Minnesota Prairie Roots

Writing and photography by Audrey Kletscher Helbling

Minnesota soup party October 21, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Audrey Kletscher Helbling @ 9:36 AM
Each guest family brings a crockpot of soup or chili to the party, which is staged in the garage.

Each guest family brings a crockpot of soup or chili to the party, which is staged in the garage.

Halloween decorations add to the festive atmosphere at Lanae and Dale's party.

Halloween decorations add to the festive atmosphere at Lanae and Dale's annual soup party.

NINETEEN SOUPS. Fifty guests. Forty degree temps.

That would be my sister Lanae and her husband Dale’s annual soup party, held last Saturday evening in Waseca.

It’s an event that has become as much a part of autumn as the leaves turning color. If you fail to show up one year, don’t expect an invitation the following year, unless you have an acceptable excuse.

This is one party most don’t miss, including me. I love soup, especially sampling so many varieties—this year French onion, Minnesota brie and apple, white chicken chili, spicy chicken cheddar potato, salmon chowder, lentil, Cajun shrimp with corn, butternut squash, potato cheese chowder and more.

Each year guests seem to come up with surprising new varieties for everyone to taste test. And that’s exactly what we do. Unless your stomach is as big as King Kong’s, it’s impossible to try every soup. So you strategize.

Scout out the options, Lanae advises newbies. Place several soup bowls on your tray and then ladle small quantities into each. Fail to follow Lanae’s advice and you’ll soon find yourself full before you’ve sampled many soups.

Those of us who’ve been attending the soup supper faithfully for years also know to save room for Julie’s homemade breads. Lanae’s neighbor, Julie, makes the best cheesy bread, delivered to the party still hot from the oven.

Add Lanae and Dale’s homemade wines, like blueberry, raspberry and rhubarb, to the mix, and you have the perfect party.

The perfect party, that is, if you’re willing to sit in the garage, on the driveway or around the backyard campfire bundled in layers to ward off the chilly temperatures. So what’s a little cold? It’s worth enduring for the delicious soups. After all, we are hardy Minnesotans.

A stack of vintage trays awaits diners.

A stack of vintage trays awaits diners.

Lanae tosses a festive cloth over the work bench for a serving area.

Lanae tosses a festive cloth over the work bench as a serving area for soups, crackers, bread and more.

As a floral designer at Waseca Floral, Lanae always has delightful decor both inside and outside her home.

As a floral designer at Waseca Floral, Lanae always has delightful decor both inside and outside her home.

© Copyright 2009 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

 

A vision of peace at Nerstrand Elementary School October 20, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Audrey Kletscher Helbling @ 8:50 AM
A sign welcomes visitors to the Nerstrand Elementary School International Peace Garden. More than a dozen countries are featured.

A sign welcomes visitors to the Nerstrand Elementary School International Peace Garden. More than a dozen countries are featured.

A face of Mexico depicted in a mosaic on the side of the school building.

A face of Mexico depicted in a mosaic on the side of the school building.

PEACE. The word evokes multi-faceted definitions. But for school children in one small Minnesota community, peace is defined in a garden, an International Peace Garden.

For nine years now, students, staff and volunteers at Nerstrand Elementary School have created an on-site evolving garden that reflects the vision of peace among nations.

“It (the garden) reminds us that the journey toward peace is never ending and that everyone is important,” according to information on the school’s website, www.nerstrand.charter.k12.mn.us.

For the first time recently, I visited the garden which shows these kindergartners through fifth graders, and others, that this world is much bigger than tiny Nerstrand, a town of about 230 in Rice County. In developing the garden, students research the featured countries, learning about customs, food, culture, issues and more. They have also contributed to world charities, like collecting food and medical supplies and sewing quilts for the people of Guatemala.

As I walked through the International Peace Garden, I considered just how much attitudes and situations have changed since I attended Vesta Elementary School in the 1960s. Back then, we feared a Russian attack. Words like “missiles,” “the Cold War,”  “Sputnik” and “fall-out shelters” defined the world.

While issues of war and of peace remain, and always will as long as we share this world, I am heartened by efforts like the International Peace Garden in Nerstrand. Understanding of other languages, other nations, other cultures can only result in better relationships among people in this diverse world of ours.

As a sign at the Nerstrand school reads in part: “We share all the stars and one hope for peace. The people of this world are all related. We share our love of life, our sense of place, our appreciation of beauty…”

Indeed.

Tanzania is represented by a giraffe, butterfly and elephant.

Tanzania is represented by a giraffe and butterfly in the International Peace Garden in Nerstrand.

An elephant from Tanzania.

An elephant depicting Kenya.

The recently dedicated Great Wall of China tower.

The recently dedicated Great Wall of China tower in the Peace Garden.

Words of peace on the welcoming sign.

Words of peace on the welcoming sign.

Mexico represented in a colorful wall-side mosaic of dancers.

Mexico represented in a colorful wall-side mosaic of dancers.

Visitors are bid a fond farewell in Norwegian as they leave Nerstrand Elementary School, founded by Norwegian immigrants in 1887.

Visitors are bid a fond farewell in Norwegian as they leave Nerstrand Elementary School, founded by Norwegian immigrants in 1887.

© Copyright 2009 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

 

Inside the 1894 Valley Grove Church October 19, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Audrey Kletscher Helbling @ 9:25 PM
The 1894 Valley Grove Church as seen trhough the second floor window of the 1862 stone church.

The 1894 Valley Grove Church as seen through the second floor window of the 1862 stone church.

Entry door into the church.

Entry door into the church.

COUNTRY CHURCHES INSPIRE a certain reverence of holiness not found in modern churches. In the wood, in the workmanship, in the setting, these houses of worship reflect the history of past generations.

Such is historic Valley Grove Church, once known as Tyske Grove, a Norwegian immigrant parish established northwest of Nerstrand. In 1862, the first stone church was built, then replaced in 1894 by a white clapboard building.

By that time, the congregation had already been renamed Valley Grove, a change made in 1870.

In the nearly four decades since the congregation dissolved, efforts have continued to preserve the two Valley Grove churches.

Walk inside the 1894 building and you’ll step back in time, to simpler days, when families gathered here to worship God, to socialize and to draw strength from each other in their new homeland.

The song Praise and Thanksgiving written by Albert F. Bayly seems appropriately fitting for country churches like those at Valley Grove:

“Praise and thanksgiving, Father we offer, for all things living, created good: Harvest of sown fields, fruits of the orchard, hay from the mown fields, blossom and wood.

Bless, Lord, the labor we bring to serve you, that with our neighbor we may be fed. Sowing or tilling, we would work with you, harvesting, milling for daily bread.

Father, providing food for your children, by your wise guiding teach us to share one with another, so that, rejoicing with us, all others may know your care.”

The otherwise plain windows in the church are topped by points of colored glass.

The plain windows in the church are topped by points of colored glass.

Autumn decorations from a wedding adorn the church window sills.

Autumn decor from a wedding adorn window sills.

How many feet have touched the pedals of the old pipe organ?

How many feet have touched the pedals of the old pipe organ?

The graceful wood of the balcony.

The graceful wood of the balcony.

Ringing the church bell.

Ringing the church bell.

Stairway banister in the balcony.

Stairway banister in the balcony.

Hydrangea arrangement inside the entry.

Hydrangea bouquet in the entry.

For more information, go to www.valleygrovemn.com. Read my earlier blog about Valley Grove, posted Oct. 9.

Photos © Copyright 2009 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

 

An autumn drive in Rice County, Minnesota October 17, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Audrey Kletscher Helbling @ 9:47 AM

“DO YOU KNOW WHERE you’re going?” I ask my husband as he turns the car down a gravel road.

“Yes,” he says and I can only hope Randy is not saying that just to appease my uneasiness. I like to know where I am, meaning I would not make a good explorer, vagabond or gypsy.

He would.

We are driving along Farmer Trail northwest of Nerstrand in Rice County. The gravel road twists and turns through the woods. And then, as we round a bend, three neon orange traffic cones mark our driving lane where a tree has fallen. Someone has been here already, sawing the tree into movable chunks. We skirt the mess and I think how fortunate that we are only on a Sunday afternoon cruise and not zipping along Farmer Trail.

A fallen tree on Farmer Trail.

A fallen tree on Farmer Trail.

Even though the leaves have little color and the skies are heavy with oppressive gray clouds on this early October day, the rural setting is beautiful, and undiscovered. This is the second year we have traveled Rice County back roads in the autumn, following routes that few others seek out for fall colors.

A corn field ripens against a back drop of trees.

A corn field ripens against a back drop of trees.

Later, as we angle toward Faribault near Cannon City, I spot an autumn-themed display of pumpkins, corn shocks, a scarecrow and flowers. It’s worthy of a photo. As I compose an image, I hear the bark of a dog, a bark that promptly scares me back to the car.

An autumn scene near Cannon City.

An autumn scene near Cannon City.

As we pull into town, we stop at Trump’s Apple Orchard. And while Randy is helping a customer who is having car trouble, I scan the tables of apples, admire the pumpkins and gourds, and then tell co-owner Todd Trump that I would like SweeTango® apples. I think I’ve got him, but the joke is on me. He steps away and returns with a SweeTango®, the newest apple developed by the University of Minnesota. He hands me a slice.

His orchard should have the variety, which is a cross between Honeycrisp and Zestar, available for sale next year, Todd says.

He likes the taste and the crunchiness (something customers prefer in an apple), Todd tells me. I’m no apple connoisseur, so I can’t distinguish the uniqueness of SweeTango®. But I agree with Todd. This is one crisp apple.

Trump's Orchard apples

Trump's Orchard apples

Trump's sells apple and other homemade pies from Trinity Lutheran Church in Faribault.

Trump's sells apple and other homemade pies from Trinity Lutheran Church in Faribault.

Gourds at Trump's

Gourds at Trump's

Pumpkins at Trump's Orchard

Pumpkins at Trump's Orchard

A stone’s throw down the road, Randy and I stop at Twiefhoff Gardens for fresh potatoes. While Randy gathers spuds, I aim my camera at colorful squash, pumpkins, gourds and Indian corn.

Indian corn at Twiehoff's Gardens

Indian corn at Twiehoff Gardens

Squash, mini pumpkins and gourds at Twiehoff's Gardens.

Squash, mini pumpkins and gourds at Twiehoff's.

The bright oranges and yellows speak of autumn, of harvest from the earth, of meandering country roads, of trails taken by the adventuresome, and the not-so-adventuresome.

© Copyright 2009 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

 

My way of dealing with Minnesota gloom October 16, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Audrey Kletscher Helbling @ 11:20 AM
Nothing like cheery packaging to brighten your mood.

Nothing like cheery packaging to brighten your mood.

THIS SEEMS RATHER PATHETIC. But yesterday I purchased three boxes of Kleenex® brand tissue based on the cheery packaging. No subdued decorator colors for me. Rather, I chose a box dotted with vivid hues of pink, green, yellow, orange, purple and blue. The other two boxes were imprinted with happy monkeys romping in a jungle of funky flowers.

These colors complement none of the décor in my home, except my daughters’ vacated lavender bedroom with the green closet doors. And I don’t even need tissues in that room.

So, why then, would I opt for these “look-at-me-I’m-a-Kleenex®-box” designs?

If you live in Minnesota, you would understand. For the past week, we have resided in a state of dreary gray skies, premature snowfall and cold.

I am sick of this weather. Already.

Give me sunshine and warmth, not clouds and freezing temperatures. My mood seems to match the weather, and that worries me. Months of cold and snow and gloom loom ahead. Five months more of this stuff, minimum, I figure.

Not everyone, I realize, feels as I do. Take the guy I saw jogging last night, in the dark, at 7:45, dressed in shorts and a T-shirt in 35-degree temperatures. Was he crazy? I thought so.

Or am I the crazy one, buying boxes of brightly-colored Kleenex® brand tissues to lift my spirits?

© Copyright 2009 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

 

Dog gone fashionable October 15, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Audrey Kletscher Helbling @ 8:18 AM
Baby, the model Yorkyshire

Baby, the model Yorkyshire

Baby shows off for the camera and does a sort of frenzied dance.

Baby shows off for the camera and does a sort of frenzied dance.

THIS LOOKS LIKE the type of dog Paris Hilton would carry in her purse.

She’s petite, fashionable, cute and a bit of a show-off. The dog, I mean, although those adjectives certainly describe Paris as well.

But this fashion conscious, chic Yorkyshire resides far from hip Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills. Baby lives in Faribault, Minn., where I saw her strolling recently along Central Avenue on our first really cold autumn evening.

Typically, dogs don’t draw a second look from me. But Baby, well, who could miss her strutting her stuff in a cotton candy pink turtleneck?

One-year-old Baby posed nicely for my camera, until she apparently decided she’d had enough. I don’t know for certain, but I expect she was tired of the paparazzi hounding her.

Enough of this already, Baby seems to say as she turns away from the camera.

Enough of this already, Baby indicates as she turns away from the camera after an impromptu photo shoot.

© Copyright 2009 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

 

Celebrate the reprinting of Maud Hart Lovelace’s The Black Angels October 14, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Audrey Kletscher Helbling @ 11:35 AM
Historical artist David Geister painted the new cover art for The Black Angels, reprinted by Minnesota Heritage Publishing.

Historical artist David Geister painted the new cover art for The Black Angels, reprinted by Mankato-based Minnesota Heritage Publishing.

THE OLDER I GET, the more appreciative I become of history. Funny how that happens.

With that said, I direct you to a historical novel, The Black Angels, first published in 1926 and now reprinted in a limited edition by Mankato-based Minnesota Heritage Publishing. See www.mnheritage.com

This Saturday, Oct. 17, the re-release of Mankato author Maud Hart Lovelace’s The Black Angels will be celebrated at the Betsy-Tacy houses, 332 and 333 Center Street in Mankato. Lovelace is best known for her Betsy-Tacy book series. See my blog, “Betsy-Tacy books debut as Modern Classics,” posted Sept. 29 on Minnesota Prairie Roots.

Now, I have not yet read The Black Angels, so I am going on good faith that this historical novel will match my expectations for a quality book by one of my favorite Minnesota authors. Set in fictional Cloudman (Mankato), Minn., in the days before the Civil War, this novel tells the story of a traveling opera troupe. Lovelace bases the troupe on the Andrews Opera Company, which performed throughout the Midwest in the mid to late 1800s. The Andrews family, at one time, lived near Mankato. Lovelace also patterns one of the characters after her Uncle Frank, who left home and for awhile joined an opera troupe.

You can learn more about the book by attending Saturday’s book release party from 1 p.m. – 3 p.m. The event includes a Black Angels vignette at 1 p.m. Historical artist David Geister of Minneapolis, who painted the cover for the reprint edition, will be signing books. See www.davidgeister.com.

Adding to the festivities will be the burning of the mortgage for the Betsy-Tacy houses. The Betsy-Tacy Society owns the childhood homes of Maud Hart Lovelace (Betsy in the book series) and her friend, Frances “Bick” Kenney (Tacy in the books). For more information, go to www.betsy-tacysociety.org.

This dust jacket graced the third printing of The Black Angels by Grosset & Dunlap of New York.  The artist is unknown. The John Day Company first published the book in 1926 with a plain yellow calico cloth cover.

This dust jacket graced the third printing of The Black Angels by Grosset & Dunlap of New York in 1926. The artist is unknown. The John Day Company first published the book, also in 1926 , with a plain yellow calico cloth cover.

Thanks to Julie A. Schrader of Minnesota Heritage Publishing for sharing the book cover images with Minnesota Prairie Roots readers.

 

Remembering an October 1967 farm accident October 13, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Audrey Kletscher Helbling @ 8:07 AM

“WHY DO YOU have that Band-Aid on your hand?” I ask.

“I was frying potatoes and grease splattered and melted a hole,” he replies.

Already I am laughing so hard that his answer is barely audible above my squawking. But I find this extremely hilarious. My father-in-law, Tom, has placed a small round Band-Aid on his artificial hand.

At first I think he is playing a joke. He has a quirky sense of humor. But he is serious, dead serious. Grease really did melt a hole in his prosthesis and he needs the Band-Aid to keep out water and gunk.

Prosthetic hand

Soon laughter gives way to seriousness as I ask how long it’s been since the farm accident that eventually claimed his hand and forearm up to inches below his elbow.

“1967,” he says. “You do the math.”

Figures flash through my brain. “Forty-two years,” I say. It was Saturday, Oct. 21, 1967.

Later, after Tom has left our house following an overnight visit, I ask Randy about that afternoon four decades ago. He had driven an empty wagon to the corn field shortly before the accident.

“He (Dad) said he would make one more round,” Randy remembers of the fateful day when his dad was chopping corn on the family farm near Buckman, Minnesota. “He said, ‘Why don’t you just stay here?’ and I said, ‘I’ll ride along.’”

The then 12-year-old’s decision to accompany his dad likely saves his father’s life. They are nearing the far end of the field when the corn chopper plugs with corn. Tom hops off the tractor to hand-feed corn into the chopper when the unimaginable happens. Along with the corn, Tom’s hand is pulled into the spring-loaded rollers. The blades chop off his fingers. The rollers trap his arm.

As his father screams for help, Randy disengages the power take-off. Soon he is running across swampland and along a cow pasture to a neighboring farm. Randy and his neighbor, Nick, jump into Nick’s car and race back through the pasture toward the accident scene. Nick parks the car. They cut across swampland to the field.

While Nick struggles to free Tom from the rollers’ grip, his son and daughter-in-law, Dick and Kathy, are also racing to the field. They have been summoned there from nearby Buckman. Dick somehow navigates through another cow pasture and along a trail to reach the far end of the field. Later he will wonder how he managed to traverse the land.

“If anyone could do it, Dick could,” Randy says. “That was his (Dad’s) ambulance ride.”

But first, the trio stops at the Helbling family farm for ice and a cloth and to gas up the car before barreling northwest to St. Gabriel’s Hospital in Little Falls 20 miles away.

Just as Dick and Kathy arrive at the hospital with Tom, another farm accident victim arrives. Meinrad, a high school student, has caught his arm in a corn picker. He lives only four miles west of my father-in-law.

Together, the two are placed inside a single ambulance that rushes them toward the St. Cloud Hospital. Later, they will share a room.

All of this I learn from my husband who remembers with vivid clarity the details of the October 1967 farm accident that cost his father his left hand and much of an arm.

For years, Tom attached a hook, secured in place by a shoulder harness, onto his shortened limb. Today he wears the prosthetic arm with several movable fingers and that small round Band-Aid that has made me laugh.

Farmers, please be careful and safe this harvest season so that we can always hear your laughter.

© Copyright 2009 Audrey Kletscher Helbling.

 

Snow on October 11? You’re kidding, right? October 12, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Audrey Kletscher Helbling @ 10:18 AM
Snow clings to maple leaves in my backyard.

Snow clings to maple leaves in my backyard. Most leaves on the maple have not even turned color.

My footprint in the snow at 9 a.m. Monday.

My footprint in the snow.

SNUGGLED UNDER a fleece blanket in a La-Z-Boy recliner watching the nine o’clock news on Sunday night, I can’t believe what I am hearing. The news anchors and weather forecaster are predicting up to three inches of snow beginning in the overnight hours and stretching into Monday.

The map shows Faribault, where I live, on the northern fringe of the region doomed to receive the most snow.

Sure enough, when I emerge 15 minutes later from my reclining cocoon and glance out the front window, I see snow already falling.

How can this be? It is, for gosh sakes, only October 11.

Just days ago we had our first hard frost. Few trees have shed their leaves. Heck, many leaves have not even turned color. I have tulip bulbs to plant, dead flowers to pull, pots to haul into the garage, green tomatoes still clinging to vines.

This is way too early for the first snowfall of the season. (OK, we did have a light dusting overnight on Friday.) As I write, it is mid Monday morning and the flakes are still spurting from gray skies. Today is only October 12, my husband’s birthday, for gosh sakes.

Happy birthday, honey!

© Copyright 2009 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

Snow frosts ferns.

Snow frosts ferns.

Summer takes a seat to winter.

Summer takes a seat to winter.

 

Cruisin’ the Bemidji art scene October 10, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — Audrey Kletscher Helbling @ 8:35 AM

WHEN YOU THINK of Bemidji, what pops into your mind? Likely Paul Bunyan and the Mississippi River.

But the area also thrives with the arts, which will be showcased Oct. 16 – 18 during the second annual Bemidji First City of Arts Studio Cruise. The event takes visitors into the working studios of 16 artists who specialize in painting, jewelry, pottery, glass, wood, fabric and sculpture.

Artist Christina Thorne makes one-of-a-kind jewelry using stone and other natural elements.

Artist Christina Thorne makes one-of-a-kind jewelry using stone and other natural elements.

Paula Swenson creates colorful contemporary art, like "Be Here Now," with acrylic and mixed media.

Paula Swenson creates colorful contemporary art, like "Be Here Now," with acrylic and mixed media.

Wanting to learn more, I interviewed woodworker Dave Towley, who heads the Cruise steering committee and is an enthusiastic promoter of the Bemidji arts scene. I was seeking event information and insights into the Bemidji area as a mecca for artists.

According to Towley, as he views it, his hometown of Bemidji attracts artists for numerous reasons. He speaks of the region’s beauty in the lakes, trees, eagles and loons. It is a place, he says, that allows for “a contemplative pace of life.” Distraction and competing noise are few.

“There’s a certain harmony that allows you to create work,” he says. “This area nurtures creativity.”

I can understand that. My formative years spent on the southwestern Minnesota prairie shaped who I became as a writer. The wide open spaces and endless skies there created within me a deep awareness of my environment. And that has made me a more insightful writer. I expect Towley and other Bemidji artists feel the same about the quiet northwoods.

These artists, however, want to keep anything but quiet about their existence. They welcome Cruise visitors into their studios to observe and interact. They also hope to create economic opportunities for the Bemidji region and for area artists.

And, Towley adds, “It’s about bringing people to Bemidji and raising awareness of Bemidji residents to the tremendous art scene.”

Towley’s right on that. While vacationing in Bemidji in August, I learned first hand of the community’s dynamic arts focus, most visible in the downtown Bemidji Sculpture Walk.

That walk and other venues will also be highlighted during the Cruise. The event kicks off with a reception from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 16, at the Bemidji Community Art Center, 426 Bemidji Avenue. Artists will greet the public and show examples of their works. Information will be posted daily at the art center about evening arts-related activities.

Artists’ studios will be open during the Cruise from 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. on Oct. 16 and 17 and from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. Oct. 18. For more information, go to www.visitbemidji.com

Visual artist Terry Honstead uses texture and a variety of materials including oil, acrylic and watercolor in addition to mixed media.

Visual artist Terry Honstead uses texture and a variety of materials including oil, acrylic and watercolor in addition to mixed media. This piece is "Harmony."

Dean Schnell transforms glass into jewelry and functional works of art.

Dean Schnell transforms glass into jewelry and functional works of art.

Paul Bunyan and Babe and the Mississippi River grace the logo for Bemidji First City of Arts Studio Cruise.

Paul Bunyan and Babe and the Mississippi River grace the logo for Bemidji First City of Arts Studio Cruise.