Ohio Cooperative Living - August - Carroll

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OHIO

AUGUST 2021

COOPERATIVE Carroll Electric Cooperative

Night moves Adventure after dark

ALSO INSIDE Stacking the generating deck Surf Ohio Iconic Airstreams


Be E Smart 3

ENERGY•EFFICIENCY•EDUCATION

LOGO WINNERS Electricity

✔ 10 years in Ohio school classrooms

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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021

INSIDE FEATURES 24 SURF’S UP Ohio shredders show you can hang ten even in a landlocked city far from the coast.

28 AFTER DARK Nighttime adds an extra spark of adventure for thrill-seekers.

30 SILVER BULLET Iconic American Airstreams — made in Ohio, treasured everywhere.

34 HARDTACKERS The miles between the Buckeye State and the high seas haven’t stopped this singing group from the lure of sea shanty lore. Cover image on most editions: The adventure changes when the sun goes down, as nighttime brings out a new set of outdoor discoveries (GibsonPictures/via Getty Images). This page: The aluminum skin of a classic Airstream trailer can be polished to a mirror-like finish — look closely and you can see both of Jim Muncy’s Airstreams (photo by James Proffitt).

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  1


UP FRONT

All of the above Choose the correct answer: What sources do Ohio’s 24 electric cooperatives employ to generate power for 1 million Ohioans?

☐ coal ☐ natural gas ☐ solar ☐ hydropower

☐ landfill methane ☐ biodigesters ☑ all of the above

Why all of the above? We’ve said it before, we’ll say it again: Reliability, affordability, and fuel diversity are paramount to the resiliency of the nation’s electric grid — period. While intermittent generation sources — like wind and solar — certainly play an increasingly larger role in electricity production, they are, for the time being, supporting performers. Issues in Texas and California have made it clear to the rest of the country that blackouts can and will happen, causing tremendous suffering and loss. It’s a gamble not worth taking, particularly when lives lie in the balance. Those recent debacles taught us some pretty clear lessons about the value and benefit of having a diverse set of supply resources available. Check out Rebecca Seum’s story on page 4, explaining how Buckeye Power tries to play as strong a hand as possible in the power generation game in Ohio. We do so because during extreme weather events, things don’t always work as expected. Recent failures have been a combination of poor planning, severe weather, and the resulting impacts on plant operations (such as frozen pipes or lack of wind or sunshine). Being prepared for the unexpected is part of the job of generating and transmitting energy.

Do it right Both Texas and California were preparing for more troubles due to hot weather and plant shutdowns. As recently as mid-June, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) issued a plea for Texans to conserve energy in advance of the state’s traditionally sweltering summer heat. An identical scenario played out at about the same time in California, when Gov. Gavin Newsom called on residents to conserve energy use during an “extreme heat event.” Newsom subsequently signed an emergency proclamation that allowed power plants to ramp up operations to meet the demand for electricity — all before the official start of summer. Some government officials and environmental activists insist that we need to transition our power system away from fossil fuels even faster than we already have. California and Texas are clear reminders that we can go too far, too fast. Ohio’s electric cooperative network is committed to doing our best to prevent that from happening here.

2   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021

Pat O’Loughlin PRESIDENT & CEO OHIO’S ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES

While intermittent generation sources — like wind and solar — certainly play an increasingly larger role in electricity production, they are, for the time being, supporting performers.


AUGUST 2021 • Volume 63, No. 11

Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives 6677 Busch Blvd. Columbus, OH 43229 614-846-5757 www.ohiocoopliving.com

4 DEPARTMENTS

Patrick O’Loughlin President & CEO Patrick Higgins Director of Communications Jeff McCallister Managing Editor Rebecca Seum Associate Editor Anita Cook Graphic Designer Contributors: Colleen Romick Clark, Victoria Ellwood, Getty Images, W.H. “Chip” Gross, Catherine Murray, James Proffitt, Jamie Rhein, and Damaine Vonada. OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING (USPS 134-760; ISSN 2572-049X) is published monthly by Ohio Rural Elec­tric Co­op­eratives, Inc. It is the official com­munication link be­tween the elec­­­­tric co­operatives in Ohio and West Virginia and their mem­bers. Subscription cost for members ranges from $5.52 to $6.96 per year, paid from equity accruing to the member. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to editorial and advertising offices at: 6677 Busch Boulevard, Columbus, OH 43229-1101. Periodicals postage paid at Pontiac, IL 61764, and at additional mailing offices. Nothing in this publication may be reproduced in any manner without written permission from Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. All rights reserved. The fact that a product is advertised in Ohio Cooperative Living should not be taken as an en­dorse­ment. If you find an advertisement mis­leading or a product unsatisfactory, please not­ify us or the Ohio Attorney General’s Of­fi ce, Consumer Protection Sec­tion, 30 E. Broad St., Col­um­bus, OH 43215. Periodicals postage paid at Colum­bus, OH, and at additional mailing offices.

4 POWER LINES

Stacking the deck: Having the strongest hand of generation sources leads to reliable, affordable energy.

8

8 CO-OP PEOPLE

Feelin’ groovy: Customers experience flower power at co-op members’ unique garden center.

12 WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE

12

Ohio Indian history writ large: The Battle of Fallen Timbers ended the fight for control of the Northwest Territory.

15 GOOD EATS

“What can I do with eggplant?” Looking for ways to prepare that purple thing from the garden? These dishes will have you coming back for more.

15

19 LOCAL PAGES News and information from your electric cooperative.

For all advertising inquiries, contact

37 CALENDAR

Cheryl Solomon

37

What’s happening: August/ September events and other things to do around Ohio.

American MainStreet Publications 847-749-4875 | cheryl@amp.coop

Cooperative members: Please report changes of address to your electric cooperative. Ohio Cooperative Living staff cannot process address changes. Alliance for Audited Media Member Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives is an equal opportunity provider and employer.

40 MEMBER INTERACTIVE

Dog days: Pooches love the water when the days get hotter!

40

Visit Ohio Cooperative Living magazine online at www.ohiocoopliving.com! Read past issues and watch videos about our articles or our recipes. Our site features an expanded Member Interactive area where you can share your stories, recipes, and photos and find content submitted by other co-op members across the state. AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  3


POWER LINES

STACKING THE DECK Having the strongest hand of generation sources leads to reliable, affordable energy. BY REBECCA SEUM

In a game of cards, assembling the strongest hand means having the right card to play at the right time. Depending on the situation, the value of each card changes. It might be best to play a jack, to hold a queen for later, or to pull out that ace in the hole. That strategy can be used as an analogy to describe the way Buckeye Power, the generation and transmission provider for Ohio’s electric cooperatives, compiles and uses its generation sources. Providing safe, reliable, affordable power to more than 400,000 Ohio consumer-member households, businesses, and farms means having the strongest hand possible so that Buckeye Power can use the right source at the right time. Each generation source is equally valuable when it’s the right time to play it. Buckeye Power pursues an all-of-the-above generation strategy, taking into consideration cost, reliability, environmental impact, and more when deciding which cards to pick up and which ones to discard. From coal to natural gas to renewable sources, each one is an important part of keeping power flowing to our members. This month, we take a look at the cards in Buckeye Power’s hand.

THE ACE: Cardinal Power Plant Cardinal Power Plant, in Brilliant, Ohio, on the Ohio River, is Buckeye Power’s main baseload source. “Baseload” refers to a plant that is built and designed to run all the time, day and night, seven days a week. That doesn’t mean it’s producing the same amount of energy all the time. Tom Alban, vice president, power generation, of Buckeye Power, says, “Baseload facilities vary their output. There’s a minimum demand and they run to meet that all the time, then ramp up during the day as needed.” This coal-fired plant consists 4   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 4  OHIO LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021 2021


This month’s article continues a four-part series on energy generation. Coming up: September: Environmental controls at Cardinal Power Plant of three units: AEP owns Unit 1, and Buckeye Power owns Units 2 and 3 and manages all three units. Buckeye Power’s combined capacity at Cardinal is 1,210 megawatts. Buckeye Power has heavily invested in emissions control equipment on their units, making Cardinal Plant one of the cleanest power plants of its kind in the world.

October: The next generation of community solar

PAIR OF KINGS: Clifty Creek and Kyger Creek plants Owned by the Ohio Valley Electric Corporation (OVEC), these two coal-fired plants were built in the 1950s to supply power to uranium enrichment facilities for the Department of Defense during the Cold War era. When that operation ceased, the facilities began supplying consumer electricity. Buckeye Power purchased shares of OVEC in the 2000s and now owns an 18% stake. At the time of purchase, Alban says, “our load was growing beyond our capability at Cardinal.” The OVEC shares became available at a time when Buckeye Power saw a need to increase capacity for future load requirements. The purchase also further stabilized long-term wholesale power costs.

Clift

y Cr

eek

Kyger Creek

Baseload: A generation source that is designed and built to operate 24/7. Once turned on, it typically runs for weeks or months continually. Cardinal, Clifty Creek, and Kyger Creek plants are baseload resources.

TWO QUEENS: Robert P. Mone Plant and Greenville Generating Station These two facilities, Buckeye Power’s natural gas peaking plants, are used only when needed to supply extra electricity, usually on the hottest and coldest days of the year. Each staffed by a team of only four and a shared plant manager, the plants are designed to be turned on and off with relatively short lead time. In fact, they can be up and running in only 10 minutes (as opposed to 24 to 48 hours to restart a coal plant that’s offline).

Mone

The Mone plant was added to Buckeye Power’s hand in the early 2000s and Greenville was purchased in the mid-2000s. When weather projections demand, staffing schedules are adjusted so the plant will be ready to go the moment it’s needed. Continued on page 6

e

Greenvill

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  5


Continued from page 5

At Buckeye Power, someone is always watching — hour by hour, a week ahead, 10 years ahead — to make sure Ohio consumer-members’ need for electric power is met today, tomorrow, and years from now. “Supply has to equal demand all the time. That’s a balancing act that goes on all day, every day.” – Tom Alban, Buckeye Power vice president

JACKS OF ALL SUITS: Solar, anaerobic digesters, methane generation, and hydropower OurSolar (2.1 megawatts) Community solar arrays at electric cooperatives in Ohio are an intermittent source of power, but consumer-members can support renewable energy projects by subscribing to the solar farms as an alternative source of generation.

Anaerobic digesters (4.45 megawatts) An anaerobic digester breaks down animal waste to extract methane that can be used as fuel for electricity generation. Buckeye Power purchases electricity from four co-op member farms connected to the grid through Consolidated, Midwest, North Western, and Paulding Putnam electric cooperatives.

Methane generation (9.6 megawatts) As organic garbage decomposes, it also produces methane. The Hancock County Landfill and Suburban Regional Landfill produce power from methane and flow it to the grid through Hancock-Wood Electric Cooperative and South Central Power Company.

Hydropower (55 megawatts) Buckeye Power purchases hydropower from the New York Power Authority. NYPA provides power from Niagara Falls and the St. Lawrence-FDR Power Project to publicly owned utilities like electric cooperatives.

What’s missing? You may have noticed the absence of two widely known generation sources: nuclear and wind. There are many variables that are considered when making decisions about which generation sources Buckeye Power chooses to invest in. Availability, reliability, forecasted future demand for electricity, and value are just a few of those factors. Generation sources are continually evaluated, and if the variables line up with our mission of providing stable, affordable, reliable, and environmentally responsible power to Ohio’s electric cooperative consumer-members, Buckeye Power may choose to add cards to its hand. Alban says, “We’re better off with renewables closer to where our load is. The price fluctuations in electricity based on supply and demand mean that generating the power in the same place you want to use it makes the most sense for cost stability.”

6   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021


Your Growth is Our Future For more than 100 years, Ohio Farm Bureau has advocated for a strong Ohio food and farm community, and we will continue to engage on issues important to you. Protecting landowner rights Rural broadband COVID-19 economic recovery Strengthening the food supply chain

COOPERATIVE CALENDAR

PHOTO CONTEST

Farm Proud. Farm Strong.

OhioFarmBureau.org

Ohio Cooperative Living magazine is looking for photos from Ohio and West Virginia electric cooperative members to use in its 2022 cooperative calendar. We’re interested in seasonal scenes from each month of the year — images that really “pop” and convey a sense of time and place. Photo subjects must be interesting and the shot well planned and framed. If their images are chosen for publication, amateur co-op photographers could earn $100 or more. Rules • One photo entry per member. • High-resolution, color, digital images only. • No prints, slides, or proof sheets — no snail mail! Send submissions by email attachment only to photo@ohioec.org. • Photo format must be horizontal and capable of filling an 8 x 11-inch image area. • Include an explanation of the photo — the where, what, when — as well as who took the shot. • Include your name, address, phone number, and the name of your co-op.

Deadline for submission: Aug. 16 • photo@ohioec.org

• Shots featuring people who can be identified within the photo must be accompanied by a signed publication release.

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  7


CO-OP PEOPLE

8   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021


Groovy Plants Ranch offers a variety of gardening-related classes in the 1869 schoolhouse on the property grounds (above); opposite, Liz and Jared Hughes, with their daughter, Lili, at the hippie bus that inspires many a customer to stop for photos.

Customers experience flower power at co-op members’ unique garden center. STORY AND PHOTOS BY DAMAINE VONADA

A

s the summer-of-love sound of Van Morrison’s “Brown Eyed Girl” echoes through the shady grounds of Groovy Plants Ranch, shoppers give their toddlers and dogs a leisurely wagon ride, pulling them slowly along while oohing and aahing over hanging baskets brimming with lush begonias and showy pots of scarlet geraniums, paprika-colored coral bells, and jewel-toned dianthus. The garden center’s signage displays 1960s-inspired shades of orange and lime, and a turquoise VW hippie bus does double duty as an unconventional planter and popular photo-op spot for customers. Every spring, owner and Consolidated Cooperative member Jared Hughes plants the coleus, impatiens, and other plants sprouting from the vehicle’s roof. “It’s a ceremonial planting to mark Ohio’s first frost-free date,” says Jared, “but I also do it because people love taking pictures beside the bus and posting them all over the internet.” Situated along a rural road about 30 miles north of Columbus, Groovy Plants Ranch is a 5-acre complex where Jared and his wife, Liz, grow and sell plants that they ship to customers around the world. It opened in 2016, but Jared began cultivating the business in his late teens while studying landscape design at Columbus State Community College and working at a Delaware County greenhouse. “I started growing succulents in my room because they’re easy to care for and propagate,” Jared says. “It was a side hustle to earn extra money.”

Succulents such as agave, aloe vera, and cactus were the happening plants of the 1960s, and along with his green thumb, Jared acquired an ear for classic rock music. Selling his blast-from-the-past plants at farmers markets, he gave his budding business a groovy name that was a natural fit for succulents. By 2015, Jared and Liz were wholesaling succulents out of a greenhouse he constructed on his parents’ farm near Cardington. “Liz and I are very complementary because she is great at design and adds artistic flair to whatever we do,” says Jared. A former teacher, Liz has a Master of Fine Arts degree from Kent State. She spearheaded Groovy Plants Ranch’s online store and conducts workshops on topics ranging from terrarium planters to gardening for pollinators. “My classes are a fun activity to do with friends or on a date,” she says. “I teach people how to care for the plants they take home.” Besides its extraordinary array of succulents and cacti, Groovy Plants Ranch also carries annuals, herbs, vegetables, houseplants, and rare plants such as Monstera albo variegata (a philodendron relative with fenestrated green-and-white leaves) and Tillandsia tectorum (a silvercolored air plant from Ecuador). Calisia repens Bianca, a dainty houseplant with pink and green leaves, is a bestseller, but the coolest plant has to be the canary wings begonia that took Jared several years to develop. “Canary wings were lightning in a bottle,” says Jared. “One day I noticed a gold fleck on the leaf of a dragon wing begonia, so I did clone after clone after clone Continued on page 10

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  9


Continued from page 9

until I got a stable, all-gold plant.” Shade-loving canary wings have bright red flowers that contrast beautifully with their unique yellowish leaves, and after patenting the plant, Jared partnered with a major seed company to bring it to market. Today, canary wings begonias are sold internationally, and at Groovy Plants Ranch, they practically fly off the shelves. If its vast plant selection weren’t enough, Groovy Plants Ranch also offers a potpourri of far-out experiences. Customers get to shop for premium seeds and arty

greeting cards in an 1869 schoolhouse or relish planting something green and gorgeous at the Potter’s Saloon. Featuring an open bar, the self-serve saloon has two kinds of soil on tap — Jungle Boogie for house plants and True Grit for succulents and cacti. A la Simon and Garfunkel, the Hugheses have created a groovy-feelin’ oasis where people come to slow down and watch the flowers growin’. “We are very intentionally taking a different approach to the typical garden center model,” says Jared, “and we always have unique and unusual plants to sell.”

Groovy Plants Ranch, 4140 County Road 15, Marengo, OH 43334. 740-675-2681; www.groovyplantsranch.com.

Customers can pot their own plants at Groovy Plants Ranch’s Potter’s Saloon, which has different soils on tap for anything from house plants to succulents and cacti.

10   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021


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OHIO’S AMERICAN INDIAN HISTORY

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COURTESY OF OHIO HISTORY CONNECTION

WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE

The Battle of Fallen Timbers ended the fight over the Northwest Territory. BY W.H. “CHIP” GROSS

O

f the many paintings hanging in the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, the largest by far measures 22 feet long by 16 feet high and is titled The Signing of the Treaty of Green Ville. Completed in 1945 by artist Howard Chandler Christy, the painting depicts the historic 1795 meeting at Fort Greenville (today’s Greenville, Ohio) between Little Turtle, chief of the Miami Tribe, and General “Mad” Anthony Wayne, representing the United States.

Setting the scene At the end of the Revolutionary War, England ceded to the fledgling USA ownership of the Northwest Territory — an immense area north and west of the Ohio River that would one day become five states: Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin, as well as part of Minnesota. The major problem with the agreement was that it completely ignored tens of thousands of indigenous people who were already living on that land — from dozens of major tribes — who were not about to give up their claims on the land without a fight. The resulting decade-long conflict was known as the Northwest Indian War, and the final fight of that conflict took place on Aug. 20, 1794, near the banks of the Maumee River. The tribesmen had ensconced themselves in a large area of downed, jumbled trees that had been blown over by a tornado. Realizing that an attack on the fallen timbers would be a suicide mission, Wayne needed a ruse to draw the opposition out into the open. He ordered 500 mounted riflemen to approach the area and engage briefly, then fall back in apparent chaos and confusion.

12   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021

Email Chip Gross at whchipgross@gmail.com with your outdoors questions. Be sure to include “Ask Chip” in the subject line. Your question may be answered on www.ohiocoopliving.com!

The enemy took the bait, pouring from the downed woods in pursuit of the retreating cavalry — only to be met head-on by the main body of the army. In truth, both sides suffered roughly an equal number of casualties — about 100 total — but the tribes saw it as a crushing defeat, and their chiefs began entreating Wayne for peace almost immediately. He accepted their requests, encouraging them to attend a peace council scheduled for the following summer. The result of that weeks-long gathering, attended by more than 3,000 — including 91 chiefs of various tribes — was the historic Treaty of Greenville, as depicted on Christy’s painting, which opened the Ohio country to white settlements.

Historic site The actual location of the battlefield, near the intersection of U.S. 24 and U.S. 23/I-475, was not discovered until 1995, by G. Michael Pratt, an anthropologist and faculty member at Heidelberg College. Today, Fallen Timbers Battlefield consists of three sites: Fallen Timbers Battlefield, Fallen Timbers Monument, and Fort Miamis. It’s owned, operated, and managed by Metroparks Toledo, and has been designated a National Historic Site and an Affiliated Unit of the National Park Service. W.H. “Chip” Gross is Ohio Cooperative Living’s outdoors editor.

For more, click on https://metroparkstoledo.com/ explore-your-parks.


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‘What can I do with ’ GOOD EATS

ITALIAN STUFFED EGGPLANT Prep: 10 minutes | Cook: 50 minutes | Servings: 4 2 pounds eggplant 2 tablespoons olive oil 1 small yellow onion, diced 1 pound spicy Italian sausage, casing removed, broken into pieces 1 cup marinara sauce 4 teaspoons minced garlic 1 teaspoon dried parsley ½ teaspoon dried thyme ½ teaspoon dried oregano 4 ounces crumbled feta fresh parsley or basil for garnish, optional

eggplant?

RECIPES AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY CATHERINE MURRAY

Cut eggplants in half, lengthwise. Scoop out flesh, leaving a ½-inch border around the eggplant shell. Dice inside flesh and set aside. Generously sprinkle eggplant shells with salt and stand up to drain in a colander. Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add onions and diced eggplant flesh, stirring regularly for 5 minutes. Add sausage to skillet. Cook until evenly browned, about 5 minutes. Stir in marinara, garlic, parsley, thyme, and oregano, and season with salt and pepper to taste. Preheat oven to 400 F. Wipe salt and moisture from eggplant shells, brush insides with remaining olive oil, and place cut side up on a baking sheet or a baking dish. Stuff sausage mixture into eggplant shells. Bake 30 minutes, sprinkle with cheese, then bake another 5 to 10 minutes until cheese begins to brown. Garnish with parsley and basil, if desired. Per serving: 558 calories, 40 grams fat (15 grams saturated fat), 91 milligrams cholesterol, 1,379 milligrams sodium, 28 grams total carbohydrates, 10 grams fiber, 22 grams protein.

Looking for new ways to prepare that purple thing from the garden? These dishes will have you coming back for more. AUGUST 2021  •  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  15


EGGPLANT PANZANELLA Prep: 20 minutes | Cook: 60 minutes | Servings: 6 14-ounce loaf of ciabatta bread 1 cup olives (mix of green and Kalamata) ¼ cup olive oil 8 ounces fresh mozzarella 2 tablespoons butter, melted DRESSING ½ teaspoon salt ¼ cup olive oil ½ teaspoon pepper ¼ cup red wine vinegar 1½ pounds cherry tomatoes, cut in half 1 tablespoon capers ½ teaspoon ground sumac ¼ teaspoon sumac 1½ pounds small eggplants, cut into 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning 1½-inch cubes Note: Italian, French, or focaccia bread can be substituted. Cut bread into 1-inch cubes. Place on a baking sheet, drizzle with some of the olive oil and all of the butter, sprinkle with some of the salt and pepper, toss, and bake at 400 F for 10 to 15 minutes, until toasted. Transfer bread to large serving bowl. Turn oven up to 450 F. Toss tomato halves with some of the olive oil, salt, pepper, and sumac and spread out in a single layer, flesh side up, on the same baking sheet. Roast for 15 to 20 minutes or until tomatoes are tender. Toss cubed eggplant in a bowl with olive oil, salt, pepper, and sumac. Spread out on a separate baking sheet lined with parchment paper and roast for 30 minutes, stirring halfway through. Mix dressing ingredients together with an immersion blender to break up the capers. Add roasted tomatoes and eggplant to the bowl with the bread, along with the olives and mozzarella. Generously drizzle with dressing and serve warm or at room temperature. Per serving: 557 calories, 34 grams fat (9 grams saturated fat), 31 milligrams cholesterol, 1,234 milligrams sodium, 47 grams total carbohydrates, 7 grams fiber, 17.5 grams protein.

SMOKY BABA GHANOUSH Prep: 60 minutes | Cook: 50 minutes | Servings: 4 2½ pounds eggplant 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 tablespoon olive oil ¼ teaspoon smoked paprika 4 large garlic cloves, unpeeled dash of cayenne pepper 1 tablespoon tahini paste paprika, red pepper flakes, and olive oil for garnish 1 tablespoon plain yogurt (optional) Slice eggplants in half lengthwise and poke the skin side with a fork a few times. Salt the eggplant flesh generously and place standing upright in a colander for 40 to 60 minutes to remove bitterness and some of the moisture. Brush off salt and excess moisture and pat dry. Heat oven to 450 F. Brush the eggplant flesh and garlic cloves with olive oil. Place eggplant halves flesh side down on the baking sheet and nestle garlic cloves in between. Roast together for 20 minutes, then remove garlic cloves, setting aside to cool. Continue roasting eggplant for another 20 to 30 minutes until it’s collapsed and the flesh is very soft and tender. Remove from oven and let rest undisturbed for 20 minutes. Scoop eggplant flesh into a mesh strainer, pressing some of the extra moisture out. Using a food processor (or mashing and mixing by hand), blend strained eggplant with the peeled garlic, tahini paste, yogurt (optional), lemon juice, smoked paprika, and cayenne. Pulse the food processor a few times, careful not to over-blend. Add salt to taste. Transfer to a serving dish, drizzle with olive oil, and sprinkle with paprika and red pepper flakes. Enjoy with pita or raw vegetables. Store in an airtight container for up to one week. Per serving: 133 calories, 6 grams fat (1 gram saturated fat), 0 milligrams cholesterol, 15 milligrams sodium, 19 grams total carbohydrates, 10.5 grams fiber, 4 grams protein.

16   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021


FRIED EGGPLANT FRITTERS

GOOD EATS

Prep: 10 minutes | Cook: 20 minutes | Servings: 6 CREOLE RÉMOULADE SAUCE 1 cup mayonnaise ¼ cup horseradish mustard 1 teaspoon Creole or Cajun seasoning 1 teaspoon minced garlic 1 teaspoon white vinegar FRITTERS 1 pound eggplant, peeled and diced 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, melted 1 egg ¼ cup flour 1 teaspoon baking powder ½ teaspoon pepper 1 cup Panko bread crumbs vegetable oil for frying In a small bowl, thoroughly mix ingredients for the Creole rémoulade sauce and chill in the fridge until fritters are ready. In a medium pot, bring eggplant to a boil in salted water and cook until tender, 10 to 15 minutes. Rinse with cold water and drain thoroughly, pressing out excess moisture. In a medium bowl, combine eggplant, butter, and egg, mashing to combine. Mix in flour, baking powder, pepper, and Panko bread crumbs until well blended. In a large skillet, heat 1 inch of vegetable oil to 200 F. Using a 2-inch ice cream scoop, gather balls of batter and carefully lower into the hot oil. Fry a few fritters at a time until golden brown, about 1 to 2 minutes each, flipping halfway through. Place on paper towels to remove excess oil. Makes about 20 fritters. Per serving: 297 calories, 23 grams fat (5 grams saturated fat), 43 milligrams cholesterol, 444 milligrams sodium, 22 grams total carbohydrates, 3 grams fiber, 3 grams protein.

See a video of some of our tasty dishes being prepared.

Have you tried one of our recipes? Do you have a recipe to share with other Ohio co-op members? Visit the Member Interactive page on www.ohiocoopliving. com to find recipes submitted by our readers and to upload yours.

www.ohiocoopliving.com AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  17


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CARROLL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES MESSAGE FROM THE GENERAL MANAGER

Virtual annual meeting on Aug. 28 Last year, COVID-19 forced us to make many adjustments to the ways we carried out our business and our lives. This included holding Carroll Electric’s first ever virtual annual meeting. Earlier this year we were having these same discussions about what to do for 2021. The annual meeting takes a great deal of planning and preparation, and we start working on it back in January. At our March board meeting, we knew we had to make a decision. Your board of directors and I have decided not to hold our Aug. 28 annual meeting in person this year. Instead, due to COVID-19 concerns about safety, we are using a virtual format once more. As I write this in late June, many of the COVID mandates have been lifted, but COVID is still a part of what we must consider and deal with. The vaccine is now readily available, yet Carroll County still trails the state in vaccination rates and there are still active cases. Our annual meeting is an important event that typically attracts over 500 people. Due to uncertainty about public gatherings, we decided the safer decision for our members is to hold a virtual meeting. This was a difficult decision and, frankly, not something we wanted to do. When we made this decision in late March, we were hopeful that by Aug. 28, all the social and event restrictions will be lifted. However, due to magazine printing deadlines and annual meeting notification requirements, we had to decide what to do about our August annual meeting. With an abundance of caution, the decision was made to cancel the in-person meeting this year. We hope our members understand this call. At that time, we did not know whether large public gatherings would be allowed in August and if our members would be comfortable attending.

I know many of you will be disappointed in not having the benefits of attendance at the meeting. We will still have the election, although all ballots must be cast online, by phone, or by mail. There will be no inperson voting.

Larry Fenbers CEO/GENERAL MANAGER

The incumbents in districts 1 and 4 are running for reelection, and the nominating committee was unable to find any other candidates to run in those two districts. Likewise, no members petitioned to put their name on the ballot. In District 8, Frank Chiurco, after 15 years of serving on the board, has decided not to seek reelection. Three candidates are running for that district. Please review their information and cast your ballot. With the virtual format, we will conduct only the business portion of the meeting. There will not be any activities at the fairgrounds. This also means no food or entertainment. The board has decided to provide a $5 bill credit to all members who vote in the election. In addition, during the virtual meeting, we will draw from the account numbers of all members completing their ballot for bill credits. There will be 11 prizes ranging from $50 to $250. Co-op Ballot will provide us with the account numbers of members that voted. They will not share any information on your vote itself. The business meeting will be broadcast at 10:30 a.m. on Aug. 28. It will be available for viewing on our YouTube channel and on our website. It will also be available for viewing later in case you cannot tune in at that time. Please look through the rest of these local pages for voting instructions and how to tune in to watch the business meeting.

annual AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   19


CARROLL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

Meeting virtually Carroll Electric 2021 Annual Meeting 2021 Annual Meeting Agenda Business meeting

10:30 a.m.

Call to order Pledge of Allegiance Invocation Introduction of trustees Notice of meeting Recognize Youth Tour participants Recognize scholarship recipients People for People Fund report Action on minutes Chairman’s remarks Manager’s comments Nominating committee report Introduction of board candidates Election (trustees) Unfinished business New business Adjournment Election results

Harold Sutton Larry Fenbers Harold Barber Larry Fenbers Harold Barber A.J. Atkinson A.J. Atkinson Larry Fenbers Harold Sutton Harold Sutton Larry Fenbers A.J. Atkinson Larry Fenbers Harold Sutton Harold Sutton Harold Sutton Harold Sutton Larry Fenbers, Keith Hardin

2020 Carroll Electric Board of Trustees District 1 • Gary Snode | District 2 • Diane Tarka | District 3 • Harold Barber District 4 • Harold Sutton | District 5 • Kevin Tullis | District 6 • Robert McCort District 7 • Todd Brown | District 8 • Frank Chiurco | District 9 • William Casper 20   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021


You can view this year’s virtual meeting on Aug. 28 at 10:30 a.m. in two different ways. The first is to visit our website at cecpower.coop. On this website, you will see menu tabs that run horizontally across the page, with one tab labeled “Annual Meeting & Voting.” Click on this tab, and a link to our YouTube video will be available there. The second option for viewing our video is to go directly to our YouTube channel. In YouTube, search “Carroll Electric Cooperative” then click on the image of our red bucket truck. Once here, you can see our YouTube videos. On Aug. 28, our annual meeting video will be one of the published videos you can select.

If you have any questions, please call us at 800-232-7697.

Please keep in mind that the annual meeting video will not be available until Aug. 28 at 10:30 a.m.

Don’t forget to vote! Election polls open July 26 and close Aug. 20 at noon. Winners will be announced at the virtual annual membership meeting on Aug. 28 at 10:30. There are multiple ways that you can vote. One option is by calling Coop Ballot’s dedicated election number at 855-340-1786 and placing your vote with one of their representatives. Members can also vote by calling this same number and requesting a mail-in ballot. Lastly, members have the ability to vote online by visiting our website at cecpower.coop and clicking on the menu tab titled “Annual Meeting & Voting” or through the SmartHub app on a mobile device.

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20A


CARROLL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

Carroll Electric Cooperative, Inc. Official Annual Meeting Notice The annual meeting of members of Carroll Electric Cooperative, Inc., will be held virtually from the Carroll Electric board room on Saturday, Aug. 28, 2021, at 10:30 a.m. to take action on the following matters: 1. The reports of the officers, trustees, and the nominating committee.

2. Election of three trustees of the cooperative — districts 1, 4, and 8. 3. All other business that may come before the meeting or an adjournment thereof. Harold Barber, Secretary-Treasurer Carroll Electric Cooperative, Inc., Board of Trustees

Exercise your right to vote

C

heck this month’s magazine for candidate biographies and the many ways to vote for the members who will represent your interests on the Carroll Electric Board of Trustees. Election polls open July 26. Winners will be announced at the virtual annual membership meeting on Aug. 28.

Trustee election summary DISTRICT 1

This year, the incumbents for two districts are running unopposed, and one district has three candidates seeking election to the board.

DISTRICT 8

All candidates were asked to provide the following information: • List of employment, education, leadership, and business experience. • Why are you interested in becoming a member of the Carroll Electric Board of Trustees or serving another term? • What, in your opinion, are the greatest challenges facing the cooperative in the near future?

All members vote for all districts. The election begins July 26 and ends Aug. 20.

20B   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021

Gary Snode, incumbent

DISTRICT 4 Harold Sutton, incumbent Vince Carter Travis Haugh Dan Meenan


Trustee election summary Carroll Electric’s trustee election began July 26 and concludes Aug. 20 at noon. Below, you will find a brief overview of the election with candidate biographies appearing on pages 20E through 20G. Vote today for the members who best represent your interests on the Carroll Electric Board of Trustees. Vote online at www.cecpower.coop or by phone at 855-340-1786. If you would like to have a ballot mailed to you, please call

855-340-1786. Mail-in ballots must be received by Aug. 20 in order to be counted. With the annual meeting being virtual this year, in-person voting is not available. One ballot may be cast per membership. Each member may vote for one candidate in each district up for election. Winners will be announced during the virtual annual meeting on Aug. 28 at 10:30 a.m. Please read the article on page 20A to learn how to watch our virtual annual meeting.

Your voting questions answered When does voting begin?

Where can I vote?

Online, telephone, and mail-in voting begins July 26. Inperson voting will not be available this year. Voting ends Friday, Aug. 20, at noon.

You can vote through our website, www.cecpower.coop, or via the SmartHub app on your mobile device. You can also vote by telephone or request to have a paper ballot mailed to you by calling 855-340-1786.

Why is my SSN required? The last four digits of your social security number (SSN) serve as the unique identifier that ties you with your account. This is how we know it’s you who cast the vote and not someone else. Online and telephone voting require the last four digits of your SSN to gain access to the ballot.

Are proxies allowed?

Do I have to provide my SSN?

You may vote for one candidate in each district up for election, regardless of the district in which you reside. All members vote for all trustee candidates.

Carroll Electric understands that not everyone is comfortable providing a portion of their SSN. Therefore, you may request to have a paper ballot mailed to the residence on file with the cooperative. This option does not require that you provide your SSN.

Voting begins July 26 Vote online. Vote at www.cecpower.coop or through the SmartHub app on your mobile device.

Vote by mail. Call 855-340-1786 to request a ballot be mailed to you.

Vote by phone. Call 855-340-1786 to cast your ballot.

No. Proxies were eliminated when the new voting methods were introduced. With nearly one month to cast a vote, more than ample time is provided for every member to find a moment to vote.

How many trustee candidates can I vote for?

How many ballots can I cast? Only one ballot per membership may be cast.

What happens if I change my mind after I’ve already voted? You are unable to change a ballot once it has been cast. Attempting to cast a second ballot will not be allowed.

Will employees or board members know how I voted? Carroll Electric has hired Co-op Ballot, a third-party election services vendor, to implement the election. At no time will Carroll Electric employees or board members have access to any information that would permit them to determine the voting of an individual.

How do you know a member will only cast one ballot? Co-op Ballot, the third-party election services vendor hired to implement the election, has checks and balances in place that will catch any attempt to cast a second ballot, regardless of voting method. Co-op Ballot will closely monitor the election for voter fraud. AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20C


CARROLL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES Posted below is the minutes from our 2020 annual meeting. If you have any corrections or new business to discuss in this year’s annual meeting, please call A.J. Atkinson at 330-627-8536 by Aug. 17.

Carroll Electric Cooperative, Inc. Annual Meeting Minutes • August 29, 2020 Board President, Harold Sutton announced the first ever virtual Annual Meeting which was recorded in the Cooperative’s board room due to the COVID Pandemic. The meeting was put on the Cooperative’s website for viewing. Manager Larry Fenbers led the Pledge of Allegiance. Board Secretary, Harold Barber, gave the invocation. Manager Fenbers introduced the Board of Trustees. Harold Barber read the Notice of the Meeting that was originally scheduled to be held at the Carroll County Fairgrounds and explained due to COVID it was held virtually in the board room at the Cooperative. Districts #2, #7 and #9 are up for election. AJ Atkinson, Manager of Marketing and Member Services, recognized the scholarship and Youth Tour winners. He said a total of $6,000 in scholarships were given this year. Two students were chosen to attend the Youth Tour in Washington, DC, but it was canceled due to the COVID Pandemic. Those two students will attend the 2021 Youth Tour in DC. Larry Fenbers returned to the podium and gave the People for People report. He stated fifty cents is the average monthly contribution our members donate and when you add it all together, it makes a difference! In 2019, $47,750 was awarded to various organizations and individuals. Since the beginning of 2020, $32,000 has been granted. A total of $880,378.71 has been given to those in need since the program began in 2000. On behalf of the People for People board, he thanked the members for their contributions and the positive impact on our communities. Harold Sutton explained the minutes were printed in the Cooperative Living Magazine. He asked for a motion to approve. Said motion was given by Larry Fenbers and seconded by Robert McCort. President Sutton went on to explain this past February a Strategic Planning Session was held and they are done approximately every three years. He stated the Cooperative works for the owner-members. He also said we should be our members first source of information about solar panels and electric vehicles. He said solar does not produce as well in Ohio as in sunnier parts of the country and explained the Cooperative has facts and figures from our own solar panel array in Sherrodsville. The Cooperative sells a service to keep the lights on, but 20D   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021

a solar panel salesman sells the product and whether it does or does not produce what they claim, the salesman is gone. He stated in no means is he discouraging solar power and it has come a long way. He just wants to encourage the members to get the facts because there is much to consider before that initial investment. He said to let the Cooperative be here to help give the vital facts. Larry Fenbers returned to the podium for the manager’s report. He stated last year no one could have predicted a worldwide pandemic. He also said a decision had to be made in May about canceling the in person Annual Meeting at the fairgrounds and holding the first ever virtual meeting in the office. He explained one good thing about the virtual meeting is that it is shorter and hopefully, next year it will be back at the fairgrounds. He said fortunately, five years ago the members voted on a by-law change to amend the options to vote enabling members to vote online, by telephone, and by mail-in ballot. He also said this is the first ever uncontested election since he has been here and it is probably due to the pandemic. He explained that the Cooperative returned over $428,000 in Capital Credits last year and the year ended in a good position. He said 2020 started fairly calm but then the virus began and a stay-at-home order was issued in March, but the Cooperative was exempted because we are an essential business. We had to figure out how to keep our employees safe by juggling start times, start locations, dividing the work force and driving separate vehicles. He also spoke of the ten-year financial forecast and cost of service study that was done and resulted in a small rate increase at the beginning of the year. He stated the Cooperative is in the process of rebuilding aging lines and circuits out of substations. The plan to replace a transformer in the Merrick Substation will be delayed until the spring of 2021 due to COVID. Tie capabilities in Leesville and Merrick sub will be upgraded. The transmission switches are being replaced in Sugar Grove Sub and it will mean a more timely response in the event of an outage. Trees are still on a five-year cycle that began in 2010. Over 2,100 dead ash trees and other outside corridor trees were removed, which was twice as many as the same time last year. We also completed one of the strategic planning goals, which was upgrading our computer systems and cyber security, focusing on protecting our members. He said he was happy to report there were no lost time accidents and the Cooperative completed the Rural Electric Safety Achievement Program


(RESAP) which is done by an outside inspection group and scored well. He announced new employees: AJ Atkinson, Manager of Marketing and Member Services, Taylor Wright, lineman, Brian Riggs, apprentice lineman and Hunter Snyder, mechanic. He thanked the board members and employees for their service. AJ Atkinson gave the Nominating Committee Report and explained some of the qualities the nine-member committee looks for are skills, character, education and experience. The committee searched and could not find any candidates to run this year. He stated District #2, #7 and #9 are up for election and will all run unopposed.

Larry introduced the Board Candidates: District #2 Diane Tarka; District #7 Todd Brown & District #9 William Casper. Jake returned to the podium and asked for a motion to close voting. Said motion was given by Bob McCort and seconded by Frank Chiurco. He also asked if there was any unfinished or new business. There being none he asked for a motion to adjourn. Gary Snode gave said motion and it was seconded by Diane Tarka. Larry Fenbers returned to the podium and stated he had spoken to Keith Harden from Coop Ballot and the results are: District #2 Diane Tarka; District #7 Todd Brown; and District #9 William Casper.

DISTRICT 1 CANDIDATE Gary Snode and his wife, Sue, reside in Brown Township, Carroll County. With the help of his wife and his son, Mark, and Mark’s wife, Mandy, Gary owns and operates 260 acres, raising hay, straw, melons, and other vegetables for home and wholesale market. Together, the couple manages Snode’s Restored Country Barn, which is used for weddings, receptions, and other social events. Snode currently serves as Carroll Electric’s board vice president and has been a trustee for the past 15 years.

Gary Snode INCUMBENT

Snode has been a member of Carroll Electric since 1970. He is a member of ACRE, the federal political action committee of the nation’s electric cooperatives, and the Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives political action committee. Snode feels strongly that the role of the trustee is to listen to the needs and concerns of each member and respond as quickly and effectively as possible. Snode believes that the biggest challenge facing the electric industry remains the rising cost and reliability of electricity. Co-op trustee certifications: Credentialed Cooperative Director; Board Leadership Certificate; Director Gold

DISTRICT 4 CANDIDATE Harold Sutton and his wife, Susan, reside in Ross Township, Jefferson County. Sutton is involved full time in the farming industry, farming more than 530 acres. Sutton served as secretary of the Carrollton Farmer’s Exchange Board for 35 years and is still a current member of the Farm Bureau. He is past president of the Jefferson County Farm Bureau and Rural Preservation Group. He is a member of ACRE and the Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives political action committee. In addition, he currently serves as Carroll Electric’s board president and has been a board trustee for the past 21 years.

Harold Sutton INCUMBENT

Sutton has been a member of Carroll Electric since 1984. He believes that his role as a trustee is “to hire, provide guidance, and evaluate the general manager of the cooperative and to be fiscally responsible in decision-making.” Sutton believes that a challenge facing the electric industry is keeping electric rates as low as possible while meeting service expectations of members and complying with government regulations, all while providing a safe work environment for employees. Sutton has two sons, Scott and Matthew. Co-op trustee certifications: Credentialed Cooperative Director; Board Leadership Certificate; Director Gold AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20E


CARROLL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

DISTRICT 8 CANDIDATE Vince Carter is a Harrison Township, Carroll County native and a Carrollton High School graduate. He and his wife, Tanya, have been married for 30 years and have two daughters, Tait and Laiton. Vince has worked for the Ohio Department of Transportation for 33 years, serving as the transportation administrator at the Carroll County facility for the last 15 years. He and his family also grow and sell sweet corn locally every year, known as Haynam’s Sweetcorn. Vince attended Kent State University and has completed the Ohio Certified Public Manager’s Program through Cleveland State University, which is a nationally certified development program for state and local government leaders.

Vince Carter

Carter said he is running for this position because he is looking for an additional way to serve his community. He believes his skill set he has developed over the past 33 years can be a benefit to the board and the membership, such as right-ofway management, budget forecasting, asset management, risk management, and employee development. Carter said he is committed to learning and listening to the needs of the internal and external customer, analyzing appropriate solution options, and being a team player for constructive operations. Carter considers the organization’s main challenges moving forward will be providing safe, reliable, affordable, and sustainable energy to all consumers while providing excellent customer service through a professional and well-trained work force. “We must strive to improve all these things while being environmentally responsible and budgetary conscious.”

DISTRICT 8 CANDIDATE Travis Haugh is a Rose Township, Carroll County native and Carrollton High School graduate. He and his wife of nine years, Kaitlin, are raising two children, Dixon and Molly. They are members of the First Christian Church in Malvern. After attending Stark State College, Travis began work with Benchmark Construction and rose to the title of vice president. At this position, Travis reviewed building plans, estimated material and labor costs, wrote bid proposals, made contract agreements, and oversaw the site foremen and project from start to finish.

Travis Haugh

After 11 years, Travis left Benchmark to start his own business, Haugh Design Company. The company focuses on designing homes, kitchens, bathrooms, decks, and outdoor spaces for local and out-of-state builders. As a small business owner, Travis manages and oversees every aspect of his business, including financial planning, billing, advertising, and production. Travis is interested in becoming a trustee because he feels as a former vice president at Benchmark Construction and young business owner of the Haugh Design Company, he offers a unique skill set valuable to the cooperative and its members. He knows how to budget project costs accurately and maintain financial stability while also understanding the future expectations of Carroll Electric’s new members. He feels the greatest challenge facing electric cooperatives today is evaluating the current and new energy sources available, providing broadband internet to members, and continuing to bring the best possible electric service to the community at the lowest cost.

20F   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021


DISTRICT 8 CANDIDATE Dan Meenan is the owner of Corell’s Kettle Cooked Potato Chips. Meenan purchased the business 26 years ago from the Corell brothers in 1994 and continues to work in the same small factory the brothers moved to in the late 1950s in Beach City, Ohio. Before buying the Corell’s Kettle Cooked Potato Chips company, Meenan had worked with Ameritech out of Cleveland, which is now part of SBC Communications.

Daniel H. Meenan

Meenan, who holds a communications and business degree from Kent State University, believes his experience managing his small business’ costs will be valuable to the board and to the members that he will represent. He feels the greatest challenge facing the cooperative is maintaining affordable, reliable energy that provides the best outlook for our children, grandchildren, and generations to come. Meenan has been a Carroll Electric member for 27 years and has raised four children: a son, Kelly, and three daughters, Connie, Carrie, and Kristi, with his wife of 32 years, Mona. They are all active members of the First Christian Church of Malvern.

Trustee education The National Rural Electric Cooperative Association’s to govern their board effectively. The BLC can be attained (NRECA) Director Education programs are specifically after earning the CCD and then completing a total of 10 designed to help electric cooperative directors, at credits from courses including grassroots, power supply, every state of their service, understand their roles cooperative business model, governance, finance, and responsibilities, stay up to date on the key communications, technology, and risk management. GOLD issues and trends in the industry, and prepare The Director Gold Program recognizes directors DIRECTOR GOLD to meet the challenges facing electric who have earned their CCD and BLC credentials CREDENTIAL cooperatives now and in the future. and are committed to continuing their The Director Education programs education throughout their service on the BLC are offered in three parts, taken board. Directors must earn three credits BOARD LEADERSHIP in progression from fundamental from a list of approved continuing CERTIFICATE to advanced. education programs within a twoyear period from the time their last The Credentialed Cooperative Director Gold credential was Director (CCD) curriculum CCD awarded. consists of five courses CREDENTIALED COOPERATIVE DIRECTOR CERTIFICATE designed to provide Carroll Electric recommends essential knowledge that every co-op trustee and skills required of receive educational cooperative directors. training so that he or she is versed in the electric industry to help serve you, our consumer-members. The Board Leadership Certificate (BLC) is the next step in advancing the knowledge and experience trustees need

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20G


CARROLL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

Year in review - 2018

A year in review Carroll Electric is an electric cooperative built by the communities we serve to deliver reliable, sustainable, and affordable energy. Because we answer to local members like you rather than out-of-town shareholders, our electric cooperative has a unique understanding of our local needs. In fact, our leaders and many of our employees live right here in the community. Carroll Electric is a community-focused organization, providing jobs, investing in the community, and giving back to the community through annual charity golf scrambles, the People for People Fund, donations to Coats for Kids, scholarships, and a Youth Leadership Tour to Washington, D.C., just to name a few. (Unfortunately, last year with the pandemic we ended up canceling our golf outing and the Youth Tour.) Being a member of a cooperative distinguishes you from other electric utility consumers, as well as other business relationships, in important ways. Co-op leaders are members of our local community. Our nine board members live right here in our local area and are elected by co-op members just like you. Board members serve threeyear terms and elections are held at our annual meeting each summer.

Based on the uncertainty brought on by the pandemic, we applied through the Small Business Association for a loan through one of their COVID relief programs. We received $440,000 through this program, which in turn was 100% forgiven as a loan and became a grant. We were able to post this to our Residential...................................... $ 18,084,844 2021 financials and avoid a rate Seasonal......................................... $ 488,185 increase for 2021.

Electric revenue

Commercial.................................... $ 2,126,285 Industrial......................................... $ 1,888,344 Public Street & Highway Lighting.......................... $ 8,585 10% Commercial 8% Industrial 2% Seasonal

We belong to the communities we serve. Since we are a cooperative, any excess revenue is shared back with members over time. In 2020, Carroll Electric returned $326,554.47 to our members — money that goes back into your pockets and into our community. Though we are local and cover portions of six counties, we are also part of something bigger. Across the country, electric cooperatives work together to restore power during major outages, develop new technologies, and build infrastructure that benefits us all. Early in 2020, we started off with the development of a new three-year strategic plan, providing updated goals to the

80% Residential

While this pandemic did cause us some delays in receiving material, forcing us to delay some substation work until 2021, we continued to address reliability issues for our members. To help address these reliability issues, we cut trees in our Ross and Petersburg substation areas.

We also rebuilt several lines in Monroe and Orange Townships in Carroll County and Goshen and Warren townships in Tuscarawas County. This greatly improved the tie capabilities between our Atwood, Merrick, and Leesville substations. The opportunity to create something new, while embracing traditional community values, has never been greater. We share a passion with you, our members, for making our community a place we are all proud to call home. Larry Fenbers CEO/GENERAL MANAGER

People for People

Rebate programs

$3,525

2017 session and a guide for our actions over the next three years. One month later, the pandemic hit. COVID-19 started spreading, and we went into a lockdown as a nation. As an essential service, Carroll Electric never stopped working. We did have to modify how we carried out our business to ensure the safety of our employees and our members. We adjusted employees’ hours, schedules, and reporting locations. We closed our lobby and kept more separation among employees. We even limited employees to individual vehicles. And our members adapted as well, by using our drive-thru, phone calls, SmartHub, and other pay options.

worth of rebates were returned to members for the purchase of energy-efficient appliances.

22H   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021

$33,000

was granted to help local organizations and members in need.


How we spend each dollar you pay Power cost ......... 55¢ Maintenance ........14¢ Depreciation ......... 8¢ Operations ............ 6¢ Interest.................... 6¢ Administration....... 4¢ Consumer account...4¢ Taxes ....................... 3¢ Margins ..................0¢

How our rates compare to competitors Comparing Carroll Electric’s rate scale to another electric supplier is not as easy as knowing our kWh charge. Rate structures may vary tremendously from one service provider to the next, and it is important to understand how rates are calculated before comparing bills with a neighbor. To make comparison easy, the chart at the right shows the actual amount paid to each service provider for the specific kilowatt-hour (kWh) charge.

1,000 kWh

Rates are based on winter 2019-2020.

2,500 kWh

1,500 kWh

Property taxes paid Carroll Columbiana Harrison Jefferson Stark Tuscarawas

First Ohio Edison Energy

$143.41

$123.18

$127.63

$186.27

$177.81

$188.18

$301.99

$286.83

$309.27

Ohio kWh tax of $688,784 was collected from members and provided to the state of Ohio for deposit in the state’s general revenue fund.

Scholarships

Power Availability Carroll Electric members enjoyed power available 99.8% of the time in 2020.

AEP

Ohio kWh tax paid $ 518,529.16 $ 42,018.32 $ 22,473.76 $ 112,208.76 $ 12.02 $ 68,967.54 $ 764,209.56

99.8%

Carroll Electric

$6,000

Six college-bound students were awarded scholarships totaling $6,000

AUGUST 22I AUGUST2021 2020• •OHIO OHIOCOOPERATIVE COOPERATIVELIVING   LIVING 20A


CARROLL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

What We Own 2019 2020 Total Utility Plant 63,459,940 65,241,123 Less Depreciation 18,165,567 17,815,844 Net Utility Plant Book Value 45,294,373 47,425,279 Non-Utility Property and Other Investments 11,785,524 11,441,384 Cash and Reserves 823,084 494,507 Other Current and Accrued Assets 2,045,966 2,512,448 Material and Inventory 196,640 185,167 TOTAL ASSETS 60,145,587 62,058,785 What We Owe Long-Term Debt 32,028,958 32,941,013 Accounts Payable 1,314,463 1,501,600 Other Current and Accrued Liabilities 2,746,001 2,841,054 Deferred Credits and Miscellaneous Reserves 261,306 235,961 TOTAL LIABILITIES 36,350,728 37,519,628 MARGINS AND EQUITIES 23,794,859 24,539,157 TOTAL EQUITIES AND LIABILITIES 60,145,587 62,058,785 Condensed Statement of Operations for years ended December 31, 2019 and 2020 Operating Revenue and Patronage Capital 22,369,060 22,906,795 Cost of Purchasing Power 12,236,813 12,550,540 Operating the Electric System 6,106,115 6,206,437 Depreciation Expense 1,717,900 1,792,882 Tax Expense 666,563 696,100 Interest on Loans 1,292,935 1,339,195 TOTAL COST OF ELECTRIC SERVICE 22,020,326 22,585,154 Patronage Capital and Operating Margins (after interest) 25,879 11,089 Non-Operating Margins 57,404 46,749 Capital Credits Assigned from Other Co-ops 642,924 708,904 NET MARGINS 1,049,062 1,077,294 The accounts of your cooperative for the years ended December 31, 2019 and 2020 have been audited by BHM CPA Group. The auditor’s complete report is on file in the office of the cooperative and is available for inspection by the membership.

Patronage capital returned

ACSI

83

Carroll Electric attained an 83 ACSI score in 2020.

20J   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021

$326,554.47

in capital credits was returned to members in 2020.


Unclaimed capital credits Carroll Electric is holding checks for the following people for whom it has no current address. These former members’ capital credits checks were returned “undeliverable” by the U.S. Postal Service. If you recognize a name, notify the person. If the person is deceased, let one of his or her relatives know about the unclaimed check. If you have a current address for anyone listed here, please contact our office at 800-232-7697. ABDALLA, WENDY L ABEL, ROBERT H ABEL, ROBERT H ADELPHIA CABLE ADELPHIA CABLE ADELPHIA CABLE ADELPHIA CABLE ADELPHIA CABLE ADELPHIA CABLE ADKINS, LARRY ADKINS, LARRY ADKINS, RUFINA B ADRIANCE, DOUGLAS V AEBERSOLD, BRETT A AGER, SEAN AGNEW JR, R E AIRHART, MICHAEL S AKERS, ROGER W ALBAUGH, STANLEY L ALBRECHT, MARIE R ALBRIGHT, LOU J ALGERI, BIOGIO ALLEN, GEORGIA A ALLEN, JAY M ALLENDER, JAMES W ALLENDER, JAMES W ALLENDER, JAMES W ALLENDER, JAMES W ALLENDER, WILLIAM K ALLER, MIKE ALLISON, DOLLIE M ALLISON, SCOTT ALMY, SUSAN K AMES, BRUCE AMMON, DWAYNE ANDERSON, HOLLY ANDERSON, JAMES W ANDERSON, ROBERT C ANDERSON, RICHARD W ANDERSON, WILLIAM B ANDREWS, ADAM J ANGELO, CHARLES ANGIONE, KRISTINE J ANTHONY, APRIL ANTOL, RICK AQUINO, REBECCA AQUINO, RINALDO ARBAUGH, BRENDA ARBOGAST, AL ARBOGAST, EDGAR E ARBOGAST, TED ARCHER, JAMES ARGENTO, CHRISTOPHER E ARKENBURGH, ALBERT ARKENBURGH, ALBERT

ARKENBURGH, DEBBIE ARMENDAREZ, MICHAEL ARMS, KIMBERLY D ARMSTRONG, DUSTY ARN, RICHARD ARNOLD, DANN ARNOLD, DANN ARNOLD, TIMOTHY P ARTHOFER, JIM ASHBRIDGE, DAVID L AT&T STORE #OH3400 ATWELL, THEODORE H ATWOOD, STEVEN AUBIHL, GRETTA J AUL, JEFFREY AULTMAN, GUY BABCOCK, DENISE L BACH, DENISE BACON, DONNA L BAILEY, LOUIS W BAIR, CHERYL BAIR, LEROY BAKER, ANNA M BAKER, ANNA M BAKER, CYNTHIA BAKER JR, EARL D BAKER, EDITH J BAKER, MARTHA E BALL, HENRY C BALL, HUBERT J BALL, RHONDA BALLEW, JOHN BANBURY, AMANDA L BANCROFT, RAYMOND C BANISTER, WILLIAM L BARKAN, MARCIA J BARKER, CECIL C BARKER, CYNTHIA BARNES, DOVER BARNES, DOVER BARNES, JAMES L BARNETT, ADELLA BARNHART, DAVID W BARNHOUSE, FLORENCE BARNHOUSE, TIMOTHY A BARR, FERN C BARSTOW, EILEEN M BARSTOW, RUDY M BATTAGLIA, AMY M BAUGHMAN, LINDA BAUGHMAN, TERESA L BAUGHMAN, TERESA L BAZZOLI, TINA BEABER, JEFFRY A BEACH, JAMES L

BEACH, RUSSELL A BEADLE, MARK P BEADLE, PAUL V BEADNELL SR, CHRISTOPHER BEADNELL, JANET BEADNELL, TODD S BEAMISH, RUSSELL N BEANS, CARENE BEAVERS, ERNEST G BEAVERS, ERNEST G BEBOUT, HERMAN C BEBOUT, HERMAN C BECK, RICHARD B BECKER, JUDY A BECKNELL, KARL BECKNELL, PAUL BECKNELL, PAUL BEEM, DAVID BEHNKE, CATHERINE BELLEW, BRIAN L BELTZ, KIMBERLY A BENITEZ, EMILIANO BENITEZ, MANUEL BENTLEY, ELIZABETH M BERGER, GLENN L BERKHEIMER, RALPH W BERNHART, JUDY BERNS SR, THOMAS BESSEY, ALBERT L BESSEY, ALBERT L BESSEY, ALBERT L BEST, LLOYD E BETHEL, JAMES R BETLER, JEFFREY W BEVAN, DOROTHY J BIAS, SHERRI BIDWELL, RONNIE J BIDWELL, RONNIE J BIDWELL, RONNIE J BINGHAM, AMY L BIRD, JOHN W BISHOP, RONALD G BJORNSTAD, HARRD BLACK, ROBERT J BLACKLEDGE, ROD BLACKWELL, SHAWN R BLAKEMAN, ROSA M BLANKE, LOUISE J BLISSENBACH, KARL W BLOOMER, JAMES J BLOOMER, ROBERTA BLUEDORN, HAL BLYTHE, STEPHANIE L BOCEN CONSTRUCTION INC BOETTLER, DANIEL M

BOGGESS, JEFFREY BOLEY, VAUGHN V BOLING, JAMES C BOND, CHARLES R BONEBRAKE, S F BONIFANT, VERNON BONANNO, MARY J BOONE, JANE E BOOTH SR, JOSEPH D BOOTH, STEVEN M BOOTH, TIMOTHY BOOTH, TIMOTHY BORNTRAGER, ABE BORNTRAGER, ABE BORTZ, RICHARD L BORTZ, RICHARD L BORTZ, RICHARD L BORTH, RICHARD L BOSOLD, NANCY C BOWEN, JOHN T BOWER, PATSY G BOWER, ROBERT H BOWERS, SALLY A BOYD, DONALD BOYD, MARY BOYLE, JAMES A BOYLE, TERESA A BOYLES, CHARLES D BRACKEN, WILLIAM C BRANDT, DENNIS BRATSCHIE, KENNETH D BRAUN, CLARKE A BRENDA JR, WILLIAM J BREWER, CHRISTY BRICK, ERROL BRIDGES, SYLVIA A BRIDGEWATER, STEVEN R BRIGGS, ROSE A BRIGGS, THOMAS B BRIGHT JR, JOHN E BRIGHT JR, JOHN E BRINK, DALE BRINK, DALE BROCKMAN VICKI BRODZENSKI, CRYSTAL BROKAW, PAUL W BROOKS, JUDITH A BROOKS, WILLIAM C BROTHERTON, DEBRA L BROWN, BOBBY C BROWN, BRINLEY E BROWN, DAVID BROWN, H D BROWN, HERBERT J BROWN, JEFFREY S

BROWN, JOHN G BROWN, LARRY E BROWN, RICK BROWN JR, ROBERT C BROWN, ROSE BROWN, ROSE BROWN, WILLIAM V BROWNFIELD, MARSHALL J BROWNING, HORACE C BROWNING, THOMAS C BRUBAKER, DARLENE A BRUGGEMAN, BRADLEY P BRUMBAUGH, MELVYN BRUMBAUGH, MELVYN BRUNNER, BRUCE D BRUNNER, SHELLYANN BRUSH CREEK GRANGE BRYANT, BRYAN BRYANT, TERRY BUCCINI JR, ERNEST BUCH, GREG BUCHER, ROBERT S BUCKEY, PAULINE BUFFONE, JAMES T BULL, BRENDA BURCH, DEBRA F BURGE, DAVID E BURGESS, THERESA BURKE, GLENDA J BURKE, JILL E BURKHART, CRYSTAL BURNS, MRS LEONARD BURNSWORTH, DORMAN BURNSWORTH, DORMAN BURRIER, JAMES BURRIS, ROSE A BURTON, ARTHUR J BURWELL, TERRI A BUSANA, TODD BUSH, DAVID P BUSH, DAVID P BUSH, SCOTT BUTLER, LARRY BUTLER, MYRNA V BUTLER, RHONDA E BUXTON, WILSON L BYERS, LEWIS CAIN, DEBRA A CALE, ROBERT C CALES, CYNTHIA L CALL, GARY L CALL, LEWIS E CALLEHAN, JEANETTE CALLIS, LARRY CAMERON, DORIS R

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CAMMANN, HENRY CAMP, CHARLES W CAMPBELL, AMY CAMPBELL, CHARLES W CAMPBELL, DANA CAMPBELL, SHIRLEY CAMPBELL, STEVEN W CANFIELD, ARLEY B CARLISLE, DAVID P CARL, PHILLIP A CARMAN, GEORGE A CARMAN, J J CARMAN, TOM CARNAHAN, MARGRET A CAROTHERS, KEITH CARPENTER, DAVID R CARPENTER, RANDY J CARPINELLI, THERESA E CARROLL, SUSAN J CARSON, KEVIN CARSON JR, WALTER L CARTER, BRENDA L CASE, THOMAS J CASSELL, FRANKIE CASSIDY, DANIEL T CASTLE JR, BOBBY L CEB ENTERPRISES CHADDOCK, C R CHADDOCK, SUSAN CHADDOCK, SUSAN CHADWELL, HARLEY CHAMBERLAIN, ANDREA CHAMBERS, WILLIAM MRS CHAMPION, CHARLES R CHAMPION, CHARLES R CHAPMAN, JOHN C CHAMPNEY III, LOUIS F CHAPMAN, LAWRENCE E CHARNETZKY, ANITA R CHATLEY, DANNY B CHAUDRUE, CHARLES CHECK, MICHAEL J CHECK, MICHAEL J CHEUVRONT, ARRANTS R CHEUVRONT, MICHAEL P CHEVALIER, ECK A CHEYFITZ, EDWARD, CHILDS, CORITAC CHOCIEJ, WILLIAM A CHOCIEJ, WILLIAM A CHRISTIAN MISSIONS CHRISTMAS, JAMES CHRISTNER, KEITH CHRISTNER, KEITH CHRISTNER, KEITH CIOTTI, FRANK CIRONE, GERALD A CLAPPER, CATHERINE J CLAPPER, CATHERINE J CLARK, EARL T CLARK, ELMER CLARK JR KENNETH D CLARKE, PAUL M CLAY, PATRICIA P COBERLY, CINDY B

COFFY, LINDA L COLBY, ALISHA R COLEMAN, GARY E COLETTI, MARK COLLIER, ROBERT COLLINS, DONALD COLLINS, EDWARD COLLINS, LARRY COLSON, MARILYN COLVIN, VERA J CONDER, RALPH A CONIKER, JEROME F CONKLE, ELAINE T CONKLE, ELAINE T CONLEY, DAVID A CONN, AARON CONN, RODGER CONNOR, MICHAEL J CONRAD, STEPHEN D CONRAIL CORPORATION COOK, ARTHUR B COOK, CORINNE S COOK, TOBY COONEY, MICHAEL R COOPER, GRACE COOPER, PATRICK COPEN, EDWARD H COPPOLA, LISA COTMAN, C R COTTRELL, LAURA COURTRIGHT, CHRISTINE A COX, CHRIS CRECCO, VINCENT D CRIDER, CURTIS D CRISSINGER III, BRUCE A CRITES, AGNES M CRONAN, DEBRA S CRONIN, SCOTT A CROSS, JEFF CROSS, ROBERT D CURSIO, ANTONIO P CUTLIP, LORI S CUTLIP JR, ROBERT R CZUCHAJ, TIMOTHY S DALONZO, JOHN P DANIELS, JAMES DAUGHERTY JR, RALPH E DAUGHERTY, TODD DAVIDSON, STEVEN DAVIES, BENJAMIN P DAVIES, THEODORE A DAVIS, BRADY DAVIS, GREG DAVIS SR, JAY H DAVIS SR, JAY H DAVIS, JOHN P DAVIS, JOHN P DAVIS, RAYMOND DAVIS, SHIRLEY E DAVIS III, WILLIAM J DAVISSON, JAMES A DAWSON, ANGELA DAWSON, MILLIE DAYTON, CARL J DAYTON, CARL J

20L   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021

DAZEY, KATHY S DECKER, BARBARA DECKER, STEVE DEETZ, CAROL A DEETZ, CAROL A DESELLEM, JOHN C DEBOLT, DAN R DECKER, BARBARA DECKERD, KEVIN R DEFEO, JAMES L DEGRAFFINREED, ANTWAUN L DEGRAFFINREED, GWEN DENMAN, CHERYL DENMAN, DARRYL DENNIS, PAM DENOON, CARL D DERLAM CO DESELLEM JR, FRED DESELLEM JR, FRED DESSECKER, JAMES DESSECKER, JAMES DETTLING, THEODORE J DETWILER, C L DEVAULT, DELORES DEVALT, JEFFERY DEVILLE, RAY C DEVINE, JEFFERY T DEXTER, SHERRY DIAMOND, YOLINDA S DIBATTISTA, JOSEPH E DIBIASE, STEPHEN A DICKERHOOF, SHERMAN DICKSON, DEBBIE A DICKSON, MELISSA DIEKMANN, ERIN DIETZ OILFIELD SUPPLY CO DIETZ OILFIELD SUPPLY CO DILLON, EILEEN M DIMENSION CABLE SERVICE DINGER, BARBARA A DINGER, BARBARA A DIXON, JOHN A DOLL, BILLY J DOLL, BILLY J DOLL, RANDALL G DOLL, TRACY A DOMER INC DOMER INC DOMER INC DOMER INC DOMER, DALTON I DONALDSON, LARRY E DONLEY, DONNA DOTSON, DOYLE L DOTSON JR, JACK C DOTSON, SANDRA DOUGHERTY, BRYAN DOUGHERTY, FRANK M DOWNARD, SHARON DOWNES, BARBARA DOWNS, KRISTINA DOYLE, THOMAS E DRAKE, LEONARD G DRAMBLE, BRENDA DRAY, WILLIAM M

DUFFIE, W M DUCHON, JOHN F DUFFIE, WILLIAM DUFFY SR, CHARLES N DULKOSKI, DARCI DUTTING, MELISSA D DUTTON, RUTH M DWIGGINS, ROBERT DYE, RONALD L DYER, LISA M EARNEST, TED EASTERLING, TERRY EBERLY, JEAN EDDY, CHARLENE EDDY, ROBERT L EDDY, TINA M EDDLEMAN, VIVIAN EDWARDS, JEFF A EDWARDS, LYNN EDWARDS, SEARS EGGAN, CHAUNCEY EICK, PAUL K ELLENBERGER, DAVID L ELLIOTT, KELLY S ELLIOTT, WILLIAM L EMERALD LAKE PARK EMERSON, MARK ENGLEHORN, SHARON L ENOLD, ERIC E ENOLD, ERIC ERICKSEN, CHARLES E ERICKSEN, DANNY ESHBAUGH, HILLARY EVANS, EDWARD A EVANS, JOHN F EVERETT, KELLI A EVERETT, RANDY EVERSON, LINDA EXCELL, LLOYD FAHEY, WILLIAM FANTON, BRUCE W FARMER, ROBIN FARNSWORTH, BRETT FARNSWORTH, BRETT FATH, PAT C FAULK, MATTHEW FELGENHAUER, RODNEY L FERGUSON, ADRIENNE M FERGUSON, BOB FERGUSON, TERRI L FERGUSON, TERRI L FERRARA, GREGORY L FERRELL, KRIS FERRELL, RICHARD D FILLINGER, J W FINNIE, SANDRA E FINNIE, SANDRA E FINNIE, SANDRA E FISCHER, ROBERT F FISCHER, SEYMOUR L FISHEL, GLENDA S FISHER, CHRISTINE E FISHER, PRESTON FISHER, TERESA FISHER, TERRY M

FITCH-THURMAN, KIMBERLEE FLANIGAN, DON FLICKINGER, PENNY S FLINN, IRA FLINN, IRA FLUHARTY II, RAYMOND E FOCKLER, JOHN L FOGLER, ROBERT FOGO, PATREEN S FOHNER, RALPH FOOR, LARA J FORBES, RONALD E FORESTER, JAMES L FOSTER, JAMES M FOSTER, JOSEPH D FOTHERINGHAM, CRYSTAL L FOUST, CLIFFTON K FOWLER, BEVERLY FRAJTER, JAMES R FRALEY, ROBERT D FRANK, JAMES R FRANK, RICK FRANKLIN, EDMOND G FRANZEN, J D FRENTZEL, KURT P FRESHOUR, STANLEY FREY, DEBRA M FRISCH, WILLIS E FRITZ, JAMES FRITZ, ROBERT W FRIZZELL, DEBORAH D FROST, CATHY FULKS, DAVID FULLER, FRED J FULTZ, RICHARD R FURY, VERA FUZI, KEVIN FUZI, KRIS FYNN, DAVID C G & B PARTS GAILLAS, HARRY GALLAGHER, SHIRLEY GALLO, ROBERT A GAMERTSFELDER, DON A GANS, DALE E GARAUX, CHRIS GARAUX, DEBORAH K GARDNER, ERLE S GARDNER, JENNIFER GARN, ROBERT H GARNER, ANGIE GARRETT, DOVIE GARVER, JOHN E GASCON, JOHN A GAULT JR. ROBERT L GAYNOR, JEANNE GAZEY, ALAN F GEGENHEIMER, JOHN C GEISER, THELMA GEIST, TIMOTHY GENNETT JR, JOSEPH W GEORGE, GLENN GEORGE, HELEN GERACI, CHUCK GIANNELLI, ROBIN F


GIBBONS, LAWRENCE E GIBSON, JAY H GIFFELS, JAMES GIFFORD, JOHN R GILHAM, SHELLY M GILLESPIE, SHIRLEY A GINTER, TIMOTHY GINTER JR, KENNETH R GISE, JOHN GLADMAN, TIMOTHY GLADMAN, TIMOTHY GLAUBERMAN, MURRAY GLAVAN, HELEN W GLAVAN, WILLIAM R GLENNON, MARK A GLOVER, DORIS J GODWIN, CRAIG D GOLDEN, KATHY GOLTZ, JEFF GONZALEZ, HERMAN L GONZALEZ, JUAN GOODSITT, CAROL GORDON, ALICIA GORDON, CAROLYN GORDON, ERIC D GORDON, ERIC D GORDON, NORMAN GORMAN, GEORGE F GORMAN, GEORGE F GORSUCH, CHARLES GOTSCHALL, CHARLES GOTSCHALL, GAYLE GOWIN, CHONDA GRABLE, LEMONT P GRAFTON, GEORGE W GRAMINES, JUNE GRANGER, LLOYD R GRAVES, ANGELLA J GRAY, LEIGHA GREATHOUSE, MACK D GREEN GAS CO GREEN, ALFRED GREEN, ALFRED GREEN, ALVIE GREEN, CLYDE C GREEN, DEBORAH J GREEN, LARRY GREEN, MICHAEL E GREEN, TERRY L GREEN, WILLIAM E GREENBAUM, DAVE GREGOR, LORI GRETCHEN, MICHAEL J GREWELL, DONNA J GREWELL SR, RICHARD J GREY, DAVID B GREYNOLDS, RICHARD GRIFFIN, TIMOTHY A GRIFFITH, DARRICK GRIFFITH, JOHNNY E GRIM, DEANNA M GRIM, DEANNA M GRIM, TIMOTHY P GRIM, TIMOTHY P GRIMES, ANGELA D

GRIMES, JEFFREY A GRIMM SR, DAVID C GRIMM, DEAN L GRIMM, JOHN W GRIMM, WILBUR W GRIMWOOD, ROBERT A GROGG, WILLIAM GROOM, SILVIE GRUBBS, FRANK GUERTAL, STANLEY C GUMP, PAMELA K GUMP, RONALD K GUNDRUM, JEROME V GWINUP, DALE E HADDOX, MARY A HAINES, ARTHUR D HAINES, RICK L HALEY, JUSTIN R HALL, VELVA HALSEY, LELAND B HAMANN, CHANTEL L HAMANN, STEVEN R HAMAS, DIANE HAMAS, DIANE HAMMEN, THOMAS E HAMILTON, DONALD HANCOCK, RENEA HANDRICH, STARR HANEY, DANNIE E HANK, MARY E HANLIN, BARBARA HANLIN, RICHARD C HANNA, JEFFREY W HANNA, MARCUS K HANNEN, CONNIE HANNI, TERRANCE J HANSEN, PAUL W HANSLIK, CAROLYNE HARBARGER, JESSICKA HARDING, GARRY B HARDING, HARVEY HARE, DANA HAREN, EARL HARKER, RONALD W HARKLESS, ANDREW L HARKLESS, CLYDE HARMON, KENNETH F HARMON, KENNETH F HARPER, TAMMY HARRIS, CONNIE HARSH, BETTY J HARSHBERGER, JOSEPH HART, CANDACE S HART, EDWARD E HART, R E HARTENSTEIN, CHRISTIE J HARTER, RICHARD F HARTLINE, CARL HARTONG, MICHAEL D HASENBUHLER, HERBERT A HASENBUHLER, HERBERT A HASENBUHLER, HERBERT A HAUENSTEIN, JESSICA HAUGHT, EDNA J HAWK, EDWIN R

HAVERSTOCK, CARRIE L HAVERSTOCK, CARRIE L HAYDEN, JOSEPH J HAYES, DENVER L HAYES, TIMOTHY S HAYES, WESLEY L HAYS, MARY O HEADEN, DONALD M HEALY, LINDA HEARTHSTONE HOMES OF EAIO HEASTON, PATRICIA HECKATHORNE. ELEANOR A HEFLIN, VAN A HELTER, JAMES M HENDERSON, RUTH HENDRIX, ELLEN G HENDRIX, PEGGY HENRY, CHARLES C HENRY, VINCENT K HENSLEY, FRANKLIN R HEPFER, SUZANNE HERDEG, PAUL HERRON, SHAWN HERZIG, MARY G HERZIG, MARY G HESTON, JOHN J HESTON, RAYMOND L HEUER, DONN C HEWETT, ALICE S HEWETT, GLADYS HIBBS, LAWRENCE HICKINBOTHAM, BOB HICKS, FELIX HIDEY, KEN S HIDEY, MICHELLE L HIDEY SR SAMUEL B HIGGINBOTHAM JR, ROBERT HIGGINBOTHAM JR, ROBERT HIGGINS, JOHN C HILKERT, DEAN HILL, MARY ANNE HILL, MATTHEW D HILL JR , ROBERT HILLER, BRUCE HILLER, BRUCE HINKLE, MATTHEW F HIRST, CLEONABEL HITCHCOCK, PEGGY L HITTINGER III, CHARLES R HODGES, AMANDA HOHLER, BRENDA K HOLBERT, JOSEPH M HOLCOMB, B L HOLCOMB, BARBARA HOLCOMB, DONNA HOLCOMB, GARY P HOLLOWAY, CHERYL HOLMES, ROBERT W HOLMES, YVONNE D HOLTON, AMBER HOLTZ, HENRY J HONE SR, JAMES D HOOBLER SR, MRS ROBERT J HOOBLER, WILLIAM H

HOOD, LARRY K HOOD, WILLIAM A HOOPER, RACHELLE HOOVER, FRANK W HOPKINS, LINDA M HOPPER, JAMES A HORNE, JOSEPH D HOSIER, FREDERICK W HOSTETLER, RUTH E HOWARD, ARTHUR HOWARD, JOHN HOWELL, BECKY HOWELL, WILMA J HOYMAN, KATHRYN HRUBY, BRIAN HUBBARD, CHARLES E HUBBARD, MARK HUBBARD, MARK HUBBARD, MARK HUBER, F V HUDSON, DAVID C HUDSON, DAVID C HUDSON, GLENDA R HUDSON, GLENDA R HUDSON, LARRY HUDSON, LARRY HUDSPETH, GARY L HUFF, EDGAR HUFFMAN, JAMIE HUFFMAN, WILLIAM C HUGHES, JOHN W HUMBERT, GRETCHEN HUMPHREY, CHARLES R HUMPHEYS, JAMES W HUNT, BLAINE HUNTER, TRAVIS HUNTSMAN, MARY HUTCHISON, TERRY S HYSONG, JOHN HYSONG, JOHN HYSONG, RUTH ICKES JR, ROBERT E IMES, WALTER G INVERSO, JACKIE L IRONDALE NAZARENE CHURCH ISABELLA, PAUL JACKSON, LYNN A JACKSON, LYNN A JACOB, KAREN JACOBSEN, CARL R JAGGER, DAVID JAMES, KERMIT I JARVIS, SCOTT F JEFF CO FOX CHASERS JEFFERS, LESLIE JEFFERS, RANDOLPH JEFFERS, RONALD E JEFFERS, TRACI L JENKINS, DOLLIE JENKINS, JUANITA JENNINGS, ANGELA M JENNINGS, ROBERT K JENTES, KAMIE JETT, DAVID

JINDRA, BARBARA A JINNINGS, EDNA M JOBES, WARREN E JOHNS, BELINDA G JOHNSON, CARRIE L JOHNSON, DAVID O JOHNSON JR, DONALD R JOHNSON, DORIS L JOHNSON II LAWRENCE B JOHNSON, LYNN A JOHNSON, MARGARET A JOHNSON, RAYMOND L JOHNSON, RHONDA L JOHNSTONE, WILLIAM J JONES, ANGELA JONES, BURTON L JONES, BURTON L JONES SR, FLOYD JONES, JAMES E JONES, KENNETH L JONES, LINDA L JONES, LINDA L JONES, MAXINE E JONES, RANDALL S JONES SR, RICHARD C JONES SR, RICHARD C JONES SR, RICHARD C JONES, ROBERT S JONES, WILLIAM J KST OIL & GAS CO INC KAIL, IRENE KALE, BRIAN J KALE, BRIAN J KALP, KERWIN E KANDRAY, DANIEL E KAPSNER, GREG J KASCO, MIKE KASTOR, CAROLE KAUFMAN, ALAN KAUFFMAN, C R KAYS, JAMES H KAYS, JAMES H KEARNS, LEWIS E KEHOE, MICHELE KELLER, ROBERT G KENDRICK, TRINKLE J KERAS, ANTHONY KERAS, SANDRA KERCH, KELLY D KERNS, IRIS D KESSLER, BETTY A KETCHUM, BILLIE JO KETCHUM, BRUCE G KETCHUM, PAUL KIEFER, NANCY KIEFFER, BETTY KIEFNER, GEORGE A KIKO, LOUISE H KIKO, LOUISE H KILBY, STEVE D KILGORE, RICHARD S KILGORE, TERRY KILONSKY, FRANCIS KIMBLE, BRYAN S KINDY, RONALD J

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING   20M


CARROLL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

KINDY, RONALD J KING, ANNA KING, CHERIE KING, CHRISTOPHER M KINSER, JAMES L KINSEY, DAVID M KINSEY, LORENA M KINSEY, STANLEY KIRKPATRICK, LOMAN D KITTLE, GRANT J KLEIN, DORA J KLINE, PAMELA J KLINGENSMITH, HOLLY KLINGENSMITH, RICK KMATZ, SEAN KNEPPER, DARLENE KNERR, JOHN KOCH, SANDY KOGUCKI, JERRY R KOHLER, HELEN E KOHLER, THOMAS KOHR, ERIC KOHR, FLOYD KOLLAR, LYTAL V KOMAROMY, ANDREW M KOPRIVER, EUGENE C KORNISH, JOSEPH A KOSKO, HELEN KOSTENJAK, JOHN D KOSUNICK, RUBY KOVACH, CHRISTIAN J KOZOKOFF, NORMAN J KRISHER, THOMAS KROPP, CELESTE KRUMLAUF, GLENN KUHN, MATTHEW L KUKURA, DAVID T KULP, CAROL A KUNKEL, JUANITA C KUTSCHER, RITA KYLER, STEPHANIE KYSER, BRENDA KYSER, JOSEPH LACKEY SR, PAUL E LAFEVER, SANDRA G LAFEVER, SANDRA G LAMB, CHARLES W LAMBERT, BEULAH LAMBERT, CHARLOTTE M LAMBERT, LUCINDA LAND, PATRICIA D LARKIN JR, THOMAS D LARKINS, LEWIS F LARSON, ALICE LASHLEY, CASSIE M LATHAM, RAYMOND G LAUBACHER, RAY I LAWLER, ROBERT LAWRENCE, RAYE LEBEAU, JANENE LECCE, ANTHONY P LEDDY, RICHARD M LEDGER, HARRY LEE JR, CHARLES H LEE, DAVID W

LEE, SHERRY E LEE, TOM LEE, TOM LEEPER, CARYL LEEPER, MABEL LEESVILLE LAKE PROP OWNERS LEGGETT, DARRELL LEGGETT, DARRELL LEGGETT, KAY LEGGETT, SANDRA LEHNER, DOUGLAS S LEHR, LENORA J LEMMON, JAMES LENHART JR, THOMAS J LEOTTI, PATRICIA A LEROY, DIANE LEVENGOOD, BARBARA LEVENGOOD, BARBARA LEVENGOOD, CAROL J LEVENGOOD, WENDY J LEWIS, BONNIE S LEWIS JR, DAVID R LEWIS, EVELYN LEWIS, ROBERT A LEWIS, TERESA LEYDA, LOIS R LIAO, REBECCA B LIBER, MARY LILE, GAYE L LILLY, GARNETTE LILLY JR, JOHN E LINARD, BETTY L LINEBAUGH, LEO LINGENFELTER, WALTER T LINHAM, STEPHEN V LINTON JR JOHN LIPINSKY, STAN LITTLE, AMANDA K LITT, GEORGE LITTLE, IRBIN LITZ, EDWARD L LIVENGOOD, ALLEN D LIVINGSTONE SR, SCOTT M LOFTIN, PAULETTE LONG, BENSON LONG, BRENDA I LONG, ELLSWORTH L LONG, GEORGE LONG, SAMUEL W LONGO, SHAWN LONGWELL JR, DONALD E LOTZ, JAMES LUCAS, CAROL LUCAS JR, CHESTER R LUCAS, DARLENE LUCAS, GREG LUCAS, LAYNA D LUCAS, LAYNA D LUCAS, LAYNA D LUKASIK, MICHAEL LUKENS, GERALD T LUMLEY, HEATHER L LUOMA, JOHN K LUTE, LOLA M

20N   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021

LUZADER, CHARLES W LUZADER, CHARLES W LYALL, JAMES M LYONS, DAVID C MAAG, WILLIAM R MACFADDEN, JP MACKAN, MICHAEL MACKEY, CHARLES F MACKO, RONALD E MADDIX, ROY E MADDIX, ROY E MADDRELL, BONNY S MAIER, DOUGLAS R MAJOR, PAMELA MALONE, CHERYL MALONE, DAVID K MALTERER, KYLIE M MANACK SR, GARY L MANN, STEVEN MANSFIELD, DAVID MANSFIELD, VANESSA A MAPLE, CLARE MAPLE, JAMIE K MARCONI, LORAIN MARCUM JR, CONLEY L MARKER, PAULA MARSHALL, ALBERT R MARSHALL, HARRY MARSHALL, RUTH MARTENEY, VICKI MARTHA, JOSEPH A MARTIN, CLYDE W MARTIN, DAVID F MARTIN, FRANK J MARTIN, GERALD MARTIN, JEFF D MARTIN, JOAN MARTIN, LOUISE MARTIN, LOUISE MARTIN, PATRICK N MARTIN, STEVE MARTIN, STEVE MARTIN, STEVE MARTIN, TOMMY MARTINELLI, ROBERT MARTINEZ, MARCI G MARTINO JR, RICK MARZEC, SHAWN E MASAL, PAUL MASON, BONNIE L MASON, RICHARD A MASSEY, RAYMOND MAST, DEMAS MAST, JAMES W MASTERS, VIRGIL K MASTON, STEVEN P MATTHEWS, MARK MATTHEWS, MARK MAURER, DELMAR W MAURER, RACHEL MAYBERRY, STEWARD A MAYLE, JOHN D MAZZANTI, JASON MCAFEE, KEVIN T MCARDLE, JOSEPH

MCARTHUR, ROSEMARY MCAVOY, RENEA MCBEATH, JAMES MCCARTY, M W MCCAULLEY, WILLIAM P MCCLAIN, DONALD N MCCLELLAN, JANICE MCCLURG JR, JOHN L MCCONNELL, THOMAS E MCCONNELL, TRACY MCCOURT, LELA MCCRAY, KATHY MCCREERY, BRUCE, MCCREERY, ELEANOR MCCREERY, FINLEY W MCCRORY, LLOYD J MCCULLEY, KENNTH MCCULLEY, KENNTH MCCULLOUGH, DANIEL MCCULLOUGH, GARY MCCURRY, DAVID S MCCURRY, TERESA MCDONALD, ADAM MCDONALD, ROBERT J MCDOUGALL, DAVID MCEWEN, DIANA MCFARLAND, FAYE E MCGLOTHLIN JR, DONALD MCINTOSH, CLAIRE E MCINTYRE, DAVID MCKAY, STAN A MCKEE, JAMES MCKELVEY, RANDY MCLAUGHLIN, NINA B MCLAUGHLIN, RUTH MCMANNIS, RUTH MCMILLEN, DANIEL L MCMILLEN, EARL MCMILLEN, NANCY J MCNUTT, JOSEPH F MCNUTT, MARY J MCNUTT, PAULA MCNUTT, SETH L MCPHERSON, GEORGE MEEK, MATTHEW MEHILIS, BERTHA MENDENHALL, AMANDA MERCER, DONNA MERRIN, CLARICE MESLER, LARRY METZGER, JOHN MEYER, MICHAEL S MICHALOVICH, TIM MICHELLI, BERYL MICHELLI, BERYL MICHELLI, BERYL MICKLEY’S KITCHENS & BATH MIHALIK, K A MILES, KRISTINE I MILES, KRISTINE I MILES, RICHARD MILHOAN, ERIC J MILLER, BARRY M MILLER, DAVID G MILLER, DONALD M

MILLER, DONALD W MILLER, GLENN D MILLER, JAMES D MILLER, JAMES D MILLER, JAMES L MILLER, JOHN A MILLER JR, JOHN J MILLER, KATHY MILLER, LAWRENCE B MILLER, LLOYD A MILLER, MICHAEL A MILLER, PAULA MILLER, RAYMOND MILLER, RICHARD C MILLER, ROBERT MILLER, ROBERT C MILLER, ROBERT C MILLER, SCOTT T MILLER, SCYNTHIA MILLER, TIMOTHY A MILLER, VIRGIL A MILLS, DORTHA MITCHELL, JAMES MIXON, WENDY J MODRANSKI, DAVE MODRANSKI, JOANN MOLDER, LOREL MOLEDOR, JOSEPH N MONTE, ROGER MONTGOMERY, LORIE MONTGOMERY, RICK MONTGOMERY, RICK MONTGOMERY, SAMUEL S MOORE WELL SERVICES MOORE, CINDY MOORE, HAROLD L MOORE, JAMES E MOORE, JEFFREY A MOORE, GARY A MOORE, PAUL W MORAN, AMY MOREHEAD, VICKY L MORELAND, KATHY MORELAND, KATHY MORELAND, MICHAEL E MORELAND, MICHAEL E MORGAN, BARBARA MORGAN, JEFFREY D MORGAN, MARCUS MORGAN, REGINA S MORRIS, DAVID N MORRIS, DAVID N MORRIS, DAVID N MORRIS, DAVID N MORRIS, NIGLE A MORRIS, NIGLE A MORRIS, NIGLE A MORRIS, RICHARD L MORRIS, V C MORRISON, CATHY MORRISON, DEBRA J MORRISON, MIKE H MORRISON, MIKE H MORRISON, MIKE H MORROW, GERALD


MORROW, LAURI J MOSSOR, JENNIFER J MOTTICE, KENNETH L MOUGHIMAN, WILLIAM C MOWERY, ARLIE MOYER, DAVID MOYER, JENNY M MUGNAINI, SUE MUIR, TIM MULLEN, CHARLES MULLENS, ERCEL MUMPIRE, SUE E MURNANE, MICHAEL J MURPHY, CRAIG D MURPHY, JIMMIE E MUSGRAVE, CLIFFORD J MUSSELMAN, JAMES L MUTH, VICKI J MUZIK, GERALD S MUZZILLO SR, GREGORY P MYER, GARY A MYERS, BARBARA MYERS, DAVID MYERS JR, EARL M MYERS, LELA F MYERS, MARK B MYERS, MERVIN MYERS, MERVIN MYERS, TIM I MYLER, FREDA NABAKOWSKI, LARRY W NAPE, JERRY L NAPE, JERRY L NASH, JOHN NAUGLE, RON NEAL, GAYLE L NEAL, HAROLD M NEEDS, DAWN NEWHOUSE, STAN C NICE, ARTHUR D NICE, HILDA M NICE, TRACY NICHOLAS, RICK NICHOLAS, RON NICHOLS, GLENWOOD N NICHOLS, ROBERT K NICHOLS, ROBERT K NICKLES JR, DELZA NIEHAUS, JOHN NIGRO JR, NICK NIKOLIS, NIKOLA NILSON, ERIC J NISWONGER, WILLIAM J NOBLE, CARL E NOBLE, DAVID E NOEL, JAMES NOEL, JAMES NOLF, CLARENCE L NOLAN, DANIEL A NOLEN, MICHAEL L NORRIS, PATRICIA NORTH, RODNEY A NORTON, MARY K NOURIE, WILLIAM P NUTT, MARY S

OBERLIN, KAREN L OCHELTREE, SANDRA K OCHSENBEIN, ROBERT L O’DONNELL, MIKE OFFENBERGER, ELIZABETH OFFENBERGER, JEFFREY L OHIO OIL & GAS EXPLORATION OLIVER, ALESIA C ONDUSKO, EMILY K ONDUSKO, EMILY K ONDUSKO, EMILY K ONDUSKO, EMILY K ORIN, STEVE ORR, RONALD D ORWICK, ROBERTA A OSTROUT, CHARLES E OTTAVIANO, SAMATHA OTT, DANIEL OWEN, RONALD M OWENS, JENNY M OWENS, KEVIN OXLEY, RICHARD B OYER, DALE R PACHECO, REY PACK, DARLO D PADEN, ROBERT A PADEN, ROBERT A PALMER, NELLE PANDREA JR, JOSEPH H PAOLA, DAVE PARISO, KATHLEEN A PARKS, RICHARD P PARRISH, JOYCE PARSONS, CALVIN B PARSONS, DAVID L PARSON, GARY D PASSMORE, FLOYD E PATE, MELINDA J PATRICK, JIM PATRICK, RANDOLPH L PATT DDS, JOHN W PATTERSON, BRENDA PATTERSON, JAMES J PAUL, LISA R PAUL, MARILYN PAUL, VICTOR J PAULUS, TODD R PAYNE, JAMES PEARCE, JOHN PEARCH, HELEN PEEK, CALVIN D PELLEY, JONATHAN S PEREZ, RICK A PERFECT PRODUCTS CO PERRINE, RONALD M PETERMAN, GLENN L PETERS, ROBERT J PETERS, TIMOTHY R PETERSEN, GAIL A PETERSON, JULIE PETRY, THOMAS PETTAY, GENEVIEVE M PETTINGER, RICHARD B PETTRY, JUDITH E

PHELPS, PAMELA PHILLIPS, DENNIS A PHILLIPS, ERIC S PICKENS, DAVID R PISCHAK, JOSEPH PISONY, VIRGINIA PLAVKA, JESSICA PLAZARIN, DOROTHY PODA, KRISTEN A POLEN, BETH A POLILLI, DENNIS POLLOCK, TOM POLLOCK, TOM POOLE, DAVID E PORCO, ANGIE POTTER, EDWIN F POTTS, SETH A POWERS, BRUCE J POWERS-CHYLINSKI, STEVEN PRATT, HUGH M PRESLAN, CLINTON E PRIBANICH, JOYCE PRIMOZICH, GARY J PRITCHARD, ROBERT G PRITCHARD, RONNIE PROUDFOOT, SHARON PUKYS, JOHN T PULLIN, ROSE M PURCELL, EMMA PURKEY, DALE A QUAKER STATE OIL QUICKSALL, DENISE E QUILLEN, DAVID N QWEST MICROWAVE CORP RADCLIFF, MELVIN L RAFFLE, THOMAS R RAHN, MARTHA A RAINES, ROGER D RAKE, GREGORY S RAMSEY, CAROL RAMSIER & COMPANY REALTY RANDAZZO JR, JOSEPH J RANGE, THOMAS W RAPP, WILLIAM E RAU, KRISTI RAY, SHARA L RAY, STEPHEN R RAY, TERRY L RAYMOND, MONICA L REA, KRISTIN REAL ESTATE SHOWCASE CO REARDON, LAURA S REED, BETH REED, BRYAN REED, GERALD REED, JANET C REED, T L REED, T L REED, VICKI REED, WILLIAM REGALLIS, JAMES E REIDENBACH, JAY P REIKOWSKI, RALPH C REISER, JIM

RENICKER, NORMA J RENNICKER, DAVID W RENNIE, MISTY D RENZ, TIMOTHY S RENZ, TIMOTHY S RESOURCE ENERGY INC RESOURCE ENERGY INC RESOURCE ENERGY INC RESOURCE ENERGY INC RESOURCE ENERGY INC RESOURCE ENERGY INC RESOURCE ENERGY INC RESOURCE ENERGY INC REYNOLDS, DAN REYNOLDS, FLOETTA RHINEHART, DAVID L RHINEHART, ROBERT L RICCO, STACIA RICE, BURT A RICKLIC, JOHN M RICKSECKER, ROBERT M RIDGWAY, CLIFF RIDGWAY, CLIFF RIDGWAY, EKATARENA K RIEGLE, TOM L RILEY, ROBIN RILEY, SCOTT M RIMMELE, BRANDY RINEHART, CARL D RITCHEY, HELEN B RITENOUR, RHONDA S RITER, JAMES E ROBERTS, JAMES C ROBERTS, JENNIFER ROBERTS JR, LEONARD ROBERTS, THOMAS E ROBIN, AMY D ROBINETTE, HOWARD D ROBINSON, JUDY ROBINSON, ELSIE L ROBINSON, RICHARD E ROBISON, PATRICIA L ROBY, LEWIS ROGERS, CHRISTINE ROGERS, JAMES G ROGERS, MARY S ROHRER, BRYAN R ROHRER, BRYAN R ROSA, RUDY L ROSE, JOHN T ROSEN, EVERETT ROSO, ANTOINETT ROTH, DOROTHY ROTH, EARL B ROTH, EDGAR R ROTH, LUKE A ROTHACHER, MICHAEL W ROTHERT, RODGER ROUDEBUSH, BRYON ROUDEBUSH, JOSEPH ROWLEE, FLOYD ROY, BERNARD ROY, BERNARD ROYAL JR, JOSEPH E ROYER, CHRISTINE

ROYSTER, WAYNE RUMBAUGH, RICHARD L RUSH, CHARLES E RUSSELL, MARY E RUSSELL, SAMUEL RUTLEDGE, JAMIE E RUWADI, GERALDINE SADLER, BILLIE J SADLER, DEBRA D SADLER, MICHAEL D SAGERMAN, DONALD SAGERMAN, GERTRUDE A SAILER, JAMES S SAJBEN, LINDA SALAPACK, JOHN SALVATORE JENNIFER SALVATORE, KIMBERLY M SALYERS, STARLET SAMPSON, A S SANDER, KAREN SAVAGE, CYNTHIA J SCARDINA, JOSEPH SCARNECCHIA, D B SCHAAR, JEFFERY B SCHAFFNER, DAVID K SCHAFFRAN, SAMUEL F SCHAFFRAN, SAMUEL F SCHARFENBERG, RALPH A SCHAUER, DAVID T SCHEATZLE, VICKI SCHEEL, ROBERT C SCHEHL SR, GARY M SCHERING, KENNTH P SCHILLING, BRENT SCHILLING, BRENT SCHILLING, BRENT SCHIRACK, JANE G SCHLABACH, JUNE SCHLABACH, MARK R SCHOTT, THERESA L SCHROEDER, LISA M SCHROTH, AUDRA N SCHULER, LUCILLE M SCHULTZ, WILLIAM B SCHUTZ, ROBERT E SCHWARTZ, JAY R SCOTT, ALAN E SCOTT, ERIC W SCOTT, MARK A SCOTT, MICHELLE SCOTT, ROY D SCOTT, ROY D SCOTT, ROY SCOTT, ROY SEALY, MICHAEL SEARCH, PEARL R SEARS, DEBBIE SELL, BENJAMIN L SELL, BENJAMIN SERB, NICHOLAS SEVERN, SUSAN SHAFFER, MARVIN C SHAHEEN, FRANK SHALOSKY, EARL SHAMBLIN, WILLIAM

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SHAMP, FLOYD SHATTUCK, DAVID SHATTUCK, MICHAEL J SHAWVER, PEARL E SHEAKS, GERTRUDE SHEAKS, GERTRUDE SHEAKS, GERTRUDE SHEAKS, GERTRUDE SHEAN, TERRY L SHELL, MICHAEL J SHEPARD, JR B SHEPHERD, CURTIS S SHEPHERD, MICHAEL D SHEPPERD, FREDERICK SHEPPERD, FREDERICK SHERLOCK, EDWARD F SHERTZINGER, MRS L W SHIFLETT, ELLEN SHIFLETT, WILLIAM J SHIRLEY SR, GEORGE J SHIVELY, VERNON SHREVE, FRANCINE SHULL, LARRY A SHULTZ, MRS WILLIAM SHUMAN, WILLIAM S SHUMARD SR, RONALD P SIBILA, MICHAEL J SICK, ROBERT SICURELLA, ALESSIO P SIEVERDING, MICHAEL J SIGLER, TIM SILCOTT, MICHAEL H SILVERMAN, BRAD N SILVIS, ADAM C SIMBALLA, KEVIN J SIMS, PRESTON SIPOS, BARBARA L SIREN, RAYMOND L SIZEMORE, PATRICIA J SKERNESS, ROBERT J SKUKOWSKI II, DANIEL J SKY FINANCIAL SMITH , BLAINE E SMITH, BUEL S SMITH, CLYDE L SMITH, DANIEL SMITH, DARLA SMITH, DENNY K SMITH, DON SMITH, GARY L SMITH, HERMAN SMITH, JAMES T SMITH, JOSEPH R SMITH, JEANNIE SMITH, JOAN SMITH, KIMBERLY SMITH MARILYN A SMITH, NAOMI SMITH, PETER L SMITH, RICHARD A SMITH, ROBERT L SMITH, ROBERT W SMITH, TOBY SMOOT, JONATHAN SMOOT, SHIRLEY

SNAIR, MARILYN SNIVELY, EFFIE R SNIVELY, MRS ROBERT S SNODGRASS, JOSEPH L SNYDER, LOVEDA SNYDER, ROBERT R SOLES, LOU E SOLOMON, AMANDA SOLOMON, O D SOULSBY, LARRY N SOLVEY, CHUCK SOLVEY, ONDREA SONNHALTER, RICHARD SOUDER, CHARLES SOVEY, HERBERT J SPACE, ZACHARY T SPAHR, JOE SPEEDY, DANETTE SPEEGLE, JANET SPENCER, FRANK SPENCER, KATHY SPENCER, PAUL W SPIELMAN, CHARLES E SPIELMAN, NANCY L SPITLER, DANE E SPRINGER, RONALD N STACH, HELEN M STAFFORD III, WILLARD A STAGGERS, PEGGY C STALEY, JIM STAMEY, JUANITA STANSBURY, JAMES B STANSBURY, JAMES B STARCHER, GLEN L STARCHER, GLEN L STARK BEAGLE CLUB STARKEY, LANCE STARKEY, LEWIS STARR, DANIEL J STARR, ORVILLE STARR, RHONDA L STEELE, CHERYL STEHLE, FRANCIS J STEIGNER, DONALD E STEINER, LAWRENCE STEININGER, JASON STEMPLE, DANIEL STEPANOVICH, MIKE STEPHENS, RUTH STEPIC III, JAMES J STERLING, PHILLIP STERLING, ROBERT STEVENS, SARAH L STEVENSON JR, EARL W STEVENSON JR, EARL W STEWARD, M J STEWART, BRIAN R STEWART, DOROTHY STEWART, MYRTLE STEWART, PATRICIA STEWART, RONALD A STIFFLER, MICHELE STIRES, MELISSA STOCKER & SITLER INC STOCKER & SITLER INC

20P   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021

STOCKER & SITLER INC STOCKER & SITLER INC STOCKER & SITLER INC STONE, TAMMY L STONEROAD, THOMAS STOUT, BARBARA STOUT, BARBARA STOUT, BARBARA STOUT, BARBARA STOUT, BARBARA STOUT, BARBARA STOUT, LINDA STRABLEY, KARL L STRACHAM, JACKI STRAWDER, EVELYN STRAWDER, ROBERT STREET, ALAN D STRESZOFF, DONALD STROCK, BRADLEY S STROEBEL, STEVEN STRONG, SCOTT D STROPKI, ANDREW T STUTLER, JOANNE C SUBAK, KENN J SUMMERS, DAN SUMMERS, WILLIAM E SUMMERS, WILLIAM E SUTCLIFFE, MARY J SUTTON, DAVID W SUTTON, EDNA R SWAFFORD, TROY SWEARINGEN, ROD J SWEGHEIMER & ASSOC SWINTOSKY, MICHAEL SYDOR, RENEE SYMES, R S SZYMANSKI, JERRY TABLER, ANN TABLER, ANN TABLER, CARRIE TAFLAN, JOHN TALBOTT, GEORGE W TANSEK, LINDA TAPPAN RV & MOB HOME TARR-REED, DEBORAH L TASH, MAC TAUZEL, DAMON TAYLOR, FLORENCE K TAYLOR, HAROLD R TAYLOR, HAROLD R TAYLOR, JAMES C TAYLOR, RAY TEETERS JR, DENZIL M TEETERS, GOLDIE TEITSWORTH, SHIRLEY J TEKIP, ANDREA N TERLEP, PAULINE TERLEP, PAULINE TERRIGAN JR, JOHN J TERSIGNI, MARYJANE THARP, HARRY THEKEN, RONALD W THIESSEN, ANN L THOMAS, KAREN THOMPSON, DON

TOMLINSON, CHARLES L THORNE JR, FRANK C THORNHILL, MICHAEL S THORNTON, JESSE THROCKMORTON, JOANNE THROCKMORTON, JOANNE TINLIN, JEFFREY L TOKASH, DAVID R TOLLE, WESLEY E TORCH, MRS GUY TORCH, MRS GUY TOTH, RUSSELL E TRANSFUEL RESOURCES TRANSFUEL RESOURCES TRANTER, JONATHAN TRENT, BARRY TRESSEL, NELL TRIMBLE, MICHELE R TRIMMER, BETTY TROMP SR, RALPH H TROESCHER, DOROTHY M TROYER, LEON TRSINAR, DOUGLAS TSCHANTZ, LINDA TUCKER, CARLE R TUCKER, DAVID M TUSCARAWAS PROP INVEST TUTTLE, CURTIS C UHRIN, STEPHEN M ULMAN, DURWARD UNITED VIDEO CABLEVISION UNITED VIDEO CABLEVISION UNITED VIDEO CABLEVISION UNITED VIDEO CABLEVISION VADJINIA, MIKE VANTINLBURG, CATHY J VAN METER, BEATRICE L VAN METER, PAUL L VANKO, EDGAR VAUGHN, DOUG VAUGHN, PAUL M VENTURA, STEPHEN A VIBBARD, THOMAS J VICK, TODD VINCA, WENDY E VINT, RICHARD VINT, SHALLA VINT, SHALLA VISSER, JOHN H VOGHT, DAVID L VOSHALL II, CHARLES W VOZAR, JOE P VUTETAKIS, SPYROS WADDING, MARK W WAGGONER, DOROTHY M WAGGONER, EDWARD D WAGNER, EARL WAGNER, EARL WAGONER, JOHN W WALKER, ANGIE WALKER, KIM WALLACE, FITCHUE WALLACE, FITCHUE WALLACE, FITCHUE WALLACE, FITCHUE

WALLACE, JOHN L WALLACE, ERIC M WALTER, MRS JERRY WALTER, MRS JERRY WALTERS, AMY E WALTERS, CONNIE WALTERS, STEVE L WARD, MARLENE WARD, MARLENE WARD, RHONDA WARDEN, FRANICS H WARDER, JAMES C WAREHAM, BRENDA S WARNER, LISA L WARNER, ROBERT L WASHBURN, LARRIE WARTMAN, ED WATSON, CHARLOTTE L WATSON, HAROLD L WATSON, HAROLD L WATSON, WILLIAM D WATT SR, GILBERT A WATT SR, GILBERT A WATTS, ELOISE J WATTS, MINDY WAY, DONNAMAE WEAVER, CHAD WEAVER, CHAD WEAVER, DANNY WEAVER, RANDALL R WEAVER, SAMUEL R WEBER, DARLENE R WECKBACHER, KATHY WEFLER, WARREN WEISEL, STEPHEN WELKER, CHARLOTTE L WELLER, LAWRENCE W WELLINGTON, KELLY A WENNER, JERRY M WERTZ, DOTTIE WEST, BONITA J WEST, KENNETH L WEST, MATTHEW S WEST, RICHARD WESTBROOK, LARRY WESTFALL, ROBERT C WESTON, DIRK S WESTON, MABEL WEYAND, KENNETH L WHEATLEY, GARY S WHITE, EDNA WHITE, JAMES W WHITE, SHARON L WHITTAKER JR, GEORGE W WHITTLESEY, ROBERT W WHYTE, ROGER E WIDDER, KRISTINE M WIEDERMAN, MARK WILBERT, TERRI WILDER, KAREN WILEY, SHAWN M WILKES, BONNIE WILKES JR, GEORGE H WILLIAMS, CORY S WILLIAMS, DANIEL L


WILLIAMS, DEL E WILLIAMS, JANET WILLIAMS, JEAN A WILLIAMS, JOAN H WILLIAMS, LARRY WILLIAMS, LINDA D WILLIAMS, ROBERT A WILLIS, DAVE W WILLS, CAROLYN WILSON JR, ALBERT WILSON, CURTIS WILSON, DANIEL

WILSON, KIMBERLY S WILSON SR, LLOYD S WILSON, TERRY WINGERTER, BERNARD WINKLER, ORANNA WINLAND, KAREN WINN, JOHN E WINN, JOHN E WITHEROW, RONALD WOLANIN, JOHN C WOLANIN, JOHN C WOLFARTH, ROBERT J

WOOD, CELIA L WOOD, FRANK L WOOD, GARY WOOD, LESTER E WOOD, PAUL WOOD, RICHARD L WOOD, RICHARD L WOODBURN, JOE WOODS, RONALD WRIGHT, BRIAN K WRIGHT, JOHN K WRIGHT, MARY A

WRIGHT, OLIVE WRIGHT, SUE C WRIGHT, WILBUR A WRIKEMAN, JEFFREY S WYKE, JOHN V WYNAMIT TREE FARM WYNAMIT TREE FARM YEAGER, STACY YENNY, LINDA M YODER, RAYMOND M YONKER, JOANN M YOUELS, BRIAN R

YOUNG, KENNETH P YURICH, JOHN T ZAGUNIS, NANCY L ZAHORSKY, FRANK J ZBUKA, CHRIS L ZECCHINI, KIRK J ZECK, BARBARA A ZEHNDER, JOHN E ZIFER, CHARLOTTE K

Tour the Cardinal Power Plant Join Carroll Electric as we tour the Cardinal Power Plant in Brilliant, Ohio, the power plant that generates your electricity. The tour will be provided to Carroll Electric members on Thursday, Sept. 16. This informative tour requires periods of walking and stair climbing, so you must be in relatively good health to attend. We suggest that you wear comfortable, flat shoes. Children 12 and younger are not permitted to attend. Five seven five six zero zero Spots are limited and will be filled on a first-call, first-served basis. If you are interested, please call Carroll Electric at 800-232-7697. Cardinal Power Plant has been operational since 1967. Cardinal Unit 1 is currently owned by AEP Generation Resources Inc., and Unit 2 and 3 are owned by Buckeye Power Inc., our generation and transmission cooperative.

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CARROLL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

Don’t forget to vote! For our members who vote, you will receive a $5 bill credit and a chance to win up to $250 in bill credits! After you vote by phone, mail-in ballot, or through our website, your account number is automatically entered into the drawing. Carroll Electric uses Co-op Ballot, a third-party election services vendor, so that our employees and trustees cannot see who an individual voted for. The election opens July 26 and ends Aug. 20 at noon, so don’t forget to vote. The drawing will take place during our virtual annual meeting on Aug. 28 at 10:30 a.m. All winners will be notified of their prize.

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800-232-7697 350 Canton Rd. NW P.O. Box 67 Carrollton, Ohio 44615

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If you have suggestions for articles in Carroll Electric Cooperative’s local pages of Ohio Cooperative Living, contact Carroll Managing Editor A.J. Atkinson at aatkinson@cecpower.coop.

22   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • AUGUST 2021

CEO/General Manager

A.J. Atkinson Carroll Electric Managing Editor

facebook.com/CarrollElectricCoop twitter.com/CarrollElectric HIDDEN ACCOUNT NUMBER

Check the Carroll Electric local pages of this magazine for the hidden account number. Somewhere in this section is an account number spelled out. If this number matches your account number, call the co-op office to claim your credit. You must call by the end of the month in which your account number appears.


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Surf’s up

Ohio shredders show you can hang ten even in a landlocked city far from the coast. BY VICTORIA ELLWOOD

24   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021


D

owntown Dayton is your typical urban Midwestern city, filled with blacktop and busy streets, high-rises, and noisy traffic.

But wait: There are also surfers, who are apt to be happily catching a wave out on the water. That’s right. They’re hangin’ loose in the heartland, where river surfing is catching on, hooking surf-newbies and seasoned devotees alike, who find a sweet spot on the Great Miami River. River surfing is similar to ocean surfing, but instead of catching waves caused by the wind, it’s done on standing river waves created by flowing whitewater. “It’s a rush,” says Shannon Thomas, a Dayton native and pro river surfer and paddleboarder. “Anyone who has surfed knows that special feeling you get when you’re on a wave. It’s amazing; very spiritual, very addictive.”

Always an avid kayaker, Thomas quickly fell in love with river surfing and whitewater paddleboarding. He spent a few years traveling around the country, living out of a van with his dog, Bailey, and searching for perfect waves from Florida to Colorado. Today, he’s back in his landlocked hometown, where he and business partner Jake Brown own Surf Dayton, a river surfing and SUP (stand-up paddleboarding) operation they launched in 2017. Jake, a former ocean lifeguard and avid surfer in California, recently returned to Ohio and is a Dayton firefighter. “Any excuse to be out on the water, and I was there,” Thomas says. “I had been river surfing in Dayton for a while and figured if I was going to stay here, why not share the surfing culture with others? From there, it has snowballed.”

Continued on page 26

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  25


Would-be surfers get a lesson before catching a tasty wave on the Great Miami River in Dayton.

Continued from page 25

Now, on any given nice evening, there may be 15 or 20 people surfing on the Great Miami. Surf Dayton is one of the scarce whitewater surfing outfits in Ohio. A full-service surf shop, it offers lessons, clinics, board rentals, board repairs, Badfish boards for sale, and even some pretty cool apparel. This year, they’re tricking out a new surf shop, too. Built from a shipping container, it’s currently situated in the parking lot of the screenprinting shop that Thomas also owns. “People see a wave, see people surfing, and take a lesson. They pick it up, and then they want to go again and again, maybe buy their own board,” he says. “Our crew just keeps growing tremendously.” Whitewater “parks” like the ones Surf Dayton frequents are being built around the country. The manmade whitewater rapids in the area are created when dangerous low-head dams are removed from rivers. “Blowing out those old low-head dams is awesome. It allows fish to migrate, opens up the waterway, and creates a whitewater feature that’s a whole lot safer than the lowhead dam,” Thomas says. When a dam is removed, it leaves a top pool and a bottom pool in the river, creating a drop where fast water meets

26   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021

slower water. “That’s what makes the waves stand up and that’s what you surf,” he adds. “You’re surfing ‘stationary’ with the water rushing underneath you.” In the Dayton area, Thomas and Brown surf on some splashy class-2 and class-3 waves downtown at Riverscape Metro Park on the Great Miami. They also can be found shredding the waves on a 4-mile stretch north of town on the Mad River. Surfers will learn the ins and outs of the extreme sport — like safety and surfing etiquette; how to catch a wave and safely swim in the current; and surfer know-how like catching an eddy, carving, and reading a wave. For the less adventurous, Surf Dayton also offers flatwater stand-up paddleboarding on the so-much-quieter Eastwood Lake and Huffman Metropark. Thomas still travels part of the year, following river waves and spending whole days on the water. A few things have changed, however. His trusty sidekick, Bailey, is turning 16 and is happy being a couch dog these days. Further, Thomas is no longer living out of his van. He bought a house in anticipation of his September wedding to fellow river-surfer Kate, who took a lesson on the Great Miami a couple of years ago … and became smitten with more than just the sport. page 26


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After dark

Nighttime adds an extra spark of adventure for Ohio thrill-seekers.

BY JAMIE RHEIN

A

s twilight comes, the rugged cliffs, crevices, and outcroppings at High Rocks Adventure add a sense of mystery to what’s already an adrenaline rush.

With expert assurance, staff member Kayce Swepston guides a lanky teen down a rocky outcropping — the beam of his headlamp illuminating the scene as darkness settles in. Swepston’s husband, Jason, stands below, holding the belay rope as she calls instructions: “Straighten your legs and lean back,” she says. Night rappels are trips into the unknown. “You can’t see the bottom of the cliff, so there’s a lot of trust needed,” says Kayce, a member of South Central Power Company. Sometimes, the trust pays off with even more thrill — one

28   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021

time during a solo rappel, with her headlight turned off, a screech owl’s wings brushed silently past her face. Typically, however, the creatures that come out at night are the small kind. Peepers and tree frogs chirp in crescendo, and with just a quick, cursory pass near the base of the rappel, Jason’s flashlight reveals cave crickets, millipedes, and a wolf spider roaming. “You can see its eyes reflect like a cat’s,” he says. When it’s really dark, the lichen texturing the craggy boulders glows, silhouetting the sassafras and black birch trees in an eerie shadow. Sometimes, however, the nighttime sky explodes in a shower of meteors — and August is a particularly good month for them, with the


If you go: High Rock Adventures, Rockbridge. 740-385-9886; www.highrockadventures.com. Hocking Hills Canoe Livery, Logan. 740-385-0523; www.hockingriver.com. Touch the Earth Adventures, Athens. 740-591-9094; www.touchtheearthadventures.com. Trailhead Canoe Livery, Massillon. 800-226-6349; www.trailheadcanoelivery.com. ZipZone Outdoor Adventures, Columbus. 614-847-9477; www.zipzonetours.com. * Check websites for dates and times of night adventures. Each goes into the fall.

Perseid peak; Jason recalls a night when meteors came every 10 to 15 seconds for a particular stretch.

Start paddling at sunset to watch the river change with darkness and the moonlight’s reflection on the water.

For those in a little less adventurous mood, High Rocks owner Steve Roley and his staff also offer easygoing nature hikes that may be booked at night.

Frogs, crickets, and sometimes an otter or beaver are the nighttime companions. In summer, “the lightning bugs that light up the ground and the trees are awesome,” says Erin Easterling, Hocking Hills Canoe Livery’s manager.

On the water As the sun dips below the horizon in streaks of orange and red, Mimi Morrison leads kayakers across Lake Hope. With a watchful eye, Morrison, who owns Touch the Earth Adventures and also leads kayakers on night paddles on Lake Snowden and Stroud’s Run, makes sure everyone settles comfortably into a rhythm of paddle and glide. A loud splat and splash is an unexpected thrill as one kayaker comes close to the elaborate stick formation of a beaver lodge. Seeing a beaver is not a paddling promise, so this is a bonus. High overhead, a few bats dip and soar. Birds periodically trill in the distance, and insects chirp. But mostly, there is a peaceful quiet. “You can feel people’s emotions as the twilight comes on and dusk settles in,” says Morrison. “There’s that moment when all you can see is the silhouette of the hills.” As the kayakers turn on their small headlights before heading to the landing spot, their beams join the moon’s reflection on the rippling water for a dance performance that just doesn’t happen in daylight. If a kayak isn’t quite your cup of tea, you might find a little night adventure in a canoe. Trailhead Canoe Livery in Massillon, for instance, offers a night adventure on the Tuscarawas River, while Hocking Hills Canoe Livery in Logan sends paddlers off on the Hocking River.

Each self-paced trip ends with a bonfire and beverages. In Logan, a live bluegrass band and s’mores are also included.

Through the trees Set high in an urban oasis of oak, sycamore, and elm trees in Columbus are the five ziplines and four skybridges of ZipZone Outdoor Adventures, where nighttime brings a stillness to the woods that belies their proximity to busy U.S. Route 23. High in the canopy during a Night Flight Tour, the evening’s weather may shift the air from crisp to damp. Depending on the moon, the forest can be startlingly bright or inky black. On this night, while guides Tyler Morefield and Maddie Richardt expertly secure guests on the first platform 40 feet in the air, a deer family heads into the brush. Soon, only red headlamp beams and fluorescent glow-stick necklaces are all that’s visible. One by one, Maddie sends each guest whirring across a metal cable toward Tyler, who waits, invisible, on another platform of a faraway tree as whoops and hollers fill the night air. “You don’t have the frame of reference of where you are, except for the wind,” says Lori Pringle, who owns the place. “It feels faster at night.”

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  29


SILVER BULLET Iconic American Airstreams — made in Ohio, treasured everywhere. BY JAMES PROFFITT

W

ally Byam’s childhood was spent immersed in nature. He worked on a West Coast sheep farm, where he lived in a donkey-towed wagon that was outfitted with a stove, food, water, and just about everything else he could possibly need. In reality, it was the earliest version of an American classic — just not as shiny. It wasn’t until 1929 that Byam built the first actual, official Airstream. Byam’s love of camping and the outdoors, combined with American ingenuity, resulted in a product that lasts for decades and is instantly recognizable around the world. Perhaps best of all, it’s made in Ohio — Byam moved the production to Jackson Center in rural Shelby County right

30   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021

after World War II, and workers there build upward of 120 of the iconic silver bullets every week, all by hand. Until the pandemic struck, anyone with a few free hours could witness the process in person — from pallets, rolls, boxes, trucks, and hoppers of myriad components to impeccably finished and tested product in just a few thousand steps. The company has not announced a date that the tours will resume, but hopes to do so later this year.

An aura of ‘cool’ Of course, while the manufacturing process itself is amazing, the unleashed product is spectacular. Its power to inspire fierce passion and intense loyalty among owners — especially among owners of vintage Airstreams — is notably cool.


Jim Muncy owns two: a 1960 Tradewind and a 1955 Cruiser. The Port Clinton resident laughed when asked how many Airstreams a person needs. “At least two, obviously. The vintage styling is just, you know, sexy,” he says. “They’ve got that bizarre Jules Verne look, I’d say. I have zero desire to own a new one.” New trailer models range from about $50,000 to more than $150,000, but vintage Airstream is not cheap, either. Muncy said he paid about $41,000 for his most recent purchase, and by the time he has it serviced and polished, it will be about $50,000. Despite their age, shiny (and even dull) Airstreams have clout. “My wife called this campground in Tennessee to make reservations and they said, sorry, they don’t allow anything older than 2005,” Muncy says. “When she told them it was an Airstream, they said, ‘Oh, okay.’”

Go anywhere, be anything Pioneer Vintage Trailers, in Oak Harbor, Ohio, specializes in Airstreams. Owner Scott Bowe has converted old Airstreams into ice skate rental booths, food kitchens, full bars, and coffee trailers, among other things, though he doesn’t polish the iconic aluminum skins. For professional shiny, they call in a crew from California, and in a couple days they turn blah, faded trailers into shiny spaceship-like eye-catchers. It’s not cheap: A fullsized trailer polish, at up to $195 per linear foot, can run upward of $6,000. When you start talking Airstreams, start expecting smiles. Continued on page 32

Riding the Miller Ferry with Mitten Kitten was on Lindy Brown’s bucket list, as is evident in this ferry cool selfie (photo courtesy of Lindy Brown). Left, the gleaming shell of an Airstream brightens up any campsite (photo courtesy of Airstream).

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  31


Continued from page 31

“Mine’s pretty much in original condition because it was perfectly kept in a barn up until I bought it,” says Lindy Brown, owner of a 22-foot 1965 Safari named “Mitten Kitten.” “It’s pretty much the original layout except where Pioneer helped me update it with a table and a work area and a kitchen area,” Brown says. “When people find out the age of the trailer, they ask me if it was my father’s or grandfather’s, and I just smile and say no.” She spent the waning days of May at Ohio’s Findley State Park

Campground, and before that, Hocking Hills, Chillicothe, the Ohio River, and anywhere else she and Mitten are welcome — which is just about everywhere. “I knew right away because of the mere shine and the look of it that it would get attention,” she says. “I just didn’t realize how much.” Brown’s two dachshunds, Gretchen and Kaiser, gladly call wherever she and Mitten stop “home.” “Kaiser has grown

Jim Muncy really fancies his vintage Airstream — with its original stove (left), cabinetry, and fixtures, as well as a peacock bedspread (photos by James Proffitt).

32   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021


up in it from the time he was 3 months old,” she says. “He was house-trained in this trailer, and so he thinks the Airstream is his home.”

Built-in community Brown lives and breathes Airstream. She operates the Airstreaming Women’s Network, is the membership chair for the

Vintage Airstream Club, and is founder of Solo Streaming Sisters. “For me and a lot of other people, I’d say the Airstreaming community is a very inclusive group of people from all sorts of backgrounds and all different ages,” she says. “I have made some of the most genuine, lifelong friends you could ever hope for, the type of people that, if you were in a bind, which I have been, you could call one person and if they couldn’t get there, they’d find someone who could help you.” Brown, 53, said she’s doesn’t plan on letting any dust settle on her or Mitten Kitten anytime soon. “Trailerites always have something to do and someplace to go,” she says, and, quoting Wally Byam: “I’d rather wear out than rust out.”

Airstream factory tours are not currently being offered, but the company hopes to resume them later this year. Check www.airstream.com/company/ factory-tour for updates.

Left, evidence that Lindy Brown’s 1965 Safari has been around the block a few times; above, Scott Bowe checks out the frame that soon will hold a fancy new grill on an Airstream that he’s converting into a mobile kitchen (photos by James Proffitt).

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  33


HardTackers: A decade-long journey of seafaring lore

The miles between Ohio and the high seas haven’t stopped the HardTackers from following the lure of sea shanty lore. STORY AND PHOTO BY JAMIE RHEIN

O

hio is the only state in the union with a burgee flag — a shape usually associated with a boating organization. The flag commemorates Ohio’s water transportation history: the miles of Lake Erie shoreline, the Ohio River, and the waterways and onceextensive network of canals in between.

of the call-and-response style of shanty songs helped the crew push and pull, hoisting sails and hauling lines in a synchronized effort. Often adapted from familiar folk tunes and ballads of the day, shanty lyrics were flavored with nautical terms and names of places the sailors had been — or hoped to see.

So a crew of sea-shanty-singing Midwesterners isn’t as out of place as it might first appear; Ohio has plenty of wet to sing about.

A HardTackers performance is a rollicking, participatory trip through seafaring time. With each member taking turns as the boisterous lead, the Tackers nimbly belt out a repertoire that includes the familiar “Fifteen Miles on the Erie Canal,” as well as songs like “The Bonny Ship The Diamond,” about the lure of quick riches to whaling crews who dream of “bonny lassies.” Then there’s “Whiskey Johnny,” a cheery-sounding cautionary tale about the dangers of drunkenness — all peppered with jokes and puns and a mini-history about their origins.

Enter the HardTackers. With their mastery of maritime know-how and their banter-filled harmonizing, the ensemble has entertained at festivals and other events in the U.S. and Canada for a decade. Shanties date to the mid-1400s era of tall ships, when sailors’ work was grueling and labor-intensive. The rhythms

34   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021


Named for hardtack, the staple biscuit of sailors, and tacking, the sailing maneuver, the HardTackers got their start in 2009. John Locke, a member of the Columbus Folk Music Society, helped band the group together as the official shanty-singing crew of the Santa Maria — the life-size replica of Christopher Columbus’ flagship that was then moored along the Scioto River in downtown Columbus. Even after that ship was scuttled in 2014, camaraderie and love for folk music have kept the a cappella group belting out their tales of adventure, mishap, lament, and longing. Each of the members may have taken a different path to sea shanties — from a grandma’s closet filled with musical instruments, to singalongs, garage bands, bluegrass bands, and the 1960s folk music revival — but they share a love of the style and the showmanship. Says Tacker Andy Beyer, “It’s not too much of a stretch between a folk singer and a sea shanty singer. You have to be brave enough to not hide behind a guitar.” As for the notion that sea shanties mean pirates: “We’ll pretend we’re pirates if there’s money in it,” he laughs.

victorious brig from the Battle of Lake Erie in the War of 1812. The Niagara is the star attraction of the Erie Maritime Museum, and during Tall Ships festivals all along Lake Erie, the HardTackers are a highlight. In July 2019, the HardTackers released their fourth CD, appropriately named Rise Again. Now, after a hiatus due to COVID-19, the HardTackers are back to in-person Tuesday rehearsals like they’ve done for 11 years, getting ready for their next voyage.

The HardTackers are slated to perform at the Dublin Irish Festival in August. The next Tall Ships Festival in Erie, Pennsylvania, is in 2022.

Linda Bolla, a committee chair of the Erie Tall Ships Festival, loves the good-time feeling of a HardTackers concert. “I love their sense of humor,” she says. “Not every performer has that much fun. You can feel the good vibe of the audience response — their ability to reach out and bring the audience into the performance, whether through the songs or the stories, is unique. They bring an authenticity and tradition of 400 years of seafaring history.” Like sailors who’ve weathered storms, the HardTackers have ridden the waves of change. Locke retired from the group a few years ago, and of the six original members, only Beyer and Rennie Beetham remain — though Larry Drake and Joe Cook have been there almost from the start. The HardTackers have moved on from the Santa Maria and are now the unofficial/official crew of the Flagship Niagara — a reproduction of Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry’s

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  35


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2021 CALENDAR

AUGUST/SEPTEMBER

NORTHWEST

THROUGH OCT. 9 – The Great Sidney Farmers Market, Courthouse Square, 109 S. Ohio Ave., every Saturday, 8 a.m.–noon. Produce, baked goods, and crafts. Follow “Sidney Alive” on Facebook or call 937658-6945. THROUGH OCT. 30 – Bluffton Farmers Market, Citizens National Bank parking lot, 102 S. Main St., downtown Bluffton (2 mins. from I-75 exits 140 and 142), every Saturday, rain or shine, 8:30 a.m.–noon. Outdoor market offering local produce, plants, and cottage foods. Storytime with the Bluffton Public Library and live music on select Saturdays. www.explorebluffton.com/ farmers-market. AUG. 12–14 – Lincoln Highway “Buy-Way” Yard Sales, locations along and near U.S. 30, including Crawford, Wyandot, Hardin, Hancock, Allen, and Van Wert counties, starting 9 a.m. www.historicbyway.com. AUG. 13–15 – Bremenfest, Crown Pavilion, 2 W. Plum St., New Bremen. Food, games, 5K and 1-mile Fun Run, car and motorcycle show, live music, parade, talent show, and much more. http://bremenfest.com. AUG. 14–15 – Revolution on the Ohio Frontier, Fort Meigs, 29100 W. River Rd., Perrysburg, 9:30 a.m.–5 p.m. $7–$12, under 6 free. See battle reenactments and weapon demos, visit army encampments, and learn what life was like in Ohio during the Revolutionary War. 419-874-4121 or www.fortmeigs.org. AUG. 19–21 – Bucyrus Bratwurst Festival, downtown Bucyrus. Grilled brats and many other festival foods, parades, pageants, contests, fun activities, and family-friendly entertainment. 419-562-2728 or www. bucyrusbratwurstfestival.com.

WEST VIRGINIA

COMPILED BY COLLEEN ROMICK CLARK

AUG. 19–21 – National Tractor Pulling Championships, 13800 W. Poe Rd., Bowling Green. 419-354-1434 or www.pulltown.com. AUG. 20 – The Amazing Downtown Race, Sidney, 6 p.m. Teams race around downtown to participating businesses for a chance to win great prizes. Sign up your team of 4 by visiting the Sidney Alive Facebook page. 937-658-6945 or www.sidneyalive.org. AUG. 20–28 – Allen County Fair, Allen Co. Fgds., 2750 Harding Hwy., Lima, 8 a.m.–11 p.m. 419-228-7141 or www.facebook.com/allencountyfair. AUG. 21–22 – Ghost Town Spring Crafts and Antiques Festival, 10630 Co. Rd. 40, Findlay. A family event featuring crafts and antiques, live music and performances, food and beverages, and kids’ activities. See Facebook page for updated schedules. 419-6737783 or www.facebook.com/Ghost-Town-FindlayOhio-1525098627787387. AUG. 22 – Living History Day, Wood County Museum Grounds, 13660 County Home Rd., Bowling Green, 2 p.m. Free. History comes alive with stories of Wood County’s people, places, and things. 419-352-0967 or www.woodcountyhistory.org. AUG. 27–29 – German-American Festival, Oak Shade Grove, 3624 Seaman Rd., Oregon, Fri. 4 p.m.–1 a.m., Sat. noon–1 a.m., Sun. noon–11 p.m. The Toledo area’s oldest, largest, and greatest ethnic festival, with authentic German food, beer, and entertainment. www. visittoledo.org/events/german-american-festival. AUG. 28 – Pistons in the Park Car Show, Arcadia Community Park, 301 W. Brown Rd., Arcadia. Top 20 trophies for all makes and models of cars, trucks, and Jeeps; additional 5 trophies for Mustang Alley. $15 registration starts at 10 a.m., judging at noon, awards at 2 p.m. Food, DJ, door prizes, raffles, 50/50 drawings. www.facebook.com/Pistons-in-the-Park-Annual-CarShow-114558889911162. AUG. 29 – Author Frank Kuron: “Clash of Cultures,” Fort Recovery State Museum, 1 Fort Site St., Fort Recovery, 3 p.m. Free. Kuron discusses the relationships of Tecumseh the Prophet and future President William Henry Harrison. He will be available to sign copies of his books Thus Fell Tecumseh and Intriguing People. 419375-4384 or www.fortrecoverymuseum.com. SEP. 2 – Open Air Dinner on the Square, Shelby County Courthouse, Sidney, 5:30 p.m. Beautiful farm-to-

AUG. 27 – Introduction to Spinning, Pricketts Fort, 88 State Park Rd., Fairmont, 11 a.m.–3 p.m. How would you like to try your hand at spinning wool? Participants will receive one hour of personal one-onone instruction from one of our skilled interpreters. $20 per person; must be age 16 or older. Admission to the fort is included. Register by calling 304-3633030; space is limited. www.prickettsfort.org. SEP. 9–12 – Charleston Ribfest and Regatta, Levee at Kanawha Boulevard, Charleston. Enjoy world-class award-winning BBQ ribs and chicken and all the fixins, carnival rides, local and national favorite food vendors, artisans, family-friendly activities, and fun on the river! 304-951-3011 or www.wvribfest.com.

table dinner on the court square. Tickets are required for this elegant fundraiser for downtown Sidney. To purchase, visit the Sidney Alive Facebook page. 937658-6945 or www.sidneyalive.org. SEP. 3–5 – Max’s Trader Days and Water Dog Races, Allen Co. Fgds., 2750 Harding Hwy., Lima, 7 a.m.– midnight. $10 per day, $20 for three-day pass; age 12 and under free. In addition to the races, events include karaoke at the grandstands, golf cart parade, flea market, and food vendors. Schedule of events can be found at http://maxstraderdays.com. SEP. 3–6 – S.C.R.A.P. Antique Tractor Show, White Star Park, 960 Twp. Rd. 60, Gibsonburg. $5. Featuring Ferguson tractors and equipment. Field plowing and discing planned for the weekend. Tractor square dance, tractor pulls, flea market, and much more! 574-3092963 or www.S-C-R-A-P-inc.org. SEP. 3–6 – St. Bernard Specialty Dog Show, Lima Kennel Club, 1050 Thayer Rd., Lima, 9 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. $5 parking. Complete show schedule can be found at www.infodog.com. SEP. 3–9 – Fulton County Fair, Fulton Co. Fgds., 8514 St. Rte. 108, Wauseon. www.fultoncountyfair.com. SEP. 7–11 – AAUW Book Fair, Lima Mall. former Elder Beerman location, 2400 Elda Rd., Lima, Tues. 4–8 p.m., Wed.–Fri. 10 a.m.–8 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–2 p.m. $5. www. facebook.com/aauw.lima.ohio. SEP. 7–12 – Alumapalooza, 420 W. Pike St., Jackson Center. A family-friendly festival for people who love Airstream travel trailers. Open to Airstream owners and non-owners alike. Informative seminars, fun presentations, trailer open houses, cooking demos, and more. 813-200-8877 or www.alumapalooza.com. SEP. 11 – Lima Area Concert Band: “Back to the Future,” Veterans Memorial Civic and Convention Ctr., 7 Town Square, Lima, 7:30 p.m. $15; free for students. Featuring saxophonist Blue Lou Marini. www. limaareaconcertband.org. SEP. 11–12 – The Fantastic Tiffin Flea Market, Seneca Co. Fgds., 100 Hopewell Ave., Tiffin, Sat. 9 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Free admission and parking; handicap accessible. 250 to 400 dealers per show. 419-447- 9613, tiffinfleamarket@gmail.com, or www. tiffinfleamarket.com.

Submit listings AT LEAST 90 DAYS prior to the event to Ohio Cooperative Living, 6677 Busch Blvd., Columbus, OH 43229 or events@ohioec.org. Ohio Cooperative Living will not publish listings that don’t include a complete address or a number/ website for more information.

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  37


2021 CALENDAR

AUGUST/SEPTEMBER

NORTHEAST

open house (1:30–4 p.m.), vintage baseball game. 330-669-9455 or https://sohchs.org. AUG. 22–29 – Lorain County Fair, 23000 Fairgrounds Rd., Wellington. 440-647-2781 or www. loraincountyfair.com. AUG. 26–28 – Quilters Gathering, Berlin Encore Hotel and Suites, 4363 St. Rte. 39, Berlin. Classes, trunk shows, and special events. Register at www. quiltersgatheringinberlin.com. AUG. 28–29, SEP. 4–6 – Great Trail Arts and Crafts Festival, Great Trail Festival Grounds, St. Rte. 43 between Malvern and Carrollton (GPS: 6331 Canton THROUGH OCT. 30 – “Live Birds of Prey,” Rd., Malvern), 10 a.m.–5 p.m., flag raising 11 a.m. A Mohican State Park Lodge and Conference Cr., celebration of American folk art, with distinctive arts 4700 Goon Rd., Perrysville, every Saturday at 7 and crafts, living history, and period music. 330-794p.m. Enjoy an up-close experience with a variety 9100 or www.greattrailfestival.com. of Ohio’s bird species. Presented by the Ohio Bird AUG. 29 – Railroad Memorabilia Show, Painesville Sanctuary. Free and open to the public. 419-938Railroad Museum, Painesville Depot, 475 Railroad St., 5411 or www.discovermohican.com/event. Painesville, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $5, C. (3–12) $3, Family $12 AUG. 17 – Portage County Farm Pesticide (max. 2 adults, 3 children). See artifacts from railroads’ Disposal, Deerfield Ag Services, 9041 U.S. Rte. glory days and times gone by, such as railroad lanterns, 224, Deerfield, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Free, but only farm railroad signals, dining car plate settings, and more. chemicals will be accepted (no paint, antifreeze, or Some items available for purchase. Collinwood Engine household pesticides). 614-728-6398. No. 999 is on display. 216-470-5780 (Tom Pescha), AUG. 15 – Northern Ohio Doll and Bear Show and prrm@att.net, or www.painesvillerailroadmuseum.org. Sale, Holiday Inn, 15471 Royalton Rd., Strongsville, 10 SEP. 3–5 – Made in Ohio Arts and Crafts Festival, a.m.–3 p.m., early bird 9 a.m. $5; kids admitted free; Hale Farm and Village, 2686 Oak Hill Rd., Bath, Fri. early bird $15. Huge variety of antique, vintage, and noon–5 p.m., Sat./Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $6–$12; free modern dolls, including Barbies and teddy bears; for age 2 and under and for active military. Over 170 toys; clothing, parts/supplies, and accessories. Door artisans selling Ohio-made products. Local food and prizes, ID/valuation, restringing, minor repair. 440entertainment. Admission includes access to the living 283-5839 (Eileen Green), phdofdolls@yahoo.com, or history museum. www.madeinohiofestival.org. www.dollshowUSA.com. SEP. 5–18 – “Celebrate the Constitution,” Historic AUG. 21 – Antiques Market, 381 E. Main St., Fort Steuben, 120 S. 3rd St., Steubenville, Mon.–Sat Smithville, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. Free. On the grounds of 10 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. Free. Annual the historic Mishler Weaving Mill. Pioneer Village exhibit and activities focusing on the nation’s founding

SOUTHEAST

THROUGH AUG. 26 – Music in the Park, Muskingum Park Gazebo, Front Street, Marietta, every Thursday, 7 p.m. Free, family-friendly concert series features local entertainment. www. mariettaohio.org/events/event-calendar. THROUGH SEP. 5 – Tecumseh!, Sugarloaf Mountain, 5968 Marietta Rd., Chillicothe, Mon.– Sat. 8 p.m. $21–$50. Witness the epic life story of the legendary Shawnee leader as he defends his sacred homelands in the 1700s. 740-775-4100 or www.tecumsehdrama.com. THROUGH OCT. 31 – Children’s Toy and Doll Museum, 206 Gilman Ave., Marietta, Sat./Sun. 1–4 p.m. Adults $4, children $2. Nine rooms displaying

antique and vintage doll collections, miniature doll houses and larger fairy tale homes, scale models, and antique toys and games of yesteryear. www. mariettaohio.org/event. THROUGH OCTOBER – Rise and Shine Farmers Market, 2245 Southgate Pkwy., Cambridge, every Friday, 8 a.m.–noon. 740-680-1866 or find us on Facebook. THROUGH DECEMBER – Athens Farmers Market, 1000 E. State St., Athens, every Wednesday, 9 a.m.–1 p.m.; every Saturday, 9 a.m.–noon. Buy local and support your local economy. The market showcases farmers, orchardists, specialty food producers, bakers, horticulturalists, cheese makers, and many other food-based entrepreneurs. 740-593-6763 or www. athensfarmersmarket.org. AUG. 7 – Museum Day, Campus Martius Museum, 601 Second St., Marietta, 9:30 a.m.–5 p.m. Free admission! Reenactors, music, storytellers, and hands-on activities will be just a few things to appeal to all ages at the museum. Guided tours of the Rufus Putnam House will be included. https:// mariettamuseums.org/events/museum-day. AUG. 7–14 – Ross County Fair, Ross Co. Fgds., 344 Fairgrounds Rd., Chillicothe, 9 a.m.–10 p.m. $5. Family fun with rides, games, food, exhibits, and entertainment. www.rosscountyfair.com.

38   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021

document and the issues and personalities of the time. 740-283-1787 or www.oldfortsteuben.com. SEP. 11 – Model Trains Flea Market and Household Items, Painesville Railroad Museum, Painesville Depot, 475 Railroad St., Painesville, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. New items have been added. Food and drink available for small donation. 216-470-5780 (Tom Pescha), prrm@att.net, or www.painesvillerailroadmuseum.org. SEP. 11–12 – Appalachian Ohio Antique Power Club Fall Gathering, Harrison Coal & Reclamation Historical Park, 43672 Stumptown Rd., Cadiz. Sat. 9 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.–4 p.m. $3. Antique tractors, engines, hit and miss, oilfield engines, cars, trucks (semi and pickup), and garden tractors are all welcome. 330-4015129, ohioantiquepowerclub@yahoo.com, or www. facebook.com/appalachianohioantiquepowershow. SEP. 11–12 – Antiques in the Woods, Shaker Woods Grounds, 217 St. Rte. 7 (GPS: 44337 County Line Rd.), Columbiana, Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $6, under 13 free. No pets. Top-quality antiques and collectibles. Antique car show on Saturday. 330-5504190 or www.antiquesinthewoods.com. SEP. 11–16 – Wayne County Fair, Wayne Co. Fgds., 199 Vancouver St., Wooster, 10 a.m.–10 p.m. daily, gates open at 8 a.m. Charge for nightly grandstand entertainment. Sat., OSTPA truck, tractor, semi pull (7 p.m.); Sun., Parmalee; Mon., Crowder; Tues., Nitty Gritty Dirt Band; Wed., Buckeye Rodeo (7 p.m.); Thur., Demolition Derby.330-262-8001 or www. waynecountyfairohio.com. SEP. 12 – Molto Bello Auto Show, Stan Hywet Hall and Gardens, 714 N. Portage Path, Akron, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. $5–$14; 5 and under free. See an incredible array of Ferraris, Bugattis, Roadsters, and other highvalue cars. Food and beverages available. www. stanhywet.org. AUG. 20–22 – Buckeye Off Road Expo, 344 Fairgrounds Rd., Chillicothe. A weekend packed full of off-road vendors, obstacle courses, mud pits, food, music, and more. Visit the website to view the schedule of events. www.buckeyeoffroadexpo.com. AUG. 21 – Cambridge Classic Cruise-In, downtown Cambridge, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. From hot rods to Harleys, there is something for everyone at this annual event. 740-439-2238 or www.downtowncambridge.com. SEP. 7–12 – Belmont County Fair, Belmont Co. Fgds., 45420 Roscoe Rd., St. Clairsville. www. belmontcountyfair.org. SEP. 10–12 – Ohio River Sternwheel Festival, Front and Greene Sts., Marietta. Sternwheeler boat races, car show, pageant, 5K run, entertainment, and fireworks. Sunday sunrise service on the Levee. 800-288-2577 or https://ohio-river-sternwheel-festival. myshopify.com. SEP. 11–12 – The Red Lamp, Midway Community Center, 37358 S.R. 800, Sardis, Sat. 7 p.m., Sun. 3 and 7 p.m. 740-934-2221. SEP. 13–19 – Guernsey County Fair, Guernsey Co. Fgds., Old Washington. 740-489-5888 or www. guernseycountyfairgrounds.org.


CENTRAL

THROUGH SEP. 25 – Canal Winchester Farmers Market, 100 N. High St., Canal Winchester, every Saturday, 9 a.m.–noon. Locally grown produce, homebaked goods, fresh meat, and craft items. 614-270-5053 or go to www.thecwfm.com. THROUGH SEP. 30 – Pickerington Farmers Market, 89 N. Center St., Pickerington, every Thursday, 4–7 p.m. Fresh produce, baked goods, crafts, and more. www. pickeringtonvillage.com/events. THROUGH OCT. 16 – Lorena Sternwheeler Public Cruises, Zanesville, Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. See website for times. $12, Srs. $10, C. (2–12) $8. Enjoy a relaxing cruise down the Muskingum River. Board at Zane’s Landing Park, located on the west end of Market Street. 740-455-8282, www.facebook.com/ LorenaSternwheeler, or www.visitzanesville.com/Lorena. THROUGH OCT. 17 – Monticello III Canal Boat Rides, Sat./Sun. 1–4 p.m. $8, Srs. $7, Stys. (6–18) $6, under 6 free. Huge draft horse teams pull the canal boat along an original section of the Ohio and Erie Canal as the boat captain entertains you with tall tales and history of 1800s life on the canal. You might even get to assist in steering the canal boat. www.visitcoshocton.com/events-list.php. THROUGH OCT. 30 – Delaware Farmers Market, 20 E. Winter St., Delaware, Sat. 9–12 p.m. 740-362-6050 or www.mainstreetdelaware.com/event/farmers-market. THROUGH OCT. 30 – Zanesville Farmers Market, Adornetto’s, 2224 Maple Ave., Zanesville, every

SOUTHWEST

THROUGH SEP. 29 – Bluegrass Wednesdays, Vinoklet Winery, 11069 Colerain Ave., Cincinnati, every Wednesday, 6:30–8:30 p.m. Enjoy dinner, wine, and an evening of lively bluegrass entertainment by Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass. Reservations are strongly recommended and should be made early. Call to confirm before traveling. 513-385-9309 or vinokletwinery@fuse.net. AUG. 10, 24 – Movies in the Park, The Park at Liberty Center, 7100 Foundry Row, Liberty, 9–11 p.m. Free. www.liberty-center.com. AUG. 13–19 – Miami County Fair, Miami Co. Fgds., 650 N. County Rd. 25A, Troy, 8 a.m.–11 p.m. www. homegrowngreat.com/event/miami-county-fair. AUG. 20 – Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass, Butler County Bluegrass Association, Collinsville Community Ctr., 5113 Huston Rd., Collinsville, 7–9 p.m. Free. Enjoy an evening of lively bluegrass music. Reasonably priced home-style food available on site. 937-417-8488.

Saturday, 9 a.m.–noon. June through August, the market will be open on North 3rd Street every Wednesday, 4–7 p.m. www.zanesvillefarmersmarket.org. THROUGH OCT. 31 – Hot Shop Studio Class: Pumpkins, Franklin Park Conservatory, 1777 E. Broad St., Columbus, every Thursday and Friday, 6–9 p.m. (Wed. and Sun. dates available in October). $70. Get hands-on experience blowing glass. In the spirit of the season, create a colorful glass pumpkin. All experience levels welcome. 614-715-8000 or www. fpconservatory.org. THROUGH OCT. 31 – Rock Mill Days, Stebelton Park at Rock Mill, 1429 Rockmill Place NW, Lancaster, Wed. and Sat. 11 a.m.–2 p.m., Sun. 1–4 p.m. Free. Tour the restored 1824 gristmill, walk on the iconic Rock Mill Covered Bridge, and enjoy Hocking River Falls. 740-681-7249 or www.fairfieldcountyparks.org. AUG. 12 – Morrow County Farm Pesticide Disposal, Morrow Co. Fgds., 195 S. Main St., Mt. Gilead, 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Free, but only farm chemicals will be accepted (no paint, antifreeze, or household pesticides). 614-728-6398. AUG. 13–15 – Coshocton Sunflower Festival, Coshocton KOA, 24688 Co. Rd. 10, Coshocton, Fri. 12–8:30 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–8:30 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–7 p.m. $8–$20. Take a wagon ride to the 4-acre field where you’ll see over 30 varieties of sunflowers. Enjoy live music, food truck, beer garden, arts and crafts vendors, and activities. 740-502-9245 or www. coshoctonsunflowerfestival.com. AUG. 14 – Union County Master Gardeners Plant Sale, Union Co. Fgds., Armory Bldg., 845 N. Main St., Marysville, 8 a.m.–noon. There will be a selection of sun and shade perennials, native plants, shrubs and trees, grasses, bulbs, and day lilies, grown by Master Gardeners and sold at very reasonable prices. 937644-8117, https://union.osu.edu, or on Facebook at http://bit.ly/UCMGFB. AUG. 15–21 – Muskingum County Fair, Muskingum Co. Fgds., 1300 Pershing Rd., Zanesville. www. muskingumcofair.com.

AUG. 21 – Books and Crafts in the Barn, 5530 Radnor Rd., Radnor, 10 a.m.–2 p.m. Books, crafts, art, and more. For up-to-date vendor list and further information, visit www.maryrodman.com/books-in-the-barn. AUG. 22 – Bo Paws It Forward Paint and Sip Fundraiser, Pinot’s Palette, 691 N. High St., Suite 101, Columbus, 2:30–4:30 p.m. (doors open at 2). Join us for a fun night of painting with an instructor and some wine! In studio, $39; virtual event, $35. Register at www. pinotspalette.com/shortnorth. 614-456-7307 or www. randomactsofdogness.org. AUG. 20–22 – Fairfield County Antique Tractor and Truck Show, Fairfield Co. Fgds. AAA Bldg., 157 E. Fair Ave., Lancaster. Free. Featuring Massey Harris, Massey Ferguson, and Ferguson. All makes of tractors, hit/miss engines, steam engines, and vintage trucks welcome. Field demonstrations, flea market, craft show, free entertainment, kiddie tractor pull, kids’ coin scramble, antique tractor pulls Saturday, garden tractor pulls Sunday. Pancake breakfast served Saturday morning. Camping available. 740-407-2347 (Doug Shaw) or 740304-4170 (Glen Bader). SEP. 4 – End of Summer Craft/Vendor Fair, Lancaster Campground Activity Bldg., 2151 W. Fair Ave., Lancaster, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. A variety of vendors and crafters will be attending. Food and beverages available, along with a bake sale and raffle. Proceeds benefit the Genealogical Research Library in Lancaster. 740-653-2573 or www. fairfieldgenealogy.org. SEP. 7–12 – United Way Community Care Days, throughout Fairfield County. Volunteers will complete projects or Random Acts of Kindness during the week. Participants will receive a free T-shirt. More information is available at www.uwayfairfieldco.org. SEP. 10–11 – Lithopolis Honeyfest, Columbus St., Lithopolis, Fri. 3–7 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–7 p.m. Honey tasting, honey bake-off, queen and princess contest, demos and bee education, mead and wine tasting, Ohio Honey Show, free kids’ crafts, and much more! 614-8297355 or www.lithopolishoneyfest.com.

AUG. 20–28 – The Great Darke County Fair, Darke Co. Fgds., 800 Sweltzer St., Greenville. $7, under 12 free. $20 for 9-day pass. 937-548-5044 or www.darkecountyfair.com. AUG. 24 – Butler County Farm Pesticide Disposal, Butler Co. Fgds., 1715 Fairgrove Ave., Hamilton, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. Free, but only farm chemicals will be accepted (no paint, antifreeze, or household pesticides). 614-728-6398. AUG. 27 – Bluegrass Night, Fibonacci Brewing Company, 1445 Compton Rd., Cincinnati, 7–9 p.m. Free. Enjoy an evening of craft beers and lively bluegrass music by Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass. Food truck available on site. Please verify before traveling. 513-832-1422 or http://fibbrew.com. AUG. 28 – Queen City Beautiful Doll Club Show, EnterTRAINment Junction Expo Room, 7379 Squire Ct., West Chester, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. $5, under 12 free. Free parking. Fashion dolls, clothes, and accessories from all eras. Door prizes, ID/valuation. 513-207-8409, askmargie@aol.com, or www.dollclubs.com. AUG. 28 – Tipp City Trans Am Cruise In, 6 S. 3rd St., Tipp City, 5–9 p.m. Free admission. Registration 5–7 p.m. ($10); awards and door prizes at 8:30 p.m. Dash plaques to first 250 entries. Open only to Firebirds, Formulas, Firehawks, Trans Ams, and GTAs. Trophies awarded. door prizes, food, entertainment, walking tour, live DJ. www.homegrowngreat.com/event. AUG. 28 – Tour De Donut Bicycle Race, downtown Troy. A fun, unique bicycle event, where your ability to eat donuts is just as important as your ability to ride your bicycle fast! Kick off the weekend on Aug. 27 with the Donut Jam in downtown Troy, 5–10:30 p.m. www. thetourdedonut.com.

SEP. 3–5 – Oktoberfest, Liberty Home German Society, 2361 Hamilton Cleves Rd., Hamilton, Fri. 6–11 p.m., Sat. 2–11 p.m., Sun. 1–8 p.m. $3. Car show Sun. 10 a.m.–2 p.m. 513-571-6198 or www.libertyhome.net. SEP. 11 – Appalachian Artisans Guild Showcase, Cherry Fork Community Ctr., 14825 St. Rte. 136, Winchester, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Free. Members of the guild will sell items, do demonstrations, and conduct on-thespot “Make It and Take It” workshops. Come learn more about what we do. www.appartguild.com SEPT. 10–12 – Clinton County Corn Festival, Clinton Co. Fgds., 958 W. Main St., Wilmington. Featuring Allis Chalmers and related companies. Corn Olympics, antique tractor pulls, horse pulls, antique cars and trucks, hit and miss engines, steam engines, and much more. 937-383-5676 (Dale Mayer) or www. cornfestivalonline.com. SEP. 11 – Bluegrass at Vinoklet Art and Wine Festival, 11069 Colerain Ave., 7 p.m. Free. Enjoy an evening of dancing, singing, shopping, and having fun in one of the most beautiful places in Cincinnati! Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass performs noon–3 p.m. See website for details and complete entertainment lineup. 513-3859309, vinokletwinery@fuse.net, or www.vinokletwines. com/art-wine-festival-2021. SEP. 16–19 – Old Timers Days Festival, 123 N. Main St., Peebles, Thur. 6–10:30 p.m., Fri./Sat. 11 a.m.–11 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. Street fair with craft and vendor booths, 5K run, car show, grand parade, pet parade, Lions Club baked goods auction, local bands, contests, and other entertainment. 937-587-3749 or https://oldtimersdaysfestival.yolasite.com.

AUGUST 2021 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  39


Dog Days

MEMBER INTERACTIVE

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1.  Nice day to be gone fishin’! Reece Uhl Holmes-Wayne Electric Cooperative member 2.  Buster, sitting on the porch. Nedra Hall Tricounty Rural Electric Cooperative member 3.  Coco likes to cool off in the creek on hot days. James Kusmik Lorain-Medina Rural Electric Cooperative member

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4.  Three loyal pups waiting for their dad at the Put-In-Bay marina. Lorie Wilber Lorain-Medina Rural Electric Cooperative member 5.  My brother and sister-in-law’s dog, Bella, enjoying a beautiful day outside. Tonya Bess South Central Power Company member 6.  My dog, Annie, enjoying the outdoors. Michelle Wittensoldner Frontier Power Company member Below: My dog, Lani, loves to do what I’m doing — even if that means riding along in a kayak. Matthew Arnold Hancock-Wood Electric Cooperative member

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Send us your picture! For November, send “Throwback Thanksgiving” by Aug. 15. For December, send “Christmas morning” by Sept. 15. Upload your photos at www.ohiocoopliving.com/memberinteractive. Your photo may be featured in our magazine or on our website.

40   OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  •  AUGUST 2021


ENTER TO WIN A $100 ELECTRIC BILL CREDIT!* Bring your completed entry form to the Ohio's Electric Cooperatives education center on Wheat Street at the 2021 Farm Science Review.

Name: Electric co-op name: Email address:

*Must be an Ohio electric cooperative member to enter and win. Must be original entry form — no photocopies.

FARM SCIENCE REVIEW September 21–23, 2021

This major agricultural show is sponsored by The Ohio State University. Drawing more than 130,000 people every year, it’s a fun, educational event for everyone.

STOP BY OUR BUILDING Using energy wisely is important on the farm and at home. You’ll find exhibits and information on ways you can save energy and money in the Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives education center.

ohioec.org/energy


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