Henry county REMC
M ARC H 2018
YOUR INDIANA COOPERATIVE COMPANION
k B a e r t s a F Five quick questions for Romeo Langford
PAGE 38
Scholarships available
Look inside for more information and how to apply
from the editor
Read on!
VOLUME 67 • NUMBER 9 ISSN 0745-4651 • USPS 262-340 Published monthly by:
A couple of months ago, I shared that I enjoy curling up with a good book when the weather outside is frightful. This winter, those frightful conditions were quite common so I’ve been able to make quite a dent in my “to be read” pile. Several of you wrote to offer recommendations of books that I, or other readers, might enjoy. Elsie Kerr wrote, “One of my New Year’s resolutions was to reread some of the ‘old’ books that were favorites of my own children many years ago. Many are well-worn!” However, to start the year, Elsie read William H. McRaven’s “Make Your Bed” and Hillary Clinton’s “What Happened?” She said both books were “thought provoking.” Meanwhile, Beverly Johnson Biehr, a published author herself, has been reading “The Zhivago Affair” by Peter Finn and Petra Couvée. It is a biography of author Borya Pasternak about the dangers and struggles that come with being a poet and writer in Russia. Becky Williams, former director of the Fulton County Public Library, recommends “The Zookeeper’s Wife” by Diane Ackerman. It was the library’s reading group selection in January. Other readers’ picks: • “A Year in Provence” by Peter Mayle (recommended by Wendy Smith) • “The Best Christmas Pageant Ever” by Barbara Robinson (recommended by Liz Gilbert) • “Jesus, The One and Only” by Beth Moore (recommended by Denise Hershman) • Nicholas Sparks’ novels (recommended by Darlene Smith) Now that the weather is starting to warm up you may not be spending as much time inside with a good book. But if you want to escape from reality awhile without leaving your chair, pick up a book or your Kindle and read on!
ELECTRIC CONSUMER 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 262,000 residents and businesses receive the magazine as part of their electric co-op membership. CONTACT US: 720 N. High School Road Indianapolis, IN 46214 317-487-2220 or 800‑340‑7362 ec@ElectricConsumer.org ElectricConsumer.org INDIANA ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES OFFICERS Gary Gerlach President Walter Hunter Vice President Randy Kleaving Secretary/Treasurer Tom VanParis Chief Executive Officer EDITORIAL STAFF Emily Schilling Editor Richard George Biever Senior Editor Holly Huffman Member Relations/ Advertising Manager Ellie Schuler Communications Specialist ADVERTISING American MainStreet Publications, 800-626-1181; amp.coop Crosshair Media, 502-216-8537; crosshairmedia.net
EMILY SCHILLING Editor eschilling@electricconsumer.org On the menu: July issue — Picnic/Pitch-In recipes; deadline April 19. If we publish your recipe on our food page, we’ll send you a $10 gift card.
Reader Submissions page: July — What accomplishments are you most proud of? Let us know in a short paragraph and, if you have one, send us a photo to illustrate your story; deadline April 19.
Giveaways: Zydeco’s Cajun Actual, which was featured in Indiana Eats in February, is providing one lucky reader with a $25 gift certificate. We’re also giving away two sets of four tickets to the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites, courtesy of the museum. To enter these drawings, send an email to ec@electricconsumer.org by March 16 with either the subject line “Free Cajun Food” or “Museum Giveaway.” If you submit a recipe or story for the reader submission page when you enter, you’ll increase your chance of winning!
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 ElectricConsumer.org; email ec@ElectricConsumer.org; or send to Electric Consumer, PO Box 24517, Indianapolis, IN 46224.
GLM Communications, Inc., 212-929-1300; glmcommunications.com Paid advertisements are not endorsements by any electric cooperative or this publication. UNSOLICITED MATERIAL: Electric Consumer 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: Readers who receive Electric Consumer through their electric co-op membership should report address changes to their local co-op. POSTAGE: Periodicals postage paid at Indianapolis, Ind., and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to: Electric Consumer, P.O. Box 24517, Indianapolis, IN 46224. Include key number. No portion of Electric Consumer may be reproduced without permission of the editor.
MARCH 2018
3
contents
MARCH
10
17
product picks
food
23
feature story
03 FROM THE EDITOR
16 INDIANA EATS
27 SAFETY
05 CO-OP NEWS What’s happening at your local electric cooperative.
17 FOOD
28 LEGISLATIVE
10 PRODUCT PICKS Spruce up with tools that make jobs a spring breeze. 12 INSIGHTS 13 C ALENDAR ART CONTEST
19 BEST OF INDIANA Cast your vote for the best. 22 DO-IT-YOURSELF What’s in your toolbox? 23 FEATURE STORY Feel the chill as the Ice Age returns to Indiana State Museum.
Find us on Facebook www.facebook.com/ElectricConsumer Follow us on Twitter www.twitter.com/Electriconsumer
profile
36 H OOSIER ENERGY/ WABASH VALLEY NEWS
Getting the votes out.
37 READER SUBMISSIONS Pictures of our changing
30 EVENTS CALENDAR
weather (not in all editions).
34 BACKYARD “Perennial of the Year” is a magnet for butterflies and
38 PROFILE New Albany’s Romeo Langford is among the best high school players in the U.S. Learn a bit more about the high-scoring hoops star.
bees (not in all editions). 35 PRODUCT RECALLS
On the Cover March’s mass hysteria in Indiana this year might not be so much about who wins the
Find us on Pinterest www.pinterest.com/Electriconsumer
high school basketball championships, but
Follow us on Instagram www.instagram.com/ElectricConsumer
New Albany’s Romeo Langford, one of the
rather, which college wins the services of most sought-after seniors in the nation. PHOTO BY TYLER STEWART/NEWS AND TRIBUNE
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MARCH 2018
co-op news
Is your bill higher than normal? www.hcremc.com
would like to offer 10 quick tips to avoid high
things HCREMC can
winter bills. Many of these tips can be used
control to help keep
year-round.
the cost of electricity as economical as possible,
CONTACT US 800-248-8413 Fax: 765-529-1667 OFFICE HOURS 7:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m., Monday – Friday
While there are some
one of the things we cannot control is the weather.
If you would like to see what your electric use was for any given month, day or hour, log into our SmartHub website or SmartHub app and click on "My Usage." Members can also utilize our energy advisor page at www.hcremc.
As many of you know, so far, we have
com. These are great resources to help you
STREET ADDRESS 3400 S. State Road 3 New Castle, IN 47362
experienced a colder than normal winter.
evaluate and reduce your electric use.
MAILING ADDRESS P.O. Box D New Castle, IN 47362
F, compared to the same period last winter
A night deposit box is available 24 hours a day. EMAIL hcremc@hcremc.com SERVICE INTERRUPTIONS To report a power outage, please call 800-248-8413, day or night. MISSION STATEMENT The mission of Henry County REMC is to provide reliable, safe and cost-competitive electrical service to enhance the lives of our members and the communities we serve. BILL DUE DATES Bills mailed April 9 are due April 26. Bills mailed April 16 are due May 3. Bills mailed April 30 are due May 17. HOLIDAY Henry County REMC’s office will be closed on March 30 for Good Friday.
The average low temperature between Dec. 17, 2017, and Jan. 17, 2018, was only 13.6 where the average low temperature was 23.9 F. Even during the Polar Vortex of 2014, the average low temperature for the exact same period was 18.5 F. These frigid temperatures have caused heating systems to work
Feel free to call us if you need more information about SmartHub or would like to learn more about how weather affects your energy use.
SHANNON THOM CEO
overtime, and since heating and cooling can make up nearly half of your electric use, you may have experienced sticker shock this winter on your electric bill. Throughout the year, we provide energy efficiency tips in Electric Consumer magazine,
Know what’s below. Call 811 before you dig!
Facebook, Twitter, and on our website at www.hcremc. com. With
LIKE US ON FACEBOOK www.facebook.com/ HenryCountyREMC
approximately 20 days left of winter, it is never too late to list
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER www.twitter.com/ HenryCountyREMC
some additional energy efficiency tips for you to consider. We
MARCH 2018
5
co-op news
APPLY FOR HCREMC SCHOLARSHIP
ORU supports reading efforts
Eligible high school seniors:
Did you know hundreds of electric
Henry County
co-ops throughout the country,
REMC’s Operation
including HCREMC, use the
Round Up board
Operation Round Up (ORU) program
is offering six one-
to help non-profit organizations,
time $1,000 scholarships
schools and community groups
to high school seniors
that improve our community? We
graduating in 2018. Three
support job creation, enhance the
females and three males will be
quality of life, and support those in
selected. Candidates must have a
need of help with food, clothing,
parent or guardian living in the HCREMC service territory and
shelter, health issues and other
must carry a 3.0 GPA or higher through the first semester of their
basic life needs.
senior year. Children of employees or directors of the HCREMC
The HCREMC Operation Round
are NOT eligible to apply. Scholarship deadline is March 23.
Up board recently approved the
Non-traditional students: HCREMC is offering a one-time
following grants:
$5,000 scholarship award to a non-traditional adult student
Tri-Elementary received $385 to
who is heading to college for the first time, or returning to complete
purchase books for all students
an interrupted education. The HCREMC Operation Round Up board
attending Family Night.
is excited to support our member-students who are continuing their education. Scholarship deadline is June 8. Applicants must be enrolled in an accredited vocational school, or a twoyear or four-year college and have a high school diploma, GED or HSE/
Blue River Valley Elementary received $500 for nonfiction books to update the school's collection.
TASC certification. Applicants must be between the ages of 25-55 and be a
Non-profit organizations are
member of HCREMC and cannot be the son, daughter or grandchild of an
encouraged to apply for an
existing employee or director of the HCREMC or the HCREMC Operation
HCREMC ORU grant. Please visit
Round Up board.
www.hcremc.com for details.
Visit hcremc.com for more information.
Save the date! 2018 Henry County REMC Annual Meeting Thursday, April 19 Doors open at 5:30 p.m. Dinner served and catered by Rhim’s Catering. Live entertainment by New Castle Show Choir. Attendees will be entered to win prizes. The grand prize is a riding lawn mower! First Baptist Church; 709 S. Memorial Drive; New Castle, IN 47362 Your April issue of Electric Consumer will include details, our annual report and your registration card!
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MARCH 2018
co-op news PrePaid Electric Service available April 1
Let your Co-op Connections Card connect you to savings
Make budgeting easier to maintain. The HCREMC PrePaid Electric Service program allows members to pay for electric usage
Let your Co-op
on their schedule, not according to a set
Connections® Card
due date. Participants essentially prepay for
connect you to desired
electric use.
savings! It’s the one card
When a participant’s credit balance falls
that does it all. Save on
below $20, an email notification will alert the
prescriptions, lab and
member to make a payment. Charges will apply if credit balance drops below $0.
imaging, hearing and
Program advantages:
vision, and so much more. Visit www.connections.coop to learn about all the ways you can save. This month, we give a shout-out to New Castle Furniture Outlet located at 2010 S. Memorial Drive, New Castle. (Hours: Monday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Sunday, 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.) They have a great offer for our members: Receive 15 percent off all gifts and accessories when you
• No charges for security deposit • No late fees • No unexpected high bills • No disconnect fee Participants may view their daily usage, as well as set up and change alert settings. Program will be available to interested
show your Co-op Connections Card!
members beginning April 1. For more information about this program, please visit
YOUR POWER OUTAGE PANTRY
We do our best to avoid power outages, but unfortunately, Mother Nature occasionally has different plans. Stay ahead of the storm by stocking your pantry with a variety of non-perishable items. Set these items aside for extended outages only, and your storm prep will be a breeze!
www.hcremc.com or call 800-248-8413.
• • • • • • • • • • •
BEANS CANNED FRUIT CANNED TUNA CANNED VEGETABLES CEREAL DRIED FRUITS DRIED MEATS/JERKY GRAHAM CRACKERS PASTA RICE OATMEAL
FRUIT
Don’t forget to stock up on disposable goods, like paper plates, napkins, plastic cutlery and cups. MARCH 2018
7
co-op news
8
MARCH 2018
product picks
Spruce up
1
4
Spring for
2
5
Get ready for a spring spruceup with tools that make the job a breeze. BY JAYNE CANNON
6 3 1
2
3
4
5
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Many of us can’t live without our furry friends, but we could sure do without the fur they shed. The Shark Rotator Powered LiftAway Vacuum, with its mini motorhead brush, feeds on left-behind fur like jaws. $300.
It’s been a long, cold lonely winter for your siding, windows and patio. But here comes the Sun Joe Electric Pressure Washer. It uses a wand, two detergent tanks and five different spray nozzles to make them all sparkle again. $153. 800-466-3337; homedepot.com
If you have allergies, vacuuming every day is a must. But who has time? With a Neato Botvac D5 Connected Navigating Robot Vacuum, you can clean your floors while you sleep or shop. Just control it from your smartphone. $540. 888-280-4331; amazon.com
Your sheets are crisp and clean, but what about your mattress? The Dyson V6 Mattress vacuum is designed to clean your mattress of things like allergens. Also use it on upholstery or, with its dusting attachment, hard surfaces. $250. 866-693-9766; dyson.com
For the really tough tasks — grimy grout, caked-on grease and more — the McCulloch Heavy-Duty Portable Steam Cleaner uses high-powered jets of steam to clear it all away and includes 18 attachments for just about any job. $140. 800-466-3337; homedepot.com
Spills and stains are especially annoying when they collide with your carpets. But never fear: Bissell’s Little Green Multi-Purpose Deep Cleaner is here. Don’t let its compact size fool you — it tackles big stains, too. $100. 888-280-4331; amazon.com
800-462-3966; bedbathandbeyond. com
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MARCH 2018
insights
Renewables poised for record year in 2019
F
ederal energy officials expect to see modest growth in the
In its latest Short-Term Energy Outlook, the Energy Information
nation’s electricity consumption in 2019 — with a record
Administration predicts a 1.3 percent consumption increase
set for renewables.
this year, followed by a rise of just 0.5 percent in 2019. For the first time, non-hydro renewable energy sources are expected to supply more than 10 percent of the nation’s annual average total generation in 2019. EIA expects the price of natural gas for electricity generation will be lower this year than last and will fall even more in 2019. Natural gas should account for 33 percent of generation this year and 34 percent next year, the report said. Those lower natural gas prices, combined with retirements of coal-fired plants, will have an impact on coal’s role. Coal supplied about 30 percent of America’s electricity generation in 2016 and 2017, but EIA expects it will fall to slightly below 30 percent this year and 28 percent next year. Despite the scheduled retirement of reactors at Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island and another in Massachusetts, nuclear’s share of generation is expected to drop just 1 percent, down to 19 percent from the 20 percent seen in 2017 and expected again G ETTY I M AG E
this year.
CORRECTION February’s story “Fireflies in space,” which was about the zero-gravity experiment aboard a Blue Origin sub-orbital flight in December, over-stated the height the rocket flew. The 12-minute flight reached an altitude of 60 miles above Earth. The automated experiment, a joint project between second
ELECTRIC CO-OPS SPONSOR 48 STATEHOUSE PAGES
graders at Cumberland
Forty-eight high school students repre-
chamber and learned about current legis-
Elementary in West Lafayette
senting 16 electric cooperatives through-
lation.
and Purdue University’s School
out Indiana got a first-hand look at the
of Aeronautics and Astronautics,
inner workings of Indiana government.
proved that the two chemicals
They participated in Indiana Electric
fireflies mix in their bellies to
Cooperative Page Day at the Indiana
make themselves glow in Indiana
Statehouse on Jan. 31.
summer fields could mix and
The students toured the Statehouse, met
would glow in the weightlessness
with their state senator; observed floor
of space.
sessions; assisted staff members; sat in on a committee hearing in the Senate
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MARCH 2018
The page experience amplifies lessons learned in the classroom, Tom VanParis, Indiana Electric Cooperatives CEO, noted. “Serving as a page gives young people the unique opportunity to participate in state government,” he said. IEC is the Indianapolis-based service association for Indiana’s 38 member-owned electric cooperatives.
insights
MARCH 2018
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Indiana eats
Great steaks and more! Johnny V’s Main Street Grille 58 N. Main St.
Frankfort, Indiana
765-654-4702 HOURS/MENU:
Visit johnnyvs.us for more information.
Fans of Johnny V’s Main Street Grille say that this locally owned eatery serves the best steaks in Frankfort, Indiana. But with an extensive menu featuring salads, burgers, sandwiches, pasta, dinner entrees, desserts and more, Johnny V’s makes family dining a breeze for even the pickiest of eaters. State Rep. Heath VanNatter, who represents the area’s District 38, is one loyal customer who brings his family to the restaurant, located, as its name implies, on Frankfort’s downtown Main Street, across from the courthouse. VanNatter usually opts for the hand-breaded Hoosier Pork Tenderloin sandwich which is served, like all sandwich choices, with steak fries. For just 99 cents more, diners can enjoy onion rings or sweet potato chips with their sandwiches. Other Johnny V’s regulars rave about the steak and shrimp dinner with two skewers of either grilled or breaded shrimp, and the housemade sugar cream pie, just one of a selection of freshly made desserts. The best time to try a slice of pie? The restaurant’s weekly Free Pie Wednesday. Besides the tasty food options, Johnny V’s patrons enjoy the comfortable casual atmosphere. Photos of old Frankfort landmarks decorate the walls. The original scoreboard from Frankfort High School’s Howard Hall, the home gymnasium of that school’s quadruple state champion basketball team in the 1920s and ’30s, is also proudly displayed. During lunchtime, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. on weekdays, Johnny V’s not only serves up daily specials for $6.99 each, but also offers 14 other lunch-sized choices. Dinner is served Monday-Thursday, 4-9 p.m; Friday and Saturday, 4-10 p.m.; and Sunday, 4-8 p.m. The adjoining 21-and-over Sports Pub, which advertises the widest selection of beers on tap in town, is open Monday-Saturday, 11 a.m.-Midnight and Sunday, 11 a.m.-10 p.m.
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MARCH 2018
ABOUT STATE REP. HEATH VANNATTER: Indiana State Rep. Heath VanNatter represents House District 38, which includes portions of Carroll, Cass, Howard and Clinton counties. He serves as chair of the Employment, Labor and Pensions Committee and also is a majority member of the Environmental Affairs and Utilities, Energy and Telecommunications committees.
food
WE SAY
‘Potato’
Easy Potato Soup by Heidi Stamets, Monroeville 1 T. butter 1 large onion, chopped 6 cups mashed potatoes 29 oz. chicken broth ½ cup milk In a medium soup pot, melt butter over low heat, and sauté chopped onions until tender. Stir in the mashed potatoes, and then slowly add the chicken broth. Stir and add milk (use more or less to achieve desired creaminess). Cook until heated through and season with salt and pepper to taste.
Baked German Potato Salad by Kathleen Tooley, Berne 1 cup mayonnaise-style salad dressing 1 lb. pasteurized processed cheese, melted ½ t. salt ¼ t. pepper 8 medium red potatoes, unpeeled, thinly sliced and cooked ½ cup chopped green onion ¼ cup sliced green olives ¼ cup sliced black olives ½ lb. cooked bacon Mix salad dressing, melted cheese, salt and pepper. Fold in sliced potatoes, chopped onion, olives and half of bacon. Place all in a greased 8x12-inch baking dish. Sprinkle remaining bacon on top. Bake at 325 F for 1 hour.
Cook’s notes: This recipe is from my 93-year-old mother-in-law and was passed down to her from her mother.
MARCH 2018
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food Potato Scones by Charlotte Rymph, Monterey 2 cups flour 1 T. baking powder 1 t. salt 3 T. cold butter 1 cup mashed potatoes, prepared with milk and butter 1
/3 cup milk 1 egg
In a bowl, combine the flour, baking powder and salt. Cut in butter until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Combine potatoes, milk and egg.
Sweet Potato Fritters with Sweet and Spicy Sauce by Patsy Frost, Corydon Fritters:
into patties about ½-inch deep and 2-3
Stir into flour mixture until a soft dough forms. Turn onto a floured surface; knead gently 10-12 times or until no longer sticky. Gently pat or
1 large sweet potato
inches across. Gently place fritters in oil,
roll dough into a 9-inch circle about
1 t. grated ginger root
ensuring they do not touch each other or
¾-inch thick. Cut into 10-12 wedges.
1 egg
the sides of the pan. Fry for 2-3 minutes
Separate wedges and place on an
/3 cup + 1 T. all purpose flour
on each side, adjusting time to achieve
ungreased baking sheet. Bake at
½ t. ground cinnamon
a light golden brown surface. Place on
400 F for 15-18 minutes or until
¼ t. ground fennel
paper towels to drain and salt lightly
golden brown.
½ t. kosher salt + more for after frying
while they are still hot.
1
Peanut or coconut oil for frying Sauce: 3 T. mayonnaise 1 T. honey 1 T. sriracha sauce For the fritters, wash, peel and grate sweet potato using the coarse selection of a grater. Grate ginger using a fine grater or microplane. Place grated sweet potato, grated ginger and egg in a medium to large mixing bowl. Add the flour, cinnamon, fennel and ½ t. of salt. Mix together thoroughly. Heat a shallow frying pan over medium heat for 2-3 minutes. Add oil to the hot pan so that it is about ¼-inch deep. Shape fritters
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MARCH 2018
For the sauce, combine mayonnaise, honey and sriracha in a small bowl. Whisk to smooth out any lumps. Serve fritters while still warm with the sriracha sauce for dipping.
Cook’s notes: The fritters can be made in advance and frozen. Once they are fried and cooled, lay them flat on a baking sheet and freeze 4 hours or until solid. Place the frozen fritters into a zipped plastic bag and store them in the freezer for up to 6 months. When ready to serve, place frozen fritters on a sheet pan and bake at 400 F for about 10-15 minutes or until crispy.
Your chance to pick more of Indiana’s best Electric Consumer is gearing up for
Readers’ Choice Awards TELL US INDIANA’S BEST…
Recognizing the ‘Best of Indiana’
Fried Chicken:_____________________________________________
another round of “Readers’ Choice
Antique Store:_____________________________________________
Awards” to be presented in June.
Girls’ Getaway:_____________________________________________
Give us at least five responses to the
Guys’ Getaway:____________________________________________
ballot at right by April 27, and your
Famous Hoosier:___________________________________________
name will be added to a drawing for three randomly selected $50 prizes.
Claim to Fame (ie: could be what being a “Hoosier” is all about; what makes our state unique;
Our goal is to highlight the unique things
_____________________________________________________
that make us proud to call Indiana “home.” We hope you will avoid national chains and franchises when answering
a quintessential Indiana place or event, etc.)
_____________________________________________________
questions and instead tell us about the
Name: ____________________________________________________
places you can find only in Indiana.
Address: _________________________________________________
Mail your completed form to: Electric Consumer, Best of Indiana, P.O. Box 24517, Indianapolis, IN 46224. Go to our website for an electronic form to fill out and full entry rules and details: ElectricConsumer.org.
City:___________________________ State:_____ZIP:______________ Phone or email:____________________________________________ Your electric cooperative:____________________________________
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M ARCH 2018
19
do-it-yourself
What’s in your Toolbox? BY M I KE M CCOR D DIYers with a few projects under their belts know a trusty set of basic tools is crucial. But it may not be in your budget to purchase every tool you think you’ll ever need all at once. Investing in a few quality items up front will get you started off right. Here’s our checklist of non-powered tools and accessories you can easily transport in a regular tool box. • A good, sturdy toolbox: It seems selfexplanatory, but quite often folks come into the store for a toolbox and choose one that’s too flimsy, too small, or both. Even if you aren’t buying the most expensive high-end tools, you’ll still want to have a box that can handle the weight. Materials such as thick plastic or rigid steel will do the job. Consider the organization factor for all the little bits of hardware you’ll undoubtedly accumulate. Find a box with a tray and plenty of compartments to keep the nails, screws, nuts, and bolts orderly and not floating around inside. Lastly, buy a toolbox that seems too big for what you have − you’ll fill it up eventually! • Screwdrivers: If you did opt for a smaller toolbox, buy a screwdriver with interchangeable tips. Otherwise, buy a set of slotted and Phillips head screwdrivers in various sizes. • Claw hammer: This is your typical hammer and one of the most versatile tools you’ll own. It will not only drive nails, but also lever them out when they need to be removed. Find one with a cushioned rubber-grip handle. • Adjustable wrench: This adaptable tool has jaws that adjust to fit nuts and bolts of many sizes. Higher quality wrenches have jaws that are less likely to slip and damage your fasteners. These come in handy under the car hood too. • Pliers: You’ll want to get the two most basic types. Needle-nose pliers give you
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MARCH 2018
gripping strength and dexterity when grabbling and pulling nails and other hardware. Groove-joint pliers have wide-opening jaws that are useful for plumbing projects. • Utility knife: Also known as a box cutter. This sharp knife comes in handy quite often when you need precision cuts with wire or tubing, or general use. Get a sturdy one with a retractable blade and extra replacement blades. • Tape measure: This unassuming item is essential for providing accurate measurements for multiple jobs. Choose a 25-foot tape that’s retractable, lockable, and at least one inch wide so it won’t collapse when extended. • Mini level: This smaller version fits nicely into your toolbox, and it provides horizontal and vertical guide lines when positioning fixtures and hardware, hanging photo frames or determining if a wall is plumb. • Putty knife: This little helper is great for removing old wallpaper or loose paint. And with patching compound, it makes quick work of those countless spackling jobs that pop up. • Flashlight: When working in tight, dark areas a basic LED flashlight is a necessity. Some are magnetic and others tilt to shine a bright light just where you need it. If you need to go hands-free, headlamps are perfect. • Hardware: Fill up all those little compartments inside your toolbox with a selection of general purpose nails and screws. Save room for picture hanging hardware, nuts and bolts, and things like screw anchors and wire nuts. • Rolls of tape: Teflon plumber’s tape is lightweight tape that is used to thread connections and prevent leaks. Electrical
tape is an insulating tape used in various wiring tasks. • Safety items: At a minimum, you’ll want to include dust masks, safety glasses and protective work gloves. Simple DIY jobs aren’t usually dangerous, but it’s wise to take precautions. Leave the complicated stuff to the pros. Visit your local Do it Best store or doitbest. com for thousands of the best home improvement products, including tools and accessories essential for creating the perfect DIYer’s toolbox! MIKE MCCORD is the owner of McCord’s Do it Best Lumber & Hardware in Logansport and 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. Electric Consumer and Do it Best assume no liability for the accuracy or completeness of its content, or for injuries, property damage, or the outcome of any project.)
Nforew Life
Old Bones
State Museum to open re-envisioned glimpse of Indiana in the Ice Age
feature story
BY RIC HA RD G . BIE VE R
H
ow do you breathe new life into 13,000-year-old fossilized bones?
How do you retell stories almost as
old as time itself? Visitors to the Indiana State Museum in Indianapolis will have a chance to find out later this month — just in time for spring break trips to the state capital. The state museum will unveil the second of its multi-phase redesign of core exhibits March 24. And unlike when it moved into its state-of-the-art new digs on the west side of downtown Indianapolis in 2002, museum curators say this time they are going to let the found remains of Indiana’s earliest critters — the mastodons and woolly mammoths, saber-toothed cats, dire wolves and giant ground sloths — tell more of the story directly to visitors. “Between then and now, visitor expectations of a museum visit have significantly changed,” said Brian Mancuso, the museum’s vice president of experience. PLEASE TURN TO THE NEXT PAGE
Ron Richards, a senior research curator at the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites, holds a cast of the skull of a short-faced bear. Behind him stands a cast of the skeleton of a ground sloth, a 9-foot-long, bison-sized beast that is a distant relative of the modern tree sloth. Both giants roamed Indiana during the Ice Age some 13,000 years ago. P HO TO BY R IC H A R D G. B IEV ER
MARCH 2018
23
ABOUT THE PHASE 2 REDESIGN PROJECT Phase 2 of the museum’s core gallery redesign opens March 24. The new core galleries are: • Frozen Reign: A State of Change — feel the tooth of a saber-toothed cat, explore an ice tunnel, hear how mastodons communicated, and see bones from many now-extinct animals that roamed Indiana; covers the time frame from 5 million years ago up to 11,700 years ago. • First Nations: The Story of Indiana’s Founding People — learn about the culture and communities of Indiana’s founding people through their games, tools and traditions. The exhibit also shares how descendants of those nations continue to thrive in the modern day; covers the time period from 11,700 years ago up to 318 years ago. • The R.B. Annis Naturalist’s Lab — explore Indiana’s natural history in this place for hands-on exploration. Fred, the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites’ iconic mastodon skeleton, will now greet visitors from a new permanent post at the gallery entrance. Follow Fred on Twitter: @FredIndiana.
PHO TO S BY THE I NDI ANA S TATE MUS E UM
Renovations to the state museum allow it to unpack ancient pachyderm “Fred,” the museum’s mastodon, and fully display his fossil bones (shown here shortly after he was assembled in January in preparation for the gallery’s opening later this month). Fred was discovered in 1998 by Dan Buesching while looking for peat on his family’s farm near Fort Wayne. Fred Buesching, Dan’s grandfather and Fred’s namesake, discovered peat on the farm in 1947 which was the start of the family’s peat moss and mulch business that continues today. Though Fred’s been displayed before, this is his first permanent home since he was excavated from the peat bog where he’d spent the previous 13,000 years.
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE
the museum. “That’s been a big change “They want it to be more experiential,
because [museums] are using computer
more immersive, more interactive than
screens a lot less now. We’re trying to
museums of the past. Interactive museums
present experiences that people can’t
create memorable touch points.”
have sitting in their house. In the early
For instance, Mancuso noted when visitors read about the massive glaciers they’ll have the opportunity to drag a
curator of science and technology.
piece of granite across limestone in the
In many ways, the 2002 museum
same way a glacier would have moved
exhibits offered too much detail,
over the land.
museum curators talking about the
“For those people that want to
changes agreed, and it was all presented
experience the business end of a saber-
in a similar fashion. “Everything had the
toothed cat tooth, you can feel that,” he
same weight,” noted Lowe. “It was a lot,” added Fisherkeller. “Our
getting. More than just reading, more
thinking was we’ll put the words there,
than just looking, you’re able to actually
and if people don’t read it all, it’s fine.”
Everyone learns and remembers
MARCH 2018
“Everybody’s got a computer in their pocket, now,” added Damon Lowe, senior
feel the thing.”
24
2000s, it was all really new.”
of the last Ice Age “scouring Indiana flat,”
said. “It’s this tactile experience you’re
The new “Frozen Reign” gallery takes visitors through a sub-glacial ice tunnel with cool breezes and sounds of dripping and cracking from an actual glacier. During the last Ice Age, sheets of ice a half mile to a mile thick covered the upper two-thirds of Indiana.
Peggy Fisherkeller, curator of geology at
But over the years, beyond simply observing what information visitors
things in different ways, he noted.
were taking in or passing by, curators
By providing text, audio and tactile
learned from visitor surveys something
experiences, the museum’s “universal
a tad unsettling about all those words.
design” tells the story of Indiana’s past
Though few visitors would have time
more fully for everyone, especially those
to read every screen and placard, some
who may be visually impaired.
expressed guilt about skipping things
“When we opened [in 2002], we
— akin to the guilt some folks may have
were on the cusp of everyone trying to
about skipping a workout or playing
use computer screens to interpret,” said
hooky. “People had this internal bad
How Fred the mastodon (on the opposite page) met his demise near present-day Fort Wayne during the last Ice Age some 13,000 years ago is not certain. But many mastodons have been found in what were once ancient bogs around Indiana. Part of the redesigned “Frozen Reign” gallery depicts the giant frame of a mastodon cracking through the ice on a bog and, despite trumpeting and thrashing about, it would have languished until it drowned, starved or was attacked by more mobile meat eaters, like bears or wolves. PHO TO BY RI CHARD G . BI EVER
“
I am still awed at the immense size of some of these animals and at how abundant their remains are in Indiana. But many more lie buried, possibly from animal species not previously known from the state. Folklore relates that any bog larger than an acre likely has mastodon remains in it.
”
Quinn, left, and Brooke break away from a start line during timed repeat drills around the ice during a weekend practice in Fishers.
Ron Richards, Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites feeling that we didn’t intend them to
passing through to an otherworldly
immense glacier, a moving sheet of ice a
feel,” Fisherkeller said.
place and another time. Recordings of
half mile to a mile thick. This is why most
Lowe said the new design will
water running off and the creaking and
of Indiana is flat. The land was scoured
accentuate the most significant points of
cracking from inside an actual modern
by the slow moving mountain of ice
what visitors want to know — not what
glacier will be heard. A cool wind will also
and rocks, and then filled and leveled by
the curators think they need to know.
hit visitors at the entrance to the tunnel
glacial till. But the spine of uplands from
— just as wind would blow from off the
around Bloomington south to the Ohio
top of a real glacier.
River that the glaciers missed were also
“We’re not really the best judge of what they need to know,” he said. “But if we ask them what they want to know, then we can give it to them.” “The gallery was 15 years old,” added
“I wanted people to have a sense of
the run off carved and molded the hills
was covered by an ice sheet up to about
and hollows.
Fisherkeller, “so I think it was time to
16,000 years ago. So this is an imagining
present new information in a new way.”
of what that climate might have been like.”
One new feature will be a subglacial tunnel that will take visitors
shaped by the glaciers. As they melted,
how this feels,” Fisherkeller said. “Indiana
“Hopefully, visitors get a sense that the ice was here. It was big. It modified
During the last Ice Age, the northern two-thirds of Indiana was covered by an
PLEASE TURN TO THE NEXT PAGE MARCH 2018
25
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE the land. It changed our life,” added Ron
explore the museum’s efforts to find and
underground was like 25,000 years ago,”
preserve Indiana’s last native giants.
said Richards.
“The exhibit feeds into the active
By the completion of this multi-
Richards, senior research curator of
field work going on that a lot of people
phase project, museum visitors will get
paleobiology at the museum.
in the public probably don’t necessarily
to travel through space and time — from
In addition to the ice being big,
know about. But it is something that
the distant past to the possible future and
Richards talks about the wildlife that
is pretty unique about this museum,”
back, examining artifacts in a way that’s
once teemed throughout the region.
said Hannah Kiefer, the state museum’s
more interactive, more immersive and
“I am still awed at the immense size
director of communications. “We have
more hands-on.
of some of these animals and at how
active digs going on. You can see the
abundant their remains are in Indiana.
product of that.”
But many more lie buried .... Folklore
Another exhibit in the new “Frozen
“It is a rethinking of how it’s shown, what’s shown, how the visitor moves through the space, and how they’re
relates that any bog larger than an acre
Reign” gallery depicts a cave setting
experiencing the space,” said Mancuso.
likely has mastodon remains in it.”
featuring bones and scenes created
“It’s as new as new can be ....”
That segues to another focus of the new exhibitions: the Indiana State Museum’s focus on discovery. The
from actual underground excavations in southern Indiana. “This is not just a fabrication of
museum is responsible for unearthing
the cave. This is an actual mold and
more ancient mammals than any other
cast of the cave. We went underground.
Indiana institution. The new exhibits will
This is an exact duplicate of what the
And telling a story as old as fossilized bones in a way that’s “as new as new can be” is truly saying — and showing and touching on — something, indeed. RICHARD G. BIEVER is senior editor of Electric Consumer.
Indiana State Museum facts, figures & FYIs Experience the Hoosier story at this world-class institution and its 11 state
Win
free passe s to the India na State Muse um and Historic Sit es!
See page 3
historic sites that feature unique, hands-on exhibits and artifacts which individually and collectively showcase the events and characters shaping Indiana’s history. The museum opened its present facility in White River State Park in downtown Indianapolis in the spring of 2002. A multi-phase redesign to
ABOUT THE REDESIGN
its core, permanent galleries began immersive and interactive.
• Phase I galleries – “Contested Territory,” “Natural Regions” and “19th State” – opened Nov. 12, 2016.
The museum celebrates its
• Phase 2 galleries open March 24.
sesquicentennial in 2019.
• The remaining galleries will close and reopen in subsequent phases.
in 2016 to make each gallery more
Near the museum are other points of interest: the Statehouse; Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art; NCAA Hall of Champions; Indianapolis Zoo; Eugene and Marilyn
• Founded in 1869
• General Admission: Adult — $14.95; Child — $9.95
Field, home of the Indianapolis Indians
• 90 buildings over 1,400+ acres
Indianapolis Colts.
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MARCH 2018
• Address: 650 W. Washington St., Indianapolis, 46204 • Hours: Mon-Sat — 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun — 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
• All 92 Indiana counties represented in sculptures on museum exterior
Lucas Oil Stadium, home of the NFL
MUSEUM NUTS & BOLTS
MUSEUM AND HISTORIC SITES AT A GLANCE
Glick Indiana History Center; Victory minor league baseball team; and
• One of the three largest Abraham Lincoln collections in the world, due mostly to ISM receiving the collection of the former Lincoln Museum in Fort Wayne from the Lincoln Financial Foundation in December 2008.
• Five National Historic Landmarks and one National Engineering Landmark
Call the museum at 317-232-1637 or visit indianamuseum.org for discounted admission and group packages, special closings, extended hours, IMAX information and other details.
safety
Avoid
DANGERS AFTER A STORM
Life isn’t about waiting for the storm to pass. It’s about about learning the safety precautions to take once it’s gone.
live wire of only a couple hundred volts.”
After a storm, many think the dangers
become a victim. Immediatley call 911 for
have left with the high winds, heavy
assistance, and then contact your electric
rain and lightning strikes, but some-
utility to turn off the power.
• Don’t step in water near downed lines.
During the storm recovery process,
• Never drive over a downed power line.
times danger can come during the storm recovery period. Keeping your distance from downed power lines, and knowing what to do if you see them, are the first steps to take when recovering from a storm safely. If you see a downed power line, which could be making contact with tree limbs, vehicles and puddles, always stay clear at least 35 feet. There is no way of knowing whether or not the power line is still live, and if you happen to touch one that is, consequences could be deadly. “Large overhead power lines can carry more than 700,000 volts of electricity,”
If you see that someone already made contact with a power line, do not try to rescue him/her. You can’t help if you
downed power lines are a threat to the area around them. Here are some helpful safety tips from your electric cooperative to help you stay safe around downed power lines: • If you see a downed power line, move away from it and anything touching it. Keep a distance of 35 feet, as the ground around downed power lines may be energized. • Assume all downed power lines are live. • If you see someone in direct or indirect
• NEVER attempt to move a downed power line or anything else in contact with it using an object such as a broom or stick. Non-conductive materials like wood or cloth can conduct electricity if slightly wet.
• If your vehicle comes in contact with a downed power line while you’re in the vehicle, stay inside the car. Call 911 or honk your horn to get help, but tell those rendering aid to stay away from the vehicle. • If you must exit the vehicle for life-threatening reasons — jump out and away from it, making sure to land with your feet together and touching. Then, shuffle away with your feet touching until you reach a safe distance. NEVER get back into a vehicle that is in contact with a power line.
said Tom VanParis, CEO of Indiana Elec-
contact with a downed line, DO NOT
tric Cooperatives. “Fatalities can occur
touch him/her. You could become en-
Stay safe around electricity and downed
when someone comes in contact with a
ergized as well. Call 911 for assistance.
power lines after a storm. It could save a life. MA R CH 2 018
27
legislative
YOUR
VOTE
HELPS PROTECT THE FUTURE OF INDIANA’S ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES
As a member-owner of an Indiana electric cooperative, you are among 1.3 million Hoosiers who can claim ownership in a not-for-profit, consumer-controlled utility that provides electricity at cost.
REGISTER TO VOTE BY
APRIL 9
REGISTER TO VOTE AND MORE AT
ACTION.INDIANAEC.ORG
28
MARCH 2018
calendar NORTHWEST
2
DENNIS STROUGHMATT, Delphi (Carroll), Delphi Opera House. Stroughmatt takes listeners on a musical odyssey with his fiddle. 7:30 pm. Tickets, $20-$35. 765-564-4300. delphioperahouse.org
17
ST. PATRICK’S DAY NIGHTTIME PARADE, Crown Point (Lake), Downtown. Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day in Crown Point with the only nighttime parade in Northwest Indiana. No admission charge. 219-6623290. crownpoint.in.gov
1718
SUGAR CAMP DAYS, New Carlisle (St. Joseph), Bendix Woods County Park. Sugar House. Pancake breakfast. Sugarbush tours. Music, horse-drawn wagon rides, ice carving, kids’ activities, artisan demonstrations, Native American lifeways. Admission charge. 574-6543155. sjcparks.org
CENTRAL
1-3
INDIANA HERITAGE QUILT SHOW, Bloomington (Monroe). Downtown Convention Center. Over 200 quilts on display, workshops, vendors and free shuttle to other community quilt exhibits. Admission charge. 812355-7721. ihqs.org
3-4
PARKE COUNTY MAPLE FAIR, Rockville (Parke). 4-H Fairgrounds. Pancake breakfast served all day, painting, arts and crafts, maple syrup, and maple camp tours. No admission charge. 765569-5226. coveredbridges. com
1517
ST. PATRICK’S DAY CELEBRATION, Indianapolis (Marion), Downtown Indianapolis. Indianapolis’ official St. Patrick’s Day Parade and Block Party. No admission charge. 317-498-5299. indystpats.com.
SOUTHWEST
1618
IRELAND ST. PATRICK’S CELEBRATION, Ireland (Dubois), Townwide. Enjoy the celebration of St. Patrick’s Day. The whole town comes alive with a wide variety of events. 8 am, Fri. - 5 pm, Sun. 812-482-4271. stpat.irelandindiana.com
17
SHA NA NA, Vincennes (Knox), Red Skelton Performing Arts Center. The legendary band performs. 7:30 pm. Tickets, $20$35. Call 812-888-4354 to order tickets. vinu.edu/ communityseries
30
MARCH 2018
31
4192: AN EVENING WITH PETE ROSE, Evansville (Vanderburgh), Victory Theatre. Spend an evening with one of the greatest baseball players of all time. 7 pm. Tickets, $37-$101. 812-422-1515. victorytheatre. com.
MARCH NORTHEAST
1-4
FORT WAYNE HOME AND GARDEN SHOW, Fort Wayne (Allen), War Memorial Coliseum. The tri-state area’s largest home and garden event. Visit website for hours and ticket prices. 260-432-1705, ext. 101. home-gardenshow.com
2-3
MICHIANA OUTDOOR SPORTSMAN SHOW, Shipshewana (LaGrange), Michiana Event Center. Enjoy all things outdoor at this show. Hours: Fri, 10 a.m. - 8 pm; Sat, 8 am. - 5 pm. $10 admission charge. 260-5629187. michianaevents.com
910
JAY COUNTY FIBER ARTS FESTIVAL, Portland (Jay), Jay Community Center. Festival for all fiber crafters. Lectures, demonstrations, vendors, and more. Hours: Fri, 10 am. - 5 pm; Sat, 9 am - 4 pm. $1 admission. 260-726-3366. visitjaycounty.com
SOUTHEAST
4
SPUD, SOUP AND SALAD LUNCHEON, Batesville (Ripley), St. John’s United Church of Christ. Try an assortment of over 20 types of homemade soups along with a salad bar and a baked potato topping bar. Silent auction. Freewill offerings accepted. 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. 812663-7422.
18
FALLS OF THE OHIO FOSSIL, MINERAL AND JEWELRY SHOW, Clarksville (Clark), Falls of the Ohio State Park. First indoor fossils, minerals and jewelry show at the park. 10 am - 4 pm. $7 admission. 812-280-9970.
31
CHILDREN’S EASTER EGG HUNT, Corydon (Harrison), Downtown Square. The event will also include live music, bounce houses, carriage rides, food and carnival games, and pictures with the Easter Bunny. 10 am - 12:30 pm. 812738-2138. thisisindiana.org
This calendar is published as a service to readers and the communities electric cooperatives serve. Electric Consumer publishes events free of charge as space allows, giving preference to free community festival and events in and around areas served by subscribing REMCs/RECs. While Electric Consumer strives for accuracy, please note that events, dates and time may change without notice. Electric Consumer advises using contact phone numbers or internet sites to check times and dates of events before making plans. To add events to Calendar, please use the “Submit and Event” form under the “Talk to Us” or “Calendar” buttons at electricconsumer.org; or mail your info to: Calendar, Electric Consumer, P.O. Box 24517, Indianapolis, IN 46224. Please submit info two months before the date of the event.
MARCH 2018
31
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A magnet
backyard
Ask Rosie
by B. Rosie Lerner
T
after the plants fade. This plant is hardy to USDA zones 4-9 (possibly zone 3), which
he Perennial Plant Association
makes it a great choice throughout the
selected its 2018 Perennial Plant
Midwest. No serious pest problems have
of the Year: Allium “Millenium”
been reported, though leaf spot may oc-
(yes, that’s Millenium with just one “n”).
cur in overcrowded growing conditions
This announcement continues to show
with decreased air circulation. Deer and
the focus on pollinator habitat these
rabbits appear to avoid browsing.
days — Allium Millenium is appropriately referred to as a butterfly and bee magnet!
Gardeners sometimes avoid planting
Q: We cut open a spaghetti squash
Alliums because of their unwanted
Millenium is a hybrid Allium selected for
reseeding behavior. Fortunately, Mille-
late flowering. It has masses of rose-pur-
nium produces 50 percent fewer seeds,
ple blooms; a uniform habit; and neat,
which raises less concern for unwanted
shiny, green foliage that remains attrac-
self-seeding.
tive long after blooms have faded. It is also known for its resistance to drought.
fibrous root system, which makes it easy to propagate by division in either spring
glossy, deep-green leaves reaches 10-15
or fall.
two or three flower stalks rise above the foliage, and each produces two or three showy globes of rose-purple florets that last as long as four weeks. They dry to a light tan, often holding a blush of their former rose-purple color.
The Perennial Plant Association selects a different perennial plant each year to promote throughout the nursery and gardening industry. PPA members nominate plants based on several criteria, including low maintenance needs, adapability to a wide range of climates, pest
Millenium is just about the perfect
and disease resistance, wide availability,
low-maintenance perennial for full sun.
multiple seasons of interest, and ease of
Once established, about the only mainte-
propagation. A selection committee then
nance it needs is cutting
narrows the field to three or four
back foliage in late fall
choices from which the members cast their votes. For more info about the Perennial of the Year program, please go to www.perennialplant. org.
34
MARCH 2018
and it had green sprouts growing inside. Have you seen this before? Is it safe to eat the squash? Bryan Overstreet, Rensselaer, Indiana
A: Although uncommon, premature
Millenium has a clump habit with a
The upright foliage clump of grass-like, inches tall in spring. In midsummer,
P HO TO BY BRYAN O V E RS TRE E T
for butterflies and bees
sprouting of seeds inside a fruit sometimes occurs in squash, tomatoes, peppers, corn, strawberries, and other species. This early seed germination inside the fruit is called vivipary. Normally, the balance of plant growth regulators inside a fruit inhibit germination until seeds are harvested from the pulp. But occasionally, seeds begin to germinate while still attached to the fruit. Environmental conditions are the most likely cause, though some plants are genetically predisposed towards vivipary. Also, overripe fruit may be more prone to vivipary. In tomatoes, cool temperatures coupled with low light conditions may promote premature seed germination inside moist, warm fruit. Regardless of the cause, the squash should be safe to eat. B. ROSIE LERNER is the Purdue Extension consumer horticulturist and is a consumer of Tipmont REMC. Questions about gardening issues may be sent to “Ask Rosie,” Electric Consumer, P.O. Box 24517, Indianapolis, IN 46224; or use our “Talk to Us” form online at ElectricConsumer.org.
ALLI UM PHO TO BY PERENNI AL PLANT ASSO CI ATI ON BUTTERFLY PHO TO S BY I STO CK/ G ETTY I M AG ES PL US
product recalls
VTech recalls two products for infants VTech, a global maker of electronic learning products for children, has recently recalled its Lights & Lullabies Travel Mobiles and Shake and Sing Elephant Rattle after receiving reports of problems with cracking or breaking. No injuries have been reported. On the mobile, the clamp attaching it to the crib rail can break causing the mobile to fall, posing an injury hazard to an infant in the crib. On the rattle, the ears on the elephant can break off, posing a choking or laceration hazard. The Lights & Lullabies Travel mobiles were sold in blue and pink — model numbers are 80-503000 (blue) and 80-503050 (pink). The model numbers are printed on the battery compartment door. The mobiles were sold at Kmart, Walmart and online at Amazon.com and zulily.com from December 2015 through November 2017 for about $25. The Shake and Sing Elephant rattle has a purple elephant with yellow and blue ears at one end and a black and white plastic teething ring at the other end. The rattle has the model number 1848 printed on the back of the rattle adjacent to the battery door. The rattles were sold at Walmart, Kmart, Meijer and other stores and online from November 2015 through November 2017 for about $8. For either product, call 800-521-2010; or go to vtechkids.com and click on “Support.” As a service to our readers and to promote electrical safety, here are some recent recall notices provided by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. Visit www.cpsc.gov/en/recalls for full details of these recalls and for notices of many more.
1
other recalls of note:
Cribside space heaters recalled The Vornado Sunny nursery electric space heater (model EH1-0090) has been recalled. A broken motor mount can allow the electric heating element to come in contact with the interior plastic materials and ignite, posing fire and burn hazards. The cribside heaters were sold at Bed Bath & Beyond, buybuy Baby and other stores nationwide and online from October 2017 through December 2017 for about $100. Call 844-205-7978; or go to www.vornado.com and search “Recalls.”
2
Recessed canister lights pose shock hazard LEDVANCE has recalled a series of SYLVANIA Batch 0, RT56HO900 LED recessed canister light kits which can short circuit, posing a shock and electrocution hazard when consumers try to troubleshoot flickering lights. The recalled canister lights were sold to industrial and commercial distributors between June 2015 and October 2016 for about $45 per kit. The recalled product was not sold directly to consumers.
1
2
Call 800-654-0089; or got to www.SYLVANIA.com and click on “Legal” and then “Recalls.”
3
HP recalls batteries due to fire, burn hazards HP has recalled lithium-ion batteries for its HP notebook computers and mobile workstations. HP has received eight reports of battery packs overheating, melting, or charring, including three reports of property damage totaling $4,500 with one report of a minor injury involving a first degree burn to the hand. The batteries were shipped with HP ProBooks, HP ZBook and Mobile Workstations sold from December 2015 through December 2017 or sold as accessories or replacement batteries for between $50 and $90 at Best Buy and other stores and authorized dealers nationwide and online.
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Call 888-202-4320; or go to www.HP.com/go/batteryprogram2018 or www. hp.com and click “Recalls.”
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Hoosier Energy news Your energy producer is a co-op, too! Hoosier Energy is a generation and transmission (G&T) cooperative providing wholesale electric power and services to your
How natural gas power plants work
electric cooperative. Founded in 1949 and based in Bloomington, the power producer
Natural gas facilities in use by Hoosier Energy add to system reliability, environmental stewardship and fuel diversity.
generates power from coal, natural gas and renewable energy resources. The G&T delivers power through nearly 1,700 miles of transmission lines on the electric grid.
used to turn turbines that rotate generators to produce electricity.
Gas turbines, as shown above, operate by drawing ambient air through intake structures. Air is then compressed and mixed with natural gas and ignited in a combustion chamber. The exhaust gases are
Hoosier Energy has three natural gas facilities. Combined, these units output 976 megawatts of energy. For more information about Hoosier Energy’s generation sources, log onto hoosierenergy.com/about/ energy-strategy.
How energy is transmitted to your home
Power generation Generating energy from a diverse set of fuel sources is an important part of the power supply portfolio, including natural gas facilities.
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Switching substation After leaving a power plant, electricity feeds into a substation that raises or “steps up” the voltage – similar to increasing water pressure.
Transmission Electricity generated by Hoosier Energy and other utilities is placed on a regional grid and transmitted at highvoltage over long distances throughout central and southern Indiana and southeastern Illinois.
Distribution substation
Energy to your cooperative
These stations lower the voltage before being sent along to your local electric cooperative.
At this phase, your electric cooperative distributes and meters the energy you use at your home or business.
reader submissions
Rachel Isch made this photo of funnel clouds forming over a bean field in August 2016.
Carla Branam made this photo outside Donaldson Cave at Spring Mill State Park in January 2018.
On a visit to Coal Creek in Veedersburg, Darin and Ashley Bowling made this photo of their son Gavin under a dramatic curtain of icicles.
Picture perfect
weather
If you don’t like the Indiana weather you are experiencing, “they” always say give it a few minutes; it’ll change.
Now that we’ve made it to March and the transition of seasons, you can bet we’ll see even more Fahrenheit fickleness waffling between winter and spring, sometimes within hours of each other. Whether
It may look as if Hercules the dog has a severe overbite, but those are just icicles and snow clinging to his whiskers and fur as he hangs out with his family while they were sledding in the back yard. The photo was submitted by the Rivera family, Decatur County REMC consumers.
you like winter or spring the best or summer or fall, here’s a sampling of picture perfect weather readers have captured in the past.
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profile
Fast Break
5 questions
for Romeo Langford
R
omeo Langford is chasing Indiana scoring records as he and the rest of the New Albany High School bas-
ketball team pursue another state championship. But what Indiana’s top high school player does after he graduates this spring is garnering even more attention from fans and sports writers. Langford, the number five player in the country, answered five questions for Electric Consumer.
Q: How did you get started playing basketball?
A: I got started playing basketball at Coach [Jim] Shannon’s Kindergarten Basketball Camp at Mt. Tabor Elementary.
Q: How do you cope with the media scrutiny and the pressure of being one of the top high school basketball recruits in the country?
A: I really don’t pay a lot of attention to it. I let the fans and other people worry about the recruiting.
Q: You’ve narrowed your college choices to Indiana, Kansas and Vanderbilt. What factors will impact your decision of which college you will attend?
A: The main factors are the relationship my family and I have with the coach, and to decide which program is going to get the best out of me both on and off the court.
Q: If basketball were out of the picture, what career path would you pursue?
A: I would probably study to be an architect.
Q: What’s one thing most people wouldn’t know about you?
A: I used to play the trumpet in middle school, and I can still play it. PHO TO BY I NDY STAR/ USA TO DAY NETWO RK
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