E E R F he wind
as t
THE LOST KINGDOM By Michael Capuzzo
For 75 years they’ve found the magic place in October, when it chooses to appear…
Linden’s Great Pumpkins Top Ten Tips for the Finger Lakes Harvest The Sycamore’s Spirit in English Center
OCTOBER 2013
Endless Mountains of Northeastern PA
Endless Memories await you any season! Contact us for your free Guide to the Endless Mountains and a Calendar of Events . 1-800-769-8999 www.endlessmountains.org
Volume 8 Issue 10
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The Lost Kingdom
Falling for October
By Michael Capuzzo For 75 years they’ve found the magic place in October, when it chooses to appear…
By Roger Kingsley
Our columnist pens an ode to his favorite month.
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The Healing Spirit
By Cindy Davis Meixel
At The Sycamore’s Spirit Healing Retreat, a mini-Omega blooms in English Center.
8 The Great Pumpkins
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A Golden Anniversary
By George Jansson In Linden, John and Edie Carpenter grow a magical garden.
By Linda Roller
Embracing tradition, the St. Paul’s Episcopal Church Antique Show hits a milestone.
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Jelly Jewels
By Jo Charles
When life hands you lemons, make lemonade. But leftover fruit juice? It’s jelly-making time.
28 Tiptoe Through the Finger Lakes By Holly Howell Oh, the places you’ll go if you are a lover of wine. Our columnist dishes on her favorite autumn haunts.
Photos (top) by Suzan Richar, (middle) provided by the Carpenter family, (bottom) provided by Holly Howell.
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Mother Earth: Suddenly There Came a Tapping
w w w. m o u n ta i n h o m e m ag . co m
By Gayle Morrow
Editors & Publishers Teresa Banik Capuzzo Michael Capuzzo
Feared widely as harbingers of doom, ravens are a whole lot more interesting—and complicated—as one of the most intelligent and social of birds.
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Submitted for Your Approval By Meghan Lee
A journey into graphic artist Tracy Tomei’s imagination.
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Autombnal Sunrise By Sarah Wagaman
Our photographer snaps the cemetery at dawn.
Associate Publishers George Bochetto, Esq. Dawn Bilder Derek Witucki D e s i g n & P h o t o g r ap h y Elizabeth Young, Editor Jennifer Heinser Cover Artist Tucker Worthington Advertising Director Meghan Elizabeth Lee Contributing Writers Angela Cannon-Crothers, Patricia Brown Davis, Jen Reed-Evans, Alison Fromme, Holly Howell, Roger Kingsley, Adam Mahonske, Cindy Davis Meixel, Fred Metarko, Dave Milano, Gayle Morrow, Tom Murphy, Cornelius O’Donnell, Roger Neumann, Gregg Rinkus, Linda Roller, Kathleen Thompson, Joyce M. Tice, Brad Wilson C o n t r i b u t i n g P h o t o g r ap h e r s Mia Lisa Anderson, Bill Crowell, Bruce Dart, Ann Kamzelski, Ken Meyer, Tina Tolins, Sarah Wagaman, Curt Weinhold S e n i o r S a l e s R ep r e s e n t a t i v e Brian Earle S a l e s R ep r e s e n t a t i v e s David Grasso Linda Roller Jae Zugarek B ea g l e
and
Assistant to Cosmo & Yogi
the
B ea g l e
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. E-mail story ideas to editorial@mountainhomemag.com. Call us 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. Or get Mountain Home at home. For a one-year subscription to Mountain Home (12 issues), send $24.95, payable to Beagle Media LLC, 25 Main St., 2nd Floor, Wellsboro, PA 16901.
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DOINGS ‘ROUND THE MOUNTAIN
D oings ’R ounD
the
M oun tain
October 2 013
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
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Gmeiner Open House: Wellsboro Art Club 134 Main Street Wellsboro, PA www.gmeinerartscenter.com
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Wine Glass Marathon 1 West Market Street, Suite 103 Corning, NY www.wineglassmarathon.com
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Community Arts Center: Menopause the Musical 220 West 4th Street Williamsport, PA www.calive.com
Wine Glass Marathon, 10/6
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Apple Butter Festival through October 14 11009 Route 44 Highway North Waterville, PA 570-753-8463
Spencer Hill Gallery: Giebel & Smith @ Johnson & Schmidt through November 1 10503 North Road Corning, NY www.spencerhillgallery.com
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22 An Evening with STYX, 10/18
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Green Monster Trail Challenge 176 Straight Run Road Wellsboro, PA www.greenmonster-trailchallenge. com
Blossburg Fall Festival 3 Riverside Plaza Blossburg, PA www.blossburg.org
Penn Wells Brunch: Dave Bush 62 Main St Wellsboro, PA www.pennwells.com
Leaf Peeping Cemetery Tour Box 349 Bath, NY www.steubenhistoricalsociety.com
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Williamsport Symphony Orchestra: The Three Giants 220 West 4th Street Williamsport, PA www.williamsportsymphony.com
DOINGS ‘ROUND THE MOUNTAIN
WEDNESDAY
2
THURSDAY
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Guthrie Arts Center: Junie B. Jones 5 South Elmer Avenue Sayra, PA www.bcrac.org
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Deane Center for the Performing Arts: Over Easy 104 Main St Wellsboro, PA www.deanecenter.com
The History Center Open House 83 North Main Street Mansfield, PA www.facebook.com/HistoryCenter OnMainStreetMansfieldPA
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Johnny Appleseed Festival through October 13 Memorial Field Sheffield, PA www.johnnyappleseedfest.com
Southern Tier Outdoor Recreation Expo through October 13 7520 New York 415 Bath, NY www.southerntieroutdoorshow.com
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Fall Community-Wide Yard Sale through October 19 Wellsboro, PA www.visittiogapa.com
Farm-to-Table Wine & Cooking Class Tour 222 South Cayuga Street Ithaca, NY www.experiencefingerlakes.com
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Taste of Tioga 1100 New York 17C Owego, NY www.tasteoftioga.com
PA Apple & Cheese Festival, 10/5
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West End Gallery: Thomas S. Buechner through November 22 12 West Market Street Corning, NY www.westendgallery.com National Theater Live: Othello 601 Main Street Towanda, PA www.bcrac.org
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Community Arts Center: An Evening with STYX 220 West 4th Street Williamsport, PA www.calive.com
Knitting & Crocheting Show through October 26 25 West Pulteney Street Corning, NY www.corningfingerlakes.com Corning Civic Music Association: Manuel Barrueco with Cuarteto Casals 1 Museum Way Corning, NY www.corningcivicmusic.org
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SATURDAY
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Ithaca Apple Harvest Festival through October 6 Downtown Area Ithaca, NY www.downtownithaca.com
Menopause the Musical, 10/8
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FRIDAY
PA Apple & Cheese Festival through October 6 141 East Canton Cross Road Canton, PA www.paapplecheese.com
Tioga Early Days Whitneyville Fairgrounds Wellsboro, PA www.visittiogapa.com
171 Cedar Arts Center: Zoe Mulford 155 Cedar Street Corning, NY www.valleyfolk.com
Halloween Harvest 8383 Gallagher Road Hammondsport, NY www.corningfingerlakes.com Glentoberfest 2790 County Route 16 Watkins Glen, NY www.theglen.com
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Williamsport Symphony Orchestra, 10/15
8
The Lost
Kingdom For 75 years they’ve found the magic place in October, when it chooses to appear...
By Michael Capuzzo the dread “Old Lady with the Basket” might suddenly appear beside our car, fast as a thought, patient as Time, the Old Lady her grandmother said the coal miners never outran, as the specter raced alongside their bobbing lanterns across ridge and valley, the shadow of Death itself. We laughed at the old story. In the speckled light of the passing trees and the slow coursing rhythm of the road we lost track of time. See Lost Kingdom on page 10
See Time Wizard on page 10
Curt Weinhold
O
ne July afternoon in 2004 my wife and I were enclosed by gloom on a lonely mountain road, high in the Pennsylvania Appalachians. Thick stands of hardwood and pine, dense with wildlife, silently watched our passage. Slowly our pickup truck pitched and wound through a fading day in the last eastern wilderness. My wife told ghost stories from her childhood. She was terrified on this road—
9
Lost Kingdom continued from page 9
�on�� �e� �o�r dream� go �o�d . . . �e�ig� ��e �ife����e �o���e been dreaming of.
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At twilight the forest gave way to town, then gaslights, a quiet Main Street. It was just three blocks, a 1920s movie theater, a barbershop, an old diner, a grand hotel from the last century. Lawyers on the steps of the 1830s courthouse facing the town green. At the center of the green, a Wynken, Blynken, and Nod statue fountain burbled its 19th Century lullaby. I wiped my eyes in near-disbelief at this Brigadoon that materialized from nowhere. Four hours out of Philadelphia, it was impossible to find a more remote town in the eastern United States. We’d left Philadelphia for good; we did not know then we had stumbled into the lost kingdom, into a town you could never leave. It was our first day in the lovely village of Wellsboro (pop. 3,297), the county seat of one of the sparsest counties in the commonwealth. Soon we bought a house in town. A year later we started Mountain Home magazine. It didn’t feel then like a remote place. My wife was born in the town, in Soldiers + Sailors Memorial Hospital, two blocks from Main Street; her brother had a law practice here. Mom lived a block away. Mountain Home grew into a regional magazine. Life in town was a delight. A fine family steakhouse occupied the same old house, same family, for fifty years; next door under a sign with a gaslight was music, and a good bar. Folks made burgers from local cattle, beer from local grain. Late one winter evening by the big carved fireplace in the old hotel bar a couple dozen white-haired men swept in, ordered a couple dozen beers, and began singing “The Yellow Rose of Texas” and other standards in lusty and perfect harmony. The Men’s Chorus, the barkeep nodded, their after-practice drink, Thursday around ten o’clock since time immemorial. We sang along, walked into the chill night, looked at the stars. The night was still, quiet, surrounded by hills and farms and by half a million acres of wilderness. You could see the stars clearer here than anywhere east of
the Mississippi. In winter, town was a Victorian snow globe, beautiful, cold, sunless, sealed from the world. But in spring and fall the tourists came, came by the thousands, as they’ve been coming since FDR sat in the White House, to renew the town. The village had a habit, like the old Celtic Castle of the Fisher King, of appearing and disappearing at a moment’s notice. Now October returns, and the men and women of autumn circle back, like blood to the extremities. The tourist season rolls along all summer, up and down, then three thousand visitors a day descend upon the Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania during the first two weeks of October. They come to fish and hunt, to hike or bike the famous canyon just ten miles west of town. They paddle the great canyon-carving Pine Creek that runs gloriously fifty miles south, a thousand feet below twin eagle-spied mountains. They stroll the village at the heart of the lost kingdom. Like the picturesque leaves that paint the hills brightest in those days, it’s the sweet peak of the season—a peak the county’s hotels and inns, restaurants and attractions depend upon to keep going the rest of the year. They come to gawk at natural marvels that remain at once spectacular and a secret, after all these years. They came drawn by the legend of popular attractions that nobody knows about. Some half a million tourists a year visit Tioga County, return to the great cities from Toronto to Philadelphia, New York to Cleveland, from whence they came, and still it remains hidden. “I’ll be thinking we can’t possibly get another tourist,” says Lori Copp, “then someone walks in and says, “What is this place! It’s amazing! How did I miss it before?” I stopped to talk to Lori in the former church out on Route 660, halfway between the twin attractions of town and the Grand Canyon, where she runs the Tioga
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Lost Kingdom continued from page 11
County Visitor’s Bureau. It’s Lori’s job to get the word out about Tioga County as travel paradise, and she does a fine job of it. She carefully allots much of her $300,000 annual budget to spread the good news on TV, print media, and increasingly, the Internet, seeding the reliable fortyto-sixty empty nester audience and a younger “extreme sports” crowd across the East Coast, with a focus from Philly to Pittsburgh, Buffalo to our nation’s capital. Every season, it seems, our special place is a secret no longer. The phone has been ringing since August 8 th, when The Washington Post travel section featured Anna Bahney’s “surprising, quirky and utterly authentic journey” along 400-mile Pennsylvania Route 6 from Scranton to Erie. She and her husband and twoyear-old son hiked the Grand Canyon from Leonard Harrison State Park. “The centerpiece of our trip was Wellsboro, a town that, without veering toward Pleasantville parody, is just as a town should be,” she wrote. “We settled into the stately Penn Wells Hotel on the town’s sharp Main Street, lined with flickering gas lamps.” They admired Dunham’s family-ownedsince-1905 department store, and the vintage Arcadia movie theater, “which opened in 1921 to show silent movies and still features first-run films on four screens.” They “ate like lumberjacks at the classic Wellsboro Diner before
hitting the road.” But their visit will not soon be forgotten. Twelve years ago—in July 2001, another world—USA Today named the Pine Creek Gorge, a/k/a The Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania, one of ten great bike tours in the world, along with spots in New York’s Adirondack Mountains; Tuscany, Italy; County Clare, Ireland; Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia; the glacial ranges of Iceland; and the Ruta Panoramica in Puerto Rico. The Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania is idyllic in fall, wrote Patricia Vance, author of Bicycle Touring: The New Complete Book on Touring by Bike. “You can ride a flat, 20-mile abandoned railroad bed at the bottom of the gorge with views of the cliffs and mixed hardwood forest.” Though leaf-peeping is popular, most just want to see the Grand Canyon, that yawning landmark recently given a starring role in AARP The Magazine in the story headlined, “9 Big Holes That Aren’t the Grand Canyon.” The largest circulation magazine in the U.S. (reaching twentytwo million households) put the Grand Canyon of Pennsylvania on the list with Morning Glory Pool in Yellowstone National Park, Meteor Crater near Winslow, Arizona, and Monticello Dam Drain Hole near Napa, California. “A striking 57-mile bike trail was an old railroad route,” AARP said. “Careful—the bald eagles might distract you.” See Lost Kingdom on page 14
See Time Wizard on page 14 12
Clinton
County, PA
1-888-388-6991 • Email: tourism@KCnet.org Start your adventure by visiting
www.ClintonCountyInfo.com
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Sarah Wagaman
Suzan Richar 14
Curt Weinhold
Lost Kingdom continued from page 12
Visitors still arrive clutching that yellowed USA Today clipping, or the 2007 New York Times story, “A Quaint Town with ‘Quiet Things’ to Do,” that announced to the world that “Wellsboro, a town of about 3,300 residents 240 miles northwest of New York City, has become a popular place for second-home buyers who want to remember their first homes—as in, the homes they grew up in.” Folks come seeking that “clean, safe and slow paced” town that has “held tight to its charm,” and its nearby Grand Canyon that National Geographic Traveler touted as heart of “The Wild, Wild East.” “North-central Pennsylvania is a bona fide, 21stcentury Eden,” National Geographic wrote. “Or so says the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Human Footprint report, which put the rugged woodlands on par with Brazil’s Pantanal and China’s Gobi as one of the last untarnished tracts on Earth. Only 1.3 percent of the lower 48 is as pure.” I remember reading about that astonishing “human footprint” report in the Sunday New York Times some years ago. I talked it up around town. This was big news! Wellsboro and its Grand Canyon had been touted as among the greenest places on Earth by the world’s most influential newspaper on its most influential day. Surely See Lost Kingdom on page 18
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Sarah Wagaman Lost Kingdom continued from page 14
Wellsboro would be discovered now. A few folks nodded soberly in return. Few had seen the story. The news barely arrived here, and it never left. A few years later some of the biggest companies in the world roared in, drilled for gas, brought roughnecks and riches, fear and loathing, changed things forever…and not. Like a tide they came and they left and an idyll remains. The hills proved stubborn foes of drillers, as they are obstinate opponents of developer’s bulldozers, major roads, and most everyone everywhere who stays away, keeping it “one of the last untarnished tracks on Earth.” In an age of imitation, our place is the real thing. In an era of hype, it keeps its own counsel. So October returns and so do our visitors, like prodigal family. They come and they leave and they keep their secret—that not far from home, the second right past their imaginings, the lost kingdom exists. It can even be visited, if it chooses to make itself visible that day.
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Falling for October By Roger Kingsley
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sk me a question and offer me twelve choices for the answer, and I’d probably have to ponder each one in depth. But ask me what my favorite month is, and eleven of the twelve choices would hardly cross my mind—all because of October. The mention of October stirs up images aplenty: frost on the pumpkins, the lighting of wood burners, nut gathering, apple picking and cider, corn harvest, fall festivals, the hunter’s moon, Halloween—the list goes on. While all these images illuminate October as a special time of year, the clincher for making it my favorite is the arrival of autumn leaves. According to me, no other time of year in the outdoors gets the oohs and
aahs that October gets. No other time of year can compete with the leading up to, the peaking, and the falling of autumn leaves. Not the budding and blossoming of spring, not the flowering and lushness of summer, nor the snow and ice of winter. October presents nature as a spectacle of extravagant beauty. When I was in the fifth grade, my teacher, Mrs. Wilcox, gave our class an assignment: we had to put together a scrapbook of leaves. I think I still have mine tucked away somewhere in a closet. With my mother’s help, the scrapbook was bound together with construction paper and yarn, and a picture of a gorgeous landscape of autumn foliage was clipped out of a See Falling for Fall on page 22
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magazine and glued to the cover. Collecting and identifying the leaves for that outdoor assignment surely set the stage for a better appreciation of trees. I remember the fun we had as kids during the month of October raking up the fallen maple leaves in our yard and jumping into the fluffy, fragrant piles. I remember the pails of hickory nuts my brothers and I gathered underneath the solitary shagbark trees scattered around our farm, and I remember cracking them open on our flagstone steps and eating the delicious meats. The bond that I now have with the beauty of the October woods began many years ago when my Dad took us boys on our first small game hunt. Carving faces in ripe pumpkins and celebrating the traditions of Halloween as a youth were fondly relived through the growing stages of our own kids. A flip of the calendar to October always fuels a reminiscence of such embedded memories. I’ve been an avid photographer for many years, and the one subject that I never tire of is autumn foliage. One of my favorite spots to photograph is the shoreline of our pond, where a mixture of hardwood species puts on a blazing show. The mirror image reflected in the motionless water shortly after sunup provides a double dose of brilliance. Peak colors on our farm takes place a few days either side of October eighth, but some of my best photographs of the pond have been taken as late as the twenty-fourth. On Christmas day in 1993, my youngest daughter Julie gave me a softcover book titled Autumn Leaves. Written by a forestry technician named Ronald Lanner, the book is an excellent guide to
the varied species of trees that contribute such brilliance to the autumn woods. In the chapter “Cool Fires of Autumn” Lanner not only explains the scientific phenomenon behind the coloration of leaves, but he also lists the contact information for twenty-five states and provinces that have hotlines available for “leaf peepers” inquiring about the progress of their autumn leaves. Evergreens—just as the name implies—add character to the autumn woods as a break in what might otherwise become a scene of repetition. A typical woodlot across our region will often feature a scattering—or sometimes a pure stand—of these cone-bearing trees, and Lanner brings their association with fall colors to our attention in his chapter “Somber Evergreens.” Lanner’s remarkable knowledge of trees enlightens the readers of his book with little-known facts about the major trees of autumn and their relationship to our culture, while Robert Baldwin’s photography offers stunning identification. Admirers of the fall colors—like me—will surely treasure this book. Ask someone what their favorite month is, and I’d be willing to bet that memories, favorite seasons, or a birth month would greatly influence their answer. While November was the month when I took my very first breath, it’s those brilliant October leaves that never fail to take my breath away. A hunter, photographer, and writer, Roger Kingsley’s articles and photos have appeared in Deer & Deer Hunting, and Pennsylvania Game News, among others.
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L i f e
Sheryl Henkin-Kealey and Dave Paxson
The Healing Spirit
At The Sycamore’s Spirit Healing Retreat, a mini-Omega blooms in English Center Story and photos by Cindy Davis Meixel
S
even sycamores grace the backyard at The Sycamore’s Spirit Healing Retreat. One might presume the name of the retreat arrived after its owners found this two-acre site, tucked between tall pine trees and Little Pine Creek just off Route 287 in English Center, yet its owners say it was the other way around—the name arrived before the place. Here, Sheryl Henkin-Kealey and Dave Paxson have set to work creating their dream of a gathering space, healing community, and holistic haven. Since opening in April, The Sycamore’s Spirit Healing Retreat has hosted a variety of events including organic recipe swaps, sound and energy healing sessions, drumming workshops, spiritual cinema screenings, intensive weekend seminars by Native American guides, and informational presentations on everything from thermography to
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angels. Prayers from the world’s major religions line the walls of the retreat’s reception area, showcasing the inclusive nature of the facility. “The retreat is not based on religion, it’s based on spirituality,” says Sheryl. “Everybody’s way is right; we don’t need to prove each other wrong to make ourselves right. We believe we’re entering a new time and we’re headed in a new direction—one of acceptance. It’s about accepting each other’s paths. If you’re living a good life, that’s all that’s important.” Staying true to that view, the couple balances Sheryl’s Native American spirituality and Dave’s Baptist background. Prior to settling into a Sunday routine at their new residence in English Center, Dave regularly performed bass guitar with the praise team at First Baptist Church in Wellsboro. It’s a creative and spiritual outlet he misses, but Sundays are now
the one day he doesn’t need to drive to Wellsboro for work with his small contracting business, “Let Dave Do It.” Dave’s carpentry skills have come in handy in the past two years since the couple acquired the English Center property. Formerly the English Center Bed and Breakfast and, prior to that, a restaurant, the site received a full year of refurbishing before opening to the public and is still a work in progress. The April 7 open house, with around 100 visitors in attendance, was a highlight of the past year. “It was like, oh boy, we did it. We’d set a date, six months prior, and we had to bring a lot of the house together in a short time,” Dave relates. “It got pretty nuts, but we finished it and, then, being able to finally take a breath was rewarding. It was encouraging thinking we did do something that may better someone’s life.”
Life
For Sheryl, a standout memory from recent months was an intensive weekend retreat conducted by Lench Archuleta, a Yaqui Indian and traditional native healer from Arizona. Although attended by just eight participants, Sheryl says the intimacy of the gathering added to its power. She feels the small nature of the retreat enhances the oneon-one interactions between participants. “Someone said to me, ‘You’re building a mini-Omega!’” Sheryl enthuses, referring to the popular Omega Institute for Holistic Studies in New York’s Catskills. The Sycamore’s Spirit Healing Retreat offers lodging in three dormitory-style rooms featuring sturdy, new northern white cedar bunk beds adorned with colorful Indian blankets and three freshly decorated bathrooms. The rooms can accommodate sixteen guests, with optional lodging available in two apartments and a cabin. A large gathering space, enhanced by a cozy living room with a stone fireplace, includes dining tables seating at least twenty. Weekend workshop pricing includes lodging and organic meals. Sheryl serves homemade food crafted from local, organic, and free trade sources. With twelve years of experience in the natural foods industry, a B.S.Ed. from Penn State, and a medicinal aromatherapy certification, her abilities are uniquely suited for her current role. In addition to paid events and free gatherings, some of the activities offered at The Sycamore’s Spirit Healing Retreat are donation-based presentations. Sheryl and Dave also envision outside organizations renting the facilities for team-building workshops or getaways. Sycamore’s large events for the year will conclude with the October 18-20 weekend imagery workshop, “A Deep Imagery Retreat: Developing and Nurturing Your Heart-Based Spirituality,” presented by Jenny Garrison. A registered nurse, yoga teacher, and author of Imagery in You: Mining for Treasure in Your Inner World, Garrison, of Wellsboro, will also present a one-day workshop on Saturday, November 2. As winter nears, Sheryl plans to continue holding free Wednesday evening gatherings, centering on explorations in nutrition, energy healing, literature, and film. She will also begin coordinating next year’s event schedule, gathering input from others via the retreat’s monthly newsletter, Facebook page, and Web site, www.thesycamoresspirit.com. “What would you like us to be? What would make them come here? We want to be a place people want to come to,” Sheryl says. With all offerings, she and Dave strive to “create community. What’s really important is helping other people. We’ve both been in situations where others have helped us and the biggest thing we want to do is give back. We all have wounds, we all get lost along the way, and we need to learn how to make sense of the journey we’re on.”
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!
Three Charles Street Wellsboro, Pennsylvania 16901
1-800-661-3581 or 607-426-5898
info@wellsboroinnonthegreen.com
A native of Wellsboro, Cindy Davis Meixel is a writer and photographer residing near Williamsport. 27
The Carpenters, Edith and Zach (top row), and (bottom row from left) Midnight, Johnny, John, and Ben
John Carpenter carves one of the patch’s larger pumpkins.
The Great Pumpkins
In Linden, John and Edie Carpenter grow a magical garden By George Jansson
C
inderella’s fairy godmother used magic to turn a pumpkin into a coach. John and Edie Carpenter use pumpkins to create magic. Around mid-September, the Carpenters and their three sons transform part of their sixty-seven-acre farm in Linden into a mini-Disney World for people hungry for a back-tonature experience. Visitors of all ages who brave the drive down the bumpy lane leading to Carpenters Pumpkin Farm won’t see people dressed in animal costumes wandering on the grounds, but they will have opportunities to enjoy up-close encounters with real pigs and goats and other assorted animals. They won’t find a variety of amusement rides, but they can opt to take a
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leisurely hayride around the farm and treat themselves to the natural beauty it has to offer. Instead of weaving their way through crowds or standing in line, they can wander through a corn maze and wonder to themselves if the Carpenters have a search party on call, just in case they can’t find their way back to where they started. And, of course, there are hundreds of pumpkins in the patch, each waiting for the perfect person to take them home. Most can be carried (or at least dragged) from the field by children. Some, however, can grow to the size of a smart car and weigh more than 750 pounds. When it comes to their pumpkin patch, the Carpenters are all in. During spring planting,
John arranges the corn rows in a way that enables him to prepare the maze in September without the use of a grid. Questions and interesting facts about farming appear on little signs posted throughout the maze. Picnic tables where hungry visitors can eat their packed lunches are placed in the yard behind their farmhouse. Giant-sized pumpkins, large enough to seat two or more young children, get plopped gently in the front yard. An old tractor, which kids can pretend to drive, is rolled out. They spare no effort to ensure an enjoyable experience for everyone who wanders their way. Edie noted that, over the years, they’ve had a few pumpkin-seekers who arrived long after sunset. A few of them even beamed their headlights toward the patch in
Photos courtesy of the Carpenter family
B i ll t o w n
BILLTOWN
an effort to find a pumpkin when their flashlights weren’t up to the task. Though the Carpenters don’t encourage late-night shoppers, they won’t turn away anyone, no matter what time they roll in. The Carpenters opened their first patch to visitors in 1994, the year they purchased the farm. “We didn’t think anybody would ever come down here,” John admitted. But come they did. Taking to heart suggestions made by their early customers, they added the maze and hayride to enhance their patrons’ pumpkinpicking experience. Word of the patch spread slowly, mostly because the Carpenters mounted a minimal marketing effort and posted few signs pointing the way to their creation. They’ve seen a small boost in attendance since creating a Facebook page (Carpenter Pumpkin Farm) two years ago, but their primary focus is on quality, not quantity. “We want to keep it a farm,” John said. “We don’t want to make it a circus, and we don’t like it when we get so busy that we can’t wait on people. We’re really big enough right now. We couldn’t host a festival because we can’t give up a field to parking.” The Carpenters do host many pre-school and elementary students who make annual treks to their farm. They also welcome a growing number of adults, who view stops at the patch as a way of hopping off the fast lane for a little fresh air and relaxation. More people visit on weekends, but why wait? The patch is open all day and every day beginning the last week in September through all of October. GETTING THERE: Carpenter’s Pumpkin Farm is in Linden, between Williamsport and Jersey Shore. When heading on Route 220 South, turn right onto Young’s Road (about 7.5 miles from the Route 15/220 split) and bear right to stay on that road. Take the second left onto Wesley Lane, then take the first right onto Carpenter’s Lane. Proceed on Carpenter’s Lane to the Pumpkin Patch (on right).
First-time contributor George Jansson, a retired teacher, lives in Williamsport with his wife, Sandy. He is also the coordinator at Messiah Lutheran Preschool in South Williamsport.
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From left to right: Wilma Johnson, Darlene Borts, Canon Hinton, Karen Morrow, and Judy Coole.
A Golden Anniversary
Embracing tradition, the St. Paul’s Episcopal Church Antique Show hits a milestone By Linda Roller
E
. F. Schumacher, the author of Small is Beautiful, once said, “Any fool can make things complicated, it requires a genius to make things simple.” By that yardstick, the people that organize the Antique Show at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Wellsboro have passed down a talent for genius for fifty years. This year, the show will be held, on October 6, in the parish hall on Walnut Street, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
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It all started in 1963, when two women with a passion for antiques decided that a show organized by the church would be a fun way to raise money. Julia Spencer and Betty Kerrick had been to a number of antique shows, and it looked like something they could do. So they contacted antique dealers from around the area and created an exhibition hall. In the beginning, there were more dealers in smaller booths, but, over time, fifteen became the number
Courtesy of St. Paul’s Parish
Arts & Travel
Arts & Travel
of booths available. As Wilma Beller, longtime worker and former chair of the show, said, “It is really all we have room for.” Instead of finding ways to make the show bigger, the committee at St. Paul’s used the size of the hall to give the show an intimate appeal. This is not a mere marketplace of antique items, but, instead, a visit with people knowledgeable about antiques. As Marge Weatherbee, who has exhibited at the show for thirty-eight years, said, “It’s a nice, homey feeling. Always a good show, always quality.” Much of the show’s family feeling comes from the traditions that were instituted from the very beginning. Originally it was a two-day show, with the dealers from outside the Wellsboro area staying with members of the parish. Then, at the end of the show, they had a full dinner with the dealers and the people from St. Paul’s that worked on the show. That tradition was altered when the show became a one-day affair. For the last twenty-five years, Wilma Beller has baked a special ham for what she calls “a little supper” the night before the show. It is still attended by the dealers and the workers for the show. As she says, “We do it because we enjoy doing it.” The other longstanding tradition is a raffle of three antique items donated by members of the parish. Currently, many of these items are from the home of Louise Brown, who left an “antique legacy” to St. Paul’s to continue this tradition. And, like any good church event, there is a lunch counter with homemade sandwiches, soups, pies, and beverages, along with a bake sale table. The show is one of the community anchors for Wellsboro’s Fall Harvest Fest, which is held the same weekend. On the sidewalks, vendors offer a variety of crafts and baked goods, the local Farmer’s Market displays the harvest, and the downtown merchants host sidewalk sales. The secret to the long success of the Antique Show is not hard to fathom. Instead of talking about increasing the size of the show, or the dates of the show, the people involved in this project talk about strengthening the connections between people. Lisa Dodge, secretary for the parish, says that working on the show “builds the sisterhood” in the parish. The focus is on the bond of friendship between the antique dealers that exhibit, the parish people who work on the project, extending to the church as a whole, and then on to the community. The Antique Show and Sale at St. Paul’s raises money for the church, but its “cash crop” is the outpouring of care and fellowship to everyone involved.
Mountain Home contributor Linda Roller is a book seller, appraiser, and writer in Avis, Pennsylvania. 31
Arts & Travel
STAY
IN CORNING
Escape to Corning and the Finger Lakes for a colorful, fall weekend! Fall getaway packages available. Museums, Wines, Shopping . . . the choices are all yours . . . at Radisson Hotel Corning.
“We are very pleased with the reach of Mountain Home magazine, it continues to be an important marketing vehicle for us to spread the word about all of the wonderful experiences available in Corning's Gaffer District. It's a pleasure to welcome Mountain Home readers to come and enjoy our downtown!” -Coleen Fabrizi, Executive Director of Corning’s Gaffer District
CORNING-GAFFER DISTRICT • Radisson Hotel Corning 125 Denison Parkway East, Corning, NY • 607-962-5000 www.radisson.com/corningny • 800-333-3333
WELCOME TO
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FOOD, GIVEAWAYS, & NETWORKING on the GREEN... JOIN US!
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F i n g e r
la k e s Holly makes her feet purple at Casa Larga’s Purple Foot Festival.
Courtesy of Holly Howell
Tiptoe Through the Finger Lakes
Oh, the places you’ll go if you are a lover of wine. Our columnist dishes on her favorite autumn haunts By Holly Howell
A
utumn is a spectacular season, especially if you live in wine country. It is a time when all of the senses seem to be at their peak. The colors, the smells, the sounds, and, of course, the plethora of harvest festivals are enough to make you want to stop 34
the clock. Well, at least we turn it back! There are so many fun things to do during harvest in the Finger Lakes, it is hard to know where to begin. So to make it easy, here are ten of my favorite seasonal hangouts, in no particular order:
The Purple Foot Festival at Casa Larga If this doesn’t say “harvest,” then nothing does. It brings back memories of the famous I Love Lucy episode, where wine was made the old fashioned way—with the soles of your feet! People from all ages can take off their shoes and
WELCOME TO
KEUKA LAKE
jump into the barrels to enjoy the feeling of fresh grapes squishing between the toes. (Note—this juice not used in making the actual wine.) Add in wine tours, great music, hayrides, seminars, and tastings, and you have a winner. Look for it next September—it is worth remembering—at Casa Larga Vineyards in Fairport. (www.casalarga.com) Naples Grape Festival Although the actual arts and crafts weekend takes place in September, you can find the famous Naples grape pies throughout the entire autumn season. There is a grape stand about every hundred feet as you drive through the town of Naples. Hard to decide which pie is the best. Delicious warmed up with a little vanilla ice cream. (www. naplesgrapefest.org) Bristol Mountain Fall Sky Rides When the foliage is at its peak, this is the perfect way to take it all in. Bristol ski resort in Naples opens up its Comet Express Chairlift during the months of September and October, and offers you a breathtaking view from the summit of the mountain. And you don’t even have to be a skier. (www.bristolmountain.com/fall-sky-rides) Brew and Brats at Arbor Hill After your sky ride, head down the road to Arbor Hill Winery. In addition to their tasty wine list, you’ll find a charming restaurant that serves up homemade German sausages and great brew as well. This area was once very well known for its hops production. Even wine lovers like a beer every now and then. A perfect Oktoberfest pairing. (www.brewandbrats.com) Hunt Country Harvest Festival The first weekend in October is the 24th annual at Hunt Country Vineyards in Branchport on Keuka Lake. A full weekend of activities including grape stompin’, horsedrawn wagon rides, tours and tastings, live music, cooking seminars, and even a local artist exhibit. Of course, the wonderful Hunt Country wines are the icing on the cake. Free admission. (www.huntwines.com/Harvest-Festival) The Finger Lakes Cheese Trail You know I could never leave out cheese, and it just so happens that the amazing Finger Lakes Cheese Trail is having one of their Open Houses on Columbus Day weekend (October 12-13). These only happen a few times a year, as the farms are small and not always open to the public. Thirteen farms participate, and are open for visitors all weekend. Sample the cheeses, meet the animals, and learn how cheese is made. Fascinating and family friendly. Don’t forget to bring a cooler to bring home some great cheese. (www.flcheesetrail.com) See Harvest Spots on page 36
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Finger Lakes Harvest Spots continued from page 35
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Ithaca Apple Harvest Festival Since it is their peak season, we need a party to celebrate apples as well! Leave it to downtown Ithaca to come up with a great one. This year is the 31st annual, October 4-6, and will offer up lots of local delicacies made with you know what. Arts, crafts, games, live performances, and rides make this the ultimate street party. (www.downtownithaca.com) Glass Harvest at Corning Museum Even glass has a harvest season, and it coincides with that of the great pumpkin! Yes, you will be able to view the world’s largest glass pumpkin in Corning during this event that runs from September 2 through November 11, 2013. Or, create your own by taking a forty-minute glass class. Lots of fun activities for adults and kids, including a Harvest Hunt in the museum and a glass farmer’s market. (www.cmog.org) Goose Watch Chestnut Festival The smell of freshly roasted chestnuts is the epitome of Autumn. Goose Watch Winery on Cayuga Lake (sister winery to Swedish Hill and Penguin Bay) grows their own chestnuts, and hosts a party to celebrate the harvest October 19. Expect lots of new chestnut recipes, live music, tasty sampling, and one of the best views of Cayuga Lake. (www. goosewatch.com) The Spontaneous Outing Last, but not least, one of my absolute favorite Finger Lakes excursions is the completely unplanned one. A few good friends (including a designated driver), a picnic lunch, a beautiful day, and an adventure just waiting to be written. I’ll never forget a trip I took with my parents a few years back. We had just returned from Napa Valley, California, and an incredible wine experience. It was one we will never forget. Yet, as we drove down the west coast of Seneca Lake on a pristine autumn day, we couldn’t help but wonder why we had spent all that money to go out West. We were mesmerized by the natural beauty of the Finger Lakes region, and realized the same thing Dorothy did when she returned from Oz. “It’s that if I ever go looking for my heart’s desire again, I won’t look any further than my own backyard; because if it isn’t there, I never really lost it to begin with.”
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).
36
WELCOME TO
CORNING’S GAFFER DISTRICT
Finger Lakes
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Finger Lakes
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38
&
Drink
Celeste Lindell
Food
Jelly Jewels
When life hands you lemons, make lemonade. But leftover fruit juice? It’s jelly-making time.
A
s the abundant crops of fruit mature each summer and early fall, my husband and I spend time gathering as much as we can. Over the years we have planted blueberries, grapes, and currants, but we are also blessed
By Jo Charles
to have an abundant supply of wild fruits, such as huckleberries, blackberries, and raspberries as well as chokecherry and apple trees on our property. With so much going on during the summer and early fall, I prefer
to wash and freeze the fruit that we pick—except the apples—opting to turn them into jelly, jams, and butters during the cooler days of late fall. Using the Ball Blue Book as my guide, I consistently achieve See Jelly Jewels on page 41
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Food & Drink
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Photo courtesy of Jo Charles
Food & Drink
Jelly Jewels continued from page 39
good results. I save the small portions of juice that are left over when all of the “exact” measuring has been completed and use it to make mixed fruit jelly. It’s actually my favorite. An acquaintance once said that he never liked mixed fruit jelly. He said it was the leftovers from the bottom of the pots dumped together. It isn’t—but, in fairness to him, he didn’t have a clue about making jelly. I actually seek out fruit specifically for my yearly batch of mixed fruit jelly. Our currant bush does not bear much fruit, but I dutifully pick the berries that it yields each year and treasure them as an important component to my mixed fruit. Chokecherries are also unpredictable. Some years the trees yield enough for a batch of chokecherry jelly and other years just a few cups. Whatever the trees and bushes have to offer is collected and the juice extracted—a cup of this, three-quarters of a cup of that—all added together for the mixed fruit. I make up the difference with a predominant fruit, such as grape or apple and follow the recipe for that particular fruit. I often use leftover wine in the concoction. You know those bottles of wine that tasted so good in the winery tasting room but when you open them at home you wonder, “Why did I like this wine?” Turn it into jelly—it will salvage it every time! Homemade jelly is a wonderful gift to give and to receive. Your own mixed fruit blend could be a shining star to share with a chosen few as a special holiday gift. In case you are wondering, the Mixed Fruit is front and center in the photo above.
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Jo Charles is the pen name of a Tioga County resident who spent thirty years working in telecommunications. She enjoys traveling with her husband, planning family functions, cooking, canning, baking, and collecting recipes. 41
Mother Earth
Restaurants
Suddenly There Came a Tapping By Gayle Morrow
For listing information please email Dawn Bilder at dawnb@ mountainhomemag.com or call (570) 724-3838. Bon appetit!
A
s summer has crept away, the resident ravens have resumed their morning flyovers. They must have been busy elsewhere for a time, or maybe they took a little vacation after getting the kids fledged. Ravens have a bad rap, don’t they, in part because of the quothing raven of Edgar Allen Poe fame, and in part, especially around Halloween time, because of the belief that they’re somehow involved in nefarious activities. Early in the spring, a pair of ravens frequented the airspace over our house. The crows were out and about, too, but ravens have a different look about them. They’re larger, their wings are longer and narrower, and they have a longer, more serious-looking bill. They are the largest passerine (perching) birds in North America. They soar more than the crows do and, instead of the familiar “caw, caw,” ravens’ interesting but not particularly melodic repertoire of sounds includes a distinctive, throaty “brawwk.” When the little ones are learning to “talk,” the noises they make are quite entertaining. Anyway, a bit of time after the two ravens were engaged in some brilliant dips and swoops and other oh-it’s-springtime-again-babylet’s-go-nest behaviors, the number of participants in the regular flyover decreased by one. And when one cruised past with talons clasped about a luckless rodent, the hypothesis was that there were new mouths to feed. 42
Ravens are omnivores, enjoying not only grains, carrion, and bugs, but the eggs of other birds. They sometimes engage in cooperative or “tag-team” hunting and sometimes secret away caches of food. The parents, who are believed to mate for life, both care for the young birds. Ravens belong to the corvid family, which includes crows, jays, jackdaws, rooks, and magpies as members. In the avian world, corvids are some of the most widespread and naturally occurring. They are highly social and intelligent. Ravens have one of the largest brains of any bird, and studies have shown them to have sophisticated problem-solving abilities. They communicate with one another inter-generationally, and have a good memory for faces, particularly human faces belonging to those who have done them wrong (check out the research that’s been done with folks wearing Dick Cheney masks—it’s quite amusing). Folks in the know about ravens, crows, and the like believe the birds are self-aware. Legend does have it that if the ravens leave the Tower of London, the fortress and the British kingdom will fall, but that’s a lot of responsibility to put on a bird, albeit a smart one. Gayle Morrow, former editor of The Wellsboro Gazette, cooks locally, and organically, at the West End Market Café. Gayle recently won a Keystone State Press Award for her columns.
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23 East Avenue, Wellsboro, PA www.flynnco.com — (570) 326-2600 Kathy Doty – (570) 404-1900 Suzeahn Hunt – (607) 857-9749
Check out this neat as a pin family restaurant with spacious seating. There is ample parking for cars and trucks. The building is equipped with a full building gas generator. The building is totally self-sufficient. Power failures do not affect the business or the building. There is an apartment in the basement which has been repainted with installation of new flooring. A washer and dryer has been installed in the apartment for business and personal use. $180,000 MLS# 124423
This very special place, tucked back in a 10-acre wooded setting, is a welcome retreat. Timber frame and stone construction anchor this home to its surroundings. From custom tile work to built-in cabinetry this home offers unique features in every room! Gardens, deck, covered porch; so much to see! $215,000
Very well maintained home just a few miles from downtown Coudersport and hospital. Home features 3 bedrooms, updated bathroom, open kitchen and living room, beautiful private patio area, and a 2 car garage. $110,000
Magnificent 3,065 sqft 4 BR residence on over 3.6 acres in a desirable location within 3 miles from Wellsboro and easy access to major commuting routes. Features unique varieties of exotic natural stone, 5” Brazilian cherry floors, 5’ wide staircase and hallways, 8” crown molding. Master suite features bath w/floor to ceiling travertine, radiant heat floors, Kohler jetted soaking tub. Spacious working/entertaining kitchen with up to date style and amenities. Front porch relaxation leads to beautiful views. $349,500 MLS #122218
Real estate
www.npennrealestate.com
107 Main Street Wellsboro, Pa. 16922
570-723-1600 www.wellsboroparealestate.com
Whiskey Creek Rd., Caton NY If you are looking for recreational property with OGM’s, then look no further. 48+ wooded acres, ideal for hunting, hiking, horseback riding, and more. Seller is motivated. Call now to make this yours! REF#10736 $106,000
FIRST
Scott Bastian, Broker 18 North Main St, Mansfield, PA 16933 • 570-662-2200 mansfieldremax@yahoo.com • www.twintiersrealty.com
SULLIVAN TWP
18.12 Acres - $121,500
LAND
PR IC E
LAND with OGMS
RE DU CE D
Serving Tioga, Bradford, & Potter Counties, and Surrounding Areas OSCEOLA TWP
60.00 Acres - $480,000
15.99 Acres - $39,900 80.97 Acres - $239,900
89.32 Acres - $525,000
3.34 Acres - $39,900
RUTLAND TWP
Gorgeous Country Views! Outstanding 5400+ sq ft timber frame home. Huge stone fireplace adorns the great room. Fully finished basement with its own kitchen/ dining area, family room, & 4 BR. Large attached garage, covered porches, & much more. Close to downtown Wellsboro. Only $483,990 M124497
Lois Van Ness 570-404-1340
Joan Miller
570-439-4313
BLOSSBURG BORO
MIDDLEBURY TWP SMITHFIELD TWP
90.70 Acres - $799,900 TIOGA TWP
106.30 Acres - $599,000
Cat Ostrom-Rush 570-447-8861
We have over 250 listings!
Dick Pino
570-404-0852
Lovely Home! 4 BR, 3 BA ranch home sitting on 4.45 acres directly across the road from Hills Creek Lake. Relax in the living room in front of a wood fire in the brick fireplace or enjoy the evening on the enclosed porch. Now Only $198,000 M124052
Wynnette Richardson 570-439-1841
Kim Case
570-404-0794
WARD TWP
50.78 Acres - $159,840 SULLIVAN TWP
174.48 Acres - $523,428
Chris Gilbert 570-404-1268
Gwen Heyler 570-854-8528
www.twintiersrealty.com Check Them All Out Online! Each Office Independently Owned & Operated
M a r k e t P la c e
Submitted for Your Approval A journey into graphic artist Tracy Tomei’s imagination By Meghan Lee
B
y day, Tracy Tomei is a graphic designer for Woolrich. In her spare time she creates the quirky and surreal prints that can be found in her virtual store, AndSoItGoes. Rod Serling’s opening lines from The Twilight Zone, “A journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination,” perfectly embody the whimsical world discovered in her artwork, which combines strong typography and tailored illustrations to create beautiful statements about life and its absurdity. The playfulness of Tracy’s art is contagious, light, and refreshing. She
takes the quotes that wheedle their way into her mind—right now, those quotes are from the Wes Anderson film The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou and the ’90s cult television show, Twin Peaks—and illustrates them in a way so captivating in their simplicity that the viewer cannot help but be drawn to the power of her typography—which she describes “as an art in itself.” In her virtual shop are prints featuring everything from the eccentric (“there is a fish in the percolator”) to the more cerebral (“What do you fear most in the world? The possibility that love is not enough.”) And while the
quotes are removed from their contexts, and could be described as fan-art because they will be more recognizable by followers of the pop culture from which she draws her inspiration, they remain intriguing—and maybe even more charming in their mystery—to the viewer that is not so familiar. While these two sources of inspiration will always be near and dear, she is expanding and seeking muses within classic literature, books by more contemporary authors, like J. D. Salinger and Tom Robbins (two of her favorites), and other television shows, like See AndSoItGoes on page 48
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Mountain Home
Service Direct Sporting Goods
MARKETPLACE
JOHN’S SPORTING GOODS Guns bought, sold, and traded!
Portlandia—a satirical sketch comedy television series on IFC. Tracy lives with her husband and a new puppy in Williamsport, but her virtual print shop is hosted by the ecommerce Web site Etsy, which brings together artisans, vintage merchants, and other distributors of handmade goods from all over the world. The vastness of the site can be overwhelming, but it’s easy to find Tracy’s shop, www.AndSoItGoesShop.etsy.com, through a feature on the Web site called “Shop Local” which allows you to search for shops by city, state, or country. By the way, our region, The Last Great Place, we call it, has a flourishing Etsy marketplace with locals handcrafting gifts, novelties, clothing, and even hand-spun yarn. And in honor of this Last Great Place, I have two prints of Tracy’s hanging on my kitchen wall, both featuring the John Muir quote “the mountains are calling and I must go”—a perfectly fitting sentiment of the alluring beauty of these mountains seen from the view out my window. Framing these beautiful words are perfectly simplistic illustrations of mountainsides (both of the prints are 48
currently available in her shop). You or I might fixate on a certain passage from a book or a particularly addictive song lyric until it remains on a seemingly infinite loop in our heads. Where do you put that? A notebook, where it is destined to fade from recollection? But Tracy uses the words swirling in her head as a catalyst for her illustrations. After finding Tracy on Etsy, I thought of handing over my notebook and begging her to make the phrases that were so special to me into something more tangible, in the spirit of her two prints that hang on my kitchen wall. And, lucky for me, Tracy has a custom order option. She will gladly create a print constructed around a favorite quote of your choosing—quirky Christmas gift idea anyone? And just in time for the holidays, she is soon going to begin offering larger eight-by-ten prints as an additional option to her current selection of five-by-seven prints and custom calendars. But for the more closely approaching holiday, Halloween, she has created a series of The Twilight Zone-inspired prints just for us. They embody a spooky cool that can be displayed and appreciated all year round.
Visa, Mastercard & Discover 90 day Layaway & Gift Certificates 814-435-3544 johnmzeigler@verizon.net 27 Whispering Pines Ln. Galeton, PA
Professional Services
AndSoItGoes continued from page 47
LivingGreen Consulting
&
Simple Solutions Non-Toxic Alternatives
Clean & Green for your
Home • Office • Garden Nutrition • Health & Beauty Energy-Saving • Organizing
cindy.copp11@gmail.com 570-294-5341
tory Beneath The Veil, The Realm of Faery Awaits
Shopping
Lodging
Mind…Body…Spirit An Enchanting Gift Shoppe Est. 2000 6 East Avenue Wellsboro, PA (570) 724-1155 www.enchanted-hollow.com
Games Imagination Fun Come see our exclusive collection of Scenic Tioga County Puzzles Check out our facebook page for events.
www.popscultureshoppe.com
2 East Avenue Wellsboro, PA 16901
570-723-4263
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B a c k o f t h e M o u n ta i n
Autombnal Sunrise By Sarah Wagaman
“Who would’ve thought a cemetery could be so beautiful? On my way to school I notice how the sun peers through the leaves changing colors and how the stone acts as a frame around the sunrise,” says Wellsboro photographer Sarah Wagaman.
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I’M A SUSQUEHANNA CANCER SURVIVOR. “I was blessed to be treated at an amazing comprehensive cancer center, right here in Williamsport. I knew I was in good hands the moment I walked into the Susquehanna Health Cancer Center, with its bright, airy and modern facilities. They treated my breast cancer with the latest technology and therapies. Throughout it all, I was impressed by the skills and compassion of the doctors, nurses, nutritionists and social workers who treat you – body, mind and soul. They provided comfort and guidance for me and my family every step of the way. Now that my cancer is cured, I’m exercising regularly and have already dropped 30 pounds. I’m healthy, strong and feel like a new person – and I appreciate every magical moment of life.” – Sue Danneker, Linden To learn more about our Cancer Center and Sue’s story of survival, visit SusquehannaHealth.org/Cancer