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This is Iowa: Family's historic trek spurs wagon ride across Iowa

This is Iowa: Family's historic trek spurs wagon ride across Iowa
HASN'T REACHED ITS DESTINATION. BUT NO ONE SEEMS TO MIND. <WIND.> EVEN IN THE CORNERS OF OUR STATE, HOURS FROM THE NEAREST METRO-- <TRUCK.> HIGHWAYS STAY BUSY. WITH TRUCKS-- <HONK HONK.> TRAFFIC AND TRACTORS. <JOHN DEERE TRACTOR AND WAGON.> WHICH IS WHY, WHEN SOMETHING ELSE TAKES OVER THE SHOULDER-- <CLIP CLOP.> IOWANS ON THEIR WAY TO WORK WILL STOP, STARE AND SNAP PICTURES OF THE TWO DRIVERS-- <THAT'S MY BAG. YOU ATE ALL YOUR COOKIES.> CHIT CHATTING ABOUT SNACKS - CRISS-CROSSING THIS STATE THEY'VE NOW BEEN IN FOR TWO WEEKS. <IT'S SO CLEAN. THE DITCHES. THEY'RE CLEAN. YOU GO THROUGH SOME STATES AND THERE'S TRASH EVERYWHERE. EVERYWHERE. YOU LOOK HERE AND YOU DON'T SEE ANY PAPER> THAT'S TOM NASS TALKING-- <SOMETIMES IF YOU WANT TO GET A WORD IN, YOU'VE GOT TO WAIT TILL I TAKE A BREATH.> BESIDE THE GUY HOLDING THE REIGNS, CARLOS FORD-- <THEY WANT TO GO EVERY MORNING.> A SOUTHERNER WHO HAD NO PLANS TO SPEND TODAY IN POCAHONTAS COUNTY. OR ANYWHERE ELSE THEY'VE BEEN SEEING-- <SOMETHING SHOWING SLOW PACE.> AT 3 AND A HALF MILES AN HOUR. <HE TOLD ME HE WANTED TO GO ON THIS RIDE AND HE SAID, "HEY, YOU WANNA GO WITH ME?' AND I SAID, 'WHY NOT?' LAUGH.> (SWEEPING DRONE SHOT) THE BETTER QUESTION MIGHT ACTUALLY BE - WHY? BECAUSE CROSSING OUR STATE IN A WAGON FROM LAMONI NEAR THE MISSOURI BORDER ALL THE WAY TO MINNESOTA AND BEYOND TAKES WEEKS WHEN YOU TRAVEL ONLY 20 MILES A DAY. THE ANSWER IS UP THERE OVER THE HORIZON. TOM'S MOM, ANN STRAND. <THEY HAD NO IDEA WHERE THEY WERE GOING, EXCEPT THEY WERE GOING NORTH.> 90 YEARS AGO, SHE MADE THIS SAME TRIP, ALONG THIS SAME ROUTE, WITH HER PARENTS. WHEN SHE WAS ONLY THREE. <COVERED WAGON, THREE CHILDREN. DIRT ROAD.> LAMONI WAS TOO EXPENSIVE FOR THEIR FAMILY. THEY NEEDED CHEAP LAND. <SO MY GRANDFATHER HAD A 1927 MODEL T. AND HE TRADED IT FOR TWO MULES AND A WAGON. HE HAD $66 WHEN THEY GOT READY TO LEAVE.> ON A SIX WEEK TREK TO A BUILD A NEW LIFE. TOM'S HEARD STORIES IT WASN'T EASY. < I MEAN, THEY ENDURED STORMS, TORNADO, MULES GOT AWAY.> BUT FAMILY LEGENDS SINK IN DIFFERENTLY-- <POURING RAIN OUT. WE'RE IN THE TENT. JUST BARELY GOT IN HERE BEFORE IT STARTED POURING.> WHEN YOU'RE THE ONE STUCK IN A DOWNPOUR-- <HERE WE ARE. GOING DOWNTOWN LAMONI, IOWA.> CRUISING MAIN STREET BEHIND MULES-- <WE'RE NOT QUITE USED TO SITTING ON THE GROUND, OR SLEEPING ON THE GROUND. A LITTLE STIFF THIS MORNING.> OR RISING WITH THE SUN - TO HITCH UP THE TEAM -- <THIS ONE IS GYPSY, THIS ONE IS FANCY. THAT ONE IS DOLLY.> JUST LIKE THOSE WHO CAME BEFORE DID RIGHT HERE, WITH MULES-- <AND THEY GET EXCITED.> 90 YEARS AGO. SO EVERY MORNING, FROM MOTHER'S DAY TO FOURTH OF JULY, <(COVERED) WE'RE ALL CLEANED UP AND READY TO GO.> THEY'VE STARTED IN A FARMYARD OR A PARK-- <WE GONNA BUST OUTTA HERE.> AND HELD ON. <YOU BETTER GET IN. WE FIXIN' TO GO! STEP OFF. QUIT. ALRIGHT. LET'S GO> BECAUSE GYPSY, FANCY AND DOLLY WANT TO GO NORTH -- <AND WE'RE OFF.> AS BADLY AS TOM DOES. <HERE WE GO ON OUR 11TH DAY OUT.> BECAUSE THE GUY WHO JUST RETIRED HAS A MOM WHO TURNS 93 IN A FEW WEEKS. AND HE'S DETERMINED TO PULL INTO THE BIRTHDAY PARTY UP IN MINNESOTA THE SAME WAY SHE FIRST GOT THERE. IN A COVERED WAGON. <AND I'M AT THE POINT IN MY LIFE WHERE I'VE JUST PUT THE BRAKES ON. SO WHATEVER HAPPENS, HAPPENS. IF THIS IF THIS IF WE'RE BROKE DOWN SOMEPLACE. FOR TWO WEEKS, SO BE IT. WE'RE NOT ON NO SCHEDULE. (44) IF I DON'T GET THERE BY HER BIRTHDAY, SHE'S JUST GOING TO HAVE TO UNDERSTAND. (48) > AND IT COULD TAKE A WHILE. BECAUSE TOM DOESN'T KNOW ANY STRANGERS. <YOU KNOW IF SOMEONE WANTS TO STOP AND TALK, I JUST STOP.> <WE'RE IN KELLERTON IOWA AND WE FOUND THIS WOMAN TO GIVE US SOME WATER.> ALONG THE WAY-- <HERE WE ARE. WE'RE WITH THE SHERIFF OF GUTHRIE COUNTY.> THEY'VE MET IOWANS-- <I'M CHRIS BLOSS AND I FARM A MILE WEST OF HERE.> SOAKED IN THEIR FAMILY STORIES-- <MY GRANDPARENTS OWNED A SECTION OF LAND THERE.> AND EXPERIENCED OUR STATE. <WE'RE WITH CHUCK THE LOCAL PASTOR OF THE CHURCH.> <I'VE MET SO MANY NICE PEOPLE IN THIS STATE. FROM THE TIME WE GOT INTO THIS STATE, IT'S UNBELIEVABLE HOW NICE THE PEOPLE ARE.> <I MEAN, EVERYBODY HAS A STORY.> INCLUDING HIM - THE GUY WHO'S SPENDING SEVEN WEEKS IN A WAGON WITH HIS DOG AND A BUDDY, BEHIND THREE MULES, TO BETTER APPRECIATE HIS MOM. <YEAH, I THINK ABOUT HER EVERYDAY.> THREE AND A HALF MILES AN HOUR IS SLOW ENOUGH TO MEET HUNDREDS OF LOCALS-- <I NEED TO CALL THE... SHERIFF.> AND SHARE THOUSANDS OF STORIES. <GOOD LAUGH.> WHILE LETTING IT SINK IN. THE NEARLY 93 YEAR OLD WAITING OVER THAT HORIZON WASN'T JUST TELLING STORIES. SHE LIVED THEM. <OH YEAH. WHAT A JOURNEY THEY WENT THROUGH. I MEAN NOT EVEN KNOWING WHERE THEY'RE GOING. THEY NEVER BEEN THERE
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This is Iowa: Family's historic trek spurs wagon ride across Iowa
Even in the corners of our state, hours from the nearest metro, highways stay busy with trucks, traffic and tractors. Which is why when something else takes over the shoulder, like a covered wagon, Iowans on their way to work will stop, stare and snap pictures of the two drivers – Tom Nass and Carlos Ford.The two chit-chat about snacks, crisscrossing a state they’ve only been in for a short time.“It's so clean,” Nass said. “The ditches. They're clean. You go through some states, and there's trash everywhere. Everywhere. You look here, and you don't even see any paper.”Ford is a southerner who had no plans to spend a day in Pocahontas County – or anywhere else they’ve seen at 3 1/2 miles an hour.“He told me he wanted to go on this ride, and he said, 'Hey, you want to go with me?' And I said, 'Why not?’ Ford said.The better question might actually be – why? Because crossing our state in a wagon, from Lamoni near the Missouri border all the way to Minnesota and beyond, takes weeks when you travel only 20 miles a day.The answer is up there over the horizon. Tom's mom, Ann Strand.Ninety years ago, she made this same trip, along this same route, with her parents, when she was only 3 years old.“They had no idea where they were going, except they were going north,” Nass said.Lamoni was too expensive for their family. They needed cheap land.“My grandfather had a 1927 Model T,” Nass said. “And he traded it for two mules and a wagon. He had $66 when they got ready to leave.”On a six-week trek to build a new life. Tom's heard stories it wasn't easy.“I mean, they endured storms, tornado, mules got away,” Nass said.But family legends sink in differently when you're the one stuck in a downpour.“It was pouring rain out,” Nass said. “We're in the tent. Just barely got in here before it started pouring.”Cruising main streets behind mules or rising with the sun to hitch up the team, just like those who came before did right here, with mules – 90 years ago.“This one is Gypsy, this one is Fancy. That one is Dolly,” Nass said.So every morning, from Mother's Day to the Fourth of July, they've started in a farmyard or a park, and held on. Because Gypsy, Fancy and Dolly want to go north – as badly as Tom does.Because the guy who just retired has a mom who turns 93 in a few weeks, and he's determined to pull into the birthday party up in Minnesota the same way she first got there – in a covered wagon.“And I'm at the point in my life where I've just put the brakes on,” Nass said. “So whatever happens, happens. If we're broke down someplace for two weeks, so be it. We're not on no schedule. If I don't get there by her birthday, she's just going to have to understand.”And it could take a while, because Tom doesn't know any strangers.“You know, if someone wants to stop and talk, I just stop,” he said.Along the way, they've met Iowans, soaked in their family stories, and experienced our state.“I've met so many nice people in this state,” Ford said. “From the time we got into this state, it's unbelievable how nice the people are.”“I mean, everybody has a story,” Nass said.Including him – the guy who's spending seven weeks in a wagon with his dog and a buddy – behind three mules – to better appreciate his mom."I think about her every day," Nass said.Three-and-a-half miles an hour is slow enough to meet hundreds of locals and share thousands of stories. While letting it sink in, the nearly 93-year-old waiting over that horizon wasn't just telling stories. She lived them.“Oh yeah,” Nass said. “What a journey they went through. I mean, not even knowing where they're going. They never been there.”And now her boy has lived them, too.More from the June 2023 Ths Is Iowa episode:This Is Iowa: The Big Game in Newton gives everyone a chance to shine This Is Iowa: The Jesse J Sanctuary is a place of peace for those dealing with cancerThis Is Iowa: Newton's prize pig Joy is the star of the show

Even in the corners of our state, hours from the nearest metro, highways stay busy with trucks, traffic and tractors. Which is why when something else takes over the shoulder, like a covered wagon, Iowans on their way to work will stop, stare and snap pictures of the two drivers – Tom Nass and Carlos Ford.

The two chit-chat about snacks, crisscrossing a state they’ve only been in for a short time.

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“It's so clean,” Nass said. “The ditches. They're clean. You go through some states, and there's trash everywhere. Everywhere. You look here, and you don't even see any paper.”

Ford is a southerner who had no plans to spend a day in Pocahontas County – or anywhere else they’ve seen at 3 1/2 miles an hour.

“He told me he wanted to go on this ride, and he said, 'Hey, you want to go with me?' And I said, 'Why not?’ Ford said.

The better question might actually be – why? Because crossing our state in a wagon, from Lamoni near the Missouri border all the way to Minnesota and beyond, takes weeks when you travel only 20 miles a day.

The answer is up there over the horizon. Tom's mom, Ann Strand.

Ninety years ago, she made this same trip, along this same route, with her parents, when she was only 3 years old.

“They had no idea where they were going, except they were going north,” Nass said.

Lamoni was too expensive for their family. They needed cheap land.

“My grandfather had a 1927 Model T,” Nass said. “And he traded it for two mules and a wagon. He had $66 when they got ready to leave.”

On a six-week trek to build a new life. Tom's heard stories it wasn't easy.

“I mean, they endured storms, tornado, mules got away,” Nass said.

But family legends sink in differently when you're the one stuck in a downpour.

“It was pouring rain out,” Nass said. “We're in the tent. Just barely got in here before it started pouring.”

Cruising main streets behind mules or rising with the sun to hitch up the team, just like those who came before did right here, with mules – 90 years ago.

“This one is Gypsy, this one is Fancy. That one is Dolly,” Nass said.

So every morning, from Mother's Day to the Fourth of July, they've started in a farmyard or a park, and held on. Because Gypsy, Fancy and Dolly want to go north – as badly as Tom does.

Because the guy who just retired has a mom who turns 93 in a few weeks, and he's determined to pull into the birthday party up in Minnesota the same way she first got there – in a covered wagon.

“And I'm at the point in my life where I've just put the brakes on,” Nass said. “So whatever happens, happens. If we're broke down someplace for two weeks, so be it. We're not on no schedule. If I don't get there by her birthday, she's just going to have to understand.”

And it could take a while, because Tom doesn't know any strangers.

“You know, if someone wants to stop and talk, I just stop,” he said.

Along the way, they've met Iowans, soaked in their family stories, and experienced our state.

“I've met so many nice people in this state,” Ford said. “From the time we got into this state, it's unbelievable how nice the people are.”

“I mean, everybody has a story,” Nass said.

Including him – the guy who's spending seven weeks in a wagon with his dog and a buddy – behind three mules – to better appreciate his mom.

"I think about her every day," Nass said.

Three-and-a-half miles an hour is slow enough to meet hundreds of locals and share thousands of stories. While letting it sink in, the nearly 93-year-old waiting over that horizon wasn't just telling stories. She lived them.

“Oh yeah,” Nass said. “What a journey they went through. I mean, not even knowing where they're going. They never been there.”

And now her boy has lived them, too.

More from the June 2023 Ths Is Iowa episode: