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‘Better road, cleaner streams and less cost’

Instructors share techniques to reduce erosion, lessen sediment

Michael A. Sawyers Cumberland Times-News

FROSTBURG — Dirt and gravel roads throughout the region can expect to get some environmentally sensitive maintenance from those who attended a recent training session on the campus of Frostburg State University.

And, the techniques taught by instructors from the Center for Dirt & Gravel Road Studies at Penn State are also less expensive than traditional ones. The idea behind the training is to keep sediment from running into streams and rivers.

“Who could be against that? Better road, cleaner streams and less cost,” said Donnelle Keech of The Nature Conservancy. That organization, paired with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources sponsored the training.

Sixty-five attended the two-day training, some representing distant agencies such as the Anne Arundel Soil Conservation District.

“We can help with some funding to get people started using these techniques,” said instructor David M. Creamer. “When we know we have had an impact is when they start to use those same techniques with their own dollars.”

Traditionally, erosion on roads was corrected by digging up the entire roadbed and placing a 100-foot pipe beneath it, according to Creamer. The center teaches an approach whereby a 20-foot pipe is inserted through a bank on one side of the road, providing equal or superior erosion control.

Creamer tells students not to use more equipment than necessary because it would be “like picking your nose with your elbow.”

Bo Sliger is the maintenance chief for the Potomac-Garrett State Forest where he and his crew of three have 25 miles of dirt and gravel roads in Garrett County.

“Our road work is pretty much dependent on getting grants,” Sliger said. “We have gotten a number of them, mostly for $30,000. Our forest roads get used not just by motor vehicles but by ATVs, hikers and others.”

This week, the forest crew will be maintaining Piney Mountain Road near Cranesville. Snaggy Mountain Road is another that requires regular attention, Sliger said.

As the manager of the Allegany County Soil Conservation District, Craig Hartsock works with private landowners to help them maintain roads.

“Every farm has a farm lane or a woods road with bridges or stream crossings,” Hartsock said. “We have cost-sharing programs to help them improve roads and reduce erosion.” These projects are contracted, he said. “We have up to 200 of those projects a year.

“We also approve all forest harvest roads for loggers,” Hartsock said. “There are 40 or 50 of those every year.”

One inch of rain that falls in an hour can cause 13 to 54 tons of sediment to be discharged into streams, according to the maintenance specialists. The techniques taught by the center are meant to reduce that discharge. In the case of the Potomac River drainage, that would mean less sediment flowing to the Chesapeake Bay.

Contact Michael A. Sawyers at msawyers@times-news.com

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Opportunities for local artists

6:01 p.m. EDT, June 3, 2012
GRANTSVILLE, Md. -—

Spruce Forest Artisan Village at Penn Alps in Grantsville, Md., provides studio space for three guest artists in traditional or contemporary art or craft media each month during the summer and fall season.

Guest artists are part of a larger educational program in which working artists open their studios to Artisan Village visitors. Guest artists pay a small fee that covers utilities, but then have access to the studio seven days a week for the month. Resident and guest artist studios must be open and artists working on their craft five days a week, during which time artists may sell their wares.

“Being a guest artist is a great opportunity because I am able to expand my audience,” said Lenore Lancaster, an award-winning artist who has shared her colored pencil drawings with visitors to Spruce Forest for five years. “Working in my own studio or even doing weekend craft shows doesn’t allow me to really talk to and get to know the customers. The setting here is really intimate and because of that sales are good.”

Spruce Forest Artisan Village is home to a number of historic house museums, art studios, galleries, an 1800s grist mill and is adjacent to the Historic Casselman Bridge which will celebrate its 200th birthday next year. The three studios available to artists are housed in historic buildings.

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Eight fire companies founded association

From Staff Reports Cumberland Times-News

WESTERNPORT — Organized on Sept. 15, 1912, by eight companies, Frostburg, Mount Savage, Chapel Hill, Cumberland Hose, GoodWill-Lonaconing, Midland, Tri Towns and Potomac No. 2, the local fire and rescue association was originally known as the Allegany County Association.

Peter McFarland, GoodWill-Lonaconing, served as the first president, and to date, 86 men and women representing 28 departments in the two-county area have followed in his footsteps.

In order to strengthen and unify the voice of the firefighters of Allegany and Garrett County, the Allegany County Association and the Garrett County Association joined together to form the Allegany-Garrett Counties Volunteer Firemen’s Association on Aug. 14, 1930.

As a result of the growth of the association over the years, the organization formally changed its name to the Allegany-Garrett Counties Volunteer Fire & Rescue Association on June 2, 1990.

Today, the association represents 36 companies, 24 from Allegany County and 12 from Garrett County.

Over the years, this association has hosted the Maryland State Firemen’s Association twice, 1951 and again in 1955.

Eight members of the Allegany-Garrett Counties Volunteer Fire & Rescue Association have led the MSFA, including John Stump, Cumberland, 1898; Peter McFarland, GoodWill-Lonaconing, 1908; Conrad Herpick, Cumberland, 1919; James McAlpine, GoodWill-Lonaconing, 1922; Cromwell Zembower, LaVale, 1951; David E. Kirk, Bowling Green, 1953; Robert Shimer, Potomac No. 2, 1988; and Robert E. Knippenburg, Midland, 1998.

The local association provided the MSFA with eight treasurers that covered a span of almost 100 years, from 1908-2003. William Wilson, Midland, served a tenure of 30 years from 1945-1975, followed by David E. Kirk, 1975-1990; Bob Saville, Bowling Green, 1990-2001; and John Shuhart, Barton, 2001-2003.

J. Francis Fatkin served a 26-year tenure on the MSFA Board of Trustees. Robert H. Shimer, Potomac No. 2, served eight, including two as chairman of the trustees, and Robert E. Knippenburg was appointed to Board of Trustees upon the death of Shimer in 2003, for the remainder of his unexpired term.


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Md. ski resort owner talks with prospective buyers

By AP | May 31, 2012

HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) — The owners of Wisp, Maryland’s only ski resort, have met with a number of potential buyers in their efforts to stave off financial failure, one of the partners said Thursday.

But selling the western Maryland resort is not inevitable, as one of the group’s major creditors claimed in a U.S. Bankruptcy Court filing this week, said co-owner Karen Myers….

…Myers said Thursday that Wisp ended the winter in better shape than many other ski resorts by trimming expenses.

“We are, and will continue to do, business as usual,” she said.

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ARC fronts grant for 10-mile trail project in Garrett County

From Staff Reports Cumberland Times-News

— GRANTSVILLE — A new trail outside of Grantsville will become a reality using a $250,000 Appalachian Regional Commission grant, according to U.S. Sens. Ben Cardin and Barbara Mikulski.

The 10-mile Meadow Mountain Trail will build on Garrett County’s efforts to expand its outdoor recreation industry, and is projected to have an economic impact of more than $3 million, the senators said.

ARC funds will be used to complete the trail design, construct the trail and improve two trailhead parking areas. The MMT is a key segment of the larger Eastern Continental Divide Loop Trail, which will be a 150-mile recreational trail winding through the heart of Garrett County.

The MMT segment will begin near Grantsville and the Casselman River Bridge and end near state Route 495 at the University of Maryland’s 4-H Center.

The trail will traverse through public lands and will be accessible to outdoor enthusiasts for hiking, biking, backpacking, trail running, cross country skiing, snowshoeing and educational study.

Job creation and financial impact stems from hikers and bikers stopping for meals and purchasing gear at the many small businesses located near the trail, and staying the night in a nearby trail town.

“Garrett County’s scenic treasures are also economic treasures, drawing thousands of tourists to Maryland each year to enjoy our state’s natural beauty,” said Cardin, a member of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. “The Meadow Mountain Trail will further tourism and small business growth in Garrett County, creating new jobs and new economic opportunities for Western Maryland.”

“This grant is about supporting jobs in Western Maryland,” Mikulski said. “It is a smart investment that will help grow Garrett County’s economy, making an investment that will draw in new visitors, jobs and economic development to the region.”

State sources will provide $316,000, and local sources will provide $48,550, bringing the total project funding to $614,550, the announcement said.

The ARC is a federal-state partnership that works with the people of the Appalachian region to create opportunities for self-sustaining economic development and improved quality of life.

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Md. Mortgage Program Unveils Special Home Buying Incentives For Garrett Co.

May. 31, 2012

Maryland Mortgage Program officials announced this morning that they are offering a reduced interest rate of 2.875% (APR 3.675%) in a few “targeted” areas around the state, including all of Garrett and Allegany counties.

The promotion, which commemorates June’s National Homeownership Month, was announced by Maryland Housing Secretary Raymond A. Skinner at a home for sale in the Barclay-Old Goucher community of Baltimore City, which is also considered a targeted area.

Other eligible areas include Dorchester, Kent, and Somerset counties.

“Homeownership is an important goal for many families and young professionals and we want to help them achieve this dream,” said Skinner. “We recognize that Maryland has a top notch workforce and we are offering this attractive low interest rate as a strong incentive to these talented individuals and families to buy homes and invest within Baltimore City and other targeted areas around the state.”


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The reduced rate will be offered to all qualified buyers in the target areas for approximately three months, or until the entire $30 million earmarked for this incentive is committed.

In addition to this reduced rate, buyers may qualify for other Maryland Mortgage Program benefits, including help with down payments and closing costs.

Program officials stressed that Garrett County residents do not have to be first-time homebuyers in order to take advantage of the low rate, as purchasers in targeted areas are eligible for a one-time exemption to the program’s first-time homebuyer requirement.

This special promotion also includes incentives for eligible buyers of any foreclosed or short sale property (collectively referred to as the Save-a-Home Loan Progam) in a non-targeted area. The interest rate for this program will be ¾% below the regular Maryland Mortgage Program, with a floor of 3.25% (APR 4.082%) and will only be available for the month of June.

For more information about the Maryland Mortgage Program – especially details on income eligibility, purchase price limits, and the low rate – persons may call the DHCD hot line at 800-638-7781 or visit mmprogram.org, which lists private lending institutions and financial counseling agencies in their areas that can help them become homebuyers.

For a map and more information on targeted areas, one may visit www.mmprogram.org/TargetedAreas.aspx.

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Deep Creek's Got Talent! Fundraiser Set For June 16

May. 31, 2012

The Honi Honi Bar will present the fifth annual Deep Creek’s Got Talent! fundraiser, which will be held on Saturday, June 16, from 6 to 9 p.m.

Over the last four years, according to a spokesperson, the event has raised more than $55,000 for local charities and organizations. The talent show organizers, who have described the show as “a cross between ‘American Idol’ and ‘America’s Got Talent,'” are looking for singers, musicians, dancers, jugglers, and actors to perform in the show.

Registration is available on a first-come, first-served basis. There are 15 available spots. To participate, performers must collect a minimum of $50 in donations to be turned in the night of the event.


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“Because this event is a fundraiser,” said a spokesperson, “more judging points will be awarded to those who collect the most money before and during the competition.”

The event’s opening round, which is an elimination round, will begin at 6 p.m. Participants will then be judged on: donations collected prior to registration at the event, which will count for 50 percent of their score; the judges’ feedback and comments, which will be worth 30 percent of an overall score; and audience votes (as donations) collected at the event, which will make up the final 20 percent of a participant’s score.

The top five performers will then be asked to perform a second routine immediately after opening round judging is completed. Following those performances a winner will be crowned. Prizes will be awarded to the top three performers, the top fundraiser, and the “most talented” contestant.

The “most talented” contestant will receive the Judges’ Choice Award. This year’s judges will be Rob Michael, Pam Trickett, and Jana Brown.

“The event will be great fun for audience members as well,” stated a spokesperson.

“Besides showcasing outstanding area talent, the evening will feature great prizes and giveaways donated by area businesses, as well as a live auction for donated items. To help commemorate our fifth year in helping charities in Garrett County, special programming and entertainment, along with prizes, will be included in this year’s event.

“For an entertaining evening benefiting a great cause in the community, make sure you attend Deep Creek’s Got Talent! on Saturday, June 16, at the Honi Honi Bar.”

All contestants must pre-register to be eligible to compete. Registration forms and additional information are available online at http://www.deepcreektalent.com. Those interested in more information may contact Stacy Holler at 301-387-4020.

The Honi Honi is presenting this event in conjunction with the following 2012 sponsors: Sticks and Stones Landscape Construction, Rob W. Michael, Allegany Hearing and Balance Center, Judy and Jan Finkel, BJ’s Custom Creations, Bill’s Marine Service, Karaoke Services by Jimmy B, WKHJ 104.5 and 92.3 The Train, High Mountain Sports, First United Bank and Trust, Rush Services, Lohr Distributors, and Railey Realty.

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Three River Reservoir Releases Set

May. 31, 2012

Taming the Savage (river, not beast) is a challenge that has been enjoyed by whitewater paddlers of all levels and from all over the world, and three opportunities to take that challenge will be available this summer and fall, with Savage River reservoir releases scheduled for June 3, July 1, and Sept. 29.


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The releases are once again being coordinated by the Adventure Sports Center International (ASCI). Above, professional whitewater outfitter Precision Rafting of Friendsville rewards guests with a rare rafting trip on the Savage during one of last year’s scheduled recreational releases.

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Celtic Concert To Kick Off Highland Fest

The 25th annual McHenry Highland Festival will get under way tomorrow, June 1, with a cabaret-style Celtic concert at the Wisp Resort. The Celtic rock duo Prydein will be featured in the event, having performed in 2011 to rave reviews, a spokesperson said. The players, who are from northern Vermont, mix traditional Celtic repertoire with a rock-music sensibility, performing on Highland bagpipes, guitar, drums, flutes, tin whistles, bouzouki, and mandolin, along with vocals. The concert will also include a special guest appearance by Scottish fiddler Bonnie Rideout, plus a performance by two of the premier dancers of Duffy’s School of Irish Dance.


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The festival will continue on Saturday, June 2, at the Garrett County Fairgrounds in McHenry, with the doors opening at 10 a.m. The daylong celebration will include Scottish and Irish dance, massed marching bagpipe bands, Highland athletic competitions, a Celtic dog “pat and chat,” clan tents and historical re-enactors, Highland cattle, border collies herding sheep and geese, and Celtic vendors. There will also be a climbing wall, horse-drawn cart rides, face painting, and more activities all day. The featured music groups this year are festival newcomer Clandestine, offering a “hard-driving, toe-tapping, Texas Celtic” sound; Cumberland’s Shanty Irish band; and again Scottish fiddler Rideout. For a complete schedule of events, including Sunday’s Kirkin’ o’ the Tartans, persons may go to www.highlandfest.info. Tickets to the concert on Friday are $40 per person, which includes a light buffet, a raffle ticket, and whiskey tasting. Tickets should be purchased in advance online at the site noted above, at the Garrett County Visitors Center in McHenry, or Gregg’s Pharmacy in Oakland.

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Garrett Trails To Offer A "Taste Of Garrett County"

May. 31, 2012

Garrett Trails has planned to host its 10th annual Taste of Garrett County fundraiser on Monday, June 18. The event will run from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Wisp Resort.

“Join us for the best Taste of Garrett ever,” stated Theresa Mac-
Lennan, executive director of Garrett Trails. “Come support trails in Garrett County and have a great time doing it.”

The fundraiser’s 20 participating restaurants plan to provide samples of their new dishes and classic favorites which are prepared, produced, and served locally.


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The year’s event will feature a “Fender Blender” competition and food prep demonstrations, including a cake decorating and a pineapple cheese ball carving lesson.

There will also be number of items auctioned, including a Kindle Fire. Entertainment will be provided by Jonny Rock.

“There is no easier way to support local business, as well as the construction and maintenance of the outstanding network of quality hiking and biking trails in Garrett County,” a Garrett Trails press release stated.

“If nothing else, come support and cheer your friends on the Fender Blender team. The red and blue teams are squaring off against each other to see which can pedal the fastest, blend the most fruit smoothies to sell, and collect the most cash.”

The red team will consist of Titus Beitzel, Bob Gatto, Mike Getty, Peggy Jamison, Judi Prather, and Dorothy Andreas Tuel. Blue team members will be David Cotton, Tom Johnson, Rick MacLennan, Rob Michael, Andie Meyers, and Laura Stamm.

Starting at 5 p.m., entry wristbands will be sold at the door. Entry for adults will be $30 each, while the price for children (12 and under) is set at $15 each.

In addition to the Taste of Garrett County, Garrett Trails is also organizing the third annual Race Up the Face. This competition pits its contestants in a foot race up the black diamond ski trail at the Wisp Resort. In its press release, Garrett Trails dubbed the race “the world’s hardest 400 meter run” and states that “participants may also walk the distance.”

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Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

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