Thanks for following me. (In the online way, not in the grocery store.)

October 21st, 2010 by Rural_Rose

I was brought up to believe in sending thank-you notes (unlike certain friends of mine who recently got married, apparently. Ahem. Did you or did you not enjoy that toaster? I guess I will never know.) Anyway, THANKS to all the comments you left when I put the call out to see if anyone is reading.

iiStockphoto image of the Facebook "like" thumb

Thumbs up to my homies!

Feel free to imagine me singing a gratitude-themed song in the style of [pick Lilith-Fair-type below] :

  • Alanis Morissette
  • Dido
  • Natalie Merchant

OR, feel free to block all those songs from your head for infinity; I wouldn’t blame you. (Though, okay, I kinda like the Alanis one sometimes. But I’m still really a fan of Jagged Little Pill era and not beyond. You?)

2 Responses to “Thanks for following me. (In the online way, not in the grocery store.)”

  1. Leah says:

    Just had to say, I still know all the words to the Jagged Little Pill album, (15 or so years later, ha). And I’m not afraid to admit it!

    Oh and PS- I too am a frequent visitor of your site! Keep up the good work. :)

  2. Rural_Rose Alison says:

    It’s a great record. Glad to meet another fan.:)

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Hello…is there anybody out there? (Just nod if you can hear me.)

October 14th, 2010 by Rural_Rose

Please forgive me if this comes off as navel-gazing, but: if you’re someone who reads this blog, would you be up for letting me know? Either leave a comment below (you will have to register) or drop me a line at alison dot sixdegrees at gmail dot com? Pretty please?

I know I have a handful of faithful readers, and WHOOO HOOO BIG UPS TO YOU! YOU ROCK!

But also: I can’t figure out how to read my Google Analytics. Besides that, I would like to hear from actual people, rather than a stat tracker that tells me weird random things that aren’t relevant to the blog itself.*

If you’re someone who reads but doesn’t want or feel compelled to leave comments, hey, I’m glad you’re here at all! And I understand that there are lots more important and interesting ways to spend your time online.

But sometimes I go weeks at a time without comments. Sniffle. (More after the jump).

istockphoto's image of a sad sack, lonely girl

istockphoto's image of a sad-sack-y, lonely girl

I often wonder if I should scrap the blog and just stick to Fb and Flickr-ing and Tweeting. (Um yeah. I do have a life off the computer. Sort of.) So I want to know if you read this blog, how you got here, and what you’re interested in/ what you’d like more of. Go ‘head! Leave me your actual name and a real comment below, or, if you want to be anonymous, just write “NOD!” as your comment. Or just do a Facebook Like (below). C’mon, I’m waiting. (And by the way: thanks!!)

*Although, I gotta say, that time I got a Google hit for SEXY OLD LADIES THAT ARE MORE THAN A MOUTHFUL, (because I am obsessed with rural legends about seeing cougars in western Illinois), I laughed and snorted so hard I almost damaged something.

22 Responses to “Hello…is there anybody out there? (Just nod if you can hear me.)”

  1. Scott says:

    *nod* *nod* *nod*
    I don’t normally comment on blogs, but thought I’d leave one since you asked so nicely.
    I think I originally found your blog after a search for Forgotonia, after reading an article about the local “movement” in the ’70s.
    Born, raised, and still live in Macomb, and work at Western.
    My vote would be for you to keep doing the blog. I don’t know about anyone else, but I read it whenever you post (in my RSS reader). Also just followed you on flickr and twitter as well.

  2. Jane says:

    Dearest Alison, I am a faithful reader. In fact, I never miss a post because I have you in my Google Reader. But that’s probably why I don’t comment, either, because that requires me to click outside Google Reader, and that’s too much work!

    I’ll say, though, that I read a ton of blogs and very rarely leave comments on any of them… just not my thing. I’d be sad if you quit blogging and I always enjoy your posts, but I’d certainly be able to keep up with you on Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, etc.

  3. MTJ says:

    Raises hand.

    I, too, subscribe via Google Reader. Love the blog. You have a fan in me!

    Macomb resident, WIU alum, and WIU staff member

    :)

  4. David says:

    I’m also a reader….via Google Reader.

    1999 WIU grad……current Army officer……

  5. DRS says:

    To the tune of Don’t Stop Believing: Don’t stop writing.

  6. Bob says:

    I read via Google Reader. Live in Macomb and new to the area, so this is actually helping me get accustomed to my new home. I also dabble in all things osage orange at times.

  7. nate the GREAT says:

    If you quit this blog I will actually have to work….

  8. Rural_Rose Alison says:

    WOW, how cool! I knew about some of you, but others have been surprises. How great to know that for those of you who don’t know me personally, you’ve found something worth reading here– especially about such important topics as hedge balls!!!

    Thanks again, and to others of you who haven’t responded yet, let me hear from you!

  9. Hillary says:

    I read your blog! I love your blog!

  10. Her GLX 3 says:

    HELLO!?!?!? I am your BIGGEST fan!

    Thanks for the tunes BTW!!!

    Love the blog – keep it up!

  11. Krista says:

    You know I’m out here! I try to keep my comments down to a minimum since blathering is my normal mode and it is YOUR blog, after all. :-)

  12. dlee says:

    Hey Alison,
    Just like NBC’s former “Must See TV,” I HAVE to check in each week to see what’s on your mind. I really enjoy your trips to places off the beaten path in the area – old buildings, cemeteries and such. Just when I was about to give up on finding new and interesting places to check out on the ‘net, I found you…so keep up the good work!

  13. Rural_Rose Alison says:

    Wow, dlee, thanks so much! What a compliment! So glad to know there are some folks out there reading the blog and finding it worth coming back to. Thanks for your comment!!!

  14. Michelle Wardlow says:

    I am a reader now. Linked from CBD

  15. Dave Dorsett says:

    Clearly I’m a reader from time to time… enough to answer a question or two, rhetorical or not. (I still despise the blasted Forgottonia name, though!)

    Dave

  16. Rural_Rose Alison says:

    And thanks for reading and raising those questions! Point taken about the name…

  17. Fred Iutzi says:

    This blog is huge — FIGURATIVELY. It dropped out of my weekly routine when you migrated sites, but I am going to try to put it back.

  18. Rural_Rose Alison says:

    Thanks, Fred! (And were you worried that I might think you were insinuating that my blog needs to go on a diet? Ha!;)

  19. Fred Iutzi says:

    My wife has started making a point of saying FIGURATIVELY (emphasis in original) in light of the continuing erosion of the meaning of “literally”. : )

  20. Rural_Rose Alison says:

    Ha! Please tell your wife I love that! That is FIGURATIVELY the funniest thing I have ever heard!

    Also thanks for the tip about the book. I haven’t read that one. It is really something to live in a region described as having a “brain drain.” I wish I could make a more intelligent comment than “it’s really something,” but …I haven’t had enough coffee yet this morning.

  21. Ilona says:

    My sis reads your blog! I will now too…… :)

  22. Rural_Rose Alison says:

    Cool! You won’t regret it. Well, at least I don’t think you will….;)

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The dish on Shiloh’s ( + a blogging milestone)

September 10th, 2010 by Rural_Rose

First visit: week of opening

Chris and I checked out the new Shiloh’s Bar & Bistro for dinner on a Friday night, after they’d only been open a few days. I asked the hostess if I could speak to the owner, since I wanted to thank him for our interview, but he was (understandably) too busy to come up front just then. I was pleased to see the place was bustling and loud and almost crowded.

We did not order an appetizer, but apparently with dinner entrees you receive a pre-meal order of small slices of seasoned bread with some kind of pastel-orange, cream-cheesed-based spread. I was tempted to finish off the plate.

Chris’s order: Crispy Shrimp Salad. My impression: ew. But only because I don’t eat shrimp. He liked it.

Alison’s order: the Chicken Shiloh. This dish involved both bacon and Gouda. Enough said. (Rice and vegetables also excellently prepared.)

Logo for new restaurant, Shiloh Bistro

Second visit: with two girlfriends, who we’ll call Emily and Kim. Friday night, Sept. 3

Appetizers: crab cakes, heavily breaded, accompanied by some kind of creamy sauce. Very good. We have a mini-spat in which each of us pretends to not mind if the other takes the last half of one, which means we all obviously want it.

Drinks:
Ravenswood Lodi red wine. (Alison. Happy.)
Honey Brown beer. (Kim. Happy.)
Water. (Emily. Pregnant. Pissed at Kim and Alison.)

Alison’s order: Chicken Roulade. Dry. I didn’t really like it. (My friends explained it was made the way it was supposed to be.)

Emily’s order: Filet mignon.

Kim’s order: The Ella Fitzgerald. (Bowtie pasta with some kind of creamy sauce and feta cheese.) It was delicious. I know this because I ate off her plate.

Service: Excellent on both visits. However, this is what happened when Emily gave her order to the young waitress.

“I’ll have the filet.”

The waitress froze, pen poised over pad. “The…filet …of…?”

Overall impression:

That second visit, it was almost an hour to get our food. But we were happy to catch up. And it was busy. And even though I didn’t really like my Chicken Roulade, I will definitely go back and try new things. (And, if I should ever find myself ordering “the filet,” will be specific.)

The menu is fancy enough that there are several items I don’t really recognize (hence the Roulade), yet casual enough to feel like you can wear jeans and nobody looks at you sideways. It might seem a bit pricey in a town where one of the few choices is, say, Buffalo Wild Wings, but the thoughtfulness of the menu, the quality and the service seem worth it. It’s a fantastic, much-needed addition to Macomb, and it was great to see the place hopping.

P.S. It’s my 500th post, y’all. (Not counting the earliest incarnation of my blogging self, which was in the early 00s and which was under a kind of pseudonym. (No, not Gossip Girl, but boy do I wish I could cause the same kind of destruction!)  Thanks again to those of you who read and subscribe, and especially to those who comment, either online or in person.
To the first reader of this 500th post, you may redeem the key to your new car, and brush the confetti off your shoulders, at the customer service desk. Prize not redeemable for cash.

One Response to “The dish on Shiloh’s ( + a blogging milestone)”

  1. Her GLX says:

    Congrats on 500 postings!

    (Now where is that service desk???)

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The (grand)mom-and-pop on the prairie

September 5th, 2010 by Rural_Rose

Chapter One

The one and only time I ever agreed to help, I was on edge every time I heard a car slowing down on the highway.

The sound of the bell on the door—which I could hear from the living room on the other side of a cubicle wall—put me in a panic. Please don’t be a customer please don’t be a customer.

My older sister, the cool-headed one of the two of us, usually watched the front office of the motel, and babysat my cousins at the same time, on weekends when my aunt and uncle went out of town or out with friends on a Saturday night. But she was about to graduate, and now that I was in high school, I could perhaps be her replacement, was the thinking.

The babysitting part on this Saturday night just meant hanging out with my three younger cousins. The scary part was that these cousins’ home—a living room, kitchen, bathroom and two bedrooms—was in the “living quarters” of a motel. The motel entrance, a small office from which to book customers, rent rooms, and distribute keys, just happened to be behind a small partition in their living room.

Chapter Two

My aunt and uncle ran the Prairie Winds motel, a one-story brick business on Highway 136 on the edge of town, about 15 miles east of the Mississippi River. I wouldn’t know until many years later that I had had legitimate reason to be freaked about facing whoever it was that might come in and cause the bell to jingle. Growing up, I had no idea that the motel’s original proprietors—my grandparents—had once been robbed there in the middle of the night.

No, what had me trembling that night was not man, but machine: if any of the travelers who stopped in for the night paid with a credit card, I was going to be in trouble. My aunt had tried, patiently, to show me how to swipe the card through the little box with the keypad on it and complete the complicated transaction. But after the third time, (as I am still guilty of doing when it comes to anything with numbers), I nodded and pretended to get it. “Oh there, I see,” I said, smacking my forehead. “You guys go ahead and go to your dance, don’t miss it on account of me!”

As soon as they left, my cousins got out a board game and I said a secret prayer. Dear God, please don’t let there be any customers and if there are please let them write a check.

Chapter Three

Luckily, the few times someone did come through the door over the course of that Saturday evening, it was just a friend of the family stopping by to say hi, or maybe a deliveryman for the ice machine. I never had to use the credit card machine. But the next few times my aunt and uncle asked me to babysit the kids and the office, I was relieved to have legitimate excuses to be unavailable on a Saturday night: pep band, marching band, or play practice. (Oh and yes, um, dates.)

In today’s Google-map era, there is perhaps little reason to worry late at night about how much further down the road the next gas station or motel might be. But back then, the Prairie Winds was the only place to stay–with maybe one or two sketchy exceptions–in the area, with the next option 30 miles to the east, or across the Mississippi into Keokuk, Iowa to the west.

So it actually a pretty genius idea when my grandpa, a farmer, decided to go into business for himself, (in addition to farming), and build a motel on the edge of Carthage, just near his home and farm. If I’m remembering correctly, Grandpa built the place himself. This shouldn’t be surprising, considering that this is the same man who, today, at 89, is still farming. And the same man who, as a teenager, left school to take over his family’s farm after his father went blind. My grandma would spend many years helping run and clean the place. She was the one who chose the romantic name.

I never heard either of my grandparents mention the story of the robbery; as is perhaps typical of their generation, they saw no need to talk about it. But I eventually learned from my dad that my grandparents suffered a harrowing, nightmarish experience one night when what seemed like just another traveler coming off the highway turned out to be a man who would hold them up at gunpoint and leave them bound and gagged. They lived, thankfully, but apparently not “to tell the tale.”

Chapter Four

By the time my cousins were in their teen years, at some point in the 90s, my family sold the motel to an Indian family from Chicago, and it has been sold again at least once since then. The place is a bit of a lighthearted Carthage joke now; if you’re back for a wedding or a reunion, you might hear, “Where you crashing tonight, the Prairie Winds?”

And the sight of the place in its current state, along an off-interstate stretch of the Midwest, was enough of a story-in-itself to capture a noted photographer’s attention. In August, the New York Times photography blog, Lens, highlighted a series of photos from rural Illinois called Prairieland by Dave Jordano.  There, in the collection of sad places that have seen better days, was the Prairie Winds. (You can read more about that in my initial post here.)

Screen shot of Dave Jordano's Prairie Winds photo

Screen shot of Prairie Winds photo by Dave Jordano

Even though I’m now aware of what happened to my grandparents on that terrible  night, the motel still conjures pleasant memories for me,  not just of spending time with with my cousins in their home in the living quarters, but also of eating Sunday dinners at the buffet when there was still a family restaurant attached.

It might not be much more than a sign of another era now–another symbol of the left-behind feel of west central Illinois. But because I know who built it, it will always be a symbol of two other things to me:  my Depression-surviving grandparents’ sense of industriousness, and their strength.

Postlude: That car in the picture is very much like the kind I used to cruise around in when I was a high schooler– a blue 1985 Crown Vic, to be exact. As you can imagine, this also played a role in the status of my Saturday nights.

2 Responses to “The (grand)mom-and-pop on the prairie”

  1. Longtime residents of “Forgotonia” can empathize more than outsiders. Lovely job! Keep it up.

  2. Teresa K. says:

    OMG!!!! (had to do it)… I didn’t know your g-parents BUILT PW. I have fond memories of that place (and no, they have nothing to with crashing there drunk or with random hook ups…) My g-ma took us “kiddies” to the restaurant all the time when I was a kid… I loved that diner. I still think of it when I drive by there almost daily… Funny post, A!

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Meta moment

September 3rd, 2010 by Rural_Rose

Hey y’all. I wanted to point out a couple small things:

  1. At the bottom of each post, you should now see a “Share This” prompt. In other words, if you should be so moved by an individual post, (and of course, you will be, I mean, duh), allows you to share it via Facebook, etc.
  2. I’ve added some Linkage—some people and places I like to follow—over on the right-hand side (under the list of tags). Check them out if you have time. (And check yoself to see if you made the cut!) And btw,
  3. thanks to any and all of you who follow this blog. I love knowing there are people actually out there reading what I have to say (though I often find out about this by running in to you in person, rather than hearing from you in the comments section. *Ahem.*) Without you, I would be a just another lonely nerd spewing her silly stuff out into the either… Oh wait…;)

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