File:Sally in process (brown Swiss cow, sponsored by Sharon & Gerry Gisler and family) - Albany Historic Carousel & Museum (2017-10-15 11.47.35 by Kirt Edblom @ Flickr 38358061886).jpg

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Sally still in the carving process. The museum allows visitors to walk through the work areas and see the carving in process. Sally, a Brown Swiss Cow is “udderly amazing”! Sponsored by Sharon and Gerry Gisler and family she will be an inside row jumper. The Gisler family was originally from Switzerland and raised Brown Swiss cattle. Gerry was raised on a Washing State dairy farm, where the Brown Swiss tradition was continued.Upon his parents retiring from active farming they kept a single cow, a Brown Swiss named Sally. Growing up, the Gisler children often visited the farm and were particularly fond of this gentle animal.

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  • Flickr Tags: Albany Albany, Oregon Oregon Carousel Carousel / Merry-Go-Round Cow Carving Wood Wooden Gaylene Wife milf WIP Historic Carousel & Museum ride rides Kids Kirt Kirt Edblom Edblom Easy HDR HDR Nikon Nikkor 18-140mm f/3.5-5.6 Animal Nikon D7100.
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Source Sally in process
Author Kirt Edblom from Albany, Oregon, United States
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" This carousel will consist of 52 animals and, being a menagerie style unit, will have a variety ranging from a seven foot plus tall giraffe, dogs, cats, zebras, unicorns, dragons, and yes, even lions, tigers, and bears, (oh my just to name a few)! The animals will be situated on three rows, where the outside row (large animals) will be “standers” while the middle and inside row animals (medium and small sized respectively) will be “jumpers”. Each row will also have two replacement animals and there is also five seasonal animals planned, bringing our total to sixty-three animals.

The Albany Carousel is fortunate to have a 1909 Dentzel Carousel Corporation mechanism donated to our project. Our initial plan was to purchase a new mechanism that would hold 32 animals. However, Bill Dentzel, great grandson of Gustav Dentzel the founder of Dentzel Carousel Corporation, heard of our project and arranged for the antique mechanism to be donated to us. The Albany Carousel owes a great debt of gratitude to both Bill Dentzel and the National Carousel Association, the actual owner of the mechanism prior to it being donated to our project through Bill Dentzel.

This classic mechanism has taken over ten years to restore to working order, every wooden gear tooth, every mirror panel, every motor that turns the carousel platform, has been meticulously restored. "

Camera location44° 38′ 13.56″ N, 123° 06′ 38.02″ W Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

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This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.
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This image was originally posted to Flickr by Kirt Edblom at https://flickr.com/photos/27190564@N02/38358061886. It was reviewed on 2 October 2023 by FlickreviewR 2 and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-sa-2.0.

2 October 2023

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current12:45, 2 October 2023Thumbnail for version as of 12:45, 2 October 20236,000 × 3,977 (14.29 MB)Clusternote (talk | contribs)Transferred from Flickr via #flickr2commons

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