MotorCoach Blog 44

I Am a Motorcoach . . .

. . . Two Seven Eight with you this week, with a long-over-due Logo-Rubbing blog. For those passengers who only recently came aboard, Logo-Rubbing is the motorcoachblog version of “rubbing shoulders with the rich and famous.” It’s all about brand schmoozing, hobnobbing with the fabulous and iconic of roadside pop culture. More important, Logo-Rubbing lets you the passenger in on some essentials of motorcoach identity. I am a commercial entity, part of a larger commercial endeavor, the name of which I boldly bear like a tattoo on my red skin while getting around in a dynamic world of interacting enterprise. And that, for a motorcoach, is most important of all: being out in the mix. The following are more than just famous brand selfies; they are commercial encounters in specific places along my travels.

Selfies

(which by definition means I’m in them . . . though you might have to look for me)

NASA! Wow, I’ve been looking forward to this photo-op since my odometer was in double-digits. Travel with a mission, space-age sophistication . . . I rolled off the assembly line with that attitude! I didn’t actually go to a NASA facility for this one. I was in Cleveland Ohio, along the shore of Lake Erie at Great Lakes Science Center.

Right next door to the Great Lakes Science Center is the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Appropriately right out front, adorning the very classy motorcoach that served the travel needs of Johnny Cash, is the original MCI logo – my own make of course. My passengers gathered round and gawked, perhaps some imagining they could hear the strumming of Johnny’s Martin D35 coming from the coach. Meanwhile, my admiration focused on a proud legacy of fine motorcoach manufacturing.

Football season is here! And here I am in Ada, Ohio, at the Wilson Sporting Goods football manufacturing plant. Yes, right here is where Wilson makes the official footballs of the NFL, along with footballs for the NCAA, the CFL, and many other leagues. Here also, let me point out, we have the first ever Logo-Rubbing photo-bomb. Along with the intended pose featuring the Wilson logo and my garage family logo, in the foreground we have the updated (and somewhat football-shaped) MCI logo.

At a Holiday Inn – Ontario, Canada – part of my branding is reflected in that of the hospitality giant. Here are two industries that serve one another well: transport and hospitality. We bring them travelers; they provide a home away from home for a night or two.

And for those who prefer their own home on the road . . . Airstream. A common experience on the highways of America, this Airstream and I pass one another in the parking lot at the Airstream manufacturing plant in Jackson Center, Ohio.

You may recall the English Bulldog with the name of international prestige from a few blogs back. Here is the logo of the company after which he was named. Also at the Airstream lot in Jackson Center, Ohio, this Mercedes camper had just received its deluxe Airstream interior.

Where there are campers, there are people into fishing and other outdoorsy stuff. And almost assuredly they have something in their camper or tackle box purchased at this place. Bass Pro Shops are often part of tour itineraries. This visit was part of a tour with destinations throughout Arkansas.

And finally, high quality products as useful in the home as in a camper are made in this manufacturing facility in Greenville, Ohio.

Here Is The News!

MEETING THE NEWS on the roadways of America, first-hand, real time, real world news—going out and discovering the news . . .

FOOTBALL NEWS: The official NFL football has been made by Wilson since 1941, originally at a Wilson plant in Chicago and at the Ohio plant since 1956. Every Wilson football has tiny W logos embossed in the hide, distinguishing them from counterfeits. Twenty footballs are made from a typical cowhide. NFL and collegiate footballs are made from the area along the backbone where the hide has been sun and weather toughened. Youth league footballs are made from the softer underbelly part of the hide. U.S. high school and collegiate footballs have a thick white line that goes half way around the ball at both ends. On CFL (Canadian Football League) footballs the line goes all the way around the ball. NFL footballs have no line.

AIRSTREAM NEWS: The distinctive Airstream rounded aluminum design has aviation origins. It was the brain-child of aircraft designer William Hawley Bowlus, previously the Construction Superintendent of the Spirit of St. Louis aircraft famously piloted by Charles Lindbergh. Airstream’s association with famous flights does not stop there. In 1969, after completing the first trip to the moon, Apollo 11 crewmembers were quarantined in an Airstream until it could be determined that they had not returned as “Lunar Pathogen” carriers. And NASA utilized Airstreams for decades in transport of astronauts to launch pads.

ORBITAL NEWS: Speaking of NASA: have you ever wanted to feel like part of the team at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration? The International Space Station is the third brightest object in the sky, and NASA will notify you by text or email when its orbit combined with favorable conditions make for good sighting opportunities in your location. To sign up, Just Google: Spot the Station.

MUST SEE...

(Unlike selfies, these are not about me, but about travel discoveries I think you’d like to know about.)

Part of a “Made in America” manufacturing plant tour, the Clabber Girl Baking Powder plant and museum tour in Terre Haute, Indiana scored high marks with passengers. The highlight of the visit was the cooking class, complete with tasty instruction handouts and samples of each step-by-step creation. (Location: 900 Wabash Ave., Terre Haute, IN; and for tour and cooking class scheduling: 812-232-9446)

Quote Of The Day samples

“Football is like life – it requires perseverance, self-denial, hard work, sacrifice, dedication, and respect for authority.” – Vince Lombardi Jr.

“We’re all in this together if we’re in it at all.” ― Johnny Cash


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MotorCoach Blog 7

I am a motorcoach:

And here is my final contribution to our January 2016 topic of slowing the world down (delayed a week due to the rude interruption of Jonas by way of mayhem he instigated on the Pennsylvania Turnpike).

We opened our topic with the indispensable practice of “living early.” But we all know even excellent planning can go awry. Case in point: I arrived twenty minutes early to pick up passengers in front of a hotel on a busy street in downtown St. Louis. On that occasion, “in front” turned out to be impossible. I was forced to pass the hotel and look for a way to make my way back. It seemed like an opportunity to use the extra time to familiarize myself with the neighborhood. A moment later, a street that looked inviting for circling back toward the hotel turned out to be commitment to a street that became an entry ramp onto a highway heading over the Mississippi River and into Illinois. My leisurely sightseeing trip around the block was suddenly converted into management of rush-hour traffic amid a lengthy succession of highway interchanges. A thought was loud: “I am no longer early!”

Two things slowed everything down in those moments. The first was ownership of skills. For this I have you-know-who to thank. Yes, Henry. His insistence on relentless due diligence in skills development insured the needed skills were in place to handle a rush of unexpected complexities. The second was prayer. It may be a challenge to imagine a motorcoach praying, but let me assure you, this one does. When it comes to slowing down the world, there’s no substitute for excellent planning, there’s no replacement for skills, and there’s no help more effective than prayers answered by the ultimate you-know-who. To my amazement I pulled up beside the hotel only a minute or two late. And to my relief I learned my passengers had been delayed by about fifteen minutes.

Here Is The News!

MEETING THE NEWS on the roadways of America, first-hand, real time, real world news—going out and discovering the news . . .

sports News: Congratulations to the Francis Howell Lady Vikings, CHAMPIONS of the Central Bank I-44 Missouri Showcase Basketball Tournament! And if I can borrow a little identity here . . . this was my first championship delivery! (See Selfies section below.)

News of trains: Have you ever wondered where all the cabooses went? Well, a brakeman used to occupy the caboose. He had several jobs, including helping with switching and watching ahead for emergencies – in particular hotboxes, the overheating of wheel bearings that could start a fire. With changes in technology, the need for the brakeman lessened to the extent that the position no longer justified its cost, or that of maintenance of the caboose.

And while we’re on the subject of trains, surely you are also eager to know the identity of the largest steam engine ever built in the United States. It was the Union Pacific Big Boy. It was 1,250,000 lbs and 132 feet long. UP had been employing the costly utilization of multiple engines to move coal out of Ogden Utah, over Sherman Hill in Wyoming (elev. 8,000 ft ), 700 miles to North Plat, Nebraska, and on to steel mills in the east. They hired Alco in New York to build an engine that could do it on its own. The result was the Big Boy. Alco made twenty-five of them between 1941 and 1944. (Another example of the
American back-roads education . . . getting out and discovering the news! Check out Must Sees below.)

Selfies

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Here I am with the members of the Francis Howell Vikings, who a few hours later secured their tournament championship.

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How’s this for contrast? Accompanied by freezing temperatures, snow on the Pennsylvania Turnpike a week ago was two feet deep. But at Hidden Valley, the playground for skiers and snowboarders in Eureka, MO, the only snow to be found was on the slopes – the artificial variety. Unseasonably mild temperatures made for a brown landscape everywhere else.

MUST SEE...

When your travels take you anywhere near Cambridge, Ohio, there are two places you’ll be glad you went out of your way to visit:

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Mosser Glass Company is an old-world artisan shop that visitors rave about and patrons from all over the world turn to for elegant art-glass products.

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Cambridge Wooden Toy Co. is home of The Great American Steam Locomotive Museum.

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A wooden scale replica of Union Pacific’s Big Boy, hand crafted by Brian Gray, owner/operator of the toy company and museum, and a treasury of facts and stories about steam locomotives and the era in which they thrived.

Quote Of The Day samples

“Offense sells tickets, defense wins games, rebounding wins championships.” – Pat Summit

“Leadership is about having others look at you and gain confidence. If you’re in control, they’re in control.” – Tom Landry

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