Sorry, the Looney Lagoon is no longer available — the attraction may have closed or be gone. When I visited the Lagoon, there were lots of tin sculptures.
A Muffler Man dressed as a lumberjack now clutches burger sign in front of a fast food restaurant. It looks a bit like Alfred E. Neumann from MAD.
We have’t visited the Museum, we just took a picture of the Frog-Clock on the outside of the building.
This place is really special. Famous for Goliath, the World’s Largest Bear. A zoo with animals and a museum with a lot of crap…
Ray Murphy a great chainsaw sculptor, gives tour-de-force live performances in his custom-built sound-proof booth. We just stopped and saw some of those sculptures – no cance to watch the show.
Forced perspective is a technique that employs optical illusion to make an object appear farther away, closer, larger or smaller than it actually is. It is used primarily in photography, filmmaking and architecture. It manipulates human visual perception through the use of scaled objects and the correlation between them and the vantage point of the spectator or camera.
“Everything for the moose lover”. Established in 1997, this unique shop is right in the heart of moose country. It was closed when we arrived.
The indian statue is big, at least 20 feet tal. Feather headdress that hangs down to the ground. In the gift shop you can buy indian souvenirs.
An old, castle-shaped kids attraction. Currently abandoned, but still perched on a hillside and recently repainted. But as you can see on the picture, we were not allowed to go closer.
Lucy is the world’s largest elephant and the only one in America designated as a National Historic Landmark. Lucy was built in 1881 by James V. Lafferty. The elephant is six stories tall, weight 90 tons, covered with 12,000 square feet of sheet tin.

















