WLM Fall & Holiday 2017 | Page 8

WLM | people HERMANS ANTIQUES – Timeless Beauty in A Gillette By Kati Hime Images by Levi Hime ntique lovers, take note – there is a 6000 square foot treasure trove waiting for you in Gillette called Hermans Antiques. Just three miles off Interstate 90, at 370 Wyoming Highway 50, look for the giant, colorful rocking chair that is a siren to antiques aficionados. Their website (hermansantiques.com) is quick to point out, “…if you go past the UPS you’ve gone too far.” When Levi and I visited their shop this summer, we shared a laugh thinking on how this is truly a small state statement. My groundwater geologist hubby can’t tell you how many Wyoming well sites, new clients, etc. he’s gone to meet whose directions included, “Take a right at Old Man Smith’s place, round the bend, take the left fork and turn right at the second big rock. If you reach the Jones place, you’ve gone too far.” We spotted the giant rocking chair, as promised, and found our way inside amidst a Secret Garden collection of iron work, a beautiful ivy-covered arch and a colorful frog that greeted us near the front door. Our purpose today was to check out the shop, but also to learn more about Garey Herman, who owns Hermans Antiques with his wife Ann. Our introduction to Garey and Ann came via one of Garey’s greatest fans in Wyoming – a delightful reader of WLM in Torrington, Mary Houser. Ms. Houser shared that Garey is an avid supporter of folks in Gillette via the local Kiwanis chapter. Wyoming folks helping Wyoming folks is something to celebrate every day, and we appreciate Ms. Houser taking the time to share Garey with us. I replied to her that we would be sure to make a trip to check out Garey’s shop, and this summer provided the perfect opportunity to do just that. 6 Wyoming Lifestyle Magazine | Fall & Holiday 2017 When I was a kid, trips back to Kearney, Nebraska to visit family included a stay in my Great-Aunt and Uncle, Cecil and Elsie Hendrickson’s, basement. The chilly, dark basement with narrow steep stairs was a time capsule, complete with original dark wood paneling, a short-backed, firm little green couch with round throw pillows from the 1960s, a TV with rabbit ears, and Elsie’s collection of salt and pepper shakers housed in antique cabinets. I was told every time, “Look but don’t touch,” and I knew that my mom meant business. Walking into Hermans Antiques brought those memories flooding back. Garey’s nephew directed us between the various buildings that comprise the shop,