Along Our Way

The third annual membership banquet of the Raccoon River Valley Trail Association was a huge success Saturday night, February 20, at the Panorama National Conference Center. About 200 people attended. Auctions and a few cash donations helped raise $10,604 to help market and promote the RRVT, the paved rec trail in west central Iowa that's in the midst of an expansion, 56 to 89 miles.
[TO READ THE STORY, AND TO SEE THESE AND OTHER PHOTOS IN LARGER FORMAT, CLICK HERE]

A conversation

COPING WITH CANCER

with the Offenburgers

Chuck Offenburger was diagnosed with non-Hodgkins, follilcular lymphoma cancer on July 10, 2009, and is undergoing treatment. We post updates weekly here, including brief insights from Chuck, Carla and at least one of you readers.

''The Lord will overshadow you, and you will find refuge under his wings.''

FOR THE LATEST UPDATE, CLICK HERE.

Chuck Offenburger's
new book on sports
legend Gary Thompson
gets excellent reviews


FOR INFORMATION ON WHERE & HOW TO BUY THE BOOK, CLICK HERE!


''GARY THOMPSON: All-American'' is the new, 352-page biography of one of the state’s genuine sports icons. From 1950-’53 Gary Thompson led the Roland Rockets to high school sports glory in basketball and baseball, giant-killers from one of Iowa’s small schools. Then he led the Cyclones at Iowa State from 1953-’57, becoming the college’s first two-sport All-American. He’s had major success in broadcasting and business, from his home base in Ames. And he and his wife Janet have a family as solid as they come. “I’m the luckiest guy around,” Thompson says.


TO READ CHUCK OFFENBURGER'S COLUMN ABOUT THE BOOK AND THE ''BOOK LAUNCHING'' HELD EARLY IN DECEMBER, CLICK HERE.

TO READ DES MOINES REGISTER SPORTSWRITER RICK BROWN'S REVIEW OF THE BOOK, CLICK HERE.

TO READ CEDAR RAPIDS GAZETTE SPORTS COLUMNIST JIM ECKER'S REVIEW OF THE BOOK, CLICK HERE.

TO READ AMES DAILY TRIBUNE SPORTSWRITER DICK KELLY'S STORY ABOUT THE BOOK, CLICK HERE.

TO READ DOUG BURNS' STORY ABOUT THE BOOK IN THE CARROLL DAILY TIMES HERALD, CLICK HERE.

TO READ ANDY GOODELL'S STORY ABOUT THE BOOK IN THE OSKALOOSA HERALD, CLICK HERE.

WANT TO SEE AND HEAR THE OLD ROLAND HIGH SCHOOL FIGHT SONG PERFORMED? CLICK HERE!

FOR INFORMATION ON WHERE & HOW TO BUY THE BOOK, CLICK HERE!


FOR PHOTOS FROM OUR BOOK LAUNCHING EVENTS, CLICK HERE!

SEE BOB MODERSOHN'S PHOTOS OF OUR BOOK CHAT AND SIGNING AT BEAVERDALE BOOKS IN DES MOINES!


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Along Our Way



What's the deal with the Saddle Shoes?
What’s the deal with the
black & white saddle shoes?



Click here for the story of our farm in Greene County, Iowa.

Here's looking at life
at Simple Serenity Farm


After the toughest, snowiest winter that either of us can remember, we have now reached the point in early February where snow is stacked everywhere. Piles are six or seven feet high. The dogs can drop full-body into snowdrifts if they're not moving fast enough. Some drifts are five or six feet tall, and 30 or 40 feet long. Whew!
Click here for larger format

Earlier photos in this series


What’s the deal with the black & white saddle shoes?

By CHUCK OFFENBURGER
COOPER, IOWA

I’ve been wearing black & white saddle shoes since I was in sixth grade back in Shenandoah, Iowa, and that was a long time ago.

I’ve always been convinced they were going to come back into style at any moment. They’ve frittered up close to being in style a couple of times, but never closer than in the late fall of 1994 during the late-great “Back in the Saddle” campaign I conducted in my column in The Des Moines Register.

As a result of that campaign, and continuing today, about 4,000 Iowans have discovered just how happy their feet can be.

In the late summer of ’94, the Bass saddle shoes I’d worn for eight years gave out. My shoe repair person then, Linda Hart, “The Country Cobbler” of Conrad, Iowa, had re-soled them twice, but she refused to do any more. So I set out to find a new pair. Several shoe stores in Des Moines said they hadn’t carried B&Ws for years. The Bass outlet store on I-35 near Story City didn’t have any in stock, and in fact didn’t show any in their catalogue. So I called G.H Bass & Co. Shoes in South Portland, Maine, and tried to order a pair direct. They laughed!

I was told that they hadn’t made black & white saddle shoes for 10 years. No demand, they said. I asked if they’d special-make me a pair, and they explained rather snootily that they are a major shoe manufacturer that doesn’t special-make one pair of shoes. When I asked how many of my friends I’d have to round up to buy specially-made ones, they told me I didn’t have enough friends to make it worth their while.

Feeling challenged, I enlisted the help of readers of my “Iowa Boy” column in the Register. I asked for letters trying to persuade Bass Shoes to start making the saddles again. Finally, after a barrage of four columns filled with funny letters, Bass “surrendered,” as it was put by Mitchell Massey, Senior Vice-President/Retail. One time only, he said, they’d take orders from me and my friends in Iowa for saddle shoes and they’d make them.

I had to round up checks and shoe sizes from my readers, telling them “it’s time for you to put your money where my mouth has been.” Then I begged my wife Carla, who was in the midst of finishing her master’s degree at Iowa State University, into handling the orders. Neither of us had any idea what was coming. Two weeks later, we bundled up orders for 675 pairs of men’s and women’s B&W saddle shoes and checks made out to Bass Shoes totaling $48,000.

Well-well! This had suddenly become an entirely different matter!

Bass got excited and put the first 10 pairs they made on the feet of their sales force heading to the New York City Shoe Show, the biggest shoe show in the world. The Bass sales people told the story of what was happening in Iowa – they called it the “Iowa Buy” – and shoe dealers put in orders for 10,000 pairs! Bass decided to put the shoes back into regular production, and that landed the story on page 1 of the New York Times fashion section.

Meantime, they re-tooled their factory and started making B&Ws as quick as they could make them, meeting the demand from Bass President Don Sappington that all those saddle shoes would be made and delivered to the customers in Iowa by Christmas Day. In fact, some of them were special-delivered on Christmas Day!

Iowans were still ordering saddle shoes from Bass a decade later, proud of the fact that for once, folks here led a fashion trend! Wearers include former Governor Terry Branstad, University of Okoboji co-founder Herman Richter, former Buena Vista University President Keith Briscoe, 92-year-old BVU Life Trustee Paul McCorkle, opera singer Simon Estes, BVU football coaches Steve Osterberger and Larry Anderson, former Loras College football coach Bob Bierie, University of Iowa women’s basketball coach Lisa Bluder, Sioux City Journal reporter Tim Gallagher, Tennessee sage Douglas T. Bates III, Internet sports columnist Ron Maly, the legendary former administrator of girls’ sports in Iowa E. Wayne Cooley, and a lot of other cool people.

For nine years, Carla and I bought a pair for the head coach whose team won the annual football game between BVU and Loras, two schools where we’ve been on the faculty. The colleges’ sports information directors nicknamed that game, “The Battle for the Saddles.”

All that time, people could call the Bass Shoes customer hotline – a toll-free number – and if they were from Iowa and were ordering the beautiful black & whites, Bass would send the shoes immediately and bill the people later.

People always asked what I got from Bass for doing so much promotion of their fine B&W saddle shoes. The answer: Cheap columns and a lot of fun.

But in February, 2004, Brown Shoe, based in St. Louis, bought all production and licensing rights “to design, source and market” Bass shoes. I feared what might happen.

When I inquired in December, 2004, here’s the message I got from Brown Shoe’s corporate public relations office:

“We appreciate your interest in Bass shoes; however, we regret to inform you that we no longer produce a men’s black/white saddle style.”

Hmmm.

That led to a story here in late December, 2004, about the 10-year anniversary of our “Back in the Saddle” campaign – it was a rather sad story that I reported was “more like a requiem than a celebration” – and you can read it by clicking here.

Within a month, however, I had heard from other saddle shoe connoisseurs around the world that there is a new source for our classic shoes – Muffys.com in Oregon – and you can read that story by clicking here.

I’ve been wearing Muffy’s saddle shoes ever since! In the fall of 2006, we celebrated the 100th anniversary of the saddle shoe with yet another fun column, and you can read it by clicking here.

So that is the full story – in chapters! – of my saddle shoe story, and that is why you see me wearing them nearly every day. They not only make my feet happy, they make me look about as cool as an Iowan can possibly look.

The Monks of New Melleray Abbey