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P-L class of 1966 gather for 59-year reunion

Special to the Times Vedette

Members of the Panora-Linden class of 1966 met Sunday, Aug. 3 at Crafty’s Coffee Shop in Panora for their reunion. Everyone enjoyed reminiscing with  lots of laughter, along with great food catered by Cafe on the Hill.  

Attending were, front row: Marie Jenkins Penington, Ronda Easley Hafner, Connie Reynolds Richey, Rexanna Marchant Ketelsen and Cindy Godwin Love. Back row: Nyal Hodges, Jim Vandevanter, Linda Lynam Jordan, Sharol Merical Williams and Ron Tryon.  

Messages were received from the following classmates who could not attend; Jim Peck, Lloyd Reese, Larry Anderson and Ron Long.

Deceased classmates are Jeanette Pote, Tom Berkley, Richard Mills, Bill Curry, Jack Stonehocker, Murray Williams, Alan Ketelsen, Dennis Bullard and Ron Van Pelt.

Panora councilmembers, city staff see progress on new apartments 

By Rich Wicks | Times Vedette

On Aug. 11, developer Tim Schutte showed Panora city staff the progress on the new apartments being built on the upstairs level at 113 E. Main St. in Panora. Once the work is completed, an open house event will be announced.

Flooring and cupboards have been installed.

Panora councilmembers and city staff tour the new apartments.

Tim Schutte shows the progress on the apartments being constructed at 113 E. Main St. in Panora.

Guthrie County Supervisors learn about health fairs at local schools

By Rich Wicks | Times Vedette

During the Aug. 12 meeting of the Guthrie County Board of Supervisors, Health Services Director Jotham Arber provided a departmental update. He shared information about health fairs to be held at local schools.

“We’ve got a health fair tomorrow (Aug. 13) in Stuart. We’ll be offering free physicals, free dental screenings, we’ll have free haircuts for kids, free backpacks with school supplies and hygiene supplies, some socks and other things. We’ll grill up some hot dogs, and there will be a resource table,” Arber said. “We’ll also do it Aug. 19 in Panora, and Aug. 20 in Guthrie Center, and then over at Audubon Aug. 21.”

County Engineer Josh Sebern offered a departmental report. He also told of continuing efforts to address washed-out areas of gravel roads in the county.

“Yes, we are aware the roads are washed. We are going to try to get around as quickly as possible,” Sebern said. “It’s State Fair week, so we have some staff that are out, but we’re working on it, in between rainstorms.”

Auditor Dani Fink also gave a departmental status report.

The supervisors meet regularly on Tuesdays at 9 a.m. The public is welcome to attend in person or via remote technology. To join remotely, call 323-792-6123, then use meeting code 547029216#.

One honey of a hobby

Craig Hinderaker checks the status of the hives.

 

Craig and Cathy Hinderaker keep busy with beekeeping and bottling honey.

 

By Rich Wicks | Guthrie Center Times, July 2025

Craig Hinderaker uses the extractor to spin honey out of the frames.

Some empty nesters become lonely when they no longer hear the “pitter-patter of little feet.” But for Craig and Cathy Hinderaker of rural Guthrie Center, some years back, they found themselves missing the buzzing of little wings.

After many years of beekeeping and bottling honey, the Hinderakers were considering giving up the hobby, but Cathy explained they were unable to resist the urge to continue.

“One year the bees died over the winter, and we took that as a sign that we were done,” Cathy said. “But it was just lonesome; there just weren’t bees around.”

So, the couple has continued beekeeping as a hobby. Cathy shared how she first became interested in bees. She recalls during her childhood, seeing unfamiliar boxes on a farmyard near Guthrie Center. She asked her father about the boxes, and he explained beekeeping.

“Ever since then, I thought it was interesting,” Cathy said.

Years later, an educational opportunity caught Cathy’s eye.

“I saw that Story County was having a class on bees, and I said to Craig that we should go. It was one night a week for two months, for three hours a night,” Cathy said. “We went through that training, then we got one hive and started it, and it just grew since then.”

Craig recalled that the couple’s original hive didn’t produce an abundance of honey at first.

Cathy Hinderaker cuts wax from a frame of capped honey.

“We got 9 pounds the first year,” Craig said.

But the couple persisted, and, as they learned, the harvest grew.

Currently, they maintain a total of six to eight hives with most on their property south of Guthrie Center and two or three at Lake Panorama. Each hive is home to up to 60,000 bees, and each hive can produce about 90 pounds of honey per year.

For the past 30 years, the Hinderakers have continued raising bees and harvesting the honey each summer. Craig is a retired rural mail carrier. Cathy is a retired ACGC High School teacher, and she still fills in as a substitute teacher. To help cover the costs of their hobby, the couple sells their honey at Art on State. 

Craig and Cathy explained the labor-intensive process of collecting the honey. At the end of summer, the Hinderakers harvest the honey by using a heated knife to separate the honeycombs and wax. The honeycombs are then spun in a large extractor. The honey is strained into 5-gallon buckets and then poured into individuals bottles as needed. Cathy explained how most commercially produced honey is heated so that it will resist crystalizing, but that process eliminates some of the benefits in raw honey. The Hinderakers’ honey is pure, raw honey, which means it has the full antibiotic and health properties.

As with any hobby, beekeeping is more complicated than most people realize. One example is a species of mite that is a frequent parasite on honeybees. Each spring and fall, the Hinderaker bees are treated for that.

Cathy and Craig Hinderaker show a bottle of their bees’ work.

“They get on the bees just like ticks on a dog, and if you get too many, they kill the bees,” Cathy said.

Asked what advice they would give anyone considering becoming a beekeeper, Craig and Cathy stressed the importance of learning from someone with beekeeping experience. 

“It takes some courage at first. And it’s a lot of work. I think it’s more work and more expensive than people realize,” Cathy said. “It is a hobby, but it’s also work.”

According to Cathy, no one in the family’s younger generations has yet caught the bug for beekeeping. 

“We have three grown children and grandchildren, but none of them seem to be interested in raising bees,” she said.

Although beekeeping requires specialized clothing and equipment, an understanding of bees and respect for bees are the most important requirements.

“Unless you’re trying to get in their house, they’re just docile,” Cathy said.

When asked for a most memorable story about their bees, Cathy had an immediate answer.

“Once we were harvesting, and we both had bee suits on. Of course, the bees get upset when you’re taking their honey away. We had it stacked in the back of the Gator,” Cathy said. “We were so covered with these angry bees, we didn’t know what to do, so we drove down the road, going like mad, and there was this big swarm of bees chasing us. That’s the maddest we’ve ever seen them. It was like a cartoon. That had to be a funny sight if anybody saw us.” 

Know someone in the area with an interesting hobby or collection that we should write about? Email rich@gctimesnews.com.

More than just books

By Karen Kelly | Special to the Times Vedette

Our window replacement project is complete. Stop in and see our beautiful view from the inside looking out. We at the MJB Library would like to thank everyone who made this project possible. Thank you to Lake Lumber, Kelvin Hafner and Kevin Laughery Construction for the outstanding work. A big thank you goes to the City of Guthrie Center and the City Council, as well as the MJB Library Board. The new windows are stunning and energy-efficient. 

Earlier this year, Ten Squared Women kindly donated to Friends of the Library. We are using some of those funds to provide a year-long subscription for Playaway audiobooks in our youth collection. Each month, this subscription will add six new Playaways to our growing collection of youth books. We thank the Friends of the Guthrie Center Library and Ten Squared Women for their generous support of the library. 

Library patrons, remember that in addition to books, the library has many other materials. Specifically, we have some excellent magazines available for checkout. The August/September issue of Our Iowa magazine might be of interest to many of you since Jack and Debbie Coffman’s farm is featured as one of Iowa’s prettiest farms in this edition.  

To all you quilters and collectors, the library is working on our display schedule for the upcoming year. If you have a quilt or a collection that you would like to display at the library for a month, please contact us. Openings are still available for the upcoming year. 

August is slipping away quickly, but the library still has many events on the calendar for patrons of all ages. On Wednesday, Aug. 13, at 4 p.m., the library will host the Guthrie STEM Lab for tween and teen aged patrons. Creation Corner is scheduled for 4 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 20 and is geared to youth of all ages. Preregistration is requested for both of these events.  

Our preschool Story Hour will meet at 10 a.m. each Friday. On Aug. 15, preschoolers will learn about horses, while cows will be the theme of Story Hour on Aug. 22. Because of the county fair, there will be no Story Hour on Aug. 29. 

Card-making class will be on Thursday, Aug. 21, from 9-11 a.m. Judi Zimmerline leads this class to create unique greeting cards. Participants will pay a $5 fee, which will cover all needed supplies for this activity. 

Cookbook Club will take a sabbatical this month but will resume again in September. Card players are reminded that the Cribbage Club meets each Monday morning from 9-11 a.m. The Bridge Club meets each Wednesday at the same time. 

The library book sale continues. We have a great supply of children’s books, fiction and nonfiction books, as well as puzzles, games, DVDs and Wii games for sale for free will donations. Proceeds go to the Guthrie Center Friends of the Library to support future projects.

This month’s display features Rich Monthei’s Tea Leaf Lustre Ironstone dish collection. It will be on display through August.

This month’s quilt is on loan from Bryan and Teresa Mowrer. The John Deere quilt was created by Dale Purcell for Bryan.

Ainsley, Merrick and Hadley share their completed LEGO projects.

Participants in the latest LEGO Mania Day work on the task of creating a ship with LEGOs.