May 26, 2013

For our bird friends . . .

d08 bp1Photo by Ellie Tunget This photo is entitled, “Friends” and captures one of the local wintering sandhill cranes feeding with the cows on local corn fields that have been harvested, cleaning up the waste corn and eating grubs and insect life, which helps the farmer."Photography is my passion and my art," Ellie Tunget said. "I've dabbled in oil and acrylic painting. The Smithsonian Institute in Washington D.C. has one of my original designs.

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A sketch of an artist

d08 bp1Photo submitted Rico Molina is a talented artist; his wife Judy is his biggest supporter.With just a pencil — and a great deal of talent — Rico Molina creates detailed portraits that are so expressive the viewer can't help but be touched. And for Rico, that's the highest praise.

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A broader perspective

d08 bp1Photo by Brian Stewart Czech Republic Mission Team, left to right: Brian Stewart, Meghan Doak, David White, Clara Kong, Joe Kong and Kerry Hassler.A year ago three young Delta area residents took an international missions class called Perspectives on the campus of Colorado Mesa University. The students were Meghan Doak, Brian Stewart and David White.

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Bounty of a local harvest

d10 bp1Photos submitted Delta County’s abundant annual harvest would become a direct source of sustainable, year-round, local food supply for seniors and others under a program being developed here by the Volunteers of America.Delta County's abundant annual harvest of agricultural produce will become a direct source of local food bounty for area seniors and others under a program being developed now by the Volunteers of America.

The VoA Harvest Plan project is aiming to place in operation a complete, professional food preparation, processing, and preservation facility in Delta County by mid 2013.

The project has received the enthusiastic support of the national VoA board, and local organizations have been "incredible" in their support of the idea, too, said Deana Sheriff, program director for the VoA Senior CommUnity Meals program locally.

d10 bp2The VoA’s Harvest Plan would be an additional support for local ag producers, helping to sustain jobs in the agriculture sector.Sheriff is quick to point out that the Harvest Plan concept has been a collaborative project from the beginning and that no one person or group is responsible for its development to date. It has been an effort with shared vision of new and innovative ways to meet a local need with local resources.

The centralized food facility will enable VoA to locally source its produce needs to serve congregate meal sites and Meals on Wheels programs in Delta, Montrose, and San Miguel counties. With its commercial processing facility in operation, VoA will also be able to store local produce for processing and preservation by canning or flash freezing.

The preserved goods will supply the VoA's needs year-round, and may also produce a surplus of canned and frozen foods that can be sold to other institutions in d10 bp3Delta County and the Uncompahgre Valley grow premium, retail-grade produce. Much of what is not retail grade, but which is still perfectly good, could find a local market and use under the VoA’s Harvest Plan.the region including nursing homes, hospitals, and schools. That would offset the cost of the senior congregate meal programs and provide a source of additional revenue to support the meals program.

The Delta County agricultural harvest usually produces an excess far beyond the needs of retail markets.

Some of this "commercial grade" bounty is bought by food processors, transported to distant processing plants, and then re-transported and re-sold here in the area where it was grown and harvested. The VoA's Harvest Plan will give local growers the option of marketing their non-retail production directly to the VoA program for processing and distribution locally. There d10 bp4The noon meal site at Hotchkiss is one of several operated by the Volunteers of America in Delta, Montrose, and San Miguel counties.would be no middle men and no expensive transportation costs out of area and then back again, Sheriff explained.

The system will save costs, increase efficiency, and provide a new source of income to both the VoA's local meals programs and to local ag producers. The program may even benefit from receiving excess production donated by producers, Sheriff explained.

The advantages and benefits of the VoA's Harvest Plan are so obvious and common sense that someone might ask why no one has thought of it before now.

In fact, it was the salt content of a can of tomatoes that became the spark of inspiration for developing the Harvest Plan concept, Sheriff explained. The local meals program found itself stymied by a nutritional regulation governing the amount of salt allowed in canned tomatoes served at local sites. But the program found it difficult or impossible to buy commercially available canned tomatoes that met the guidelines. Thus, the Harvest Plan concept was born.

"We will be able to process our own, locally grown tomatoes and other foods that have the low salt content required by the regulations and by the people we serve," Sheriff explained.

The Harvest Plan's advantages include the following ones:
• It will enable VoA to centralize its meals preparation, cutting both waste and cost.

•VoA will consolidate its six meal site kitchens into one facility. Sheriff says that will enable current staff to extend their hours into full-time jobs, and an estimated ten to 20 new local jobs will be created.

d10 bp5The VoA’s Harvest Plan would establish a commercial kitchen facility with raw food storage and processing capacity for canning and flash freezing. The facility would provide full-time employment to current VoA staff plus additional jobs, the organization says.• It will allow VoA to preserve by freezing or canning the local harvest abundance for use at local meal sites throughout the year, and the produce will be taken fresh from local fields.

• It will end the expensive, energy-wasting cycle of transporting local produce to the Front Range for processing, and the equally wasteful purchase and re-transport back to the West Slope for use.

• It will support local agriculture.

• It will provide the VoA senior meals program "a sustainable food source for the people we serve," Sheriff said.

In addition to those benefits, the Harvest Plan program is one that VoA, as a national organization, knows has worked in other areas of the country, and that accounts for some of the enthusiastic support the national VoA board has given the idea here, Sheriff said.

The Harvest Plan concept is innovative and forward looking, and that will help make it attractive to foundation funds for startup capital and sustaining funding. Sheriff said that a federal agency is committed to support for startup financing of some kind.

Finally, the Harvest Plan will give the VoA's Comm-Unity meals program freedom and flexibility to plan and create meals tailored to the needs of local seniors and that are within nutritional requirements.

"And, our seniors will have an additional reason for feeling good about the local foods they are enjoying every day," Sheriff added.

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Racing for the checkered flag

d10 bp1Photos submitted Standing on her family’s race track and posing with her Tag kart, Mianna Wick of Delta holds her trophy for winning the S5 Junior Stock Moto division of the 2012 Rocky Mountain ProKart Challenge go-kart race in September. Wick recently returned from the SKUSA SuperNationals XVI, at Las Vegas. Wick is among a handful of serious female kart drivers in the state working to break into the high-speed sport of professional racing.At first glance, Mianna Wick seems like an ordinary 16-year-old girl. Her favorite subject (she has always been home-schooled) is algebra.

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The spirit of the Old West

d10 bp1Photos submitted A costume contest is held at the annual Gathering of the Gun Fighters in Yuma, Arizona. Cap’n Billy (aka Richard Brubaker) attended the event last year.Richard and Terri Brubaker have been learning a lot about western history while portraying a variety of characters based on historical events.

"During shows," Richard said, "we like to portray, as close as we can, what happened at an actual event during the 1870s or 1880s.

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A marathon clean-up

d10 bp1Four local New Yorkers registered for the marathon, Jenny and the son of the owner whose apartment was cleaned up have a quick snack before running back to the ferry.Jenny (Marshall) Dziura, the daughter of Chris and Susie Marshall of Delta, flew into New York to run in the New York City marathon Nov. 4, but wound up with a far more rewarding experience helping victims of Hurricane Sandy.

Dziura is executive director of the Chris Klug Foundation (chrisklugfoundation.org), a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting life-saving organ and tissue donation and improving the lives of those touched by donation.

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‘I thank the Lord for my eyes’

c10 bp1Photos by Annette Brand

Fred Honchell was painting away in Ridgway last Thursday on “Open Seating,” depicting this old car which he found at God’s Rods, a garage owned by a mechanic friend and his wife.When Fred Honchell of Delta left the U.S. Air Force in 1970, he went to work for Lockheed Aircraft Company in Marietta, Ga. Lockheed sent him to Edwards Air Force Base in the Mohave Desert where he worked on the C5A flight testing program.

"I was out in the desert by myself with spare time on my hands," Honchell said.

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Preserving a community landmark

d08 bp1Photo by Pat Sunderland

The Hotchkiss Homestead is still the seat of the Hotchkiss family cattle ranch and is occupied by the founder’s great-grandson Dick and his wife Janice.The community has rallied around an effort to restore the Hotchkiss Barn, a landmark in the community that is named for Enos T. Hotchkiss. Hotchkiss built the structure in 1886.

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