Pioneer Cooperative Official Electric publication of your electric cooperative Official publication | www.pioneerec.com www.ohioec.org
JUNE 2017
Finding the BIG ones
Knowing where to look is only part of a fishing guide’s job ALSO INSIDE Stating our case in Washington We all scream for ice cream Walnut Creek confidential
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Electricity revolutionized the way we manage our time. WHAT WILL IT DO NEXT? Electricity. Every day it brings us something new. Something to empower or simplify our lives. Clean. Efficient. Stable. You might call it the essential energy. Now, and for the future.
To learn more about the cooperative difference, visit ohioec.org.
Electricity. A world of possibilities.
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24 8
30
INSIDE HIGHLIGHT 30 FINDING THE BIG ONES
FEATURES 4
CALLED TO SERVICE
In this issue:
Those who serve on the boards of Ohio electric cooperatives are rewarded with a deeper connection to their communities.
8 SHOW ON THE ROAD The Lynn Drive-In near Strasburg is
the second-longest-operating open-air theater in the world.
19 LOCAL PAGES News and information from your electric cooperative.
e .
7 10:06 AM
Think you’d like to be a fishing guide? Turns out there’s more to it than just knowing where to find those trophies anglers are looking for.
24 CONSERVATION PAST Before airplanes and GPS, a series of towers was the first line of defense against forest fires.
26 A SIMPLER LIFE Walnut Creek — the cradle of Ohio’s Amish Country — is known for its bucolic beauty and tempting treats.
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Bellefontaine (p. 4) Piqua (p. 4) Attica (p. 4) Lancaster (p. 4) Strasburg (p. 8) Montpelier (p. 10) Walnut Creek (p. 26)
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Ju
O
UP FRONT
C
TRUSTED
C C J M B a
RESOURCES
Board members at electric cooperatives may face different challenges today compared with 75 years ago, but their dedication is constant
L
O I E 2 e m i R
ocal control is one of the defining characteristics of your electric cooperative. That control comes from a board that’s elected from the membership — member-consumers like yourself. Much of the success of the electric cooperative program is the result of effective governance by proactive, focused directors, whose primary role is to direct the CEO and the management team, assuring commitment to business success through maintenance of the highest standards of responsibility, service, and ethics. While yesterday’s director wrestled with the challenge of bringing light to rural America, today’s director is wrestling with new challenges, such as ever-increasing expectations for service reliability and convenience; how and when to adopt new technology solutions; the costs and benefits of alternative sources of energy; and how to best integrate the next generation of employees into the organization. The constantly changing energy landscape requires directors to be engaged with members and management to meet the diverse needs of their communities. The National Rural Electric Cooperative Association reports that almost half of current board members are over the age of 65. As more retire, the next generation of new leaders is poised to begin filling our boardrooms. The challenges those new directors will face are sure to be more complex and numerous than ever, and the best pathways won’t always be clearly marked. For nearly 80 years, successful electric cooperatives have been led by board members and management teams who demonstrate a high level of engagement with the local community and their membership; those who, in effect, lend their business and life experiences to their respective cooperatives (we report a bit more in depth on that connection beginning on Page 6). Most board members bring something even more important than business credentials to their roles: They bring the desire to serve. More than anything, cooperative board members help their neighbors and fellow members with an eagerness to learn, a willingness to act, and a firm grasp of the cooperative business model that, together, breathes life into the cooperative difference.
2
Pat O’Loughlin President & CEO Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives
The constantly changing energy landscape requires directors to be engaged with members and management to meet the diverse needs of their communities.
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T L a n P o
P a
P a C
June 2017 • Volume 59, No. 9
OHIO
COOPERATIVE LIVING
Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives 6677 Busch Blvd. Columbus, OH 43229 614-846-5757 memberinteract@ohioec.org www.ohioec.org
Patrick O’Loughlin President & CEO Patrick Higgins Director of Communications Jeff McCallister Managing Editor Samantha Rhodes Associate Editor Contributors: Mary Beasecker, Colleen Romick Clark, John Egan, W.H. "Chip" Gross, Heather Juzenas, Pat Keegan, Toni Leland, Catherine Murray, Jamie Rhein, Adam Specht, Craig Springer, Brad Thiessen, Damaine Vonada, Margie Wuebker, and Diane Yoakam. OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING (USPS 134-760; ISSN 2572-049X) is published monthly by Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. With a paid circulation of 294,359, it is the official communication link between the electric cooperatives in Ohio and West Virginia and their members. Nothing in this publication may be reproduced in any manner without written permission from Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. All rights reserved.
For all advertising inquiries, contact GLM COMMUNICATIONS 212-929-1300 sales@glmcommunications.com
ohioec.org
JUNE 2017
Official publication of your electric cooperative www.ohioec.org
Check out the mobilefriendly website and digital edition of Ohio Cooperative Living, as well as other timely information from Ohio’s electric cooperatives.
Official publication of your electric cooperative www.ohioec.org
JUNE 2017
Finding the BIG ones
Knowing where to look is only part of a fishing guide’s job ALSO INSIDE Stating our case in Washington We all scream for ice cream Walnut Creek confidential
Finding the BIG ones
Knowing where to look is only part of a fishing guide’s job
FOLLOW US ON :
ALSO INSIDE Stating our case in Washington We all scream for ice cream Walnut Creek confidential
facebook.com/ohioec
youtube.com
@OHElectricCoops
linkedin.com
What’s the best thing about the state fair?
Circling steers in the show ring, thirstquenching lemonade after hours in the sun, flaky-fried funnel cake goodness, and endless chatter with fellow Buckeyes — welcome to the Ohio State Fair. What do you think is the best part about this annual tradition? Take to our Facebook or Twitter pages to share your memories with our staff, and you may find your answers printed on these pages! Find us by searching for Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives on social media.
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, or call 1-800-282-0515. Periodicals postage paid at Columbus, OH, and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to editorial and advertising offices at: 6677 Busch Boulevard, Columbus, OH 43229-1101
Cooperative members: Please report changes of address to your electric cooperative. Ohio Cooperative Living staff cannot process address changes. Alliance for Audited Media Member
OEC-OCL_JUNE 17 full issue.indd 5
DID YOU KNOW? Ohio hosted one of the first 10 drive-ins in the country, the Starlight Auto Theatre, which opened in 1937 in Akron. Within 10 years, Ohio had more than 80 drive-ins and peaked with close to 190 in the late 1960s. In the years since, the state has seen a decline of 87 percent. Yet Ohio still has 24 open drive-ins, giving it the third-most remaining of any state in the country (behind New York and Pennsylvania). Read about one of them, the Lynn, on Page 8.
JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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BY ADAM SPECHT
POWER LINES
CO-OPS GO TO
WA S H I N G T O N
U.S. Rep. Bob Latta (center), of Bowling Green and Ohio’s 5th District, goes over issues important to electric cooperatives and their members during meetings with co-op members, board members, and staff in late April.
Annual legislative visits are a chance for cooperatives to state their case
O
as rolling back EPA regulations and protecting the Rural Utilities Service loan program, to under-the-radar issues impacting cooperatives, such as federal land management policy and the Cadillac tax on health insurance plans.
hio electric cooperative trustees and employees took their policy priorities to Capitol Hill in late April at the NRECA Legislative Conference in Washington, D.C. Co-op leaders from dozens of states joined Ohio's delegation for the annual conference, which focused this year on building momentum from the successful Co-ops Vote campaign during the 2016 election.
Members and staff from Ohio electric cooperatives pass the Capitol on their way to another legislator visit.
“Rural America stood up with a louder voice than before,” said Jim Matheson, president and CEO of NRECA, in an address to Legislative Conference attendees. “In a time of uncertainty, it’s all the more important for us to remain at the table, be active participants in the policy environment, and assert ourselves as the voice of American consumers.”
In personal meetings with legislators and their aides, Ohio's attendees discussed a broad range of policy topics — including obvious areas of concern, such
4
According to Marc Armstrong, director of government affairs for Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives, it’s critical for co-op leaders to get face time with their representatives in Congress.
“We can't expect our elected officials to always know what our legislative priorities are,” Armstrong said. “It is important for our leaders to convey — from a local perspective — what issues affect cooperative businesses and our members’ electric service.” While most of Ohio’s members of Congress are aware of a prominent handful of co-ops’ policy priorities, many are not always aware of the breadth of issues facing co-ops. Co-ops are not just power
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T
“
In a time of uncertainty, it’s all the more important for us to remain at the table, be active participants in the policy environment, and assert ourselves as the voice of American consumers.
”
—Jim Matheson NRECA president
suppliers to rural Ohioans — they are also employers and economic engines of local economies. "Our co-ops face an array of policy issues — issues that affect our ability to deliver reliable, affordable power to our members, but also issues that can make it difficult for co-ops to provide for their hardworking employees," Armstrong said. "It's important that our policymakers are aware of all these issues and not just the ones that make headlines." While co-op leaders make the trip to Capitol Hill to advocate for members, it does not require a flight to D.C. for a co-op member to make his or her voice heard. Members can visit www.action.coop, where they can educate themselves on energy policy and send messages to their representative and senators on behalf of their cooperative.
r
U.S. Rep. Bob Gibbs (gesturing), of Holmes County and Ohio’s 7th District, made time for his electric co-op constituents during the annual legislative visits in April.
Topics on the table Ohio’s Legislative Conference attendees had a full list of policy issues to discuss with members of Congress: Rural Utilities Service (RUS) Electric Loan Program: The Rural Utilities Service Electric Loan Program provides affordable capital to electric cooperatives for infrastructure development. Co-op leaders asked members of Congress to show their support of the RUS loan program, and to support future legislation allowing co-ops to pre-pay RUS loans without penalties. Regulatory Relief: The new administration has issued executive orders to review and revise both the Clean Power Plan and The Waters of the United States rules. Electric co-ops welcome the change of direction from these costly and unnecessary regulations. Electric co-ops believe in being good stewards of the environment, but red tape and expensive rulemaking only increase members’ rates. Full “Cadillac Tax” Repeal: Electric cooperatives around the country provide health insurance benefits to more than 100,000 employees, retirees, and their families. Because co-op employees live in rural communities, where limited access to health care drives costs higher, many co-op health insurance plans would be penalized with the “Cadillac tax” included in the Affordable Care Act. Co-ops across the country, including Ohio co-ops, asked their members of Congress to support the growing bipartisan effort to permanently repeal the Cadillac tax.
U.S. Rep. Steve Stivers (right) of Ohio’s 15th District stops to chat with Todd Ware of Newark-based The Energy Cooperative.
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Support Improved Federal Land Management Policies: Federal land management policies make it difficult for co-ops to maintain rights-ofway on or near federal property. Co-op leaders urged legislators to support bipartisan legislation that would streamline the rights-of-way review process and reduce the risk of liability.
JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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BY HEATHER JUZENAS
Lisa Hooker
POWER LINES
Harold Cooper (right), a lieutenant in the Pebble Township VFD, is also a member of the South Central Power Company’s board of directors, and often talks co-op business with other member-owners — such as Chief Jerry Wessel — when he’s out and about.
DOING THE
BOARD’S
WORK
At electric cooperatives, the board of directors is the direct link to owner-members
B
eing a board member for an Ohio electric cooperative comes with a sense of pride in service to one’s community. Board members, after all, are the link between owner-members of the cooperative and the services those members receive from the cooperative, and they take that responsibility seriously.
A commitment to service
Harold Cooper has been a member of Lancaster-based South Central Power Company’s board since 1998. He’s also a prominent farmer and is a lieutenant in the Pebble Township Volunteer Fire Department (he served as chief for 19 of his now-30 years there). He says there’s rarely a day when he doesn’t talk about co-op business with his neighbors when he’s out and about in Waverly or elsewhere — even his fellow volunteer firefighters strike up conversations with him about electric service when they get together. “I feel like I can directly affect how the cooperative operates, and I enjoy being the link between the co-
6
op and my neighbors,” Cooper says. “I can take their concerns right back to the board and we can act right away if we need to. It’s something you would never see happen at one of the big utility companies.” That local control — rather than control by investors who are hundreds or thousands of miles away from the community — is the cornerstone at the foundation of electric cooperatives. “We are there to look out for our members’ best interests, not to make a profit for shareholders,” Cooper says. “We work to provide a service that is dependable and community-oriented, and I think we’ve done a pretty good job of that. We’ve made several improvements to our lines and the service in my area. Everyone is very appreciative of that.”
In it for the right reasons
Colleen Eidemiller has been on the board at Pioneer Electric Cooperative in Piqua for 11 years and has been a member of the co-op for 17 years. She saw
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Lynn Maniaci Colleen Eidemiller (above, center) says listening to what other Pioneer Electric Cooperative members have to say is both the most important and most enjoyable part of her job on that co-op’s board of directors. Michael Sherger (bottom photo, red shirt), a member of the board at North Central Electric Cooperative, says board members appreciate when neighbors engage and share their issues, because one member’s problems could affect any number of others, and the board is there to help.
“
”
—Michael Sherger
North Central Electric Cooperative the co-op’s focus on service within the community — from safety programs and business development to scholarships and in-school electric demonstrations — and was inspired to run for the Pioneer board. “We give back so much to our members and our neighbors that people don’t really even know, because we don’t toot our own horn all the time,” she says. “From a board member’s perspective, I feel proud that I’m able to be a part of that.”
In a position to help
Michael Scherger is nearing the end of his first year on the board of the North Central Electric Cooperative in Attica. The utility industry is new to him, and he
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Ken Holida
The board members live and work in the communities, too, and we get our power from the co-op, just like everyone else.
says being a board member has given him a new appreciation for everything that goes into keeping the power on. Sherger, like most board members, views his role as an opportunity to further serve his community. He encourages members to talk to him about the co-op. “The board members live and work in the communities, too, and we get our power from the co-op just like everyone else,” he says. “The feedback we get is almost always positive, but they know that if they are having a problem, we could just as likely have the same problem, and we’re in a position to help. It’s gratifying to be a part of a good, solid team at the co-op.” HEATHER JUZENAS is a freelance writer from Licking
County and is a member of The Energy Cooperative.
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STORY AND PHOTOS BY DAMAINE VONADA
ICON
LYNN AUTO
THEATRE
STRASBURG
“
t s o T b t
Location: 2.5 miles west of Interstate 77 at the junction of U.S. 250 and State Route 21. Provenance: Opened in 1937, the Lynn drive-in movie theatre was originally called Boyer’s Auto Theatre and was one of several neighboring businesses that Roland Boyer owned and operated near Strasburg. After Franklin Ward and Ray McCombs purchased the drive-in in 1948, they renamed it for McCombs’s daughter, Judy Lynn. The Lynn Auto Theatre thrived during the 1950s, when the post-World War II baby boom fueled the popularity of the casual outdoor movie and concession-stand experience. By the time that veteran movie theatre manager Richard “Dick” Reding acquired the Lynn in 1957, there were about 400 drive-ins in Ohio and some 4,000 throughout the United States and Canada. Although competition from VCRs and cable TV closed many drive-ins in the 1970s and 1980s, the Reding family kept the Lynn Auto Theatre open and up-to-date. In 1967, they added a second screen; in 1996, they supplemented its vintage post-mounted speakers with a modern FM stereo sound system; in 2005, they put up a retro-style neon marquee; and most recently, they installed digital projectors for both screens.
t d d fl f t o k a
Significance: The Lynn Auto Theatre is both Ohio’s oldest drive-in movie theatre and the world’s second-oldest continuously operated outdoor theatre. It’s also one of the few remaining drive-ins with a grass lot where folks can relax in lawn chairs or spread out blankets. Currently: Dick Reding’s grandsons, Rich Reding and Jamie Reding, own the Lynn and run it with help from family members. With spaces for 245 vehicles at the first screen, and 145 at the other, the theatre features first-run, family-oriented movies. “Kids that once came with their parents have grown up and are now bringing their kids here,” says Rich Reding. While families are welcome to bring snacks, the Lynn’s old-school concession stand serves hot dogs, hamburgers, and popcorn made in a 1962 Cretor popcorn machine. “It’s an Olympic model,” says Reding, “and one of the oldest Cretors still in use.”
f r “ I a h o a w a q s
It’s a little-known fact that: The Lynn Auto Theatre’s slogans — “Come As You Are in the Family Car” and “See the Stars under the Stars” — were coined by Dick Reding. Lynn Auto Theatre, 9735 St. Rte. 250 NW, Strasburg, OH 44680. Open April–Oct., days and showtimes vary. For the schedule, admission prices, and other information, call 330-878-5797 or visit www.lynndrivein.com.
A
F
IM
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5/23/17 12:19 PM
BY JOHN EGAN
CO-OP PEOPLE
Courtesy Chris Kick/Farm and Dairy, Salem, Ohio.
POWER
A DIFFERENT SHADE OF
“ I J f d c a
GREEN
“ i s f
Chris Weaver, chief operating officer at Bridgewater Dairy in Montpelier, shows part of his herd that now helps produce electricity as well as milk.
With an eye on the environment, Bridgewater Dairy turns waste into electricity
B
ridgewater Dairy, a family farm in Montpelier, Ohio, has 3,000 dairy cows that produce 30,000 gallons of milk daily. They also produce an estimated 15 million gallons of manure each year. A decade ago, Chris Weaver, Bridgewater Dairy’s chief operating officer, started turning his farm’s animal waste into something valuable — electricity — by installing an anaerobic digester. “I wanted to manage the animals’ manure with an eye to helping the environment,” Weaver says. “I also wanted to improve the comfort of my cows. An anaerobic digester lets me do both.” An anaerobic digester breaks down organic material, such as animal waste, in a sealed, oxygen-free vessel, extracting methane that can be used to fuel an electric generator. Bridgewater’s digester has the capacity to generate 1.2 MW of power. It also drastically cuts down on the manure smell, flies, and risk of water contamination. Weaver says the dairy didn’t build an anaerobic digester to go “off the grid”; the operation still receives all of its electricity from North Western Electric Cooperative. But it sells all the electricity it produces to Buckeye Power, the generation and transmission cooperative that provides wholesale electricity to all of Ohio’s electric co-ops. Three other farms on co-op lines do the same: Wenning Poultry
10
in Mercer County (Midwest Electric in St. Marys), Ven Erk Dairy of Paulding County (Paulding Putnam Electric Cooperative), and Renergy in Monroe County (Consolidated Electric Cooperative in Mount Gilead). Combined, the four have a capacity of about 3.3 MW. “Bridgewater Dairy has been an excellent member, one of our best,” says Darin Thorp, president and CEO of North Western Electric Cooperative. “We helped them get started by supplying the distribution lines, meters, and switch gear.” None of the cost of the project, however, was passed on to other co-op members. “That was important,” he says. “Each member needs to pay their fair share so that one member doesn’t cross-subsidize another.”
“ e p 5 s s R e n
“ a T
Thorp says one reason renewable electricity from digesters is so attractive is that it is a baseload resource, meaning it can run around the clock, 365 days a year, as long as it has a steady fuel supply. Solar- and wind-powered generators, on the other hand, don’t generate electricity when the sun goes down or the wind stops blowing. “Anaerobic digesters may not be as fancy or appealing as wind and solar,” Weaver says. “For some people, power from poop carries an ‘ick’ factor compared to wind and solar. But digesters have an important role to play in rural America.” JOHN EGAN is president of Egan Energy Communications (www.eganenergy.com).
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“ F a g
5/23/17 12:20 PM
I s i a t T b C
B Bu igg tt er on s
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IMPORTANT CONSUMER INFORMATION: Jitterbug is owned by GreatCall, Inc. Your invoices will come from GreatCall. 1Monthly fees do not include government taxes or assessment surcharges and are subject to change. Plans and services may require purchase of a Jitterbug Flip and a one-time setup fee of $35. Coverage is not available everywhere. 5Star or 9-1-1 calls can only be made when cellular service is available. 5Star Service will be able to track an approximate location when your device is turned on, but we cannot guarantee an exact location. 2We will refund the full price of the Jitterbug phone and the activation fee (or setup fee) if it is returned within 30 days of purchase in like-new condition. We will also refund your first monthly service charge if you have less than 30 minutes of usage. If you have more than 30 minutes of usage, a per minute charge of 35 cents will be deducted from your refund for each minute over 30 minutes.You will be charged a $10 restocking fee. The shipping charges are not refundable. There are no additional fees to call GreatCall’s U.S.-based customer service. However, for calls to a Personal Operator in which a service is completed, you will be charged 99 cents per call, and minutes will be deducted from your monthly rate plan balance equal to the length of the call and any call connected by the Personal Operator. Jitterbug, GreatCall and 5Star are registered trademarks of GreatCall, Inc. Copyright ©2017 GreatCall, Inc. ©2017 firstSTREET for Boomers and Beyond, Inc.
OEC-OCL_JUNE 17 full issue.indd 13
JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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STORY AND PHOTOS BY JAMIE RHEIN
IN THE GARDEN
THINKING
BEYOND THE POT
With a little imagination, lots of ordinary items can become container gardens
T
he first containers Kathleen Killilea remembers planting were terra cotta window boxes with cherub embellishments. “My father lifted me over the wall of a client’s garden and handed them to me,” she recalls. Killilea’s job was to place those flower boxes she had helped to plant. She and her brothers played assistant to their dad, who started working at deMonye’s Greenhouse in Columbus when he was 13 years old and grew up to own it.
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Her early training paid off. Killilea and her brother Brian, now deMonye’s main operators, have an eye for what makes unusual containers work. Among the traditional flower pots and planters that pepper deMonye’s with a sea of colors are the creative and clever. A child’s wagon becomes a fairy garden of creeping thyme and baby angel tears. Another wagon has a succulent combination. On one wall hangs a tennis racket festooned with sedum.
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IN
Creative, unusual planter tips 1
Use quality potting medium with a peat moss mixture.
2
Good drainage is key. Add a base of rocks to drain excess water. For extra drainage, make holes in the bottom of objects.
3
When creating a tiered planter, put plants requiring the most water at the bottom layer, since watering the top will send water to the bottom.
With a little imagination, even an old bed frame can host a small garden.
4
Plant to location needs. Consider shade or sun — or both.
Longtime employee Denny Kaye is also responsible for these creative approaches — using Big Twister Juncus as hair for a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle bucket, and hens and chicks as a Minion hairdo. He’s also created planters from purses, shoes, and even ceramic picture frames, which he often finds at antique malls and flea markets. “If there is an indentation, he will plant a succulent,” laughs Killilea.
5
Choose plants with the same sun, shade and water needs for the same container.
DeMonye’s serves as only one greenhouse inspiration; a trip through the yard of Renee and Tony Kropat’s circa-1880s home in Westerville is another bonanza of creativity. Renee’s background as a student at Columbus College of Arts and Design, and later as a gallery owner, honed her ability to see artistic possibility where others might only see junk.
6
Use appropriate container depth. Shallow containers are fine for succulents. Plants with a deeper root system need 4 to 5 inches of soil.
7
Vary plants for a mix of textures, heights, and colors for visual appeal.
8
Think asymmetrical, fanciful, and fun, but don’t use plants that will hide the container.
9
Add embellishments or paint for added interest.
10
As temperatures change, replant to have planters last.
A cast-off couch, for example, has become a succulent bed after Kropat stripped away the fabric covering and reworked some of the springs. A vintage school locker painted orange years ago is planted with purple allium. When a theater’s seats were replaced, Kropat snapped up the old ones for planter conversation pieces. Kropat also thinks big when creating fairy An old ladder festooned gardens — an old canoe has new life with gardening tools is a nice on dry land, as Kropat filled it with dirt, conversation piece. In these whimsical planters, the right plant makes perfect potted flowers, plants, and figurines. hair for the characters. Nearby, a full metal bed frame serves as a flower bed, where brightly painted metal cows grin among pink phlox. Repurposing is Kropat’s passion — turning old wooden stairs upside down for a tiered flower box or perching a sink bowl on a weathered pipe to create a pedestal planter. A ladder festooned with old gardening tools and flower boxes made from weathered wood is a garden eye-catcher. “I try to take an object out of its normal approach,” she says. “I like giving a second, third, or fourth life to something before it ends up in a landfill.” JAMIE RHEIN is a freelance writer from Columbus.
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Old boots can get a new life as planters in the right setting. JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JUNE 2017
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BY MARGIE WUEBKER; LIGHTER OPTIONS BY DIANE YOAKAM PHOTOGRAPHY BY CATHERINE MURRAY
GOOD EATS
WE ALL SCREAM FOR
ICE CREAM!
0
June is National Dairy Month, and what better way to celebrate than with a batch of HOMEMADE ICE CREAM?
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The best part of making your own is that you can fix it any way you like: Add fresh fruit or nuts for texture and a tasty appeal, or pile in candy or cookies for an even sweeter treat!
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GOOD EATS
HOMEMADE ICE CREAM ½ gallon milk 2 3¾-oz. boxes instant vanilla pudding 1½ cups sugar 1 8-oz. container Cool Whip Beat milk, pudding, and sugar. Stir in Cool Whip and pour into canister of a manual or electric ice cream maker. Freeze according to manufacturer’s directions. Makes 11/2 gallons.
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Variations For fruit-flavored ice cream, add 2 cups of any crushed fruit to mixture before pouring into ice cream maker. For cookies-and-cream ice cream, add 2 cups frozen crushed chocolate sandwich cookies to mixture before pouring into ice cream maker.
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BUTTER PECAN ICE CREAM ¾ cup pecans, chopped 3 Tbsp. melted butter ¹/8 tsp. salt 1 Tbsp. white sugar ½ cup brown sugar, packed 2 Tbsp. cornstarch 2 eggs, beaten
1/3 cup pancake syrup or maple syrup ¼ cup white sugar 2½ cups milk 1 cup whipping cream 2 tsp. vanilla
On a baking sheet, combine pecans, butter, salt, and 1 Tbsp. white sugar. Spread in a single layer. Roast at 350 degrees for 6 minutes. Stir and roast 6 minutes longer. Cool. Combine brown sugar, cornstarch, eggs, syrup, and white sugar in double boiler. Gradually add milk. Cook over boiling water until mixture thickens, about 10 minutes. Remove from heat and chill for several hours or overnight. Stir in pecans, whipping cream, and vanilla. Pour into canister of manual or electric ice cream maker. Freeze according to manufacturer’s directions. Makes 1 gallon.
LIGHTER OPTIONS
STRAWBERRY BANANA “ICE CREAM” 2 to 3 very ripe bananas Pinch of salt ¹/8 tsp. vanilla 2 to 4 Tbsp. milk 1 cup fresh strawberries, finely diced
Peel bananas and cut into large pieces; place in airtight bag and freeze. Place frozen bananas in a blender with salt, vanilla, and 1 to 2 tablespoons milk; blend until smooth, adding remaining milk only if necessary to achieve a soft-serve consistency. Fold strawberries into banana mixture. Serve immediately or place in freezer for 20 to 30 minutes for firmer texture. Makes 2 servings. Per serving: 144 calories, 1 g total fat (0.3 g saturated fat), 5 g fiber, 3 g protein
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CHOCOLATE COCONUT MILK ICE CREAM 1 (14 oz.) can full-fat coconut milk 1/4 cup plus 2 Tbsp. cocoa powder 1/4 cup honey or real maple syrup 1 tsp. vanilla
Combine all ingredients in a blender and blend until smooth and creamy. Place in ice cream freezer and follow manufacturer's directions. Process about 20 minutes. Serve immediately. Alternate freezer method: Place in the freezer for 4 to 6 hours. If ice cream gets too firm in the freezer, allow it to thaw at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes before serving. Makes 4 servings. Per serving: 224 calories, 10 g fat (8 g saturated fat), 1.5 g fiber, 2 g protein
JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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BY PAT KEEGAN AND BRAD THIESSEN
THE EFFICIENCY EXPERT
DODGING THE Courtesy rareformproperties.com
DRAFTS
Above: Caulking seals air leaks around existing windows as well as new windows. Inset: Interior storm windows allow you to keep your old windows, yet still achieve state-of-the-art efficiency and comfort.
Affordable strategies give homeowners tools to improve inefficient windows
H
Courtesy Innerglass Window Systems
omeowners often fret about their older windows, perhaps even original to the house — maybe they let in cold drafts during the winter, or contribute to overheating in the summer. People like the look of the older windows, and replacing them with new ones is expensive. In last month’s column, we talked about replacing windows, but doing so is costly, and it could take 20 years of energy savings to recover the investment. You can, however, make significant improvements to your existing windows without investing a large amount of money or time.
Energy loss and drafts often occur in the cracks between the components of the window. Weatherstripping can be used for areas where a window’s movable parts meet the window frame, where drafts often sneak through. Retailers offer a variety of low-cost, easy-to-apply weatherstripping for different types of windows, and they can pay for themselves in energy savings in as little as one year. The seam between the window frame and the wall is another common source of air leakage. Fill gaps less than ¼ inch wide with caulk; for anything larger, use expanding foam and paint over it. Of course, loose, cracked, or even missing glass panes can mean significant heat losses. If you’re handy, it’s possible to re-glaze a window yourself, or there may be a local shop in your area that will do it. 18
Installing exterior or interior storm windows, which you can order to fit the exact size of your window opening, can sometimes produce as much savings as a full replacement, cutting heating costs by as much as 7 to 12 percent. There are many types of other window coverings, including interior roller shades, cellular shades, or draperies, that can cut heating or cooling expenses by 10 to 16 percent. Draperies are usually less efficient, so make sure they overlap in the middle, are as tight to the window and wall as possible, and run all the way to the floor. The best way to reduce overheating in the summer is to keep the sun’s rays from reaching the window — awnings or overhangs, or window films that adhere to the window surface, can protect the interior from unwanted summer sun. Another low-cost measure for these areas that can produce as much savings as storm windows is to fashion a plastic weather barrier that adheres to the frame. Building supply retailers sell a clear plastic and framing material that can be shrunk into place by using a hair dryer. To learn more about improving the efficiency of older windows, visit www.energystar.gov or www. energy.gov. You may also want to check with your local electric co-op, as many offer incentives and are knowledgeable about local suppliers and contractors. PAT KEEGAN and BRAD THIESSEN write for Collaborative Efficiency, an energy communications company.
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PIONEER ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES
CA P I TAL CR EDI TS and the COO P E R AT I VE DI F F E R E N C E Being a member of a cooperative certainly has its benefits. As a member, you have a say in how Pioneer conducts business, the ability to vote for your board of trustees and county boards, and an opportunity to take part in our various programs, including our Co-op Connections® card and rebate and incentive programs. Additionally, between May and June each year, I like to highlight the benefit of capital credits. I’m happy to report that this year, for the 36th consecutive year, we will be returning capital credits to you, our members, through the general retirement process. Capital credits reflect a member’s ownership in the cooperative. At Pioneer, margins generated by the cooperative annually are allocated back to members based on their share of the amount paid for electricity. Capital credits are retained within the cooperative to maintain financial flexibility and strength and to finance capital improvement and expansion projects, which helps keep the cost of electricity down. Each year, the Pioneer Board of Trustees evaluates the financial condition of the cooperative to determine if we can retire capital credits. This year, Pioneer is returning more than $1.8 million to its members.
Ron Salyer
PRESIDENT & CEO
Pioneer has returned more than $43.7 million to its members in the form of capital credits since 1981.
Some of you may have already received your bill credit beginning in midMay while others will receive theirs in the coming weeks, depending on your respective billing dates. This retirement is possible due to the financial strength of your cooperative and the proper management of investments in Pioneer’s distribution system. So, whether you or your neighbor were elected to a seat on one of our boards, you recently used your Co-op Connections card, or you are now receiving a bill credit for your share of capital credits, I hope you recognize and appreciate the difference — the cooperative difference — and overall benefit of being a member.
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CO-OPS TAKE MESSAGE TO
CAPI TO L HILL A
t the end of April, the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association welcomed more than 2,100 co-op grassroots advocates to Washington, D.C., for its annual Legislative Conference. Directors, managers, and employees of memberowned electric cooperatives came to Washington, D.C., from across the country to talk to their respective congressional delegations and staff about legislative issues affecting electric cooperatives and their members. This is Pioneer’s 45th year attending the conference and Vice President and Chief Communications Officer Nanci McMaken’s 25th year. “We had the opportunity to sit down with Congressman Jim Jordan, as well as with aides from both Congressman Warren Davidson’s and
20
Congressman Mike Turner’s offices to discuss issues crucial to electric cooperatives,” said McMaken. “So many decisions made at the federal level affect cooperatives’ ability to serve our member-consumers reliably and cost-effectively. Sharing our concerns face to face helps the legislators get to know a portion of their constituencies better and to demonstrate our desire to partner with them on developing and promoting fair, common sense policies for rural cooperative members.” Manager of Community and Government Relations Todd Garrett attended the conference for the first time this year. He was impressed overall with the number of co-op attendees and the interest and attention legislators gave their message. “The conference was a valuable way for co-ops to voice their concerns on key issues,” said Garrett. “Being able
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to meet with senators, representatives, and their aides to express our viewpoint demonstrated the importance of the political process.” Some of the key issues discussed during the conference included the need for improved federal land management policies that allow co-ops to maintain vegetation in right of ways to improve reliability, extending tax credits for geothermal like those that exist for wind and solar energy, and relief from unnecessary and costly regulations. Garrett also noted the importance of Pioneer members, and other eligible individuals, taking part in ACRE Co-op Owners for Political Action®, the political action committee (PAC) that supports and informs candidates who are in tune with the most relevant political issues facing cooperatives. “It was evident that the representatives and aides we met with were well informed about the topics discussed,” he said. “They listened to our views and understood the reasons we support certain legislation.” The contributions of the PAC support political candidates currently running for Congress who are willing to fight on the behalf of cooperatives. Co-op Owners and the growth of the PAC is critical for the future of the
cooperative and its members. Also joining McMaken and Garrett from Pioneer was board trustee Colleen Eidemiller. Eidemiller has been on the Pioneer board for 10 years, and this was her fifth year attending the conference.
Vice President and Chief Communications Officer Nanci McMaken (center) leads a discussion with congressional aides during the Legislative Conference.
Cooperative representatives take time to pose with Congressman Jim Jordan.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT ACRE CO-OP OWNERS FOR POLITICAL ACTION What is ACRE Co-op Owners for Political Action®? Co-op Owners is a program that allows our residential electric cooperative members — our consumer-owners — to share their opinions and strengthen their voice in the political process. What does Co-op Owners do? Co-op Owners was organized to support political candidates, currently running for or in Congress, who understand the important issues affecting rural cooperatives and are willing to fight on our behalf.
Is ACRE bipartisan? Yes. ACRE is bipartisan, supporting candidates based solely on their support for electric cooperative issues, regardless of political party affiliation. How does ACRE make a difference? When individuals join ACRE, they demonstrate their commitment to their cooperative and local community. Each individual ACRE contribution promotes the legislative objectives of the electric cooperative program and promotes a strong local consumer-owned electric cooperative focus.
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Pioneer sees record level of broken poles due to vehicle accidents in 2017 Pioneer Electric Cooperative prides itself on making safety a top priority — not only for its employees, but for its members and communities as well. This year, Pioneer’s focus is to spread the word about vehicle and power line safety. As an electric utility provider, Pioneer line crews are often called to respond to accidents associated with power lines, poles, and other electrical equipment. Between January and April 2017, crews have responded to nearly 30 vehicle accidents – a significant increase compared to previous years. Twenty of those accidents resulted in 21 broken poles, and broken poles increase the chance of downed power lines. These situations can be particularly dangerous if the people involved do not know to stay in the vehicle, or the proper way to exit if necessary. Therefore, as part of this safety initiative, Pioneer continues to spread the message by offering tips for safe driving and explaining the process of exiting a potentially energized vehicle and surrounding area in the graphic on page 20C. With summer upon us, it is Pioneer’s hope that
Pioneer crews arrive to replace a pole broken as a result of a vehicle accident on April 25, 2017.
everyone will take the time to learn this process. Whether today, tomorrow, or 10 years in the future, Pioneer believes that this valuable information is beneficial and could save a life.
TIPS TO AVOID VEHICLE ACCIDENTS: 1. NEVER DRINK AND DRIVE. 2. NEVER TEXT AND DRIVE. 3. KEEP SPEEDS IN CHECK AND SLOW DOWN AT NIGHT AND IN BAD WEATHER LIKE RAIN OR SNOW. 4. KEEP CRUISE CONTROL OFF WHEN ROADS ARE WET OR SLICK. 5. IF YOU’RE TOO TIRED TO DRIVE, CALL A FRIEND OR PARENT FOR A RIDE. Check out the video by searching ‘Vehicle and Power Line Safety’ on YouTube at www.youtube.com/ user/PioneerECtv. 20B
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What to do if a power line is on or near your car 1
If you can drive in reverse away from the area, do so cautiously. Do not drive over downed power lines. Always assume that power lines are energized.
2
If you can’t drive away, call 911. Let emergency responders know where you are and what has happened. The safest thing to do is stay in your car until emergency crews arrive to assist you.
3
Honk your horn to alert passers-by. Roll down the window and warn people not to come near the car or line.
4
If you must exit, open the vehicle door all the way. Ensure that you use the handle and that you do not touch any other part of the door.
5
Prepare to jump. Stand up elbows tucked into your stomach and hands held close to your chest.
6
Jump out of your vehicle. Do your best to land as far as possible from your vehicle, with your feet together, and without stumbling. You must never be in contact with both your vehicle and the ground at the same time.
7
Shuffle-walk or hop until you have reached a safe area well away from the downed power line or electricity source. As you shuffle or hop, keep your feet touching one another at all times.
8
Different parts of the ground could be energized at different voltages. If your feet are each in different voltage areas, electricity could run from one area to the other through you. This is why it is important to shuffle or hop and always keep your feet together.
9
Once you are in a safe area away from the power source, wait for emergency crews.
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CELEBRATING
P
ioneer, the city of Piqua, and Tree Care, Inc. joined forces to celebrate Arbor Day on Friday, April 28, with the help of more than 60 students at Springcreek Elementary School in Piqua. The event kicked off with a proclamation by Piqua’s Mayor Kathryn Hinds. Following the proclamation, Hinds led students in a chant, “Trees help us live!”
AR B O R DAY TREE FAST FACTS: Trees remove pollution from the atmosphere, improving air quality and human health. One large tree can provide a day’s supply of oxygen for four people. Source: arborday.org
Arborist Eric Davis of Tree Care, Inc, explained to students the need for trees and why it is essential to care for and plant new ones. Each student then had the opportunity to help plant the tree now located in front of Springcreek Elementary. Pioneer’s Vegetation Manager Danny Bagwell attended the event on behalf of Pioneer. He handed out goody bags with safety information and activities for the students. They also received a small tree to take home, plant, and maintain. “It is important to teach these kids just how important trees are — and what better opportunity than Arbor Day?” asked Bagwell. “We are happy to take part in this annual celebration.”
20D
Pioneer Vegetation Manager Danny Bagwell greets students and distributes goody bags during the April 28 Arbor Day celebration at Springcreek Elementary School in Piqua.
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Pioneer scholarship winners finish well in statewide competition Forty-eight students competed for 18 scholarships in the Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives’ Children of Members Scholarship competition on April 14 in Columbus, Ohio. Jennifer Trzaska of Minster placed 5th in the girls’ division, earning a $1,800 scholarship. Jacob Schmiesing of Sidney placed sixth in the boys’ competition, earning a $1,700 award. Both Trzaska and Schmiesing won first place in Pioneer’s scholarship competition in January, qualifying them to advance to the statewide Children of Members competition.
Jennifer Trzaska
Jacob Schmiesing
Pioneer receives Tree Line USA award
DID YOU KNOW?
Pioneer was awarded the Tree Line USA award for the 15th consecutive year.
Liking us on Facebook or following us on Twitter gives you access to up-to-date information from YOUR cooperative.
The Tree Line USA distinction recognizes Pioneer’s commitment to proper tree pruning, planting, and care within its service territory. Tree Line USA is a partnership between the Arbor Day Foundation and the National Association of State Foresters and is based on five core standards: quality tree care, annual worker training, community tree planting and public education, tree-based energy conservation, and Arbor Day observance.
This information includes energy efficiency, outages, rebates and incentives, and much more!
SO WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR? LET’S GET CONNECTED!
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THE CO-OP CONNECTIONS PROGRAM HAS SAVED MEMBERS
$100 MILLION+
ON PRESCRIPTION DRUG COVERAGE THROUGHOUT THE NATION. FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS What is the Co-op Connections® Card? The card provides Pioneer members discounts at local and national businesses. Show the card at a business to receive the discount determined by the owner or manager.
Where do I find a list of benefits? Local and national benefits can be found under co-op deals at www.connections.coop. You can also check our local listing at www.pioneerec.com.
How much does it cost? It is FREE to our members.
I’m a business owner. What do I need to do to participate? Call Pioneer at 800-762-0997 or visit our website, www.pioneerec.com, for additional information.
Where can I use this card? Any local or national business that participates in the program. There are thousands of businesses that offer discounts, and even more are added daily. When will I receive my card? Cards are typically mailed to our members with their New Member Packets. Please contact our office at 800-762-0997 to request a new card.
*This pharmacy discount is not intended to be a substitute for insurance.
PIONEER RURAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC.
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
CONTACT
Chair
1-800-762-0997 | 937-773-2523 www.pioneerec.com MAIN OFFICE
344 West U.S. Route 36 Piqua, Ohio 45356 DISTRICT OFFICE
767 Three Mile Road Urbana, Ohio 43078 OFFICE HOURS
8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
22
How does the pharmacy discount work? There are more than 60,000 chain and independent pharmacies in this program. Showing this card when you purchase prescription medications can save you between 10 and 85 percent on some medications.
Ronald P. Clark
Colleen R. Eidemiller First Vice Chair
Ted R. Black Second Vice Chair
Terrence A. Householder Secretary
Ron L. Bair Treasurer
Mark A. Bailey Orville J. Bensman Roger J. Bertke Duane L. Engel Trustees
Harold T. Covault Donald D. DeWeese Dwain E. Hollingsworth Douglas A. Hurst Edward P. Sanders Paul R. Workman Donald K. Zerkle Trustees Emeritus
Ronald P. Salyer President/CEO
HAVE A STORY SUGGESTION?
E-mail your ideas to: member@pioneerec.com
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HWE celebrates 50 years of serving Kelleys Island Consolidated wins innovation award, Boysel wins Citizen of the Year award
In April, Hancock-Wood Electric Cooperative (HWE) celebrated its 50th year of bringing electric service to Kelleys Island, which was added to the HWE service territory in 1967 when HWE absorbed accounts from a failing electric company servicing the island. It is unique for an Ohio electric cooperative to serve an island, as extending reliable electric service can be more challenging.
Mid-Ohio Energy named 2016 Business of the Year
Mid-Ohio Energy Cooperative was recently named 2016 Business of the Year by the Hardin County Chamber and Business Alliance. The award was presented at the organization’s 11th annual Mid-Ohio Energy President/ CEO John Metcalf (left) membership and awards and Board Chairman Gene ceremony.
McCluer accepted the Hardin
Since Mid-Ohio’s County Chamber’s Business of the Year award. Community Fund was started in 2006, more than $450,000 has been given directly to schools, first responders, service groups, and more.
BREC’s new smart meters will reduce outage times
Installation of Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative’s new advanced metering infrastructure system is currently underway to provide twoway communications with near-realtime oversight of system operations. Once that is completed, BREC will be able to determine within a matter of minutes which of its more than 18,000 members are without power if a major storm rolls through the service area. Power restoration times will be greatly improved, and crews will operate in a more efficient manner than was possible before.
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Consolidated Electric Cooperative (CEC) won the Delaware Area Chamber of Commerce Innovation in Business award at the Chamber’s annual dinner on Feb. 2. Additionally, Dan Boysel, CEC’s director of economic development, won the Chamber’s Citizen of the Year award.
Consolidated Electric Cooperative President and CEO Phil Caskey (left) and Director of Economic Development Dan Boysel received awards at the Delaware Area Chamber’s annual dinner.
The Innovation in Business award is presented to a Chamber member that has used innovation to stand apart, and the Citizen of the Year award is granted to an individual who has made a unique contribution to the community.
Grant for 3D printer given to local school by North Central Electric
What costs $3,200 and helps prepare students for potential technology courses in college? A MakerBot 3D printer, courtesy of North Central Electric Cooperative. The Atticabased co-op’s People Fund recently granted $3,200 to Seneca East Front row: Austin Butler and Hannah Michel. Back row, from Schools for the highleft to right: Tech teacher Jillian tech printer, which will Baker, Gabbi Dixon, Principal Don promote more STEM Vogt, North Central People Fund (science, technology, representative Diane Stallings, and engineering, and math) Aubrey Saylors. concepts and find use in entrepreneurship and marketing courses. The grant provided funds to purchase the 3D printer, software programs to run the equipment, upgrades to a computer that runs the printer, and the initial supply of filament.
Items that students have created with the printer proudly sit on display. JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 23
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NEW Rechargeable Digital Hearing Aid Technology Only $199!* (*Each when you buy a pair)
Rechargeable is now affordable. The new HearClearTM HCRC eco-friendly hearing aid combines advanced technology with a low price. The Rechargeable HCRC! Digital sound processing chip provides crystal clear sound and makes speech easier to understand with less feedback than old analog technology Never worry about replacing batteries again! 2 Hour Charge Gives 16 Hours of Use! Micro USB Cable (included) charges your hearing aid in the car, with a computer or plugged in the wall! Easy On / Off Button Automatic Noise Reduction and Feedback Canceler 100% Money Back Guarantee Hear up to 3 times better when you wear a pair of hearing aids compared to wearing just one!
5 Star Reviews No More Dead Batteries! “This HearClear HCRC rechargeable hearing aid works all the time! Unlike hearing aids powered by throwaway batteries that go dead at the worst time, I plug these in at night and the hearing aid charge lasts all day, every day.” - Xavier J. Great Hearing Aid! “I’m really glad I tried the HearClear HCRC! It works as good as or better than the more expensive ones I’ve purchased in the past. It’s great that the price is reasonable. Thank you for the great product.” - Tim M.
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JUNE 2017
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STORY BY CRAIG SPRINGER PHOTOS COURTESY OHIO DNR
OHIO HISTORY
FIRE
ol
TOWERS
New efforts aim to preserve these artifacts of our conservation past
or
O
ur present days are an amalgam of all of our yesterdays: the past is prelude. That adage couldn’t be more true with respect to Ohio’s geologic history. Nearly the entire state felt the cold crush of mile-deep glacial ice pushing on the land.
are ital
The evidence is all around you in the moraines, the low long ridges in southwest Ohio; the grooves etched in stone on Kelleys Island; the open, pleasant till plains seemingly laid flat as a skillet. Continued on Page 26
r wn
ust
ack
OEC-OCL_JUNE 17 full issue.indd 27
JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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“
Fire towers, though we don’t need them any longer, are our symbol of forest conservation.
”
—Don Karas
ODNR Division of Forestry
Before airplanes and GPS, staff stood atop watchtowers in Ohio's forests to watch out for telltale plumes of smoke. Continued from Page 25
Only southeast Ohio was spared the press of ice. It’s a province entirely different from the rest of the state, expressed in the people and the places they inhabit. This Appalachian piedmont bounds in hill after hill. Relative vast reaches of woods — forests of white pine, black oak, red maple, sweet gum, hickory, and buckeye — adorn those hills. They are a natural commodity worthy of protection. That protection began with a network of some 39 fire towers that once studded the highest of hills. The towers afforded the broadest, longest views by fire watchers who kept a lookout for “smokes,” those first plumes that signaled a potential forest fire. According to Don Karas with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR), Division of Forestry, the towers arose in the 1920s from a need for wildland fire suppression. Ohio’s southeast forests were recovering then, regrowing from having been harvested for charcoal used in iron production in the mid-to-late 19th Osbourne Fire Finder century. President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal “alphabet soup agencies” would come into play in forest conservation in Ohio. The federal government’s Resettlement Administration facilitated the removal of families off of small, failed farms where folks were scratching out a living in hollows. Those condemned lands came back into the public domain, today managed by the ODNR or the U.S. Forest Service’s Wayne National Forest. Part of the growing conservation concern then was detection and suppressing of wildfires. Roosevelt deployed his “Tree Army” to the piedmont. That army was the Civil Conservation Corps (CCC), the first of Roosevelt’s New Deal agencies intended to help jump-start the failing economy. The CCC put young men to work in public-works projects across the country.
26
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JUNE 2017
OEC-OCL_JUNE 17 full issue.indd 28
“Not only did they plant trees, but they built roads and lodges and bridges,” Karas says. “In an 18-month period between 1933 and 1934, the CCC built 11 steelframe fire towers in southeast Ohio.” They constructed another eight from 1934 until the CCC was disbanded in 1942. But the rise of airplanes and other technology eventually supplanted the need for towers. Since it was cheaper to fly predetermined routes over the forests on the watch for smoke than to maintain and staff towers, the ODNR opted for aerial surveys during fire season. The last of the firewatchers, Marion Sanders, walked out of a Pike County fire tower for the last time in 1978, and over time, the towers fell into disrepair. Fortunately, some have been saved, preserved, and even relocated for public viewing; the Armintrout tower is on permanent display in the ODNR area of the state fairgrounds. “Fire towers, though we don’t need them any longer, are our symbol of forest conservation,” Karas says. “We took great care in preserving this one for all Ohioans to see.” In all, eight of the fire towers have been preserved, and at least one other restoration project is in the works. David White of Lancaster, a member of the Forest Fire Lookout Association, leads an endeavor to relocate the Rock Bridge/Sugar Grove tower to Charles Alley Nature Park in Lancaster. It’s a labor of love, says White, a former park ranger and wildfire fighter. “Towers are part of our history,” he says. “We need to preserve them for education and our heritage.” CRAIG SPRINGER came of age on the glacial moraines in Butler County. Visit him at www.craigspringer.com.
Smoke billows from an Ohio forest fire in the 1950s. Airplane use has made the fire watchtowers unnecessary.
101⁄2 103⁄4 1013⁄16 107⁄8 5/23/17 12:27 PM
⁄8
7
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JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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⁄8 OEC-OCL_JUNE 17 full issue.indd 29
B_I_V = Live Area: 7 x 10, 7x10 Magazine Master, 1 Page, Installment, Vertical updated 11/2013
5/23/17 12:27 PM
TRAVEL OHIO
STORY AND PHOTOS BY DAMAINE VONADA
W
hile many travelers regard Holmes County as the crux of Ohio’s Amish Country, few realize that Walnut Creek is its cradle. In 1809, Amish farmer Jonas Stutzman migrated from Pennsylvania to present-day Holmes County as the area’s first white settler. More Amish folks soon followed, putting down roots that blossomed into the world’s largest Amish-Mennonite community. Though 190 years have passed since Amish pioneers platted the village of Walnut Creek, the splendor of the land remains obvious. Narrow ridges bordered by undulating valleys present a pastoral mosaic of tidy farmhouses, bountiful fields, and hillside pastures where horses graze. The scenery alone makes Walnut Creek worth visiting; its other attributes — shops, restaurants, entertainment, and genuine encounters with the “plain people” — are bonuses. Some advice: Bring a camera for capturing Walnut Creek’s bucolic beauty and a cooler for keeping the local goodies you’re bound to buy.
Rebecca’s Bistro
Olde Time Lodge
Merle and Lela Hershberger grow peaches and apples to sell at Hillcrest Orchard farm market, but when they retire, their “dawdy haus” will be a restored 1850s log cabin. Until then, lucky lodgers can experience the cabin’s rustic simplicity (gas and electric lights but no TV) and serene orchard setting. 330-401-3185; www.dwellhillcrest.com
28
German Culture Museum
With eclectic exhibits that encapsulate Walnut Creek’s Amish and “English” (non-Amish) heritage, the museum is an instructive first stop. Its treasures include chairs made by Jonas (“The Father of Amish Country”) Stutzman, who famously anticipated Christ’s Second Coming by wearing white clothes and building an extra-large chair for Christ to sit in. 330-763-1390
Rebecca Miller’s tasty tomato basil soup is so satisfying it’s a local legend. Her cozy, often crowded eatery occupies a repurposed 1817 log cabin, and even though she seasonally tweaks the “modern farmhouse food” menu, you can’t go wrong with the creamed eggs, quiche, or carrot cake. 330-893-2668; www.rebeccasbistro.com
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JUNE 2017
OEC-OCL_JUNE 17 full issue.indd 30
5/23/17 12:27 PM
ADA
WALNUT CREEK
CONFIDENTIAL Travelers enjoy exploring the scenic cradle of Ohio's Amish Country
Walnut Creek Flea Market
Carlisle Inn
The inn enjoys a heart-of-Walnut Creek location just a short walk from most village attractions. The exterior resembles a rambling country manor, and its uniquely furnished guest rooms feature comfy Amish-crafted beds. While Walnut Creek bustles on Saturday, the best place for basking in Sunday’s peace and quiet is the inn’s front porch. 855400-2275; www.dhgroup.com/inns
Amish Country Theater
The Conn family’s wholesome and hilarious shows provide entertaining evenings. Grandkids laugh as much as grandparents, and this year’s original, country-style productions are Macho Mule and Show Me the Funny. 888-9887469; www.amishcountrytheater.com
OEC-OCL_JUNE 17 full issue.indd 31
A popular State Route 39 shopping destination, it’s clean, modern, and completely indoors. Three attributes set it apart: no repeat merchandise; parking for buggies as well as buses; and the genial atmosphere fostered by the Zimmerman family members who own and operate it. 330852-0181; www. walnutcreekamishfleamarket.com
Der Dutchman Restaurant
When Der Dutchman debuted nearly 50 years ago, its hearty, Amish-style fare helped put Walnut Creek on the tourism map. Regulars rave about its broasted and baked chicken, but homemade noodles over homemade mashed potatoes constitutes comfort food nirvana. Although you may have to wait for a table, your reward is the dining room’s eye-popping view of Goose Bottom Valley. 330-893-2981; www.dhgroup.com/restaurants
The Farm at Walnut Creek
A working Amish farm offers a Noah’s Ark adventure — by car or horse-drawn wagon — that lets families hand-feed some 60 different animals ranging from American bison to zebras. Visitors also can tour the barns and snack on cookies in the main farmhouse. 330-893-4200; www.thefarmatwalnutcreek.com
Walnut Creek Cheese
The phenomenal cheese selection is merely the tip of the foodie iceberg at this State Route 39 megastore, where tourists and locals alike shop for everything from its bakery’s fresh-baked fry pies to its cannery’s apple butter barbecue sauce. Don’t miss the creamery’s homemade custard, the café’s pulled pork, or the test kitchen’s free samples. 330-852-2888; www.walnutcreekcheese.com
JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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5/23/17 12:28 PM
STORY AND PHOTOS BY W.H. “CHIP” GROSS
WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE
THINK YOU’D LIKE TO BE A
FISHING GUIDE?
F
or once, I was there “yesterday.” If you’re an angler, you know what I mean. How many times have you heard, “Well, the fish aren’t biting today, but had you been here yesterday (or last week, or last month), well…” Putting me on the fish that magical late-summer morning a few years ago was veteran fishing guide Dave Rose. We were fishing a small river in northwest Michigan from a drift boat, casting minnow-imitation lures for king salmon (also known as Chinooks) that were migrating upstream from Lake Michigan to spawn. When we began fishing at dawn that morning, Rose estimated we would see about a hundred salmon moving upstream in the shallow, clear water beneath the boat. But by the end of our 7-mile, half-day float, we’d easily seen 10 times that number — an estimated 1,000 salmon or more.
30
“I’ve only seen this happen a time or two during all my 20 years of guiding,” Rose says incredulously. “We were definitely in the right place at the right time.” I hooked half a dozen salmon that day, landing three — which is about the usual ratio for kings. Rose estimated that the salmon I caught weighed 17 to 18 pounds each. Many fishing guides specialize in a specific species, but Dave Rose is a multi-species fisherman, guiding anglers to trout, salmon, smallmouth and largemouth bass, walleye, pike, perch, and panfish on inland lakes. He lives near Traverse City, Michigan, and attracts most of his clients from that resort town and others within a day’s drive.
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JUNE 2017
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5/23/17 12:28 PM
The guiding life
A typical guiding day for Rose begins the evening before the actual trip. “It usually takes me a couple hours to prepare the boat (an 18-foot MirroCraft) with the specific tackle we’ll need for the day, including the safety gear,” says Rose. During summer months, Rose usually has his clients meet him at a particular lake at 5 a.m. He’ll get there a half-hour or so earlier, to launch the boat and be ready. His typical guided fishing trips last about five hours and cost $425 for either one or two anglers. One of the main things Rose likes about guiding is meeting different people. “I really enjoy the camaraderie of fellow fishermen,” he says. “So if you don’t like people, you probably wouldn’t enjoy guiding.” Only about half his clients are experienced fishermen. “And it’s not an easy task to get people to catch fish if they know little or nothing about fishing,” he says. “So if a customer is a newbie, I spend much of our time on the water teaching him/her how to fish. But I enjoy that aspect of the job, especially when guiding a parent and child.”
Not always sunshine and roses
As for the downsides of guiding, Rose mentioned inclement weather. “You never know what Mother Nature is going to throw at you,” he says. “Some days are cold, wet, miserable and the fish just aren’t biting.” Rose has a special trick up his sleeve for those tough days. He lowers an underwater camera over the side of the boat to prove to clients that fish really are present. “Regardless of the conditions, my goal every day is to try and get clients the most and biggest fish they’ve ever caught,” he says. “I work hard to make that happen, every trip.” As for the costs of being a fishing guide, Rose says expenses can run quite high. “There is not only the
Outdoors editor Chip Gross displays a king salmon he pulled from a small river during a trip to northwest Michigan.
OEC-OCL_JUNE 17 full issue.indd 33
Fishing guide Dave Rose (left) and a client show off part of their catch of Green Bay walleyes during a day on the lake.
cost of purchasing a boat, motor(s), and trailer, but the cost of maintenance and gas as well,” Rose says. “Add to that an annual guide’s license, insurance, rods, reels, bait, and other tackle, and expenses really add up quick.” One last thing Rose highly recommends for any potential fishing guide is a fallback plan. “Make sure you have a spouse with a real job,” he says. If you’d like to fish with Dave Rose this summer, he can be reached at 231-633-9875 or by e-mail at paintedfish@wildfishing.com. And tell him I sent you. CHIP GROSS is Ohio Cooperative Living’s outdoors editor and a member of Consolidated Electric Cooperative. He can be reached by e-mail at whchipgross@gmail.com.
Pro Tactics: Steelhead & Salmon
You can learn more about salmon fishing by reading a copy of Chip Gross’s book Pro Tactics: Steelhead & Salmon. Chock-full of interviews with fishing guides, charter captains, outdoors writers, and just plain good fishermen from the Great Lakes, Pacific Northwest, and Alaska, the book is loaded with fishing advice and techniques, as well as more than 60 color photographs. Priced at $28.60 (includes tax and shipping), personalized copies may be ordered from Chip by mailing a check or money order to: WORDsmith, 6108 Township Road 88, Fredericktown, OH 43019. Please include the name of the person it's for, so it can be personalized.
JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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5/23/17 12:29 PM
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JUNE 2017
OEC-OCL_JUNE 17 full issue.indd 34
5/23/17 12:30 PM
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JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 33
5/23/17 12:32 PM
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Customer
“Sadly, we lost my sister-in-law, Barb, to bone cancer in September, but when she knew she had only a little time left, she invited us all to come on a family trip to Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, last July. We had a great time.” Lisa Hutton Hancock-Wood Electric Cooperative member
“Walking toward the Old South Meeting House in Boston, where the colonists met to plan the Boston Tea Party.” Nancy Sparks Paulding Putnam Electric Cooperative member
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Send us your pictures!
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34
Upload your photos at www.ohioec.org/ memberinteractive. For November, send a photo or 100 words describing what you’re thankful for by August 15; for December, send photos representing the 12 Days of Christmas by September 15.
Make sure to include your name, mailing address, phone number or e-mail, the name of your electric co-op, and who the person(s) in the photo is, as well as an explanation of the photo.
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JUNE 2017
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rides, live music, and fireworks. Parade Sat. 1 p.m. 419-877-2747 or www.awchamber.com/cherry-fest.html. JUN. 9–10 – Pork Rind Heritage Festival, downtown Harrod, Fri. 5–11 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.–11 p.m. Cruise-in car show, games, entertainment, 5K run, and, of course, freshly popped pork rinds! 419-230-1946. JUN. 10 – Put-in-Bay Music Festival, Perry’s Victory & International Peace Memorial, 93 Delaware Ave., Put-in-Bay, 11 a.m.–8 p.m. $7 for the Miller Ferry; festival admission free. Celebrate the Americana sounds of bluegrass, new grass, folk, zydeco, and rhythm & blues. 419-285-2184 or www. pibmusicfest.com.
JUN. 3–4 – Black Swamp Historical Farm Museum Show, Auglaize Village, 12296 Krouse Rd., Defiance, Sat. 10 a.m.–? p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $5, under 12 free. Gas engines, tractors, and garden tractors are operated and displayed. 419-782-7255, 419-782-1954, or http:// visitdefianceohio.com. JUN. 3–4 – Power of Yesteryear Spring Show, Wood Co. Historical Museum, 13660 County Home Rd., Bowling Green (off I-75, exit 179, east 1/2 mile). 419-819-9355 or www. powerofyesteryear.org.
JUN. 7–10 – Dennison Railroad Festival, Historic Center Street District, downtown Dennison. Car show Sat. noon. Parade Sat. 5 p.m. 740-922-6776 or www.dennisonrailroadfestival.org.
JUN. 8–10 – Cherry Fest Expo, 10802 Waterville St., Whitehouse, Thur. 6–11 p.m., Fri. 1 p.m.–midnight, Sat. 9 a.m.–midnight. Free admission. Cherry pie by the slice, or buy the whole pie! Food, beer and wine garden, horse-drawn carriage
NORTHEAST
JUN. 10–JUL. 2 – 61st Annual Wassenberg June Art Exhibition, 214 S. Washington St., Van Wert, Tues.–Sun. 1–5 p.m., Thur. 1–9 p.m. Free. Special reception on June 10, 6–9 p.m., free and open to public. 877-989-2282 or www. wassenbergartcenter.org.
JUN. 15–18 – Blood Brothers, the Musical, Van Wert Civic Theatre, 118 S. Race St., Van Wert, Thur.–Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. $10. 419-238-9689 or www.vwct.org.
JUN. 17 – International Jazz Festival: “Take Me to the Rivers,” Kingsbury Park, 118 Auglaize St., Defiance, 6–10:15 p.m. Honors the memory of Wild Bill Davison and Milt Buckner. Free. Gates open at 5 p.m., children’s activities 5:30–7 p.m. Food and beverages for purchase. Bring a chair and enjoy the music. www.defiancejazzfestival.com. JUN. 18 – Antique Tractor Show, Sauder Village, 22611 St. Rte. 2, Archbold, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Historic tractors from the 1920s to the 1960s will be on display. Tractor pedal pulls for the kids. 800-590-9755 or www.saudervillage.org.
JUN. 19–20 – Auditions for Summer Youth Theatre: Alice in Wonderland, Van Wert Civic Theatre, 118 S. Race St., free. 740-283-1787 or www.oldfortsteuben.com.
JUN. 10 – International Wine at the Mill, Loudonville, noon–11 p.m. Enjoy nearly 100 varieties of international and Ohio wines, domestic beers, live music, and great food. $10 adults over 21, $1 ages 10–20, under 10 free. 419-541-0161 or www.wolfcreekmill.org/events.html.
JUN. 10–11 – 4th Annual Dog Fest of Zoar, 198 Main St., Zoar, 9 a.m.–5 p.m. Free admission, $5 parking per vehicle. Buckeye Dock Dogs showcase their Big Air, Extreme Vertical, and Speed Retrieval competitions. Bring your pets for the parade, costume contest, pet-friendly vendors, and more. Free museum tours throughout the weekend (pets stay outside). 800-262-6195 or www.historiczoarvillage.com. THROUGH NOV. – Frank Lloyd Wright House Tour, 534 Morgan St., Oberlin, 12–5 p.m. The Weltzheimer/Johnson House is the first Usonian house in Ohio and one of the few in the nation open to the public. $5; college students free; 18 and under free. 440-775-8671. JUN. 3 – Flea Market on Chardon Square, 111 Water St., Chardon, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. More than 100 distinctive vendors. Includes vintage and collectible items. Free. http:// chardonsquareassociation.org.
JUN. 3–4 – Columbia Antique Gas Engine Show and Flea Market, Columbia Twp. Park, 25540 Royalton Rd. (Rte. 82), Columbia Station, Sat. 8 a.m–5 p.m., Sun 8 a.m.–3 p.m. 440-236-9053 or www.columbiastation.com/engineshow.html.
JUN. 3–4 – Ohio Valley Frontier Days, Fort Steuben, 120 S. Third St., Steubenville, Sat. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Celebrate early American life with soldiers, surveyors, settlers, and Native Americans. Crafts, games, pony rides, music, presentations, and colonial dancing. $6, C. (6-12) $3, under 6
SOUTHWEST
JUN. 2–4 – Southern Ohio Farm Power of the Past: Antique Tractor and Machinery Show, Pike Co. Fgds. (off U.S. 23), Piketon. Tractor and machinery displays, craft booths, demonstrations, live entertainment, raffles, daily parades, and kids’ games. 740-289-4124. JUN. 3 – Bradford Railroad Museum Festival, 200 N. Miami Ave., Bradford, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. For all age groups and rail fans. 937-552- 2196 or www.ohio.org/ events/bradford-railroad-heritage-festival.
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JUN. 11 – Kelleys Island 5 & 10K Run/Walk, Memorial Park, 112 Division St., Kelleys Island, 8 a.m.–2 p.m. Registration begins at 8 p.m., race at 10:45 a.m. Followed by a Fun Run and awards ceremony. Registration $20 online, $25 at site. 419-7462360 or www.kelleysislandchamber.com.
JUN. 15–17 – Tri-State Pottery Festival, Fifth St. at Broadway, East Liverpool. Celebrate the rich heritage of the “Pottery Capital of the World.” Art show, Pottery Olympics, displays and exhibits of locally made wares, and a wide variety of food and live entertainment daily. 330-385-5394. JUN. 15–18 – Dean Martin Festival, various sites, Steubenville. Celebrate the 100th birthday of Steubenville’s famous native son. Features top impersonators and entertainers. Join other Dino fans for food, music, and nostalgia. 740-2834935 or www.deanmartinsteubenville.com. JUN. 17 – Spring Farm Open House, Our Little World Alpacas, 16800 Cowley Rd., Grafton, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Free. Come see the baby alpacas (crias). 440-477-4300 or www. ourlittleworldalpacas.com.
JUN. 3–4 – Troy Strawberry Festival, downtown Troy, Sat. 10 a.m.–8 p.m., Sun 10 a.m.–6 p.m. Voted the 2017 Best Food Festival in Ohio. More than 60 food booths, all showcasing strawberry dishes and products. Also arts and crafts vendors, games for all ages, 10K run, and Jr. Golf Tournament. 937-339-7714 or http:// gostrawberries.com . JUN. 9–10 – Banana Split Festival, 1326 Fife Ave., Wilmington, Fri. 4–10 p.m., Sat. 12–10 p.m. Free. Celebrate the fabulous ’50s and ’60s at the nation’s only banana split festival. Enjoy food booths, live music, games, 5K run, baseball tournament, and, of course, banana splits! Classic car cruise-in Fri. night, car show Sat. 877-428-4748 or www.bananasplitfestival.com. JUN. 10 – 92nd Annual Old Fashioned Strawberry Festival, downtown Shandon, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free admission. Celebrate everything strawberry! Enjoy fresh food and produce, including strawberry shortcake and ice cream. Local vendors and artists, antique tractor show, plus live Welsh harp music and organ music. 513-860-4194 or www.gettothebc.com/ events. JUN. 11–12 – Hueston Woods Arts and Crafts Fair, Hueston Woods State Park, Pioneer Farm Museum, 6929 Brown Rd., Oxford, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $4, 12 and under free. 513-523-8005 or www.gettothebc.com/events.
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Van Wert, 7 p.m. Open to school-age students K–12. Show dates July 28–30. 419-238-9689 or www.vwct.org.
JUN. 23–25 – Maria Stein Country Fest, 2291 St. Johns Rd., Maria Stein. Admission, parking, and entertainment are free. Handicap accessible. Featured performance includes two shows: Nojoe’s Circus and Jurassic Kingdom. Also Tractor Square Dancers, games, rides, music, and food. 419-586-1146 or www. mscountryfest.com. JUN. 23–25 – Riverfront Gathering: “Celebrating Our Water Resources,” Confluence of the Rivers, 315 E. River Rd., Defiance, Fri. 5–9 p.m., Sat. 12–10 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Free pontoon rides, children’s Aqua Zone activities, music, food, and river events. Bring your lawn chair. 419-782-0739 or http:// visitdefianceohio.com.
JUN. 24 – Lake Seneca Annual Miles of Yard Sales, off N. St. Rte. 576, 1-1/4 miles north of U.S. Rte. 20, Montpelier. Porta-Pit chicken dinners starting around 11 a.m. at the Arrowhead Lodge with plenty of extras and homemade bake sale items. 419-485-5205, 419-553-7105, or www.lakeseneca.org. JUN. 24–25 – Northwest Ohio’s Picker’s Paradise, Henry Co. Fgds., 821 S. Perry St., Napoleon, 9 a.m.–5 p.m., rain or shine. Free admission, free parking. All-American flea market. Look for us on Facebook. 419-235-3264. JUN. 24–25 – Crosby Festival of the Arts, Toledo Botanical Garden, 5403 Elmer Dr., Toledo, Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $8, under 12 free. Northwest Ohio’s premier fine arts festival features the work of more than 200 artists from across the country. 419-536-5566 or www.toledogarden.org. JUN. 30 – Henry Co. Rib Fest, 611 N. Perry St. Napoleon, 5–11 p.m. $5. From 12 local vendors. 419-592-1786.
JUN. 17 – Steubenville’s Dean Martin Hometown Celebration, S. 4th St., Steubenville, 9 a.m.–9 p.m. Street festival featuring music, vendors, food, entertainment, car show, 5K walk/run, trolley tours, and lots of activities for kids young and old. 740-283-4935 or www.visitsteubenville.com. JUN. 17–AUG. 12 – Ohio Light Opera, Freedlander Theatre, 329 E. University St., Wooster, 2 and 7:30 p.m. June shows: Anything Goes, HMS Pinafore, and Music Man. 330-263-2345 or www.ohiolightopera.org.
JUN. 23–24 – Ohio Scottish Games, Lorain Co. Fgds., Wellington. $12–$17, under 10 free. Kids’ games, animals, British cars and bikes, Clan Village, Kilted Mile, and more! New this year is Grass Track Bike Racing. www.ohioscottishgames.com. JUN. 23–25 – Cy Young Days Festival, 102 S Bridge St., Newcomerstown. Long Toss competition, Old Timers game, car show, pet show, and other entertainment. Grand Parade marshal is Jack McDowell of the Chicago White Sox. 740-498-4545, 740498-5261, or www.cyyoungdaysfestival.com.
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JUN. 23–25 – Lorain International Festival and Bazaar, Black River Landing, Black River Ln., Lorain, Fri. 5–11 p.m., Sat. noon–11 p.m., Sun. noon–9 p.m. Ethnic foods, crafts from many homelands, and nonstop entertainment. $3 daily. www. loraininternational.com.
JUN. 24 – Antique Engine Show and Pie Baking Contest, 6304 Avon Lake Rd., Spencer, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Antique engines, pie contest, food, and kids’ games. Pie contest information: 330635-5716. Other information: 330-667-2257. JUN. 24 – Fort Laurens: “Let Them Eat Cake,” 11067 Fort Laurens Rd. NW, Bolivar, 2–4 p.m. $10. Dress in your finest for an afternoon of British teas, desserts, and history of the British Empire. Reservations required. 330-874-2059 or www. fortlaurens.org.
JUN. 16 – Summer Sizzler Speed Horse Show, hosted by Adams Co. Horseman’s Association, Adams Co. Fgds., 836 Boyd Ave., West Union, 7 p.m. 937-695-0550 or e-mail acha.show@gmail.com. JUN. 16–17 – Jungle Jim’s International Beer Fest, Oscar Event Ctr., 5440 Dixie Hwy., Fairfield, 7–10:30 p.m. $20–$60. 513-674-6000 or www. junglejims.com/beerfest. JUN. 17 – Antique and Artisan Show, Main St., Tipp City, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Free. Stroll historic downtown Tipp City while enjoying a premier display of antiques and vintage wares. Artisans from all over the Midwest. Demonstrations, local food, entertainment, and a farmers market. 937-667-0883 or www.downtowntippcity.org/ events.html. JUN. 24–25 – Brush and Palette Art Guild Annual Art Show, Southern State Community College, Central Campus, 100 Hobart Dr., Hillsboro, 1–5 p.m. Free. Work from both professional and non-professional artists will be on display and for sale. 937-393-4193. JUN. 24–25 – 26th Historic Home and Garden Tour, Urbana. Sponsored by the Champaign Co. Preservation Alliance. 800-791-6010, www. ccpaurbanaohio.com, or find CCPA on Facebook.
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JUN. 3 – Cruise-In for Dialysis, downtown Marion, 12–6 p.m. Registration 12–3 p.m. Awards at 6 p.m. Fundraiser for kidney dialysis patients in the seven-county area. See antique cars and not-so-old cars, trucks, and motorcycles. 740-244-6117 or www. cruisinfordialysis.com. JUN. 3 – H.O.T. Tamale Bike Tour, Community Park, Waldo Fulton Rd., Waldo, start time 8–9 a.m., registration 7–9 a.m. Day ride $20 ages 11 and up, $45 family. 740-382-9952 or www.hot-tamale.org. JUN. 3 – “WWI Home Front” Exhibit Tour, Ohio History Ctr., 800 E. 17th Ave., Columbus, 12:30–1 p.m. Go on a guided tour of the new WWI exhibit to learn about objects related to the American home front and the war effort. $5–$10. 614-297-2300, 800-686-6124, or www.ohiohistory.org. JUN. 7–10 – Commercial Point Homecoming, Community Ctr. grounds, Commercial Point, Wed.–Fri. 4–11 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.–11 p.m. Rides, concessions, beer garden, games, parade, fireworks, and more. Also custom motorcycle raffle and car show. 614-875-5929 or e-mail pprindle48@gmail.com. JUN. 8–10 – Hot Air Balloon Festival, Coshocton Co. Fgds., Coshocton, Thur. 4–9 p.m., Fri. 11 a.m.–9:15 p.m. Balloon Night Glow, Sat. 6 a.m.–9:30 p.m. fireworks. 740-622-4877, 800-338-4724, or www. visitcoshocton.com/hot-air-balloon-festival.
SOUTHEAST
9 a.m.–3 p.m. Meet the Ohio History Connection’s old-building experts and learn how to make informed decisions about repairs and improvements to any home or building built between 1800 and 1955. 800-499-2470, 740-885-8194, or http://buildingdoctor.org. JUN. 9 – Jazzin’ Up the Museum, Valley Gem Sternwheeler, 601 Front St., Marietta, 6:30–9 p.m. $40 single, $75 couple. Join the Friends of the Museums and delight in a delicious buffet meal on the Valley Gem. Dance the night away while cruising down the Ohio River listening to a live band playing songs from the ’40s, ’50s, and ’60s. 740-373-3750 or www. mariettaohio.org.
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JUN. 9–11 – Columbus Arts Festival, downtown riverfront, Columbus, Fri. 11 a.m.–10:30 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–10:30 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. Features nation’s top artists and craftspeople, live music, theater, dance, hands-on art activities, and gourmet food from Columbus’s finest restaurants. 614-224-2606 or http:// columbusartsfestival.org. JUN. 9–11 – 66th Annual Poultry Days, 459 S. Center St., Versailles. Enjoy the festival’s world-famous barbeque chicken dinners and many fun events, including the 36th Annual Ultimate Frisbee Tournament. www.versaillespoultrydays.com. JUN. 10 – BLISS Series: “Turtles, Dragons, Toads, Oh My!,” Buckeye Lake Historical Society Museum, St. Rte. 79, Buckeye Lake, 1:30–3 p.m. Presented by Nancy Lockhart, “The Turtle Lady.” Kids are encouraged to attend, as there will be live, wiggly things! 740-929-1998 or http://www. buckeyelakehistory.org. JUN. 10 – Cruise-a-Palooza, downtown Amanda, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free admission, $7 registration for contestants. Classic cars from all eras, a 50/50 drawing, baked goods auction, door prize drawings, DJ, and exhibitors of interest to all ages. E-mail philipmstroup@ hotmail.com or http://cruise-a-palooza.com. JUN. 11 – Summer Avant-Garde Art and Craft Show, Makoy Event Ctr., 5462 Center St., Hilliard, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $3, 12 and under free. Large show featuring artists and crafters selling their original handmade items. Full concessions stand on site. www.avantgardeshows. com. JUN. 15–17 – Washboard Music Festival, Main St., Worthington Park, Logan, Thur. 5–10 p.m., Fri./Sat. noon–11 p.m. Free. Ohio’s most unique music and arts festival, celebrating the old-fashioned washboard as a musical instrument. Also features free carnival rides for kids. 740-777-1445 or www.washboardmusicfestival. com. JUN. 16–17 – Father’s Day Campout, A. W. Marion Park, Circleville. Spend a weekend of relaxation, fishing, movies, games, and activities with Dad. 866-644-6727 or http://parks.ohiodnr.gov/awmarion. JUN. 16–18 – 43rd Annual Coshocton Dulcimer Days Festival, Roscoe Village, 600 N. Whitewoman
JUN. 1–4 –Nelsonville Music Festival, Robbins Crossing, Hocking College, 3301 Hocking Pkwy., Nelsonville. Live music on multiple stages, kids’ activities, local arts vendors, food, beer garden, and more. On-site camping. Day pass $55, Sat. $90; weekend pass $75–$350. 740-753-1924 or www.nelsonfest.org. JUN. 2–3 – Guernsey Gospel Jubilee Spring Gospel Sing, Spring Valley Campground, 9000 Dozer Rd., Cambridge, Fri. 6 p.m., Sat. noon. Free will offering, free parking.
JUN. 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 – Guernsey Co. Farmers’ Market, 801 Wheeling Ave., Cambridge, 9 a.m.–1 p.m. 740-439-2238 or www.facebook.com/CambridgeMainStreetFarmersMarket. JUN. 8 – Marietta Building Doctor Clinic, The Castle, 418 Fourth St., Marietta, 7–9 p.m. Free with advance registration. On-site consultations by appointment, Fri., Jun. 9,
WEST VIRGINIA
JUN. 9–SEPT. 3 – Tecumseh!, Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre, 5968 Marietta Rd., Chillicothe, Mon.–Sat. 8 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m. $14–$43. Witness the epic life story of the legendary Shawnee leader. Backstage tours starting at 3:45 p.m. ($5), buffet 4:30–7:30 p.m. ($7.95–$14.95). 740-7754100 or www.tecumsehdrama.com. JUN. 9–10, 16–18, 23–24 – Sarah, Plain and Tall, Players Theatre, 299 Putnam St., Marietta, Fri./Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 3 p.m. $12, Srs./Stds. $10, C. (17 and under) $7. 740-374-9434 or www.midohiovalleyplayers.org.
JUN. 10 – Passport to Fishing, Deerassic Park Education Ctr., 14250 Cadiz Rd., Cambridge, 12–2 p.m. Free. Introduction to fishing. 740-435-3335 or www.deerassic.com. JUN. 10 – Ruff Truck, Guernsey Co. Fgds., Old Washington, 7:30 p.m. $5, 10 and under free. 740-260-9909. JUN. 10, 17, 24 – Tecumseh! “Living History” Tour, Sugarloaf Mountain Amphitheatre, 5968 Marietta Rd.,
JUN. 2–4 – Family Trails Weekend, North Bend State Park, 202 North Bend Park Rd., Cairo. Hikes, bike rides, bird walks, and more. 304-643-2931 or www.northbendsp.com. JUN. 3 – Taste of Parkersburg, corner of 3rd and Market Sts., Parkersburg, 5–11 p.m. $15 advance, $20 at site. Savor food, wine, and beer from local restaurants. 304865-0522 or www.downtownpkb.com.
St., Coshocton. Free admission and parking; workshop fee $15. Hear Appalachian and traditional music played on mountain dulcimers, hammered dulcimers, bowed psalteries, fiddles, guitars, banjos, and other instruments. 740-545-6265 or www.coshoctondulcimerdays.com. JUN. 16–AUG. 6 – CAPA Summer Movie Series, Ohio Theatre, 55 E. State St., Columbus, Wed.–Sun. 7:30 p.m., Sun. matinee 2 p.m. America’s longest-running classic film series. 614-469-0939 or www.capa.com. JUN. 17, 23 – Lorena Sternwheeler Dinner Cruise, Zanesville, 6–8 p.m. $35. Board at Zane’s Landing Park located on the west end of Market St. Reservations required at least 48 hours in advance. Children’s menu also available. 800-743-2303 or www. facebook.com/LorenaSternwheeler. JUN. 22 – “‘Hive Q’: Exploring the Intelligence of a Honey Bee Colony,” Wells Barn, Franklin Park Conservatory, 1777 E. Broad St., Columbus, 6–8 p.m. Free. Reservations required. Did you know that a colony of honey bees can actually make decisions? Explore some of the amazing “mechanics of thought” that bees employ at the individual and colony level to make decisions. Includes bee hive visit if weather permits. 614-715-8000 or www.fpconservatory.org. JUN. 24–25 – Vectren Dayton Air Show, 3800 Wright Dr., Vandalia. Features the U.S Air Force Thunderbirds and F-35 Lightning II Heritage Flight, U.S. Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet, plus other exciting performances. 937-898-5901, www.facebook.com/ VectrenDaytonAirShow, or www.daytonairshow.com. JUN. 24–25 – Keeping the Tradition Pow Wow, 2301 W. River Rd., Dayton, Sat. 12–8:30 p.m., Sun. 12–5 p.m. American Indian men’s and women’s dances, traditional arts and crafts, and food. $8, Srs./C. (6–16) $6, free under 5. Weekend passes available. 937-2688199 or www.sunwatch.org. JUN. 25 – Dublin Kiwanis Frog Jump, 5200 Emerald Pkwy., Dublin, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. 800-245-8387. JUN. 30 – Lancaster Community Band Patriotic Night, Lancaster Bandstand, Broad and Main Sts., Lancaster, 7 p.m. Free. 740-756-4430.
Chillicothe, 3 p.m. $5. The one-hour tour takes you back to late 18th-century Ohio to learn more about the lives of the frontier settlers and Shawnee who shaped our history. Devised, written, and directed by cast members of Tecumseh! 740-775-4100 or www.tecumsehdrama.com. JUN. 17 – Bluegrass Bash, Pritchard Laughlin Civic Ctr., 7033 Glenn Hwy., Cambridge, 7 p.m. $10. 740-439-7009 or www.pritchardlaughlin.com.
JUN. 17 – National Road Bike Show and Ribfest, Wheeling Ave., Cambridge, 11 a.m.–8 p.m. One of the fastestgrowing motorcycle shows in the region. Bike judging, fun contests, live music. beer garden, and barbecue. 740-439-2238 or www.downtowncambridge.com.
JUN. 23–24 – Kicking Bear One-on-One, Deerassic Park Education Ctr., 14250 Cadiz Rd., Cambridge, Fri. 4–9 p.m., Sat. 7 a.m.–2 p.m. Free. Archery shoot and campout for ages 5 to 15. 740-435-3335 or www.deerassic.com. JUN. 23–24 – National Cambridge Glass Collectors Show and Sale, Pritchard Laughlin Civic Ctr., 7033 Glenn Hwy., Cambridge, Fri. 1–5 p.m., Sat. 10:30 a.m.–4 p.m. $5 admission, good for both days. www.cambridgeglass.org/ glassshow.php.
JUN. 23–25 – Muskingum Valley Trade Days, 6602 St. Rte. 78, Reinersville. Large flea market. 740-558-2740 (before show), 740-558-2402 (during show).
JUN. 24 – National Cambridge Collectors Glass Dash, St. Benedict’s Activity Ctr., 220 N. Seventh St., Cambridge, 7–11 a.m. Early-bird admission (first hour), $10; after 8:30 a.m., $4. 740-432-4245 or www.cambridgeglass.org.
JUN. 9–11 – 37th Annual Fostoria Glass Convention, 901 8th St., Moundsville. Elegant glass show and sale, this year featuring Fostoria glassware designed by George Sakier, who pioneered the company’s Art Deco-style glassware. 304-843-4128 or www.fostoriaglass.org. JUN. 29–30, JUL. 1 – Sternwheel Regatta, Point Pleasant. Free. Parade, pageants, concerts, and more. www. pointpleasantregatta.org.
PLEASE NOTE: Ohio Cooperative Living strives for accuracy but strongly urges readers to confirm dates and times before traveling long distances to events. Submit listings AT LEAST 90 DAYS prior to the event by writing 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 of where the event takes place or a number/website for more information.
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JUNE 2017 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING 39
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www.ohioec.org
CONCERN FOR COMMUNITY Cooperatives are ingrained in their local communities. They support schools, spearhead economic development efforts, and give neighbors a helping hand through community service projects and programs like Operation Round Up, which rounds up consumermembers’ bills to the next dollar and puts the spare change in a fund that supports local groups or individuals. Electric co-ops started in the 1930s with neighbors helping neighbors, and that tradition lives on today.
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