12 th Annual
and BARNS BBQ
JUNE 1, 2024 st
Presenting Land Conservation Sponsors
WELCOME
TO BARNS BBQ and WILLISTOWN CONSERVATION TRUST
NOW IN ITS 12TH YEAR, Barns & BBQ has become a tradition of the Willistown Countryside, one that I look forward to every year. Not only does this special day provide us with a wonderful chance to enjoy time together as a community, but it also allows us to celebrate and honor the rich history and conservation legacy of our little piece of Chester County.
TOGETHER, WE CAN LEARN ABOUT THE LAND, HOUSES, AND BARNS that have been so meticulously stewarded by their owners. We also get the chance to appreciate the conservation initiatives by Willistown Conservation Trust and its founders who worked diligently to ensure the many properties and their history would be forever preserved. And best of all, we get to enjoy time in nature, admiring the colorful wildflowers and fresh blooms, the green woodlands and majestic trees, and the buzzing pollinators and chirping bird species that thrive here, too.
OF COURSE, THIS DAY WOULD NOT BE POSSIBLE WITHOUT OUR MANY SUPPORTERS. To the hosts who have generously opened their barns, homes, and land to us, thank you! I am also deeply grateful to the hundreds of landowners, as well as the township, county, and state officials, who have helped us protect more than 7,500 acres of beautiful vistas, critical habitat, and Willistown history.
I OWE A HEARTFELT THANKS to those of you who have lent their steadfast support to WCT over the years: our donors, participants, volunteers, and sponsors. And finally, to our dedicated staff who work tirelessly every day to contribute to the success of Willistown Conservation Trust, I extend my gratitude.
I AM SO PLEASED THAT YOU HAVE DECIDED TO JOIN US on one of my favorite days of the year. Enjoy your time getting a closer look at the Willistown countryside and all it has to offer!
Sincerely, Kate Etherington
LAND ACKNOWLEDGMENT | The work of Willistown Conservation Trust takes place on the ancestral lands of the Lenni Lenape. We honor the Lenape and other Indigenous caretakers of these lands and waters, the elders who lived here before, the Indigenous today, and the generations to come. We acknowledge the Lenni Lenape as the original people of this land and their continuing relationship with their territory. As we enjoy and protect the beauty of Willistown and surrounding areas, we cannot forget its original inhabitants and how their way of life echoes throughout the conservation of this land and its natural resources.
BARNS & BBQ COMMITTEE
SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR BARN OWNERS
Amy & Michael Brooks
Colonial Pennsylvania Plantation
Cara & John Fry
Bev & Jim Kolea
Bonnie & Jim Van Alen
CO-CHAIRS
Molly Love & Adrian Castelli
Caroline Moran
Devin Wilkins & Kyle Wichser
COMMITTEE
Amy & Michael Brooks
Donna & Robert Corrato
Wendy & John Cozzi
Kate & Ben Etherington
Kate & Luke Etherington
Cara & John Fry
Kim & Russ Galligher
Kat & Steve Gord
Joy & John Grady
Bev & Jim Kolea
Sally & Joe Layden
John Stoviak, Chair
Leanne M. McMenamin, Vice Chair
Meg Tegler Hardesty, Vice Chair
Elizabeth C. Hucker, Treasurer
Michael Burg, Esq., Secretary
Clarke Blynn
Bryan D. Colket
Leanne & Rob McMenamin
Jennifer & Christopher Moller
Janice & Britt Murdoch
Leigh & Steve Oblack
Tracy & Joe Przybylowski
Tara & Jeff Shanahan
Holly & John Stoviak
Bonnie & Jim Van Alen
Penny & Tom Watkins
Beth & Nelson Wicas
Wendy Cozzi
Kimberley H. Galligher, VMD
Lindsay Scott Leisenring
Molly Love
Michael J. McGraw
Linda I. McIsaac
Britton H. Murdoch
Photography by WCT Staff
Silenia Rhoads
Justin N. Thompson
David L. Unruh
Jeanne B. Van Alen**
Rick Warden
Jason D. Weckstein, PhD
**President Emerita
BARNS & BBQ SPONSORS
Presenting LAND CONSERVATION SPONSORS
GRIFFITHS CONSTRUCTION INC. | WARREN CLAYTOR ARCHITECTS
BIRD CONSERVATION SPONSORS
Brandywine Realty Trust
Country Properties/BHHS
First Trust Bank
Saul Ewing LLP
Shreiner Tree Care
HABITAT RESTORATION SPONSORS
Audi Devon
Austin Hepburn Windows, Pella
Bank of America Private Bank
Barnard, Mezzanotte, Pinnie, & Seelaus LLP
Cambridge Masonry
Cherokee Construction
Claytor + Noone Plastic Surgery
James Brown Plumbing Heating & Air Conditioning, LLC
King Construction
Lighting By Design and Beyond
Marshall Sabatini Architecture
Marvin Window | Matus Windows
Mill Creek Capital Advisors, LLC
Peter Zimmerman Architects
Providence One Development
Ranieri & Kerns Associates, LLC
SPI Communications
Stoltzfus Construction
Stoney Bank Nurseries
The Baldwin School
The Mundy Wealth Management Group / Morgan Stanley Wealth Management
The National Bank of Malvern ThinkGreen
White Horse Village
Wisler Pearlstine, LLP
PROGRAM SPONSORS
Cullen Construction Inc.
Dewson Construction Company
F.L. Bissinger Architect
Kreischer Miller
Precise Buildings, LLC
The Classic Coachworks
Event Calendar
Visit wctrust.org/calendar or scan code for more event information and registration
Recurring Events
WEDNESDAYS
“Just Show Up” Volunteer
Wednesdays at Rushton Farm
This is an opportunity to work in the fields with the farmers. You can show up at the farm from 9 am - 4 pm on any Wednesday during the season.
JUNE
June 1 | Barns & BBQ
June 6 | Mindful Birding at Dusk
June 11 | ECOcentric: Exploring the World of Birds
June 13 | Field to Feast with Malvern Buttery
June 17-21 | Rushton Nature Keepers
June 21 | Community Supper Series
June 23-29 | Creek Week
June 26 | Fireflies, Moths, and Your Yard in the Dark
June 26 | Nature Walk with Gretchen
JULY
All Month | Plastic Free July
July 20-27 | Wildflower Week
July 24 | ECOcentric: Discovering a Native Wildflower Meadow
SAVE THE DATES
August 3 | Summer Tomato Celebration
October 5 | Run-a-Muck | 5k and 1 Mile Walk
Events subject to change - check wctrust.org/calendar for the latest details.
THURSDAYS
Stewardship Volunteer Days
WCT maintains public nature preserves, spanning more than 300 acres and we rely on your help to accomplish our mission. Stewardship Manager John Holback leads Stewardship Volunteer Thursdays and all registrants will receive an email notification on the Tuesday before the workday with work details and location.
ECOcentric LECTURE SERIES
ECOcentric is defined as having a serious concern for environmental issues. It is a mindset that values the entire environment and all life within rather than only what is useful to humans. In other words, it is a deliberate shift toward the balance that can be achieved when we make nature our center rather than ourselves.
Through a variety of educational lectures and immersive field experiences with WCT staff and professionals, adults will gain a holistic foundation in four major conservation topics: birds and wildlife, regenerative farming, watersheds, and habitat stewardship.
RUSHTON NATURE KEEPERS (RNK)
RNK educational programming will resume in June! Check for registration details and the program schedule at wctrust.org/ rushtonnaturekeepers.
Brandywine Realty Trust is proud to support the Willistown Conservation Trust on their mission to preserve rural and historic land, and to help people of all ages and backgrounds develop a lifelong commitment to the land and the natural world.
HISTORICAL. SERENE. COMMUNITY.
Firstrust is proud to support Willistown Conservation Trust.
For protecting this historically rich land, and offering our community a place to enjoy the beautiful nature, we thank you
Timothy Kochanasz SVP, Business BankingPortfolio
Executive
Financial
N U R S E R I E S
“WHEN WE SEE LAND AS A COMMUNITY TO WHICH WE BELONG, WE MAY BEGIN TO USE IT WITH LOVE AND RESPECT.”
- Aldo Leopold
The land we inhabit - the soils, waters, plants, and animals that form the fabric of our earth - is not just a resource; it’s our shared community. Fostering a sense of belonging and respect for our land is vital for its preservation and our collective well-being.
At Willistown Conservation Trust, we embrace this holistic perspective. Our mission is not just conservation; it’s a commitment to fostering deep, reciprocal relationships with nature – relationships built on love, respect, and care. From safeguarding critical habitats to promoting sustainable land use practices, WCT protects and nurtures the land that sustains us.
With your gift to the Annual Fund, you’re not just contributing to the protection of land; you’re investing in a legacy of stewardship that will benefit generations to come. Every contribution, no matter the size, brings us closer to a shared goal of creating a future where land thrives, and communities flourish. Together, let’s use our love and respect for the land to build a brighter tomorrow.
Kate Etherington President & Executive DirectorLAND CONNECTS ALL LIFE
Connect with WCT by supporting our 2024 Annual Fund today.
OCTOBER 5, 2024
Once a year, in the fall, the Trust dedicates a day to celebrating with the community our mutual commitment to protecting the inherent beauty and natural resources of the Willistown countryside. Over 500 people gather for a unique opportunity to run or muck over Willistown’s conserved open spaces and to enjoy a wonderful country supper.
SUMMERBANK
239 SPRING ROAD MALVERN
IF YOU’VE BEEN A WILLISTOWN AREA EQUESTRIAN OVER THE PAST 50 YEARS, CHANCES ARE YOU’VE RIDDEN AT SUMMERBANK FARM. As one of the earlier indoor riding rings in the community, it was an all-weather resource for many competitive riders, hobby equestrians, and pony clubbers. The 20-acre property has also been an important part of the equestrian trail network, connecting many adjacent farms and conserved open space.
THE LAND SITS IN THE GEOGRAPHIC CENTER OF WILLISTOWN TOWNSHIP, down the road from the historic crossroads village of Sugartown, a bustling hub of commerce and community in the 19th century.
SUMMERBANK’S DEED WAS ORIGINALLY TITLED TO THE WILLIAM MCCAHAN ESTATE, A PROMINENT PHILADELPHIA SUGAR REFINERY OWNER, KNOWN AS "ROSELAWN FARM". According to the deed, the property boundaries were “beginning at a point in the title line in the bed of Spring Road at a corner of land now or late of Theodore Roosevelt III”. Roosevelt was a grandson of President Roosevelt and served as Pennsylvania Secretary of Commerce.
IN 1973 THEN-OWNER ARNO M. MEYER CONSTRUCTED THE BARN AND HOME. In 2021, Jim and Bev Kolea purchased Summerbank and have thoughtfully renovated the home and restored the aging barn. The facility features a 19-stall barn, indoor and outdoor riding arenas, tack room, mud room, powder room, and heated wash stall.
TRADITIONALLY THE BARN HAS BEEN LEASED BY PROFESSIONAL TRAINERS WHO TEACH THEIR STUDENTS AND PROVIDE STALL SPACE FOR A NUMBER OF BOARDERS. After years of intensive pasture use, the Koleas are working to restore the grazing fields as they prepare to welcome their next equine residents. Resting grazed paddocks allows forage plants to recover and deepen their root systems, contributing to better soil, plant, and animal health.
MANY OF THE PASTURES ON THE PROPERTY HAVE AN ABUNDANCE OF BEAUTIFUL NATIVE TREES TO PROVIDE LOTS OF SHADE FOR THE HORSES ON HOT SUMMER DAYS. The property borders the Sugartown Preserve and is surrounded by hundreds of acres of conserved land. Some of the other plantings are magnolia trees, dog woods, weeping cherry trees, catalpa trees, rhododendrons, hydrangea and azalea, an English rose garden for pollinators, and many more indigenous trees and shrubs that grace the beautiful property.
THE KOLEAS ARE PROUD TO BE THE NEXT STEWARDS OF SUMMERBANK FARM. Bev says, “We have lived in Willistown Township for many years and appreciate its beauty! It is like a slice of heaven to us!”
INDIAN RUN FARM
936 PLUMSOCK ROAD NEWTOWN SQUARE
WHEN YOU TURN SOUTH FROM GOSHEN ROAD ON TO PLUMSOCK ROAD YOU FEEL AS THOUGH YOU’VE STEPPED BACK IN TIME. With its dirt road, one of only three in the area, original farmhouses, old stone barns, and open fields in every direction, you can imagine what life in Willistown might have felt like 200 years ago.
IN FACT, THIS LAND HASN’T CHANGED MUCH OVER THE YEARS EXCEPT TO ADAPT TO ITS CHANGING POPULATION. In the early eighteenth century the Okehocking Indians approached William Penn to request a land grant. The resulting 500-acre Okehocking Indian Land Grant, including Plumsock Road, was later abandoned by the Okehocking tribe in 1720 as roads were built and Quakers began to settle in the area. Thus began the bucolic development of the Land Grant District, with the inclusion of a Quaker meeting house and school at the intersection of Goshen and Plumsock Roads.
BONNIE AND JIM VAN ALEN HAVE DEEP ROOTS IN THE WILLISTOWN COMMUNITY. Indian Run Farm had belonged to Jim’s great aunt, Lenore Lucas, who moved there in the 1920’s. Jim grew up on nearby Delchester Road, where he still recalls hearing the trolley running along Route 3 from Philadelphia to West Chester delivering milk. Jim and Bonnie purchased the farm and moved there in 1969. The original home, built in 1796, was a small three story building with an outhouse. Jim’s great aunt had completed a first addition in 1929, and Bonnie and Jim added two more additions in the 1990’s as their family grew.
RAISING THREE BOYS AT INDIAN RUN, BONNIE, JIM AND SONS FELL IN LOVE WITH THE LAND, HIKING AND RIDING ACROSS ITS OPEN SPACE. Realizing that they lived in an oasis of countryside vulnerable to development, Bonnie contacted the Brandywine Conservancy in the late 1970’s with the idea of creating a satellite program for conservation easements in Willistown. This program would ultimately become WIllistown Conservation Trust. In 1980 their property became one of the organization’s first easements. Indian Run Farm comprises 21 acres, with a total of 65 contiguous acres owned by the Van Alen’s and their family.
THE BARN, BUILT IN 1826 BY MORDECAI BARTRAM, a nearby resident and namesake of the covered bridge on Goshen Road, originally housed cattle. The Van Alen’s had the original cow stanchions and floor removed, and added a tack room to create a barn suitable for horses. Today a pony for their granddaughter and 5 horses live there. The barn was built in two sections, with exterior of stone, stucco, and board and batten siding and a stone wall running between the two sections. Above the horse section as one enters the barnyard is a hayloft, and above the far section, which is used for tractor storage, is a newly renovated play room accessible by stairs and an upstairs porch.
THE BARN’S OTHER NOTABLE OCCUPANTS INCLUDE BATS WHICH RETURN EACH SUMMER TO THE HAYLOFT, AS THEY LIKELY HAVE FOR NEARLY 200 YEARS. Bonnie and Jim lay a tarp to protect the hay and straw and collect the valuable bat droppings for the garden. The bats are an important part of the local ecology, and the Van Alens enjoy watching them swoop for bugs over the summer pond. The barn houses old dovecotes, holes in the exterior near the roof of the barn which are unusual in a structure of this kind. The old nesting box attached to the far end of the barn was occupied for two summers by a female Kestrel that had been rescued by the Van Alen boys.
ENCHANTING BARN OASIS
623 SUGARTOWN ROAD MALVERN
ALTHOUGH THE SETTING IS SUBURBAN, MICHAEL AND AMY BROOKS’ HOME IS REMINISCENT OF WILLISTOWN’S AGRARIAN PAST. The property is situated along historic Sugartown Road, once a bustling center of commerce and community life, and across the road from “Sugartown Strawberries”, a working farm beloved by the community for it’s delicious strawberries and abundant pumpkins.
THROUGHOUT THE 1800S “SHUGART’S TOWN”, LATER KNOWN AS SUGARTOWN, WAS A SOCIAL, EDUCATIONAL, COMMERCIAL AND MUNICIPAL CENTER. The location was ideal for a town being in the center of a large farming community, but also at the intersection of five roads – Sugartown, Boot, Dutton Mill, Spring, and Providence. In its heyday Sugartown provided more goods and services for a longer period of years than any other village in Willistown.
THE ORIGINAL DWELLING DATES BACK TO 1854, WITH LATER ADDITIONS IN 1992. Adjacent to the house sits an idyllic stone barn, built in 2000. The barn serves multiple purposes including garage space, horse barn, as well as space for entertaining and leisure. A beautiful pool rounds out the recreational space. A secondary barn, built by Precise Builders, was built this year to provide additional stall space for the resident horses.
THE PROPERTY IS HOME TO SEVERAL ANIMALS INCLUDING TWO RETIRED HORSES
– Baxter, a Connemara, and Mouse, a Paint, who graze on the two-acre pasture and are trail ridden for pleasure on the many local trails conserved by WCT. The Brooks’ children are active members of the Radnor Hunt Pony Club, and Amy serves as one of the joint District Commissioners. Each year they participate in the Pony Club’s Paper Chase, which benefits WCT’s open space preservation efforts.
IN ADDITION, THE FARM IS HOME TO EIGHT CHICKENS and one rooster named Clementine, and fresh eggs are enjoyed by all.
COLONIAL PENNSYLVANIA PLANTATION
3900 NORTH SANDY FLASH DRIVE NEWTOWN SQUARE
COLONIAL PENNSYLVANIA PLANTATION IS AN 18TH CENTURY LIVING HISTORY FARM LOCATED WITHIN RIDLEY CREEK STATE PARK. The property was an original land grant by William Penn in the late 17th century and was occupied by the Pratt family, an English Quaker family, from 1720 to 1820 and acquired by Ridley Creek State Park in 1966.
IN 1971, MEMBERS OF THE BISHOP’S MILL HISTORICAL SOCIETY VISITED A NEGLECTED FARMHOUSE DATING TO THE 1690S WITHIN RIDLEY CREEK STATE PARK, now included in the National Register of Historic Places. Upon leasing the 112-acre property on which it sat in 1973, the founders restored five historic buildings (including the original house), crop fields, and a kitchen garden using painstaking historical and archeological research. The Society evolved with a more ambitious goal of establishing the colonial farm as a museum of Pennsylvania folklife and as a tribute to the hard-working colonial families who helped build America. Through the farm, interpreters could explore and demonstrate how local colonial farmers lived and worked, what they learned, and how their knowledge and life impacted the present. The renamed “Colonial Pennsylvania Plantation” (CPP) opened to the public for the Bicentennial in 1976. Called a “museum in the making,” the site allowed visitors to observe and even participate in the many activities of daily life on a farm in the Revolutionary era.
AT CPP, THE REVOLUTIONARY ERA IS BROUGHT TO LIFE FOR VISITORS AS THEY DISCOVER HOW COLONIAL FARM FAMILIES LIVED AND WORKED during a critical period in American history through the education, interpretation, and active participation in critically endangered historic skills that made 18th century life possible. CPP’s programs offer a unique opportunity for visitors to connect to the places, people, environment, and skills of the past through the act of doing, providing meaningful and lifelong experiences. CPP operates as a working living history farm open to the public and includes two functioning barns; wagon barn and stable barn.
THE TWO-STORY WAGON BARN IS USED FOR BOTH PROCESSING AND HOLDING CROPS AND MAINTENANCE AND STORAGE OF TOOLS, typical of an 18th century setup. The wagon barn also currently serves as an important program space for the farm offering an immersive environment for historic skills workshops and hands-on children’s programming. The farm’s banked stable barn houses feed, bedding, and supplies on the top and our two horses and ox on the bottom.
THE FARM CONSISTS OF A MAIN FARMHOUSE, CONSTRUCTED BETWEEN 1690 AND 1790, several outbuildings, including a spring house, and two barns. CPP interprets the agricultural system as one in transition from a single barn to a two-barn system. A wagon or field barn would have been constructed in the early-mid 1700s with a livestock barn built in the early 1800s. The wagon and livestock barns were the precursors to the Pennsylvania bank barn, such as the one erected by the Pratt family in 1805. While the full barn structure is no longer standing, the foundation is visible and the site’s current barnyard and re-constructed livestock barn sit within the outlines of the foundation. The wagon barn was restored in 1975 based on archeological evidence and local architectural research. The structure has the characteristic two stories and wide double-doors on the gable ends for wagons to be driven straight through for loading or unloading. In 1991, the second-story floor was replaced using old beams and stairs were built for access by Sess and Glass of 18th Century Restorations Inc. The livestock bank barn was partially reconstructed on old foundations and the original eastern wall in 1978-79 and included the summer beam, joists, and sills from a local historic bank barn being demolished.
THE FARM INCLUDES TWO NATURAL WATERWAYS, RIDLEY CREEK AND THE SMALLER PRATT RUN. At the entrance to the farm is a wetland that boasts many native plants including Shrubby St John's Wort, Coralberry, Blackhaw viburnum, New Jersey Tea, Sassafras, Culver's Root, Northern Sea Oats, Redbud, and River Birch. The orchard with heritage varieties of apple and pear trees, a butternut tree, and two paw paw trees, along with the garden, provide a variety of pollen sources for the farm’s apiary.
HISTORIC CHESTER COUNTY BARN
864 GRUBBS MILL ROAD
NEWTOWN SQUARE
AT THE CORNER OF GRUBBS MILL AND GOSHEN ROADS, A MASSIVE STONE BARN STANDS LIKE A WATCHFUL BEACON OVER KIRKWOOD PRESERVE, an important and iconic landmark at the heart of the Willistown countryside and neighboring historic White Horse District. The land here, originally 500 acres, was purchased in 1699 by the Massey family who built the James Massey House (c. 1730), the tenant house, and this traditional Chester County forebay bank barn. Since the 1700s, the buildings and landscape have undergone vast changes and many names — including White Horse Farm, the Alpaca Barn and Massey Farm — and now, thanks to the local community, this special place will remain forever preserved.
IN 2021, THE NOW 16-ACRE MASSEY FARM WAS LISTED FOR SALE, and a developer intended to purchase the land, demolish its historic buildings, and construct four new homes on subdivided parcels. Recognizing this imminent threat that would erase the history and important natural resources of this farm, two local nonprofit groups — Willistown Conservation Trust (WCT) and the Delchester Group, Inc. — partnered to purchase the property with the support of many community lenders.
PROTECTING THE PROPERTY WAS A PRIORITY FOR BOTH GROUPS, AND AS SUCH, 6.5 ACRES WERE ADDED TO WCT’S NEIGHBORING KIRKWOOD PRESERVE, while the remaining portion was sold to conservation buyers John and Cara Fry who are working to restore the barn and two homes and forever protect the land under conservation easement.
THROUGHOUT THE YEARS, THE HOMES AND BARN OF MASSEY FARM HAVE HOSTED A PLETHORA OF HUMAN AND ANIMAL OCCUPANTS, from farmers and the U.S. Ambassador Robert Strausz-Hupé, to cattle and alpacas. While vacant, the barn became home to many other critters including bats and birds. Today, the barn is home to Nat Fry Woodworking. Nat creates custom designed and handmade furniture using traditional joinery and ethically sourced hardwoods such as Ash, Walnut, Cherry, Oak and Maple. Over time the Frys will continue to renovate this massive barn to suit their family’s needs.
BROOKS BARN
SUMMERBANK
RUSHTON WOODS PRESERVE & FARM
KESTREL HILL PRESERVE ASHBRIDGE PRESERVE
WOODPECKER WOODS PRESERVE
12 th Annual
BARNS BBQ and
REQUESTS
INDIAN RUN FARM
OKEHOCKING PRESERVE
• Please leave your dogs at home
• Since you’ll be walking in animal pastures with uneven footing, sensible shoes are recommended a few
• Dress appropriately for inclement weather — we will be outside
PLAN YOUR DAY
TOUR | 9:00 AM TO 1:00 PM
SUMMERBANK*
Bev & Jim Kolea
239 Spring Road, Malvern
*Please use stable entrance
INDIAN RUN FARM*
Bonnie & Jim Van Alen
936 Plumsock Road, Newtown Square
*Parking along Plumsock Road
BROOKS BARN*
Amy & Michael Brooks
623 Sugartown Road, Malvern
*Parking is on Dovecote Lane
COLONIAL PENNSYLVANIA
PLANTATION
3900 North Sandy Flash Drive, Newtown Square
FRY BARN
Cara & John Fry
864 Grubbs Mill Road, Newtown Square
• Bathrooms are available at Willistown Conservation Trust Office (925 Providence Road)
• Only the barns are open for touring
• Please wear your wristband — it is your admission ticket
impact lives
Robert
McMenamin Managing Director Market Director610.567.4702 rob.mcmenamin@bofa.com
We are pleased to Sponsor Willistown Conservation Trusts' Barns and BBQ!
Proud Sponsor of the Willistown Conservation Trust
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