Santa Ynez Valley

Santa Ynez Valley
Our Backyard

Friday, October 8, 2021

Michigan 2021 - Tahquamenon Falls

 For some time we have wanted to explore Michigan in the fall, especially the Upper Peninsula.  While staying near Mackinaw City, we took a day trip to the eastern part of the UP to look for fall color and visit Tahquamenon Falls.


At our campground near Mackinaw City, the trees were in the early stages of developing fall color.



As we drove up the UP, we started seeing pockets of good fall color.




Upper Tahquamenon Falls



Maple leaves changing color near the falls




Mercer Museum

While we were in the Bucks County area of Pennsylvania, we also spent a day visiting the Mercer Museum in Doylestown.  After building Fonthill Castle, in 1914 Henry Mercer began construction of a building to house his extensive collection of the tools American settlers used to live their lives.  Mercer was concerned that advances of the industrial age were rapidly making many of the objects used in everyday life obsolete and that many would soon disappear.  One of Mercer's passions was saving such objects and documenting how they were used.


Mercer Museum


The main gallery is filled with objects of the lives of the early settlers.



A display of hand tools


The museum was decorated with works from Mercer's Moravian Tileworks.


The museum holds a large collection of stove plates which were used to construct the very common cast iron wood stoves.



Part of a firearms display


A medical equipment display


And what every family needed!
(determined to be a mid-twentieth century fake)




Thursday, August 26, 2021

Fonthill Castle

 After spending a few days in the Philadelphia area to visit Barbara's brother and family, we headed a bit further north to visit Bucks County, Pennsylvania.  We came here to research several of Barbara's early ancestors who had lived in this part of Pennsylvania.  One of the places recommended that we visit while in the area was Fonthill Castle in Doylestown, Pennsylvania.

 Henry Chapman Mercer (1856-1930) was born into a wealthy family and raised in Doylestown.  While he studied law and passed the bar, he never actually practiced law.  As a young man he traveled extensively and developed a fascination for human history.  He became involved in archaeology and became a major collector of objects used by people over the millennia.  He later apprenticed with a Pennsylvania-German master potter to learn a tile making skill he feared was becoming lost and later founded Moravian Tile Works.

Between 1908 and 1912 he built Fonthill, his home as a "Castle for the New World".  Because he had seen many wooden buildings ravaged by fire, he built his castle using the new technology of reinforced poured concrete.  The building was designed by Mercer with much of the design in his mind and evolving as the construction proceeded.  The building was constructed by 8-10 unskilled workmen, a foreman, Mercer's guidance and a single horse named Lucy.

Approaching the main building



The Carriage House


A tribute to Lucy, the horse that helped build the castle


The estate surrounding the castle



The castle is a showcase for tile produced by Mercer's tile works as well as other tile he collected around the world.  Tiles were often designed to tell stories of mythology, the bible and history.













Even the ceilings and floors were decorated with tiles.




He even used some Sumerian cuneiform tablets.


Medieval Helmets


Human skull in his study


Pots Mercer had collected around the world


The Conservatory


A guest bedroom


The meeting and dining area


Moravian Tile Works was built in 1912 after its nearby predecessor was destroyed by fire.



Sunday, June 27, 2021

Grand Teton National Park 2021 - Part 4

 A few last images from our 2021 visit to the Tetons

The view of the Teton Range across Jackson Hole from the top of Shadow Mountain


Morning at Schwabacher Landing



 Barn Swallow


Beautiful morning at Oxbow Bend


One last image of the Tetons