Monday, September 26, 2016

Third Leg of the Rally

Six rigs continued on to our third stop and are camped at Greenfield Village RV Park.  In the mornings, we are treated to this view of our neighbors. 




 We spent our first day touring The Henry Ford, one of the best if not the best museum we've been in. 



John and Shirley met Shirley's daughter, Carolyn at the museum.  



This place is enormous and the most eclectic museum we have been in.  



This is President Reagan's limo that took him to the hospital after he was shot.



Here is the limo that took JFK to the hospital.



The limos went all the way back to Teddy Roosevelt who didn't like automobiles so this was his "limo" 



I love trains and the museum didn't disappoint.  








What a trip it would be to ride in this.  



As expected, the automobile section was amazing with a wide variety of cars.  I wouldn't mind owning this one.



This Duesenberg cost more than a Mercedes and Rolls Royce combined. 




Here are two more pictures.  I needed to  be selective or this blog would go on way too long.  




A blow-up demonstration of a Model T 



Next was the aircraft section.  







Vickie and Vicki wing walking



Telephones.




Vickie in the furniture section.




Who remembers this?  


Yes, that is a Hot Dog Bun Sofa



The farming section.




This Dymaxion House was designed by Buckminster Fuller to meet the post-World War Two housing demand.  It was made from aircraft aluminum from factories that were not producing aircraft anymore due to the wars end.  




It never went into production and only a few prototypes were built.  

The most impressive part of the museum to me was the enormous generators, motors and machinery on display.









Driving Miss Vicki



This is the chair that President Lincoln was sitting in when he was shot by John Wilkes Booth.



There is so much to see under one roof, we were only able to give you a taste of what we saw.  This place needs to be seen in person to comprehend the sheer size and scope of the displays. 

  

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Mackinac City

We got up early and walked down to the water to watch the sunrise.  We weren't disappointed.  







We visited Historic Mill Creek Discovery Park





We arrived about ten minutes before opening time so we watched this little guy scurry around gathering food and storing it in his burrow.  He wasn't afraid of us at all. 



We toured a replica of a working saw mill run by water power.



This man's  name is Tom, the Sawyer who gave us a demonstration and was very informative on the workings of the mill. 



This is some of the workings of the mill.  When you think of the technology of the period and the materials they had to work with, wood and iron, the ingenuity that went into this is impressive.   



This is a view of the dam and pond that was built to provide the water power for the mill.  There was only a short period of time every summer when there was enough water in the stream to fill the pond. 



He then had us go outside so we could watch the water and how it was controlled to propel the mill machinery.  





He then gave us a demonstration of how boards were cut before the mill was built.  The top man made two cents a board and the bottom man made one cent.  They could cut one board an hour and worked a twelve hour day.  The mill increased production to twelve boards an hour.  



Pat, Vicki and Vickie went zip lining.







We all stopped at The Keyhole Bar & Grill for lunch.





We then toured the USCG icebreaker Mackinac which is now a museum.   




This is one of the propellers from the ship.



It could cut a channel in the ice 150 feet wide.


This is one of the ten-cylinder diesel engines that ran powerful electric motors which, in turn, powered the propellers.  There were two props in the stern and one in the bow.  The front prop would suck water from under the ice as the ship rose up on it to break it.  
  



Here are some pictures of the bridge.








Another view of the "Mighty Mac".



This is close as we got to the northern lights.


Tomorrow we're off to our next stop.