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Dream hunt’s one guarantee: To be memorable.
By Mike Tontimonia The distance between Northeast Ohio and a remote mountain top campsite: Considerable but doable. This week is a travel week involving three days in a diesel pick-up truck and another on horseback. We left Monday morning well before dawn with Topeka, Kansas in our sights. The drive The truck is capped and
Pocket Panache
Struggling in my handbag is an almost daily experience for me. Oh, I made sure to choose a bag with all the organizer pockets including one for a cell phone.
The ‘doctors of old’ started as farm children, from simple backgrounds
Part II of a series “The old country doctor was a man of few words because there were no words.” >– Dr. Arthur E. Hertzler, The Horse and Buggy Doctor, copyright 1938 It has been said that the best doctors of the olden days had started out as farm children. One quote from Dr. Arthur
How to ripen green tomatoes indoors
The almanac warns frost is overdue. Vegetable growers are harvesting those last few warm weather crops before it’s too late.
Lunatic asylum brings history to life
University class visits Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum in Weston, West Virginia.
Once the site of Weston State Hospital, a psychiatric hospital.
A roundup of FFA news for the week of July 19, 2012:
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio — David Glass, of Zane Trace FFA, had the unique opportunity to travel to Costa Rica for 10 days in June. Glass received this trip along with his National Proficiency Award at FFA National Convention in the fall. Glass started of his trip with a tour of EARTH University on June 14. While
It’s a great day for hay — let’s keep it that way
It’s important to inspect hay stacks for stability as you add or remove bales, and transport hay.
Finding common ground on the topic of hunting
There is no longer the need to hunt for fur or survival in this part of the world, but there will always be the need to manage animal populations.
A bunch of memories held in one smooth rock
Good people and good places are the foundation for great memories, and all it takes to remind one of any or all of the three is sometimes as insignificant as a small rock. In this case it is a rock the size of an egg, but flat and polished from years of movement of sea
Early doctor’s description of surgeries seems hard for us to believe today
(Part III of a series) Part 1– The strong survive and succeed Part 2– The ‘doctors of old’ started as farm children from simple backgrounds The writings of Dr. Arthur E. Hertzler, a Kansas farm boy turned country physician who earned his living by making house calls in the early 1900s, provide a remarkable glimpse






