Montgomery Youth Tour engages high school students
South Alabama Electric Cooperative Stories | Recipes | Events | People | Places | Things | Local News May 2024
Manager David Bailey
Produced by the staff of South Alabama Electric Cooperative
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For 25 years, Fred Hunter has been telling the stories of Alabamians from all walks of life through his popular show, “Absolutely Alabama.” Recently he began a new chapter in retirement, but he’s still telling stories.
5 Stay cool
16
42
Now is the time to ensure your home is ready for summer.
‘Smart’
golf ball
Fairhope’s Brian Heaton invented a golf ball so smart that it won the Best New Product at the 2023 PGA Show.
Scholarships
South Alabama Electr ic Cooperative awards scholarships to deserving high school seniors.
Local high school juniors represented South Alabama Electric Cooperative during the 2024 Montgomery Youth Tour in March. See story Page 6.
16 VOL. 77 NO. 5 MAY 2024 DEPARTMENTS 11 Spotlight 29 Around Alabama 34 Cook of the Month 40 Outdoors 41 Fish & Game Forecast 46 Cup o’ Joe ONLINE: alabamaliving.coop 20 MAY 2024 3 WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU! ONLINE: www.alabamaliving.coop EMAIL: letters@alabamaliving.coop MAIL: Al abama Living 340 Technacenter Drive Montgomery, AL 36117 HIS
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FEATURES
Board of Trustees
Delaney Kervin President District 5
James May Vice President At Large
Raymond Trotter Secretary/Treasurer District 3
Johnny Garrett District 1
Bart Snyder District 2
Ben Fox District 4
Douglas Green District 6
Tim Sanders District 7
Thanks to Mom
David Bailey, General Manager
I’d like to take a moment at the start of this column to say thank you to my mother, Nan Rae Wilson Roth. Better known as “Nan” to her three sons and “Nana” to her grandchildren and great-grandchildren, she has without doubt been the greatest influence on my life other than my Lord and savior Jesus Christ.
No journey as a mom is perfect, but hers was particularly weighted with various medical issues for her two eldest sons. She advocated for above-average medical care for her boys and pushed them to be above average to overcome their medical issues.
She led by example, overcoming the various roadblocks that come at each of us over our lives. She was guided by a simple philosophy: “Put God first. He will carry you through the valleys and over the mountaintops of life.” She is my greatest hero, and I would like to wish her a very happy Mother’s Day this month. I love you for being my mom.
In the electric industry, May marks one of the months we call “shoulder months.” These periods, when temperatures outside are usually mild, often run from March to May and can sometimes include the end of September and October.
January 2024, though, was no shoulder month. The weather was so cold that South Alabama Electric Cooperative’s winter demand levels were second only to those in 2022. For PowerSouth, our power supplier, January had an all-time high winter demand.
So, what does this mean for you? Often, by the time we’re billed for that electric usage, the weather has become milder, and we forget just how much energy we used when temperatures were much colder or much hotter. The bill arrives and we have that classic sense of sticker shock. We think, “There’s no way I used that much electricity.”
Fortunately, SAEC has tools to help with that sticker shock. We can assist you to set up text notifications that tell you how much electricity you’re using daily. That way, if your usage increases due to the weather, you can make adjustments in your household in a timely manner before you’re billed.
Let’s say you usually set your thermostat to 68 degrees, but temperatures drop, and someone adjusts the thermostat to 75 degrees and
forgets to turn it back down. Your heating system already must work harder to maintain 68 degrees at colder temperatures, and now it’s working at turbocharged mode at 75 degrees. But if you received a text notification that your usage was higher than normal, you’d be able to adjust your thermostat back to normal or lower settings and wear warmer clothes instead. When you make small adjustments to your thermostat, the savings can be big over a 30-day billing period.
It’s important to remember that your temperature at 68 degrees is still 68 degrees no matter how cold it may be outside. Technology can be a great thing if you allow it to work for you, and SAEC has plenty of ways you can use it to stay informed about your usage, your method of receiving billing statements and even check the status of your power when you’re not home.
More and more of our members are choosing to receive their bill digitally, which is significantly faster than the postal service. They don’t call it “snail mail” for nothing, with members sometimes receiving bills in the mail late or even when they’re past due. That certainly doesn’t help the sense of sticker shock. Members can receive bills both ways. E-bills give you the maximum amount of time to handle your monthly payment and provide the exact same information as your print bill, only on your computer or device.
If you’re concerned about setting up accounts and getting this new technology working, we’re happy to help you with that. The main thing to remember is the importance of keeping your information up to date. Keep an accurate cellphone number on file so we can send you text notifications and log the correct account and address when you call in an outage. Providing a working email address is also helpful for sending your e-bill. Rest assured that we will never share your data with anyone. Not even TikTok. I hope all of you have enjoyed your shoulder months. As always, please reach out to us if you have any questions about your bill or any of our usage tools. Don’t forget to remember the military men and women this Memorial Day who made the ultimate sacrifice so that we have the freedom to call, visit or think about our mothers on their special day. Freedom is neither free nor guaranteed, so don’t take it for granted. Until next time, have a safe month.
4 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
Stay cool
Follow these tips to keep costs, indoor temperatures down
Summer is around the corner. Now’s the time to make sure your home is ready for the heat. Boosting your home’s energy efficiency saves money, says Andy Kimbro, South Alabama Electric Cooperative vice president of member services.
The home’s heating, ventilation and air conditioning system, or HVAC, can account for 50% of your monthly power bill. It’s smart to have your HVAC serviced regularly.
“We recommend at least once a year that needs to be serviced. Just like your car,” Kimbro says. “You don’t drive your car forever and never change the oil. You have to make sure that car is running as efficiently as it can, so it can give you the best miles per gallon that it can. It is no different with your HVAC. It needs to be running as efficiently as possible for the age it is and condition it is.”
SAEC offers members living in manufactured homes rebates to upgrade to a more energy-efficient heat pump, which helps during high-demand seasons. The rebate equals $400 per ton on a new unit.
Here are more tips for keeping your electric bill down and boosting your home’s energy efficiency during scorching summer months:
Keep your thermostat as close to 78 degrees as possible. This can be a challenge where temperatures can remain in the 90s for days. Ceiling fans can help. “Fans aren’t going to make the air colder, but it gives a chilling
effect,” Kimbro says. “A fan running in a room can make it feel four or five degrees cooler than it is.”
Seal cracks around doors and windows. Cool air blowing from your vents can escape through the smallest cracks. Weatherstripping or caulk can fill most gaps. “At the end of the day, make the envelope of a house as tight as you can make it,” Kimbro says.
Turn off ceiling fans and adjust your thermostat, so your HVAC doesn’t run constantly when you’re away. Maintaining a consistent temperature when no one’s home increases your bill.
Wash clothes and dishes in cold water and take cooler showers. Your water heater can make up 15%-25% of your monthly bill — second only to the HVAC system. “Those two items right there have a large say in what your power bill is going to look like each month,” Kimbro says.
Switch to LED bulbs. They are 75% more efficient than incandescent bulbs, are not hot to the touch and do not warm up the indoor air you are trying to cool.
Use room-darkening shades or curtains on windows facing west or south. Plant trees on those sides of your home to provide shade.
Make sure ovens and clothes dryers vent to the outdoors.
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Alabama Living MAY 2024 5
Creating LEADERS
Students learn about cooperatives, government during Montgomery Youth Tour
Each year, high school juniors representing Alabama’s electric cooperatives converge on Montgomery for a chance to learn leadership skills, see how their government works and make connections with peers from around the state.
The Alabama Rural Electric Association hosts the Montgomery Youth Tour, and around 150 students made the journey to the state’s capital March 13-15. South Alabama Electric Cooperative sent 14 students to the 2024 youth tour.
While in Montgomery, students learned how cooperatives work, spoke with elected officials, toured historic sites and participated in leadership and team-building activities.
To be chosen to participate in the tour, students from local high schools within SAEC’s service areas in Pike, Coffee and Crenshaw counties apply, write an essay and are interviewed. From those teens selected to travel to Montgomery, SAEC chooses two students to also attend the National Rural Electric Youth Tour in Washington, D.C., in June.
6 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
Front row, left to right: Savannah Edgar, Joy Schwarte and Sandra Hall. Second row, from left: Bennett Holmes, Olivia Lee and MaKaylah Green. Third row, from left: Libby Knighten and Kristian Prettyman. Fourth row, from left: Manning Fox, Brady Flowers and Brodie Davis. Back row, from left: Dawson Bradford, Maverick French and Samuel Bozeman.
Taking the tour
Joy Schwarte and Savannah Edgar will represent SAEC in Washington, D.C. The high school juniors said the trip to Montgomery showed them what they could do in the future if they work with others to better their home state and their communities.
“We just connected because we were all there for the same reason, to grow as leaders,” says Schwarte, 17, who attends Pike Liberal Arts School.
Edgar, 16, attends Highland Home High School and says the roster of guest speakers featured during the Montgomery Youth Tour resonated with her, especially one speaker’s message of how life never really goes according to plan.
“I’ve had so many ups and downs, and if I looked at myself in ninth grade and where I am now, I would have never been able to imagine myself here,” Edgar says.
Schwarte says the speakers emphasized the need to think “outside the box” to solve problems. “You have to be flexible, and you have to learn to compromise,” she says.
Along with hearing from motivational speakers, while they were in Montgomery students participated in games designed to teach them how cooperatives work and about financial literacy and teamwork.
Learning how the state and federal governments can impact the daily lives of individuals was eye-opening, Schwarte says. Also, she says she learned how SAEC betters the communities it serves in ways other than providing electricity, and it made her realize the importance of individuals helping their communities.
“I want to be a mechanical engineer, and I wanted to do that before this and I still want to do that now,” Schwarte says. “But I think this has helped me realize that it takes so many people to make something great work. It’s not just by yourself,
and so I want to be part of a team now when I grow up not just to do something I like but something that’s going to impact a community.”
Edgar says the experience makes her think twice about leaving her home state once she has completed her education.
“Being from a small town, I’ve always kind of just wanted to get out,” she says. “Going on this trip and hearing all the amazing things about Alabama, I’ve come to realize I really love my home and my community and how it’s affected me growing up. I just want to be able to give back to that.”
Nearly 60 Alabama students will go to Washington, D.C., for the weeklong National Rural Electric Youth Tour, joining more than 1,800 students from across the nation. The National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, the Alabama Rural Electric Association and local electric cooperatives sponsor the national youth tour.
Alabama students representing electric cooperatives across the state speak with elected officials and learn more about how their state and federal governments work.
Supporting tomorrow’s leaders
The youth tour engages young people who want to learn through experiences outside of the classroom.
“You’re creating the leaders of tomorrow,” says SAEC Vice President of Member Services Andy Kimbro. “They get to interact with other like-minded students wanting to be leaders, wanting to make things better in their community. Some of them do this and do not really understand the magnitude of how it is going to affect them.”
Kimbro hopes the experience will give students a better understanding of electric cooperatives as a business model, the issues faced by cooperatives, how cooperatives deliver electricity and the cost behind it.
“It is a great opportunity, the way we see it, to educate those students on what a cooperative is but also how to be a better citizen for the community that you live in,” he says.
Today’s young people are often seen as disconnected from the real world, but Kimbro says the students involved in the youth tour never fail to impress with their desire to learn.
“By the time they are finished, they come out with a new energy,” Kimbro says. “They want to make a difference.”
During the Montgomery Youth Tour, high school juniors learn leadership skills and tour sites like the Civil Rights Memorial.
Alabama Living MAY 2024 7
8 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop Alabama Living MAY 2024 8 FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT JEANETTE LAMPLEY AT 334-672-0053 AND LATERAH BAXTER AT 334-672-2452. ARTS AND CRAFTS FOOD ENTERTAINMENT KIDS ACTIVITY AREA May 4 Fun for the whole family! pring est Downtown Brundidge You’re invited! Mark your calendar: City of Brundidge fireworks show will be 8 p.m. on Saturday, June 29!
Isabel loves helping grandma, Krista Helms, make cupcakes for papa Rick and her mommy. She loves eating them, too. SUBMITTED by Wiliam Helms, Valley Head.
then
Brooks, 1, helping out on his great grandparents’ farm in Megargel. SUBMITTED by Audra Wilson, Monroeville. RULES:
July theme: “Dog Days of Summer” | Deadline: May 31 Online: alabamaliving.coop | Mail: Attn: Snapshots, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124
Photos submitted for publication may also be published on our website at alabamaliving.coop and on our Facebook and Instagram pages. Alabama Living is not responsible for lost or damaged photos. Send a self-addressed stamped envelope to have photos returned.
Oakley went to get her first haircut and
she wanted to help. SUBMITTED by Stephanie Tilley, Union Grove.
| Alabama Snapshots | Mom’s little helper Alabama Living MAY 2024 9
My daughter Kaylee Bonner, 6 years old, helping me make cornbread. SUBMITTED by Elizabeth Bonner, Monroeville.
EcoWild Outdoor Expo set for May 10-12
Alabama’s natural wonders and diverse ecosystems will be the highlight of the first EcoWild Outdoor Expo, a three-day event to be held at the Arthur R. Outlaw Convention Center in Mobile May 10-12.
“We want EcoWild to be a family-friendly show that reflects the character of the Gulf Coast,” says Stephen Potts, executive director of EcoWild and assistant publisher of Mobile Bay magazine. “We’ve planned an event that accomplishes that mission. We truly have something for everyone, no matter their activity level, from strolling our well-appointed art gallery to scaling a 26-foot-tall rock wall!”
Additional attractions include kids’ fishing; hunters’ education; axe throwing; raptor shows (Saturday only); dog demonstrations; STEM-based nature challenges; archery; honey harvesting; saltwater touch tanks; walk-through butterfly house; giant alligator slide; BB-gun range; confiscated wild game trailer; campground; and a Sunday-only appearance from the Auburn Eagle.
adds, “including our presenting sponsor, the Poarch Band of Creek Indians, along with Outdoor Alabama, the University of South Alabama, Gulf Distributing, Army Bass Anglers, Bellingrath Gardens and Home, The Southern Outdoorsmen, Dauphin Island Sea Lab, Quail Forever, Alabama Tourism Department, Montgomery Whitewater, Alabama Audubon, Alabama Black Belt Adventures, Exploreum Science Center, National Maritime Museum of the Gulf of Mexico, and the Boy Scouts of America Mobile Area Council.”
More information and tickets are available at ecowildexpo.com. Speaker topics include “The Wild Places of Alabama,” “Furbearer and Predator Management,” “Sharing the Gulf with Manatees,” and “Cultivating the Beauty of Native Alabama Trillium.”
“Top Alabama organizations will be onsite all weekend,” Potts
Whereville, AL
Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative, if applicable. The winner and answer will be announced in the June issue.
Submit by email: whereville@alabamaliving.coop, or by mail: Whereville, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124.
Contribute a photo you took for an upcoming issue! Send a photo of an interesting or unusual landmark in Alabama, which must be accessible to the public. A reader whose photo is chosen will also win $25.
The expo is the only show of its kind on the Gulf Coast, showcasing the area’s natural resources, the best in outdoor lifestyle gear, and conservation initiatives that keep outdoor activities accessible, now and in the future. Organizers expect to host 5,000 attendees.
Find the hidden dingbat!
The hidden dingbat from last month, a golf ball, didn’t roll away from too many of you as we had more than 270 correct entries that told us the ball was perched in the glass display case in the photo of the crew from Southern Pine EC on Page 30. Ada Mae Graham from Spruce Pine, a member of Franklin EC, wrote us, “I am so glad no one is going to use their golf club because swinging at that golf ball would cause a lot of glass to fall.” Elaine Robinson from Brewton said she and her husband look forward to getting the magazine every month. “He likes the crossword puzzle and the recipes were my ‘go to’ until you started the Dingbat Find,” she wrote. “We both enjoy the magazine from cover to cover, always so informative.” Thanks, Elaine and Gary! We also heard from Candy Frazier, who wrote that the Southern Pine employee pictured and whose life was saved is her grandson. “I am so thankful that God didn’t take him from me,” she wrote. “I will be eternally grateful for the men on his crew and all of Southern Pine.” We are, too, Candy.
This month, we are hiding a sombrero to celebrate Cinco de Mayo, so good luck. Our randomly drawn winner from April is Itylene Benedick of Jack, a member of South Alabama EC, who wins a $25 gift card from our sponsor, Alabama One Credit Union. Congratulations!
Sponsored by
April’s answer: Judging from the guesses we received, there are apparently many train cabooses all across Alabama! Guesses included Foley, Cullman, Chickasaw, Montgomery, Elkmont and others. But this particular caboose is in the town park in Gilbertown, in Choctaw County, and was recently restored; the town hopes to be able to eventually rent the caboose for events and other purposes. This picture was taken before the new lettering was finished. (Photo contributed by Donna Maten Carney of Gilbertown.) The randomly drawn correct guess winner is Rebecca Roberson of Joe Wheeler EMC.
By mail:
Find the
Dingbat
Alabama Living PO Box 244014 Montgomery, AL 36124
By email: dingbat@alabamaliving.com
10 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
Spotlight | May
PHOTO BY BILLY POPE
Registration for Alabama State Games continues
The 41st Alabama State Games, scheduled this year for sites in Birmingham and Jefferson County, is an annual amateur multi-sport competition with nearly 5,000 athletes competing in 20-plus sports for gold, silver and bronze medals and opportunities to be awarded academic scholarships.
Registration is open and is continuing for the games, which are June 7-9. Among the more popular sports are soccer, baseball and, for the first time, powerlifting.
The games were founded in 1982 at the request of the U.S. Olympic Committee to encourage academic success, healthy living and community leadership. As part of this year’s games, the nonprofit ASF Foundation, which hosts the Alabama State Games, will award $40,000 in academic scholarships on June 7.
For more information or to register, visit alagames.com and asffoundation.org
Take us along!
Jacob Bright of Arab, a member of Arab EC, visited Baxter State Park in Maine with Louis DiFrederico of Millinocket, ME.
Margaret Taylor from Bryant, a member of Sand Mountain EC, took her magazine on a vacation last year out west, visiting Glacier National Park in Montana and Grand Teton National Park and Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. “It was the best vacation and everyone should go see science at work in nature,” she says.
We’ve enjoyed seeing photos from our readers on their travels with Alabama Living! Please send us a photo of you with a copy of the magazine on your travels to: mytravels@alabamaliving.coop. Be sure to include your name, hometown and electric cooperative, and the location of your photo. We’ll draw a winner for the $25 prize each month. Make sure your photo is clear, in focus and not in shadow.
Shane and Jennifer Brown and Kevin and Alanna Twilley from Cullman, members of Cullman EC, have been friends since elementary school and love cruising together. They recently took an Eastern Caribbean cruise and brought Alabama Living out for a picture in Freeport, Bahamas.
of
Letters to the editor
E-mail us at: letters@alabamaliving.coop or write us at: Letters to the editor P.O. Box 244014 Montgomery, AL 36124
‘Fishmaster’ grateful
I would like to thank you for choosing me for the article featured in the Outdoors section in the April edition of Alabama Living magazine! In all my life, I never really ever thought something like this would happen to me. It has been the honor of my life and I pray that it had a positive effect on all who read it. Thank you again!
Ryan Gunn (“The Fishmaster”)
Flomaton
Sierra’s sees new faces
We can’t thank you enough for the beautiful article and cover (Arab EC edition)! We were pleasantly surprised to see that. We have seen lots of new faces from surrounding communities, thanks to your piece. We appreciate you so much. If you’re in town again please reach out. We’d love to have you for lunch.
Alex, Crystal & staff at Sierra’s
Arab
Turkey article informative
I just wanted to tell you I enjoyed the article about the declining turkey population in last month’s magazine. By coincidence, I was discussing turkey hunting with one of my coworkers earlier in the week, and she too had mentioned the declining population. Mr. Felsher’s article was extremely informative.
Dave Florey Silverhill
Swinging memories
I just enjoyed reading your “A Swing in the Woods,” (“Cup o’ Joe,” April 2024). It sure brought back memories. Ropes were favorite toys for my brother and me, along with roller skates and bicycles. And the woods started right behind our house, and it was only a short climb to be at the top of Red Mountain where we explored the old iron ore caves. Those were the days!
Doug Carpenter Mountain Brook
Liked linemen articles
Thank you for the articles written by the two linemen, Jarred Whitaker and Jeff Malone, in your recent issue. Very interesting and informative! Everyone should read them.
Teri Ingram
Titus, AL
May | Spotlight
PHOTO COURTESY ALABAMA STATE GAMES
Youth soccer is one of the more popular sports team competitions at the Alabama State Games, which this year is June 7-9.
Carlene Thornton
Fort Mitchell, a member of Tallapoosa River EC, traveled to the Sonoran Desert in Scottsdale, Arizona. The McDowell Mountains can be seen in the background.
Alabama Living MAY 2024 11
Black Belt bakery aims to nourish community through food Greensboro baker fuses
Egyptian, Southern flavors
By Jennifer Kornegay
Ablock behind the heart of Greensboro, Alabama’s tiny downtown, a small cottage painted pine-tree green is flying a flag that whips in the wind before unfurling to proclaim: “Love each other.” The house was once a home, but today, a small hand-lettered sign near the sidewalk says it’s Abadir’s Cottage, homebase for the food business Abadir’s that Sarah Cole has been building since 2020.
In its kitchen, Cole deftly draws from her family’s Egyptian heritage, stirs in some of her upbringing in nearby Demopolis and blends it with skills gained during some time in Pennsylvania resulting in a Middle East-meets-Alabama cuisine that’s all her own. She dreams up and whips up sweet and savory pastries, cookies, breads, sandwiches, stews, salads and beautiful fresh-flower-festooned cakes for catering gigs, website orders and for sale at farmers markets and pop-up events, and soon, from the Greensboro cottage space.
Her recipes are often her own twists on classics, and not all of her Egyptian treats are strictly traditional. Ingredient lists include usual Southern suspects like tomatoes, okra and molasses but Middle Eastern flavors too, like honey, dates, anise, coriander and rosewater. Her Alabama upbringing and devotion to using seasonal, local ingredients, particularly produce (often from her own garden), are routinely in the mix, exemplified in her cornmeal poundcake with fine-ground coriander seeds and almonds, carrot cake with dried apricots, and her pickled collards stuffed with herbed rice, a nod to Egyptian stuffed grape leaves. Abadir’s roasted carrot dip with turmeric is earthy and smooth. Cake frostings are often laced with cardamom and other spices. A fan favorite, Cole’s toasty tahini cookies are her riff on a sugar cookie that’s lightened and then infused with Arab touches, like nutty sesame seeds and tahini. Her bright yellow sfouf, an Arab cake with coconut and turmeric, is another best-seller. Anytime her menu includes maamoul, an Egyptian take on shortbread stuffed with dates, it sells out. And many of Cole’s creations are vegan, gluten-free and refined sugar-free.
12 MAY 2024
Sarah Cole, founder of Abadir’s. PHOTO BY JENNIFER KORNEGAY
Community at the core
But that flag out front points to the true nature of the nourishment Abadir’s aims to provide. “I love to make and share food, but I want to nurture this community too,” she says. “I think food is just a great way to do that.” Abadir’s is anchored by a mission to improve access to healthy food and food education, like workshops to increase nutritional knowledge and cooking classes to teach basic kitchen skills and simple recipes, while also harnessing food’s power to foster connections.
It’s why every ingredient’s nutritional value is considered before making the cut. Cole uses a sourdough base (instead of yeast) to lift every style bread she makes, even pita. She uses flours made from wholesome grains and opts for less refined sugar, relying on fruits and honey to sweeten treats. And many recipes make vegetables the star. “I’m not preachy about it, but I do hope to help people think about how what they eat affects their bodies,” she says.
It’s also why Cole is proud of Abadir’s becoming one of the first five certified B-corporation businesses in Alabama late last year. The designation means that a business is committed to positive social and environmental impacts and meets standards of performance, accountability and transparency in its efforts. “You can operate a for-profit business and do charitable things with it; B-corps are focused on giving back, and that’s what Abadir’s is,” she says.
raised Cole and her older sister. In 2017, Cole moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where she turned a struggling farm market around by adding educational programming and community events. At the beginning of the pandemic, she went to work for a Pittsburgh bakery where her longtime affection for cooking was re-ignited.
During both jobs, thoughts of Abadir’s were simmering in the background. “I’d been thinking about a way to feed others for a while, and I soon figured out that it felt right to come back to Alabama to do what I was envisioning,” Cole says. And once she knew what she wanted to do, there was only one name to give it. “Abadir is my mother’s maiden name, but she and her family changed it to Anton when they moved to the United States so they didn’t stand out as ‘foreign,’” Cole says. “But I’ve always thought it was beautiful. And I love that it is unusual.”
Good taste, good deeds
The B-corp process took a full year and was challenging, but Cole says it was worth it. “For me, having the certification says, ‘I am doing what I say I am.’ This business exists to better my community. And the first four other B-corps are women-owned, too. I think together, we’re making a strong, collective statement about using businesses for good.”
Cole’s vision for improving people’s health and expanding their palates (she gets a thrill watching customers try and enjoy something new) will soon be executed in the new cottage space. “It’s a multi-use gathering and food space, a home for all Abadir’s is and wants to be,” she says.
Before baking
The Abadir’s story is still being written, but it began decades ago when, in 1983, Cole’s 28-year-old mother fled religious persecution in Egypt. Hosni Mubarak was in power, and her Christian mother (and others who shared her faith) were in danger under his rule. She and Cole’s grandparents settled in Demopolis. Cole’s mom met her dad in the local grocery store, they married, and
To implement her many ideas, Cole needed the right infrastructure. Abadir’s Cottage fit the bill; she’s been in the space since last spring and cooking up big plans ever since. “I do want a restaurant, but it’s not the time now, and that’s not what is needed here now,” she says. “A real passion is the food education component, so I now have the room to do classes and workshops, but I also want the cottage to be a place people can come and sit and just be, so I’m trying to make it really homey and comforting.”
It may not be a traditional restaurant, but the cottage will be filled with food. One of the front areas is outfitted with a glassfront fridge to hold frozen pita rounds and talami (a Middle Eastern flatbread), roasted-veggie-stuffed pita pockets, soups and other grab-and-go items like meals people can take home and heat up.
Abadir’s pastries and baked goods, Cole’s spice blends like aromatic za’atar and bold dukkah, and products from other local food makers line shelves, and she hinted that her pickled veggies and fruit jams will join them soon. “People can eat here at the tables if they want, and again, they can just come and sit. They don’t have to buy anything.”
The offerings will change with the seasons, and Cole says she’s getting excited about hosting special events and pop-up ticketed lunches and dinners here and there, some with visiting chefs. “I want offer some free community lunches too, and I’m working up a price-fixed lunch option, like something filling and wholesome that’s always X dollars.” Cole notes that being flexible is key to
Alabama Living MAY 2024 13
Cole has been in Abadir’s Cottage since last spring. It has space for classes and workshops as well as room for those who just want to ‘sit and just be.’
PHOTO BY JENNIFER KORNEGAY
Abadir’s strategy. “I want this to ebb and flow and evolve to always be a community-focused food business and stay true to the way I want to feed people,” she says.
Cole has also been instrumental in getting Greensboro’s new weekly farmer’s market going, which launches in early June and is not far from Abadir’s Cottage. “I’ll have the kitchen open, and we’ll be doing some classes to help people get the most out of the produce they can get at the market.”
Highlighting home
Last fall, Cole visited Egypt for the first time. She made the journey with her mother, who had not set foot in her homeland since leaving more than 40 years earlier. The experience only strengthened the family inspiration in Abadir’s foundation. “Seeing my mom reconnect to the place she grew up, that was huge, because so much of what I am doing in the kitchen is to hang onto these memories of her and my grandparents from my childhood,” she says. “All of that goes into my food. I’m aways thinking about them when I’m creating dishes.”
While it opened her eyes to new things — like the smoky dishes she ate in the Siwa Oasis that had been cooked buried in the surrounding desert’s sand — the trip also underscored some of the principles she holds to in Abadir’s. “Every region had its own different take on the same dish, and that’s true here, too. My mom has her own regional take on Egyptian cuisine because she cooked it here, so it was the Alabama version of the dishes,” she says. “It’s the same with me. I only have access to certain things, and then I blend in my memories, which are of here, so that all shapes my dishes. But that’s the beauty of food; it is personal. We are always making it our own.”
The fact that her food is as much Alabama as anything else makes Cole smile and fuels her determination to continue changing the narrative in her town and her state. “Alabama gets some negative headlines, and when it comes to the Black Belt, I think some people look at us and feel bad for this place, but that’s not how it is,” she says. “This is the most historically rich region in the entire nation. There are good roots and good stories and good people doing great things here. I’m just glad I can be a part of it.”
Many of Cole’s homemade layered cakes are festively decorated with fresh flowers and greenery.
www.alabamaliving.coop
Above, the seasonal sandwiches with housemade bread at Abadir’s are full of color and flavor. This breakfast sandwich features fried onion, local eggs, lemony roasted kale, smoky thin carrots, garlic lemon spread and scallion tahini spread.
Below, the Abadir’s salads are packed with seasonal veggies, fruits and herbs, many from local farmers, and finished with homemade dressings.
PHOTOS ON THIS PAGE BY SARAH COLE
Get social: eatabadirs.com abadir’s on Facebook eatabadirs on Instagram
Cole’s tahini cookie is similar to a sugar cookie, but infused with Arab touches like nutty sesame seeds.
Electric cooperatives recognize several with awards
The Alabama Rural Electric Association of Cooperatives, which publishes Alabama Living, presented several awards at its 77th Annual Meeting in April. AREA Board Chairman Vince Johnson and President and CEO Karl Rayborn were on hand to present the awards.
Patsy Holmes, near right, who served on the Central Alabama EC board for 30 years, was given the Chairman’s Award for extraordinary service on behalf of Alabama’s cooperatives.
Far right, Kathy Holcomb accepted the Bill Nichols award, given for going beyond the normal call of duty to further the principles and progress of rural electrification, on behalf of her late husband, Lavaughn Holcomb, member of the board at Marshall-Dekalb EC and the AREA board for many years.
Far left, Charles “Ed” Short, longtime manager at Covington EC, received the Eminent Service Award for his outstanding contributions to the rural electrification program at the state, regional and national level.
Tom Stackhouse, near left, president and CEO at Central Alabama EC for nearly 27 years, was given the Ted Jackson Pathfinder Award, bestowed on a person whose life has had a profound and lasting effect on the foundations of the rural electrification program in Alabama or the nation.
William Selby, assistant manager at North Alabama EC, was given the Jack Jenkins Award for his dedication to seeing that highspeed internet service was brought to some 7,000 unserved or underserved members in north Alabama.
The Alabama Media Excellence Award was given to WTVY of Dothan, accepted by General Manager Valerie Russell, far, left, for their downto-earth but professional approach in covering co-op and electric utility issues in the Wiregrass, and to Alabama Public Television, accepted by Government Affairs Director Jack Williams and Deputy Director Melissa Austin, for their support and recognition of cooperatives during the Alabama High School Athletic Association football and basketball championship playoffs broadcast on APT.
PHOTOS
BY ALLISON LAW AND MARK STEPHENSON
Southern Pine Manager Vince Johnson, left, was proud to present the second Chairman’s Award to employees John Paul, Darlene Chavers, Ben Crane and Jimmy Wilson for their quick action which saved the life of a coworker, Devin Collins, when a power line fell on his truck 2023.
Alabama Living
Fairhope inventor aims for a hole-in-one
By Emmett Burnett
With a press of a tiny button, an embedded computer chip in a 1.68-inch diameter orb comes to life. Powered by Bluetooth, the little sphere’s electrical sensors gather and send data to a nearby mobile device.
Your golf ball probably does not do that yet. Brian Heaton’s does.
The Fairhope resident invented the PuttLink Smart Golf Ball, which went to market last summer, and along the way, achieved the Best New Product 2023 PGA Show Winner award.
The ball looks, feels, and putts, like any another other golf ball with one distinction. “Ours has a computer in it,” Heaton notes, and he demonstrates.
The Eastern Shore inventor takes a putt at the pristine greens of Fairhope’s Lakewood Golf Club. As it rolls, the ball gathers and reports information. Heaton’s smartphone immediately announces, “7 feet, 6 inches” – the length of the putt.
cluding green conditions, ball speed, cup entry detection, and cup entry speed.
The golf ball registers other datapoints, via mobile device, in-
In addition, the personal putting statistics are stored in the phone’s app and viewed as graphs and charts. Knowledge is power. “This information was not readily available for most golfers before our PuttLink Smart Ball,” Heaton says. “Now it’s accessible as the putt is in progress.”
Such instant data can be beneficial in determining the golfer’s strengths and weaknesses because now, there’s an app for that.
Heaton’s inspiration for this sphere of distinction was his son, Michael, who at age 16 has won state championships. “But like most golfers, Michael disliked putting practice,” noted his father. “I wanted to make putting drills fun for him, so I designed an interactive golf ball that would make a cheering sound, when he did good or made the cup. I thought that was cool.”
“Cool” led to another idea. Heaton recalls, “I realized adding more information to the program running in the golf ball could be beneficial to golfers.” It could be a valuable train-
Brian Heaton displays his creation, the PuttLink Smart Golf Ball, in a discussion at Fairhope’s Lakewood Golf Club. PHOTO BY EMMETT BURNETT
The electronic golf ball and the computer circuitry embedded in each PuttLink Smart Golf Ball.
PHOTO BY BRIAN HEATON
ing tool if the app recorded the ball’s speed and distance, track statistics, and other putting applications.
“Putting practice is mundane,” he says. “Unlike the instant gratification of hitting a 200-yard drive, watching it in flight, and shouting, ‘Wow, look what I did!’, you’re often alone and rarely receive recognition or statistics. But you should because putting is vital.”
Approximately 40 to 60 percent of a golfer’s strokes are in putting. The putter is the most important club in your golf bag. As Heaton adds, “Almost every golf hole ends in a putt.”
Competition on the green
The ball records data and achievements that can be shared with other golfers anywhere in the world. In addition to making putting practice exciting, it can be competitive as users try to outdo each other’s stats.
Now one would assume hollowing out a small cavity in a 1.68inch orb, inserting a battery, blue tooth transmitter, and sensors, transforming the golf ball into a rolling computer, is a sizable task. One would be correct.
“I worked on a couple of prototypes but two years into it, I knew I needed help on the app. I’m a mechanical engineer by trade, but not a computer software engineer.”
He reached out to three talented men for their expertise: Matt Smith in Nashville and Jeremy Hamilton of Portland, Maine are the computer program designers. Mike Smith of Atlanta is the marketing/ development specialist. Heaton’s duties include overseeing assembly, inventory, distribution and sales.
“Our golf ball must be the same weight (46 grams) and measurements (1.68-inch diameter) as a ‘real’ golf ball, and it is.”
As for production, PuttLink Smart Golf Balls’ circuit assembly is in Canada, the balls are from Louisiana, and final assembly and packaging are done in Brewton, Alabama. Orders are processed in Fairhope. “Everything is done in North America,” Heaton says. “We are proud of that.”
PuttLink officially launched on June 1, 2023. The smart ball products began delivery to customers a few days earlier than the company startup.
But the innovative golf balls were first introduced to the golfing community earlier in the summer at the 2023 PGA Show and scored a hole in one. PuttLink’s smart ball won Best New Product of the Year.
“ There is nothing quite like it,” Mike Smith says, explaining the PuttLink Smart Ball. “Brian’s innovation was unique, but it came with challenges, like how do you get something in a golf ball that doesn’t impact the roll? Also, the timing of the Bluetooth low energy that powers the ball had to be just right. We had to improve the ball’s battery life (two years) too.”
Creation to market covered 5 years. “It took us a year to figure out how to cut the ball precisely,” Heaton recalls. “We developed specialty saws to split the golf ball right down the middle with surgical precision.”
The ball must roll identically to a “real” golf ball, and it does.
“We were honored to receive the award,” Heaton says. “Everybody at the show seemed interested in our product and since then, customer feedback has been good.”
To date, PuttLink has the only smart ball for putting in the world. The PuttLink team emphasizes that the ball is for putting practice, not actual golf games.
Other neat facts: A PuttLink’s ball’s transmitting range is up to 30 feet. It works through a light sensing system. Every time the ball rolls it “sees” light and dark and calculates decisions based on what it sees.
PuttLink Smart Golf Balls support Apple and Android mobile devices and will come soon to smart watches.
One caveat before you divot: The electronic ball is designed to be struck by a putter and no other club.
Currently, PuttLink’s Smart Balls are available through the company website, puttlink.com. Other sales venues are being explored, including big box sporting goods stores and internet sales. “I love the potential for this product,” Mike Smith says. “We are taking what the industry calls a ‘crawl, walk, run,’ concept. The product was launched in June and now we are going after the bigger guys to sell it, including major golf retailers.”
An idea born in Fairhope may soon have a world customer base, as PuttLink’s Smart Golf Balls keep rolling along, as they are supposed to, each with an onboard computer, ready to help golfers in need.
More info at puttlink.com.
18 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
In a demonstration at Fairhope’s Lakewood Golf Club at the Grand Hotel, Brian Heaton putts the PuttLink Smart Ball. As the ball travels, it transmits data to the golfer’s mobile device.
PHOTO BY EMMETT BURNETT
The circuitous life of an Alabama storyteller Fred Hunter embarks on the next phase of his storytelling journey
By Stephen V. Smith
“There’s a story everywhere you look for one,” says Fred Hunter. And he’s always looking.
While viewers of Birmingham television station WBRC have long appreciated his delivery of timely and accurate weather news, it’s not meteorology that Hunter is best known for. People across the state recognize the man under his trademark Stetson hat as the face of the program, “Absolutely Alabama.”
The long-running series took Hunter and his faithful photographer Mike Tucker to all corners of Alabama and everywhere in between, capturing the stories of the people, places, and events that contribute to the state’s character. Originally a 30-minute show when launched in 1997, it was later changed to a series of three- to five-minute pieces that ran as segments in newscasts and as YouTube videos.
“We explored small towns, big cities, and Alabama’s rural countryside to uncover the sometimes hidden but always fascinating stories that comprise our state’s rich cultural tapestry,” says Hunter. “Practically everywhere I go — especially if I’m wearing the Stet-
son — people stop and talk to me about their favorite episodes.”
“Absolutely Alabama” ended its 25-year run in December 2022. Hunter retired from his life as a meteorologist in April, but is quick to point out that a storyteller never retires.
“I’m a product of Alabama,” Hunter says. “I sprouted from the rich soil of Northeast Alabama and was fed and watered across every region of our great state. I’ll be telling her stories until the day they lower me into the Alabama soil.”
Growing up co-op
Hunter was born in Fort Payne and his parents brought him home to the Chavies community near Rainsville, served by Sand Mountain Electric Cooperative. His father’s work in retail took the family to several towns across the state, including two stints in Opp where they lived on the Covington Electric Cooperative system. They returned to Sand Mountain in the 1960s, where Hunter graduated from Fyffe High School.
“To me, the electric cooperative story has always been one of the
20 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
Fred Hunter, wearing his trademark Stetson, pauses at the trailhead of the Talmadge Butler Boardwalk Trail during filming of a segment of “Absolutely Alabama” on the Alabama Birding Trail.
PHOTO BY MIKEL YEAKLE
greatest examples of neighbors taking care of one another,” says Hunter. “The rural south was so far behind the rest of the country in terms of infrastructure, and the electric cooperative program helped us help ourselves. Some of the finest, hardest-working people I ever met growing up were those linemen and the rest of the folks who ran the co-ops. They were the pillars of the community.”
Although today he lives outside of Tuscaloosa, Hunter and his wife Ivy have continued their cooperative connection. They previously owned property on the Baldwin EMC system and today enjoy their cabin getaway on Lookout Mountain near Mentone, served by Cherokee Electric Cooperative.
Texas and back again
Hunter earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of Alabama in the mid-1970s, while taking advantage of distance learning with Mississippi State University to become certified in meteorology. Following roles at TV stations in Tuscaloosa, Montgomery, and Myrtle Beach, Hunter landed a position at KTBC in Austin, Texas. He fell in love with the music, food, history, and people of the city.
It was here that Hunter’s life as a storyteller began in full force. “Shortly after taking on the weather duties, I was called to a meeting with the station’s general manager,” Hunter relates. “He told me that the station — like so many others, even to this day — received numerous viewer complaints about all the negative stories they aired. He wanted me to start a series called ‘Positively Texas.’ I began the series where all great Texas stories begin — at the Alamo.”
For more than two years, Hunter shared positive Texas stories with KTBC viewers. But in the spring of 1997 when he heard of a meteorologist job opening in Birmingham, he knew this was a chance to move back home. “I loved Austin,” he explains, “but as Coach Bryant said when explaining his decision to leave Texas A&M for the head coaching job at the University of Alabama, ‘Momma called.’”
What followed was the most unusual — and shortest — interview of Hunter’s career. “I walked into the news director’s office at WBRC,” he recalls, “where I was greeted by Peggy, a no-nonsense red-haired woman with Texas roots. She said, ‘You’re coming back to Birmingham to be my weekend weatherman, and you’re going to produce a weekly series like ‘Positively Texas.’ We’re going to call it ‘Absolutely Alabama.’ I’ve already spoken to your news director in Austin. You start in two weeks. I can’t give you a raise from what you’re making, but I can get you back home. Do you have any questions?’”
“No ma’am,” was his reply, and the “Absolutely Alabama” journey began.
‘Absolutely Alabama’ and Beyond
For 25 years, Hunter shared stories about people from all walks of life through the popular series. He visited owners of restaurants and small businesses. A specialty sock manufacturer, cracker maker and innkeeper. Craftsmen and entrepreneurs of all ilk. Artists, creators, musicians. From the W.C. Handy Music Festival in Florence to the National Shrimp Festival in Gulf Shores, Hunter was there showing the world all that is special about his home state.
And he isn’t finished. While he’s not returning to television, Hunter plans to continue telling stories in his retirement. His new project is called, aptly, “Fred Hunter’s Alabama.” It features a website, fredhuntersalabama.com, along with an email newsletter. At the center of this personal project is a new podcast, which can be found on all major podcast platforms under the name Fred Hunter’s Alabama.
As he begins a new chapter in life, Hunter is excited to share Alabama stories with old friends while introducing a new generation of readers and listeners to the fascinating people, places, and adventures of their state.
“Storytelling is in my blood,” Hunter says. “It’s part of who I am, and something I hope to keep doing for many years to come.”
At left, Hunter visits with innkeeper Cynthia Stinson at the Mentone Inn Bed & Breakfast. At right, the logo for his new project which includes a podcast, “Fred Hunter’ Alabama,” and below, visiting with Chris Richardson of Richardson Axeworks in Bluff Park.
PHOTOS COURTESY FRED HUNTER
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A hip and caféhomey in the heart of the Black Belt
Story and photos by Jennifer Kornegay
With its exposed brick walls, rough-hewn beams overhead and sleek, bare-bulb light fixtures, The Stable, A Southern Coffee Pub, has all the visual hallmarks of a trendy café.
A sandwich board out front lists its tasty offerings and industrial-looking awnings throw shade over bright red metal café tables on the sidewalk. It often hosts live music shows, some advertised on funky, artsy band posters. This restaurant would be right at home in a metro area like Birmingham or Mobile. But instead, it’s deep in the heart of Alabama’s rural Black Belt region, downtown in tiny Greensboro, population approximately 2,150.
An affection for coffee fueled owner Monique “Mo” Kitchen’s desire to open the spot in 2017, and it was more than the hot, dark energy-inducing drink that she wanted to offer. “I love the relaxed vibe of coffee shops,” she says. “I’ve always enjoyed spending time in them wherever I’ve lived or traveled.”
The former vet tech moved to Greensboro from Birmingham two decades ago, and not long after arriving, started thinking about a space she wished the city had. She felt Greensboro needed some high-quality coffee, but also a hip and homey space to hang out in. If she built it, she thought, they would come.
The Stable
1120 Main Street, Greensboro, AL
334-218-2109
thestablecoffeepub.com
She was right. If you pop in The Stable around lunchtime on a weekday, you’ll likely find it packed with a diverse range of diners. A father reclining on a leather sofa in a cozy sitting area sips a cappuccino while watching his toddler son flip through a board book. At a corner table, two female friends are laughing over a shared slice of peanut butter cream pie. A large group of older folks dig into the day’s special, a loaded baked potato overflowing with smoky pulled pork.
When it first opened, Kitchen had two partners, and they convinced her to add food to the coffee selections. Despite her name, she doesn’t really enjoy cooking. “But I do it, and we do it all. We make almost everything from scratch here,” she says. “I have a friend who does the pork butts for me, and I get whole-grain sourdough bread from Abadir’s, a local bakery. Customers love that stuff, and I hope to get more from her in the future.”
Hours: Monday – Saturday, 7 a.m.-3 p.m.; Closed Sundays Watch The Stable’s Facebook and Instagram pages for announcements of special events/hours.
The menu is vast, with wraps and sandwiches, salads and pizzas, plus breakfast selections (served all day on Saturdays). The Little Big Town sammy is a big hit, loaded with turkey, cheddar, avocado spread and a tangy chipotle sauce. Any time is a good time to order the Harvest Time salad, a mound of crisp field greens with sliced turkey, feta, tart dried cranberries, crunchy apple chunks and chopped walnuts drizzled with bright lemon vinaigrette. The chicken salad is basic but a beloved best seller. “It’s simple: chicken baked in a convection oven to keep it moist and tender, then shredded and mixed with salt and pepper, a little mayo, some celery and sliced grapes,” Kitchen says. Her usual pick is The Stable Sampler, a scoop each of chicken salad, pimento cheese and cream cheese topped with spicy-sweet pepper jelly with crackers for shoveling it all into your mouth.
24 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
Greensboro l
The coffee counter at The Stable is the spot to grab a drink from a long list of hot and iced coffee concoctions.
| Worth the drive |
The Harvest Time salad is a satisfying mix of crunchy, tart, sweet and tangy.
Alabama Living MAY 2024 25
And if you save room for dessert, you’re in for a treat. Greensboro’s once-famous but now-defunct Pie Lab isn’t completely gone. The last owner sold the recipes to a local man who now operates Greensboro Pie, and his delights — from chocolate chess and Key Lime to pecan and brown-sugar buttermilk — are available at The Stable.
And what’s a piece of pie without a hot cup of coffee? And not just any ole coffee. Since the original idea for The Stable revolved around the drink, Kitchen sources the good stuff: Revival Coffee, roasted in small batches in Selma. “It’s what we serve, and we sell it by the bag too,” she says. Rich and strong, it doesn’t just taste good; it’s a mission-based business that does good too, donating a portion of proceeds to causes like stopping human trafficking. “I think that’s really cool, and I’m proud to play some small part by supporting them.”
When the lunch crowd dies down, others meander in mainly for a cup of joe – the toasted marshmallow latte is a local favorite. They snag one of the stools at the long, slim tables up against the front windows to watch life on Main Street go by. Such life is ad-
mittedly far less busy and far more leisurely than a larger city, but that’s something else Kitchen hopes to change.
“Even though I’m not a native, I love this town,” she says. “We have a few new restaurants here, like really great Thai food right next door, but I would love to see more spots open up on this street.”
She’s also working to restore the historic 1884 building housing The Stable. In addition to a general store, its past lives include time as an auction house, which dovetails nicely with some fundraising plans. “I’m hoping to do a silent auction of some local artists’ works to raise money for some of the needed repairs and restoration work,” she says. “I want to make sure the place stays comfortable and looking good. It’s a place for everybody.”
Creating a gathering space for the Greensboro community was always part of Kitchen’s plan, and The Stable’s many regulars are rewarding her efforts. “That’s why I still do this and will keep doing it even when it sometimes gets overwhelming,” she says. “People come in here and sit and talk and eat, and I can see that they’re happy here. That’s just cool.”
26 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
Clockwise from top left: Outside, a few café tables are perfect perches when the weather is nice; the Stable’s interior welcomes guests with a comfy sitting area for lounging; a glimpse of the Greensboro Pie delights available at The Stable; the street-front window bar is perfect for eating and people watching; owner Mo Kitchen at one of The Stable’s sidewalk tables.
What you can do if you have a Social Security or SSI overpayment
n overpayment occurs when Social Security pays a person more money in Social Security benefits or SSI payments than should have been paid. The amount of the overpayment is the difference between the payment received and the amount that was due.
Social Security is required by law to adjust benefits or recover debts when an overpayment occurs. If you receive an overpayment notice, it will explain why you’ve been overpaid, the overpayment amount, your repayment options, and your appeal and waiver rights.
After receiving an overpayment notice, you can:
• Repay the overpayment in full or through a repayment plan by check, money order, credit card or by monthly reductions from your So-
cial Security benefit. You may be able to make a full or partial repayment using Pay.gov or your bank’s online bill pay option. We offer flexible repayment plans, including payments as low as $10 per month.
• Appeal the overpayment if you don’t agree that you’ve been overpaid, or you believe the amount is incorrect. You can request a non-medical reconsideration online or you can submit a completed SSA-561, Request for Reconsideration, to your local Social Security office.
• Request that we waive the overpayment if you believe you are not at fault for causing the overpayment AND you cannot afford to pay the money back or it is unfair for some other reason. You can ask for a waiver by submitting a completed SSA-632, Request for Waiver of Overpayment Recovery, to your local office. If your overpayment is $1,000 or less, we may be able to process your waiver request quickly by telephone. You can contact your lo-
crossword
by Myles Mellor
cal office or call us at 1-800-772-1213, Monday through Friday, between 8:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
• Request a different repayment amount if you are unable to meet your necessary living expenses due to the current repayment amount. If you are unable to repay the debt within 60 months* due to the negotiated repayment amount, you will be asked to complete form SSA-634, Request for Change in Overpayment Recovery Rate. You can find the form at ssa.gov/forms/ssa634.pdf
*This is a recent policy change. Previous policy required the completion of the SSA-634 if the overpayment could not be repaid within 36 months. To learn more about overpayments and our process, visit our Understanding SSI Overpayments webpage at ssa.gov/ssi/ text-overpay-ussi.htm, read our Overpayments fact sheet at ssa.gov/marketing/ assets/materials/EN-05-10106.pdf, or watch our Overpayment video at youtube. com/watch?v=pxYYcjqkFvM.
28 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop SOCIAL SECURITY May
Across 1 Beautiful shrub with white flowers 6 Grass around a home 9 Mischievous creature 11 Marks a survey 12 Migratory garden visitors in the Cardinal family of birds 15 Purple perennial 19 Goal 21 Flowering ___ (white flowered tree) 22 Doctor’s title, abbr. 23 Depart 26 A large lot perhaps 28 Alabama state flower 32 Green field 33 Floating like a butterfly 34 Garden shrub 35 Tummy muscles, abbr. 36 Vine supports Down 1 Potting ___ (used to boost young flower growth) 2 Grace ending 3 Modern map 4 E-mail address ending 5 Promise at the altar, 2 words 7 Rhododendron kin 8 Bird’s home 10 Flowering 13 Regret 14 Showy flower which can be pink, white or blue 15 Part of a machine 16 Small recess 1 7 Enriched 18 Set up 20 Alabama state butterflies 24 French for soul
Rises like ivy on a wall 27 Drops from the sky 29 Pool problem 30 Painting stand for an artist 31 Earth
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A
Answers on Page 45
Kylle’ McKinney, SSA Public Affairs Specialist, can be reached by email at kylle.mckinney@ssa.gov.
Bethany Collins will have a solo exhibition, “Accord,” all month at the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine
Around Alabama
18 Winfield At the Historic Pastime Theatre, the Alabama Troubadours will celebrate the music of singer/songwriter John Prine. 7 p.m. Tickets are on sale at the theatre office, Gold Connection, the Kemp Foundation and Winfield City Hall. 205-487-3002 or find the theatre’s page on Facebook.
18
Scottsboro 23rd annual Catfish Festival, Jackson County Park. 8 a.m., rain or shine. Fun for the whole family, with car, truck and motorcycle shows, arts, crafts, food trucks, vendors, entertainment by the Bowmans, kids’ area, free catfishing for kids, inflatables, train rides and more. 256-609-1409.
2-4
Foley Gulf Coast Hot Air Balloon Festival, OWA Parks and Resort. Flights showcasing more than 50 balloons from across the nation, plus a festival with food, retail and arts and crafts vendors, live music, free lawn games, a K9 Frisbee show, Gulf Coast Zoo meet and greet, tethered rides, pilot meet and greets and more. Balloon activities are wind and weather permitting. GulfCoastBalloonFestival. com
3-4 Troy Thunder on Three Notch, Pioneer Museum of Alabama, 248 U.S. Highway 231 North. Skilled artisans and craftsmen dressed in period clothing demonstrate folk arts and crafts. Event features daily reenactments of the Battle of Hobdy’s Bridge, which occurred on the Pea River during the Creek War of 1836. Living history from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., with battles at 2 p.m. each day. Pioneer-museum.org
3-4 Cullman Alabama Strawberry Festival, featuring kids’ rides and inflatables, strawberry delights, artisans and crafters, food and drink vendors and several musical acts, including headliners Eli Young Band and Niko Moon. AlabamaStrawberryFest.com
4 Wetumpka Central Alabama Master Gardeners’ Plant Sale, 8 a.m. to 12 p.m., Elmore County Extension office, 3340 Queen Ann Road. Great prices and selections of annuals, perennials, vegetables, herbs, shrubs, trees, house plants and more. Yard art and a variety of vendors. 334-235-4302.
To place an event, e-mail events@alabamaliving. coop. or visit www.alabamaliving.coop. You can also mail to Events Calendar, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124; Each submission must include a contact name and phone number. Deadline is two months prior to issue date. We regret that we cannot publish every event due to space limitations.
Alabama Living on FB instagram.com/alabamaliving
4
Pike Road SweetCreek Farm Market Spring Chicken Festival, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., 85 Meriwether Road. The largest vendor market ever at the market, with more than 50 Alabamabased makers and vendors. Free. See the event’s page on Facebook.
4-5
Guntersville United Cherokee Ani Yun Wiya National Pow Wow, 9 a.m. Saturday, 221 Pleasant Hill Road. Native American dancing and crafts and demonstrations of Indian culture, including archery, tomahawk throwing, flint knapping and more. Food and drinks will be available. ucanonline@aol.com
10-12
Mobile EcoWild Outdoor Expo, Mobile Convention Center. Meet Conservation enforcement officers, park rangers, biologists and park naturalists. Learn how to become a conservationist and help protect and conserve our natural resources. Hunting and fishing vendors, educational sessions, recreational exhibits, outdoor-themed art gallery, kids’ classroom, cooking demos, specialty marketplace, food trucks and more. Ecowildexpo.com
10-11
Frisco City 15th annual Mother’s Day Plant Sale, Jones Park, 4326 Bowden St. All proceeds support the projects of Revive Frisco City Inc.
11
Pisgah second annual Mountain Laurel Arts and Music Festival, CR 374 at Pisgah Civitan Park. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Walk the mountain trails and view area waterfalls; artists, creators and craftsmen will show their works for purchase. Local musicians will perform, and food vendors will be available. Free, with $5 parking. Find the event’s page on Facebook.
11
Hartselle second annual benefit concert, “Elvis Remembered,” featuring Michael Dean and Memphis. 7 p.m., Hartselle High School auditorium, 1000 Bethel Road NE. Benefit to send students to nationals in June. Tickets are $15; contact Lisa King at lisa.king@ hartselletigers.org for more information.
18
Millbrook Millbrook Mayfest, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Village Green Park. Free, family-friendly event with entertainment, children’s activities, handmade items, arts and crafts and food vendors. See the event’s page on Facebook.
18 Wetumpka Spring Art Show sponsored by Downtown Artists Wetumpka, 9 a.m. Open to the public and free; local artists will showcase their work. See the event’s page on Facebook.
18 Arley Arley Day Festival Parade and Car Show, Hamner Park. 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. beginning with a parade through town; activities include a car show with prizes, arts and crafts vendors, food vendors, children’s games, water slides, horseback rides, free hotdogs for kids and more. 3-on-3 basketball tournament and pickleball tournament. ArleyWomensClub.org
18 Arab Poke Salat Festival, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Featuring a 1980s dance party and costume contest, top dog competition, 5K run, disc golf tournament at Arab City Park, corn hole tournament, line dancing, Zumba, children’s obstacle course, tumble and cheer performances, arts and crafts vendors and more. See the event’s page on Facebook.
18
West Blocton Cahaba Lily Festival, Lily Center. Featuring shuttled trips to the river and canoes for rent to view the blooms, along with street vendors, children’s play area, presentations by environmental groups and keynote speaker Dr. Larry Davenport, recognized by many as the foremost authority on the Cahaba Lily. CahabaLilyFestival.com
All month
Auburn “Bethany Collins: Accord,” a solo exhibition by the Montgomery-born artist will be on view at the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University. “Accord” features Collins’ latest and most recent explorations into Southern and American history through sculpture, music and the written word. Jcsm. auburn.edu
Alabama Living MAY 2024 29
MAY
Artist
Art at Auburn University.
Why solar is not free
A:Q:I often hear claims you’ll never pay an electric bill again if you go solar. Is that true?
The ability to generate your own renewable energy at home is an amazing thing. It’s pretty cool that the technology is accessible to home and property owners across the country. The concept of free energy from the sun is appealing, but solar power isn’t actually free. There are costs associated with capturing that energy for use in your home.
Installing a residential solar system doesn’t equate to $0 energy bills. Prices for the solar system and installation vary, but adding solar typically comes with a five-figure price tag. Solar systems only provide power when the sun is shining. You still rely on your electric utility for power at night and when the skies are cloudy. Most electric utility rate structures include a set monthly service fee. Unless you plan to disconnect from local electric service completely, you will still have a monthly electric bill.
Solar might be a good investment for you, or it might not. Several factors impact how well the investment pencils out, including where you live, home orientation and shading, electric bill rate structure and cost, available incentives and tax credits, your budget and credit rating.
If you are considering solar on your home, I suggest taking these three steps:
• First, make sure your home is as energy efficient as possible. It wouldn’t make sense to put a new motor on a boat with holes in it, so why would you put a solar system on an energy-wasting home? Invest in reducing wasted energy before investing in creating new energy. The efficiency updates I recommend before installing solar include insulating and air sealing your home and upgrading to efficient appliances—especially the heating, ventilation and air conditioning system.
If your HVAC system is older than 10 years or malfunc-
tioning, make sure replacing it is in the budget. Remember, energy efficiency upgrades might have a better return on investment than installing solar.
A more efficient home means a smaller—and lower-cost— solar energy system. Solar systems are typically designed to produce the amount of energy a home uses in a year, so if you complete energy efficiency improvements before installing a solar system, make sure the solar contractor accounts for those energy savings.
• Second, check with your electric utility about the requirements to install solar and how it will impact your bill. If you decide to install solar panels, working with your utility will be essential, as you will need to take important steps, such as signing an interconnection agreement to ensure the system is properly connected to the electric grid.
• Third, get at least three quotes to compare each contractor’s recommended system design, equipment and cost. It’s a significant investment, so you want to know your options.
There are several ways to pay for a solar system and installation. It can be bought outright with cash or financed by a loan. This allows you to own the system immediately or at the end of the loan term. State and federal tax incentives can help offset the costs.
There is also the option to install a solar system through a lease or power purchase agreement. In this structure, a third party—usually the solar installer—owns the system. They install the system on your property and then sell you the energy produced at a predetermined rate. They are responsible for maintaining the system and own it at the end of the agreement term.
Loans, leases and power purchase agreements can impact the sale of a home. Although a solar system may increase the value of your home, some buyers—or their lenders—are not interested in taking on leases or power purchase agreements.
Investing in solar is one way to support the transition to renewable energy. Before you make the leap, improve your home’s energy efficiency and empower yourself by thoroughly weighing the costs and benefits.
30 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop | Consumer Wise |
Miranda Boutelle is the chief operating officer at Efficiency Services Group in Oregon, a cooperatively owned energy efficiency company. She has more than 20 years of experience helping people save energy at home, and she writes on energy efficiency topics for the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, the national trade association representing nearly 900 electric co-ops.
Alabama Bookshelf
In this periodic feature, we highlight books either about Alabama people or events, or written by Alabama authors. Summaries are not reviews or endorsements. We also occasionally highlight book-related events. Email submissions to bookshelf@alabamaliving. coop. Due to the volume of submissions, we are unable to feature all the books we receive.
Silent Cavalry: How Union Soldiers from Alabama Helped Sherman Burn Atlanta – And Then Got Written Out of History, by Howell Raines, Crown, $21.99 (Confederate history) Part epic American history, part family saga and part scholarly detective story, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Raines brings to light a piece of submerged history: How an unsung regiment of 2,066 Alabama yeoman farmers, called the First Alabama Cavalry, U.S.A., was the point of the spear that Sherman drove through the heart of the Confederacy.
Unique Eats and Eateries of Alabama: The People and Stories Behind the Food, by Nicole Letts, Reedy Press, $27 (Culinary studies) From Big Bob Gibson’s north Alabama white sauce to the Gulf Coast’s West Indies Salad, the state claims a unique dining culture. Some of the state’s best-known chefs and artisans are highlighted in this culinary cruise from north to south and east to west.
Southern Rivers: Restoring America’s Freshwater
Biodiversity, by R. Scot Duncan, The University of Alabama Press, $34.99 paperback (Environmental studies) Nature writer and Alabama Audubon executive director Duncan looks at the perilous state of the Southeast’s rivers and the urgent need to safeguard their vitality. The region’s rivers are the epicenter of North American freshwater biodiversity and home for a wide array of aquatic animals.
Blood at the Root, by LaDarrion Williams, Labyrinth Road publisher, $18.89 (YA contemporary fantasy) A teenager on the run from his past finds the family he never knew existed and the community he never knew he needed at a historically black college and university (HCBU) for the young, Black and magical. The idea for the book came from a simple question that the author, who is from Helena, posted on social media: “What if Harry Potter went to an HBCU?” The book will be released May 7, 2024.
A Hard Rain: America in the 1960s, Our Decade of Hope, Possibility and Innocence Lost, by Frye Gaillard, NewSouth Books, $25.62 (Civil rights/memoir) Gaillard brings a deeply personal history to this pivotal time in American life. Now in softcover, the 2018 book explores the competing story arcs of tragedy and hope through political and social movement of the times: civil rights, Black power, women’s liberation, the war in Vietnam and the protests against it. Gaillard is a native of Mobile and has served as a writer in residence at the University of South Alabama.
Cold War Alabama, by Melvin G. Deaile, Ph.D., Arcadia Publishing, $24.99 (Alabama history) The 50-year Cold War began following World War II and was a struggle between ideologies, militaries, economies, athletes and each nation’s ability to reach space. Alabama played a key role in that conflict; this work relies heavily on period photos to document the many aspects of Alabama’s role in the Cold War.
Alabama Living MAY 2024 33
CINCO de MAYO
Coming up next...
September theme: Corn
Submit by: June 7
October theme: Spooky Treats
Submit by: July 5
Email us: recipes@alabamaliving.coop
Visit our website: alabamaliving.coop
USPS mail: Attn: Recipes P.O. Box 244014 Montgomery, AL 36124
Recipes can be developed by you or family members. Adapt a recipe from another source by changing as little as the amount of one ingredient. Chosen cooks may win “Cook of the Month” only once per calendar year. Submissions must include a name, phone number, mailing address and co-op name. Alabama Living reserves the right to reprint recipes in our other publications.
| Alabama Recipes |
Photos and styling by Brooke Echols
Good Morning, Cinco de Mayo
Cook of the Month: Gabe Argo, Cullman EC
Gabe Argo is a pharmacist by trade, but he spends his spare time coming up with new recipes which he tries nearly every week. One of his favorites, Red Enchiladas with Beef, turned out to be a winner for him this month, as it was chosen for May Cook of the Month honors. The recipe calls for chuck roast, but Argo says you can use eye of round or other quality cuts of beef just as well. His recipe is a combination of a couple of recipes which he modified. For example, if onions or jalapenos don’t agree with you, you can substitute onion powder and bell pepper. “What makes this recipe is the homemade enchilada sauce,” he says, which includes tomato sauce, the flavor of browned beef bits and red cooking wine. “This is a good dish for decent size family meal,” he says. Argo estimates he’s been cooking seriously for 10 years, often preparing meals on Sunday that he can use for lunch all week. His coworkers at Anderson Pharmacy in Altoona where he works especially enjoy it when he brings in leftovers to share.
Red Enchiladas with Beef
3 pounds boneless beef chuck roast, fat trimmed, cut into 11/2inch cubes
Salt and pepper, to taste
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 sweet or yellow onions, finely chopped
1 jalapeno, seeded and finely chopped
3 tablespoons chili powder
2 teaspoons ground cumin
2 teaspoons ground coriander
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon dried oregano
4 garlic cloves, minced
2 (15-ounce) cans tomato sauce
1/4 cup dry red wine
2-3 cups shredded Mexican Blend cheese
12 large flour tortillas
1/4 cup chopped fresh cilantro
Preheat oven to 300 degrees. Pat beef dry with paper towels and season with salt and pepper. Heat 1 tablespoon oil in a large Dutch oven. Add half the beef and cook until browned on all sides. Transfer to a plate or bowl. Add remaining vegetable oil and repeat with remaining beef. Remove second batch of beef and place with the previously browned beef. Pour off all but one tablespoon of oil from Dutch oven and add onion plus 1/2 teaspoon salt. Cook for 5 to 7 minutes, stirring occasionally. Stir in jalapeno, chili powder, cumin, coriander, cayenne pepper, and oregano and cook and stir for 1 minute. Add garlic and cook for 1 minute. Stir in tomato sauce and wine, being sure to scrape up any browned bits on the bottom. Return beef and any juices to the Dutch oven and bring to a simmer. Cover and place in oven for 2 to 21/2 hours. Transfer beef to a plate. Pour sauce through a fine-mesh strainer. Push on the solids with the back of a spoon to get as much liquid out. Discard the solids. You should have at least 2 cups of sauce. Once meat has cooled some, shred it with 2 forks. Place it in a medium bowl and add 1/4 cup of sauce and 1 cup shredded cheese. Increase oven temperature to 375 degrees.
Grease a 9×13-inch pan. Spread 3/4 cup of sauce in the bottom. Spray the tortillas on both sides with vegetable cooking spray. Bake for 1 minute or until warm and pliable. Place 1/3 cup of beef mixture down the middle of each tortilla. Roll up and place seam side down in the baking dish.
Pour 1 to 11/4 cups of sauce over the enchiladas. Sprinkle the remaining cheese on top. Cover with foil (spray the underside with cooking spray so the cheese won't stick). Bake for 20 to 25 minutes. Serve with cilantro. Cook’s note: Substitute one-half green bell pepper for the jalapeno for less spice.
Alabama Living MAY 2024 35
Red Enchiladas with Beef
Fresh and Easy Pico de Gallo is one of my favorite fresh treats. It reminds me of summer’s bounty with fresh onions, tomatoes, jalapenos and lime juice. We soften the cilantro up with a bit of mint. Have this anytime of the year to get that fresh fix! It’s the perfect addition to your Cinco de Mayo celebration! For more recipes, visit thebutteredhome. com.
Party Shrimp Pozole Verde
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 onion, chopped
1 tablespoon minced garlic
1 24-ounce jar salsa verde
1 32-ounce carton chicken stock
1 tablespoon dried oregano
2 cans yellow hominy, rinsed 1-11/2 pounds medium shrimp, raw, peeled and deveined
In a large pot or Dutch oven, add the oil and heat on medium-high. Add the onions and reduce heat to medium, stirring onions about 5 or 6 minutes. Add the garlic and stir about 1 minute. Add the chicken stock, then the salsa verde. Add the oregano and the hominy and bring to a boil, stirring occasionally. When soup is boiling, add the shrimp, then take the soup off the heat (shrimp cooks fast). Serve with tortilla chips, chopped cilantro, grated cheese, sour cream, and sliced radishes. Cook’s note: Be sure not to keep the shrimp at a boil longer than a minute. You may make the soup a day ahead of time, just don't add the shrimp until right before serving. An easy, flavorful take on the authentic dish. Guests may choose their own toppings.
Anna Felkins Cullman EC
Fresh and Easy Pico de Gallo
5 medium Roma tomatoes
2 small jalapeños
1 sprig of mint
1 whole lime
Salt and pepper, to taste
1/2 cup diced red onion
2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
Chop the red onion into small bits. CAREFULLY open up those small jalapeños and CAREFULLY seed and remove the membrane. Dice about the same size as the onions. Cut tomatoes in half and seed and dice the same size as the peppers. Chop the mint and cilantro. Juice the lime. Add a pinch of salt and pepper as well as the mint and cilantro.
Squeeze the whole lime on top and mix! Refrigerate for at least 30 minutes.
NOTE: This recipe gets better the longer it sits in the refrigerator. Steep it for at least 30 minutes but overnight is preferred.
Good Morning, Cinco de Mayo
1 pound ground sausage (I used hot venison)
2 14.5-ounce cans chopped tomatoes
2 16-ounce cans pinto beans
1 tablespoon taco seasoning
1 teaspoon salt
4 eggs
1 8-ounce package mozzarella cheese, shredded
Cook and crumble the sausage in a skillet. Drain off any excess grease. Add the two cans of tomatoes and the two cans of the beans. Do not drain the tomatoes or beans. Add the taco seasoning and salt. Simmer and stir all of this together until the liquid has reduced. Using a big spoon, make 4 pits in the sausage, bean and tomato mixture. Crack one egg in each pit. Place lid on the skillet and simmer/steam on low until the egg whites have set. Sprinkle the whole bag of mozzarella cheese over the cooked dish. Place the lid back on and steam until the cheese is melted. Makes 4 hearty servings and takes about 20-25 minutes to prepare. A great breakfast or brunch recipe.
Joy Griswold Dixie EC
Mexican Lentil Casserole
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 medium onion, chopped
1 poblano pepper, chopped
2 stalks celer y, chopped
1 15-ounce can lentils, drained
1 cup brown rice, cooked
1 6-ounce can tomato paste
1-2 tablespoons chili powder
1 teaspoon each smoked paprika and cumin
1/2 teaspoon oregano
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
Salt and black pepper, to taste
1/2 cup crushed tor tilla chips
1/2 cup Monterey jack or cheddar cheese, shredded
In a large ovenproof saucepan, sauté the onion, poblano pepper and celery in oil for 5 minutes. Stir in the lentils, rice, tomato paste and seasonings. Bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes. Sprinkle with tortilla chips and cheese and bake another 5 minutes or until cheese melts. Serves 6.
Phyllis Dubey Baldwin EMC
Brooke Burks
36 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
Photo by The Buttered Home
How to “go native” in the garden
Native plants are all the rage these days, steadily winning new hearts and gardens, which is great news for gardeners and for the environment.
According to a National Gardening Association survey, 26 percent of U.S. gardeners were using native plants in 2022 compared to 17 percent in 2020, and that number continues to rise as more and more people discover the many benefits provided by native plants.
Native plants — indigenous plant species that have existed and evolved naturally (without human introduction) in a particular region or habitat for millennia — offer all kinds of ecosystem services (pollination, water filtration, erosion control, etc.) vital to life on Earth, including us humans. They are also crucial sources of food and habitat for insects, birds and other
wildlife, which helps keep ecosystems in balance and increases biodiversity.
By the way, May is National Garden for Wildlife Month, a great time to plant natives. And since natives are well adapted to local growing conditions, they are easy to care for and tend to need less additional water, fertilizer and pesticides than many non-native plant species.
So why haven’t more gardeners gone native? In part because they aren’t familiar with the biological and aesthetic benefits of natives, but also because natives can be hard to find. They are rarely, if ever, available at the large retail garden stores where many gardeners shop or through local plant nurseries; for years, most gardeners who wanted to use natives have had to buy them online. While reputable mail order companies can be excellent sources of natives, they lack one of the most important aspects of natives — a local provenance.
To get the most out of natives, it’s best to use natives that were “born and raised” in or near where they will be planted —
the closer a native is to its home range, the better it will perform and serve the local ecosystem. And the very best sources of those plants are local growers who can provide all the other benefits of going local: healthier and more eco-friendly products, access to a knowledgeable and dedicated staff and a chance to keep your dollars in your community.
Lucky for us, several new native-only plant nurseries have opened in Alabama including Nemophily Natives in Auburn, Recreative Natives in Cropwell, The Native Nursery in Fairhope and Blooming Garden in New Hope, all of which are owned and operated by people who are passionate about native plants. Locally grown natives can also be found at seasonal plant sales and swaps sponsored by public gardens and by some conservation and gardening organizations. Regional native nurseries and seed companies also are great sources of native plants suited for Alabama.
Want to learn more about natives? Visit
| Gardens |
Katie Jackson is a freelance writer and editor based in Opelika, Alabama. Contact her at katielamarjackson@gmail.com.
Gulf fritillary butterflies are among the many insects that rely on native plants for food, shelter and breeding habitat. While they use passion flowers (maypops) as their caterpillar hosts, these bright orange butterflies feed on the nectar of many other native plants including this blanket flower (Gaillardia). Providing insects with the proper native plants for their survival is key to the health and balance of ecosystems.
38 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
PHOTOS BY KATIE JACKSON
a local grower! You can also search the Alabama Cooperative Extension site, aces.edu, for information and to learn about upcoming native plant workshops. Also check out the Alabama Wildflower Society and Alabama Native Plant Society on Facebook, both of which post information on native plant retailers, seasonal sales and events.
Another excellent resource of information is the Alabama Plant Atlas at floraofalabama.org, a comprehensive database of the many plants that occur in Alabama that can be searched by location (county) and by common and scientific plant names. In most cases, it also provides information on growth habits and habitat needs of the plants. The iNaturalist phone app is also great for identifying plants and learning about plants when you’re on the go.
While you’re outside this month, listen out for another native Alabama species — Brood XIX periodical cicadas. These fascinating insects are part of a rare double emergence of 13- and 17-year cicadas underway in parts of the U.S. and they are raising quite a ruckus. To learn more, including where they are likely to be found in Alabama, visit cicadamania. com.
MAY TIPS
Plant summer vegetables such as beans, corn, eggplant, melons and tomatoes.
Plant warm-season annual flowers.
Divide overcrowded bulbs and perennials.
Propagate new plants from cuttings or by layering, grafting and division.
Keep newly planted shrubs, trees and annuals watered.
Celebrate National Public Garden Day on May 10 and Composting Day on May 29.
Mixing purple coneflowers (Echinacea purpurea), black-eyed Susans (Rudbeckia hirta) and other native plant species together in a single planting helps create a diverse habitat for wildlife and a stunning tableau of colors and textures for your enjoyment. Make sure to choose seed mixes that contain only species native to your area and suited to your local growing conditions.
Alabama Living MAY 2024 39
Much more than red snapper to catch in the Gulf
While most offshore anglers head into the Gulf of Mexico during the summer to catch red snapper, people might land several other snapper species and many other fish during a day on the water.
The 2024 recreational red snapper season opens May 24 in Alabama and federal waters. The season will continue every Friday through Monday until the state reaches its federal red snapper quota of 591,185 pounds. In early July, the season will remain open from July 1 to July 5 to include the Independence Day holiday.
“We don’t have any problem catching a limit of red snapper,” says Kurt Tillman, who runs Captain Kurt Charters out of Dauphin Island. “We catch a lot of big red snapper, but there are many other fish to catch off Alabama besides red snapper. After we catch our red snapper, we might go to another spot and fish with smaller squid pieces to try for vermilion snapper or something else.”
Also called beeliners, a vermilion snapper looks very similar to a small red snapper. Vermilions average less than one pound and rarely top five pounds. The Alabama state record weighed 7 pounds, 3 ounces. Beeliners can provide incredible action on light tackle. Use smaller hooks and squid pieces for bait.
“Vermilion snapper are probably the most common snapper off Alabama after red snapper,” says Scott Bannon, Alabama Marine Resources Division director.
“Many people prefer to catch vermilion snapper because they are easier to clean than red snapper and people can keep more of them. Vermilion snapper frequently stay around the same reef complexes as red snapper, but some reefs might hold more vermilion snapper.”
them to the surface and flip baits to individual fish they see.
“People sometimes catch gray snapper in the Perdido Pass area or Mobile Bay,” Bannon says. “It’s very common to catch mangrove snapper around the nearshore rigs.”
Another small species, lane snapper seldom grow more than about 18 inches long, but the state record weighed 8 pounds, 1 ounce. Also called candy snapper, these delicious diminutive fish appear bright rosy red with broken horizontal yellow stripes on their sides.
Rarely caught by recreational anglers, cubera snapper take the title in the family heavyweight division. These ocean leviathans can weigh more than 100 pounds. The world record came in at 124.75 pounds, a fish caught off Louisiana. The Alabama state record weighed 94 pounds, 3 ounces. With a mouthful of extremely sharp canine teeth, they can do serious damage to flesh so handle them carefully.
Also called gray snapper, mangrove snapper look grayish green with a reddish tint ranging from copper to brick red. They rarely top 10 pounds, but the state record weighed 18 pounds.
Mangroves frequently enter water less than 20 feet deep and commonly rise high in the water column. Mangroves sometimes stay around rocky jetties and shallow platforms. Notorious bait stealers, mangroves occasionally hit flies, spoons, soft plastics and other lures, but typically prefer live bait such as small croakers, mullets or menhaden, also called pogies. Many anglers chum
Among the most brightly colored snappers, a yellowtail snapper displays a bright yellow band running from the snout to its tail. It continues to widen to cover the entire tail and tail fins with a bright yellow splash. The rest of the body looks olive to purplish with irregular yellow spots. Rarely seen in the western and northern gulf, yellowtails do appear off Alabama at times. The Alabama state record weighed 9.6 pounds.
In the Gulf, anglers might also catch several other types of snapper. These include mutton snapper, dog snapper, silk snapper and other species.
While dropping baits to the bottom, anglers could also catch amberjack, spadefish, triggerfish, tilefish and various grouper species. Higher in the water column, anglers might land cobia, king mackerel, Spanish mackerel, dolphin fish, also called dorado or mahi, and tripletail. Farther offshore, blue marlin, white marlin, sailfish, wahoo, blackfin and yellowfin tuna roam.
With more than 10,000 artificial reefs covering more than 1,200 square miles off the coast, Alabama ranks as one of the best places on the Gulf Coast to catch red snapper and other bottom or reef fish. For reef information, visit outdooralabama.com and hover to saltwater fishing and then click on artificial reefs.
Anglers might catch many other species off Alabama coasts. When people drop baits into the Gulf of Mexico waters, no telling what they might catch. Seasons, daily limits and other regulations vary by species so always check the regulations before keeping anything. Visit outdooralabama.com and click fishing, then saltwater fishing.
40 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
| Outdoors |
John N. Felsher is a professional freelance writer who lives in Semmes, Ala. He also hosts an outdoors tips show for WAVH FM Talk 106.5 radio station in Mobile, Ala. Contact him at j. felsher@hotmail.com or through Facebook.
Whole families can enjoy catching red snapper off the Alabama coast. These two anglers show off part of their catch.
PHOTO COURTESY OF CAPTAIN KURT’S CHARTERS
DOUG HANNON’S FISH & GAME FORECAST
Tu 2 7:42 - 9:42 8:06 - 10:06 2:09 - 3:39 2:33 - 4:03 We 3 8:30 - 10:30 8:54 - 10:54 2:57 - 4:2 7 3:21 - 4:51
Th 4 9:18 - 11:18 9:42 - 11:42 3:45 - 5:15 4:09 - 5:39
Fr 5 10:06 - 12:06 10:30 - 12:30 4:33 - 6:03 4:57 - 6:2 7
Sa 6 NA 12:06 - 2:06 NEW MOON 6:09 - 7:39 6:33 - 8:03
Su 7 12:30 - 2:30 12:54 - 2:54 6:57 - 8:2 7 7:21 - 8:51
Mo 8 1:18 - 3:18 1:42 - 3:42 7:45 - 9:15 8:09 - 9:39
Tu 9 2:06 - 4:06 2:30 - 4:30 8:33 - 10:03 8:57 - 10:27
We 10 2:54 - 4:54 3:18 - 5:18 9:21 - 10:51 9:45 - 11:15
Th 11 3:42 - 5:42 4:06 - 6:06 10:09 - 11:39 10:33 - 12:03
Fr 12 4:30 - 6:30 4:54 - 6:54 10:57 - 12:27 11:21 - 12:51
Sa 13 5:18 - 7:18 5:42 - 7:42 NA 12:09 - 1:39
Su 14 6:06 - 8:06 6:30 - 8:30 12:33 - 2:03 12:57 - 2:27
Mo 15 6:54 - 8:54 7:18 - 9:18 1:21 - 2:51 1:45 - 3:15
Tu 16 7:42 - 9:42 8:06 - 10:06 2:09 - 3:39 2:33 - 4:03
We 17 8:30 - 10:30 8:54 - 10:54 2:57 - 4:2 7 3:21 - 4:51
Th 18 9:18 - 11:18 9:42 - 11:42 3:45 - 5:15 4:09 - 5:39
Fr 19 10:06 - 12:06 10:30 - 12:30 4:33 - 6:03 4:57 - 6:2 7
Sa 20 10:54 - 12:54 11:18 - 1:18 5:21 - 6:51 5:45 - 7:15
Su 21 NA 12:06 - 2:06 FULL MOON 6:09 - 7:39 6:33 - 8:03
Mo 22 12:30 - 2:30 12:54 - 2:54 6:57 - 8:2 7 7:21 - 8:51
Tu 23 1:18 - 3:18 1:42 - 3:42 7:45 - 9:15 8:09 - 9:39
We 24 2:06 - 4:06 2:30 - 4:30 8:33 - 10:03 8:57 - 10:27
Th 25 2:54 - 4:54 3:18 - 5:18 9:21 - 10:51 9:45 - 11:15
Fr 26 3:42 - 5:42 4:06 - 6:06 10:09 - 11:39 10:33 - 12:03
Sa 27 4:30 - 6:30 4:54 - 6:54 10:57 - 12:27 11:21 - 12:51
Su 28 5:18 - 7:18 5:42 - 7:42 NA 12:09 - 1:39
Mo 29 6:06 - 8:06 6:30 - 8:30 12:33 - 2:03 12:57 - 2:27
Tu 30 6:54 - 8:54 7:18 - 9:18 1:21 - 2:51 1:45 - 3:15
The Moon Clock and resulting Moon Times were developed 40 years ago by Doug Hannon, one of America’s most trusted wildlife experts and a tireless inventor. The Moon Clock is produced by DataSport, Inc. of Atlanta, GA, a company specializing in wildlife activity time prediction. To order the 2023 Moon Clock, go to www.moontimes.com.
Alabama Living MAY 2024 41 7315 County Road 17 • Woodville, AL 35776 256-805-0153 • macy@libertymonument.net Serving North AL, Southern TN, and Northwest GA. We o er traditional sandblast and laser etched monuments. Onsite cemetery engraving. Check us out on Facebook.
2024 EXCELLENT TIMES MOON STAGE GOOD TIMES MAY A.M. PM AM PM Fr 17 7:42 - 9:42 8:06 - 10:06 2:09 - 3:39 2:33 - 4:03 Sa 18 8:30 - 10:30 8:54 - 10:54 2:57 - 4:2 7 3:21 - 4:51 Su 19 9:18 - 11:18 9:42 - 11:42 3:45 - 5:15 4:09 - 5:39 Mo 20 10:06 - 12:06 10:30 - 12:30 4:33 - 6:03 4:57 - 6:2 7 Tu 21 10:54 - 12:54 11:18 - 1:18 5:21 - 6:51 5:45 - 7:15 We 22 11:18 - 1:18 11:42 - 1:42 5:48 - 7:18 6:11 - 7:4 1 Th 23 NA 12:06 - 2:06 FULL MOON 6:09 - 7:39 6:33 - 8:03 Fr 24 12:30 - 2:30 12:54 - 2:54 6:57 - 8:2 7 7:21 - 8:51 Sa 25 1:18 - 3:18 1:42 - 3:42 7:45 - 9:15 8:09 - 9:39 Su 26 2:06 - 4:06 2:30 - 4:30 8:33 - 10:03 8:57 - 10:27 Mo 27 2:54 - 4:54 3:18 - 5:18 9:21 - 10:51 9:45 - 11:15 Tu 28
4:06
6:06 10:09 - 11:39 10:33
12:27
Th
Fr 31
12:33
12:57
DAY A.M. PM AM PM
3:42 - 5:42
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- 12:03 We 29 4:30 - 6:30 4:54 - 6:54 10:57 -
11:21 - 12:51
30 5:18 - 7:18 5:42 - 7:42 NA 12:09 - 1:39
6:06 - 8:06 6:30 - 8:30
- 2:03
- 2:27
Mo 1 6:54 - 8:54 7:18 - 9:18 1:21 - 2:51 1:45 - 3:15
SAEC awards scholarships to local students
Each year, South Alabama Electric Cooperative supports local students with its Electric Cooperative Foundation Scholarships.
Scholarships are awarded to deserving high school seniors planning to attend an accredited technical school, two-year college or four-year university.
This year, SAEC awarded $1,000 foundation scholarships to 17 students.
To learn more about the ECF scholarship program, visit southaec.com. SAEC has been awarding the ECF scholarships for more than 20 years. Since 2013, more than 130 local high school seniors have benefitted from the program.
50 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop
Britton Delaney Paul Pike Liberal Arts School
Chloe Alyssa Duncan Charles Henderson High School
Anna Caroline Kilcrease Ariton High School
Amber Nicole Wilkinson Highland Home High School
Brice Andrew McKenzie Highland Home High School
Ella-Kate Tomlin Luverne High School
Alabama Living MAY 2024 51
Hope Elaine Challancin
Charles Henderson High School
Robert Lane Duett
Highland Home High School
Harlee Cheyenne Bennett Goshen High School
Paitin Olivia Riley Goshen High School
Zachary Rodgers Pike Liberal Arts School
Ellis Dail Knighten Brantley High School
Jackson Bryce Adcock Zion Chapel High School
Sarah Elizabeth Lee Pike Liberal Arts School
Elsie Clare Coppage
Charles Henderson High School
Joseph Ezra Carnley Zion Chapel High School
Wyatt Owen Cornett Luverne High School
Crisis recognized?
There is so much written about crises these days that we too often lose focus on what is truly a crisis. A crisis is defined as a condition of instability or danger that results in formerly successful coping mechanisms failing us and ineffective decisions and behaviors taking their place.
In past months, I have written about the growing problem of electric capacity shortages. In 2021, I wrote about those shortages and the resulting extended blackouts in Texas and other parts of the Midwest with Winter Storm Yuri. Last year, I wrote about the rolling blackout across the TVA and Duke service areas with the extremely cold temperatures on Christmas Eve 2022.
Are those events “crises?” If your electricity is off with freezing temperatures, it is a crisis. It was certainly a crisis for those 140plus poor souls that reportedly froze to death in Texas in 2021. For the rest of us just following the stories, warm and from afar, it may not yet be a crisis.
Recent articles in The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, and Politico predict that, unless something changes, electric capacity shortages may soon become a crisis in certain areas. That should not be a surprise, considering the combination of the expansion of data centers to manage more digital applications; the growth of artificial intelligence (which demands up to 100 times more data and energy than traditional internet searches); the rise of an electric economy due to higher demand from more electric vehicles; increased electric heating; advanced manufacturing that requires more energy; and, finally, the zeal of the Biden Administration in shutting down fossil fuel-fired energy sources.
The Wall Street Journal article, “The Coming Electricity Crisis,” published March 28, 2024, states Georgia Power Company recently increased its winter capacity demand forecast by 17-fold through 2031 because of expected growth of data centers, electric vehicles, and battery factories. The PJM Interconnection, which operates the electric grid across 13 Midwestern and Northeastern states, doubled its 15-year annual forecast for demand growth – an amount about twice New York City’s typical daily peak. AEP Ohio says new data centers and Intel’s $20 billion-dollar chip plant will greatly stress the electric grid, and a new Micron chip factory in New York is expected to require as much power by 2040 as the combined states of New Hampshire and Vermont.
Data centers and chip manufacturing plants will require 13% to 15% more electric capacity per year than originally included in forecasts through 2030, and potentially even more after that. Equally troubling, data centers and most advanced manufacturing require around-the-clock, year-round, reliable power that renewables cannot and will not provide. Batteries are not projected to be cost-competitive for decades, if ever. New transmission
lines to better connect different regions of the country can take over a decade to permit and construct, even if siting regulations are relaxed.
Additionally, approximately 20 gigawatts (think power for 15 million homes) will be retired by 2027 and another 50 gigawatts (power for another 40 million homes) is scheduled to be retired between 2027 and 2032 across the country. PJM’s external market monitor has warned that up to 30% of its region’s installed capacity is at risk of retirement by 2030.
EPA’s Effluent Limitations Guidelines (water usage rules) will close many coal-fired plants by as early as 2028. Additionally, EPA’s proposed Greenhouse Rules will close any remaining coalfired plants between 2028 and 2042 that do not adopt unproven carbon capture and storage technology. The Biden Administration is also promising stringent EPA restrictions this summer on natural gas-fired generation that does not incorporate clean hydrogen fuels, or carbon capture and storage technology, that are currently not available.
FERC Commissioner Mark Christie warned in March 2024, “Utilities are rapidly retiring fossil fuel and nuclear plants, subtracting dispatchable resources at a pace that is not sustainable, and we can’t build dispatchable resources that can replace the resources we are shutting down.” Obama Energy Secretary Ernie Moniz recently predicted the utilities will ultimately have to rely more on gas, coal, and nuclear generation to support surging electric demand. He said, “We’re not going to build 100 gigawatts of new renewable generation in a few years.” TVA has already established a 5 MW limit for new or expanding loads on its electric distributors – a very low level for expanding areas like Huntsville and Nashville.
Even The Washington Post published an article on March 7, 2024, “Amid Explosive Demand, America is Running Out of Power,” about the growing concern over available electric capacity. The article states that vast swaths of the U.S. are at risk of running short of power as electricity-hungry data centers and clean-technology factories proliferate around the country.
President Biden and his Administration continue to impose a death march on America, prematurely closing reliable electric generation plants and throwing trillions of dollars at renewable energy resources and clean energy technology that consumes huge amounts of electricity, while continually reciting that climate change is the existential threat of our lifetime. Unfortunately, even as more rational members of the mainstream media are now recognizing, we are close to a very real crisis – we are running out of reliable, affordable electricity.
I hope you have a good month.
44 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop | Our Sources Say |
Gary Smith is President and CEO of PowerSouth Energy Cooperative.
How To Place a Line Ad in Marketplace
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Honoring the ones who came home
“Shoot him! Shoot him! Shoot him!” my father yelled at the screen. No one in the movie theatre made a sound. I think that’s because the audience knew the old man in the wheelchair was a veteran. Nevertheless, I was mortified by his outburst. But, I should’ve known something like this might happen when I took Dad to see “Saving Private Ryan.”
The scene that had such an effect on him was a particularly intense one. Many of you will recall it. During a skirmish with the enemy, a GI medic was shot and killed. The Americans took the lone German survivor, and made him dig a grave. Then they planned to put him in it. But Tom Hanks showed mercy and spared his life, which later in the movie would cost him his own.
My father said “Private Ryan” was the most realistic depiction of World War II he’d ever seen. It also had an unusual effect on him: The next day he talked more about the war than he ever had before. As you know, many vets rarely speak about their experiences. Since this was a window that didn’t open often, I began asking a few questions.
Initially, I inquired about a scene in the movie when an American sergeant told his men not to shoot the Nazis jumping from their pillboxes after they were doused with a flamethrower. “Let ‘em burn!” he said.
“Did things like that really happen?” I asked.
He replied directly and honestly. “Yeah, they did.” Then he continued. “And don’t think the Germans were the only bad guys. The Americans did some terrible things, too.”
“Like what?” I asked. To my surprise, he answered my question.
“Well, you know that part of the movie when the Americans were going to shoot that German who killed the medic?”
I nodded. It wasn’t too difficult to remember the scene when he yelled out loud in the theater.
“Well,” he said, “something like that happened to me. I walked up to a bunch of our guys standing over the body of a German. Seems he shot our chaplain in a firefight. So when the GIs captured him, their sergeant walked up to him and without saying a word, stabbed him with his bayonet.”
I sat in sickened, stunned silence. This was too horrible to hear. How much worse would it have been to have actually been there? For Dad, it was no movie. This really happened. What else had he seen, or for that matter, done?
At once, I realized that war dehumanizes you, regardless of what side you are on. In addition, now I understood the price my father paid fighting for our freedom. The conversation ended and we never spoke of it again. But this story has haunted me for years.
My Mom often told me that the man who returned from the war was not the same person who left. I knew physical pain accompanied my father all his life because of the wound he sustained at the Battle of the Bulge. But there were also unseen wounds that manifested themselves - outbursts of anger, excessive drinking, and nightmares. Back then it was called battle fatigue, and those affected by it were left to deal with it themselves. Some drank, some turned to Jesus, some committed suicide. Now it’s called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, or PTSD, and we know so much more about it. There are many new treatment options that are helping our Middle East war veterans. Unfortunately, they weren’t available to help the Greatest Generation.
This Memorial Day, when we remember those heroes who made the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom, let’s not forget to honor the men who came home with an unscathed body, but a wounded soul. Men like my father, who managed to get through life despite the heavy burden they brought back from the battlefields.
Thank you for your service, Dad.
If you or someone you love needs help, call the Veteran’s Crisis Hotline at 1-800-273-8255.
46 MAY 2024 www.alabamaliving.coop | Cup o’ Joe |
a standup
a
and a
and
at jhobby2000@aol.com.
Joe Hobby is
comedian,
syndicated columnist,
long-time writer for Jay Leno. He’s a member of Cullman Electric Cooperative
is very happy now that he can use Sprout from his little place on Smith Lake. Contact him
Illustration by Dennis Auth
See Page 34
September recipe
theme: Corn