Hands-On History: New museum, Children of Gettysburg 1863, explains big concepts to Gettysburg’s smallest visitors

Exhibit at Children of Gettysburg 1863. Photos courtesy of Gettysburg Foundation.

Bob is the most popular guy at Gettysburg’s newest museum.

He’s actually a dummy—dressed in Civil War clothing, lying on a cot—whose battle wounds get bandaged by kids nearly all day, every day. He’s just one of many interactive activities that make history hands-on for Gettysburg’s youngest visitors at a new museum called Children of Gettysburg 1863.

Children and families choose one of six “characters”—real Gettysburg children who lived through the Civil War—and follow their personal stories through colorful, oversized storybooks and related hands-on activities like the bandaging of Bob. Everything is conceived and operated by the Gettysburg Foundation, the nonprofit arm of the National Park Service’s Gettysburg National Military Park.

“We’re changing the concept of what a museum is, because it’s entirely hands-on,” said Bethany Yingling, museum manager. “And there’s nothing better than watching parents and kids interact, learning together.”

 

Eyes of a Child

Yingling is often the one who greets families at the entrance and shadows them through the museum’s five rooms, each presenting specific Civil War topics leading up to, through and following the pivotal Civil War battle. The target age range is kindergarten through fifth grade, yet Yingling said that many adults are surprised by how much they learn—through the eyes of their children—as well as the eyes of Gettysburg’s children of 1863.

In addition to each room’s central, oversized storybooks—based on historically accurate, first-person accounts—there are scavenger hunt cards for kids to emboss along the way, the chance to be a drummer boy in the Civil War (don’t worry, mamas—the drumbeats are muted), lifting a heavy bucket full of bullet shells (a common post-battle activity for Gettysburg’s children), puzzles and more.

“I look at this as an opportunity, as a history nerd, to do all the things that I wish I’d had the opportunity to do as a little kid,” said Yingling, who earned a degree in secondary education social studies and history and previously worked as a teacher. “This is my way to give back to all the little nerds up-and-coming, and I say that word ‘nerd’ with love.”

All that hands-on learning helps kids process what the pivotal Civil War battle was all about. Because, otherwise, how do you explain big concepts like the Civil War and slavery?

“It’s our obligation, our role, to inspire these kids in a way that makes sense to them, because war is scary and slavery is complex,” said Elle Lamboy, Gettysburg Foundation’s vice president of philanthropy. “So, we tried to break it down, working with educators, in ways that kids can begin to understand that they’re in a special place.”

Nurturing the next generation of history lovers by “igniting that spark of curiosity that will keep burning for a lifetime” is the museum’s primary goal, said Lamboy.

 

Planting Seeds

Converting the foundation-owned house into a children’s museum “was kind of a crazy idea but we felt like there was a real market advantage because there was nothing for this demographic, and as a nonprofit educational organization, we were meeting our mission—and then it was just so rewarding to bring these stories of these kiddos to life,” Lamboy said.

The beginning of the pandemic synched with—and shaped—the exhibits’ creative direction.

“That was the other wild part—the technology factor,” said Lamboy. “Everyone’s gut reaction was that the museum had to be high-tech. But as we were planning the gallery space, we were all on Zoom, kids were on Zoom, we were all on screen overload. And we were like, ‘Let’s just go back to a simpler time so kids really get a feel for what it was like in 1863.’”

Looking at today’s pandemic events through the lens of history often reveals new lessons. For example, did you know, Gettysburg residents wore masks following the battle to protect themselves from post-battle stench and disease?

“Kids have those a-ha moments when they realize they’re living through crazy things too—like COVID,” Yingling said. “They say, ‘They had to wear masks too?’ That connection—seeing that this isn’t the first time something horrible happened that required people to wear masks—and you can get past horrible things that happen in life.”

So far, attendance is shattering all projections. Affordability and accessibility is a priority. Admission is free for each child, age 12 and younger, with a paying adult ($7.50). The museum is already a popular destination for scouts, school and homeschool groups.

“What makes the museum so special is that everything is touchable and interactive,” said Anna Domzalski of Gettysburg, who organizes monthly field trips for a homeschool co-op involving 10 families and about 30 children.

With kids ranging from babies to fourth graders, most outings are especially meaningful for one specific age group, but their visit to Children of Gettysburg 1863 “was great for everyone,” said Domzalski.

“They did a great job with everything—the foundation made great choices,” Domzalski said. “But even more so, they picked the right people to run it. They’re phenomenal.”

Gettysburg’s history lessons are not only important to visitors, but for those who live nearby.

“We drive through the Gettysburg battlefield every day,” said Domzalski. “And your kids naturally ask questions. So, the museum is the perfect starting place to answer those questions.”

While Children of Gettysburg 1863 is located in town, the foundation also operates the popular NPS battlefield visitor center.

“Having the Gettysburg Museum and Visitor Center is huge, but we want you to grow with us your entire life,” said Lamboy. “What is the legacy of Gettysburg, if we don’t appeal to incoming generations? It could be lost. Our kids are going to be the ones to change this world. So, if we can have even one tiny part in that, it’s very rewarding.”

 

Children of Gettysburg 1863 is located at 451 Baltimore St., Gettysburg, and online at gettysburgfoundation.org/children-of-gettysburg-1863. Tune into TheBurg Podcast’s July episode to hear more from Elle Lamboy about the individual Children of Gettysburg 1863 stories, plus the museum’s special events.

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Lost & Hound: Find Toby In PA reunites missing pets with their families

Cleo and family

PennDOT Engineering District 8 in Harrisburg is home to piles of road salt and reinforced concrete pipes.

For about two months this year, it also was home to a miniature poodle named Cleo, who likely squeezed through holes in the fence and was living among the pipes.

Find Toby in PA, a nonprofit dedicated to reuniting lost pets with their owners in central Pennsylvania, got wind of a dog inhabiting the PennDOT property on Herr Street. Within about two days, Kim Bolden and a fellow volunteer were able to trap her in a crate with food.

What came next shocked even Bolden, who has six years of experience volunteering with Find Toby.

Cleo belonged to a family who thought that their dog had died shortly after going missing in late March. The cremated remains from another run-over pup (once a similar size and fur pattern to their own Cleo), sat in their home while the family grieved. Thanks to Find Toby, the real Cleo came home.

“They would’ve never found her if she wasn’t microchipped and registered,” Bolden said.

Pure Passion

Find Toby’s mission is twofold.

On the one hand, the organization helps reunite families with lost dogs, cats and other pets. They do this with the help of administrative volunteers who manage the highly active Facebook page, but also with field volunteers unafraid to sacrifice a good night’s sleep for the sake of a lost animal.

On the other hand, Find Toby has a preventative motive. This means helping people with the often-forgotten step of registering a microchip, as well as informing folks about the need to keep newly adopted animals extra secure with a double leash on a collar and harness.

“Probably more than 50% of the dogs that I end up working with are recently rehomed or rescued within the last week,” Bolden said.

According to the latest data, Find Toby helped reunite 5,754 pets in 2019 alone. This includes mostly dogs, but also cats and other pets (think horses, birds, rabbits and reptiles). Since then, Find Toby has continued to grow in popularity and now is often the first place Harrisburg-area people go when they discover that their pet is missing.

And to think it all started with one dog, Toby himself, who, in early 2013, wandered lost for 16 days before the group’s original community found him and brought him back to his Mechanicsburg home.

Rachel Black, president of Find Toby, said that it took a couple of years for the organization to formalize. Born of necessity and grown on pure passion, the group today is a much more detail-oriented version of its earlier iterations. Facebook group admins volunteer from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. “and this is seven days a week, 365 days a year,” said Black, who herself volunteers on holidays.

The admin volunteer training program teaches standard formats and responses that volunteers have curated over the years. Key field workers undergo Missing Animal Response Network (MARN) training for lost pet recovery.

Helping Hands

By day, Black is a business analyst for Highmark. Her analytical brain has come in handy. When a dog, Charlie Bear, was lost in the Mechanicsburg area for four months, Black said that she looked at data and information to whittle down potential locations based on sightings.

Strategy is crucial in the world of lost pets.

“That dog is safer if it is calm, in a safe spot, even if it is still loose than if we scare that dog and make it run,” Black said, which is why Find Toby often keeps sightings on the down-low until the job is done.

Many owners are surprised to find that their lost dog may not approach them when it has been living as a wild animal for an extended period of time.

“They’re in survival mode now,” Bolden said.

Bolden, too, has a personality suited for the job.

“I’ve always been very calm,” she said.

That doesn’t mean that her work is not stressful, and Bolden emphasizes just how much Find Toby could use helping hands. With its growth comes a need for more people manning the Facebook page, watching live cameras overnight to help field workers get sleep, and even going out in the field to trap lost pets or refresh food and water.

Bolden’s story of capturing Cleo and returning her home to her once-mourning family is unique, but it’s not the only wild tale she has.

Whitney, a dog in Palmyra, escaped her home twice in a matter of days. She was captured both times, first by squeezing herself into a raccoon trap meant for a different critter, then by entering Find Toby’s own trap. A shepherd mix, Kisses, escaped in Annville while en route from the Carolinas to New York. She survived for 29 days in January before popping up in someone’s yard.

“We finally got her, and she smelled like cows and hay,” Bolden said. “So, she must have gotten into barns.”

Ultimately, Find Toby volunteers sacrifice time and energy, but they gain a community of animal lovers and unendingly rewarding experiences.

“The animals and the people that you’ve met always come forward with you, and it makes you a different person,” Bolden said.

 

For more information or to volunteer with Find Toby in PA, visit www.findtobyinpa.org or www.facebook.com/findtobyinpa.

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It’s Her Destiny: Amy Brickner takes you to the source for farm-fresh milk, ice cream

Amy Brickner

On a stretch of land near Carlisle, down the road a bit, you’ll find what Amy Brickner calls her “Destiny,” a place where she feels at home and at peace.

A crowd gathers around her, welcoming her as she nears the slide. Suddenly, all heads turn to get a glimpse of the enthusiastic, ginger-furred straggler who, when he realizes he is missing out, begins charging at full speed, grunting loudly, eager for a greeting.

“These are my pets,” said Brickner of the goats and pigs that make Stover Farms their home.

Located near the pet playground is a cozy wooden structure complete with a rocking chair on the front porch that practically beckons visitors to relax, stay awhile, perhaps indulge in a bit of ice cream, and take in the tableau. Brickner named the business “Destiny Dairy Bar” because she knows she is needed here, and it is here where she’s happiest.

“My family has always farmed here,” Brickner said. “My mom, my uncle and my grandfather were all involved until my grandfather passed.”

She eventually left home to study animal science at Cornell University. She later pursued a master’s degree in dairy nutrition at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

“I wanted to get my Ph.D. since I love teaching and figuring out better ways to do things, but the farm was always in the back of my mind,” she said.

In 2006, she decided to return to the family farm.

“I guess I never felt like I was going to stay in Madison,” she said. “I wanted to be home and be closer to the farm and my family, especially as I began to lose family members.”

Brickner sells non-homogenized creamline milk that will delight those old enough to remember fighting over the cream ball with their siblings.

“You have to shake it to incorporate the cream,” Brickner said.

She explained that creamline means the milk has not been separated and standardized to a certain fat percentage. So, you get it exactly how it comes out of the cow.

“This means it could change by the season, diet or by the number of days the cows have been milking,” she said.

Even finicky children may turn into converts when they taste Brickner’s line of flavored milks. Customers can choose from chocolate, strawberry, root beer, peach, cookies and cream and raspberry, to name a few.

“When you think about how versatile milk is, it makes sense to put flavors in it and make it fun,” she said.

Additional products include ice cream with flavors like vanilla, chocolate, butter pecan, peanut butter and peach.

Brickner thinks it’s important to be transparent when it comes to operating a farm.

“I love showing people around and connecting them in a small way to their food,” she said. “You worry about things people see being misconstrued, but I think we all need to do better in having open discussions on how animals are raised and treated.”

Brickner wants people to know that she feeds calves and milks cows every day at 3 p.m.

“So, that’s a good time to come out and ask questions,” she said.

On a recent weekday, Jason Fanus stopped by to pick up a few products on his way to work in Carlisle. He weighed in on the flavored milk.

“I like the root beer,” he said. “It tastes like root beer barrels. And if you haven’t tasted the cookies and cream milk, you don’t know what you’re missing.”

Fanus learned about Destiny Dairy Bar from Facebook and convinced his co-workers to visit the farm, too.

“Once you’ve tried her products, you’ll want to come back for more,” he said.

“This is music to my ears,” Brickner said, with a smile.

She added that interacting with the community, sharing what she has learned about the agricultural industry over the years, tending to the animals and offering them the best care possible is the fulfillment of a plan that was set in place long ago when she fell in love with the farm.

“It’s why I named the place Destiny,” she said.


Destiny Dairy Bar is located at 60 Horners Rd., Carlisle. Learn more by visiting their website at
www.destinydairybar.com.

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Food & Family: Kimchee Girl shares her love of Korean cuisine with central PA

Illustration by Aron Rook.

Joyce Park Williams never planned on running her own pop-up restaurant.

“I started my food company by accident,” said the owner and chef behind Kimchee Girl authentic Korean food.

A former makeup artist, a lifelong resident of the Harrisburg area and the first of her Korean family to be born in the United States, Park Williams could not find kimchee—a 3,000-year-old fermented Korean dish—that rivaled her mother’s.

“Growing up poor, we grew everything,” she said.

She recalled making “hundreds and hundreds of pounds of kimchee” with her family. But in her house, her parents had no recipe; they made it to taste.

After her mother passed away from cancer, Park Williams realized that she needed to find a way to replicate the delicious food she’d grown up with. So, she carefully studied and documented her dad’s kimchee techniques until she felt the recipe matched the taste of her mom’s cooking. Now, she had pounds of kimchee filling her fridge.

“All my friends are on Facebook like, ‘You make kimchee?’” she said. “I’m like, ‘Yeah.’… ‘Do you sell it?’ I’m like, ‘Sure.’”

By the end of the following weekend, she had made $1,000.

In May 2021, she filed the paperwork to become a legal business. Now, you can find Joyce Park Williams and her blazing pink tent all over central PA. And while kimchee, the dish she makes with only a handful of ingredients, is her specialty, it’s usually her other dishes that draw a crowd.

“Korean food is very aromatic,” she said.

Customers follow the smell of Korean-style barbecue ribs, bone-in pork chops and bulgogi wraps with marinated beef. It’s common for people to come back for seconds. Park Williams lights up when she talks about customers enjoying her food.

“But this isn’t really about me,” she said. “It’s about my mom.”

She believes in the power of food to connect us to each other and to the ones we love.

While she tries to locally source as many ingredients as possible, buying from places like the PA Open Air Farmers Market on Cameron Street in Harrisburg, her ultimate goal is to find a farmer to grow her food and to get her mom’s kimchee into supermarkets across the country.

Already through her online shop, she sells kimchee to people in states as far away as California who want a taste of the food that “has four times the probiotics of Greek yogurt” and won’t go bad for years.

“I want kimchee to be as common as ketchup,” she said.

And with her kimchee now sold at five different outlets across Pennsylvania and Maryland, including Cornerstone Coffeehouse in Camp Hill, she’s doing her best to make that happen.

Though there are hundreds of varieties of kimchee, Park Williams makes hers stand out by making it vegan (without fish sauce) and by donating a portion of every Kimchee Girl sale to a local person battling cancer.

Around Christmas, she and her husband, Kevin, dress up as Santa and Mrs. Claus and take gifts, gift cards and money for treatment to a patient or their child who needs it.

“[Cancer] is expensive,” said the survivor of uterine and breast cancer who wants to give back as much as she can.

Soon, along with its pop-up, Kimchee Girl with have a more permanent spot at the new indoor farmers market in Hershey, where kimchee will be served along with their other classic Korean dishes. She is looking forward to sharing her food with even more people.

“It’s very joyful,” she said. “Food is really the fabric of our life.”

For more information on Kimchee Girl, visit www.kimcheegirl.com.

 

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July Editor’s Note

Who’s that doggy on the cover?

Why, that’s Pursuit!

Each July, our magazine offers a special section devoted to our beloved animal companions. So, in past years, we’ve had dog covers and cat covers and, once, even featured a picture of a canary perched atop the head of a boxer (the canine type, not the fighting type).

This year, it’s Pursuit’s turn to show off his handsome mug, as captured by our illustrator, Ryan Spahr. Pursuit is currently a resident of the Humane Society of Harrisburg Area and is looking for his forever home.

According to the Humane Society’s description, Pursuit, a pit bull mix, had some interesting adventures before landing in their care, including a mad dash from some pursuing police officers, which is how he got his name.

If you’re thinking about a pet, perhaps you’ll consider Pursuit or one of the other longer-term residents of our local shelter. A quick online search has a wealth of information about the animals in their care, including likes (for Pursuit, that’s food and other dogs) and dislikes (in his case, cats).

We hope you’ll find a great match for your home!

In addition to our pet theme, July stories include everything from arts to eats to events. Within these pages, you’re certain to discover something new or interesting or just lots of fun.

Lastly, July is a big vacation month. In the past, readers have sent us photos from their holidays, taking TheBurg along as they traveled everywhere from Florida to Italy, from Hawaii to France. If you’ve packed up a copy for vacation reading, send us a pic from the road, from the beach or from abroad, and we’ll be delighted to share it on our social media pages.

Happy summertime, everyone!

Lawrance Binda
Co-publisher/editor-in-chief

Click here to read a digital version of our July magazine.

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July News Digest

Receivership Extended

The Harrisburg School District’s receivership has been extended for three more years.

Last month, the Court of Common Pleas approved an extension of the receivership, which was slated to end on June 17.

In late May, the Pennsylvania Department of Education (PDE) filed a petition for an extension of the receivership for another three years, asking the court to reappoint Dr. Lori Suski, the current receiver of the district, to serve until June 17, 2025.

Suski was appointed as the receiver in January, following the departure of Dr. Janet Samuels who had served in the role since the beginning of the three-year receivership period in June 2019.  The court originally placed the district under state control due to its failure to meet 2016 Financial Recovery Plan goals.

The PDE petition states that while “the District has made initial progress toward financial and academic recovery,” the district’s long-term recovery still needs work to improve financial health and academics. The department said that the receiver is “mid-stream” in many of her current initiatives to meet goals outlined in the district’s 2021 Amended Financial Recovery Plan.

According to the petition, the district has improved its financial status. For instance, PDE noted the proposed 2022-23 balanced budget. It also outlined the district’s development of a K-12 math and English language arts standards-aligned curriculum and the hiring of several top officials in the district, including Superintendent Eric Turman.

However, PDE has a number of items that it wants the district to address before exiting receivership. These include continuing to develop a five-year financial projection and facility utilization plan, improving student PSSA and Keystone Exam scores and making progress with graduation rates and attendance goals, among other objectives.

While under receivership, the Harrisburg school board is essentially stripped of all authority, except for the power to vote on the district’s annual taxing proposal.

 


ARPA Funds Deployed

Harrisburg has decided to allocate a portion of its federal COVID relief funds to its public safety departments.

At a legislative session last month, City Council approved the allotment of about $15.6 million in federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds for public safety initiatives and reimbursement for lost revenue during the pandemic.

In total, the city was allotted $47 million in ARPA funding.

Under the bill, $5.5 million will fund the replacement of the HVAC system in the city’s Public Safety Building in downtown Harrisburg. According to Mayor Wanda Williams, the system is antiquated and in need of an upgrade.

“It’s a pricey, but necessary expenditure, as well as a health risk,” she explained at a previous council work session.

Harrisburg will also give $1.2 million in one-time bonuses to uniformed personnel in the Harrisburg Fire Bureau and Bureau of Police. Each staff member will receive a $5,000 bonus.

“The bonuses, I feel, are instrumental because we were considering those at-risk workers during the hardest times of COVID,” said council member Ralph Rodriguez. “If we don’t take care of them, we will continue to lose them.”

Another $8.8 million will be used to reimburse the city for expenses and lost revenue due to the pandemic, an amount initially approved as part of the 2022 budget.

Williams announced her proposed plan for the use of the ARPA funds in mid-May, including the items that council approved last month. Her proposal also includes uses for the remaining funds, such as for an affordable housing initiative and the replacement of the city’s Hall Manor pool with a waterpark. Those projects, among others, will require future approval by council.

“I would really like to hear the full presentation with presence from each of the directors that would be impacted by the mayor’s proposal,” said council President Danielle Bowers. “I would also like to hear from the residents.”

 

School Budget Includes Tax Hike

Some area property owners soon may see a tax increase, as the Harrisburg School District has proposed a 3.36% hike for the coming year.

At a board meeting last month, district officials presented the proposed $224.2 million 2022-23 budget, which includes a tax increase for the school portion of the property tax.

The district has proposed increasing the millage rate from 29.78 in 2021-22 to 30.78 in the coming fiscal year. Under the plan, taxpayers would pay $30.78 per every $1,000 in assessed property value.

However, Dr. Marcia Stokes, the district’s business administrator, explained that the 5,609 households in Harrisburg that receive the homestead exemption will actually see a decrease in their taxes. Additional property tax relief funds this year will increase the exemption, she said.

At press time, the school board had not yet approved the proposed tax hike, which would take effect in July. Taxing is virtually the only power that the board has left since the district entered into state receivership in 2019.

Overall, the district proposed a $224.2 million balanced budget that includes the use of millions of federal COVID-19 relief dollars.

According to Stokes, this year’s proposed budget is much higher than last year’s $184.8 million budget due to the influx of about $50 million in Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) funding.

The proposed budget includes normal expenditures such as regular instruction, special instruction and staffing costs. However, it also includes special projects such as the renovation of the district’s Steele Elementary School, which the district plans to reopen, and the replacement of HVAC systems across schools. Both would utilize ESSER funds.

Additional ESSER dollars would support upgrades to district playground equipment, furniture, restrooms and fitness equipment, among other items.

Receiver Dr. Lori Suski was expected to make a decision on the adoption of the proposed budget at a late June board meeting, when the school board also was expected to vote on the tax increase.

Lofts Project Begins

In a place where folks once played basketball and held meetings, people soon will be eating, sleeping and simply relaxing.

The Lofts officially broke ground last month in the former Salvation Army building at Green and Cumberland streets in the heart of residential Midtown Harrisburg.

Harrisburg and Dauphin County officials were on hand to ceremonially inaugurate the project, which is being developed by Wormleysburg-based Integrated Development Partners (IDP).

“Today, we’re celebrating what’s to come here at the Lofts of Midtown and what will become a beautiful addition to an already beautiful neighborhood,” said Mayor Wanda Williams. “Each day, the future is getting brighter for the city of Harrisburg, and we’re looking forward to seeing what’s next.”

Since its founding in 2018, IDP has undertaken several area projects, most notably the mixed-use Steel Works revitalization project in Steelton.

The company first proposed the Lofts in December 2020 as a for-sale condominium project, but since has changed the business model to rental units, according to Managing Partner Jonathan Bowser.

IDP officially bought the 18,500-square-foot, mid-century building last year from the Salvation Army, which relocated in late 2019 to a much larger facility on S. 29th Street.

The Lofts project includes 16 one- and two-bedroom units, plus 32 parking spaces located in a surface lot across the street.

Bowser said that his company called the project “The Lofts” because several units are being built in the former, multi-story Salvation Army gymnasium.

“Those will be two-story lofts, so we’re very, very excited about that,” he said.

Rents will range from about $850 a month to $1,500 a month based upon numbers of bedrooms and the sizes of units, with several apartments meeting the city’s affordable housing guidelines, Bowser said. Units will range in size from about 700 square feet to 1,200 square feet.

 

Firehouse Weighed for Homeless Center

Harrisburg and Dauphin County may repurpose a prominent, long-vacant building to serve as a facility for the city’s unhoused.

The Paxton firehouse, located in Shipoke, has sat empty for years, but is now being weighed as a potential service center to support residents experiencing homelessness.

According to Randie Yeager, Dauphin County human services director, the proposal came after the county noticed an increased need for shower facilities for the unhoused population. Several area organizations that have provided those services have reduced capacity, reached maximum capacity or closed, she said.

The county, along with the city and local organizations that serve the unhoused, are working together to address this issue, she said.

Their current proposal, dubbed “Showers on Second,” would use the 85-year-old firehouse as a place for people in need to possibly access showers, among other services, according to a written proposal sent to Shipoke residents by the county.

County, Harrisburg Fire Bureau and Capital Area Coalition on Homelessness representatives held a closed meeting with Shipoke residents last month to discuss the proposal.

The Paxton Fire Co. firehouse, formerly known as Station 6, closed in 2014 due to a need for significant repairs and its location in a flood zone.

Yeager said that the county is still considering other locations for a service center and that no decision had yet been made on the firehouse. If the county moves forward with the proposal, it would seek a local organization to run operations at the facility, Yeager added.

Other possible services offered at the center could include providing locker space, snacks and visits by Dauphin County Human Services staff.

According to the proposal document, the Paxton firehouse location could serve around 15 to 30 people daily and is in close proximity to south Harrisburg and downtown encampments of unhoused residents.

While the initiative is still in draft form, Yeager said that she hopes soon to see action to fill the gap in services.

 

Lighting for New Market Sign

The Broad Street Market’s sign is shining again, after a project to refurbish it was recently completed.

Last month, the market held a re-lighting ceremony, featuring live music, vendors and food as part of 3rd in the Burg.

The sign was repaired and reinstalled in April after suffering damage due to a windstorm. In May 2021, the market launched a campaign and raised $43,000 from community and private donors for the refurbishment.

“On behalf of the board and the market’s 40 vendors, we are grateful to those who supported our efforts to reconstruct our iconic sign in order to continue to be a bright light for our communities in the heart of Midtown,” said market board Chair John J. “Ski” Sygielski.

Sygielski, Harrisburg Mayor Wanda Williams and Matt Krupp of Lighten Up Harrisburg, a major donor to the project, attended the ceremony.

The sign, constructed by RPM Signs and Lighting, has new, energy-efficient lighting, a sturdier structure and a new design featuring silhouettes of the market’s two buildings.

“Given that much of Harrisburg exists in a food desert, with little access to local affordable and nutritious food, the historic Broad Street Market plays an important role as the centerpiece in Midtown Harrisburg’s revitalization,” Krupp said. “We are very honored to be a part of this historic restoration and humbled to have been in a position to help.”

 

Home Sales Slip, Prices Up

Harrisburg-area home sales dipped, but prices rose sharply in May, according to the most recent report on previously owned houses.

For the three-county region, sales fell to 670 homes in May versus 730 in May 2021, but the median sales price of a house increased to $260,000 from $240,000, according to data from the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors (GHAR).

In Dauphin County, sales totaled 320 homes in May, a decrease of 27 units from the year-ago period, while the median price rose to $235,000 from $210,000, GHAR said.

Cumberland County had 322 home sales in May versus 335 a year ago, as the median price jumped to $291,000 from $265,000. In Perry County, 26 houses sold, a drop of seven units, as the median price rose to $243,000 versus $217,000 in May 2021, according to GHAR.

Houses sold relatively quickly in May, as “average days on the market” dropped to 16 days compared to 20 days the prior May, according to GHAR.

 

So Noted

Andrew Gackenbach was named chief production officer last month for Goodwill Keystone Area. In this position, he will drive Goodwill’s retail and donated goods production operations, including overseeing 47 retail stores and donation centers across 22 PA counties, their e-commerce site and warehouse logistics, according to the organization.

Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Capital Region last month announced receipt of its largest donation ever, $1.1 million from philanthropist MacKenzie Scott. The donation was a portion of a national gift totaling $122.6 million from Scott to the parent organization, Big Brothers Big Sisters of America.

Boho Hoarder last month opened shop in Lower Paxton Township, selling second-hand and vintage finds. Owner Rebecca Babish offers a wide variety of clothing, home décor, accessories, glassware and other items from the second-floor shop at 5800 Jonestown Rd.

C. Kim Bracey last month was named the new CEO of YWCA York. Bracey served as York’s mayor for eight years and most recently served as executive director for the Governor’s Center for Local Government Services in the PA Department of Community & Economic Development.

Dauphin County Library System last month debuted its new Print Shop in first-floor space of Penn National Insurance building on N. 2nd Street in Harrisburg. The shop, formerly located in the McCormick Riverfront Library, features a new digital press, and offers affordable print and copy services to local nonprofits.

Harrisburg School District last month broke ground on a project to replace the turf field and the track at Harrisburg High School-John Harris Campus’s Severance Field. The project also will add lighting to the stadium, as well as new field goal posts and soccer goals.

Joe Massaro has been named the new president and CEO of the Pennsylvania Restaurant & Lodging Association. Massaro, the long-time general manager of the Hilton Harrisburg, as well as the regional director of operations for Greenwood Hospitality, replaces John Longstreet, who will retire on July 31.

Phil Guarneschelli, president of UPMC in Central Pa., last month announced his retirement following 36-plus years with UPMC and its predecessor, PinnacleHealth. Lou Baverso, currently chief operating officer for the regional healthcare provider, will succeed Guarneschelli as president.

The Tour de Belt broke both ridership and fundraising records last month during the annual, 20-mile bike ride around the Capital Area Greenbelt. Nearly 1,200 riders raised $59,425, money that will go to Greenbelt improvements, according to organizer Capital Area Greenbelt Association.

Changing Hands

Allison St., 1504: G. Boylan to T. Hardison, $50,000

Bailey St., 1196: D. Boyle to G. Ojeda & M. Rivas, $45,000

Bailey St., 1216: Straw Family Trust to D. Boyle, $40,000

Benton St., 704: T. Nguyen to PA Deals LLC, $55,000

Berryhill St., 1317: Integrity First Home Buyers LLC to Appel Investment Group MD LLC, $134,995

Berryhill St., 1403: Integrity First Home Buyers LLC to A. Johnson, $134,995

Berryhill St., 1425: D. Boyle to R. Rosso, $49,000

Berryhill St., 1609: Integrity First Home Buyers LLC to C. Wheeler, $139,995

Boas St., 402: J. Musselman to McCarty Business LLC, $155,000

Boas St., 1819: D. Keech to Premier Abundance LLC, $65,000

Boas St., 1821: Arinati Capital LLC to 2020 Real Estate Ventures LLC, $50,000

Briggs St., 2018: Cohen Altman Properties LLC to Biyaki Enterprises LLC, $55,000

Camp St., 563: R. Rammouni to Elite Property Rentals LLC, $73,500

Chestnut St., 1629: Bachaouch Properties LLC to R. Nunez, $100,594

Cumberland St., 1328 & 1330: D. & K. Hopkins to S. Welch, $185,000

Derry St., 1210: R. Rammouni to Hillside Financial LLC, $60,000

Emerald St., 631: G. Santiago to Elgamwo LLC, $45,000

Evergreen St., 121: D&F Realty Holdings LP to 101 S. 17th Street LLC, $250,100

Green St., 904: K. & E. Richards to A&W Homes LLC, $220,000

Green St., 1504: J. Webb to Berlin Group LLC, $205,000

Green St., 1529 & 1531: M. Goldberg to Alliance Estates LLC, $470,000

Green St., 1802: A. Simpson to T. Ireland & R. Uniatowski, $257,500

Green St., 1932: L. Mayton & A. Quick to M. & T. Kochera, $273,451

Green St., 2137: T. Sangrey to CWJK Holdings LLC, $145,500

Greenwood St., 2130: C. Traini to C. Fuentes, $45,000

Harris St., 205: J. Heinly to K. & G. Lyon, $258,500

Harris St., 441: Legacy Auto Exchange LLC to B. Robinson, $215,000

Herr St., 215: Z. & W. Zogby to G. & K. Ibberson, $205,000

Herr St., 1738: Strong Force Enterprises LLC to S. Jules & Q. Barkley, $179,000

Hoerner St., 133: L. Yoder to N. Tull, $85,000

Jefferson St., 2355: Da Xing Cheng Inc. to W. Himmelreich, $61,500

Kelker St., 209: Alkaline Properties LLC to D. Pittman, $200,000

Kensington St., 1946: E. & T. Reyes to F. Ortiz, $67,000

Kensington St., 2327: G. Donato to PA Deals LLC, $45,000

Kensington St., 2349: L. Davidson to Q. Huynh, $120,000

Lewis St., 305: J. Novinger to K. Pianka & S. Adams, $176,000

Locust St., 103, 105, 107 & 109 and 120 River St.: Bowser Properties LLC to Fratelli Property Investments LLC, $1,500,000

Logan St., 2244: Capital Real Estate Group LLC to D. Boyle, $40,000

Maclay St., 239: Awesome Tenants LLC to B. Vincent, $110,000

Market St., 1419: M. Araujo to J. Irizarry, $135,000

Market St., 1458: Gaines Real Estate Solutions LLC to A. Fox, $125,000

Melrose St., 716: J. Overton to Rivas Property Investments LLC, $41,984

Mulberry St., 1230: R. Wright to W. Suarez, $250,000

North St., 2008: D. Madden to K. Fort, $89,900

N. 2nd St., 813: Slater Holdings LLC to J. Rotz, $330,000

N. 2nd St., 1106: J. Baer to S. & J. Toole, $188,000

N. 2nd St., 1221: B. & L. Bauman to Ogden Homes LLC, $150,000

N. 2nd St., 1935: D&F Realty Holdings LP to 101 S. 17th Street LLC, $174,900

N. 2nd St., 2219: J. & W. Macavoy to K. Kelley & B. Kerstetter, $220,000

N. 2nd St., 2619: R. & J. Shovlin to E. Orazi, $310,000

N. 2nd St., 2738: J. Houck to Jani Family Trust, $300,000

N. 2nd St., 2915: L. Whitcomb & M. Quinn to R. & J. Shovlin, $450,000

N. 3rd St., 1203: T. Roddy to S. Bruder, $226,000

N. 4th St., 2404: D. Boyle to A&K Investment Partnership LLC, $52,500

N. 4th St., 2717: L. & Y. Kazhdan to T. Wilcox & J. Clark, $190,000

N. 5th St., 1718: Jones Logistics Unlimited LLC to First Daughters LLC, $46,000

N. 6th St., 1414: S. Deasy to B. & L. Comeau, $200,000

N. 6th St., 3148: T. Malehorn to E. Einav, $141,000

N. 18th St., 17: Arinati Capital LLC to 2020 Real Estate Ventures LLC, $50,000

N. Front St., 323: J. Enos to L. Poole & A. Johnson, $648,000

Oxford St., 611: Neidlinger Enterprises LLC to M. Estrada, $145,000

Park St., 1917: Dees Properties to J. Lopez, $73,000

Park St., 1937: MFRA Trust 2016-1 to Adonis Real Estate LLC, $54,900

Paxton St., 1001: I Mart LLC to DAP on Paxton LP, $900,000

Peffer St., 215: C. Beck to K. Peacock, $185,000

Peffer St., 234: J. Priest to R. Hansman, $262,000

Peffer St., 323: Global Reach LLC to Tony’s Café Keystone LLC, $125,000

Penn St., 1322: S. Galbraith to E. O’Brien, $167,500

Penn St., 1420: Hobbeze Inc. to PA Deals LLC, $65,000

Penn St., 1806: Tang & Perkins Property Management LLC to J. Forbes, $165,000

Penn St., 2112: B. Calaman to O Bear Properties LLC, $60,000

Penn St., 2431: T. Weidman & D. Powell to 2431 HBG LLC, $45,000

Pine St., 223: Muslalir Trust to 223 Pine LLC, $790,000

Race St., 554: T. Corl to RG Harrison LLC, $172,000

Reel St., 2739: D. Boyle to J. Juca & N. Masabanda, $45,000

Regina St., 1834: MCLP Asset Company Inc. to M. Santiago, $45,000

Regina St., 1849: Integrity First Home Buyers LLC to J. Schwab, $129,995

Rolleston St., 1143: A&K Investments Partnership LLC to P. Zorrilla, $151,000

Rolleston St., 1218: LVS Titel Trust XIII to Operation Elevation Limited Liability Company, $53,500

Rudy Rd., 1833: Wisechoice USA LLC to CBMB Global Real Estate LLC, $65,000

Rumson Dr., 2786: B. & C. George to E. Drum, $110,000

Seneca St., 239: J. Payne to K. Rutherford, $228,000

S. 13th St., 223: Fair Shake Real Estate LLC to ZNZ Penn Group LLC, $59,000

S. 16th St., 17: W. Cherelus to M. Montes, $89,000

S. 17th St., 20: F. Wofford to 2020 Real Estate Ventures LLC, $65,000

S. 18th St., 1309: L. & C. Thi to A. Bouhach, $100,000

S. 23rd St., 605: Henry & Sons Property 2 LLC to Pledgestone Partners LLC, $69,000

S. 28th St., 726: L. & S. Cassel to P. Garcia, $180,000

S. Cameron St., 1303, 1305, 1307 & 1309: Panas Investments LLC to A. Afolabi, $115,000

Spencer St., 1853: G. Boylan to T. Hardison, $45,000

State St., 1402: E. Zeigler to I. Barreiro & M. Reyes, $156,000

Susquehanna St., 2128: Zion Management LLC to SPG Capital LLC, $62,500

Swatara St., 1254: C. Patel to A. Ortiz, $40,000

Sylvan Terr., 126: D. Boyle to M. Castro, $50,000

Vine St., 119: Wild Patch LLC to D. Beebe, $130,000

Walnut St., 1404: 2013 M&M Real Estate Fund LLC to S. Morrison, $102,000

Whitehall St., 2054: R. Welborn to A. Tatum, $108,000

Wiconisco St., 553: S. Sary to N. McKnight, $71,250

Zarker St. 2037: C. Geary to L. & E. Allen, $117,000

Harrisburg property sales, May 2022, greater than $40,000. Source: Dauphin County. Data is assumed to be accurate.

 

 

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Treasured Threads: One weaver passes her legacy to another

Nelly Smith

When you walk into Weft Wabi-Sabi Weaving on a brisk day, you’re enveloped in the radiant warmth of a fired-up Irish wood stove.

During summer’s sticky string of months, sheep’s wool insulation cools the shed-turned-small business to a comfortable equilibrium. Above you, natural light rains in from skylights—beneath your soles, a cushiony cork floor.

Womb-like is how one weaver described the feeling upon entry.

“Womb-like,” owner Nelly Smith echoed, mulling it over. “I don’t think I could put Weft to words better than that if I tried.”

Though, if she did try, she’d equate it to “a little slice of heaven”—an ambiance reminiscent of a Japanese tea room, which, to her, a lover of tea and artistry, is as close to heaven as can be experienced on earth.

At Weft, Smith facilitates a weaving experience that’s about much more than just putting thread onto loom. Rooted in “Wabi-Sabi,” an ancient Japanese aesthetic philosophy in which beauty is found in imperfection, weavers are encouraged to explore this concept through their creations.

Shelved on the walls and bundled together in baskets on the floor are threads of nearly every color and texture imaginable. With bountiful fibers within reach, weavers are at liberty to intermix hues of reds and yellows, purples and blues—whatever their hearts desire.

“There are no rules,” Smith said.

When people enter, she wants them to feel free to be the truest version of themselves and to express that through the loom as they rhythmically move the needle over and under the warp thread. She simply instructs: “Pick a color and start weaving.” The rest is up to them.

“When they leave after weaving for a few hours, I hope they feel a little more ‘something’—whatever that ‘something’ is that they needed most,” she said. “I want them to feel like they can handle the world a little bit better.”

 

A Legacy

Smith believes the loom can help people find—or rediscover—themselves because it happened to her several years ago.

As a stay-at-home mom who home-schools her three young children, she’s experienced joy in teaching them to exercise their creativity and explore their curiosities. But while nurturing her children, she grew increasingly aware of the stuck spots in her life, including her long battle with dyslexia and accompanying feelings of imperfection. Looking for a cathartic outlet, she stumbled upon Kite Tales SAORI Weaving Arts Studio.

Kite Tales, located in downtown Mechanicsburg at the time, just down the street from her house, was offering classes, and Smith began weaving there every Wednesday. There, she became close to owner Tara Kiley-Rothwell.

“Tara started to reteach me how to live. Her love for her students and passion for weaving was the medicine I had been searching for my whole life,” Smith said. “I learned to trust myself and honor myself. I often say I started weaving, then I started crying, and then I started healing.”

Last June, Kiley-Rothwell passed away after a battle with cancer, and the studio closed. She left behind a parting request for Smith.

“On her deathbed, Tara told her husband that she wanted me to continue the studio,” Smith said.

Wanting to fulfill her dear friend’s wish, she combined her degrees in art and social work to open Weft, located down a small alley in downtown Mechanicsburg. Having purchased the authentic Japanese looms and remaining thread that Kiley-Rothwell left behind, Smith is now giving them a second life.

“Nelly continuing Tara’s legacy is a beautiful tribute to our dear friend,” said April Bilbrey, who befriended Smith at Kite Tails and now helps teach classes at Weft. “It’s an amazing art form that formed bonds between us that will last beyond this lifetime.”

These treasured threads from the past are not just being shaped into potholders, table runners, scarves and wall hangings. They’re interweaving Kiley-Rothwell into the core of Weft—the person who inspired the people and the place.

Once students and now teachers, Smith and Bilbrey are sharing the lessons they learned through weaving, encouraging people to see beauty in all things, whether an artistic creation or themselves. And Smith is cherishing every little “magical” moment.

“I am blown away by the students I have had in the short time Weft has been open,” Smith said. “Their ideas give me goosebumps; their joy in weaving is infectious. I feel like I have so much to learn from all of them. It is such a joy to be part of their weaving journey.”

Weft Wabi-Sabi Weaving is located on E. Stouffer Alley (rear of 310 E. Main St.), Mechanicsburg. For more information, visit www.weftweaving.com.

 

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Good Dogs, Made Great: Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program trains pups and parents how to have a great relationship

Natahnee Miller & Bruce

It started with a growl.

Norman was just a puppy when he began showing signs of “resource guarding”—the phrase that dog behavior experts use to describe dogs being possessive—and sometimes aggressive—over their food or toys.

“We couldn’t walk near his food bowl,” said Jessica Green of Millersburg. “The first time or two, I thought, ‘Oh, he’s just being a puppy.’ But then you could tell by the look in his eye, he was not playing.”

And Norman was growing by the minute. A Mastiff mix, he already weighed between 30 and 40 pounds at 10 weeks old.

“Our fear was—he was going to get a lot larger,” said Green, although admittedly, she has “a soft spot for large breeds.”

She went online to search for accredited dog trainers in the Harrisburg area, focusing on those affiliated with the International Association of Animal Behavior Consultants (IAABC). Her search turned up two options—only one of which offered the individualized training Norman needed.

“My only hope was Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program, and luckily they had space for me,” Green said.

For several months, Norman and his pet parents—Green and her fiancé—worked with trainer Natahnee Miller, president of Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program.

One of the first things Miller focused on wasn’t necessarily Norman’s behavior—but his parents’. Norman, like many pups, was adopted in 2020 amid pandemic shutdowns and work-from-home lifestyles.

“At the time, we weren’t the most structured people in the world. But Natahnee gave us ideas as to how to integrate structure into our lives because Norman needed that as a puppy,” Green said. “Now, we purposefully walk him in the morning and at lunchtime every day.”

Miller also taught them how to read Norman’s body language and behavior. And you could say that Norman has let his guard down. Now a big boy of 105 pounds, 2-year-old Norman no longer growls to protect his food, although he’s still working on a few other quirks.

“He’s not perfect, but he’s much better,” said Green. “The training made living with our dog that much more enjoyable. We will forever be thankful to Natahnee and Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program.”

The experience was life-changing in many ways. Green became so fascinated with dog behavior training that she now volunteers at an area shelter—the Perry County Animal Rescue—once a week.

Another way Green showed her appreciation was through donations to Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program. As a nonprofit, the all-volunteer organization is dedicated to providing high-quality training with no expectations of payment. Donations fund the organization’s relatively small budget of $5,000 annually, which covers everything from insurance to dog treats.

 

Very Rewarding

Founded by Andrew Hyle in 2012, Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program first offered free dog training at the Allison Hill Community Center.

When Miller came on board in 2016, she brought a wealth of knowledge from her experience as a former state dog warden and the former director of behavioral care at the Harrisburg Humane Society.

“Working at the shelter, and as a dog warden, you see a lot of people having a lot of communication issues with their dogs—things that are fixable,” Miller said. And she wanted to help.

The most common issues?

“What dog owners typically label as ‘aggression’—things like barking at other dogs or people, cars and bikes,” said Miller. “Separation anxiety is also up there, a lot of behavioral issues.”

Miller realized that Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program could fill several voids in the community. Very few area trainers were using the modern, relationship-based training methods she believed in. Dog behavior, she said, usually boils down to two things—context and communication.

“They either haven’t learned a behavior, or they don’t know what you’re asking,” said Miller, whose day job is with the state’s Department of Environmental Protection.

Today, 10 years after its founding, Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program has helped hundreds of pet owners and their pooches, mostly in the Harrisburg area. But the circle widened during the pandemic. Many pet owners across the country—struggling with pandemic puppies and struggling financially—discovered and contacted Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program. The magic of Zoom allowed Miller’s free training to go nationwide.

“Natahnee’s mission at Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program makes sure cost isn’t a barrier to great dog training, and it keeps dogs in homes and out of shelters,” said Rhonda Renwick of Harrisburg. “It kind of hit my heart—I love the mission behind the program.”

An IAABC-accredited dog trainer, Renwick juggles volunteer time—at area dog shelters and Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program—with her career in electrical engineering.

“It’s very rewarding to see a dog live a happy life and break some of the barriers they had in a shelter and allow a dog to just be a dog,” Renwick said. “To break down fear, barriers with other dogs, with people, so you can have a happy wiggly dog, is so worth it.”


For more information, visit
www.greatdogprog.org. And tune into the July episode of TheBurg Podcast where Natahnee Miller provides free advice on the top five dog behavior issues.

 

Look for the Signs

It’s a common scenario: You’re at an area park, when a dog—off-leash—runs up to you. “It’s OK—he’s friendly,” shouts the owner, usually from a distance. But does that pet parent really have their dog under reasonable control? What if you’re afraid of dogs? Do you have children or a dog with you? How is your dog going to react?

For all these reasons and more, two area nonprofits—Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program and Cumberland County’s Animal Assistance Program—are teaming up to place educational signs in area parks. So far, 10 parks in East Pennsboro Township are installing the signs, which explain why it’s best to ask permission before letting your dog approach others. A QR code links to free dog training and sociability materials on Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program’s website. Additional parks and rec contacts are being sought.

“Consent—just like with people—is the key,” said Natahnee Miller, president of Harrisburg’s Great Dog Program. “I don’t want someone I don’t know running up to me and giving me a hug—and most dogs don’t either.”

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Good, Better, Best: Palmyra man reaches career peak as Westminster Dog Show judge

Richard Powell

Richard Powell possesses highly evolved observation skills. He pays great attention to details. And his propensity for focus and concentration is off the charts.

In other words, he has everything required for being an excellent judge.

A 77-year-old resident of Palmyra, Powell judges show dogs at the highest level. Last month, he judged the terrier group at the 146th annual Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show at Lyndhurst Estate in Tarrytown, N.Y.

“If you don’t have ‘the eye,’ you shouldn’t judge dogs,” Powell said. “You have to have an artistic attitude. You’ve got to understand beauty. You’ve got to recognize quality.”

Powell explained that dogs are judged by a standard written by designers of the breed and approved by the American Kennel Club.

“When you first look at a dog, you look at the overall balance, the symmetry and the closeness to the breed standard,” he said. “Then, you start at the face, its eyes and how it looks back at you. But the most important thing about a dog is the shoulders. If it’s made right, it will move right.”

In the dog world, Westminster is the Super Bowl, the World Series and the Kentucky Derby all rolled up into one. The second longest continually staged sporting event in the country, it features 3,200 dogs of all breeds from throughout the United States.

But a show is only as good as the dogs that compete and the human beings who judge them.

“Our mottos are ‘only the best’ and ‘there’s only one,’” said Gail Miller Bisher, director of communications for the Westminster Kennel Club. “And it’s true on several levels. If you’re bringing in the best dogs and the best dog exhibitors, they expect the best judges, and we have the best judges. Having excellent judges is critical to the success of the Westminster Dog Show.”

Powell never intentionally set out to become a dog show judge, much less a judge at the most distinguished show in the world. In many ways, it was the culmination of a career centered around his love of canines.

Following years of breeding, handling and showing a variety of breeds, Powell started judging in 2000, in his mid-50s. Through his numerous judging assignments across the country and internationally, through seminars and via book learning, he became an expert at his craft.

“It’s very prestigious. It’s an institution,” Powell said, of the Westminster show. “To be asked to judge, it is quite an honor. I think it will be the culmination of my judging career. Everyone wants to win there, and everybody wants to judge there.”

The feeling is mutual. Westminster cherishes Powell’s commitment and expertise, said Miller Bisher.

“The most important thing about Mr. Powell is his dedication to the sport of dog shows,” she said. “It’s a lifestyle. You have to be somebody who wants to learn. You’ve got to be dedicated and love, love dogs.”

Retired from full-time work, Powell lives with his wife on 1.5 acres of farmland outside of Palmyra, complete with a lawn, a garden, chickens and some collectible automobiles. Not surprisingly, he said that he couldn’t imagine life without his own dogs.

“I’m from England, and dogs are such a huge part of life, more so there than here,” he said. “People who have dogs are very lucky to have them in their lives. I don’t think I’ve ever been without one. Dogs are so loyal. They expect nothing.”

Slowing down isn’t part of the current plan for Powell, who’s as busy as he wants to be judging dog shows. While Powell appreciates the opportunity that the Westminster show has offered, I left with the distinct impression that, if this one was indeed his last, that would be OK, as well.

“I have no idea,” said Powell, when pressed on his desire to judge a third Westminster Dog Show. “If I’d be invited, that would be great, and I would think about it.”

For more information on the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, visit www.westminsterkennelclub.org.

 

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Pets & Pests: Comb through your options for the best critter control

Many of us know the horror of petting our dogs and cats only to come across tiny, blood-sucking critters on their fur or attached to their skin.

Just the other day, my cat was batting around a gray, oblong object that was the size of a dime. My 5-year-old daughter asked my wife and me what it was. Upon inspection, I announced, in dismay, “It’s a bloated tick!” If emojis were appropriate here, I would insert three green little faces.

Our cavalier, Darcy, had been wearing a Seresto collar, which has consistently kept the fleas and ticks away for a few years. We have tried a few chemical-free products on her, but Darcy has a severe reaction to fleabites, so we wanted something stronger. Darcy had no issues with the collars, but, after reading the recent warnings and reports of injury and death to some pets that wore them, we took it off a couple days ago.

This tick seemed to be dead, so I assume the poison that remained on Darcy’s coat after we removed the collar was enough to kill it. However, it ate very well before its demise, and there is still a possibility that it transmitted a bacterium (Borrelia burgdorferi) that causes Lyme disease. Now, we headed to her veterinarian for a Lyme disease screening. I have seen the effects of untreated, tick-borne illness, and it is heartbreaking. Lyme disease can cause fever, joint swelling and pain, lameness, loss of appetite, lethargy and damage to the kidneys.

There are a ton of flea and tick preventatives available in many forms today. Oral and topical medications, collars, shampoos, sprays, powders and oils have saturated the market. A century ago, people were dousing their homes with kerosene and rubbing crushed mothballs into animals’ fur. Since then, the effort to prevent and kill pests has become easier for pet owners. It’s a dream come true, in a sense, but sometimes at the expense of our pets’ health and the environment.

The FDA regulates and reports on the chemicals used in flea and tick products. At FDA.gov, you can find, and I encourage you to do so, information on the ingredients used in these products, in addition to the risks they carry for harming pets, humans and the planet. Just because the FDA approves a medication does not mean it is entirely safe for all pets. On the flip side, not all products touted as “natural, organic or plant-based” are safe for all pets either. Be sure to read labeling and reviews of the products, and talk to your veterinarian before choosing the one that is right for your pets.

After reading reviews and labels and talking to the vet, you should choose the best, safest and most effective remedy. The size, breed, health and lifestyle of your pet will help you determine your needs.

Does your pet stay indoors? If so, you may not need much, if anything at all. What type of coat do they have? A long coat provides plenty of places for bugs to hide and breed. A short coat is easier to manage and comb through with a flea comb. (Flea combs are one of my favorite tools, as they can remove fleas and unattached ticks with great efficacy.) Also, consider where you live and travel with your pets, their contact with other animals, and if they interact with young children. I mention the latter because the chemicals used on pets are toxic if ingested, and children should not touch them.

The best piece of advice I can impart is to repel the biting pests before there is a problem. I have been using a few different products with neem, citronella, rosemary, peppermint or lemongrass oils for two decades without any adverse reactions for my pets or my family. They can also be used in conjunction with pharmaceuticals, unless the labels state otherwise.

Pest control is not a one-size-fits-all program. There is a delicate balance between keeping pets safe from too many chemicals and avoiding the deadly diseases spread by fleas, ticks and mosquitoes. Assess the health of your pet before using any product. Even though reactions to drugs can happen to any pet, the ones with health issues are more likely to have an adverse reaction. Never use a drug on your animal that isn’t prescribed for them, and always purchase from a veterinary practice or registered dealer. Finding the right pest control regimen can be difficult to navigate, but acquiring more information from reputable sources will always be to your benefit.

You are your pet’s best advocate.

Kristen Zellner is owner of Abrams & Weakley General Store for Animals, 3963 N. 6th St., Harrisburg. For more information, call 717-232-3963 or visit www.abramsandweakley.com.

 

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