June 2021 — Indiana Connection

Page 1

Something old,

something new…

BARN VENUES OFFER COUPLES RUSTIC AMBIENCE FOR THEIR SPECIAL DAY

pages 18–23

JUNE 2021



from the editor

how to be a rock star Either I’m late to the whole rock painting trend or I was actually way early.

The summer when I was 10, I found a rock that I thought was shaped like a foot. Immediately, I was inspired to pick up a paintbrush and enhance that resemblance. That was literally my stepping-stone to adorning a handful of other rocks that summer with simple motifs like flowers and bubble letters that spelled “LOVE.” Who would have thought that my childhood obsession with rocks would someday roll into a phenomenon rooted in kindness? Through the “Kindness Rocks Project,” anyone can grab a plain ol’ rock and add color, designs and inspirational quotes on it. The fancified stone can then be placed somewhere where it will be found — perhaps just when its discovery could change someone’s day, outlook or even life. Interested in rocking some kindness? First wash the rocks. Place them in a colander and run some water over them. Then rub each rock with some mild soap to remove any dirt. Rinse again. Place clean rocks on a towel to dry.

WE’D LOVE TO SEE HOW YOU’RE “ROCKING”

Use non-toxic multi-surface or outdoor-rated acrylic paint. Use paint pens to write on the rocks or add details. Be sure to write #thekindnessrocksproject on the back of the rock so the person who finds the rock can share pictures of it on social media.

kindness.

Share photos of your painted rocks on our social media channels.

When you’re finished painting your rock, add a top coat of clear acrylic spray. Don’t put stickers or googly eyes on your rock as they can be harmful to animals. Also, don’t leave your rocks on others’ property, in national parks or forests, or in places with “Leave No Trace” policies in place. Visit www.thekindnessrocksproject.com for more ideas on how you can spread some love one rock at a time.

EMILY SCHILLING Editor eschilling@indianaec.org

On the menu: November issue: Pumpkin, deadline Aug. 1.

December issue: Chocolate, deadline Oct. 1. If we publish your recipe on our food pages, we’ll send you a $10 gift card.

Giveaways: Two prize packages are available to win this month. J. Ford’s Black Angus,

which is showcased on page 15, is providing a $50 gift card. Meanwhile, Do it Best store owners are offering a gift package that includes pantry organizers ($250 value). For details and to enter, visit indianaconnection.org/talk-to-us/contests. Entry deadline for giveaways: June 30.

Three ways to contact us: To send us recipes, photos, event listings, letters

and entries for gift drawings, please use the forms on our website indianaconnection.org; email info@indianaconnection.org; or send to Indiana Connection, 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600, Indianapolis, IN 46240-4606.

VOLUME 70 • NUMBER 12 ISSN 0745-4651 • USPS 262-340 Published monthly by Indiana Electric Cooperatives Indiana Connection is for and about members of Indiana’s locally-owned, not-for-profit electric cooperatives. It helps consumers use electricity safely and efficiently; understand energy issues; connect with their co-op; and celebrate life in Indiana. Over 304,000 residents and businesses receive the magazine as part of their electric co-op membership. CONTACT US: 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600 Indianapolis, IN 46240-4606 317-487-2220 info@indianaconnection.org IndianaConnection.org INDIANA ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES OFFICERS: Walter Hunter President Randy Kleaving Vice President Steve McMichael Secretary/Treasurer John Gasstrom CEO EDITORIAL STAFF: Emily Schilling Editor Richard George Biever Senior Editor Holly Huffman Communication Support Specialist Ellie Schuler Senior Creative Services Specialist Taylor Maranion Creative Services Specialist Lauren Carman Communication Coordinator Stacey Holton Director of Creative Services Mandy Barth Vice President of Communication ADVERTISING: American MainStreet Publications Cheryl Solomon, local ad representative; 512-441-5200; amp.coop Crosshair Media 502-216-8537; crosshairmedia.net Paid advertisements are not endorsements by any electric cooperative or this publication. UNSOLICITED MATERIAL: Indiana Connection does not use unsolicited freelance manuscripts or photographs and assumes no responsibility for the safe‑keeping or return of unsolicited material. SUBSCRIPTIONS: $12 for individuals not subscribing through participating REMCs/RECs. CHANGE OF ADDRESS: If you receive Indiana Connection through your electric co-op membership, report address changes to your local co-op. POSTAGE: Periodicals postage paid at Indianapolis, Ind., and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to: Indiana Connection, 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600, Indianapolis, IN 46240-4606. Include key number. No portion of Indiana Connection may be reproduced without permission of the editor.

JUNE 2021

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contents

JUNE

12

16

insights 03 FROM THE EDITOR

food

13 CALENDAR

05 CO-OP NEWS Energy news and information from your electric cooperative.

14 COUNTY OF THE MONTH Spotlighting Benton County.

09 ENERGY New devices can help you control your energy use.

Well-deserved reputation.

12 I NSIGHTS

26

15 INDIANA EATS J. Ford’s Black Angus:

16 FOOD The berry best.

FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA

Indiana Connection

29

pets

18 COVER STORY Something old, something new in barn wedding venues. 24 DIY

safety

27 TRAVEL Sounds of bluegrass and nature at Bill Monroe Music Park. (Not in all editions)

Organize your way to the pantry of your dreams.

28 H OOSIER ENERGY/ WABASH VALLEY NEWS

25 RECALLS

29 SAFETY Stay safe when setting sail.

26 PETS How to include your pets in the family vacation. (Not in all editions)

30 PROFILE Building trust in the workplace.

On the cover Christine and Derek May have opened up their refurbished (and rebuilt) barn for hosting weddings. Their Vignette Farms near Attica, which includes the 1910 cornfield cathedral and their historic 1865 Italianate home, is one of the latest vintage venues finding new life in creating new memories. PHOTO BY TAYLOR MARANION

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We’re halfway through 2021 and are now in the midst of summer’s hot, sunny days and fun outdoor activities. We’re here to guide you through the dangers and drains of the coming months with some practical advice for surviving the good ol’ summertime.

Watch out for heat illnesses THE ONSET OF SUMMER

comes with lots of fun outdoor activities — whether you’re lying by the pool or playing on a baseball field. Keep heat stress at bay, no matter your sun-soaked activity

of choice, by knowing how to prevent heat-related illnesses and how to recognize the symptoms in yourself and others. The most serious of heat illnesses, heat stroke, can be deadly and swift. Your

body temperature could rise to 106 F or more in as little as 10 to 15 minutes. Heat stroke happens when your body temperature rises rapidly but cannot sweat quickly enough to cool itself. Symptoms include hot, dry skin or the opposite — profuse sweating, hallucinations, chills, throbbing headache, confusion or dizziness and slurred speech.

If you see someone with the symptoms of heat stroke, immediately call 911 and move the person to a shady area. Try misting the person with cold water, soaking his or her clothes or fanning the body. Heat exhaustion is the result of heavy sweating — extreme loss of salt and water. People prone to heat CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE JUNE 2021

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CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE exhaustion include the elderly, those with high blood pressure, or people who work in hot conditions. Besides excessive sweating, symptoms include extreme weakness or fatigue, dizziness and confusion, nausea, clammy skin, muscle cramps, and shallow, rapid breathing. If a person suffers from heat exhaustion, move him or her to a shaded or air-conditioned area. The victim should drink cool non-alcoholic beverages and take a cool shower or bath.

Sun-bathers may be prone to heat syncope, which is dizziness or fainting after lying (or standing) for long periods of time. Dehydration can contribute to an episode of heat syncope, so keep that water bottle handy when you head to the beach. If you feel dizzy after lying for a long time, sit or lie back down in a cool place and sip on a cool beverage like water, a sports drink or clear juice. Folks who work or play sports outside in the heat may suffer from heat cramps, which result from

Our furry friends need relief from the heat, too Just as you try to keep yourself cool on sunny summer days, you should make sure your pets are comfortable, too. Many of the same summer rules for humans apply to our furry friends as well: Don’t exercise when it’s too hot outside, drink plenty of water, avoid overexposure to the sun, and find a shady outdoor spot or move indoors to enjoy the air conditioning when the temperature spikes.

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JUNE 2021

low salt levels after heavy sweating. Stay alert if you feel cramping because it could be a symptom of heat exhaustion. Heat cramps usually are felt in the arms, legs or abdomen. If you feel them, stop what you’re doing, sit in a cool place, and drink clear juice or a sports beverage. Take it easy for a few hours after you no longer feel the cramps; if you return to your activity, the condition could transition to heat exhaustion or heat stroke. If you have heart problems, are on a

Here are some tips that will keep your pets happy and healthy this summer: Do not leave your pet in a parked car, even for a couple of minutes. An 85 F day can heat up the interior of a car to 120 or 130 F in less than 30 minutes. That kind of heat can quickly kill a pet. Pack plenty of cool water for your pet before heading to the beach or out for any day-long trip. A dog can drink up to three times its normal amount of water on a hot day. Pets suffer from heat exhaustion and heat stroke just like humans. Don’t exercise your animal when it’s really hot.

low-sodium diet, or the cramps do not go away in an hour, call a doctor. Heavy sweating can cause a heat rash during hot, humid weather. It looks like a red cluster of pimples or small blisters that usually pop up on the neck or chest, groin, and in the crook of your elbow. You can’t do much to treat heat rash besides keep the area dry and use baby powder to alleviate discomfort. U.S. Centers for Disease Control

Keep old, overweight and sick dogs, and those with snub noses, like pugs, bulldogs and Boston terriers, Lhasa apsos or Pekingese, indoors in the air conditioning as much as possible. Bring outdoor pets inside if it is air conditioned during the worst heat of the day. Make sure they have ready access to shade and cool water when they’re outside. Groom animals more often during summer. Cut long hair to within no less than an inch of the skin so your pet will be cool but still have protection from the sun.


SEEK SHELTER FROM STORMS When you’re out on summer days having fun, it might be hard to do the right thing when bad weather suddenly approaches. But lightning can kill instantly and seemingly come from out of the blue. Don’t stay out when you hear the first rumbles of thunder; that’s nature’s warning! When storms approach: Seek shelter immediately. Shelter can be a substantial building or an enclosed vehicle with windows up.

Light up the night WHY YOU SHOULD BRIGHTEN UP YOUR YARD

YOU TOIL ALL SPRING

early, lights help show off

There are several ways

to make sure your garden

landscaping. And, in winter,

to make your yard glow at

and landscaping are

lighting the branches of

night: An electrician can

beautiful. But come

a leafless, snow-covered

thread electric lines through

summer, enjoying your

tree can create a dramatic

waterproof pipes, bury them

handiwork is reserved to

outdoor display.

deep in the ground under

glimpses on bright weekend days because work and other commitments keep you away from home during most daylight hours.

Outdoor lighting can be as simple or elaborate — and as affordable or extravagant — as you choose. A few, well-placed

The solution? Plant a few

lights can transform a

lights among your bushes

pitch-black backyard into a

and plants. Outdoor lighting

shadowy showcase.

looks great after dark — and invites you and your family to linger outdoors on warm summer nights. Even in the spring and fall when the sun sets

And placing lights in your yard helps protect your property from prowlers and saves your family from stumbling in the dark.

your plants and light up the night with 120-volt lamps similar to the ones you use indoors. Or, you can do it yourself with easy-to-install solar or low-voltage garden lights whose wires do not have to be buried — you can brush a little mulch over the lines to hide them — and, unlike the more expensive 120-volt lights, pose little risk of shock for curious pets and children.

Do not seek shelter under trees and picnic structures or in baseball dugouts. Avoid objects like electric wires, metal fences, bleachers and awnings. Get off and away from water. If you are in an open field and cannot find shelter in a building or closedframe vehicle, crouch on the ground using the “lightning crouch:” feet together, body squatted low, head tucked in and ears covered. If a person is struck by lightning, call 911 and care for the victim. You cannot be harmed by touching the victim after he or she has been struck by lightning. “Look up and live” is not just for “electrical” safety around power lines. Mother Nature reserves the biggest bolts of electricity for herself in the form of lightning. Heed her warnings with the first rumbles of thunder you hear or the first sight of distant flashes.

JUNE 2021

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STOP THOSE SUMMER ENERGY DRAINS Summer break can be a recipe for high electric bills if kids are home all day enjoying cool indoor air. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates that 9 percent of Americans’ household energy costs are dedicated to air conditioning alone, so try these tips to keep costs down when the temperature rises.

Avoid ‘phantom’ load Get your family in the habit of turning electronics on and off via power strips. As electronics and appliances become more technology

Yard sale season STOP, INSPECT AND THINK BEFORE BUYING It’s yard sale season and lots of people love getting bargains. As the saying goes, “One man’s trash is another man’s treasure.” But before forking over the cash, parents or anyone living in a household with children should stop, inspect and think before buying. Why? Old products that were once considered safe may have since been found to be hazardous. These old items often find their way into resale shops and garage or yard sales. If purchased, the items go back into homes where their use

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JUNE 2021

could turn to tragedy. You can do your part by going to the federal government’s product recall website — www.recalls.gov. Browse for any products before using anything you have already purchased. Here is a partial list of items that could be dangerous to children, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission:

CRIBS If made before CPSC and industry safety standards were established, these cribs can entrap, strangle or suffocate children. More than 2 3/8 inches between the crib slats or cutouts on the headboards or footboards present suffocation and strangulation hazards. Cribs that have broken or

savvy, they often draw power even while turned off. A good indicator of this — called “phantom load” — is to check the device for a light that stays on all the time. Phantom load will add a few watt-hours to energy consumption, but a few watt-hours on each of your many electronic devices adds up. To avoid this silent power draw, unplug the device or invest in a “smart” power strip, which allows certain electronics to continue using electricity while others can be completely shut down.

Air-conditioning units More people in the house plus doors hanging open from the last trip

missing parts or corner posts higher than 1/16 inch present a risk of death. There are about 20 deaths a year from using older and used crib models. If you’re throwing an old crib out, destroy it. Use only cribs that meet current standards.

PLAY YARDS AND PLAYPENS Faulty top and side rails on playpens, portable cribs and play yards with mesh sides can strangle young children. More than 1,000 children under the age of 5 are treated in emergency rooms each year from injuries in play yards. Five die.

INFANT CAR SEATS/ CARRIERS When used as a carrier, old car seats can eject infants

to play outside plus high temperatures equals an air-conditioning unit that has to work harder to keep the house cool. Be sure to adjust settings to maximize efficiency, such as using the “auto” function instead of keeping the fan running all the time. Regular maintenance to keep your air conditioner or heat pump in good working order is a good idea, as is checking and changing the air filter every few months or if it’s dirty. Also, set your thermostat as high as you can while maintaining your comfort level. — U.S. Department of Energy, Cooperative Research Network

because the handles break or side locks break.

OLD BABY WALKERS Older walkers can fit through standard doorways and do not stop at the top of the stairs. In the past, baby walkers injured more children than any other product. These injuries included skull fractures, concussions, internal injuries, broken bones, cuts and bruises.

CLOTHING WITH STRINGS Jackets and sweatshirts with strings, especially around the neck, can catch and strangle children. Remove all strings or cut them off clothing. Do not sell old clothes that have these strings.


energy S MART ER HO MES , PA RT 1

New devices allow homeowners to better control their energy use Wi-Fi enabled devices

Unlike programmable

H O ME E N E RG Y MO N I TO RS

quickly. Home energy

allow users to stream

thermostats that came

These devices come in

monitors can inform

movies or ask a virtual

before them, it is

two different types. One

you about the majority

assistant such as

much easier to set up

kind, such as SiteSage,

of your home’s energy

Amazon’s Alexa about

a schedule for Wi-Fi

monitors each circuit

use and what devices

the weather. Some

thermostats or adjust

of your home’s circuit

potentially cause

homeowners also use

them on the fly. Some

breaker box to tell you

energy waste. In fact,

Wi-Fi gadgets to better

models utilize machine

how much electricity

some energy advisors

control energy use in

learning to figure out

is used at each circuit.

have even used these

their homes.

how deep of a setback

They do not show more

to get greater insight

your home can handle

detailed energy use; if

on a home’s energy

to maximize energy

multiple appliances or

consumption!

savings, even for heat

devices are powered

pumps.

on the same circuit,

As technology has improved, more devices that increase homeowners’ comfort have become available.

Traditionally, the

Some new thermostats

recommendation for

the monitor will not be able to tell how much electricity each appliance

These new devices can allow you to minimize your home’s energy waste and save money.

can be controlled by

heat pump thermostat

a smartphone, and a

settings is to “set it and

few even use machine

forget it.” Setting and

That’s where the other

energy use can be

learning to better control

forgetting is a tried and

type of energy monitor,

improved, contact your

heating and cooling

true method to minimize

such as the Sense,

local electric co-op’s

systems. For those

expensive auxiliary heat.

can come in! It uses

energy advisor.

willing to go to the next

Newer Wi-Fi thermostats

electrical harmonics

level, real-time energy

can take advantage of

and machine learning to

monitors will display

setbacks by learning

detect appliance patterns

your home’s energy use

when the heat pump

to “learn” what devices

and may even show

needs to turn on to reach

are using electricity in

when specific appliances

the desired temperature,

your home. They have

cycle on and off!

while preventing the

been on the market long

W I- FI T HE RM OSTATS

auxiliary heat from

enough that they can

Wi-Fi thermostats are

turning on.

identify many frequently

a proven technology.

is using.

used appliances fairly

For more information about how your home’s

by Kevin Carpenter Energy Advisor Tipmont REMC

JUNE 2021

9


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SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE (Continued from previous page)

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insights

editor LETTERS TO THE

Pondering writing a letter to yourself

As I thought about what I would say to myself in a few years (after reading the April 2021 editor’s column) I thought if I could only have written to myself, gone back in time, to change things I did or did not do. Not that I was thinking about financial gain or having things easy, more like missed opportunities with friends, family and such. Then later I realized just how tough that would be. A little like if I were to tell my grandchildren how best to live or make life choices. Probably best to let them make their own decisions. But I may just think more on that letter to myself in the future. Tom Clarkson, via email

A true ‘story’ book

I know that some people are not skilled at crafting words into an interesting story or discourse but others like us do like to write and do appreciate the opportunity to pass on a little of what we’ve learned or experienced. Jay Wilson, Rochester, Indiana

Clarification Regarding the May 2021 County feature, the Noble County Historical Society has pointed out that the county is named for James Noble, Indiana’s first U.S. senator. For decades, historians and textbooks have wrongly credited his brother, Noah, who was 12 JUNE 2021 governor of Indiana from 1831 to 1837.

As we approach the 20th anniversary of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, Indiana Connection would like to hear your stories about this fateful day and see your photos. What were you doing when you learned about the planes crashing into the Twin Towers and the Pentagon? Do you have a personal connection to the events that happened that day? How did Sept. 11 change your life? If we publish your story or photo in our September issue, we’ll send you a check for $50. We’ll also send $50 to a randomly selected reader who sends us their recollections. The deadline to share your stories is July 6. Send them to us at www.indianaconnection.org/ share-your-9-11-stories-and-photos or mail us at Indiana Connection, Sept. 11 Stories and Photos, 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600, Indianapolis, IN 46240.

Marketplace Our Marketplace offers maximum exposure for your business or organization at a minimal cost. A limited number of display ads (such as those below) is available each month.

Don’t miss this opportunity to reach over 900,000 readers at an affordable rate! Please contact Cheryl Solomon, 847-749-4875 or cheryl@amp.coop, for other small business advertising opportunities in Indiana Connection. ipshewan Sh

a

The editorial “A Letter to Myself” prompted me to tell you what my daughter found, purchased and sent to me. Storyworth is a prepared and developed plan by which a person is given a question to answer at regular intervals. The answers to these openended questions are collected for a year, then put into a book which is then available to one’s children or grandchildren. The stories (answers to the questions) can be added to, edited, or deleted by the writer or by the one who purchased the Storyworth plan.

SHARE YOUR SEPT. 11 STORIES AND PHOTOS

e s t. 1 9 2 2

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JUNE

JULY

Due to the ever-changing COVID-19 situation, please note that the events below may not occur at their originally scheduled times. Be sure to reach out to the event contacts below to ensure that the programs you are interested in are still taking place. JUNE 17–19: HAUBSTADT SOMMERFEST, Haubstadt (Gibson), Old Haubstadt Gym Grounds. Three days of rides, live music, food and Southern Indiana’s finest Bierstube! Laufenfest 5k Run, Walk and Lil’ Dutch Run on Saturday. Free. 812-385-0999. haubstadtsommerfest.com JUNE 27–JULY 11: LIBERTY BICENTENNIAL AND FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION, Liberty (Union), Courthouse Square and citywide. Two weeks of festivities. Arts and craft vendors, live entertainment, food booths, contests and a parade. Free. 765-458-5976. ucdc.us JULY 9–17: THREE RIVERS FESTIVAL, Fort Wayne (Allen), Headwaters Park. Nine-day celebration with over 80 events. Live music, junk food alley. Free. 260-426-5556. threeriversfestival.org MORE EVENT LISTINGS AT INDIANACONNECTION.ORG/EVENTS

JUNE 2021

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county feature Benton County’s sculpture at the Indiana State Museum represents Dan Patch.

Benton County Benton County’s two most

county fairs. A year later, he began

prominent claims to fame both

racing on a national circuit to great

pertain to the “harness” — as in

acclaim. In a surprise move in 1901,

harness racing and harnessing the

Messner sold his prized stallion

wind.

to a New York casino owner for

At the turn of the 20th century, harness racing was one of the most popular sports in the nation. And into the limelight paced Dan Patch, a dark bay Standardbred stallion who went undefeated in open competition. Dan Patch’s achievements made him a sports

$20,000, a record price at the time. A year later, he was sold for $60,000 to the owner of a stock feed company in Minnesota. Dan Patch retired undefeated in 1909 as the holder of nine world records. He died of a heart attack at the age of 20 in 1916.

celebrity, possibly the most famous

Though buried in Minnesota, Dan

athlete in America until Babe Ruth.

Patch is remembered in Oxford

Born in 1896 in Oxford, Indiana, Dan Patch became so dominant on the racetrack after just two seasons of racing that other owners eventually refused to enter their horses against him. With his short

with a memorial tombstone. The town holds its annual “Dan Patch Days” festival on the weekend following Labor Day each year. The festival is scheduled this year for Sept. 10–12.

racing career over, he performed

Benton County is also known for

time trials and traveled extensively

harnessing wind. Sitting along the

on exhibition. He earned millions

Illinois state line between Chicago

of dollars in purses, attendance

and Terre Haute, Benton County is

gate receipts and product

positioned at the door to the great

endorsements while breaking the

prairies to the west. Benton County

world speed records at least 14

is among the windiest areas of the

times in the early 1900s.

state which led to its selection as

Dan Patch was bred by Daniel

site of the state’s first wind farm.

County Facts FOUNDED: 1840 NAMED FOR: U.S. Sen. Thomas H. Benton of Missouri, architect and champion of U.S. westward expansion POPULATION: 8,653 (2018 estimate) COUNTY SEAT: Fowler INDIANA COUNTY NUMBER: 4 TRIVIA: The descendants of Sen. Thomas Hart Benton have continued to be prominent in Missouri life; his great-grandnephew, also Thomas Hart Benton, was a 20th-century painter who painted the celebrated and controversial “Indiana Murals” for the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair. The works are now permanently displayed at Indiana University in Bloomington.

the southern part of the county, opened in 2009. The two large wind farms make Benton County the largest wind producer in the state, and, with over 620 turbines, the county has one of the largest

Messner Jr., a dry goods merchant

Benton County Wind Farm began

concentrations of wind turbines

in Oxford, and began his harness

operating in 2008. A second

in the United States east of the

racing career in 1900 at Indiana

farm, Fowler Ridge Wind Farm in

Mississippi River.

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Indiana eats Have a hankering for an eggtopped burger? At J. Ford’s Black Angus bar, order a “create your own burger” and go crazy with your toppings. PH OTO B Y MA R TY JON E S

WELL-DESERVED

Reputation For Jeff Ford, the path to a successful culinary career began in the back of a catering company’s semi-trailer. He perfected his chicken frying technique there when he was just 17 and that led to stints as sous chef and executive chef at various country clubs and restaurants in Indiana and Kentucky. In 2006, he was named the top country club chef in an Ohio Valley Club Managers Association competition. Wife Kelly’s food service background includes working at restaurants in high school and college and after graduation before transitioning to a successful career in sales. So, when the Fords took over the Black Angus, an established Terre Haute steak house in 2007, good things — and good eating — were bound to happen. With Jeff as

J. Ford’s Black Angus offers fine food in a comfortable setting

executive chef and Kelly running front of the house operations, J. Ford’s Black Angus has a well-deserved reputation for serving excellent food in a comfortable setting. State. Rep. Bob Heaton, a restaurant regular, can attest to J. Ford’s commitment to providing its customers an outstanding and unique experience. After all, how can you go wrong with a kitchen commandment like this one: “We wouldn’t serve a customer anything we wouldn’t be proud to serve our mother.” The menu rotates regularly so be sure to visit www.jfordsblackangus.com to see what’s currently being created in the kitchen. Perennial favorites are the Lobster Corn Dog appetizer and the tightly trimmed New York Strip Steak, chef Jeff’s choice. Even the House Salad — a menu staple that rarely

gets a shout out — is a show-stopping medley of greens, mandarins, feta cheese and red onion rings in a creamy vinaigrette dressing. A six-time Wine Spectator Award of Excellence winner, J. Ford’s offers an extensive selection of wines of all varieties, domestic and imported as well as full bar of other spirits. J. Ford’s is located in historic downtown Terre Haute at the corner of 7th and Walnut streets, two blocks south of Wabash Avenue. Guests can enjoy food and drinks in the bar, the dining room and in J. Ford’s three private dining rooms.

J. Ford’s Black Angus 129 S. 7th St., Terre Haute, Indiana 812-235-5549

jfordsblackangus.com

ABOUT STATE REP. BOB HEATON: Rep. Bob Heaton (R) represents District 46 which covers portions of Clay, Monroe, Owen and Vigo counties. Not only is Heaton the House Majority Whip, he is the Ways and Means committee chair. He serves on that committee’s Higher Education subcommittee as well as the Financial Institutions and Insurance committee. Heaton is president of Heaton Financial Services. An Indiana State University graduate, he played forward in the university’s famed basketball team — led by Larry Bird — that played for a NCAA Division 1 championship during the 1978-79 season. JUNE 2021

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food APPLE BERRY BREAKFAST CRISP Robert M. Winters, Rensselaer, Indiana 4 cups thinly sliced cooking apples 2 cups blueberries, blackberries, raspberries or mixed berries ¼ cup firmly packed brown sugar ¼ cup frozen orange juice concentrate 2 T. all-purpose flour Mix together thoroughly and spread into a buttered 8-by-8-inch square baking dish. Prepare topping. Topping 1½ cups quick or old-fashioned oats (do not use instant oats) ¾ cup firmly packed brown sugar 3 T. all-purpose flour ½ cup melted butter Stir dry ingredients thoroughly in a bowl. Add melted butter in slowly and mix with fingers until it resembles medium crumbs. Sprinkle evenly over fruit. Bake in oven at 350 F for 30-35 minutes or until apples are tender. Serve warm with cream, half and half or vanilla ice cream. Cook’s notes: Although I prefer fresh berries, frozen berries are acceptable. I sometimes melt ice

BLUEBERRY DELIGHT Mari J. Briggs, Sheridan, Indiana

the crisp for breakfast. Although I

1 (11 oz.) box vanilla wafer cookies, crushed 1 cup sifted powdered sugar

call it a “breakfast crisp,” it makes a

½ cup butter

cream overnight and pour it over

great dessert on those cold winter evenings.

2 eggs 1 (16 oz.) can blueberry pie filling ½ pint whipping cream, whipped ½ cup chopped pecans Fresh blueberries, washed and dried

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Spread half of the crushed wafer cookies on the bottom of an 8-by8-inch pan. Cream sugar and butter together. Add eggs and blend in well. Carefully spread over the wafer cookies. Cover creamed mixture with pie filling. Spoon the whipped cream on top of the pie filling. Sprinkle the pecans and reserved cookie crumbs on top. Dot with fresh blueberries. Refrigerate 24 hours before serving.


The

food WHICH READERSUBMITTED RECIPE WILL YOU TRY FIRST? TAKE YOUR PICK!

berry best

BAKED HAM IN STRAWBERRY SAUCE Fancheon Resler, Albion, Indiana 1 (2-inch-thick) slice of boneless ham 1 T. dry mustard 4 T. brown sugar ⅓ cup white vinegar 1 (10 oz.) package frozen strawberries, undrained 2 (3-inch) cinnamon sticks 2 whole cloves ½ t. ginger Gash the ham fat in several places and brown ham slice on both sides in a skillet. Place in a baking dish. Combine mustard, brown sugar, and vinegar; sprinkle over ham. In a saucepan, simmer strawberries,

QUICKIE COBBLER Shirley Todd, Columbus, Indiana ¾ stick (6 T.) butter 1 cup sugar ½ cup all-purpose flour 2 t. baking powder ½ cup milk 3 cups fresh berries

Melt butter and pour into an 8-inch square pan. Mix together sugar, flour and baking powder. Gradually add milk, stirring to blend. Pour into the pan. Stir a few times, then add berries and rake them through the batter with a fork. Bake at 375 F for 25-30 minutes or until crust is brown. Serve warm. Cook’s note: I use blackberries or blueberries in the recipe.

cinnamon, cloves, and ginger together for 10 minutes. Remove cinnamon sticks and cloves and pour over ham. Bake in 320 F oven for 1 ½ hours.

FO O D PREPARED BY I NDI ANA CO NNECTI O N STA FF PHO TO S BY TAYLO R M ARAN I O N

JUNE 2021

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Something old,

something new …

Barn venues offer couples rustic ambience for their special day BY RICHARD G. BIEVER


L

aura Burton was never the kind of little girl who dreamed of having

that big, fancy, “Barbie-style” ballroom wedding. “I was more of a tomboy,” she said. But on Sunday drives with her parents, she did like to daydream while gazing out the back windows at the passing farmland and countryside. Though they lived in rural Benton County, her mom had family in adjoining Warren and Fountain counties to the south near Attica. They attended a rural church in the area and would visit. “We liked to cruise around in the country,” she recalled.

Just east of Attica, one particular old home with a wooden barn out back always caught Laura’s eye. “I remember driving by a house that was just beautiful. I’m a vintage, Victorian kind-of-girl. And I just always loved that house.” The house (pictured above) was a two-story red-orange brick Italianate with gingerbread trim built in 1865. Laura never would — or could — have imagined then that one day her past and future would be joined together at that roadside home. But last October, just inside the double glass-paned wooden doors of that house, in a special room to the left of the wooden balustrade of its steep curved staircase, she readied herself to be a bride. Then, before family and friends, she and her fiancé, Ben Fisher, said their timeless vows to each other out back by that old barn under God and a big Indiana autumnal sky.

CASUAL YET CL ASSIC The wedding took place in the historic home and barn known as Vignette Farms. It opened as a wedding venue at the start of 2020,

just before the pandemic. The newly rebuilt 110-year-old post and beam barn features 3,200 square feet and includes a bar area and two bathrooms. The home, meanwhile, includes an elegantly decorated bride room and a masculine groom room with separate entrances, bathrooms and staircases, and an entryway accented by dramatic, tall windows and that breathtaking sweeping staircase. The farm, served electrically by Tipmont REMC, is “something old” transformed into “something new.” It’s one of the latest around Indiana providing a place for this generation of brides and grooms trading the traditional formal locales for more relaxed, casual and natural settings. (Please see sidebar on page 22 for a partial listing of similar venues.) “There’s something about country living that is charming to a lot of people,” said owner Derek May. May and his wife, Christine, purchased the farm in the summer of 2018. They have worked tirelessly to bring Vignette Farms to life. “What we wanted to provide here is a timelessness,” said Chris. continued on page 20

PH OTO B Y R A CH E L S ITA R Z, B OH EMIA N L IGH T S P HOTOGR A P H Y

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19


co ntin ue d fro m pa ge 19

Vintage weddings at venues like barns and farms have become popular in the past decade as many couples shun the glitzy trappings of ballrooms and banquet halls. They are trading the ritz for rustic. Doing so, they are finding a bucolic beauty at venues close to nature which reflect the timelessness of the vows they’ve made. Call it “rural chic,” “rustic chic” or “rustic elegance.” “We’re pretty laid-back people,” said the bride, now Laura Fisher, of Ben and herself. “I just wanted something casual but classic and pretty, not real trendy. I just wanted a more elegant style, Victorian classic.” According to an annual survey from The Knot, an online wedding-planning platform and magazine, 15% of

“There’s just a serenity out here, I think people sense it when they come out.” D E R E K M AY, V I G N E T T E FA R M S

couples getting married in 2019 chose a barn, farm, or ranch for their wedding reception which was the second most popular choice. And while traditional banquet halls remained number one, they are losing their appeal. In the past decade, the number of couples choosing to celebrate their wedding in banquet halls dropped from 27% in 2009 to 17%. Couples today want their wedding to express their identity, The Knot noted. Couples gravitate toward locales that say something about them. By choosing to get married in a barn or a state park or similar outdoor venue, a couple might want to show their love of nature or that they fell in love hiking or camping. Other unique locales gaining in popularity are historic homes, museums and historic sites for history buffs, and rural vineyards for wine lovers. “There’s just a serenity out here,” said Derek. “I think people sense it when they come out.” Derek also noted there’s grandeur in the historic barns themselves — what you might call the old cathedrals of the cornfields. “There’s just something so special about an old historic barn, the

story that’s behind it,” he said. “We tried to create this experience when people walk in where they are just in awe, how big and how high it is.”

A NEW PURPOSE The Mays call themselves “serial entrepreneurs.” Both hail from Indianapolis and its suburbs. They’ve had their hands in various businesses: owned a coffee shop, a catering service, and a lawn care business; and built and sold custom furniture. “I call her the ‘visionary’ and myself ‘operations,’ said Derek. “She has all the ideas, and I help carry them out.” After Chris binge-watched a Netflix show about a woman and her daughters establishing a barn wedding venue in Canada, her adult daughters, Courtney and Chelsea, convinced her that was something they could do. They also had a couple of friends who owned wedding barns. Courtney, 26, developed a marketing plan for barn wedding venues for a marketing research course she was taking. The Mays sold their home, moved into a rental, and began looking for a property in eastern, northeastern suburban Indianapolis to begin a new chapter in their life. They put in an offer on 10 acres in Hancock County they thought would be ideal, but it fell through when their variance for the venue was rejected by the zoning board. They continued their search and broadened their search. They finally found the historic home and barn outside of Attica. It was an hour and a half drive from Indy’s north side, a little farther than they planned, but they drove out to the open house. “I just knew there was something special about this property,” Chris said. The location was close enough to Lafayette/West Lafayette and Purdue University that they believed they could make it work.

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D E R E K A N D C H R I S M AY M O V E D T O AT T I C A F R O M I N D I A N A P O L I S T O S TA R T T H E I R V I N TA G E W E D D I N G V E N U E , V I G N E T T E FA R M S , I N 2 0 1 8 . T H E I R F I R S T S E A S O N WA S L A S T Y E A R .

The home had been restored in the 1970s by a family that had lived there for 40 years. There had been other owners since, one updated the kitchen. Coincidentally, they later learned the kitchen designer from Home Depot was Ben Fisher’s mom. The Mays realized the barn to be the wedding venue had some issues: there were sagging areas and rotted flooring; a turkey vulture had taken up residence; and, though it had been decades since animals inhabited the barn, it still smelled like an old barn. But they put in an offer and were able to purchase the home, barn and seven acres in September 2018. The Mays first sought out a wellknown Amish construction crew from Adams County to help restore the barn, but the team was too busy to schedule them in. So, the Mays turned to other contractors. “It was such a horrible mess. We had many crews come and did not call us back. They did not want the job,” noted Chris. Finally, they hired a crew and were repairing footers, replacing bad siding, and having new concrete poured. Then, on May 23, 2019, straight line

winds came through, picked the barn up a bit, dropped it, and the whole thing collapsed into itself. It was among four barns in the area to topple in the storm that day. Fortunately, Derek had an engineering friend out earlier who did a schematic drawing of the barn down to every post. He had a perfect blueprint to rebuild it exactly as it was. At that point, the Amish barn builder, Ruben Schwartz, had cleared his schedule and agreed to reconstruct it. “It was so devastating. But long story short, it was a blessing in disguise,” said Derek.

The Amish crew salvaged about 80% of the original posts and timbers and were able to clean and treat them, getting rid of the old barn odor. A small crew then came and rebuilt the barn over the course of about six weeks in the fall of 2019, completing it in November. The end result: Essentially a brand new 1910 barn built with clean like-new original timbers. The Mays also had a new stamped concrete floor poured, and Chris, a skilled carpenter, put much of the original barn wood not reusable for the rebuild to another use. She and the continued on page 22

LAURA & BEN

PHO TO S BY RACHEL SI TARZ, BO HEM I AN LI G HTS PHO TO G RAPHY

Laura and Ben Fisher wanted a simple but elegant wedding venue. They found it in the rebuilt barn and home she remembered passing by as a little girl.


family, which also includes 17-year-old son Preston, built the long dining tables for the barn. She and Derek credit the Indiana Office of Community and Rural Affairs for a matching grant that, along with insurance funds and other help from the Attica community, allowed them to rebuild the barn for the new business venture. “We never, ever dreamed that we would have a brand new ‘old’ barn, cleaned, repaired, that will hopefully last 100 years,” added Chris. While Vignette Farms only had two weddings its first year, because of COVID, 12 have been booked for 2021, and two already for 2022. The barn also will be used to host an international soil/agricultural meeting this summer.

A HIDDEN GEM Chris has other plans beyond a wedding venue for Vignette Farms, thus the “s” on the end, she said. They’ve purchased a small greenhouse to start growing and selling flowers. She’d like to open up a roadside coffee shop and raise chickens, and a Victorian garden is on her bucket list. A vineyard, Chris said, would be appropriate down the road ... to go with “Vignette” which is derived from the French word for “vine.” Vine also happens to be the name of a crossroads community just up the road. “I have visions for this and this and this …,” she said.

INDIANA BARN VENUES

continu ed from p age 21

“I walk around in awe of the history of this place,” she added. “We’re just stewards of this place. It’s ours for now, but it’s not ‘ours.’ We’ve had so many people come through, and, sometimes, they just stop and ask if they can look because they’ve always wanted to see inside the house. We love that.” It’s a funny coincidence that long before Vignette Farms was in care of the Mays, it belonged to the imagination of a young Laura Burton, riding past in her parents’ car. And just by chance, Laura’s mother, Kathy, came across the venue online when Laura began looking for a wedding site. “You mean the house I always used to like to drive by that had the barn?” Laura asked her mom. “That would be perfect.” And it was. Laura added, “I’m thankful Chris and Derek saw a hidden gem in the house and barn, and brought it back to life for people to enjoy.”

The list of non-traditional wedding/reception venues around Indiana has proliferated in the past decade. We reached out to the electric cooperatives that distribute Indiana Connection for recommendations of event centers in their areas. Here’s a list of places to consider: BARTHOLOMEW

Blackberry Hill Wedding Barn • Elizabethtown White Diamond Lavender Farms • Hope BOONE

JLH Wedding Barn • Jamestown The Barn in Zionsville • Zionsville CARROLL

Vintage Oaks Banquet Barn • Delphi CLARK

Franklin Farms Event Venue LLC • Marysville Montgomery Farms Weddings and Events • Underwood HARRISON

Cedar Bluff Weddings and Retreats • Corydon HENRY

Barn Thirty-Eight • New Castle The Belgian Horse Winery • Middletown Boondocks Farm • Knightstown Whitetail Tree Farm • Springport JASPER

The Pavilion at Sandy Pines • DeMotte JENNINGS

The Barn at Willow Lake • North Vernon LAPORTE

The Shed at Guse Christmas Trees • Wanatah NOBLE

Mid-America Windmill Museum • Kendallville Sylvan Cellars Events Center • Rome City OWEN

Abram Farm • Spencer RIPLEY

RomWeber Marketplace • Batesville Walhill Farm • Batesville SPENCER

The Corner House B&B • Rockport Matlida’s Event Barn • Evanston VIGO

Sycamore Farm • Terre Haute WA R R I C K

Tanglewood Weddings & Event Barn • Boonville WA S H I N G T O N

RICHARD G. BIEVER is senior editor of Indiana Connection.

The Farm • Salem

22

For links to these venues and others, visit this story on our website: IndianaConnection.org

JUNE 2021


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do-it-yourself

CLUTTER CONTROL Organize your way to the pantry of your dreams

A messy, disorganized pantry might be easy to ignore by simply closing the door. But the next time you need to grab something, you’ll face the half empty bags of chips and random canned foods strewn about or even falling down. Tackle those haphazard dry goods with some sensible steps and helpful organizational tools. Empty, toss, and donate Start by emptying out your entire pantry. Throw away any food that is expired or stale. When ditching clutter from any type of storage area, it’s good to have a usage timeline. In other words, toss something if you haven’t used it over a certain period of time. If you haven’t consumed or even touched it in a couple of months, you probably never will. Freshen up Now take a good look at the walls, shelving, and floor. Thoroughly clean and disinfect all surfaces, not just for overall cleanliness, but also to eliminate odors and hinder potential pests. Vacuum up any loose crumbs that have accumulated on the shelves or floor and wipe down every surface. A fresh coat of paint on the walls or wood shelving might give your pantry an extra lift. Try adding self-adhesive liners to solid shelving to protect them from future messes. They’re easy to install and don’t leave residue behind when peeled up. They also keep the bottoms of cans from scuffing up your newly painted shelves. Or add a thin, painted piece of plywood to wire shelving to keep items from falling through the rungs. If you lack shelving altogether, there are lots of modular units,

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JUNE 2021

simple bracket and plank shelving, or vinyl coated wire shelving systems available for any size pantry. Put everything in its place Now that you’re ready to put everything away, make sure the items you’re keeping are wiped free of sticky drips or residue. Don’t just throw items back on the shelves — organize them in a way that works for you. Consider categorizing your food staples for convenience and frequency of use. Group like-items together and place products you use most often right up front. Invest in organization Storage containers, especially for things like flour and sugar, keep your pantry tidy and organized. Pour these staples into air-tight containers that are both aesthetically pleasing and protective against bugs. A non-slip turntable keeps things within reach and maximizes space. Try a threetiered plastic organizer for displaying spices, baking supplies, teas, cans, or condiments so they’re all together and easy to spot. Let the pantry door work for you. Overthe-door or mountable storage organizers are easy to install and gain you extra real estate. Try a multi-roll rack that holds your aluminum foil, plastic wrap, and parchment paper boxes. It keeps them easily accessible right from the door and

by

rolls stay in place when you pull out a sheet. A mounted plastic bag organizer is great for stuffing spare bags and dispensing them for reuse later. Once you’ve gotten organized, keep it up! Return items to their proper bins or shelves after every use and encourage your family to do the same. Visit your local Do it Best store or doitbest. com for thousands of the best home improvement products, including supplies to help keep your pantry organized.

PANTRY ORGANIZATION

GIVEAWAY Motivated to spruce up your pantry? Enter to win a prize pack (valued at $250) — sponsored by Indiana Do it Best store owners — featuring pantry organization tools mentioned in this article. Turn to page 3 to learn how to enter the giveaway and visit our website for a listing of all the goodies in the prize pack.

Cynthia and Gregg Reed

Cynthia and Gregg Reed are the owners of Reed’s Hardware in Bluffton. He is a member-owner of Do it Best Corp., a Fort Waynebased cooperative of thousands of hardware stores, home centers and lumberyards throughout the U.S. and around the world. (This article is for informational purposes only. Indiana Connection and Do it Best Corp. assume no liability for the accuracy or completeness of the information contained herein, or for injuries, property damage, or the outcome of any project.)


product recalls One million Greenworks and Powerworks pressure washer spray guns recalled Greenworks and Powerworks pressure washer spray guns have been recalled. The spray gun connector can break, causing the hose and/or parts of the connector to become dislodged during use, posing an impact injury hazard to the user. This recall involves the Greenworks brand 2000 psi plastic pressure washer spray gun included in the Greenworks brand 2000 psi Plastic Gun Accessory kit, Greenworks brand Pressure Washer models ranging from 1500 -1800 psi, and certain Powerworks brand Pressure Washer models ranging from 1700-1800 psi. The spray guns and/or the power washers were sold nationwide at Lowe’s Stores and online from January 2017 through February 2021. The plastic gun accessory kit was sold for about $40 and the pressure washers were sold for between $100 and $180. Call Hongkong Sun Rise Trading at 833-211-9185; or go online at www.greenworkstools.com and click on “Important Safety Notices” at the bottom of the page for more information on model numbers and descriptions. As a service to our readers and to promote electrical safety, here is a recent recall notice provided by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. Visit www.cpsc.gov/en/recalls for full details of this recall and for notices of many more.

JUNE 2021

25


pets

How to include your pets in the family vacation

Sixty years ago, author John

friendly hotels and parks, bring food

day, even with the windows

Steinbeck wrote a semi-nonfictional

and water that the pet is used to, and

open, a parked automobile can

travelogue called “Travels with

a collar with an ID and temporary

quickly become a furnace, and

Charley” about a road trip around

ID tag with the phone number of

heatstroke can develop.

America. Charley was his standard

your destination and your cell phone

poodle. A decade later, singer Lobo

number,” she says.

had a soft rock hit that detailed road trips with “Me and You and a Dog Named Boo.” While we may not be writing a book or a song afterward, traveling with our furry buddies has become more popular in recent years as hotels and places of accommodation have become more pet friendly. Still, there

carrier, try getting the carrier out a

to consider when traveling with a pet:

few days before departure. Feed

• Consider having your pet microchipped as a means of permanent identification. • Bring an extra leash, preferably a slip-loop leash. • When traveling in a car, pets should be in a crate, or a pet car

with Rover and meandering with

seat and harness, to ensure their

Mittens. If you’re planning to take your

safety as well as your own while

pet along on a family vacation this

driving.

should take to prepare your cat or dog for travel. To minimize stress, pets should be kept on the same schedule, says Lorraine Corriveau, wellness veterinarian and small animal community practice specialist at Purdue’s College of Veterinary Medicine. “You also should bring medical and vaccination records, research pet

26

JUNE 2021

have difficulty getting into a

Here are a few other tips from Purdue

are things to keep in mind when roving

summer, there are several steps you

• For pets, particularly cats, who

• Make frequent stops to allow your pet to exercise, relieve itself and drink water. • Prepare your pet for a long trip by taking him or her on a series of short drives. • Your pet’s travel-feeding schedule should start with a light meal three to four hours prior to departure. • Never leave your animal alone in a parked vehicle. On a hot

and put your cat’s food bowl in the carrier at home so that it’s not just used for transportation. If your cat loves catnip, place some in the carrier to make it more appealing. Sometimes it is best to put the carrier on its end, with the opening at the top, and put the cat in bottom first. • Some pets may react to being in a carrier by vocalizing excessively, drooling and salivating, vomiting and relieving themselves. If your pet displays these behaviors, a sedative may be needed. You should seek the advice of your veterinarian about whether your pet needs a sedative, and which sedative is appropriate. • If you intend to travel by air, check with the airline to make sure you have met all requirements and policies and with your vet for tips and special travel concerns.


travel

TH E HI L L S

are alive …

Visit Bill Monroe Mus ic Pa rk for t he s o u n ds of bluegra ss … and nature

To most folks, “bluegrass” probably

fire rings and picnic tables, and is pet

Indiana, … means a lot to me,” he later

conjures up the sprightly music played

friendly. In addition to the camp sites,

told an interviewer. “I bought this place

with a banjo, fiddle and mandolin from

rustic and primitive cabins, and two

… to have a home base here where

the hills of Kentucky or Tennessee. But

recreational campers are available to

we could to play to the folks and give

for those who know their bluegrass

rent.

them a chance enjoy and to learn about

music, the hills of bucolic Brown County come just as readily to mind.

Activities and amenities on the grounds also include catch-and-release fishing,

bluegrass music. And it’s really growing in this state, and I’m glad that it has.”

For over 80 years, the Brown County

non-motorized boating, biking, an on-site

The first annual “bluegrass” festival

burg of Bean Blossom has been home to

camp store, and free admission during

hosted by Monroe was in 1967 and is

some of the biggest names in this music

your visit at the Bill Monroe Museum and

now the oldest continuous bluegrass

genre at what was originally the Brown

Gift Shop.

festival in the world. After Monroe’s

County Jamboree. The names got no bigger than legendary Bill Monroe who came as a performer in 1951, bought the jamboree grounds in 1952, and

The park is located just five miles north of Nashville and Brown County State Park.

death in 1996, the Jamboree grounds changed hands a few times and has been renamed “Bill Monroe’s Memorial Park and Campground.”

maintained his presence there until his

T H E B I RT H OF BLUE G RASS

Improvements continued to be made to

death in 1996.

While Monroe was born and raised in

the campground, and the Bill Monroe

Kentucky, he and his brothers moved

Bluegrass Hall of Fame Museum was

to northwest Indiana at the start of

added.

Hoping to emerge from the shadow of COVID-19, the Bill Monroe Music Park and Campground kicks off the 2021 season early this month with the John Hartford Campout, June 2-5. The biggest event will be the Bean Blossom Bluegrass/Uncle Pen Jams, Sept. 17-25. As guidelines and pandemic protocols continue changing, please check its

the Great Depression to work at an oil refinery in Whiting when he was 18. They soon began playing music professionally, starting with a square dance in Hammond. His career took off from there as he pioneered what became “bluegrass.”

The genre takes its name from Monroe’s early band, the Blue Grass Boys, which set the standard for the music. The name, of course, came from Monroe’s home state of Kentucky. But Monroe’s performing career, which spanned 69 years as a singer, instrumentalist,

website — billmonroemusicpark.com —

The Music Park and Campgrounds

composer and bandleader, got its start

for up-to-minute information.

traces its roots back to 1939 when

in Indiana’s blue-collar northwest and

the Brown County Jamboree in Bean

its roots are deep in the hills of Brown

Blossom began. The jamboree grew

County.

When not enjoying the toe-tapping music inspired by Monroe, the “Father of Bluegrass,” sit back and listen to the sounds of Mother Nature beside a crackling fire under a star-filled night sky. The family-friendly campground is already open for the season. One of the largest campgrounds in southern Indiana, the 55-acre park offers uncrowded sites with water/electric,

as thousands of people gathered annually to see local musicians and stars of the Grand Ole Opry. In 1951, Monroe, by then a huge star, began playing the jamboree. A year later, so impressed with the enthusiastic crowds, Monroe bought the festival grounds.

B I L L MO N RO E M U SI C PA R K & C A M P G RO U N D

5163 N. State Road 135 Morgantown, Indiana 812-988-6422 info@billmonroemusicpark.com

“This festival here in Bean Blossom, JUNE 2021

27


Wabash Valley Power news

PUMP IT UP: Some of the coolest new tech for your home will chill you out in the summer and keep you toasty in the winter – while reducing your carbon footprint and lowering your energy costs. If your home is cooled by an air source heat pump, the system also heats your home in the winter. And if your heat pump is more than 10 years old, it may be time to upgrade to a new system. Fortunately, air source heat pump technology also has improved significantly over the last decade. A new cold climate air source heat pump will not only provide energy efficient cooling, but it will minimize your energy bills even in winter’s brutal cold. Electric heat pumps have been around for a long time, and they’re among the most efficient ways to cool your home.

An old, clunky heat pump can help inspire you to upgrade to new tech and save!

Air source heat pumps essentially pull heat from the air — in the summer the system pulls the warm air from your home and pumps it outside; in the winter, it pulls the heat from the air outside and pumps that heat into your home. While they are a terrific energy efficient option in the summer, typical heat pumps can lose their efficiency when the temperature drops near 20 degrees Fahrenheit. Fortunately, advances in compressor technology allow new cold climate heat pumps to gather heat at much lower winter temperatures. When it’s 47 degrees or above outside, cold climate heat pumps operate at nearly 400% efficiency (meaning they produce nearly four times the energy they consume). And even when the temperature outside drops to zero, a cold climate heat pump

will still operate at about 200% efficiency. That means your system will use a lot less energy – and minimize the use of a backup heat source, saving you money. Your local electric cooperative even offers Power Moves® rebates for qualifying upgrades to a cold climate air source heat pump! For more information, contact your local electric cooperative’s energy advisor, or visit www.PowerMoves.com.

Hoosier Energy news

POWER ING C OM MU NI TY HOOSIER ENERGY, MEMBER COOPERATIVES MAKE A DIFFERENCE TOGETHER Cooperative leaders formed Hoosier Energy in 1949 to help electrify rural communities. Today, the generation and transmission cooperative serves 18 member systems in southern and central Indiana and southeastern Illinois. At the heart of the cooperative culture is an honest desire to provide services that value reliability, affordability and sustainability. These aspects connect to Hoosier Energy’s mission as it works to make a difference together with member co-ops. Hoosier Energy’s obligation to serve transcends weather, market volatility or regulatory uncertainty. It rests solely on working together with member systems to deliver electricity to power homes and communities in Indiana.

Our member cooperatives serve 59 Indiana and Illinois counties Operating and maintaining 36,000 miles of distribution lines Providing electric service to nearly 307,000 member-consumers Serving an estimated 710,000 people in Indiana and Illinois

CORRECTION Because of a photo services misidentification, a photo of a harmless beetle was mistakenly used last month to depict 28 MAYtiger 2021 an emerald ash borer. Here is an actual emerald ash borer.


safety

Stay safe when

SETTING SAIL Electric safety is as important on the sea as it is on the land. A key way to be safe while boating is to stay clear of power lines. Electric safety is probably the last thing that crosses anyone’s mind on a leisurely summertime boat ride. But because water and electricity are a deadly combination, before taking off, brush up on some boating safety rules. “It’s critical you stay away from electric

Among other maritime must-dos:

power lines and other electricity

• While on the water, watch for

sources when you go boating,” said

signs that indicate where

John Gasstrom, CEO of Indiana

underwater utility lines are

Electric Cooperatives. “After all,

located. Don’t anchor your boat

besides being a popular ingredient

near them.

for summertime fun, water is a good conductor of electricity. Even when you’re on a boat, electricity still tries to reach the ground below to the bottom of the body of water.” Boaters should constantly be aware of the location of power lines. On sailboats especially, that means paying close attention when raising or lowering the boat’s mast or spar and ensuring drying sails and sheet lines don’t blow into power lines. “When docking your boat, enlist the help of another person to help guide you at least 10 feet away from all

• When fishing, check for overhead power lines before casting your line. • If your boat accidentally comes in

• Equipment leakage circuit interrupters protect swimmers nearby from potential electrical leakage into the water around your boat. Consider installing them on your boat. To make sure your boat’s electrical system is in shipshape, periodically have a professional marine electrician inspect it. It should meet local and state safety codes and standards.

contact with a power line, whatever

Make sure the boat’s AC outlets

you do, don’t jump in the water.

are three-prong. All electrical

Stay on board and don’t touch

connections should be in a panel box

anything made of metal. Don’t

to avoid contact. Ground fault circuit

leave the boat until it has moved

interrupters should be installed on

away from the power line.

your boat and on the dock. When

• If you notice a tingling sensation while swimming, the water could be electrified. Get out quickly,

using electricity near water, use portable GFCIs labeled “UL-Marine Listed.” Test all GFCIs once a month.

avoiding metal objects like ladders.

power lines,” Gasstrom said.

JUNE 2021

29


cooperative career Professional progression:

BUILDING TRUST The day Mary Jo Thomas took the open

year history

accounting position at Whitewater Valley

of Indiana’s

REMC in 1996, she began working her way

REMCs. In

up the career ladder. In 2013, she became

more recent

president and CEO of the cooperative that

years, two

provides electricity to consumers in several

other women

counties along the Indiana/Ohio state line

have become

around Richmond.

CEOs at

“I did not set out to be CEO,” Thomas said. The person who was offered that accounting job turned it down when he found out it included a typical cooperative “wearing-of-

MARY JO THOMAS Thomas

Indiana electric cooperatives and a third has become the CEO at a power generation and transmission cooperative.

many-hats role,” which included answering

By the early 2000s, as Thomas was

the telephone and backing up the utility’s

promoted into new roles, she began working

front counter during the lunch hour. So,

closely with a new CEO who joined the

Thomas applied.

cooperative. In her, he saw his successor;

“I didn’t have any problem with that,” she said. “And that’s really been my work ethic: to help out wherever I can. That’s how you build trust in the workplace – by working shoulder to shoulder. If you think you’re better than anybody else and shouldn’t have to do something, that’s not a good way to build teamwork.” When she became CEO, she was the only female chief executive of a cooperative in Indiana and only the second in the 85-plus

he began mentoring her. Thomas accompanied him to meetings around the state and was exposed to all elements of the industry outside her local cooperative. When it came time for his retirement, he and the Whitewater Valley board of directors thought the succession was in place to go smoothly. Thomas, though, was hesitant. “I teetered back and forth,” she recalled. “I wasn’t sure I could do it.” But the retiring CEO assured her, “You’re doing it now.”

2005 promoted 1996 hired Accountant/ Computer Specialist

30

JUNE 2021

2001 promoted Director of Customer Service

Director of Administrative Services and Corporate Development

President and CEO Whitewater Valley REMC

stepped into the role she realized she’d been doing all along. What made the decision easier, she noted, was she knew the team she’d have behind her. “The staff I have, and that I knew I had going in, make my job easy,” she said. “We’re a team. It’s a group effort for sure. “You have in the back of your mind that you have to know it all. But when you have good people around you, you don’t have to know it all. I don’t have to have the answer to every question. I might need to know how to find the answer, but I know who to ask to get all the information to make a decision.”

INTERESTED IN AN ELECTRIC CO-OP CAREER? Visit WePowerIndiana.org to learn about available careers or tell us about yourself.

2012 promoted Promoted to Chief Operating Officer

2013 promoted President and CEO




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