegance of Nebraska’s agricultural story. You’ll find paintings of giant cornstalks and of farmers on vintage tractors in farm houses around the state. David City embraces rural beauty at the Bone Creek Museum of Agrarian Art. Opened in 2007, Bone Creek is the only museum in the United States focused on agriculture art. Located in the hometown of noted artist Dale Nichols, who died in 1995 and is considered one of the most important regional artists
Readers’ Voices: Homeward bound as pandemic blooms
Lois and Sadie at the Brownville Fall Festival in Brownville, Neb. Lois Barber
Lois Barber
Happy to be home in Amherst Lois Barber
Lois and Doug park at her children’s place in Treadwell, New York. Lois Barber
Crossing Nebraska en route to Harold Warp’s Pioneer Village in Minden, Nebraska. LOIS BARBER
A visit to Harold Warp’s Pioneer Village campsite in Minden, Neb. Lois and Doug bought this van last Aug. 1 at a flea market in Colorado. Lois Barber
A watercolor sketch Lois Barber created in Beatrice, Neb., while Doug was driving. Lois Barber
Published: 12/25/2020 7:33:44 PM
Back in February, my partner Doug and I both traveled to Colorado expecting to return to Amherst in mid-April. Soon it became apparent that was not going to happen and we settled in at Doug’s lovely house.
One month rolled into another and when it looked like we would be there through the summer, we resurrected a garden spot behind our house and planted an optimistic amount of seeds. Like all gardens, it was way more work than we anticipated, but spending time in it each day created a rhythm in our stay-at-home lives.
In June, July and August, there were more than 70 days when the temperature was over 90 degrees many days, way over 90! The plants seemed to love it and with a thick blanket of mulch and water, they thrived every day. We were well rewarded for our time and energy with eggplants, peppers, beans, tomatoes and hundreds of sunflowers.
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