Discover Grove City July/August 2021

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GroveCity DISCOVER

JULY/AUGUST 2021

The official magazine of Grove City, Ohio

LOOK FOR

The

INSIDE

Evans Center Ally

Dedra Thompson

Parks and Recreation month Inaugural Shutterbugs Rising softball star



In 2004 we started coming to Grove City Family Dentistry. Dr. Mitchell and his staff have not only been very professional, but also extremely caring of our needs. The quality of their service is commendable. After each visit they are kind enough to check on us and ensure any follow-up issues are immediately resolved. Their quality of work is to be commended and we would recommend them to anyone looking for a new place for their dental needs.

— Don & Alice Price

2017

2018

2019

2020


HOME OFFICE IN THE COURTYARDS GROVE CITY, 43123

1385 Dublin Rd. Columbus, OH 43215

GroveCity DISCOVER

1335 Dublin Rd., Ste. 101C Columbus, Ohio 43215 614-572-1240 • Fax 614-572-1241 www.cityscenecolumbus.com

Kathleen K. Gill

Jerry Ziglar has been selling homes in the southwest area for over 40 years now.

Need a notary? Service FREE for friends and clients. Call us today!

Dave Prosser

Chief Creative Officer

Gianna Barrett

Vice President Grove City Advertising Director

Gary Hoffman Jamie Armistead

Jerry Ziglar

614-893-9566

jerryziglar@gmail.com

www.jerryziglar.com

Dr. Megan Kottman

President/CEO

Creative Director Accounting Director

Brandon Klein

Editor

Mallory Arnold

Associate Editor

Sarah Robinson

Assistant Editor

Amanda DePerro

Contributing Editor

Alyssa Burley Bre Offenberger Ellie Roberto Trevor Simpson Sarah Grace Smith Helen Widman

Editorial Assistants

Brent Clark Photos Raymond LaVoie Photography

Photography

Tracy Douds Carrie Thimmes

Advertising Sales

Circulation

614-572-1240

www.DiscoverGroveCity.com CityScene Media Group also publishes: CityScene Magazine www.CitySceneColumbus.com Dublin Life Magazine www.DublinLifeMagazine.com

Accepting New Patients We make your family’s dental health our priority. Call for an appointment today (614) 539-2702

2 July/August 2021

Westerville Magazine www.WestervilleMagazine.com Tri-Village Magazine www.TriVillageMagazine.com Healthy New Albany Magazine www.HealthyNewAlbanyMagazine.com Pickerington Magazine www.PickeringtonMagazine.com The Publisher welcomes contributions in the form of manuscripts, drawings, photographs or story ideas to consider for possible publication. Enclose a SASE with each submission or email bklein@cityscenemediagroup. com. Publisher does not assume responsibility for loss or damage. The appearance of advertising in Discover Grove City does not constitute an endorsement of the advertiser’s product or service by the City of Grove City. Discover Grove City is published in January, March, May, July, September, November. Subscriptions are free for households within the city limits of Grove City and Jackson Township. For advertising information or bulk purchases, call Gianna Barrett at 614-572-1255. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written consent of the publishers. Discover Grove City is a registered trademark of CityScene Media Group. Printed in the U.S.A. © 2021.

www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


GroveCity DISCOVER

Volume 4, Number 1 July/August 2021

The official magazine of Grove City, Ohio

4 Calendar What’s Happening? 6 Message from Mayor Richard L. “Ike” Stage Curb Appeal Leads to a Safer Community

8 Faces

Senior Center Superhero

Dedra Thompson is giving back to Grove City’s older adults in a big way

18

12

Development

13

Council Briefs

14

In Focus

A Different Take on Multi-Generational Living A Season of Making Lemonade

Parks and Recreation Month Department leaders reflect on decades of growth

20

18

Shutterbugs

20

To the Rescue

24

Eight-Time Winner

Our annual look at Grove City through the lenses of its residents

Animals need shelters and shelters need us

Grove City collects five 2021 Best of the ’Bus awards

28 Student

Spotlight

Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend For GCHS senior Maddie Wilcox, it’s the softball diamond

32 Living

On the Flip Side Two local couples flip homes in Grove City

35 @DiscoverGroveCity On the cover: Dedra Thompson by Ray LaVoie Photography

www.DiscoverGroveCity.com www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

35

Art Fur Park

37

Luxury Living

37

Artist Ken Valimaki shares the story of his Breck Community Park dog sculpture

Real Estate Top Homes SOLD

38

Bookmarks 39 The Source

Parks and Recreation Offerings for August and September 2021 July/August 2021 3


Calendar

For more events visit www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

What’s Happening? Events subject to change. Consult websites for details and updates.

July 1-31

Bike with Mayor Ike

Parks and Recreation Month Watch for updates GroveCityOhio.gov

July 2

Grove City Independence Day Fireworks 9:50 p.m. Grove City High School 4665 Hoover Rd. GroveCityOhio.gov

July 6

Evans Center Reopening

July 10

Heart of Grove City Car Show 2-7 p.m. Historic Grove City Town Center www.heartofgrovecity.org

July 11-13

Camp Naz Vacation Bible School 6-8:15 p.m. 4770 Hoover Rd. www.thenaz.church/vbs

July 12

2021 Chamber Open 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Hickory Hills Golf Club 3344 Georgesville-Wrightsville Rd. www.gcchamber.org

4 July/August 2021

July 17

Tacos & Tequila 4-9 p.m. Historic Grove City Town Center www.heartofgrovecity.org

Food Truck Festival and Shop Hop Fridays, 4-9 p.m. Historic Grove City Town Center Broadway and Park Street www.heartofgrovecity.org July 9 July 30 Aug. 6 Aug. 20 Sept. 3 Sept. 24 Oct. 1 Oct. 8 Oct. 29 www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

Photos courtesy of City of Grove City

8 a.m.-5 p.m. 4330 Dudley Ave. GroveCityOhio.gov


2021 Grove City Community Outdoor Movie Nights schedule:

Village Pickers at the Southwest Franklin County Historical Society Open House

Wednesdays, 8 p.m. The Naz Church 4770 Hoover Rd. GroveCityOhio.gov July 7: Star Wars: The Force Awakens (PG) July 14: D2: Mighty Ducks (PG) July 21: Toy Story I (PG) July 28: Mary Poppins Returns (PG)

July 23-24

Grove City High School Alumni Softball Tournament Multiple locations www.grovecityalumnitournament.com July 24

Southwest Franklin County Historical Society Open House 2-4 p.m. Century Village at Fryer Park 4185 Orders Rd. www.grovecityohhistory.org

Aug. 6-9

Purple Heart Weekend Henceroth Park, Purple Heart Memorial Walk 2075 Mallow Ln. GroveCityOhio.gov

Aug. 7

Trinity United Methodist Church Rummage Sale 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 4850 Haughn Rd.

Aug. 14

EcoFest 9 a.m.-2 p.m. 3359 Park St. ecofest.grovecityohio.gov

Aug. 14

Bike with Mayor Ike 9 a.m. 3359 Park St. GroveCityOhio.gov

2021 Summer Sizzle Concert Series Fridays, 7-8:30 p.m. Park Street and Arbutus Avenue GroveCityOhio.gov July 9, Rezes-Hall Band, classic rock July 16, Lords of Literature, classic rock July 30, The Usual Suspects, pop and blues

Aug. 14

Bourbon Tasting 3-10 p.m. 3359 Park St. www.heartofgrovecity.org/ bourbontasting Aug. 28

Southwest Franklin County Historical Society Open House 2 - 4 p.m. Century Village at Fryer Park 4185 Orders Rd. www.grovecityohhistory.org

Aug. 6, The Conspiracy Band, R&B, rock and jazz Aug. 13, Marquis 66, classic rock

Through Sept. 11

Grove City Area Chamber of Commerce Farmers’ Market Every Saturday, 8 a.m.-noon Historic Grove City Town Center 3444 Park St. in the Promenade www.gcchamber.org

August 8-10

Calendar of Events Sponsored by Franklin County Banking Center. www.VCNBfamily.com

6-8:15 p.m. 4770 Hoover Rd. www.thenaz.church/vbs

Do you have an event you would like to submit?

Camp Naz Vacation Bible School

Send details and photos to bklein@cityscenemediagroup.com. www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

July/August 2021 5


Curb Appeal Leads to a Safer Community

W

e’re blessed with such a beautiful community, filled with fantastic parks and playgrounds, scenic trails and multi-use pathways. Our neighborhoods are second to none, where residents take great pride in their homes and property, doing their best to keep up the curb appeal. That’s the same level of care we channel when maintaining the city’s public spaces. Not only do we consistently tend to the attractive “curb appeal” of the city, but extra effort is made to contribute to an overall healthy earth, starting in our own community. This includes a dedicated associate maintaining our Town Center’s charm to hanging streetlight baskets overflowing with flowers. Keeping our community clean and tidy not only improves the value of neighborhoods, it affects a visitor’s perception of our hometown. Efforts are made on a regular basis to bring new life to areas of the city that have become neglected or property that has been mismanaged. This starts with updating and enforcing city ordinances that promote and support the attractive appearance and safety of our community’s housing stock. However, more important than improving looks of our community with preened lawns, mended fences or uncluttered yards is the fact that maintaining a neat, cared-for appearance in our neighborhoods is an important deterrent to crime. Studies support the notion that not only is a lack of maintenance in neighborhoods associated with higher levels of depression, anxiety and stress for residents, it also attracts illicit activities and crime. Keeping our community safe is top priority and we’ll tackle that responsibility from all angles – one of the simplest angles being the upkeep of our surroundings. The Keep Grove City Beautiful Committee is celebrating 30 years of promoting these efforts, including positive and sustainable environmental practices through community involvement, recycling and beautification.

Connect with us! 6 July/August 2021

This spring, the committee organized a Cleanup Day throughout Grove City and Jackson Township. Participating in the day-long city cleanup were more than 50 groups and 270 volunteers who collected more than three tons of trash; and those are just the results we’re aware of. Folks throughout the city volunteered to clear months of rubbish hidden below the snow, trapped in creek beds or blown from trash cans. Photos were shared on social media throughout the day, of families smiling as they filled trash bags – rightfully proud of their efforts. Grove City Boy Scouts organize creek cleanups each year as well, doing their part to keep our community clean and the land healthy. It’s a great feeling, to polish the community we care so much about. These organizations are not alone in the effort. Many families and organizations have “adopted” streets and parks and regularly tend to them. And there’s at least one resident who enjoys plogging around town. That’s O.K. … I didn’t know what that was at first either. It’s a combination of jogging while picking up litter. The word is a merging of the Swedish verbs plocka upp (pick up) and jogga (jog). Without missing a single stride, Grove City resident John Smith uses a trash grabber to gather the trash along his running route and stuff it in a bag for proper disposal. It’s that level of personal pride that speaks volumes to why Grove City stands out as a beautiful and safe community in which to live and visit.

Mayor Richard L. “Ike” Stage

Subscribe to our eNewsletter — From the Grove — at GroveCityOhio.gov.

We’re Social

@GroveCityOhio www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


Looking for something to do this summer? With the weather getting warmer, visit THE HEART OF GROVE CITY! Park your car and enjoy retail shopping with woman’s fashion and home decor at The Farm Table and athletic apparel at Mojo. Plan on spending the whole day shopping and enjoying great food at local restaurants like Grove City Brewing Company and Plum Run Winery, where you can enjoy a locally brewed craft beer and locally made wine. The Heart of Grove City is also proud to introduce you to The Tree of Life Chiropractic a short walk to an easy adjustment and home of Spoonful of Elderberry.

Events to Mark on Your Calendar The Farm Table Market Days (July 17, August 21)

July and August Paint Classes To register go to www.thefarmtableon62.com Select Paint Studio to find all classes and details

Meet our vendors, taste local foods and even have a chance to be artistic with Dixie Belle Paints. Don’t be surprised if you find a local food truck in our parking lot!

Tacos & Tequila (July 17)

Flowers in Bloom. Wood flower painting class. July 13 ~ 7pm Aug 19 ~ 7pm Color Me Summer Flower Pot Paint Class July 22~ 7pm Aug 10 - 7pm Paint 101 - learn to upcycle furniture July 15 - 7pm Aug 31 - 7pm

1pm – 10pm On the corner of Park Street & Broadway

Mojos on Broadway (All of July and August)

Grove City Farmer’s Market

Get all of your local apparel at Mojos this summer. Mention this ad and receive 20% off your entire purchase.

The Farm Table Vendor’s Fair (July 17) Visit thefarmtableon62.com to register or call 614-317-7233 to request a tent space and to see if your craft/products qualify for this event.

Stop by and visit local vendors like Spoonful of Elderberry for the best of the spring and summer harvest.

Bourbon Tasting (August 14)

Food Truck Nights (July 9, 23 and August 6,20)

3pm – 10pm On the corner of Park Street & Broadway

Some of Columbus’ best food trucks along with Grove City favorites visit Town Center to satisfy all your cravings.

@heartofgrovecity Patrons of Grove City Town Center are able to purchase an alcoholic beverage from an approved, liquor-permitted establishment and sip, stroll, shop and explore within the DORA boundaries.

Your proud sponsors:

thefarmtableon62.com

grovecitybrewery.com

facebook.com/MojoOnBroadway

plumrunwinery.com

spoonfulofelderberry.com

treeoflifefamilychiro.com

For more info on DORA and event updates, visit www.heartofgrovecity.org


Faces

By Sarah Robinson

Senior Center Superhero

A

fter retiring from a 35-year career with Nationwide Insurance in 2013, Dedra Thompson had no idea that her dream job was still waiting for her. And she didn’t know that dream job was actually right in front of her. “I never realized when I retired that the years worth of volunteering that I did at LifeCare Alliance would lead to a career,” she says. “That is absolutely the best job anyone could ever ask for.”

8 July/August 2021

Thompson began volunteering for LifeCare Alliance while still working at Nationwide, and it’s where she was first introduced to the Evans Center. “Once I began doing a little bit of volunteer work, an opportunity arose for a dining center coordinator at the Evans Center,” she says. “So, we talked through that opportunity and I decided to come on part-time in 2013 with LifeCare Alliance.”

Her primary job function was to go to the Evans Center every day and serve the meals delivered by LifeCare Alliance. In addition, Thompson would encourage socialization and involvement with activities and programming at the center. Her involvement with Evans Center only grew from there. “For the last two or three years, I served as the vice president there,” she says. “Once that happened, that kind www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

Photo ourtesy of Ray LaVoie Photography

Dedra Thompson is giving back to Grove City’s older adults in a big way


Photo ourtesy of Dedra Thompson

of threw me into a little bit more of the volunteerism at the center, and that was overseen by (Evans Center director) Tammy Jefferson.” Before the pandemic, the Evans Center was a place where older adults could gather, share stories and build relationships over its daily meals. Evans Center regulars had built their own community. “At one point, we had probably about 50 different folks that would come and join me for lunch, maybe once or twice a week,” Thompson says. “Sometimes I had regulars that would come five days a week. They would come not for the meal, necessarily, but for the socialization and because they’re active and they want to do other things at the center.” Last year, when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the center had to temporarily close its doors. “When we shut the doors in March, Tammy and I just looked at each other www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

Distributing grab-and-go meals from the Evans Center, December 2020: Sue Thompson, Traci Burley, Tammy Jefferson and Dedra Thompson.

and said, ‘This is just gut wrenching,’” she says, “because our seniors really need to a place to go.” So, Thompson worked with Tammy and Leah Bunck at LifeCare Alliance to arrange a grab-and-go lunch system in the parking lot of the Evans Center for older adults to drive by and have a contact-free lunch provided to them. While it wasn’t quite the same, it still provided that sense of friendship and community many of the older adults were seeking. “We started doing that last summer and continued about every two weeks doing that,” Thompson says. “We were able to be there at Thanksgiving and Christmas which seemed really important to folks to be able to stay connected to the center.” One interaction toward the beginning of the pandemic during a graband-go lunch really resonated with Thompson.

“One of the ladies (was) brought by her daughter,” she says. “(The daughter) looked at me and her mom was in the car, and she said, ‘Are any of your other seniors struggling?’ I looked at her mom, and I looked at her, and I said, ‘I think we’re all having trouble right now.’” As she tells the story, Thompson tears up – it was that moment that she truly realized the loneliness and struggle to adapt that faced so many older adults during the pandemic. Staying in touch through grab-andgo lunches, phone calls, and even text messages and social media for the often newly tech-savvy seniors was a major source of support to get through that loneliness. “We were also able to partner together to create a Facebook group for our seniors during the pandemic as part of the senior club,” says ThompJuly/August 2021 9


Dedra and Don Thompson with grandchildren Eli and Isaiah

10 July/August 2021

helps her understand and connect with her mom, LeeAnn Butcher. “When I started at the center and then later when I started volunteering more, my mom started coming twice a week to the center,” Thompson says. “She’s at Grovewood Place and she’s 84, so it’s an opportunity for me to have another view and keep a lens on what that age group experiences, what things they worry about, what things are important to them.” LeeAnn is the reason Thompson came to Grove City. When LeeAnn and husband Bernard decided to downsize and buy a house in Grove City 15 years ago, Thompson and her husband Don decided to move to the area as well with their now-adult daughter Jessica.

Bob White, longtime Evans Center member

Two of Thompson’s three sisters – Denise Parker and Debbie Harlow – still live in central Ohio, too. After Bernard passed away in 2011, the family’s bond grew even closer. “Our family is very close,” Thompson says. “My two sisters and I are able to keep mom active during the week. With dad passing, that his us all really hard, but we kind of felt that we needed to make sure we stay even closer with mom.” Keeping true to tradition, Jessica spends a lot of time with Thompson. Jessica and her husband Ron Brown www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

Photos courtesy of Dedra Thompson

son, laughing. “They have taken off. It’s got 180 members and (the older adults) own it now, so they do their thing.” It’s clear after just a short discussion with Thompson that she’s not just passionate about the acts of serving and giving back, but about the Evans Center regulars themselves. “My favorite part is that I love the seniors,” she says. “It wasn’t just about lunch. They would come in and they would talk and they would share about their family, they would share about events in their life and I grew really close to several of them.” Another perk to being involved with the center, says Thompson, is the insight she gets into older adults’ lives and what they’re going through, as it


Explore your library this summer...  Browse!  Use a computer!  Print, Copy, Scan, Fax!  Grab a Take & Make Kit!  Join us online for programs!

Summer Reading Challenge through July 31

Thompson’s mom, LeeAnn Butcher

bring their two boys, 5-year-old Eli and 2-year-old Isaiah, to visit their grandparents for lunch every Sunday. “The two little guys are our world,” Thompson says. “We’re so glad to have them and a wonderful daughter and an outstanding sonin-law.” While Thompson loves to bring Eli and Isaiah to Gantz and Windsor Park when the weather is nice, the thing she most loves about Grove City isn’t a place, but a feeling. “What I appreciate the most is the sense of community,” she says. “It’s a small group feeling, a small community feeling, and I learned that a lot from interacting with the seniors. They care about one another; they look out for one another.” It’s safe to say that the impact of working with older adults has changed Thompson’s life for the better. “It is actually, truly a dream job,” she says. Sarah Robinson is an assistant editor. Feedback welcome at srobinson@ cityscenemediagroup.com. www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

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July/August 2021 11


Development – A Different Take on Multi-

A

lthough complete 2020 Census results won’t be available until mid-August, the data are expected to reveal Ohioans age 60 and older now outnumber those under age 20. Grove City has been planning for the steady rise in olderaged residents as the Baby Boom generation brings an increased demand for affordable, low-maintenance and accessible housing. The trending shift in the aging population, combined with the general growth of the Echo Boomers population (the children of Baby Boomers) brings both challenges and opportunities to Grove City development. The challenge is to provide our 55plus community with low-maintenance housing opportunities that complement active lifestyles within a reasonably close distance to family. The opportunities presented by the evolving development include homes with access to the same trails and open space opportunities found in larger-lot, single-family subdivisions in close proximity to extended family. smaller lots and single-story homes tarThe newest, primarily single-family geted for an older demographic. home developments (Farmstead, Trail The Beulah Park development incorView Run and Pinnacle Quarry) include porates a wide variety of living options –

The Farmstead community includes more than three miles of paved walking/biking paths with scenic views winding through the neighborhood.

multi-family living, single-family homes, condominiums and assisted living – giving relatives in all stages of life the ability to come together in a single development.

Just beyond the larger, singlefamily homes of Trail View Run are single-story houses with smaller lots, intended for lower-maintenance living. 12 July/August 2021

www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


Generational Living Intergenerational living is not a new concept. Since the early 1900s it has been common for American homes to have multiple generations and extended relatives living under one roof; however, the desire for suburban living with a more separated nuclear family became the norm due to overcrowding in cities. New developments aim to create the opportunity for multi-generational living while incorporating the amenities found in modern Architectural rendering of a condo planned for the Pinnacle Quarry development. residential communities. Residents who have called Grove nance living as developers integrate the City home for most of their lives are changing needs of our community. gaining greater access to low-mainte-

Council Briefs A Season of Making Lemonade

Y

ou remember the saying “Make lemonade out of lemons.” Well, this pandemic gave my wife Twinkle and I just that opportunity. Many of our social activities such as dining out and going to plays and movies were not available during the shutdown. So how did we make lemonade out of our COVID-19 isolation? We enjoyed the beautiful parks in Grove City, including Scioto Grove Metro Park. We also went on Saturday daytrips to a variety of parks to do some hiking and picnicking. One of our favorite areas is Clifton Gorge State Nature Preserve and John Bryan State Park, both just south of Springfield. The gorge is an example of a fastflowing stream eroding through softer sandstone. The lower trail is within the gorge, next to the stream with large boulders and falls from the rim. It is fun to hike but you need to pay attention to where your next step will be. The upper trail is much easier to hike, with beautiful views of the lower gorge. At the south end of the gorge is the Historic Clifton Mill Restaurant www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

where we like to get carryout, sit outside and enjoy a great meal. There are two parks, Flint Ridge and Blackhand Gorge State Nature Preserve, east of Newark and north of Zanesville where we hiked. Both are part of the original Native American inhabitant settlements where they mined flint for their arrows and spear points. Both have excellent trails and mostly level hiking. During our time of isolation, we traveled to these parks on separate Saturdays. Both times we stopped at the delightful village of Granville on the way home and enjoyed a pizza from Elm’s Pizza Parlor as we sat in front of the library on the main square. Once our friends found out what we were doing, they started sending us location suggestions for our day trips. One of the best suggestions, as it turned out, was from City Administrator Chuck Boso, and it was close to home. He sent us a link to Walnut Woods Metro Park off Richardson Road near Groveport. He highlighted the Tall Pines section of the park. Boy was he right! The paved trails meander through

Grove City Council members, (clockwise, starting top left): Roby Schottke, Ward 4; Christine Houk, Council President, Ward 3; Ted Berry, Ward 1; Aaron Schlabach, At-Large and Randy Holt, Ward 2.

stands of tall pine trees and in the snow, the scene looked like a fairy tale forest. These are just a few places we traveled. We began looking forward to our “pandemic Saturdays,” as we now call them. We found great places to hike, to picnic, and a way to isolate outdoors while having fun. Roby Schottke Council Member, Ward 4 July/August 2021 13


InFocus

By Brandon Klein

Parks and Recreation Month

Department leaders reflect on decades of growth

K

The Heritage Celebration at Century Village at Fryer Park features the Ohio Village Muffins versus Century Village Greyhounds in an old time baseball game.

14 July/August 2021

Photos courtesy of Grove City Parks and Recreation Department

elly Sutherland says she struggles to explain what she does as Grove City’s parks and recreation superintendent. “There’s so much that we do,” she says. The department is involved in a huge number of city activities, so even the most involved Grove City resident might not know all that Sutherland and her team have played a part in creating. As the department celebrates National Parks and Recreation Month in July, its leaders reflect on the department’s growth over the last 30 years. Since the city established a Parks and Recreation Department with a director and staff in 1973 replacing the parks department set up in 1966 under the guidance of a park board, it has grown in terms of staff, programming, facilities and operations, says Kim Conrad, director of the Grove City Parks and Recreation Department, who has been with the department since the 1980s. Not only does it interact with many local government departments and programs, it offers something for everyone. “We do everything from, I want to say, from cradle to Kids go down the slide at Gantz Park. grave with people in our community,” Conrad says.

www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


That includes numerous events offered year round, preschool programming, youth and adult sports, more than 125 different courses every two months (which you can find in The Source section of any Discover Grove City magazine), and socialization activities for older adults. In addition, it provides a helping hand to several other organizations such as with LifeCare Alliance to serve hot meals at the Evans Center, American Red Cross to conduct blood drives on a monthly basis, Heart of Grove City for its special events in the historic town center and programming with the Southwest Franklin County Historical Society. In the early years, the department had a few programmers, a director and several support staff, operating out of the old municipal building on Park Street, where the police station now sits. Staff relocated several times including to

Westgrove Park

Parks and Recreation’s Top 5 The daily after-school childcare Grove City Parks and Recreation Director Kim Conrad highlights the de- program takes place in the gymnasipartment’s five most popular programs: ums at Buckeye Woods, J.C. Sommer, Highland Park, Monterey and Youth team sports: The city Richard Avenue elementary schools. It offers basketball, baseball and volley- runs from 2:40-6 p.m. every day that ball throughout the year. In 2019, prior the SWCSD is in session. Qualified to the pandemic, there were 2,336 childcare providers staff each site. youth participants in fall baseball, basPreschool programing: ketball, volleyball and Little League Parks and recreation introduces chil(spring-summer) baseball. dren as young as 2 years old to a Programmed After-school variety of recreational activities. RecRecreation for Kids (P.A.R.K.): School in Gantz Park offers children The P.A.R.K. before- and after-school ages 3-4 nature and play-based childcare program offers a safe place activities to encourage learning and for children to be when not in school, prepare them for kindergarten. The where they stay physically, men- department also partners with outside tally and socially active. After-school organizations such as JumpBunch to P.A.R.K. operates conveniently at five teach early team sports skills and Bally South-Western City School District Sports Group to offer Little Sluggers Telementary schools serving kindergar- ball & Mini-soccer Stars for children ten through grade four. Before-school ages 3-4. P.A.R.K., which also serves intermediGardening: Parks and recreate school students, is located in the Kingston Center and includes trans- ation has several garden-themed proportation to schools not within walk- grams and activities centered at the ing distance provided by the SWCSD Gardens at Gantz Farm and the historic Transportation Department. Gantz farmhouse. The gardens provide www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

a look at horticulture through time. Park staff and volunteers have developed three main gardens to demonstrate a wide range of styles from the past and present and emerging styles, too. The Garden Sprouts program teaches children gardening from sowing to harvesting. Many classes for all ages are held in the farmhouse that use herbs for cooking, crafts and more. Older adults: Parks and recreation offers several programs for older adults through the Evans Center. People ages 55 and older can visit the center for daily and weekly activities such as exercise and yoga, card and board games, arts and crafts opportunities, and performing arts like chorus and drama. It is home to a variety of parks and recreation classes and the starting point for trips to local restaurants, theaters and shopping destinations as well as longer overnight trips. While closed for the pandemic, the center has been renovated to provide even better services for Grove City’s older population when it reopens.

July/August 2021 15


locations such as the historic farmhouse at Gantz Park and City Hall before settling in its current home at the Kingston Center in 2016. The department has grown and enhanced its programming. “When the Big Splash opened (in 1999), we were able to grow that program and that’s become a much bigger summertime program,” Conrad says. The department has its finger on the pulse of what attracts visitors and residents. Department staff constantly assess new and existing programs to determine if one needs to be added, replaced or removed altogether. In the early years, for instance, Conrad says the department used to offer an arts academy but shelved it years ago. The department could always bring it back at a later time, she adds. “We tried to look at what the national trends are,” Conrad says. “A great example is that back in the mid2000s, skate parks were all the rage. And so, we ended up building a skate park back in 2007 and we offered skating lessons or skateboarding lessons for quite a while. … There’s still a lot of interest in those facilities.” The department’s analysis of recreational trends along with community input led it to add pickleball courts, giving community members of all ages the space to play the sport. You can read more about Grove City’s pickleball enthusiasm in the March/April 2021 issue or online at www.discovergrovecity.com. Garden Sprouts’ Children’s Garden at Gantz Farm. Aside from new sports, parks and recreation helped boost a longtime recreational activity in City’s affiliation with Little League launched in 1950 with Grove City: Youth baseball has a long history in the com- hundreds of youth participating over the years. Although the munity, well before a parks department was founded. Grove city owned and maintained Windsor Park, home of the youth baseball diamonds, the department did not take over the youth baseball program until 1998. By that time, the affiliation with Little League had lapsed. In 2013, Grove City again established a connection with Little League, Sutherland says. The department has several projects on deck including development of the 30-acre green space reserved for a park in In July, the Grove City Parks and Recreation Departthe Beulah Park development, the space in the Town Center ment will offer the following activities: formerly occupied by the Grove City Library, and develop• 31 miles: Learn the Grove City Trail System by ment of the 34-acre Pinnacle Area Park located near the inspending the month of July biking, hiking, running or tersection of Holton and Hoover roads including trails, a play walking 31 miles in 31 days. The city will highlight its area and shelters. No matter what style of recreation you love, Grove City Parks and Recreation has something for you – or park trails via Facebook and its website. will very soon. • Pop-up park visits “We’ve got a lot on the horizon,” Conrad says.

Park and Recreation Month Activities

Details are being finalized. For more information, visit www.GroveCityOhio.gov. 16 July/August 2021

Brandon Klein is the editor. Feedback welcome at bklein@ cityscenemediagroup.com. www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


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To the Rescue Animals need shelters and shelters need us By Mallory Arnold

A

Speak for the Unspoken’s Paula Biancone, head of Animal Welfare, Andrea Kochensparger, executive director and Megan Doty, volunteer.

dogs have to eat their food in specialized chairs, essentially highchairs for dogs. While this is something she doesn’t see

Photos courtesy of Speak for the Unspoken

ndrea Kochensprager thinks deaf dogs are awesome. The director of Speak for the Unspoken, a fosterbased rescue with roots in Grove City but extends throughout central Ohio, works with impaired and injured dogs almost every day. The organization began with a focus on rescuing deaf and blind dogs, particularly Australian shepherds who are often improperly bred and produce impaired puppies. While some may assume these differently-abled pups might be more difficult to adopt out, Kochensprager says it just takes meeting one to know how amazing they are. “Deaf dogs are great,” she says. “First of all, they don’t get scared of fireworks, loud noises, and don’t get all worked up when cars honk or fire engines go by.” She also stresses that the bond deaf dogs have with their owners is incredible. “The bond they build with you is so intense because they’re always looking at you,” she says. “They’re watching for instructions because that’s the way they communicate.” Today, Speak for the Unspoken takes in dogs with all kinds of medical issues. Most recently, the organization has taken in two dogs with megaesophagus, a disorder in which the esophagus dilates and loses motility. Because of this, the

Beverly Hanson, volunteer, holding Rusty with Starla laying on the ground. The dogs are blind and at the time of publication available for adoption. 20 July/August 2021

www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


“Evangeline is a deaf catahoula mix. She’s a big sweetheart and Kochensprager says she can play, play, play all day. She’d be an amazing running partner,” she says. “She’s going to daycare a few days a week so she can play with other dogs. She definitely needs someone who wants to give her a lot of exercise. She’s fabulous.” often, Kochensprager knows that by educating the public about the disorder, these dogs will find a loving home just like any other pups. “You just have to meet these dogs and understand that they’re just like any dogs that have four legs,” she says. “They get along just fine.”

A Million Things to Do While fostering is one of the most important facets of Speak for the Unspoken, there are plenty of other ways to volunteer. “People don’t understand that running an animal rescue is like running a small business,” Kochensprager says. “We need people who understand finance, who do data entries, who can come to adoption events and hang out with the dogs, who can transport dogs – there are a million other things that happen in the background of our system.”

Amy Morris Dudley and Craig Dudley, right and center, with the adopters of a litter the two fostered.

She says that social media and graphic design volunteers are always welcome, as the organization needs creative people to help get their message out to the world. “One of the things that I tell our volunteers is that I want them doing something they enjoy,” Kochensprager says.

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Konrad Rutgers with a Great Dane.

Speak for the Unspoken works with injured dogs.

dogs and to see them come out of their shells and know they are going to be loved for a long time.” For more information about how to volunteer or foster at Speak for the Unspoken, visit www.speakforthe unspoken.com.

“Volunteers tend to stick around longer if they’re doing something they like to do here.” For example, Kochensprager is a lawyer by trade, but she doesn’t always do the legal work behind Speak for the Unspoken, because she’s passionate about other aspects of the organization.

“We Need Help”

Sweet Success There are too many success stories to recount, but in May, Kochensprager experienced one rescue that was particularly rewarding. A miniature pinscher named Maple came in with cataracts, a condition that affects vision. Luckily, in some cases, this is reversible. Thanks to Speak for the Unspoken, Maple will see again. “It’s amazing to restore vision to a dog,” Kochensprager says. “It’s one thing if they’re born blind, but it’s another when they lose vision slowly because it’s confusing and they don’t understand what’s happening.” Even though it’s brutal and heartbreaking seeing dogs brought to the or22 July/August 2021

Abby and Spencer Bates. Abby is the Speak for the Unspoken’s social media lead.

ganization injured, mistreated, abused or straight from a puppy mill, the growth Kochensprager and the Speak for the Unspoken fosters get to see is worth it all. “Some dogs come to us and haven’t ever been out of a cage before – they’ve never touched grass,” Kochensprager says. “One of the most rewarding things that our fosters do is work with those

Lisa Oliver, director of Columbus Pet Rescue, lives in Grove City. In her neighborhood alone, she’s found 93 stray, homeless cats and kittens. Grove City has been home base for the foster-based nonprofit for a number of years, but works all around Columbus to rescue animals in need. “We’re just a collection of people trying to improve the welfare of animals and aren’t okay with the state that we find them in – disposed and uncared for,” Oliver says. With the number of animals volunteers see every day, the rescue is in dire need of support. Oliver says a ton of work goes into a single rescued animal and the costs add up. The rescue needs funds for medical treatment, whether for fleas, ticks and parasites or more serious injuries that require emergency services. Plus, basic vet care is necessary as well. Oliver says www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

Photos courtesy of Speak for the Unspoken

To volunteer or learn more about how to help Columbus Pet Rescue, visit www.columbuspetrescue.com


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Three reasons to adopt an adult cat: 1. Adult cats are less in demand, so you’re doing an important good deed by bringing one home. 2. You know what you’re getting into – adult cats have established personalities, so you know if you’re getting an energetic rocket or a relaxed, couch potato cat. You also already know if a cat is OK with being around other cats, dogs or kids. 3. You can sleep through the night. Kittens are known to be wild at night. If you want to skip that phase of kitten-rearing, an adult cat is for you. by the time they have an animal ready to adopt, the average amount that’s been spent is around $500 – and that’s for an uncomplicated case. The Columbus Pet Rescue spent $40,000 on supplies at PetSmart last year. Fostering, however, is one of the most important ways you can help. “You have to have transportation, the proper space and the desire to help,” Oliver says. “We want a foster home to be a secure, comfortable place where an animal can adapt.” Mallory Arnold is an associate editor. Feedback welcome at marnold@ cityscenemediagroup.com. www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

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Eight-Time Winner Grove City collects eight 2021 Best of the ’Bus awards By Mallory Arnold

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rove City is known to show up time and time again for CityScene’s Best of the ’Bus awards. Every year, Grove City is by far the most active community supporting its nominated people, organizations and businesses. The 2021 Best of the ’Bus awards crowned eight Grove City winners. This is the winners’ celebratory parade.

Best Suburban Art Gallery/Gallery Event

Grove City Arts in the Alley

The Arts in the Alley Music and Arts Festival has been a pivotal part of Grove City for almost 42 years. Every year, hundreds of juried exhibitors gather in the area to show off photography, jewelry, fine art, crafts, glasswork, pottery and more. While the 2020 event had to pivot to a digital version, the alteration was perhaps a more permanent way for people to interact with art online. The 2021 event is projected to be in-person, however, many of last year’s visitors can return to

2021 Grove City Arts in the Alley Sept. 18-19, 2021 Saturday: 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. Sunday: 11 a.m.-5 p.m. www.gcchamber.org 24 July/August 2021

the digital Arts in the Alley to remind them of all the unique entertainment and art there.

Best Brewery

Grove City Brewing Company

It was no contest as to who would take first place in this Best of the ’Bus category. From the start, Grove City Brewing Company was ahead of other nominations by a large margin. This could be due to Grove City’s love for the flagship brew, Beulah Blonde, or newer additions such as Jolly Red Velvet, a collaboration with Grove City Jolly Pirate Donuts. Part of the 2021 Best of the ’Bus award should be shared with head brewer Trevor Luther for his video series, Trevor’s Brew Diaries. Whether he’s talking about new Irish beers while eating Lucky Charms cereal, taking a tour of Rustic Brew Farm in Marysville or pairing Christmas cookies with craft brews, Luther is the type of guy you want to sit down and grab a beer with. Discover Grove City Magazine’s favorite: Mahooley’s Oatmeal Stout.

Best Fitness Classes

Grove City Orangetheory

On the opposite side of the spectrum from sitting down for a beer at Grove City Brewing Company, Grove City Orangetheory proves fitness really is a marathon, not a sprint. There were some fierce contenders in the 2021 Best Fitness www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


During the most sequestered time of the pandemic, Orangetheory released free virtual workouts to keep people upbeat, moving and safe.

Best Pizza

Massey’s Pizza

One of the most sought-after awards is the Best of the ’Bus Best Pizza, and with the help of Grove City fans and 155 pepperonis on every large pizza, Massey’s takes the crown this year. It takes a unique taste to be the best, and Massey’s took

Classes category, but Grove City Orangetheory kept its head down and sweated it out to the top. Orangetheory is a heart rate-based HIIT total body group workout. Participants wear heart rate monitors so real time results are displayed on screens throughout the studio. The unique aspect of Orangetheory is that everyone’s heart rate zones and levels are going to be different, so trainees are able to see if they’re making the most out of their workout. While Orangetheory is a franchise, the Grove City location in particular is active in the community, known for getting to know their trainees personally and spreading positivity. The #TuesdayTestimony features a new member each week and there’s even a “brag board” to praise hardworking trainees.

www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

July/August 2021 25


the cake (or should we say pie) with the limited time April Cajun shrimp alfredo pizza on cauliflower crust. Of course, the crowning glory of Massey’s is the world-famous pepperoni pizza, filled with so much pepperoni it’s impossible to see a shred of cheese. Discover Grove City Magazine favorite: The godfather Si- – it has been necessary. Volunteers became essential so that cilian deep dish pan pizza. those in need could still feed their families. In 2020, MidOhio delivered 74 million pounds of food to 600,000 famiBest Volunteer Experience lies. Plus, more than 60 percent of the food delivered is fresh, not canned. Perhaps one of the most deserving, the Mid-Ohio Food “During these uncertain times, we are here with you and Collective won the Best Volunteer Experience. Considering for you!” Mid-Ohio Foodbank tweeted Nov. 13, 2020. “If you the last few years, Mid-Ohio has been more than a blessing or someone you know is in need of food and groceries, please reach out to us. We are happy to connect fresh and shelf-stable foods to all our families in need.” One of the most recent programs Mid-Ohio has launched is the Rooted In You project, a $30 million campaign to reimagine ending hunger in central Ohio. “I often say our work has to matHOMESTEAD VILLAGE SAVES YOU UP TO ter to our hungry neighbors, or it’s not worth doing,” says Mid-Ohio Food Collective President and CEO Matt Habash. Rooted In You focuses on changing the way food pantries are viewed. The campaign moves to create more VILLAGE COST OF AVG COST OF pantries that mirror the grocery store SENIOR APARTMENTS SENIOR APARTMENTS experience with roomy aisles, attracVS tive lighting and convenient hours. $3,100/MONTH $989/MONTH Not only that, but the campaign will allow customers the chance to connect with health care officials, housing support staff, job training professionals and childcare facilities. “This is a moment of transformation,” Habash says. “One that is Homestead -Village.com | 1-833-455-PLUS Rooted In You.” *Utilities and Prices May Vary | *Mention Ad for Waived Fees

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Best Barbecue

City Barbeque

A staple in the community, Grove City’s City Barbeque clinched the title of Best Barbeque with little to no competition. Ask anyone on the street and they’ll tell you that the restaurant is the epitome of BBQ. Not only is the beef brisket mouthwatering and the Nashville hot chicken spicy, but the Grove City team works to highlight and appreciate their staff. City Barbeque names a teammate of the month and often features them on social media. Plus, 26 July/August 2021

www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


baked goods, homemade jellies, flowers, fresh produce and unique boutique-style products. Plus, with three ways to shop – delivery, pick-up and in-person – this market was the go-to place during the 2020-21 pandemic. Even under tight 2020 COVID-19 safety regulations, the market saw an average of 500-700 shoppers safely shopping each Saturday. The market is open through September 5.

Mallory Arnold is an associate editor. Feedback welcome at the Grove City location proudly supports dozens of commu- marnold@cityscenemediagroup.com. nity organizations and groups such as the National Canine Cander Foundation, Grove City Band Boosters, Leukemia & Lymphoma Society and more.

Best Jewelry Store

Myers Jewelers

Myers Jewelers won perhaps the shiniest Best of the ‘Bus award, snagging the Best Jewelry category. The family business has been in the community since 1966 and combined as a team boasts over 200 years of jewelry experience. With an emphasis on detail, the store always has a collection of gorgeous watches, engagement rings and more.

Best Farmers’ Market Experience

Grove City Farmers Market

With so many great farmers markets in Columbus, this Best of the ‘Bus category is always a nail biter. Grove City Farmers Market pulled out on top, proving yet again how enthusiastic and prideful Grove City residents are of their community. The market is one of the most colorful in Central Ohio and showcases www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

July/August 2021 27


Student Spotlight

By Sarah Grace Smith

Anne Wilcox, Maddie Wilcox’s mother, Wilcox, Sean Wilcox, Wilcox’s, and Wilcox’s sister, Kennedy Wilcox, get a family photo on senior night for Wilcox’s softball team.

For GCHS senior Maddie Wilcox, it’s the softball diamond

W

hen Maddie Wilcox grew up playing coed baseball, she never dreamed that she could play softball in college. When 8-year-old Wilcox started playing girls’ softball for a travel team at the recommendation of a neighbor, she often found herself last on the bench. “She was a terrible player, honestly,” says her father, Sean Wilcox, with a laugh. “She would get into the last inning and strike out and go back to the bench and cry.” Sean did what any parent would do: He agreed to help his daughter succeed 28 July/August 2021

in what she loved however he could – even if it meant quitting his job. “She said she really, really wanted to play,” he says. “So I made the decision since she was my last daughter to quit coaching football and dedicate my time to her.” The father-daughter duo trained hitting 157 days straight in their basement. They didn’t take any off days, not even Christmas Eve, Christmas Day or New Year’s. Their hard work and major dedication paid off in a big way. By the time the next season came around in the spring, 9-year-old Wilcox was ready.

The Grove City High School softball team went 28-2, setting a record of 20 straight wins to open the season, and won the OCC League Championship. WIlcox finished with a batting average of .448 and her on base percentage was .558. She made first team all-league and was second team all-district. “I ended up proving myself,” she says. “I got to start and batted second. I actually ended up being really good, and I was one of the best on the team after working so hard.” Wilcox went on to play softball in high school. Her freshman year, she made varsity and all-district, and she was awarded second team Ohio Capital Conference. She even batted first. “I went into high school not even knowing if I was gonna start,” she says. “I kept getting opportunities and I ended up starting. … The older girls pushed me to do better.” Her dad was proud to have a daughter playing for Grove City High School under Ted Williams, a hall of fame softball coach. “He definitely gets the best out of all the girls,” Sean says. “I can’t thank him enough for how hard he’s been able www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

Photos courtesy of Maddie Wilcox

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Senior Year Stats


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July/August 2021 29


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to push Maddie. His proven track record over the years has been exceptional. … It’s the best program at Grove City High School.” During her freshman year, Wilcox injured her hip. However, like that 157day commitment she’d once made, she dedicated herself to her physical therapy and training regimen, and soon she was good as new. Her sophomore year she was first team OCC and third team all-state Division I. Her previous travel coach, Tom Schmeiser of the Ohio Outlaws, was grateful to have her on the team. “She was definitely one of (our leaders),” he says. “She’s everything you’d ask for. She’d give you 100 percent and then some.” Schmeiser says that the goal of the Ohio Outlaws before it was dissolved was to help softball players get recruited. With the team, Wilcox traveled to places such as California, Colorado and Wilcox dressed up for senior prom night. www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

Photos courtesy of Maddie Wilcox

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Wilcox receives her award at the all-state softball banquet in her sophomore year.

New Jersey to be seen by scouts. With the Ohio Outlaws, Wilcox set a record for the most homeruns in a season. Despite her success, she never forgot she was part of a team – and there to have fun. “In between an inning she’ll be dancing in the outfield,” says Sean. “She’ll try to make you laugh. She’s always trying to pick up her teammates.” On the first day that college coaches were allowed to contact potential recruits, Wilcox set an Ohio Outlaw team record for most phone calls received by coaches with more than 10. She was heavily recruited by many Division I schools, but she decided on Ohio University. “I’ve always wanted to go there since I was a little girl,” she says. “It really is just like a dream come true.” Wilcox attributes her success to her dad, without whom she says she doesn’t know where she’d be. “My coach has been my dad,” she says. “We’ve gone through this entire process together. It’s just so cool, all that we’ve gone through.” Sarah Grace Smith is an editorial assistant. Feedback welcome at feedback@ cityscenemediagroup.com. www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

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Living

By Sarah Robinson

On the Flip Side Two local couples flip homes in Grove City

W

atch enough HGTV and you’re bound to convince yourself you’re ready to flip a home. For most of us, that urge goes away when we turn off the TV. For others, flipping homes is just what they do. Flipping homes just fell into Jara Palmer’s lap when she and husband David Palmer decided to team up with friends and lifelong Grove City residents Janelle and Brent Goldbach seven years ago. “(None) of us had any experience with it before,” Palmer says. “We just had a dream for our families. … We saw the value in owning our own business and working for ourselves.” Everyone on the GoldTree Ventures team has their own unique role. Palmer, a licensed real estate agent, works primarily on the buying and selling aspect of the properties. Janelle runs the social media channels, and David and Brent provide the muscle, doing most of the hands-on work involved in flipping a home alongside contractors from time to time. Even the kids get involved, if only to provide some comic relief and excitement. The kids, 7- and 5-year-old Coen and Kaia Palmer and 3and 1-year-old Macie and Mya Goldbach, tag along to look at houses when their parents are on the prowl for a new property. “They think that every house that we go into is going to be theirs,” says Palmer, laughing. “They always pick out their own bedrooms in the houses and fight over who gets what.” When the group got started, they primarily flipped houses to resell, then moved into renovating apartments for longterm leases. “We have had a real estate investment business for about seven years now,” Palmer says. “We wanted to diversify into Airbnbs to differentiate between different aspects of our busi32 July/August 2021

Palmer says one thing that people may not know about turning a home into an Airbnb is the need for durable furniture and furnishings. Between guests coming in and out and the constant cleaning, Airbnbs get a lot of wear and tear! www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

Photos courtesy of Photos courtesy of Jara Palmer

Left to right: Brent and Janelle Goldbach, Jara and David Palmer

ness office, and Airbnb was kind of popular a few years ago. So, we decided to go for it.” The team is mainly interested in single-family homes with at least three bedrooms. “We typically want homes that offer more space for families, a larger group of friends, just any sort of larger group to be able to stay together,” Palmer says, “as opposed to in a hotel room where everybody’s separate, there’s really no living space, there’s no kitchen, there’s no back yard to hang out in.” The team flips homes all over Columbus, but Palmer says they prefer to look at homes in Grove City. At first, she says, they weren’t sure if anyone would want to stay in Grove City, but the booming success of their Airbnb, which opened in fall 2018, said otherwise. “It just seems that it’s a really good location,” she says. “We get a lot of people coming to do something in Columbus. Berliner (Sports Park)’s a big draw, especially in the summer with all the softball and baseball games they have over there, and a lot of people just coming to visit family in the area.” While the team and their house-flipping ventures have been hugely successful, many houses start out in tough shape and need a lot of work to get ready for guests. “Most of our homes that we buy are not in the best condition,” Palmer says. “We actually got one at a sheriff sale auction and so it was really run down and not well kept. When


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you buy a house like that, … it’s dirty. So it’s a pretty big undertaking, but that’s how you can get good houses.” Palmer says the fun thing about transforming homes into Airbnbs as opposed to flipping and selling is when it comes to time to decorate. “As far as renovations go, we try to keep things pretty neutral,” Palmer says. “That tends to appeal to the most people. All of our renovations include fresh paint, new flooring throughout and then we typically do an upgraded countertop. Those are the big things.”

Big Dreams, Tiny Home Next on the horizon for GoldTree Ventures is the team’s first ever tiny home. “We just saw an opportunity where a little piece of property came up for sale and we grabbed it,” Palmer says. “We have some really cool ideas with how we are going to turn 500-some square feet. So pretty small now, it’s all open. It’s more like a loft feel. There’s going to be a loft bed, everything’s just scaled down, a really small kitchen.” Unlike the typical home the team would turn into an Airbnb, this tiny home will not have three bedrooms. 34 July/August 2021

“It might just have one or two but we’re hoping that the appeal of something different and people wanting to try what it’s like to stay in a tiny house for a little bit will draw people in,” Palmer says. While the group only just acquired the home to start working on, they’re all excited about the big ideas they have for the eensy abode. “We’d like to provide some outdoor space since the inside is not that big, especially for the spring through fall

here,” Palmer says. “So probably a fire pit, maybe a nice patio where you can go outside and not feel like you’re in a tiny space the whole time.” And the best part about the tiny home? It’s right here in Grove City. Just like the GoldTree Ventures team and so many more projects-to-be. Sarah Robinson is an assistant editor. Feedback welcome at srobinson@ cityscenemediagroup.com. www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


Art Fur Park

Artist Ken Valimaki shares the story of his Breck Community Park dog sculpture By Helen Widman

O

ver the years, Breck Community Park has been a prime destination for dogs and their owners, but the park is also home to two permanent canines. However, you won’t find these pups playing catch or chasing squirrels – after all, they’re made of aluminum. Ken Valimaki, an Ohio native, artist and educator, created the sculpture Woof!Woof! of two dogs who loyally watch over Breck Community Park day in and out. Valimaki originally took inspiration from his own Afghan hound dogs, Corbu and Ando, named after a famous artist and architect. In 2016, Grove City residents reviewed and voted on various artist proposals for Breck Community Park. Valimaki

Photo courtesy of City of Grove City

The unveiling of Woof!Woof! sculpture by Ken Valimaki in October 2018.

entered the winning sculpture which was dedicated on Oct. 21, 2018. Dennise Hunt, vice president of Grove City Arts Council, explains the council partnered with Grove City Parks and Recreation to hold the contest and the entries were displayed at public festivals before the vote began. www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

July/August 2021 35


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Contact Gianna Barrett at gbarrett@ cityscenemediagroup.com or 614-572-1255

Professional Photographer Digital files for your use Credit Cards,Venmo and PayPal Accepted

Family Portraits 614-323-6314 or Ray@raylavoie.com to book your session

“The arts council partnered with parks and rec to run a contest to get that sculpture chosen and the public responded very well,” Hunt says. The sculpture is eight feet tall and sits on a bed of concrete. The dogs are made of aluminum, which Valimaki says is much easier to work with than other materials due to its lighter weight. “We were happy with the sculpture, it was a nice thing,” Valimaki says. “And I’ve met friends and people that I don’t even know that have reacted to it in a positive way. (It) put a smile on their face. I told him to bring their dogs and put (them) near the sculpture and photograph their dogs and people next to it and so forth.” Valimaki earned two degrees from The Ohio State University in fine arts and art education. He now has a studio in Hilliard where he works with partners Michael Liscano and Kin Yu, both of whom are his former students. Valimaki says the group is known for its 250 flamingo sculptures. “We’re known for flamingos that are like seven feet tall of aluminum, painted and very stylized so … it was sort of a comical, whimsical piece and it turned out to be fun for us,” Valimaki says. Valimaki enjoys creating his art through a collaborative process. “I like the idea of working with other people because, first of all, we help each other,” Valimaki says. “And the people that I work with are very positive about doing things. … What has been interesting is meeting people that we’ve done work for (who) appreciate what we’re doing.” Throughout his art career, Valimaki continues to live by his own philosophy. “My philosophy in life, even with my students, was, ‘Keep the art alive,’” he says. “And that means whether it’s writing, it’s fine art, if it’s music, whatever. Promote it with your own family, with other people and with other kids.” Helen Widman is an editorial assistant. Feedback welcome at feedback@ cityscenemediagroup.com.

36 July/August 2021

www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


what’s your style?

Jerry Ziglar O: (614) 486-0101 M: (614) 893-9566

Michelle Marie (614) 270-9909 mmrealtor4u@gmail.com

2077 Gingerwood LUXURY HOME IN GROVE CITY “SOLD”. Formal living and dining rooms, family room, Large kitchen with updated appliances, bay window, Kitchen nook leading to concrete patio.Master suite with Garden tub and separate shower. First floor laundry with mudroom and utility sink.

Greens at Pinnacle. Large first-floor master suite 2 additional bedrooms and huge loft / bonus room / rec room / den upstairs! Soaring vaulted ceilings throughout! Island kitchen with stainless steel appliances and 42’’ cabinets. Stamped concrete patio with privacy fence. Very well maintained. Washer and dryer convey.

Signature Real Estate

Heart and Home Realty

Top homes sold in Grove City All information is collected from the Franklin County Auditor’s Office.

1114 Pinnacle Club Dr. 4 beds 2.5 baths $735,000 Sold on 4/26/2021

3740 Backstretch Way 3 beds 3 baths $458,275 Sold on 5/28/2021

1618 Pinnacle Club Dr. 4 beds 3.5 baths $700,000 Sold on 5/28/2021

1908 Mallow Ln. 4 beds 3.5 baths $455,000 Sold on 6/1/2021

1667 Hartig Dr. 4 beds 4.5 baths $610,000 Sold on 4/26/2021

6041 Grant Run Pl. 3 beds 3.5 baths $450,000 Sold on 5/13/2021

4758 Hunting Creek Dr. 3 beds 2 baths $499,999 Sold on 5/28/2021

6108 Honey Farm Way 3 beds 3.5 baths $435,884 Sold on 4/21/2021

4907 McNulty St. 4 beds 5 baths $475,000 Sold on 5/6/2021

1411 Ironwood Dr. 3 beds 2 baths $435,000 Sold on 4/23/2021

Showcase your home listings to every homeowner in Grove City. Your listings will also appear in the digital edition of the magazine, hosted on the Discover Grove City home page: www.discovergrovecity.com Contact Gianna Barrett today for more information: gbarrett@cityscenemediagroup.com 614-572-1255 www.DiscoverGroveCity.com

July/August 2021 37


Bookmarks

Recommendations from Southwest Public Libraries — Grove City Library

The library continues to serve the community responsibly with creativity and innovation. Services subject to change according to current health and safety developments. Stay up-to-date at swpl.org. Honoring strong women everywhere! Did you know Aug. 26 is Women’s Equality Day? It’s a fight that is still being fought today. So, in honor of all the women who have struggled for equality and still struggle for equality, try one of these titles featuring strong female protagonists, women who are powerful, capable, intelligent, independent. Grandma Gatewood’s Walk: The Inspiring Story of the Woman Who Saved the Appalachian Trail (Bio/memoir) by Ben Montgomery Not only did this gutsy 67-year-old Ohio mother of 11 and grandmother of 23 hike the Appalachian Trail solo, and was the first woman to ever do so, she did it three times. Gatewood’s exploits brought national attention to the state of hikers’ trails and made Americans more aware of the joys of walking and of nature itself.

The Right Sort of Man (Sparks & Bainbridge Mystery, book one of three) by Allison Montclair Worldly adventuress Miss Sparks and sheltered young widow Mrs. Bainbridge team up to form a “marriage bureau” post-WWII. Strong, complex, well-developed characters run a matchmaking business, solve a murder, share life skills and secrets, and stand up for themselves. Funny banter and female friendship are hallmarks of this mystery series debut.

Upright Women Wanted (Fiction) by Sarah Gailey In the future American southwest, specific reading material and certain ways of life are strictly prohibited. Esther stows away on the librarian’s traveling book wagon to escape an arranged marriage and learns that a quiet resistance can be just as effective as fighting.

The Silvered (Fantasy) by Tanya Huff Miriam is a mage of meager talents, and Tomas is a young werewolf whose pack protects the country. When a foreign army kidnaps five powerful mages for dark experiments, Miriam and Tomas find themselves the only ones who can save them. This book is serious in tone with unique worldbuilding.

The Ladies of Covington Send Their Love (Fiction) by Joan A. Medlicott Old friends Amelia, Hannah and Grace are all facing difficult situations. The rising cost of living is one thing, but then Hannah’s grown children start pressuring her to move to a “home.” When Amelia inherits a house in Covington, North Carolina, they decide to band together to take charge of their lives and make their “senior years” both fun and rewarding.

Mystic and Rider (Fantasy) by Sharon Shinn Unrest grows in the kingdom over the tolerance of those with magical abilities called mystics. As the situation becomes more dangerous, the mystic Senneth and her traveling companions encounter adventure, intrigue, politics, prejudice and perhaps romance.

Killing Trail: A Timber Creek K-9 Mystery (Mystery) by Margaret Mizushima Mattie and her K-9 partner Robo find themselves hunting for the killer of a local teenager in a small Colorado town. Suspenseful and full of character, this is a thoroughly enjoyable mystery that’s not too dark or violent.

Graceling (YA fantasy) by Kristin Cashore In a world where those with two differently colored eyes are graced with special abilities, Katsa is graced with killing. As Katsa struggles with her grace and the way her king abuses it, she learns the meaning of true family and that her grace may not be exactly what it seems.

Join us for Summer Reading Challenge June 5-July 31 for all ages, babies through adults. Track your reading, attend our virtual programs, explore library resources and more for chances to win fun prizes. Learn more at swpl.org. 38 July/August 2021

Grove City Library 3959 Broadway

Service Hours: Mon-Tue-Fri-Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Wed-Thu 12 p.m.-7 p.m. | Closed Sun. Follow the library on social media www.DiscoverGroveCity.com


The GUIDE PARKS AND RECRE ATION OFFERINGS AUG/SE P T 2021 Online, phone and office registration begins Monday, July 12

www.GroveCityOhio.gov

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GUIDE

guide detailing Grove City Parks and Recreation Department offerings. You have the opportunity to see a fresh set of classes and activities six times per year to help you select what fits best in your family’s busy schedule. To register for a class or activity, call the Parks and Recreation office at 614-277-3050 or the Evans Center at 614-277-1060, use online registration, or stop in the Kingston Center, 3226 Kingston Ave.; or Evans Center, 4330 Dudley Ave. When registering for the first time, a staff member will assist you with establishing your household account in our system. To register online, customers must also have an online registration account. This simple process can be completed by phone or in person. Registration is required for all activities even if there is no fee, unless designated as a drop-in class. For more information on classes, activities and events in Grove City, visit GroveCityOhio.gov, sign up for our electronic newsletter and follow social media accounts on Facebook and Instagram @GroveCityOhio and @GroveCityParks and Twitter @GroveCityOhio.

Directory

Parks & Event Spaces

CITY OF GROVE CITY Building Division.....................614-277-3075 City Council............................614-277-3065 City Information......................614-277-3000 Community Relations..............614-277-3040 Development..........................614-277-3004 Division of Police....................614-277-1710 Evans Center..........................614-277-1060 Finance/Tax............................614-277-3025 Human Resources...................614-277-3013 Mayor’s Court.........................614-277-1715 Mayor’s Office.........................614-277-3006 Parks & Recreation.................614-277-3050 Parks Weather Hotline.............614-277-3060 Service Department................614-277-1100 Zoning....................................614-277-3086

Big Splash/Evans 2831 Southwest Blvd. Breck Community (Dog Park) 3005 Demorest Road Concord Lakes Off Lake Mead Drive Creekside Off Holton Road Fryer (Century Village, Splash Pad) 3899 Orders Road Gantz (Gantz Barn, Gantz Farmhouse) 2255 Home Road George Edge Music Park on Broadway Park St. at Broadway Grant-Sawyer Home 4126 Haughn Road Grove City Gold Star Families Memorial Columbus St. at Broadway Grove City Museum 3378 Park St. Henceroth (Purple Heart Memorial Walk) 2075 Mallow Lane

City Offices City Hall 4035 Broadway Evans Center 4330 Dudley Ave. Kingston Center 3226 Kingston Ave. Safety Complex (Police) 3360 Park St. Service Complex 3262 Ventura Blvd. 2 The Source

Hoover Park Off Haughn Road Indian Trails Off Buckeye Parkway Keller Farms Off White Road Meadowgrove Off Springhill Drive Pinnacle Area 2430 Holton Road Scioto Meadows Off Scioto Meadows Blvd. Skate Park 3728 Hoover Road Town Center Gazebo Grove City Road at Broadway Town Center Promenade Park St. to Grant Ave. (parking lot) Walden Bluff Walden Bluff Court Westgrove Park 3580 Magnolia St. Windsor (Evans Center) 4330 Dudley Ave. 4408 Broadway

Online GroveCityOhio.gov Connect with @GroveCityOhio www.GroveCityOhio.gov


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Preschool RecSchool (Ages: 3-5) This child-centered preschool offered by Grove City Parks and Recreation fosters in each child feelings of competence, social skills, independence, love of learning and appreciation for the wonders of nature. Curriculum is based on the Ohio Department of Education Early Learning Content Standards and capitalizes on how children learn best: through play. Activities balance spontaneous and planned learning experiences including art, literacy, music, exploration, early academics, science and daily outdoor experiences. RecSchool is at Gantz Barn in Gantz Park and operates September through May with part-week, half-day classes offered morning or afternoon. Enrollees must be 3 years old by Sept. 30 of the current school year. Registration for each school year begins the previous February and continues until the program is full. Sept.-May Gantz Barn Morning and afternoon options 2021-2022 Registration: Call Michele Demmy, 614-871-6330, for information. PlayTots (Ages: 2 with Adult) Two year olds and a parent or other caring adult enjoy preschool classroom activities including art, sensory exploration and self-directed and planned experiences. Registration for the next school year begins each May. Day: Fri. Gantz Barn Two morning options available. 2021-2022 Registration: Call Michele Demmy, 614-871-6330, for information.

KinderCamp (Age: 5) Children practice kindergarten preparedness skills by exploring a familiar, natural subject through reading, writing, art, math and science. Wks: 1 • Classes: 3 • Days: Mon., Tue., Wed. Gantz Barn, Upstairs $38 (NR: $43) Begins: Aug. 2 • 9-10:30 a.m. Activity #: 1082108_01 Modern Dance (Age: 3-4) Learn the jazz dance style adapting bold, dynamic movements and techniques to later apply to a variety of modern dances. Develop skills to grow and enhance your journey for future dance. Experienced instructor Lindsay Maynard leads. Modern Dance (Age: 3) Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Thu. Kingston Center Room 4 $48 (NR: $53)

JumpBunch (Ages: 18 months-2) Toddlers build coordination, balance, teamwork and motor skills during coach-led activities. Through encouragement and success, children gain confidence, sports-readiness skills and the foundations of fitness. JumpBunch (Ages: 18-24 months) Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Gym $60 (NR: $68) Begins: Aug. 11 • 6-6:30 p.m. No class Sept. 1 (Wed.) Activity #: 1032108_01 JumpBunch (Age: 2) Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Gym $60 (NR: $68) Begins: Aug. 11 • 6:45-7:15 p.m. No class Sept. 1 (Wed.) Activity #: 1032108_02

Begins: Aug. 5 • 6-6:30 p.m. Activity #: 1022108_01 Modern Dance (Age: 4)

Program details subject to change to reduce community health risks from COVID-19. www.GroveCityOhio.gov

Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Thu. Kingston Center Room 4 $48 (NR: $53) Begins: Aug. 5 • 6:45-7:15 p.m. Activity #: 1022108_02

Registration

Online, phone and office registration begins Mon., July 12 The Source 3


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Youth

Sporties for Shorties (Ages: 3-5) Young children develop kicking, running, throwing and team skills through exciting lead-up sports activities and group games. Focus sports may include baseball, soccer, football and others. Powered by JumpBunch.

Youth Volleyball Registration (Grades 3-12) Fall indoor volleyball leagues are available for youth players in grades three through 12 in four age divisions: junior (grades 3-4), intermediate (grades 5-6), middle (grades 7-8) and senior (grades 9-12). Boys and girls compete together. Teams are determined by a blind draft conducted by the Parks & Rec. office. A tournament closes out the season in mid-December. Volunteer coaches are needed.

Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Gym $60 (NR: $68) Begins: Aug. 11 • 7:30-8:15 p.m. No class Sept. 1 (Wed.) Activity #: 1032108_03

Wks: 10 • Day: Weekday Evening SWCSD Sites $60 (NR: $65)

Little Sluggers T-ball (Ages: 3-4) Little Sluggers introduces young children to baseball using ageappropriate activities to develop fundamentals in a fun, supportive atmosphere. Weekly instruction works on batting, base running, fielding, throwing and catching basics followed by modified games. Parent participation welcomed, but Bally Sports staff lead the program. Shirt and cap included. Player supplies own mitt. Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Fri. Windsor Park $75 (NR: $75) Begins: Sept. 10 • 5-6 p.m. Register with Bally Sports at bit.ly/ BallyTBallGC Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Fri. Windsor Park $75 (NR: $75) Begins: Sept. 10 • 6-7 p.m. Register with Bally Sports at bit.ly/ BallyTBallGC

Options for 4 year olds: Peewee Karate classes are open to ages 4-7. Check the Youth Sections for details!

Registration

Online, phone and office registration begins Mon., July 12 4 The Source

Mini Soccer Stars (Ages: 3-5) Bally Sports leads an age-appropriate program that utilizes fun games and activities to teach fundamentals to beginning soccer players. Coaches focus on teaching the basics of dribbling, passing, scoring and the concept of game play. Proper sportsmanship is emphasized in an encouraging atmosphere enabling children to enjoy learning soccer while being physically active. Each week includes developmentally appropriate instruction and recreational, noncompetitive game play. Mini Soccer Stars (Age: 3-4.5) Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Westgrove Park $70 (NR: $70) Begins: Sept. 8 • 5-6 p.m. Register with Bally Sports at bit.ly/ BallySoccerGC. Mini Soccer Stars (Ages: 4.5-5) Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Westgrove Park $70 (NR: $70) Begins: Sept. 8 • 6-7 p.m. Register with Bally Sports at bit.ly/ BallySoccerGC.

Practice Begins: Week of Sept. 5 | Games Begin: Week of Oct. 3 Register online during August at Recreation.GroveCityOhio.gov P.A.R.K. (Grades: K-4) Programmed After-school Recreation for Kids is committed to providing a safe, secure, enriching and affordable place to be after school. This schoolage childcare program offers daily after-school activities for children in kindergarten through grade four staffed by qualified childcare providers at each site. P.A.R.K. operates in the school gymnasiums every day the South-Western City School District (SWCSD) is in session. The program is designed for, but not limited to, children of working parents. P.A.R.K. provides planned cooperative games, outrageous play, fitness, indoor and outdoor activities, free art, specialinterest and free-choice activities and much more. Please pack a nutritious snack daily. Days: Mon.-Fri. Buckeye Woods, Highland Park, J.C. Sommer, Monterey, Richard Avenue Elementaries $190 per month School Days • 2:30-6 p.m. Follows SWCSD schedule Register online at Recreation. GroveCityOhio.gov

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Before-School P.A.R.K. Elementary (Grades: K-4) Before-school P.A.R.K. creates a safe, fun environment in the morning hours before school starts for students of Buckeye Woods, Highland Park, J.C. Sommer, Monterey and Richard Avenue elementaries. The monthly tuition fee includes breakfast and supervised recreational activities. This program meets every day the SWCSD is in session. Transportation to the child’s home school is provided by the SWCSD Transportation Department; J.C. Sommer elementary students walk to school with P.A.R.K. staff. Days: Mon.-Fri. Kingston Center $98 per month School Days • 6-8 a.m. Follows SWCSD schedule Register online at Recreation. GroveCityOhio.gov Before-School P.A.R.K. Intermediate (Grades: 5-6) Before-school P.A.R.K. creates a safe, fun environment in the morning hours before school starts for students of Hayes, Holt Crossing and Park Street intermediate schools. The monthly tuition fee includes breakfast and supervised recreational activities. This program meets every day the SWCSD is in session. Transportation to the child’s home school is provided by the SWCSD Transportation Department; Park Street Intermediate students walk to school with P.A.R.K. staff. Days: Mon.-Fri. Kingston Center $110 per month School Days • 6-9 a.m. Follows SWCSD schedule Register online at Recreation. GroveCityOhio.gov

Modern Dance (Ages: 5-10) Learn the jazz dance style adapting bold, dynamic movements and techniques to later apply to a variety of modern dances. Develop skills to grow and enhance your journey for future dance. Experienced instructor Lindsay Maynard leads. Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Thu. Kingston Center Room 4 $52 (NR: $57) Begins: Aug. 5 • 7:30-8:15 p.m. Activity #: 2022108_01 Gymnastics: Intro to Parkour (Ages: 5-11) Learn to safely navigate obstacles by running, jumping, climbing and safely landing. Strength and flexibility incorporate into each class. Intro to Parkour (Ages: 5-7)

www.GroveCityOhio.gov

Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Mon. Kingston Center Gym $48 (NR: $53) Begins: Aug. 2 • 7-7:45 p.m. No class Sept. 6 (Mon.) Activity #: 2012108_06 Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Tue. Kingston Center Gym $48 (NR: $53) Begins: Aug. 3 • 7-7:45 p.m. Activity #: 2012108_09 Karate Peewee Beginner (Ages: 4-7) Learn basic karate movements, the martial arts philosophy and the importance of concentration and confidence. Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Mon. Kingston Center Room 3 $45 (NR: $50)

Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Mon. Kingston Center Gym $48 (NR: $53)

Begins: Aug. 2 • 5-5:30 p.m. No class Sept. 6 (Mon.) Activity #: 2062108_01

Begins: Aug. 2 • 5-5:45 p.m. No class Sept. 6 (Mon.) Activity #: 2012108_04

Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Room 3 $45 (NR: $50)

Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Tue. Kingston Center Gym $48 (NR: $53)

Begins: Aug. 4 • 5-5:30 p.m. Activity #: 2062108_02

Begins: Aug. 3 • 5-5:45 p.m. Activity #: 2012108_07 Intro to Parkour (Ages: 8-9) Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Mon. Kingston Center Gym $48 (NR: $53) Begins: Aug. 2 • 6-6:45 p.m. No class Sept. 6 (Mon.) Activity #: 2012108_05 Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Tue. Kingston Center Gym $48 (NR: $53)

P.A.R.K. programs are popular! Call 614-277-3050 to ensure availability before attempting to register.

Intro to Parkour (Ages: 10-11)

Begins: Aug. 3 • 6-6:45 p.m. Activity #: 2012108_08

Karate Peewee Advanced (Ages: 4-7) Build on the basics of karate with movement drills, kata (form) and noncontact sparring with added emphasis on concentration, confidence and the martial arts philosophy. Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Mon. Kingston Center Room 3 $45 (NR: $50) Begins: Aug. 2 • 5:45-6:15 p.m. No class Sept. 6 (Mon.) Activity #: 2062108_03 Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Room 3 $45 (NR: $50) Begins: Aug. 4 • 5:45-6:15 p.m. Activity #: 2062108_04

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Karate Youth/Adult Beginner (Ages: 8+) Build concentration and confidence with an emphasis on martial arts philosophy while learning karate basics, movements drills, kata (form) and non-contact sparring. Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Mon. Kingston Center Room 3 $60 (NR: $65) Begins: Aug. 2 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. No class Sept. 6 (Mon.) Activity #: 3062108_01 Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Room 3 $60 (NR: $65) Begins: Aug. 4 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 3062108_02 Karate Youth/Adult Advanced (Ages: 8+) Deepen levels of concentration and confidence, while emphasizing martial arts philosophy and learning more advanced movement drills, kata (form) and non-contact sparring. Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Mon. Kingston Center Room 3 $60 (NR: $65) Begins: Aug. 2 • 7:45-8:45 p.m. No class Sept. 6 (Mon.) Activity #: 3062108_03 Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Room 3 $60 (NR: $65) Begins: Aug. 4 • 7:45-8:45 p.m. Activity #: 3062108_04 Fun Friday (Ages: 6-11) End your week with outdoor, outrageous play and super fun activities. Challenge yourself with games, activities, art, experiments and so much more. Pack a snack and meet us in the park! Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Fri. Windsor Park, Large Shelter $15 (NR: $17) Aug. 6 • 9 a.m.-Noon Activity #: 2982108_01

Registration

Online, phone and office registration begins Mon., July 12 6 The Source

Game Night (Ages: 11-15) Join a group that celebrates creativity, strategy and fun! Play a variety of board games that test your thinking skills including, but not limited to, Settlers of Catan, Munchkins, Clue, Yahtzee, Apples to Apples and Risk. Each session features new games with instructions on rules. Enjoy game night pizza and beverages! Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Fri. Evans Center Rec. Room $20 (NR: $22) Sept. 24 • 5:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 2082109_01 LEGO Robot BattleBots (Ages: 6-12) Love LEGOs? Program and build LEGO Robots to compete in a BattleBot championship and win prizes. No experience necessary - learn all you need to put together a winning BattleBot. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Fri. Kingston Center Room 2 $75 (NR: $83) Aug. 13 • 1:30-4:30 p.m. Activity #: 2102108_01 Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Mon. Kingston Center Room 2 $75 (NR: $83) Sept. 6 • 1:30-4:30 p.m. Activity #: 2102109_01

Simple Science (Ages: 6-10) Sometimes using basic components results in the best hands-on science experiments. Join us for some simple science fun! Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Room 2 $14 (NR: $16) Aug. 18 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 2102108_02 Class2Trail: Nature Art (Ages: 6-8) Fashion your own paint and paintbrushes out of items found in nature, then use your creations to make a unique work of art. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Wed. Gantz Park, Large Shelter $10 (NR: $12) Sept. 22 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 2092109_01 Class2Trail: Nature Navigation (Ages: 9-12) Explore the wonders of nature using a compass, coordinates and clues to find hidden caches. Wear sturdy footwear and bring a water bottle. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Sat. Gantz Park, Large Shelter $10 (NR: $12) Aug. 21 • 11 a.m.-Noon Activity #: 2092108_01 www.GroveCityOhio.gov


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Big Art (Ages: 6-9) Cover a variety of styles and techniques while focusing on the process, using quality materials and supplies found in a professional art studio like pastels, watercolors, acrylics and more. Take home a finished piece each class. Art supplies furnished. Dress to get messy/ bring a smock! Wks: 5 • Classes: 5 • Day: Tue. Kingston Center Room 2 $63 (NR: $71) Begins: Aug. 3 • 6-6:45 p.m. Activity #: 2042108_01 Wks: 4 • Classes: 4 • Day: Tue. Kingston Center Room 2 $50 (NR: $55) Begins: Sept. 7 • 6-6:45 p.m. Activity #: 2042109_01 Art Workshop (Ages: 10-13) Learn to combine techniques like sketching, painting, collage and more while creating a different art project each week. Dress to get messy/bring a smock. Wks: 5 • Classes: 5 • Day: Tue. Kingston Center Room 2 $75 (NR: $83) Begins: Aug. 3 • 7-8 p.m. Activity #: 2042108_02 Wks: 4 • Classes: 4 • Day: Tue. Kingston Center Room 2 $60 (NR: $68) Begins: Sept. 7 • 7-8 p.m. Activity #: 2042109_02 Wind Chimes (Ages: 6-10) Use beads in a variety of colors, shapes and sizes to create your own unique wind chime to hang in your house or garden. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Room 2 $12 (NR: $14) Sept. 15 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 2042109_03

Some adult classes are open to teens. Check the Adult section or call 614-277-3050 for options. www.GroveCityOhio.gov

Acting Class with Showcase (Ages: 7-16) Work in groups to act out various, age-appropriate acting scenes including some from TV, movies and plays. Improve your memory, learn to develop a character and increase self-confidence and stage presence. Great for anyone interested in working in the entertainment industry. The instructor can provide guidance to parents of children interested pursuing professional acting. Last day is a showcase for guests to see the participants in action. Wks: 7 • Classes: 7 • Day: Thu. Kingston Center Room 2 $132 (NR: $147) Begins: Aug. 5 • 6:05-6:55 p.m. Activity #: 2052108_03 Acting Games (Ages: 7-16) Build confidence and creativity while having fun! Learn to act through games and improvisational situations to sharpen your ability to think on your feet and explore the possibilities of your imagination. Acting games build collaboration skills, expose participants to new experiences and foster selfreliance. Wks: 7 • Classes: 7 • Day: Thu. Kingston Center Room 2 $88 (NR: $98) Begins: Aug. 5 • 5-5:50 p.m. Activity #: 2052108_02 Modeling: The Catwalk (Ages: 7-16) Experience fashion on a make-believe catwalk stage. Learn to walk with grace and style as well as basic etiquette to help with good behavior and manners. Invite a guest to see you work the stage and model your favorite outfits on the last day. Students are encouraged to model their favorite Disney character costumes/outfits. Includes in-class photo session with a professional. Photos are yours to keep! Wks: 7 • Classes: 7 • Day: Tue. Kingston Center Room 3 $175 (NR: $190) Begins: Aug. 3 • 5-6 p.m. Activity #: 2052108_01

Salsa! (Ages: 6-9) Make a popular tomato-based salsa, but also expand your horizons by including other fruits and vegetables in a salsa mix. Heat is adjusted to suit more sensitive palates in this mini version of the popular adult class. Safe working habits are stressed as you prep a salsa to take home along with recipes for more. Gloria Hartung instructs. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Wed. Gantz Farmhouse Classroom $12 (NR: $14) Aug. 18 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 2072108_01 Veggie Pizza (Ages: 6-9) Make a no-bake pizza using a ranchtype base and diced vegetables. Gloria Hartung instructs. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Wed. Gantz Farmhouse Classroom $12 (NR: $14) Sept. 15 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 2072109_01 VIPs: Teens for Grove City (Grades 7-12) Join the Volunteer Involvement Program (V.I.P.) to donate your time and expertise while gaining service hours and a great feeling of helping others. Hours are conveniently tracked through the program. Grove City offers many events and programs throughout the year, and participants in this program help make them successful. Join today to have fun and make a difference in the community. Applications are available in the Kingston Center and at GroveCityOhio.gov. Call 614-277-3058 for information.

Program details subject to change to reduce community health risks from COVID-19.

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Adult Aromatherapy Pendants (Ages: 18+) New class! Make your own air freshener using clay pendants that can be strung on a cord or used in your car. The clay absorbs essential oils and releases them slowly. Gloria Hartung instructs. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Thu. Gantz Farmhouse Classroom $12 (NR: $14) Sept. 23 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 3042109_01 Herb Pastes, Salts and Blends (Ages: 18+) Want to savor the wonderful flavor of your fresh herbs all winter? Explore various preservation methods and make a salt, a blend and a paste all made with herbs. Mary Jane LaLonde instructs. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Tue. Gantz Farmhouse Classroom $20 (NR: $24) Aug. 24 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 3072108_01 Dyeing Silk Scarves Naturally (Ages: 18+) Use herbs and flowers to create beautiful two-tone silk scarves as you explore the amazing array of natural dyes made from plants growing in the Gantz garden. Mary Jane LaLonde instructs. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Thu. Gantz Farmhouse Classroom $25 (NR: $28) Aug. 12 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 3092108_03

Registration

Online, phone and office registration begins Mon., July 12

Program details subject to change to reduce community health risks from COVID-19. 8 The Source

Oh, My Aching Knees! (Ages: 18+) Prepare and take home a salve to soothe aching muscles in a workshop while discussing salves based in cayenne, turmeric-ginger and arnica. Led by Gloria Hartung and volunteer Linda Everts. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Tue. Gantz Farmhouse Classroom $10 (NR: $12) Aug. 10 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 3092108_01 Pickles! (Ages: 18+) Learn to make end-of-season pickled vegetables like Grandma used to make. Sweet and crunchy or spicy and hot, end-of-season pickles use the last of the glorious garden produce to make a tasty sandwich topper, salad enhancer or relish tray standout. A mix of vegetables is doused in a sweet or spicy brine and canned to keep for winter. Mary Jane LaLonde instructs. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Tue. Gantz Farmhouse Classroom $14 (NR: $16) Sept. 21 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 3092109_02 What Can I Do With All My Peppers? (Ages: 18+) Gorgeous red peppers are ready to harvest! Make a delicious roasted red pepper spread that is wonderful on bread and crackers or over meat and vegetables. Take home a jar of spread and several recipes, including one for authentic Serbian Ajvar and roasted red pepper hummus. Mary Jane LaLonde instructs. Wks: 1 • Class: 1 • Day: Thu. Gantz Farmhouse Classroom $20 (NR: $24) Sept. 9 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 3092109_01

Evans Center Walking Club Seniors, meet at 9 a.m., Mondays in Windsor Park at path end east of the Center for a group walk.

Karate Youth/Adult Beginner (Ages: 8+) Build concentration and confidence with an emphasis on martial arts philosophy while learning karate basics, movements drills, kata (form) and non-contact sparring. Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Mon. Kingston Center Room 3 $60 (NR: $65) Begins: Aug. 2 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. No class Sept. 6 (Mon.) Activity #: 3062108_01 Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Room 3 $60 (NR: $65) Begins: Aug. 4 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Activity #: 3062108_02 Karate Youth/Adult Advanced (Ages: 8+) Deepen levels of concentration and confidence, while emphasizing martial arts philosophy and learning more advanced movement drills, kata (form) and non-contact sparring. Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Mon. Kingston Center Room 3 $60 (NR: $65) Begins: Aug. 2 • 7:45-8:45 p.m. No class Sept. 6 (Mon.) Activity #: 3062108_03 Wks: 6 • Classes: 6 • Day: Wed. Kingston Center Room 3 $60 (NR: $65) Begins: Aug. 4 • 7:45-8:45 p.m. Activity #: 3062108_04 Grove City Compost Drop -off Program (Residents Only) Participate in Grove City’s food composting program, funded with assistance from SWACO’s Community Waste Reduction Grant. Program is no cost for residents of Jackson Township including Grove City and Urbancrest. Registration required. Collection containers are at 2803 Southwest Blvd. For more info, visit GroveCityOhio.gov or call 614-277-3050. Brookpark Middle School Parking Lot Activity #: 5152114_01

www.GroveCityOhio.gov


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Grove City Parks and Recreation Shelter Rentals

Windsor and Gantz parks feature shelters large enough for gatherings available to the public year-round, dawn to dusk, and are open for walk-up usage if not already reserved. Reservations for April through December 2021 open Tuesday, Jan. 19. All other shelters and gazebos are accessible on a first-come basis and are not reservable. The Eagle Pavilion in Fryer Park has separate policies from open shelters; there is no walk-up usage. For more information, call 614-277-3050 or visit GroveCityOhio.gov and select Park Rentals from the Parks and Recreation menu.

WINDSOR PARK LARGE SHELTER

GANTZ PARK LARGE SHELTER

GANTZ PARK SMALL SHELTER

Size Picnic Tables Electricity

Size Picnic Tables Electricity

Size Picnic Tables Electricity

1,500 square feet 18* With key ($25 deposit)

Rental Times & Fees

1,800 square feet 18* With key ($25 deposit)

Rental Times & Fees

11 a.m.-3 p.m. or 4-8 p.m.: $55 ($70 NR) Full Day (11 a.m.-8 p.m.): $95 ($125 NR)

11 a.m.-3 p.m. or 4-8 p.m.: $45 ($60 NR) Full Day (11 a.m.-8 p.m.): $75 ($105 NR)

850 square feet 6* With key ($25 deposit)

Rental Times & Fees

11 a.m.-3 p.m. or 4-8 p.m.: $45 ($60 NR) Full Day (11 a.m.-8 p.m.): $75 ($105 NR)

Outdoor Shelter Reminders:

WINDSOR PARK BASEBALL FOR ALL/DREAM FIELD SHELTER

GANTZ PARK GAZEBO

Size 1,500 square feet Picnic Tables 8* Electricity With key ($25 deposit) Rental Times & Fees 11 a.m.-3 p.m. or 4-8 p.m.: $45 ($60 NR) Full Day (11 a.m.-8 p.m.): $75 ($105 NR)

Size Picnic Tables Electricity

500 square feet 0 With key ($25 deposit)

Rental Times & Fees

11 a.m.-3 p.m. or 4-8 p.m.: $45 ($60 NR) Full Day (11 a.m.-8 p.m.): $75 ($105 NR)

FRYER PARK EAGLE PAVILION (ALL SEASON) Size Amenities Utilities

2,500 square feet Serving kitchen, restrooms, round tables and chairs Electricity, plumbing

Rental Times & Fees

Damage deposit (refundable): $150 8 a.m.-noon, 1-5 p.m. or 6-10 p.m.: $200 Any two time blocks: $400 Full Day (8 a.m.-10 p.m.): $550 Pavilion may only be rented by residents.

• Refunds only granted 30+ days before reservation date. • Water fountains/flushing toilets are seasonal (April 15-Oct. 15). • Electricity is available using a key; requires a $25 refundable deposit. • Reservations have priority. Shelters are first-come, first-served if not rented. • Shelters are cleaned early each morning. Be prepared in case others have left messes. • Tobacco products, alcohol use/ impairment and weapons are prohibited. • All park laws apply; see Grove City Code Chapter 903.

Parks with Walk-up Shelters • • • • • •

Blodwen Creed-Lawless Creekside Fryer Park Indian Trails Keller Farms

• Meadowgrove • Scioto Meadows • Swearingen • Westgrove • Windsor

Reservations for rentable shelters for 2021 are available starting Tue., Jan. 19.

*Shelters are at reduced capacity until further notice due to community health risks. www.GroveCityOhio.gov

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Registration

Grove City Parks and Recreation offers five easy methods to register for classes. Registration forms are available for download online at GroveCityOhio.gov or pick up at the Kingston Center or the Evans Center. ONLINE registration is available at GroveCityOhio.gov for most Parks and Recreation offerings, providing 24-hour access to our exciting array of options for all ages.

1 2

WALK-IN registration is available Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., in the Kingston Center, 3226 Kingston Ave., for preschool, youth and adult classes, and at the Evans Center, 4330 Dudley Ave., for 55+ offerings.

3

Registration by PHONE is accepted via Visa, Discover or MasterCard only, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call the Evans Center, 614-277-1060, for 55+ classes, and the Kingston Center, 614-277-3050, for all others.

4

Use the silver DROP BOX located on the parking lot side of the Kingston Center for afterhours registration. The box is opened at 8 a.m. each business day; registrations placed in the box after 8 a.m. are processed the next business day.

5

MAIL your payment and completed registration form to: Grove City Parks and Recreation Department, Kingston Center, 3226 Kingston Ave., Grove City, OH 43123

Payment Methods •  Cash or Money Order •  Checks made payable to: City of Grove City. A customer with a returned check is assessed a $25 fee. Any customer with two returned checks within 12 months must pay all subsequent fees by cash or money order. •  Credit Card: MasterCard, Discover or Visa only Confirmation Once you have registered for a class, no other confirmations are made unless a change is made in the program details. It is the responsibility of the participant to be present on the date and time listed. Cancellations/Credit Registered participants may cancel from a program, but it is that participant’s responsibility to contact the Parks and Recreation Department. A credit is made to the participant’s account if a request is made in writing prior to the start of the program. To receive a full refund for sports, the request must be made before uniforms are ordered. Class/Event Cancellation All classes and events are subject to change or cancellation based on participation and instructor availability. A staff member will notify all registered class participants as changes occur. Photos and Videos The City of Grove City reserves the right to photograph or record event and program participants for publicity purposes. Images may be used in catalogs, brochures, magazines, ads or other print or electronic public relations efforts (i.e., website, social media). Residency Rates & Fair Share Policy The lower “resident rate” provides credit to those paying municipal taxes that help support the programs 10 The Source

and events offered by the City of Grove City. To qualify as a resident, a person must live or work in Grove City or Jackson Township. This does not include all of ZIP code 43123; ZIP codes are used by the U.S. Postal Service to designate the office that delivers mail to an address. Visit FranklinCountyAuditor.com to check your address. Grove City parcel IDs start with 040; unincorporated Jackson Township with 160. Through the City of Grove City Fair Share Policy, non-residents who pay income tax to the City of Grove City are eligible to participate at resident rates. To be eligible, non-residents must annually provide proof of employment on company letterhead with the signature of the personnel director or a current pay stub showing the employer’s address. Equal Opportunities and Special Populations The Grove City Parks and Recreation Department is committed to serving the whole community. All persons regardless of age, sex, race, color, national origin or religion are encouraged to participate. Our goal is also to include individuals with special needs in our existing programs based on their need and ability. Groups or individuals serving special populations are welcome to contact the department to make program arrangements. The City of Grove City does not discriminate on the basis of disability in the admission or access to its programs or activities. An ADA Coordinator has been designated to coordinate compliance with the nondiscrimination requirements contained in the Department of Justice regulations implementing Subtitle A of Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. §12101 et seq.), which prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability by public agencies. The ADA Coordinator can be contacted at 614-277-3050. www.GroveCityOhio.gov


Preparing students to be Christian leaders who impact their world.

Henry Arias-Lamus • Jacob Bapst • Josiah Bever • Evan Bowen • Ivan Bowman Olivia Carson • Alaina Dawson • Carson Dick • Jamie Dozier • Jared Ehrman Victor Garcia-Solis • Simona Giupponi • Andrew Heins • Taylor Ison Tara Johnson • Evan Karlich • MaKenzie Kisor • Ethan Koch • Mackenzie Kouns Christian Lautenschleger • Christopher Martinez • Kelsey Maxwell • Collin May

Congratulations

Class of 2021

Grove City Christian School

Abigail McDonald • Molly Murage • Lonny New • Ellen Nicklaus • Brooke O’Dell Annabelle O’Neal • Dawson Palmer • Joseph Phillips • Jaime Quevedo-Mora • Caren Quiroz Kyle Reed • Taylor Rice • Isabella Rieser • Evett Romine • Catherine Snider Sebastian Sosa • Elizabeth Woods

Class of 2021

Grove City Christian School is a ministry of the Grove City Church of the Nazarene and is accredited by the Association of Christian Schools International (ACSI) and AdvancED.

4750 Hoover Road • Grove City, Ohio 43123 • 614-875-3000 • www.grovecitychristian.org 1


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