
Well yesterday was fantastic! So much to tell you and so much that was learnt so forgive me for bullet pointing some of it.
Firstly, early morning start, I was picked up at 6.50 for Rotary breakfast. Great group of rotarians and we sang the NZ national anthem in Maori and English and actually we weren't bad for that hour of the morning! And finally the sun was out and a bit of dew on the grass so fall is on its way.
Then we headed of with our host Mark, to kill time for an hour before the rotary district governor - Pam- joined us. It turns out that Mark and his family lived in the Frank Lloyd Wright house for 5 years!! So he took us there and explained the lay out and why he called it Frank Lloyd Wrong! Very cool architect apparently but not so brilliant engineer. Still it is a special house and noted for being low and horizontal just like the American prairie and with a hip roof (4 triangles). But also with an overhang that doesn't allow light, internal guttering so lots of damp, and a complimentary ant colony. Anyway Mark was responsible for lots of the restoration but now lives back in his own family home built in 1840, and this year is living there for his 50th year. Oh, and a tornado siren went off, as it does every tuesday morning at 10.00am I'm told.
So then we hit the road on our way to Starved Rock State Park. - A glacial formed huge rock that is the only high point on the flat landscape and where a tribe of native Indians defended and remained till they starved to death. Lots of detours due to the flooded roads etc. We had a wonderful lunch in a big log cabin restaurant built in the 1930's and then 'hiked' to the rock. Afterward we watched the video and visited the museum.
On the way driving and talking etc and passing huge corn fields, I noted these facts and figures:*The area around where we were driving Ottawa, Illinois etc is one of three largest
water reserves in the world.
*Rail - we passed one of the two busiest tracks in the state (country ?), it has 150 trains a day, each with over 250 cars.
*Fuel is $4.15 gallon
*We passed pumpkins and scarecrows and red barns and silver silos
*There are 11 nuclear power plants in the state
mostly built in the 1970's before they fully understood it would take 10,000 years to break down the waste.
*US has more coal than Iraq has oil but needs the technology to reduce emissions in order to use it.
*Illinois is known as the world's bread basket - it has topsoil 8-12 feet deep.
*average farm size was 80 acres, now 900 acres!
*Ave income in Batavia - suburb where I'm staying - is $5-50,000, Houses are $300,000.
*Abraham Lincoln made world famous 'Gutenberg Address' in Ottawa, a town we passed through.
* $1000 is spent on health insurance for every new vehicle built by GMC in the US.
*40% of US truck drivers are women.
*The area of Illinois that I'm in, is home of Caterpillar, McDonalds, Boeing, and Sara-Lee.
*The Illinois River was really really really flooded.
*I saw two raccoon road kill, about seven squirrels, one chipmunk and one buzzard.