May 2012

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EwEind Fs R the

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Shari Griswold, Houston geophysicist, maps Tioga County’s depths for hidden gas treasure

SEISMIC SHARI

By Alison Fromme Photos by Elizabeth Young

THE BIRCH-OIL MAN GARY TYSON’S SPRING BIRDS KEN MEYER’S SPRING FLOWERS

MAY 20121


Grand Opening

Join Us in Celebrating the Grand Opening of Our New Wellsboro Office Thursday, May 3, 2012 4-6 p.m. 110 Plaza Lane (Located in the Wellsboro Plaza)

Event Activities

Tour the new 24,872 sq. ft. office building, meet our providers and enter to win door prizes.

• Enter to win door prizes

• X-ray demonstrations • Medical durable equipment • Enjoy refreshments

For more information call, 570-724-4241.

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www.guthrie.org


Volume 7 Issue 5

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The Last Great Place

14

Seismic Shari

25

Saturday in the Park

By Mike Capuzzo

Thanks to you, Dear Reader, Mountain Home is the “Best Niche Publication” in Pennsylvania again.

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By Alison Fromme Shari Griswold, Houston geophysicist, maps Tioga County’s depths for hidden gas treasure.

Doings ‘Round the Mountain

Blossburg remembers coal, CMOG recalls the Great Flood of ’72, and her friends celebrate Dotty Webber.

22

Looking Back By Joyce M. Tice

By Gary Tyson Hill Creek’s glorious bird walks offer splendid shots of nature’s feathered glory.

Joyce travels back to 1897 in Wellsboro and Mansfield, and a famous local murder.

30

Craving Crawfish By Derek Witucki

Photos by Elizabeth Young Louisiana boiled crawfish are a taste of home for Pennsylvania gas workers.

35

Birch, Still

By Dave Milano

Dave distills the memories of Llewellyn Butler, Birch-Oil Man. (To read about a new birch still see also p. 43).

41

The Better World

By John & Lynne Diamond-Nigh

Strangers at a restaurant spark golden memories of heroes and angels.

70

Shop Around the Corner:

The MotherDaughter Gallery

By Cindy Davis Meixel With Lin and Jesse Gardner, West End Gallery in Corning is a mom-anddaughter shop.

Oops and Etc: The photos with last month’s Yogomaga column were taken by Michelle Lawrence.

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43

Still Stilling After All These Years By Gayle Morrow

Gayle inspects a new, working birch still at the Lumbermen’s Museum in Potter County. (See also p. 35 for the memories of the Birch-Oil Man).

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Puff the Magic Chocolate By Becca Ostrom

Le Chocolat, Bernie and Bonnie Katz’s sweet Williamsport shop, started with a puff.

53

My Favorite Things By Michael Capuzzo

Italian Night at Lamb’s Creek is a two-for-one offer you can’t refuse.

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Finger Lakes Wine Review By Holly Howell

Spring is glorious in the lakes, a fine Riesling to celebrate!

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Editors & PublishErs Teresa Banik Capuzzo Michael Capuzzo AssociAtE PublishErs George Bochetto, Esq. Dawn Bilder MAnAging Editor Derek Witucki dEsign & PhotogrAPhy Editor Elizabeth Young coPy Editor Pete Boal covEr Artist Tucker Worthington contributing WritErs Sarah Bull, Angela Cannon-Crothers, Jennifer Cline, Barbara Coyle, Kevin Cummings, Patricia Brown Davis, Georgiana DeCarlo, Clint Decker, John & Lynne Diamond-Nigh, Lori Duffy Foster, Audrey Fox, Alison Fromme, Donald Gilliland, Lilace Mellin Guignard, Steve Hainsworth, Martha Horton, Holly Howell, Jelaina Jones, David Ira Kagan, Roger Kingsley, Adam Mahonske, Roberta McCulloch-Dews, Cindy Davis Meixel, Suzanne Meredith, Fred Metarko, Karen Meyers, Dave Milano, Gayle Morrow, Tom Murphy, Mary Myers, Jim Obleski, Cornelius O’Donnell, Brendan O’Meara, Becca Ostrom, Thomas Putnam, Gary Ranck, Gregg Rinkus, Kathleen Thompson, Joyce M. Tice, Linda Williams contributing PhotogrAPhErs Mia Lisa Anderson, Bill Crowell, Bruce Dart, Anne Davenport-Leete, Ann Kamzelski, Ken Meyer, Barb Rathbun, Tina Tolins, Sarah Wagaman, Curt Weinhold

Mother Earth By Gayle Morrow

Our columnist taps into the life-force of spring.

61

A May Opening

Photographer Ken Meyer raises the curtain on spring.

sEnior sAlEs rEPrEsEntAtivE Brian Earle sAlEs rEPrEsEntAtivE Christopher Banik Dan Reed bEAglE Cosmo AssistAnt

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to thE bEAglE

Yogi

Back of the Mountain

Suzan K. Richar visits Galeton’s lovely Berger Lake in springtime, reprising her winter photograph of February 2012.

Wellsboro High School, 225 Nichols St. Wellsboro

Family, Individual, and Senior Citizen Plans Available. Drop-In Fee $5/night.

m State of the Art Equipment m Towel Service m Fitness Center Attendants m Friendly Atmosphere

570-724-3547 4

Mon-Fri: Sat: 5:30-7:30 a.m. 7:00-11:00 a.m. 3:30-7:30 p.m. www.wellsborosd.org (click on the Fitness Center tab)

Mountain Home is published monthly by Beagle Media, LLC, 25 Main St., 2nd Floor, Wellsboro, Pennsylvania, 16901. Copyright © 2010 Beagle Media, LLC. All rights reserved. To advertise or subscribe e-mail info@mountainhomemag.com. To provide story ideas e-mail editor@mountainhomemag.com. Reach us by phone at 570-724-3838. Each month copies of Mountain Home are available for free at hundreds of locations in Tioga, Potter, Bradford, Lycoming, Union, and Clinton counties in Pennsylvania; Steuben, Chemung, Schuyler, Yates, Seneca, Tioga, and Ontario counties in New York. Visit us at www.mountainhomemag.com. Get Mountain Home at home. For a one-year subscription to Mountain Home (12 issues), send $24.95, payable to Beagle Media LLC, to 39 Water St., Wellsboro, PA 16901.


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It’s A Love Affair, That’s Why You read us, and you write us. Mountain Home has won an unprecedented 33 statewide Keystone Press Awards for journalism excellence in writing, photography, and design in just five years, and special recognition for attracting the most new readers (100,000) in the state. From Pittsburgh to Philadelphia, the Pennsylvania Newspaper Association says nobody does it better than our writers and readers. First PlAcE,

bEst

nichE PublicAtion in thE stAtE M o u n t a i n H o M e S t a f f , 2011

oF

PEnnsylvAniA,

F i r s t P l A c E , s P o r t s s t o r y , M a t t C o n n o r , 2011 s E c o n d P l A c E , F E A t u r E b E A t r E P o r t i n g , D a w n B i l D e r , 2011 s E c o n d P l A c E , P A g E d E s i g n , a M a n D a D o a n -B u t l e r , 2011 s E c o n d P l A c E , F E A t u r E P h o t o , a n n K a M z e l S K i , 2011 s E c o n d P l A c E , P h o t o s t o r y , a n n K a M z e l S K i , 2011 h o n o r A b l E M E n t i o n , b u s i n E s s /c o n s u M E r s t o r y , M a t t C o n n o r , 2011 h o n o r A b l E M E n t i o n , F E A t u r E P h o t o , C i n D y D a v i S M e i x e l , 2011 h o n o r A b l E M E n t i o n , F r o n t P A g E d E s i g n , t u C K e r w o r t H i n g t o n , 2011 First PlAcE, sPorts story, Matt

connor,

2010

First PlAcE, businEss or consuMEr story, Jeffrey allen feDerowiCz, 2 0 1 0 F i r s t P l A c E , P h o t o s t o r y , ann KaMzelSKi, 2 0 1 0 F i r s t P l A c E , s P o r t s o u t d o o r c o l u M n , f r e D M e t a r K o , 2010 F i r s t P l A c E , F r o n t P A g E d E s i g n , tuCKer wortHington, 2 0 1 0 s E c o n d P l A c E , F E A t u r E s t o r y , Matt Connor, 2 0 1 0 honorAblE MEntion, sPorts story, a n g e l a C a n n o n -C r o t H e r S , 2 0 1 0 F i r s t P l A c E , F E A t u r E s t o r y , J o y C e M. t i C e , 2 0 0 9 s E c o n d P l A c E , b u s i n E s s s t o r y , BarBara Coyle,

2009

s E c o n d P l A c E , s P o r t s / o u t d o o r c o l u M n , roy Kain, 2 0 0 9 s E c o n d P l A c E , P h o t o s t o r y , ann KaMzelSKi, 2 0 0 9 s E c o n d P l A c E , s P o r t s s t o r y , freD MetarKo, 2 0 0 9 sPEciAl citAtion, bEst PublicAtion in thE PEnnsylvAniA At groWing rEAdErshiP (100,000 Mountain HoMe Staff, 2 0 0 8

stAtE oF

nEW rEAdErs)

F i r s t P l A c E , P E r s o n A l i t y P r o F i l E , MiCHael Capuzzo, 2 0 0 8 F i r s t P l A c E , s P o r t s / o u t d o o r c o l u M n , freD MetarKo, 2 0 0 8 s E c o n d P l A c E , s P o r t s / o u t d o o r c o l u M n , liz BerKowitz, 2 0 0 8 s E c o n d P l A c E , F E A t u r E s t o r y , MiCHael Capuzzo, 2 0 0 8 honorAblE MEntion, businEss or consuMEr story, CinDy DaviS Meixel, 2 0 0 8 h o n o r A b l E M E n t i o n , F E A t u r E P h o t o , CinDy DaviS Meixel, 2 0 0 8 F i r s t P l A c E , d i s t i n g u i s h E d W r i t i n g , MiCHael Capuzzo, 2 0 0 7 F i r s t P l A c E , P E r s o n A l i t y P r o F i l E , MiCHael Capuzzo, 2 0 0 7 F i r s t P l A c E , s P o r t s / o u t d o o r c o l u M n , DaviD CaSella, 2 0 0 7 s E c o n d P l A c E , s P o r t s / o u t d o o r c o l u M n , roy Kain, 2 0 0 7 honorAblE MEntion, FEAturE bEAt rEPorting, tereSa BaniK Capuzzo, 2 0 0 7

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The Last Great Place

One of the last Great Department Stores!

Revolution In The Air

Since 1905

By Michael Capuzzo

I

t’s the season of strange and wild things, old cycles reverse, new shoots find the sun, the world gets giddy. Winter wears green, spring snows, and in the Mountain Home offices we drink champagne every Friday afternoon. And why not, I say, raising a toast to you, Dear Reader? It’s 5 o’clock somewhere. Here’s to you, retired Dresser Rand manager-turned-fisherman Fred Metarko, and to you, slightly crazed classical artist Tucker Worthington. Here’s to you, Wellsboro director and actor Thomas Putnam, and you, Finger Lakes sommelier Holly Howell. Why, here’s writer, mother, wife, marketing executive, and former Disney World Snow White Associate Publisher Dawn Bilder, Canton elementary school teacher Sarah Bull, Cowanesque Valley former farm girl Amanda Doan Butler, Wellsboro photographer and Mansfield University biology professor emeritus Ken Meyer, elementary school art teacher Sarah Wagaman, and Donald Gilliland, the fifth-generation Potter Countian and brilliant investigative reporter who studied medieval lit at Cornell. Drink up, all. Mostly here’s to you, Dear Reader, for you’ve broken the rules, confused all the categories, once again. You see, no sooner had we hired two recent Mansfield University grads last month—Managing Editor Derek Witucki and Graphic Designer and Photo Editor Liz Young—than our fortune took a remarkable turn. This May issue of Mountain Home is seventy-six pages, the biggest magazine we’ve published in six years, with Derek writing his first story for us, about a 3,000-pound load of Louisiana crawfish that travelled 1,300 miles, and Liz taking some wonderful photos of steaming crawfish and geophysicist “Seismic Shari”—the cover photos, artfully paired by cover designer Tucker Worthington. The June issue, to be produced in our roomy new offices at 25 Main Street, second floor, Wellsboro, promises to be an even bigger magazine, still “Free as the Wind.” See Great Place on page 12

Join us for our

Mary Wells Day Sidewalk Sale Friday, May 25 th Sunday, May 27 th Sidewalk sales continue all summer long!

45 Main Street Wellsboro, PA

570-724-1905

www.dunhamswellsboro.com 7


DoIngs ’rounD the MountaIn

M

AY The Great Flood of ‘72 Corning Recalls Anges’s Wrath Twenty years ago this June, the flood spawned by Hurricane Agnes changed the course of Twin Tiers rivers and history. The Chemung River rose fifteen feet and devastated the Corning Museum of Glass, which marks the epic event (eighteen dead, more than 6,000 homeless, $230 million in property damage) and the community’s heroic comeback with a new exhibit. The Flood of ’72: Community, Collections, and Conservation at Corning Museum of Glass will be on display from May 24, 2012 to January 3, 2014.

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Blossburg Coal Festival Dance Around the May Coal You probably live here now, and thus are reading this, because coal was discovered in Blossburg in 1792. You can honor our shared history at Blossburg’s 20th annual state coal festival. The Pennsylvania hamlet does it up right – parade, concerts, car show, carnival, fireworks, 5K race, raffle, kiddie coal king and queen – May 23-26 on 45acre Island Park, and a $3 ticket buys all four days. Call 570-404-2456, or visit www. blossburgcoalfestival.org.

Celebrating Dotty Webber A Slate Run Toast to a Pioneer’s Life If you’ve ever hiked the Pennsylvania Alleghenies, chances are legendary local woodsman and forester Bob Webber (our Mountain Home January 2007 cover story) hand-axed the trail. Ever since Bob lost his wife Dotty this winter, he and his many friends have planned a joyous Saturday, May 19 celebration of her remarkable 89 years at the Black Walnut Bottom state access point on the Slate Run, a mile south of Slate Run Tackle Shop and Wolfe’s General Store. It’s a day of hot dogs and

Photo by Brad Wilson

good memories, free to anyone who loves the woods, the hills, and the Webbers. Call the general store for details, 570753-8551. Growers Markets Bloom Fresh Gatherings in Our Towns The greening of northern Pennsylvania continues this spring as the popular Mansfield, Troy, and Wellsboro growers and farmers markets re-open with local farm-fresh produce, organic, hand-grown-andmade, and many other things. See the “Farmers Markets” category below for details.


MUSIC

DoIngs, cont.

4 Simply Sinatra – If you can’t get enough of ol’ blue eyes, acclaimed touring faux Frankie Steve Lippia, backed by a regional orchestra, may be just the ticket. He’s done Vegas, he’s done Atlantic City and New York City jazz clubs, and at 7:30 p.m. May 4 he does Williamsport. (The Community Arts Center, 220 West Fourth St., Williamsport, PA; 570 326-2424, www.caclive.com). 12 Chris Lavancher – Mansfield, PA native Lavancher, now of North Reading, MA, returns home to release his first CD, Roadside Attractions, at a show in Cherry Flats at Bruce and Debbie Smith’s barn. Hard-knocks storytelling folk and blues “of love and loss, of dreams and schemes” on his own-built guitar. Email chris@chrislavanchermusic.com fmi. 12 Endless Mountain Music Auction – The third annual Auction with a Beat! is a fund-raiser for the Endless Mountain Musical Festival, wherein for $30 music lovers enjoy wine, dine on a catered feast by Timeless Destination restaurant, and bid on more than 75 things, such as glider rides, getaways, spa fantasies, the Maestro’s conducting baton, and more. It’s 5 p.m. Saturday May 12 at the Deane Center Black Box Theater. Tickets available at endlessmountain. net or 570-787-7800. (The Deane Center for the Performing Arts, 104 Main St., Wellsboro, PA). GALLERIES 1-27 Two Woman Show: Jeanine Rounds and Nancy Perkins – Two award-winning Bradford County artists—Jeanine Rounds of Athens and Nancy Perkins of Rome – will exhibit together in Wellsboro. Rounds paints in realism and fantasy from her extensive travels in the American

Southwest; Perkins captures animals – bass, deer, butterfly – in her oils. A reception at the museum, hosted by the Wednesday Morning Musicales, will be from 2-4 p.m. May 12, with an artist talk at 3 p.m. (Gmeiner Art & Cultural Center, 134 Main St., Wellsboro, PA; (570)724-1917, open daily 2-5 p.m., see www.gmeinerartscenter.com. 3 Music in the Galleries: The Tumbleweeds – Cowboy songs and ballads with the Lanahan family, 6:30-7:30 p.m. (refreshments at 5:30). Reservations required at 607-974-2333 or andrukatk@rockwellmuseum. org. Members FREE/Not-yet-members $10. (Rockwell Museum of Western Art, 111 Cedar St., Corning, NY; www.rockwellmuseum.org). May 4-June 1 Recent work by Tom Gardner – “Around and About,” new paintings by Gardner, including his evocative landscapes of upstate New York and northern Pennsylvania, opens with a 5-7:30 p.m. May 4 reception. Free and open to the public. (West End Gallery, 12 W. Market St., Corning, NY). THE THEATRE 1-2 Young Frankenstein – Mel Brooks wasn’t satisfied with one monster smash; in the giant footsteps of his hilarious film on young Dr. Fronkensteen, he co-wrote the music and lyrics for Young Frankenstein, the musical, a 2008 Broadway hit now on tour. Showtimes 7:30 p.m. May 1 and May 2 at the Clemens Center. For tickets, call 607-7348191, 800-724-0159, or order online at www. clemenscenter.com (The Clemens Center, 207 Clemens Center Parkway, Elmira, NY). 8-9 Beauty and The Beast – A tale as old as time and new as the Great White Way, the Broadway national touring family musical of Disney’s Beauty and the Beast comes to Williamsport for two nights of lavish sets, costumes, and famous numbers such as “Be

Our Guest.” Shows 7:30 p.m. May 8-9. See www. beautyandthebeastontour.com (The Community Arts Center, 220 West Fourth St., Williamsport, PA; 570 326-2424, www.caclive.com). 10 Damn Yankees – Wellsboro’s charming Arcadia Theater is known for first-run movies, but also, since 2002, has produced live theatrical shows featuring high school and college students. In the classic Damn Yankees, middle-aged baseball nut Joe Boyd trades his soul to the Devil for a chance to lead his favorite team, the hapless Washington Senators, to victory in the pennant race against the New York Yankees. Showtimes 7:30 p.m. Thus. Fri. Sat. May 10-12, u is 7:30 p.m. May 10, $12 for adults, $8 for students. (Arcadia Theatre, 50 Main St., Wellsboro, PA; 570 724 9371; www.arcadiawellsboro.com). COMMUNITY EVENTS 15 Mark Twain in Wellsboro – Actor Dave Ehlert of Branson, MO, brings his one-man show, “Mark Twain 100 Years Later,” to Wellsboro 6:30-8 p.m. Tuesday, May 15. (The Green Free Library main room, 134 Main St., Wellsboro, PA. Registration is encouraged, call 570-724-4876). 19 The Mutt Strut – The 2nd annual Mutt Strut is a people-and-pooch pledge walk and fund raiser for the Animal Care Sanctuary from 11 a.m.-4 p.m. May 19 in East Smithfield, PA (353 Sanctuary Hill Lane). There’ll be food, music, grooming classes, agility and training demos, discounted ($50) DNA testing for mystery breeds. Contact Rachel Higham at 570-596-2200 or rhigham@animalcaresanctuary. org. 26 A Classic Wellsboro Saturday – Folks like to wander up and down the gas-lit Main Street of the classic small town in the spring, and sometimes things happen, like the “Classic Car Cruise-In” that may catapult your thoughts back to the 1950s, or the

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DoIngs, cont. sidewalk sales that mark Mary Wells Day, honoring the town founder from 1830. On Saturday, May 26, both these pleasant things will happen on the same day with charmingly little fanfare, the cars from noon to 3 p.m. 27 Fly In Breakfast – There’s something inspiring about watching small airplanes soar in the skies above Grand Canyon Airport while sinking happily lower to the Earth with second and third helpings of pancakes, eggs, bacon, sausage, coffee, and juice. All are welcome to the popular Tioga County airport fund-raiser 8 a.m.-noon Sunday May 27. Call 570-724-3746 fmi. (The airport is six miles west of downtown Wellsboro, PA, at 1899 feet; 4143.67402N / 077-23.79068W estimated). FESTIVALS May 4-5 Potter-Tioga Maple Festival – Fortysix years old and still sweet, the maple fest at the Coudersport, PA, Courthouse Square tempts sweet tooths with dozens of delectable treats, sugar shack demonstrations, a Maple Quilt Raffle, Maple Sweetheart crowning and parade, live music, duck race, pet parade, kiddie carnival, classic cars, historic walking tour, book sale. See www.visitpottercounty. com. 11-20 Lilac Festival – A good place to take mom and also international visitors is Rochester’s largest lilac celebration in North America featuring Highland Park’s world’s largest lilac collection (1,200 bushes) and ten days of free headliners—bluesman Johnny Winter, Red Baraat, The Wailers (as in Bob Marley), Melissa Manchester, Lou Gramm (as in Foreigner), Steel Magnolia and more. See www.lilacfestival.com 24-27 Corning GlassFest – The 3rd annual GlassFest celebration of glass and the fine arts is a prismatic Corning, NY, extravaganza of live music (The Makepeace Brothers, Virgil Cain, DSB), Hot Glass Show in Centerway Square, Finger Lakes Wine & Craft Beer Tasting with 30 regional producers, a Flame-Off (like Iron Chef for glassmakers, using torches), a 2300 degrees free music-art-drinks-food event at the Corning Museum of Glass, a fast 8K run, slow fine arts show, smokin’ hot BBQ and band at the Radisson, open doors at local museums and galleries, Light up the Night (glass sculpture and neon at Riverfront Park), and more. Sponsored by the Gaffer District and Chemung Canal Trust Co.;

see www.glassfest.org. May 31-June 3 Ithaca Festival – Four days, more than 30,000 people, countless performers, artists (actually, 1,000 local artists), community groups, food purveyors, green businesses, official fest artist Meghan Wood. For more on Ithaca’s summer arts and music big do, see www.ithacafestival.org. WINERIES 4-6 Cayuga Lake Wine & Herb Festival – If you missed it in April, Cayuga Lake Wine Trail’s Wine & Herb Festival returns in May to close out the year’s most popular event. You’ll receive a commemorative token gift, a souvenir wineglass, plus a potted herb plant from Dickman Farms, a plant carrier, and recipe cards from each of the lake’s sixteen wineries on Saturday and Sunday (only four wineries are participating Friday). For tickets and more information, including available packages, call the wine trail office (800-684-5217), and see www. cayugawinetrail.com 5-6 Keuka Lake Wine Trail in Bloom – A weekend $35 ticket—$50 per couple – buys you wine tastings, herb-inspired foods at each of the lake’s eight wineries, including Heron Hill and Dr. Frank’s Vinifera Wine Cellars, plus one flower and one herb, each in a four-inch pot ready to plant in spring gardens. If you’re still counting at day’s end, it’s a tangible take-home of sixteen herb and flower plants and lots of mouth feel. Tickets can be had at the wine trail office (800-440-4898), www. keukawinetrail.com, and at Wegmans. 6 Vertical Riesling Tasting – While Riesling leaves us happily horizontal, the vertical tasting at Fulkerson Winery on Seneca Lake is an ambitious toast to May, Reisling Month in the Finger Lakes, including Rieslings from the wine library, a talk about the importance of the grape in the Finger Lakes, and more. It’s $5 per person, reservations required, call (607) 243-7883. (Fulkerson Winery, 5576 Route 14, Dundee, NY, see www.fulkersonwinery.com) 20 Canandaigua Spring Wine Garden Party – From noon to 5 p.m. Sunday, loll under the Spring Garden Tents at lovely Sonnenberg Gardens in Canandaigua, NY. For $40 a person—$75 a couple – one receives a picnic lunch, a six-pack of annuals, wine tastings from seven vineyards on the Canandaigua Wine Trail, including Heron Hill

HOME TERRITORY Welcome to Mountain Home We’re grateful that you’ve already welcomed us onto your porch and into the living room. Thanks to you, Mountain Home, the Twin Tiers lifestyle magazine, has 100,000 readers from the Finger Lakes to the Susquehanna River. Locally owned and based at creek-side offices in Wellsboro, Pennsylvania—population 3,245—we tell local stories by gifted local writers, artists, and photographers (see our awards on page 6). You can get a subscription, but most folks pick us up, “Free as the Wind,” at one of 279 distribution points, represented on this original map by artist Tucker Worthington. Please support our advertisers and distributors— on our Web site, we’ve published a complete list by town of the businesses, from Wegman’s to wineries to the corner store, where you’ll find Mountain Home. Call us at 570-724-3838 to chat, tell a story, or advertise. Meanwhile, happy reading! Teresa & Mike Capuzzo, Wellsboro, Pennsylvania 10

and Hazlitt, wine seminars from the wine makers, live music, food and craft vendor sampling. Lawn blanket suggested. Tickets available at Wegmans or www.canandaiguawinetrail.com. For more information, call Cathy at 585-223-4210 ext 121. OUTDOORS 5, 12, 19, 26 Saturday Morning Bird Walks – The Tiadaghton Audubon Society leads its popular bird walks every Saturday morning in May at Hills Creek State Park. The walks start at 8 a.m. and last about two hours. Meet at the office. The walks are free, and everyone is invited. Wear subdued clothing, sturdy shoes, and binoculars, if you have them. Bald Eagles are often observed, as well as Ospreys that frequent Hills Creek Lake. (Hills Creek State Park, 111 Spillway Rd., Wellsboro, PA; contact the Audubon Society at 724-4246 or www.tiaudubon.org). 19 & 20 Upper Pine Creek Trout Tournament – Win cash, prizes, and bragging rights fishing the lovely Pine Creek. Participants will be stationed along a 13-mile stretch from Galeton to the Ansonia Bridge from 6 a.m.-7 p.m. Saturday and 6 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday. Headquarters is the PA Grand Canyon Snowmobile clubhouse on Route 6. For more, see www.pagrandcanyonsnowmobileclub.com, call 570-724-2888, or email johnm@chilitech.com. FARMERS MARKETS 4 Mansfield Growers Market – The 2012 season starts May 4, same successful hours as last year – 3-6 p.m. Fridays at the St. James Church, Rt. 6, Mansfield, PA. Live music, kids activities, hot-cart suppers, and a cornucopia of local fruit, vegetable, meat, eggs, flowers, seedlings, fresh herbs, maple products, honey, dairy, baked things, preserves, and local crafts. 5 Troy Farmers Market – Saturdays 9 a.m.-1 p.m. at the Farm Museum, Rts. 6 & 14, Troy, PA. 10 Wellsboro Grower’s Market – Some of the best local produce, meat, flowers, crafts, and baked goods find their way to the growing Grower’s Market, 3-6 p.m. Thursdays starting May 10 at the First Presbyterian Church, 130 Main St., Wellsboro, PA. Email wellsborogrowersmarket@gmail.com fmi.


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BilltownBluesFestival

Great Place continued from page 7

23rd Annual

June 10, 2012

Lycoming County Fairgrounds East Lycoming Street, Hughesville, PA Noon–10:00 pm • Rain or Shine • Gates open at 11:00

The Uptown Music Collective Young Blood Blues Band Roy G. Blues Matt Hill & The Deep Fryed Two Fiona Boyes & Band Free Parking Great Food J.P. Soars and the Red Hots Arts & Crafts Johnny Winter Bernard Allison Group

ACOUSTIC TENT FEATURING Grammy Award winner Steve Mitchell's Circle of Drums, BBA Audition Concert Solo/Duo winner Sean Farley and International Blues Challenge solo/duo winner Fiona Boyes

Free bus service from downtown Williamsport Festival & hotel/ticket packages available. Info: 570-584-4480 or

billtownblues.org

2011 Blues Organization KBA Award Recipient

Tickets: $20 Advance, $25 Gate By mail (with SASE by 6/1): BBA Tickets, PO Box 2, Hughesville, PA 17737

www.vacationpa.com www.visitpa.com Supported in part by the Lycoming County Visitors Bureau & PA Council on the Arts

Meanwhile, we were putting away the champagne glasses when we got the astonishing news in late April that Mountain Home had just won thirteen more Keystone Press Awards for journalism excellence from the Pennsylvania Newspaper Association, once again outperforming large, corporate-owned Philadelphia weeklies. That’s forty-five Keystones in six years; most significantly, for the second straight year, Mountain Home was named the Best Niche Publication in Pennsylvania. Join me in a sip, and let’s reflect on that. Second best niche publication went to The Jewish Exponent, a celebrated weekly newspaper published in Philadelphia since 1887 to report “the interests of the

Jewish people,” now owned by the Jewish Federation of Philadelphia and reaching a national audience with more than fifty staff members. Third best niche publication was The Philadelphia Business Journal, one of forty-one big-city weekly business journals owned by American City Business Journals, which is owned by Advance Publications, the 46th largest private company in the United States (S.I. Newhouse’s twenty-five newspapers including the Newark Star-Ledger, Conde Naste magazines including Vogue, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker). Let’s be clear about this. Beagle Media, named for our fifteen-year-old frustrated rabbit hunter Cosmo, is owned by me and my wife

Don’t miss the great opportunities at the

2012 Northern Tier Marcellus Shale Business Expo Saturday June 23rd 9:00 am - 4:00 pm

Alparon Park, Troy, PA

Door Prize Drawings Next to Office - Every hour

To learn more, view who is registered or to become a sponsor or an exhibitor visit:

www.ntmarcellusexpo.com 12


Teresa Banik Capuzzo and Philadelphia lawyer George Bochetto. We’re putting out the magazine for 100,000 readers from the fifteen-bytwelve foot parlor in our house, a small Victorian by a creek in Wellsboro, pop. 3,000, the county seat of Appalachian Tioga County. (Note the photo of Associate Publisher Dawn Bilder running another story by Cosmo in the parlor on page 6). We can’t forget the seven-by-nine foot laundry room, where the ad director’s old Apple computer has temporarily dashed my wife’s hope for a washer-dryer, or the small kitchen counter where we meet over breakfast and lunch, and sometimes 4 a.m. snacks. Our full-time editorial staff has never exceeded two. What’s our secret? Drain the flask, dear friend, for the

truth is out, our secret is you. The Greeks, even the poets, mastered the art of directness, so I’ll try: the smart money at Advance Publications, et. al., believes you don’t have time or inclination to read. It’s Hollywood corny, but they trust marketing studies and not the heart, which alone is true. They think you have no attention span, and just want the simplest facts to make political and economic decisions and to buy more stuff, so small are your desires. They practice the unspoken but fierce religion of modernism, which despite decades of scientific evidence insists that there’s nothing much inside you besides what you’re told, thus you are easily duped by the latest marketing craze, there’s nothing spiritual or noble in you, no God in

the sky or even the brain, no stories, no myths, no spark of the divine muses of old that moved Shakespeare or even Spielberg—or if they exist such things are dark and jumbled and best forgotten as the worst part of you. None of this is true, of course, it’s their fantasy and an ugly one to boot, but they’re sticking to it. The modern “objective” journalist is the priest of this religion, posing as a scientist studying us folks as if he were a whale biologist writing a thesis on a pod. Who can be surprised by his cynicism, his brittle sense of isolation, when he is trained to hear and transmit everything about the whales but the most natural, most beautiful and powerful thing of all, their magnificent song? Great Place continued on page 45

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14


SEISMIC SHARI

Shari Griswold, Houston geophysicist, maps Tioga County's depths for hidden gas treasure

J

By Alison Fromme Photos by Elizabeth Young

ust outside Wellsboro, red and green cables snake their way through a field and disappear into the ground, where unseen wires penetrate twenty feet down to reach a couple pounds of dynamite. At the other end of the cables, a man crouches over a fifty-pound backpack full of electronics. He radios his team a few miles away and prepares to detonate the explosives. The man is known as a shooter, and although he’s the one who pushes the button, a woman behind the scenes calls all the shots. Her name is Shari Griswold, a Houston-based geophysicist at Shell Exploration & Production who’s orchestrating the massive, multimillion-dollar seismic survey, untangling the mystery of what lies beneath the surface in Tioga County. Her network of dynamite, detonators, receivers, helicopters, drills, and a couple hundred workers collects valuable, secret data. Data that whispers where sweet spots of natural gas hide—and hints at the best ways to get that gas out.

15


Project manager Shari shares a light moment with Dean Webster of CGGVeritas, the company that performs the seismic survey.

Shari heads out into the landscape in an F-250 truck, wearing an orange vest over a denim jacket and a hardhat over shoulder-length brown hair. She is the only woman in sight. Her easy smile and soft voice—with a barely-there Southern accent—might make you forget that she’s got the power here. And she is not just the only woman at this field site. She is the only woman supervising Shell seismic operations in all of North and South America. As project manager, Shari oversees and coordinates a crew of men from Shell, CGGVeritas, Long Consulting,

and Gliko Aviation. They hail from Texas, Montana, Pennsylvania, and elsewhere. Some have worked on seismic crews for more than thirty years. Others just left jobs like teaching to work in the gas industry. Young fresh-faced guys work alongside grizzled veterans. Some monitor quality control, some pilot B-212 helicopters, some record data, some work with landowners. When Shari hops out of the truck at a field site, she surveys the entire survey crew. “The job is a natural fit,” she says, shrugging off the fact that she is the only woman around, although a few women

Workers attach yellow bags with receivers to the helicopter cable; the widely scattered receivers record the sound waves, generated by explosions that map the shale.

16

do work for CGGVeritas, the heli-drilling operation, and other subcontractors. “The position itself comes with a certain amount of authority,” she says. “I’ve experienced nothing but professionalism and camaraderie,” she adds, but she does joke about the state of some port-a-johns, which weren’t standard at job sites when she first started. This particular detonation site was prepared weeks ago. A 40,000-pound track drill lumbered over the land, bored the hole, placed the explosives, led the wires to the surface, filled the hole with gravel, and then moved on to the next site along a path cut by a mulcher in a wooded patch. Without an orange flag marking the spot, a bystander would never know that dynamite charges lurked below the surface. This dynamite, this hole—just the diameter of a soda can—is one of thousands of shots set off over the course of Shell’s 140-square-mile North Wellsboro survey and 160-square-mile Sabinsville survey. This spot is relatively easy to get to, a few hundred feet off a country road. Other sites aren’t so accessible. In remote spots, a helicopter drops a drill and compressor from a long line to bore a hole. Then it is flown to another location. Dynamite is buried in the depths of forests, on hillsides, amidst thickets of willows. Almost no corner of the landscape is left unmonitored or unknown. The land here is nothing like the Louisiana mud Shari worked in during


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Shari, with Brian George (left) of Long Consulting and Paul Costers of Shell Quality Control, studies a map for testing areas that won’t disturb wild turkeys—or turkey hunters.

the first part of her career. Or the Alabama flatlands. Or the Wyoming plains. For twenty-seven years Shari has been working on seismic surveys with Shell, all over the country. It’s a far cry from the subjects Shari once studied back in school, when she was a music major at a community college in California. But as a kid her dad—a chief geophysicist at a naval base—showed her weather balloons and sparked her curiosity. That curiosity resurfaced when she realized music was not a practical career choice. And so her analytical mind won over her love of music. She transferred to Cal State Bakersfield, and a field trip to Death Valley sealed the deal. “I thought, ‘Wow! Four-billion-year-old rock formations right in front of me!’” says Shari, who interned at Getty Oil. She earned her bachelor’s degree in geologic sciences with an emphasis in geophysics. 18

But don’t ask her to ID rocks. She hated the memorization. “We don’t care what it’s made of,” Shari says, laughing about geophysicists. “We just want to know how fast sound goes through it.” And that is at the crux of figuring out what’s beneath our feet. Once the dynamite explodes, sound waves will ricochet through the land in all directions, reaching 13,000 feet underground, through the Marcellus and Utica Shales, through layers of shale, siltstone, sandstone, formed and transformed over millennia. Each underground formation slows and reflects the waves of sound energy differently. Some of the sound waves will bounce back to the receivers that Shari’s team has scattered throughout the region. What is down there? Gas, of course, but how much, and where precisely? The United States Geologic Survey

estimates that the whole Marcellus Shale holds eighty-four trillion cubic feet of undiscovered, technically recoverable natural gas, not counting natural gas liquids. Underneath, in the even-deeper Utica Shale—more than two miles below the surface—who knows? In Tioga County, lots and lots of computer power will connect the dots between the sound wave vibrations, the receivers, and actual rock cuttings from wells already drilled. Questions will be answered. But, of course, those answers are closely guarded, proprietary information. Secrets will be kept. So what’s in it for landowners? The Penn State Marcellus Center for Outreach and Research outlines the longterm pros and cons of seismic testing for residents, who usually receive about $5 per acre in compensation if they sign on. If you’re hoping for a gas well, they


Clockwise, from above: In the “dog house,” multiple computers crunch numbers from receivers in the field; a noisy generator recharges 120 batteries that power the receivers; the batteries are ready to load for the seismic helicopter ride.

say, and a company finds major faulting under your property, the value of your lease could plummet. If a company tests your land and then returns for future leasing, conditions there are probably favorable and you might be able to negotiate better lease terms. Companies might be looking for waste injection well sites, in addition to pockets of gas. “We want to make the best decisions about where to put wells and how to drill,” Shari says. It’s all about “fewer, smarter wells” in the sweet spots. The more accurate the locations, the fewer well pads needed, the more productive wells per well pad, according to Shari. CGGVeritas, the company that executes the survey, can tell clients like Shell where the gas is, how the rock will fracture, and whether the fractures will remain open. The analysis can pinpoint faults. It can predict gas well production over time. “And that’s a million dollar question,” says Shari. No one at Shell wants to drill a dud. “You want to be able to say ‘Yes! It’s not a dry well!’” she explains, with fists raised in victory. Of course, none of this precise

knowledge can be gained without the survey. And the survey requires getting the dynamite and the receivers out there in the first place, with permission from landowners to walk properties, place receivers, and detonate blasts. None of it is easy. Sh a r i’s a p p r o a c h i s c a re f u l , methodical, precise, calm. She checks in on field sites. She meets with team members. She answers phone calls and e-mails. She speaks with residents at town hall meetings. She laughs with a colleague, and then reminds him to wear his safety gloves. When Shari takes off her hardhat after visiting a site, she puts on a bright red cap. “Warm Up Reining Champion,” reads the embroidery. She took up horseback riding just a few years ago, after a knee injury cramped her enjoyment of the outdoors. The competition is all about routine. Spins, turns, sliding stops. It’s not a race against time. Judges critique accuracy. Shari rides her horse, Steppin’ Sanjo, carefully, methodically, precisely, calmly. To orchestrate everything on the job,

Shari and her team study multicolored planning maps. Neat North-South dotted lines show rows of receivers. Blue, green, and red patches illustrate which landowners have granted permission for seismic testing. But the reality on the ground is much more complex. The dotted lines much more crooked. At a staging site, a man sits at a couple of computer monitors inside a semi tractor trailer and coordinates the travels of two B-212 helicopters. At the back of the trailer, a noisy generator recharges 120 batteries that will power receivers in the field. Outside the makeshift office, an approaching helicopter dominates the air. Big yellow bags of receivers—receivers full of precious data coming in from the field—dangle from a 150-foot cable. The pilot carefully lowers the bags to the ground, and then hovers as men unload them. After dropping the gear, the chopper lands on the pad and refuels. Then, it rises again, hovering over fresh receivers for the ground crew to load onto a special carousel. The chopper flies away, 19


At a safe distance marked off by a pole, the dynamite “shooter” presses a button, triggering the boom that jolts the land and sends the mapping sound waves 13,000 feet underground.

the pilot ready to drop bags one by one across the landscape with the push of a button. Men on the ground will meet the bags and place receivers, walking through underbrush and maneuvering around houses, unpermitted land, septic tanks, water wells, and town sidewalks. The crew trudges up and down hills, through brambles, and over snakes. At every turn, Shari says she’s thinking about the safety of employees, concerned about slips, trips, and falls, truck accidents, helicopter crashes, and more. Her crew can’t even walk without safety training. Guys learn how to move over tricky terrain, snow and ice, leaves and mud, thanks to another company, Global Mountain Solutions. She’s also working to get the aviation crew FAA approval to perform rescue operations. Just in case. “Every employee has the right—the obligation—to shut down operations if they consider them unsafe,” Shari says, echoing the corporate Shell safety ethos. Recently, high winds and fear of tree falls shut down operations in a state forest. And so seismic crews comb the landscape, placing receivers that look a bit like big alien spiders. In each receiver, a central computer compartment stores the data, black cables connect to thick metal probes that stick a few inches in the ground. With each dynamite blast, the probes vibrate, the computer records. Later, data from the receivers is 20

perhaps without the professionalism that Shell emphasizes, according to Shari. If an issue crops up, she says it’s likely a miscommunication that needs to be ironed out. She tries to put herself in landowners’ shoes. She has thirty acres in Colorado—but no mineral rights— in the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, near a region ripe with energy development. She asks herself what she would do if a company wanted to survey her land. What would the benefit be to her? Shari says it’s unfortunate that hydrocarbons—any fossil fuels—can’t be extracted without drilling. “But we need them,” she says. “When I look at historical photos of coal mining and bare hillsides that have now been restored, it gives me confidence that when these wells are finished we can reclaim them to the point that you wouldn’t know they were there.” Back in the field, just a few moments have passed since the shooter first contacted the recording shack. He waits for his green light to detonate the blast. The explosion will show up miles away on a computer screen in the shack, where the vibrations become a black and white image, like inscrutable static, like tea leaves to be read by a fortune teller. The shooter hears a “standby” command on his radio and waits until his team back at the computers is ready. Just then, a man and woman ride up to the detonation site on a four-wheeler. “Sorry folks! Didn’t mean to interrupt!” shouts the man, who is apparently a local resident. Smiling and curious, he asks if there’s going to be a heli drop nearby. “Just going to cut through the woods here,” he says as he drives down a path. Seconds later, the radio crackles again. The shooter says the obligatory “Fire in the Hole” warning, pushes a button and detonates the blast. A powerful, brief boom jolts the ground, the crew, and Shari herself. Waves ripple through the landscape, the community, and beyond.

downloaded, then crunched, processed, and churned by a team back in Houston into a visual image of what is down there. An image of what is down there, hundreds of feet under farmers planting fields, our kids playing ball, our neighbors hunting in game lands. This spring, Shari and her team try to avoid turkey hunters. They ground helicopters on key hunting days. They ask landowners about their hunting plans. “The last thing a hunter needs—sitting in one place for an hour with his turkey call—is a helicopter flying overhead,” Shari says. Shari stresses the group’s efforts to minimize disruptions to landowners. They established no fly zones over deer farms. Her team swapped metal stakes for wooden ones to protect cows. They remove and replace sensors around farmers’ plowing schedules. They avoid using track drills on soggy ground. Even so, some residents see seismic testing as disruptive. Unfair. A gateway to more drilling. Trespassing and blasting near water wells top the list of seismic testing complaints logged with the PA Department of Environmental Protection. Since 2010, about ten such complaints were logged with the agency’s North Central office. A handful of $100 fines were issued against Geokinetics, Dawson Seismic, and an unnamed company (the Science writer Alison Fromme is a freelancer DEP’s information is incomplete). It is tough to work in an area where whose writing has been featured in Mountain other companies have come before, Home since 2011. Living in Ithaca, she blogs about food at ithacafoodweb.com


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?

Looking Back

Homicidal History

T

By Joyce M. Tice

he story of Effie Copley of Hill’s Creek and Mansfield is as sad a story now as when her brief life was ended by murder back in 1897. Country girl Effie wanted to improve her life and make something of it. In 1891, at the age of sixteen, she enrolled in a nursing course at Mansfield State Normal School, the same school that evolved into the present Mansfield University. She also worked at one of the hotels in Mansfield. Walter Goodwin of Charleston was a farm boy with an alert eye for the ladies, any and all of them. He was confident and charismatic, and his seduction of Effie Copley led to a pregnancy and forced marriage in 1896. Walter’s mother acted as midwife at the birthing. Effie remembered she had heard the baby cry, but never saw it. Walter’s mother claimed that the infant was so severely deformed they did not want Effie to see it. Effie never believed it. Not long after, Effie was given fifty dollars and told that her relationship with the family was over. She returned to Mansfield, and in May 1897 she had Walter arrested for abandonment. After release from jail on $300 bond, a prince’s ransom in 1897, Goodwin visited Effie where she worked, the Beach home on Sullivan Street in Mansfield. His intent was to have her drop charges against him. During his hour-long meeting with her, his present friend, fourteen-year-old Gertrude Taylor of Gaines, held the reins of his horse and wagon. The next night Walter and Gertrude returned to Mansfield. Walter disguised himself with a handkerchief around his neck and his hat pulled low over his eyes. He left Gertrude with the horse and she dozed off in

22

the wagon, awakening to the sound of pistol shots. Walter returned and they drove to Wellsboro where they rode around the square for a while to make themselves visible. When Mr. Palmer of Sullivan Township came into town on Saturday morning he discovered the body of a woman lying on the bank on Sullivan Street, four bullets in her head, and blood running all down the bank. Effie was still breathing, but barely. She died at the Cottage Hospital in Blossburg shortly after. It did not take the expertise of the FBI team of Criminal Minds or the Law and Order detectives to finger Walter Godwin. From jail Walter wrote to Gertrude telling her what her story should be. He entrusted the letter to a jail officer for delivery. That failing for obvious reasons, he accused Gertrude of the murder and she was arrested and jailed. The trial was dramatic, and Walter was sentenced to death by hanging. Gertrude went back to Gaines where she was a popular guest at parties. In June 1898, Walter was hanged in Wellsboro. In his final speech he continued to blame Miss Taylor for the actual shooting. When the black bag was placed over his head, his final words to the sheriff were, “Goodbye, Dick.” After the hanging, Walter’s brothers took the body away in a horsedrawn wagon. Some think that for a scoundrel like Walter Goodwin maybe one hanging is not enough. I hear rumors he might be hanged again in Mansfield in September, but we all know how unreliable rumors are. Joyce M. Tice is the creator of the TriCounties Genealogy and History Web site (www.joycetice.com/jmtindex. htm) and the new History Center. She can be reached at lookingback@ mountainhomemag.com.


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O U T d O OR S American Goldfinch

Saturday in the Park Hills Creek’s Glorious Bird Walks Photos and Story By Gary Tyson

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very spring for the past five years, the Tiadaghton Audubon Society has led bird walks sponsored by DCNR at Hills Creek State Park. Bird lovers and birders of all levels come to watch the spring migration as it progresses through April and May. As soon as the ice melts off the lake— usually around the first of April—the large waterfowl start to arrive. These are usually Canada geese, but there are often large flocks of tundra swans as well. Snow geese are more frequently seen flying over on their non-stop trip from the Chesapeake Bay to Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge in New York, but occasionally a few will stop by briefly in Tioga County’s various lakes. Bald eagles also appear shortly after the ice disappears. Then later in April large numbers of ducks and grebes visit the lake—buffleheads, ruddy ducks, ring-necked ducks, American widgeons, lesser scaup, all three species of mergansers, horned grebes, pied-billed grebes, and occasionally red-necked grebes. Common loons show up at this time too, and bird-walk participants are often treated to their hauntingly beautiful call. Walk leaders always have at least one high-powered spotting scope with them during this part of the season so everyone can get a closer look at whatever birds are out on the lake. The ospreys also return near the end of April. By the first of May, with the exception of wood ducks, common mergansers, mallards and Canada geese, most of the waterfowl have continued on north, but then the so-called perching birds start to arrive in numbers. Favor-

Tundra Swan

ites include Baltimore orioles, scarlet tanagers, eastern towhees, indigo buntings, hermit and wood thrushes (also with beautiful, melodic songs) and the many warbler species. Another favorite, eastern bluebirds—many of which have actually spent the winter with us—usually have built nests in the nest boxes and laid eggs by this time. This makes them an easy find for our enthusiastic birdwatchers, who carefully check out the several nest boxes near the park’s amphitheater and visitor center. The bluebirds always select at least one; the others are often occupied by house wrens and tree swallows, and sometimes red squirrels, who are not quite so welcome because of their destructive

Great Blue Heron

habits. Nevertheless, we let them keep a nest box or two. Although the weather can be windy and uncomfortably cold during the first couple of walks in April, it has its compensations in the species of birds seen. Some of these are relatively 25


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Barred Owl

rare for our area, such as long-tailed ducks (oldsquaws), white-winged scoters, and Bonaparte gulls. May, however, is another story. Its days are warm and often glorious, and it is hard to imagine a more pleasant way to spend a spring morning than to stroll through the park and listen to singing birds in their wildflower setting. The weekly bird walks take place every Saturday morning in April and May at 8:00 a.m. at Hills Creek State Park. Participants should bring binoculars and wear sturdy shoes and subdued clothing. Trails are easy, and the routes can be altered to meet special needs. No pre-registration or fees are required. The walks start at the park office. For more information, you can visit the TAS website at www.tiaudubon.org. Gary Tyson is webmaster and a bird guide for the Tiadaghton Audubon Society. He is a prizewinning photographer, and his bird photographs are used by many environmental organizations and educational institutions in the U.S. and Canada.

Great Blue Heron

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SHALE COUNTRY

Craving Crawfish

Gas Workers Import a Ton of Louisiana Boil By derek Witucki Photos by Elizabeth Young

S

eth Citron is the owner and operator of Crawdaddy’s On Site Catering based out of Lafayette, Louisiana. With the slogan, “No job too big or too far,” Seth found himself traveling 1,300 miles for three “boils” in Athens and Wellsboro, Pennsylvania. “We got a lot of hard working locals and a lot of Louisianans that can’t get this stuff up here, so I know they appreciated everything,” Seth said. “Logistically, it is a pretty hard thing, what we’ve done. We had another

30

event at lunch yesterday for another oil and gas company in Athens, Pennsylvania, before we came over here for a night boil. This will be our third boil in thirty hours,” Seth said. “I slept good last night. I’m going to sleep even better tonight.” Crawfish, crayfish, crawdads, or by any other name they are called, are crustaceans native to fresh water streams and ponds across the world. The Louisiana variety grow to be several times larger than the crawfish found in Pennsylvanian and New York

waters. Crawfish are often served with potatoes and corn on the cob, but mushrooms, onion, garlic, and other ingredients (like sausage and even hotdogs) can be thrown in the mix to taste. The extras absorb the seasonings, in this case a home blend specially made by Crawdaddy’s On Site Catering. Alongside the main dish, a dipping sauce made from mayonnaise, ketchup, and a few seasonings complements the crawfish and can help tone down the sometimes spicy Cajun seasonings


SHALE COUNTRY

used in the boil. Kris, a Louisianan from Acadia Parish who is working in Pennsylvania, says that the difference between crawfish from place to place is what is added into the seasonings and the mix. “Corn and potatoes, that’s a staple,” Kris said. “Some people add garlic, some people put in onions which they half. The onions will open right up [bloom] and you can eat them right there; it’s delicious. Mushrooms will soak up the seasonings, so those will be a little spicy.” Able to turn out 140 pounds of cooked crawfish every ten minutes, Crawdaddy’s served up about 950 pounds of rice-pond-raised crawfish in a single evening—enough to feed 125 people. Safety Management Systems (SMS) hosted two of the boils to show their appreciation to their partners working in the area. SMS is based out of Lafayette, where they came to

Owner Seth Citron piles ‘em high.

know Crawdaddy’s through their catering service. “There are a lot of oil and gas guys around here doing drilling, safety work, service work all over this area,” Seth said. “The cheapest thing about doing this is the crawfish, getting over here is where it gets expensive,” Seth said. “We left Sunday morning about 6 o’clock [four days ago]. And pretty much drove through from Lafayette.

The hardest thing to do in getting the crawfish up here is shelf life, taking care of them because they are somewhat fragile. You’ve got to keep them in a stagnant state, but you’ve got to keep them alive. So, we didn’t want to have too much time from getting them out of the ponds and to the boil.” The crawfish were kept at about See Crawdad on page 32

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Bryce Darnall (pictured twice) oversees the boiling process while Middlebury teenagers, Josh (left) and Ben (not pictured) assist in the loading and emptying of the boiler. Crawfish, like lobsters and crabs, are boiled alive because it is the most reliable way to keep them from spoiling (especially in southern heat), so as not to ruin the taste, texture, and safety of the meat.

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Crawdads continued from page 31

fifty degrees with copious amounts of ice and a refrigerated trailer. The crawfish they brought with them were from Acadia, a parish of Louisiana and the birthplace of Cajun culture, where they were raised in rice paddies between harvests. Between hungry glances at the not-yet-ready-to-serve crawfish, Louisianan and SMS employee Gerald explains, “Usually if you want to have a good time, it’s buy them live, then that way the family and everyone’s friends get together, drink a little beer, boil the crawfish.” Feeling culture shock? Not Gerald: “I have friends who come over to our state, who say ‘I want to see an alligator.’ A lot of people think we have alligators in our back yard. [Louisiana] is not as bad as it looks on TV. [But for me,] it’s good to see different parts of the country that I don’t normally see, and plus [Pennsylvania] is a such a historic place.” Derek is the managing editor for Mountain Home. His writing has previously appeared in The Wellsboro Gazette and the Williamsport Sun-Gazette. You can follow him on Twitter, @DWitucki.

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ATVʼS ARE RECOMMENDED ONLY FOR RIDERS 16 YEARS OF AGE & OLDER. ATVs CAN BE HAZARDOUS TO OPERATE. FOR YOUR SAFETY, BE RESPONSIBLE. READ OWNERʼS MANUAL. ALWAYS WEAR A HELMET, EYE PROTECTIONS & PROTECTIVE CLOTHING. BE CAREFUL ON DIFFICULT TERRAIN. ALL ATV RIDERS SHOULD TAKE A TRAINING COURSE (FREE FOR NEW BUYERS, ASK YOUR DEALER OR CALL ASI AT 800-887-2887). NEVER RIDE: UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF DRUGS OR ALCOHOL, ON PAVED SURFACES, ON PUBLIC ROADS, WITH PASSENGERS, AT EXCESSIVE SPEEDS. NO STUNT RIDING. RESPECT THE ENVIRONMENT WHEN RIDING. Foreman® is a trademark of Honda Motor Co., Ltd. ©2008 AHMC, Inc. (9/08) 08-0428

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L I F E Birch, Still

Distilling the Birch-oil Man’s Memories By Dave Milano

I

t was late summer, 1924. Ford Motor Company was counting its manufactured automobiles in the millions, Calvin Coolidge was preparing a campaign for the presidency, Little Orphan Annie had just debuted in the New York Daily News, and in a tiny house down in the bottom of the Pine Creek Gorge, Llewellyn Butler was born into a lumberman’s life, in the little logging village of Tiadaghton, Pennsylvania. Llewellyn’s father, Orville, was working then for Callahan Brothers Sawmill, a very modest operation targeting small-diameter trees—the only ones left after the big logging

companies had scraped the hills and valleys nearly bare, then packed up and moved on. “Dad made two-byfours,” Llewellyn says. It didn’t last long. By the time Llewellyn was a year old the family had moved out of Tiadaghton to the relative high ground of nearby Draper, where Orville continued to work for the Callahan Brothers, mostly running their new, portable saw mill, cutting whatever could bring a fair price, and sometimes doing whatever work was available on the brothers’ farmsteads. It was the life of a Pennsylvania logger and lumberman—continual hardscrabble efforts to scratch a living from the forest, interrupted here and there by the seemingly oblique machinations of government and big industry. The pattern would persist for Orville’s entire life, and later for Llewellyn’s as well. They would work in the forest when they could, take jobs in the coal mines or the factories when they had to, or, as in Llewellyn’s case, disappear for a few years to fight a war. But the forest was what they always knew best, and it was always home. If

there was a way to make a living in the woods, they figured out how to do it. And that is how Orville Butler, his brother Clayton, and son Llewellyn, came to find uncommon livelihoods in the common Pennsylvania hardwood betula lenta, the Black Birch. For three decades, from 1942 to 1972, using homemade stills plunked deep in the woods, the Butlers extracted jug after jug of birch oil from the spicy trees, selling the golden hot medicinal fluid to essential-oil dealers in New York City, who then resold it to manufacturers for everything from flavorings to anti-inflammatory liniments for sore muscles and joints. There were more than a few birch stills operating in northern

35


Pennsylvania in those days. Distillers would search out a spot with a good water source and plenty of high-quality birch trees nearby (often land owned by the State, which collected fifty cents each time a still was filled with birch). Two hundred cubic feet of birch, seventy-five cubic feet of firewood, and forty-eight hours of distilling would produce four to eight pounds of pure birch oil. Running two stills seven days a week, and with oil going for $12.00 a pound, it was good business, and it sustained the Butlers for decades, until scientists discovered how to make the essential ingredient in the essential oil—methyl salicylate—by esterifying salicylic acid with methanol. “The market for birch oil just went away,” says Llewellyn, “and that

was that.” The Butlers shut down their stills in 1973 and turned to selling logs to the pulpwood plants, for paper towels and toilet paper. The Butler’s last still sits now behind Llewellyn’s home in Morris, Pennsylvania, its parts gradually decomposing, its firebox converted to a root cellar, full of Llewellyn’s potatoes. And while it looks like the days of birch oil distilling are probably gone for good, a clever, energetic young person might just be able to get the old still up and running again. And if so, there happens to be an old birch-oil man in Morris who would be willing to move his potatoes, and help figure out again how to make a living from the forest...

Dave Milano is a frequent contributor to Mountain Home

Llewellyn at the still today; his father Orville and uncle Clayton

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We’re not just constructing a new building, we’re bringing improved access to a host of primary and specialty healthcare services. This summer, residents of Bradford County and the northern tier of Pennsylvania can enjoy our new 13,000 square-foot medical building in Troy. Track our progress today at Facebook.com/AMSTroy

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37


Me n ta l he a lt h

Q A

SPECIAL AdVERTISING SECTION

: How does mental health affect physical health?

James E. Manning IV, MD

Medical Director of LBH Outpatient services

e D ucat I on B.s. in Biology from university of Virginia Medical college of Virginia r e s ID e ncy McV hospitals ce rt If Icat Ion s american Board of Psychiatry and neurology

Kathryn Brodrick, ACSW, BCD, LCSW Program Director for LBH Outpatient Services

e D ucat I on: B.a. in liberal arts, social science from Mansfield University M.s. in social service from Boston university, school of social Work c e rtIf I cat Ion s : licensed clinical social Worker Board certified Diplomat in clinical social Work Academy of Certified Social Workers

Gerald H. Cerrone, Ph.D.

Clinical Psychologist, Clinical Supervisor

38

e D ucat I on: B.a. in Psychology from Washington & Jefferson College M.a. in clinical Psychology from loyola university Ph.D. in clinical Psychology from union Institute and university

: Mental health is integral to our overall health. It’s important to remember the mind is a part of the body that needs to be cared for just like the liver or heart, and mental health conditions should be taken as seriously as any other medical condition. Anyone can be susceptible to mental health problems, especially when experiencing a difficult new life change such as a serious illness, job loss, or traumatic event. Up to 85% of physician visits involve problems with a significant psychological component. Nearly 1 in 5 Americans will experience a mental health condition in any given year, and as many as 1 in 3 Americans will suffer from one during their lifetime. Common concerns include anxiety, depression, family or marital problems, workplace/school conflicts, adjusting to a dramatic lifestyle change, and trauma. Our mental health is determined by many variables, including genetics, other medical conditions, exposure to stress/trauma, and the adequacy of support systems. Advanced neuroscience studies reveal that the brain’s integration of thought, emotion, and behavior determines and affects overall physical health. Psychological distress can negatively impact and modify immune response. Negative thoughts, attitudes, and emotions can also accelerate the onset of heart disease and impede health improvements. LHS health professionals recognize the important connection between mental and physical health. In 1996, the Laurel Health Centers (LHCs) partnered with Laurel Behavioral Health to offer counseling services. Laurel Health System has continued to expand its behavioral health services, currently offering outpatient services to people of all ages at Soldiers + Sailors Memorial Hospital and the Wellsboro, Elkland, Mansfield, Blossburg, and Lawrenceville LHCs. At the LHCs, a team of healthcare professionals focuses on caring for the whole person. Physicians, a psychiatrist, a psychologist, social workers, nurses, physician’s assistants, and a dietician work in tandem to diagnose and treat physical and psychological health problems Laurel Behavioral Health (LBH) providers treat mental health conditions through a variety of therapeutic approaches. Patient treatment varies for each individual’s needs, but every patient’s comfort and privacy are top priority. Discreet and confidential, LBH outpatient services are offered at multiple locations so patients can attend whichever location they find most comfortable and convenient. The services are also discounted to those qualifying for the sliding free program. Appointments can be made through referral by a physician or made directly by calling LBH’s Outpatient Program. For more information, or to set up an appointment, call (570) 723–0620.

“It’s important to remember the mind is a part of the body that needs to be cared for just like the heart or liver.”


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: Peripheral vascular disease (PVD) is a narrowing of the peripheral arteries, most commonly in the arteries of the pelvis and legs. All three of these conditions are caused by atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) and result in narrowed or blocked arteries in various critical regions of the body. The risk factors for PVD are smoking, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, diabetes, poor exercise and diet, obesity and a family history of the disease. It usually takes several years for the symptoms of PVD to appear. The symptoms generally begin when people are in their 50s or older and usually, by the time the symptoms start, the PVD is well established. The most common symptom of PVD is a painful muscle cramping in the legs, usually in the calf muscles, when walking, climbing stairs or exercising. The pain usually goes away when you stop exercising. If there’s a blood-flow blockage due to plaque buildup, the muscles won’t get enough blood during exercise to meet the needs. The “crampy” pain is the muscles’ way of warning the body that it isn’t receiving enough blood during exercise to meet the increased demand. Many people with PVD have no symptoms or mistake their symptoms for something else. If PVD has been left untreated, it can progress to more serious problems, including foot or toe wounds that won’t heal or gangrene that may ultimately require an amputation. Treatment at Guthrie is based on how bad the symptoms are. If a patient has symptoms, we have the patient make lifestyle changes, like quitting smoking, exercising more, eating healthier and losing weight. Many patients require medications to help control blood pressure and cholesterol in order to prevent any further progression of the disease. Lastly, there is a lifetime process of monitoring the patient to make sure the PVD isn’t progressing. It’s important to know that nothing makes the disease go away; the goal is to stop the

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progression of the disease in its tracks and to minimize its effect on a patient’s lifestyle. If lifestyle changes and medical management don’t prevent the progression of the disease, Guthrie vascular surgeons offer minimally invasive procedures, such as angioplasty or stent placement to improve the blood flow and relieve symptoms. If there’s a portion of artery that’s completely blocked and you’re having severe symptoms, bypass surgery may be necessary. All of these procedures are available at Guthrie’s Robert Packer Hospital in Sayre, Pa., but appointments can be made in any of our six convenient locations, including Big Flats, Corning, Ithaca, Sayre and Towanda. Our new location in Wellsboro will be opening late spring. 39


PhysIcal theraPIsts

Chris D. Jones, PT, DPT, OCS, SCS e D ucat I o n Masters Degree in Physical therapy university of Delaware Doctor of Physical therapy arcadia university re s IDe n c y sports Physical therapy university of Delaware c e rtIf I c at I o n Board Certified by the American Board of Physical therapy specialists as a specialist in sports Physical therapy; Board Certified by the American Board of Physical therapy specialists as a specialist in orthopedic Physical therapy

Marc Riley, PT, OCS, ATC, CSCS e D ucat I o n Bachelors degree in athletic training/ exercise science, Ithaca college Masters Degree in Physical therapy gannon university c e rtIf I c at I o n Certified Strength and Conditioning specialist, national strength and conditioning Association; Board Certified by the American Board of Physical therapy specialists as a specialist in orthopedic Physical Therapy; Level 2 Medical Certification through the titleist Performance Institute f e lloW s h I P orthopedic Manual Physical therapy, Daemen college 40

Q A

SPECIAL AdVERTISING SECTION

: What is lymphedema?

: The lymphatic system is responsible for removal of fluid, transporting white blood cells, and leading the immune response in the body. Therefore, lymphedema is the accumulation of this protein-rich fluid in the interstitium (between cells in the tissue); it causes chronic inflammation, swelling, and fibrosis/hardening of the skin in the affected tissues, i.e. persistent swelling of a body part, such as the arms, legs, and even the trunk/breast. There are two types of lymphedema: primary (lymph vessels are missing or impaired) and secondary (there is damage to or lymph nodes removed). Primary lymphedema affects women more than men and is a developmental issue that can occur with or without family history. It can present at birth or occur spontaneously throughout the life cycle without previous symptoms. Primary lymphedema generally occurs in lower extremities more than upper extremities, most commonly on one side. Secondary lymphedema, or acquired lymphedema, results from surgery, radiation, infection or trauma. Specific surgeries, such as mastectomies/ lumpectomies, may remove lymph nodes in addition to cancerous tissues increasing the risk of developing lymphedema, whether immediately post-operatively, or weeks, months, even years later. Symptoms of lymphedema most often include a full or tight sensation in the limb(s), a feeling of heaviness in the extremity/region, which impact daily tasks. If you notice persistent swelling, seek immediate medical advice as early diagnosis and treatment will improve both the prognosis and condition. Lymphedema is categorized in stages from 0 to 3, without symptoms to severe lymphedema. Each stage is a progression of the Allison Patt, PT CLT, previous which results in an increase a physical therapist at in swelling and changes in skin Elite Therapy, PC in Mansfield PA utilizing integrity. It is common for people manual lymphatic with lymphedema to develop an treatment to address lymphedema. Allison infection called Cellulitis due to poor is certified in Complete lymphatic drainage, allowing bacteria Decongestive Therapy (CDT) and is accepting to culture in this accumulation of new referrals for protein-rich fluid. Redness, warmth, the treatment of lymphedema. CDT has pain, swelling, tenderness, and fever been proven to be the are all possible signs of this infection. most effective treatment for lymphedema. Treatment for lymphedema depends on the cause, stage, and severity, as well as past medical history. Complete Decongestive Therapy (CDT) was developed over many years, but is first credited to Alexander V. Winiwarter in 1848 who started therapy with gentle massage and exercise. Throughout the 1900’s CDT has existed in various forms, but the first full CDT treatment was not performed until the 1950’s by G. Keith Stillwell at the Mayo Clinic. Presently, there are only 2 lymphedema therapists in Tioga County, one of which is practicing at Elite Therapy in Mansfield. To become a lymphedema therapist, the clinician must attend/complete a 135 hour accredited course to better understand the lymphatic system as well as principles of treatment listed next. Today, CDT consists of: Manual lymphatic drainage (MLD), Compression bandaging, proper skin care, compression garments, exercises, and instruction of self-manual lymphatic drainage, bandaging and measurements. MLD is a gentle massage used to promote the lymphatic activity and to increase reabsorption of fluid. Bandaging prevents reaccumulation of fluid and aids to reduce the hardening effect of fluid. Exercises with bandages aids to reduce swelling by creating a muscle pump. Skin care is important for reducing risk of infection and allows treatment to continue. CPT, however, does have contraindications that may eliminate possible treatment; however, your healthcare provider should provide further information. CDT is intensive, and treatment compliance is critical both in the clinic and at home. o ffI c e: 285 south Main street Mansfield, PA 16933 (570) 662-1400


LIFE

The Better World

Hallelujah

By John & Lynne Diamond-Nigh

S

ometimes all you want to do is sit with an old friend across mugs of Belgian ale and grit your brain on the darkest conundrums of life. At other times, all you want is unalloyed joy. A wordless tide of well-being. No precepts, no morals, no thinking, just bliss. We had hardly been seated and served our drinks when, streaming toward us, came a line of statuesque young men, walking with that pride of gait given only to Texans and athletes. “Either,” I said to Lynne, “this is the Cambridge debating club, or the Italian national soccer team, or Greek gods in training. Apollo-ettes.” Now I’m rarely gobsmacked, but this came close, this dazzling stream of Michelangelesque beauty. Quickly, the twenty or so young men were seated near us. No unruliness; nothing of the sort. Instead, our neighbors in their casual blazers sat like choir boys. A mellow méringue of chit-chat and joshing floated over their tables. To ensure good conduct, an older, lion-maned man strolled among them, keeping a shrewd, affectionate eye. One of the waitresses, losing her sequence of orders, called out, “Llasagna for Lewis!.” Well, that’s all it took. Almost at once, at a table near us, in rough musical unison began “lew . . .” At an adjacent table, two notes up, “loooooou” and so on up the scale in remarkable harmony. All were singing, laughing. “Lynne,” I said, “I know what these guys

are. They’re a Welsh miner’s choir some fairy godmother turned into a hockey team.” In a trice, my own traveling days came back to me as the goalkeeper on what was, one fine year, an unbeatable high school soccer team, and I thought to myself with an A. E. Housman sort of nostalgia, ah, good lads, enjoy this golden mirthful camaraderie. It won’t come round many more times in life. And neither do the unexpected moments of joy that arise out of the pure randomness of everyday life. Though they remain with us longer—etched into our memories of times and places—moments like these are a rare treat. “. . . lllooooo. . . WISS.” Lynne looked at me with gimlet curiosity, “Sweetheart, you have tears in your eyes.” Perhaps I did. It was exactly the hallelujah I needed. As we left the restaurant, a fierce wind was springing up, so strong it took us both to crank open the door against it, provoking another reminiscence. When Lynne grew up on Long Island, the wind was often stronger even than this. “I loved it,” Lynne said, her own nostalgic gleam in her eye. “I would dash out into the yard, throw back my head and twirl in the wind like a whirling dervish.” I nod toward a patch of grass. As I take in every detail, Lynne throws up her lovely arms and spins, for the joy of it, a perfect pirouette.

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John writes about art and design. Visit John’s work on Facebook at John DiamondNigh, Artist. Lynne’s Web site, aciviltongue.com, is dedicated to civility studies.

41


LIFE

42


ARTS & LEISURE Still Stilling After All These Years By Gayle Morrow

“I

t was my memories and Sam’s wantto.” That’s Grant “Skip” Cavanaugh’s in-a-nutshell description of how he and Sam Cooke built a new, working, birch oil still at the Lumbermen’s Museum in Potter County. On a sunny morning in mid-March the still had its first fire and, to the delight of its creators and a couple of visitors, it wasn’t too long before the redolence of birch oil (think wintergreen) was wafting through the air. “It’s just like the old ones,” said Llewellyn Butler, one of just a few birch still gurus left in the area. “That’s what Skip wanted. It’s just like his dad’s.” Cavanaugh, a Stokesdale resident, explained that his father, also named Grant, built and ran birch stills in Tioga County in the years before and after World War II. The younger Grant was his dad’s best helper. “His last still was in Scotch Pine Hollow (near Asaph),” said Cavanaugh. “I was around these things all the time.” Cooke, who lives near Mansfield, is recently retired from the Bureau of Forestry, and serves as a member of the museum’s board of directors. He explained that there was some funding available to

him through the Bureau, and that there were people (including himself and Cavanaugh) who were interested in the oldfashioned art of birch oil steam distillation. The museum was receptive to the idea of making a working still on the premises and so, with “the will and the means,” the project got underway. The new old still is called a cord still as it holds, you guessed it, a cord of birch wood, plus the required bundles of birch branches. This one is on stilts, though in the old days that was not the case, and made from hemlock planks in the same “groove and spline” method used for shipbuilding. It sports copper piping (any metal birch oil comes in contact with has to be copper as other metals will leach into the oil), a stone fire pit, a copper pan, and a glass decanter into which the finished product drips. That is only after a gentle, forty-eight-hour cook, a couple of trips through copper coils, and some serious condensation. “You could make whisky,” mused Butler, watching the steam roll out of the still. “It’s all the same process—steam

distillation. It’s all about history. It was something farmers could do in the winter (to make money).” The plan, at this juncture, is to connect with a niche market, sell the oil, and put some money back into the Lumbermen’s Museum. The benefits of birch oil are many, and though commercial users have long since made the switch to a synthetic product, there is, as is often the case, just something a little more genuine about the real deal. “Dad had customers, one with arthritic knees,” Cavanaugh recalled. “After a year (of using birch oil liniment) he walked in with no crutches. Whether he just believed it worked, or it did—it did.” See the birch still in operation at the Bark Peelers’ Convention.

43


r e v o c s i D

Events

re 6th-8th A New Level of AdventuHyner HangApril Gliding Club April 21st Hyner View Trail Challenge & Hyner Ultra Challenge 50K April 30th - May 5th Mill Hall Kiwanis Outdoor Show & Carnival May 4th Jersey Shore Hospital 18th Annual Golf Classic May 6th Sentimental Journey Fly-in Breakfast May 16th Clinton County Economic Partnership EXPO 2012 May 19th International Learn to Fly Day May 19th-20th Hyner Hang Gliding Club Memorial Day Fly-in

Clinton County ! Pennsylvania in

1-888-388-6991 • Email: tourism@KCnet.org 212 North Jay Street • PO Box 506 • Lock Haven, PA 17745

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The Landing Strip Family Restaurant

44


Great Place continued from page 13

That’s why Mountain Home exists, simply as a place on the back of the mountain where we can all share our stories, our natural and beautiful story, our sometimes tragic and always human song. There never has been and never will be more powerful content. I ’m j u s t s a y i n’ ; y o u , our readers and writers and photographers (who are one and the same) have proved it with your brilliant storytelling, and faithful reading, year after year. You’ve proved it with stories by skilled journalists and amateurs, freelancers, untrained writers, by coffee baristas and yoga practitioners, college professors, college students, high school students, hunters, fishermen, factory workers, pastors, frustrated lawyers, PhDs, psychics, a Presbyterian pastor communing with the dead, a ninety-year-old women who pecks away on a typewriter and outwrites us all—all better writers, funnier, more soulful, better narrative storytellers, so it seems, than professional city journalists. It’s a radical new form of citizen journalism you’ve invented, writing the literature of a whole community. You’ve told our stories with such love and passion that the sum of it seems more targeted, more finely “niched,” a closer strike to the heart, than even big-budget publications aimed at strictly Jews or strictly businessmen. Mountain Home’s niche is all of us, the vast Twin Tiers of New York and Pennsylvania, where the newspapers are dying and we’re booming, because of you. The magazine is what the smart money says can’t exist anymore, a general interest publication, because the smart money says that in this fractured, selfish

Sarah Wagaman

Donald Gilliland

Located on the DownTown Historic Square Just minutes from the scenic Pennsylvania Grand Canyon and the beautiful Pine Creek Rails to Trails hike & bike riverside trail!

Thomas Putnam

Three Charles Street Wellsboro, Pennsylvania 16901

1-800-661-3581 or 607-426-5898

info@wellsboroinnonthegreen.com

Tucker Worthington

See Great Place on page 48 45


THE 20

TH

ANNUAL

BLOSSBURG COAL

Celebrating the history and heritage of the mining

industry in Blossburg and the surrounding communities.

I

n 1792 coal was discovered in the Blossburg area during the building of the Williamson Road. The coal quickly became a valuable resource that brought people to the area to work in the coal mines, and many of the towns in our area were created because of the mining that took place. Blossburg was home to William B. Wilson, the first US Secretary of Labor. This man helped shape the United States, advocating eight-hour workdays, strong unions, workers compensation, child labor laws, and workplace safety during his years of labor activism and political influence. After Wilson’s death in 1934 the family farm was sold to the American Legion Post No. 572 of Blossburg. The Legion Post is still located there today. Although mining no longer takes place in the area, we honor our past with the annual Coal Festival. The first Coal Festival was held Memorial Day weekend in 1993, 201 years after coal was discovered in Blossburg. The event continues to be held on Memorial Day weekend each year. We invite you, your family, and friends to help us celebrate.

46

MAY

ENTERTAINMENT

Most Talent on Stage are local performers • CARNIVAL & COAL MUSEUM

• FOOD AND FUN FOR ALL! WEDNESDAY May 23 • Jay Smar & band – 2 Shows - 6 PM THURSDAY May 24 • WARD/HMAC Family Night • North Penn Jazz Band - 6:00 p.m. • Black light show, Adam Kopp 8 p.m. FRIDAY May 25 • Royalty Pageant, sponsored by C & N Bank - 6:00 p .m. • Michelle Clark 2 shows 7pm SATURDAY May 26 • Gates open at 8:00 a.m. • 5k race • Horseshoe Tournament & Other Entertainment • Antique snowmobile show • Car Show registration on Island Park starting at 9:30 a.m. Awards at 3:30 p.m. • 6th Annual Coal Run - Registration at Bear A Main Street at 9:30 a.m. • Parade - 11:00 a.m. • Midway opens at Noon. • Denny Huber - 12:30 p.m. & 1:30 p.m. • Karate Demonstration - 1:00 p.m. • Erie Canal Cloggers – 2:00 p.m. & 4:00 p.m. • Patrick Cole & Band - 6:00 p.m. and 7: 45 • Raffle Drawing - 7:30 p.m. • AREA’S LARGEST FIREWORKS DISPLAY -Starting at dusk


FESTIVAL

23-26

Island Park, Blossburg, PA

ADMISSION

All visitors must purchase a $3.00 pin that is good for all four days of the festival and all events held at the Coal Festival inBlossburg. Pinsare available to be purchased in advance at First Citizens National Bank Blossburg, Bloss Hardware, Blossburg Borough office, and Momma’s Restaurant.

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Indigo

icl

For more Information call 570-638-3313 or visit www.blossburgcoalfestival.org

www.matthewsmotorcompany.com Matthews Motor Company is a family owned and operated full service car dealership. We have an on-site NAPA Service Center and a AAA Approved Body Shop. We also have the largest Car Rental Fleet in Tioga County. County. 47


Great Place continued from page 45

world there is no higher story that binds us all. You’re a revolution in the making, a glimmering outline in words and image of the universal human spirit, the stuff the best stories are made of, and Teresa and I bow low and lift our glasses high to you. Here’s to you once again, Matt Connor of Lock Haven, our former managing editor who died in February at age forty-six. A gifted author and storyteller who won four Keystone awards for his writing in Mountain Home, he posthumously shared a fifth prize, a First Place for Headline Writing. Matt wrote the headline himself, “Well Ahead of His Time,” on the last major story he wrote for us before he became too sick, his fine cover story on 1950s Clinton County Marcellus Shale wildcatter Dorcie Calhoun.

Holly Howell

Amanda Doan Butler

Visit us for the Best!

Fabulous Fun Toys • Beautiful Baby Clothing Dancewear • Great Gifts for Kids of All Ages

Absolutely Absolutely Worth Worth the the Trip! Trip!

Sarah Bull

Keystone Press Awards First Place, Best Niche Publication in Pennsylvania, 2012, Mountain Home staff. Second Place, Column, Thomas Putnam, “A Nurse: Night;” “Lost in Space,” “Listen Up!” Honorable Mention, Column, Holly Howell, “Wines Worth Toasting;” “Rat Meets Red,” “A Season of Remembrance.” First Place, Sports Story, Dawn Bilder, “Hit and Miss Hanna.” Honorable Mention, Sports Story, Sarah Bull, “The Road All Runners Come.” First Place, Sports/Outdoor Column, Fred Metarko, “Divine Intervention?”, “Plying the Waters,” “Fishy Looking.” Second Place, Feature Story, Donald Gilliland, “The Long Road Home.” Second Place, Personality Profile, Michael Capuzzo, “David vs. Goliath.” First Place, Feature Photo, Ken Meyer, “Now and Then.” Second Place, Feature Photo, Sarah Wagaman, “Town in a Tuba.” Honorable Mention, Front Page Design, Tucker Worthington, “Not So Fast, Romeo!”; “Back to the Future; “One Hell of a Life.” Honorable Mention, Page Design, Amanda Doan Butler, “Fall in Love.” First Place, Headline Writing, Mountain Home Staff, “Well Ahead of His Time;” “Webster Defines Natural;” “Dam Pine Creek!!!”

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86 W. Market St., Corning NY www.imaginethatkids.com


Welcome to Corning’s Gaffer District

flameworking competition illuminated sculpture at night

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We carry an array of products to compliment your hair care and beauty needs.

www.glassfest.org, or call 607.937.6292

Photos/ M. Burroughs/ A.D.Wheeler/ T. Freeland

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Puff the Magic Chocolate Story and Photos by Becca Ostrom

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he journey began twenty-two years ago with a New York City trade show. Bernie Katz had his own business and went to these trade shows often to find new ways to appeal to his customers. His wife Bonnie would join him to see what was new in the industry. During one fateful trade show, Bonnie found the one thing that would lead her to a life of fulfillment. She watched a man create stuffed balloon creations. For two days she admired his work and ultimately knew this was what she wanted to do. Shortly after, Bernie purchased the equipment (and he says she has yet to pay her back!) to help her begin her small business at the Selinsgrove Mall. After being there for a short while, she moved her business, B.K. Puff & Stuff, to the Lycoming Mall. Bonnie’s business grew and so did her dreams. She

knew that she needed to relocate her business to respond to its increase in business. Bonnie recalled being warned by others, “People said that I would struggle. I thought people would know my business, but I was defined by the ‘mall.’” Worries aside, Bonnie made the transition from the mall to downtown Third Street in Williamsport. The balloon business began to struggle, so Bonnie and Bernie began to add to their inventory. “More and more requests came in for chocolate,” Bonnie commented, “so I found equipment to begin doing hand packaged chocolate. It was a dying style in our fast-paced society.” Bonnie slowly let go of the balloon industry and made her way to Pine Street. With the move When it comes to chocolate, Bernie and she made another big change to her Bonnie are young at heart. They take their business, B. K. Puff & Stuff was re- business in stride while sharing the sweets. named Le Chocolat. See Le Chocolat on page 52

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We Proudly Serve Starbucks速 coffee

WWW.CAFE1905.COM

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Le Chocolat Continued from page 50

Bonnie and Bernie Katz are best friends who share the common goal of bringing a smile to every customer who comes through their door. The atmosphere they have created will leave anyone who dreams of Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory feeling they have entered his secret stash. The chocolate case lines half of the wall with imported chocolates. The flavors range from the traditional bon bon to the unique flavors of sea salt truffles, amaretto, strawberry cheesecake, and Bonnie’s favorite—at least for the moment—buttercream. The store is filled with unique gifts and hand-crafted creations: jewelry, hand-made glass work, and gag gifts which are Bernie’s specialty. Bonnie is the sweetheart of the shop. She will engage you with conversation and make sure you get all the chocolate you could possibly handle. Bernie is the jokester. He is always willing to tell, hear, or be the joke in any conversation. These two individuals will change the way you purchase your sweet treats! “I love the people, love my product, and love that there is always something new,” Bonnie said as she waited on customers. “There is always something new in chocolate, whether it is how it is presented, molded, or what health kick is tagged along with 52

it. Didn’t you know that dark chocolate is really good for you? Eat more then!” Bonnie is willing to give anyone the encouragement they need to indulge in something as delicious as chocolate. Being around for twenty-two years means you see a cycle of patrons who come through. “Parents who I used to see bring in their children every week years ago, now are bringing in their grandchildren as well as their grown children! You know you are doing something right if you get to see generations grow with your business.” Bonnie and Bernie know the costs of being a business owner and the time and sacrifice that must go into being a successful one. “I don’t always like what my customers like. I have some chocolates that come in and I try and think that I purchased a dud, but low and behold! I am making a special order for that chocolate because I sold out of it so quickly! A good entrepreneur knows that you have to love what you do, but more importantly love your customer. When you keep your priorities like that, you aren’t going to be afraid of change and if anything, you are going to jump on the opportunity.” As Bonnie hands chocolate to a customer she jokes and says, “I started out working for Bernie when he owned his own business. I wanted to get away from his business, but here he is! We have a tendency to follow one another, I guess we can’t seem to get enough of each other!” This store offers more than delicious chocolate, it offers the community the chance to be a kid again, to eagerly wait your turn and choose your own box of chocolates and to see that a love story can begin and grow with a box of chocolates. Mountain Home contributing writer Becca Ostrom is a barista at Night and Day Coffee Café in Mansfield.


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My Favorite Things

An Offer You Can’t Refuse By Michael Capuzzo

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t was a Tuesday night, Italian Night at Lamb’s Creek Food & Spirits in Mansfield, and I was confused. It was fifteen dollars for two entrees, two salads, and an appetizer. “Fifteen dollars apiece?” I asked the waitress. “No. Fifteen dollars for two.” “Wow,” I said, or something like it. The good news got only better as the entrees arrived—a hearty bowl of penne Bolognese for Teresa, and a sumptuous Spaghetti alla Carbonara for me, both dishes served with a hunk of garlic bread. The small salads were just adequate, yet seemed something-to-write-home-about because of the

discount. One appetizer to share comes with the deal, but the fried calamari was ample for two, and in fact some of the plumpest, juiciest calamari either of us have tasted. The special includes choices of three entrees, usually two pasta dishes and a personal pizza eight inches across, and three appetizers: Bruschetta, mozzarella sticks, or the calamari. A $6 glass of red wine—a Beringer Stone Cellars Cabernet Savignon— floats to the table on Italian Night for $3.50 a glass, and as a wag once said, you’d be a fool not to. Lambs Creek Food & Spirits, 200 Gateway Dr., Mansfield, PA. For information or reservations, call (570) 662-3222 or visit www.lambscreek.com.

Photo by Brandon Clark 53


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Enjoy the region’s comprehensive restaurant listings. From our Finger Lakes wineries to Williamsport’s good eats to the fertile Pennsylvania heartland in between, we’re famous for our regional specialties and love to eat. For listing information please email Dawn Bilder at dawnb@ mountainhomemag.com or call (570) 724-3838. Bon appetit!

PEnnSYLvAniA Bradford County Canton KELLEY’S CREEK SIDE RESTAURANT Kelley’s offers $4 breakfast and $6 lunch specials every day, and they are open for dinner Wed-Sun. They specialize in home-style cooking like their prime rib and serve homemade desserts like chocolate peanut butter pie and muffins. (570) 6734545, 1026 Springbrook Dr, www. urbanspoon.com

Lycoming County Trout Run

Texas Hots Burgers Cheesesteaks Smoked BBQ Sandwiches Area’s Best Fried Chicken Soft & Hard Ice Cream Italian Ice And MORE!

Monday - Sunday 11am -10pm 132 Tioga Street Wellsboro, PA 16901 570-724-4450

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

We produce and sell high quality, natural honey products and much more. Come take a tour of our facility! Reservations are recommended for large groups. Call for details.

Monday-Friday 8a.m. - 5p.m. Saturday 8a.m. - 1p.m.

www.draperbee.com

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32 Avonlea Lane Millerton, PA 16936

800-233-4273 or 570-537-2381

Tioga County Blossburg MOMMA’S Momma’s offers a full menu and specializes in homestyle cooking. They have daily specials and the area’s best baby back ribs on Saturdays. Steak night is on Thursdays. They also cater to rigs. (570) 638-0270, 102 Granger St.

Liberty BLOCKHOUSE CAFÉ Blockhouse Café is open for breakfast and lunch and on Friday nights, serving homemade and home-style meals, including desserts. it’s a unique café with good food, great company, and a place where you always get your money’s worth. (570) 324-2041, 31 Willow St. THE LANDING STRIP FAMILY RESTAURANT The Landing Strip offers home cooked foods, daily specials, homemade desserts, a clean, friendly atmosphere, on or off premises catering, and has a banquet or large party area. Easy on/off Route 15. (570) 324-2436, Routes 15 & 414 junction.

Mansfield

BITTNER’S GENERAL STORE Hot and cold 18” subs, specialties are italian and cheese steak. Pizzas, homemade salads, pastas, and hot foods. Fresh meats, cold cuts, and our own lean ground hamburger. Camping supplies and propane. (570) 998-8500, located at the junction of Rt. 14 and Rt. 15 in Trout Run, PA, bittnersinc@aol. com.

EDDIE’S RESTAURANT Eddie’s offers home-style cooking with homemade daily specials. Their specialties include hot roast beef sandwiches and chicken & biscuits, both served with real mashed potatoes. They have homemade pies and serve breakfast, lunch, and dinner. (570) 662-2972, 2103 S. Main St.

FRY BROS. TURKEY RANCH Original turkey dinners & complete menu. Established business since 1886. Restaurant and convenience store. At the top of Steam valley Mountain, elevation 1,704 ft. Open daily for breakfast, lunch, & dinner. Gifts and souvenirs. 27 Rt. 184 Hwy, (570) 998-9400.

LAMBS CREEK FOOD & SPIRITS Lambs Creek offers sophisticated, down-home cooking seven days a week. Every Tuesday there’s an italian night speciai. Beautiful terrace overlooks gorgeous mountains. (570) 662-3222, 200 Gateway Dr, Mansfield, PA 16933, www.lambscreek.com

STEAM VALLEY RESTAURANT Steam valley offers good home cooking and daily specials. it’s open 7 days of the week. Gas, diesel, and convenience store coming soon! (570) 998-2559, 169 Rt. 14 Hwy, P.O. Box 157, Junction Route 14 & 15.

PAPA V’S PIZZERIA & RESTAURANT Papa v’s offers a wide variety of hand tossed new York Style thin-crust pizza, a multitude of hot and cold sandwiches, fresh ½ pound Angus burgers, and delicious homemade italian dishes for lunch and dinner. 12 N. Main St, (570) 662-2651, www.papavpizzeria. com.

Williamsport WEGMAN’S Wegman’s Market Café features freshly-made foods ranging from quick grabs like pizza, subs, and Asian classics to comfort-food favorites, salads, and sandwiches. Come try our family-friendly foods at budget-friendly prices. 201 William St, (570) 320-8778, wegmans.com.

To advertise in the food section call 570-724-3838


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WREN’S NEST Wren’s nest has live music every Wed. night from 6-9. Specialties include crab cakes, steaks, and pastas. They make homemade desserts including lemon meringue ice cream pie and crème brule (sampler). (570) 662-1093, 102 West Wellsboro St, www.wrensnestpa.com. YORKHOLO BREWING CO. Offers a selection of dishes made up of local ingredients paired with Yorkholo’s own fresh brewed beer, including “Pine Creek” Raspberry Wheat, “Summer Love” Summer Ale, “Mountaineer” i.P.A, “Bungy” Blonde Ale, and 2 rotating selections. (570) 662-0241, 19 N Main St, www.yorkholobrewing.com.

Mansfield Fast Food MCDONALDS (570) 662-7077, 120 n Main St. WENDY’S (570) 662-7511, 1580 S Main St. KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN (570) 662-2558, 1320 S Main St.

of fine steaks, seafood, pasta, gourmet sandwiches, fresh burgers, desserts. Breakfast, lunch, dinner, and Sunday brunch. (570) 724-2111, 62 Main St, www. pennwells.com. THE NATIVE BAGEL The native Bagel offers bagels made fresh daily, gourmet coffee, deli sandwiches, soups and salads, and homemade desserts. Bagels are mixed, kneaded, rolled, boiled, and baked onsite. All soups, breads, and baked items are “made from scratch.” 1 Central Ave, (570) 724-0900, www.nativebagel.com. PAG-O-MAR Pag-O-Mar offers subs, salads, and deli sandwiches at the head of the Wellsboro Junction Rail Trail, across from the Tioga Central tour train station. They also offer soft custard and Hershey’s hard ice cream. And there’s a farmer’s market in season. (570) 724-3333, 222 Butler Rd. (just past junction of Rts. 6 & 287). SUBWAY “Eat Fresh.” (570) 724-1424, 63 Main St, www.acornmarkets.com.

Morris

THE STEAK HOUSE The Steak House has been serving the finest steaks and seafood since 1957. Whether you want a black angus hamburger or a cold water lobster tail, there’s something for the whole family in a true Wellsboro atmosphere. 29 Main St, (570) 724-9092, www.thesteakhouse. com.

BABB’S CREEK INN & PUB Babb’s Creek inn & Pub specializes in Seafood and Prime Rib, which is available every night, except Tuesdays when the restaurant is closed. Reservations are appreciated for parties of 8 or more. Located at the intersection of Rtes. 287 & 414, (570) 3536881, www.babbscreekinnandpub.com.

TERRY’S HOAGIES Terry’s Hoagies makes the best hoagies in town. They specialize in both hot and cold hoagies, and bake their bread and potato, macaroni, and pasta salads fresh daily. Hoagie trays and meat & cheese platters available. (570) 724-7532, 7 Charleston St, www.terryshoagies. com.

Wellsboro

TIOGA CENTRAL RAILROAD All aboard Tioga Central Railroad! Take a scenic ride while enjoying dinner on Saturday night or Sunday brunch. Wine and beer available. See website for menu selection. (570) 724-0990, 11 Muck Rd, www. tiogacentral.com.

TACO BELL (570) 662-2558, 1320 S Main St. ARBY’S (570) 662-7626, 1672 S Main St.

CAFÉ 1905 Classic coffee house located in Dunham’s Department Store. Proudly serving Starbucks® coffee, espresso, Frappuccino®, Tazo® tea plus delicious freshly baked pastries, homemade soups, artisan sandwiches and ice cream. Free wi-fi. (570) 724-1905, Inside Dunham’s Department Store, 45 Main St. DUMPLING HOUSE CHINESE RESTAURANT Dumpling House specializes in Hunan, Cantonese, and Szechuan Cuisine. it’s family owned and operated and located on beautiful Main Street in Wellsboro. You may dine in or carry out. (570) 724-4220, 31 Main St. DUNKIN’ DONUTS America Runs on Dunkin’. 7 days a week, 24 hours a day. (570) 724-4556, 7 Main St. THE FROG HUT The Frog Hut serves favorites like Texas hots, fried chicken, and Philly cheese steaks. They offer homemade soups and salads, and for dessert, try their soft serve ice cream, italian ice, sundaes, and other ice cream treats. (570) 724-4450, 132 Tioga St. HARLAND’S FAMILY STYLE RESTAURANT Open seven days a week at 5 a.m., serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner all day until 9 p.m., including the largest Black Angus burgers in town, full salad bar, and all homemade desserts. Housebatter-dipped haddock fish fry every Friday. Full service on-site catering available. (570) 724-3311, 17 Pearl St. MARY WELLS ROOM AND PENN WELLS LOUNGE Located in historic Penn Wells Hotel, full service restaurant and lounge feature an extensive menu

Spices, Fresh Ground Peanut Buuer, Snacks, Candies, Gluten Free Items, Organics Items, Coffees, All of Your Baking Needs and So Much More! 7686 Route 6, Troy PA Phone: 570-297-1015

Open: Mon.- Frid. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. Find us on facebook

TONY’S ITALIAN CUISINE Come to Tony’s for homemade cooking and family recipes, fresh dough and homemade bread made daily, pasta dishes, and special pizzas like steak pizza, Sicilian pizza, and their 3-cheese pizza. it’s family-owned and run, and they offer lunch and dinner specials. (570) 724-2090, 3 Main St. WELLSBORO DINER Wellsboro Diner, a famous Wellsboro landmark, serves sumptuous home cooked meals, fresh baked pies, cookies and cakes, and the very best prime rib on Saturday nights. They offer more than ample portions to all hungry guests. (570) 724-3992, 19 Main St, Wellsboro, PA 16901 WEST END MARKET CAFÉ “Globally inspired, locally sourced.” A place of nourishment and respite, celebrating local food & creativity. We feature fresh, locally sourced ingredients whenever possible & Fair Trade coffee products. Monday-Friday 7:30 a.m. To 3 p.m. Saturday 8 a.m. To 3 p.m. (570) 605-0370, 152 Main St, www. westendmarketcafe.wordpress.com.

Wellsboro Fast Food MCDONALDS (570) 724-2151, 9 Charleston St.

Advertise your business with Mountain Home

100,000 readers strong and growing Call 570-724-3838 55


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Westfield ACORN #10 FEATURING SUBWAY “Eat Fresh.” (814) 367-2610, 465 E Main St, www. acornmarkets.com.

Potter County

Steuben County Addison

Galeton

ACORN #11 FEATURING SUBWAY “Eat Fresh.” (607) 359-2603, 121 Front St, www. acornmarkets.com.

ACORN #25 FEATURING SUBWAY “Eat Fresh.” (814) 435-6626, 3 West St, www.acornmarkets.com.

Bath

TUTORS RESTAURANT Tutors Restaurant offers delicious home-cooked meals 7 days a week. Breakfast on Sat and Sun. Tues˜italian. Wed˜Seafood. Thur˜Wings. Fri˜Fish Fry. Sun˜Brunch Buffet. (814) 435-3550, 75 Germania St.

RICO’S PIZZA Rico’s Pizza offers nY Style hand-tossed pizzas with a variety of toppings. The full menu includes appetizers, salads, subs, calzones, stromboli’s, and pizza by the slice. Dessert, beer, and wine are also available. (607) 622-6033, 371 W Morris St, www.ricospizza. com.

Germaina GERMANIA HOTEL The best burgers around. Wings, pizza, steaks, and seafood. Thursday Rib night. Friday Broiled or Fried Haddock. Salad bar Thurs, Fri, Sat. Serving food 7 days a week, 12pm to12am. Legal beverages, rooms available, find us on Facebook “Germaniahotel Germania.” (814) 435-8851, Rt. 44 (Seven Miles South of Galeton).

Gold GOLD GENERAL STORE Serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Pizza and subs. Baked goods. Grocery items. (814) 848-9773, 2760 State Rt. 49W.

Yorkholo

Brewing Co. & Restaurant Handcrafted Ales paired with dishes made up of local ingredients

19 N. Main St. Mansfield, PA

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nEW YORK

Corning THE GAFFER GRILLE AND TAP ROOM The Gaffer Grille and Tap Room offers fine dining, atmosphere, food, drinks, and friends! We serve lunches, dinners, meetings, or small parties up to 30 individuals. visit us on Historic Market Street in Corning’s Gaffer District. (607) 962-4649, 58 W Market Street, www.gaffergrilleandtaproom.com. HOLMES PLATE RESTAURANT Holmes Plate offers Rustic Semi-Al Fresco casual dining, specializing in the area’s largest selection of craft & micro-brewery beers. We prepare every dish fresh to order with the highest quality ingredients. (607) 377-5500, 54 West Market St, www. holmesplate.com.


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RADISSON HOTEL CORNING Grill 1-2-5 serves creative regional specialties: small plates, grilled sandwiches, and tender filet mignon. The Steuben Bar offers appetizers, light meals, your favorite beverages, and is known for the best martini in the city! 125 Denison Parkway East, (607) 9625000, www.radisson.com/corningny. TONY R’S Tony R’s is the first upscale steak and seafood restaurant in Corning, new York’s Gaffer District. They serve the finest cuisine in the area and also offer a tremendous selection of the finest wines that you will not want to miss. (607) 937-9277, 2-6 East Market Street, www. tonyrssteakandseafood.com. RICO’S PIZZA Rico’s Pizza offers nY Style hand-tossed pizzas with a variety of toppings. The full menu includes appetizers, salads, subs, calzones, stromboli’s, and pizza by the slice. Dessert, beer, and wine are also available. (607) 962-2300, 92 W Market Street, www. ricospizza.com.

Wayland ACORN #16 FEATURING SUBWAY “Eat Fresh.” (585) 728-3840, 2341 Rt. 63, www. acornmarkets.com.

Chemung County Horseheads RICO’S PIZZA Rico’s Pizza offers nY Style handtossed pizzas with a variety of toppings. The full menu includes appetizers, salads, subs, calzones, stromboli’s, and pizza by the slice. Dessert, beer, and wine are also available. (607) 796-2200, 2162 Grand Central Ave, www.ricospizza.com.

Finger Lakes Hammondsport MALONEY’S PUB Maloney’s Pub offers live music year round. Come show your talent or view other local talent at their open mics on Thursdays, or lounge around and play pool at their pool table. They also have pub merchandise available. (607) 569-2264, 57 Pulteney St, www.maloneyspub.com.

Watkins Glen CAPTAIN BILL’S Discover the beauty of Seneca Lake. Dine afloat aboard the Seneca Legacy or on the waterfront at Seneca Harbor Station. Saturday night dinner cruises sail from 6-9 p.m. Open 7 days. (607) 535-4541, 1 N Franklin St, www.senecaharborstation.com.

then stop into our West Market Street location for the perfect pizza, calzones, sandwiches, & more!

92 W. Market St. Corning, NY

www.ricospizza.com 371 W. Morris St. Bath, NY

2162 Grand Central Ave. Horseheads, NY

570-724-3311 Open 7 Days a Week 17 Pearl St., Wellsboro, PA 16901 Full Service On Site Catering Available

To advertise in the food section call 570-724-3838

Largest Black Angus Burgers in town! Full Salad Bar 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. All Homemade Desserts

Open at 5 a.m., we serve Breakfast, Lunch, & Dinner all day until 9 p.m.! 57


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Finger Lakes Wine Review

A Riesling to Celebrate! By Holly Howell

S

urrounding the sapphire waters of Seneca Lake, our 32 wineries invite you to experience a destination rich in history, beauty, and the production of world-class wines. Located in the heart of New York’s Finger Lakes Region, our climate supports not only the growth of hardy native grapes and premium hybrids, but also more delicate varieties, such as Riesling, Gewürztraminer, Cabernet Franc and Pinot Noir. Along the Seneca Lake Wine Trail, you will truly find a wine to suit every taste.

June 8-10, 2012:

SMOKIN’ SUMMER KICKOFF November 16-18, 2012:

NOVEMBER DECK THE HALLS WEEKEND November 30-December 2, 2012:

DECEMBER DECK THE HALLS WEEKEND

http://gettag.mobi

877-536-2717 58

I

t’s a glorious time of year. The flowers are blooming, the birds are singing, and there’s a comforting buzz of lawnmowers in the neighborhood. Spring has officially sprung. And that means it is also time to celebrate one of my favorite refreshments. May 1st starts a month-long festival in the Finger Lakes called “May is Riesling Month.” This annual promotion offers visitors countless invitations and opportunities to taste the most award-winning wines of our region. The unique soil make-up and geographical layout of central New York has provided the Riesling grape with ideal conditions in which to make excellent cool climate wine. In the past few years, we have been blessed with some superb vintages, and our Riesling wines continue to garner big scores from national wine magazines, big praise from world renowned wine critics, and big medals at the top wine competitions. So, it is only natural that we throw Riesling a big party! Riesling is a grape that originated in Germany, and makes just about every type of wine you can imagine. From bone dry to dessert sweet, it is one of those few wines that comes in a style to please every wine drinker. It is all about when you pick the grape, and how much sugar is in the juice when it is fermented. But no matter how sweet it gets, Riesling always has that electric backbone of acidity that keeps it in balance, consistently making it a wonderful choice to pair with a wide variety of foods.

During the month of May, you will find lots of great activities surrounding Riesling. Participating wineries are easy to find, as they will be flying the signature Riesling flag. Some wineries have complimentary Riesling tastings, discounts on Riesling bottles, or free shipping on Riesling cases. Others have incorporated Riesling into special food tastings, like pairings with some of the local artisanal cheeses. Many of the regions hotels, inns, and B&Bs have excellent getaway packages in May for Riesling lovers. The wine country restaurants are jumping on the bandwagon, too, and you’ll find great deals on Riesling wines by the glass and special wine flights, along with specially themed Riesling dinners. Ve r t i c a l t a s t i n g s p o p u p everywhere. A “vertical” is when you try the same wine from the same winery, but from several different vintages. For example, you may taste Dry Rieslings from 1999, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, and 2009 sideby-side so you can taste how Riesling wines age. A fascinating experience, and often the winemaker will join you. Don’t miss out on the fun. Check out www.fingerlakeswinecountry. com/RieslingRocks.aspx and keep updated on all the action. I will see you there! Holly is a Certified Specialist of Wine (by the Society of Wine Educators) and a Certified Sommelier (by the Master Court of Sommeliers in England); email her at wineanddine @mountainhomemag.com.


HOME & GARdEN

Mother Earth

The Life Force of Spring By Gayle Morrow

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o you’ve got your yard cleaned up (let’s hope you saved some dandelions), your peas and onions are sprouting, your windows are sparkling, and you’ve scrubbed away the winter’s accumulation of crud. But, have you done any spring cleaning on you? “In Chinese medicine, spring is related to the liver and the gallbladder,” said Linda Spencer, LOM (Licensed in Oriental Medicine, a new licensing in Pennsylvania). “The focus is on strengthening, and part of that is cleaning.” Spencer is a Wellsboro-based acupuncturist, a provider of Chinese medicine, and an herbalist. She explains that in Chinese medicine the liver is associated with the blood and that an unimpeded flow of blood is important for the flow of chi, or life force. She suggests thinking of your blood vessels as a tube. When the tube is full, the blood and chi flow well; when it’s not, the flow tends to be in fits and starts. The liver in the springtime helps the body create new cells and provides blood and chi for new birth. She said a “powerful type of energy is needing to be exuded” for this work, and the liver helps with that in the body. “We want a smooth flow of chi,” she said, adding that while “the liver

might not be dysfunctional as an organ,” its role in helping the chi move can still be compromised. So, what can we do to help our bodies help us? It’s interesting, isn’t it, that nature provides what we need when we need it? “We’d use dandelion, or fresh rhubarb,” Spencer continues. “We might use a little forsythia as it helps to clean and clears out toxins in the blood. The honeysuckle flower helps to cleanse, and chrysanthemum flowers are good for the liver and eyes. “Now is also the time to move. Yoga, tai chi, and walking are good for the whole body and the liver. It helps the chi move smoothly and easily.” As we see in the world around us, spring is the time of rebirth, new growth, out with the old and in with the new. Making that same connection on a personal level seems appropriate. As Spencer says, we can be “looking at nature and making that same association with the body.” It sounds as though Granny was right—a good spring tonic and a walk in the woods may be just what we all need.

Breakout of cabin fever and visit us this spring explore exciting new wines and re-discover Seneca! #atwaterwine Scan code for your free gift! 5055 State Route 414 Burdett · NY · 14818 800 · 331 · 7323 Check our website for directions and events atwatervineyards.com

Gayle Morrow, former editor of The Wellsboro Gazette, cooks locally, and organically, at the West End Market Café.

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HOME & GARdEN

ine. Ship-to-S l n O p tore Sho

FREE SHIPPING! Shop online at www.dunhams.doitbest.com

8-10 East Ave. Wellsboro, PA Phone: 570-724-1905 60


HOM E & G A Rd E N A May Opening Photographer Ken Meyer raises the curtain on spring

W

ith the exception of the Iris, the lily pad, the pussy willow and the apple tree, all the plants shown are forest inhabitants. The Pussy Willow is an early bloomer and Spring Beauty’s, Hepatica and the Red Trilliums follow around the time that the trees leaf out. Painted Trillium and Gay wings will bloom later in May. Many of these flowering plants fit into the category of spring wildflowers and almost all are blooming early this year.

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HOME & GARdEN

Lockhart's Amish Furniture

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Morris Chair Shop Your Best Choice in Solid Wood Furniture Made to Order Buy Direct ! A Great Selection of Dining Room , Bedroom, Den and Home Office Furniture 54 Windsor Ln. Morris PA 16938 570-353-2735 www.morrischairshop.com 62

Award-winning photographer Ken Meyer is a Mansfield University biology professor emeritus and a frequent contributor to Mountain Home.


Real estate

Chris Gilbert .......................................570-404-1268 Ron Gilbert .........................................607-483-2241 Gwen Heyler .......................................570-854-8528 Joan Miller ..........................................570-439-4313 Wynnette Richardson........................570-439-1841 Veronica Stotler .................................570-854-4756 Alice Wack ..........................................570-529-2635 Scott Bastian, Broker ........................570-662-2200

FIRST

18 North Main St, Mansfield, PA 16933 • 570-662-2200 mansfieldremax@yahoo.com • www.tiogacountryrealestate.com

1.79 Acres - $34,900 85.71 Acres - $212,500

15.99 Acres - $39,900 80.97 Acres - $239,900 CLYMER TWP

re du ce d

7.17 Acres - $32,500 8.10 Acres - $32,500 15.30 Acres - $45,900

CHARLESTON TWP

9.90 Acres - $89,900

92 Acre Horse Farm! Bradford County! Large barn offers shop space, office, storage/ tack room, concession area & utility room. There are 16 stalls, indoor arena, wash stall & grain bin. Plenty of hay storage. Several fenced paddocks, outdoor arena, great hay fields, two houses & a stocked pond. Just $599,900 M20058

LAND Jackson Twp 13.07 Acres - $49,900 16.57 Acres - $64,900 18.84 Acres - $89,900 12.52 Acres - $47,900 60.08 Acres - $119,900 82.00 Acres - $199,000

Country Setting, Close to Town! Cute, immaculate 2 bedroom, 1 3/4 bath home in move in condition is situated on 4.96 acres. Kitchen is a cook’s delight. Large decks, paved driveway, large yard with stream. OMGS! Just $175,000 M20067

Land With OGMS!

re du ce d

re du ce d

11.80 Acres - $65,000 7.92 Acres - $105,900

Pr ic e

LAND Ward Twp 7.43 Acres - $29,900 23.72 Acres - $74,900 26.96 Acres - $89,900 95.19 Acres - $293,070 108.90 Acres - $334,200 150.00 Acres - $457,500

Pr ic e

LAND

DELMAR TWP

40 Acre Country Estate with OGMS! Contemporary 4-5 BR, 3 BA country home built in 1990. Property features 2 barns, aboveground swimming pool, enclosed outdoor hot tub, stocked pond, tennis court, & large walkout deck with privacy. Minutes from Mansfield or Troy. Just $625,000 M20072

Live the Dream! Spacious home in the heart of hunter’s paradise with gorgeous views, large deck, sunroom, brick fireplace, 2 BR, 2 BA, family room, southern exposure, garage/workshop, small barn. 7.4+/acre landscaped gardens, fields, woods w/trails for hiking. PLUS add’l income producing rental, 2 BR home. Just $247,900 E20073

OSCEOLA TWP

LAND

SULLIVAN TWP

OG M S!

LAND Liberty Twp 1.40 Acres - $27,000 3.13 Acres - $44,900 4.71 Acres - $39,900 6.29 Acres - $42,500 7.49 Acres - $66,900 11.01 Acres - $59,900 51.04 Acres - $189,900

OG M S!

Serving Tioga, Bradford, & Potter Counties, and Surrounding Areas

WELLSBORO BORO

PRICE REDUCED! Beautiful Home! Peaceful, quiet setting with stream. Lovely 3 BR 2 BA ranch home situated on 4+ acres offers open floor plan. Secluded family room with stone fireplace, wood flooring, & glass doors facing the woods great to watch the wildlife. now Just $222,900 M20003

1.50 Acres - $49,900 1.60 Acres - $54,900 RUTLAND TWP

26.96 Acres - $125,000 CERES TWP

52.63 Acres - $315,000

PRICE REDUCED! Completely Renovated Home! The kitchen has brand new hickory cabinets, new laminate flooring throughout, with new carpeting on the second floor, new drywall comes completed with crown moldings. A lovely corner lot close to downtown Wellsboro. now Just $175,000 M10001

Pr ic e

LAND

LAND

ARMENIA TWP

RUTLAND TWP

1.99 Acres - $29,900

13.29 Acres - $52,500

1.66 Acres - $44,900

11.21 Acres - $149,000

CANTON TWP

WELLSBORO BORO COVINGTON TWP

2.00 Acres - $34,900 PINE TWP

2.36 Acres - $34,000

Spacious Home! Plenty of Garage Space! Lovely 2000+ sq ft 3 BR home features spacious eat in kitchen, lots of counter space & storage, large living room, master suite w/bath, den/office, wrap around deck & covered porch. Attached 2 car garage, large pole garage, & heated detached garage. 3+ acres. Just $349,000 M20013

LAND

COMMERCIAL LAND

20.74 Acres - $49,900

15 Acres - $975,000 12.92 Acres - $425,000

CHARLESTON TWP

FARMINGTON TWP MIDDLEBURY TWP

30.79 Acres - $59,900 WARD TWP

258.90 Acres - $791,700 SILVER LAKE TWP

280.00 Acres - $425,000

Great Views and Location! 5+/- ac. Lovely country home with upstairs rental apartment. First floor has 2 BR, 2 BA & great room. Enjoy 4 wheeling, snowmobiling, & the wildlife in your yard. Also has 65x25 garage/ camp with kitchen, rec area, 3/4 bath & garage area. Asking $185,000 M10008

MANSFIELD BORO

2.42 Acres - $650,000 ATHENS TWP

10 Acres - $599,900 DUNCAN TWP

147.01 Acres - $1,350,000

Each Office Independently Owned & Operated

WELLS TWP

30.00 Acres - $125,000 ATHENS TWP

44.43 Acres - $149,000

OG M S!

Gorgeous Country Location! Spacious newer 5 BR, 2½ BA ranch home situated on 51+ acres overlooking the large pond. Finished walk-out lower level. Deck with great views! Pole barn with 3 overhead doors. Centrally located between Mansfield, Elmira, & Troy. Only $509,900 M20006

Unbelievable Opportunity! Beautiful, EXTREMELY well-maintained, assisted living facility sits on 37 ac. Offers 28 private rooms with 3 additional 2nd floor suites, great common areas & seasonal patio space. Clean, bright, & as nice as home! Turn-key operation awaiting energetic new owners! OGMS convey! Only $1,450,000 M10112 63


Real estate

Call the office at 570-723-8484 114 Tioga Street (Rt. 6 across from Pizza Hut) Wellsboro, Pa. 16901

www.mountainvalleyrealtyllc.com NORTHCENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA’S CHOICE FOR: COMMERCIAL, HOMES, ACREAGE, FARMS, CABINS, & RENTALS “Professionals working hard for YOU”

8.85 AC & ASTOUnDinG HOME-nEAR WELLSBORO, PA – Set back in off the road with private country setting,4 bdrm ranch, full finished walk-out basement and add’l cathedral ceiling room currently offers commercial use. A must see interior and beautiful property with long views. Public sewer with add’l access to long frontage. $289,000 #122379

PRivATE CAMP On 4.24 ACRES – if you’re looking for a quiet & serene setting this is it. Gated access to keep camp safe. very close to state land for great hunting and features a deck 3/4 around the camp. nestled on the mountain and near Pine Creek and Marsh Creek junction! $79,900 #122384

SPACiOUS RAiSED RAnCH-91 AC 100% OGM’S – Substantially lg property & ample space to raise livestock.3294 sq ft. attractive home offers 3 bdrms, 2 baths, open floor plan & more. Property offers high tensile fencing, 2 wells,2 septics,barn, shed & will convey gas rights with current lease expiring 2/13. 71 ac of woods to hunt. $1.25M #122361

OUTSTAnDinG EXECUTivE/RUSTiC HOME-24 AC – Sitting majestically overlooking the valley! 4 bdrm home offers exquisite spacious open interior with list of tastefully designed amenities. Must see property also offers a full raised finished basement for family entertainment area with 2nd kitchen.EZ to NY, Mansfield, & Rt.15/I-99 $474,000 #122338

iDEAL AS FARMETTE OR HOBBY FARM-11 AC – Large 4 bedroom home! Updated farmhouse offers spacious rooms. Barn provides opportunity for workshop or to raise animals. Great property to raise your family, gardens and livestock! All this on 11 acres. EZ to Wellsboro or Williamsport! $182,900. #122318

ATTRACTivE RAnCH HOME AMOnGST THE PinES – Private setting between Wellsboro and Mansfield. This custom home with attached 3 car garage! Offers 2-3 bdrms. Stainless Steel appliances, Zodiac counters and ceramic tile floors. 3 sources of heat and fuel, 13 acres mostly wooded acres and privacy! $337,000 #122262

GREAT STARTER HOME OR COZY CABin! – Come take a look at this uniquely designed home. Efficient, attractive and affordable. Deck allows the perfect view. Fireplace adds to the coziness of this home. Short drive to Rt. 15/I-99 to Mansfield or Williamsport. Only $75,000 #122247

WOW! GORGEOUS MOUnTAin viEWS On 72 AC – 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, spacious home with very lg. 2 story garage/workshop. Open floor plan with lg bright windows throughout on top of a full basement with double walkout doors! On 72 acres close to Chatham/Deerfield Twp lines and EZ drive to Wellsboro, Rt. 15 or nY State. very private! $375,000 #122226

GREAT OPPORTUniTY!! HOME AnD BUSinESS – Commercial property offers attractive ranch home and 14 storage rental units. Be self-employed and occupy very nice home on over 2.22 acres. Room for Gas industry yard use. Come see the potential here! Make offer! $265,500 #121425

STOnE COTTAGE - WALK TO PinE CREEK – 2 Bedroom cabin ideal for small full time home, vacation rental or full time rental. This cozy cabin offers a stone fireplace and full basement. Easy access to State Game Lands and walk down the path to Pine Creek. $105,000. #122151

LOvELY HOME- LG SHOP- COMMERCiAL POTEnTiAL – Substantial opportunity to occupy, rent an apt., & own commercial type workshop w/ overhead doors! Property sits short drive to Rt. 6-660 Corridor & Rt. 15. Attractive remodeled home offers multi level decks, newer hottub, spacious beautiful interior and all this on 2 acs. $289,000 #122046

SUBSTAnTiAL COMMERCiAL OPPORTUniTYOWnER OCCUPY – Historic Comm location at Rt. 6 & Rt. 449, Potter County-Opportunity to owner occupy on property on 2.8 ac with a multitude of commercial endeavors including Gift Shop, Gs Industry use, etc. 2 levels of store/office and living space with 2 car garage. Pertinent details available. $598,000 #122098

100% OMGS- YOUR PRivATE CASTLE On 65 AC – indescribable detail in this custom home w/unique post & beam design,open floor plan, cathedral ceilings,lg windows & double glass doors throughout. Access the lg deck from 4 rooms. Custom amenities including lavish master bathroom. 65+/- acs offer future timber potential & 64 100% OGM rights. $739,000. #119832

2 STORY HOME AnD LARGE WORKSHOP W/ OFFiCE – 4 brdm home w/ 22+/- ac & lg building w/room for trucks/garage&office space! Attractive home offers awesome views & floor plan, hardwood floors,& efficient heating system. Land features a pond, stream, some timber value,& 4000 sqft building. EZ to nY & Wellsboro. OGM’s negotiable!$379,000#122066

HiSTORiC WESTEnD WELLSBORO HOME – Elegant 5-6 bdrm Wellsboro home with motivated sellers! Property has been used as successful Bed & Breakfast. Home features innkeeper’s living quarters, 2.43 acres, 2 car gar., established clientele lists. ideal as turnkey business or home for large family. very Motivated for offer $379,900.#120493

SUCCESSFUL TAvERn/LOUnGE/BAR WiTH HOME AnD CAMPGROUnD – Successful opportunity! Excellent financials, turn-key operation with substantial regular customers. Bring your expertise and foresight. Full service kitchen with current equipment. Offers home to occupy or lease and small campground. EZ to Rt.15 OFF Ramp, NY or Mansfield! $679,000. #121497


Real estate

USE OF THIS AD AS IS REQUIRES NO PRE-APPROVAL! Any additions to this ad besides your company name, contact info, and DISH Network perfered tags must be sent for PRE-APPROVAL. Please refer to www.allsystemssat.com for guidelines on what is allowed in retailer tags, or call Marketing Department or your sales representative.

Failure to have an altered ad slick pre-approved will result in non-payment of your claim. Please submit a completed pre-approval form along with your finalized proof prior to the ad running to All-Systems Co-Op and Marketing Department via email at pre-approval@allsystemssat.com (preferred) or fax to (718) 346-3704 CUSTOM HOME, 2.75 AC-EZ TO MAnSFiELD, PA OR RT. 15. – newly constructed Home features 3 bedrooms, 2.75 baths, large deck w/ views of the countryside, 2 car attached garage & many other unique features. Bright, cheerful and short drive to Mansfield, Rt. 15 & Williamsport, Pa. $289,000. #120865

CAMP BORDERinG STATE LAnD-4.41AC – Make this camp your own getaway or full time residence! 4.41 ac bordering state land in wooded setting offers 2 bdrms. with room for a 3rd. Cozy and delightful this home comes furnished. Easy drive down to Rt. 6 in Gaines Twp. Must see cabin! and nice wooded lot. #121855 $129,000

DO NOT REMOVE DISCLAIMER!

All-Sys Slick #: MA1.75x4_DISHHighSpeedExcede_052012

All-Sys Slick #: MA3.625x2.25_DISHHighSpeedExcede_052 SPACiOUS ATTRACTivE HOME 1.07ACGet – Outstanding opportunity if you are seeking a larger home for you family. 3+bdrms, 3 full baths, spacious kitchen/dining room and large cozy family room in lower lever with gas fireplace. Also offers an attached 2 car garage and paved driveway. All this on 1.07 in lovely neighborhood.$219,000.#121577

GRAnD ESTATE On 102 ACRES! – This a timeless treasure! Rich architecture, exquisite details and luxurious amenities, this 4+ bdrm estate offers uncompromising quality and style. 102+ acres with negotiable OGM’s. Also a 4000 sqft building, w/a 2bdrm, apt/inlaw suite on prop. $2,950,000 #121184

spectacular 7500 Internet sqft classic is High-Speed

True Blue Satellite Systems Retailer’s 699 Karr Valley Rd,Name Almond, NY UnCOMPARABLE HOME-EXQUiSiTE DETAiL – incomparable style in the countryside outside of Liberty, Pa. Unique amenities, suana, pool, spa, exquisite rare hardwood finishes throughout, 3 ac just over the Lycoming County Line offering E-Z drive to Rt. 15/I-99 to Williamsport, Mansfield, Wellsboro and beyond. Make offer! $397,500. #121168

6.02 ACRE LOT WiTH 100% OGM’S UnLEASED! – 6.02 acre building lot with 100% OGM’s unleased! Gorgeous bldg. lot already has well, holding tank for septic, electric and driveway is in. Private wooded setting and overlook your ponds. Walk to State Game Lands and Hills Creek Lake. May offer seller’s assist to a qualified buyer. $99,000 #121336

PRivATE LOGHOME RETREAT – Attractive log home features a 2 sided stone fireplace with wood insert. Cherry steps to the second floor loft which offers 2 bdrms & bathroom. Spacious great rm offers cathedral ceilings & slate floors. Home boasts beautiful master suite. All this on 32 private acs! EZ to Wellsboro.$435,000.#121313

SUBSTAnTiAL OPPORTUniTY...124 AC-100% OGMS – 124 gently rolling acres very close to Borough of Wellsboro. Property offers 2 homes, a pond, a stream, phenomenal views and sits in a quality country setting. 100% Oil, Gas & Mineral Rights will convey to the buyer. This is the heart of the Marcellus Shale Gas Exploration! $1,500,000 #120176

22.54 AC-WOW THE viEWS...BETWEEn TROY AnD MAnSFiELD – Over the meadows & beyond! Meticulously maintained Lindel cedar log multi-level home. Raised basement for add’l living space. Elegant & rustic w/open flr plan. A/C, Harmon coal stove, lg. new garage, new well & spring, 22.54 ac open & wooded land. Corner property with long frontage. $360,000 #119956

COMFORTABLE WELLSBORO RAnCH HOME – Attractive setting with 4 ac. This home offers 3 bdrms, kit. with breakfast room, dining rm and liv. room with fireplace. glss sunroom, full basement with garage, a barn and conveys 100% oil, gas and mineral rights. $219,000 #121996

000-000-0000

(607) 276-2817, www.truebluesat.getdish.com

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Real estate WWW.PENNOAKREALTY.COM

65 Main Street, Wellsboro, PA 16901 l (570) 724-8000 PA Certified WBE

Ordinary People Providing Extraordinary Service!

CHARMinG REMODELED FARMHOUSE at the edge of Wellsboro - five minute ride to schools, medical facilities, library, shopping. Eat-in country kitchen, light-filled family room off kitchen, potential 3rd BR, wood stove comfortably heats whole house, fenced yard area for children or pets, 24x14 workshop w/electric, long rolling views of countryside; new front porch. MTH 122253 $174,500

niCE 2 BR HOME situated on 25 mostly wooded acres less than 4 miles from town. Features spacious kitchen-dining area w/all appliances, large living room, 1-3/4 baths, wrap around deck with countryside views; full block basement w/BR and 3/4 bath, chimney set up for wood stove and walk-out to driveway. MTH 122355 $125,000

RESiDEnCE, invESTMEnT OPPORTUniTY as a landlord, land for farming or hobby farm, just recreational property w/beautiful views - 101+ acres w/two single story residences: 1 mobile home w/additions and single car garage and 1 ranch style w/new 200 amp service and wiring throughout, 2 car detached garage; bank barn w/silo, steel pole barn. MTH 122333 $297,000

CUSTOM BUiLT 4 BR HOME at the edge of Mansfield Boro w/long views overlooking town. Many upgrades completed by current owner - finished basement w/office, custom built cabinetry, hardwood flooring, more. Formal dining room, large kitchen w/family dining area, 2.5 baths; rear deck, tasteful landscaping and patio w/natural gas grill. MTH 122374 $349,900

SPACiOUS FARMHOUSE in Richmond Township, remodeled and featuring replaced windows , new kitchen and bathroom in ‘09, large remodeled laundry room and entry area; den could be 1st floor BR. Attached 2 car garage, rear deck, landscaped yard, concrete driveway, mini-barn. MTH 121631 $177,900

OGMs (nOT LEASED) nEGOTiABLE. Gentleman’s farm on 29 acres, minutes from Route 6, Charles Cole Hospital, golf course, restaurants and State Land. Recently remodeled 5 BR, 3 bath home, sizable deck w/hot tub, newer metal roof on large barn, “eat-in” kitchen w/island, office, sun room off kitchen, walk-out full basement. MTH 119844 $239,900

RARE FinD! 28 acres w/small cabin and 1,735’ frontage on First Fork of Sinnemahoning Creek, bordering State Forest. Can be purchased with First Fork Lodge, well known B&B, fly fishing/sporting goods shop and fine restaurant - great opportunity to continue an established landmark (see MLS 120485), or just enjoy your own private haven on the creek. MTH 121460 $169,000

RESiDEnTiAL BUiLDinG LOTS in rural subdivision; Troy School District. 4.8 + 8 acre lots, totaling 12.8 acres, each lot w/perc site for septic; drill your own well. Frontage on both township and private subdivision roads. Utilities (gas, electric, telephone & cable) are underground. 20 minutes to Southport/ Elmira, nY. MTH 122375 $59,900

Commercial Sales & Leasing

FIRST

Chris Gilbert - Realtor chris.gilbert@remax.net DIRECT: 570-404-1268 OFFICE: 570-662-2200

18 North Main St., Mansfield, PA 16933

66

Access! Location! Convenience! Great commercial property along RTE 6 & Whitneyville Rd. Offering shop/offices, showroom, & 4 bedroom home situated on 5.23 acres. Large graveled parking area. Home could be lived in or rented out for income. Only $1,190,000 or Rent for $10,000/month M10100

Newer Retail Store Front/Office In The Heart of Marcellus Shale! Building offers 7,000+ sq ft including 5,000 sq ft of prime retail space, 2 bay garage with auto lift, small waiting area/kitchenette, office, additional detached storage area, 2 half baths, & loading dock. Lease for $3,750/month or Buy for $359,000 M10014

Great Commercial Location! Just over 1 acre located along Route 6 just west of Wellsboro. Building offers 3,700+ sq ft with office, shop, & storage space and plenty of parking. Call today! Now Only $159,900 M10135

Great Commercial Location! Excellent Visibility! Located at the exit ramp of Rte 15 & Rte 49. Build a hotel or set up a gas station. Possibilities are endless with 17+/- acres!! GREAT INVESTMENT! Just $1,750,000 M10151

EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED & OPERATED


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8028 Rt. 414 Liberty, PA 16930 Located one mile west of Rt.15 along Rt. 414 Now offering Rent-to-Own financing on all storage sheds!

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DZUIBA &SON, INC.

HEAVY HAULING AND OILFIELD TRUCKING

66 Dunkleberger Road Millerton, PA 16936

www.dbmovers.com Phone: 570-549-6683 Fax: 570-549-6684 Cell: 570-404-4747 Pager: 570-513-8318

107 Main Street Wellsboro, Pa. 16922

570-723-1600

BEAUTIFUL CEDAR LOG HOME built in 2003 with over 1,000 ft frontage on First Fork of the Sinnemahoning Creek, first floor BR and bath, huge great room w/stone fireplace to the ceiling. Small horse barn, round pen; State Forest, snowmobile and horse trails all about. MTHDLM 122325

LONG ESTABLISHED 10 UNIT log motel in great Route 6 location—1 mile east of Ski Denton, frontage on Nine Mile Creek (tributary to PineCreek), short walk to State Forest, across from access to Susquehannock Snowmobile Trail System—opportunity for stay-at-home business w/nice living quarters. MTHDLM 122178 $289,000

GREAT CAMP, possible full time residence on 20 acres provides seclusion and privacy, yet with access to Route 44 just 4/10 mile away. Home sits south of the golf club and close to State Land, is very well built with a beautiful stone fireplace and walk out lower level. MTHDLM 121031 $159,500

BEAUTIFUL 5 BR FARMHOUSE on 88 acres with 6 picture perfect out buildings in excellent condition. Large stone fireplace in Great Room, 1st floor BR and bath w/laundry, beautifully landscaped grounds. Borders State Forest, some fencing—excellent horse property or commercial possibilities; some timber value; OGM, negotiable. MTHDLM 119077 $399,000

www.wellsboroparealestate.com

swatsworth lane, Columbia Crossroads this home features 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, beautiful hardwood floors and kitchen and laundry room have ceramic tile. there is a detached, newer 2-car garage and a pond for the family to enjoy. Newer roof and updated windows. less than 10 minutes to troy and 15 to southport, NY.

REF#10499

$139,000

Swatsworth Ln, Columbia Crossroads

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Real estate

WOW right on the Pine Creek. Here is one that has it all. This property really is a must see. 3 bedroom home with a large 2 car garage and tons of amenities. Central air, alarm system, beautiful deck over the lower level, large 2 car detached garage and, oh yes, did we mention that you’re right on the creek? MLS# 122367 $349,900

Spacious ranch home on large lot. Three large bedrooms with two full baths. Attached 2-car oversized garage. Home features a large deck in the rear of the home and a spacious front porch. Home also features an extra large living room and spacious kitchen and dining area. MLS# 122175 $192,900

Pride of ownership in this property. Documented as one of the oldest homes in Mansfield. This home has been maintained in excellent condition and is a must see. Acreage and square footage taken from courthouse records. MLS# 122298 $189,900

Location, location, location. This completely remodeled home is just a short walk to downtown and only a couple of blocks from the high school. Large back yard. The entire inside has been remodeled and the outside has a fresh new paint job. Very affordable, and would be a great starter home. MLS# 122337 $129,900

40 acres in Ward Township, Tioga County. The land has frontage along a township road and is only a short walk to State Forest land. Electricity is available and the property has been perc approved for construction. The land is gently rolling and offers many potential building sites for a house or cabin. $139,000.

Cameron County, PA We are offering 3 parcels with state forest frontage AND frontage along Cowley Run near the Sizerville State Park. 4 acres - $49,900, 6 acres - $59,000, and 7 acres - $59,900. Owner financing available to qualified buyers.

Flora Haff-Cranmer Diverisified Realty 607-329-9386 fcranmer@stny.rr.com Contact Flora for Buying and Selling in The Finger Lakes! RELAX & ENJOY country living at this cozy renovated cabin in Steuben County-Upstate NY. Nestled in 5 wooded acres perfect for hunting. Furnishings & wood stove incld. Shared lake access/great fishing! Elec installed. Cable/internet available. Less than 30 mins. to Watkins Glen, Corning, Keuka Lake! Priced at $61,500. MLS#228470

KEUKA LAKE! TWO Spectacular Building Lots overlooking this Beautiful Lake and Quaint “#1 Coolest Small Town in America” Hammondsport Community! Located on East side with Fabulous Views of the Village, Keuka's Famous Bluff, Vineyards, & MUCH MORE! (One @ 5+ acres, the other @ almost 6 acres!) Priced to sell @ $92,000 and $112,000. Buy both and have the most AWESOME 11 acres overlooking Keuka Lake!

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The Fine Art of a Mother-Daughter Bond Story and Photos by Cindy Davis Meixel

M

arket Street in Corning can be an enchanting place for anyone, especially a child. As the daughter of business owners, Jesse Gardner spent many magical moments growing up on Market Street, tucked in amongst an extended family of merchants, blanketed by familiar faces, conversations and kindnesses. Jesse fondly recalls the scent of pizza flowing from the store next door where she would visit, nearly daily, eager to receive a fresh, gooey slice, served with a smile across the counter. There was also the hardware store that promised hours of amusement in simply gazing at its shelves layered with crafts and curiosities. Lou, the mailman, offered 70

another reassuring routine each morning, delivering warm greetings. And there was the distinct sound of the doorbell in her parents’ art and framing shop, announcing the arrival of another customer, or artists hauling in their latest creations. Activity whirled around her, stirring into her days along with snack time, infinite rainbows of markers, and inviting stacks of papers—childhood pleasures all mixed together in some sweet, imaginative, messy masterpiece only a youthful mind can create. Jesse, the youngest of three Gardner children, was born two years after her parents, Lin and Tom, opened their first business, Corning Art & Frame, in 1977. In 1988, the


Gardners added West End Gallery to their enterprises and, three years later, sold the initial framing business. Lin is owner and director of West End Gallery; Tom is an artist. While the marriage did not survive, a partnership did; Tom is one of approximately seventy regional artists represented by the gallery—a modern, two-story space exhibiting original, representational art in various mediums including oils, acrylics, pen and ink, watercolors, pastels, graphite, wood, bronze, glass, and metal. When a twenty-something-Jesse decided to move West, she grabbed one of her father’s paintings off the wall of the Gallery and packed it in her U-Haul. Her degree earned at Corning Community College and her soulmate, John, by her side, she was ready to explore what the world had to offer. They landed in Colorado and carved a successful living in corporate America, yet Corning kept calling her home.

“I couldn’t deny that I felt something was missing,” Jesse acknowledged. “I realized that this is where my heart was—with family and the Gallery. My heart was here before my body was. My body couldn’t catch up fast enough.” Now fully home, with husband John by her side, Jesse has been given the title of assistant director. “She’s my retirement plan,” Lin joked. Yet, this retirement plan is actually serious business. Jesse’s return is freeing up Lin’s time for a bit of play. On Mondays, in particular, Lin now escapes work and paints instead. Her endeavors in oils are a delightful new exploration for this woman who has encircled her work life for thirty-five years with the creations of others. “I love that you can just get lost in it,” Lin said. “There are no deadlines, like with work. It’s nice to play and get lost in time.” Being her mother’s “retirement plan” is an honor to Jesse. “I take

it as the utmost compliment. It’s humbling,” Jesse offered. “It makes me happy that this natural shift in roles will allow her to focus more intently on her new-found freedom. She can take the well-deserved time for herself that See West End on page 64

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West End continued from page 63

Come explore our 3 story, 40+ Vendor Historic Old Mill featuring Antiques, Collectibles, Country Home Décor Monday 10-5 and much, much more. Tuesday 10-5 Don’t forget to buy mom a gift for “Mother’s Day” Sunday, May 13th!

Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday

10-5 10-7 10-5 10-5 10-3

Check us out on facebook or the web. www.facebook.com/HorseheadsMillStreetMarket.com www.horseheadsmillstreetmarket.com

Scott Walker, 570-295-1083

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she has earned. She has worked hard all her life. She has poured everything into this business—her heart and soul. I often hear how proud mothers are of their daughters, but I must say I couldn’t be more proud of my mother as a business woman and a mentor, but more importantly, as a friend and a mother.” Lin also poured her strong work ethic into her daughter. Some of this certainly occurred naturally while Jesse was growing up in and around the family businesses, being a witness to all of the interactions and effort, but other lessons were direct. When Jesse was fourteen, she wanted an original oil painting, titled “Misty Morning,” by Martin A. Poole, an artist represented by the Gallery since the year Jesse was born. She was required to purchase it on her own. “Mom let me pay it off on a payment plan with my allowance,” Jesse recalled, thinking fondly of the hard-earned lesson. “I think it made me appreciate it that much more. It was my first original painting and, every year since then, I’ve purchased one of Marty’s paintings.” Jesse looks forward to more lessons by her mother’s side in the coming years. The young businesswoman is intent on seeing West End Gallery grow even further with traditional street sales as well as with the entrepreneurial outlet offered via the Internet. “I plan to see this business to its sixtieth anniversary—at least,” she said. In this magical Market Street shop, adorned on its exterior with a melting clock created by her father, Jesse is aware of the preciousness of time. And, like ingenious clockwork, in sweet synchronization, a daughter returns to the nest and a mother finds her own wings. Cindy Davis Meixel, a native of Wellsboro, is a writer, photographer, kayaker, and yogarian residing in Williamsport.


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

Into the Looking Glass Photo by Suzan K. Richar, artist and photographer, Wellsboro, PA This photo was taken from Germania St., looking across Berger Lake at Galeton’s landmark bandhouse in John J. Collins Memorial Park. The winter version of this photo was featured in our February issue.

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