Garden Club Pontoon Tour held June 19 

Larry Davis, Phyllis Davis, Maggie Gross and Sandy Hackerson

A total of 17 pontoons were used with three leaving every 15 minutes from the Boulder Beach docks.

By Shane Goodman

The Panora Garden Club held a fundraiser on the evening of June 19 that offered pontoon tours of Lake Panorama. Five time slots were available between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. to more than 180 participants. The tour lasted about two hours with each pontoon captain making one trip around the lake. The possibility of rain was a concern, but the weather was beautiful, the water was calm, and the sunset was gorgeous.

Participants were asked to make a $30 donation to participate in the tour. Besides the two-hour cruise on Lake Panorama, they also received a charcuterie cup, prepared by Jill Christensen of Hamlin, and bottled water, provided by Sunset Realty.

A member of the Panora Garden Club was on board each pontoon to answer questions and point out highlights. Signs along the tour route marked the gardens and landscaping of 20 garden club members. Maps showing Lake Panorama’s cove names and garden club member homes were distributed to each guest.

Members of the club donated four gift baskets for a raffle. Names were drawn while the pontoon tours were underway, so winners could pick up their baskets when they returned. 

This was the third year for the pontoon tour, and several people on this year’s tour now have attended all three years.

Organizers don’t yet have a final tally of how much money was raised, but they say the event was successful. They received positive feedback about having this year’s tour in the evening. Several people commented this was the first time they had been able to participate because they work during the day.

Funds from the tour will be used to support existing projects, and also help with new projects in the future. Because of the success of this year’s event, and many positive comments, organizers say they will likely host another evening tour of Lake Panorama in 2025. 

The Panora Garden Club is a 501(c)3 nonprofit charity, so donations are tax deductible. Funds raised are used to continue the projects club members conduct to beautify the community such as the summer petunia trees near the gazebo, 28 street pots scattered throughout Panora with both summer and winter displays, and last winter’s giant gnomes installed for the Christmas season.

Bette Donahey and Maureen Lubeck

Margee Shaffer and Linda Wendl

Lyle Hansen and Paula Hansen

Cribbage results from June 19

Special to the Times Vedette

On June 19, a total of 13 players participated. Dan Webb racked in a 17 and a 21 while Richard Ellis got a 16 and 17. Dave Kading produced a 20 and a 16. Jane Buckus, Rhonda Titus and Robert Klever each got a 16.

The Guthrie Center cribbage players generally meet at Guthrie Center Library on Mondays at 8 a.m., at the assisted living rec room at 8 a.m. on Wednesdays, and at the Guthrie Center Activity Center at 1 p.m. on Fridays. Organizers say there is always room for more, and they will be glad to teach you how to play. They play for quarters on Wednesday and Friday. For more information, email 58chevy@netins.net.

All-School Reunion July 5-7

Reunion coordinators Diane Maness and Alicia Ciesielski show the raffle quilts.

 

Come back home and share fellowship with classmates and others.

By Rich Wicks | Guthrie Center Times

A famous line from the 1985 movie “The Breakfast Club” refers to five high school students as a brain, an athlete, a basket case, a princess and a criminal. These and other stereotypes have flourished in high schools for decades, but, as with all stereotypes, they fail to truly describe any one individual. People are far more complex than a simple label. 

Another universal truth about high school is that people are still evolving during those turbulent high school years, and the post-high school years often reveal skills and interests that were unknown before graduation.

The ACGC All-School Reunion provides a chance for former students to come back and share fellowship with classmates and others. With a wide variety of events scheduled, there’s sure to be something to appeal to everyone.

Diane (Van Cleave) Maness and Alicia (Nickel) Ciesielski are heading up the efforts to make the 2024 version of the All-School Reunion a success. They shared information on the origin and history of the event, as well as this year’s plans.

“It started back in 1986,” Maness said. “Gif Covault was one that helped get it going, and, back in 2000, he was the Grand Marshal in the parade.”

Covault not only was instrumental in starting the all-school reunions, but he also began the tradition of giving money to each graduating senior student on senior awards night.

“For some of the graduates, it’s the only time their name is called that evening and the only scholarship they may get,” Ciesielski said.

The All-School Reunion traditionally gives at least $50 to each graduate. To further this cause, the reunion is selling T-shirts, can koozies and raffle tickets to help cover the cost of the reunion and to replenish the scholarship funds.

The raffle tickets are $5 each and offer a chance to win a unique Iowa State or University of Iowa lap quilt. GCHS graduates Laura Sheeder and Cindy Steensen each created one of the quilts. The winners will be drawn at dinner on Saturday night.

The past several all-school reunions have occurred each sixth year, which may seem arbitrary, but Ciesielski explained a logical reason for that. It related to the common timing of individual graduating classes holding a reunion every five years.

“So, if we do our all-school reunion every five, you’d get the same two graduating classes to have their big shindig,” Ciesielski said.

Maness and Ciesielski showed records and clippings from previous all-school reunions. The records from the 1996 event showed that, at the time, there had been roughly 3,700 graduates from the schools/communities that are now part of the ACGC district. That number has obviously grown in the nearly 30 years since the tabulation. Those graduates are now scattered across all 50 states and many foreign countries, so the event planners strive to make the reunion attractive enough to bring former students back hundreds, or even thousands, of miles. As such, this year’s event includes an impressive array of options for socializing, dining and reliving the good old days.

 

The schedule

Registration for the reunion is available on both days (Friday, 8:30 a.m. to noon and 3:30-7 p.m.; Saturday, 7-9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.) at the fairgrounds event center.

 

Friday events:

The golf tournament tees off at 9 a.m. at Guthrie Center Golf Course

Class pictures and displays are viewable at Mary J Barnett Library 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Al Bell presentation at Mary J Barnett Library 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Business tours 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in downtown Guthrie Center.

Cribbage tournament 9:30 a.m. at event center

Bingo 4 p.m. at event center

Fire Department dinner 5-7 p.m. at event center

Band 8-11 p.m. at the fairgrounds little amphitheater

Beer tent at fairgrounds event center 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.

 

Saturday events:

Dad’s Belgian Waffle breakfast, 7-9:30 a.m. at fairgrounds event center

Fun Run, 8 a.m. at fairgrounds event center

Class pictures and displays are viewable at Mary J Barnett Library, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Al Bell presentation at Mary J Barnett Library, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Parade, 10 a.m. Vintage, classic and not-so-classic vehicles welcomed. No charge.

Artist Spotlight, 11 a.m. at Art on State (320 State St.)

Don Todd presentation, 11 a.m. at MJB Library

Petting Zoo, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at fairgrounds

Bags Tournament, noon at fairgrounds

Artist Spotlight, 1 p.m. at Art on State (320 State St.)

Alumni swim meet, 2:30 p.m. at swimming pool

2001 graduate Wyatt Sheeder Jiminez concert, 2 p.m. at Methodist Church

Dinner, 5-7 p.m. at fairgrounds event center. Catered by Cabbage Rose.

Dale Menning & Stardusters, 7-9 p.m. at fairgrounds event center

DJ, 9-11:30 p.m. at fairgrounds little amphitheater

Beer tent at fairgrounds event center, 11 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.

 

Sunday events:

Methodist Church 10-10:30 a.m. coffee and rolls (church service at 10:45 a.m.)

Other local church services

 

Additional information about scheduled events 

The golf tournament will be a two-person scramble format with a maximum of 18 teams. Fee is $50 per person, which includes a cart.

Class displays at the public library can be set up at specific times July 1-5. Contact the library for details.

As part of the business tours, each applicable business owner will provide some history of the building, with pictures as available.

The Fire Department dinner will be a BBQ dinner of hamburgers, hot dogs, chips, cookie and a drink. This event will help raise funds to support the fire department. 

Friday’s band will be Richard Arndt and the Brew, playing a range of rock and roll to blues.

Saturday’s parade will begin at the courthouse, traveling down State Street and ending at the fire station. All classes, groups, teams and anyone with a classic car or truck are welcome. Former band members are invited to bring their instrument and join a band float playing the school song in the parade. 

Regarding the beer tent, Maness offered a piece of advice.

“If you’re coming to the beer tent, make sure you bring your driver’s license because you will be ID’d,” she said.

Many of the events at this year’s reunion are similar to those in previous years, but there’s one notable exception. 

“The only thing that’s different is the golf tournament,” Ciesielski said. “We’d like to have at least one member on each team to be a graduate because there is a maximum number that can play, so we aren’t inviting the public to play unless it’s with an alumnus. Everything else is fine for anybody and everybody.”

So, whether you were the princess, the brain, or the basket case, the ACGC All-School Reunion invites you to come show your true colors. And if you’re not a former student of these schools, you’re invited to be part of the fun anyway. One main theme that Ciesielski and Maness repeated was that the all-school reunion welcomes everyone.

“We’re just trying to get everybody,” Maness said. “It doesn’t matter if you graduated out of Guthrie. It doesn’t matter if you graduated at Adair-Casey. It’s wide open for everyone.”

Yester Years

10 years ago

From the archives of The Guthrie County Vedette, June 19, 2014

CANOE TRIP. J.R. Wasson and his 16-year-old daughter Katie took a five-day canoe trip down the Des Moines River from Red Oak Dam near Pella to the Mississippi River at Keokuk. The Panora pair paddled 135 miles.

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20 years ago

From the archives of The Guthrie Center Times, June 16, 2004

HERE IT COMES. Tiger junior Matt Pearey delivers a pitch against West Central Valley at the Guthrie Center diamond last week.

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30 years ago

From the archives of The Guthrie Center Times, June 15, 1994

CITIZEN OF THE YEAR. Mayor Forrest Schnobrich was named Casey’s Citizen of the Year prior to the parade Saturday morning. Schnobrich, who was elected mayor in last November’s election, is presented the award by Max Whetstone.

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40 years ago

From the archives of The Guthrie County Vedette, June 14, 1984

NEW COLOR TV. Members of the Craft Care Center Auxiliary recently presented a new color television for use in the north wing lobby. Pictured with the new set are auxiliary members Pat Trent, left, and Patsy Laidley.

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50 years ago

From the archives of The Guthrian, June 17, 1974

THE HOME OF CORN-N-CLOVER. The old Farmers Co-op Creamery, which has manufactured butter at this location since 1917, will close its doors Saturday, June 29. Once one of the largest butter makers in the United States, the creamery, owned by Seymour Foods, is closing because its profits have been stripped away.

Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee 

A 22-year-old Cassius Clay (soon to change his name to Muhammad Ali) made the above words famous when he told boxing fans what his ring style would be like when competing against heavyweight champ Sonny Liston.

That was 1964, and most everyone at the time had seen butterflies float and had been stung by a bee. Sixty years later, where did all the butterflies go? The monarch population has seen a massive decline. Since the mid-1990s, the decline in its population has been most dramatic, with estimates projecting that the population is only 20% of what it was just a few decades ago.

Then something unexplainable happened. Roosting monarchs saw a 100-fold increase in the 2021-2022 winter. According to experts, a mere 2,000 surviving migrating monarchs with only a percentage of which could have been female apparently managed to breed the population up to 250,000 in a single season.

Now, monarch butterflies are dangerously close to extinction again. An annual survey led by the World Wildlife Fund of monarchs wintering in central Mexico found the second-lowest number on record. The findings are troubling to ecologists who are intent on preserving the dwindling species.

Some say all this change is because of crops with chemicals that decimate milkweed plants, which are the host and food source for monarch caterpillars. Other theories have emerged that include global warming factors, but researchers are divided on what has been affecting the monarch population.

If you were like me as a kid, you found those caterpillars, put them in Mason jars with holes poked in the lids, filled the jars with branches and leaves, and anxiously watched the transformations into butterflies.

When the Goodman daughters were young, these caterpillars and butterflies were not as noticeable. I wondered why but never gave much thought to it. Hopefully, kids and adults will notice a resurgence of monarchs this summer. In hopeful preparation, you may want to dig out the Mason jars. 

Now, about those bees…

Have a fantastic Friday, and thanks for reading.

Shane Goodman
Editor and Publisher
Times Vedette digital editions
shane@dmcityview.com
641-755-2115