Mountain Home, April 2021

Page 1

M O U N T A I N

HOME Pennsylvania & the New York Finger Lakes

End E R F the wi as

Professor Higbee’s Lost Streams Two Local Anglers Rescued the Professor’s Maps from Oblivion, and Saved a Life’s Work

Our Annual Fishue! Slate Run Tackle Changes Hands Goats Cure Your Skin! Give and Take on Hobo Creek

By Lilace Mellin Guignard

APRIL 20211


2


Volume 16 Issue 4

16 Give Your Skin the

Professor Higbee’s Lost Streams

Capra Aegagrus Hircus Milk Cure

By Lilace Mellin Guignard Two local anglers rescued the professor’s maps from oblivion, and save a life’s work.

By Gayle Morrow

19 Freddie’s Fish

By Kevin McJunkin The one that got away.

22 The Best Angle

By Don Knaus

A dad teaches his daughters about reel life.

6 The Real Outdoorsmen

30 Are You a Paper

Packrat?

By Pat Kelly Give and take on Hobo Creek.

By Cornelius O’Donnell

Some stuff has to go, but not the recipes...

34 Back of the Mountain

By Curt Weinhold Fisherman’s paradise.

12 Catch and Release at Slate Run

Cover by Gwen Button, photo of Professor Howard Higbee, age 65, working on a PA Land Resource map, courtesy Penn State University. This page, from top, by Lilace Mellin Guignard; center, abandonded vagrant campsite, by Pat Kelly; bottom photo tip jar at Wolfe’s General Store, by Gayle Morrow.

By Gayle Morrow New owners take the helm in Pine Creek Valley.

24 3


w w w. m o u n ta i n h o m e m ag . co m Editors & Publishers Teresa Banik Capuzzo Michael Capuzzo Associate Publisher George Bochetto, Esq. D i r e c t o r o f O pe r a t i o n s Gwen Button Managing Editor Gayle Morrow S a l e s R ep r e s e n t a t i v e s Joseph Campbell, Shelly Moore, Richard Trotta Circulation Director Michael Banik Accounting Amy Packard Cover Design Gwen Button Contributing Writers Maggie Barnes, Mike Cutillo, Ann E. Duckett, Carrie Hagen, Pat Kelly, Don Knaus, Kevin McJunkin, Dave Milano, Cornelius O’Donnell, Brendan O’Meara, Peter Joffre Nye, Linda Roller, Karey Solomon, Beth Williams C o n t r i b u t i n g P h o t o g r ap h e r s Bernadette Chiaramonte, Diane Cobourn, Lonny Frost, Teza Gerow, Michael Johnston, Roger Kingsley, Travis Snyder, Linda Stager, Sherri Stager, Jody Tice, Sarah Wagaman, Ardath Wolcott, Curt Weinhold D i s t r i b u t i o n T eam Brian Button, Grapevine Distribution, Linda Roller T h e B ea g l e Nano Cosmo (1996-2014) • Yogi (2004-2018) ABOUT US: Mountain Home is the award-winning regional magazine of PA and NY with more than 100,000 readers. The magazine has been published monthly, since 2005, by Beagle Media, LLC, 39 Water Street, Wellsboro, Pennsylvania, 16901, and online at www.mountainhomemag.com. Copyright © 2021 Beagle Media, LLC. All rights reserved. E-mail story ideas to editorial@mountainhomemag. com, or call (570) 724-3838. TO ADVERTISE: E-mail info@mountainhomemag.com, or call us at (570) 724-3838. AWARDS: Mountain Home has won over 100 international and statewide journalism awards from the International Regional Magazine Association and the Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association for excellence in writing, photography, and design. DISTRIBUTION: Mountain Home is available “Free as the Wind” at hundreds of locations in Tioga, Potter, Bradford, Lycoming, Union, and Clinton counties in PA and Steuben, Chemung, Schuyler, Yates, Seneca, Tioga, and Ontario counties in NY. SUBSCRIPTIONS: For a one-year subscription (12 issues), send $24.95, payable to Beagle Media LLC, 39 Water Street, Wellsboro, PA 16901 or visit www.mountainhomemag.com.

We specialize in designing a home that is exactly what you need. Always exceptional craftsmanship. Always the most energy efficient products. Always the security of a 12 Year Structural Home Warranty in the state of PA.

SELINSGROVE

LYCOMING MALL

MANSFIELD

www.brooksidehomes.com | info@brooksidehomes.com | 570-374-7900 4


ARE YOU THE BEST?

You Should Work for the Best! O V E R 4 2 Y E A R S I N T H E I N D U S T RY

NOW HIRING! NCCCO CRANE OPERATORS • MECHANICS CLASS A CDL DRIVERS • WELDERS FABRICATORS • MILLWRIGHTS

IN OUR WILLIAMSPORT & WYSOX FACILITIES

CLASS A DRIVERS WITH TANKER EXPERIENCE GO TO THE HEAD OF THE LINE!

...for Better Wages! CDL DRIVERS

25 to $32

$

CRANE OPERATORS

$ 25 to 40 Crane operators should $

have truck mounted crane experience and NY/PA Licensing.

y! t Call Toda 800-232-2977 Apply a ALLISONCRANE.COM

5


6

Larry Seaman

Labor of love: July, 1991, Howard Higbee, age 91, reviews the first proof of an updated Stream Map of Pennsylvania.


Professor Higbee’s Lost Streams Two Local Anglers Rescued the Professor’s Maps from Oblivion, and Saved a Life’s Work By Lilace Mellin Guignard

W

e’ve all heard about treasure maps, but sometimes the map is the lost treasure. This is the story of a map created in 1965 by Penn State Professor Howard Higbee. After three decades of drawing 86,000 miles of streams onto a 33x55-inch map of Pennsylvania, a printing company reproduced 70,000 copies. Several years later they went out of business, trashing the original drawing and printing plates. Thus the legend of the “Lost Stream Map” was born. Then in his seventies, soils scientist Professor Higbee saw thirty years of his work vanish. It had been painstaking work. Starting with many large topographic maps and aerial photographs, he reduced them again and again, drawing in each stream under high magnification. Then, to check distances, he modified his car’s odometer to measure miles in 500ths. That the map made it into people’s hands was wonderful. That it was lost to future fisherman, conservationists, foresters, and others with a stake in the great outdoors was heartbreaking. Back then, it was impossible to make new plates from the reproductions because they’d been printed in non-photographic

blue. Retired and caring for his wife who had Parkinson’s disease, Professor Higbee couldn’t start from scratch. He declined an offer to sell his last copy for $400, and believed his labor of love was lost forever. • Jim Weaver, retired Tioga County Planner and avid fisherman, recalls how during his college days at Penn State in the early ’70s you couldn’t buy a copy. “We lusted over it when we could look at it. Some of the university fishery guys had originals hanging on their office walls. We tried to find mistakes in the areas we were familiar with and used it to plot devious schemes to find brook trout water. The scale and lack of other features made it challenging to find those waters on the ground, but it made for a good chase and wayfinding.” The map is all about water. Main roads are pale orange and float behind the vivid blue veins almost as an afterthought. For this reason, people who use the map to find secret less-fished streams crossreference it with a state forest map or gazetteer to find the back roads that will get them closest. “Now that it’s available again it’s just good to hold it, read it, marvel at

Higbee’s perseverance, and take in the wondrous water resources of this state,” says Jim. “It’s a well-watered country.” Two fishermen are responsible for the map becoming available again in 1991. Larry Seaman and Karl Ings, of Vivid Publishing Company in Williamsport, were loaned a copy of “an old first edition stream map,” which they kept in their office. “Customers would stop to study it and ask where they could get one,” Larry recounts. “That was a light bulb moment! Karl said, ‘We could sell a lot of these.’” Howard Higbee’s name was on the map, so Karl picked up the phone and called Penn State. But they wouldn’t give Karl the retired professor’s phone number. Larry went to the library reference room and looked it up in the State College phone directory. When Howard heard what Karl wanted to do he said, “Well, Sonny, if you’re interested in the stream map you had better get here fast because I’m ninetyone. At this stage of my life there isn’t much I really want or need. But seeing the Stream Map available to the public again is one thing that would make me happy. But you better hurry—I’m not going to See Streams on page 8

7


Endless Mountain Music Festival and Deane Center for the Performing Arts presents

Fire in the

Glen

FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 2021

7:00 PM • Coolidge Theatre • Deane Center

g Show! n i p m u A Mug-Th A Celtic eclectic blend of ScottishIrish music from this energetic trio!

2500 • BYOB • Tables Available

$

For tickets and tables call

570-724-6220 endlessmountain.net 8

deanecenter.com

Streams continued from page 7

be around much longer.” They visited him the same day. It was April 4, 1991. In October 1991, they printed 10,000 copies. Though it happened fast, it did not come easy. They weren’t mapmakers. They made how-to videos back when VCRs sat beside every TV. They were like YouTube before the Internet. When Howard told them the plates had been lost, Larry and Karl asked Penn State to give them the rights if they could figure a way to reprint. Because Penn State had already tried, with no luck, they agreed. “At first, we were stymied.” Larry says they looked into duplicating the original process of drawing the streams “resembling capillaries in the human circulatory system.” But they didn’t have the money or the patience that would require. Even National Geographic told them it couldn’t be done. They thought of going to the landfill and searching for the plates. Then they heard about emerging technology that claimed to be able to reproduce non-photographic blue. They located a company called Complete Pre-Press with one of the first drum scanners, but the drum wasn’t big enough. “We held our breath and cut one of the few remaining ones into six sections,” explains Larry. They were prepared to be disappointed but the results were better than expected. “All the details were there, crisp and clear,” according to Karl. “We knew at that moment that Howard Higbee might actually see his wish fulfilled.” They printed 10,000 maps for $10,000, in time for Christmas. The first thing they did was a direct mailing to the 6,000 members of Trout Unlimited. The paper map, rolled or folded to 8x10 inches, sold for $19.95. The 33x55-inch laminated one to pin on your wall was $39.95. “The printer said, ‘I think you’re printing too many,’ but 23 percent of Trout Unlimited members bought them from that first mailing. And it took off after that,” Larry chuckles. Professor Higbee lived to see his map back in circulation, and, before he died at the age of ninety-three, the new map had won rave reviews and the thanks of thousands of outdoor


enthusiasts. “He told us we were like a couple of coon dogs,” Larry says. To date they’ve printed over 110,000. • Why is this map so popular that a husband and wife argued over who got their copy in the divorce? (Both anglers, she won custody of it.) Or that a couple had to replace theirs when the people buying their home insisted the map come with it? And how popular is it now that they’re available again? Don Kelly, who owns the Tackle Shack in Wellsboro, offers one explanation. “Twenty years ago maps were so important,” he says. “They were all we had. These days we have digital resources and map apps to use in the field.” But nothing will replace the experience of a large map, like the stream map hanging in his cabin, for staring at and finding new areas to explore. “You can’t see things at that scale on the screen. Maybe you’ve heard that Pennsylvania has more streams than any other state except Alaska, and that sounds pretty cool. But you don’t get it until you see it all on one map,” says Don. • I’d asked Kathleen Lavelle, who’s been working with Trout Unlimited since 2014, if she knew about the lost stream map. While I stand in her living room greeting her dogs, she admits, “When you emailed, I immediately searched online because I hadn’t heard of it.” Kathleen has been working at home during the winter of COVID. Her computer sits on a table among maps and charts. “When I saw it on my screen, I turned to look over my left shoulder at the wall.” She points behind me and I turn. There, framed by weathered branches, is a laminated copy above their couch. We laugh. “I first saw the map on the wall of a bar Alan [that’s Alan Dakin, her partner] took me to on an early date. I must’ve spent a lot of time looking at it because he got me this copy during our first year together.” She immediately knew she wanted to hang it prominently, so searched for the right branches from Little Pine Creek, near their home. “One of the things I like about it is that Pittsburgh doesn’t look any busier than

BUSINESS PLEASURE Small Businesses = Big Dreams. You pour your life into your business, and so do we. From grand opening to the day you cash out and move on, we’ll help ensure your success. Because knowing your business is our business. You & Us. That’s C&N.

cnbankpa.com/Business

See Streams on page 10

9


Streams continued from page 9

(3) Courtesy Larry Seaman

Clearfield County.” And that’s the thing about maps. They always tell a story, but maps of the same place can tell different stories. For instance, if you type Pennsylvania into Google maps, what comes up first is an outline of the state with highways and main cities. That map is a story of how to get around, making it look like there are few ways to reach the north-central part of the state. The yellow lines, especially where they intersect, tell the story of populations and commerce, and the places included seem like the desirable places to go. Whereas, a map of light pollution tells anyone looking for dark skies that north-central Pennsylvania is a preferable destination. Cartographers know that what is left out is as important as what’s included, and getting all the streams and their names on the map was a higher priority for Professor Higbee Lucid legacy: (from top) Karl Ings and Larry Seaman than including all the roads. If everything were included, the map would be unusable. running a map laminator in A map of Pennsylvania’s waters tells the story the early days; Larry (right) of a state in which water is a major force. Seeing and Karl today; Karl’s son Ryan may be the next in the rivers, streams, and creeks squiggle across my line to carry on the Vivid kitchen wall where I’ve tacked the map tells me the tradition. story of land that provides lots of clean drinking water, water for crops and livestock, and a variety of aquatic recreation opportunities. But as the field coordinator working on the Pennsylvania Coldwater Habitat Program, Kathleen can also read in it the stories of ecosystems. “Recently a priority for TU is identifying areas where there are barriers to aquatic organism passage.” She knows many of these streams that appear unimpeded actually have culverts that are too small to allow trout and other organisms to follow the lines that flow so freely on the map. “In my job we refer to streams by a six digit code, so this map is how I learn their names.” Where this map really shines for Kathleen is in terms of education, especially when she needs to explain to interns about watershed size, boundaries, and connectivity. In addition to the blue of water, dark green lines show minor and major watersheds— areas where all water drains to a common outlet. I stand in front of her map, trying to name the six main river sheds, where the thickest outlines follow the land ridges that determine into which river waters flow. (I did okay, but didn’t know the Genesee and called the Ohio by it’s tributary, the Allegheny.) The educational possibilities are endless and ageless. Jennifer McCarthy posted the map in her classroom when she taught fifth grade science at Liberty Elementary. “My students loved to trace the connection between their neighborhood streams, the West Branch of the Susquehanna, and on to the Chesapeake Bay,” she recalls. She retired in 2015 and brought one of the maps home. Tired of talking indoors on a sunny day, Kathleen and I take her dog, Atlas, for a walk on the rail trail where Little Pine Creek flows into Pine Creek. “We call it Big Pine here, or the Big, to keep them straight,” she tells me as we pause on the bridge. Below us I watch the water from Little Pine head to the Pine Creek, running briskly past banks that are still snow-covered on its way to the Chesapeake Bay. Naked sycamores stretch silver arms to each other. Atlas pulls us onward. • A small warehouse in Williamsport is home to Vivid 10


Publishing. It’s an open space crowded with tables layered with maps and some machinery. On the back wall are wide shelves with stacks of inventory, and near the door are a couple of desks. When I stick my head through, Larry motions me in and quickly puts on a dusky purple facemask. Larry was born and raised in Williamsport but traveled for work after college, then came home and started the publishing company. Now he lives on Lycoming Creek, a mile upstream of where he lived as a boy. Larry’s the writer and numbers guy; Karl’s the salesman. The two met through college friends in Florida, and when Karl stopped to visit on his way through, he liked the area enough to accept a job. Soon he married a Pennsylvania girl and had some kids. Larry leans back in his chair. “Back then, our how-to videos were mostly hunting and fishing,” he muses. Now maps and accompanying materials, including a book on fly-fishing, are their focus. “It looks like Karl’s son Ryan might take over the business,” says Larry, who is seventy-two. “He fishes too, and was always in here with his dad when he was little. I think we brainwashed him.” Before his death, Professor Higbee passed on his unique map-making methods and his blessing to Larry and Karl when they told him they’d like to map the streams of other states. “We’d made many visits to his home near the Penn State campus,” Larry says. “He’d be prepared for each visit with notes on 3x5 cards, as if he were giving a lecture.” Larry and Karl were good students, apparently, because they were able to combine the professor’s methods with new computer technology and a team of cartographers to create maps for New York, Colorado, Michigan, West Virginia, North Carolina, Maryland, Delaware, Oregon, Ohio, Wisconsin, Northern California, Washington, Montana, Missouri, New England, New Jersey, and Illinois. They choose states based on the number of fishing licenses sold. “To honor him, all the maps we create will carry his name. The drawing of Howard bent over his drafting tale is there to constantly remind us to accept nothing less than the Professor’s high standards for detail, accuracy, and See Streams on page 32 11


Pat Kelly Up a creek: Pat Kelly enjoyed a small fire, fishing, and solitude on Hobo Creek—or so he thought.

The Real Outdoorsmen Give and Take on Hobo Creek By Pat Kelly

O

n his right hand he had tied on a makeshift bandage made out of plastic bags. He was sitting on top of a trail-side picnic table with trash spread out all around him. As I climbed up the creek’s embankment, I could hear him loudly talking to himself. When he noticed me, he flinched in obvious surprise. We were in secluded woods early in the morning and each man’s presence made the other feel uncomfortable. Noticing my fly rod, he relieved the tension by asking if

12

I had any luck. I returned the favor (albeit while lying) and told him I had caught nothing. Afterwards I didn’t think much of it. The way I saw it, encounters with vagrants were bound to happen to hunters and fishermen. We occupy out-of-the-way places and are outside when most people are not. That was five years ago, and I’ve fished “Hobo Creek” dozens of times since then without incident. Until this past year the memory had all but faded. Just before Christmas, I was working

a section of Hobo Creek upstream from an old covered bridge. There was snow on the ground, and I had built a twig fire next to the water so I could periodically warm my hands. After a few drifts I managed to land a respectable rainbow. I was in the process of taking the obligatory fishing hero selfie when something unexpectedly splashed into the water right in front of me. My first thought was that it was a jumping trout, but that didn’t make sense since the water along the shore was only an inch deep. Maybe a See Outdoorsmen on page 14


welcome to

Canyon Country Fabrics HOURS: Tues, Tues, Wed. & Fri. 9-4; Thurs. 9-7; Sat. Sat. 9-3; CLOSED Sun. & Mon.

664 KELSEY ST., WELLSBORO, PA 16901 • 570-724-4163

• 108” Wide Backing • Batting • Fleece & Flannel • Crafts & Gifts

WELLSBORO Manicure Spa Pedicure Waxing

• Lg. Selection of Cotton • NEW Home Décor NOW IN STOCK!

For All Your Quilting Needs! GET A JUMP ON YOUR SPRING HORSE NEEDS! 3 3 3 3

GROOMING ACCESSORIES & TOOLS LEATHER CARE SUPPLIES TACK AND EQUIPMENT FLY SPRAY AND MASKS

ROCKWELL’S Feed, Farm & Pet Supply

Your Neighborhood Pet Supply Store! 1943 SHUMWAY HILL RD., WELLSBORO, PA HOURS: 7:30-5:00 M-F • 8:00-1:00 SAT. 570-724-0967 OR 877-797-4575

73 Main Street • Wellsboro, PA 16901

570-948-9299

Hours: Mon-Sat. 9:30am-7:30pm; Sun. 10am-6pm

Tioga Office Products 96 East Avenue • Wellsboro, PA

570-724-4060 top11@ptd.net top

We Have a Truckload of Furniture For Sale!

ycamore’s Sp eS

ll

ss

en

We

ne

mind. Heal your spirit. body. Transform your soul.

Enlighten your Nourish your

• FUNCTIONAL HEALTH COACHING • HEALTHY LIFESTYLE CLASSES • CANCER PREVENTION/RECOVERY COACHING • AROMATHERAPY & HERBAL CLASSES/ CONSULTS/PRODUCTS: Featuring “The Scentual Soul”

ter

irit

Th

Desks, Lateral Cabinets, Glass & Dry Erase Boards

Ed u c a tio n

C

New Location: 55 East Avenue, Wellsboro

- Fine Aromatherapy EOs and Product Line

Sheryl Henkin-Kealey, BS.Ed, CMA, Certified Holistic Cancer Coach

(570) 634-3777 • sycamorespirit@gmail.com

Visit www.TheSycamoreSpirit.com for class schedules! Facebook.com/TheSycamoresSpiritWellnessEducationCenter

website: hamiltongibson.org | twitter: HGProductions29 facebook: @hamiltongibsonproductions instagram: hamiltongibsonproductions YouTube: Hamilton-Gibson Productions email: hamgib@gmail.com | phone: 570.724.2079

hope—a new constellation

waiting for us to map it, waiting for us to name it - together

[From ONE TODAY by Richard Blanco]

Hamilton-Gibson Productions mission is to provide opportunities for people of all ages to enrich and empower their lives through community performing arts. We embrace 2021 as a time to work and play together so we can once again be enriched and empowered...together.

13


PINE CREEK VALLEY

MILLERS GUN SHOP, INC

6945 Nittany Valley Dr., Mill Hall, PA

570-726-3030

www.millersgunshopinc.com

—WE ARE YOUR ONE STOP HUNTING HEADQUARTERS—

14

Outdoorsmen continued from page 12

squirrel had lost the handle on a walnut? I looked straight up, but there were no overhanging branches—just blue sky. I stood up and stared hard into the woods. Did someone just throw a rock at me? Similar to a soon-to-be-murdered idiot in a horror movie, I dismissed the strange anomaly and resumed fishing. Walking upstream, I started noticing boot prints in the snow. I didn’t think much of it at first—it was, after all, a public tract of woods. Then as I started fishing the next run, I smelled wood smoke. I was 100 percent positive I had put out my fire, going so far as to kick all of the embers into the water. I cast a few more times, but the smell was so strong it became impossible to ignore. I stopped fishing and turned around to reexamine the woods. I was shocked to see that not ten yards behind me was a crude campsite. A checkered quilt was spread out on the ground with an empty beer can lying next to it. A foot away from the blanket, built up against the trunk of a large tree, were the smoldering remains of a fire. By the looks of the ash heap and the height of the bark’s scorch marks, this must have been a roaring blaze. I smothered the smoking coals as best as I could with snow, and with renewed interest picked up the boot tracks that walked away from the fire. I was curious that this might be the same hooftie I bumped into years ago on the picnic table. As I followed the tracks deeper into the woods, I finally remembered the mystery splash and paused. Did this person see me building my own fire and think that I was setting up shop in “his woods?” Maybe he felt crowded, picked up a rock, and decided to put a shot across my bow? Regardless, what good would come from finding someone at the end of these tracks? It was time to get out of the woods. Before leaving I checked the weather on my phone. It went into the twenties the night before and it would again once the sun went down. I woke up the next day soured on Hobo Creek and in the market for a better fishing spot. A couple months prior I had found a fantastic new stream hidden about one hundred and fifty yards off of the Ironton Rail Trail. The IRT is a nine-mile-long macadam path that runs parallel to the Lehigh River and some of its tributaries. It is the type of place that Karens and Kens use to walk their dogs, push strollers (oftentimes with dogs in them), and ride bicycles in excessively tight clothing. The local consensus is that it is a safe place. However, when I fished this water for the first time, I found I just couldn’t stop looking over my shoulder. Then an unexpected thought popped into my head: “This would be a great place for me to get killed without anyone ever knowing it.” I missed setting the hook on a trout and took it as an omen to leave. I hadn’t been back since. Since then, the seasons had changed and everything looked much different. There were six inches of snow on the ground and the bare branches allowed me to see much deeper into the bush than I could before. As I left the trail, a suburbanite on a $1,000-bike zipped by me. His presence made me feel stupid for being so paranoid the last time I was here. After an hour of walking the creek, I finally had a trout strike a drifting nymph. As I set the hook, I saw the flash of his silver belly just before he relieved himself of my fly. Thinking I was all alone, I swore aloud at maximum volume. After my little fit, I heard a susurrus somewhere behind me, almost as if my tantrum had startled something. I whipped my head around and saw tucked back in


Patrick Kelly

welcome to

WILLIAMSPORT

CATHERINE BURNS INSURANCE SERVICES

WE OFFER:

No vagrancy: new signs that homelessness isn’t just a city problem.

the brush and briars a green tent. Outside of it was a man in a rough winter coat kicking snow away from the entrance. It must have been his eyes I felt a couple months ago. That said, up close he didn’t look too dangerous; he just looked cold. Back at the car I checked the weather on my phone. It was going to be another below freezing night. In two days of fishing, I had managed to blunder into two different homeless guys’ campsites. Up to this point I had only ever seen homeless people on city sidewalks. These two were more hardcore—tucked away in the snowy bush, well outside of town and all alone. I would not go so far as to say I admired these people, but it was hard not to be impressed with the level of toughness required to live like this. A few days after Christmas, I was heading into town with my two sons. I was riding shotgun, with my sixteen-year-old driving and my eleven-year-old wasting his youth on some video game in the backseat. On a whim I told my eldest to turn down the road my new creek was on and to drive very slowly. The leafless trees and snowy backdrop made it possible to just make out the green tent from the road. I had him stop right there in the middle of the street so I could point it out. I told my two boys that was what real hardship looked like and to not let that happen to them. At a gas station we picked up some jerky, pretzels, and candy bars and tied them up in a plastic shopping bag. Back at the trailhead I told the boys I would be out of sight for a few minutes and to wait in the truck. The green tent was on the opposite side of the creek. Cupping my hands over my mouth, I yelled that I was chucking a bag of food across the water. I wished him a Merry Christmas, a Happy New Year, and to be careful. Then I left the outdoorsman to the elements and walked back to my son’s warm truck. Pat Kelly is also a contributor for Pennsylvania Game News. He lives on a small farm in Lehigh County, PA, with his wife and their three children.

MEDICARE SUPPLEMENTS, ADVANTAGE PLANS, AND PRESCRIPTION DRUG PLANS, LONG TERM CARE INSURANCE, ANNUITIES, LIFE INSURANCE, PRE-PAID FUNERALS, RETIREMENT PLAN ROLLOVERS, AND MUCH MORE!

960 Plaza Dr. (Savoy Plaza) Montoursville Part of YOUR CBD STORE

570-327-1598

BurnsInsuranceServices@gmail.com THE ORIGINAL

®

ROAN Inc.

REAL ESTATE AUCTIONEERS

& CONTENTS 3530 LYCOMING CREEK ROAD COGAN STATION, PA 17728

RON: 570-220-0062 *** ROD: 570-419-1550 *** AMANDA: 570-220-0255

OFFICE: (570) 494-0170 * EMAIL: roaninc@comcast.net * WEB:roaninc@comcast.net

SPRING AUCTION SCHEDULE APRIL

SATURDAY, APRIL 17TH @ 10AM: PUBLIC GALLERY AUCTION TO INCLUDE THE LEE PHILLIPS ESTATE OF LOCK HAVEN PA ALONG W/ SELECTED OTHERS ~ IN-HOUSE AND ONLINE BIDDING TO BE AVAILABLE / ABSENTEE BIDS ALWAYS ACCEPTED SATURDAY, APRIL 24TH @ 9AM: GUN AUCTION AT OUR GALLERY W/ PREVIEW FRIDAY, APRIL 23RD 9AM TO 5PM AND SALE DAY AT 7AM CATALOGS AND PHOTOS ONLINE ~ CALL US TODAY TO CONSIGN YOUR GUNS

MAY

SATURDAY, MAY 15TH @ 6PM : REAL ESTATE ONLY AUCTION TO BE HELD ONSITE AT 1865 BEAUTY AVE. WILLIAMSPORT PA ~ PHOTOS & DETAILS ONLINE FRIDAY & SATURDAY, MAY 28TH & 29TH @ 10AM: ANNUAL MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND AUCTION FEATURING PART ONE OF THE WILLIAM & CAROLLA GLENNON ESTATE OF SABINSVILLE, PA ~ TO INCLUDE A WIDE VARIETY OF ANTIQUES & FINE FURNISHINGS, TIFFANY BRONZE PCS, STEUBEN & OTHER ART GLASS, FINE CHINA, STERLING WARES, JEWELRY AND MUCH MORE ~ IN-HOUSE AND ONLINE BIDDING TO BE OFFERED / ABSENTEE BIDS ALWAYS ACCEPTED

WATCH FOR PART TWO OF THE GLENNON ESTATE TO BE HELD IN JUNE AT OUR GALLERY: GUNS / BEAR TRAPS / LIKE NEW SUBARU / KUBOTA 4X4 / JD 85 TRACTOR

SEE OUR WEBSITE FOR FULL DETAILS, PHOTOS AND TERMS ON ALL UPCOMING AUCTIONS www.roaninc.com

WE ARE NOT AFFILIATED WITH MICHAEL T. ROAN AKA ‘ROAN REAL ESTATE

15


Mother Earth

Give Your Skin the Capra Aegagrus Hircus Milk Cure By Gayle Morrow

T

his time of year, your skin is longing for moisture. After weeks of dry, indoor heat, multiple layers of clothing, chilly winds, and a propensity to not drink quite enough water (most of us don’t sweat as much at 20 degrees as we do at 80, and, sorry, for hydration purposes, vodka doesn’t count), who can blame your epidermis for its flaky, itchy condition? It needs some attention. It needs goat milk. Enter the Nubians, Boers, Nigerian Dwarves, Saanens, Toggenburgs, et al. They’re some of the most popular dairy goat breeds, and if you’re already a goat milk soap or goat milk lotion devotee, you are already familiar with their charms. If you’re not yet a fan, for the sake of your thirsty skin, read on. What’s so special about goat milk (aside from the inherent cuteness of the provider)? What makes it so good for slathering and lathering?

16

It has to do with its acid, fat, and mineral contents. Alpha hydroxy acids are chemical compounds widely used in the cosmetics industry. They come naturally from plants and animals, or can be manufactured. Lactic acid is an AHA found in goat milk. What makes it especially useful in the realm of skin care are its properties as a skin brightener and as an exfoliant. Lactic acid can reduce the pigment, known as melanin, in your skin, which you might like if your complexion is a bit blotchy or splotchy; exfoliants work to break down the connectors that hold dead skin cells together. Jamie Cunningham, who, with her family, owns and operates Whitetail Lane Farm in State College, makes soap and lotion from milk she gets from the farm’s goats. She says lactic acid “kind of attacks the dead cells on your skin” which you then can wash away. Goat milk, she says,

is “fortified with lots of extra vitamins and minerals” and has a high butterfat content. And, the lactic acid is a humectant, she adds, meaning that it pulls moisture from the air. “I have super dry skin,” Jamie confesses, adding that she was buying goat milk soap to use in an effort to combat that dryness. In the meantime, she and her husband had purchased property and were using goats to clear it—the critters are famous, after all, for eating just about anything (except laurel, but including holiday wreaths hanging on doors). And, as grown-up girl and boy goats will, they produced little goats. Her husband had the idea of giving their human kids the experience and responsibility of helping to care for their goat kids, and then “we had all this milk.” So, she says, “I thought, why not make the soap myself?” She did and she does, joining legions


&

PINE CREEK VALLEY of other what-can-I-make-from-goat-milk enthusiasts in creating products that skin loves. Heidi Hart, who makes Pure Hart Soap just outside of Wellsboro from goat milk her mixed flock of girls provides, admits she started soap making “on a whim.” “I started off using a recipe from an established soap maker,” she says, noting this was pre-Internet, so “there was not the access to the soap-making community that there is now. I didn’t understand the differences in fats, but, as I progressed, I began to do my research and experiment with the oils.” Heidi explains the “basic definition of soap” is oils/fats plus sodium hydroxide/strong alkali—AKA lye—mixed together via a process known as saponification, meaning both ingredients are “altered” and no lye is left behind to burn the skin. It helps, she says, to have “the benefit of programs that will do all of the chemical calculations for us,” eliminating the guesswork in variables that could lead to a batch of really harsh soap. “The liquid portion of the soap can be just about any liquid,” she continues. “If you’re using just water, the water evaporates out of the final bar during the curing process. When you are using goat milk, the liquid portion of the milk evaporates and leaves the fat behind. You create a balance of fats that will allow the benefits of each to shine and minimize the downsides.” “We don’t use lard,” Jamie says. Her oil favorites include coconut, palm (sustainably raised in the U.S.), avocado, and caster. Heidi says her oil research has shown her that olive oil is mild but doesn’t give much lather. Caster oil is also very mild on the skin “but in large quantities can make a softer, sticky bar.” Then there are all the wonderful fragrances, lathering, and moisturizing properties soap and lotion makers can tinker with. Like any recipe, your choice of ingredients and your options for combining them depend on what you want your final product to be. In this case, one of the ingredients in the final product is a happy goat. “The kids are on their mom for about eight weeks,” Jamie says. “We start milking about once a day, then let them go dry. We give them ample period to relax and just be goats.” Both soap/lotion makers freeze the milk from their girls, which frees them and the goats from an artificial schedule. “The best way to make soap with milk is to use frozen so the goat does not have to be in lactation the entire time you’re actively making soap,” Heidi says, adding she prefers fresh milk to make lotion but can use frozen for that as well. “I do not feel the need to push my goats. Goats are individuals and I often follow their cues for how long I keep milking. “My personal take on soap making is the magic of it,” she continues. “I know it is science, but for me it is magic.” “I’m not even sure I’d be making soap if we didn’t have goats,” Jamie says. Find Heidi and her goats at purehartsoap.com, at 7411 Route 6, Wellsboro, and on Facebook. Jamie is at Whitetail Lane Farm, 309 Whitetail Lane, State College, on Facebook, and at (814) 280-6045. Heidi recommends healthline.com/nutrition/goat-milksoap-benefits#what-it-is for the science behind soap making. I found thenerdyfarmwife.com to be a fun information site as well.

t Sl a

e Run Tackle Sho p

Wolfe’s General Store A unique store nestled among the steep mountains and gorges of Pine Creek! Remarkable Gift Shop Fully Stocked Orvis Fly Shop Fabulous Deli Hundreds of great gifts for the whole family!

Located at the top of the 2.8-mile Pine Creek Catch-And-Release “Stretch”

Hours: Fri-Sat 8am-6pm; Sun-Thur 8am-5pm (Deli closes 1 hour prior to store closing) Fax: (570) 753-8920 • E-mail: info@slaterun.com

Rt. 414 • Slate Run, PA • (570) 753-8551 • slaterun.com 121 W. Church St. Lock Haven, PA 17745

Davis Real Estate, Inc. 570-748-8550 are the mountains and valleys of north central pa calling? see the latest properties available for your outdoor adventures! RecreationalPropertiesPennsylvania.com

you are here!

LISA LINN 570-660-0626 Recreational Property Specialist lisa.a.linn@gmail.com Pine Creek, Tioga County, Potter County & More! 17


BRADFORD CO.

welcome to

Dine, Stay or Just Get Away 35 Rooms Restaurant and Tavern

(Traditional American family style)

Catering

Wyalusing Hotel

50 BALLARD STREET • TROY, PENNSYLVANIA 16947

Weddings • Private Parties • Events

Great Rates, Great Food, Great Attractions 54 Main Street, Wyalusing, PA

570-746-1204

www.wyalusinghotel.com

NOW BOOKING

All Under One Roof...

For more information or to see if your special date is available, visit

WWW.TROYSALEBARN.COM

SMALL ANIMAL • LARGE ANIMAL Funded by a grant from the Bradford County Tourism Promotion Agency

W W W. T R OY V E TC L I N I C . C O M

SERVICES OFFERED: Healthy Wellness Exams Exams for Sick Pets Laser Surgical Procedures Portable Digital Radiology Acupuncture In-House Bovine Pregnancy Testing Customer Pet Portal • Online Store House Calls Available Pet Cremation Services Fully Stocked Pharmacies Pet Suplies: Flea & Tick Medication Food, Toys & Treats

WeWe invite everyone from everywhere to come invite everyone from everywhere to come “Experience Bradford Bradford County!” County!” “Experience

Adventure Awaits

PostcardLike Streets

Adventure Awaits

History & Heritage Fairs & Festivals

Resources for Development. Progress for People.

History & Heritage

Kayaking & Hiking PostcardLike Streets

Coordinating Business Opportunities and Community Development throughout Bradford and Susquehanna Counties.

Fairs & Festivals

Enterprise Center Suite 109 703 S. Elmer Avenue 1 Elizabeth Street, Suite 3 Sayre PA 18840 Towanda, PA 18848 570-265-0937; fax 570-265-0935 Email us at cbpa@epix.net or visit our website www.cbprogress.org

Kayaking & www.visitbradfordcounty.com •Hiking 570.265.TOUR Follow us on www.visitbradfordcounty.com • 570.265•TOUR Follow us on 18


welcome to

BRADFORD CO.

Freddie’s Fish

M

The One That Got Away

y brother Bruce and his son Freddie were up visiting one summer from North Carolina. Bruce is a fish hawk, and apparently Fred has inherited his dad’s fishing aptitude. When he was nine years old he fought and landed his first Citation-sized (a North Carolina tournament fishing award) cobia, a forty-six-pound brute that was longer than he was. We had a couple of hours to fish before a family obligation. I wanted to take them to a small local trout stream, that will remain unnamed, where a couple of years before I had caught and released a twenty-plus-inch brown trout. But the sky was dark, the wind blowing hard, and a storm was coming. I checked the weather radar and noticed that the storm was centered over the stream and heading our way on the prevailing winds. We decided to drive through the storm to the stream. Hopefully, it will have passed, and we would have a brief window to fish before the next wave of storms came through. We arrived just as the rain and wind tapered off and found the stream slightly off color and rising slowly—perfect conditions—and the trout on the feed. Freddie expertly flipped his orange panther Martin spinning lure into the head of the first pool and took a twelve-inch brown. We worked upstream until we came to the Big Fish Hole. I told Freddie to cast his spinner just above a leaning bankside hemlock and slowly retrieve it. A submarine slowly rose out of the tree’s big root ball and struck the lure. Freddie was hooked into something big. The fish rolled several times, exposing its creamcolored belly. Freddie’s stiff saltwater spinning rod bent double as he put the butt to it before it could wrap the line around a root and break him off. It was a brown trout at least two feet long, especially big considering the size of the stream! But then the hook pulled out of his mouth… Freddie exclaimed “Wow, that was the best trout I ever hooked!” I replied, “I’m sure you will see more like that one.” Bruce winked at me and said, “Good guiding.” Was it the same fish I caught two years ago? We’ll never know. I tried for that fish several times after that, but never saw or touched him. ~Kevin McJunkin

W WHITE MOUNTAIN

Kids Apparel

754 Canton Street, Troy PA • 570-297-7770 HOURS: Monday-Saturday 8am-5pm hooverclothingstore.com 19


Curt Weinhold

Sherri Stager

Linda Stager

20


Linda Stager

A Welcoming Waking

Travis Snyder

A

pril’s earth is verging on the receptive, her colors are soft and welcoming, her birds are pairing up, even her bears are high-fiving. The fourth month seems to want to be pleasant, a bit more approachable than her immediate predecessors were apt to be. April says, “Here I am!” in a most agreeable way.

Curt Weinhold

Bernadette Chiaramonte

21


The Best Angle

A Dad Teaches His Daughters about Reel Life By Don Knaus

T

his is about fishing, not land lines, cell phones, texting, Twittering, Facebook, or any other of those social platforms that plague adolescents and stifle conversation ideas. With the age of a sage, I look back. My neighborhood in the 1950s was like most places then. The kids knew a few basic things. Like: indoors is bad; outdoors is good. Swathed in proper attire is bad; running around nearly naked is good. Bare feet, short-shorts, and bare back was the uniform of the day. On a typical warm day, I’d have been outside since just past daybreak. Near noon, my mother made me get out of the sun and eat some lunch, which was also an opportunity for her to begin her litany. “You can’t eat with those filthy hands! Now you march yourself right over to the sink and wash up! Look at you! You’d think a boy could play without getting filthy. You look like you’ve been wallowin’ with the pigs. Now get cleaned up. And put your shirt on.” As the dirt slowly ran off my

22

hands and formed a muddy trickle to the drain, she scolded, “You know that’s no way to wash your hands. You could plant a pea patch under those nails. And those ears! You could grow corn in those ears!” See what I mean? Indoors is bad. We knew that the best things happened outside. Good parents knew that, too. Some of my childhood pals and gals hiked or camped with the family, or swam in icecold mountain waters. I preferred fishing with my dad. All summer, I wanted my dad to take me fishing. I was always ready for fishing. I hid in the tall corn stalks in our garden until Dad got home. He smiled. “Whaddya say we go fishing?” We hopped in the car, drove to a stream, and talked while we fished. See what I mean? Outdoors is good. Anyway, I grew up, met my lovely bride, and we spent spring days fishing, summer nights camping, fall days hunting, and winter days hiking through snow.

We walked miles in the woods, holding hands, enjoying the outdoors. Sometimes, we didn’t even talk, but we shared, we connected. Then, our girls came along. We knew instinctively the value of the outdoors. We started with walks along woodland trails, swimming at deep spots on ice cold trout streams, camping, and sledding through forest snows. When they were seven and five, I wanted to teach them how to fish for trout. I wanted my daughters to see the beautiful places where I caught all the brookies they devoured. I wanted them to catch their own supper. But they ought to have success first. Whet their appetite for angling. I needed a sure thing. I knew of a trout stream stocking about seven miles out of town. We arrived after school. The gals traipsed behind me as I navigated to a nice spot. Several adult anglers were positioned on the other side of the brook, just thirty to forty feet away.


They glared at the girls. My two blonde cherubs smiled and said, “Hi. We’re gonna catch some fish.” The glares continued. I always had at least two rods at the ready. I grabbed the one most ready, baited the hook, and positioned the younger daughter in the right spot. I coached, “We’ll put your bait in right there,” as I pointed to the prime trout lie. “I’ll be back to help you as soon as I get Gretchen ready. When a trout bites, you’ll feel…” I tapped the rod with my finger three times so the kid could feel what a hit was like. I hurried to her elder sister, feverishly seating the rod ferrules and tying a hook. Whap! Something slapped my face. Maggie and the girls were laughing uncontrollably. I noticed a nine-inch brook trout wiggling at the end of Karin’s line. I reacted. “I TOLD you to wait! Now wait a minute until I can get Gretchen ready to fish. Maggie, help her get that trout off the hook.” I turned to Gretchen and added a couple of sinkers. Whap! I felt the wriggle again. More laughter. Maggie confessed to rebaiting the kid’s hook. Gretchen approached her sister and threw in. I stood behind her, placing my arms around her to help guide her bait presentation. Whap! This time Karin’s trout hit my arm. Gretchen shrugged her shoulders to show that she didn’t want any help. Maggie and I sat back and helped with the unhooking and rebaiting until they each had the limit. The adults across the brook, having been skunked, stomped off in disgust. We giggled all the way home. I cleaned the fish while the kids watched. Then they begged for “Daddy Fish,” a recipe for trout that they love. And yeah, we chatted all during supper about friends, school, church, clothes, fishing, and, especially, about Daddy getting smacked in the face with a fish. After that, our daughters went along on fishing trips just to be with Mom and Dad. These were fun family outings that always ended with a picnic along the stream. From time to time, the girls slapped a number of trout onto the bank. And, as only kids could do, they often frustrated nearby adult anglers. But when they were in their early teen years, when they began to notice boys before brookies, they trooped along only because they didn’t want to hurt my feelings. That became clear to me one trout opener. I had limited out, and I was frantically coaching Karin. She missed, and she missed on bite after bite. As I was rebaiting her hook, I looked slightly downstream to my bride and Gretchen. They were leaning against a streamside hemlock, heads together, chatting about spring clothing sales. Both of them held their rods so the bait dangled six inches out of the water. Their minds were not on fishing. I managed to smile. “C’mon,” I said. “Let’s get outta here. I think we’ve all earned a late breakfast. Let’s stop at the diner on the way home.” It was a great outside experience. So, mom and dad, take the kids hiking or camping, and especially fishing. At night, spotlight deer, walk a woods trail to the beam of a flashlight, throw a Jitterbug for bass, angle for eels, sit by a night fire along the “crick,” listen to frogs. The important thing is, you’re outside with your kids and you’re actually talking to each other. And that’s not a bad angle. Retired life-long sportsman Don Knaus is an award-winning outdoor writer.

EXCELLENCE IN REAL ESTATE 20-C Bridge St • Galeton, PA 16922

Serving Tioga and Potter Counties!

Shelly Wattles, Broker • 607-426-9788 • pinecrk@verizon.net

814-435-7780 • pinecreekrealestate.com

Liberty book Shop 1 East Park St., Avis, PA 17721 • 570-753-5201 • www.TheLibertyBookShop.com Used, Rare and Out-of-Print Books. Your source for unusual books on any subject. Browse our in-stock selection of over 40,000 hardcover books and paperbacks. HOURS: Thurs & Fri 10-6; Sat 10-3 (or by appointment, feel free to just call)

Free National Search Service for books not in print. Worldwide shipping!

barrel135 Barrel 135

Casual Dining Done Right

www.barrel135.com

We offer any occasion catering—on/off site.

(570) 322-7131

Barrel135@gmail.com 135 West 3rd St., Williamsport, PA 17701

Always Buying, Selling and Appraising WILL PAY YOU CASH

for Military Items • Advertising • Jewelry Watches • Coins & Paper Currency • Decorated Crocks • Antique Furniture

Fine Selection of Quality Antiques Certified Appraiser

381 Broad Street • Montoursville www.callahansantiquities.com Hours: Thursday-Saturday • 11am-5pm •

570-368-2597 23


Gayle Morrow Natural lure: previous owners Tom and Deb Finkbiner, left, pass the keys to new owners Kim and Tom Kozlowski.

Catch and Release at Slate Run New Owners Take the Helm in Pine Creek Valley By Gayle Morrow

I

t is official—the iconic Wolfe’s General Store/Slate Run Tackle Shop has new owners. It is also “overwhelming and exciting,” says Kim Kozlowski, who, with her husband, Tom, are those new owners. But, she adds, “we have Deb and Tom.” Deb and Tom (the other Tom) are the Finkbiners, also a Pine Creek Valley institution, and they have owned and operated the store and the tackle shop on Route 414 in Brown Township, Lycoming County, for forty-five years. They’re sort of, kind of, ready to retire, although not quite. In Tom Finkbiner’s words, “Deb and I are going to hang in there” with the Kozlowskis. For a while, anyway. It was back in the mid-1970s that Deb purchased the Wolfe’s General Store from her former in-laws. “I was supposed to be here,” she says. “It was part of my journey.” Tom was another part of her journey, and she of his—the two met not long after she bought 24

the store, and the wheels, or maybe it was the reels, started spinning. “We wanted to make the store unique,” says Tom. They also wanted a fly fishing shop—preferably one with a line of Orvis products. Might as well dream big, right? Pine Creek was already renowned in some circles for its world-class fishing, but it was something of a well-kept secret. So much a secret that the first company executive Tom approached about being a product/ equipment outlet was less than enthusiastic when he learned Slate Run had only nineteen permanent residents. How in the world could Tom afford an inventory of high-end fishing supplies selling to nineteen people? It wasn’t too long after that, though, that an Orvis official, who had talked with somebody who had talked with somebody about the amazing fishing on Pine Creek in north central Pennsylvania, called and wanted to talk about product placement

at the store. “The first seven or eight years were challenging,” Tom continues. “Every penny we could get our hands on went into the store.” As the number of fisherfolk and other outdoorsy types visiting the area increased, “what we found was that people were coming and had no place to eat.” That led Deb to expand the line of food offerings—that, and an offhand comment from a customer that “you should make your own bread…” So, “we got this idea about building a deli,” Tom says. “We did sticky buns too, back then,” Deb says. “There would be a waiting line.” So, over the years, the store became the go-to spot, a destination, really, for high-end fly-fishing equipment, yummy sandwiches, camp supplies, good conversation, and a helping hand when one was needed. “It’s only a country store” to somebody See Catch on page 26


welcome to

CORNING’S GAFFER

DISTRICT

CORNINGWARE CORELLE & more ®

®

NEW INSTANT POT ARRIVALS NOW IN-STORE COME SEE OUR ASSORTMENT OF INSTANT POT PRODUCTS AT AMAZING PRICES

BLOWOUT PRICES ON OUR WAREHOUSE OVERSTOCK PRODUCT BRING AD IN AND RECEIVE

ADDITIONAL 15% OFF WAREHOUSE OVERSTOCK PRODUCT Ask associate for details on eligible items.

APRIL 1 — APRIL 30, 2021

*Excludes: Gift Card Purchases. Other exclusions may apply. Offer cannot be combined with other coupons or additional offers. Coupon valid at the 114 Pine St. Corning, NY Store only.

(607) 962-1545

Welcome to Corning’s Corning’s Gaffer GafferDistrict District Welcome to We to to Wecarry carryan anarray arrayofofproducts products complement compliment your yourhair haircare careand and beauty beautyneeds. needs.

24 W. Market St., Corning, NY 14830

607.936.8541

25


Catch continued from page 24

SALE Starts April 21 – Ends April 24, 2021

Cannot be combined with any other offer or rebate.

Locally owned since 1848

2027 Lake Road Elmira, NY 14903 Full Display Showroom Professional Installation Serving the Twin Tiers (607) 732-1537 www.classictileimports.com

26

who just walks in, but “it’s a very complex thing to run,” Tom says. The couple persevered, “We lived our little dream, and did everything we needed to do to develop a business we could be proud of,” Tom says. But, as for many folks who have worked all their lives, retirement, while they could still enjoy it, was a goal. Finding the right people to take over the business wasn’t happening, however. They imagined it would close, maybe become a bed and breakfast. “People would come and look…and then, luckily, Tom and Kim came along,” Tom says. “I said to Tom, ‘they’re the ones,’” Deb recalls. The Kozlowskis have a home in Haneyville, which is just a couple ridges over from Slate Run, and own and operate several Subway franchises in Lycoming County. Those businesses support seventy-two employees, and have a lot of moving parts, so there are aspects of their new endeavor which are somewhat familiar. Kim was a traveling nurse, and laughs that “I have a pretty good background of throwing myself into the fire.” Her family has had a variety of businesses in the lower Pine Creek Valley (“My grandfather was known for making turtle soup,” she notes). Both Tom and Kim are serious hikers, campers, fisherfolk, and lovers of “outdoorsy things.” “When we saw this was for sale…” Kim says, taking a break to answer the phone. “Wolfe’s General Store, this is Kim, how can I help you?” she says, like she’s been saying it all her life. The couple are planning some changes. They want to put a deck on the building, and up the focus on hiking opportunities. Kim characterizes changes to the inventory as “a double-edged sword.” “Deb has made it easy. She’s done it successfully for forty-five years. We’ll add some of my own taste, some little additions, but overall it’s a pretty well-oiled machine.” “We’ll both learn each thing,” Tom Kozlowski says of the business’s divergent but intertwined tackle and convenience store/ sandwich-making departments. They agree that they’re taking over a legend, and are enthusiastic about the prospect. Plus, Tom reassures all those who love the Slate Run Tackle Shop’s famed Brown Trout Club that it is “absolutely” continuing. The Wolfe’s General Store/Slate Run Tackle Shop story would not be complete without noting that it could have ended some years ago. During the mid-1980s, the Finkbiners considered relocating to Montana. They bought a little land, made regular visits, and figured they’d open a fly shop there. Friends Bob and Dottie Webber, who had their own little mountaintop paradise near Slate Run, helped them understand that their life was here. It was Bob Webber who said, “I don’t know how you two can leave it,” Tom recalls. Ultimately, they couldn’t. This was, and is, home, and they’re confident the future of their “baby,” as they characterize the store, is bright. “They’ll put their signature on this,” Tom says of the Kozlowskis. And that’s no fish story. For more information, visit slaterun.com or call (570) 7538551.


La Bourgade On Seneca

Photo by Jenn Morris

Perfect for your 1st or 2nd home! YEARLY RENTALS Starting at $1,595/month

607-227-4791 • LaBourgade.net La Bourgade Lane, Burdett NY

412 N. Franklin St. • Watkins Glen, NY 14891 Open Mon-Thurs 9am-6pm; Fri-Sat 9am-8pm 412 N. FranklinSun St. •10am-5pm Watkins Glen, NY 14891 *Subject to change based on NYS regulations. Open Year ‘round www.famousbrandsoutlet.com

www.famousbrandsoutlet.com

607-535-4952 607-535-4952

Exceptional wine since 1988. We ship to PA!

Open for sales and tastings: Mon-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun Noon-5pm

607-535-9252, 4024 State Rte. 14, Watkins Glen, NY lakewoodvineyards.com

Famous Brands began in 1983, offering “famous brand” Famousand Brands in 1983, offering clothing footwear atbegan below retail prices. Since that humble beginning in a tiny storefront, we have grown to “famous brand” clothing and footwear at 30,000 sq. ft. covering 3 floors and half a city block, becoming abelow destination store for millions of Since visitors and localshumble alike. retail prices. that

beginning in a tiny storefront, we have grown to 30,000 sq. ft. covering 3 floors and half a

27


d n i f o t e r e h W Pick up your Mountain Home and other goodies at these businesses, who make Mountain Home the largest publication in the region. PENNSYLVANIA LOCATIONS WELLSBORO WELLSBORO EQUIPMENT WEIS WELLSBORO HIGHLAND CHOCOLATES ROCKWELL’S FEEDS THE FARMER’S DAUGHTERS TIOGA OFFICE PRODUCTS ACORN/KWIK FILL—EAST AVE FIRST HERITAGE BANK CANYON MOTEL FIRST CITIZENS BANK KROUT’S CREATIONS TOPS MARKETS DUNKIN’ DONUTS FOX’S PIZZA DEN FROG HUT GEORGE’S RESTAURANT ACORN/KWIK FILL—JUNCTION STEVE’S BEVERAGE SHERWOOD MOTEL PENN WELLS LODGE PENN WELLS HOTEL REP. CLINT OWLETT BON HOFFIE SKIN CARE CENTURY 21 NATIONWIDE INSURANCE WEEK’S BARBER SHOP HIGHLAND CHOCOLATES MAIN ST. BETHANY JEWELERS HUB’S HOME OXYGEN C&N WELLSBORO DEANE CENTER THE RED SKILLET NATIVE BAGEL GINN & VICKERY POP’S CULTURE SHOPPE THE STEAK HOUSE DUMPLING HOUSE DUNHAM’S DEPT. STORE NORTHWEST SAVINGS PENN OAK REALTY SHABBY RUE WILD ASAPH OUTFITTERS HANNA’S NAIL SPA SENIOR’S CREATIONS MAIN STREET OLIVE OIL CS SPORTS THE ROOST IN MY SHOES JOHNNY’Z HOT ROD CAFÉ FINE WINE & GOOD SPIRITS BOROUGH OFFICE 28

GOODIES FOR OUR TROOPS OREGON HILL WINERY GARRISON’S MENS SHOP GREEN FREE LIBRARY ACORN/KWIK FILL—RT 287 THE SHARED HOME WELLSBORO DINER MIDDLEBURY CENTER MIDDLEBURY POST OFFICE DONNA’S MARKET OWLETT’S PAG-OMAR FARMS MARKET RT 6 / GAINES BURNING BARREL BAXTER’S BAKERY GAINES POST OFFICE NOB HILL MOTEL GALETON NITTANY MINIT MART STROLL DOWN MEMORY LANE BRICK HOUSE RESTAURANT GALETON POST OFFICE GALETON SHOP-N-SAVE FINE WINE & GOOD SPIRITS ACORN/KWIK FILL RT 6 WEST LARRY’S SPORT CENTER BLACK FOREST TRADING PA LUMBER MUSEUM COUDERSPORT FEZZ’S DINER LAURELWOOD INN MILL STREAM INN OLGA’S HAUBER’S JEWELRY CREAM-N-SUGAR MULTI-CARE CHIROPRACTIC COUDERSPORT SHOP-N-SAVE ULYSSES THE CARPENTER’S SHOP ULYSSES LIBRARY CORNER CAFÉ HARRISON VALLEY DANDY MINI MART WESTFIELD HOME COMFORT RESTAURANT TOPS WESTFIELD BONHAM’S VARIETY

SABINSVILLE KIM’S OLD COUNTRY STORE KNOXVILLE KNOXVILLE POST OFFICE OSCEOLA OSCEOLA BIG M LEE’S COUNTRY KITCHEN ELKLAND PJ’S RESTAURANT LAWRENCEVILLE LAWRENCEVILLE EXXON LAWRENCEVILLE POST OFFICE ROTSELL’S RESTAURANT TIOGA JUNCTION HALL’S LUMBER ACORN/KWIK FILL TIOGA FLORIDA FRYED CHICKEN TIOGA POST OFFICE ROSIE’S COUNTRY KITCHEN PA WELCOME CENTER CANTON CANTON INDEPENDENT-SENTINEL ACORN/KWIK FILL TROY HOOVER’S HARDWARE CLINT OWLETT’S OFFICE COPPER TREE CITGO BARNSTEAD PANTRY LEONA MEATS DANDY MINI MART EAST SMITHFIELD E. SMITHFIELD COUNTRY STORE DANDY MARKETS WYSOX RIVER STONE INN COMFORT INN TOWANDA BEST WESTERN INN PLUS RODEWAY INN SAYRE BLUE STONE BREWERY TOPS SAYRE BEST WESTERN COMFORT INN

ATHENS MICROTEL BEEMAN’S RESTAURANT MANSFIELD PERKIN’S MICROTEL HAMPTON INN PAPA THE BUTCHER QUALITY INN & SUITES HERITAGE SPRINGS MARKETPLACE LIQUOR STORE MANSFIELD POST OFFICE EDDIE’S RESTAURANT COMFORT INN SHEETZ BLOSSBURG BLOSSBURG BEVERAGE BLOSSBURG LIBRARY BLOSSBURG POST OFFICE BLOSS HOLIDAY MARKET ACORN/KWIK FILL LIBERTY MARTIN’S PANTRY C&N LIBERTY FRY’S TURKEY RANCH WILLIAMSPORT WEGMANS OTTO BOOK STORE GIANT WILLIAMSPORT MONTOURSVILLE WEIS MONTOURSVILLE WEIS MUNCY

MUNCY

JERSEY SHORE WEIS JERSEY SHORE LIBERTY BOOK SHOP WOOLRICH OUTLET STORE LOCK HAVEN UNKEL JOE’S FOX’S MARKET HOUSE RESTAURANT MILL HALL SHEETZ WEIS MILL HALL ROUTE 44 UP THE CRICK BONNER’S SPORTS & RV SANTINO’S PINE CREEK INN WATERVILLE TAVERN


MCCONNELL’S STORE HOTEL MANOR ROUTE 414 WOLFE’S GENERAL STORE CEDAR RUN INN MILLER’S STORE NEW YORK LOCATIONS SPEEDWAY

ERWIN

ADDISON ADDISON POST OFFICE ACORN/KWIK FILL BATH WINE & SPIRITS DORMANN LIBRARY OLD NATIONAL HOTEL DAYS INN HAMMONDSPORT GREAT WESTERN FINGER LAKES BOATING MUSEUM BEST WESTERN KWIK FILL BURGERS & BREWS PARK INN CROOKED LAKE ICE CREAM FIVE STAR BANK HMMSPRT GROCERY HMSPRT CHAMBER OFFICE VILLAGE TAVERN MALONEYS BAR SNUG HARBOR BULLY HILL WINERY THE WATERFRONT LAKESIDE RESTAURANT GLENN CURTISS MUSEUM HERON HILL WINERY BRANCHPORT HUNT COUNTRY DUNDEE / PENN YAN SKYLINE TRADING POST ANTIQUE INN REST WALGREENS MICROTEL YATES CHAMBER OFFICE FULKERSON’S WINERY INN AT GLENORA WINERY TABORA WINERY SHAW WINERY ANTHONY ROAD WINERY FOX RUN WINERY GORHAM GOHRAM MARKET CANANDAIGUA WEGMAN’S CANANDAIGUA NAPLES BOB & RUTH’S REST NAPLES POST OFFICE ARTIZANN’S COMMUNITY BANK NA NAPLES APOTHOCARY RENNOLDSON’S MARKET JOSEPHS WAYSIDE MARKET COHOCTON COHOCTON POST OFFICE THE OLDE CONTRY STORE MONTOUR FALLS SCHUYLER HOSPITAL THE FALLS HOME CLASSIC CHEF’S RESTAURANT CURLY’S FAMILY RESTAURANT WATKINS GLEN TOPS WATKINS GLEN WG POST OFFICE WG CHAMBER OF COMMERCE FAMOUS BRANDS GLEN MOUNTAIN BAKERY

M O U N T A I N

HOME Penn sylva nia & the N ew Yo rk Fi nger Lake s

Now W Cookineg’re !

Like Aliso n in Her Ith Fromme ac Our Writ a Kitchen, ers Discov Recipes er for Lockdow Life in n

M O U NFRET A I N

HOME

Gayle Mor The Ghostsrow’s Chicken Tale Maggie Bar of Heritage Vill age nes on Hus band Tex

as the

E

wind

ting

FEBR UARY

2021

Pennsylvania & the New York Finger Lakes

EEnd FasR the wi

Timeless Beauty At Geneva’s Grand Old Belhurst Castle, Weddings and Legends Are Forever Young By Jan Smith

I N N T A M O U

HOME Tea for Two (or More) in Billtown Chef Hosch Lands a Carriage House All Manner of Manors

ue Iss ing edd JANUARY 2020

W

1

s Lake nger rk Fi ew Yo the N nia & sylva n n e P

ne A Doggo le Miracllage

a Vi It Takes st Dogs to Find Lo By Gayle

Morrow

E REwind

Fas the

ns 15!! Home Tur e Mountain to Trim the Tre ious Hunter y A New Wa ffers for the Ser Stu Stocking

DECE MBER

2020

Over 60 Towns at Nearly 300 Locations! GLEN HARBOR HOTEL GLEN MOTOR INN LANE’S YAMAHA LAKEWOOD VINEYARDS LONGHOUSE LODGE WATKINS GLEN INT’L RACEWAY GENEVA BELLANGELO NORTH BELLHURST CASTLE GIFT RAMADA INN VENTOSA WINERY ROUTES 96 & 414 SAMPSON STATE PARK OFFICE OVID BIG M WAGNER WINERY HAZLITT WINERY HECTOR POST OFFICE CHATEAU LAFAYETTE RENEAU ATWATER ESTATE VINEYARDS FINGER LAKES DISTILLING SILVER SPRINGS WINES CAYUGA DANDY MINI MART ITHACA OLD MEXICO HAMPTON INN DEWITT MALL LATOURELLE COUNTRY INN & SUITES BEST WESTERN UNIVERSITY INN STATLER HOTEL CORNELL ECONOLODGE

SCIENCENTER COMFORT INN ITHACA MARRIOTT DOWNTOWN HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS LANSING COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT WAVERLY TEDD’S BUSY MART NICHOLS TIOGA DOWNS CASINO ELMIRA TOPS CEDAR STREET FIRST HERITAGE BANK GCP LIQUOR STORE CLEMENS CENTER ELDRIDGE PARK CAROUSEL HOLIDAY INN HORSEHEADS QUALITY INN COUNTRY INN & SUITES AMERICA’S BEST VALUE INN CANDLEWOOD SUITES COURTYARD MARRIOTT

RELAX INN FAIRFIELD INN NATIONAL SOARING MUSEUM CORNING FERENBAUGH CAMPGROUNDS CORNING BUILDING COMPANY CORNING VISITORS CENTER WEST END GALLERY WEGMANS CORNING CORNING INC CMOG WELCOME CENTER VITRIX GLASS STUDIOS STAYBRIDGE SUITES DAYS INN COMFORT INN RIVERSIDE FAIRFIELD INN PAINTED POST AMERICA’S BEST VALUE INN ECONOLODGE HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS CAMPBELL WATSON HOMESTEAD

BIG FLATS SPORTSMAN’S WAREHOUSE TOPS CONSUMER SQUARE MINIER’S MARKET ELMIRA/CORNING REGIONAL AIRPORT ARNOT MALL DANDY MINI MART ECONOLODGE 29


FOOD

&

DRINK

Are You a Paper Packrat? Some Stuff Has to Go, but Not the Recipes… By Cornelius O’Donnell

I

f you are, join the club. Anyone who visits my casa will tell you I have lots of “stuff.” And, since I am hunkered down as I write this, I thought I would use this quiet time to pitch or pare the piles (I call it POP). But what to tackle first? Well, there was a medium-sized box marked “Christmas cards” on my closet floor. It’s been bugging me. I always resisted tossing unusual cards, or the sub-pile of the “photo of family” versions. It was difficult, but I did manage to off-load quite a few to a much smaller box. Then I came across a document that a Cape Cod friend sent several years ago. 30

It was a recipe that she loved, and since I had all the ingredients (she included a box of the noodles and the broth cubes in a mailing envelope with the recipe), I was charmed into making it. I had a saucepan full of soup bubbling away in minutes, as I recall. It was so welcome on a chilly day. (The mail comes just before noon.) I was so pleased to become reunited with Jebba (that’s her name). I had to send it to you via this column. (However, I could not convince Mountain Home to include the noodles and broth cubes with the next issue of this wonderful magazine.) Sadly, the sender is no longer with

us. She was an artist who had a business designing and packaging kits for needle pointers, plus beautifully designed tote bags. What a talent, and I cherish the things I have that she designed. I knew her family on the West Coast, and after she and her husband, Larry, came east, they made their home a B&B for me. I treasure the memory of those beach walks—and the stops to visit their neighborhood lighthouse in Chatham. It has many steps up to the view of the water and surrounding countryside. What a terrific way to walk off the fried clams! Here’s the recipe. If you’re a low-salt person, just have a small portion or float a


slice of pared potato in the broth while it is bubbling. I’m told it absorbs at least a bit of the salt. Remove it before serving. Very Nice, Very Nice Hurry-Up Soup This makes a big bowl of soup for one person. Double everything for two people. The basic soup base: 2 generous cups boiling water ½ or 1 single cube Tom Yan Broth (1 whole cube makes a very spicy broth) 2 oz. (approx.) Chinese noodles ¼ inch fresh ginger, peeled and finely chopped (I grate it on a microplane) To all of which add one or more of the following: Chopped raw red cabbage Snow peas cut in half Scallions chopped or cut, but do use some of the green Broccoli, fresh or cooked Shrimp, peeled, 4 to 6 per bowl Clams, shells rinsed and beards removed (the bivalves, not you) Scallops or cod, cut in small pieces Chop and prepare vegetables. (Jebba notes that they almost always added cabbage and scallions no matter what else they used.) Bring water to a boil. Crumble up noodles and drop them into the boiling water. Add ½ or 1 Tom Yam cube, chopped ginger, and whatever pleases you. Leave cabbage or snow peas until the very last minute, as you want them to remain crunchy. Cook approximately 3 minutes or until the noodles are tender. Add last minute vegetables. Serve at once. Believe me, it’s fun to play around with this recipe using your favorite things. As the recipe says—very nice. A Song in My Heart and a Meatball on My Plate Remember that line from Roger and Hammerstein’s Carousel? You know, the one about June busting out all over? Anyway, I was humming that song as I finished this column and, lo and behold, another thought of food occurred to me. It’s the wonderful Chinese dish called Lion’s Head Meatball. I’ve never made it before but had it some years ago in a restaurant. And I loved it. It’s basically an oversized orb the size of a tennis ball that is made up of finely ground or chopped pork, chopped scallions, ground ginger, sesame oil, soy sauce, Chinese wine, dried shitake mushrooms, water chestnuts, egg, and cornstarch. Usually, the meatballs are first deep fried in a neutral oil such as rapeseed or sunflower and then poached in a clear broth with bok choy leaves. The meatball is said to resemble a lion, and the bok choy his mane. While it is relatively easy to make, it is time-consuming and too long to tell in an article. That being said, I’d like to direct you to the following food blog that has color photos of the dish and many tips that are very appealing. Go to redhousespice.com and search for Yan-kit So’s recipe. It’s part of Chinese Recipe Central. Also very nice! Chef, teacher, author, and award-winning columnist Cornelius O’Donnell lives in Horseheads, New York.

Draper’s Super Bee Apiaries, Inc. Honey...How sweet it is!

We produce and sell high quality, natural honey products and much more.

Try your Fresh Fruit with Honey! Monday-Friday 8am-5pm Saturday 8am-1pm

www.draperbee.com

32 Avonlea Lane Millerton, PA 16936 800-233-4273 or 570-537-2381

We Are Open Daily! Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner.

570-662-2972

2103 S. Main St., Mansfield, PA

Homemade Specials Daily! Our specialties include Hot Roast Beef Sandwiches and Chicken & Biscuits - both served with real mashed potatoes! Homemade Pies! 31


LISTED AT $

477 Tioga Street Wellsboro, PA Office: 570-723-8484 Fax: 570-723-8604 Licensed in PA & NY

259,900

STUNNING four bedroom home in Westfield on very quiet street. Beautiful Kitchen with breakfast bar, formal dining room just off kitchen, and a cozy living room compliments the first floor living space. Upstairs features 4 generously sized bedrooms including the Master bedroom and bathroom. Great home / location for kids! Offers a huge Family room in the basement, an attached oversized 2 car garage, swimming pool / pool house, and hot tub! Perennial flower beds surround the house. MLS R134441A

www.mvrwellsboro.com

HIGH QUALITY FIREPLACES AND STOVES

www . wellsboroequipment . com

Call Chance at

(570) 724-6100 ext. 5

A division of Wellsboro Equipment located at 25 Whitneyville Road, Mansfield PA 16933

The Area’s ONLY NFI-Certified Installers Free Quotes • Financing Available NATURAL GAS • PROPANE • WOOD • PELLET • COAL

We’re Here For All Of Your Spring Project Needs. Give Us A Call Or Stop In! T&G Flooring • Log And Shiplap Siding Solid Wood Counter Tops TCS Accents (Use For Backsplashes, Wall Paneling, Table Tops, Flooring, Etc.) • Framing Material Rough And Surfaced Lumber Over 1,000 Molding Profiles (Sale Rack Is Loaded With A Variety Of Moldings) We Carry Both Domestic And Exotic Species

2228 SR 49 West • Ulysses, PA

814-848-7448

TheCarpentersShopInc.com

The Area’s Lowest Tire Prices

We Can Service Low Profile & Most Run Flat Tires Top Quality Tires Huge Inventory Most Brands Available Computerized Spin Balancing State Inspection

WE HAVE TIRES FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS

Mon-Fri 8-5 Sat 8-Noon 3 Miles North of Middlebury Center on Route 249

570-376-2239 32

Streams continued from page 11

quality,” Larry says. I wander over to a map of pastel pinks and greens. The label says Land Resource Map of Pennsylvania by Howard Wm. Higbee 1967. “That’s his original soils map,” Larry explains. “This was his main project, and he didn’t finish till two years after he retired. He said people always asked him why he bothered going to so much detail with the streams, and he’d say, ‘Because water affects soil.’” We wind between tables to a back corner that has their newest printer. Gone are the days of having to print 10,000 at a time, which resulted in an inventory that got harder to store as they added states. Now all map printing is done in-house, as needed. He punches a few numbers into their HP Pagewide printer and leans against it as the large format maps slide out the other side. “It takes forty-inch paper on rolls, and we can print on demand up to 5,000 a day,” he says. They also have a new website at streamsmaps.com that makes ordering easy (and there’s free standard shipping). Each comes with three PDF download bonuses. The “Explorer’s Guide to Hidden Streams & Lakes” indexes the main waters of interest to fishermen (more than 1,000 for the Keystone Sate) and gives map coordinates. The other two are useful to folks new to fishing: “Finding Secret Fishing Spots” and “How Anglers Stalk and Catch Record Fish.” My laminated map cost $39.95—same as in 1991. Vivid Publishing’s latest project is the Limestone Stream & Lake Map of Pennsylvania. It includes south-central and southeastern sections of the state, overlaying just the limestone areas of the soils map onto the stream map. This map tells the story of happy, healthy trout. Limestone water is less acidic, acting like a natural buffer against acid mine drainage, an ongoing issue in Pennsylvania. “If flowing from underground they also tend to have a steady temperature which is cooler in summer and warmer in winter,” Larry says. “We hope this map will encourage people to explore with a pH water tester and water thermometer and find some overlooked limestone gems containing big trout.” These maps do excel at encouraging exploration. Scott Greevy, a ranger at Michaux State Forest in the south-central part of the state, remembers showing a classified ad for some “secret stream fishing map,” AKA a Higbee map, to his father. “I was fourteen or sixteen and my old man got it for me. I don’t remember the exact wording of the ad,” he says, “but it made it sound like if you had this secret map you could go fishing anywhere. Mapping is a language. When I look at this map I don’t see a flat piece of paper.” He gave his paper one to his brother and upgraded to a laminated one that hangs in his garage. “I’ve stared at that map a lot,” Scott continues. He’s pulled by what he calls the mystique of it. “It makes it seem like you could go somewhere no one’s ever been before.” It’s the first filter he looks at when planning a fishing trip. “So many trips have come out of that map,” he grins. “If you stare at that thing long enough, you’re gonna go fishing.” Lilace Mellin Guignard is a member of the Pennsylvania Outdoor Writers Association and author of the memoir When Everything Beyond the Walls Is Wild: Being a Woman Outdoors in America.


Mountain Home

SERVICE DIRECTORY

OUR 2021 PUZZLES HAVE ARRIVED!

Chair s i r r o M liners Rec Choose your leather, Fabric, or Wood Species

You could promote your business here! Give me a call today.

Beats all for Comfort !

Morris Chair Shop.com 54 Windsor Ln Morris PA 16938 (570) 353-2735

Hauber ’s Jewelry • Diamonds & Quality Jewelry • Bulova & Seiko Watches and Clocks • Fenton, Charms, Trophies and Engraving “We do watch batteries!”

25 Main St. Wellsboro, PA • 570-723-4263 www.popscultureshoppe.com

B I

Buildings of All Kinds Since 1971

BUILDINGS, INC. Business Route 15, Covington, PA (570) 659-5103 • (800) 839-7438

Shelly Moore

Account Executive Mobile (570) 263-2693 shelly@mountainhomemag.com

LARGE... or Small We Do It All! WWW.BUILDINGSINCPA.COM

l l s b o ro We

W

Building Supply &

45 Charleston St. Wellsboro, PA

570-724-8890

Email: wbsupply@fronter.com

Proud publisher of: Mountain Home • #ExploreCorning Explore Wellsboro Experience Bradford County The Unofficial Route 6 Guide

Building Material agway & Hunting SHop

ALL in 1 STOP!

R USSELL'S BUY SELL OR TRADE GUNS

Atrium Vinyl Windows

• Premium Vinyl Construction • Easy Care Beauty • Energy Efficient Glass • Limited Lifetime warranty on ALL vinyl and working parts and 25 years insulated glass protection.

BEST EXCAVATING Driveways • Basements Septic Systems • Retaining Walls Patios • Stone • Gravel

814-367-5682

Westfield Pa WWW.BESTEXCAVATING.COM

wellsborobuildingsupply.com • Atrium Windows • Blown-in Insulation • Dimensional Lumber

Building...

• Doors (Interior, • Plumbing Exterior, Barn Rail, • Roofing Material & Garage) (Architectural • Electrical Shingles & Metal) • Molding • Siding

• Black Oil Sunflower Seeds • Landscaping Supply • Bagged Mulch

Agway...

& Soil • Farm Feeds

Dog & Cat Food • Purina Pro-Plan (Equine, Stock, Chicken) Dog Food • Farm Fencing • Whole Corn • Taste of the Wild • Wild Bird Seed

Hours: M-F 7:30-5:00; Sat. 7:30-5:00; Closed Sunday 33


B A C K O F T H E M O U N TA I N

Fisherman’s Paradise By Curt Weinhold

B

erger Lake, the jewel of Galeton, glows this time of year, as a fisherman patiently waits, a Bradford pear tree flowers in the foreground, and green creeps up the far mountainsides. Across the water, Collins Park and the bandshell also wait patiently for summer’s activities.

34


299,000

LISTED AT $

OWNERS TO RETIRE & looking for new owner for the business that Rachael Ray herself has claimed as one of 5 good places to eat in the entire country! (See photo in listing.) Many updates including new windows, roof, plumbing, electric, kitchen and bath. The business, it’s great reputation, all the equipment & products are being sold with the property on Route 6. Includes living space being transitioned to a surely successful vacation rental. This historic & charming treasure can easily be made into apartments, a B&B, vacation rental, retail shops and more! MLS C133521A

289,900

LISTED AT $

477 Tioga Street • Wellsboro, PA Office: 570-723-8484 Fax: 723-8604 Licensed in PA & NY

649,000

LISTED AT $

3 BEDROOM HOME ON 156 ACRES OF FARMLAND. 2 Bedrooms and Bathroom on second floor. Downstairs there is a Family Room heated by a wood stove, enclosed Sun Porch w/newer vinyl windows, large Living Room, Kitchen, newer Dining Room with deck to enjoy the views. Also a Bedroom and Bathroom as well as a smaller Bedroom/Office. Large Bank Barn, Machine Shed, detached 2 car Garage with a potential Man-cave area above. Several other smaller buildings. Approx. 36 acres of woods and remainder is open. The hunting is phenomenal. OGMs will convey. Currently leased. No Royalties being received. MLS R133990A

649,000

LISTED AT $

VACATION RENTAL/INCOME ON 40 ACRES! Features 2 gorgeous homes that are currently occupied as busy Vacation Rentals year round. The “Country House” is a 5-bed/2-bath movein ready remodeled brick home with vaulted ceilings in kitchen, large living areas, first fl. bedroom, and more! The “Carriage House” features 4-bed/1 bath, full kitchen, enormous living area, central air, and sits over a huge 3 car garage/office area. All furnishings, client lists & supplies go these homes along with generator. Both have patio/fire ring areas & private settings. The land is gently sloped and on top has 360 degree views. Rural but close to Mansfield, Wellsboro, Rt 15 etc. MLS R133990A

499,900

LISTED AT $

WELL ESTABLISHED, POPULAR IN TOWN RESTAURANT AND BAR Turn key operation. This price includes all the equipment! Includes yearly renewed brewer’s license and has established many loyal customers with it’s continued ingenuity and creativity to bring tastings, trivia, amazing food and welcoming atmosphere to Mansfield. Upstairs has apartment units that are currently unfinished but have lots of potential for additional income or to live above for yourself. If you’re looking for a turn key business that is up and running and creating revenue immediately with a well established reputation and welcoming atmosphere, make this business yours today! MLS C134230A

475,000

LISTED AT $

HUNTERS PARADISE on 153+ acres with a stream and apple orchards! Land is mostly wooded for your recreational needs with open spots for enjoyment. Rustic cabin on the property features 2 bedrooms, electricity and a wood stove to take the chill out of the air. There are 2 sheds with one having electricity and an outhouse. This is definitely a one of a kind property that you don’t want to let pass you by! 1,000’s of State game land is close and there’s access on the roads for snowmobiles. A spring on the property makes for the potential for water in the cabin. Call for your showing today! MLS R31710656A

STYLISH MULTILEVEL MANSFIELD HOME IN AN EXCLUSIVE QUIET LOCATION! Home boasts 4 beds/3 baths with a modern yet contemporary vibe with open floor plan, gorgeous kitchen, dining room, living room with fireplace, and sitting area on the main level and hardwood floors almost throughout. Take a few steps up to the bedrooms and chic master Suite with walk in closet and roomy master bath and private deck. Large screened porch. New roof! Finished basement with a family room, bedroom, exercise room etc. Property is nicely done with paved drive, fenced yard and very little traffic with views of woods. Must SEE! MLS R31710829A

245,000

LISTED AT $

52 ACRE WELLSBORO AREA LOT FOR SALE!!! This beautiful piece of property is ideal for a building site, hunting, hiking, or a place to get away to, with a nice mix of fields and wooded land. Babbs Creek meanders through it! Property sits just minutes from Wellsboro in a nice quiet setting. Get away from it all at this gorgeous property!!! OGMs are leased and convey. Don’t miss this opportunity - Won’t last long in this market!!! MLS L31710896A

!

Our Listings are Selling Fast!

WE NEED YOURS Call Today to Get Your FREE Comparative Market Analysis!

219,900

LISTED AT $

GREAT OPPORTUNITY-CHECK IT OUT! POTENTIAL INCOME WITH THIS BEAUTIFUL AND SPACIOUS 5 BEDROOM 2 UNIT HOME! Live in one unit while renting out the other unit-each unit has its own separate utility meters and 100 amp service panel for each side . Home features a gorgeous fireplace, new boiler, new bathroom, curb appeal, balcony and 2 car garage. Located on .78 acres and within walking distance of downtown Mansfield. Call to schedule your showing today. MLS R31710862A

69,900

LISTED AT $

VERY PRIVATE 11.28 ACRES IN CHATHAM TWP! This property is ready for your home or cabin. Utilities are at road, sand mound is installed and just needs tank. Land is a mix of open and woods and is ideal for hunting, recreation etc. The deeded right of way allows for easy access. Call for an appt, as there is gated access. MLS L133401A

www.mvrwellsboro.com

35


A DVA N C E D HEART AND VA S C U L A R C A R E CLOSE TO EVERYONE YOU CARE ABOUT The nationally recognized cardiac care and expertise of the UPMC Heart and Vascular Institute are available close to home. Our local experts offer a multidisciplinary approach and customized treatment plans, with access to cutting-edge research and more advanced treatment options when needed. To schedule an appointment for our compassionate care, or for more information, visit UPMC.com/YourHeartWilliamsport.

36


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.