Did you get to the Albaugh Classic?

Told ya! I was one of thousands of car buffs in Ankeny on Saturday for The Albaugh Classic supported by hundreds of volunteers and sponsored by Karl Chevrolet. Besides the Albaugh Collection there were about 500 owners from the Midwest displaying their vehicles: classics; street rods; cars and trucks. Included were quite a few orphan cars – some with names that old-timers know like Nash, Hudson, Willys, and Packard, and some orphan brands that younger folks know too like Oldsmobile and Plymouth. There were more Corvettes than I had ever seen in one place. Below are a few of my favorites.

For the first time I saw Dennis Albaugh’s collection of 130 Chevrolets. What a collection! My favorite was the one-of-a-kind 1928 Chevrolet Camp Car owned by John and Dora McMullen and shown below. It came complete with a non-anchored wicker chair driver’s seat with a second for the front seat passenger. Imagine what a State Trooper would say about that! It also had a quilt rack to the left of the driver’s seat, drop leaf dining room table just behind the front seats, and roll down window shades. Move over Winnebago!

CampCarSmallCampCar2Small

The Albaugh’s Collection represents a Chevrolet and a Corvette from every year, and some years with two. It’s a privilege to walk through. Watch for Dennis to open his garage again. You’ll get your chance and you don’t want to miss it.

Speaking of you don’t want to miss it, watch for the 2009 Salisbury Automobile Classic on September 13.

photos by James G. Lindberg

The Albaugh Classic

Taillight2If you are a car buff, you’ll want to be in Ankeny on Saturday for The Albaugh Classic sponsored by Karl Chevrolet.

It’s your chance to see Dennis Albaugh’s collection of 130 Chevrolets; some say it is the best Chevy collection anywhere!

At the same event you will see the cars that hundreds of other folks are bringing

  • classics (pre-War and post-War)
  • street rods and modified
  • Corvettes
  • cars and trucks

You will be able to vote for your favorite 12 classics and see what the judges think of cars and trucks in 20 other categories.

Where? Albaugh, Inc. at 1525 NE 36th Street in Ankeny. (Do not believe the maps you get from either Google or Mapquest!) Instead take I-35 to exit 92, turn west on E. 1st Street (0.2 mi) then north on NE Delaware (2 mi), turn east on NE 36th (0.4 mi) and you will see it on the right as you approach the underpass at I-35.

When? Saturday, August 8th from 6:30 am until 4:00 pm. Get there early. It’s going to be hot!

How much? $10 or free to those 12 and under.  Thanks to Karl Chevrolet all the proceeds go to Ankeny High School.

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photos by James G. Lindberg and dok1

Des Moines and San Francisco: factual differences

I’ve been visiting family in the Bay Area of California for three weeks – plenty of time to see some differences between Polk County in Central Iowa and San Mateo County just south of San Francisco. (Compare stats.)

Weather? In the summer this coastal part of CA often feels cool; Central Iowa often feels a little muggy.

  • at 2 pm on Friday, June 26 it was 65 with 64% humidity and an 8 mph breeze in Half Moon Bay
  • at 2 pm in Des Moines it was 86 with similar humidity and breezes
  • and sometimes San Francisco can be downright cold in the summer! In the photo to the right taken at 3 pm on June 24, it was foggy and 50 degrees with a 25 mph wind on the Golden Gate Bridge.

Unemployment? Iowa looks comparatively good.

Real estate? Iowa wins big time! While the houses don’t look that different, the land costs are very different. In the first quarter of 2009 the median cost of a home was

Cost of living? You may have figured this one out already. The cost of living where the national average is set as 100 is

State budget? California is in a budget impasse, and the world is watching. Iowa appears to be OK.

  • In California the governor and the legislature are enough at odds that the state can’t pay its bills
  • In Iowa although it has not been an easy process, the budget is manageable

Well, you win some, you lose some, and sometimes you tie.

photo by James G. Lindberg and by flickr by Scott Laird

Bernie Madoff in Des Moines dollars

By his own admission Bernie Madoff engaged in criminal acts using $65 billion of other people’s money. He lost it.

How much is $65 billion in Des Moines dollars?

The median annual household income in Polk County is under $55,000.

If the average Polk County family worked 1 million years, they would still be $10 billion short.

You say you don’t have a million years? Enlist your friends. There are about 150,000 households. If every man, woman, and child in Polk County pooled their income for about 8 years, we could match the $65 billion. 

That’s one perspective on the crime: Bernie Madoff took the equivalent of 8 years of labor of every man, woman, child in Polk County, Iowa.

I wonder where his thinking went wrong. 

photo by flickr by Steve Rhodes of a painting by Yan Pei Ming

Des Moines economy receives high rating

While the economy in the Des Moines metro (like the rest of the country) is less than perfect, the Washington-based think tank Brookings Institution reports: Des Moines is doing relatively well.

The Brookings’ MetroMonitor report was released today (6/17/2009), and based on “overall performance” Des Moines is ranked in the top 20 of the 100 largest metropolitan economies in the U. S. where overall performance was based on recent changes in 4 indicators:

  • employment
  • unemployment
  • gross metropolitan product
  • housing price index

The full rankings are available.

In employment were are in the top 20% along with Omaha-Council Bluffs and Kansas City. The middle quintile included Denver, Minneapolis, St. Louis, and Chicago.

In the rate of increase in unemployment, the report showed that Des Moines was best in the country. We have lost jobs more slowly than any other metropolitan area. This was attributed in part to the relative insulation of the insurance industry to rapid change during a recession. Omaha-Council Bluffs was also in the most favorable 20%.

The question of wages which typically do not drop during a recession, Des Moines did not compare as favorably where we were in the second to the lowest quintile.

In recent changes in the gross metropolitan product, Des Moines was in the middle quintile.

The strength of the real estate markets is reflected by our position in the 2nd most favorable quintile. If you want to sell a house, it is most favorable to live in Houston, Buffalo, or Dallas, but you are in a lot of pain if you are trying to sell in Modesto, CA, Las Vegas, NV, or Stockton, CA. New slogan opportunity for Las Vegas: “If you bought a house in Vegas, your money will stay in Vegas.”

A final category considered in the Brookings report is real estate owned by lending institutions. These are properties that have been foreclosed, that the lender has tried and failed to sell at auction, and that remain in the hands of the lending institution. The Des Moines metro is in the middle. The fewest such properties are in Syracuse and Albany, NY and greatest number in Stockton, CA and Las Vegas, NV.

During the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, while we are suffering individually and collectively as institutions, a city and state, the Des Moines metro is doing relatively well. We couldn’t ask for a lot more.

photos by flickr by recentexposurephotography

The changing face of Iowa: wind turbines

It’s windy in Iowa. (I didn’t have to tell you, did I?)

It’s hard to miss Iowa’s new wind turbines. They continue to spring up in Western Iowa along Interstate 80 in areas including one called Windy Hills. The turbines are on both sides of I-80 in Adair , Cass , and Pottawattamie Counties. 

Today we find that Mid-American Energy has over 100 turbines in Pottawatamie County alone where many of the pictures above were taken at the Walnut Wind Project.

Money is blowing in the wind.

According to the Union of Concerned Scientists each turbine will net the landowner $2,000 -5,000/year in royalties. That’s great news in counties where the average farm is near 440 acres and the crop value per harvested acre has been running between $205 – 225/acre.

How are we doing in terms of absolute capacity compared to the rest of the country? We’re doing well; currently we are even with California in absolute capacity. DOE puts us 3rd in the nation; citing Dirk Lammers Yahoo says 2nd, where Texas is first. 

  •  Iowa has 2862 MW of capacity (with our population of 3 million that’s about 1 kW/person)
  • California has 2868 MW with their population of 36 million
  • In Iowa we’re producing 10% of the nation’s wind power. I’m impressed!
Best of all wind energy is producing Iowa jobs at

A few possibilities have not worked out yet but many are still in progress.

It’s good for us. Enjoy it. Comparatively, Iowa is way ahead. There is space. Our leadership and legislature were not beholden to any established energy producer. Wind projects have brought money into the state; less money will go out to purchase energy.    

Resources for further information

photos by James G. Lindberg

Fridays at the Fountain in West Glen 2009

People are searching for Fridays at the Fountain. OK, then. Here you go!

Looking for something to do once the work week is over? Fridays at the Fountain started in May and you missed Dick Prall, but there is still time through the end of July to hear music, make friends, and unwind from the week.

Every Friday through the end of July, you can attend Fridays at the Fountain. More details at their website.

  • $5 (and you’d better be 21 ‘cuz liquor, wine and beer are sold)
  • 5:30 until 8:00 pm (Then what will we do?)
  • Fountain Plaza in West Glen Town Center
  • just off Interstate 35 and George Mills Parkway
  • near Jordan Creek in West Des Moines

Live entertainment – from pop to jazz.

The 2009 band lineup taken from West Glen’s pdf file is:

Afterwards, go see Bomi Mistry for healthy treats at Fuel.

photo by flickr by MorBCN and by  James G. Lindberg

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Trouble at GM? It’s not the first time

The wheels have come off at GM, but it could be worse.

After all, you will wake up on Tuesday June 2, 2009, and there will still be a General Motors. (That’s good.) You will own the lion’s share of GM until (and if) it starts to make money, and then someone else will get to buy it back. (That’s mixed.) I would probably favor the idea that we (aka, the federal government/U. S. Treasury) would make some big bucks before we sell. Some question whether making money anytime soon is going to happen.

If you read 2008 Salisbury Automobile Classic on AroundDesMoines.com last September -especially the links to Billy Durant – you know that GM has had its share of trouble.

Billy Durant created GM in 1908 for a small sum of money, raised a large sum of money by selling stock, bought Buick, Oldsmobile, Cadillac, and Oakland (Pontiac), was pushed out in 1910, quickly joined forces with a race driver named Chevrolet and founded Chevrolet Motors, regained GM in 1916, was forced out again in 1920, and before he could rebuild his fortune, was ruined in the stock market crash of 1929. Durant was a dandy entrepreneur who lived too close to the edge once too often.

You can examine the way GM views its history. While the Web site has a corporate spin, the photos make it great fun for a car buff.

CNBC.com has a timeline history that was posted on May 27 2009. While it wanders a bit, it has a lot of facts.

The foreign press is sometimes a nice read since they mince fewer words. Try the Telegraph.co.uk from England.

So while the trouble at GM is not the first trouble, it is the biggest bankruptcy in U. S. history, and it does have our attention.

I sure hope we like the changes in GM ‘cuz looking for a Chevy is never going to be the same.

photos by flickr by bobster885 and James G. Lindberg

Thomas Friedman at Grinnell College

Good message!

Become the generation that will be called the Re-Generation.

Thomas Friedman, New York Times world affairs columnist and prolific author, gave the commencement address at Grinnell College on Monday May 19, 2009. You can hear the entire address (in 3 installments totaling just under 25 minutes) courtesy of YouTube.

In his initial remarks Friedman related several issues cited by fellow journalist Kurt Andersen in his recent Time magazine article, The End of Excess.

Continuing, Friedman then focused on a generational theme, first on the The Greatest Generation (that of his parents and grandparents – the generation that survived The Great Depression then fought in World War II). He cited the qualities that characterized the greatest generation:

  • hard work
  • delayed gratification
  • achievement oriented
  • focused attention

Those were my parents too and I would add to that list

  • frugal
  • humble
  • accountable

Friedman contrasted the Greatest Generation with his own generation, the baby boomers (post-WWII babies) and named that generation the Grasshopper Generation – eating through the fabric of the nation like hungry locusts. He credited the grasshopper generation with such dubious qualities as

  • excess (over-consuming, over-building, over-borrowing, over-lending, over-eating) and
  • dumb as we wanna be (delaying the solutions to Social Security, health care, energy, environment, and immigration).

He cited the subprime meltdown in particular as illuminating a decline in basic values, risk management, accountability, and ethics.

Friedman then challenged the Grinnell graduates to become the Re-Generation

that could restore the basic values of

  • hard work
  • accountability

and added that the graduates should carry with them

  • ethics
  • uncompromising idealism
  • unbending convictions
  • principled behaviors

and that they should create value through

  • invention
  • innovation
  • imagination

all in order to do real engineering of materials, of services, of societal movement that fulfill needs, both seen and unseen.

It was great advice to the Grinnell College Class of 2009.

Friedman also told an interesting story with several Iowa connections. While studying in London in 1975 and dating wife-to-be Ann Bucksbaum, daughter of Carolyn “Kay” (a Grinnell alum) and Matthew Bucksbaum (an Iowa alum), Friedman (not a journalist at the time) was so stirred by the politics of the day that he wrote an op-ed piece. Ann carried it back to Des Moines. The piece made its way to The Des Moines Register editorial page editor who published it. Friedman received $50, and he was hooked as a journalist. Thus, Friedman’s exceptional career has a strong Des Moines connection.

If you’d like to read two recent Friedman books try

photos by James G. Lindberg

Free yoga at Gray’s Lake

What could be better?

  • yoga
  • free
  • Gray’s Lake (north side, park by the beach)
  • Saturday mornings from 9 am to 10 am
  • 17 weeks beginning June 6 and running through September 26
  • a variety of instructors

Sponsored by Des Moines Parks and Recreation the sessions are said to be beginner’s classes (lucky for me). If you want to try it, wear loose fitting clothes and bring a mat, rug, or towel along with some water. You’ll stand; you’ll sit; you’ll stretch and bend. It is not a competitive sport so you won’t have to do anything and you don’t have to do it perfectly (very lucky for me).

You don’t have to sign up, and you don’t have to stay so try it once; you might like it.

One of the better sites for medical information is WebMD and they list many benefits of yoga including

  • flexibility
  • posture
  • stress reduction
  • breathing

I remember my first yoga class. I went only to humor the Purple Wren while we were living in California 10 years ago. Much to my surprise I liked it and it made me feel better – more flexible, more relaxed, and breathing better. I’ve been to classes quite a few times since, always like it, always feel better, but I never go on a regular basis. (How smart is that?)

There are many styles of yoga and many studios in Des Moines. But don’t be intimidated; I’m sure that the summer program at Gray’s Lake will keep it simple.

Here is the June/July schedule. I’ll update it later. If it rains, it’s canceled.

Try it once.

photos by flickr by DonnaGrayson and A-Wix

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