Friday, September 29, 2017

The Johnny Appleseed Festival


According to the calendar, Autumn officially arrived on September 22nd. But in reality, the Fall season began in the Fort Wayne area the weekend before, with the 43rd annual Johnny Appleseed Festival. Held every year on the third full weekend in September, The Festival is the official kick off of Fall around here!

Full of delicious food, unique crafts, antiques, and even part farmers market, The Johnny Appleseed Festival honors the legendary John Chapman (aka Johnny Appleseed), who is actually buried here in Fort Wayne, Indiana. In case you're not familiar with him, "Johnny" went around planting apple trees all around the eastern part of U.S. in the early days of America. A little known fact about Johnny's apples is that they were used mostly for making hard cider instead of for eating! 

The Johnny Appleseed Festival is probably my most favorite time of the year. Not only do I love a good festival, and Fall in general, but this festival holds a special place in my heart. When I was in grade school, my church and school had a booth at Johnny Appleseed that I worked for several years! Dressing like a pioneer is a requirement to work The Festival and it was always so much fun to steal away in your pioneer woman dress and bonnet and go play in the creek with your friends.

This year, we had an extra special visitor to The Johnny Appleseed Festival! Mo Rocca from CBS Sunday Morning (and My Grandmother's Ravioli) came to Fort Wayne to film a segment for Sunday Morning and partake in all things apple! Centered around his grave in Johnny Appleseed Park, The Festival offers plenty of food made from apples, from Apple Dumplings to Apple Pancake Roll-Ups. They even have the world's best Ham and Bean Soup (and cornbread!) It's not been released yet when the episode will air, but I am keeping my ears open! My mom and I ran into them filming all over the festival, so who knows, we may be in a few shots!

Even if it's ninety degrees out (like it was this year!), this festival just gets you in the mood for Fall! Everywhere you look there are pumpkins, apples, and mums! The sound of bagpipes, drums, and cannons fill the air and the smell of campfires permeate everything! I dare you to visit the Johnny Appleseed Festival and NOT want to go home and make caramels, drink cider, and decorate your home for Fall!


Some of the "pioneers" hard at work cooking up a batch of caramel corn!


Here's Mo and the crew filming!


I couldn't resist this bucket of wooden gourds! I had to get one!


Fall abounds everywhere you go at The Johnny Appleseed Festival!




Johnny Appleseed Park is actually a campground the rest of the year. It's a really beautiful area.


Every year we get at least one of these ceramic mushrooms. My goal is to have a whole little forest of them like this!


The farmer's market area is perhaps my most favorite part. It's full of gorgeous flowers like this!


And this! You can purchase bunches of them and make your own bouquet!


I loved these wooden witches!


And the matching ghosts! I wish I would have gotten them now! Next year!


There are just so many cool crafts at the Johnny Appleseed Festival!



Of course, stopping by the grave of the man that started it all is required!



 

Friday, September 15, 2017

West Central Home & Garden Tour


 The historic West Central Neighborhood in downtown Fort Wayne, Indiana is one of my all-time favorite neighborhoods. Dating back to the 1830's, it once housed the elite of Fort Wayne society and the houses there are nothing short of amazing. 

I was lucky enough to live in West Central for a few years and I probably still would if I hadn't gotten married! It was a dream of mine to live there ever since I can remember and it was a sad day when I moved out! Many of the houses have been (horribly) split up into apartments and fallen into disrepair over the last century, but West Central is making a major comeback. It makes me so happy to see people restoring these gorgeous, gigantic, old houses! Many of them are truly mansions.

This past weekend I went on the annual West Central Home and Garden Tour and today I am sharing some of my favorite parts of it. I took mostly outdoor pictures because it was difficult to get a good indoor shot. Some of the houses I will be showing you weren't even on the tour, but I love them so much I had to include them anyways! 

Someday soon, I will take another walk downtown and take more pictures, but this will give you a taste of some of the beautiful architecture that Fort Wayne has to offer!


This house was one of two reasons why I had to go on the West Central Tour this year. I drove by this house almost every day for the better part of a decade and always wished that someone would fix it up! And now they have! It had sat vacant for years and was just a mess. There was a giant bush covering the whole front of the home and I was so happy the day they tore it out and I could see the whole house! This house dates back to about 1887!


The home is full of original stained glass that was actually stolen, recovered, and thankfully put back in it's rightful place!


I loved the color of these original hardwood floors! They are so unique.


This was my second reason for going on the tour...my old apartment building! My apartment was the second from the top in the right hand corner!

This is Sheridan Court Apartments, built in 1925 by the famed architect Alvin M. Strauss. Someday I will show you the pictures of my amazing old apartment.

Another gorgeous old home on the tour! The original owner of the home owned the Shields Clothing Co. on Calhoun Street and had this house built for his family around 1910. I just love finding out interesting facts like that about old Fort Wayne!

Although not one of the grander homes in West Central, this cute little cottage home is still full of character. It was estimated to have been built around the middle 1800's!

It's all about the details in old homes!

I am OBSESSED with this wallpaper!!! It's in a house that is a "work in progress" and will most likely be covered up or ripped out in the future. It was pretty damaged and filthy in some areas of the stairwell. I wonder if it is original to the house, which was built in 1899. At least I got this picture of it!

These gorgeous row houses were built for the faculty of the now-defunct Methodist College. Although they appear to be completely connected, in the back there are spaces between them with windows that look right into the next house. You would never be able to escape your co-workers living here!

Emmanuel Lutheran Church was also included on the tour after having undergone extensive renovations. It reminded me of a mix of my old church and the Old North Church in Boston.

I LOVED the shimmery gold stars against the blue on the ceiling of the chancel! Well done!

This was an alley we walked through on the tour, but Fort Wayne still has several brick streets throughout the town!

These next homes were not on the tour, but I had to include them anyways! They are all in West Central and something about each of them spoke to me. Like this one. What a perfect little cottage!

Many of these home I have driven by hundreds of times, but never walked by them. It's an entirely different vibe and I will be doing it more often!

I cannot believe the attention to detail in even the littlest of things.

What a beauty! I wonder what's up in that turret?

Every home on this block has been recently restored and remodeled and they have all done an excellent job!

This has always been one of my favorites and I even tried to get an apartment in there once, but it was too expensive for me!

I loved this second story porch on one of the houses!

I did have the chance to live here once, but I turned it down to live in Sheridan Court. The second story in that turret could have been my living room!

I just love old houses!

Some color combos you can only get away with on an old house!

What an awesome little apartment building. It reminds me of Chicago.

This is my new absolute favorite house in West Central now! They just remodeled it have done an amazing job. It used to be completely white and you just could not see any of the character of it.

Perfection.



Thursday, September 7, 2017

My Flower Garden Tour 2017, Part 2: Annuals


Last week I took you on a tour of the perennial flowers in my flower gardens. Today, I will be sharing the annuals!

In case you were wondering what the difference is, perennials come back every year (hopefully!) Annuals are only around for one season. I try to incorporate a good mix of both perennials and annuals in my flower gardens. The nice thing about annual flowers is that they can really change up the look of your garden from year to year if you plant different ones each year!

Next year, I am planning on really stepping up my annuals. The past few years I've focused mostly on perennials because they are cheaper in the long run and you don't have to keep replanting them! But, my annuals have really looked awesome this year, so I am going to do it up even more next Spring/Summer!

I really don't have that many gardens. Don't get the idea that I have acres upon acres of perfectly manicured gardens like Martha Stewart! Although, that is my goal one day! I have a few little areas around my house, garage, and creek that I've managed to put a border on and plant a few plants! They are always a work in progress and I still have plenty of space in all of them to plant more flowers next year, and even for years to come!

If all you have are a few containers on your apartment balcony or window ledge, that's a great start! In fact, that's how I got my start! And don't get discouraged if your plants didn't do so hot this Summer. There's always next year!

All the seeds that I planted this year. The Primrose and Phlox didn't happen this year.

Here is my back little garden area at the very beginning of Summer. It looks like weeds but about July or August it really starts to look like an actual garden.

Here it is today!

These are the Zinnias, which are one of my new favorite flowers.

An up close shot of one of the Zinnias. They are all so different, you never know what you're going to get!


A Sunflower just about to open.



These are Cockscomb that I originally got at the Johnny Appleseed Festival two years ago! I planted the seeds that fell from them and they have come back every year! They are technically Annuals but the seeds just replant them by themselves!

Twins! This year I am going to get another color to add to the garden! Maybe orange.

My creekside garden is so shady, so I planted Impatiens and they have really done well! I think they are going to be my go-to flower from now on since my yard is so shady.



I love ornamental or flowering cabbages!

Perfect for Fall!

A unique Begonia mix.

In the background is one of my fave plants, a Kong Coleus. The Asparagus Fern in the front I got on clearance for 50 cents and it has just grown like crazy! I love these Ferns!

Speaking of Coleus, the ones I planted from seed actually ended up blooming! It was touch and go for a couple months after a groundhog messed up this area. I will definitely be planting these again next year.

This is a Flowering Maple...it reminded me of a Hibiscus, so I had to get it!

And finally, my sweet peas! This was my first year growing them and clearly I have some things to learn! 1. Get the proper size! These are supposed to grow up to 7 foot tall! Way taller than my tomato cage trellis! It's still possible that these will bloom, so we will see!

This is my big old planter on my deck full of petunias, sunpatiens, verbena and a corkscrew plant.

Goodbye Summer! Til next year!