OHIO
JANUARY 2024
COOPERATIVE Hancock-Wood Electric Cooperative
Woods, waters, and
What a life! 20 years with Chip Gross
ALSO INSIDE Standing up for co-ops British baking favorites The Kenley Players
We’re building the next generation of leaders by supporting their education through programs like college, technical,, and trades scholarships, and the Washington, D.C.,, Youth Tour.
Contact your electric cooperative's youth program coordinator to learn more about its youth programs.
ohioec.org/education-youth
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
INSIDE FEATURES
22 BROADWAY IN THE HEARTLAND
The Kenley Players brought a dose of big-city glamour to the Buckeye State.
28 WILD KITCHEN
ODNR’s mobile kitchen serves game vittles far and wide — and free!
30 FACTS AND FOIBLES FROM THE FRONT PORCH
The Harding site in Marion tells the story of the last U.S. president to hail from Ohio.
Cover image on most editions: W.H. “Chip” Gross says his “overwhelming fascination and appreciation for the beauty, complexity, and intricacy of the natural world” has been the key to his longevity as Ohio Cooperative Living’s outdoors editor. See page 8 as we mark his 20 years (and counting) with a selection of some of his favorite work through the years (photo by Jan Gross). This page: A Holstein cow gets an upclose look at a visitor to Indian Creek Creamery’s grazing pasture in DeGraff. Owners Colleen and Ray Jackson, members of Logan County Electric Cooperative, founded the creamery in 2019 as an offshoot of their 180-acre dairy farm. See our story on page 26 (photo by Damaine Vonada).
JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
1
UP FRONT
The road ahead J
anuary is always a good time to take stock of things — to prepare for what’s ahead in the coming year — and often, your electric cooperative finds a long list of upcoming events and things to consider as we try to make sure we’re ready for whatever comes our way. Our list seems to be a little shorter this year, but that doesn’t mean we have less to do or less to worry about. We have some important long-term goals that we need to make progress on to ensure that we can continue to provide the reliable and affordable electric service that you’ve come to expect. One of our most pressing concerns is the growing recognition throughout the electric utility industry, especially among those whose job it is to ensure the reliability of the regional and national electric system, that we have entered a new era — a period of increasing risk that our electric system may not be able to provide all the power needed to keep everyone’s lights on during periods of extreme weather. The nation’s growing demand for electricity is on a collision course with the shrinking supply of the traditional fossil-fuel-fired generation that has always been the foundation for the system’s reliability. Recent reports, prepared separately and independently by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (nerc.com) and our regional grid operator, PJM Interconnection (pjm.com), point to government policy as the greatest threat to the future reliability of our electric power system. So that’s where we start our “to do” list for the coming year: • Emphasize to our elected officials and other policymakers the need to protect the interests of the people and businesses we serve, who depend on an uninterrupted supply of electricity for their safety, security, and economic well-being, regardless of the weather. • Adequately plan, invest, and maintain our electric generation facilities to maximize their availability during extreme weather events — when they’re needed most. • Plan for future investments in proven technologies that can keep up with the growing demand for continuous electric service, recognizing that all forms of electric supply have inherent strengths, weaknesses, and risks and that a diverse portfolio of resources provides more stability, in both price and availability, for everyone. • Provide training and workforce development opportunities to ensure that our employees are prepared to meet the challenges of today and tomorrow. We know there are challenges ahead, but one thing has remained constant over the years: We are always more successful when we work together toward our common goals, even when the path ahead is sometimes unclear. Thank you for your patronage and support of your electric cooperative again this past year. I hope that you and your family enjoyed a joyous holiday season, and I wish you a safe and happy 2024!
2
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
Pat O’Loughlin
PRESIDENT & CEO OHIO’S ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES
The nation’s growing demand for electricity is on a collision course with the shrinking supply of the traditional fossil-fuel-fired generation that has always been the foundation for the system’s reliability.
JANUARY 2024 • Volume 66, No. 4
Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives 6677 Busch Blvd. Columbus, OH 43229 614-846-5757 www.ohiocoopliving.com Patrick O’Loughlin Caryn Whitney Jeff McCallister Amy Howat Crystal Pomeroy
4 DEPARTMENTS
President & CEO Director of Communications Managing Editor Associate Editor Graphic Designer
Contributors: Marc Armstrong, Colleen Romick Clark, Getty Images, W.H. “Chip” Gross, Catherine Murray, James Proffitt, Damaine Vonada, and Patty Yoder. 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 Berne, IN 46711, 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.
4 POWER LINES
Standing up, speaking out:
Co-ops find a unified voice to let officials know how policies will affect their members.
8 WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE
A walk on the wild side: Outdoors editor W.H. “Chip” Gross celebrates 20 years (and counting) of telling stories about the outdoors.
Cheryl Solomon American MainStreet Publications 847-749-4875 | cheryl@amp.coop
That’s a lovely bake! Bingeing the
latest round of British bake-offs? Try these scrumptious show-inspired treats.
17 LOCAL PAGES
News and other important information from your electric cooperative.
26
26 CO-OP PEOPLE
Cream of the crop: Indian Creek Creamery specializes in producing milk “as nature intended.”
What’s happening: January/ February events and other things to do around Ohio.
33
36 MEMBER INTERACTIVE
Cooperative members:
Please report changes of address to your electric cooperative. Ohio Cooperative Living staff cannot process address changes. Alliance for Audited Media Member
13
13 GOOD EATS
33 CALENDAR National/regional advertising inquiries, contact
8
Snow day: How do members have fun during the cold and snowy winter? Their photos tell the story!
36
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. JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
3
POWER LINES
4
Standing
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
up,
Elected officials like U.S. Rep. Bob Latta (R-Bowling Green, opposite page) make it a point to listen to electric cooperative leadership at organized events such as the Legislative Conference to help them make decisions that affect their constituents.
speaking
out
Co-ops use a unified voice to let officials know how policies will affect their members.
BY JEFF MCCALLISTER
E
lectric cooperatives have a long history of standing up for themselves when the needs of their members are not being met.
A cornerstone of cooperative influence is engaging in the political arena. It’s a necessary and important part of keeping the cooperative business model strong, so co-ops invest a significant amount of time in building relationships with government representatives. “It’s imperative that the voices of co-op members are heard by decision-makers at every level,” says Marc Armstrong, director of government affairs for Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives, the statewide trade association that provides services to the state’s cooperatives. “We try to make sure government officials know how their decisions will affect people’s everyday lives, and it’s really as simple as that.” Hosting elected officials at the co-ops’ Central Ohio Lineworker Training Facility in Mount Gilead or the Mone power plant in Convoy gives co-ops a chance to highlight the cooperative difference — to show firsthand how locally owned, not-for-profit co-ops do more with less every day to serve their members. Co-op managers and trustees also meet those leaders on their own turf, traveling to the Ohio Statehouse or to Washington, D.C., to share a united constituent voice. The relationships co-op leaders are able to build, whether with a local township trustee, a state representative, or a
U.S. senator, allow them to speak to those officials from a position of trust. Mike Aquillo, CXO/VP member services for Marysvillebased URE–Union Rural Electric Cooperative, joined other co-op leaders for the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association’s Legislative Conference in Washington, D.C., in April. “This was a great opportunity for cooperatives across the country to come together and discuss the energy policy issues impacting our members,” Aquillo says. “The Ohio cooperatives showed up in force, had very productive meetings with our elected officials, and clearly communicated our concerns, specifically with the declining thermal baseload generation and its potential serious impacts on the reliability that our members — their constituents — know and depend on.” That topic is increasingly on the minds of co-op leaders as they examine new rules proposed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that, while wellintentioned, would have a devastating effect on power companies’ ability to provide reliable, 24/7 electricity. The efforts that have followed the announcement of these regulations illustrate the formidable voice co-ops can project when united on an issue. Co-ops, through their statewide and national trade associations, have banded together to make sure that both federal legislators and the EPA understand the implications of the proposed rules. JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
5
These efforts to advocate for responsible energy policy are crucial, says Pat O’Loughlin, president and CEO of Buckeye Power, the cooperative that supplies the electricity that Ohio co-ops deliver to their members. “People of all political persuasions depend on a reliable supply of electricity for their health, safety, and security,” O’Loughlin says. “These rules, in effect, will force us to shut down the power plants that are the most reliable and affordable sources of power that exist today.” The rules aim to slash carbon dioxide and other power plant emissions and include a requirement that coal and natural gas power plants capture nearly all the carbon dioxide they create, or else be forced to close. Co-ops understand the importance of reducing greenhouse gases, O’Loughlin says, but the problem with the proposed rules is that neither the technology nor the infrastructure currently exists to allow coal and gas plants to comply — and it would take years just for zoning and engineering requirements to be put in place, even if they did.
Development such as the Intel manufacturing facility in Licking County (top photo) is driving increasing demand for electricity, adding renewed importance to reliable coal-fired generation such as that provided by the Cardinal Plant in Brilliant (above).
What can YOU do? As a cooperative member, you can help make sure elected officials know how you might be affected by various laws and rules that are up for debate at various levels of government by joining Voices for Cooperative Power. VCP is a grassroots educational and advocacy program designed to both keep members aware of the concerns of co-ops and to help members directly communicate those concerns to elected officials. Visit www.voicesforcooperativepower.com to get updates on the latest issues of importance to the co-op and to find easy ways to communicate with government officials. Members also may check out America’s Electric Cooperatives PAC, a political action group that builds relationships with candidates for federal office so that when issues arise that affect co-ops, those candidates, if elected, are most likely to support positions that benefit cooperative members. For more information about the PAC and how you can join, contact your cooperative. 6
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
“If compliance were even possible, the cost would be far greater than the EPA suggests and would far outweigh any environmental benefits,” Armstrong says. “That’s what our legislators need to know.” The cost of the rule, co-ops contend, isn’t just monetary. Those coal-fired and gas-fired power plants are closing with nothing in place to meet power demands when the sun is not shining or when wind turbines aren’t moving — both of which happen during extreme weather, when electricity is in greatest demand. “While renewable energy technology has improved in recent years, intermittent generation resources cannot meet the growing demand on their own,” O’Loughlin says. For example, The Energy Cooperative in Newark, thanks to growth in western Licking County and Intel’s decision to locate in nearby New Albany, projects it will add 9,000 new electric members over the next five to 10 years, leading to an increase of 50% to 90% compared to its current demand. “The increased load includes data centers and commercialindustrial members that operate around the clock,” says Josh Filler, VP and COO–electric operations at The Energy Cooperative. “The more baseload generation we lose, coupled with increased demand for energy, the more susceptible we will be to rolling brownouts, or worse yet, blackouts. Our members depend on us to maintain reliable and consistent service.” And that’s why the co-ops are speaking out in unison against the proposed rules — once again standing up for their members, who will be the ones who pay the price in both higher electric bills and increased potential for blackouts.
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WOODS, WATERS, AND WILDLIFE
A walk on the
wild side
8
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
Outdoors editor W.H. “Chip” Gross celebrates 20 years (and counting) of telling stories about the outdoors. BY JEFF McCALLISTER
T
he January 2004 issue of Country Living magazine (now known as Ohio Cooperative Living) featured a story about Ohio’s 10 best places to view wildlife.
That certainly comes across in his writing and contributes to the popularity and longevity of “Woods, Waters, and Wildlife,” but he says there’s more to it as well.
The essay was written and photographed by W.H. “Chip” Gross — the first of 20 years’ worth of outdoors-related features Gross has written under the “Woods, Waters, and Wildlife” heading in these pages. His topics have ranged from hunting and fishing to Ohio history, and he’s showcased innumerable plants and animals found around the Buckeye State along the way.
“This column has been about people as much as it’s been about the outdoors,” he says. “I love telling readers about the various men, women, and young people I’ve met along the Buckeye State’s back roads, giving each of those mostly unsung folks their well-deserved ‘15 minutes of fame.’
Gross, a 45-year member of Mount Gileadbased Consolidated Cooperative and retired from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife, says he has an “overwhelming fascination and appreciation for the beauty, complexity, and intricacy of the natural world.”
“I’m looking forward to 20 years more.” In honor of the occasion, Chip has selected a “best-of” album of some of his favorite work through the years. Turn the page to see his picks — and if you have a favorite that you remember, drop him a line at whchipgross@gmail.com.
JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
9
20 years of Woods, Waters, and Wildlife
August 2005: This bat, captured, banded, and released at Mohican State Park, illustrated a column titled “Bat man!” profiling wildlife biologist Merrill Tawse and his research.
July 2004: This Native American boy was dancing in an Indian pow-wow near Loudonville when I took his photo for a column titled “Return of the natives.” October 2009: This white-tailed
buck, photographed at a Columbus MetroPark, helped introduce the “Outdoors in autumn” special section.
January 2011:
September 2010: A base jumper parachutes from the New River Gorge Bridge in West Virginia, illustrating a column titled “Leap of faith.”
The Punderson Classic Sled Dog Race at Punderson State Park was the setting for this photo for “Born to pull.”
May 2014: One of my
all-time favorite wildlife photos: I found these two young red foxes playing near their den; the ensuing photo essay was titled “Foxy baby!”
May 2019:
I photographed this family touring South Bass Island State Park for my story “Lake Erie islands: Ohio’s three most remote campgrounds.”
10
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
January 2015: I was at the right place at the right time to photograph this alligator fight to illustrate a column reviewing the J.N. “Ding” Darling National Wildlife Refuge. February 2020: A Cooper’s hawk, appearing to scream his displeasure at having his picture taken, was really just yawning with boredom when I snapped this photo from my bedroom window; the column was titled “Look who’s coming to dinner.”
May 2007:
Two workhorses “horsing around” during Spring Plowing Days at Malabar Farm State Park near Mansfield.
May 2008: Whitewater rafters challenge West Virginia’s New River in a column titled “Wet & wild.” The photo won a national award from the Outdoor Writers Association of America.
June 2006: This photo of my second son, Peter Gross, fishing at our neighbor’s pond won an award presented by the National Wildlife Federation.
April 2013: Members of the Outdoor Writers of Ohio kayak the Little Miami River. My column “Up the creek with a paddle” profiled Ohio’s Scenic Rivers Program.
March 2012: This
pair of ospreys at Bon Secour National Wildlife Refuge in Alabama illustrated my column “Greg Miller’s ‘big year.’”
July 2016: A set of caribou
antlers frames Mt. Denali in Alaska. This photo accompanied “America’s best idea,” about the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service.
August 2018:
November 2017:
“Lake Erie icon” profiled Marblehead Lighthouse — the oldest continuously operating lighthouse on the Great Lakes.
I shared my passion for hunting rabbits behind hounds in “Beagles and cottontails: Do hunting dogs go to heaven?” Pictured is Greg Thomas with Daisy and Brooke.
August 2022:
I’ve always liked the haunting quality of this photo I took of the secretive ghost plant, also called Indian pipes, for a story titled “Specter of the forest.”
July 2023: Controlled
burns of prairies are always spectacular. This photo illustrated a column titled “Conservation Corps” about the Appalachia Ohio Alliance.
January 2021: My grandson,
Sam Gross, gives a thumbs-up to his first airplane ride; the photo illustrated a story titled “First flight.” JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
11
12
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
lovely bake! GOOD EATS
That’s a
Bingeing the latest round of British bake-offs? Try these scrumptious show-inspired treats.
Scottish cheese scones Prep: 15 minutes | Bake: 15 minutes | Servings: 12 2 cups flour 3 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon mustard powder dash cayenne pepper 3 tablespoons unsalted butter, diced + more for greasing
4 ounces (1 cup) shredded cheddar cheese + more for sprinkling 1 large egg
6 to 8 tablespoons milk + more for brushing
Scottish cheese scones are served all day — with morning coffee, with soup and salad at lunch, and alongside a glass of wine. In a medium bowl, mix dry ingredients (flour through cayenne). Rub cut tablespoons of butter into flour mixture and toss in the cheese. Make a crater in the flour; break egg into crater and add 6 tablespoons milk, beating with a fork. Mix flour and egg mixture with your hands, creating a dough. If it’s too sticky to handle, add a bit more flour. If it’s too dry, add a bit more milk. Knead for 1 minute. Preheat oven to 400 F and grease baking sheet with butter. Roll dough out to ½-inch thick, cut into circles with a 2½-inch round cutter, and transfer to baking sheet. Brush tops with milk and sprinkle with cheese. Place on middle rack and bake 10 to 15 minutes. Per serving: 172 calories, 9 grams fat (5 grams saturated fat), 39 milligrams cholesterol, 307 milligrams sodium, 17 grams total carbohydrates, 0.5 gram fiber, 6 grams protein. JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
13
Traditional sausage rolls 1 pound 80 to 85% fat ground pork 1 teaspoon dried sage
1 teaspoon dried thyme 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
Prep: 20 minutes | Bake: 25 minutes | Servings: 10 1 8.5-ounce sheet puff pastry 1 egg, beaten
In a medium bowl, mix together ground pork, sage, thyme, mustard, and Worcestershire sauce. On a floured surface, roll puff pastry into a 10 x 15-inch rectangle, slice in half lengthwise, and place halves an inch apart on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Evenly spread 2-inch lines of the sausage mixture slightly off-center down the length of each pastry piece. Fold the wider side of pastry over the sausage and press and seal edges with a fork. Cut rolls into 3-inch sections and slit the top of each roll twice to allow steam to release. Place baking sheet in fridge for 10 minutes. Preheat oven to 425 F. Brush pastry tops with beaten egg and bake 25 minutes, or until a deep golden brown and sausage is 165 F. Serve hot. Refrigerate leftovers for up to 4 days in the fridge or freeze up to 3 months. Per serving: 431 calories, 26 grams fat (9 grams saturated fat), 151 milligrams cholesterol, 226 milligrams sodium, 11 grams total carbohydrates, 0.5 gram fiber, 38 grams protein.
Classic Madeira cake 2 cups flour 1⁄2 cup ground almonds 3 teaspoons baking powder
Prep: 20 minutes | Bake: 60 minutes | Servings: 8
1⁄2 teaspoon salt zest of one lemon 3⁄4 cup unsalted butter, softened
3⁄4 cup superfine sugar 3 large eggs
Note: If you can’t find superfine sugar (a.k.a. caster sugar or baker’s sugar — NOT confectioners' or powdered sugar), simply food-process granulated sugar for 30 seconds or so until the granules are visibly smaller. Grease and flour a 9-inch round cake pan. In a large bowl, mix flour, ground almonds, baking powder, salt, and lemon zest; set aside. With an electric mixer, cream butter and sugar until light, fluffy, and pale in color. Beat in eggs one at a time, following each with a spoonful of the flour mixture to prevent curdling. With a spatula, gently fold in the remaining flour mixture until evenly mixed and smooth (expect the batter to become rather heavy and dough-like). Spread evenly into greased pan. Preheat oven to 350 F. Bake 40 to 50 minutes, until a toothpick through the middle comes out clean. Let cool 15 minutes, then carefully remove from pan. Cool completely before cutting and serving. Decorate with candied citrus peel, lemon icing, jam, or fresh berries. Per serving: 267 calories, 15 grams fat (8 grams saturated fat), 77 milligrams cholesterol, 189 milligrams sodium, 30 grams total carbohydrate, 1 gram fiber, 5 grams protein. 14
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
Treacle tart 13⁄4 cups flour 1⁄2 teaspoon salt 1⁄2 cup unsalted butter, sliced thin
1⁄3 cup ice cold water 8 slices stale white bread, crusts removed
Prep: 20 minutes | Chill: 30 minutes | Bake: 50 minutes | Servings: 6 11⁄2 cups golden syrup 1 egg grated zest and juice of 1 lemon
whipped cream for topping (optional)
In a large bowl with your hands, lightly combine flour, salt, and butter until it resembles crumbles. Mix in water a bit at a time. When it begins to stick together, form dough into a round disc. Place in a sealed container and refrigerate 30 minutes. Preheat oven to 350 F. Roll dough out on a floured surface until it's larger than the 9-inch tart pan. Transfer dough to the pan, pressing into the corners and leaving 2 to 3 inches of dough overlapping the sides. With a fork, pierce dough on bottom of pan many times. Fit parchment paper into tart crust and fill with pie weights (dry beans or rice.) Place on a baking sheet and bake for 20 minutes. Remove weights and parchment; set aside. Meanwhile, place stale bread in a food processor and pulse into crumbs. Measure out 4 ounces (2 1⁄2 cups) of the breadcrumbs and set aside. In a large bowl, whisk together golden syrup, egg, lemon zest, and 1 tablespoon of the lemon juice. Mix in breadcrumbs. Pour mixture into tart shell and spread evenly. Place on a baking sheet and bake 40 to 50 minutes until the filling is set (a slight jiggle and some bubbling is OK.) Cool completely on a wire rack, then trim crust edge. Serve topped with whipped cream (if desired). Can be stored at room temperature for 2 days or in the fridge for 4 days. Per serving: 519 calories, 14 grams fat (8 grams saturated fat), 51 milligrams cholesterol, 580 milligrams sodium, 93 grams total carbohydrates, 2 grams fiber, 8 grams protein.
Check it out! See videos of some of our mouth-watering recipes being prepared at
www.ohiocoopliving.com
JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
15
10 - Ye Guaran ar Level R teed ates
Introduces
AFFORDABLE LIFE INSURANCE The Best Idea For ... Personal Insurance - Business Insurance - Mortgage Protection
Copyright 2011 All Rights Reserved
NON-TOBACCO RATES
MONTHLY RATES $100,000
$250,000
$500,000*
Issue Age
Male
30
8.94
7.73
9.77
8.61
14
11
36
9.12
8.12
10.32
9.44
15
37
9.21
8.37
10.52
9.81
38
9.21
8.48
11.69
39
9.46
8.61
40
9.63
$1,000,000*
$100,000
MONTHLY RATES $250,000
Male Female Male Female
Issue Age
Male
Female
Male
18
16
58
28.33
21.98
50.43
36.04
13
22
18
59
31.07
23.51
55.50
15
13
22
20
60
34.14
24.28
10.16
16
14
24
21
61
37.41
12.35
10.56
17
15
25
22
62
8.83
12.94
11.01
18
16
27
24
41 10.05
9.05
13.66
11.61
20
17
30
42 10.47
9.26
14.21
12.46
22
19
43 10.98
9.39
14.72
13.25
24
11.58
9.73
15.68
14.10
45 12.25
10.15
16.86
46 12.84
10.65
47 13.43
Female
Male
Female
$500,000*
Male
$1,000,000*
Female
Male
Female
89
62
169
117
38.76
98
68
188
129
59.98
41.71
109
73
207
140
25.65
66.43
47.11
122
84
236
156
41.07
27.91
73.90
51.33
136
93
265
171
63
44.58
34.39
85.55
59.61
152
102
287
187
26
64
48.23
38.53
93.16
64.39
169
112
323
206
33
29
65
53.18
41.15
100.34
70.37
188
125
356
229
20
38
31
66
59.15
44.62
115.74
75.41
209
135
392
248
26
22
41
34
67
65.66
49.09
130.13
83.65
231
148
436
272
15.16
28
24
46
38
68
74.33
59.65
145.11
112.92
262
174
491
322
17.85
15.87
30
25
49
41
69
82.98
65.91
161.68
129.33
293
188
548
352
11.16
19.14
16.84
33
27
54
44
70
93.20
73.30
181.25
148.72
330
204
615
387
48 13.48
11.89
20.45
17.77
35
29
58
48
71
102.45
82.71
204.38
159.34
374
235
702
443
49 13.71
12.33
21.77
18.77
38
31
63
52
72
113.68
94.13
232.46
172.23
427
272
807
512
50 14.37
12.99
23.41
20.00
40
34
69
57
73
127.55 108.24
267.15
188.15
493
319
937
596
51 15.38
13.75
25.38
21.18
45
35
78
62
74
142.08 123.01
303.50
204.84
562
367 1074
685
52 16.37
14.88
28.02
22.76
49
38
87
67
75
159.25 140.48
346.45
224.56
644
424 1235
789
53 17.46
15.88
30.96
24.81
55
44
101
77
76
200.03 174.92
418.29
276.67
785
530 1489
982
54 18.69
16.72
34.00
26.21
60
46
112
83
77
249.54 216.74
505.52
339.94
956
658 1797
1215
55 20.64
17.51
37.14
27.86
67
50
122
90
78
310.70 268.40
613.27
418.11 1167
817 2179
1504
56 22.69
19.48
41.67
31.07
74
53
140
97
79
374.78 322.52
726.16
500.00 1389
983 2578
1807
57 24.69
20.63
45.59
33.43
81
58
154 107
80
450.51 386.48
859.57
596.78 1651 1180 3050
2164
44
Female
* $500,000 and $1,000,000 monthly rates are rounded up to the nearest dollar. Therefore, actual monthly rates at $500,000 and $1,000,000 may be slightly less.
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(203) 637-1544 or (800) 645-1544 Monday - Friday 8 am to 5 pm EST
Premiums illustrated represent 10 year level term insurance with guaranteed level premiums for 10 years. $100,000 - $1,000,000 rates are Select-A-Term [policy form no. 07007] Preferred Plus Non-tobacco. This coverage features a level death benefit with fully guaranteed level premiums for the first 10 years with coverage to expire at age 95. The policy may be continued on Annual Renewable Term at the end of the level premium period without evidence of insurability until the anniversary nearest the insured’s 95th birthday. The underwriting risks, financial and contractual obligations and support functions associated with products issued by American General Life Insurance Company (AGL) Houston, TX are its responsibility. AGL does not solicit business in the state of New York. All terms, conditions and limitations of any policy issued shall govern. American General Life Companies is the marketing name for a group of domestic life insurers including American General Life Insurance Company and The United States Life Insurance Company in the City of New York. Policies and riders not available in all states. Premium rates current as of October 2023; rates may vary by state. Premiums available for other rate classes, ages and payment plans. Premium charges depend on evidence of insurability. Premiums increase at the end of the guaranteed term if policy is renewed. Death benefit remains level. The policy may be contested for two years from the date of issue for material misstatements or omissions on the application. Death benefit is limited to return of premium paid in the event of suicide within first two years. Rates subject to change. Standard Marketing Services represents AGL and other fine insurance companies. All companies identified above are wholly owned subsidiaries of Corebridge Financial, Inc. Corebridge Financial and Corebridge are marketing names used by subsidiaries of Corebridge Financial, Inc.
HANCOCK-WOOD ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT AND CEO
Y
All the easy jobs are done
ears ago, I was approached by a long-term employee who was frustrated by the blocks and complications they faced while trying to complete a project for the co-op. After all, there were a multitude of benefits to the project, but the complexity and steps involved were almost overwhelming. My answer was simple: All the easy jobs are done and, if it were simple, it would have been completed years ago. In all seriousness, your cooperative invests hours and, many times, years of human capital in projects to improve your electric service reliability. A good example of this is our investment in rebuilding the Arlington Substation. HWE’s 2023 capital budget included $2.5 million to replace an obsolete substation, which previously had been upgraded in 1977. So, how do we go about replacing a substation that requires being out of service for six months, and still provide our members with electric service?
In August, our contract crew, Vaughn Industries, began to tear down the old substation. This substation serves approximately 600 members in the Arlington area.
Columns were poured in September. The total project cost is about $2.5 million and will take approximately six months to complete.
The story started in 2001, when Hancock-Wood submitted a construction work plan to the United States Department of Agriculture for funding through the Rural Utilities Service (RUS) program. The dollars from this plan allowed the operations group to begin rebuilding the overhead power lines that connect Arlington to the other substations with larger wires. The rebuilding of threephase overhead lines continued until 2016 and allows the co-op to provide electric service for our Arlington members from other substations. Simultaneously, the engineering group was working on a design for a new substation when it became apparent a larger site was required. Thankfully, a long-time member of the co-op agreed to sell additional land around Arlington substation in 2016 to assist with the rebuilding plan. The design of the project continued and, like most detailed projects, hit several roadblocks and snags
along the way. American Electric Power notified Hancock-Wood a new transmission line was being designed with a higher voltage and from a Bill Barnhart different route. PRESIDENT & CEO The new transmission line would result in the substation construction schedule being pushed back several years and would require different equipment. Borrowing funds from RUS requires the coop to undertake a lengthy environmental assessment review and the funds are not available until we complete the project. The accounting group needed to ensure the co-op could cash The next phase of the rebuild flow the project until the project project began in October. This is complete for at least three project is being conducted months. Supply chain disruptions in conjunction with AEP’s line conversion project. required the board to approve the purchasing of equipment two years in advance of the beginning of construction. Some of the substation’s unique features include a concrete pad with oil containment to ensure an oil leak will not contaminate groundwater. Also included is a substation building designed to serve as a storm shelter for our line crews during potential severe weather incidents.
The final stage of the project, which is estimated to be completed by the end of January.
This substation rebuild design also includes fully automated equipment that can be monitored and controlled from our office and excess electrical capacity to not only serve future needs, but also to provide backup service for our members in the Bluffton, Blanchard, and southern Findlay areas.
I’m thankful that the co-op has a group of dedicated, ambitious, and hardworking employees. And yes, all the easy jobs do seem to be done, but our employees and trustees are always willing to tackle the next challenge. JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
17
HANCOCK-WOOD ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE
Welcome
TO THE
TEAM
Zapata hired as groundman Isaiah Zapata has accepted the groundman position at HancockWood Electric. He comes to us from Port Clinton and recently worked at a water district. Zapata will train as a groundman/ apprentice lineworker and, after successfully completing his training, will be promoted to the line crew.
Martens hired as lineworker Chase Martens has been hired as a lineworker. He previously worked for Vaughn Industries. He is married to Samantha and together they have a cat named Leo. In his spare time, he enjoys golf, running, and cooking. He’s a football fan and spends the weekends cheering for the Ohio State Buckeyes and Cincinnati Bengals. Welcome, Chase!
Wishing you a
HAPPY RETIREMENT
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
Wishing Danita a happy retirement Hancock-Wood’s board of trustees and employees would like to wish Danita Higgins a happy retirement. Danita held positions in the member service area and, more recently, worked as the distribution scheduler. She has been with Hancock-Wood Electric for 23 years.
Seniors can apply for our 2024 Scholarship Program
2023 Hancock-Wood Electric Cooperative scholarship recipients and Youth Tour delegates.
The Children of Members Scholarship program is available to any seniors whose parents are current Hancock-Wood Electric members. The following awards will be granted for the 2024 program:
1st place: $3,500 2nd place: $3,000 Five honorable mentions: $2,000 each To apply, visit our website www.hwe.coop or call our office for more information. Deadline to apply is Feb. 9, 2024, by 4:30 p.m. JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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HANCOCK-WOOD ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE
Think Energy $mart with Bruce During these coldest months of the year, we do everything we can (within reason) to stay warm. The most important consideration when using any heating source is how to operate the appliance safely. Any home with a fossil fuel-burning appliance should have a carbon monoxide detector installed on each floor of the main living area. This is especially important if a vent-free gas heater or fireplace is being used anywhere in a home, including the garage. A vent-free heater is considered very efficient because it does not allow any combustion gases to leave the structure. The drawback is those gases can contain harmful and deadly compounds. Also, be sure to comply with all the required clearances for your heater and make others in your home aware of them as well.
is well-insulated and use a reliable thermostat to accurately control the temperature. Inspect the heater cord to verify it is in good condition. Using extension cords to operate heaters is not recommended. If an extension cord is necessary, be sure the cord is appropriate to handle the heater’s electric load.
Secondary heaters are commonly used this time of year to help maintain comfort in problem areas of a home, and to keep water from freezing in other areas. To control the operating cost of these devices, be sure the target area
For more tips on keeping warm and energy efficient this winter visit www.hwe.coop/save-energy/saving-energylinks/ or contact the office 800-445-4840 to schedule an audit with me.
Happy New Year! 2
0
2 4
CONTACT 800-445-4840 FAX: 419-257-3024 WEBSITE www.hwe.coop OFFICE 1399 Business Park Drive South P.O. Box 190 North Baltimore, Ohio 45872-0190
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Bill Barnhart
Gene Barker
President and CEO
Chairman
William Kale Vice Chairman
Duane Fry Secretary/Treasurer
Lee Anne Dierksheide Assistant Secretary/Treasurer
Tim Phillips Ed Crawford Charles Beagle Ron Riegle Brian Terry
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
Our office will be closed Jan. 1 to observe the holiday.
PAYMENT OPTIONS online, dropbox, office, by phone, or automatic bill pay HAVE A STORY SUGGESTION? Email your ideas to: leslie.guisinger@hwe.coop
JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
21
y a w d a d n o a r l
B in the heart BY PATTY YODER
The Kenley Players brought a dose of big-city glamour to the Buckeye State.
B
roadway musicals have dazzled audiences since the 1850s, and this year will be no exception. Whether they travel to New York to see shows on the Great White Way or view touring productions in Cincinnati or Columbus, Ohioans today have many options to experience classic and modern Broadway hits. But that wasn’t always the case. In the 1950s, seeing Broadway shows required a trip to New York’s Theater District, which was an exotic experience that few were able to enjoy. Back then, life was more local. Families would watch TV and see movies, but the actors remained twodimensional. The chances for most people to see stars on the stage or meet their celebrity crushes were slim to none. Until John Kenley came along.
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
Kenley — a theatrical producer and former vaudeville performer — founded the Kenley Players, which brought “America’s most exciting summer theater” to Ohio from 1957 until 1995, drawing crowds with lavish productions, low ticket prices, and big-name stars in leading roles. After touring the Midwest for a decade, the Kenley Players found its permanent home in Ohio. Dayton’s Memorial Hall hosted the first 14-show season, then the players relocated to Warren. Most summers, the shows toured various combinations of Dayton, Warren, Cleveland, Columbus, and Akron. The performances showcased such talents as dance legend Gene Kelly, singer and Brady Bunch mom Florence Henderson, and crowd favorite Paul Lynde. The Mount Vernon
“I can vividly remember Robert Goulet climbing up the four steps of this little sliding board and sliding down. We had no idea who he was, but all of us kids were just dying laughing.” Friends Carol Hilton and Barbara Wood have vivid memories of the Kenley Players.
native holds the record for most performances, appearing in nine shows between 1969 and 1979. Kenley’s idea was to bring the thrill of professional live theater to people who might not otherwise see it and spark their interest in other art forms, which it certainly did for Carol Hilton and Barbara Wood. Growing up in Niles in the 1960s, the friends attended multiple Kenley performances at Packard Music Hall in Warren. They even scored an autograph from British actor Noel Harrison, fresh off The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. “There was a lot of excitement with the live music, the singing, and the sets. One of the sets was made up of giant boxes stacked on top of one another, and each box was a different hotel room,” Hilton says. “I was always intrigued by whether the band would be in the back, in the pit, or as part of the set and how quickly the sets would change for the next scene.” What did it take for big stars to spend their summer performing on the straw-hat circuit? Timing had a lot to do with it, like catching up-andcomers before their big breaks and stars at the end of their careers. It also didn’t hurt that Kenley treated his leads like royalty and paid weekly salaries as high as $35,000, according to a 2006 Cleveland Plain Dealer article. The consummate showman also knew how to create a buzz with unexpected casting. John Kenley Some audience members bought tickets solely to see how TV game show host Arthur Godfrey fared opposite movie star Maureen O’Sullivan.
The Kenley Players brought stars from Hollywood and Broadway, such as (opposite page, from left) Harvey Korman, Vicki Lawrence, and Lyle Waggoner, to perform in theater productions at various Ohio locales.
“He would bring people to the stage that you would never expect to be together, but it would work because they had good chemistry,” Hilton says. Before his role as Sir Lancelot made him a household name, Robert Goulet starred in six Kenley shows — and made quite an impression on Wood and her family. During the 1960 run of Meet Me in St. Louis, Wood’s parents struck up a conversation with Goulet at a local restaurant. Her mother invited him and co-star Jill Correy to dinner while they were in town, which led to an impromptu performance on the family’s backyard swing set, now a family legend. “I can vividly remember Robert Goulet climbing up the four steps of this little sliding board and sliding down. We had no idea who he was, but all of us kids were just dying laughing because here’s this big grown man going down our sliding board,” she says. (Whether it was Goulet’s natural inclination to perform or a few pre-dinner cocktails that led to the show is unknown.) “I remember thinking, ‘Wow, she is so beautiful and he’s so handsome.’ It just was magical to us.” After some 500 shows, Kenley spent his final years in Cleveland. His 100th birthday brought tributes from Billy Crystal, Florence Henderson, and scores of other former players. Kenley passed away in 2009 at age 103. He is credited with carving a path for Broadway touring companies and founding today’s thriving arts scenes throughout the state. Hilton, now of Columbus, and Wood, of Marysville, continue to enjoy musicals, plays, and the occasional opera, holding season tickets at various times. Did the Kenley Players have something to do with their love of live performance? The friends answer in unison: “Absolutely!”
To learn more about out the Kenley Players, visit www. kenleyplayershistory.com.
JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
23
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
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JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
25
CO-OP PEOPLE
Cream
of the
Crop
Indian Creek Creamery specializes in producing milk ‘as nature intended.’ BY DAMAINE VONADA
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
W
hen Colleen Jackson instructed her children’s homeschooling group in the early 2000s, she prepared a lesson featuring milk straight from the Holstein cows lolling in the pasture on her family’s 180-acre dairy farm near DeGraff. “I scooped the cream off the top of the milk, then put it in a jar with some clean marbles and let the kids shake the jar,” she recalls. “They turned the cream into butter.” She didn’t know it then, but Colleen and her husband, Ray, would later carve their own niche in Ohio dairying in 2019. Like many dairy farmers in recent years, the Logan County Electric Cooperative members found themselves struggling with high production costs and low milk prices. Ray helped keep the farm afloat by working for a bovine genetics company, but things were tough. Faced with losing the farm and the way of life they love, Ray and Colleen converted an outbuilding into a licensed creamery named for the stream that crosses their land, and Indian Creek Creamery was born. They began producing and bottling non-homogenized milk crowned with a layer of cream, wagering that consumers would thirst for their minimally processed product. “We started the creamery because we needed to be able to sustain our farm and pay our bills,” Colleen says. “We also wanted people to know what real milk tastes like.” The Jacksons know a thing or two about “real milk” because they both grew up on dairy farms. He is from the Wellington area, and she was raised near Urbana. They met at Ohio State, where Colleen majored in business and Ray, a selfdescribed “cow nerd,” studied dairy science. After marrying in 1990, they rented acreage from Colleen’s father until Ray found an affordable farm about 5 miles north of DeGraff. Though run-down, it had a functional milk house and an early 1900s farmhouse, which they moved into in 1995. Today, Ray and Colleen have 140 Holsteins, and keeping the herd happy and healthy is their top priority. They grow their own crops for feed; use sand as dairy cow bedding to cushion the stalls (they say it’s the gold standard); and maintain a free stall barn where the cows can come and go as they please. “The single biggest thing we do for our cows’ comfort is let them leave the barn and go outside into the pasture,” Ray says. “They enjoy the pasture so much that they’ll even lay down in the snow.” The Jacksons breed their cows via artificial insemination, and because cows instinctively seek a quiet place to give birth, they put expectant moms into a special “maternity ward” pen three weeks before they’re due to calve. Getting the
newborn calves off to a good start is all in a day’s work for Colleen. “I hand-feed them with either bottles or buckets for two months,” she says. Ray and Colleen milk 70 cows daily and process the raw milk into Grade A milk that’s sold in half-gallon, BPA-free plastic bottles. They only offer three products: regular whole milk, chocolate milk made from a recipe Colleen developed, and A2/A2 whole milk. Cows have two variations — A1 and A2 — of the gene that forms protein in milk, and Indian Creek Creamery’s A2/ A2 milk comes solely from DNA-tested cows possessing two A2 genes. Since it requires laboratory analysis and separate processing, A2/A2 milk has a premium price, yet is gaining popularity because many people who have difficulty digesting A2/A1 milk can drink the A2/A2 version. Their method preserves the flavor of raw milk, but they never homogenize because, Colleen explains, “We provide milk as nature intended, with nothing added and nothing taken away.” Although butterfat naturally floats on raw milk, large-scale milk producers both fragment the fat to make a uniform liquid (homogenization), and also remove some of the butterfat to meet federal standards. “Typical whole milk is 3.25% butterfat,” notes Ray. “Our milk tastes richer because it’s 4.2% butterfat.” The creamery’s initial production run was just 83 half-gallons, but now the Jacksons turn out 4,000 bottles weekly and deliver them to customers ranging from chefs and baristas in Cincinnati and Columbus to independent grocers and specialty shops in small towns. Before homogenization took hold in the 1920s, every bottle of milk had a top ring of cream, so when Ray gave milk samples to prospective buyers, he had to teach them something that their great-grandparents did routinely: shaking the bottle to mix in the cream. His personal touch paid off. “People love it when a farmer shows up, looks them in the eye, and tells them the milk is so fresh that it was in the cow the night before.”
To find locations that sell Indian Creek Creamery products, visit www.indiancreekcreamery.com.
JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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Wild ODNR’s mobile kitchen serves wild game vittles far and wide — and free! STORY AND PHOTOS BY JAMES PROFFITT
K
endra Wecker, chief of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources’ wildlife division, swears she’s not trying to put any food trucks out of business.
“Absolutely not,” she insists. The ODNR’s Wild Ohio Harvest mobile kitchen, she explains, has a higher purpose as it serves delicious and nutritious food samples from the 18-foot, fully outfitted trailer: “Our goal is to meet new people who aren’t current anglers or hunters, and we want to hook them through their stomachs and taste buds.” The kitchen and its chefs cook and serve up free food created with wild-harvested Ohio game, including fish, fowl, and other critters. And Ken Fry, ODNR outdoor skills specialist, says it all began when he was cooking up such treats from the bed of a pickup truck with a pop-up tent at a Jefferson County farmers market a while back.
“It was so well-received that I presented the trailer idea to my supervisor and he liked it and said, ‘Let’s go with it,’” Fry says. Since the ODNR already had the trailer, all it needed was some cool graphics on the outside and a full kitchen installed on the inside. About $10,000 later, it was done. The trailer includes a kitchen with deep fryers and cooking surfaces, a sink, and plenty of prep and serving space. It can be operated either with propane or electricity, which means its dedicated foodies can crank out yummies at both indoor and outdoor events. Construction was completed in 2019, but it was sidelined soon thereafter because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, ever since the all-clear, it’s been on the road visiting fairs, boat shows, libraries, and other sites where ODNR chefs tempt Ohioans to get out and harvest their own proteins. “There’s been a movement in the last 10 to 15 years where people really appreciate knowing where their food, such as produce, comes from,” Fry says. “So hunting and fishing in Ohio is a perfect means to know where your proteins come from and how they’ve been handled from the point of harvest to the table.” A recent public library event featured a cooler full of icedup bluegill. Folks could fillet the fish, watch them being prepared, then eat them. Fry says partakers included kids and some adults who had never fished before. Ohio First Lady Fran DeWine was such a fan of the operation after she sampled its fare that she penned a column for the Xenia Daily Gazette sharing one of the ODNR’s super-secret recipes. Of course, the ODNR was happy for the helping hand in getting the word out that wild game can be fun to acquire as well as tasty
It’s often standing room only when the ODNR’s Wild Ohio Harvest mobile kitchen makes a stop.
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
Search “Wild Ohio Harvest Cookbook” at www.ohiodnr.gov, or scan the QR code for an ODNR cooking demonstration on YouTube.
kitchen and healthy. And, full disclosure: Their recipes aren’t really so secret; the ODNR’s online resources include a cookbook and a YouTube channel. According to Fry, you never know where the kitchen may pop up. “We’re trying to get away from preaching to the choir, and so we’ve accepted some events we may not have in the past,” Fry says, citing another recent library appearance. “It was a Surviving the Zombie Apocalypse program, and we talked about how you could use wild game to put meat in the freezer if you had to — if things got real nasty out there with the zombies.” So what exactly do they cook up? A little bit of everything. Obviously, panfish like bluegill and yellow perch are top ingredients, though walleye tends to be the star of the show when it comes to fish. “I’d have to say our crowd favorite is blackened walleye with cheddar grits and a Creole sauce,” Fry says. “And for non-fish dishes, that’s a tough one, but probably the black-and-blue venison sliders.”
Ingredients for other trendy dishes have included wild turkey, squirrel, waterfowl, and upland game birds — all prepared in front of diners and potential hunters and anglers. Some of the food prepared in the kitchen is donated by hunters or members of the ODNR staff, and some are garnered from scientific research or evidence seized by wildlife officers. According to Fry, if the crowd is especially large and hungry and there’s a sense they may run low on food, staff members adjust the portion sizes, which is fine. “The goal isn’t to feed everyone; it’s to provide a taste,” he says, “and there are times where people love our dishes so much we have to remind them that we’re only here to provide samples.” Even Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine is not immune from the rules. At a recent event celebrating Lake Erie and its walleye fishing, DeWine told the gathered audience that he himself has pushed the limits on the wild game samples and been cut off. “Well, actually, yes, that has occurred,” he admitted, smiling. “And they actually cut my son off one time, too.”
Top chef Ken Fry, outdoor skills specialist with the ODNR, holds court in his wild game castle.
JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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Facts and foibles from the front porch The Harding site in Marion tells the story of the last president from Ohio.
S
BY DAMAINE VONADA
herry Hall never tires of showing visitors the paintings of Warren and Florence Harding that hang side by side near the entrance of the Warren G. Harding Presidential Library and Museum in Marion. “Every element of the paintings has a story to tell,” says Hall, the site manager, “because it reflects something that was meaningful to them.” The paintings, by nationally known artist — and Marion native — Danny Day, are so lifelike that you can see the veins in the Hardings’ hands and wrinkles in their clothes. The president has a genial twinkle in his eye and holds a straw hat straight out of the Jazz Age. Laddie Boy, the beloved Airedale who attended cabinet meetings and retrieved the president’s errant golf balls, sits at Harding’s feet, and resting on a table behind them is a copy of The Marion Daily Star, the failing newspaper Harding purchased at age 19. He managed to make
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OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
it profitable and still owned the Star when elected president in 1920. Mrs. Harding’s painting depicts her wearing a choker, a favorite fashion accessory that launched the 1920s “flossie cling” fad. Because she was an accomplished pianist, the painting includes a piano, and on top of it are flowers and a tin box made for her by a disabled World War I veteran, signifying the time she spent helping servicemen at Walter Reed hospital. The thoughtful attention to detail so evident in the paintings characterizes the entire library and museum. Opened in 2021, the nation’s newest presidential archive salutes the last of eight presidents to have hailed from Ohio, with features such as columns that echo both the White House and the front porch of the Hardings’ home. It also accomplishes something Hall thinks is long overdue: relating Harding’s “full story” by providing accurate, unbiased information.
Ohio’s presidents
Ohio is known as the “Mother of Presidents,” as seven chief executives were born in the Buckeye State and an eighth settled here before his election to office. They are Ulysses S. Grant (Point Pleasant), Rutherford B. Hayes (Delaware), James Garfield (Orange Township — now Moreland Hills), Benjamin Harrison (North Bend), William McKinley (Niles), William Howard Taft (Cincinnati), and Warren Harding (Corsica, now Blooming Grove). William Henry Harrison was born in Virginia but settled in Ohio. Ohio residents will once again play an important role in determining the leadership of the nation at the polls this November.
Warren Harding’s 1920 presidential victory led the front page of The Marion Daily Star, which Harding owned between 1884 and 1923.
“We want people to meet Harding as a human being with all of his strong points and all of his foibles and failings,” Hall says. Harding won the 1920 election in a landslide, garnering a record-setting 60.3% of the popular vote in the first U.S. election in which women cast ballots. For Americans, Harding’s outgoing nature was a refreshing change from his aloof predecessor, Woodrow Wilson, and his policies — tax cuts, protective agricultural tariffs, support for highways and commercial aviation — boosted the economy and helped modernize the nation. He was even nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.
The Harding Home and Warren G. Harding Presidential Library and Museum, 380 Mt. Vernon Ave., Marion, OH 43302. The sites are open 9 a.m.– 5 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and noon–5 p.m. Sunday, with guided tours offered on the hour. (The sites are also open on Wednesdays, March through November.) All tickets must be purchased in advance. For more information, visit www.hardingpresidentialsites.org.
After his death from heart failure in 1923, however, political scandals — especially Teapot Dome — and accounts of extramarital affairs tainted Harding and his administration. “Harding died a much beloved president and then his legacy just plummeted,” says Hall. “But now, historians are rediscovering him and rethinking his presidency.” The library also examines the Hardings’ life together; though they may not have had a fairy-tale romance, their union lasted 32 years and brought them success in publishing and politics. A modern woman in her own right, Florence managed the Star’s circulation department, and after her husband accepted the Republican presidential nomination, she turned their home into a hub for his supporters. Harding campaigned from their front porch, drawing 600,000 people to Marion in what Florence later called “the greatest epoch of my life.” You can stand on that front porch today simply by crossing the lawn between the Harding Library and recently restored Harding Home. From the staircase where they were married and marble statues they bought while touring Italy to the waffle iron Florence used to make Warren’s favorite food, it provides an intimate and authentic perspective on two small-town Ohioans who considered themselves “just folks” but together reached the White House.
Harding was a constitutional conservative who campaigned on a platform of nationalism and won the presidency in 1920.
JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
31
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SCOTTAmerica’s ANTIQUE MARKETS Favorite Treasure Hunts!
AUGUST 2023
COOPERATIVE
OHIO EXPO CENTER - COLUMBUS, OH 800-1,200 Exhibit Booths!
ATLANTA EXPO CENTERS - ATLANTA, GA 3,500 Booths!
Power brokers
2023 Shows
2023 Shows
TM
DEC 16 & 17
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OHIO
740.569.2800
www.scottantiquemarkets.com
WHERE ONLINE SELLERS GO TO BUY!
2024 Shows
JAN 27 & 28 FEB 24 & 25 MAR 23 & 24
DEC 7 - 10
2024 Shows JAN 11 - 14 FEB 8 - 11 MAR 7 - 10
APR 11 - 14 MAY 9 - 12
Show Hours: Sat. 9am - 6pm & Sun. 10am - 4pm
Show Hours: Thurs. 10:45am - 6pm, Fri. & Sat. 9am - 6pm, Sun. 10am - 4pm
Directions: I-71 Exit 111 (E 17th Avenue) to Ohio Expo Center.
Directions: 3 miles East of Atlanta Airport, I-285 at Exit 55
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
(3650 & 3850 Jonesboro Rd SE)
Keeping the lights on
ALSO INSIDE Tastes like robin Tragic tale of the Wuebker brothers Forgotten France
*Closed Easter Sunday
For information and rates, send an email to
advertising@ohioec.org.
2024 CALENDAR
JANUARY/FEBRUARY
COMPILED BY COLLEEN ROMICK CLARK
NORTHWEST
THROUGH JAN. 7 – “Hayes Train Special” Model Train Display, Hayes Library and Museums, Spiegel Grove, 1337 Hayes Ave., Fremont. Free; donations accepted. Operating model train display runs through an intricate Victorian holiday scene. Interactive buttons, multi-tier layout. 419-332-2081 or www. rbhayes.org. JAN. 2–26 – Art Contest: “Not So Bad Art by Good People,” sponsored by the Logan County Art League. Artwork created by selected Logan County citizens will be on display at Citizen’s Federal Savings and Loan, 100 N. Main St., Bellefontaine. Vote for your favorite piece of art in person or on our website. Celebration dinner and auction of artwork on Jan. 26 starting at 5 p.m. https://logancountyartleague.org. JAN. 3, FEB. 7 – Down on the Farm Story Time, Proving Ground Farm, 5670 E. Twp. Rd. 138, Tiffin, 10 a.m. Stories and activities are geared for preschoolage children and focus on farming and nature in a picturesque outdoor setting. Families welcome! 419-
WEST VIRGINIA
447-7073, www.conservesenecacounty.com, or follow Seneca Conservation District on Facebook. JAN. 5, FEB. 2 – Star Gazing at Schoonover Observatory, 670 N. Jefferson, Lima, 8 p.m. Free. Come see the stars with us! If you have a telescope, bring it to the meeting and members will show you how to use it and answer any of your questions. 419303-1725 (David Humphries) or https://limaastro.com. JAN. 12 – Martin Sexton, Veterans Memorial Civic and Convention Ctr., 7 Town Square, Lima, 7:30 p.m. $30+. 419-224-1552 or www.limaciviccenter.com. JAN. 19 – Champions of Magic, Veterans Memorial Civic and Convention Ctr., 7 Town Square, Lima, 7:30 p.m. $35+. Experience an evening of impossible illusions and spectacular special effects, including a daring escape from Houdini’s water torture cell. 419224-1552 or www.limaciviccenter.com. JAN. 20–21 – Lima Symphony: “Music by Candlelight,” Sat. 7:30 p.m., Trinity United Methodist Church, 301 W. Market St., Lima; Sun. 4 p.m., Grand Opera House, Saint Marys. Experience the music of Brahms and Dvořák as it was meant to be heard. 419222-5701 or www.limasymphony.com. FEB. 1 – Come From Away, Veterans Memorial Civic and Convention Ctr., 7 Town Square, Lima, 7:30 p.m. $50+. The hit musical based on the remarkable true story of 7,000 stranded passengers and the small town in Newfoundland that welcomed them following the September 11 attacks. 419-224-1552 or www. limaciviccenter.com.
FEB. 2–4 – Greater Toledo Auto Show, Glass City Center, 401 Jefferson Ave., Toledo, Fri. 12–9 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–9 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $8, Srs./Stds. $6; 9 and under free. Displays of the latest and greatest models and automotive technologies from more than 20 different manufacturers. www.toledoautoshow.org. FEB. 3 – Ice-A-Fair, 685 Main St., Vermilion, 11 a.m.–7 p.m. Free. A daylong winter event for the entire family, featuring glittering ice sculptures on display and ice carving demos throughout the day. Ends with the towering Fire & Ice display. 440-963-0772 or www. mainstreetvermilion.org. FEB. 3–4 – Tri-State Gun Show, Allen Co. Fgds., 2750 Harding Hwy., Lima (2 miles east of Lima on St. Rte. 309), Sat. 8:30 a.m.–4 p.m., Sun. 8:30 a.m.–3 p.m. $6, free for members, under 18 free. Over 400 tables of modern and antique guns, edged weapons, and sportsmen equipment. 419-647-0067 or www. tristategunshow.org. FEB. 4 – Family Concert: “Superheroes and Supervillains,” Veterans Memorial Civic and Convention Ctr., 7 Town Square, Lima, 3 p.m. Conductor Michael Repper leads the orchestra on a daring adventure where the Avengers take on Darth Vader, Cruella De Vil faces off against Spiderman, and baby Yoda softens the hearts of even the most treacherous characters. Who will win? 419-224-1552 or www.limaciviccenter.com. FEB. 8–18 – Live Theatre: Misery, Van Wert Civic Theatre, 118 S. Race St., Van Wert, Thur.–Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. $16. 419-238-9689 or www.vwct.org.
JAN. 13 – “Valjean, Cosette, and a String Quartet,” The Smoot Theatre, 213 5th St., Parkersburg, 8 p.m. $30–$45. Join Tony Award nominee Josh Young and his wife, Broadway star Emily Padgett, as they celebrate the decade that gave us Les Misérables, Phantom of the Opera, and Cats — the decade where Stephen Sondheim and Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber reached the pinnacle of their creative mastery: the 1980s. www. greaterparkersburg.com/events.
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. JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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2024 CALENDAR
JANUARY/FEBRUARY
NORTHEAST collectables. 330-948-4300 (Amanda Whitacre) or www.conraddowdell.com. JAN. 27 – “Ice Fishing,” Mosquito Lake State Park, 1439 St. Rte. 305, Cortland, 10–11:30 a.m. Free. Interested in learning how our local fishermen have perfected this art? Come join us for an informative and interactive program on this seasonal sport. Dependent on weather. jason. lee@dnr.ohio.gov or www.ohiodnr.gov. JAN. 27 – TCA Snow Time Train Meet, UAW Hall, 5615 Chevrolet Blvd., Parma, 10 a.m.–3 JAN. 18–21 – Cleveland Boat Show, I-X Ctr., 1 p.m. Adult $6, Family $10, under 18 free. Handicapped accessible. Over 175 tables I-X Center Dr., Cleveland, Thur./Fri. 12–9 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–9 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Mon. and many operating displays. New and old 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $15–$20; Family 4-pack, $60; 6 trains to buy, sell, or trade; many brands and and under free. Visit the “Boating Experience” scales. Model building supplies and kits, TCA Pavilion, view the 5,000-gallon aquarium, see Kids Club, and more. Refreshments available. 330-273-6404 (John Twarog) or www. live paddling demos, and much more. Don’t greatlakestca.org. miss Twiggy the Water-Skiing Squirrel! www. clevelandboatshow.com. FEB. 2–11 – The Great Big Home and Garden Show, IX Center, 1 I-X Center Dr., Cleveland. JAN. 20–21 – Cleveland Home Show, $11–$15, C. (6–12) $5, under 6 free. See Huntington Convention Center, Hall A, 300 website for hours and schedule of events. Lakeside Ave. E., Cleveland, Sat. 10 a.m.–8 Explore hundreds of exhibits, meet industry p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Free with online admission or $10 at the door. Meet with home experts and home professionals, and enjoy improvement professionals in a fun, interactive unique features such as the garden showcase. environment. Expert exhibitors will inspire and www.greatbighomeandgarden.com. motivate you to start planning with confidence. FEB. 3 – Cleveland Bazaar Valentine, 78th www.ohiohomeshows.com. Street Studios, 1305 W. 80th St., Cleveland, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. More than 150 artists and makers, JAN. 21 – Flea Market of Collectables, food trucks, a bar, and so much more. www. Medina Co. Fgds. Community Center, 735 facebook.com/clevelandbazaar/events. Lafayette Rd. (St. Rte. 42), Medina, 9 a.m.–3 p.m. $2. Early-bird special admission, 6–9 FEB. 3 – Mohican Experts Hike, Mohican a.m., $3. A treasure trove of vintage items and State Park, 3116 St. Rte. 3, Loudonville, 9
a.m.–12 p.m. Free. www.facebook.com/ MohicanStatePark. FEB. 4 – Model Railroad and Toy Show, Medina Co. Fgds. Community Center, 735 Lafayette Rd. (St. Rte. 42), Medina. $7. 330-948-4400 (Vikki Conrad) or www. conraddowdell.com. FEB. 9–10 – Cleveland Beerfest, Huntington Convention Center, 300 Lakeside Ave. E., Cleveland. $40–$95; designated driver package for $25. Sample more than 150 local and craft brews, as well as wines and spirits from new craft wineries and distilleries. Food vendors on-site. https://clevelandbeerfest.com. FEB. 9–MAR. 3 – Agatha Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express, Great Lakes Theater, 2067 E. 14th St., Cleveland. See website for days and times. $20–$89. In this comedic twist on the famous mystery, Poirot must solve the crime of a man stabbed in his locked compartment on the opulent Orient Express — where every passenger is a suspect. 216-2416000 or www.playhousesquare.org. FEB. 10 – Cleveland Bazaar Valentine, Lake Affect Alive, 1615 E. 25th St., Cleveland, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. Local and handmade makers, full bar, food, and more. www.facebook.com/ clevelandbazaar/events. FEB. 11 – Medina Gun Show, Medina County Fgds. Community Center, 735 Lafayette Rd., Medina, Sat. 9 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.–3 p.m. $8. 450 tables of displays. 330-948-4400 (Jim Conrad) or www.conraddowdell.com.
SOUTHEAST
JAN. 23 – Mary Chapin Carpenter and Shawn Colvin, Peoples Bank Theatre, 222 Putnam St., Marietta, 8 p.m. $53+. www.peoplesbanktheatre.com. JAN. 26 – Sunset and Full Moon Hike, Burr Oak State Park, 10220 Burr Oak Lodge Rd., Glouster, 5:30–7 p.m. Free. Enjoy the twilight of the forest and view the full wolf
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moon on this short, 1-mile hike. Wear sturdy shoes and dress for the weather. Have dinner at the lodge after the hike! www. ohiodnr.gov. JAN. 27 – Buckeye Trail Trek, Shawnee State Park, 4404 St. Rte. 125, West Portsmouth, 10 a.m.–2 p.m. Free. Meet in the lodge lobby at 10 a.m. Traverse 4 miles on the Buckeye Trail through Shawnee State Forest’s beautiful, unglaciated, rugged terrain. Pack snacks and water, wear sturdy hiking boots, and bring a hiking stick. www. ohiodnr.gov. FEB. 2 – Twitty & Lynn: “A Salute to Conway & Loretta,” Majestic Theatre, 45 E. Second St., Chillicothe, 7:30 p.m. $49–$59. The grandson of Conway Twitty and the granddaughter of Loretta Lynn perform their
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
grandparents’ timeless duets and solo hits. 740-772-2041 or www.majesticchillicothe.net. FEB. 3 – Moose Miller, Majestic Theatre, 45 E. Second St., Chillicothe, 7:30 p.m. $10–$20. 740-772-2041 or www. majesticchillicothe.net. FEB. 3 – Chris Janson, Peoples Bank Theatre, 222 Putnam St., Marietta, 8 p.m. $59+. www.peoplesbanktheatre.com. FEB. 10 – Annual Winter Hike, Burr Oak State Park, 10220 Burr Oak Lodge Rd., Glouster, 10 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Free. Hike lengths are 3, 5, and 8 miles; wear sturdy shoes and dress for the weather. Free bean soup and cornbread after the hike at the lodge. 740-818-4530 (Julie Gee) or www. ohiodnr.gov.
CENTRAL
brews, as well as wines and spirits from new craft wineries and distilleries. Food vendors on-site. https://columbusbeerfest.com. JAN. 20 – Logan Frozen Festival, downtown Logan. Free. Enjoy ice sculptures, ice games, vendors, and more. 740-385-2750 or www. hockinghills.com. JAN. 20 – Winter Hike at Hocking Hills, Hocking Hills State Park, 20160 St. Rte. 664 S., Logan, continuous starts from 9 to 11 a.m. Free. See the beauty of the park in winter as you hike 6 miles from Old Man’s Cave to Ash Cave, with JAN. 11, FEB. 8 – Inventors Network a stop at Cedar Falls for bean soup and corn Meeting, The Point at Otterbein University, 60 muffins. Shuttle bus returns hikers to parking Collegeview Rd., Westerville 43081, 7 p.m. Zoom area. 740-385-6841 or www.hockinghills.com. meetings on Jan. 18 and Feb. 15 at 7 p.m. 614JAN. 27 – Buckeye Lake Winterfest, locations 470-0144 or www.inventorscolumbus.com. around the Buckeye Lake area. Begin your day JAN. 16, 18 – Ohio Boating Education Course, at the North Shore Boat Ramp at 6:30 a.m. to West Licking Fire District, 111 Basin St., Hebron, see if Benny the Bass takes the bait to predict 5–9 p.m. Free. Fulfills Ohio boating education the beginning of spring. After the kickoff, visit requirements; must attend both nights. Taught over 40 businesses in the region for food and by ODNR officers. Successful completion earns drink specials, live music, an art show, and the student the Ohio Boater Education card. more! 740-398-7205 or www.facebook.com/ Register by calling Buckeye Lake State Park BuckeyeLakeWinterfest. Office at 740-527-4218. JAN. 27 – Winter Hike at Alum Creek, Alum JAN. 20 – Cabaret in the May: “No Place Like Creek State Park, 3615 S. Old State Rd., Home,” Marion Palace Theatre, 276 W. Center Delaware, 2–4 p.m. Free. Enjoy the crisp winter Street, Marion, 7:30 p.m. $22. Featuring Tanner air as we hike 4.5 miles through the woodlands Wink and Madisen Schenk. 740-383-2101 or and along the lake. Moderate difficulty, with www.marionpalace.org. some hills and stream crossings. 740-513-6382 (Lindsey Krusling) or www.ohiodnr.gov. JAN. 20 – Columbus Beerfest, Greater Columbus Convention Center, 400 N. High St., JAN. 27–28 – Scott Antique Market, Ohio Columbus. $40–$95; designated driver package Expo Ctr., Bricker and Celeste Bldgs., 717 E. 17th for $25. Sample more than 150 local and craft
Ave., Columbus, Sat. 9 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Free admission; $7 parking. 800 exhibit booths. info@scottantiquemarket.com or www.scottantiquemarkets.com. FEB. 2–4 – Columbus Log Home and Timber Home Design-Build Show, Ohio Expo Ctr., Rhodes Bldg., 717 E. 17th Ave., Columbus, Fri. 1–7 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $10 online, $12 on-site; 18 and under free. Tickets good for all days! An expo for log home, timber frame home, and rustic furniture enthusiasts. 866-607-4108 or www. loghomeshows.com. FEB. 6 – Spring Concert Rehearsal: Singers Wanted, Epiphany Lutheran Church, 268 Hill Rd. N., Pickerington, 7–8:30 p.m. Join the Pickerington Community Chorus every Tuesday from Feb. 6 on as we prepare for our spring concert, to be presented on April 20. No audition required. For more information, contact Cherie’ Stahlman-Knapp at 614-5821509 or stahlman@insight.rr.com, or visit www. pickeringtoncommunitychorus.com. FEB. 9–11 – National Fishing Expos, Columbus, Ohio Expo Ctr., Bricker Bldg., 717 E. 17th Ave., Columbus, Fri. 12–7 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–3 p.m. $5–$30. Formerly Columbus Fishing Expo. Nearly 300 vendors, exclusive product showcase, demonstrations, informational seminars by professional anglers, and more. www. nationalfishingexpos.com.
SOUTHWEST
THROUGH FEB. 26 – Bluegrass Wednesdays, Vinoklet Winery, 11069 Colerain Ave., Cincinnati, Wed. 6:30–8:30 p.m. Enjoy dinner, wine, and an evening of free entertainment by Vernon McIntyre’s Appalachian Grass. Reservations recommended. 513-3859309, vinokletwinery@fuse.net, or www. vinokletwines.com. JAN. 13 – Brown County FFA Consignment Auction, Brown Co. Fgds., 325 W. State St., Georgetown, 10 a.m. Auction of farm equipment and farm vehicles. Items for consignment will be received on-site from 10 a.m. on Wed., Thurs., Fri. 937-731-3939 or bcffaca@yahoo.com. JAN. 18 – “Attracting Wildlife to Your Backyard,” Caesar Creek State Park, Nature Center, 8570 E. St. Rte. 73, Waynesville, 1–3 p.m. Free. Join park naturalist Erin Shaw to learn ways to attract native wildlife to your backyard and understand why it’s important. www.ohiodnr.gov.
JAN. 19 – Pam Bowman: Hammered Dulcimer, Troy-Hayner Cultural Center, 301 W. Main St., Troy, 7:30 p.m. In conjunction with the Mountain Dulcimer Society of Dayton. www. troyhayner.org/music.html. JAN. 19–21, 24–28 – Cincinnati Boat, Sport, and Travel Show, Duke Energy Convention Center, 525 Elm St., Cincinnati. $13–$15; under 12 free. Find everything you need to plan your next outdoor adventure, from boats, campers, ATVs, and motorcycles to adventure sports equipment. See website for hours and schedule of events. www. cincinnatiboatsportandtravelshow.com. JAN. 19–21, 26–28 – Greater Cincinnati Remodeling Expo, Sharonville Convention Center, 11355 Chester Road, Cincinnati, Fri. 12–5 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.–5 p.m. $5, under 18 free. Meet local remodeling and building experts and get the advice you need to help you with your home improvement projects; explore innovative displays showcasing the latest trends in design and product offerings. www.homeshowcenter.com/ overview/Cincinnati. JAN. 30 – Drawing Room Chamber Concert, Troy-Hayner Cultural Center, 301 W. Main St., Troy, 7:30 p.m. Hosted by Steven Aldredge. Featuring Aaron Brant on French horn and Amanda Roberts on piano. www.troyhayner. org/upcoming-concerts.html.
FEB. 2–3 – Cincy Beerfest, Duke Energy Convention Center, 525 Elm St., Cincinnati. $40–$95; designated driver package for $25. Sample more than 150 local and craft brews, as well as wines and spirits from new craft wineries and distilleries. Food vendors on-site. https://cincybeerfest.com. FEB. 3 – Greater Cincinnati Fly Fishing Show, Oasis Conference Center, 902 Loveland-Miamiville Rd., Loveland, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Fly fishing education, tying equipment, magazines/books on fly tying, fishing kits, training services by professionals, and more. https://10times.com/fly-fishing-show. FEB. 9 – The Butler Philharmonic Orchestral Ensemble: “Fitton Family Friday,” Fitton Center for the Creative Arts, 101 S. Monument Ave., Hamilton, 7:30 p.m. Members $6, nonmembers $8. Facebook: @officialbutlerphil or www.butlerphil.org. FEB. 9–11 – Hearts Afire Weekend, downtown Loveland. Celebrate Valentine’s Day in Loveland, known as the “Sweetheart of Ohio.” Featuring fire, ice, live entertainment, outdoor decorations, and more love-inspired fun! https://lovinlifeloveland.com/events/ loveland-hearts-afire-weekend. FEB. 10 – Cincinnati Winter Blues Experience, Manor House, 7440 Mason Montgomery Rd., Mason, 5 p.m. $30. https:// winterbluesexperience.com.
JANUARY 2024 • OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING
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MEMBER INTERACTIVE
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1—A boy and his best friend on a very snowy, cold day. Kristin Hinkle, South Central Power Company member. 2—Locklan Lady, our grandson, holding a tiny snowman he made all by himself. Diana Sieb, Darke Rural Electric Cooperative member. 3—Our granddaughter Penelope’s first snow day. John Black, Pioneer Electric Cooperative member. 4—My son, Hayes, when left with his Papaw on his favorite snow day. Katrina Homan, Frontier Power Company member. 5—Farmall H resting until spring. Dale Mendenhall, Adams Rural Electric Cooperative member. 6—I captured this beauty in our backyard on a snowy February afternoon. Karen Gainey, South Central Power Company member. 7—My wife and daughter making the most of a snow day in Laurelville. Travis Thompson, South Central Power Company member.
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For April, send “Wind in my hair” by Jan. 15; For May, send “Mom at her best” by Feb. 15. Upload your photos at www.ohiocoopliving.com/memberinteractive. Your photo may be featured in our magazine or on our website.
OHIO COOPERATIVE LIVING • JANUARY 2024
Did you know? Even as demand for electricity is constantly growing, Ohio has lost 80% of the always-available coal-fired plants that ensure the lights will come on every moment of every day.
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Energy transformation can be navigated, but reliability MUST be anchored as our North Star guiding the journey. As it exists today, the electric grid is operating ever closer to the edge where reliability is at risk.
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—James Robb, CEO North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC)