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Ruralite, Golden Valley Electric Association, March 2026

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Perfect for Potlucks

With more than 200 recipes, this cookbook offers many options for potlucks, family reunions or picnics planned this summer! An added bonus in the back are the recipes from a previous barbecue recipe contest. “Perfect for a Potluck” is an 8½-by-11-inch indexed cookbook for only $10, which includes postage.

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Ruralite

March 2026 • Volume 73, No. 3

CEO Michael Shepard

SENIOR VP OF CONTENT Leon Espinoza

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DEPUTY EDITORIAL DIRECTOR

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Alyssa McDougle

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Shaped By Other Hands

There’s a moment in every apprenticeship when a student realizes the lesson isn’t just about technique—it’s also about trust.

Rick Pass experienced this when he traveled to North Carolina at 62, newly retired, to study duck decoy carving with master carver Vic Kirkman. Eleven days of intensive work led to Rick’s first world carving championship event in Ocean City, Maryland, and from there to five summers studying in Canada with 14-time world champion Pat Godin.

Rick hadn’t carved before retirement. He simply recognized that mastering something meaningful meant finding the right teachers and being willing to learn.

That same spirit of generous mentorship runs through our Spotlight feature on traditional Western arts.

Blacksmith Darryl Nelson, who forged his career from farrier to resident blacksmith at Oregon’s Timberline Lodge, speaks of feeling an obligation to the master smiths who taught him decades ago. Silversmith Beau Compton learned his trade from a mentor who never charged him a dime and now opens his own home and

workshop to the next generation. Saddlemaker Mario Hanel mastered his art through fellowship training. Rawhide braider Steve Harris learned from his brother at 15 and now teaches his 13-year-old daughter.

In each case, knowledge traveled from one set of hands to another—not through textbooks or online tutorials but through the patient, in-person act of showing someone how it’s done.

Dave LaBelle’s photography column carries this message forward in a different way. His reflection on Eva Schloss, Holocaust survivor and Anne Frank’s stepsister, reminds us that some of the most important lessons are passed through personal testimony. Eva spent decades sharing her story so others might learn from it—a form of mentorship that transcends any single craft.

As we celebrate National Women’s History Month, I’m thinking about the mentors who shaped me and the knowledge I have a responsibility to pass along.

Who taught you something that changed your path? Who might be waiting for you to do the same?

Until next time,

Close, Page 10

the Kitchen, Page 16

Healy Power Plant Team Transforms Into the Next Generation of Its History

“The year 2025 marked a pivotal turning point for the Healy Power Plant,” writes Plant Manager Allan Mortenson in the year-end report for the plant owned by Golden Valley Electric Association.

Assistant Plant Manager Dave Brown agrees.

He speaks from nearly 30 years of experience after starting work at the plant in 1997. Dave had seven-year stints in each of three departments—operations, electrical, and instrumentation and maintenance—before assuming his current position.

“It was a very different place,” says Dave in reflecting on his introduction to the plant. “It was little rough then. And that has changed a lot.”

Especially in the past year.

Two coal-fired generating units, known as Unit 1 and Unit 2, comprise the Healy plant in Denali Borough. The units were designed to produce 28 megawatts and 60 megawatts of power, respectively, for a combined total of 88 megawatts.

In 2025, Unit 2 achieved record-setting generation milestones, including the best single-day production in plant history. Closing the year with a gross capacity factor of 63% marked the strongest annual output on record.

“We’re getting more, longer runs than we used to,” Dave says.

“The cheapest option is to run these units as baseload.”

Baseload power accounts for most of the electricity used by consumers. While GVEA has other power generation sources, the

Healy units generate a constant and reliable amount of electricity necessary to meet the ongoing demands of GVEA members.

Renewable power sources, such as solar and wind farms, are increasingly used to supply electricity, but these sources provide intermittent power. The amount of electricity generated as well as the time it takes to generate power by these sources depend upon the seasonality and whimsies of nature.

In addition to increased power generation, the report relays progress in key facets of performance for the plant, including workplace engagement, safety and environmental controls.

Fostering Employee Engagement

Dave attributes the plant’s transformations during 2025 to a rejuvenated and engaged workforce.

It hasn’t always been this way. In recent years, GVEA has considered shutting down one or another of the aging Healy units.

“I think that a lot of trust level had dropped with the discussion on shutting down Unit 2,” says Dave referring to a 2022 decision to shutter the plant in two years—a decision that was later reversed in 2024.

“That has made a big turnaround,” he says.

The plant has shifted from a reactive and disengaged environment to one characterized by accountability, communication and growing employee ownership.

Dave credits the initial turning point to a 2024 analysis from John Weeda, a consultant from the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. John has 40-plus years of experience in coal as well as team and morale building.

John identified problem areas, including operations and work culture, and set a path to address them.

Dave says that Allan has built upon the work of the consultant.

In reflecting on the past year, Dave says that a key to progress has been that Allan spends a lot of time listening to employees. He repeatedly hears Allan ask staff, “What does good look like?” He then encourages employees to take ownership in providing solutions.

Dave stresses that, while seeing and reporting issues by workers has always been a priority for the plant, now employees are encouraged to go beyond see-and-report by bringing solutions to management.

Left to right: Bella Holum, Olivia Juhl, Charles Armstrong, Blaine Mayo, Steven Isaacson, Travis Lucas, and Dave Brown. PHOTO BY KELLY REYNOLDS

GOLDEN VALLEY ELECTRIC

In turn, the plant’s workforce is responding with unprecedented levels of engagement.

Dave cites examples of the increasingly productive dialogue within the plant.

Management holds weekly, plant-wide “all hands” meets to keep people informed, including with updates from departments.

“We keep it as transparent as possible,” Dave says.

Attendees are encouraged to speak up.

“An issue isn’t brushed off,” Dave says. “And we keep people informed on how we are addressing the problem.”

Dave points out that the GVEA executive team in Fairbanks has put a heightened emphasis on training.

“People appreciate that we are investing in their skills,” he says. The endgoal is to provide in-house training to reduce the reliance on contractors and instill more employee ownership in how the job is done.

Dave also describes the recently instituted System Sponsorship Program. Teams include representatives in key roles at the plant for each of the 20-plus systems. Each group works together to delve deeply into the system.

“We want them to be the experts for that system,” Dave says.

For example, the ash system representatives are working with an

Top photo:
Healy Unit 1, GVEA’s original generating unit commissioned in 1967, stands as a cornerstone of reliable baseload power in Denali Borough.
Bottom photo:
Healy Units 1 and 2 together provide up to 88 megawatts of dependable baseload power for GVEA members. In 2025, Unit 2 achieved record-setting generation. Photos courtesy of GVEA. PHOTOS COURTESY OF GVEA

engineer to develop a design that is the right fit for the specifics of the Healy plant.

Also recently instituted is the “Peer-to-Peer Superstar” monthly recognition of an employee. Staff submit nominees, then a plantwide vote is taken to select the awardee. The Safety Committee also recognizes one employee per quarter.

Safety First

“Safety is way more important than the megawatts,” Dave says. He says that employees didn’t always believe this statement, but now they do.

The 15-member Safety Committee is another manifestation of the renewed sense of ownership by employees.

The Alaska Power Association honored the team with the 2025 Commitment to Continuous Safety Improvement Award for its outstanding lockout/tagout—known as LOTO—program.

The committee, guided by Plant Foreman Zoey Taylor and Safety Specialist Kevin Stotler, overhauled LOTO processes, improved training, and enhanced procedural clarity for employees and contractors. While strengthening safety at Healy, the initiative is fostering a strong, proactive safety culture across GVEA.

Kevin also holds more hands-on safety drills for employees which are conducted on a monthly basis. He’s expanded participation of the supportive local fire and emergency medical services personnel in the drills.

Improving Environmental Performance

To fully appreciate the plant’s recent environmental performance successes, it’s helpful to understand the pressures to meet everchanging environmental requirements combined with the challenges of implementation in aging units.

Unit 1, GVEA’s first power plant, became operational in 1967. Since then, it has produced consistent, reliable power. Concurrently, environmental technology has evolved during its nearly 60-year history.

The most notable advancement in environmental controls for the plant in 2025 is the successful completion of the selective catalytic reduction, known as SCR, in Unit 1.

“The $26 million SCR project reduces our emissions to meet new environmental permitting needs,” Dave says.

It’s a technology that reduces nitrogen oxides from exhaust gases.

Unit 2 has a more checkered history. Built and owned by the state of Alaska, it first came online in 1998. When the plant failed an operation, the unit was rendered dormant in early 2000. Golden Valley bought the plant in 2013, and reactivated Unit 2 in 2015.

Unit 2 was originally constructed with federal funding as part of a Clean Coal Technology Initiative,” Dave says. “The technology itself works, but it’s more complicated.”

With 28 years elapsing since its opening, Unit 2 also requires upgrades to meet evolving environmental standards.

Both Healy units made a concerted effort to operate in full environmental compliance, including meeting all

reporting requirements. Through close collaboration with the Environmental Department in Fairbanks, 2025 was a very successful year.

For example, the unit continued progressing toward meeting air permit requirements, largely due to updates to the SO₂ emission control system that were implemented to increase reliability.

A major regulatory milestone for the unit was meeting compliance standards for mercury that were agreed to by GVEA and the Environmental Protection Agency in 2018. Ongoing monitoring is through the real-time mercury emissions analyzer installed last year.

Facing the Plant’s Next Chapter With Vigor “Big capital projects are ahead,” Dave says.

Planned in stages, they began in the first quarter of this year and will extend into 2027.

The Healy team is focused on increasing power output in 2026, with overall gross generational target of 75% by 2027. Dave notes that a plant will never reach 100% because of planned outages necessary for maintenance, as well as other factors.

Unit 2 currently has two outages a year in order to provide maintenance. Dave explains that outages are expensive because GVEA has to buy replacement power during that period, which drives up the cost systemwide.

The objective is to reduce Unit 2 to one outage per year. A team is working to develop long-term solutions to ongoing maintenance challenges, particularly with the combustors, which drive the turbine and have historically required multiple outages each year for maintenance.

While Unit 2 broke records for power generation in 2025, Unit 1 trailed behind its seven-year average of 81% gross capacity factor, ending the year with a 76% gross capacity factor.

The major factor in its output reduction was multiple tube failures, a typical problem for these types of aging power plants. A team is working on issues regarding a boiler feed pump, which is original to the plant and no longer manufactured. No direct replacements are available. Thus, the only alternative is to upgrade the pump.

Regarding employee matters, Dave emphasizes that they also aim to assure conditions that support a better work and life balance for employees.

To help offset overtime conditions, new full-time positions are being recruited.

“While the plant will have more staff, it takes a long time to train people,” Dave says.

Dave plans to retire in May after nearly three decades of working in the plant.

He will depart with optimism about the plant’s future.

“Allan is putting together a proactive team,” Dave says. “When people come to work, we want people to come and enjoy being at work. If there is an issue, it gets addressed.”

“There’s a stronger sense of teamwork, with everyone focused on a common goal,” Dave says. n

Text Opt-In

Stay informed the easy way. Opt in to GVEA text alerts. To get started, log in to MyGVEA at gvea.smarthub.coop and visit:

1. Settings → Contact Methods to opt in to receive texts and ensure your contact information is up to date. IMPORTANT step: Once you opt in under Settings → Contact Methods, you’ll receive a verification code via text message. Be sure to enter that code in MyGVEA on the same page to complete the opt-in process.

Once you’ve opted in, you can go to 2. Settings → Manage Notifications to choose exactly which alerts you want—from outage updates to billing reminders and more. It’s quick, secure and the best way to stay connected with your cooperative.

All members who opt in to receive texts by June 1 will be entered to win a $1,000 electric credit. n

a: Select Contact Methods.

b: Select Edit (pencil icon).

c: Choose how you want to receive messages.

d: Select Save.

a: Select Manage Notifications.

b: Select number you want to receive texts.

c: Select Save.

PHOTO BY M-IMAGEPHOTOGRAPHY

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Ship Cruising

Astoria Artist Masters

Duck Decoys

Living along the banks of the Columbia River, inspiration is always nearby for Rick Pass. The Astoria, Oregon, artist handcrafts lifelike waterfowl. While much of his work is destined for a place of pride on the mantel, plenty of his creations have a practical purpose as decoys for duck hunters. He tests them from his dock.

“You have to make sure that they’re floating correctly,” Rick says. “If you throw them in the water upside down, they have to flip upright. Plus, you want to make them light, because you don’t want to be packing around a bunch of heavy stuff.”

Astoria has long been known for waterfowl art.

shipbuilder. He carved birds from salvaged scraps of the western red cedar used for watercraft. When he retired in his 70s, Charles began producing about a dozen decoys a week and selling them for just over $1 each. According to the Ward Foundation, administrator of the waterfowl decoy world championship, Charles made roughly 4,000 decoys from the late 1920s to early 1930s.

Now those vintage creations fetch thousands at auction. A rare Charles Bergman swan sold for $36,650 at Sotheby’s. Legend has it there were once a dozen swans, and Charles’ grandson used to play with them. But Charles’ wife got tired of tripping over them on the porch and chopped up all but three for firewood.

A Hobby Hatches

From age 15, Rick could be found fishing, hunting and bird-watching along the Columbia. His other passion was sports. He played basketball in high school, football in college and aspired to be a coach. Back then, coaches also had to be teachers. So, he taught history and served as head coach of the high school basketball team for 14 years. From there, he became a principal and finally superintendent.

“I loved my career,” Rick says. “It didn’t matter whether I was coaching, teaching or an administrator. It was a lot of fun, and I met a lot of people. Hopefully impacted positively a few lives along the way.”

While teaching, Rick noticed the superintendent’s passion for duck carving. But it wasn’t until Rick retired that he jumped into the art.

“I knew as I was getting closer to retirement that I needed something,” he

ABOVE: Rick Pass begins his duck decoys from scratch in his Astoria, Oregon, workshop. LEFT: The duck decoys are functional and ready for hunting but are also lifelike pieces of art.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF RICK PASS

says. “And whatever it is, if it’s church or your family or carving or a mixture of those, you have to have something to get up every day.”

To learn, Rick sought out the best.

“I was already 62 when I retired,” he says. “I figured, if I’m going to be any good at this, I’ve got to find my people and learn quickly.”

Rick traveled to North Carolina to study with Vic Kirkman.

“I carved with him for 11 days,” Rick says. “While we were there, he took me to my first world carving championship in Ocean City, Maryland. That was the final spark to see, oh my goodness, the quality of work. Everything from a working decoy to these masterful pieces that sold for a lot of money to sit on shelves.”

While in Ocean City, Rick met more masters, including Pat Godin, who won the world championship more than 14 times. Later, Rick flew to Ontario, Canada, to work with Pat. He spent five summers studying with him in Edmonton.

Quality Craftsmanship

Rick saves his stock of old-growth red cedar for special occasions and mostly works with tupelo wood. Tupelo trees grow in Carolina and Louisiana swamps. Rick says

the water-submerged tree bottoms are soft wood that’s light and carves easily.

“That’s the preferred wood of 90% of carvers,” Rick says. “Balsa would work, too, but tupelo and bass wood are the two most popular woods. Of course, in the old days you’d carve what you had available.”

Rick’s shop is packed with wood, carving tools and birds—not just the carved ones.

“When I get to the painting, I always get out a real bird and lay it here and try to match the colors as best as I can,” he says.

Rick’s collection includes taxidermy birds and a freezer packed with frozen fowl. While he bought a few of the specimens, many were acquired as trades for carvings.

Carving Out Community

Rick sells and trades his decoys and takes his best to competitions. He travels to compete, making sure to attend the Canadian nationals and the Ward World Championships.

“The competition is really about showing our artwork,” Rick says. “Yeah, we do compete against each other, and yes, there are some prizes, but really, it’s the camaraderie and getting to know each other. And finding out, ‘How did you do that?’ And, ‘This is how I do it.’”

Rick doesn’t have to travel far to find camaraderie. There’s plenty at home. Regulars drop by his shop to work, watch him work or just chat.

“People stop by, we create problems, we solve world problems,” he says. “It’s just as much about those kinds of things as it is about carving. A lot of problems are solved in this shop. Once we walk out, the problems are still there in the world. But we do hash them over a little bit.”

Rick worries that decoy carving is a dying art. His sons—a riverboat pilot and a pharmacist—haven’t gotten into it yet. His grandchildren have tested the waters a bit and even gone to competitions. But every year Rick sees fewer carvers.

“People just don’t do it anymore,” he says. “If you’re going to go hunting, you buy your decoys. It used to be if you wanted to go hunting, you made your decoys because you didn’t have the money to buy them.”

Rick plans to stick with the art and with Astoria.

“We’ve had a great life,” Rick says. “I love it here. This is where we grew up, and it’s quite a special place. Our boys went sturgeon fishing, salmon fishing right out there. It’s pretty hard not to love this place.” n

FROM LEFT: Rick sands a decoy with a Dremel in his workshop. Rick’s shop shelves are packed with ducks in a variety of stages of construction. The hundreds of ribbons he’s won for his waterfowl carvings inspire him to keep carving.

Preserving Traditional

WesternArts

In today’s throwaway culture, traditional Western craftsmanship endures. Area organizations and artisans strive to keep these centuries-old techniques alive.

Forging Ahead

Eatonville, Washington, blacksmith Darryl Nelson started at 19 as a farrier.

“I had wanted to be a vet but didn’t want to do another eight years of school,” he says. “So, I decided I’d shoe horses.”

In farrier class, Darryl met a young man fresh from blacksmithing school in New Mexico who told Darryl about the trade.

“I was quite inspired by what you could do with a little piece of steel,” he says.

Darryl shod horses while building skills in architectural ironwork.

“I found that I enjoyed my time at the anvil more than under the horse,” he says. After 13 years as a farrier, he moved into full-time blacksmithing.

In 1979, Darryl and a group of other artists formed the Northwest Blacksmith Association.

As a cooperative nonprofit, they pool funds and bring in blacksmiths from around the country to teach master classes.

Through the association, Darryl met Russell Maugans, second in a line of resident blacksmiths at the iconic Timberline Lodge on Oregon’s Mount Hood. They began working on projects together. Eventually, Darryl became the lodge’s third resident blacksmith. He continues to perform repairs and craft a line of artistic ironwork sold in the gift shop.

Darryl is also involved with the Cascadia Center for the Arts & Crafts in nearby Government Camp. Every summer at CCAC, former U.S. Forest

Service buildings are packed with artists taking classes in a variety of disciplines, including blacksmithing, glass, jewelry arts, textile and fiber arts, visual arts, printmaking, and even writing.

The big draw for Darryl is Blacksmith Week, which features classes for all levels. There are demonstrations from skilled smiths and hands-on experiences, too.

He says the event has grown considerably since its creation 20 years ago. The national Western States Blacksmithing Conference has been held at the camp twice.

“Usually at Blacksmith Week, we have between 50 and 75 people in attendance,” Darryl says. “For the western states conferences, we literally filled the whole town of Government Camp with 400 smiths from around the country and even had some from South Africa and Australia.”

“We also have group projects where everybody from all levels is encouraged to try their hand,” Darryl says.

Blacksmith Week is mostly about passing on the craft.

“I almost feel an obligation to the master smiths who taught me 50 years ago,” Darryl says. “For centuries, blacksmithing was pretty common. At the same time, there were a lot of closely guarded secrets because it was so common that it was highly competitive. So, for a long time, it was hard unless you were an actual apprentice or in most places, it stayed within a family.”

Darryl’s great-grandfather was a blacksmith who came to America in the late 1800s to forge his own path in business. Because he was not the eldest son, he wasn’t expected to inherit the family shop in Denmark, so he began working in North Dakota.

Shops like his adapted as equine-driven economies turned to tractors and cars. Many

blacksmith shops transitioned into auto shops. When Darryl’s father was growing up, there was still a forging station in the corner.

Darryl’s father left the family trade and moved to Washington to work for Boeing. But Darryl had the support of his family when he chose to take up blacksmithing. He even had a chance to do some forging with his grandfather, and he holds precious the few tools he inherited from him.

Darryl loves everything about blacksmithing—the fire and the hot steel and “just being able to shape and manipulate something that is as resistant as steel,” he says. He’s known for crafting expressive animal heads, but his favorite thing to make is tools.

“Really, the key thing with blacksmithing is tool making,” he says. “Most of the tools I have that I use daily, I made myself. I love making a tool and then being able to use it to make other things.”

When asked what advice he has for people considering the trade, Darryl laughs.

“We used to tell people, which is probably still fairly accurate, to make sure your wife has a good job. And there’s a lot of female blacksmiths now, too. But one of you had better have a steady job.”

Darryl’s wife, Suzan, has been extremely understanding, he says, and tolerant of the mess he makes.

“They don’t call us blacksmiths for nothing,” he says.

Smithing in Silver

Silversmith Beau Compton is in his second term as president of the Traditional Cowboy Arts Association. He has been a member of the organization for 10 years, but getting in wasn’t easy. It took the Tombstone, Arizona, artist five years of hard work to finally join the ranks.

The small, elite group of master-level artisans formed more than 25 years ago to preserve and honor cowboy arts.

Divided into four traditional disciplines— silversmithing, bit and spur making, saddlemaking and rawhide braiding— members offer an education program with mentorship training to aspiring artists from around the world. The association awards two scholarships annually to help craftspeople participate in the program.

Beau says the old masters were afraid to teach anyone aside from family or apprentices.

“They were scared of anybody taking their glory away, I guess, or their money,” he says.

The Traditional Cowboy Arts Association thinks differently.

“We’re open to discussing and showing new makers anything,” Beau says. “That’s what’s really cool. We don’t have anything to hide. We all just love teaching and just really support it.”

Beau studied with silversmith Mark Drain in Seattle. Then, he headed to Canada to work with Scott Hardy. In both

Roseburg, Oregon, artisan Steve Harris demonstrates the hackamore reigns he uses as he rides an Appaloosa. PHOTO BY SANDRA HANNON Steve relies on his wife, Rebekah, photographed with their then-four-year-old son, Tom.
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE HARRIS FAMILY

fellowships, the master artisans were kind enough to put Beau up in a spare bedroom and teach him the finer points of the trade.

Beau’s family was active in ranching and professional rodeo, so cowboy arts came naturally.

After graduating in 1997 from high school in Colorado, he contemplated bit and spur making. Marlo, his thengirlfriend and now-wife, had a family connection to Vic Vasquez, an Arizona saddlemaker, silversmith, and bit and spur maker.

“He was very kind to me,” Beau says. “He never charged me anything, and I got to learn from him for about four years before he passed away.”

Vic’s widow gave Beau the first shot at buying the shop.

“I got to buy all his equipment and everything right off the bat,” he says. “I was pretty set up.”

Now, Beau passes on that kindness through the Traditional Cowboy Arts Association. He also opens his home and workshop to several fellowship recipients.

“We have some wonderful donors and supporters who give us that money every year to help further that education,” Beau says. “It’s only through our generous supporters that we can do that.”

Silversmithing isn’t without its challenges. Lately, the stress has been the skyrocketing price of metals. Beau says the cost has increased significantly since last summer.

“Silver was at $25 an ounce,” Beau says. “It’s up over $80 right now. And gold was around $2,200, and yesterday it was at $4,600. It’s getting very costly. We’re treading water that we’ve never been in. We’ve seen silver hit $50 before, and it’s always come back down. But this just feels different. I’m not so sure that it’s ever going to come back down.

“We’ll do what we have to and flow with whatever change we need to and adapt,” he says. “We’ll be all right. Silver has always been a fun metal to play in, and now it’s like, ‘Wait, this is getting serious.’ We can’t waste any of this stuff anymore.”

Lining Up for Saddles

Chiloquin, Oregon, saddlemaker Mario Hanel doesn’t advertise his business because he doesn’t need to. He has a threeyear waiting list. Part of the reason that line forms is because Mario is slow but steady.

“This isn’t a factory,” he says. “It’s a one-man shop, and I’m very meticulous. It takes longer than an average saddlemaker for me to build a saddle. The more I learn about making a saddle more functional and aesthetically pleasing to look at, the longer it takes.

“I’ve never focused on production. I was raised around craftsmen, and I was taught that it doesn’t matter how long it takes. The end product is the important thing.”

Mario’s work begins at the core as he hand-carves the tree, which is the wood scaffolding beneath the saddle’s leather. Mario mastered tree-making through a fellowship with the Traditional Cowboy Arts Association and training with master craftsman Troy West in Texas.

“Some people will walk up to a saddle and say, ‘Man, that’s a really pretty saddle,’” Mario says. “It’s not just the curving—it’s the lines and shapes and the flow and things like that. There’s a lot more to it. Building a tree to me is a lot like sculpting. You’re actually carving wood into a shape. If your horn isn’t shaped right, it doesn’t work as well. There’s a whole art to it. And that’s what really interests me.”

Silversmith Beau Compton puts countless hours of work into his one-of-a-kind custom belt buckles, rings and more. PHOTOS COURTESY OF BEAU COMPTON

LEFT: Blacksmith

Darryl Nelson demonstrates during Blacksmith Week. While Darryl is best known for creating animal heads, he frequently stretches the limits of the medium with creative sculptures in metal. PHOTOS COURTESY

And comfort is key for customers who sit in a saddle every day.

“I have customers that go ride on the weekend every chance they get, but most of my customers are making a living at it,”

Mario says. “They use it in the rain, the snow, the sun, all those things that are hard on stuff, especially leather.”

Having a pretty saddle is important, but it’s not enough.

“A guy who sits in a saddle all day if the seat’s not right, they’re not going to keep that saddle very long,” Mario says. “You can carve the prettiest flowers in the world, but if it doesn’t work, a cowboy is just not going to hang onto it, and a lot of cowboys are going to hear about it.”

Mastering the Braid

Roseburg, Oregon, artist Steve Harris is a master of the hackamore, a bitless bridle that uses pressure on a horse’s nose, chin and poll, rather than inside the mouth, to guide and control. He and his family raise cattle to produce the rawhide that he braids into elaborate, artistic and functional pieces.

Steve grew up on horseback, riding bareback as long as he can remember.

“I actually am the fourth born in my family, but the third born was a horse,” he says. “He was born to a mare that belonged to my mother out of a stallion that was owned by my grandfather. I always had to

take a backseat to him. He grew up before I did, so he raised me.”

Steve learned to braid from his brother when he was 15.

“He and I got to braiding together, and it was just a treat,” Steve says. “I really loved it.”

He loved it so much he kept at it.

Steve makes and repairs saddles and more, but it’s hackamores he loves.

“I really love making hackamore best because when you’re riding hackamore, it really cleans up all your signals,” he says. “Because you’re just riding the horse. Your signal can be really nuanced or really simple, but it’s the horse you’re riding, not the gear.

“When I was a kid and riding bareback, there was that. I was just riding the horse. I think philosophically that’s influenced me as a saddlemaker and as a teacher and as a horseman. It influences me as a parent and in everything I do.”

The whole Harris family is involved in the craft, from Steve’s wife, Rebekah, to his 13-year-old daughter and apprentice Caitriona, and his younger children, who make everything from earrings to braided keychains.

Although seemingly simple to the eye, hackamores are intricately designed and crafted for communication between the rider and horse.

“A strand of rawhide is a strand of rawhide, but if you and I put 16 strands of rawhide together, braid them around a core and get the nose button in the right shape, suddenly we’ve got something that talks to a horse in a real nuanced way,” Steve says. “That same volume of rawhide in just one single strip is pretty useless as anything but a dog chew. But if you put the effort it takes into refining all those strands and putting them together just right, you get results that look like magic.” n

OF DARRYL NELSON
Oregon saddle maker Mario Hanel starts with a hand-carved tree, which is a scaffolding beneath his elaborate custom saddles. PHOTO COURTESY OF MARIO HANEL

Meals From the Heart

INSPIRE LOVE WITH PROPOSAL-WORTHY DISHES

Marry Me Slow-Cooker Chicken

4 chicken breasts, boneless and skinless, about 2 pounds

1 teaspoon kosher salt

½ teaspoon ground black pepper

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 tablespoon salted butter

1 cup chicken stock

1 tablespoon cornstarch

4 cloves garlic, minced

¾ teaspoon crushed red pepper, optional

½ teaspoon dried oregano

¼ teaspoon dried thyme

½ cup sundried tomatoes packed in oil, chopped

1 cup heavy cream, warmed slightly

¾ cup Parmesan cheese, grated

1 tablespoon fresh basil leaves, chopped

Season chicken with salt and pepper. Heat olive oil and butter in a skillet over medium heat, then sear chicken for 2-3 minutes per side until lightly golden. Transfer to slow cooker along with any leftover butter and juices from the skillet.

In a bowl, whisk chicken stock with cornstarch, garlic, crushed red pepper, oregano and thyme. Pour the mixture over the chicken in the slow cooker.

Top each chicken breast with chopped sundried tomatoes. Cover. Cook on low for 3-4 hours or on high for 1½-2 hours, until chicken reaches 165 degrees. Remove chicken to a plate, and keep warm. Stir heavy cream and Parmesan into the hot liquid in the slow cooker until smooth. Return chicken to sauce. Spoon sauce over the top, and let rest for 5-10 minutes on warm.

Garnish with basil before serving.

Recipes by Gertrude Treadaway
ADOBE STOCK PHOTO BY FOMAA

Marry Me Chocolate Cake

18.25-ounce package devil’s

food cake mix

3.9-ounce package instant chocolate pudding mix

2 cups sour cream

1 cup melted butter, cooled

5 eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

2 cups semisweet chocolate chips

Strawberries, optional

Powdered sugar, optional

Heat oven to 350 F. Coat a 10-inch tube pan with nonstick cooking spray.

In a large mixing bowl, combine cake and pudding mixes. Make a well in the center, and add sour cream, butter, eggs and vanilla extract.

Beat on low speed until blended. Scrape bowl, then beat for 4 minutes on medium speed. Mix in chocolate chips by hand.

Pour batter into greased pan, and bake for 50-55 minutes. Let cool in pan for 10 minutes, then turn onto a plate and cool completely. Garnish with strawberries and sprinkle with powdered sugar, if desired.

Marry Me Shrimp Pasta

1 cup drained sundried tomatoes packed in oil, sliced, plus 4 tablespoons tomato oil, divided

1 pound large shrimp, peeled, deveined, tails removed

Kosher salt

Freshly ground black pepper

16 ounces rigatoni or penne pasta

4 garlic cloves, finely chopped

2 tablespoons tomato paste

¼ teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes

2 cups chicken broth

1 cup heavy cream

1 teaspoon Italian seasoning

5 ounces baby spinach

1 ounce Parmesan, finely grated, plus more for serving

Torn fresh basil leaves, for serving

In a large heavy skillet over medium-high heat, heat 2 tablespoons tomato oil. Season shrimp with salt and pepper, to taste. Cook in oil, stirring occasionally, until pink and opaque, about 3 minutes. Transfer shrimp to a plate.

Meanwhile, cook pasta in a large pot of boiling salted water. Stir occasionally, until al dente, according to package directions. Drain.

In the same skillet over medium heat, cook garlic, tomato paste, red pepper flakes and remaining tomato oil. Stir until tomato paste deepens in color, about 1 minute. Add sundried tomatoes, broth, cream and Italian seasoning. Bring to a simmer, scraping up any browned bits. Cook, stirring occasionally, until sauce slightly reduces, about 5 minutes. Add spinach. Cook until wilted, 1-2 minutes.

Add pasta, shrimp and Parmesan. Cook, stirring, until pasta is coated and sauce is glossy. Season with salt and black pepper. Remove skillet from heat. Cover, and let sit 2 to 3 minutes. Stir pasta again to coat.

Divide the mixture among bowls. Top with basil and more Parmesan.

Marry Me Chicken Soup

1 tablespoon olive oil

½ cup yellow onion, diced

2¼ teaspoons salt, divided Pepper, to taste

1 teaspoon garlic powder

1 teaspoon dried thyme

3 tablespoons tomato paste

6 cups chicken stock

1⁄ 3 cup sundried tomatoes in oil, chopped

3 cups shredded cooked chicken

2 cups small-shape pasta, such as orecchiette

½ cup heavy cream

½ cup grated Parmesan cheese

2 cups baby spinach

1 teaspoon red wine vinegar

Heat a large pot or Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add olive oil, onion, ¼ teaspoon salt and black pepper. Cook for 3-5 minutes, stirring frequently, until the onion begins to soften.

Sprinkle in garlic powder and thyme. Cook for about 1 minute, stirring constantly, until fragrant. Add tomato paste and cook for 30 seconds, stirring constantly.

Pour in chicken stock, scraping up any browned bits from the bottom of the pot. Stir in 2 teaspoons salt and sundried tomatoes. Add chicken, and stir to combine. Cover, and bring to a boil. Once boiling, add pasta. Stir.

Cover, and reduce heat to a strong simmer. Cook for 8-15 minutes depending on the pasta type. Stir occasionally, until pasta is just cooked through.

Turn off heat. Add cream, Parmesan cheese, spinach and vinegar. Stir to combine and melt the cheese.

Marry Me Meatballs

18 ounces ground chicken

2 teaspoons dried oregano, divided

2 teaspoons paprika, divided

½ cup grated Parmesan, divided

Pinch of sea salt

Pinch of freshly ground black pepper

1 tablespoon olive oil

3 garlic cloves, peeled and crushed

5 ounces sundried tomatoes, roughly chopped

¾ cup heavy cream

1 cup chicken stock

½ lemon

Basil leaves, for garnish

Place the ground chicken, 1 teaspoon oregano, 1 teaspoon paprika and ¼ cup Parmesan in a bowl. Add a pinch of salt and pepper. Use clean hands to mix everything together, then roll mixture into 16 meatballs.

In a large, deep frying pan, heat oil over medium heat. Fry meatballs, stirring occasionally, for 10 minutes until golden all over. Remove them to a plate.

Add garlic, sundried tomatoes and remaining dried oregano and paprika. Cook for a few minutes until garlic has softened. Add cream, stock, remaining Parmesan, and additional salt and pepper, to taste. Stir well. Add meatballs, and cook for 5 minutes. Make sure meatballs are cooked through, then remove the pan from the heat.

Squeeze lemon juice and sprinkle basil over the top.

READER EXCHANGE

Crafts/Hobbies

I am in need of yarn to make hats for homeless people and people who are receiving cancer treatments. Leftover yarn is used to make hats for newborn babies. The person who makes these hats is a homebound person on oxygen. This not only gives him an activity, but it also helps those in need. From 2019 to the present, he has made over 2,000 hats. I distribute these hats to the people who need them.

Deb Darr

3550 Sample Road Falls City, OR 97344

I am looking for unwanted stamped post cards, stamp albums, world stamps, old stamped envelopes or any stamps you don’t know what to do with. I’m filling in unfinished stamp albums I inherited from my dad. I would love any you can send. Thank you.

Lori Arola

82162 Red Bluff Road Seaside, OR 97138-5037

Milestones

Our incredible mother, Elizabeth Gwiazdon (aka Betty), celebrates her 100th birthday in March. She was born in Hawaii and traveled the world with her Army dad and mom. She married a Lt. Colonel in the Air Force and raised 6 amazing children. She has 13 grands, 19 great-grands, and 2 great-great-grands. She started as a secretary for a property management company in the mid ’70s and rose to the ranks of executive director of the Sacramento Apartment Association. She then worked for another tenant/landlord group, taught classes at our local college and then started a consulting business to continue to help educate and mediate tenant/landlord issues. She just retired at 98. She’s been an incredible role model and positively influenced countless people her entire life and career. She is full of life, love and laughter. She’s a fashionista. She dresses every day as if she was greeting the president or the queen of England. We would love to share cards and wishes with her and the family. Please send to: C/O Michele Skupic, P.O. Box 207, Graeagle, CA 96103-0207. My sincerest gratitude.

Michele Skupic Graeagle, California

Odds

Looking for screws for long genealogy books. I need 6 or 8 metal extension screws to hold more pages for each book. Thank you.

Lucile Stecklein

P.O. Box 116 Blackfoot, ID 83221

Camp Elkanah is celebrating its 70th anniversary, and we would love to hear from you. If you were a camper, staff member, dream team member or volunteer, we would appreciate your memories or photos. What were your favorite activities, food or games? You can write a sentence or a book. All will be appreciated. Contact us at the address or email below.

Camp Elkanah

P.O. Box 150

La Grande, Oregon 97850

Email: elkanah@campelkanah.com

Website: campelkanah.com (click on “Share your story”)

Thanks

I want to thank everyone for all the cards, letters, gifts and flowers. Everything was amazing. Mom received over 320 handmade cards, and kindness and prayers. I cannot express how much it meant. It also was good for residents seeing her get mail.

Susan Mascall

North Powder, Oregon

Thanks to everyone who sent recipes. Reading comments was fun. I started looking forward to getting mail again. I received lots of good-looking cornbread recipes; even the one I had asked for.

Elena Nightingale

LaGrande, Oregon

Submitting Requests Is Free

Send your request (no attachments) to readerexchange@ruralite.org or mail to Reader Exchange, 5625 NE Elam Young Parkway, Suite 100, Hillsboro, OR 97124. Fill in the subject line with Reader Exchange.

Acceptance, scheduling and editing are at the editor’s discretion. Single requests only, please. No duplicates. If replying to a reader submission, please only send what is requested.

Submissions are handled first-come, first-served as space allows. We cannot honor every request.

Please affirm you have authorization from all appropriate parties before submitting. By submitting, you indemnify Reader Exchange, Pioneer Utility Resources Inc., its officers, directors, employees, utility clients and insurers from all legal liability incurred by the publication of information.

We no longer accept pen pal requests. You may submit a pen pal request as a Marketplace ad (pricing applies).

When submitting a milestone request, please send it at least two months before the milestone.

Phone numbers are not published. Email addresses are if they are part of the ad, but you must include a postal address.

Requests must include the name and address of the electric utility that provides your magazine.

Seniors get new medical alert device

Instantly connects to free unlimited nationwide help with just the push of a button with no contracts, no deposits, and no monthly bills

■ NO MONTHLY BILLS: “My wife had an old style help button that came with hefty bills every month and she was embarrassed to wear it because it made her look old,” said Frank McDonald, Canton, Ohio. “Now, we both have FastHelp™, the sleek new medical alert device that our grandkids say makes us look ‘cool’ not old,” he said. With FastHelp, seniors never have to worry about being alone and the best part is there are no monthly bills ever.

Seniors born before 1964 get new medical alert device

Nationwide: Demand for new Medical Alert Device soars

The phone lines are ringing off the hook. That’s because for seniors born before 1964, it’s a deal too good to pass up.

Starting at precisely 8:30am today the PreStore Release begins for the sleek new medical alert device that comes with the exclusive FastHelp™ One-Touch 911 Button that instantly connects you to unlimited nationwide help everywhere with no contracts, no deposits and no monthly bills ever.

“It’s not like old style help buttons that make you talk to a call center, only work when you’re at home and come with hefty bills every month. FastHelp comes with state-ofthe-art cellular embedded technology. That means it works at home or anywhere and everywhere cell service is available whether you’re out watering the garden, driving in a car, at church or even hundreds of miles away on a tour or at a casino. You are never alone. With just a single push of the One-Touch E Button you instantly get connected to free unlimited help nationwide with no monthly bills ever,” said Jack Lawrence, Executive Director of Product Development for U.S. based Universal Physicians.

“We’ve never seen anything like it. Consumers absolutely love the sleek new modern design and most of all, today’s instant rebate practically pays for it and no monthly bills ever,” Lawrence said.

FastHelp is the sleek new medical alert device with the best of combinations: a quality, high-tech engineered device that’s also an extremely great value because there are no monthly bills ever. ■

■ FLYING OUT THE DOOR: Trucks are being loaded with the new medical alert devices called FastHelp. They are now being delivered to lucky seniors who call the National Rebate Center Hotline at 1-800-209-4926 DEPT. FSTH138 today. Everyone is calling to get FastHelp, the sleek new medical alert device because it instantly connects you to unlimited nationwide help everywhere cell service is available.

HOW TO GET IT

BORN BEFORE 1964:

Use the rebate coupon below and call this Toll-Free Hotline: 1-800-209-4926

EXT. FSTH138

BORN AFTER 1964:

You cannot use the rebate coupon below and must pay $299 Call: 1-800-209-6405

EXT. FSTH138

■ SENIORS SNAP UP NEW MEDICAL ALERT DEVICE : Instantly connects you to free unlimited nationwide help with no contracts, no deposits and no monthly bills ever. Nothing to hook up. You don’t need a land line or cell phone. It’s ready to use right out of the box. Comes with new cellular embedded technology that works at home or anywhere you go so you are never alone.

BOTTOM LINE: You don’t need to shop around. We’ve done all the leg work, this deal is too good to pass up. With the instant FastHelp rebate, it is a real steal at just $149 and shipping. There are no monthly bills ever.

PROS: It’s the sleek new medical alert device that comes with the exclusive FastHelp One-Touch 911 Button that instantly connects you to free unlimited nationwide help with no contracts or deposits. It connects you to the vast available network of cellular towers for free and saves seniors a ton of money because there are no monthly bills ever making this deal a must have. Plus it’s the only medical alert device that makes seniors look important, not old.

CONS: Consumers can’t get FastHelp in stores until later this year. That’s why it’s so important for seniors born before 1964 to call the National Rebate Center Hotline within the next 21 days. For those who miss that deadline, the sleek little medical alert device will set you back over $300 bucks.

Hurricane Help

“We had two hurricanes recently. I had no electricity for 6 days. I fell, so I pushed the button, and they came right out and picked me up off the floor. I tell many of my friends they need to get FastHelp!” - Virginia, FL

LIFESAVER

“When I got my FastHelp I never thought I’d have to use it, but when I fell and broke my hip it saved my life.” - Harold, OH

Very appreciative of having FastHelp

“I did have an emergency. Help RESPONDED quickly and came in a few minutes.” - Irving, PA

WE LOVE THE PRODUCT

“We bought it outright with no bills ever.” - Rosemary, NY

Safe anywhere

“This little FastHelp device is my guardian angel. I’m so glad my daughter-in-law got it for me.” - Pete, FL

Rating: These are unsolicited consumer feedback from satisfied customers as reported to Universal Physicians.

Watch Wildlife Wander Through Pristine Nature in Northern Nevada at ADVENTURE AWAITS

Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge

What Is It?

Thousands of pronghorn, deer, bighorn sheep and more roam on hundreds of thousands of acres of wilderness in Northern Nevada at Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge. The refuge—which also has beautiful mountains, dark skies and geological features—was originally established to benefit pronghorn populations.

History

Pronghorn populations in Nevada rapidly shrunk in the early 1900s. Nonnative animals, such as horses, sheep and cattle, were overtaking the habitat. The Audubon Society and Boone and Crockett Club bought the more than 30,000-acre Last Chance Ranch to create an antelope refuge. In 1936, President Franklin D. Roosevelt enlarged the refuge to nearly 540,000 acres.

Wildlife

Thousands of pronghorn live in the greater Hart-Sheldon area, straddling the Oregon-Nevada border. Pronghorn can run sustained sprints of about 50 mph, making it the fastest North American land mammal. The refuge is also home to bighorn sheep, mule deer and sage grouse. Visitors may even see an American pika, a small herbivorous mammal that looks like a mix of a mouse and rabbit.

A Gorge Trip

The refuge has a rugged landscape ready for those willing to explore it. One popular site is Thousand Creek Gorge, a slot canyon with 500-foot-tall walls. Visitors will likely need to take a moderate hike or have a higher clearance vehicle to get there. Many make their way to Virgin Valley Warm Spring to camp, while others head out to watch the wildlife at Catnip Reservoir.

More Information

Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge is very remote. While that can be great for getting away from it all and diving into nature, be sure to have a full tank of gas and carry extra fuel—visitors will be more than 100 miles from a gas station. To learn more, call 775-941-0199 or visitfws.gov/refuge/ sheldon.

Pronghorn graze at Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge. PHOTO COURTESY OF USFWS

Shining a Light

Every calendar month is dedicated to bringing awareness to its own cause or observance, some lighthearted and others profoundly meaningful. October, for instance, is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, yet it also shares space with National Pizza Month. In the United Kingdom, 30 days across May and June are recognized as National Smile Month. And while we might celebrate whimsical Mustache March, the month is also designated as National Women’s History Month, a time to celebrate women’s contributions to history, culture and society.

Throughout my career, I have photographed many famous women—movie stars, civil rights figures and humanitarians from all walks of life. In 2011, I photographed Eva Schloss, a survivor of Hitler’s death camps and Anne Frank’s stepsister. Eva died Jan. 3 in London at the age of 96.

Approachable and generous with her time, Eva told her story to audiences for two days. Like Anne, Eva and her family went into hiding from the Nazis, and after two years, they were tracked down, arrested and deported to concentration camps. Eva barely survived Auschwitz, and her brother and father died in captivity.

“The horrors that she endured as a young woman are impossible to comprehend and yet she devoted the rest of her life to overcoming hatred and prejudice, promoting kindness, courage, understanding and resilience through her tireless work for the Anne Frank Trust UK and for Holocaust education across the world,”

Reader Challenge

While I advocate photographing famous people whenever and wherever you can, don’t limit documenting only those society or fate has shined a light on. Ask yourself, “Is there is a person I admire in my world, a giving soul in my community I can honor?” Try to make a portrait that celebrates their character.

Email your best image—just one—with caption information, including an explanation of how it affects you, to gph@pioneer.coop. We may share submissions on our website and social media channels.

King Charles says in a piece written by Thomas Mackintosh and published by the BBC on Jan. 4, 2026.

Beneath Eva’s positive public face, she shared with me after a lecture that waves of pain linger. I watched for images that might reveal that pain and often shot as tight as possible, usually with a telephoto lens to compress the face, hoping to capture subtle expressions that reveal the pain in her heart. n

To learn more of Eva’s story, check out bit.ly/4qYVuC4 or pick up one of her books, “Eva’s Story: A Survivor’s Tale by the Stepsister of Anne Frank” and “The Promise: The Moving Story of a Family in the Holocaust.”

Photographer, author and lecturer Dave LaBelle has captured special moments for more than half a century, sharing photo tips and life perspectives with readers. For more of his writings, visit davidlabelle.com and his blog at bridgesandangels.wordpress.com.

NIKON D200, 180mm lens ISOf/2.8800, at 1/200

John Walters Keeping

Equipment Running at Full Efficiency From the Inside Out

When John Walters first joined GVEA in 2010 as a temporary employee, he admits he knew little about gas turbines. However, his excellent mechanical skills allowed him to work on a team that overhauled the GT-2 turbine at the North Pole Power Station. Not long after the project was done, he was hired full time as an operator mechanic and worked his way up to his current position as gas turbine plant foreman.

“Not a lot of people get to see the inside of a gas turbine,” John says. “I got to be part of taking it apart and seeing how massive and heavy everything is, yet how precise and tight all these tolerances are. It was a real eye-opener.”

As the gas turbine plant foreman, John now spends more time planning, arranging, and prioritizing maintenance and operations than he spends working on equipment. He monitors inventory so that his 19 operator mechanics have the parts they need to keep the turbines at North Pole, Fairbanks and Delta working efficiently. However, that doesn’t stop John from getting into the nitty-gritty when he gets the chance.

equipment at a high level because efficiency is how GVEA can keep rates as low as possible for members.

“We work hard towards keeping the rates as low as possible,” John says. “The infrastructure to generate 1 megawatt of power is massive, and a lot of the costs for fuel and parts are out of our hands.”

“We’re prepping for a combustion inspection on a Frame-7 gas turbine, and I’m really looking forward to it,” John says. “I’ll get right out there with the guys and do a little bit of work until they run me off.”

In addition to his skilled operator mechanics, John attributes much of his team’s success to his plant leadman, who helps him review the workload and allocate assignments. John is passionate about maintaining

When John speaks, it is with certainty and ease, so it is hard to imagine him facing any challenges in his position. However, he says computers are a bit of a headache when it comes to devising his team’s yearly rotating schedule. He says starting the project feels overwhelming, but once it’s finished, the task doesn’t seem that bad.

Growing up in Alaska, John has found many ways to spend his free time. He says he likes to do the typical Alaskan stuff like hunting, fishing, cross-country skiing and riding in his side-by-side. John has also turned his hands-on skills to woodworking. Though he has built several pieces of furniture, he says most people are impressed by his cedar-strip canoe. This upcycling project came about when a friend contacted John about window trim from a demolition project.

“He’s like, ‘This wood I’m cutting smells really good,’” John says. “I go check it out, and they’re cutting up all this cedar trim. So I got it, milled it all up and built the canoe out of it.”

When John’s three sons were involved in North Pole High School football, he volunteered for 15 years with the booster club and, at one point, served as president. Though he doesn’t volunteer as much now, he says his family is still a donor with their name featured at the field. n

PHOTO BY KELLY REYNOLDS

MARKETPLACE

Agriculture

Reinforced custom-sized pond liners (39 cents/sqft). Hay covers, greenhouse covers, any width and length. Truck tarps and more. High puncture and tear strength. Best price guaranteed. Celebrating 43 years in business. btlliners.com. 541-447-0712. 0426

Seeking summer pasture for 20-80 cow-calf pairs. Call 541-519-7068 or 208-880-2518. IDEastern, OR. 0326

Antiques and Collectibles

Buying antiques and collectibles: advertising signs, porcelain signs, gas pumps, beer signs, antique toys, cast-iron coin banks, neon signs and more. Jason, 503-310-3321 or tjabaughman@yahoo.com. 0326

Buying American Indian collectibles, Navajo jewelry, blankets, rugs. CA/AZ baskets and beadwork. Quality paintings of the early Southwest and Americas. Call 760-409-3117 or send photos to amer.ind.baskets@gmail.com.

Automotive

1978 Jeep CJ5. 6 cyl. 4 sp. Good condition. New seats and top. $10K. 208-435-4798. 0326

Books, Magazines, Videos

Book restoration. Bibles, cookbooks, cherished family heirlooms. Beautiful work. We give renewed life, more durable than original, to last for generations. 775-537-7066; salacanstudio@gmail.com.

Community Events

Beekeeping Class by Dick Turanski from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, March 28, at the Eugene Mission, 1470 W. 1st Ave., Eugene, OR. Advance registration and payment required. Class limit is 70 people. $50 cash or check only. Checks payable to RPT & Associates, P.O. Box 41294, Eugene, OR 97404. Two teachers will answers your questions: Richard T. Turanski, 55 years of beekeeping, first taught at Lane Community College in 1975; and Mike France, former president of Lane County Beekeepers Association, teacher at Lane County Beekeepers Association. Includes coffee, banana bread and lunch served noon-1 p.m. Park in lot or on the street. Contact for registration by email only, Dick.Turanski@GloryBee.com. 0326

Long Creek, Oregon, Emergency Services Appreciation Dinner. April 25. Live auction items are fire engine, flat utility trailer, Hamley saddle, firewood and more. For dinner reservations, call 541-421-3601. For more information, visit cityoflongcreek.org. 0426

Quick, Affordable: How to Place an Ad

„ Ads 25 words or fewer are $35 a month. An extended ad of up to 35 words is $50 a month. Contact information is included in the word count. Phone numbers and emails count as one word.

„ Longer ads may be placed. Contact 503-357-2105 or info@pioneer.coop for pricing information.

„ Ads are for customers of member co-ops, public utility districts and municipals only. Subscribers and nonmembers may inquire about pricing at 503-357-2105 or info@pioneer.coop.

„ Ads must be direct and in first person, and are subject to approval and editing.

„ Closing deadlines (in our office): May issue—March 31

„ If submitting ad by mail, send appropriate payment with your name, address, email, phone number and the name of the electric utility that provides your magazine to: Marketplace, P.O. Box 1306, North Plains, OR 97133. Make check or money order payable to Ruralite.

„ We accept credit card payments for ads submitted by email. Send ad to info@pioneer.coop. Call 503-357-2105 to pay by credit card.

Advertisements are accepted in good faith. Pioneer Utility Resources is not liable for interactions between buyers and sellers.

Art Center East’s 49th birthday March Membership Drive. Spring Makers Week, March 23-27: art classes for all ages in La Grande, OR. artcentereast.org. 0326

Farm Equipment

1940s Caterpillar D2, hydraulic blade up/ down, full canopy, many photos. Belonged to my late father. Diesel engine stuck so asking only $3.5K, OBO. Near Dayton, WA. 208-284-5073.

Water trailer. About 400 gallons, Homelite pump, on heavy-duty ex-military trailer. Photos, no title. Pump not started since before COVID-19. Near Dayton, WA. 208-284-5073.

Free Items

Free materials—church/government unite. National Sunday Law. TBSM, P.O. Box 374, Ellijay, GA 30540. tbsmads@yahoo.com; 1-888-211-1715. 0426AR

Help Wanted

Camp hosts/caretakers wanted for the Tucannon River RV Park, a small (33 sites), modern RV park in rural SE WA on the Lower Tucannon River. Prefer active retired couple able to meet and greet, take reservations, pull hoses, mow, general maintenance. RV required, FHU provided, plus stipend. Call 509-382-2759.

Livestock, Supplies

Live bees by Dick Turanski. New large supplier of 5 frame nucs in nuc box. Available 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, May 9. Nucs with your choice of queens as follows: Italians, Carniolans or Buckfast (Buckfast is NEW, starting with a limit of 2 nucs per customer). Introductory low price of $200 per nuc or more than 10 at $195 per nuc. Order via email, dick.turanski@glorybee.com. Mail checks to RPT & Associates, P.O. Box 41294, Eugene, OR 97404. Deadline for checks must be postdated April 30, 2026. Pick up location in the gravel yard next to GloryBee’s Distribution Center 29548 B Airport Road, Eugene (directly off Highway 99). Stop by the pop-up tent to check in. 0426

Miscellaneous

Granite cemetery markers at affordable prices. Will ship to most places. For more info: highdesertmemorials.com; Joe, 541-815-8906 or highdesertmemorials@gmail.com. 0326

Attention landowners. Grants available now. Wildland fire fuel reduction service. Steep ground, remote, rocky, small lot, big acreage are no problem. Blue Mountain Defensible Space LLC. Bluemountainbrush@gmail.com; bluemountainbrush.com; 509-399-3473. 1126

Animal and human wilderness tracking school materials. Writings, slides, physical displays, teaching materials and books. Enormous collection for anyone interested in tracking. Dave, fairbanksaircraft@comcast.net. 0326

Tulsa 3-stage planetary gear reduction, bought surplus from Link Belt Crane, used as final drive for P&H and LB 100-ton crawler cranes. Best use, 4-ft. tunnel drill using ROTEK turntable bearing, $5K. 6 truck tires, 50% tread, Patagonia mud and snow. LT215/R8516, 60% tread. $600. Ted, 458-910-3727. 0326

Local commercial fisherman sells summer catch of preserved freshness by blast freezing at sea, gourmet canned tuna on internet. Sept.June. 100% guaranteed the best canned tuna you ever tasted. Original, jalapeno and garlic flavors available. To order: twofisherstuna.com or 206-799-1082. 0526

Pets, Supplies

Havanese puppies in Rainier, OR. Hypoallergenic, great for all ages. Raised by our family as quality pets for you. Visit www.happeninhavanese.com or call Rebecca at 503-728-6241. 0426

Pools/Spas

2010 Artesian Swim Spa for sale. 7x14’ Been inside all the time; excellent condition. $5K. 541-954-3884. 0326

Real Estate

320 acres east of Adel, OR. Borders Hart Mountain views, Steens Mountain and Beaty Butte. Landowner tags, very rural. Reduced price: $145K. For maps: 541-659-1573; thejugglingman3@gmail.com. 0326

Let me help you buy or sell ranch, farm and recreation property in OR. Fourthgeneration Oregonian, prior ranch owner. For sale; Deschutes Canyon Mountain views 118 acres riverfront. $14.9M. John Gill, johngill@landandwildlife.com; 541-480-916. Land And Wildlife brokerage. 0326

Private 10-acre wild tree farm near Sandpoint, ID, with older 3-bd. mobile home, countymaintained road, good building sites. $395K. Steve, 208-290-6505. 0326

Mobiles to mansions. Cabins to castles. Brookings, OR area Principal Broker Pat Piper, Century 21 Agate Realty. Helpful. Educated. Caring. 28 years of area experience. patpiperbroker@gmail.com; 541-251-2152. 0526

For sale/rent: 20-acre developed land, 3,600sqft. shop with “barndominium” potential. Weddings/events, horse property, RV hookups, creek, views. $575K. Seller financing. Goldendale, WA. 509-378-5886. 0326

Boyers Cash Store & Keylock. Monument, OR. Thriving turn-key business. $500K. Duke Warner Realty, ddwr@ortelco.net; 541-987-2363.

10 undeveloped rural acres situated on the Rio Grande River, 28 miles south of Taos, NM. Ideal location for off-the-grid homestead, vacation retreat or permanent residence. Asking $75K. Serious inquiries only: rima.sanders@frontier.com. 0326

For sale by owner in Baker City, OR. 2- to 3-bd. home, move-in ready with many new upgrades. Well on the property. Fruit trees. Mountain view of Elkhorns. Call 307-321-1232 for appointment. 0426

Recreational Rentals

Sunshine and sand—Book your summer dreams at WaveCatcher for 2026. Oceanfront cottage with direct beach access, on the spectacular Central OR Coast. Sleeps 6. All house amenities. Winter closure NovemberMarch. Reservations, information email: relax@wavecatcherbeachrentals.com, or text 541-740-2846 or 541-740-9953. 0326

Oceanview Maui vacation rental. Spring break for the month of March. Was $210, now $185. One-time cleaning: $150, 2 TVs, king-size bed, queen-size sofa bed. Beach chairs and umbrellas. Great view. 503-812-6689.

Enjoy your ideal Maui getaway. This updated 2-bd., 2-ba. condo sleeps 4 and features a charming “surf shack” design. Just half a block from a beautiful beach, it’s perfect for morning strolls and sunsets. Plus, you’re steps away from shops and restaurants at Azeka Plaza. tinyurl.com/MauiGetaway. 0526

Recreational Vehicles

2010 Northern Lite 8-11QSE Classic Series Slide-In-Truck Camper for short-bed trucks. Queen bed, skylight, wet bath, full kitchen, premium wood paneling. Original owner. Needs new Happijacs. $10.5K. Text, 208-301-3732 for photos. 0326

Coleman 17-R trailer. 1 axel, 8 months old, used once, 2K miles. Aljo Starlink post-hitch 27 ft. long, hitch to rear. Old. Good condition and tires. 35-ft. Wildcat Maxx. 8-ft. slide out, 25 years old. Lived in, one owner. 500 miles on tires. Make offers. Ted, 458-910-3727. 0426

2015 Artic Fox 29L Travel Trailer. Stored under awning from 2015-24. Double slide, loads of storage and in very good condition. Clean and ready to go. Can send photos. $28.5K. jeff.bartunek@gmail.com. 0326

Services

Dawn Till Dusk Masonry. Brick, block, stone and pavers. Small jobs and repairs welcome. dawntillduskconstructionmasonry.com; 541-388-7605; 541-410-6945. License #245760 bonded and insured. La Pine, OR.

Blue Mountain Defensible Space LLC

Wildfire Fuel Reduction: clearing brush, thinning trees, animal habitat enhancement. Expert service. Grant money available OR, WA, ID. Bluemountainbrush@gmail.com; bluemountainbrush.com; 509-399-3473. 1126

Situations Wanted

Looking for woman 25-50 years old. Honest, likes cats, average looking, pleasant. Widow in ID or MT preferred. Would like to meet and see if we are compatible. I’m a retired widower. Christian, firefighter. Bob, P.O. Box 69, Noxon, MT 59853. 0326

Want to Buy

Gold, silver, coins/currency, buy, sell. Collections wanted. Fair prices paid. 45 years in retail store. Baker City, OR. 800-556-2133; garrymclin@aol.com. 1026

Buying American Indian collectibles, Navajo jewelry, blankets, rugs. CA/AZ baskets and beadwork. Quality paintings of the early Southwest and Americas. Call 760-409-3117; send photos to amer.ind.baskets@gmail.com. 0526

Old carpenter tools, planes (wood/metal), levels, chisels, slicks, adzes, axes, hatchets, handsaws, old rulers, spoke shaves, wrenches, shipwright tools, old tool chests. 503-659-0009; 971-666-0659. 0326

Wanted: older Corvette 1953-63 any condition, cash. Call or text 702-296-2289 or email a62vette@yahoo.com. Even if you’re thinking about selling. 0326

Stationed in Nenana

Two GVEA linemen relocate to improve response times and strengthen service in GVEA’s southern most district.

There could hardly be two better candidates to relocate to Nenana, south of Fairbanks, to improve response time for power outages south of the city.

Eric Gebhardt and Charles Merritt fit the bill perfectly—and enthusiastically.

Golden Valley Electric Association linemen positions in Nenana were vacant for a long time. So anytime there was an outage from Nenana to Cantwell, nearly 100 miles away, linemen had to drive from Fairbanks, an estimated three-hour drive to Cantwell.

But these two linemen volunteered to move their families south of Fairbanks and permanently staff the long-vacant office.

“The need was there,” Eric says. “I grew up rural. I prefer quieter areas. I have more space to breathe.”

The lifelong Fairbanksan loves his profession, a trade he has enjoyed for the past five years.

“I like the brotherhood,” he says. “We take each other, our well-being, and safety very seriously.”

He also likes working outside every day, always seeing new parts of the Alaska Interior.

“There are over 3,400 miles of line out there,” he says.

He couldn’t have a better work partner than Charles, who moved to Fairbanks in 2023, in the dead of winter. He and his family were in the Lower 48 at the time, and he was surprised to learn his wife, who had always dreamed of living in Alaska, saw an opening for a lineman and applied on his behalf.

When the opportunity arose to move to Nenana, the Merritts jumped at the chance.

“It was a good opportunity for me and my family just to get out of town,” he says. “It gives us an opportunity to live farther out in Alaska than most folks can, and I still have a job that is great.

“It was an opportunity to be able to live a little more the lifestyle we were searching for.”

He laughs when he confesses he also doesn’t mind having the GVEA shop in Nenana all to himself.

Charles has been doing this work for 24 years and admits to being a bit of an adrenaline junkie.

“I’ve had to leave four different Thanksgiving dinners right as I was sitting down,” he says. “And two or three Christmases.”

Yet, this more remote position has allowed him to spend more time with his wife and seven children than ever before, he says.

The work is dangerous, but these linemen appreciate and even thrive on the challenge.

“Sometimes, we have to get creative solutions for a pole that broke down in a valley, in four feet of snow, at a river crossing,” Eric says. “We think, ‘How are we going to pull this one off?’”

“We’ve gotta know our stuff, and we’ve got each other’s back,” he says.

After a surge of spruce bark beetles devastating trees in the southern half of the Denali Borough the past two years, the linemen find themselves in Cantwell on a regular basis.

“The winds pick up coming through the pass” and regularly knock down a growing number of dead trees. Quite often, those trees fall onto electrical wires. Some of those trees aren’t even growing in the right-of-way.

“We only have 15 feet on either side of the pole,” Eric says. “Over time, those trees get taller. They weren’t a problem 10 years ago. They are a massive problem now.”

Charles recalls a recent windstorm in Cantwell that meant he was there for 20 hours, helping restore power. The fix isn’t always easy.

In October 2024, he worked 30-hour shifts with 8-hour breaks in between, helping to reconnect power after 10 inches of snowfall, followed by freezing rain. That stamina comes after years of experience, he says.

There was an upside to that long 20-hour shift in Cantwell. Local residents made sure he felt welcome and appreciated.

“They were bringing me cookies, making sure I had coffee,” Charles says. “One guy made sure I had some of his deer sausage.”

He was regularly invited inside to warm up, although he assured folks he was dressed warmly and actually sweating as he worked in the sub-zero temperatures.

When power prices rise, GVEA linemen who interact with the public sometimes get hit with negativity from customers. Charles

says he hasn’t experienced any of that since venturing out in his new territory south of Nenana.

“As far as my district, everyone has been supportive” he says. “Everyone is still coming out and telling us ‘thanks guys,’”

With a GVEA prevention program in place, cutting down some of those problem beetle-killed trees is helping and already reducing the number of outages.

“We’re here to make it better for everybody,” Charles says. “We’re already cutting outages down tremendously.”

The two linemen now based in Nenana are also continuing with system and equipment upgrades.

“We’re changing a lot of insulators,” Eric says. “Over time, with weathering, their insulating will break down.”

“We’re happy to be down here. Some repairs still need more than two guys, but we are able to get initial assessments.”

Sometimes certain repairs may still take time, as materials have to be retrieved from Fairbanks. But there is no doubt they will get the job done.

“One of the best aspects of the job is helping out customers,” Eric says.

And here’s a perk Charles was sure to point out.

“I’ve worked in most every state in the United States and several territories,” he says. “I get to be the lineman in charge of Denali National Park. How cool is that? For a lineman, that’s a feather in your hat.” n

Eric Gebhardt and Charles Merritt, now based in Nenana, bring experience, grit, and a strong commitment to safety as they restore power across GVEA’s southernmost district. PHOTOS BY KELLY REYNOLDS

All Wildlife Welcome

While living in Alsea, Oregon, Michelle Flamez frequently had elk visitors in her yard. On this rare occasion, a few turkeys joined the party. PHOTO BY MICHELLE FLAMEZ

To submit your photo, email a JPEG to photos@pioneer.coop. Include “Before You Go” in the subject line and share a bit about what inspired you to make your photo.

Seafood Cookbook

Barbecue Halibut Oriental, Crab Enchiladas, Easy Salmon Quiche, Dilled Salmon Fettuccine, Clam Chowder and Salmon Oyster Dip are among the recipes featured in this book from our 1993 contest. The 8½-by-11-inch indexed book is $8 (includes postage).

TO ORDER BY MAIL: Submit payment with cookbook title, your name, address and number of cookbooks wanted to: Ruralite Cookbooks P.O. Box 1306 North Plains, OR 97133

TO PAY BY PHONE: Call 503-357-2105 for credit card payments with Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express.

TO ORDER ONLINE: Visit www.ruralite.com.

Please allow two to three weeks for delivery.

ADOBE STOCK PHOTO BY ZI3000

Our Bone-ified Best Blade

“It’s a beautiful knife with a great blade and a sure grip” — William B. Wilmington, NC

EXCLUSIVE FREE

My friend Sergio is a mixed martial arts fighter. His shoulders are broad. His muscles have muscles. He’s not the kind of person you want to be on the wrong side of.

This manly man has a saying about being tough: You should either know how to fight or look like you do.

The message is simple enough. People spoiling for a fight usually don’t pick the biggest guy in the bar. If you look like someone who shouldn’t be messed with, you likely won’t be. With our Blue Bone Bowie Knife on your hip, that’s exactly the message you’ll send.

As beautiful as it is functional, this knife is 10" overall and features a high-quality 420 surgical stainless steel blade with a serrated spine. The handle is constructed of genuine natural bone with redwood spacers. On the handle you’ll find design work that’s carved by hand, a testament to its craftsmanship.

This knife is stick tang, meaning it won’t wimp out when you need it. This knife also features brass hand guards and brass spacers with file work, so you won’t lose your grip. For easy carrying, it comes with a genuine tooled leather sheath. CALL NOW! If you’re one of the rst 700 587 callers for this ad, we’ll throw in a pair of Stauer HD Pocket Binoculars — a $99 value — ABSOLUTELY FREE!

Walk around with the Blue Bone Bowie Knife and you’ll feel a lot safer. I know I do.

Knife Speci cations:

• 10" overall length

•420 surgical stainless steel and stick tang construction

• Genuine natural bone and redwood hand-carved handle

• Genuine leather sheath included

Blue Bone Bowie Knife

Stauer Pocket Binoculars a $99 value with your purchase of the Blue Bone Bowie Knife

$299 $79*+ S&P Save $220

*Special price only for customers using the offer code.

Your Insider Offer Code: BBK162-02

California residents, please call 1-800-333-2045 regarding Proposition 65 regulations before purchasing this product.

Owned By Those We Serve

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Tom DeLong, Chair, District 2

Rick Solie, Vice-Chair, District 3

David Messier, Treasurer, District 1

Gary Newman, Secretary, District 4

John Sloan, District 6

Bradley Swope, District 5

Krista Zappone, District 7

Corporate Headquarters

758 Illinois St. P.O. Box 71249

Fairbanks, AK 99707-1249

907-452-1151

800-770-GVEA (4832)

Fax 907-458-6365

Delta Junction Office

1681 Richardson Highway Delta Junction, AK 99737

907-452-1151

800-770-GVEA (4832)

Fax 907-895-5472

Report Outages:

907-452-1151

800-770-GVEA (4832)

Select: Option 1, Option 1

View Outage Map: gvea.com/outages

www.gvea.com

Tuesday, May 5

Attend GVEA’s Annual and Appreciation Event MEMBERS’ MEETING

4 p.m. Member Appreciation Event

6:30 p.m. Meeting begins Carlson Center, 2010 2nd Ave. in Fairbanks

The meeting is in person and live streamed on GVEA’s YouTube and Facebook pages. Family-friendly activities and educational booths are open prior to the meeting.

One registered membership in attendance will win a retired fleet vehicle.

Stay tuned for additional details at gvea.com/annual.

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