JUNE 2020
GROWING MIRACLES Nevis gardener enjoys God’s inventions
Doug Scraper, 75, Nevis, offers treats to his beloved horse, Skeeter. He boards Skeeter at Strait Rail Ranch, where he has voluntarily tended a vegetable garden for about eight years.
By Shannon Geisen sgeisen@parkrapidsenterprise.com
Scraper’s grandparents had a “ranchette” in Arkansas, with a horse, a cow, a pig and chickens. “I love for horses brought Doug would spend all of my time with the Scraper, 75, and his quarter horse – just nonstop. Her name was horse, Skeeter, to Strait Rail Ranch Dixie,” he recalled. “Just fell in love in Nevis a little over a decade ago. with horses from then on.” His love for gardening transSkeeter, 18, was his first opporformed a small area – formerly the tunity to own a horse. Scraper site of a cow barn – into a flourishpurchased the horse 11 years ago ing vegetable garden. and began boarding him at Strait Dylan Schauer, owner of Strait Rail Ranch. Rail Ranch, said, “As much as I’d That’s when he eyed the footlike to take credit for all of Doug’s print of the old cow barn – the hard work, I just can’t, but it really grassy area where the cow stalls is a beautiful, amazing garden. This had been and the cement aisle down man puts a lot of work into it, and the middle. does things that I couldn’t do.” “It was the perfect spot for a Originally from Grand Forks, garden,” he said. “The rows are Scraper retired from the U.S. Air just the right length and are Force after 20 years as a B-52 pilot. easily accessible.” “I was the squadron commander His Lebanese grandparents at the bomber squadron at Minot homesteaded in North Dakota, so when I retired from the Air Force. he grows a giant Syrian heirloom That was in 1988,” he said. tomato plant in his garden. He and wife Kathy opened an art “It gets big, beautiful tomatoes Scraper's sister and brother-in-law gallery in Fargo for 23 years, along handcrafted signs for his garden. on it,” he said. with a restaurant for 10 years. Scraper also cultivates heirloom “We bought a cabin on Lake Belle red and yellow sweet peppers, Japanese Trifele black Taine in 1987. We’d go there every weekend until we tomatoes, along with white tomato and yellowretired, then we moved over there full time,” he said. ish-orange tomato varieties. “It was a cabin when we bought it. We remodeled it three times, and now it’s a home.”
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Art Beat Quarterly Regional Guide
Inside this issue... 3 How to make the most of your telehealth Appointment 4
Spring Grilled Pork Tenderloin
5-8 Art Beat 9
The great tomato race
10 I'm sorry what did you say? 11
Aging in place: What does that mean?
12 Minding Our Elders column
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