Don’t let high gas prices cancel your summer vacation
Day-trips close to home can save money and still be fun
-
Photo courtesy of Iowa Barn Foundation
The Carnegie Library in Fairfield is now a museum, featuring a collection of many items significant in Iowa history.
- Photo courtesy of Iowa Barn Foundation The Maasdam Barns in Fairfield are headquarters for IBF’s Spring Barn Tour. Once home to Evergreen Ridge Stock Farms, a premier breeder of draft horses, visitors can see Percherons putting up hay here at 1 p.m. on Saturday, June 27.

Photo courtesy of Iowa Barn Foundation
The Carnegie Library in Fairfield is now a museum, featuring a collection of many items significant in Iowa history.
School is out, the weather is on its best behavior, and the family’s ready for a road trip. If vacation plans involve air travel, AAA warns domestic airfares are 9% to 20% higher than last summer. High jet fuel costs, strong demand, and the closure of budget carrier Spirit Airlines, all played a role.
Driving? It’s much the same story. Due to low fuel inventories, high demand, the Iran war, and shuttered refineries, gas prices are 45% higher today than on March 1, 2026. Reuters reports prices should average $4.35 to $4.80 per gallon this summer, with spikes to $5.00 possible.
While it’s not a great year to go to Europe, or drive the family to California, there’s no need to cancel vacations altogether. Instead, why not consider what can be done in Iowa this summer. Here’s an idea for an entertaining, fun, affordable weekend for late June.
IBF Barn Tours: A Living
Catalogue of Iowa Barn History

Photo courtesy of Iowa Barn Foundation The Maasdam Barns in Fairfield are headquarters for IBF's Spring Barn Tour. Once home to Evergreen Ridge Stock Farms, a premier breeder of draft horses, visitors can see Percherons putting up hay here at 1 p.m. on Saturday, June 27.
Rediscover farm roots on Iowa Barn Foundation’s (IBF) Spring Tour, at 23 historic barns in Jefferson County, many just a few miles off four-lane U.S. Highway 34. All barns are open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 27 and June 28. Tours are self-guided, but barn owners will be on hand to answer questions, and tell great barn stories.
Begin at the Maasdam barns, exit 212 from U.S. 34, on Fairfield’s south side. From 1906-1938 Jacob Maasdam ran the famed Evergreen Stock Farm in these three historic, restored barns — one each for mares and stallions, and a third used as a show barn.
The barns showcase the genius of William Louden and his Louden Machinery Co. Visitors can see Louden’s barn litter/feed carriers, automatic water bowls, and flexible barn door hanger, all patented from 1867-1912, on display and in working order here.
At 1 p.m. on Saturday, Southeast Iowa Draft Horse & Mule Association members will put up some hay at Maasdam Barns using Louden equipment, a sight one will never forget.
When Henry Ford saw Louden’s overhead monorail in operation, he designed it into his Highland Park plant in Detroit, site of the world’s first assembly line. Thus, a device designed to make work easier for farmers in Fairfield revolutionized production of the famed Model T.
While at Maasdam Barns, make a point to visit the small museum telling the story of the barns and see a Chicago Aermotor windmill at work. The kids will love the large tank of goldfish, and pen of Buff-Orpington hens from McMurray Hatchery in Webster City.
Other barns on the tour include a rare Victorian carriage house; English gable barn with original, hand-hewn timbers; a prairie style barn; a circa 1950 Martin hay silo; and a three-compartment Martin steel grain bin.
“This is our 26th year of barn tours. We have the biggest, longest-running barn tours in the country (and world as far as we know) with annual June and September tours. Last year’s spring tour, held in Cedar County, drew 800 visitors, including some from as far away as Texas and California,” said IBF board member and magazine editor, Dave Austin.
A Must-See Museum
Between 1892 and 1919, steel tycoon Andrew Carnegie donated funds for 101 public libraries in Iowa. His 1892 grant for a library in Fairfield was historic, as the first ever funded in a city where Carnegie had no personal connection. Previously, all the grants went to build libraries near Carnegie’s steel mills in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area. Fairfield’s magnificent Carnegie library set the pattern for his eventual funding of 2,800 libraries worldwide.
In reality, Fairfield got more than a library. The original building also housed a museum and 300-seat auditorium, becoming the de facto educational and social center of Fairfield. Altered over the decades, it still has its original Victorian tile floors, a testament to superb design and solid construction.
The collection is as surprising as the stunning building that houses it. Here you’ll find the best collection of Zuni pottery and Pima basketry in the Midwest, Civil War artifacts, including a “funeral ribbon” worn by Fairfield native and U.S. Congressman, James Wilson, allowing him aboard Abraham Lincoln’s funeral train in 1865. Those interested in birds or taxidermy will want to see the large collection here, some donated by The Smithsonian in the 1890s. Never seen a specimen of the extinct Passenger Pigeon? You can, at this Carnegie building.
In keeping with our affordable vacation concept, both the barn tours and Carnegie Museum are completely free. A donation to each will further the work of both.
Better still, if restoring a barn, contact IBF through their website, iowabarnfoundation.org. They have the knowledge, experts and grant funds to get you started.
For those who don’t own a barn but want to support the project, that can still be done with an annual membership with IBF. The cost is $50 and includes the IBF Magazine, published twice each year.






