Illinois?
I missed the last few Nationals. I used to work them back in high school.
It was fun last night...best time was 12.8. Gotta get my 60ft down better or get some sticky tires. Got 7 runs in....I think that's the most I've ever gotten in @ 66.
It was fun last night...best time was 12.8. Gotta get my 60ft down better or get some sticky tires. Got 7 runs in....I think that's the most I've ever gotten in @ 66.
ha good qwestion
The second Saturday in June is Tiskilwa's Strawberry Festival celebrating Tiskilwa's strawberry season with a community celebration. The festival offers fresh berries and strawberry shortcake, children’s activities and entertainment. It coincides with town-wide garage sales. There are rides to a local farm for people to pick their own strawberries.[2]
Tiskilwa celebrates Pow Wow Days every year the first weekend in August. Pow Wow Days is a three day event that includes a community concert or big band dancing, children's "Muttin Bustin Rodeo", a parade, a real Indian Pow Wow, a beer garden, 4H Club and cheerleader sponsored food stands, church-sponsored lunches, historical tours, antique automobiles and tractors and many other events. Pow Wow Days was founded in 1976 as part of the national bicentennial. It may be, though, that the bicentennial was just the spark but not the driving force behind Pow Wow Days. The essence and purpose of Pow Wow Days may well be defined by a prescience of what was to come and a desire to preserve and protect what is good and unique at the core of this small-town community with a history of its own going back nearly 200 years.
Founded in 1834 Tiskilwa emerged as a regional economic and cultural center integrating its own administrative capacities, schools, churches and shops serving a small population of townspeople and farm families from the surrounding 3 to 5 miles. It was a small, but vibrant community whose epicenter consisted of three blocks of Main Street around which located its churches, cafes, taverns, grocery stores, beauty parlors and barbershops and any number of local business enterprises. It might have been a tiny community in comparison to the rest of the world, but it was complete. For nearly 150 years Tiskilwa was a self-reliant community. Its residents would travel out of Tiskilwa as a novelty rather than a necessity.
All this began to change for Tiskilwa in the post World War II era as it did across the rest of America. Travel had evolved from a horse and buggy on a one-lane dirt road to a 4-door sedan on a broad, paved and painted, two-lane highway. By 1976 the time it used to take a farmer to reach downtown Tiskilwa would put him in downtown Peoria. And maybe back home. There occurred in a relatively short period a huge shift in the physical boundaries that framed Tiskilwa’s collective consciousness. Now traveling to those three blocks of Main Street Tiskilwa was no longer a necessity, rather a novelty. The reality of this was dawning in 1976.
The good news is that local residents recognized within their tiny community plenty of reasons to want to visit, experience and even become a part of Tiskilwa. This is what Pow Wow Days is about. Curious outsiders and backroad tourists are encouraged to come to Pow Wow Days and experience the open, warm and heartfelt camaraderie that characterizes a unique, 200-year-old farming community heritage.
jackie phillips is from here
I know where it is now....not to far away from lockport another town with the where the heck is that place....Welcome and glad you bumped up this thread
The second Saturday in June is Tiskilwa's Strawberry Festival celebrating Tiskilwa's strawberry season with a community celebration. The festival offers fresh berries and strawberry shortcake, children’s activities and entertainment. It coincides with town-wide garage sales. There are rides to a local farm for people to pick their own strawberries.[2]
Tiskilwa celebrates Pow Wow Days every year the first weekend in August. Pow Wow Days is a three day event that includes a community concert or big band dancing, children's "Muttin Bustin Rodeo", a parade, a real Indian Pow Wow, a beer garden, 4H Club and cheerleader sponsored food stands, church-sponsored lunches, historical tours, antique automobiles and tractors and many other events. Pow Wow Days was founded in 1976 as part of the national bicentennial. It may be, though, that the bicentennial was just the spark but not the driving force behind Pow Wow Days. The essence and purpose of Pow Wow Days may well be defined by a prescience of what was to come and a desire to preserve and protect what is good and unique at the core of this small-town community with a history of its own going back nearly 200 years.
Founded in 1834 Tiskilwa emerged as a regional economic and cultural center integrating its own administrative capacities, schools, churches and shops serving a small population of townspeople and farm families from the surrounding 3 to 5 miles. It was a small, but vibrant community whose epicenter consisted of three blocks of Main Street around which located its churches, cafes, taverns, grocery stores, beauty parlors and barbershops and any number of local business enterprises. It might have been a tiny community in comparison to the rest of the world, but it was complete. For nearly 150 years Tiskilwa was a self-reliant community. Its residents would travel out of Tiskilwa as a novelty rather than a necessity.
All this began to change for Tiskilwa in the post World War II era as it did across the rest of America. Travel had evolved from a horse and buggy on a one-lane dirt road to a 4-door sedan on a broad, paved and painted, two-lane highway. By 1976 the time it used to take a farmer to reach downtown Tiskilwa would put him in downtown Peoria. And maybe back home. There occurred in a relatively short period a huge shift in the physical boundaries that framed Tiskilwa’s collective consciousness. Now traveling to those three blocks of Main Street Tiskilwa was no longer a necessity, rather a novelty. The reality of this was dawning in 1976.
The good news is that local residents recognized within their tiny community plenty of reasons to want to visit, experience and even become a part of Tiskilwa. This is what Pow Wow Days is about. Curious outsiders and backroad tourists are encouraged to come to Pow Wow Days and experience the open, warm and heartfelt camaraderie that characterizes a unique, 200-year-old farming community heritage.
jackie phillips is from here
I know where it is now....not to far away from lockport another town with the where the heck is that place....Welcome and glad you bumped up this thread
Whats up guys. Just joined and wanted to pop in and say hello!
2012 GT Premium White with Black stripe and hood scoop. Seems to be all stock with 25k miles. I bought it from Golf Mill Ford. The previous owner is from Darien IL. I was hoping he was on here, but not too sure.
Im from Bolingbrook, so feel free to wave or flash the beams if you see me going by!!
2012 GT Premium White with Black stripe and hood scoop. Seems to be all stock with 25k miles. I bought it from Golf Mill Ford. The previous owner is from Darien IL. I was hoping he was on here, but not too sure.
Im from Bolingbrook, so feel free to wave or flash the beams if you see me going by!!
Whats up guys. Just joined and wanted to pop in and say hello!
2012 GT Premium White with Black stripe and hood scoop. Seems to be all stock with 25k miles. I bought it from Golf Mill Ford. The previous owner is from Darien IL. I was hoping he was on here, but not too sure.
Im from Bolingbrook, so feel free to wave or flash the beams if you see me going by!!
2012 GT Premium White with Black stripe and hood scoop. Seems to be all stock with 25k miles. I bought it from Golf Mill Ford. The previous owner is from Darien IL. I was hoping he was on here, but not too sure.
Im from Bolingbrook, so feel free to wave or flash the beams if you see me going by!!
https://themustangsource.com/f722/20...5-09-a-513756/
Taken the wife to chicago today. Going to Ikea in schumberg, then Joe's crab shack on golf rd, than a traders joe's in Arlington heights. So if you see a dirty blue ford Raptor with In. plates honk its me.
Originally Posted by dly
Taken the wife to chicago today. Going to Ikea in schumberg, then Joe's crab shack on golf rd, than a traders joe's in Arlington heights. So if you see a dirty blue ford Raptor with In. plates honk its me.

Originally Posted by AlsCobra
Dude go to Hot Doug's. Tell Doug I miss him already. Lol. Theres only 2 reasons I would go back to Chicago. Catch another game at Wrigley. And go eat at Hot Doug's again.
I honked at you but you just ignored me .... kinda hurt my feeeeeeeeelings



