Sunday, May 4, 2014

May 4, 2014

View of the day-This was a common sight for us this winter/spring...almost 4 months of it.

Well, it's been a long hard winter up here for us...and busy. Between trade shows, toy shows, work and road trips, during one of the longest cold stretches we have seen in a long time, the blog has been put on the back burner.

We had the Saskatoon toy show first thing in January 10,11 & 12. It was a new venue this year, so we were unsure if the crowds would be as good as they had been in the past if no one could find the place, but our (Al's) fears were unfounded and it turned out to be a great show...the weather even co-operated. Here is a before and after of our tables.

The Crop Production show was in Saskatoon the following week, so the Sunday of the toy show, we got the booth set up for the Association of Canadian Custom Harvesters, but this time we didn't have to man it. Lynn Prevost had said she would do the Saskatoon show if we looked after Brandon Ag Days the following week. Worked for us.

Our golf cart was delivered to Crop Production and was brought to Yorkton with Jeff Just, one of the CaseIH guys manning their booth...who is also a neighbor, sort of...from the other side of Yorkton. Big thanks to CaseIH for the delivery.

We got back from the Toy Show/Crop Production, just in time to turn around and head east to Brandon for AgDays, January 20.
We got set up and had a chance to look around before settling in to the booth. We only had to work one day as Brad and Rhonda Martens, harvesters from Gladstone, MB, took over the last two days.

The Minot, ND Triple T Toy Show was next on our agenda, on February 1. As usual, we managed to find a few deals and pick up the several boxes of toys that had been shipped to Pingree and Kenmare.
Al's Toy buddy, Roger Miller, had flown in to Minot from Arizona and was getting a ride back to Canada with us, so we made a point of stopping in Kenmare to visit a private museum that we had visited several years ago.
He was quite impressed.


Next on our calendar was the Yorkton Toy Show and Auction, Feb 7,8 & 9. We were organizers for the auction, which was held on the Friday night, so between getting set up for that and getting the tables set up for the toy show at the other venue...we were hopping! There were 225 lots that sold, most consigned, but a lot were cleaned out of the closets at home.
This is also the third year we have had a tractor painted up to raise money for a family in the area who is going through a rough time. 
This year we had a Versatile 2335 which was painted by Mike Kardynal from Minute Muffler in town.Another successful auction, with a lot of notes for next year...hopefully we find them when the time comes. Al came up with the idea of having a "show" tractor for the Yorkton show, so each year we have to make boxes and decal up the tractors. 
These are this year's model...and there are only 35 made.


Now, we were going to be able to be the participant and take it, kind of, easy...we were heading to Wichita, KS for the US Custom Harvesters annual convention.  Al had purchased a certificate at the Canadian Custom Harvesters convention, which included a membership, registration and rooms for the event. 

We took the scenic route on the way down, first to pick up some rims and hubs to dual up the Magnum in Aberdeen, SD, then we stopped in Waconda, SD to pick up some of the toys that Al had purchased online. We also made a detour over to Great Bend, KS and Cherokee, OK to have a visit with the farmers that we have been fortunate to have worked for, for the past 20+ years. The amazing thing about this trip was that we had snow on the ground all the way down, to Cherokee.
We had a good chuckle at the snowman that was built outside the newspaper building in Cherokee...it was even reading the Messenger!

Back in Wichita at the convention, it was great seeing our extended harvesting family, once more, but this time it was under more laid back circumstances.
We had a tour of the AGCO factory in Hesston, KS...we covered a lot of miles going between the buildings, but it was still pretty interesting...Al was even considering changing colors for a short time, but Marilyn said the cab was too small.
We got to enjoy their hospitality, took in the big trade show and learn a lot at the various sessions that were held...and we sat on our hands during the auction. No treasures this year.

Our travel time wasn't over yet. We nicely got back from Wichita, then four days later, we were on the road to Morden, in the southern part of Manitoba, for the last toy show of the spring season. 

Once we were back in Yorkton, living through the longest stretch of -40ÂșC weather we have seen in our time, Al was getting into the start of the tax season rush at H&R Block and Marilyn started helping out there, too, after she was finished at Staples for the day.

Marilyn had theatre business, with the preparations for a drama festival, clear across the province. It was a small cast, but the set required three bathtubs...with showers and running water. Nothing too it...on paper at least...finding claw foot bathtubs for the director was something else. 

Right in the thick of rehearsals, Marilyn got to go on a "sewing retreat". She had been invited to fill the fourth position for a trip to the garment district in Los Angeles, CA. Her friend, Brenda's sister, Colette, who owns Colette's Sewing Machine Plus(where she got her embroidery machine and serger) had a shopping trip planned through one of the ladies that had brought a workshop to Yorkton. Colette, Brenda, Marilyn and Monika, one of Colette's regulars, took off April 8 for a full week of, all things sewing.

We got to learn how to create our own personalized patterns, then we met some of the people that dress the stars. The shopping was amazing...streets lined with bolts of all materials imagined...too bad we didn't have the cargo trailer to haul our treasures home. The weather was great, we got to tour the usual traps and even got to see Book of Mormon at the Pantages theatre. 

Getting our purchases home was a different story. We had to buy extra cases, make sure we were under 50lbs per bag(no easy task, when you can buy material at $2.50 a pound). we did have to get our dress forms shipped to Kenmare, since they were being custom made for us. We're already looking forward to next year's trip. Marilyn just needs to get sewing.

Back in the real world we managed to get our play, The Drowning Girls...based on a true story from the early 1900's about a man who married, then killed three of his wives by drowning them in the bathtub...all put together...thanks to the spare water pump from the camper, as you can see from the monitor in the green room. All the hard work paid off as we came home from the 6 day/6 performance festival with the Technical Merit, Best Characterization, Best Novice Actor, and Runner up to Winning Entry.
One last encore performance May 17 in Yorkton, then Al can have his toy hauling cargo trailer back...minus the tubs and plumbing.

We got through the tax season in one piece...nobody got choked and we are still waiting for the weather to smarten up. We had lots of rain and there is still a snowbank on the north side of the house.

Bring on the summer...

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