Burg Review: Reflections, regrets in Theatre Harrisburg’s thoughtful, funny “Now and Then”

Theatre Harrisburg’s latest production, “Now and Then,” is a heartfelt romantic dramedy that challenges its characters’ decisions at critical crossroads, all within the confines of an Irish pub setting.

The play may be a locked-room piece set in a comfortable venue, yet the questions and potential scenarios posed are anything but. It’s a thought-provoking story about middle-aged people with regrets, and it’s a story about young people asking “Should I…?” about their futures.

Then when the liquor starts to flow, the conversation turns into a daring string of truth or dare questions: If you could travel back in time, what wisdom would you impart to your younger self? Where would you be if you turned left instead of right at that proverbial fork in the road? What would you change about your life if you had the opportunity? What if you lived your whole life, and you never figured out why you’re here? And because you’re drinking, there’s a desert island or a million dollars somewhere in the phrasing.

“Now and Then” is a newish play (2018) from playwright Sean Grennan, directed by Theatre Harrisburg’s Kelli Kauterman. Although the play likely isn’t familiar to you, the many themes that surface will feel like home. If you’re the type to lie awake at night, wincing or fantasizing about alternative endings for the embarrassing moments of your life, then this play will especially resonate with you.

Theatre Harrisburg’s Artistic and Production Director Kristi Ondo said, “‘Now and Then’ is about choices we make in life. It’s one of those plays that get people thinking and talking. I think audiences will like it and be surprised by it.”

It’s that word “surprise” that keeps this reviewer from fully unpacking the plot for you, dear readers.

But here’s the set-up: The year is 1981. Would-be musician/bartender Jamie (Mo Tanveer) is closing Mulligan’s Bar for the night. A mysterious older man (Craig Copas) wants to stay and drink for an hour, and he’s willing to pay Jamie and his girlfriend/waitress Abby (Sarah Pinter) $2,000 to hang out.

Jamie and Abby reluctantly indulge the stranger, sinking sideways into awkwardly deep conversations. The man seems unnervingly knowledgeable about and inappropriately engaged in the couple’s life decisions, making their once easy money decidedly uneasy. Then a fourth mystery character (Patty Cole) enters the eroding coziness of the bar, delivering hilariously vicious honesty that simultaneously hurt my heart and made me laugh.

All of the actors delivered excellent performances throughout, although revealing specifics (there were many) would surely spoil the surprise.

But I can tell you that, when the lights snapped off for intermission, I yelled, “NO!” probably a little too loudly. I would rather have sat in my fold-out chair with my urgently full bladder and empty candy wrappers than to even take a 15-minute break from the play.

Post-curtain, “Now and Then” inspired my plus-one and I to have a lively “third act”—intense examinations of different choices we might have made in life—all desert islands and million dollars aside.

I hope it inspires the same for you.

Now and Then runs through April 10 at the Krevsky Center, 513 Hurlock St., Harrisburg. For more information on show times and tickets, plus up-to-date COVID-19 protocol for attendance, visit www.theatreharrisburg.com/2021-2022-shows/now-and-then.

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The Week that Was: News and features around Harrisburg

Jamien Harvey, executive director of the Camp Curtin and East Shore YMCA, at the site of an affordable housing development project in Uptown.

Ready for spring? We sure are. This month’s home and garden issue of the TheBurg magazine features all the things, green and leafy, that spring brings. Look for the cover with lots of plants. and grab a copy of the April issue. And, of course, don’t miss out on this week’s local news, listed below.

Art in the Wild returns to Wildwood Park in April, celebrating its 10th anniversary. In our magazine story, get a behind-the-scenes look at the event that features art made of elements found in nature.

Bob’s Art Blog features a fun April Fools’ Day twist and showcases art happenings at The Millworks.

The Camp Curtin branch of the YMCA in Harrisburg began construction on an affordable housing project in Uptown, our online story reported. The development will include four single-family homes for low-income residents.

Church World Service hosted a night at the movies this week in celebration of the opening of its new Harrisburg office, our online story reported. The organization will provide services to refugees including case management, basic needs support and cultural orientation, among others.

The Dauphin County Library System kicked off National Library Week with the county commissioners reading to local students, our online story reported. Also this week, they are asking residents to participate in a connectivity survey.

Our editor discusses the newspaper industry and the importance of local news to a community, in his April Editor’s Note.

Five candidates will compete in the race for the redrawn 103rd House district, which may prove to be especially hot. To find out who will be included on the primary ballot in May, click here.

Harrisburg Havoc, the area’s new women’s tackle football team, will take the field for their first season on April 9, our reporting found. According to players, the team has provided a way for women to participate in a sport that they’ve largely been left out of.

Harrisburg will plant over 50 new trees in Allison Hill throughout April, our online story reported. The city is seeking volunteers to assist with the plantings.

John Wilsbach is central PA’s traffic guy, our magazine story reported. He updates central Pennsylvania commuters on traffic conditions multiple times each workday, mainly during rush hours, 52 weeks of the year.

The Ronald McDonald House in central PA provides a home for families with children receiving treatment at Penn State Health Children’s Hospital. In our magazine story, read more about the services and care that the organization has given to over 1,000 families annually.

Rubicon will host a dinner to raise funds for the family of a Ukrainian staff member, among other relief efforts, our reporting found. The multi-course meal will feature traditional Ukrainian dishes.

Sara Bozich has weekend recommendations from concerts to beer trails and art outings. Click here to view them all.

Spring events are in full swing this month. See what’s happening in the Harrisburg area in April, here.

Trader Joe’s opened in Camp Hill on Thursday, our online story reported. Customers waited in a line that wrapped around the building on opening day.

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Dauphin County Library System kicks off National Library Week, issues connectivity survey

Dauphin County commissioners George Hartwick (right) and Mike Pries read to St. Stephen’s students at the McCormick Riverfront Library.

On Friday morning, the Dauphin County commissioners read to a group of St. Stephen’s School students at the McCormick Riverfront Library.

The literary event helped to kick off National Library Week, which runs April 3 through 9, within the Dauphin County Library System (DCLS).

“Our libraries are so important to all of us,” commission Chair Mike Pries said before opening a picture book to read to the students.

In tandem with the special week of recognition, the library system will focus on the digital services and resources that it provides, fitting with the week’s theme—“Connect with Your Library.”

Library officials are asking the public to participate in a survey about which digital services they use and what they would like to see offered. According to DCLS Executive Director Karen Cullings, this will help the library determine which future tech purchases and investments they may need to make.

“Public use of the library’s PCs is at an all-time high and use of the Wi-Fi network on personal devices and downloading of e-books and e-audiobooks is experiencing explosive growth,’’ Cullings said. “The library has been through many years of fast-paced change as it has adapted to meet the community’s need for information.”

Everyone who fills out the survey will be entered into a drawing to win a $25 gift card from a local business.

The library system currently offers over 120 public computers and free Wi-Fi across its eight locations.

The McCormick Riverfront Library is currently undergoing construction for an expansion project. Once that is completed, the library will offer more than 3,400-square-feet of added online resources and specialized computer tools for science, technology, reading, engineering, arts and math learning support, according to officials.

Additionally, to celebrate National Library Week, MARCO, the library’s mobile “Exploration Station,” will visit the following locations:

  • April 4 – Cumberland Court Apartments, 1111 Capitol St., Harrisburg, 12:30 to 2 p.m.
  • April 5 – Downey Elementary School, 1313 Monroe St., Harrisburg, 3:30 to 5 p.m.
  • April 6 – Rutherford Park Townhouses, 337 Brokas Dr., Hummelstown, 3 to 4:30 p.m.
  • April 7 – Northern Dauphin Human Services, 295 State Dr., Elizabethville, 3 to 5 p.m.
  • April 8 – Felton Lofts, 100 S. 4th St., Steelton, 3 to 5 p.m.

They will also provide free books for readers of all ages, goodie bags and online library card sign-ups.

For more information about the services that the Dauphin County Library System offers, visit its website. 

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Bob’s Art Blog: A Special Day in the Year

Part I: The Men Who Fell to Earth

Scientists from NASA put out the alarm as soon as they heard static on their sonar tracking system thousands of miles out in space. It picked up a devastating, 230-kiloton asteroid that could hit Earth early May or sooner. The odds were one in 3,800 that it would actually hit our planet…but still. NASA readily admitted not all asteroids are trackable, but, with the size of this one, that fact fell out the window. Perhaps the noise could be an identified craft entering Earth’s atmosphere. The Northeast coast was the target, but when and where would be anyone’s guess. As the week wore on, the unknown object became the main topic of conversation with speculation rabid. Whatever would arrive by the workweek’s end was headed straight for central Pennsylvania.

The clock struck midnight as the first day of the month arrived, with a glowing streak shot through the rooftop at the Millworks with such force, finally settling on the third-floor art studios. For the local residents, it was a massive jolt causing the Midtown neighborhood of Verbeke and 3rd to come to life with everyone spilling into the streets to find out what caused this catastrophic collision. A spacecraft glowed for city blocks, emitting a strobe show like something out of “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.” UFOs have always held a certain fascination for the American public, and this one would only serve to advance that notion. When the craft’s doors opened, the Electric Prunes’ “I Had Too Much to Dream Last Night” echoed, the reverb feedback created by the guitars thumping bass line.

Art of the Huckle Buckle Boys

As the spacecraft entered the Earth’s atmosphere, it hit a time warp continuum setting the calendar back to 1967, and the occupants within left dazed and confused. As the mothership’s portal swung wide, out stepped Zack Rudy and Garrick Dorsett of Studio 318, Millworks’ very own Huckle Buckle Boys, delivering their out-of-this-world art. “The Men Who Fell to Earth” were none other than comrades-in-arms, brandishing paint and canvas to conquer Earth or at least central PA bringing a fresh palette back with them from their space jaunt just in time for an April 1 arrival. Canvases featuring characters that could easily come from Area 51 showcase optic colors of moondust yellow, Venutian violet, Jovian juniper to include the multi-colored rainbow rings of Saturn. Zack eagerly exclaimed to the onlookers that, “we were off in a dream and went for a ride last night” by the Turtles’ “She’s My Girl,” as Garrick gleefully gushed we even traveled to “Itchycoo Park and touched the sky” by Small Faces. Both agreed, “it’s all too beautiful!”

This blog is delivered in the spirit of the day and all April Fools Day stands for. With a nod to Orson Welles’ Halloween night original broadcast of “War of the Worlds” in 1938.

Look for the unveiling of Huckle Buckle Boys’ room-size mural and beer release collaboration at Spring House Brewery at 209 Hazel St. in Lancaster on May 1. Public invited.

 

Part Two – More Millworks Mayhem

Works by Erica Binder

Continuing the theme of out-of-this-world art at Millworks finds “Words of love, soft and tender” as once cooed by Mama Cass, lends credence to Karma Ashanti Love, a crafter of consummate skill with her one-of-a-kind rope bags, bowls and baskets. The business-branding name is derived from the designer’s daughters, “tossed with love at the end. Hand dyed ropes and buttons made of clay, complete the labor-intensive process in delivering the final product to the customer,” shared Erica Binder of Studio 212.

 

 

 

Display by R76

Reina Wooden (R76) makes “singing in the rain” easy-peasy with her message laden umbrellas twirling and swirling on the wall recently in the lobby at Millworks. Decked out in eye-catching colors, the protection from the elements is more than functional and fun when the conversation-starters clamor for attention down the boulevards of Midtown.

 

 

 

 

Art by P.D. Murray

Outsized and outrageously outré iterations that P.D. Murray borrows from The Bard for inspiration, using Shakespearian icons Prospero, Ariel and Caliban from the “Tempest,” King Lear, Ophelia from “Hamlet” and Papageno, Queen of the Night, from Mozart’s opera, “The Magic Flute.” This eclectic group is featured in Murray’s latest array of cotton candy-colored paintings found in Studio 323. Choosing a palette perfect for “Springtime when Man’s fancy turns to thoughts of…” Artist-created libations found at the bar at Millworks, mixed with elan by its in-resident bartender, Roman. Millworks’ artists now have their own signature cocktails available to sip and enjoy. Cheers and happy April Fool’s Day!

 

 

April Art Events

“I’m Fine” at Creative York, 10 N. Beaver St. in York, is a community-engaged exhibit of masks and stories dedicated to sculpting mental health awareness through May 21.

Spring Odds One Bizarre is Saturday, April 30, in the parking lot of the Broad Street Market from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

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Trader Joe’s opens in Camp Hill, customers come in droves to shop for unique products

Trader Joe’s on opening day, Thursday.

On Thursday morning, 100-year-old Bess Gorelick, strolled into the just-opened Trader Joe’s in Camp Hill.

Gorelick was the first customer to enter, preceding the line of eager shoppers that wrapped around the building at 8 a.m. on the grocery store’s opening day.

“I love Trader Joe’s,” she said. “They have products that they don’t have anywhere else.”

The 12,550-square-foot store is the first Trader Joe’s in the area and the ninth in Pennsylvania. Nationwide, it has over 500 stores in 42 states. It’s known for its unique, quality food products at affordable prices.

At the opening, store captain Jamie Brown welcomed customers into the store, along with a team of Hawaiian shirt-sporting staff members.

“We are super excited to have you all here,” he said.

Since last June, when the store announced it would be coming to the Lower Allen Commons, fans of the franchise were anticipating its arrival.

Customers shop inside Trader Joe’s

For New Cumberland resident Heather Keller, visiting Trader Joe’s before meant taking road trips to different locations. It was something she and her stepmom did together, before she passed away last year.

“She would’ve loved to have one so close,” Keller said. “It’s nice that it’s a little more convenient now, but probably not good for my wallet.”

Keller’s go-to items are the miso soup, mini chicken wontons and the dunker cookies, although she said she could make a long list of favorites.

Inside Trader Joe’s

Other popular Trader Joe’s products include their signature chocolate hazelnut biscotti, kettle cooked chicken soup and “five-buck Chuck.”

Inside, the store features artwork with familiar images to central PA. There is the Market Street Bridge, white-tailed deer, a Nittany lion and even the sign from Harrisburg’s Broad Street Market.

According to the store, it will also participate in the company’s Neighborhood Shares Program, meaning it will donate unsold products to nonprofit, community-based organizations.

Trader Joe’s is located at 3545 Gettysburg Rd., Camp Hill. Store hours are 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. For more information, visit www.traderjoes.com.

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

 

Plan your weekend with my weekly list of things to do around Harrisburg and central PA! Scroll down or use the menu links to find ideas for your weekend.

For something new: Hersheypark opens this weekend! Have you tried Reiki? Don’t miss this giveaway.

(Still) Worth noting: Check out my private Facebook community, Cheers Harrisburg. You can join the convo here.

Things on my agenda this weekend: Dinner out with a (different) friend, market trips with Bo

Don’t forget to support your local brewery! Click here to find one near you.

For your weekend planning

Below are options for your weekend.

Things to Do in Harrisburg + Central PA | Weekend Roundup | Sara Bozich

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Top Weekend Recs

  1. Check out my ? Spring Bucket List!
  2. Plan for April in SoMa
  3. Make travel plans (with a discount + perks)
  4. Review of Dutch Apple’s Singin’ In the Rain
  5. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


What are you doing this weekend around Harrisburg? Let us know on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.

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They Made a Stink: Callery pear trees added to noxious weeds list; new tree sales banned

One of Pennsylvania’s most popular trees is “growing like a weed”—really.

The Callery pear tree, also called the Bradford pear, is known for its quick growth. But state officials recently placed the ornamental pear tree on the noxious weed list, labeled it an invasive species, and banned it from being sold or cultivated in the state. In a nutshell, it’s an illegal weed.

What’s so bad about this specific tree, you might ask? Despite the tree’s popularity as a longtime landscaping favorite, it has a stinky reputation.

“They smell horrid,” said Shannon Powers of the state Department of Agriculture, referring to the trees’ white spring blossoms. Stench aside, that’s not primarily why the trees are troublesome.

 

Root Cause

“It’s invasive, in comparison to native species that belong here,” Powers said. “An invasive species has the potential to harm our economy and ecosystem. And the harm to the economy comes in, when it damages agriculture.”

Today, the trees—native to Asia—are prevalent throughout Pennsylvania, but the root of the problem goes back a century.

“Callery pears were brought here intentionally in the early 1900s when researchers were looking for a blight resistant species to cross-pollinate with other trees,” said Powers. “No one maliciously brought them here. These pear trees are hardy, resist disease, and flourish, but they’ve become invasive and have spread into woodlands and pastures much more readily than anyone would have thought.”

It’s both costly and challenging to remove them, especially from farmland.

Pennsylvania law classifies three categories of noxious weeds.

Class A weeds, although well-established, are capable of being wiped out. Callery pear trees fall into class B because “they’re so widely established that we can’t feasibly eradicate them, but we can work to control them,” Powers said. The popular, deep-red Japanese barberry shrubs were also recently deemed class B noxious weeds because, not only are the prickly plants invasive, non-natives, but they harbor ticks—serving as potential breeding grounds for Lyme disease. Class C weeds are those not yet detected in Pennsylvania, but on the federal watch list.

So, what should homeowners do about Callery pear trees?

“We’re not saying everyone should go out and chop down their trees,” Powers said. “But property owners can keep an eye on the area where the trees appear to be spreading and get rid of seedlings.”

Sometimes, the prolific trees’ growth is actually their own downfall.

“They have poor form and tight branching, so Bradford pear trees split regularly because the branches get too heavy,” said Ellen Roane, Harrisburg city forester.

When that happens, she said, it’s actually a good excuse to remove the entire tree.

It’s a common scene in Harrisburg because there are more Callery pear trees than you can shake a stick at. More than 700 were counted, Roane said, during the most recent inventory of city street trees. That means Callery pear trees account for more than 10% of the trees lining Harrisburg roadways.

Street trees are planted and maintained by property owners, but because they’re within the public right of way, they’re regulated by the city. When property owners contemplate planting trees, they must consult the city’s “approved species list.”

“The Callery pear hasn’t been on the approved species list for Harrisburg since at least 2015,” Roane said.

Her reaction when she heard the Department of Ag was banning further sales of the tree? “I thought, ‘Finally, thank God,’” she said.

But in the meantime, she’s stuck regulating these now-noxious trees.

“If it was on my property, I would remove it—it’s just really problematic,” Roane said. “We’re not mandating that at this point, but the city does have a program for low-income residents and senior citizens. We will remove or prune trees if they’re not in great condition, at no cost.”

The Norway maple is another tree on Roane’s hit list. It too, is “highly invasive,” she said, and slightly more prevalent than Callery pear trees in the city. Both are examples of streetscape species once thought to be good choices—but today, we’re paying for those mistakes of the past.

 

Leafy Lessons Learned

“The most important thing is, when you’re looking at your landscaping, learn about what you’re buying, look at what’s going to thrive in your area, and look for native plants,” Powers said. “Native plants are not going to cause problems down the road.”

Recommended street trees on Harrisburg’s “approved species list” today include red oak, swamp white oak, linden, black gum, serviceberry and the Kentucky coffee tree, among others.

Homeowners headed out to nurseries across the state this spring likely won’t find trees labeled Callery or Bradford pears anymore, although nurseries have two years to deplete their supply and comply with the ban. But there are plenty of better options.

“We had 523 trees arrive yesterday, and that’s just the beginning of our spring stock,” said Alicia, nursery manager, during the first week of March at Stauffers of Kissel Hill Linglestown.

Her best advice for native alternatives to Callery pears?

“The most popular trees, especially for spring blossoms, are actually cherry trees,” she said.


For more information on noxious weeds in Pennsylvania, visit
www.agriculture.pa.gov/Plants_Land_Water/PlantIndustry/NIPPP. For Harrisburg’s tree information, visit www.harrisburgpa.gov/parks-recreation-facilities/trees.  

 

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Electric Avenue: Are EVs a good option for your average city driver? Our reporter wanted to find out

“When we get up to this red light,” said Faulkner Nissan of Harrisburg salesman Gavin Winfrey, “I want you to put your foot down. So, that way, you can feel the linear acceleration.”

“By put my foot down, you mean what?”

“I mean put your foot down on the gas,” Winfrey said. Then he corrected himself. “The accelerator.”

“Now?” I asked.

“Now.”

So, I accelerated. And I said, well, a word that’s not used in polite company.

“You weren’t expecting that, were you?”

“No, I was not!” I squealed as the Nissan LEAF practically punched the air with a gentle whir.

This story began on the question, “Is it practical to own an EV if you live in the city?” Many city residents might be ideologically inclined to stop chugging greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, but how do they charge up? No driveway. No garage. No charger around the corner. It’s a challenge, even enthusiasts agree.

But my research turned into one big test drive for me. I’ve been thinking about a new car. Will it be an EV? Read on.

 

Early Adopters

In early 2019, Doug Neidich drove his new Nissan LEAF to Pittsburgh. The trip took 10½ hours. He had time to ponder.

“I wanted to get into this early for the education I received, and when I was in the middle of Nowhere, Pennsylvania, two-thirds of the way to Pittsburgh at 11:30 at night, sitting in a Sheetz and waiting for the tow truck to show up, I sat there thinking, ‘Well, I was in this for the education, and I’m getting one,’” said Neidich, the CEO of Harrisburg-based GreenWorks Development.

In Neidich’s defense, part of the learning experience was finding out that his LEAF charged to the European standard instead of the American. Finding a European-standard charger on your travels is “like finding a unicorn in the woods.” By now, he knows where they are and knows to double check that they are, in fact, operational.

For most EV owners today, chargers are popping up like mushrooms after a storm, and apps send them to those appropriate for their vehicles. Winfrey suggests that EV drivers talk to their employers about installing chargers. He also envisions a world where business owners entice customers to charge while they browse—which I noticed at the Neighbors & Smith plaza in Camp Hill.

However, chargers are not ubiquitous. Midtown resident Ryan Unger doesn’t know of any in his neighborhood. He takes his girlfriend’s Volkswagen ID.4 to the charger on 2nd and State streets or to the lineup outside the State Museum on 3rd Street.

Challenges arise. If it’s daytime, there’s parking to pay for—a hefty sum with downtown Harrisburg’s $4-an-hour fee. And while signage designates the spots for EVs only, it doesn’t seem to be enforced.

In fact, notes Neidich, there is a term for internal combustion engine vehicles owners who deliberately hog EV spaces—“ICEing the charger.”

But to all my what-ifs, there are answers. What if I don’t have time to charge? Find a fast charger, and find something to do for an hour or so. What if I’m planning a long trip? Chart out your stops and top off as you go to get through the next stage. What if the chargers are all taken? Rarely happens. What if my flivver breaks down in some remote spot, and I lost the crank handle?

Sorry. Wrong century.

“It’s one of those things where you do have to do your research,” Winfrey said. “If you know someone who has one, pull them aside, and talk to them. Get some tips and tricks. It’s not the same driving experience.”

 

Democratizing a Charge

Technology leaps forward, notes Andy Daga, CEO of Momentum Dynamics, Malvern. The EV charging stations now appearing are impractical in urban environments for their expense and susceptibility to vandalism and weather, he said.

Daga’s firm has developed automatic charging and is working toward its incorporation into a national charging network. The system uses magnetic induction to transmit power from an inground charging pad to a vehicle above.

In Daga’s vision of “organic charging,” automatic chargers are beneath the surface in parking lots at grocery stores, shopping centers, restaurants and theaters.

“People have vehicles for reasons,” he said. “They go places. Why don’t we put the charging infrastructure in the places where they continually go? Park for 15 minutes or 30 or 60 minutes, and get 100 miles to 150 miles of range extension without spending a moment of your time charging. You won’t even need to think about it. It happens in the background, just like E-ZPass does.”

City dwellers aren’t alone in needing simplified access to charging, Daga said. Rural and suburban dwellers need answers, too—not to mention disabled motorists needing hands-free charging.

“The solution ultimately has to fit everybody’s lifestyle,” he said.

EVs actually have at least one urban advantage. City driving outperforms highway driving in mileage because a car sitting in traffic isn’t tapping into the battery.

“Once you drive an electric vehicle, you will never go back to a gasoline vehicle,” said Neidich.

 

Charging 101

If you’re “slim on time,” you need a fast charge, which still takes up to an hour for a full charge, said Winfrey. Below that, Level 2 chargers are increasingly available, but a full charge can take many hours. The day Winfrey discovered that the city of Harrisburg has chargers in the City Island parking garage, he plugged in his car “and was walking around taking photos of Harrisburg.”

So, owning an EV makes you stop and smell the roses?

“Oh, yeah,” said Winfrey. “Certainly.”

Many streetside chargers are Level 2, and overnight juicings are frequently mentioned. Even when Unger searches out a fast charger, he still needs to fill the time.

“I’ll just bring my iPad and watch a TV show or read while it charges,” he said.

He added that a viable charging network pumps up the economy.

“It is incumbent to build out that infrastructure if we want to be the location of choice for young professionals and younger residents,” Unger said. “Anything we can have to be more attractive to live in is a positive for us in this region.”

Plugging into a regular, 110-volt home outlet takes days to charge, but home upgrades to Level 2, 240-volt chargers are easy. Seriously. They’re on Amazon for $200. For city dwellers, stringing an extension cord to the street is not recommended, I’m told.

The city communications office didn’t respond to my emailed question about whether a resident could turn a backyard into a driveway for Level 2, at-home plug-ins.

Easier to ask forgiveness, I say.

 

 Coming Up

Neidich has preregistered for Nissan’s next-gen EV, the 300-mile-range Ariya. Also, he read about an Israeli company promising, by 2024, a battery that gets 100 miles per five minutes of charge.

“When you talk about a city resident who doesn’t have a garage or doesn’t have off-street parking, and doesn’t have availability of a Level 2 charger within walking distance, that’s got to be their answer,” he said. “What they really want is what the world has come to completely take for granted with gasoline-powered vehicles—a quick stop at a fueling station, and, 15 minutes later, they’re in great shape.”

It’s coming in two or three years, he said. The world of EVs “is definitely changing in a hurry.”

And now for my decision. The new-car hungries are hard to deny, but my Nissan Sentra remains fun to drive. Yes, it’s emission-belching, but I’m a fuel-conscious driver. For me, a full charge on an EV could last a couple of weeks. For long trips, my crystal ball sees a convenient, fast-charging infrastructure and longer-range batteries in the near future.

So that’s my decision. In about two years, maybe the stars will align, and I’ll join the EV revolution.

Plus, Daga said, most automakers are committing to upfitting their EVs for automatic charging, which should incentivize progress on that organic experience. And if they’re not around by the time I get my EV, my first trip might be a hop across the river to Neighbors & Smith. Plug in my car, and then sip a One Good Woman coffee while I find a cute sweater at Little Black Dress and matching shoes at Plum Bottom? Yes, please. After all, I’ll doing my part for the environment.

 

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Floral Connections: Creator, client intersect, bond at Woodland Floral Design Co.

Photos by Tales and Trees Photography

Serving others is not always one-size-fits-all.

Meaningful connection and impact can be found down all paths—both well worn and less so.

This is a lesson that Misha Dennison learned in late 2020, when she left her job as a social worker to become a florist full-time. And it’s helped form the basis for her Biglerville-based business, Woodland Floral Design Co.

“I always knew I wanted a job where I could help people, and when I thought about the wedding industry, I never equated being a wedding florist as being as much of a help as being a social worker,” Dennison said. “But, it’s really just a different way of serving people. Even if it is just through flowers, to me, it’s so much more than that.”

Dennison first explored floral design when she interned with C&J Catering several years ago. However, it wasn’t until a peer from high school posted on Facebook looking for an affordable wedding florist, after exhausted DIY efforts, that she fully gave it a try. And she offered to do it for free.

“We just paid for the florals,” said Alyssa Rowe Aucker of Carlisle, who married Lance Aucker in November 2019. “I wasn’t her best friend or her sister; I was just someone she vaguely knew from high school. It meant so much to me for her to go through that much effort to make my wedding day special, despite not getting much compensation out of it at the moment.”

But those first free floral creations for Aucker—a classic pairing of white roses and eucalyptus—have since paid off more than tenfold. If you scroll through Woodland Floral Design Co.’s Instagram feed, you’ll see just how much her business has blossomed. Last year, she averaged 65 weddings, and, as she entered the new year, she already was nearly booked for 2022.

The evolution of her designs over time tells a story, too. They all share locally sourced blooms and a mix of dried pieces, adding Dennison’s signature texture and whimsy. But, in each bouquet, you see bits of the bride’s personality pulled through. Some are composed of vibrant pinks, oranges and yellows, while others feature more muted neutrals and toffee tones.

“I can never really create the same design twice, because each is for a different couple,” Dennison said. “It’s inspired by them.”

From inquiry to day-of delivery, Dennison’s heart and hands are behind the Woodland Floral Design Co. brand. She does it all herself. And she has no intention of outsourcing any element of her work, even as the business grows, for the same reason she wants to stay within the wedding industry—the people.

“It’s so important to me to know that my clients aren’t just hiring a florist,” Dennison said. “They’re looking for someone to connect with.”

It’s a blurry line where Dennison ends and Woodland Floral Design Co. begins. In many ways, they’re one and the same. She lives a mission of serving others in her daily life, offering a gentle smile and an ear to listen to those who need it. And, if you were to visit her wilderness-nestled house, you’d see proof of her passion scattered in every room—stacks of inventory inching toward the ceiling and dried flowers delicately draped from curtain rods and laundry racks.

Dennison is excited that she soon will have a more defined space to channel her creativity, as her screened-in-back porch is being transformed into an office that will overlook the woods. She hopes that this office will bring in an abundance of natural light—a blissful retreat as she tinkers on projects. It also will give her an opportunity to make more connections and build community with her clients, rooted in the same core mission that started it all.

“As my business has evolved, it has shown me and reminded me daily what my priorities are,” Dennison said. “So, as I look forward to what the future might hold, I think those priorities will be the same. I will still be asking myself, ‘How can I better serve?’—not only my clients, but my clients as people, whose lives, even if it’s just for a short period of time, intersect with mine.”


For more information on Woodland Floral Design Co., visit
www.woodlandfloraldesignco.com.

 

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April Editor’s Note

Last month, a sculpture of a newsboy stood proudly in front of our office—for a few hours anyway.

We participated in Harrisburg’s Ice & Fire Festival, which featured ice sculptures placed throughout the city. A paperboy—perfect for us!

A warm weekend followed by rain showers quickly reduced the little guy to a formless, blobby shape and then to a cold puddle of water.

As I assessed the situation, mid-melt, some wise guy walked up to me and said, “He’s mostly gone. Kinda like the newspaper industry, huh?”

Ouch.

Unfortunately, he wasn’t wrong either. Over the past few years, Dauphin County alone has lost three venerable weekly newspapers. By my count, only two papers based in the county still exist that regularly publish news.

There was a time—and it wasn’t terribly long ago—when a town of any decent size had its own local newspaper. There were more than a dozen in Dauphin County alone.

You may not have read them to find out what was happening in China, but that wasn’t their purpose. You read them to find out what was happening down the block, which, in the scope of things, was likely a lot more important to your life.

Council actions, the school board, local businesses, development—it was all there. Local ads, too, for restaurants, realtors, retailers, etc. So much has been lost. No Facebook page can replace the reliable, relevant information that’s disappeared from so many communities.

At TheBurg, we’ve adapted by combining old-school newspapering with the best of the digital world, boosted by a modern aesthetic and true care for our community. Any business that’s survived the online revolution and two years of pandemic must be doing something right, and that applies doubly to the struggling newspaper industry.

So, open up the April issue and see for yourself what we’ve been up to. Then visit our website, read our online-only news, check out our blogs, listen to our podcast. We may have lost our icy newsy, but we believe that we’ve found a winning formula for high-quality, 21st-century local journalism.

Lawrance Binda
Co-Publisher/Editor-in-Chief

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