The Rotary Club of Jasper Breaks Ground on New Rotary Youth Park

Saturday, December 31st, 2011

Rotary Youth Park

Rotary Club of Jasper Breaks Ground on a new Rotary Youth Park


The Rotary Club of Jasper has launched a project to bring a new youth park to Pickens County. The new Rotary Youth Park is located across from the Pickens County Middle School in the Roper Park complex. With all the competitive playing fields, the new County Recreation Center and future Boys & Girls Club facility, the location will be a perfect spot for parents and children of all ages to take a break from all the more structured activities. The plans for the park are complete and there are lots of opportunities for individuals or organization to add Legacy features to the park as it matures and grows.

If you are interested in joining a great local organization with international reach come visit the Rotary Club of Jasper. We meet every Wednesday at Noon on the Appalachian Campus of Chattahoochee Technical College. Just tell them you are Don’s Guest.

The link below has a great story, photos and videos provided by Know Pickens.com.

Rotary Club of Jasper Youth Park

What a great little corner of God’s earth we have to live in!

See you ’round the mountains,
Don

Robert Henry Trio a Rousing Success

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011
Casual Classics Concert Near Bent Tree

Robert Henry Trio in Concert in Jasper on November 7, 2011. Photo Courtesy Sara Baurmann

If you were one of the record crowd at the Casual Classics Concert last Monday Night in Jasper then this is old news; if you were not, then you missed a great evening. After the audience of around 200 settled in to their seats at the New Lebanon Presbyterian Church, (on Bent Tree Drive just outside Jasper) the Concert Master and President of Jasper Muse, Inc., Suzanne Shull, welcomed everyone and set the stage. The first selection was Beethoven’s 12 Variations on a Theme by Handel and as an introduction, Charae Kreuger, Cello, asked the very pertinent question: “What does a genius do for fun?” The answer, obviously, is that he writes 12 delicious variations on a single theme. The music was enchanting and the performance pristine.

For the second selection Fia Durrett joined the group and Dr. Henry introduced Mendelssohn’s Trio No 1 in D Minor, Opus 49. The piece is delectably challenging and the Trio was up to the challenge. Every heart pounding climax brought the audience to the edge of their seats and every quiet nuance was lovingly presented. The audience was enraptured, not a stir or cough was heard until the final note and the audience erupted into applause that continued after the Trio left the stage, walked out through the hall and was well on their way to the dressing room.

After a brief intermission, Fia Durrett, Violin, introduced the evening’s final selection Dvořák’s Piano Trio No 4 in E Minor (“Dumky”) The 6 sections are essentially short Slavic ballads (dumka) and each could stand alone; however they are musically intertwined and clearly of Slavic origin. Collectively they were like a melancholy litany handled lightly. Oh so Dvořák and oh so beautifully played by the trio.

It was an amazing concert – crisply and professionally delivered by the widely acclaimed artists and warmly received by its North Georgia audience. If you missed it, we’ll hope to see you at the next concert, which will be the Franklin Pond String Quartet along with a Guest Soloist presented on February 7, 2012. Go ahead and mark your calendar now!

See ya ’round the mountains,

Don

4th Annual Taste of Pickens a Huge Success

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Last Saturday hundreds of Pickens County residents and their friends from around North Georgia got a real treat as 4th the Annual Taste of Pickens was held on the Appalachian Campus of Chattahoochee Technical College in Jasper, GA.  The event is sponsored by CARES (Community Assistance Resources and Emergency Services) as a fund raiser for the local food pantry.    All the fantastic food was donated by local restaurants, caterers and grocery stores so all of the proceeds go to supporting the food bank and helping to feed those in our community in need of occasional support.  CARES is just one of the outstanding non-profit organizations that make Pickens County one of the most remarkable counties in the country.   My wife and I attended and had a great time, but I did not have the foresight to record the event for this column.  Fortunately, Beth Compton of Southern Home Inspections and JasperPickensCounty.com did take the time to write a nice article and post a video.  Beth offered to let me post it here, so here is the link to Beth’s story on  A Taste of Pickens.  See you there next year and until then we’ll…

See you ’round the Mountains.

Don

Pickens County “Thrives” Even in Hard Times

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Last week the Small Business Council that I chair for the Chamber of Commerce co-sponsored a very successful seminar here in Pickens Couny.  The following article is the one I submitted to the Pickens Progress for publication.

Chamber Seminar a Rousing Success

Over 80 local community and business leaders gathered at the Appalachian Campus of Chattahoochee Tech last Tuesday for a day long business seminar entitled Surviving and Thriving in Hard Times.   The attendees were treated to Key Note addresses by Dr. Roger Tutterow, Professor of Economics at Mercer University and Dr. Betty Siegel, President Emeritus of Kennesaw State University as well as 6 Breakout Sessions and a Business Expo with 12 local vendors.  The reviews from attendees identified the program as a rousing success and plans and discussions will begin immediately to determine the time line for a future seminar.

The Key Note speakers, Drs. Tutterow and Siegel, are both nationally known speakers and they brought both their thoughtful insights and personal knowledge of the area to bear in their presentations.  

Dr. Tutterow, whose undergraduate degree is from Berry College and MA and Ph.D in Economics are from Georgia State University, delivered a lively presentation peppered with statistics (and insights based on them) that narrowed the national economic news right down to very local impacts.   Dr. Tutterow’s analysis confirmed what many local businesses owners had believed to be true – during most of the recession Pickens County and Jasper have fared better than the state and national level in measurable areas such as sales tax revenues, home sales and home values.  This trend was evident until just a few months ago when local activity suddenly caught up with those unfortunate state and national trends.  The good news is that the same factors that led to our lagging on the way down, may well lead to our leading on the way back up.  (In fact, Pickens County is now reporting that sales tax revenue has started back up and local Realtors® will confirm that since mid-August the volume of traffic, offers and closings has increased significantly.)  Dr.  Tutterow’s clear message to business owners – and we all heard it loud and clear – was that we appear to be at the inflexion point and any gain in market share right now will only be amplified as the market improves.

Dr. Siegel, currently the Distinguished Chair of the Siegel Institute for Leadership, Ethics and Character, provided a warm and thoughtful primer on the value of leadership in solving problems at all levels of our lives.  Dr. Siegel’s personable delivery style is so effective that one quickly forgets her national stature and settles in to listen to a personal mentor holding forth on some concepts that one intuitively knows are true and some that may not have been properly considered.   There are hundreds of definitions of leaders and leadership, but Dr. Siegel’s contention that “leaders enroll others in their mission,” rings true.  Dr. Siegel’s presentation was filled with personal stories and insights into living and leading that left no doubt why she remains in demand world-wide.  It was an educational blessing just to be in the same room with her for an hour.

The two keynote speakers were supported by a strong cast of subject matter experts delivering 6 breakout sessions during the course of the day.  Randy Reidrich from the UGA Small Business Development Center presented on Managing Change.  Dave Garner of ETC and Albert Grassia from Micah Apparel provided an introduction to Social Media.  Mike McCalip of Herdt Consulting talked about Applying Leadership to Your Business.  North Georgia Cellular’s Randy Maynard gave an overview of Using New Technology.  Kary Kilkerson, from host & co-sponsor Chattahoochee Technical College, served up a session on Providing Exceptional Customer Service while James Schuster from Visual Marketing Group, Inc. developed some Approaches to Fresh Marketing.

The seminar was organized by the Chamber’s Business Council and the county’s informal Leadership Council, headed by Ardis McCain and Larry Toney.  Denise Duncan, the Executive President of the Pickens County Chamber of Commerce was the glue that held process together and provided the leadership to bring off such a successful event in such challenging times.  The Chamber and Chattahoochee Tech were the primary sponsors and the Corporate Sponsor was “The Mountains of Big Canoe.”  Vendors participating in the Expo were:  Chattahoochee Tech, Community Bank of Pickens County, Crescent Bank, ETC Communications,  Julia Jorns, CPA, LLC, Micah Apparel, New Beginnings Therapeutic Services, North Georgia Cellular, Strategic Analytic Solutions, Torrey Mountain Properties, Inc., Unites Community Bank and the University of Georgia, Small Business Development Center.  Both breakfast and lunch were provided by Bojangles.

The sponsors and attendees agreed that the seminar was a valuable addition to the community business calendar.  Business Council Chair, Don Martin, indicated that “the only way to make a significant improvement would be to have 200-300 business leaders attend next year – we’ll just have to get right to work on that.”

Tater Patch Players Present “Booger Holler Opry”

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

Right off the top of my ever balding head, I’m thinking that title is not going to make it up there with “Gone With the Wind” or ” The Sun Also Rises,” never-the-less, you have to admit it is a unique moniker.  We first encountered Booger Holler in the Players first Dinner Theater production “The Last Laugh,”  as the place where Pickens Dickens was headed with his Mrs. Wright.  However,  that small town was reputed to be near the Tallahatchie Bridge, which puts it in one of at least 3 other possible mythical locations.   Continue reading »