Ohio Cooperative Living – February 2023 - North Central

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FEBRUARY 2023
ALSO INSIDE Energy as security Candy land Unique Ohio place names
OHIO COOPERATIVE
Barn gallery Fine art from the farm
North Central Electric Cooperative
INSIDE OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023 Cover image on most editions: The charm of old-time agricultural life is a constant inspiration for the artwork created by Lorain-Medina Rural Electric Cooperative member Gary Stretar (photo courtesy of the artist). This page: Birthday cake balls are a customer favorite at Harry Birt’s Store in the Darke County village of New Weston (photo by Margie Wuebker). FEATURES 22 PEE PEE CREEK? Each of Ohio’s unique place names is a chapter in the state’s story. 24 SWEET TOOTH Harry Birt’s store has it all — but that candy section keeps the doors open. 28 MAD RIVER MOUNTAIN Ohio’s largest ski resort turns 70 years old this year. FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  1

A winter storm that cost too much

This past Christmas brought a blast of cold winter weather like we haven’t seen in several years. As we’ve come to expect when that kind of weather hits, people worked tirelessly across much of the country to keep the lights on and to restore power where and when it was lost.

Planners, engineers, and system operators worked diligently day and night to address frozen equipment and fuel supply shortages and to make needed adjustments to meet the high demand for electricity. Power plant employees worked around the clock to keep their plants running while wind chills dipped down near 40 below zero, creating challenges to keep critical equipment operating.

The high winds resulted in scattered power outages and broken power lines across Ohio and the entire Midwest and created brutal and dangerous working conditions for lineworkers tasked with making repairs to restore needed electric service.

As our electric system was stretched to its limits (once again), the market price of electricity exploded to 50 times its normal level. It was difficult to come to terms with that skyrocketing expense.

Tragically, however, money was not the highest cost. One young lineworker, Blake Rodgers, lost his life while working to restore electric service to members of Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative in southern Ohio.

Like nearly all of you, I did not know and never met Blake Rodgers. We can only pray for, and offer condolences to, his family and friends who will miss him the rest of their time on Earth. And we can honor the service and sacrifice of electric cooperative employees everywhere who work to provide this most essential and life-sustaining service to our homes and businesses. Thanks to all of them.

And God bless Blake Rodgers. May he rest in peace.

UP FRONT
Pat O’Loughlin PRESIDENT & CEO OHIO’S ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES
We honor the service and sacrifice of electric cooperative employees everywhere who work to provide this most essential and lifesustaining service.
2  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives

6677 Busch Blvd. Columbus, OH 43229 614-846-5757

www.ohiocoopliving.com

Patrick O’Loughlin President & CEO

Caryn Whitney Director of Communications

POWER LINES

Jeff

Contributors: Margaret Buranen, Colleen Romick Clark, Getty Images, Randy Edwards, David Gattie, W.H. “Chip” Gross, Catherine Murray, Craig Springer, and Margie Wuebker.

OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING (USPS 134-760; ISSN 2572-049X) is published monthly by Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. It is the official communication link between the electric cooperatives in Ohio and West Virginia and their members. Subscription cost for members ranges from $5.52 to $6.96 per year, paid from equity accruing to the member.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to editorial and advertising offices at: 6677 Busch Boulevard, Columbus, OH 43229-1101. Periodicals postage paid at Pontiac, IL 61764, and at additional mailing offices. Nothing in this publication may be reproduced in any manner without written permission from Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. All rights reserved. The fact that a product is advertised in Ohio Cooperative Living should not be taken as an endorsement. If you find an advertisement misleading or a product unsatisfactory, please notify us or the Ohio Attorney General’s Office, Consumer Protection Section, 30 E. Broad St., Columbus, OH 43215. Periodicals postage paid at Columbus, OH, and at additional mailing offices.

National/regional advertising inquiries, contact Cheryl Solomon American MainStreet Publications 847-749-4875 | cheryl@amp.coop Ohio-based advertisers contact Rheta Gallagher 614-940-5956 | rgallagher@ohioec.org

Cooperative members: Please report changes of address to your electric cooperative. Ohio Cooperative Living staff cannot process address changes.

Power play: National interests are best served by an all-of-the-above energy approach. 8

CO-OP PEOPLE

A look at yesteryear: Ohio artist Gary Stretar paints rural landscapes as they once looked. 10 WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE

Nothing succeeds like Success: The incredible, and fraudulent, tale of a long-forgotten Lake Erie shipwreck.

Spice of life: Cinnamon, once more valuable than gold, is still a treasured ingredient in most everyone’s kitchen.

LOCAL PAGES News and information from your electric cooperative.

What’s happening: February/ March events and other things to do around Ohio.

MEMBER INTERACTIVE

Beautiful barns: Our readers sought out some of the best rural landscapes the state has to offer.

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

FEBRUARY 2023 • Volume 65, No. 5 13 36
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POWER LINES

Power play

National interests are best served by an all-of-the-above energy approach.

During an unprecedented crisis in NASA’s Apollo program, Ohio native and Apollo 13’s flight director, Gene Kranz, looked out across his mission control room and said: “OK, let’s everybody keep cool. Let’s solve the problem, but let’s not make it any worse by guessing.”

Composed, rational thinking. It’s crucial when problems are unknown, unfolding, and likely to compound with bad decisions. It’s also needed in the current debate around America’s energy and electric power sectors.

The U.S. economy, the largest and most important industrialized economy in the world, was built and currently stands on abundant, reliable energy resources. Fossil fuels, nuclear power, and renewables have electrified America, energized its transportation sector, provided high-temperature industrial heat for manufacturing, and bolstered its military — the world’s most powerful and lethal.

However, climate change concerns are reorienting America’s energy and electric power debate to carbon reduction, and policies are being proposed for an energy transition away from fossil fuels and toward renewables. While nuclear power is not excluded in all transition proposals, nuclear is generally marginalized in favor of the preferred resources — renewables.

Never before has the U.S. debated eschewing the conventional energy resources on which its economy stands. And for good reason.

Energy resources and electricity aren’t merely market commodities or climate change issues — they’re foundational to America’s national security. And it has been generally understood that a hallmark of America’s energy and national security legacy is an abundant, domestic supply of diverse energy resources to provide the U.S. with flexibility and resilience in times of economic disruption and geopolitical disturbance.

This is critical for ensuring a resilient electric power grid: storable coal and nuclear to provide consistent baseload power; flexible natural gas for responding to minute-by-minute fluctuations in demand; and zero-carbon, cost-competitive renewables to fill in when available. Diverse resources, while not interchangeable, are crucial as each resource provides unique operational characteristics that ensure resilience.

The national security value of energy, however, extends beyond U.S. borders. America is facing some of the greatest global challenges in its history, with energy embedded in many of them.

Russia has invaded Ukraine and weaponized oil and natural gas to create severe shortages in Europe and supply disruptions globally. Russia has also established itself as a global leader in civilian nuclear exports — a position once occupied solely by the U.S. but lost, in part, because of policy decisions in the 1990s.

China, through its Chinese Communist Party (CCP), has emerged as the most serious threat to U.S.

4  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

security as it seeks to become the world’s greatest superpower. To that end, the CCP is deepening oil and natural gas ties with Russia and the Middle East while monopolizing the global market on minerals and metals used in manufacturing solar panels, electric vehicles, and batteries — the very technologies prioritized in the proposed U.S. energy transition. At a more comprehensive level, China is leveraging its Belt and Road Initiative to help emerging nations industrialize their economies around all energy resources, including fossil fuels and nuclear power.

Over the past decade, the U.S. has established itself as a global leader in oil and natural gas production. In doing so, it has achieved a level of energy selfsufficiency while establishing important energy partnerships with key allies and emerging economies around the world. However, as the U.S. considers restructuring its economy around carbon reduction, China, Russia, and other authoritarian nations aren’t debating energy as a climate issue. They’re debating it as an instrument of national power to advance their interests — interests that often are in opposition to America’s. Consequently, a U.S. divestment from fossil fuels will create vacuums in global energy trade — which will be filled by energy-rich nations eager to displace the U.S. in any way they can.

Climate change is a threat that should not be dismissed, but there’s only so much the U.S. can

do unilaterally. From 2000 to 2020, global carbon emissions increased 35.7%, with over 78% of this originating in China. During this same period, total U.S. carbon emissions decreased 22.8%, while carbon emissions from the U.S. power sector decreased 37.1%. This is a global issue with global sources and global impacts, and those impacts will not stop at U.S. borders simply because the U.S. has decarbonized its own economy. In fact, an electric power sector based predominantly on weather-dependent energy resources may be highly vulnerable to impacts of a changing climate.

This said, the U.S. should focus on shoring up all critical infrastructure subject to rising sea levels, droughts, and any other enduring climate shifts that could disrupt critical services.

When Gene Kranz looked across that mission control room, he could see myriad instrument panels. But it never crossed his mind to try and get that crew home safely by focusing on just one panel. Yet, America is considering a complete restructuring of its economy to dial down a single gauge on the complex instrument panel that is America’s economy and national security.

Given that America is facing multiple security challenges from multiple competitors on multiple fronts, this is worse than guessing. It’s gambling against a stacked deck.

FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  5
Guest columnist David Gattie is an associate professor of engineering at the University of Georgia (UGA) College of Engineering, and a senior fellow at UGA’s Center for International Trade and Security. He has testified before the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee on energy, climate and nuclear power policy.

Throughout the ages, there have been many important advances in mobility. Canes, walkers, rollators, and scooters were created to help people with mobility issues get around and retain their independence. Lately, however, there haven’t been any new improvements to these existing products or developments in this field. Until now. Recently, an innovative design engineer who’s developed one of the world’s most popular products created a completely new breakthrough . . . a personal electric vehicle. It’s called the Zinger, and there is nothing out there quite like it.

“What my wife especially loves is it gives her back feelings of safety and independence which has given a real boost to her confidence and happiness! Thank You!”

–Kent C., California

The first thing you’ll notice about the Zinger is its unique look. It doesn’t look like a scooter. Its sleek, lightweight yet durable frame is made with aircraft grade aluminum so it weighs only 47.2 lbs. It features one-touch folding and unfolding – when folded it can be wheeled around like a suitcase and fits easily into a backseat or trunk. Then, there are the steering levers. They enable the Zinger to move forward, backward,

turn on a dime and even pull right up to a table or desk. With its compact yet powerful motor it can go up to 6 miles an hour and its rechargeable battery can go up to 8 miles on a single charge. With its low center of gravity and inflatable tires it can handle rugged terrain and is virtually tip-proof. Think about it, you can take your Zinger almost anywhere, so you don’t have to let mobility issues rule your life.

The Zinger folds to a mere 10 inches.

Why take our word for it? Call now, and find out how you can get a Zinger of your very own.

FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  7
Call now and receive a utility basket absolutely FREE with your order. 1-888-411-0566 Please mention code 117692 when ordering. 85253 Once in a lifetime, a product comes along that truly moves people. Introducing the future of battery-powered personal transportation . . . The Zinger.
The Zinger and Zoomer Chairs are personal electric vehicles and are not medical devices nor wheelchairs. They are not intended for medical purposes to provide mobility to persons restricted to a sitting position. They are not covered by Medicare nor Medicaid. © 2023 Journey Health and Lifestyle Now available in a Joystick model (Zoomer Chair) Joystick can be mounted on the right or left side for rider’s comfort ACCREDITED BUSINESS A+ enjoying life never gets old™ mobility | sleep | comfort | safety
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The Invention of the Year
10”

A look at yesteryear

When young Gary Stretar wasn’t playing sports, he was busy drawing something. He didn’t grow up to become an athlete, but two childhood influences cemented that second pastime into a rewarding career.

Stretar grew up in the western suburbs of Cleveland. Inspired by proximity to Lake Erie, he painted mostly seascapes in watercolors. He took art classes in high school and college, but didn’t major in art. He preferred creating realistic art to styles of art that were popular at the time. Today, he displays his work in a gallery on his property, and travels to sell his works at various shows around the country.

While he credits his wife, Mary, also a talented painter, for improving his painting, it was two early influences that gave him his inspiration.

The first was his teacher in both fifth and sixth grades, Miss Paul. Stretar says he didn’t learn much more in college art classes than what Miss Paul had already taught him. “Teachers don’t always challenge kids to learn more, but she did,” he says. “She wasn’t afraid to teach us

[advanced art techniques of] perspective, line, color values. A lot of us in her classes went on to art careers.”

The second influence was a schoolmate (and still friend) who invited Stretar to visit his family’s farm in Holmes County. Stretar ended up spending countless hours on that 150-acre tract, painting and visualizing. “It was a completely different world for me,” he says.

After the Stretars married, they continued living in the Cleveland area for a while, but they dreamed of one day living in an old house in the country. When they realized their dream and moved to a converted dairy farm near Spencer — where they are members of LorainMedina Rural Electric Cooperative — Stretar switched from painting those Lake Erie seascapes, mostly using watercolors, to painting rural landscapes, primarily in oil.

“I found that oils gave me more flexibility in what and how I could paint,” he says.

Stretar’s art studio is a converted dairy barn. Their 1835 Greek Revival house overlooks Mary’s extensive flower and vegetable gardens.

STORY BY MARGARET BURANEN; PHOTOS COURTESY OF GARY STRETAR
8  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

Many landscape artists set up their easels outside and paint their surroundings, a technique known as plein air, or they photograph a scene to paint later. Not Stretar. “Almost never do I paint [while] on-site,” he says. “And rarely do I photograph a scene to paint later.”

Instead, he makes a small, 3-by-5-inch sketch of what he wants to include in a painting. Then later, he starts painting scenes from memory. For authenticity of detail — such as the angle of a barn’s roof — he relies on the approximately 100 books on styles of rural architecture that he owns.

Stretar’s aim in his painting is “to make a farm look the way it did before the 1860s, so that early farmers would recognize it.”

His paintings portray farms before mechanization, when farmers used only oxen or draft horses. Because he doesn’t include people or animals, his art conveys both a sense of timelessness and a bit of mystery.

Stretar sells as many winter landscapes as he does paintings showing all the other seasons combined. He

notes that “the winter color palette is closer to those of the Dutch Masters,” who influence his style of painting, along with painters of the Hudson River School and French Barbizon School.

Stretar says that the most rewarding part of creating his paintings is “when a client says that a painting ‘takes me back to when I was a child.’”

Besides their artist parents, the Stretars’ five children learned about art from their maternal grandmother. Her watercolor paintings became illustrations for many greeting cards.

Several of the Stretars’ children are full- or part-time artists today. Daughter Ruth, a hairdresser, sells her watercolors at her salon. Son Luke has his own painting studio in Richfield. Son Caleb is a sculptor and painter. “They had a great art teacher, Dean Shaffer, here at Black River High School,” Stretar notes.

To view Stretar’s paintings, visit www.garystretar. com. His gallery is open by appointment only.

CO-OP PEOPLE
Ohio artist Gary Stretar paints rural landscapes as they once looked.

Nothing succeeds like Success

There has likely never been a more ironic name for a prison ship than Success. The vessel — which was a Lake Erie icon for more than a decade — was successful in another sense: She was the focus of the longest and largest nautical hoax in the history of the Great Lakes, and possibly all of North America.

Measuring 135 feet in length and having three masts, Success was built in 1840 in India during the days of sail. Early in her long career, she made trips transporting immigrants from England to Australia, then functioned for several years as a prison ship, anchored in Sydney’s Woolloomooloo Bay. But it was when the ship’s owners put her up for sale that Success sailed into nautical history.

A group of promoters purchased the ship, planning to sail her around the world for the public to board and

tour — for a price, of course. But before her debut, they believed Success needed a bit of refurbishing.

They brought aboard some unusual equipment: handcuffs, leg irons, branding irons, metal straightjackets, a triangle-shaped whipping post, even a medieval torture device known as an iron maiden.

And they painted on the sides of the hull, in large black letters, the words “Convict Ship.”

None of the apparatuses had ever been on the ship previously, let alone used, but no matter. The promoters even went so far as to erroneously add half a century to the ship’s age. So now, Success had not only been converted to a “convict ship,” complete with all her ghastly accoutrements, but was also the “oldest and most historic ship afloat.”

10  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

The public ate it up, no questions asked.

Sailing from England, Success arrived in Boston in slow 99-day transatlantic trip — after which her captain for the voyage complained, “She sails like a bale of hay.” She toured major U.S. cities along America’s east and west coasts and the Gulf of Mexico, then sailed up the Mississippi, stopping at major ports along the way. Next, making her way up the Ohio River, she visited Cincinnati, Wheeling, and Pittsburgh in 1918 and 1919. In 1923, Success Lakes, where she toured for the next five years.

By 1924 — and despite protests from the Australian government about its entirely made-up history — Success was such a popular attraction at Toledo that local papers reported, “Every day since its arrival here, it has been visited by good-sized crowds.” Other Lake Erie ports included Lorain, Cleveland, and Sandusky, where she often docked for weeks at Cedar Point amusement park.

Her owner in 1925, a Captain David H. Smith, described his ship as “a tremendous paying game.” A conservative estimate of the ship’s income during the 1920s was $450,000 annually, equivalent to many millions in today’s dollars.

Unfortunately, the good times were not to last. With the stock market crash of 1929, the largesse of the Roaring ’ ended, ushering in the Great Depression. During the Americans struggled to make ends meet, let alone have money enough left over for entertainment. The crowds dwindled, then eventually stopped coming altogether, and Success popularity and into disrepair.

Purchased by a businessman in Port Clinton, Ohio, in the fall of 1945, the decrepit old hulk was being towed from Cleveland to Port Clinton when she ran aground and stuck fast on a sandbar about a half-mile from shore off the Port Clinton swimming beach. There she remained mired until the evening of July 4, set her afire just to watch her burn.

More than 1,700 shipwrecks lie at the bottom of Lake Erie, only 277 of which have been located. Success is one of those that have been identified, with what is left of her wooden keel, ribs, planking, and metal parts lying in just 8 to 10 feet of water. Today, divers are welcome to investigate Success and 32 other shipwrecks in Ohio’s Lake Erie waters.

Chip Gross is Ohio Cooperative Living’s outdoors editor.

To learn more about ghost ships and their locations, visit www.ohioshipwrecks.org.

FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  11
The incredible, and fraudulent, tale of a long-forgotten Lake Erie shipwreck.

2 Trays – Diced Chicken Breasts (2.5 lb.)

2 Trays – Chicken Breast Strips (2.5 lb.)

2 Trays – Thin-Sliced Chicken Breasts (2.4 lb.)

1 Package – Organic Ground Chicken (1.5 lb.) Chicken

FREE –2 More Trays Diced Chicken Breasts (2.5 lb.)

FREE – 2 More Trays Chicken Breast Strips (2.5 lb.)

12  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023 No Antibiotics Ever100% Veg Fed Guaranteed QualityHome Delivery . Not valid with any other o ers. *Savings shown based on total of single item base price. Free shipping available in select states. Limited one order per household. Valid for new customers only. Visit perduefarms.com or call 1.800.473.7383 for full Terms and Conditions. All pictures shown are for illustration purposes only. Product is frozen at peak freshness and carefully packaged in eco-friendly shipping material to ensure safe delivery.
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Cinnamon, once more valuable than gold, is still a treasured ingredient in most everyone’s kitchen.

Spice of life APPLE CINNAMON MONKEY BREAD

Prep: 15 minutes | Bake: 45 minutes | Servings: 8 ½ cup granulated sugar 2 tablespoons ground cinnamon ¼ cup butter, melted

2 16.3-ounce cans buttermilk biscuits (refrigerated tubes) 2 large tart apples, peeled and chopped 1 cup powdered sugar 1 tablespoon milk

In a large bowl, mix granulated sugar and cinnamon. Cut each biscuit into 4 pieces and add to the bowl with the cinnamon and sugar, along with the apples. Toss many times to coat. Heat oven to 350 F. Transfer coated biscuits and apples into a greased bundt pan. Pour butter evenly over top, then press down lightly on the top. Bake 40 to 45 minutes or until golden brown across top and a toothpick comes out clean. Cool 10 minutes, then run knife around edge of pan to loosen. Place heatproof serving plate over pan and flip over. Slowly loosen pan from bread. Whisk together powdered sugar and milk into an icing. Drizzle icing over bread. (If icing doesn’t drizzle easily, add a little more milk.) Bread is easy to serve and eat — just pull apart into chunks with your hands!

Per serving: 556 calories, 22 grams fat (10 grams saturated fat), 15 milligrams cholesterol, 1,237 milligrams sodium, 84 grams total carbohydrates, 4 grams fiber, 8 grams protein.

FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  13 GOOD EATS
RECIPES AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY CATHERINE MURRAY

Prep: 15 minutes | Cook: 20 minutes | Servings: 6 ½ cup bread crumbs Small sweet onion, minced 4 cloves garlic, minced 1 tablespoon ground coriander 2 teaspoons cinnamon

1 teaspoon dried mint 1 teaspoon dried oregano 1 teaspoon salt

teaspoon black pepper 1 lemon, zested and juiced

GREEK MEATBALLS

1 pound lean ground beef or lamb

In a large bowl, mix together breadcrumbs, onion, half of the minced garlic, coriander, cinnamon, mint, oregano, salt, pepper, and lemon zest. Add in ground meat and egg, incorporating with your hands. If you have some extra time, refrigerate mixture for 30 to 60 minutes — it will help the meatballs hold their shape.

Form mixture into 1-inch meatballs. Dredge each in flour, coating lightly then shaking off excess. Heat olive oil in medium skillet over medium-high heat. Add some meatballs, leaving space in between them. Cook 5 to 7 minutes, rolling them around to cook evenly. Transfer meatballs to a plate covered with a paper towel to soak up excess oil. Repeat with remaining meatballs. Make Tzatziki sauce by mixing together the remaining half of the minced garlic, lemon juice, sour cream, cucumber, and dill. Dip meatballs in the accompanying Tzatziki sauce as an appetizer, or serve both on top of a pita, Greek salad, or rice bowl for a full meal.

Per serving: 355 calories, 20 grams fat (9 grams saturated fat), 111 milligrams cholesterol, 551 milligrams sodium, 18 grams total carbohydrates, 2 grams fiber, 27 grams protein.

½
1 egg ¼ cup flour ¼ cup olive oil 1 cup sour cream or plain Greek yogurt 1 small cucumber, minced 1 teaspoon dill
14  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

Prep: 10 minutes | Bake: 60 minutes | Servings: 2

Stu ed sweet potatoes

2 medium sweet potatoes

2 tablespoons cinnamon butter (recipe at right)

4 tablespoons chopped pecans

1 banana, sliced

½ cup miniature marshmallows

Cinnamon butter

1 stick unsalted butter, softened

1 tablespoon honey

½ tablespoon powdered sugar

1½ tablespoons ground cinnamon

NOTE: Try the cinnamon butter on pancakes, mu ns, biscuits, toast, and peanut butter sandwiches. The stu ed sweet potatoes are perfect for a decadent breakfast or warming winter dessert.

Preheat oven to 400 F. Poke some holes in the skin of the sweet potatoes with a fork and place on a baking sheet. (Sweet potatoes leak sticky syrup when baking.) Bake 45 to 60 minutes, or until potatoes are soft when lightly squeezed. Meanwhile, make cinnamon butter by combining butter, honey, powdered sugar, and cinnamon with an immersion blender or food processor. Set aside.

Remove potatoes from oven and cool on baking sheet for a few minutes until they’re easier to handle. Slice potatoes in half lengthwise and fluff/mash the insides a bit with a fork. Slather cinnamon butter over the open potatoes, tuck in banana slices and sprinkle with marshmallows, pecans, and some extra cinnamon. Turn oven to broil and place baking sheet back in the oven, keeping a close eye. Warm and toast marshmallows to your desired color. Serve while hot.

Per serving: 521 calories, 22 grams fat (8 grams saturated fat), 31 milligrams cholesterol, 254 milligrams sodium, 80 grams total carbohydrates, 12 grams fiber, 5 grams protein.

CINNAMON BUTTER-STUFFED SWEET POTATOES

FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  15

Prep: 5 minutes | Cook: 45 minutes | Servings: 4

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 large onion, diced

2 large carrots, diced

3 to 4 cups chopped Swiss chard (separate stems from leaves)

3 cloves garlic, minced

2 tablespoons fresh grated ginger (peeled)

1 teaspoon ground cumin

1 teaspoon ground coriander

1 teaspoon paprika

½ teaspoon cayenne

1 14.5-ounce can tomatoes

3 15-ounce cans chickpeas, drained and rinsed

1 lemon, juiced

3 cups vegetable stock

2 cinnamon sticks

2 bay leaves

½ cup golden raisins (optional)

Heat olive oil in large pot over medium-high heat. Add onion, carrots, and Swiss chard stems and sauté, 5 to 7 minutes. Add garlic, ginger, cumin, coriander, paprika, and cayenne and sauté another minute or so. Add tomatoes, chickpeas, lemon juice and broth, then stir. If vegetables aren’t fully covered, add a bit of water. Submerge cinnamon sticks and bay leaves. Bring to a boil, then lower heat to medium-low, cover and simmer 30 minutes. Remove cinnamon sticks and bay leaves, stir in Swiss chard leaves and raisins, cook another 5 minutes or so, and serve.

Per serving: 472 calories, 7 grams fat (1 gram saturated fat), 0 milligrams cholesterol, 835 milligrams sodium, 89 grams total carbohydrates, 6 grams fiber, 19 grams protein.

Moroccan Spiced Chickpea Soup

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

www.ohiocoopliving.com

While you’re there, check out a video of a few of our recipes being prepared.

16  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

LOCAL PAGES

KEY CO-OP TOPICS WITH ED

FCC NATIONAL BROADBAND MAP

It has been a long road trying to fill the broadband service gap in the cooperative’s territory. Since 2019, NCE has been working to find a way to ensure the growth of broadband access for you, the members. We have completed countless surveys to provide mountains of data to various entities. We partnered with other organizations to apply for grant funding. I have even personally spoken regularly at meetings of government o cials and agencies to try to encourage them to direct grant dollars toward cooperative territories where the need is the greatest. Your co-op undertook this task because you reached out to make it known you deserve the same kind of service available to those in urban areas. After all, reliable access is no longer a luxury but a requirement for our daily lives.

In January, we sent out a call to action, along with electric cooperatives across the nation, asking members and their communities to share the true reality of internet coverage in their area — as tens of billions of dollars in federal funding became available to help build broadband access to unserved or underserved areas.

The National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) is now beginning to make funding decisions regarding broadband services this summer. We encouraged NCE members to review the nationwide internet coverage maps from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). And many of you responded. Thank you for taking the time to do so.

During this process, members could determine if their location was being accurately represented regarding internet availability. If members found discrepancies, they could file a challenge with the FCC to review their claim and ensure revisions were made before the NTIA finalizes its funding decisions this summer.

NTIA oversees the $42 5 billion Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program — the largest recipient of the historic $65 billion in the 2021 infrastructure law aimed at providing “internet for all.”

The FCC map — which is based on data from internet service providers — will be used to determine where the available resources are allocated. The allocation of BEAD funding to states is expected to be announced by June 30 . That’s why it was crucial for everyone to get involved to ensure the maps were accurate.

BEAD funds will first go to unserved areas (based on the FCC map) lacking internet access speeds of 25 Mbps download and 3 Mbps upload. Then, once a state has a plan to address those areas, the remaining funds will go to underserved areas that lack 100/20 Mbps broadband. Obviously, we would prefer the speeds to be synchronous with a minimum of 100/ 100 Mbps, but this is at least a step in the right direction.

We know the need for broadband service is great, and we will continue to review every avenue possible. Hopefully, the effort everyone puts into ensuring the maps more accurately depicted the service levels available in the coop’s territory bear fruit. Ideally, we will see a significant portion of the funds go toward solving the gap in service.

If you would like to stay up to date with what is happening with broadband, please sign up for our monthly e-newsletter at https://bit.ly/NCEeNews.

OUR OFFICE WILL BE CLOSED ON FEB. 20 IN OBSERVATION OF PRESIDENTS DAY.

NORTH CENTRAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE
FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  17
Ed

Basic service charge and kWh rate adjustment on February bill

At your not-for-profit North Central Electric Cooperative, our goal is to deliver safe, affordable, reliable electricity to our member-owners. Therefore, our rate structure is designed to reflect the co-op’s delivery and power supply costs each year.

Every year, the cooperative conducts a cost-of-service study to ensure these costs will be covered, allowing us to continue providing safe, reliable power at an affordable rate.

Unfortunately, NCE is not immune to the rising inflation costs and supply chain issues we have all been experiencing over the past several months. After careful consideration of the cost-of-service study, we concluded we will need a rate increase in 2023.

What is the “basic service charge”?

Members pay the basic service charge regardless of how much electricity they use each month. This fee offsets some of the fixed costs of providing electric services, such as the cost of poles, wires, transformers, and other necessary equipment. The basic service charge allows the cooperative to keep pace with the cost of ongoing maintenance and replacement of its 1,793 miles of distribution lines.

Saving money through Time-of-Day

In addition to monitoring overall usage, you should familiarize yourself with the Time-of-Day schedule and peak hours (www.ncelec.org/time-day-schedule). As a member of NCE, you know how to make smart energy choices that help you save money. However, when you use electricity can be just as important as how much you use.

Throughout the day, energy use fluctuates based on consumer demand. Typically, households use larger amounts of electricity in the morning when most people are getting ready for their day, and in the evenings when people return from work, cook dinner, wash clothes, and watch television.

These times, when people are using more electricity at the same time, are called “peak hours.” The cost to provide power is higher during these times because of the additional demand for electricity. NCE’s peak times are 2–10 p.m. on weekdays during the summer (May 16 through Sept. 15), and from 6–9 a.m. and 5–10 p.m. on weekdays during the winter (Sept. 16 to May 15).

By shifting some of your energy use to hours when demand is lower, known as “off-peak hours,” you can save money on your energy bills and help keep rates lower.

Here are a few easy ways you can shift energy use to offpeak hours:

• Wash full loads of clothes in cold water during off-peak hours to save money.

• Run the dishwasher right before you go to bed, or air-dry dishes by opening the dishwasher instead of using the heated dry cycle.

• Turn off lights and electronics when not in use.

• Use smart devices to schedule running during off-peak hours (washers, dryers, dishwashers, etc.).

Coming rate adjustments

Beginning with the February 2023 bills, the basic service charge will increase by $3, from $44 to $47. In addition, the per kWh rates will also increase to more accurately reflect the expenses incurred from the generation, transmission, and distribution of electricity. (See new rates in the table.)

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18  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023
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Additionally, a per kWh economic development investment charge will be added in 2023. Residential consumers will see just over one-tenth of one penny per kilowatt-hour in their kWh charges. This adjustment is designed to help the co-op territory compete as a location for companies to create and maintain jobs. It will allow for the addition of new substations and economic development projects. This is a benefit for everyone because it encourages regional economic growth, which will help to level electric rates for all members. Attracting new businesses and helping existing ones grow allows fixed electric costs to be distributed among a greater number of members, which will help us keep our rates as low as possible.

The board of trustees concluded that these adjustments are necessary due to forecasted lower electricity sales, the drastic increase in inflation, the increased costs associated with system maintenance and improvements, rising costs of fuel to generate electricity at our not-for-

profit power plant, and everyday materials to maintain the system.

Furthermore, the Purchased Power Adjustment, which is the per-kilowatt-hour charge (which changes monthly based on several factors including the cost of fuel and environmental controls) billed to us by our electricity generator Buckeye Power, is expected to rise.

In the end, average-use consumer members can expect approximately an 8 35% increase on their total bill. This will vary based on the on-peak and off-peak usage and actual kilowatts used per member.

To see if there is a way to save energy, don’t hesitate to get in touch with our energy advisors by calling the coop during regular business hours. To track your usage, please utilize the SmartHub app located on our website or available for your smartphone. More info here: www.ncelec.org/smarthub.

Energy efficiency tip

Maximize your heating system’s performance by inspecting, cleaning, or replacing air filters once a month or as needed to reduce energy costs and prevent potential damage to your system. Make sure radiators, baseboard heaters, and warm-air registers aren’t blocked so air can flow freely.

FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  18A
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MAKING RELIABILITY A PRIORITY

One of North Central Electric Cooperative’s most important ongoing projects is right-of-way clearing and vegetation management. Keeping power lines clear of tree limbs and brush helps the co-op:

• Reduce power interruptions.

• Improve service reliability.

• Restore outages more quickly.

• Avoid unexpected and costly repairs.

• Create a safer environment for crews and the community.

What is a right-of-way?

A right-of-way is the strip of land underneath or around power lines and transformers that NCE has the right and responsibility to maintain and clear. We must keep trees and other vegetation a proper distance from equipment to prevent harm to people or disruptions in electric service. The area above poles and wires should be completely clear of all vegetation. Keep shrubs and other plants a minimum of 10 feet away from ground transformers.

Why is it important?

Trees and small animals cause a substantial number of power outages every year. While the co-op has little control over the animals, our crews can take steps to reduce the impact of downed trees. Clearing the right-ofway is vital to keeping our members’ power on. Branches and limbs that come into contact with power lines can cause voltage fluctuations, blinking lights, or even an outage for cooperative members.

Right-of-way clearing also keeps your family safer by ensuring tree branches and vegetation do not become energized due to close contact with a downed power line or other electrical equipment. With the ability to carry up to 34,500 volts, a power line touching a tree branch can be incredibly dangerous. Be mindful when around trees that are close to power lines, and make sure children know that climbing trees near power lines or playing near padmounted transformers is extremely dangerous.

Our responsibility

NCE maintains 1,796 miles of line, bringing power to over 9,886 homes and businesses. This gives NCE’s right-ofway maintenance crews a big job to do. Each year, we plan for tree contractors to work in specific areas of the cooperative’s service territory to avoid any potential issues.

How can you help?

It’s best to never plant a tree within 30 feet of an electric pole, keeping taller trees like maple, oak, and spruce at least 60 feet away.

The cooperative will also notify members of tree trimming and other right-of-way maintenance in their area via an automated phone call from our o ce. It’s essential that NCE has an up-to-date phone number for situations like these so you can be made aware of who will be in your area and why. To update this information, call the o ce at 419426-3072 or email nce@fesco-oh.org.

18B  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

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December board meeting highlights

To provide additional transparency to the membership, highlights of the board meetings each month will now be published in the monthly Ohio Cooperative Living (OCL) magazine. Due to the expansive number of topics and discussions, these are only the highlights. In accordance with the Code of Regulations, full meeting minutes are available to all members in-person at the co-op during regular business hours.

Call to Order

• Meeting was called to order at 9:00 a.m.

Attendance

• All trustees were present, as well as legal counsel, general manager, and senior staff (or representative).

Legal Report

• Attorney Brent Howard presented the Code of Regulations red-line version. President Snavely made a motion to send the proposed changes to members for their consideration as part of the 2023 Annual Meeting voting as presented. Motion approved.

Approval of the Consent Agenda

• Consent agenda consisting of prior meeting minutes, new members, collection report, delinquent graph, deceased estates, and outage reports approved.

• A discussion was held about recording names in the meeting minutes specifying who made a motion and who seconded. The board agreed to no longer record the names. Motion carried.

Action Items

• Safety reports, 2023 rate schedules, Administrative Policy 115 approved as presented.

2023 Work Plan and Budget

• Senior staff presented the Wage & Salary Budget, Capital Budget, Expense Budget, Cash Flow Budget, Narrative, and Form 7 Budget to the board. The 2023 budget was approved as presented.

Departmental Reports

• Monthly Financial, Operations, Key Accounts/ Economic Development, Communications, IT, Weekly report, STAC meeting, and Billing department reports reviewed.

• HR reviewed AP Policy 112; changes to dissolve the Code of Regulations Committee (since its job was complete in reviewing the code); and create a new Youth Committee approved as presented.

• Communications reported the 2022 annual meeting cost comparisons and 5 STAR Co-Op award.

• Communications reported David Hawk from District 6 was nominated for the People Fund Board. A motion was made to approve David Hawk to the People Fund Board. Motion carried.

Legal

• NRECA legal reporting service bulletins reviewed. Association/Committee Reports

• Reviewed OEC President’s report.

• Reviewed CFC Solutions report.

• GM VanHoose gave a report on the building updates. Adjournment

The meeting adjourned at 2:03 p.m.

NORTH CENTRAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE
go the extra mile for you Electric co-ops serve 8 consumers per mile of power lines — sometimes even less. Other electric utilities serve 32 or more consumers per mile. Even though we serve fewer consumers along the lines, that won’t stop us from going the extra mile for you, our members, whom we’re proud to serve. FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  18C
Electric co-ops

NORTH CENTRAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES

Trustee nomination petitions available:

BE A PART OF THE COOPERATIVE DIFFERENCE!

Districts 1, 2, and 3 on NCE’s board are up for election in 2023. Nominating petitions will be available Monday, Jan. 9, at the cooperative’s o ce in Attica. The board needs members who understand their community’s needs and are dedicated to helping the cooperative enact policies that help our members and better our community.

Any candidate who wishes to run for a board position must submit 25 member signatures from within their district and an election application by 4:30 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 13. The candidate must be a member in good standing with the electric cooperative, be at least 18 years old, and have received electric service from NCE for at least one year before being elected to the board.

Energy Efficiency:

Tip of the Month

Do you have a home office? Set equipment like printers and scanners to automatically switch to sleep or energy-saver mode when not in use. In addition to saving energy, the equipment will stay cooler, which

will help extend its life. Another way to save in the home office is to use energy-efficient lamps for task lighting. Small lamps use less energy than whole-room lighting.

Former communications intern wins college scholarship through OEC

Kaidan Mathias, our 2022 summer communications intern, has won a Next Generation scholarship through Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives.

The $1,000 scholarship was established to expose young people to the career opportunities available in the rural electric cooperative industry and to give them encouragement and financial assistance in pursuing their careers.

Kaidan worked closely with communications staff writing press releases, magazine articles, and social media copy. She also gained firsthand experience with programs like the Adobe Creative Suite and assisted with member events like the annual meetings and Member Appreciation Day.

Before becoming a cooperative intern, Kaidan participated in the inaugural Seneca CEO program, creating her own business in the process.

Currently, Kaidan is completing her first year at Heidelberg University in Ti n. Seneca CEO is a program for seniors in high school who want to seek entrepreneurship education. The CEO program prepares students to be responsible, enterprising individuals who become entrepreneurial thinkers and contribute to economic development and sustainable communities. If you are interested in more information about a CEO program in your area, please contact the co-op at 800-426-3072 or visit www.senecacountyceo.com.

18D  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

Weather READY

Sign up for your community’s emergency warning system.

Prepare an emergency kit with water bottles, packaged foods, medical supplies, blankets, hats, and gloves.

Be prepared for a winter storm

Winter storms can result in heavy snow, ice buildup, and extreme cold. They can cause closed roads as well as power outages. Take steps now to protect your home and family.

GETTING READY STAYING SAFE

Have snow removal equipment on hand, as well as rock salt to melt ice and snow to improve traction.

Winterize by sealing gaps in windows and exterior doors. Make sure your home is properly insulated.

Take steps to keep pipes from freezing. Learn the location of water supply valves and how to shut them off in case a pipe bursts.

Consider an emergency heating source, such as a woodburning stove or electric space heater.

If a winter storm warning is issued, postpone travel or any outdoor activities.

Stay indoors and dry, if possible, and wear warm clothes. Change wet clothes to avoid the loss of body heat.

Eat regularly and drink plenty of fluids to avoid dehydration. Avoid caffeine and alcohol.

Drive only when necessary. If you must drive, travel on main roads only during daylight hours.

Follow weather updates and be prepared if venturing outside. Winter storms are often accompanied by ice and extreme cold.

THE COLD FACTS

Wind chill can be a grave threat in cold conditions. Wind chill isn’t the actual temperature, but the effect of cold and wind on exposed skin. As wind speed increases, heat is carried away from the body at a faster rate, reducing body temperature.

Blizzards are an extreme form of winter weather. According to the National Weather Service, a blizzard happens when snow accompanied by winds of 35 mph or more reduces visibility to less than a quarter-mile for three hours or longer.

NORTH CENTRAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  19
NORTH CENTRAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE LOCAL PAGES GENERAL MANAGER Edward VanHoose LOCAL PAGES EDITORS Justis A. Clifford, Director of Communications Addie M. Martin, Communications Specialist Holly M. Storrow, Communications Specialist BILL PAYMENT STATIONS Bascom Communications - Bascom Premier Bank - Carey, Civista - New Washington First Federal - New Washington First National Bank - McCutchenville & Sycamore Discount Drug Mart - Upper Sandusky & Willard NORTH CENTRAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE INC. CONTACT 800-426-3072 | 419-426-3072 www.ncelec.org OFFICE 350 Stump Pike Road P.O. Box 475 Attica, Ohio 44807 WEEKDAY OFFICE HOURS 8:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m. 24-hour night depository access HAVE A STORY SUGGESTION? Email your ideas to: NCE@fesco-oh.org 20  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023 BOARD OF TRUSTEES Rodney P. Snavely President, District 4 Michael P. Scherger Vice President, District 6 Kevin E. Bishop Secretary, District 1 Steven J. Seitz Treasurer, District 2 David S. Green Trustee, District 1 Dennis W. Schindler Trustee, District 2 Nick W. Wagner IV Trustee, District 3 Ronald P. Frisch Trustee, District 5 Andrew Brose Trustee, District 7 Attention high school students! Applications are due Feb. 10 Applications are due Feb. 24 $4,100 Need cash for college? We’re giving away in scholarships! To obtain an application: • Visit www.ncelec.org/scholarship • Call 419-426-3072 • Ask your school counselor Sophomores and Juniors! Interested in a life-changing leadership experience in Washington, D.C.? Join youth from all over the country in this once-in-a-lifetime trip. June 17–23, 2023 To obtain an application: Visit www.ncelec.org/youth-tour. Call 419-426-3072. 2023 HAPPY Valentine’s Day! from North Central Electric

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Pee Pee Creek?

Each of Ohio’s unique place names is a chapter in the state’s story.

An Ohio map reads like an autobiography. The names pinned to places — the towns, counties, watercourses, and junctures that you may have never even heard of — tell stories of experience, chance encounters, longings for a better future, or the wistful wishing for a place left behind. Some pay tribute to heroes of the past. Others are curious and comical, leaving one to wonder, “Uh, what were they thinking?”

The gouging push and soggy pull of glaciers and the long steady movement of water shaped the land we see today,

and strongly influenced names given the sinuous blue-line waters draining north to Lake Erie or south toward the Ohio River.

Then there’s the spilling of blood — the clash of cultures and struggle to possess what Native Americans, the British, and a fledgling United States of America all wanted to call their own.

Let’s consider the latter first.

Je 22  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

Four Mile Creek, for example, rises in the uplands along the Indiana-Ohio state line, picking up the waters of small rills and runs and seeps. It bumps into glacial moraines and purls through pastoral farmsteads on its downhill destiny with the Great Miami River — by which time it has become a substantial stream. Its placid form and lyrical name belie the fact it was born from warfare.

In October 1791, the entirety of the U.S. Army set out from a freshly built Fort Hamilton (named to honor Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton) and nested on a bench of land above the Great Miami River. The autumn foray would become a march to massacre. The soldiers, in a slow slog north, cut a road in a wide swath through virgin forest. Four miles from the fort’s gate, the army camped for a night along a stream. The next day, three miles on, they crossed Seven Mile Creek. A month later, on the headwaters of the Wabash River, they met a confederation of Indian tribes and suffered a crushing defeat.

It became known as St. Clair’s Defeat. The battle site where upwards of 800 soldiers exhaled their last is today’s Fort Recovery. Those vanquished under the command of the Miami leader, Little Turtle, or the Shawnee leader, Blue Jacket — such as Arthur St. Clair, Richard Butler, and William Darke — live on in stream, county, and township names.

Of course, Native American place names also persist in Ohio. The difference is that they tend to be descriptive, rather than tributes to people or commemorative of experiences. “Miami,” of course, lives large in Ohio. According to linguist David Costa of the Myaamia Project at Miami University in Oxford, the Great and Little Miami river names include an adopted English use of the original Myaamia, meaning “downstream person.”

According to Costa, Miami Indians knew the Great Miami River as ahseni siipiiwi, literally “Rock River.” Lake Erie was known as ciinkwihtanwi kihcikami, literally “sea of the falls,” referring to Niagara Falls downstream. St. Mary’s River on the Indiana-Ohio state line was nameewa siipiiwi, literally “sturgeon river.”

You won’t find any of those on a map, though you will find numerous Anglicized versions of Algonquin and Iroquois words — Coshocton, for example, comes from the Lenape/Delaware word goschachgunk, which simply signified a river crossing.

Ohio has a fair number of communities with stilted names that speak to high aims of its early settlers. Akron derives from Greek for “high place.” Gallipolis evokes a sense of the Greek city-state self-governance. Xenia reflects the hospitality expected in the home in classical Greece.

Alert Station is a curious hamlet near Ross (formerly Venice, corrupted from Venus), northwest of Cincinnati (so-named after the Roman soldier-farmer Cincinnatus). Alert was and remains a crossroads. But those pioneer settlers valued literature and ensured early on they had a library populated with the classics, and the folks there were considered “alert,” as in “intellectual.”

Ohio had no shortage of volunteers answering President Polk’s call to action against Mexico in 1846. A good many Ohioans served in the Mexican War, and the effect of their return in 1848 was certainly felt in new place names. The soldiers may have desired to memorialize those killed in action, or they romanticized the places and people they had met in what is now New Mexico, California, and interior Mexico. Most prominent is Rio Grande, Ohio, pronounced “RYE-O Grand.” And there are the Buckeye burgs of Vera Cruz, Monterey, and Montezuma, as well as the City of Holy Faith: Santa Fe, Ohio.

One cannot consider the topic of Ohio’s place names without addressing those that leave you scratching your head. Ever heard of No Name, Knockemstiff, or Pee Pee Creek? All three exist in southern Ohio, and it’s the origin of the last that’s well-documented. Pee Pee Creek trickles through Pebble Township in Pike County, which had been named by Peter Patrick — who had carved his initials in a stream-side tree circa 1785

Ohio’s place names run the spectrum from commonplace to implausible. One can go to Russia, visit Rome, London and Paris, and take a drive through Mesopotamia — without ever leaving the state. Every place name relates to desires, experience and perception. And what they have in common across that spectrum is enchantment in the spirit of their origins.

FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  23

Sweettooth

Harry Birt’s store has it all — but that candy section keeps the doors open.

Afaded sign inside this Darke County institution proudly proclaims the store motto: “A balanced diet is chocolate in both hands.” Sweetness certainly comes in all shapes, sizes, colors, and flavors at Birt’s Store in the village of New Weston.

The rustic shop typically stocks 350 varieties of candy as Valentine’s Day approaches. Decisions are even tougher at Christmastime, as the shelves get stocked with more than 525 varieties, according to third-generation owner Brad Birt.

Double-dipped chocolate peanuts, maple-filled chocolate peanut clusters, chocolate-covered caramels, and

Brad Birt, representing the third generation of his family to sell candy from the Darke County store, displays some of the sweet treats available in the candy aisle

chocolate drops top the list of favorites. After all, the love of chocolate spans all seasons.

Birt’s grandfather, Harry Birt Sr., unwittingly started a family tradition in the 1920s when he added five cases of white peppermint lozenges, orange slices, and chocolate drops to his general store shelves. The candy arrived via caboose at a nearby train depot, but it was evident that crew members had sampled plenty along the way.

Harry Birt Jr., who came on board after World War II, recognized the importance of establishing a niche market in the form of more candy, fresh fruits and vegetables, and deli meats and cheeses. He initially used the family

24  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

station wagon to pick up orders directly from suppliers. Trucks came later.

“My dad believed people would come if you offered a great product at a reasonable price,” Brad Birt says. “We have built a reputation over decades, and you don’t try to fix something that isn’t broke.”

The store deals with dozens of suppliers who share a commitment to quality, requiring regular trips covering Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania.

Holiday shoppers grab silver scoops and white paper sacks to make their bulk selections — though chocolates and other specialties are prepackaged at other times of the year.

“Tastes change with age,” Birt says. “Kids are into sour candies and gummy anything these days. Everybody else wants chocolate, chocolate, chocolate, or the candy they grew up with. Folks do a lot of reminiscing up and down the aisles.”

Tiered shelves offer a smorgasbord of chocolates: flavored creams, assorted fruits, nuts, fudge clusters, and even coated animal crackers and sandwich cookies. Tenpound slabs of chocolate and 5-pound chunks of caramel are popular with at-home candymakers.

Individually wrapped candies like Tootsie Rolls, taffy, and Bit-O-Honey vie for space with flavored jelly beans, jumbo malted milk balls, divinity, old-fashioned hard tack candy, and 1-pound jawbreakers.

“My grandfather dealt with candy by the pound,” Birt says. “We deal with candy by the ton. Candy is our niche. It’s what keeps the doors open.”

Harry Birt’s Store, 501 Main St., New Weston. Open seven days a week. www.harybirtsstore.com, www.facebook.com/HarryBirtsStore; 937-338-3111.

FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  25

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MAD RIVER MOUNTAIN

Ohio’s largest ski resort turns 70 this year.

28  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

When he was 12, John Buchenroth received a Christmas gift of $10, which was a considerable sum in 1962. It turned out to be a life-changing gift for the Bellefontaine youngster. Three days later, he put on warm clothes and took his money to the area’s new Alpine ski resort, which had opened for its first season a few days before Christmas that year.

“It was my first day of skiing,” recalls Buchenroth, 73. “The lift ticket was a dollar-fifty, rental was a buck, my first lesson was a buck-fifty. And I fell in love with the sport.”

Sixty ski seasons later, Buchenroth is still in love — and he’s passed along his enthusiasm for skiing to thousands of beginners who have strapped on their first pair of skis at the Logan County resort now known as Mad River Mountain. Buchenroth is supervisor of the Ski and Ride School at Mad River, which celebrates its 60th anniversary this season.

Mad River has been owned by Vail Resorts since 2019, when the Colorado-based company purchased all 17 properties previously owned by Peak Resorts, Inc., including three other Ohio resorts. Mad River isn’t the oldest resort in Ohio — Snow Trails in Mansfield opened a year earlier — but it lays claim to being the largest in the Buckeye State, covering 144 acres, with a peak elevation of 1,460 feet above sea level.

The vertical drop is just 300 feet, a molehill compared to ski mountains out West (Vail, the flagship of Mad River’s corporate owner, boasts a vertical drop of 3,450 feet), but this humble Ohio ski hill has been the resort where generations of central Ohioans have learned to ski, either on their own or with their school ski clubs. Olympic and X Games snowboarder Louie Vito, who learned to ski at Mad River, went on to be a superstar. Most others simply move on to bigger mountains but bring their kids back to Mad River to get their start.

“We’re teaching kids and grandkids of people we have had in our programs,” Buchenroth says. Located in the tiny village of Valley Hi, just outside of Bellefontaine, Mad River Mountain offers 20 ski runs, from the beginner area at the base of the hill to steeper, more challenging slopes and one wooded glade. There is a terrain park for Alpine acrobatics and a tubing park touted as Ohio’s largest. With Ohio winters unpredictable for snow, snowmaking is a must at all Ohio ski resorts, and Mad River has 128 snow guns, capable of covering all 144 skiable acres.

The resort’s new-ish lodge opened in 2016 after a fire destroyed the original lodge in 2015. The new lodge has increased capacity, seating 800 hungry skiers in the cafeteria and about 200 in The Loft bar.

FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  29
Staff members at Mad River Mountain (left) work to ensure a great skiing and tubing experience for all who visit. John Buchenroth (right) fell in love with skiing as a child, after he took his first lesson at Mad River. He now supervises the resort’s Ski and Ride School.
30  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023

The first couple of years have been a bit rocky for the new owners. The ski industry nationwide took a big hit during the pandemic, and operations during the 2021–22 season at Mad River were curtailed due to labor shortages and warm weather in December, which delayed the resort’s opening until Jan. 6, says Larry Kuebler, general manager of Mad River.

“We got a late start [and] we took away some operating hours, and people were not thrilled with that,” he says. “I don’t blame them one bit.”

Kuebler was optimistic as he was preparing for the opening of the 2022–23 season. Vail Resorts promised a $20-an-hour minimum wage for all positions, and Mad River started the season fully staffed, which has allowed a return to normal operating hours. Plans for the 60th anniversary season include weekly events, expanded menu offerings in the lodge, and a return to live music in the bar.

Vail Resorts considers attendance figures to be proprietary, Kuebler said. Prior to the pandemic, the resort’s previous owners said publicly that the ski hill sees about 150,000 skier visits and 40,000 tuber visits per season. Most come from Columbus, Dayton, and other mid-Ohio locations.

“We have so many passionate skiers who have been skiing here for so long, and they’re proud to call it home,” Kuebler says.

Over the past couple of decades, downhill skiing has witnessed a participation slump as Baby Boomers are aging out of the sport and not as many younger people are picking it up. Keubler said Mad River’s response has been to focus on recruiting new skiers and getting them involved in the ski school.

“If we’re going to help the overall industry, we have to focus on getting them to love the sport as we do,” he says.

School groups can be found at Mad River every night of the week. Many young skiers learn the sport through their school ski clubs, including Brady Whiteside, 18, a graduate of Hilliard Davidson High School who started snowboarding at Mad River in the seventh grade.

He learned to ski from Mad River instructors, who “taught us the basics” and inspired self-assurance, Whiteside says, so that later, when he began traveling to ski the much longer and steeper runs at Colorado resorts like Winter Park and Arapahoe Basin, he had confidence in his ability.

“You can only prepare so much for those crazy trails [in Colorado], but they took me as far as I could [at a hill the size of Mad River].”

Now a freshman at Ohio State University, Whiteside says Mad River can seem small, after skiing the big western mountains, but he will be going back to the local hill this winter.

“It’s close, and when I go to Mad River, I’m going to snowboard with friends,” he says. “We make our own fun.”

FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  31
Children have been learning to ski on the slopes at Mad River Mountain since 1962. Today, families enjoy skiing and snowboarding on the resort’s 20 trails and snow tubing on the runs of Ohio’s largest tubing park.
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2023 CALENDAR FEBRUARY/MARCH

NORTHWEST

FEB. 9–19 – The Lion in Winter, Van Wert Civic Theatre, 118 S. Race St., Van Wert, Thur.–Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. Set during Christmas 1183, the play tells the wickedly amusing tale of King Henry II, his imprisoned queen (released only for the holiday), and their three entitled sons who vie for the throne in a double-dealing division of the kingdom. 419-238-9689 or www.vwct.org.

FEB. 17 – Mitchell Tenpenny, Veterans Memorial Civic and Convention Center., 7 Town Square, Lima, 7:30 p.m. Rising country star brings his debut tour to Lima. 419-224-1552 or www.limaciviccenter.com.

FEB. 19–20 – Horse-Drawn Sleigh Rides, Spiegel Grove, Hayes Presidential Library and Museums, Fremont. Celebrate Presidents Day by taking a horse-drawn sleigh or trolley ride through the estate, as President Hayes did when he lived here. $5 50 sleigh, $4 50 trolley, 2 and under free. 800-998-7737 or www.rbhayes.org.

WEST VIRGINIA

FEB. 24–26, MAR. 3–5 – Walking Across Egypt, Encore Theatre, 991 N. Shore Dr., Lima, Fri./Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. $8–$15. A spirited elderly widow decides to befriend and adopt an orphaned juvenile delinquent. 419-223-8866 or www.amitellers.org.

FEB. 25 – Burning Snowman Fest, Dock’s Beach House, 252 W. Lakeshore Dr., Port Clinton, 4–10 p.m. Say goodbye to winter with the burning of a giant snowman! Live music, food, and drink; all proceeds go to charity. 419-357-6247 or www.facebook.com/ BurningSnowman.

FEB. 25 – Menopause the Musical, Niswonger Performing Arts Ctr., 10700 St. Rte. 118 S., Van Wert, 3 p.m. $39–$69 419-238-6722 or www.npacvw.org.

MAR. 3 – Air Supply: “The Lost in Love Experience,” Niswonger Performing Arts Center, 10700 St. Rte. 118 S., Van Wert, 7:30 p.m. $65–$95 419-238-6722 or www.npacvw.org.

MAR. 4 – Glass City Wine Festival, Glass City Center, 401 Jefferson Ave., Toledo. $25–$40. Toledo’s premier wine, food, and shopping festival. 419-255-3300 or www.glasscitywinefestival.com.

MAR. 5 – Acoustics for Autism Music Festival, 300 block of Conant and surrounding area, Maumee,

Sat. noon–Sun. 2 a.m. Free for all ages. More than 80 bands on eight stages. Proceeds go to provide support and information, resources, and financial assistance to families affected by autism. 419-5149817 or www.acousticsforautism.com.

MAR. 9 – Toledo Symphony Concert, Sauder Village, Founder’s Hall, 22611 St. Rte. 2, Archbold, 7:30 p.m. $15–$18; free for students K–12 800-590-9755 or www.saudervillage.org.

MAR. 12–13 – Spring Festival of Crafts, Premier Banquet Hall, 4480 Heatherdowns Blvd., Toledo, Sat. 9 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. Free. New location! See the new crafts, gifts, and decorating ideas from our crafters and artists. Collecting household and food items to benefit Toledo SeaGate Food Bank. 419-842-1925 or www.toledocraftsmansguild.org/shows.html.

MAR. 13 – My Fair Lady, Veterans Memorial Civic and Convention Center., 7 Town Square, Lima, 7:30 p.m. $45+. Entertainment Weekly calls this “a sumptuous new production of the most perfect musical of all time.” Directed by Bartlett Sher. 419-224-1552 or www.limaciviccenter.com.

FEB. 26 – West Virginia’s Premier Wedding Expo, The Morris, 411 N. 6th St., Clarksburg, 1–3 p.m. $15. Find everything you need to plan your special day. Meet the area’s leading wedding professionals in a fun environment with other engaged people. https:// infinitystudioseventplanning.com/wedding-expofebruary-2023

MAR. 11-12 – Kanawha Valley Railroad Association Model Train and Craft Show, Charleston Coliseum and Convention Center, 200 Civic Center Dr., Charleston, Sat. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $5; 12 and under free. Vendors, clinics, and layouts. www.kvrailroad.org/events.html.

COMPILED BY COLLEEN ROMICK CLARK
Make sure you’re included in our calendar! Submit listings AT LEAST 90 DAYS prior to the event to: Ohio Cooperative Living 6677 Busch Blvd. Columbus, OH 43229 or send an email to events@ohioec.org. Ohio Cooperative Living will not publish listings that don’t include a complete address or a number/website for more information. FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  33

THROUGH FEB. 25 – “The Me Decade: A Look Back at the 1970s,” McKinley Museum, Keller Gallery, 800 McKinley Monument Dr. N., Canton, Tues.–Sat., 9 a.m.–4 p.m. $8–$10. Featuring ’70s fashion, décor, appliances, pop culture objects, and commemorative items from the nation’s bicentennial celebration in 1976. 330-455-7043 or http://mckinleymuseum.org.

FEB. 11 – Lake Erie Folk Fest, Shore Cultural Centre, 291 E. 222nd St., Euclid. 1–6 p.m., free music workshops, jams, and performances; 7:30 p.m., Grand Finale concert (tickets required). www.lakeeriefolkfest.com.

FEB. 17 – Kent BeatleFest, downtown Kent. Free. Come together for the annual celebration of the Fab Four’s music, featuring a stellar lineup of bands at various venues throughout the downtown. www.kentbeatlefest.com or www.facebook.com/ KentBeatleFest.

FEB. 24–MAR. 5 – Cleveland Auto Show, I-X Center, One I-X Dr., Cleveland. $15, Srs./C. (7–12) $12, under 7 free. Featuring concept, pre-production, and

SOUTHEAST

production vehicles, plus an array of entertainment including sports and celebrity appearances, indoor test drives, vehicle giveaway, classic car competition, and more. www.clevelandautoshow.com.

FEB. 25 – Brite Winter, West Bank of the Flats, Cleveland, Sat. 3 p.m.–Sun. 1 a.m. Premier wintertime festival featuring diverse musical acts, artwork, fun outdoor activities, food and beer trucks, and more. www.britewinter.com.

FEB. 25 – Ohio Boating Education Course, Cleveland Watercraft Office, 1150 E. 49th St., Cleveland, 8 a.m.–5 p.m. Free. Fulfills Ohio’s mandatory boater education law requirements. 216-361-1212 or https://ohiodnr.gov/home/news-andevents/all-events/parks-wc-events.

MAR. 2–4 – Ohio Amish Country Home and Garden Show, Chestnut Ridge Sewing, 5079 Township Rd. 401, Millersburg. www.chestnutridgesewing.com.

MAR. 4–5, 11–12 – Maple Syrup Festival, Malabar Farm State Park, 4050 Bromfield Rd., Lucas, 12–4 p.m. Free. Experience the sugar camp at Malabar Farm with live historical demonstrations. Horse-drawn wagon rides, food, and maple products for sale. 419-892-2784 or www.malabarfarm.org.

MAR. 4–5, 11–12 – Maple Sugar Festival and Pancake Breakfast, Hale Farm and Village, 2686 Oak Hill Rd., Bath, 9 a.m.–5 p.m. Enjoy a hearty pancake breakfast and then head out to learn about tree tapping and maple sugar and syrup production. Watch evaporator demonstrations, hear stories about maple traditions, see seasonal cooking demonstrations, and more. www.wrhs.org/signature-events.

MAR. 5 – World Tour of Music: Les Délices, AkronSummit County Public Library, 60 S. High St., Akron,

necessary! 740-596-3030, www.facebook.com/ LakeHopeStatePark, or www.ohiodnr.gov.

FEB. 18 – Great Backyard Bird Count, Burr Oak State Park, 9:30–11:30 a.m. Free. We’ll identify and count all the birds we see on a 1 5-mile hike. Bring binoculars or borrow a pair from the nature center. Dress for the weather. 740-767-3570, www.facebook. com/BurrOakStatePark, or www.ohiodnr.gov.

2–4 p.m. Free, but reservations recommended. The Cleveland-based early music ensemble, led by baroque oboist Debra Nagy, will present an afternoon of medieval music. Firestone high school choir students will also perform. 419-853-6016 or www.ormaco.org.

MAR. 11 – Dane Vannatter Trio: “Come to the Cabaret,” Williams on the Lake, 787 Lafayette Rd., Medina, 6–9:30 p.m. $60. Enjoy an evening of favorite tunes from the American Songbook, as well as appetizers and drinks, a dinner buffet, desserts, and an auction to benefit ORMACO’s outreach programs. Book early to avoid disappointment: 419-853-6016 or www.ormaco.org.

MAR. 11–12 – Rocky River Spring Avant-Garde Art and Craft Show, Rocky River Memorial Hall, 21016 Hilliard Blvd., Rocky River, Sat. 10 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. $3, under 12 free. Large show featuring artists and crafters selling their original handmade items. Full concession stand. 440-227-8794 or www.avantgardeshows.com.

MAR. 12 – Cleveland Comic Book and Nostalgia Festival, Doubletree by Hilton Cleveland/ Westlake, 1100 Crocker Rd., Westlake, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $5; 6 and under free. Comic and toy vendors, guest comic creators, hourly prizes. 330-462-3985 or www.harpercomics.com

MAR. 12 – “Moustache Yourself: Gypsy Jazz,” Wadsworth Public Library, 132 Broad St., Wadsworth, 2–3 p.m. Free; reservations recommended. The northeast Ohio–based band Moustache will bring to life the style of music that originates with Romani guitarist Jean “Django” Reinhardt and French swing violinist Stéphane Grappelli. 419-853-6016 or www.ormaco.org.

as blacksmiths, tinsmiths, horn makers, leather workers, and cabinetmakers. Also gunmakers’ supplies and books. 740-373-3750 or www. campusmartiusmuseum.org.

FEB. 11 – Valentine’s Chocolate Extravaganza, 118 S. Paul St., Woodsfield, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Contact 740-472-4848 with any questions.

FEB. 16 – Chamber of Commerce Annual Dinner, Pritchard Laughlin Civic Ctr., 7033 Glenn Highway, Cambridge. 740-439-6688 or https:// cambridgeohiochamber.com.

FEB. 17 – Great Backyard Bird Count, Lake Hope State Park, Nature Center, 27331 St. Rte. 278, McArthur, noon–4 p.m. Free. Come out to assist us with this global citizen science project to identify and count bird species. No prior birding experience

FEB. 18 – Stonehouse Trail Nature Hike, Salt Fork State Park, 14755 Cadiz Rd., Lore City, 11 a.m.–1 p.m., weather permitting. Free. Join the naturalist on a moderately difficult 1 8-mile nature hike to the historic Kennedy Stonehouse. Weather-appropriate clothes and sturdy shoes recommended. 740-630-6105 (John Hickenbottom), www.facebook.com/saltforkstatepark, or www.ohiodnr.gov.

FEB. 18 – “Skunk Cabbage Caravan,” Shawnee State Park Lodge, 3–5 p.m. Free. Carpool to Bear Lake in Shawnee Forest to see a beautiful winter blooming plant with a very interesting life history. Dress in layers, wear waterproof boots, and be prepared to walk a short distance off trail along a stream. 740-858-6652, www.facebook.com/ ShawneeStatePark, or www.ohiodnr.gov.

FEB. 18 – “Contemporary Gunmakers and Allied Artists,” Campus Martius Museum, 601 Second St., Marietta, 9:30 a.m.– 4 p.m. Features the work of several dozen traditional gunmakers as well

FEB. 25 – “Visit the Nature Nook,” Shawnee State Park Lodge, 4404 St. Rte. 125, West Portsmouth, noon–3 p.m. Free. Visit with our animal ambassadors in the Shawnee Lodge Nature Nook. 740-858-6652, www.facebook.com/ShawneeStatePark, or www.ohiodnr.gov.

MAR. 5 – “An Afternoon with Fran Leibowitz,” Peoples Theatre, Marietta, 3 p.m. Free. Marietta College welcomes the Emmy-nominated author, journalist, and social commentator. www.marietta. edu/event/esbenshade-series-fran-lebowitz or www.peoplesbanktheatre.com.

MAR. 10–12 – Home, Garden, and Business Expo, Pritchard Laughlin Civic Ctr., 7033 Glenn Hwy., Cambridge. 740-439-6688 or www. cambridgeohiochamber.com.

MAR. 11 – “An Insider’s Tour,” Campus Martius Museum, 601 Second St., Marietta, 1:30–3:30 p.m. $10 + museum admission. Take a deeper look at the early settlers who are the focus of David McCullough’s book The Pioneers. Tour the home of General Rufus Putnam. Registration required. 740373-3750 or www.campusmartiusmuseum.org.

2023
CALENDAR FEBRUARY/MARCH
34  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023
NORTHEAST

FEB. 17 – Great Backyard Bird Count 4-Mile Hike, Alum Creek State Park, New Galena Picnic Area, 4550 Africa Rd., Galena, 8:30–11 a.m. Free. We will identify and count all the birds we see and hear on our hike. Dress for the weather; bring binoculars. 740513-6382 (Lindsey Krusling) or www.facebook.com/ AlumCreekStatePark.

FEB. 17–19 – Chasing Charming, Marion Palace Theatre, 276 W. Center St., Marion, Fri./Sat. 7 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. $15–$22. Featuring a cast of local youth. 740-383-2101 or www.marionpalace.org.

FEB. 18 – “Basic Landscape Design,” Franklin Park Conservatory, 1777 E. Broad St., Columbus, 11 a.m.–1 p.m. $20–$25. Learn the basic design principles of color, texture, scale, rhythm, repetition, and form and how these principles can be used to create a customized garden mixed with trees, shrubs, perennials, annuals, and bulbs. Register at www. fpconservatory.org/events/basic-landscape-design.

FEB. 18 – Winter Hike, A.W. Marion State Park, 7317 Warner-Huffer Rd., Circleville, 2–4 p.m. Free. Join us for a 2-mile hike along the northern shore of Hargus Lake. Moderately difficult trail; may not be suitable for young children or those with a physical impediment. Dress for the weather; bring water. 740-527-4008

or https://ohiodnr.gov/go-and-do/plan-a-visit/find-aproperty/a-w-marion-state-park.

FEB. 18–26 – Spring Home and Garden Show, Ohio Expo Center, Bricker and Celeste Bldgs.., 717 E. 11th St., Columbus, Sat. 11 a.m.–8 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–6 p.m., weekdays 11 a.m.–7 p.m. $8–$10; 17 and under free. Connect with local experts for advice and find the best products and services for making every space of your home more functional and beautiful. www.dispatchshows.com/home-and-garden-show.

FEB. 19 – Fairfield County Antique Tractor Club Toy and Tractor Show, Fairfield Co. Fgds., AAA Bldg., 157 E. Fair Ave., Lancaster, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. $2, under 12 free. Two large, heated buildings with toys and displays. Lunch served by local 4-H group. 740-407-2347 (Doug Shaw) or www.fairfieldcountytractorclub.com.

FEB. 24 – Michael Cavanaugh, Marion Palace Theatre, 276 W. Center St., Marion, Fri./Sat. 7:30 p.m. $28–$38. Tony and Grammy–nominated star of the Broadway musical Movin’ Out performs the greatest hits of Billy Joel and Elton John. 740-383-2101 or www.marionpalace.org.

FEB. 25 – Paul Francis Quartet, Majestic Theatre, 45 E. Second St., Chillicothe, 7:30 p.m. $15–$20. Grammy Award-winning drummer, educator, and Chillicothe native Paul Francis returns to perform at the historic theater. www.majesticchillicothe.net.

FEB. 25–26 – Maple Syrup Tours, Dawes Arboretum, Main Shelter House, 7770 Jacksontown Rd., Newark, 1–3 p.m. Walk along the trail to discover the many ways syrup has been made throughout history. Peek inside the log cabin, and taste a sample of this all-natural treat! Tours are first come, first served. 740323-2355 or www.dawesarb.org.

FEB. 25–26 – Scott Antique Market, Ohio Expo Ctr., Voinovich Bldg., 717 E. 17th Ave., Columbus, Sat. 9 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Free; $5 parking. 800 exhibit booths. info@scottantiquemarket.com or www. scottantiquemarkets.com.

FEB. 20 – Monday Music Night: McIntyre Bluegrass Trio, Centerville Library, 111 W. Spring Valley Pike, Centerville, 7–8 p.m. Free. Enjoy lively banjo, fiddle, and guitar music performed by Vernon and Kitty McIntyre and guest Robert Campbell. 937-433-8091

FEB. 25 – TCA Ohio River Chapter Train Meet, American Legion Hall, 11100 Winton Rd., Cincinnati, 8 a.m.–2 p.m. for members; 10 a.m.–2 p.m. for the public. 513-256-9955 (Dan Miller). steamsparkles@ aol.com, or www.tcatrains.org/event/ohio-riverchapter-train-meet-7

MAR. 2–5 – Arnold Sports Festival and Arnold Expo, Columbus Convention Center, 400 N. High St., Columbus, Fri./Sat. 10 a.m.–7 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Three-day, daily, and individual competition tickets. Nearly 1,000 booths of the latest in sports nutrition, apparel, and equipment, plus four stages of unique, non-stop competitions and entertainment. www.arnoldsports.com.

MAR. 4 – “Planning a Year of Vegetables,” Franklin Park Conservatory, 1777 E. Broad St., Columbus, 1–2:30 p.m. $20–$25. From seed selection to vegetable varieties and everything in between, you will learn how to plan a garden to provide you with a full year of vegetables, grown in your own yard! Register at www. fpconservatory.org/events/vegetable-planning.

MAR. 5 – Buckeye Comic Con, Courtyard Marriott Columbus West, 2350 Westbelt Dr., Columbus, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $5; 6 and under free. Comic and toy vendors, guest comic creators, hourly prizes. 330-462-3985 or www.harpercomics.com.

MAR. 10–12 – All American Columbus Pet Expo, Ohio Expo Center, Bricker and Ohio Bldgs., 717 E. 17th Ave., Columbus, Fri. noon–8 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–7 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–5 p.m. Includes the Pet Expo, the All About Cats Expo, and the Mega Pet Adoption. www.allaboutcatsexpo.com.

MAR. 11 – Columbus Beer Festival, COSI, 333 W. Broad St., Columbus, 8–11 p.m. $50; early admission at 7 p.m., $65. Featuring over 50 breweries, 150 beers, and access to all the museum’s exhibits, plus some special surprises. Admission includes beer tastings, with food sold separately. www.columbusbrewfestival.com.

MAR. 12 – New Albany Symphony Orchestra: “Ellington Price Still,” McCoy Center, 100 W. Dublin-Granville Rd., New Albany, 3–4 p.m. $14–$22 Featuring the works of Duke Ellington, Florence Price, and William Grant Still. 614-469-0939 or www.newalbanysymphony.com.

11 a.m.–5 p.m., $10 admission good both days. Preview 9–11 a.m., $30; includes show pass. Under 18 free. One of the best modern design shows in the country. Over 50 sellers offering midcentury furniture, lighting, decorative objects, housewares, pop culture memorabilia, and fashion. 513-951-6626 or www.20thcenturycincinnati.com.

FEB. 25–26, MAR. 2–5 – Cincinnati Home and Garden Show, Duke Energy Convention Center, 525 Elm St., Cincinnati, Wed.–Fri. 11 a.m.–8 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–9 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–6 p.m. $13 online, $15 at door. More than 400 exhibitors. www.cincinnatihomeandgardenshow.com.

THROUGH MAR. 29 – Bluegrass Wednesdays, Vinoklet Winery, 11069 Colerain Ave., Cincinnati, Wed. 6:30–8:30 p.m. Free entertainment by Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass. Reservations recommended. 513-385-9309, vinokletwinery@fuse. net, or www.vinokletwines.com.

FEB. 17–19 – Miami County Home and Garden Show, Hobart Arena, 255 Adams St., Troy, Fri. 2–6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $6; 12 and under free. We have everything from outdoor specialists to kitchen and bath renovators to help you plan your next home improvement project. 937339-7963 or www.miamicountyhomeshow.com.

FEB. 18–26 – Princess and Frog, Taft Theater, 317 E. 5th St., Cincinnati. $8–$54. Check website for performance times. 513-569-8080 or www. thechildrenstheatre.com.

FEB. 25 – “Early Signs of Spring,” Rocky Fork State Park, 9800 N. Shore Dr., Hillsboro, 1–2:30 p.m. Free. Join a naturalist on a guided 3-mile hike to search for early signs of spring. 937-393-4284 or www.ohiodnr.gov.

FEB. 25 – Winter Hike, St. Rte. 370, Yellow Springs. Free. Guided 6-mile hike along Little Miami River, departing from John Bryan State Park and stopping midway at Clifton Gorge Nature Center, where hot cocoa and snacks will be served. 937-537-6173 or www.ohiodnr.gov.

FEB. 25–26 – Dayton Off-Road and Outdoor Expo, Roberts Centre, 123 Gano Rd., Wilmington, Sat. 9 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $5; 12 and under free. Vendors, Jeeps, monster trucks, and more! Fun for the whole family. 877-428-4748 or www. daytonoffroadexpo.com.

FEB. 25–26 – 20th Century Cincinnati, Sharonville Convention Center., 11355 Chester Rd., Cincinnati,

MAR. 7 – Downtown Downhome Bluegrass, Miami Downtown Downhome, 221 High St., Hamilton, 7–8:30 p.m. Free. Featuring Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass. Enjoy an evening of lively bluegrass music with lightning-fast instrumentals, close harmonies, and entertaining novelty songs. For more information, email vaughnjh@gmail.com.

MAR. 11–12 – Sweet Spring Marketplace, Montgomery Co. Fgds., 645 Infirmary Rd., Dayton, Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–4 p.m. $5; 12 and under free. Early-bird shopping Sat. 8–10 a.m., $7. Over 80 exhibits filled with shabby chic, repurposed, vintage, primitive, farmhouse, country, contemporary, jewelry, clothing, bath and body, home décor, and yummy foods. www.montcofair. com/event/sweet-spring-marketplace-3

CENTRAL
FEBRUARY 2023 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING  35
SOUTHWEST

MEMBER INTERACTIVE

Beautiful barns

For May, send “Junior gardener” by Feb. 15; for June, send “Hook, line, and sinker” by March 15.

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Johnston Farms in Piqua, Ohio, along the branch to the Erie Canal. Rebecca Kidd, Hancock-Wood Electric Cooperative member This one was built by me! John Lind Jr., South Central Power Company member
This is a picture of my barn — I call it “Winter Wonderland.”
Angie Williams, Adams Rural Electric Cooperative member The Biehl family’s Mail Pouch barn at Moss Run, Lawrence Township, Washington County, Ohio. Penny Biehl, Washington Electric Cooperative member Our pole barn in the backyard last year after a snowfall. Shawn Girdler, Butler Rural Electric Cooperative member
36  OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • FEBRUARY 2023
A newly built barn in Enon accented by its lavender fields. Jodi Bird, South Central Power Company member
CCOUNTANTS INTERNS CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVES DISPATCH OPERATORS COMMUNICATORS MARKETERS REGULATORY CONSULTANTS COORDINATORS LINEWORKERS Energize your future with a careerat an electric HUMAN RESOURCE SPECIALISTS IT SPECIALISTS POWER PLANT OPERATORS ENGINEERS WE’RE HIRING! Electric cooperative job opportunities are Ohio’s best kept secret ohioec.org/careers Visit your cooperative’swebsite for career opportunities in your area. Ryan: mission to ensure that Ohio Michelle: understanding thatwe’re hereto serve Bethany: Everyone works toward a common goal: keeping the lights on for the members.” Mike: a stable career, outstanding family-friendly environment.”
30 x 60 x 12 Storage Building - 1 60 foot Sidewall Open - 5 12 foot Bays - 3 foot Overhang on Front 40 x 60 x 12 Garage/Hobby Shop - 2 10x10 Garage Doors - 1 3 foot Entry Door - Soffit/Wainscot Optional Call Toll Free (855) MQS-3334 www.mqsstructures.com Free Estimates
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