Henry County REMC - September 2022 Indiana Connection

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SEPTEMBER 2022 NEW GENERATION OF BARN OWNERS TURN TO FOUNDATION FOR SUPPORT PAGES 22-27 Henry County REMC’s Annual Meeting Oct. 7. Drive-thru and Facebook Live.

from the editor

SEPTEMBER 2022 3 VOLUME 72 • NUMBER 3 ISSN 0745-4651 • USPS 262-340 Published monthly by Indiana Electric Cooperatives Indiana Connection is for and about members of Indiana’s locally-owned, not-for-profit electric cooperatives. It helps consumers use electricity safely and efficiently; understand energy issues; connect with their co-op; and celebrate life in Indiana. Over 304,000 residents and businesses receive the magazine as part of their electric co-op membership. Member’s cost per issue is approximately 32 cents, plus postage. CONTACT US: 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600 Indianapolis, IN info@indianaconnection.org317-487-222046240-4606IndianaConnection.org INDIANA COOPERATIVESELECTRICOFFICERS: Randy Kleaving President Steve McMichael Vice President Dr. Richard Leeper Secretary/Treasurer Tom VanParis Interim CEO EDITORIAL STAFF: Emily Schilling Editor Richard George Biever Senior Editor Holly Huffman Communication Support Specialist Ellie Schuler Senior Digital and Layout Design Specialist Lauren Carman Communication Manager Kiley Lipps Graphic Designer Amber Knight Creative Manager Mandy Barth Vice President of Communication ADVERTISING: American MainStreet Publications Cheryl Solomon, local ad representative; 512-441-5200; amp.coop Crosshair Media 502-216-8537; crosshairmedia.net Paid advertisements are not endorsements by any electric cooperative or this publication. UNSOLICITED MATERIAL: Indiana Connection does not use unsolicited freelance manuscripts or photographs and assumes no responsibility for the safe keeping or return of unsolicited material. SUBSCRIPTIONS: $12 for individuals not subscribing through participating REMCs/RECs. CHANGE OF ADDRESS: If you receive Indiana Connection through your electric co-op membership, report address changes to your local co-op. POSTAGE: Periodicals postage paid at Indianapolis, Indiana, and at additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to: Indiana Connection, 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600, Indianapolis, IN 46240-4606. Include key number. No portion of Indiana Connection may be reproduced without permission of the editor. On the menu: December issue: Cocoa recipes, deadline Oct. 1. January issue: “Copycat” recipes (inspired by your favorite restaurants), deadline Nov. 1. If we publish your recipe on our food pages, we’ll send you a $10 gift card. Giveaway: Enter to win a $50 gift certificate from Mayberry Café. Visit indianaconnection.org/talk-to-us/contests or send your contact information to the address above. The deadline to enter is Sept. 31. EMILY SCHILLING Editor eschilling@indianaec.org Living for today

My first-ever editor’s column, titled “That Reminds Me” (which at that time was the traditional name of this publication’s editor’s column), was about my frustration about not having an appropriate headshot to accompany my column and my decision to go “headless … in terms of this column” that first month. How ironic that nowadays, there’s a different headshot accompanying this column each month! (I’m headless no more!)

Through the years I’ve written about my adventures on a particular Southern Indiana road trip, my first boyfriend (we were in kindergarten), and the tap dance class I took in college. I’ve shared stories about what I wished I would have learned in high school and what I’ve learned since. One of my earlier columns bemoaned the fact that I procrastinate way too much. I promised myself back then that “No longer am I saying, ‘I’ll get to that one of these days.’ I’m not going to live for later.” I wisely suggested “You can’t do it all today. But it just seems like you have a lot more time if you start using today to its best advantage.”

Reading that column today reminds me that I could have done a better job taking my younger self’s advice. I still put things off and do a poor job of juggling my ever-increasing responsibilities, prioritizing things that probably don’t need to occupy top spots on my to-do list. “I don’t want to leave this world with a whole list of things I never did and never will. I’m not going to be a person who was all work and no play. Someone who didn’t use her free time to its best advantage,” I vowed. But I never truly embraced my Funnyproclamation.howalook back can be a wake-up call. I guess life’s lessons don’t always come from experience. Perhaps they can emerge unexpectedly at other stages of life when you most need an aha moment. And they can reemerge when you need to remember to do a better job living for today.

Three ways to contact us: To send us recipes, photos, event listings, letters and entries for gift drawings, please use the forms on our website indianaconnection.org; email info@indianaconnection.org; or send to Indiana Connection, 8888 Keystone Crossing, Suite 1600, Indianapolis, IN 46240-4606.

As I look back at the hundreds of columns I’ve written over the years, I realize how much I’ve grown and changed — and how much I’ve stayed the same. I’m SO thankful that I was able to chronicle my musings, adventures, and memories through my editor’s letter. Not only was I able to share my thoughts with you, but I also captured a moment in time that I can look back upon now with a whole new perspective.

4contents SEPTEMBER 2022 SEPTEMBER 03 FROM THE EDITOR 05 CO-OP NEWS Energy news and information from your electric cooperative. 10 ENERGY Steering clear of solar scams. 11 INSIGHTS 12 COUNTY OF THE MONTH Spotlighting Posey County. 14 SAFETY Knowledge is power for farm safety. 18 INDIANA EATS Home cooking with a side of nostalgia at the Mayberry Café. 20 FOOD A taste of honey. 22 COVER STORY Barn anew: Caring for Indiana’s historic barns 28 HOOSIER ENERGY/ WABASH VALLEY NEWS 29 DIY HOME Nice and cozy: DIY weatherproofing for your home. (Not in all editions.) 30 PETS Fat cats: The problem of overweight felines (Not in all editions.) On the cover Gwen and Andy Bell’s desire to avoid a “cookie-cutter” home brought them to an old farmhouse in Whitestown that also had a barn. With their first baby on the way, they weren’t ready to restore it. So, they joined the Indiana Barn Foundation to learn how to preserve it for the future. 3018 energy Indiana eats food pets 20 FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA Indiana Connection 10

PHOTO BY RICHARD G. BIEVER

co-op news SEPTEMBER 2022 5 www.hcremc.comCONTACTUS Fax:800-248-8413765-529-1667 OFFICE HOURS 7:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m., Monday – Friday STREET ADDRESS 3400 S. State Road 3 New Castle, IN 47362 MAILING ADDRESS P.O. Box D New Castle, IN 47362 A night deposit box is available 24 hours a day. EMAIL hcremc@hcremc.com SERVICE INTERRUPTIONS To report a power outage, please call 800-248-8413, day or night. MISSION STATEMENT The mission of Henry County REMC is to provide reliable, safe and cost-competitive electrical service to enhance the lives of our members and the communities we serve. BILL DUE DATES Bills mailed Sept. 15 are due Oct. 2. Bills mailed Sept. 28 are due Oct. 17. Bills mailed Sept. 9 are due Sept. 28.y. Know what’s below. Call 811 before you dig! LIKE US ON FACEBOOK www.facebook.com/HenryCountyREMC FOLLOW US ON TWITTER HenryCountyREMCwww.twitter.com/ CONTINUED ON PAGE 6

LEADERSHIP CHANGE

As everyone is aware, the past couple of years has been challenging. We have adaptedprocesseschangedandtothe issues we were facing. When it came time this year to decide on the annual meeting, we still saw COVID numbers rising. The board of directors decided that we would again hold our annual meeting via Facebook Live, but we would also have a drivethru event to give away our annual gift to those attending.

SAFETY Safety is always a top priority for Henry County REMC. Therefore, leaving that as part of the strategic plan was essential. We want to our employees to focus on safety, as well as educate our members and the community on electrical safety.

JOIN US ON OCT. 7 86TH HCREMC MEMBERSHIP ANNUAL MEETING

In 2021, we improved reliability through a more aggressive vegetation management cycle and preventative maintenance program. Additionally, we continued to target underground conversion and reconductor projects that improve service quality throughout the service area. These items, along with several other actions taken, have helped reduce outage quantities and restoration Improvementstimes.to infrastructure take time and money, which is monitored

MELISSA TRUE CEO

RELIABILITY We strive to improve our operational efficiency and provide the most reliable electric service possible for our member-consumers (that’s you!).

On Oct. 7 at 5 p.m., you can once again watch our annual meeting update on Facebook LIVE. You can also drive through the warehouse at our facility located at 3400 S. State Road 3 from 5 to 7 p.m. You can stop in to get your gift, talk to the directors and drop off your ticket for an additional billing credit.

(See insert included with your billing statement.)

On Aug. 1, 2021, Melissa True was named as the new CEO of Henry County REMC. As part of that leadership change, the board of directors took time to work on a new strategic plan. The directors spent time with the management team to work through the top priorities that everyone felt needed to be addressed over the few years. Those goals include continuing safety initiatives, rebuilding infrastructure to improve reliability, reviewing rate structures to ensure we are providing quality service at the right price, focusing on cybersecurity, and improving member and youth engagement.

Recapping 2021-22

Assecure.ourmember, you also play a large part in keeping your information safe. Please contact our office to report suspicious calls or verify your account status. Never give out your information over the phone unless you are sure who you’re speaking with is a HCREMC representative.

MEMBER AND YOUTH ENGAGEMENT

CYBERSECURITY Most everyone is receiving scam calls or know of someone who has had their information compromised. We are doing our best to stay ahead of the threat actors behind these schemes. Your information is important to us, and we want to protect you. We continue to dedicate extra resources, increase staff training, and work with multiple agencies to ensure we are doing our very best to keep your data

We are seeing a change in the expectations of our memberconsumers. People are depending more on social media; they want to be informed faster and more often. We also know that not everyone uses social media, so we need to evaluate how we can reach our entire membership. Our goal is to find ways to engage more with all the membership and the youth of our community. It is vital that we do not lose our history. Teaching the youth about how the REMC was formed is also essential to us. We also value teaching them about safety around power equipment and the opportunities available through the cooperative.

co-op news 6 SEPTEMBER 2022 by our board of directors, who are member-consumers elected to their seats by all the other memberconsumers. Being a non-profit electric cooperative, we work diligently to get the most out of our budget dollars and stay on track to meet our goals. 2021 was particularly challenging on this front due to supply chain shortfalls and cost increases, but we are proud to have met our goals and completed the projects we set out to get done. We will continue these efforts and aim to improve reliability in the years ahead.

RATES Our power supplier, Hoosier Energy, informed us of rate adjustments coming in April 2023. It is important when rate adjustments need to take place that we review ours as well. We are currently in the middle of a costof-service study to determine what adjustments, if any, will need to be made to cover our costs. As we have all seen over the last year, the cost of almost everything we do is rising. It is no different in our industry, but it is the goal of the board of directors to keep costs down as much as possible. The board will be reviewing rates and the budget to ensure they are doing all they can to continue providing safe, reliable and cost-competitive electricity.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5

SHANE YOUNG DISTRICT 2 20 years as an HCREMC member. Occupation: Business manager at Co-Alliance. Education: Graduate of Shenandoah High School. Community involvement: 15 years with youth sports activities and member of the Middletown Church of the “MyNazarene.goalas a director is to enhance the value of service provided through the REMC to the members by applying sound business practices and supporting measures to improve reliability.”

JAY CARR DISTRICT 8 43 years as an HCREMC member. Occupation: Carpenter, have owned my own business since 1978. Education: Graduated from Tri Jr./Sr. High School in 1970 and from Nashville Auto Diesel College in 1972. Community involvement: Member of Spiceland Friends Church. Past master of Spiceland Masonic Lodge. Member of New Castle Elks and served as an officer for several years at the local, district and state levels. Lifetime member of the Tri High Alumni, corporate sponsor of Tri High Athletic Department. A supporter of 4-H and involved with several hands-on projects at Tri High School ag department. Secret Families of Henry County. “My goal as a director, and having been a member of HCREMC for over 40 years, is to engage in the operations of the co-op. I want to learn more about it and do what I can to keep HCREMC a sound operation and a contributing business to Henry County for our patrons.”

DISTRICT 7 28 years as an HCREMC member.

DIRECTOR CANDIDATESWAYNEJESTER

Occupation: Area operation manager for Milestone Contractors. Operates a family farm near Mooreland, Indiana. Education: Associate degree in construction management. Community involvement: Lifestream in Richmond, United Way of “MyWhitewater.goalas a director is to serve the best interest of our member owner and provide cost-effective reliable power.”

SEPTEMBER 2022 7

Many people call in and describe these blinks as power surges. A power outage is generally a sudden absence of voltage, which is the opposite of a surge. Surges originating from the power provider are relatively rare occurrences, with homes being more commonly susceptible to proximity lightning strikes entering through water pipes or other means, but the responsibility falls on the property owner to protect equipment from the possibility. High-quality surge protectors located as close to the device as possible are one of the best ways to prevent damage from an over-voltage situation. While blinks are not a high-voltage condition, they do cause people anxiety about their equipment needing to restart and reboot, so the installation of an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) can be considered to help devices “ride through” outage situations.

WHAT ARE YOU DOING ABOUT IT?

First off, HCREMC never wants you to lose power. Most often, when blinks occur, it is because a device known as a recloser has operated. A recloser is like a fuse that can sense downline problems and temporarily open a circuit, let the problem resolve itself, and then close back in if the problem is no longer there. These devices allow for the circuits to self-heal when a problem arises, instead of acting like a conventional fuse that would require a lineman to patrol the line and manually reset the fuse. While we do not like blinks occurring at all, we do prefer them to hours-long outage situations.

Yes! We have well over 1,000 miles of line and only 34 employees. We certainly cannot be everywhere at once, so we appreciate any members who are willing to help by being our eyes and ears out in the field. Please call 1-800-248-8413 to report any concerns or problems regarding electrical

facilities. FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS co-op news Blinking lights 42% Transmission (Duke, Hoosier) 31% Trees 13% Public (Vehicles, Dig-Ins, etc.) 6% Animals 5% Design/Equipment Failure 2% Unknown 1% Weather 2022 OUTAGEUNPLANNEDHOURSBY CAUSE

WHY DO YOU KEEP TURNING MY POWER OFF?

SHOULD I REPORT BLINKS?

Brief outages referred to as “blinks” or “clicks” can be highly frustrating to homeowners and businesses alike, and we will often field inquiries from the membership when multiple blinks occur in a short period of time. Here is an opportunity to answer some of those frequently asked questions:

WHAT IS A TRANSMISSION LINE?

8 SEPTEMBER 2022

In 2022, Henry County REMC recognizes that the priorities of our membership are not what they once were. Electronics are getting more sensitive, more people are working from home, students are doing their learning at home, the smart home has risen into great prevalence, and the tolerance for power interruptions is at an all-time low. Having reliable service 99.973% of the time is not good enough for many, including us, and we have numerous programs in place to aggressively increase reliability for the long-term. Those programs include systematic replacement of aged infrastructure, underground conversions where they make sense, a rigorous inspection and maintenance program, and a more aggressive vegetation management system.

Often small animals like squirrels or birds interfere with lines and create these issues, especially in the June and July timeframe. Trees are also a common cause of these blinks. Our line workers respond to many other issues that cause blinks, however. These issues include vehicle accidents, farming equipment hitting facilities, galloping lines, cable or fiber companies placing inadequate facilities on our poles, lightning strikes, and equipment failure.

WHAT ABOUT SURGES AND MY DEVICES?

A prevalent cause of blinks in June and July of this year originated at the transmission level. Transmission lines are the larger and higher-voltage lines that carry power from generating plants to substations where HCREMC takes over and distributes it to your house or business. Problems can occur on these transmission lines as well but when they do, they will impact a greater number of HCREMC members (and customers of other utilities in the area). We try to communicate via social media when these transmission issues occur so that account holders can rest assured the blinks are not a problem with their individual service.

As of mid-July, the average Henry County REMC member has experienced uninterrupted power 99.973% of the year. There are very few products we use in our daily life that are as reliable as electric service. When discussing reliability, we here at HCREMC look at three key factors: quantity of outages, restoral times, and the number of meters impacted each time there is a problem. Since 2018, we have measurably and significantly improved in each of those areas overall.

WHAT CAUSES THE LIGHTS TO BLINK?

HERE ARE SOME THINGS TO LOOK FOR:

4. Know the interconnectionrequirements.safetyAlland safety requirements must be met during installation with safety inspections often required. Know who pays for repairs and damages to the system.

energy

by Mark Belcher Member Service and Marketing Manager

3. Do your own homework. Research the costs and benefits of installation, insurance, tax credits, necessary permits and payment plans, to name a few. The more you know, the less you’ll fall for the wrong sales pitch. And if you need more time to decide, be wary if you are pushed to make a quick decision.

10 SEPTEMBER 2022 Steering clear of solar

5. Get multiple bids for installing the same kind of system, if possible. The cheapest bid isn’t always the best, nor is the highest bid always the best quality. But you might learn something about how the various companies do business, and if the pricing is way out of line one way or another, that’s a clue that something isn’t right. Residential solar installation is an investment. You are the one making that investment, so be sure your decision is the right one for you.

Orange County REMC scams

With renewable energy on the rise and questions swirling about the stability of the grid, installing residential solar panels is a popular option for both saving money and helping the Butenvironment.howcanyou distinguish between a legitimate solar installation and scam artists trying to make a buck at your expense? And how can you be sure that you’ll realize the full benefits of your solar investment down the road?

1. Be alert for installers who make false claims about annual utility rate increases, often citing numbers that are two or three times higher than past history. This is an even more effective tactic now as many utilities have had to raise rates due to market volatility.

2. If installers say not to contact your electric cooperative, it should raise a red flag. Your cooperative can provide information about potential rebates and buyback energy rates, which are not the same as the retail rate. In Indiana, net metering recently expired, making solar power more expensive. Check NABCEP.org for certified installers and be wary if the salesperson claims you will have no utility bill or will even make money. Such a claim is all the more reason to contact your cooperative.

Each year since 2009, Indiana’s electric cooperatives have honored middle school students who are making a difference in their communities through the Youth Power and Hope Awards program.

YOUTH POWER AND HOPE AWARDS HONOR KIDS WHO CARE Are you a middle schooler making a difference in your community?

This fall, up to five Hoosier fifth through eighth graders will join the ranks of past winners who have volunteered to help others in their communities. They will receive their awards during the Indiana Electric Cooperatives Annual Meeting in Indianapolis on Dec. 5.

SEPTEMBER 2022

insights11

The deadline to apply is Oct. 3. For further information, and to fill out the award application, go to www.indianaconnection.org/youthpowerandhope

Each winner will receive $500 and will also be featured in an upcoming issue of Indiana Connection.

County Facts

Posey County

The following year, Robert Owen, a Welsh textile manufacturer and social reformer, along with William Maclure, an educator and geologist, purchased Harmonie from Rapp and the Harmonie Society.

Unlike Rapp’s religious group, Owen’s society was based on Owen’s socialist vision of equal education and equal social status. Owen enticed many scientists and educators from Philadelphia and other places in the East to join him in New Harmony — arriving by river on what became known as the “Boatload of Knowledge.” Numerous scientists and educators contributed to New Harmony’s intellectual community.

Posey County is home to what’s believed the northernmost stands of cypress trees in the U.S. The stands give Posey a decidedly southern feel along the floodplains. In the floodplain where the rivers meet is the Hovey Lake Fish & Wildlife Area. Hovey Lake FWA covers approximately 7,404 acres and features a 1,400-acre oxbow lake, other smaller sloughs and marshes, and provides quality hunting, trapping, fishing, and wildlifewatching opportunities.

With its interesting geographical, biological and historical stories, Posey County, located in Indiana’s southwest corner pocket, is like no other county in the state.

county feature 12 SEPTEMBER 2022

Though Owen’s utopian vision collapsed after just two years, New Harmony became known as a center for advances in education and scientific research as some of those he brought to Posey County, such as Thomas Say, America’s “father of entomology,” stayed in New Harmony after others moved away. New Harmony established the nation’s first public school system open to both boys and girls, the state’s first free library, and a civic drama club. Say first identified a new variety of firefly he found here. It was later given his name. Mostly through the lobbying and educational efforts of Indiana school children and Purdue University entomologists, the Say firefly was made the official state insect in 2018. More than 30 structures from the two communal societies remain as part of the New Harmony Historic District, which is a National Historic Landmark. In addition to the historical remnants of the early societies, the quaint town features other historic buildings and attractions, distinctive one-of-a-kind eateries and specialty shops, antiques, art galleries and festivals. The Harmonie State Park is also nearby.

Posey is the “big toe” of Indiana; it’s the farthest southwest of Indiana’s 92 counties. The Wabash River forms Posey’s western border with Illinois as it empties out into the Ohio River. The Ohio forms the county’s southern border with Kentucky.

PHOTO COURTESY OF INDIANA STATE MUSEUM AND HISTORIC SITES

NAMED FOR: Thomas Posey, Indiana GovernorTerritory POPULATION: 25,480 COUNTY SEAT: Mount Vernon NUMBER:COUNTYINDIANA 65 New Harmony’s Labyrinth was a place for meditation and reflection for the Rappites. Its 2008 reconstruction, based on archival information, restored the labyrinth to its original form. It is open and free to the public.

FOUNDED: 1814

North of Hovey Lake along the Wabash is the historic town of New Harmony. Two utopian communal societies were attempted there — with varying success. The outpost town was founded in 1814 by George Rapp, leader of a religious movement. The group, known as Rappites or Harmonists, fled Germany to escape religious persecution as they awaited the Second Coming of Christ which they believed would be in their lifetime. They settled first in Pennsylvania, then moved by flatboat down the Ohio and up the Wabash to the site they called Harmonie. Under Rapp’s leadership, the hardworking Harmonists built a thriving town. But in 1824, they moved back to Pennsylvania to be closer to the large markets in the East for their products.

• Watch out for power poles, too. If you strike one, it may break, dropping a live line on your equipment.

• When considering the height of equipment, don’t forget about the radio antennas and GPS receivers that may reach another couple feet above the roof.

BE EQUIPMENTMOVINGWHENELECTRICITYAROUNDSAFEFARM

KNOWLEDGE IS POWER FOR FARM SAFETY

With the arrival of harvest time, Indiana’s farmers are shifting into high gear as they move into their fields to bring in their crops.

• Always look up and around before moving or raising equipment. A good rule of thumb is to stay at least 30 feet from all power lines and power poles.

• If you’re in equipment that touches power lines, stay in the cab and call for help. Tell others to stay away.

In the rare case of a fire and you have to escape, jump clear of the equipment. Keep both feet together and shuffle at least 30 feet away.

• If you’re not completely sure if equipment will fit under a power line, find an alternate way to move it.

“People assume that everything will fit under the power lines, but that isn’t always the case. The biggest cause of electrocutions on farms is equipment accidentally touching power lines.”

“Combines and grain augers are large pieces of equipment,” says Elkins.

All that increased activity puts farmers and farm workers at greater risk, warns Jon Elkins, vice president of safety, training and compliance at Indiana Electric Cooperatives.

Think safe, think 10 — the 10-foot rule, that is! When working with farm equipment or machinery, stay away from power lines at least 10 feet in every direction. If you need to work within 10 feet of an overhead power line, call your electric cooperative first.

14 SEPTEMBER 2022

To protect themselves, farmers and their workers should follow these tips from Indiana Electric Cooperatives:

safety

• When moving equipment near power lines, have a spotter on hand to ensure your safety.

• Check clearances each time you enter or exit a field. It’s possible changes were made since the last time you accessed the field and the clearances could have changed.

• Take the time to fully lower grain augers and other portable equipment before moving them.

“Working the land has enough hazards in the work itself,” says Elkins. “With care and planning, moving to and from the fields shouldn’t be one of them.”

• Never try to raise power lines to allow passage of tall equipment. Even non-metallic objects such as wood poles or branches can conduct electricity.

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DO YOU LONG FOR SIMPLERTHOSEDAYS WHEN A STROLLFATHER-SONDOWN TO THE FISHIN’ HOLE, TO THE SOUNDTRACK OF AN OFWASWHISTLINGEARWORMTUNE,THEHIGHLIGHTTHEWEEK?

COOKINGHOME WITH A SIDE OF nostalgia

The Mayberry Café's trademark 1960s-era Mayberry Police Department cruiser is parked on the side of the restaurant, adding to the ambience even before visitors set foot in the Andy Griffith Show-themed restaurant.

If that sentence resonates with you, and you haven’t yet been to the Mayberry Café in Danville, Indiana, well, you need to nip that right in the bud and plan a visit. And if you don’t get Andy and Barney flashbacks reading that, well, nevertheless, head to this small-town eatery to enjoy down-home cooking with a heaping side of nostalgia.

Indiana eats 18 SEPTEMBER 2022

Opie’s Prize Catch Blue Gill is a favorite of many diners as is the breaded tenderloin (featured on

The first thing you may see after grabbing a parking spot near the old brick building across from Danville’s town square is an authentic 1960s-era Mayberry Police Department car. It’s parked on the side of the building, just where you might imagine Sheriff Andy Taylor and his deputy, Barney Fife, left it. After pausing to remember the days when life was kinder and homespun advice solved the wackiest predicaments, head on in under the black awning decorated with a Sheriff’s badge and enter an alternate universe Mayberry.

Andy's Tenderloin is a star attraction at the Mayberry Café. Diners can choose to have the handcut pork tenderloin either grilled or breaded.

Husband and wife Brad and Christine Born fashioned the Mayberry Café (formerly the Main Street Café, Bakery and Deli) after Brad’s favorite TV show, The Andy Griffith Show, which ruled the airwaves from 1960-68. Though the iconic comedy took place in a fictional burg in North Carolina, Danville’s friendly, neighborly vibe made it the perfect location for the Borns to pay homage to the country classics Aunt Bee herself may have served her family. Those classics include fried chicken, fried catfish and country fried steak, along with fried biscuits and apple butter. Aunt Bee’s tasty fried pickles served with ranch or spicy ranch dressing are guaranteed to be made “without kerosene.” (Andy Griffith fans will know what that means!)

THECAFÉMAYBERRY 78 W. Main St. 317-745-4067Danville www.mayberrycafe.com The warm beforebiscuitssugar-coveredcinnamonfriedandapplebuttercaneitherbeenjoyedthemaincourseorasadessert. ENTER TO WIN A $50 GIFT CERTIFICATE LEARN MORE ON PAGE 3 KNIGHTAMBERBYPHOTOS

The food isn’t the only draw at the café, whose visitors have included Gomer Pyle himself, Jim Nabors; Dixie Griffith, Andy’s daughter; and Karen Knotts, whose father Don Knotts played Barney. Episodes from The Andy Griffith Show play on a constant loop on the various flat screen TV sets placed around the restaurant and cast photos and memorabilia line the walls. With the homey décor and retro vibe, you’d swear Aunt Bee herself was back in the kitchen making sure you were well-fed and taken care of. And when you’re at the Mayberry Café, that’s exactly what you are: well-fed and taken care of.

SEPTEMBER 2022 19 the Indiana Tenderloin Lovers’ Trail) and the various burgers, named for some of Mayberry’s most illustrious characters like Barney, Otis and Ernest T. Save room for the cobbler served with vanilla ice cream and Aunt Bee’s Chocolate Mug Cake made with her secret ingredient, Dr. Pepper.

FOOD

20foodSEPTEMBER 2022 FROM COMB, SWEET COMB TO TABLE Pork: 1 ½ T. olive oil 3 cloves garlic, minced 1 t. salt ½ t. pepper 1 3 ½ lb. bone-in pork loin roast 1 t. Heatsageoven to 375 F. Combine olive oil, garlic, salt and pepper in a cup. Spread over top of pork. Sprinkle with sage. Place in roasting pan. Bake 1 hour.

½

PORKMAPLE-HONEYLOINROAST

Patricia Piekarski Harvey, Illinois

Maple-Honey Sauce: cup chicken broth, divided 1 T. cornstarch ⅓ cup maple syrup ⅓ cup honey ¼ cup heavy whipping cream Dash of allspice PREPARED BY EMILY SCHILLING AND KILEY LIPPS PHOTOS BY KILEY LIPPS

Whisk 1 T. broth and cornstarch until smooth. Bring remaining ingredients to a boil. Whisk half of cornstarch mixture into maple honey mixture. Bring to a boil. Cook until thickened (about 1 minute). Add additional cornstarch mixture if desired. Reserve ¼ cup of this mixture. Brush 2 T. of reserved sauce over pork. Bake additional 10 minutes. Brush with 2 more tablespoons of reserved sauce. Bake 5-10 more minutes. Pour any juices from pork into cooked maple-honey sauce; serve with pork. Yield: 6 servings.

1 egg ¾ cup sugar 3 cups flour

1 t. cinnamon 1 t. gingerbread spice

1 9-inch pie shell, unbaked In a saucepan, bring honey to a boil. Quickly beat eggs into honey. Add butter, extract, pecans and nutmeg. Pour into pie shell and bake at 325 F for 25 minutes or until filling is set.

Glaze: ¼ cup powdered sugar 1 ½ T. Preheatmilkoven to 375 F. In a large bowl, mix honey, oil, egg and sugar. In a separate bowl, combine flour with baking soda, cinnamon, and gingerbread spice. Add to honey mixture and blend together to make a dough. Take 1 t. of dough and roll into a ball. Place dough ball on a cookie tray lined with parchment paper. Repeat until all dough is used. Bake for about 8 minutes or until bottoms of cookies are lightly browned. Take out of oven and let cool completely. Combine powdered sugar and milk to get a thick mixture. Drizzle over cookies. Let glaze harden for several hours, then store cookies in an airtight container.

½ cup sifted all-purpose flour

1 t. grated orange rind ½ cup honey 3 T. melted shortening In a large bowl, sift all-purpose flour, salt and baking powder together. Add whole wheat flour and mix thoroughly. In another bowl, combine egg, orange juice, rind, honey and shortening. Add all at once to flour, stirring only enough to dampen all flour. Bake in well-greased muffin pan or use paper baking cups. Bake in hot oven at 400 F for 15-20 minutes or until browned.

HONEY PIE Shirley Todd Columbus, Indiana

1 cup chopped pecans Dash of nutmeg

½ cup whole wheat flour

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Yield: 6 8 servings.

1 t. baking soda

1 t. vanilla extract

1 cup honey 3 eggs, beaten 3 T. butter

SOFT COOKIESHONEY Marilles Mauer Greensburg, Indiana

1 egg, well beaten ¼ cup orange juice

2 t. baking powder

Yield: 12 muffins.

Cookies: 7 T. honey ¾ cup oil

¼ t. salt

HONEY MUFFINSORANGE

Doris Ann Kahlert Berne, Indiana

22 SEPTEMBER 2022 NEW GENERATION OF BARN OWNERS TURN TO FOUNDATION FOR SUPPORTPHOTOLEFT

When Robyn and Jason Thompson tied the knot in 1998, she warned him the rope was attached to more than just her. “She told me when I married her, I married the land,” Jason said. “And she wasn’t lying.”

PHOTO RIGHT Jonathan, Robyn, Jason and theEvelyn,GwendolyntripletsBryanleft,Thompson,AbbyfromandKatieandBuntonwithMadelyn,andinfrontofsame1874barn.

That land is a 70-acre farm in eastern Morgan County. Once covering “half the township,” the grain and livestock farm has been in Robyn’s family for 175 years. It was maintained and passed down through seven generations on her maternal side. Robyn knew from an early age she would eventually have to move home. “This is just who I am,” she told him, “and this is the life I want to have. I want to raise my children out there, and I want to make my life there.”

By Richard G. Biever

For the past 12 years, the Thompsons, both 46, and their two children, now 21 and 18, have lived on the land in the farmhouse Robyn grew up in. They moved in and became the farm’s chief caretakers when Robyn’s mother moved to Brown County (Robyn's parents had divorced years earlier). But Robyn and Jason aren’t farmers. And neither is her only sibling, younger brother Bryan Bunton. Neither were Robyn and Bryan’s parents. So, ever since their grandparents were well into their 80s and no longer able to work the land, the fields were leased to area farmers. And in those 20-some years after her grandfather retired, the farm’s barns and outbuildings sat empty and devoid of the life and livelihood they once supported.

Venerable barns need to be needed, need to have purpose, just as people do, or they quickly start declining, too. That’s what happened to the family’s English bank barn that dates to 1874.

“I just I couldn't handle it. The barn had Creeping Jenny all over. It just looked awful,” she said. Upon moving home, they found the roof had begun leaking, the concrete center aisle had cracked and was crumbling, a foundation wall caved in, groundhogs were everywhere. “I was very close to my grandfather. I spent a lot of time up there in that barn. I took care of the horses. It just made my heart sick to see it in that condition.”

Robyn Thompson's family in front of the family's barn in the 1890s.

At the start of the 21st century, an estimated 30,000 barns still stood across Indiana’s countryside. A third of those disappeared by 2010, and more disappear each year.

Yeager, 70, said the construction methods — hand-hewing, drilling holes, and setting giant timbers without cranes and electricity — and the little variations each local farmer and carpenter incorporated still fascinate him. And then to frame and raise these massive structures, he said, took a whole community coming together. But these castles of the countryside began to outlive their usefulness by the mid-1900s. Changes in agriculture brought larger and larger commercial farms. The machinery used to work them grew with the acreage and literally outgrew the wooden Morestructures.practical and frugal than sentimental, many farmers began bulldozing and burning the outdated structures rather than continuously pay the insurance and taxes levied on them. Many barns were crowded out by suburban development. Others were dismantled for the weathered wood siding and huge timbers that were sold off for rustic accents or structural elements for new custom homes. Others were allowed to slowly crumble until, like some Gothic ruin, they were reclaimed by the earth.

Williamson, who died in 2017 at age 91, devoted his life to telling and preserving Indiana’s agricultural history as a longtime leader of Purdue University’s Agricultural Alumni Association and founder of the State Fair’s Pioneer Village. He was also the catalyst for the IBF, Yeager said.

Soon after, the Thompsons turned to programs offered by Indiana historical preservation groups to learn what they could do to restore and maintain the remainder of the farm. And they joined a newly formed organization dedicated solely to supporting the preservation of Indiana’s historic barns like theirs — The Indiana Barn Foundation.

A year ago, IBF also established the Mauri Williamson Legacy Endowment to create an ongoing funding source for itself for grants, educational efforts, and technical assistance.

Continued on page 24

SEPTEMBER 2022 23

The Indiana Barn Foundation was established in 2013 and is an eclectic group of farmers, rural residents, agricultural folks, and those who just love those iconic fixtures of Indiana’s family farming heritage. Its goal is to support folks wanting to restore and preserve heritage barns. In doing so, they preserve a major piece of the story of Indiana’s agricultural history — its implements, its structures, and its people — that made Indiana one of the most productive agricultural states in the nation despite being the smallest state by area west of Appalachia.

aBuildingfoundation

“A lot of people would tell you, to see a classic old barn still standing in the countryside just looks beautiful,” said Kent Yeager, president of IBF.

“But to me, it's more about the history and heritage that's involved in these buildings … being built from natural resources that were right there locally. And the fact that a lot of these were built when there wasn't much in the way of tools. It was hammers and chisels. It took real craftsmanship to build these things.”

To support preservation projects, the Foundation awards annual grants for barns in most urgent need of repair.

Continued from page 23

Andy, who works in technology in downtown Indianapolis, and Gwen, an administrator with Noblesville schools, loved the unique circa-1900 two-story home with the wrap-around porch and asymmetrical gables when they first saw it. It had exposed dark hardwoods Gwen especially loved and antique charm. It had the large lot. It had updated electrical wiring, kitchen, and bathrooms. And the price was right — selling just before the real estate market went bonkers. But it had sat on the market for 300 days, so they were a little suspicious.

Andy Bell drove from his home in Whitestown in Boone County down to Martinsville for IBF’s annual meeting and barn tour in July. It was the first IBF event he’d participated in since joining a year ago. Unlike Robyn with her deep roots to her farm, Andy, 36, and his wife Gwen, 35, had no family attachment to their acre and a half and barns until they bought the lot in 2021. Along with the Queen Anne/ Victorian style farmhouse and garage came two old barns they didn’t know what they’d do with.

Hanover College biology professor Darrin Rubino takes a core sample of a barn timber to figure out the age of the wood.

South toward Indianapolis are new retail centers, professional buildings, restaurants, and more. That farm on the north end of Whitestown was also sold to a developer. A gridded sea of curving streets and cul-de-sacs, roundabouts, and retention ponds, prepared the way for new homes that are sprouting up like young shoots of corn in spring — except for the lot with the Queen Anne house and barns. That lot, the landowner hoped to sell to a family that would preserve its integrity. He found that buyer with the Bells.

“We refuse the whole ‘cookie-cutter subdivision’ thing,” said Andy. “It is fine, to each their own, but we just like things that have a little more story, some charm behind it.”

In another lifetime, the house and barns had been the base of a 120acre multi-generational family farm. Located on the main county road north out of Whitestown, the farm fanned out west and north. Andy said a prominent area farmer purchased the entire farm from the original family years earlier and had maintained the barns and updated the house while keeping its old character.

Staying true

IBF has seen dramatic growth in interest and membership in the past couple of years. For most of its short existence, its membership was around 200. That number doubled to 400 in the past year, as has applications for grants. “This year, we had a sea change in grant applications,” Yeager said. “It makes our task much more difficult, twice as difficult, in determining who was going to get a grant.”

Around the time of IBF’s beginning, many of the same individuals involved in the foundation helped encourage the Indiana General Assembly to adopt a property tax deduction for heritage barns. By removing the assessed tax, the hope was more barns would be saved.

24 SEPTEMBER 2022

In the past decade, Whitestown has become a suburban boomtown. Fields where tractors turned the soil just a few years ago now bustle with bulldozers and new construction.

“What's wrong with it? Is it haunted? Is it on a burial ground? Is it gonna implode? …” Andy said. “Is there something horribly wrong with the updates? People aren’t wanting to take the risk?” Gwen added.

Kent Yeager, president of IBF, shows off a core sample removed from a timber.

the house, I was tinkering around in the barn,” noted Andy. “I was like, ‘I don't know what I'm doing. This is awesome, but there's a lot going on here.’” That’s when he found the Indiana Barn Foundation online and joined. “I want to restore it, I want to keep its original charm, but I want to make it Thefunctional.”twohave toyed with the idea of someday opening a hybrid coffee shop/antiques shop in the big barn or

Robyn has since become IBF’s Morgan County representative, creating a Facebook page and sharing information with others. For all the love the siblings have for the legacy that has tied them to their family’s land, they agree critical Gwen and Andy Bell's 1900-era farmhouse came with two old barns. What had been the farm fields behind them are now being developed into housing subdivisions.

Landmarks Foundation seminar and joining IBF. “I came back with fresh eyes. Our barn was actually better than I thought it was. I felt much more hopeful. We had a plan of attack on how to get it back to its former glory,” she Theysaid.ridthe barn of varmints, made repairs to its structure, added new fencing to the barn lot, and then brought in new tenants — goats. They learned livestock help reduce the freeze-thaw cycle that had damaged the foundation when the barn sat empty. The goats act as a passive mowing system for the barn lot, too. They also added a farm dog — a Great Pyrenees — to protect the goats and keep groundhogs away. Her brother, Bryan, suggested they plant hay to sell, use as feed for the goats, and store in the lofts to keep them from being empty, another takeaway from the seminars on the care and feeding of an old barn.

Continued on page 26

They waited for the inspection results. The inspector's only comment: “It’s an old house.It will have some issues.” But he noted no corners were cut on the updates; everything was done well. The only mark the real estate agent said it had against it was the open farmland around it would soon become suburban neighborhoods. That didn’t faze the Bells. In fact, it meant the children they hoped to have — the first, Henry Preston, expected to arrive in mid-August (just as this issue went to press) — would have a neighborhood of other kids to play with and a big yard and barns they could all hang out in. And with Whitestown’s growing amenities, they could see themselves putting down deep “Onceroots.webought

SEPTEMBER 2022 25

The Bells intend to keep as much of the original look and feel as they can to their house and barns. “That's a recurring theme,” Andy said. “We just want to stay true to the land.”

Coming home

Robyn Thompson’s outlook on staying true to her family’s land improved after attending an Indiana

creating studio space for Gwen who was an art teacher before becoming an administrator. She paints and creates pottery and is a classically trained musician on violin and piano. They also envision using the loft as office space. But with the cost involved and the baby on the way, they decided those plans will have to wait. In the meantime, they plan to clean it up and make sure it remains That’ssound.what brought Andy to IBF’s annual meeting where he learned more about his barn and made contacts with other barn owners. “You can tell they’re just such advocates for the restoration and the history and just being stewards of old barns. I’m obsessed with our big barn. But it’s such a tall order.”

For tickets: visit IndianaBarns.org; or Facebook.com/IndianaBarns. decisions loom on the horizon. The Thompsons will soon be empty nesters, and their children plan to live elsewhere. “We’re still young,” Robyn said. “But we're starting to feel it. We put that hay up the other day, and we were exhausted. I don't know that I want to do that much longer.” Inside the farmhouse hangs a fading yellow and stained photo from the 1890s of her ancestors posed in front of the 1874 barn. The ancestors, staring out from the past, seem to cast a stern and stony sideways glance whenever she thinks of moving on. “I cannot look at that photo and not feel some level of guilt,” she said. “They're so proud. You can feel it in that photo.”

IBF makes sure a barn has a place and means to continue preserving Indiana’s agricultural heritage, telling stories of families and farms of the past, and making memories for future generations.

Richard G. Biever is senior editor of Indiana Connection.

Triplets, from left, Evelyn, Gwendolyn and Madelyn Bunton check out the goats on the family’s farm.

Bryan, who works for a utility in Indianapolis and lives in Greenwood, has just started taking a greater interest in the farm and the family legacy. At 43, he and his wife, Katie, just recently added to the long lineage of girls in the family. They are parents of toddler triplets, Madelyn, Gwendolyn and Evelyn, who are approaching 2. Bryan said he wants his girls to feel at home on the farm. Maybe one of them, or all three, he muses, will carry the farm into the next generation.

IBF BARN FUNDRAISERTOUR

To join or learn more information, go to: www.IndianaBarns.org, or on Facebook.com/IndianaBarns; email: info@indianabarns.org; or write to the Indiana Barn Foundation, 1201 Central Ave., Indianapolis, IN 46202.

Continued 25

from page

The Indiana Barn Foundation, a 501(c)(3) organization, is a network of barn enthusiasts supporting barn preservation. Through its associations with National Barn Alliance, Indiana Landmarks, and barn experts, IBF offers preservation workshops, barn tours, educational and grant opportunities, updates and info on relevant legislation, and a quarterly newsletter.

INDIANA FOUNDATIONBARN

26 SEPTEMBER 2022

“We’re in suburbia primarily because of the school systems and all that,” he said. “But I want them to have the same experiences I had growing up: being able to run for hours and not see the same thing twice; being able to go play in the creek or in the barn lofts. It would be a lot easier to just pack up, sell everything off. But there's so much family history here that it just wouldn't feel right. This is still always home.” Whether a historic barn stays in a family and continues supporting the working farm, or is in the hands of a new keeper and finds a new or different lease on life, the Indiana Barn Foundation is there to help.

Daviess County is the site of Indiana Barn Foundation’s 2022 Barn Tour, Saturday, Sept. 24, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Join barn enthusiasts in touring a variety of historic barns, including the 1908 T.C. Singleton Round Barn which serves as host. See the stunning craftsmanship, hear about their histories, and learn from a preservation expert how to assess a barn’s rehabilitation needs. Make it a weekend experience by attending a special event on Sept. 23, featuring dinner inside the Singleton Round Barn and a presentation by award winning author and photographer John Hanou.

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The CCAA also recognized Hoosier Energy’s integrated vegetation management methods. Herbicide is applied only to woody-stemmed plants that pose the greatest risk of interrupting electrical service in rights of way. That allows for minimal disturbance to the monarch habitat.

BUTTERFLYEFFECTthe

28 SEPTEMBER 2022 Hoosier Energy news

“Most of the conservation measures in our agreement are things that we were already doing, so it wasn’t a big shift for us to meet the requirements of the CCAA,” said Jared Murphy, vegetation management coordinator at Hoosier Energy.

“With the certificate of inclusion, we will know what to expect,” said Dave Appel, Hoosier Energy’s environmental team lead. “Even if the monarch is listed, we will not be subject to any greater regulation than what the COI requires.”

The monarch butterfly’s migratory corridor ranges from Texas through the Midwest and into Canada, and concern has grown for the future of the species due to its steadily decreasing population.

HOOSIER ENERGY PREPARES FOR MONARCH PROTECTIONS

Hoosier Energy joins East Central Energy, a distribution cooperative in Braham, Minnesota, as the only two electric co-ops to enroll in the CCAA so Thefar.certification process of nearly two years requires investment in significant conservation activities and support from the board and management, but Hoosier Energy sees the effort as worthwhile. Enrollment in the CCAA “validates what we have done and gives us confidence moving forward,” Appel said. “But the greatest benefit is regulatory certainty.”

T his summer, Hoosier Energy became the first generation and transmission cooperative in the country to receive the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Certificate of Inclusion (COI) to join the Candidate Conservation Agreement with Assurances (CCAA) for the monarch

Thebutterfly.butterfly’s migratory path and habitat go through the heart of Hoosier Energy’s service territory. If the monarch were to be listed under the Endangered Species Act, this voluntary agreement assures there will be no conservation requirements beyond those provided for in the TheCCAA.International Union for Conservation of Nature added the migratory monarch butterfly to its Red List of Threatened Species as endangered in late July. However, that list is not related to the U.S. Endangered Species Act and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has not yet listed the butterfly as endangered. But the decision to list the monarch as threatened or endangered could come as early as the 2024 fiscal year.

co-op news 2021 Operating Revenue $24,219,907 Operating Expenses Purchased Power 14,474,613 Operations & Maintenance 2,905,067 Customer, Administrative & General 2,842,732 Depreciation 2,274,866 Taxes 557,710 Interest 835,077 Operating Margin $329,842 Non-Operating Income Interest Income 2,172 Gain(loss) Disposal of Assets 44,177 Income from Investments in Associated Organizations 694,369 Amortization Recognized (197,981.00) Total Margins $872,579 INCOME STATEMENT PowerPurchased $14,474,613 GeneralAdminCustomer,and $2,842,732 Depreciation $2,274,866 Taxes $557,710 Interest $835,077 Operating Expenses Assets 2021 Net Utility Plant $44,776,656 Other Property and Investments 10,583,131 Deferred Debits 405,741 Cash 693,963 Accounts Receivable 2,317,013 Materials and Supplies 736,511 Prepaid Expenses and Other 49,336 $59,562,351 Equities and Liabilities Memberships $190,206 Patronage Capital 28,700,614 Other Equities 3,165,658 Long Term Debt 23,163,311 Current Liabilites 4,342,542 $59,562,331 Balance Sheet 2021 Assets $59,562,331 2020 Assets $56,851,799 Asset Growth 5% Equity 54% Capital Credits: Retired 2021 $1,036,290 andOperationsMaintenance $2,905,067 SEPTEMBER 2022 29

Check the bag Owners should also look for an Association of American Feed Control Officials (AAFCO) statement on the bag. This ensures that the food follows the rules and is complete and Thebalanced.amount to feed listed on the pet food bag gives a good starting point, but is based on the pet’s ideal weight, not the weight it currently is.

As always, if you have any questions about your pet’s health, contact your veterinarian.

“Owners need to remember that any other food — human table scraps or treats — that their pet gets adds calories to the diet,” Pavlovsky says. It is important to use consistent treat brands vs. switching between brands to avoid stomach upset, and calories from treats should make up less than 10% of the diet.

“Itrecommendations.isvitaltonotjust reduce the amount of food that a pet is fed,” Pavlovsky says. Simply reducing the food may create problems for its internal organs.

connectionWeight/health Pavlovsky explains that there are several proven connections between weight gain in pets and their health. Overweight pets are more likely to develop diabetes and orthopedic diseases. Mobility issues can also lead to reductions in both quality of life and life expectancy.

The problem of felinesoverweight

FAT CATS

By most estimates, well over half of all cats in the United States are overweight.

pets

30 SEPTEMBER 2022

The cat could struggle going up and down steps to reach its food or litter box or to get outside. It may also struggle jumping into bed. If a pet owner notices any of these signs, it is important to seek the advice of a veterinarian on how to safely put the cat on a weight-loss program. The veterinarian will make sure that there aren’t any other health issues with the pet and make

To determine your cat’s body fat, during its annual physical exam the veterinarian will feel the ribs for how much fat is covering them. At an ideal weight, the ribs should be easily felt without pressing too firmly. The vet will also check the cat from the side, looking for an abdominal fat pad.

“There are so many different diets available to pet owners that it can be overwhelming,” Pavlovsky notes. His broad advice is to choose a reputable brand that has veterinary nutritionists on staff. He also says the life stage of the food should be right for the age of the animal; for example, a kitten should be eating a specifically labeled “kitten food,” and an adult cat should eat a diet designed for adults.

A 2019 survey of pet owners and veterinarians suggests about 60 percent of cats are overweight or obese, a statistic that hasn’t budged in recent years.

Though overweight pets are a very common problem, it’s one that can be resolved. Love and affection can be given in other ways than food, such as through interaction and training.

Cat owners who see their pet every day may not notice kitty has gained weight says Dr. Gene Pavlovsky, a small animal veterinarian at the University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine. But owners will often notice the cat is slowing down as it ages or that it is limping. Both of these signs can be exacerbated by weight gain, he says. “Increased weight gain often doesn’t allow them to groom themselves properly or use their litter box,” Pavlovsky adds. As a result, fat cats may have an unkempt coat and the owners may notice inappropriate urination and defecation just outside the litter box.

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