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Artist Gary L Hightshoe | Milk It For All It's Worth Hardcover Journal
$19.95
Get every last drop of goodness life has to offer. Milk It For All It's Worth features an original drawing of the George Rogers Farm, which stood for generations on Butterfield Road south of Cascade, Iowa, crossing the Maquoketa River. The road's name recalls an era when every farm along the route kept dairy cows supplying cream to the Cascade Creamery in the early 1900s. The milk barn — the oldest outbuilding on the Rogers place, circa 1900 — watched as a handful of cows grew to a herd of more than 100 head of dairy cattle. By the latter half of the century, it had been quietly converted to a chicken coop. What egg-citing or extraordinary things have happened in your life? Get Gary's Hardcover Journal and tell your story.
Gary L. Hightshoe is an Emeritus Professor of Landscape Architecture at Iowa State University, where he taught plant materials, planting design, and landscape resource management for more than 47 years. Over the course of nearly half a century, his colleagues, clients, students, and family have known him by many names — the Tree Whisperer, the Grandfather of the Prairie, the Godfather of Savanna Studio — and every one of them fits.
A lifelong conservationist, ecologist, historian, illustrator, hunter, angler, photographer, and artist, Gary is the author and illustrator of two landmark works: Native Trees, Shrubs, and Vines for Rural and Urban America and North American Plantfile — books that continue to shape the field of landscape architecture. His most enduring legacy, however, may be Savanna Studio at Iowa State: the only traveling landscape architecture studio of its kind in the world. Over two decades, Gary led more than 1,000 students out from behind their desks and into the field — to the Boundary Waters, Yellowstone, Theodore Roosevelt, Banff, the Badlands, and beyond — because, as he has always believed, "you can't develop a relationship with the landscape from behind a desk."
Gary loves the great White Oak, the Pagoda and Flowering Dogwood, and any native prairie forb. His granddaughters will tell you he is decidedly not a fan of petunias, lilacs, or red-leafed varieties. And he has spent a lifetime restoring 40 acres of never-tilled original Iowa land — wetland, prairie, and forest — to the way it was always meant to be.
"Long after we've come and gone, a tree still stands." — Gary L. Hightshoe
About this Journal:
• Size: 5.5" × 8.5" — the perfect companion, at home or on the go
• 80 lined pages of cream-colored paper
• UltraHyde hardcover with a rich, luxurious feel
• Cream ribbon page marker and matching elastic closure
• Expandable inner pocket for recipes, notes, cards, and keepsakes
• Print quality is exceptional — vivid, true-to-life, and exactly as pictured
Get every last drop of goodness life has to offer. Milk It For All It's Worth features an original drawing of the George Rogers Farm, which stood for generations on Butterfield Road south of Cascade, Iowa, crossing the Maquoketa River. The road's name recalls an era when every farm along the route kept dairy cows supplying cream to the Cascade Creamery in the early 1900s. The milk barn — the oldest outbuilding on the Rogers place, circa 1900 — watched as a handful of cows grew to a herd of more than 100 head of dairy cattle. By the latter half of the century, it had been quietly converted to a chicken coop. What egg-citing or extraordinary things have happened in your life? Get Gary's Hardcover Journal and tell your story.
Gary L. Hightshoe is an Emeritus Professor of Landscape Architecture at Iowa State University, where he taught plant materials, planting design, and landscape resource management for more than 47 years. Over the course of nearly half a century, his colleagues, clients, students, and family have known him by many names — the Tree Whisperer, the Grandfather of the Prairie, the Godfather of Savanna Studio — and every one of them fits.
A lifelong conservationist, ecologist, historian, illustrator, hunter, angler, photographer, and artist, Gary is the author and illustrator of two landmark works: Native Trees, Shrubs, and Vines for Rural and Urban America and North American Plantfile — books that continue to shape the field of landscape architecture. His most enduring legacy, however, may be Savanna Studio at Iowa State: the only traveling landscape architecture studio of its kind in the world. Over two decades, Gary led more than 1,000 students out from behind their desks and into the field — to the Boundary Waters, Yellowstone, Theodore Roosevelt, Banff, the Badlands, and beyond — because, as he has always believed, "you can't develop a relationship with the landscape from behind a desk."
Gary loves the great White Oak, the Pagoda and Flowering Dogwood, and any native prairie forb. His granddaughters will tell you he is decidedly not a fan of petunias, lilacs, or red-leafed varieties. And he has spent a lifetime restoring 40 acres of never-tilled original Iowa land — wetland, prairie, and forest — to the way it was always meant to be.
"Long after we've come and gone, a tree still stands." — Gary L. Hightshoe
About this Journal:
• Size: 5.5" × 8.5" — the perfect companion, at home or on the go
• 80 lined pages of cream-colored paper
• UltraHyde hardcover with a rich, luxurious feel
• Cream ribbon page marker and matching elastic closure
• Expandable inner pocket for recipes, notes, cards, and keepsakes
• Print quality is exceptional — vivid, true-to-life, and exactly as pictured

