A marvelous, fabulous journey

When a reporter has a hard time putting into words the personal thoughts, emotions and experiences of Honor Flight, it sort of puts into perspective what this trip means to those of us lucky to have accompanied World War II veterans toWashington,D.C., to view their memorial.

Even now, two days after returning from the journey, I get a lump in my throat when I think about all of the wonderful men and women I’ve met on the trio of flights I was so fortunate to be a part of.

Before the tears completely take over and I can no longer see my keyboard, I want to express my sympathy to the family of Bud Meyers, of Windom. Bud was one of the World War II heroes I interviewed prior to this final flight, and he was so looking forward to the trip. He died last Wednesday morning, and the news cast a pall on my pre-flight preparations. I felt like I’d been sucker-punched.

I didn’t know Bud like his family or friends knew him, certainly. I spent an hour — maybe two — listening to his harrowing stories of war. He landed onIwo, delivered soldiers to shore for the invasion ofOkinawaand survived a virtual kamikaze attack on land armed only with a carbine rifle and a 20-shot clip.

After all of those stories, you know what he said to me?

“It was a very interesting part of my life.”

That quote alone says a lot about the men and women who sacrificed so much so future generations could live in the land of the free.Americatruly is the home of the brave.

On Monday, I spent much of my time talking to members of the Honor Flight Southwest Minnesota committee, asking for their final thoughts — their most cherished memories — about the four flights and the 435 World War II veterans with whom they shared this journey.

That story, along with several others, will be included in a special Honor Flight edition that prints with this Saturday’s Daily Globe.

 As I ponder writing that special piece, I’d like to share with you my most cherished memory of this entire Honor Flight experience.

It began with a request from my publisher to attend a meeting of an Honor Flight committee that was forming. We traveled to Luverne on Dec. 15, 2009, to listen in on discussions about how we could raise money to take our World War II veterans toWashington,D.C., to view their memorial.

Joni and I left the meeting that night committed to publishing a feature story on a World War II veteran in our paper every week, starting on Dec. 24, and continuing until we had enough money raised for the trip.

Nineteen weeks — 19 World War II stories — later, we were in the air and bound for our nation’s capital city. I wrote all but one of the stories leading up to that first flight and had an amazing experience just visiting with veterans who are too humble to call themselves heroes. Between flights two, three and four, the Daily Globe published another 30 pre-flight feature stories on our World War II veterans. Two years, 49 feature stories and not a one of the stories we heard was the same.

It just goes to show that everyone truly does have a story to tell.

There is a sign I hung just above the doorway in my home that reads, “Home is where the story begins.”

When I bought it, I thought it was neat because I prefer to write from home, in the quiet solitude of my makeshift office.

Now, it has a different meaning — actually, a reminder — to always take the time to sit and listen to the stories of our greatest generation before they are lost forever.

All of the Honor Flight veterans will understand when I say this experience opened them up to actually talk about what they saw, what they did and how they endured the events of a world at war. I can’t recall how many times families of featured veterans came up to me after a story was in print and said, “I didn’t know that about dad,” or “He’s never shared that with me during all the years we’ve been married.”

Well, now is your chance to listen to those stories. There is no time like the present.

People have said I’m lucky to have been able to experience three journeys with Honor Flight. No one knows that more than me, and I can’t thank the Honor Flight committee enough for allowing me to be a part of such a wonderful project.

Most of all, I want to issue a thanks and a challenge to all of you. Thanks for your donations to Honor Flight, thanks for taking a Deep Freeze Dip or buying a button, thanks to the sponsors, the guardians, the medical staff and everyone else who helped in any way to make this dream come true for the 435 World War II veterans who traveled with us.

As for the challenge — please, please take the time to visit with these people. Ask them to share their stories with you — and be prepared to get lessons in geography and history — there’s nothing better than hearing stories from those who were there.

I will forever cherish the one-on-one, in-home interviews I conducted with these veterans. I can say, without a doubt, it was the highlight of my life.

With Honor

Awesome. Amazing. Wonderful. Outstanding.

I feel like I’ve been saying those words a lot these past few days as friends, family and co-workers have asked me about my travels with the World War II veterans last Friday and Saturday on Honor Flight Southwest Minnesota’s third flight.

To put into words what this trip has meant to them — and what it has meant to me to see it through their eyes — is difficult, even for a writer!

If I’m not getting goose bumps about the memories, I’m getting choked up because I miss the smiles, the hugs and the stories from my World War II heroes.

After returning from the inaugural flight a year ago, I called the experience the trip of a lifetime. Now I’m wondering if it’s OK for me to say I’ve had two trips of a lifetime.

Since returning from our journey, Aaron Hagen has been busy editing photos and my fingers have been tapping away at the keyboard, writing stories for our special 16-page, full-color Honor Flight edition that will be published with Saturday’s Daily Globe.

I’m excited for our readers to finally get a chance to learn more about some of the wonderful men and women who were our honored guests on this flight. The trip would not have been possible without the generosity of people across southwest Minnesota.

When you stand face to face with a veteran and see the tears in their eyes and the bounce in their step — all because of two full days of touring war memorials, getting countless hugs, handshakes and accolades — it makes any donation you can give to Honor Flight well worth it.

Even before the third flight became a reality, there was talk of possibly taking a fourth flight of World War II veterans out to Washington, D.C., to view their memorial.

At this time, it’s uncertain whether that will happen. In reality, we need to get more buy-in from communities outside of our immediate area to help sponsor veterans for the flight.

We also need to know if there are still World War II veterans here in southwest Minnesota and northwest Iowa who want to make the trip.

I know of at least two veterans — from communities just 20 minutes down the road — who are still hoping to go on Honor Flight.

I would encourage any World War II veteran who would be interested in experiencing your own “trip of a lifetime” to call and request an application or more information.

At the same time, any veteran who has a child, grandchild or other relative who wants to accompany them on the flight as a guardian, they need to get their name on the list. Approximately 50 guardians are needed for each flight, and the first to apply get first choice if and when a fourth flight is scheduled.

“You aren’t committing yourself by submitting an application,” said Jane Lanphere, Luverne Area Chamber director and coordinator of the Honor Flight applications for veterans and guardians. Jane is available to help answer your questions and send you an application. Just give her a call at (507) 283-4061.

The excitement, anticipation builds

I had intended to write a few online blogs this week about my recent experiences in Washington, D.C., but aside from sharing a story and several photos of the cherry blossoms, I simply ran out of time and energy.

My sleep schedule is still out of whack, and I feel like a little old lady when I’ve crawled into bed by 8:30 p.m. a few days this week. On the flip side, I’m wide awake at 5:30 in the morning, and I’ve discovered I can be productive at that horrible hour despite sitting in front of my home computer in my PJ’s.

Now that you have a mental picture of my disheveled morning appearance, please erase it for your own well-being!

While I may get around to writing more about the D.C. experience sooner or later, I want to share with you my most treasured experience of the trip. It wasn’t even on our itinerary — it just presented itself out of the blue … at the airport, no less.

The 20-plus U-Lead participants had gathered at Gate 1 at Reagan National Airport for our Thursday morning departure last week when, over the loudspeaker, it was announced that an Honor Flight had just landed and a plane filled with World War II veterans was about to be unloaded at our gate.

I was so excited I hurried to a spot toward the front of the welcome line, and joined the “D.C. Honor Flight Crew” in cheering on the arrival of a group of men and women from the Appleton and Green Bay areas of Wisconsin.

At the sight of that first veteran coming off the jetway at Gate 1, I began to clap and the tears started to roll down my cheeks … it’s a woman thing!

One by one, the veterans — many of them with a look of disbelief on their faces — looked at the gathering of cheering people. Many of them smiled, some were moved to tears and others, well, I think they still may have been in a state of shock by the time they boarded their buses to depart on the trip to view their World War II Memorial.

I shook each veteran’s hand, thanked him or her for serving our country and gave into hugs for those men with their open arms. One man slipped in a kiss on my neck. If he did that to every woman who gave him a hug on his Honor Flight excursion, I would imagine he returned home as one happy man.

At one point during the welcome, a fellow U-Lead participant turned to me and asked why I wasn’t taking pictures. My response was quick … this is my vacation. On the inaugural flight, and on the third flight I’m traveling with in just two weeks, I’ll be so busy snapping photos and getting quotes that I won’t be able to simply enjoy the looks on the faces of the veterans as they are cheered, thanked and celebrated.

Daily Globe sports editor Aaron Hagen will be the official photographer on this next journey, and I will be toting a notebook, audio recorder, camera and laptop to chronicle the trip for the 110 World War II veterans we will travel with.

I have just two more veteran features to write before this next journey, and if the wit of some of the veterans I’ve interviewed thus far is any indication, I know we all will have a fabulous time.

Big dippers and the Deep Freeze Dip

Watching two self-proclaimed fat guys slip into a wetsuit — their chosen attire for this Saturday’s Deep Freeze Dip in Worthington’s Lake Okabena — can be likened to a gut-busting comedy routine … or at least that’s what I imagined after reading an e-mail from Luverne Area Chamber Director Jane Lanphere Tuesday morning.

Jane’s husband, Larry “Lumpy” Lanphere, is well-known in these parts for his years in the radio business. Come Saturday, he might become well-known for another reason. He and fellow radioman Dan Dobson have agreed (or more aptly been railroaded) to take the plunge into the frigid waters of our local lake.

Larry Lanphere and Dan Dobson

Do you know how cold it is going to be on Saturday?

Well, right now, the forecast is for a high of 5 to 10 degrees. As event organizer Chad Cummings says, it will be “cheek-chillin’ cold outside!”

I called Larry on Tuesday to get his side of the story on the wetsuit fitting, and tried to stop giggling long enough to concentrate on my typing.

“Holy buckets — Jane had to come in and help both of us get the top part on,” Larry described. “How the hell do (women) get girdles on?”

Well, I wasn’t about to answer that question … let’s just say Larry now has a new appreciation for the work some women go through to create a smoother, shapelier appearance!

Then Larry declared, “We can’t even hardly walk in these things — we look like idiots. We thought we looked pretty good until we looked in the mirror. Holy gosh, we have lumps all over the place! We look like beached walruses, I’ll tell ya!”

As I laughed uncontrollably, he explained how he and Dan are going to arrive dressed in their wetsuits (kindly donated for the cause by Donovan’s Hobby & Scuba Center in Sioux Falls, S.D.) for the dip. I don’t know … I think I’d be willing to donate a little more just to watch these guys struggle and squirm to get into their gear!

“For two fat old guys, it’s going to be trouble,” Larry confided.

It’s all worth it — taking pledges to take the dip and helping raise the remaining $50,000 needed to send southwest Minnesota (and northwest Iowa) World War II veterans on Honor Flight.

In a second phone call to Larry’s better half, Jane said Tuesday they now have 84 applications from World War II veterans wanting to take part on the third Honor Flight Southwest Minnesota.

“We really need 150 on the list in order to fly,” said Jane. Only 110 seats are available for veterans, but they like to have a list of back-ups to draw from. The dates for the next flight are April 29-30.

“This is the time to get those veterans from Rock, Nobles, Pipestone, Murray, Cottonwood and Jackson counties — and those applications from Iowa,” she said. Applications are available from Chamber of Commerce and Veterans Service Offices across southwest Minnesota.

A quick perusal of the list shows at least 30 of the 80 applicants are from the six counties of far southwest Minnesota, with the remainder coming from just beyond — Lincoln, Lyon, Martin, Redwood and Kandiyohi counties, to name a few. Many of those veterans live in areas where the Honor Flight Network hasn’t yet, and may never, reach.

As the Daily Globe reporter on the inaugural Honor Flight Southwest Minnesota, I will say without hesitation that whatever we can do to support these heroes is well worth it — regardless of what their address is now. Traveling with them, hearing their stories and getting to know them — those were the greatest experiences I have ever had.

My money for the Deep Freeze Dip on Saturday is going to our Daily Globe dippers — copy editor Joe Froemming and sports reporter Daniel Kerwin.

Word has it that Larry needs a lot of help, though, so if you can spare some bills, he’ll gladly take them.

As of Tuesday afternoon, there were 59 jumpers on the Deep Freeze Dip list — including 10 from JBS who have already been guaranteed $250 a piece by the company. That’s $2,500 for Honor Flight and the jumpers are still out adding to their pledge cards!

Worthington’s District 518 and Adrian School District each have five dippers, with Worthington Christian School sponsoring two. Several local businesses are also sponsoring dippers, including GuidePoint, Hy-Vee and Worthington Taxi, to name a few.

So, come on out and watch the hilarity … it begins at 3 p.m. Saturday on the shores of Chautauqua Park in Worthington (free shuttles provided from Westminster Presbyterian Church parking lot). Cheer on the dippers, dig into your wallet and help us get the next flight of veterans to Washington, D.C., to see their memorials.

Special projects

My blog writing has been fairly sporadic as of late. It isn’t that I have writer’s block. I’ve actually had some ideas for blogs, but then the time gets away from me and I’ve moved on to other projects.

It’s been a busy summer, not just at the office, but in my "other life" as well. It began with nephew Matt’s graduation at the end of May, then went right into Relay for Life mode and Matt’s wedding. Throw in a few weekends of work and a couple of my ongoing special projects at home – a cross-stitch masterpiece for Matt and his bride and my own personal Honor Flight scrapbook – and, well, I’ve had time for little else it seems.

We are working on a few special projects at the Daily Globe right now. We have our annual "Positive Perspectives" edition coming out at the end of this month, and I was assigned to do a story about the work being done at Newport Laboratories. I find the research work they are doing fascinating, and I wish I’d been a better science student to understand it all. Instead, my mind holds little tidbits about a lot of different things as a journalist. I guess that will just have to do.

We are also working on a special edition to commemorate the 50th anniversary of a crash at Reading that killed nine people on Aug. 13, 1960 – including six employees of the former Campbell Soup Co. in Worthington. Managing Editor Ryan and I have been working together on this special project, which will include stories on each of the victims of the crash, as shared by their families. In the work that we’ve done so far, we’ve learned that there is still healing that needs to be done in this small Nobles County community – healing that didn’t happen 50 years ago because, as one person said, they were staunch German folk who had to move on – there wasn’t time to grieve.

In between those two projects, I’ll be coordinating our next edition of Active Life, a publication geared toward those over age 50 in our communities. I’m always searching for story ideas of active seniors, seniors with interesting hobbies or, simply, seniors with a story to tell. Feel free to send ideas my way at jbuntjer@dglobe.com.

And finally, one more special project that will actually spill into mid-September, our annual Century Farm edition. This year, we have 17 century farms in the six counties of southwest Minnesota that we serve. The list of farms from Iowa typically isn’t released until mid-August. With so many farms this year, I will need to do a bit of research to see which farms have the best stories behind them for inclusion in the tab.

By the time that special project reaches your hands, the summer will officially be completed, Turkey Day will be a recent memory and the kids will have been in school for nearly a month. Oh, and I’ll be a great aunt by then. I don’t think I’m old enough to be a great aunt, so I just keep telling myself it’s one step up from being a "good aunt." On the other hand, I am looking forward to teasing my oldest brother about being an old grampa!

All this activity makes me think of one of my favorite sayings: "Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans."

Isn’t that the truth!