LIVE. WORK. PLAY. EMMET COUNTY, MICHIGAN
Transcription
LIVE. WORK. PLAY. EMMET COUNTY, MICHIGAN
IMAGINE LIVE. WORK. PLAY. EMMET COUNTY, MICHIGAN PETOSKEY · HARBOR SPRINGS · MACKINAW CITY 2012-13 · emmetcounty.org Tra vel Mich igan’s Tunnel of Trees Quite possibly one of the most cherished scenic highways in the country, the Tunnel of Trees along M-119 (Lake Shore Drive) snakes its way along the twists and turns of the Lake Michigan shoreline, stretching 20 miles from Harbor Springs to Cross Village. Grab your camera and hit the road, there’s plenty to see and do along the way. Stop and visit. Taste. Shop. Dine. Experience. See. Create. And then, do it all over again for years to come. Explore the shore along Michigan’s Tunnel of Trees. THREE PINES STUDIO 5959 Levering Road, Cross Village 231.526.9447, threepinesstudio.com 2 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G LEGS INN End of M-119, Cross Village 231.526.2281, legsinn.com GOOD HART GENERAL STORE M-119, downtown Good Hart 231.526.7661, goodhartstore.com A STUDIO M-119, downtown Good Hart 231.526.7110, astudioshop.com GOOD HART GLASSWORKS 112 W. Townline Road, Good Hart 231.526.7283, artistsnorth.com/dinning NORTHERN CREPES M-119, downtown Good Hart 231.526.0276, facebook.com/northerncrepes TRILLIUM WOODS ANTIQUES AND ESPRESSO BAR M-119, two miles south of Good Hart 231.526.6569 or 231.838.0649 PRIMITIVE IMAGES M-119, downtown Good Hart 231.526.0276, primitiveimages.com HARBOR SPRINGS WINERY AT POND HILL FARM M-119, five miles north of Harbor Springs 231.526.3276, pondhill.com | Introduction Emmet County: COMMITTED TO DOING THINGS DIFFERENTLY, WITH EXTRAORDINARY RESULTS S hawn Wonnacott was enjoying a day at Walloon Lake with his kids last summer when he struck up a conversation with another beachgoer. She mentioned she was from a suburb of Chicago, and Shawn inquired about what brought her to Emmet County. The woman told him she saw a television ad for Emmet County, and it enticed her and her family enough to make the approximately seven-hour trip to the northern shores of Lake Michigan. What the woman didn’t know is that Wonnacott is an Emmet County Commissioner, one of seven who in 2011 approved an expanded marketing campaign that includes television advertisements in the southwestern Michigan/ Chicago region. In the past months, stories like this have become more common as Emmet County continues to garner state and national headlines — and not for the typical doom-andgloom budget forecasts, staff cuts and the like that have plagued many communities. Instead, Emmet County has been featured in the Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times, Midwest Living Magazine, Detroit Free Press, Grand Rapids Press, Traverse City Record-Eagle and dozens of other publications and media outlets for the unique assets that are setting us apart. It’s the result of a single word that embodies the spirit of Emmet County, its leaders, residents, business owners and families: Commitment. This commitment is evidenced in continued upgrades to parks and recreation opportunities that draw thousands here each year. A commitment to conservative fiscal management over many, many years has helped Emmet County weather the financial downturn better than most. And a Lyn Johnson, Emmet County Controller commitment to seizing new opportunities when they arise has kept us a leader in providing unique experiences, such as the International Dark Sky Park at the Headlands. Commitment is a word that is also embraced by the people featured in this year’s issue of Imagine — our fourth year publishing this annual magazine. Inside these pages you’ll read about those who have committed to investing in Emmet County, be it in their business decisions, family life or community involvement that improves the quality of life for all who live here. Their commitment is woven into the fabric of our communities along with so many others who work tirelessly to preserve Northern Michigan’s exceptional way of life. Look around us, every day — at our bustling bike paths, packed beaches and campgrounds, vibrant downtowns, awardwinning ski resorts and the plentiful boats cruising the Inland Waterway during the summer months. Emmet County has made a conscious decision to take our fate into our own hands, knowing that no one can preserve and advance our county’s vitality but ourselves. It’s a course of commitment we will continue, together with the communities of Northwest Michigan. ...a single word that embodies the spirit of Emmet County, its leaders, residents, business owners and families: Commitment. VISIT US ONLINE WITH YOUR SMARTPHONE! PETOSKEY · HARBOR SPRINGS · MACKINAW CITY · BAY HARBOR · ALANSON · PELLSTON · CROSS VILLAGE L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 3 Madigan/Pingatore Insurance Services Insuring over 3 billion dollars of client assets. Madigan/Pingatore Insurance Service 77ATER3TREET3AULT3TE-ARIE-ICHIGANs Stephen H. Madigan 0INECREST(ARBOR3PRINGS-ICHIGANs Serving the Great Lakes Since 1895 WWW.MADIGANPINGATORE.COM 4 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G Recycling for your world. Providing cutting-edge recycling services to families and businesses throughout Emmet County. IMAGINE Providing materials to local industry. Emmet County Department of Public Works emmetcounty.org 231-348-0640 www.EmmetRecycling.org For more information about Emmet County, visit emmetcounty.org or call 231.348.1704. EDITOR & WRITER BETH ANNE PIEHL HISTORY’S HOME IN HARBOR SPRINGS Emmet County Communications & Web Director [email protected] PHOTOGRAPHY G. RANDALL GOSS Northern Michigan Review, Inc. [email protected] 349 E. Main Street | Harbor Springs, MI 49740 LAYOUT & DESIGN (231) 526-9771 WENDY WOLFSEN www.HarborSpringsHistory.org Northern Michigan Review, Inc. [email protected] ADVERTISING SALES Northern Michigan Review, Inc. Advertising Staff CHRISTY LYONS Advertising Director [email protected] Landmark Lodging. Waterfront Dining. EMMET COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS JAMES TAMLYN, CHAIR LESTER ATCHISON, VICE CHAIR LARRY CASSIDY PAUL HRAMIEC JACK JONES DANIEL PLASENCIA SHAWN WONNACOTT LYN JOHNSON, COUNTY CONTROLLER IMAGINE is published by Emmet County, 200 Division Street, Petoskey, MI 49770, in conjunction with Northern Michigan Review, Inc. (231.347.2544). Content may not be reproduced without prior written consent from the editor. Content subject to change without notice. All rights reserved. ©2012 BAY VIEW INN, BAY VIEW CROOKED RIVER LODGE, ALANSON Victorian country inn on the shores Family-friendly lodge, overlooking the of Little Traverse Bay. 800-258-1886 picturesque Crooked River. Indoor pool. 231-548-5000 PIER RESTAURANT, HARBOR SPRINGS Waterfront dining at the marina in beautiful Harbor Springs. 231-526-6201 PERRY HOTEL, PETOSKEY Just off the bay in Petoskey’s historic downtown Gaslight District. 800-737-1899 WEATHERVANE RESTAURANT, CHARLEVOIX Charlevoix’s only true waterfront dining. On the channel at the drawbridge, downtown. 231-547-4311 STAFFORDS.COM L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 5 IMAGINE 8 CONTENTS On the cover: International Dark Sky Park at the Headlands. Robert de Jonge photo. 22 INFORMATIVE THE ESSENTIALS OF EMMET COUNTY 10 INVESTED COMMITMENT TO BUSINESS SUCCESS INFLUENTIAL CALLING EMMET COUNTY HOME IMPRESSIVE Headlands EMMET COUNTY PROPERTIES: FOR THE PUBLIC, FOREVER 34 INVIGORATING THE GREAT OUTDOORS! 30 42 38 INSPIRATIONAL NURTURING AN ARTS AND CULTURE COMMUNITY INTRIGUING HISTORICAL POINTS OF INTEREST 44 6 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. INCOMPARABLE SMALL TOWN CHARM, BIG CITY AMENITIES E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G Harbor Point, Harbor Springs this is where become lifelong memories open Year Year-Round Round Two exhibition halls, one art gallery, 230 seat theater, studios—all in a fully restored, 122-year-old architectural gem. ACTIVITIES & EVENTS Concerts, Kids’ Art Camp, Workshops, Coffee At Ten, Holiday Art Bazaar, New Year’s Eve at CTAC! The beauty, charm and relaxed pace 2012 EXHIBITS of our resort towns bring you a vacation Artists of Mackinac Island June-September dreams are made of. Michigan Watercolor Society & Juried Fine Arts Featuring Michigan artists All work for sale September-November Affordable to extravagant ART TREE GALLERY PetoskeyArea.com 800.845.2828 Free Vacation Guide In beautiful, downtown Petoskey! www.crookedtree.org (231) 347-4337 harborsir.com L IVE HERE Petoskey u Harbor Springs u Boyne City bayharbor.com S TAY HERE P LAY HERE The world-class residential and resort community of Bay Harbor is situated along 5.5 miles of Lake Michigan shoreline nestled between Petoskey and Charlevoix. Bay Harbor encompasses a 27-hole championship golf course, marina. Equestrian Center, Yacht Club, boutique shopping & dining and hotel & conference center. When you’re ready to reward yourself with Northern Michigan living at its best, Bay Harbor is your destination! BAY HARBOR PREMIER EVENTS Northern Michigan’s Premier Chauffeured Black Car Service The Highest Quality Service at a Reasonable Price 231.492.9232 or [email protected] baytobaycars.com Open Air Market every Friday - May 25 from 2pm - 6pm In Water Boat Show - June 15-17 Vintage Car & Boat Festival - June 22 - 24 Fireworks and Petoskey Steel Drum Band - July 3 Main Street Parade - July 4 Bay Harbor Arts Festival - August 4 & 5 Trunk or Treating - October 31 Ice & Spice Festival - January 18 & 19, 2013 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 7 | Informative Emmet County The essentials of Emmet County Harbor Springs EDUCATION PRIVATE SCHOOL DISTRICTS E very day, Emmet County schools’ graduates are making a difference in the world. The best and the brightest emerge as leaders from these top-achieving districts whose alumni excel thanks to well-rounded curricula, dedicated teachers and a community committed to education. PUBLIC • Petoskey, the largest with approx. 2,960 students, petoskeyschools.org • Harbor Springs, approx. 800 students, harborps.org • Littlefield-Alanson, approx. 320 students, alansonvikings.net • Pellston, approx. 610 students, pellstonschools.org • Mackinaw City, approx. 200 students, mackcity.k12.mi.us • Concord Academy of Petoskey, K-12 charter school, fine arts emphasis, approx. 270 students, concordpetoskey.com • Petoskey Montessori Children’s House and Elementary, approx. 65 students (includes pre-K), petoskeymontessori.org • Charlevoix-Emmet Intermediate School District, (regional educational services), char-emisd.org 8 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G • St. Francis Xavier (Catholic, pre-K through eighth-grade), approx. 200 students, petoskeystfrancis.org • Harbor Light Christian, (pre-K through 12th grade), approx. 140 students, harborlightchristian.org • Seventh-Day Adventist (K-8), approx. 8 students, (231) 347-2560 ALL ENROLLMENT FIGURES ESTIMATED 2011-12 TRANSPORTATION FLY FROM NEARBY Pellston Regional Airport is known locally and nationally as one of the most alluring airport terminals anywhere, with its log-cabin look, cozy feel and native Northern Michigan details including fieldstone fireplaces, lodge furnishings and hand-carved signage. But it’s not just pretty; it’s also the most convenient way for residents and visitors to travel to and from Emmet County. The airport is located in Pellston, about 20 minutes from Petoskey and about 15 minutes from the Mackinac Bridge. It is owned and operated by Emmet County and serviced by Delta, with flights daily to Detroit for connections around the world. About 70,000 passengers rely on the airport for personal and business travel, and numerous local businesses utilize the airport to fulfill global commerce and transportation needs. It’s also a busy spot for general aviation and private pilots, plus there’s an upper level restaurant and bar, Hoppie’s Landing. The airport code is PLN; call (231) 539-8423 for flight information. For airport information, go online to www.pellstonairport.com. • Municipal airport: A second local airport, Harbor Springs Municipal Airport, provides services and facilities for general aviation. (231) 347-2812. • Roads: The county is situated near major transportation routes including U.S. highways 31 and 131, and also interstate I-75. • Ferries: Several ferry boat providers transport thousands of visitors each year from Mackinaw City across the Straits of Mackinac to Mackinac Island. GOVERNMENT Organized in 1853, Emmet County today has 21 units of government, which includes two cities, three incorporated villages and 16 townships. www.emmetcounty.org CITIES • Petoskey, the county seat, pop. 6,000 • Harbor Springs, pop. 1,600 VILLAGES Alanson • Mackinaw City • Pellston TOWNSHIPS Bear Creek, Bliss, Carp Lake, Center, Cross Village, Friendship, Littlefield, Little Traverse, Maple River, McKinley, Pleasantview, Readmond, Resort, Springvale, Wawatam, West Traverse DEMOGRAPHICS OF NOTE ACCOLADES • Population, 2010 Census: 32,694. That number grows by tens of thousands in the summer months with resorters and seasonal residents return. We love it when they love us! Rarely a year goes by without several publications and their writers discovering all the wonderful things about Emmet County. We’ve been featured in: Midwest Living; “The 100 Best Small Towns in America;” “The Great Towns of America;” “America’s 100 Best Places to Retire;” “100 Best Outdoor Towns;” Outdoor Life; “1,000 Places to See in the U.S.A. and Canada Before You Die;” GOLF magazine; Where to Retire; “Best Places to Live in Rural America;” Conde Nast Traveler; CNBC; the Today Show; New York Times; Boston Globe; Travel + Leisure magazine. • Emmet County encompasses more than 460 square miles, of which roughly half is land and half is water. • The county seat is Petoskey. • Average annual snowfall: 90-110 in. • Tourism is the main economic engine, driven by winter and summer sports. • One of the largest employers is McLaren-Northern Michigan, formerly Northern Michigan Regional Hospital. McLaren-Northern Michigan, a subsidiary of McLaren Health Care, is a 202-bed, regional referral center located in Petoskey, serving residents in 22 counties across northern lower Michigan and the eastern part of the Upper Peninsula. Other large employers are the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians, which operates Odawa Casino; Bay Harbor Company; Walmart; Home Depot and Lowes; Moeller Aerospace and Circuit Control Corp. RAVE REVIEWS FOR EMMET COUNTY CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE • Petoskey Regional Chamber of Commerce (231) 347-4150 Petoskey.com • Harbor Springs Area Chamber of Commerce (231) 526-7999 Harborspringschamber.com • Mackinaw City Chamber of Commerce (231) 436-5574 Mackinawchamber.com Petoskey State Park You voted. LINDA MICHAELS “Top 5 East Coast Pipes” 2009 Transworld Snowboarding Magazine Reader Poll “Michigan’s Best Ski Resort” All things Petoskey Stone & more! 2008 Oakland Press Best of the Best Survey “#1 ranked Terrain Park in North America” “#4 ranked Grooming program in North America” Jewelry • Clocks • Serving Pieces Picture Frames • And More! Ski Magazine 2007 Reader Survey “Michigan’s Best Ski Resort” 2006 and 2003 Detroit News “#1 Ski Resort in the Midwest” Ski Magazine 2002, 2003 and 2004 Reader Surveys 500 Nubs Nob Road | Harbor Springs, MI 49740 Snowline: 800-SKI-NUBS | 231-526-2131 www.nubsnob.com Thank you Exclusive • WeeForest Folk Dealer Turquoise Bracelet Handcrafted Sterling Silver & Turquoise Ring (231) 347-0261 313 E. Lake Street • Downtown Petoskey www.lindamichaels.net L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 9 | Influential Calling Emmet County home A successful county depends on the commitment of its citizens to make conscious decisions that improve quality of life for all. In these pages, read about the individuals and families who do just that. Thanks to their efforts and involvement, Emmet County remains a truly one-of-a-kind community. FRANK FOSTER: On the move in the political scene, but still rooted in Northern Michigan A regular at area events like chamber luncheons, economic development task forces and YMCA board meetings, Frank Foster looks every bit the part of a polished politician — well-dressed, well-mannered and well-informed. He’s a hand-shaker who greets people by name and tailors his remarks to address each group’s specific concerns. But get Foster talking about his Emmet County roots and his upbringing in one of the most outdoor-oriented counties in the state, and his down-to-earth, humble background is evident. “My dad was a builder so we moved a lot. We lived all around the county — Alanson, Pellston, Petoskey,” said Foster, 25. “I’m the fourth generation of Fosters in this area. And I don’t think there’s a better place to be.” These days, Foster is splitting his time between Petoskey and Lansing as one of the youngest legislators voted into office; at age 24 he became the Representative for the 107th District, defeating Democrat Richard Timmer for the House seat. After the 2010 election, protecting and promoting natural resources quickly rose to the top of Foster’s priority list. By 2011, he was chairing the Natural Resources, Tourism and Outdoor Recreation Committee as one of just two freshmen committee chairs 10 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G appointed by the Speaker of the House and the youngest person ever in state history to lead a committee. “For me, the important part of keeping our natural resources pristine is not only to attract tourists and promote economic development,” Foster said, “but we have to be responsible for what we have been given.” A YOUNG MAN WITH A PLAN: GROW BUSINESS, CREATE JOBS His father, Frank Sr., is still a local builder in Emmet County, and his mom, Susan, a dental hygienist. They raised Frank, their only child, to appreciate the outdoors and the beauty of small-town life. His youth was spent playing hockey and exploring the wide-open acreage that’s afforded to kids who grow up in Northern Michigan. After graduating from Petoskey High School in 2004 he attended Grand Valley State University where he earned a business degree in 2009. He interned for Rep. Pete Hoekstra one summer and started developing an interest in politics and the desire to spur positive change. Still, he graduated with the expectation of returning home to Emmet County to manage his family’s third-generation construction company. But his interest was piqued when he started hearing about the open 107th seat. Foster took part in hockey as a youth in Emmet County. The district includes Emmet, Chippewa and Mackinac counties, and two townships in Cheboygan County. He campaigned on a message of business growth and job creation and surprised his family by announcing he would run as a Republican; many members of his extended family had served as Democrats in local offices, including one icon who had served for years as Emmet County’s Democratic Party chairman. “I was somewhat familiar with the legislative process, as I’d gone to Lansing during college to advocate for higher education funding and affordable housing for students,” Foster said. “I had played hockey in St. Ignace and had family in Sault Ste. Marie, but the stigma was that no one from below the Bridge could Photo: G. Randall Goss of the Little Traverse Conservancy and member of the Governor’s Blue Ribbon Panel on State Parks and Outdoor Recreation. “After talking with county leadership and the Dark Sky team, he made sure that there was unanimous support from the three involved townships and the county board. He then took the initiative of introducing the legislation to help make the Dark Sky Coast a reality.” ‘THESE ARE THINGS REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS CAN DO TOGETHER’ Michigan Representative Frank Foster, at the family farm in Petoskey, has his roots deeply anchored in Northern Michigan. win the seat.” the get-go. He proved that theory incorrect and landed “He was a bright young man out of school 63 percent of the vote. Since then, he appears and he was very active in college,” said Beck. to be following Gov. Rick Snyder’s famous “When we started putting his campaign to“working in dog years” pledge to get Michigan gether, what really impressed me was how back on the right track. Foster has already in- hard he and his staff worked and how many troduced dozens of bills and supported others, thousands of doors they knocked on. He’s including a sustainable funding model for the been a fast learner and we’ve shared a lot of state’s award-winning Pure Michigan cam- the same interests, like how do we create a paign. He’s been recognized as “Leader of the smaller but more efficient government.” Year” from the Michigan United ConservaBeck said he foresees a future with Foster in tion Clubs, “Alumnus of the Year” by Grand public service. “Public service is a fine career. Valley State University’s Seidman College of Frank’s young age, his energy and his intellect Business, and was selected among 20 fresh- will serve him well if that is what he wants to man state legislators in the U.S. to attend the do.” 2011 Emerging Leaders Summit in WashingMany in Foster’s district note that he reton, D.C. mains tuned in to issues that affect individual He’s logged tens of thousands of miles demonstrating his commitment to his constituents We have to be responsible and his state, and usually spends four-day weekends in-district attending ribbon-cut- for what we have been given. tings, meeting with community leaders and FRANK FOSTER visiting his family. His efforts haven’t gone unnoticed by those communities. One example is the pending legin the beltway and beyond it. “Frank Foster epitomizes the ideal of intelli- islation to designate a Dark Sky Coast along gent, compassionate and concerned represen- Emmet County’s northern coast, to completative of our rural district in Northern Michi- ment the International Dark Sky Park at the gan, the Straits Area and the Eastern Upper Headlands. “It’s wonderful that Rep. Foster sees proPeninsula,” wrote Kim Hagen, a Yahoo blogtection of the night sky as part of his work in ger after a Foster visit to St. Ignace. chairing the House Committee on Natural Harbor Springs resident Larry Beck, who helped with Foster’s election efforts in 2010, Resources, Tourism and Outdoor Recreation,” said Tom Bailey, long-time executive director said Foster’s enthusiasm impressed him from ‘ ’ Supporting parks and recreation opportunities is particularly meaningful in Northern Michigan where residents work to protect tracts of land and access to waters for future generations, Foster noted. “There isn’t as strong of a sense downstate, I don’t think, of passing things on to the next generation. But there is Up North,” said Foster. “I vied really hard to be chair of the Natural Resources, Tourism and Outdoor Recreation Committee to continue that momentum.” That committee dovetails with his efforts to ensure steady funding for the Pure Michigan campaign. “We have to go after the global tourism market in Michigan. Our two peninsulas and all there is to offer here — the Dark Sky Park at the Headlands in Mackinaw, Camp Pet-O-Se-Ga in Alanson, Pictured Rocks glass-bottom boat tours — are truly unique experiences that will draw global visitors.” He added, “These are things that Democrats and Republicans can do together. We need to make it a priority.” Opportunities for youth are a natural offshoot of recreation, he said. To that end, Foster serves on the board of directors of the Northern Michigan YMCA, based in Petoskey, and he has worked to support the Hunter Heritage package that would allow younger youth to hunt with proper supervision. He recalls fondly his own time as a youth in Emmet County, playing at the Petoskey Winter Sports Park, walking to the movie theater and meandering the storybook downtown Christmas open house. “One of the things that I am most proud of is the wealth of knowledge that Northern Michigan residents have and the resources that we have,” Foster said. “That results in projects like extending an old train track to make a terrific bike trail, or the creation of the state’s only Dark Sky Park. There are a lot of hands working together and I’m most proud how everyone’s doing their part in Northern Michigan.” Foster’s online office keeps constituents up to date 24/7 on current events, his thoughts and activities around his district and the state. Friend him on Facebook or go online to www.repfoster.com. “INFLUENTIAL” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 11 Photo: G. Randall Goss | Influential The Garber family at home in Petoskey, (clockwise from left) Tad, Jack, Peter, and Trish. THE GARBERS: Petoskey’s first family of broadcasting reinvents radio as son Joey keeps wowing the golf world E very day, the work of Trish Garber and consecutive years) and becoming one of the two of her three sons reaches into the youngest winners ever of both the Michihomes, vehicles and workplaces of tens gan Amateur tournament and the Michiof thousands of Northern Michigan resi- gan Jr. Amateur in the same year. dents and visitors. As owners of MacDonLike his brothers, who clearly excel as the ald-Garber Broadcasting, the family radio next generation in the radio business, Joey legacy that started more than 35 years ago credits his upbringing in Emmet County as continues today in a radius reaching from a key factor in his success on and off the Traverse City into the Upper Peninsula. golf course. And while Trish, husband Jack, and sons “When someone from down here in GeorTad, 26, and Peter, 25, work hard to deliver gia asks me what Petoskey is like, it takes music and news to listeners, son Joey, 20, me a bit to give them the whole story,” Joey finds himself among those making the wrote, in an email interview with Imagine. headlines. The University of Georgia soph- “I describe Petoskey how most people do, in omore is a championship golfer who regu- regards to it being one of the most pristine larly swept the competition during his days and beautiful places in the summer … at Petoskey High School, earning the title “But when I tell them how I feel about of Michigan High School Mr. Golf (two Petoskey and what I think of it as growing 12 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G up, it’s more like this: A close-knit community with great people. A community that is so invested in making it a better place for everyone. Great educational opportunities from elementary schools to a college. Friday night lights at Curtis Field, the atmosphere inside the gym, the inspiration in the classroom — all of these things are what I think of when I think of my childhood and growing up in Petoskey and Emmet County.” THE RIGHT FORMAT “Our family’s commitment is first and foremost to Petoskey — that’s our first priority,” says Trish, in the family’s home that is stunning, spacious and comfortable like only a house that’s raised kids can be. On this day, all the family members except Joey have settled into the living room that has a beautifully distracting view of Little Traverse Bay outside a wall of windows and patio sliders. “We have resisted the move to Traverse City, which really is the hub of commerce in Northern Michigan, frankly,” Trish continued. “While I like Traverse City, Emmet County has so much more. It’s more intimate and the community gives us as much CHILDHOODS SPENT OUTDOORS Tad, Peter and Joey remember a childhood spent on the course at the Petoskey- Photo courtesy Petoskey News-Review as we give them.” Born and raised in Ann Arbor, Trish was familiar with Emmet County; her family had a ski chalet in nearby Boyne Falls, where she developed a passion for skiing that ultimately led her to Aspen. In the early 1980s, Trish’s father, Kenneth H. MacDonald, recruited his daughter to come back to Michigan to help him grow his then-Saginaw-based radio station holdings. With two of her brothers as principal stockholders, the family agreed to expand north; they took ownership of WKHQ, Lite 96.3 FM and 1340 WMBN. Trish and Jack, also a Saginaw native, were married in 1982 and chose Petoskey as home base. In 1989, Kenneth passed away, leaving her to handle much of the operations and future growth. It was a challenge she took head-on and continues to enjoy today. “I was really attracted to the business side and the opportunity to turn a radio station group around,” says Trish. Among her first steps was increasing the power of WMBN-FM to 100,000 watts. While the call letters have changed to WLXT and the power has grown triplefold, the format has remained the same, playing adult contemporary music on 96.3. On the AM side, the company made the decision to change the format of 1340 AM to “The Ticket,” an all-sports station, on Jan. 1, 2012. Today, the company also owns and operates 1270 WMKT, “the talk station;” the new BOB FM (104.5) in Traverse City, playing 80s and 90s music; and three stations in Cadillac. In total, the eight stations reach from south of Cadillac to the Soo in the Upper Peninsula. “It’s a powerful market. At any given time, KHQ alone has nearly 200,000 listeners. That is a huge responsibility to both entertain and inform those active listeners 24 hours a day and one we don’t take lightly,” Trish said. As Trish was developing the radio stations, Jack was pursuing his own business interests. While his background was in the car business with his family’s dealerships in Saginaw, he followed his bride to Petoskey and went into commercial real estate. He then went on to become a retailer in Petoskey’s Gaslight District via the Orvis Whippoorwill store, which continues to provide fly fishing guide services despite closing the store after Jack experienced some health issues. While he and Trish didn’t share a common broadcasting background, they did share a passion that they inherently passed along to their three sons: Golf. And lots of it. Joey Garber air time for the youngest Garber. Bay View Country Club, picking up the Tad is currently the director of MacDongame their dad played in college and one ald-Garber’s Interactive Division, handling their mom enjoyed as a hobby. the advancement of online, mobile and vid“I remember being dropped off and spending my entire day putting and chip- eo components of the radio business, and managing social media. He’s based in Traping,” said Peter. “I loved it. I still love the game of golf. It’s probably a big part of who verse City. Tad graduated from Northwood we are as people, because from a young age University, where he also played golf. He and Peter are co-owners of the new we interacted with adults. Emmet County station, BOB FM. Peter, a University of did provide us the freedom to learn about ourselves and how to behave in a safe set- Michigan graduate, is the company’s creative director. After living in Colorado and ting.” While all the boys excelled at sports, it Chicago, both sons were enticed back to was Joey who had the desire to take it to Northern Michigan by their mom to start the next level. “Joey has had a very success- BOB FM. They share a place in Traverse ful athletic career which can be attributed City now as they develop the station. “We were given this frequency and it was to his older brothers. They were wonderful an opportunity to get my creative juices gorole models for Joey,” said Jack. That strong family support helped Joey ing,” said Peter, a writer who enjoys developing ad content and campaigns. win four Golf Association of Michigan “To have these guys come into the busichampionships and nearly every high school event his last two years at Petoskey ness with refreshing new approaches has High School. Joey hopes that after gradua- taken what we have always done and intion from the University of Georgia, he’ll jected a shot of energy,” said their mom. “I think they’re doing remarkably well. I be playing on the PGA Tour. “PHS is a very close-knit, diverse school can’t tell you what a blessing it is to have that really had a great influence on how I them interested in not just broadcasting viewed myself and how I was going to cre- but in the area. It’s so gratifying to have them nearby. They are the next generation ate the path of my future,” Joey said. “High of business leadership.” school golf meant so much to me, because Jack said Emmet County has provided I felt like I was playing for more than myself. I was supported so wholeheartedly by him opportunities to further bond with his sons outside of the business world. “I grew my school and community that it kept me up in an outdoors family, hunting and fishmotivated and focused.” ing in particular,” Jack said. “This area offers me that. It took my boys a while to find REFRESHING RADIO an interest in that, but now I think they like IN NORTHERN MICHIGAN to hang with their dad hunting and fishing. As Joey pursues the pathway of a pro, his That’s very satisfying to me.” community will be cheering him on, and so will his family — who will surely find “INFLUENTIAL” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 13 Photo: G. Randall Goss | Influential THE FISHER FAMILY Walter Fisher and daughter Elise Hayes at Nub’s Nob ski area. COMMITMENT TO COMMUNITY HEALTH — THROUGH WORK AND PLAY Nub’s Nob owner and family leaving their mark throughout Emmet County W alter Fisher and Elise Hayes are a dynamic father-daughter pair who have committed their lives to investing in and ensuring the health of Emmet County, as owners of Nub’s Nob — a favorite local winter recreation spot — and as board members making critical decisions guiding the operation of the region’s largest health care provider. And while they have had a significant impact on the lives of many Northern Michigan families, Emmet County, too, has affected theirs. Since Walter was a young child, visiting Northern Michigan on his parents’ yacht from their home in the Detroit area was part of a beloved summer routine. He is 85 now, and remembers well those trips in the early 1930s to the shores of Petoskey and Harbor Springs. “We were a water family,” said Fisher, who splits his time living in both Harbor Springs and Bloomfield Hills today. “I was raised on the water.” 14 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G Fisher married his wife, Sis, in 1955, and they began ferrying their three children “Up North” each summer, too. It was during those trips they found Wequetonsing, a small resort enclave near Harbor Springs. “We rented in Wequetonsing in the early days where we would swim and sail in Little Traverse Bay. It was such a nice atmosphere, there were a lot of Michigan people, but also Cincinnati and Chicago families,” Fisher recalled. In the mid-1960s, they built their first seasonal home in Roaring Brook and they have become interwoven into the community fabric ever since, most notably as leaders with the hospital and its philanthropic arm, the Northern Michigan Regional Health System Foundation. Fisher was first elected to the Lockwood-MacDonald Hospital board in 1963. Lockwood merged with Little Traverse Hospital to form Northern Michigan Regional Hospital (which in March 2012 changed its name to McLaren — Northern Michigan after an affiliation with McLaren Health System in Flint). He retired in the early 2000s after serving on and off the various hospital boards for 40 years. In 2011, he was honored with the Jack Clark Philanthropy and Service Award for his exceptional contributions to the Northern Michigan Regional Health System Foundation. Of special note was Fisher’s involvement in the merging of LockwoodMacDonald and Northern Michigan Regional Hospital many decades ago and his consideration of how the merger would positively affect colleagues and the community. His daughter, Elise, who is chairperson of the foundation, presented him with the award. During the ceremony, she noted: “This award is presented to individuals who are visionaries and philanthropists at heart. These individuals have provided direction and leadership to the foundation and have been instrumental in making our health system what it is today.” LIKE FATHER, LIKE DAUGHTER Hayes, 55, first joined the board of the Northern Michigan Regional Hospital Foundation when she was in her late 30s, after a phone call from a friend requesting her involvement. “She said, ‘Elise, it’s time you get involved,’” Hayes recalled. “She lit the fire in me and made me aware of how much good the foundation does.” She has now been chairperson of the 25-member foundation board for five years, having served since 2002. The foundation, which meets up to eight times a year, oversees all philanthropic decisions that impact the hospital and its services, plus VitalCare Hospice of Little Traverse Bay, and community outreach such as the local free clinic. Each year, the foundation has a fundraising goal; this year, it’s $6 million. “We are very close,” said Hayes. The fundraising efforts have paid off for patients in ways such as new equipment for digital mammography and heart and I have gained much ‘more than I have given.’ of Nub’s Nob ski resort in Harbor Springs, one of three regional winter recreational areas and a favorite of locals. Fisher and his brother purchased Nub’s Nob in 1977 and today it is operated largely by Hayes, who enjoys being on-site and helping the resort sustain its motto, “Firstclass and friendly skiing” with long-time general manager, Jim “JB” Bartlett. Back when the Fishers first became owners, the resort had hotel rooms and a swimming pool; skiers rode to the top of the slopes with rope tows and a T-bar, with just two or three chairlifts in operation. Today, Nub’s has nine chairlifts and 53 runs over 248 acres, and it is consistently ranked in national publications for its grooming, snow conditions and a terrain park that draws thousands of skiers and snowboarders. “I skied for over 60 years,” said Fisher, who recently had to give up the sport. “I still have an office there, right under the clock. I like to go to the lobby at Nub’s and talk to the guests; they think it’s great that they just met the owner. It’s very exhilarating for me to talk with the guests.” While Elise has taken on a more active role in management of the ski area, she also continues to support her other passion: the local arts community, which her mother has long supported as well. Her accolades for the level of performing arts in the region are high. “We went to see the Nutcracker at the new Performing Arts Center in Harbor Springs and we were blown away,” Hayes said. “It was a seasonal highlight for us.” Hayes said while her résumé of community involvement appears lengthy, the benefit has been to her the most. “I have gained,” she says, “much more than I have given.” “INFLUENTIAL” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE vascular machines, and facilities such as the stunning new John and Marnie Demmer Wellness Pavilion in Petoskey. Two long-time hospital supporters, Bob Bleyaert and Hiland Hall, eventually asked Elise to join the “big board” at the hospital, as her father had done for 40 years. In 2003, she accepted a position on the Health System Board of Trustees, on which she continues to serve. Through her commitment to the hospital and the foundation, Elise, like her parents, also developed a special connection to Emmet County. She met her husband, Rip, on a chairlift at Nub’s Nob in 1979, 33 years ago. They have two children; daughter Logan, 27, who works in public relations in Manhattan, and son Stewart, 23, who works for a developer in British Virgin Islands. The family lives in Bloomfield Hills and owns a seasonal home in Roaring Brook, a stone’s throw from her brother, Greg Fisher, and sister Yvonne McCready, and their families. “It is a great place to bring children … There is so much to do here in a safe environment,” Hayes said. “Our children grew up with both local and seasonal friends, which was broadening then and to this day. “We would spend the whole summer up in Harbor Springs. They had summer jobs and were part of the normal rhythm of life up North. In the winters, we would spend Christmas in Harbor Springs and our children were on the ski teams so we were here every weekend, too. Our children have developed wonderful relationships and roots here.” THE FAMILY THAT SKIS TOGETHER … The Fisher family has helped shape the health and well-being of the community in another significant way — as owners Photo courtesy Petoskey News-Review ELISE HAYES Nub’s Nob terrain park Open Daily Year Round . Everyone Welcome! Boarding . Training . Lessons . Clinics . Pony Camps . Lounge & Event Rental Indoor Arena . Outdoor Track . Dressage Arena . Round Pen Training Area bayharbor.com | 231.439.7100 | [email protected] L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 15 | Influential The Fleming family: Anne, Kieran, Claire, Ellie THE FLEMINGS: A GRASS-FED REVOLUTION Committed to bringing healthful food choices to Northern Michigan (Adapted from an article by Wil Cwikiel that originally appeared in the Harbor Light Newspaper, with additional writing from Beth Anne Piehl) MEET THE FLEMINGS In the tiny community of Bliss — about equidistant from Sturgeon Bay and the Bliss General Store — is the 20-acre Fleming Farm, run by Kieran, 45, and Anne, 43, and their daughters Claire, 14, and Ellie, 11. Although Kieran and Anne both have day jobs, they are committed to doing their part to bring local healthy food choices to Northern Michigan. So, in their “spare time” they run Fleming Feirm. Feirm is the Gaelic spelling of farm, and this spelling of farm isn’t the only example of how they do things in a traditional manner. For thousands of years, livestock were raised on pasture, the growth of which was fueled by the sun. The Flemings explained that “pasture” is actually the generic term for a community comprised of dozens of herbaceous plants and is home to thousands of species of insects and other arthropods. When animals dine on this diversity, they are treated to a full complement of nutrients. It wasn’t until the 1940s and 50s when petrochemicals (in the form of everything from gasoline to fertilizers to herbicides and pesticides) made growing corn and soybeans so cheap that farm animals were switched to a seed-based diet (i.e., corn and soybeans) and produced on factory farms. The result is what we see today: copious quantities of inexpensive protein, animal wastes polluting waters, unsavory living conditions for farm 16 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G Photo: Darrell Amlin T here’s been a quiet revolution going on in Emmet County. It will not involve any “shots heard ‘round the world” or NATO forces. And the only “tweets” are from actual baby chickens. The masterminds of this revolution are a couple in their 40s and their kids, running a local family farm and trying to provide healthy food choices to themselves and their neighbors. The beneficiaries are the consumers who are willing to put their money where their taste buds are. animals (not to mention farm workers), and was at his suggestion that we get the equipmeat with questionable food value, accord- ment to process the birds right on the farm.” ing to the Flemings. The Flemings have decided to go “back to DOWN ON THE FEIRM the future” by growing meats the way they When compared to a factory farm, things were grown for the 10,000 years of agricul- are a lot different at the Flemings. First, the ture before the 1940s — on pasture. This is chickens — Cornish Cross, ISA Browns, at the heart of the current grass-fed revo- Barred Rocks and Rhode Island Reds — are lution taking place at Fleming Feirm and purchased as day-old chicks from a farm other small family farms across the country. in Zeeland each week. They are mailed to “Our inspiration started with the fact that the Flemings in a box. “The postmaster both of us came from farm backgrounds,” calls and says, ‘You’ve got chicks,’ and you said Kieran. “Anne’s family had 160 acres can hear them peeping in the background,” nearby and her dad loved to farm. He used Anne says. draft horses for most of the work. In fact, I After a few weeks under warming lights am convinced he farmed just so he could in a brood house, the chicks are moved outhave horses. side. Instead of being cooped up in an enor“I grew up in dairy country of Wiscon- mous pole barn with a square foot of dirt per sin where every kid’s first job was baling bird, Fleming Feirm chickens are raised in hay and milking cows. We had a small “chicken tractors” where they are moved to farm, though my dad was a dentist. When fresh pasture every day. A chicken tractor, we finally moved back here in 2000, I was also known as a “pasture pen,” is a lightchamping at the bit to get some chickens. weight, movable, floor-less cage that gives We both really like the idea of providing our the chickens access to the pasture for foragcommunity with high-quality, clean and ing while at the same time providing shelter healthy meats. Anne’s dad had been raising from rain, excessive sunlight (which could and selling chickens for many years and it overheat the chickens inside), and protec- of the operation — college is not cheap these days! If the demand is there and we can make a fair profit, perhaps we will expand even more.” WHERE YOU CAN FIND FLEMING FARE Across the country, many high-end restaurants are featuring fresh, local, pastured chickens grown like the Fleming birds. Locally, many establishments and gourmet stores are doing the same. Starting June 1, 2012, the chickens and eggs will be back at their regular sales outlets, including Toski Sands, Harbor IGA, Pond Hill Farm, Grain Train and “hopefully a few others,” Kieran said. Restaurants and catering services have used their birds, too, including: The Crow’s Nest, Blackbird Gardens/Real Food Dream Kitchen, Nancy Kelly’s Pellston Market, and Stafford’s Hospitality. “We butcher on Wednesday evenings. I ‘Hard work builds character!’ KIERAN FLEMING then drop fresh birds off at Toski Sands and Harbor IGA on Thursday morning. This allows customers to buy a bird that is less than 24 hours in the bag. This is the absolute highest quality chicken you can find because it is not only a well-cared for pastured product, but you just can’t get it that fresh through big distribution systems,” noted Kieran. Sue McGlaughlin, co-owner of ToskiSands with husband Keith, said they strive to provide high-quality products to their customers. “Having direct communication with a vendor like this is extremely beneficial for everyone involved — the farmer, the store and, ultimately, the customer,” she told Edible Grand Traverse, an online magazine that recently featured the Flemings. “Though the price is higher than our other chicken products, the customers understand the difference in economics for a small farmer versus a mass producer. Comments have been that it is a small price to pay for eating healthy.” JOIN THE GRASS-FED REVOLUTION “Are the Flemings the forbears of our local food revolution?” wrote this article’s original author, Wil Cwikiel, of Harbor Springs. “They may be, but it’s going to take more than one family in Northern Michigan growing chickens on grass. It’s going to take all of us to start supporting all our local growers, for our local offerings will only expand when we divert enough money into the local economy so our neighbors can make a living growing our food. Just like the colonists protested sending money back to England in the form of taxes, we need to keep our food dollars local to create the market for our local producers.” He added: “I’m very glad there are people like Kieran and Anne Fleming — people who are willing to create options so that my family can make choices that keep us healthy, help support a vibrant local economy, and that are good for the planet.” Learn more: www.flemingfeirm.com “INFLUENTIAL” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE Photos: Mark Flemming/Harbor Light Newspaper tion from predators. Each tractor also has a waterer that provides the chickens with all the water they need. Twice every day the girls venture into the rolling green behind the barn to move each 8-foot by 12-foot pen forward 12 feet so that each group of chickens is on fresh pasture. Instead of dust, odor, and the cacophony of 30,000 chickens in one building, the girls (and chickens, for that matter) experience fresh air, contented clucking, and the symphony of wind in nearby trees, insect sounds, and distant birdsong. They fill the waterer and top off a grain feeder that balances out the chickens’ diet. They make sure each chicken looks healthy and that there are no holes in the fence that could provide access to a wily coyote or cunning raccoon. When done driving the chicken tractors, the girls go on to finish other chores, ride their horses, or kick a soccer ball around. Claire and Ellie are just as much a part of the business as Anne and Kieran. In fact, they are part of the inspiration for the business. Anne and Kieran want their children to see farm life first-hand, everything from the joy of a newborn baby calf to the reality of how living animals are converted to table fare. Claire and Ellie, Harbor Springs Public Schools students, have learned that all living creatures are to be treated with respect and cared for in the most humane way possible. And, perhaps most importantly, these two girls are learning the value of hard work — not only that it has its monetary rewards (the girls receive a cut of the profits — half of which goes to their respective college funds and the other half for them to manage as they see fit), but also the inexplicable joy of experiencing authentic accomplishment. And, as Kieran says, “Hard work builds character!” There’s more character-building ahead, according to their dad: “This summer (2012) the girls will try to raise over 1,000 chickens in about 15 batches — all moved twice daily on to fresh pasture. The girls help butcher and package them as well. At some point I hope they will help market them, too.” It’s worth noting that Fleming Feirm houses the only licensed chicken processing facility in Emmet County. The demand, the Flemings say, is there for them to expand — but they’re hesitant to take more hours away from their family time. Already Kieran is the full-time director of land protection for the Little Traverse Conservancy, and Anne is a communications consultant whose primary client is the conservancy. “Our plan for the future is in flux. We see tremendous demand but want to guard our family time (and sanity) to some extent,” says Kieran. “We decided we are going to try and increase production a little more this year and see what the market response is. If it’s favorable, we will then gauge the girls’ interest and ability in taking on more L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 17 | Influential THE BASSETTS: thrown into it.” About that time, she met Justin Bassett, who owned a cottage near her parents’ place at Nub’s. The two fell in love, married and are now raising their three children in Harbor Springs, in a new neighborhood that backs 110 private acres owned by friends of the Bassetts — which means it’s a forest adventureland for the Bassett kids, Elizabeth, 4, Instead of routine meeting coverage, read- Max, 7 and Noah, 13. ers started finding essays from community As she became more confident in her writleaders discussing what brought them to ing abilities, Charles O’Neill continued to Emmet County — and what has kept them encourage her to vary her writing style and here. They met people in the area doing good approach to coverage. In 2010, he asked her things to better the quality of life for all. And to take over content development. they started developing a deeper connection “It was a hard decision, because we have to both the paper and their neighbors in the three kids at home,” said Kate, who still process. works mostly from home except on Tuesdays Each week, readers can also get a little — production day. “But he sold me on it. If it insight into the Bassetts’ life and love of had been just a job for me, I would’ve been Northern Michigan, through columns and able to walk away from the offer. But I feel so commentary that keep the “sense of place” strongly about our paper and I’m so grateful commitment in focus. “When there’s a tough he had that faith in me that I said ‘yes.’” story to tell, we tell it,” says Kate. “But we Kicking off the new year in January 2011, always ask ourselves first, ‘Why are we tell- she and Charles started talking about how ing this story?’” the paper could better reflect the community and branch out to cover more of a regional THE VOICE OF THE COMMUNITY perspective. Born and raised in Saginaw, Kate’s family “People look to the paper as the voice of the had traveled each winter to Harbor Springs community. We are partners with the comto ski. She moved to Harbor Springs in 2000 munity,” says Kate. “It’s a privilege to be a to take a summer internship at the Harbor part of that.” Light. “I was planning to teach high school Eng- KEEPING FAMILY TIME AT THE FORE lish, but this was a good opportunity for me With a full-time staff of three, publishing a to use my writing skills,” Bassett said. “I weekly paper is a hectic job. Plus, Justin, 42, didn’t have any journalism experience, ex- is the marketing and sales director for Walcept in high school classes, so I was totally strom Marine, so his summers are jammed Committed to instilling a sense of place in both work and family life W hen Kate Bassett talks about what it means to nurture a strong sense of place through the newspaper she edits, it’s clear she’s not only talking about her work life. She and her husband, Justin, are equally committed to ensuring their three children appreciate the beauty and opportunities of life in Emmet County. The Bassetts embody what it means to be an Up North family — working hard and playing hard and caring for the community in which they live. And reporting about it each week for all to read is a responsibility Kate doesn’t take lightly. “I really do feel like a community is made up of its stories. We tell those stories — that’s what it means to me to be a paper of record,” says Kate, news editor of the Harbor Light Newspaper, a weekly based in Harbor Springs. Kate, 33, had been a writer for the Harbor Light for 11 years before being promoted to news editor in December 2010. At that time, she was encouraged by the paper’s owners (see article on the O’Neills on page 20) to follow her instincts that were leading her to use the paper as a vehicle to explore the unique sense of place that characterizes Harbor Springs and the county overall. 18 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G We carry many with opportunity. The family was facing the time pressures that many others do, and both Kate and Justin didn’t want their kids to miss out on having mom and dad around. So on top of their jobs, they have also chosen to homeschool their children. “We never had the opportunity to have family time,” says Kate. “So we consciously made the decision after Noah was in first grade that we would homeschool until high school. It’s been great; they can learn at their own pace and we can do schoolwork sitting on the beach. The biggest thing for us was having that family time.” With this family, that means lots of outdoor adventures. They’re avid sailors, crosscountry and downhill skiers, snowshoers and beach-goers — especially at treasured Sturgeon Bay. “I went under water one day and came up and said, ‘I can never leave this,’” Kate says, with a smile. Justin, who was raised in Ann Arbor, recalls driving north each weekend as a teenager to ski at Nub’s Nob and Boyne Highlands, and knowing the north is where he wanted to permanently land. “I thought it would be such a great spot to raise kids,” he says, adding, “I’ve sailed in a lot of spots around the world, and nothing compares to me like coming around Harbor Point and seeing Harbor Springs from the water. Every time I think, ‘Ah, there’s home.’” Products made in Michigan DELI • MEAT • GROCERY • PRODUCE • WINE Custom gift baskets, holiday time or anytime. Our goall att Harbor H b Springs S i IGA is i to t provide id the th highest hi h t quality lit andd freshest f h t products dducts including the latest trends in specialty items and local goods while shopping in a warm & friendly atmosphere. 15% OFF 6 bottles of wine - everyday! 300 W. LAKE STREET • HARBOR SPRINGS • (231) 526-2101 • [email protected] • harborspringsiga.com + = cnbMobile We go wherever you go. 8011 S. U.S. 31 - Alanson, MI 49706 231-548-BANK www.CNBisMyBank.com Cheboygan Onaway Mackinaw City Pellston Indian River Alanson “INFLUENTIAL” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE Max Bassett L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 19 | Influential Committed to telling the stories of their community T Photo: Mark Flemming/Harbor Light newspaper THE O’NEILL FAMILY: hroughout the history of newspapering, it was a given that reporters would attend most governmental meetings and write a piece the next day, detailing each action item and discussion point. (Even if, well, it was kinda boring.) It was how the industry viewed its role — to be the “paper of record.” And while the watchdog role of the media is still a vital part of a democracy, readers started wanting more. They wanted to be told compelling stoCharles O’Neill, editor and president of the Harbor Light newspaper in Harbor Springs. ries. They wanted to feel good about where on Maurer’s Mackinac Island weekly, The retirement from the Harbor Light. “I knew they lived, and read about how others were contributing to the fabric of their communi- Town Crier. Upon graduation, Maurer if I wanted to try moving back up North to helped Kevin land a job with the St. Louis run the family business, that was the time,” ties. Charles said. The owners and staff of the Harbor Light Post Dispatch, as Sunday magazine editor. As he and Ruth started thinking about Newspaper spent the last couple of years reflecting on what it means to be a weekly where they wanted to raise their growing EXPANDING THEIR VISION newspaper in the distinctive community of family, Kevin thought back to his time in In 1995 he joined the paper working closely Harbor Springs and overall in Emmet Coun- Harbor Springs. “Raising a family in a big ty. Instead of simply reporting facts, they city was not something mom and dad want- on all aspects of running the weekly together ed to do,” said Charles. “So they decided to with his dad, who still keeps a pen in the jourwanted to start telling the stories that give nalism world. “He hasn’t retired. He’s not this region of Michigan its peerless sense of move north and buy the paper from Wes.” involved in the day-to-day deadline side of While his dad was running the paper, “it place. And at a time when many newspapers are was old-school journalism,” Charles recalled. it, but he’s all about the newspaper business,” struggling to stay viable, the Harbor Light’s “They covered news county-wide. One time, Charles said. “And if someone calls and my mom doesn’t answer the phone here, they’ll renewed focus on telling good stories and fos- the mayor chastised his coverage of a council say, ‘Where’s Ruth? Is everything OK?’” tering community pride has brought in new meeting and said, ‘You can’t write what we While he writes on occasion, Charles’ revenue and new readers to the long-stand- say in the paper!’” main enjoyment lately is taking stunning Young Charles paid his newspaper-family ing local weekly. “We’re no longer going to be stenographers dues, working in the dark room develop- area photos found throughout the paper and at meetings,” says Harbor Light President ing photographs, cutting and pasting copy handling graphic design of each issue. He manages the business side as well. “We’re a atop the light tables and driving the pages Charles O’Neill. “And a lot of this has to do very stable paper, and we’re very fortunate,” with Kate (news editor Kate Bassett). Her ad- to Gaylord for printing each week. When it dition to the staff for the last 12 years, and her came time for college, Charles was more in- he said. “Part of that is because we’ve expanded our vision of what a weekly paper terested in business than journalism. new leadership role over the past year, has “Dad is a journalist and a business man. I can be. And our readership is unbelievably brought energy and life into the paper. She brings a fresh look at things.” (See story on was more interested in all parts of the paper,” loyal and caring.” Whether Charles’ son, Quinn, 7, wants to said Charles, 47, who attended Bowdoin ColBassett, page 18). follow in his family’s journalism footsteps relege, a liberal arts college in Maine, where he mains to be seen, of course. None of Charles’ majored in economics. After, he enrolled at FROM EMMET COUNTY GRAPHIC siblings followed the journalism course; EmNorthwestern University where he majored TO THE HARBOR LIGHT in corporate public relations, but then trans- ily is a grant writer in New York City; Ruthie, is a freelance writer and producer in L.A.; The new editorial direction is the next step ferred into the Medill Journalism School. in the evolution of the Harbor Light, which Still, business was more interesting than Brian is a golf pro at Boyne; and Louise is a was founded in the 1950s and known then journalism to Charles, and after Northwest- teacher in Royal Oak. “Quinn likes to say, ‘My dad makes newspaas the Emmet County Graphic. In the early ern he was accepted into the University of pers, and my mom makes money,’” Charles 1970s, it was purchased by Kevin and Ruth Michigan’s Business School. Afterward, he says with a laugh about Quinn’s mom, Jill, O’Neill, Charles’ parents. worked for a period of time in public relations an accountant and financial executive. “My While Kevin was in journalism school at in Grand Rapids, representing small cap the University of Michigan, one of his pro- Fortune 500 clients. He then moved to Chi- dad always reminded me, that when you fessors, Wes Maurer Sr., sent him to intern cago where he worked in marketing for a golf write about someone in a small town, you’re going to see those people every day. It’s a very at the paper he owned in Harbor Springs — course ownership/management company. humbling experience.” the Harbor Light. O’Neill also spent time In 1994, his parents began to contemplate 20 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G BOYNE. What are you up for? from 74 $ per person/night VACATION PACKAGES AVAILABLE Discover great getaway packages and activities including golf, spa, waterpark, tennis camp, dining and wine events, Zipline Adventure and much more at BOYNE’s northern Michigan resorts! BOYNE HIGHLANDS | BOYNE MOUNTAIN | THE INN AT BAY HARBOR – A RENAISSANCE GOLF RESORT BOYNE.COM | 800.GO.BOYNE A Great Golfer Live Where You Love to Play chooses the best courses and membership in the best CLUB. Best Courses. Best Club. Smart Choice. 20% OFF CLUB MEMBERSHIP 20% OFF ANNUAL DUES Up to 20-MONTH, 0% FINANCING Memberships from $4,800; financing as low as $240/month. Offer ends September 3, 2012. Please contact Kathy Boyer, Director of Membership, at [email protected] or 231.526.3033 for complete membership offer. www.BOYNEREALTY.com L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. 800.88.BOYNE E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 21 | Invested INVENTIVE, INSPIRING AND … Committed to business success in Emmet County E Photo: G. Randall Goss mmet County is the place where creativity, ingenuity and hard work are rewarded by a quality of life that simply can’t be surpassed. For generations, the most respected and internationally regarded families, entrepreneurs, executives, corporate leaders and retailers have set foot in Northern Michigan and found it impossible to leave. Summer homes have become year ‘round residences as technology allows people to be able to work where they want to live - not the other way around. The region’s diversified economy is a mix of successful retail, industrial, tourism-oriented enterprises, manufacturing, agricultural, building trades and health and medical professions. They’re buoyed by responsive local units of government, convenient transportation, state-of-the-art technological infrastructure and alliances of business professionals region-wide. As the following stories tell, Emmet County is a place where business opportunity is met with an open door, a cooperative attitude and ultimate success. NORTHERN LIGHTS FAMILY OUTFITTERS: E A top-selling Carhartt store “in the middle of nowhere” veryone knows Shannon Redding isn’t really Shannon Redding. She’s “The Carhartt lady.” From a 600-square-foot garage-turnedretail store in the dead-center of rural Emmet County, this Carhartt seller has become one of the company’s most profitable outlets, in both Michigan and the United States. And she doesn’t even sell online. “There aren’t many people like us around anymore,” says Redding, who at age 37 is ebullient in both her approach to selling what is arguably the most premier, durable line of work wear and being a mother to three active children who use the family’s 10 acres as a personal playground. Even in the winter, the Reddings’ long, steep driveway off the winding, sparsely populated Pleasantview Road doesn’t deter 22 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G Shannon Redding “The Carhartt Lady” at Northern Lights Family Outfitters, in Levering customers from steadily coming in to buy their Carhartts (“Conveniently located in the middle of nowhere!” she touts.) Each May, they arrive by the hundreds for a day of fun called the “Redneck Day Family Reunion” — all about grilling and gear. And year ‘round, Redding can be found urging customers of both genders to let her measure them for a proper fit — including the inseams. Traditional enough for you? “I’m like a private Carhartt fitting room,” she laughs. “And the wives love me. One woman told me, ‘I’m so glad you did that! For 20 years I told him that his rear end looked saggy in pants!’ I just educate people about clothes.” The result of Redding’s fun, relaxed and upbeat attitude has proven to be a formula for success. Her store ranks fifth in Michigan out of 500 locations in sales, and 242nd in the nation out of 4,500 doors. Northern Lights has been in the top 10 for sales by location for the past three years in the state of Michigan as well. By the way, did we mention she doesn’t do Internet sales? “I don’t know how they find me in Texas, North Carolina, Virginia but they do!” Redding exclaims, as she hangs up after helping a Texas caller find the right workboots to suit his farming methods. (Editor’s note: If you Google “The Carhartt lady,” her name actually comes up!) There are other traditional ways Redding does business, too. She offers free shipping, orders and offers quality products (such as Muck and Red Wing boots) at discounted prices every day, and allows customers to return items any time — even if years pass. “We are all about personal service,” said Redding. “That’s what we do.” BECOMING ‘THE CARHARTT LADY’ A Levering native, Redding’s first experience with Carhartt was in the mid-1990s, when she was hired to work in human resources at the company’s Dearborn headquarters after she graduated from Aquinas College. Perhaps the inspiration for running her own shop two decades later came from witnessing corporate management at the 120-year-old company. “It is a family-owned business and they run it that way,” Redding said. “It was so simplistic. When Hamilton Carhartt discovered there was a need for quality work wear for those working the railroads of Detroit, he set up shop. A call would come in and they’d say, ‘All right, we’ve got an order! We need five sets of bibs and jackets’ and they’d just start sewing them. Now that’s service!” Redding’s boss took her under her wing and taught her everything she knew, not just about Carhartt but about growing a quality company without compromising its integrity. Still, Redding had a passion to become a school counselor, and the more she reflected, the more it swayed her to return to school. “I needed to live my dream. I didn’t see myself living in Dearborn; I wanted to be Up North and I had to get out of the city. So I said ‘money shmoney’ and I went back to school.” She left Carhartt, earned her teaching certification, married her husband, John, and accepted an internship with an inner-city school in Grand Rapids in 1999. At the same time up north, Redding’s brother, Jeff, and his family were experiencing a personal tragedy. His wife was diagnosed with Huntington’s disease and with three young children at home, he needed help. His sister volunteered. “John had a seasonal job and was about to get laid off, and I just finished student-teaching, so we turned to each other and said, ‘Let’s go north and let’s go help him.’ We agreed that this was our chance to go live up north.” ‘RAISING OUR KIDS IN THE PLACE WE ADORE’ After returning to Emmet County and settling into the new routine of helping her brother and looking for work, John and Shannon started thinking about starting their own family. They hoped to find a way that Shannon could both work and be home for the kids. As they were building their home on Pleasantview Road, Shannon started earning some extra cash by hosting garage sales with end-of-season Children’s Place clothing that she would pick up at huge discounts from outlet stores. When locals snapped up the pieces, John, an employee of the Emmet County Road Commission, suggested she look into selling Carhartts. She called her former employer and they agreed to send up a sales rep to discuss the proposal. In the meantime, they had finished the 600-square-foot space that was to be the garage before it was revamped for retail space. The Carhartt rep told her, “’You’ve already got a business established here.’ And they opened me up,” Shannon said. She opened for business in 2004. While she worked to develop a loyal clientele, the babies started coming. Today, they’re all school-age and attend Pellston Elementary School: Mariah, 10, Levi, 9, and Axel, 6. In between feedings and diapers, errands and school projects, Redding has memorized the “Carhartt Bible,” remembering hundreds of item numbers and important nuances like which jackets fit different body types and which boots are the best for each job. She guides moms who are concerned about spending money on clothes that won’t fit their kids well; she builds confidence in girls who aren’t rail-thin in how to look their best; and she famously encourages men to actually try on their pants and boots before purchasing them, to assure proper fit. Taking the time and care to get to know her customers has catapulted Northern Lights Family Outfitters to the tops among Carhartt dealers. Today, she takes care of more than 300 businesses and many more individuals. “I keep it simple,” she says, rather simply. If you stop by to pay her for something and she’s not home, it’s OK to slip it under the door. Sunday is designated family day, and she appreciates customers waiting until Monday to drop by if they can. “We still don’t have regular hours,” she notes. “It’s a good idea to call first before you come and make sure that I’m here.” During this interview, a conversation is overheard with a customer about selecting the right boots. “There’s a lot of stuff I don’t know, but I do know about boots,” she tells him, “and I do know about Carhartt.” She returns from the shop to the kitchen table. “It’s like a counseling session in here sometimes,” she says with her trademark smile and laugh. “It’s like a barbershop. We want people to come here and feel at home. And they do.” And she feels at home, too, in Emmet County. “We get to live in the most beautiful part of the country,” Redding said. “We get to live the lifestyle in the place where people want to vacation. We get to raise our kids in the place we adore. It’s not just making a living; it’s making a life.” Northern Lights Family Outfitters is located at 7037 N. Pleasantview Road, about 15 miles north of Harbor Springs. Also find at Northern Lights: Muck Boots, Red Wing Boots and Wonder Wink Scrubs. Mark you calendar! 32nd Annual Blissfest Music Festival July 13-15, 2012 Festival Farm 3695 Division Road Harbor Springs, MI 49740 A world of music and dance in your own backyard with over 50 folk and roots performers on three stages. Blissfest Music Organization 2000 Harbor-Petoskey Road Petoskey, MI 49770 231.348.7047 www.blissfest.org www.PetoskeyDowntown.com Find more online, www.northernoutfit.com. Phone (231) 537-2382. “INVESTED” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 23 Photo: G. Randall Goss | Invested Dennis Tippett, manager at Jervis B. Webb Company, now Daifuku Webb, stands in front of a series of robotic fork lifts in the 80,000 square foot factory in Harbor Springs. AUTOMATION POWERHOUSE: T JERVIS B. WEBB CO. here’s a good chance that last time you traveled by commercial airline, your baggage found its way from check-in to cargo hold thanks to a Harbor Springs company. For nearly 50 years, Jervis Webb Company — now Daifuku Webb — has been quietly operating in a mammoth, bigger-than-it-looks facility next to the Harbor Springs airport. At 80,000 square feet, it’s one of the largest manufacturing plants in Emmet County. “This company is known for its innovative engineering and commitment to developing new technologies that improve the way materials are moved,” said Den Tippett, a Harbor Springs native and 42-year veteran of the plant who has been its manager since 2003. The roots of the Webb company began in 1919 in Farmington Hills, when Jervis B. Webb adapted the forged rivetless chain conveyor for the automotive industry. This single product revolutionized mass production and forever changed the way automobiles were manufactured. The company evolved to produce a variety of material handling systems for all types of manufacturers, plus “smart handling systems” and automated guided vehicles used in manufacturing and warehouse facilities. The Webb family, Tippett noted importantly, also happened to be summer residents in Northern Michigan. When they sought to move up North full time, they bought an old aluminum foundry and opened a second Jervis B. Webb facility at its current location near 24 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G the Harbor airport. While that is often the story behind many retail outlets in Northern Michigan — a person with a passion opens a storefront downtown selling their unique wares — it’s not so often the story of how manufacturing moves to Northern Michigan. But it’s an important one, especially for the 57 employees who work from Webb’s Harbor Springs location. “The Webb family vacationed up here and they just really loved Northern Michigan,” Tippett said. WHAT’S GOING ON IN THERE? Inside the sprawling facility, employees handle everything from processing raw materials to fabricating parts, painting product and testing robotics. In one large room, small robotic vehicles — “SmartCarts” — operate by following magnetic strips affixed to the floor; in real-life, these carts can be found moving huge shelving units of parts to workers on a vehicle assembly line. Other large, loader-type vehicles are also designed to operate without a human driver; they navigate by using a rotating light on the top that “reads” reflective tape strategically placed on walls and support columns. These are known as AGVs, or automated guided vehicles. “We do custom automation for clients who have a problem they want solved,” said Tippett. He’s not kidding. When the U.S. Army needed an AGV to carry a large “bowl” of solid rocket fuel, Jervis Webb devised a solution. For some of the largest airports around the globe, shuttling baggage behind-the-scenes from the check-in counter to the proper airplane can produce a logistics nightmare. But Webb’s engineers consistently figure out how to get from point A to point B without the traveler ever knowing the hundreds of miles of conduit needed to make it happen. Their airport clients include O’Hare, Miami and Newark, to name a few. In yet another section of the building, workers are assembling large round frames. Inside each one, an intricate maze of wires in all colors connect to electronic components, switches and gears. Eventually these will be amusement park ride components, demonstrating the variety of work that goes on inside the Harbor facility. COMMITMENT TO BEING ON THE CUTTING EDGE For an area known for its heavy retail and resort economy, Jervis Webb is an example of how economic diversity is still working for Emmet County. Most likely, not many people envision groundbreaking technology and revolutionary robotics being invented, tested and sold from the idyllic shores of Little Traverse Bay. But that’s happening at Jervis Webb, both the Harbor Springs plant and its sister-facility in Boyne City, in next-door Charlevoix County. A Pellston facility serves a testing site for Webb’s AGVs, including the “SmartCarts” that really live up to their name. Watching the ground-hugging carts maneuver by reading magnetic tape is intriguing. Each one gets eight hours of testing time before being released to the client, Tippett said. “Customers can design their own load-handling frame, so whatever they need transported can be accommodated with the SmartCart design,” he noted. “These types of vehicles are continually bringing inventory to the assembly line. They’re extremely efficient for work flow.” Not only are the carts designed and tested in Emmet County, the software engineering that drives them is also developed here. The software experts join a staff that includes fabricators, welders, assemblers, wiremen and technicians all working together to meet customer expectations. “The Webbs wanted to be able to have total control of every aspect of the manufacturing process,” Tippett said. The airport baggage handling systems remain the company’s main product line. After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Jervis Webb saw its business increase as airports around the country were required to change security procedures and flow of people and baggage. “We started getting a lot of change orders,” said Tippett. “They needed more conveyors and more controls to achieve the new regulations. It’s the airport work that kept us going through the leaner times.” Three years ago, the Webb family looked to divest itself from day-to-day operations, and the company became a subsidiary of Daifuku. A Japanese firm, Daifuku is one of the largest material handling companies in the world. It’s helped afford stability to the workforce at the company’s multiple global operations, including Harbor Springs. “We have a lot of employee longevity at this plant,” said Tippett. “Right now we have three people who’ve been here over 40 years, and another 10 people who’ve been here more than 30. The company provides good jobs to area residents. And for me personally, I never had to move from this area. I was fortunate that I could get a job here in manufacturing, which was my career path, and that I didn’t have to go somewhere else to find work.” Providing access to COMPASSIONATE, Q QUALITY HEALTH CARE for all of northern Michigan. northernhealth.org · 800.248.6777 416 Connable Avenue, Petoskey “INVESTED” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE ABOUT THE COMPANY: Jervis B. Webb Co. is a global leader in providing durable material handling systems, including automatic guided vehicles (AGVs), conveyors, baggage handling systems and automated storage and retrieval systems. Webb systems are the centerpiece of thousands of manufacturing plants, warehouses and airports. It is a subsidiary of Daifuku Co., Ltd., a Japanese firm. Webb is headquartered in Farmington Hills, with manufacturing locations in Harbor Springs and Boyne City. One of its product demonstration facilities is located near Pellston Regional Airport. Learn more: www.jervisbwebb.com. (PPHW&KDUOHYRL[ &RXQW\)DLU 6DWXUGD\6XQGD\$XJ$XJ&DUQLYDO$XJ 0LGZD\IRRGIXQ0RQVWHU7UXFNVDXWRFURVVIUHHOLYHPXVLF+OLYHVWRFNVKRZVDXFWLRQNDUDRNHIDPLO\VKRZV L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 25 | Invested Storybook setting: arolyn Sutherland probably can’t help it. After decades of running the tiny Good Hart General Store in the tiniest of towns, you get to know a lot about your customers and your neighbors, and their customers and neighbors. And so if you try to talk with her about doing business in Good Hart, you inadvertently find out instead about everything — the history of the store, the history of the town, the history of the people that comprise this sleepy resort area along Lake Michigan. It’s a bit like the “Cheers” of highway M-119, without the bar, but with a cast of equally amusing and entertaining characters. There’s Carolyn and Jim Sutherland. Carolyn has run the general store for more than 40 years after moving Up North from the Detroit area to the county she long adored. She met Jim, then a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter pilot, 28 years ago, when he was in town for a family reunion and stopped by to pick up a paper; they’ve been married over 25 years. And then there’s Ami Woods, Carolyn’s daughter, who was raised in Good Hart, led the big-city life in Chicago, and came back to her roots, because, well, she missed the beach. What is so charming about this store, its characters and its setting is its picturesque placement along one of the most scenic drives in the United States — the Tunnel of Trees. When you’re driving this twisting, narrow road along the Lake Michigan shoreline, there is nothing around for a long while except glimpses of big, beautiful and mostly seasonal homes, thick forests and panoramic views of the turquoise waters of Lake Michigan down below the steep bluff. The Good Hart General Store arrives after you’re a good 20 minutes north of Harbor Springs, serving as a resting stop for M-119’s thousands of annual travelers. It’s easy, when you pull up, to imagine how many bicyclists, convertible drivers and motorcyclists have used the bright red store as a backdrop for their photos (M-119 is among the most popular routes for motorcycle trips in the country). If in your mind you picture what a general store looks like — with its gourmet goodies, worn benches, fresh baked goods, maps and logowear representing the town itself — that is what you will find here. Tilted floors, hound dog and all. “There aren’t many of these,” says Ami. “General stores simply don’t exist like this anymore.” She’s right. During the last few decades, they’ve been displaced in many areas of the U.S. by specialized retailers and Big Box stores. But Good Hart, in many ways, is different from most communities. Its history is rich and deep and dates back to the earliest of Native Americans, who called it “the land 26 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G Photo: G. Randall Goss C THE GOOD HART GENERAL STORE Carolyn (left) and Jim Sutherland with daughter Ami Woods (center) run the Good Hart General Store. of the crooked tree.” It’s in the middle of one of the most breathtaking drives you’ll ever take, whether it’s during the lush green days of summer or the blazing fall color season. Its secluded beaches, with plentiful public access, can only be described as incomparable. And it has a landmark — the Good Hart General Store. 40 YEARS AND COUNTING After a couple hours of chatting with Ami and Carolyn, and sporadically with Jim, there was an overflow of entertaining stories — about myriad topics. There were lots and lots of laughs and some descriptive story-telling, not confined to the history of the store, but about life in Good Hart overall (Population: about 500). In 2011, Ami penned a piece about the store’s 40th anniversary under her mother’s ownership. She explained in that article that the store was built in 1934 by Cliff Powers and purchased by Sutherland in 1971, and she has operated it year ‘round ever since. Housing a United States Post Office, the store oper- General stores simply ‘don’t exist like this anymore.’ AMI WOODS Tunnel of Trees store in downtown Petoskey. Her parents, Hazel and Ed Crowle, evenates six days a week to accommodate mail tually retired to Harbor Springs where her service for residents. father was a city clerk and well-rememBorn and raised in Huntington Woods, bered community activist. Sutherland and Sutherland had a successful early career then-husband, Gary Woods, followed her as a dental technician and professional or- parents north, purchased the store and ganist. She recalled summering in Emmet relocated permanently to Emmet County. County during the time when her grand- “We had the chance to move up here, and mother worked at Saks Fifth Avenue’s this is where we wanted to be, so we did,” Carolyn said. Both were eager to leave their careers, and embrace the Up North lifestyle. Carolyn and Jim continue to operate the store along with store manager, Jamie Harris. It is one of few businesses to achieve the 40 year mark and likely one of few authentic general stores still in operation today. “In addition, the business continues to thrive due to successful online business and national shipping of our famous chicken and beef pot pies,” Ami noted. In 2011, the business produced nearly 10,000 pot pies that were either purchased in person, delivered locally, or shipped across the country. Ami herself is one of the store’s known subjects. Many customers remember the day she was brought home from the hospital — during a time when steaks were cut to order, neighbors traded baskets and native art for canned goods, and the outhouse was still in operation. Ami returned to Northern Michigan six years ago after a career in Chicago and she now oversees marketing efforts and specialty purchasing, while also running a successful marketing business. “The concept of the general store as a business is a dying model. These beautiful stores that were the heart of our nation’s commerce in the ‘30s and ‘40s are no lon- Great Lakes Eco-Adventure Center, LLC 6016 Martha Street Indian River, MI 49749 Phone: 231-881-7863 Email: [email protected] www.glecenter.com GPS: 45.409131° -84.612772° 00333795 00 0 03 03337 0 3337 3337 33 337 33 379 795 95 ger. I’m happy to say that we’re one who survived, and we will continue to survive,” Woods said. “Forty years is a very long time for any business, let alone a business that should have failed years ago. We’re the hub of our community and we’re proud to serve that purpose to our customers, who are also our friends.” Those who do stay year ‘round in Good Hart, and the tourists and resorters who swell the local population during the warmest months, will find that the Good Hart General Store includes a deli featuring homemade salads and sandwiches, a bakery with fresh breads and specialty items such as the pot pies, general merchandise, provisions, unique gift items, beer, wine, liquor, branch office to Harbor Springs’ Graham Real Estate where Carolyn has served as a broker also for 40 years, and of course, the U.S. Post Office that was established in 1874 (ZIP code 49737). Friends and neighbors hold court daily, and just as it was done 40, 50, 60 years ago, the world’s problems are solved over a doughnut and coffee. Visitors will note several original facets of the 1934 structure including the original hardwood countertops, hand-carved wood cooler, National cash register (with bill of sale and warranty), brass Post Office boxes and stained glass windows, plus plenty of souvenirs to remember their visit. “We go through literally thousands of biker patches,” says Carolyn. “Everyone wants a keepsake of this trip. “They say, ‘This is God’s country up here.’ They can’t get over how beautiful it is.” For additional information on the Good Hart General Store, visit www.goodhartstore.com or www.facebook.com/goodhartstore. “INVESTED” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE member families can’t be wrong! DOES YOURS BELONG? Help to meet the needs of your family and community AND provide extended coverage for your emergency medical needs. It’s one MEMBERSHIP you can’t afford to be without! Serving northern Michigan communities 24 hours a day – 7 days a week Allied EMS Systems, Inc. 3407 M-119 – Harbor Springs, MI 49740 800.533.7178 • alliedems.org L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 27 Photos: G. Randall Goss | Invested KILWIN’S CHOCOLATE KITCHEN: A commitment to making quality candy from home base in Petoskey hungrier. “This whole building was designed around giving tours,” said McCarty. “It is Kilwin’s to the core.” ‘THIS IS WHERE WE WANT TO LIVE’ While Kilwin’s is a well-known name t each of the 80 Kilwin’s candy stores among local “fudgie” towns like the touraround the United States, customers ist spots up North, it’s also renowned naget a little taste of Petoskey. tionwide. In fact, 80 percent of retail sales Most of the decadent sweets, treats and occur outside of Michigan, McCarty said confections sold in the franchises of the fa- — making the company’s commitment to mous local candy retailer are made inside a keeping production in Emmet County that sprawling Charlie and the Chocolate Facto- much more significant. They employ more ry-esque new production facility in Petoskey. than 50 staff year ‘round, including a dozen The new building, which opened in May candy makers. 2011, serves as the continuation of the com“It really was always a question whether pany’s commitment to staying in Emmet Kilwin’s would stay in Petoskey,” McCarty County and producing fine chocolates, can- said. “You don’t necessarily need to have dies, ice cream and more. all the production services here, especially “About 20 percent of products are made since 80 percent of our product is shipped in the individual stores, and our ice cream out of state. But we wanted to be here. This is made off-site to our specifications, but is where we want to live.” the rest of our products are made here in McCarty and his wife, Robin, first bePetoskey and shipped around the country,” came involved with Kilwin’s in 1979, when said Kilwin’s CEO Don McCarty. they got jobs working in the Mackinac IsTours of the candy-making process let land location. In 1983, they invested in the visitors get a through-the-glass look at what newly formed franchising company and it takes to produce thousands of pieces of opened Kilwin’s first franchised store in candy each day. Chefs and cooks dressed in Grand Rapids, and then expanded to Saucrisp white outfits roll and pull taffy, pour gatuck, Florida and other locations. They warm chocolate into molds and glaze pop- bought the Kilwin’s company in 1996 from corn with caramel as hungry onlookers get Wayne and Lorene Rose and kept the com- A 28 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G ABOVE: Kilwin’s new sea salt caramels get final hand toppings. TOP: Kilwin’s new headquarters and candy facility in Petoskey. pany’s commitment to using original recipes. “We try to make the best quality products we can using the freshest possible ingredients,” said McCarty. While tours were given at the former Petoskey production facility on Mitchell Road, the older, cramped 10,000 square foot building didn’t allow for the panoramic views like those inside the new, larger building. At 40,000 total square feet on two levels, it was designed by local architect Elaine Keiser in the former Oleson’s grocery store on U.S. 31. In their first summer of tours in 2011, more than 8,000 people came through to watch the candy-making process. Thousands more are expected in coming years to see, taste and smell the “chocolate story,” which is told not only in sugar and spice, but also in photos and information throughout the building. McCarty said one of his favorite activities is visiting the plantations personally where the cocoa beans are grown. “We want people to see the whole process and learn, from how it’s planted and grown to how it’s harvested and made into product,” McCarty said. Back at the store’s entrance after the tour, visitors will once again see the end result of the hard work that goes into making candy. There are gooey bear claws the size of a grizzly paw, coconut marshmallows, striped caramel puffs, enormous pecan “turttles,” and at least 100 different kinds of chocolates. Kilwin’s makes more than 400 varieties of chocolates in total. “We do carry a lot more products, but we still make the original recipes from 65 years ago,” said McCarty. “That’s what I like about the candy business — it doesn’t change that much. It’s about quality and about people coming up North to have a good time. We enjoy being a part of that.” Kilwin’s president Don McCarty. OUTSIDE OF KILWINS Don and Robin McCarty have received a lot of attention for their stunning new Kilwin’s Chocolate Kitchen in Petoskey. But another side of how the McCartys are impacting people’s lives comes in their mission work in Africa, where the husbandand-wife team spend months committed to helping families impacted by AIDS and Take a tour: Kilwin’s Chocolate Kitchen is lo- children orphaned in disease-ravaged nacated at 1050 Bay View Road, Petoskey. The free tions. tours take place from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays “I think we all have a reason and a puron the half-hour. A typical tour is about 30 min- pose for being here,” says Don, “and we utes. www.kilwins.com need to give back.” Together with several other area families, the McCartys started the nonprofit called “SAME” — South African Medical Expeditions — in 2004. “People need to see what’s going on there, with the amount of HIV cases and the devastation and poverty,” said Don. “In the areas we work there is a 30 percent HIV infection rate.” The families involved in SAME contribute financially and with their time. They have started medical clinics that can dispense AIDS-slowing medications and educate people about how to stop the spread of the disease. They’ve been able to hire staff for their African clinics and nurses to go into homes to administer tests and medications. With an annual budget now of about $180,000, the McCartys feel that they have made a difference in the lives of many. “This has become our passion,” said Robin. “We saw these kids who didn’t have any place to go, no food, no medical help. Now, we know kids who would not be alive today without intervention.” Sturgeon River Pottery A Northern Michigan Destination for over 30 Years... Offering a huge collection of: Northern Michigan Art Handcrafted Pottery & Tile Petoskey Stones Jewelry Rustic Furniture Birdhouses & Feeders Garden Art & Décor Open 7 days a week, all year! Just 2 miles west of Petoskey on US 31 (Charlevoix Ave) (231) 347-0590 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 29 | Impressive Emmet County PROPERTIES Emmet County’s vast tracts of dense forestlands and expanses of clear, clean, Caribbean-blue waters are priceless recreational assets for residents and visitors. Through the decades, Emmet County’s Board of Commissioners has taken the necessary steps to ensure these properties and attractions remain accessible and open to the public. In fact, nearly 30 percent of the county’s 300,000 acres remains in public ownership (among federal, state and local governments). THE HIGHLIGHTS: THE HEADLANDS INTERNATIONAL DARK SKY PARK In May 2011, the 600-acre Headlands property became the United States’ sixth International Dark Sky Park and just the ninth in the world! The prestigious designation was awarded after years of proven commitment by Emmet County officials to limit light pollution through commonsense lighting design and county ordinance; to provide regular educational programs that are free and open to all; and to ensure community outreach that engages others in working together to protect the night sky. Each month, the county hosts free monthly programs at the park with Dark Sky Park program director Mary Stewart Adams of Harbor Springs. She weaves celestial lore with astronomy, astrology, indigenous cultural stories, poetry and contemporary science to present one-of-a-kind programs that focus on naked-eye observation. Some of our most frequently asked questions about the park include: What is an International Dark Sky Park? MAP COURTESY OF NICKEL DESIGN 30 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G A Dark Sky Park, as designated by the A brighter future for Dark Skies International Dark-Sky Association in Tucson, Ariz., is a park or other protected public land possessing exceptional starry skies and natural nocturnal habitat where light pollution is mitigated and natural darkness is valuable as an important educational, cultural, scientific and natural resource. What will I find at the Headlands International Dark Sky Park? • 600 acres of pristine forest about 2 miles west of downtown Mackinaw City; • 4 1/2 miles of trails, with a self-guided interpretive cell phone tour; • 2 1/2 miles of frontage on Lake Michigan, where an estimated 80+ shipwrecks lie; • Two residences accommodating large groups for programs and overnight events; and How do I find out about programs at the Headlands? Who is the Dark Sky Park program director? Emmet County provides information through its dedicated Dark Sky Park page on the county website, www.emmetcounty. org/darkskypark/. Also find out about us through local resources such as Mackinaw Area Chamber of Commerce, Great Lakes Lighthouse Keepers’ Association, Straits Area Audubon, Little Traverse Conservancy, Heritage Village Historical Park and local media. In addition, the county offers biweekly email blasts with programming details and also information about what to watch for in the night sky in the days and weeks ahead. To register for the email alerts, email Emmet County Communications Director Beth Anne Piehl at bpiehl@emmetcounty. org. To email specific questions about the night sky or to schedule programs for your organization or group, contact Adams directly at the email or phone number listed below. Mary Stewart Adams is a star lore historian, storyteller and author who has been immersed in the history of star knowledge for nearly 30 years. For the past several years Mary served as the leader of the initiative that achieved International Dark Sky Park designation for the Headlands. Mary was honored in 2006 with the Gary R. Williams Dark Sky Advocate of the Year Award. She writes and speaks extensively to local, national and i nte r n a t io n a l Mary Stewart Adams audiences on our relationship to the night sky and its cultural consequences. Join Mary under the stars to celebrate the fundamental human happiness that results from learning the history, the art, the science, and the poetry of the stars. Mary makes her home with her four children under the starry skies of Harbor Springs. She can be reached at (231) 8388181, or email starmare.adams@gmail. com. • Spectacular starry skies! When can I see the Northern Lights? The Northern Lights, also known as the Aurora Borealis, are difficult to predict and don’t occur at any particular time of the year more than another. Contemporary scientists believe they are caused by electromagnetic storms on the Sun. Indigenous cultures, however, believed they were the sweeping hem of the garment of Gitche Manitou, and they appear when the Great Spirit dances for joy and protection of the Earth. Go to www.spaceweather.com, NASA’s website, for email alerts about when solar activity may spur Northern Lights in our region. What about the Headlands during the day? At all hours of the day, visitors may glimpse an abundance of wildlife, including bald eagles, osprey, white-tail deer, turkeys, coyotes and black bear. Marked nature trails take visitors throughout the acreage and along the shoreline, guiding hikers, bicyclists, cross-country skiers and photographers past wetlands and oldgrowth forests in each breathtaking season of the year. To inquire about rental properties for overnight stays, call (231) 436-4051. What are the major observational events I can see from the Headlands? The north ‘circumpolar’ constellations, including Ursas Major and Minor, Draco and Cassiopeia and the Milky Way. In addition, annual meteor showers can also be observed from the Headlands, such as the Lyrids in April, the Perseids in August and the Geminid meteor showers in December. Guest house at the Headlands (231) 436-4051 7725 E. Wilderness Park Dr., Mackinaw City www.emmetcounty.org/headlands/ “IMPRESSIVE” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 31 swimming beach on Pickerel Lake and trout fishing. Facilities include 90 campsites with electricity and water, modern restrooms and showers, four-season rental cabins — including three new additions in 2011-12 — playground equipment and open field game areas. There is also a recreational hall/multi-use building and an open-air pavilion available for rent. Throughout the summer, outdoor movies are shown in the pavilion on Saturday evenings. MCGULPIN POINT LIGHTHOUSE Since Emmet County purchased McGulpin Point Lighthouse in 2008, it has attracted tens of thousands of visitors who have ventured here step back into Emmet County’s past. The property is one-of-a-kind historic asset; it was the original site of an Odawa village (known as Ottawa in early years) and was the first deeded property in the county. The lighthouse was established in 1869 and served as a crucial beacon on the Straits of Mackinac as it guided vessels through the shoal-filled waters. In 1906, the light was extinguished and the property passed into private ownership for the next 100+ years. Today, it has been restored to period detail and a gift shop has been added. More plans for developing the historic site are in the works. There is no charge to visit the lighthouse, located at 500 Headlands Dr., two miles west of downtown Mackinaw City. The season is Memorial Day weekend through the second weekend of October. Daily hours are May-September, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. and noon to 5 p.m. October weekends. (Check the county Web site to ensure dates and times.) (231) 436-5860 www.emmetcounty.org/mcgulpin/ CAMP PET-O-SE-GA One of Northern Michigan’s most treasured campgrounds and waterside parks, Camp Pet-O-Se-Ga in Alanson keeps getting better. The park was originally constructed in the 1930s as a boys’ camp. Today, Emmet County maintains its 300 acres that provide year-round recreation to daytime and overnight guests with nature trails, a 32 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G Lake Michigan. Fishing is permitted on the Carp River, which flows through the park. A boardwalk leads visitors from a parking area off Straits View Road. Covered pavilion and access points to the Carp River are available. Directions: From I-75, head west on Central Avenue, then south on Wilderness Park Drive. Cecil Bay is located near the intersection of Cecil Bay Road and Wilderness Park Drive. www.emmetcounty.org/cecilbay/ 11000 Camp Pet-O-Se-Ga Road, Alanson Reservations: (231) 347-6536 www.emmetcounty.org/petosega/ CECIL BAY A mile of unspoiled shoreline and 800 acres of wilderness to explore are the characteristics that make Cecil Bay appealing to rugged adventure-seekers. Located about 8 miles southwest of Mackinaw City, Cecil Bay boasts sandy beaches perfect for picnicking and sunbathing after a swim in New lease on operations CROOKED RIVER LOCK NOW UNDER COUNTY OPERATION T he Crooked River Lock in Alanson is under new operational management, with Emmet County partnering with the Michigan Department of Natural Resources to run the lock. Emmet County has entered into a sublease with the DNR to operate the lock for five years. The move came after more than a year of discussions with the DNR and following the recommendations of the Crooked River Lock Consortium. An agreement was signed by the chairman of the Emmet County Board of Commissioners, James E. Tamlyn, in early 2012. The county’s Parks and Recreation Department will be taking over the operations of the lock for the boating season. “The agreement allows the county to provide reliable, continued operation of the lock while decreasing passage fees and extending the boating season through the lock,” said Dan Plasencia, Emmet County Commissioner, District 4, and chairman of the consortium. “The county encouraged this partnership, believing it will enhance recreational, economic and developmental impact in Emmet County and the surrounding communities along the Inland Water Route. The 2012 passage fee will be $30 annual and $10 daily. The 2012 lock schedule is as follows: — April 14-15, 21-22, 28-29: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. — May 25-June 30: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. — July 1-Aug. 19: 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. — Aug. 20-Sept. 3: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. — Sept. 4-10: 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. — Sept. 11-30: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. — Oct. 6-7, 13-14, 20-21 and 27-28: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Crooked River Lock closes for the season at 5 p.m. on Oct. 28. “We’re there when you need us...” Electrical, Plumbing, Interior/Exterior, Roofs, Appliances, Heat and AC, LP Systems, Awnings SALES & SERVICE 6825 M-68, Alanson, MI 49706 | ranchrv.com | 231.548.5443 | 800.358.1582 i3BEJBUJPOUIFSBQZ EPFTOUIPME NFCBDLw The Trilogy system has changed the rules of radiation therapy. Its speed, precision, and convenience frees patients from excessive radiation exposure and long appointments. Patients spend less time treating their cancer — and more time living fully. McLaren–Northern Michigan is the only facility in northern Michigan to offer Trilogy with BrainLAB Stereotactic Radiosurgery (SRS), superior to CyberKnife and Gamma Knife for accuracy and speed. 231.487.4209 · northernhealth.org/trilogy L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 33 | Invigorating Get out! Zipline, Boyne Highlands, Harbor Springs OUTDOOR AMENITIES COMBINE FOR A ONE-OF-A-KIND WAY OF LIFE Y ED WAGAR: Touring Gear Ed Wagar has raced through the mountains and along the scenic roads of Colorado, with some of the top professional racers. He had made a name for himself, too, as a top racer in rides that sometimes traveled up to 70 miles in one stretch. Back home now in Emmet County years after ending a successful professional rac- Photo: G. Randall Goss ou can be indoors anywhere. But where would you like to be outdoors, every season of the year? In Emmet County, the only unknown is what you want to do today: Golf, morelmushroom hunt, bike, in-line skate, hike, go to the beach, swim, boat, snorkel, kayak, canoe, camp, skydive, parasail, ski … you get the picture. All it takes to enjoy the outdoors here is a little imagination and momentum to get moving. Get out, and live it up! Ed Wagar, of Touring Gear, downtown Harbor Springs. 34 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G ing career, Wagar still finds plenty of challenges and enjoyable rides over the terrain of Northern Michigan. “I got to ride all around the country and some of the trails we have right here are some of my favorites of all time,” said Wagar, 46, owner of Touring Gear in Harbor Springs. The long-time bike retail and repair store was purchased by Wagar and a partner, Tim Jarvi, in 2007. It’s evolved into a place where residents and visitors can stop not only for new purchases, repair and gear, but also maps and suggestions about routes to ride. Wagar, a Petoskey native, also offers guided tours and a host of background info on what people may find along the way. “We are trying to do a lot more than just sell bikes here,” he said. “We are promoting being outdoors and enjoying Northern Michigan.” In order to offer some riding tips to get the most out of your biking experience in Northern Michigan, we asked Wagar for his recommendations on where to put your mettle to the pedal. “There are literally hundreds of rides I could take someone on,” said Wagar. “We are very lucky to have the kind of riding that we do here, whatever your level.” WAGAR’S SUGGESTED RIDES: ROAD BIKING — M-119 “Tunnel of Trees,” Harbor Springs to Cross Village — Emmet Heights Road, Harbor Springs — Joy Valley Loop — beginning at Evergreen/Maxwell Roads in Springvale Township OFF-ROAD BIKING — North Country Trail, Emmet County: “It’s great riding, we’re lucky to have it right here,” says Wagar. “Some sections are tougher than others, but we can guide riders and teach them how to negotiate the terrain.” — Bear River Recreation Area and corridor, Petoskey ALL AGES — Little Traverse Wheelway, Charlevoix to Harbor Springs (paved) — Boyne Highlands, Harbor Springs Behind Boyne Highlands is an approximately mile-long route that’s “perfect for kids learning how to mountain bike,” Wagar says. “It’s a single-track, all-mountain bike trail system. That’s an awesome ride for kids.” A BIKING BACKGROUND Biking was in Wagar’s blood from an early age. Starting at age 12, he worked in a Petoskey bike shop at a time when bikes were so heavy he couldn’t lift them onto the repair stand. Later, while he was a student at North Central Michigan College, he worked for Le Cyclist, “where I got my first road bike and my first mountain bike. Everyone there was a biking enthusiast and they were all very active in riding around the area,” Wagar recalled. It rubbed off on Wagar, who became more interested in racing. “That’s when I decided I was going to head to Colorado,” he said. “Mountain biking in particular was growing like crazy at that time.” He lived in Colorado from 1993 ‘til 2001, working for a bike shop and racing on its team. “The rides were amazing and I had access to a coach and fitness services,” Wagar said. “But it was difficult. I was in the top 10 in Michigan but I dropped down a category when I moved out there.” Still, he continued to race hard and work hard and his level improved. “When I finished, I was racing mountain bikes in the elite/experts category,” Wagar said. As his professional career began winding down years later, he endured a serious injury and began looking to return to Michigan. “I came back here to my hometown and I wasn’t sure what I was going to do,” he said. Wagar stopped by a local bike shop in Petoskey in 2002 and was offered a job, which he accepted. A few years later, he looked to buy his own bike business when Touring Gear came up for sale. Now a Petoskey resident with two children, Hannah, 10, and Ben, 8, Wagar is enjoying sharing his biking background and knowledge of the area with his kids and residents and visitors looking to pedal the area — at slow or fast speeds. “I think that for younger riders or people who want to race their bikes, there is a lot of opportunity here — more than there used to be,” Wagar noted. “And there are opportunities like those that we provide, tours of the area and riding clinics that teach people better techniques so they can enjoy the ride more when they’re out. “A lot of us who live here take this area for granted, but people who visit here are blown away at how nice this area is and how great the biking is all over Northern Michigan.” Touring Gear is located at 108 E. Third St., Harbor Springs, behind The Outfitter. Learn more at www.touringgearbicycles.com or call (231) 526-7152. Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday, and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sundays. WE HAVE IT ALL! Golf: A dozen or more public and private courses make Emmet County your own private tee-box. Ski resorts and winter sports: Nub’s Nob and Boyne Highlands in Harbor Springs are meccas for snowboarding, skiing, tubing and crosscountry skiing, with dozens of hills for all levels of riders and skiers. For a smaller venue, check out the Winter Sports Park in Petoskey for sledding, skating and skiing, too. Iceboating on the Bay Watersports: Get out on the water at these inland lakes: Walloon, Wycamp, Larks, Crooked and Pickerel, and Little Traverse Bay. Nature preserves: The Little Traverse Conservancy owns and manages more than 164 nature preserves within a five-county area, including Emmet. Request a map: www.landtrust.org. Rec sports: The city of Petoskey and the Petoskey YMCA both offer recreational league sports for kids and adults, from Little League to soccer and men’s and women’s basketball, and softball. OH WAIT – THERE’S MORE! Geocaching, kayaking, festival-going, food tastings, art fairs, outdoor concerts, autumn color tours, hunting and fishing, farmers markets, pumpkin patches and corn mazes, ice skating, hockey, tubing, ice sailing … ABOVE: The trail systems that crisscross Emmet County are part of a larger network that includes 220 interconnected miles. The jewel is the Little Traverse Wheelway, which begins in next-door Charlevoix County and travels into Emmet County through Bay Harbor, Petoskey and Bay View to Harbor Springs – 26 miles total of black-topped path that draws thousands of trail users to Northern Michigan each year. L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 35 | Invigorating New recreation destination: PETOSKEY’S BEAR RIVER REC AREA T he 36 acre, 1.5 mile long valley along the Bear River in Petoskey has become a showpiece in the local recreation scene. All located within the city of Petoskey, this expansive park features steep terrain, unpaved and paved trails, forests and boardwalks. It’s the perfect spot for biking, hiking, walking, fishing, picnicking and kayaking/canoeing. In fact, it’s the Lower Peninsula’s only whitewater park! Plus, it’s just a two-block walk from Petoskey’s downtown shopping district. Entrances to the park are located on West Lake Street, Sheridan Street and several adjacent neighborhoods. (Note: This park is operated and maintained by the city of Petoskey.) GLLKA Life Auto Great Lakes Lighthouse Keepers Association Home Health Business Annuities Retirement A registered not-for-profit organization dedicated to lighthouse restoration and preservation. Financial Services Employee Benefits Proud to partner with Emmet County in the Relighting of McGulpin Point Lighthouse We’re With You Every Step Visit our Lighthouse Gift shop at 707 N. Huron Ave in Mackinaw City. Across the street from Old Mackinac Point Lighthouse Boyne City East Jordan Petoskey 231-436-5580 36 Senior Services L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G www.korthaseflinn.com 800-303-4113 [email protected] PASSPORT TO ADVENTURE! Getting Kids Outdoors takes kids and their families around the county In Emmet County, Getting Kids Outdoors is a full-time commitment. A new Passport to Adventure program encourages children and their families to get outdoors and explore, while promoting local events, programs and nearby natural destinations. Families are encouraged to get a passport and visit the destinations it recommends. It’s free, and there is no start or end date; families can pick up a passport any time of year and complete it in one season or over the course of a year or more. The passports are available at any of the participating partner sites, such as the Little Traverse Conservancy on M-119 in Harbor Springs. “It’s limitless!” said Alison Berry, education coordinator with the Little Traverse Conservancy in Harbor Springs. “Our goal is to update the sites every couple of years to keep things fresh, interesting and fun. It gets kids and their families outdoors, exploring local places many people travel to the north to see, but that many locals rarely get a chance to go out and explore themselves. It encourages exploration and discovery in the outdoors for kids of all ages.” Some of the locations families can expect to find include the conservancy’s nature preserves, Oden Fish Hatchery, Top of Michigan Trails Council trails, the Headlands International Dark Sky Park and many more. One page encourages participants to create their own destination site in Northern Michigan, with suggestions listed both in the passport map and online. GKO’s mission is to build a community-wide effort that embraces and promotes getting kids outdoors as part of a healthy lifestyle, while promoting the national movement, Leave No Child Inside. For more information about GKO and the Passport to Adventure, go online to www.gettingkidsoutdoors.org or email Berry at [email protected]. For help getting a passport, call Berry at (231) 3470991. Welcome to the neighborhood. • Barber & Beauty • Dental & Medical p • Hospice • Medical Appointment Transportation • Vision • X-Ray • Pharmacy • • • • • • Social Services 24-Hour Care Therapy Housekeeping Laundry Dementia Care 750 E. Main Street, Harbor Springs, MI 231-526-2161 | www.baybluffs.org of the United Methodist Church JUNE-AUGUST Worship • Performing Arts Education • Recreation Programs LOCATED RIGHT HT NEXT DOOR OO TO O PETOSKEY, PETOSKE WE WELCOME EVERYONE. EVERYONE 231.347.6225 • www.BayViewAssociation.org Graham Real Estate CAROLYN C. SUTHERLAND, ASSOCIATE BROKER 231.526.6001 PHONE [email protected] EMAIL GRAHAMGOODHART.COM WEB Creating vacation memories for over 40 years. Full service sales and rental office. L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 37 | Intriguing An extraordinary past INFLUENCES THE FUTURE Central Michigan College student study for a full semester in Ireland. The society also holds an annual Robert Emmet Remembrance Day on Sept. 20. RAILROADS AND RESORTS Big Rock at McGulpin Point A t least 395 years ago, French explorers were navigating the treacherous Straits of Mackinac as they explored the new world. Along the shoreline near what is today known as McGulpin Point Lighthouse, they relied on a 54-ton rock to gauge water levels as they navigated in canoes along the tumultuous waters between Michigan’s Upper and Lower Peninsulas. The McGulpin rock — named “chi-sin” by Emmet County’s Historical Commission to reflect the native Odawa (Ottawa) language — has been observed since at least 1615 as an aid to navigation around the time voyager Etienne Brule was traveling the Great Lakes. Native Americans, of course, used it much earlier and it endures today as a symbol of the area’s earliest origins. The big rock was even mentioned in 1749 in a journal by French-Canadian voyager Michel Chartier de Lotbiniere, who compiled sketches of the layout of Fort Michilimackinac and described the area in his writings. (Read his journal entry at www.emmetcounty.org/mcgulpin/) McGulpin Point Lighthouse and the 300 feet of Lake Michigan shoreline where chisin rests are owned by Emmet County. 38 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G FROM ‘TONEDAGANA’ TO EMMET COUNTY Centuries before being discovered as a resort destination, the area’s qualities drew Native Americans to the verdant woods and rivers for hunting and fishing, and enticed Europeans for trading and later, logging and shipping. Prior to 1842, Emmet County was known as Tonedagana County, named after an Odawa (Ottawa) Indian chief from Cross Village. In 1842, an act of the State Legislature changed the name to Emmet County, in honor of Robert Emmet (1778-1803), an Irish patriot of the time with no known ties to Emmet County or Michigan. However, he was known globally for a speech he gave on the eve of his execution in Ireland that said, in part, “when my country takes her place among the nations of the earth, then, and not until then, let my epitaph be written.” The Robert Emmet Society, based in Petoskey, works to keep a focus on the Irish heritage of the county namesake. The group, formed in 1989, has offered a scholarship for the last nine years to a North Growth of the county was expedited when the Grand Rapids and Indian Railroads started traveling to Petoskey in the mid-1800s. While the soil was poor for farming, the lumbering was good, and after the height of lumbering passed the resort industry flourished. The first resort was Bay View, founded in 1875 by the United Methodist Church, just outside Petoskey and along the Little Traverse Bay shoreline. Bay View is a National Historic Landmark community which is home to more than 30 community-owned buildings, nearly 450 cottages and two inns, situated on 337 terraced acres. Generations of families continue to visit their Victorian cottages each summer, swelling the local population and hosting public music, worship, lectures and educational seminars. Bay View was followed by the Harbor Springs resort communities of Wequetonsing and Harbor Point, exclusive enclaves of storied homes and waterfront parcels. Through the last century, the resort industry thrived, as resorters came north to escape allergies and the heat of the summer in the cool, clean environs of Emmet County. They wanted their children to splash in pristine lakes, wander lush, thick woodlands, and linger amidst unspoiled beauty until summer faded to fall. And still today, that hasn’t changed. THE ODAWA WARRIORS’ JOURNEY EXHIBIT Meet key historical figures from Odawa, French and British history, watch a movie based on a French soldier’s journal during the time of the French and Indian War (1750-1761), and tour an authentic wigwam at “The Odawa Warriors’ Journey” exhibit at Pellston Regional Airport. The exhibit details the journey of Odawa warriors from Emmet County to Farmington, Penn., to join the fight for Native sovereignty. The Pennsylvania battle in the summer of 1754 was the opening ac- MEREDITH HENRY: Tour reveals another side of Emmet County O Characters depicted in the Odawa Warriors’ Journey exhibit. tion of the French and Indian War. At least 20 Odawas (Ottawas), known as the Anishinaabe, were among those who traveled about 630 miles to this battle against George Washington. The exhibit, a project of the Emmet County Historical Commission, is open daily free of charge from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Exhibit components include interpretive display boards, a self-guided cell phone tour and life-size figures telling their own stories from the time period. Emmet County received a $15,000 Michigan Humanities Council grant to help fund this project. Collaborating with the development of the exhibit and lending of artifacts are Mackinac State Historic Parks, the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians and the National Park Service, through Fort Necessity. The Odawa Warriors’ Journey had been on display at Fort Necessity, in Pennsylvania, from July 2010 to July 2011. The local exhibit committee further expanded the journey by tying in key figures and events in the Mackinaw region to the national actions going on at the time, through the use of a special movie and characters such as Patrick McGulpin, the namesake family of McGulpin Point Lighthouse just west of downtown Mackinaw City, and Charles Langlade, a prominent Odawa leader who impacted numerous battles and events here and nationally. The Pellston display will be open through at least August 2012. (231) 348-1704, or [email protected]. Grand Hotel, Mackinac Island HAPPY 125TH ANNIVERSARY, GRAND HOTEL! Since it opened on July 10, 1887, Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island has been one of America’s premier summer vacation spots. Its history as a summer getaway—and as an integral part of the history of the state of Michigan— is indeed rich and auspicious. In 2012, Grand Hotel will be celebrating its 125th anniversary as America’s Summer Place, where five U.S. presidents, countless dignitaries from around the world, many other political leaders, authors, celebrities, and captains of industry—as well as countless families, groups and associations—have enjoyed exceptional accommodations, dining, and activities, all in an unparalleled locale. The hotel’s president, Dan Musser III, and his wife, Marlee Brown, and their children reside in Petoskey and on Mackinac Island. www.grandhotel.com nce you take a tour of Emmet County with Meredith Henry, you’ll never look at it the same again. The ski hills that rise from the landscape in Harbor Springs are actually Nokomis and Mishomis, a grandmother and grandfather placed together for eternity by the Creator. The waves of sand dunes at Petoskey State Park didn’t develop from the blowing winds off Little Traverse Bay; they are the “Seven Sisters” or “Serpent’s Back” that comprise the back of a serpent thrown to shore after a fight with the Underwater Panther. To Henry, a member of the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians, the history of Emmet County is much deeper than contemporary historians relay; the stories here reflect generations of cultural lore shared among Native people who have called this area home for thousands and thousands of years. “I feel like it’s my job to be here in my community educating people. I love raising my kids in Emmet County, and I want to educate the community about the people who live in it,” Henry says. “But it’s difficult, because how is a person supposed to hang on to their past when sweetgrass fields have been replaced by golf courses?” Many Odawas such as Henry hold tight to their traditions of storytelling, reliance on the wisdom of elders and the desire to proudly pass their heritage on to the next generation. In Henry’s family, the stories are more multicultural than many; her background is Scottish, German and Odawa. She is married to a Jamaican, Kenroy Henry, which means their children, Sophia, 6, and Cameron, 5, embody many cultures, with many traditions to celebrate. She and Kenroy, married eight years, have coined a new phrase for their children (who have dual citizenship): Anishnaicans, a combination of Anishnaabe and Jamaican. And they’ve found about 25 other families north of Gaylord like them. “I’m a modern Anishnaabe person. I’m Christian and I’m Native. We rock the baby Jesus to sleep on Christmas and we go to Ghost Suppers to honor our dead,” she explained. “We are a multicultural family. You have to make them work together, and you can.” TAKING THE TOUR On a sunny spring day, Henry, 31, a Harbor Springs native, begins a tour of Emmet CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 39 | Intriguing Photo: G. Randall Goss CONTINUED FROM PAGE 39 County that you won’t find in a guidebook. As she drives, she explains that every major roadway was once a footpath for the Anishnaabe (a general term for all Michigan Indians) to travel downstate. U.S. 31 toward Charlevoix, for instance, was known as the Chief Blackbird Trail — Makadadebneshiinh Miikan. The first stop is the casino hotel on U.S. 131, which is an important part of the Odawa community. “One of the biggest misnomers is all we do is own casinos,” Henry says. “Yes, it is our biggest money maker. But this is why we are able to have our government complex, higher education scholarships, etc., because of the economic base it provides.” As the car pulls around, Meredith points to a conifer with a large “knot” of branches and needles in the middle. She calls it a “Little People’s Home” — a place where fairy-like creatures live, in her traditional lore. “They are known to steal your children,” she explains. “My kids won’t go near them in the woods!” The drive back toward Little Traverse Bay reveals the story of the grandmother and grandfather hills, better known today as Nub’s Nob and Boyne Highlands. “They loved each other so much that the Creator placed them side-by-side forever,” Henry says. “Those hills are really important to our tribe because they represent the bond of the circle of life — you end up becoming part of the land when you pass on.” Passing by Bay Harbor, Henry relays how the now-opulent resort community was once a heavily populated Indian area popular for fishing. And a nearby golfcourse was once one of the most renowned areas for picking sweet-grass as recently as the 1930s; the plant is one of four sacred medicines in her tribe, along with tobacco, cedar and sage. One of the most significant stops Henry wants to make is at Greensky Hill Church in Charlevoix County. We drive past the crooked trees that served as landmarks for natives as they traversed the area, past Bay Shore and Big Rock — both with important Native histories attached — and onto a narrow dirt road. To the left is a large circle of reaching, mature trees that once served as “council tree,” or meeting place. “This is a really important place, because this is where the Indians started getting converted to Christianity,” Henry explains. “It really brought Indians from all over together. Many of them assimilated for survival.” Including, she says, her own family. COMING HOME, SHARING STORIES Once we enter her hometown, Harbor Springs, we pass the former Indian board40 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G The Henry family (from left) Kenroy, Cameron, Sophia, and Meredith on the shore of Little Traverse Bay. Behind them on the horizon are the hills known as the “Seven Sisters” or the “Serpent’s Back.” ing school at Holy Childhood Church. Henry was a student there, as was her father and his siblings, and thinks her family had it easier than many Indian children because of their lighter skin tone. She’s heard many stories from others with tainted memories; the school closed in the mid1980s. We drive through “Indian town” and visit a cemetery where many white crosses I feel like it’s my ‘responsibility to teach my children about all of their cultural backgrounds so they know where they come from. MEREDITH HENRY ishing her master’s degree in educational leadership from Ferris State University. She recently left a full-time position with the tribe to start her own consulting business, Great Lakes Consulting Ltd., with a Native colleague. “When I left the tribe, I learned there’s a bigger picture. There’s Emmet County and there’s a global perspective; I can do a lot more educating and I can reach a lot more people this way,” Henry said. “That’s my whole goal with this company.” Her willingness to share personal insights also stems from her instinct to make her children proud of their diverse background, which she says is more common in Emmet County than what first meets the eye. Much like our tour, I think to myself. “I really appreciate my mom — she is the one who taught us about our Indian roots. My dad was gone a lot; he’s a captain on a Great Lakes freighter, so it was up to her to tell us about our culture and our ancestors, even though she’s not Indian,” Henry said. “And likewise, I feel like it’s my responsibility to teach my children about all of their cultural backgrounds so they know where they come from.” Our last stop is at the figure of Chief Petoskey, a statue which looks out over Little Traverse Bay near the Perry Hotel downtown Petoskey. He’s looking out over the bay, over the grandmother and grandfather hills, with the Seven Sisters to his right. He’s dressed in European garb, but with moccasins on his feet and holding an eagle feather and a pipe. “He’s living in two worlds at once,” Meredith points out. “That’s how I feel culturally, too.” ’ bear crowns for the spirit to wear to the Ghost Suppers. At her childhood home on Fisher Road (Meredith’s maiden name is Fisher) in Stutsmanville, the road ends in a cul-desac where a watering hole, fed by a spring, was the family’s version of going to the beach. The pond is surrounded by thick, plush mint and the memories elicit wide smiles and happy memories for Henry as we stop there to talk. “This is the most secret spot in Emmet County,” she smiles. “It’s the best water you’ve ever had.” For a young Native American, Henry’s desire to know her ancestry and the accompanying stories is inspirational. Perhaps it’s her teaching background that drives her to educate others; she is fin- Alanson Swing Bridge Historical home in the Bay View Association HISTORICAL POINTS OF INTEREST UNIQUE TO EMMET COUNTY ALANSON MACKINAW CITY Alanson Swing Bridge Inland Waterway & Museum Hillside Gardens Mackinac Bridge Cecil Bay (former lumbering community) McGulpin Point Lighthouse Mackinaw Heritage Village Colonial Ft. Michilimackinac Camp Pet-O-Se-Ga CROSS VILLAGE Mackinac Bridge Devil’s Elbow spring, along the Tunnel of Trees Cross on the hill Leg’s Inn “Tunnel of Trees” M-119 Skillagalee and Waugoshance light stations GOOD HART St. Ignatius Church and beach Good Hart General Store HARBOR SPRINGS Andrew J. Blackbird house/museum Ephraim Shay House Wequetonsing ODEN Oden State Fish Hatchery, (originally established in 1921) PETOSKEY Bay View Association Stafford’s Perry Hotel & statue of Chief Petoskey Petoskey’s historic downtown district St. Francis Solanus Mission Church (the oldest building still standing in Northern Lower Michigan) Little Traverse Historical Society HISTORICAL MUSEUMS: Harbor Springs, Petoskey, Bay Harbor, Pellston, Mackinaw City, Inland Water Route Museum in Alanson For a free Emmet County Historical Tour Map, call (231) 348-1704 or email [email protected] Prehistoric prize: The Petoskey Stone Michigan’s state stone (1965) is prevalent along the shoreline of Little Traverse Bay. A Petoskey stone is a rock and a fossil that is composed of fossilized coral, Hexagonaria percarinata. The stones were formed as the result of glaciation and originally deposited during the Devonian period some 350 million years ago. L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 41 | Inspiring: Arts & Culture Robert deJonge’s award-winning photo, “I am an Island,” was taken at Wilderness State Park in northwest Emmet County. The Headlands Dark Sky Park PHOTOGRAPHER Robert de Jonge: Committed to family, faith and capturing Northern Michigan’s essence T here is no lack of inspiration in Emmet vast depth of the night sky and its millions County for Bob de Jonge’s photographic of bright, shining objects. eye. Likewise for the viewers of his And he had volunteered his time for this, I photographs. asked Mary again? I was introduced to de Jonge’s work in 2010, “I was happy to do it,” says Bob, an imwhen the county first began offering Dark Sky posing man in height but not in demeanor. Park events at the Headlands (see article, page “Night photography is a whole different ani30). Mary Stewart Adams, Dark Sky Park mal than day photography. What makes it program director, had mentioned that a pro- fun nowadays is the equipment. For one, senfessional photographer whose work she appre- sors on digital cameras now are a lot more ciated had offered to shoot an event for us. sensitive than film could ever be. You used to It was the night of the total lunar eclipse have to keep the shutter open a half-hour to on Winter Solstice in December 2010, and get good night shots. Now, you hold the shutthe event came in the midst of a very snowy ter open for five minutes and the photo looks stretch. Many of us expected it to be too over- more realistic.” cast to witness the celestial goings-on high Once he has the raw images, technology above. However, as has been our luck on sev- comes in to play again; this time, on his home eral occasions, the skies cleared completely computer with image-enhancing software. this crisp night and Bob was able to get clean “The whole technological and art fields shots. merging really interests me,” Bob says. “In When I saw the photos, my chillbumps the human eye, there is nothing mechanical. weren’t from imagining how cold it must have The camera can’t always capture a scene the been out there on the Straits of Mackinac in way an eye can see it. I try to re-create that by the middle of a cloudless December night. I using other techniques that bring out details couldn’t believe how Bob had captured the the camera normally can’t see, but which are 42 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G there.” I was reminded of the countless times I’d photographed a landscape or other captivating scene that was so magnificent in person, but looked so blah when I got the print backs. They just weren’t the same as what I had seen with my own eyes. Technology, Bob says, enhances that photographic experience but doesn’t diminish its artistic value. “I do take liberties and I take an artistic approach. I make images impressionistic, artistic,” says Bob. “In talking about my approach to photography, I have found that the best way to explain it is that I’m interested in creating art and the camera happens to be my tool of choice, rather than a paintbrush or chisel. I don’t pretend to be a photojournalist. Many times my images are realistic in style, but if I feel that the ‘truth’ of the subject is best expressed by a more impressionistic or abstract approach, a camera can help me do that too. And if a computer and software can further express my artistic vision, I’m happy to add that to my artist’s toolbox.” HOW EVERYTHING CLICKS UP NORTH The Grand Rapids native, 57, and his wife, Manette, moved to Petoskey in 1995. With four children — the youngest then in kindergarten, the oldest a sophomore in high school — they appreciated the beauty of the area and the lifestyle afforded them, particularly when it came to churches and schools in Emmet County. Danielle and Clara attended Concord Academy charter school in Petoskey, and Arianne and Andrew attended Harbor Light Christian School in Harbor Springs. “It was a real fit for our family here,” says Bob, a graphic designer by profession. Since he was a student at Calvin College, he’s worked for the Calvinist Cadet Corps, a national BoyScout type organization with a more Christian, Bible-centered focus. He works from home, handling the creative needs of the organization, from their annual magazine to videos, promotional materials, website updates and graphic design projects. When the family started looking to move north, they considered the Leelanau Peninsula first, but ultimately felt Petoskey had more to offer. “We found it to be a really great community. We became members of the First Presbyterian Church in Petoskey which is a very active church here. There’s a great hospital and we were very pleased with the schools. I really love the balance we have,” Bob says. “And the community is very supportive of the arts. The Crooked Tree Arts Center is very active in promoting the arts and artists here. Photo: G. Randall Goss There are all these positives. For being a moderate-size city, we’ve got a lot of great things going for us.” While Bob continued his graphic design work for the Cadet Corps, Manette took a position as the coordinator of the Wellness Center at the Manthei Veneer Mill, also in Emmet County. In his spare time, Bob started exploring the area more and more from behind the lens. He considers photography less a “hobby” and more a “calling,” a passion and skill that he’s been gifted. “My first real itch to do photography started at age 15 when my dad bought me a camera for Christmas,” he recalled. “That following summer we did a circle tour of Lake Superior and I took my camera with me. That was really the start.” As he continues to enjoy shooting the idyllic scenes that nature often presents, his work is getting attention from more than just those of us at the county. His photographs of the Dark Sky Park at the Headlands have landed on the cover and within several national and state magazines and publications, including Midwest Living and Every Day with Rachael Ray. They’ve been featured on television segments and websites across the country as well. Some of his other photographs have earned him local awards, including first place in the Charlevoix Circle of Arts juried photography show in November 2011 and second place in the 31st annual Juried Photography Exhibit hosted by the Crooked Tree Arts Center. He’s also served as Artist in Residence at the Sleeping Bear Dunes, Acadia National Park in Maine, the Petrified Forest in Arizona, Porcupine Mountains in the Upper Peninsula and Isle Royale in the middle of Lake Superior. “In my galleries you’ll find images from outside of Michigan,” says Bob, “but you might sense a special kind of love comes through in my local work.” Likewise, Bob. Editor’s Note: On the cover of this magazine is Bob de Jonge’s photograph of the sky over the Headlands International Dark Sky Park in Mackinaw City, taken in November 2011. POINTS OF INTEREST | Instrumental An arts-oriented community EMMET COUNTY’S CULTURAL ORGANIZATIONS: • Bay View Association: Summer arts and entertainment open to the public. bayviewassociation.com • Blissfest Music Organization: Preserving and promoting the cultural heritage and diversity with a focus on folk and roots music, dance, oral history and crafts from America and all cultures. blissfest.org • Crooked Tree Arts Center: crookedtree.org • Emmet County Fairgrounds: Antiques shows, fair, garden expos and benefits. emmetcounty.org • Great Lakes Chamber Orchestra: Live orchestral performances. glcorchestra.org • Harbor Springs Performing Arts Center: Performance venue for students and for professional groups and non-profits, such as the Association for Harbor Arts. harborps.org/PAC/pac • Little Traverse Civic Theater: Community theater. ltct.org • Northern Michigan Chorale (Facebook) • Odawa Casino: Gaming, entertainment, concerts. odawacasino.com What does he shoot with? A Nikon D3 Where are his favorite places for photography? Petoskey State Park beach; Fisherman’s Island; Sturgeon Bay; nature preserves of the Little Traverse Conservancy, especially McCune Preserve on the Minnehaha Creek (“All the protected lands here are a huge asset for me,” Bob says); Oden Island; Good Hart; Wilderness State Park What is his must-have equipment? Tripod, cable release (he prefers wired to wireless because of the unreliability of batteries required for wireless — what if you’re all set up for the perfect shot and the batteries are dead?) Bob and Manette deJonge near the dunes of Where can you find de Jonge’s images? Petoskey State Park on Little Traverse Bay. www.robertdejonge.com L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M Bay M E TView C O U NHall T Y. Auditorium ORG 43 | Incomparable SMALL TOWN charm T BIG CITY amenities 44 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G here aren’t many rural places in America with abundant natural beauty and outdoor recreational opportunities that also provide world-class amenities within walking distance of each other. But Emmet County isn’t like anywhere else. From medical care to education, recycling to veterans affairs, emergency services to cultural opportunities, Emmet County is the place where it all comes together for the benefit of the 36,000 year ‘round residents and tens of thousands of resorters who live among us during Michigan’s warmest months. A unique combination of quaint settings and sophistication makes Emmet County a destination for everyone. HEALTH CARE Courtesy photo Dr. Peter Armstrong, Radiation Oncologist TRILOGY: A COMMITMENT TO BEATING CANCER A new generation of doctors use the newest generation of cancer-fighting equipment at Mclaren - Northern Michigan I t’s difficult to not notice Dr. Tom Boike’s youthfulness. At age 32, the McLaren — Northern Michigan hospital radiation oncologist represents the next generation of physicians who are attacking cancer with fresh drive and determination — and they’re using the next generation of tools to do it. The newest in the arsenal has a long name: Trilogy Stereotactic RadioSurgery. But its mission is simple: Kill cancer. “It is one of the most powerful, most versatile SRS technology available today,” said Boike, a radiation oncologist. If you’ve ever driven downstate, you’ve passed the billboards along I-75 for CyberKnife and GammaKnife cancer treatment centers in mid-Michigan. Just as those were cutting edge cancer-fighting methods when they came out many years ago, Trilogy with BrainLab has surpassed them in its technology-driven method of eradicating cancer from all areas of the body. The Trilogy with BrainLab relies on a variety of imaging capabilities and robotics to do its job; the computer reads CTs, diagnostic X-rays and 4-dimensional CT scans that monitor patient breathing and tumor movement. All are digitally compiled to provide a comprehensive picture of where the cancer is located. Then the precise x-ray beam delivers a high dose of radiation to the smallest of targets, breaking apart the tumor’s DNA strands and killing it. It’s a lot of work behind the scenes by the doctor, physicist and the machine, but not necessarily for the patient; treatment time on the table can be as brief as 15 minutes. “Now we can see and treat something that is 4 millimeters in width with sub-millimeter accuracy, and the radiation is delivered in about 5 minutes,” Boike said. “Most of the time is spent making sure the patient is lined up on the table correctly.” ‘We can offer the best treatment available without patients having to go downstate’ If you have passed those downstate billboards, you’ve likely driven through the stomping grounds of Dr. Boike, who was raised in the Fenton/Flint area. His dad was a specialist in gynecological oncology, and it inspired Boike to pursue oncology as well. Boike attended medical school at Wayne State University and completed his research residency at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak. Afterwards, he headed to the University of Texas-Southwest in Dallas to complete his radiation oncology residency and pursue his interest in teaching and research. With a growing young family and a fresh perspective on treating cancer patients, Boike began looking for a position within a medical facility. “After my residency, we looked all over the Midwest for a job. I was more interested at that time in a more academic, researchbased hospital,” Boike said. The couple originally stayed in Dallas, where Boike took a job as assistant professor of radiation oncology at the University of Texas Southwestern. While maintaining a busy practice and research, he was recruited by a former colleague to considCONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 45 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 45 er joining with Traverse Bay Radiation and Oncology, based in Traverse City but whose doctors share time at NMRH. He and his wife of seven years, Wendy, both share a love of being outdoors along with enjoying a small but progressive community; they found Emmet County and NMRH to be the right fit. “They were doing some new and exciting stuff — including the introduction of Trilogy. We had our first child on the way, and that got my wife thinking of where we should be,” Boike said. “My dad has had a place on Lake Charlevoix for many years, and I have uncles up here, so I knew what a beautiful place Northern Michigan is to live.” Because radiation oncology is a small, specialty field with infrequent openings, Boike knew the timing to join the practice was right. “I interviewed again and my wife and I agreed this was the place for us,” Boike said. They moved permanently to Petoskey in March 2011 and he started in his new position April 1. A radiation oncologist has to complete a 5-year residency program; there are only about 170 residents per year across the country, Boike said, and just about 60 percent of those students go on to private practice. Tied closely with the technology, radiation oncologists deliver guided and precise radiation to cancerous tumors with equipment such as the Trilogy system. Just as not all cancers respond to chemotherapy, not all respond to radiation; it’s up to experts such as Boike to determine which method will provide the best outcome for the patient. Sometimes, both chemo and radiation are required. “We work very closely with chemotherapy and the oncology staff to treat patients,” Boike noted. Boike said more than 1.6 million new cases of cancer are diagnosed each year, with 550,000 deaths from cancer projected in 2012 in the United States. Lung, breast, colorectal and prostate cancer are among the most common, and having breakthrough technology on hand is a huge benefit to patients. Having it in a small community like Petoskey is remarkable in itself, Boike noted. “When I was interviewing, I didn’t want to go somewhere that didn’t have the tools available to me that I had in Dallas at the University of Texas, which is a leading cancer hospital,” Boike said. “We have that here. We also have a tumor board that holds weekly meetings to discuss patients and challenging cases. That is not something common for a community hospital.” The first patient was treated with the Trilogy system in November; after this magazine interview early in 2012, the team was preparing to treat a small tumor in a patient’s brain for the first time. “Previously we were sending patients downstate — Midland, Saginaw — for treatment. We were a good department, but there were some patients who benefitted from more 46 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G advanced treatment than we could provide,” Boike said. “But it’s hard for patients to travel that far from here for treatment. Now they don’t have to. We can offer the best treatment available without them having to go downstate.” Boike said the staff initially projected about 100 patients per year who would have had to go down state for treatment will now be served locally with Trilogy available here. “But it might be more. Right now we are treating about 40-45 patients per day with two physicians,” Boike said. “Our services are becoming a little broader and the hospital has been adding more physicians. We’re seeing more head and neck cancers, so they are increasing access to care with more ENTs. There have been a few more young physicians joining the staff to see patients in this regard. The oncology department just keeps getting stronger.” And with his young, growing family, which includes daugher Olivia, 1, now a part of the fabric of Emmet County, so does the community. “We came to Northern Michigan to be outside,” Boike said. “We do look forward to doing more in the community.” “INCOMPARABLE” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE Courtesy photo | Incomparable Dr. Tom Boike Manna The F O O D P RO J E C T We’re feeding the hungry throughout the north. With your support, Manna helped to distribute over 2 million meals throughout Emmet, Antrim, and Charlevoix counties in 2011. We thank you. 8791 M C B RIDE P ARK C OURT , H ARBOR S PRINGS , 231-347-8852 WWW . MANNAFOODPROJECT . ORG 25 Years ...and growing 1987 - 2012 Courtesy photo Zak Kruskie HEALTH CARE TRAGEDY AVERTED: TEEN’S LIFE SAVED AFTER CRITICAL HEAD INJURY ON THE BALLFIELD ‘Without the hospital being so close, who knows what would’ve happened’ S chool had just ended for the year and on an early summer afternoon, teams of teen boys were warming up for North Emmet Little League games at Pioneer Park in Pellston. It was a gathering of local All-Stars, and Zak Kruskie was among them. Then 13 years old, Zak had his back turned to a couple of players when an errant throw was missed by a teammate. It connected painfully instead with Zak, at his left temple. “Everything went black. I covered my face with my glove and when I pulled it away, I felt a little dizzy. I started to walk to the bathroom to look in the mirror and suddenly I couldn’t walk any farther,” recalled Zak. “I saw him wandering around and wondered what was going on. I did not see what happened,” said his mom, Pam Kruskie. “I went over to him and he said he had been hit in the head with the ball and he wanted to leave the field immediately. “I said we needed to get him to the hospital right away,” said dad Jeff, recalling the sense of urgency that June afternoon four years ago. “In the car, Zak said to me, ‘My head hurts so bad. Please don’t let me die,’” his mom continued. “He said it over and over. I said, ‘Zak, we’re not going to let you die.’” In those 15 minutes from Pellston to the region’s highly-awarded and largest medical care provider — Northern Michigan Regional Hospital in Petoskey — damage was starting inside Zak’s brain. The Kruskies would learn after a CT scan that the ball had fractured Zak’s skull and severed a vein behind the temple; a pool of blood was visible on the scan. Neurosurgeon Dr. Blaine Rawson, of the Center for Neurosurgery, arrived within minutes to prep Zak for immediate surgery. The surgery took 90 minutes and involved an arduous array of procedures. Zak’s jaw muscle was detached in order for doctors to reach the bleed. Two plates and a piece of titanium mesh were “So many kids have gone on to college attached to his skull, the damaged vein and achieved academically and in athletwas cauterized and then the skull was re- ics. We’ve had a lot of opportunities gocovered. Thirty-three staples closed an ing to school in Pellston.” incision from Zak’s temple to the front of Living in a small, close-knit commuhis left ear. nity like they do, in Readmond Town“I don’t remember anything really from ship west of Pellston, Pam said provides that first day at the hospital,” said Zak, immeasurable comfort in times of need. now a 17-year-old star shortstop for the “The amount of support that we had from Pellston Hornets who will play ball at the community was overwhelming,” she Delta College in Saginaw next year. recalled. “People were filling the waiting His North Emmet Little League team- room with us 24 hours a day.” mates likely remember that day. The When thinking back to the day of the teens were so distraught by the accident accident, it’s difficult for the Kruskies to and the subsequent medical interven- not consider the “what ifs.” Pam said betions happening to their friend that they fore they decided to leave for the hospital, didn’t want to continue playing. “Most of she had given Zak an Advil to help alour team folded up, it was so traumatic leviate the pain while she and Jeff talked for them to see Zak on a breathing ma- about whether he needed to rest from the chine and to be hurt,” said Pam. “And injury (“Was it a concussion,” they wonwhen Zak woke up, he was upset that he dered, “or worse?”) or be seen at the hoscouldn’t play. He wanted to play.” pital. Because of the requisite recovery time They are beyond thankful that they for a brain injury, Zak spent his freshman trusted their instincts. “They said if we year as the Hornets’ football varsity team had waited an hour he would have died,” manager instead of as a player. By spring, said Pam. he was able to play baseball for both the “If we would’ve let him fall asleep to JV and varsity teams. “I was really ready rest, he never would’ve woken up,” added to get back into it,” said Zak, who will Jeff. graduate in June with the 51 other memFor Zak, the level of gratitude toward bers of the Class of 2012 — and with a the staff and hospital that saved his life number of athletic accolades, including is tough to adequately put into words. “I All-Conference and All-District distinc- don’t even know how to say it,” he says. tions. “Without the hospital being so close, who “Pellston is a small school but there are knows what would’ve happened.” so many great things about it,” Zak said. “INCOMPARABLE” CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 47 | Incomparable EMERGENCY RESPONSE 9-1-1 CENTRAL DISPATCH: LOCAL CENTER A MODEL IN MICHIGAN AND BEYOND Long before government leaders began calling for counties to consolidate services to help stem Michigan’s economic woes, Emmet County had partnered with nextdoor Cheboygan and Charlevoix counties to create a model 9-1-1 authority that continues to lead the way. “It’s a model not only for Michigan but the nation. Consolidation can work well and today it’s quickly becoming the preferred method — and our counties did it 15 years ago,” said Greg Clark, assistant director for the Charlevoix-CheboyganEmmet 9-1-1/Central Dispatch Authority. “With the new push for counties to consolidate their efforts around the state, we say, ‘If you want to see how it’s done, come to the ‘Tip of the Mitt’ and see what we’re doing.’” It was not a simple task; the region is the size of Rhode Island, and during the height of tourist season it includes more than 300,000 people living, working and playing up North. The dispatch center, centrally located in Petoskey, went live in 1996 and receives nearly 70,000 calls per year. 48 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G NCMC: COLLEGE COMMITTED TO COMMUNITY EDUCATION North Central Michigan College in Petoskey is more than a community college; it’s a community itself. Its influence propels students of all ages and backgrounds into a brighter future, provides employers with convenient training opportunities, and enriches area residents through lively public programs and activities. “North Central provides high school students an opportunity to get an early start on college through dual enrollment and other options, and many high school graduates come here for an economical start on college,” said Dr. Cameron Brunet-Koch, college president. “Many adults come here for school because they can take classes without leaving their families and jobs behind. The community comes here for enrichment activities that include classes for fun, speeches by interesting people, exercise and inspiration from our campus art and our natural area.” Students have about 60 programs of study to consider, from associate degree programs to certificates, certificates of development and non-degree courses. These programs can provide a freshman with insight into a future career or an adult the opportunity to reinvent theirs. More progress is ahead for the 54-year-old college that has about 2,900 full- and parttime students. A new $10.4 million Health Education and Science Center is set to open in the fall of 2012. HIGHER EDUCATION Aerial view of the NCMC campus COURTESY PHOTO SERVING THOSE WHO HAVE SERVED Jim Alton VETERANS AFFAIRS: COMMITTED TO HELPING VETERANS AND THEIR FAMILIES An estimated 6,000 veterans call Emmet County home, and county Veterans Affairs director Jim Alton said his office works daily to make sure these men and women have access to resources to help them recover from service-related injuries and events. Ensuring the vets and their families are aware of their earned benefits is a key part of the local VA’s job as well. “Our veterans’ service to the United States of America has been and continues to be appreciated with the utmost respect and gratitude,” said Alton, a Marine Corps veteran. “We are here to serve you who have served this country; please let us know who you are and how we can help.” Reach the VA office at (231) 348-1780, or online at www.emmetcounty.org/VA/. In April 2012, the VA office relocated from the county building downtown Petoskey to the John R. Watson Community Resource Center on Harbor-Petoskey Road; the new address is 3434 M-119, Harbor Springs. It is in suite D, on the lower level. RECYCLE MORE, SORT LESS: MAKING RECYCLING EASIER FOR RESIDENTS, VISITORS AND BUSINESSES The numbers continue to climb for the county’s successful recycling program. In 2011, the amount of material going through the facility was up 25 percent by weight over 2010 levels. “We’re a well-established program so additional gains aren’t so easy to come by, but we made recycling easier and started taking more materials and, sure enough, Northern Michigan really did ‘recycle more,’ just like our slogan for the new system: ‘Recycle more, sort less,’” said Elisa Seltzer, director of Emmet County Recycling. The county continues its momentum after a major facility expansion in 2010, and on a regular basis staff announces new initiatives to recycle new products and reduce the need for landfilling items. For instance, in the past year the recycling staff added latex paint recycling, mattress recycling and hosted a hugely successful carton recycling contest that drew attention to the variety of cartons that can be recycled locally. Curbside recycling participation continues to soar as well, along with participation in the free electronics recycling effort. “Recycling opportunities in Emmet County are unparalleled compared to other rural communities, and even to most cities,” said Seltzer. “It’s easy to recycle well and recycle a lot in Emmet County. And no other community in the state provides such a first-class recycling program without utilizing general fund tax dollars. Emmet County’s program has been selfsupporting since 1991.” RECYCLING For more info about the progressive recycling program: www.emmetcounty.org/recycling/. Small town charm… N othing quite gives the feeling of smalltown enchantment like Emmet County’s quaint, eclectic and dynamic downtowns. For well more than a century, the shopkeepers, restaurateurs and entrepreneurs that fill Northern Michigan’s downtowns have catered to the tens of thousands of resorters, tourists and locals who meander the streets for one-of-kind items not found in big-box retailers or large city shopping malls. Along these tree-lined, flower-laden lanes, shoppers will find stylish boutiques and custom jewelry designers amidst art galleries and gift stores carrying distinct items that reflect the Northern Michigan lifestyle, such as Petoskey stones, conversation-piece relief maps of area waterways, vintage signs from the earliest resort days, apparel emblazoned with favorite Up North towns, and much more. And then there’s the food. Local downtowns are known for their range of palate-tempting eateries, coffee shops, fine dining establishments, pubs, fudge and ice cream outlets — and everything in between. Whether you’re looking to dine on an unbeatable breakfast at a mom-and-pop bistro or in a candlelit corner mulling over an award-winning wine list, the downtowns of Petoskey, Harbor Springs and Mackinaw City deliver. Two other small towns are as quaint as they come, too. Alanson residents and business owners have gone full-throttle into beautifying their town and adding unique shops and restaurants over the last decade-plus. This tiny community is tying its downtown to the ambling Crooked River out its back door with events such as the annual Riverfest, and plans to develop ferry service and more access to the scenic, renowned waterway. Pellston, too, is drawing attention to its walkable downtown and community, as a destination for those traveling along U.S. 31 and year ‘round residents. Passing through town, visitors are encouraged to pull over for gourmet food, a picnic in the park and a few shop- ping stops as well. Along with shopping and dining, the vibrant downtowns throughout Emmet County take pride in their presentation, with concerts in the park during the summer events and dozens of fun, family-friendly events in safe, inviting environments. Make it a point to experience the downtowns of Emmet County, whether you’ve lived here your whole life or you’re starting a new one up North. ■ L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 49 Pellston Regional Airport W hether you’re a visitor to Northern Michigan or a resident returning home, Pellston Regional Airport welcomes you with the warmth and ambiance of a rustic lodge in the Northern wilderness. Hand-carved signs, native wildlife displays, on-site restaurant and free parking are complemented by an award-winning log design to create an airport like no other. Daily commercial flights to Detroit Metro connect you to anywhere you want to go — if you can bring yourself to leave. Incomparable convenience with no hurries, no hassles. It’s the Up North lifestyle. 231.539.8441 • pellstonairport.com • North U.S. 31, Pellston, Michigan 49769 DAILY FLIGHTS • FREE PARKING • WIRELESS INTERNET • HOPPIES LANDING RESTAURANT • GENERAL AVIATION SERVICES CONFERENCE AND MEETING SPACE • BUSINESS CENTER • RENTAL CARS Pellston Regional Airport (PLN) is serviced by Delta 50 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 1751 US 131 S Petoskey, MI 49770 P: 231-497-0991 TOLL: 888-497-0105 Education • Health Care • Industrial Municipal • Multifamily Residential DeVere Construction Company, Inc. 1030 DeVere Drive Alpena, MI 49707 P: 989-356-4411 F: 989-356-1198 www.deverecc.us L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G 51 Northern Michigan Premier Properties Lake Charlevoix Waterfront 125 Belvedere Avenue, Charlevoix -This beautiful boathouse was designed and built by Andre Poineau and truly a landmark for Lake Charlevoix. The home features five bedrooms, seven full baths, four half baths, 10,437 square feet, custom kitchen, guest apartment and numerous windows overlooking Round Lake. The Boathouse currently houses 30 boats and really shows off the homes spectacular unique craftsmanship completely finished with cypress wood. Visit www.winnboathouse.com to view more photos and information. $7,950,000 Walloon Lake Waterfront f 06360 Red Pine Road, Boyne City - Enjoy spectacular views of the West Arm of Walloon Lake from this five bedroom, five bath, 5215 square foot home. Features include a large custom kitchen with granite countertops, Brazilian cherry hardwood floors, large stone fireplace in the great room, finished lower level with an exercise room, family room, and bar. Entertain family and friends on the expansive Bluestone decks that has an outdoor built-in grill with granite countertops, sunken hot tub and fire pit all with amazing views of the 147’ of sandy private frontage. $1,995,000 Downtown Petoskey 615 Bay Street, Petoskey - Enjoy beautiful summer days sitting on your covered porch from this classic in-town home overlooking Little Traverse Bay and downtown Petoskey. Features include; four bedrooms, two and one-half baths, custom kitchen with beautiful cabinets, stainless steel appliances, granite counter tops, and an amazing cooking fireplace. The rest of the house is no exception to quality, with numerous fireplaces, central vac, sound system, irrigation, custom lighting system, two car garage, workshop and master suite above, and so much more. $719,000 Contact Patrick Leavy for a personal tour! PATRICK LEAVY (231) 838-6700 Mobile [email protected] Visit www.patleavy.com to view other properties available 52 L I V E . W O R K . P L AY. E M M E T C O U N T Y. O R G
Similar documents
LIVE. WORK. PLAY. EMMET COUNTY, MICHIGAN
• Roads: The county is situated near major transportation routes including U.S. highways 31 and 131, and also interstate I-75. • Ferries: Several ferry boat providers transport thousands of visitor...
More information