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He plans four more sculptures. The next will be a giant spider web, and he wants to create a tribute to Native Americans. But he's not sure after that. He first thought the project would take two years. "I was so naive," he says. "I thought everyone would say, ‘Yes, we have to save Regent,' and they'd all get on board and it would just get done."
In fact, there was an initial wave of support. But fatigue set in as the project stretched on. "I think most people here are generally supportive," says Margee Lee Witte, a humor columnist at the local paper, The Herald. "But they're like people everywhere; they wait to see what happens, then jump on the bandwagon."
State officials didn't know what to make of Greff at first. But his persistence seems to have won them over. "I think Gary's determination reflects the character of the state," says North Dakota tourism director Sara Otte Coleman. "You don't see a lot of quitters around here." Coleman's department pro-motes the Enchanted Highway (now its official name), and the state provided a loan to help open an Enchanted Highway Gift Shop, which sells souvenirs on Regent's Main Street.
Greff estimates that the sculptures have cost more than $400,000 in all. The money has come from a wide variety of sources, including grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Archibald Bush Foundation. Almost all the money goes into the sculptures. Greff says he lives on about $1,500 a year and the free meals he gets from his family. I was skeptical, but as he ran through his budget in the kitchen of his weather-beaten trailer, it turned out, amazingly enough, that he even has a few hundred dollars to spare.
It's easy to dismiss Greff as some Great Plains Don Quixote tilting at junk-metal windmills, except for one thing: people are starting to come. More than 10,000 visitors—some from far away—signed the Enchanted Highway Gift Shop's guest book last year.
The day I visited was way past tourist season, but at every single site, somebody pulled up, usually in an RV. "It's so unexpected," said Judy Rodel of Woodville, Wisconsin. "What humans can do with their time and talent is incredible."
Even some Regent skeptics say it's made a difference. "I'm not a big fan," says James Gion, a local attorney. "I think what God gave us out here ought to be enough. But that said, I have to admit it's working." Connie Wax, former manager of the Dacotah Bank branch in Regent, agrees. "We've seen a great deal of new traffic coming through town. It's amazing how many people come because of the highway."
Not that Regent is reborn. Like so many small Great Plains communities, the short, well-worn Main Street features lots of empty storefronts, and the high school closed a couple of years ago. That got even Greff discouraged. "I was really down for a while," he says, "thinking what am I doing this for? Then I thought, as long as your dream is alive, you've got a chance."


Comments
Thanks for highlighting our drive through North Dakota. Your unique sculptures of art are truly grand and your creative objects should be seen by more people.
We would love to have a much smaller version of one of your creations for display in our yard. Do you have a catalog to view?
Posted by Bea and Bob Zukowski on July 17,2009 | 01:51PM