Author: paedwards

Sweet Lorane Community News, March 7, 2019

Fern Ridge Review
Creswell Chronicle
Sweet Lorane Community News
March 7, 2019
By Pat Edwards

Well, I’m hoping that by now, everyone has had their power restored from the recent snowstorm. My brother-in-law and his wife were without power near Saginaw for almost 9 days. It was a massive job for all of the linemen and women who were working to clear away fallen trees, plow the roads and restore power to the thousands of homes throughout Lane County that were affected.

Yvette Hamby, a friend and local resident, works in the office at Lane Electric Cooperative, and she reported working 16-hour days for well over a week. We all owe a great deal to these people as well as neighbors who looked out for each other. Thank you to all.

Here’s a repeat notice from a previous column… The Lane County Pomona Grange’s Prime Rib Dinner fundraiser to raise money for scholarships offered to youth throughout Lane County was postponed, due to inclement weather. It is now scheduled for Saturday, March 16, at 5:00 p.m. at the Dorena Grange near Cottage Grove. It will include not only dinner, but music and a silent auction as well.

The Pomona Grange of Lane County oversees and coordinates events between the 22 granges in Lane County including Lorane and Crow. Grange is a fraternal organization in the United States that encourages families to band together to promote the economic and political well-being of the community as well as agriculture, and is frequently the voice of each community it represents. They have long provided local scholarships to graduating seniors in our high schools to help with the high cost of college.

This month, the Lorane Grange’s Spaghetti dinner and bingo is scheduled for Saturday, March 23—typically the 4th Saturday of each month during the school year—with dinner at 5:30 p.m. with bingo for the whole family following.

The Crow Grange’s dinner and bingo nights are held every 1st and 3rd Saturdays beginning at 6:00 p.m. for dinner and 7:00 p.m. for family bingo.

And, if you’re a bingo player, Creswell has begun its own bingo fundraiser at the Creswell VFW at 6:30 p.m. It’s going to be held the 2nd Friday of each month.
All of these events are family-friendly and your participation helps to fund the many projects these organizations sponsor that benefit each of our communities. Please lend them your support and participation whenever you can.

As we all crawl out of our enforced confinements because of the snow, let’s look forward to the gentler days of spring that can’t be too far away. Here’s to gentle spring rains interspersed with sunshine. The crocuses and daffodils seem to be ready!

Sweet Lorane Community News, February 28, 2019

Fern Ridge Review
Creswell Chronicle
Sweet Lorane Community News
February 28, 2019
By Pat Edwards

Today, Thursday, February 28, is the first day in a while that I’ve been able to sit down at my computer and write. Jim and I have spent the last four days living in the family room and breakfast nook of our home where an indoor propane heater kept the cold temperatures away. Our power had gone out along with that of so many others throughout Lane County because of the massive snowstorm. The first day and night were spent trying to keep trails through the accumulating snow and getting organized for what we feared would be a long haul without electricity. Jim was unable to make it out of our driveway, much less make the drive from our home to Lorane to open the store. The power was out there, too, and there was absolutely no traffic passing our home on Territorial Road… only one large 4-wheel-drive truck was able to make a lonely track on the road early in the day, and that quickly filled up with the new falling snow. I heated leftover coffee from the day before in a pan on a small butane campstove that I kept out on the front porch. Our breakfast, the new frozen “crustless quiches” that we had gotten from Costco a few days before, was also heated in a skillet on the stove. Our cell service was not working at first, but finally, we were able to send and receive text messages.

That first day, Jim worked to get our small generator working, but it didn’t want to start. In the early afternoon, our daughter, Michele and her husband Brian, who live a mile and a half from us were able to drive their truck with chains part of the way to our house, and they hiked in the rest of the way. They came to see how we were doing and to help us get set up for what we suspected might last for several days to a week.

The heavy snow collapsed the small canvas canopy covering my car and Brian worked to shovel snow off of it to reduce the damage the metal tubing structure was doing to it. That first night was spent with heat from the propane heater until we turned it off before going to bed, light from my Coleman propane lantern while I read to pass the time, and candles and flashlights to light our way to the bedroom where we slept, fully clothed under the warm covers. When Jim was finally able to get the generator running, power cords were like spider webs across the floor and we were able to plug in the coffee pot, phone chargers, the microwave and fortunately (for my own sanity), Jim’s TV set.

Michele and Brian were able to make a run into town and bring us more gasoline and propane as well as a few staples. Our daughter Gloria kept in close contact with us as well and came the next day with our honorary daughter, Tracie, to help shovel snow and free my car from the canopy.

Our son Rob, a surgical assistant for Slocum Center, on the other hand, had to make his way early that first morning from his home in Cottage Grove to RiverBend where he had surgeries scheduled. After one hip replacement, the hospital which was on its own generators, cancelled the rest of the schedule and Rob headed home. The normal 20 minute trip down the freeway took him 5 hours before he finally got home, only to head back in the next day at noon.

Thanks to the hard work of the crewmen at Lane Electric Coop, our power was restored yesterday (Wednesday) afternoon. Our vehicles are still in the driveway, but Jim plans to venture out today to try to open the store which still does not have power along with most of Lorane.

Despite the problems, we were lucky. Our experience was so much easier than that of others, we know. As I write this, some are still facing several more days to a week without electricity. Some have lost buildings to the weight of the snow. Others have been reporting the generosity and caring of neighbors who came to their rescue… clearing downed trees from roads and driveways, shoveling snow off of roofs threatening to fall and providing assistance to those living alone or who are unable to manage on their own.

Many of us despair at the way our society has divided politically over the past few years, but difficult conditions and emergencies such as we’ve experienced (and are still experiencing) this past week, demonstrate our basic “human-ness.” We do care about each other and it comes out in the form of neighbor helping neighbor.

That, in itself, is enough to warm our hearts in a very special way and to rekindle our hope in the future.

Sweet Lorane Community News, February 21, 2019

Fern Ridge Review
Creswell Chronicle
Sweet Lorane Community News
February 21, 2019
By Pat Edwards

The Unicorn Ranch in Lorane has just announced that it is signing area youth from ages 8 to 19 for its Lane County 4-H programs. They will definitely have a horse project, but they are also considering adding art, agriculture, growing herbs and other projects if enough interest is shown in them and whether they can find leaders with the skills and knowledge to lead them.

In addition, the Unicorn Ranch has been chosen as the site for the 2019 Lane County 4-H Horse Fair.

Many of you know—and I have spoken of it on these pages—that I was the Lorane 4-H coordinator for over 10 years while our own children were growing up in the 1970s and 1980s. I have a special soft-spot for 4-H and what it provides for not only farm youth, but urban kids, as well.

4-H has been a part of Lorane’s culture for many, many years. In the early part of its history, when life was centered around the farm and home, the main 4-H projects almost always involved activities such as livestock raising, sewing and cooking. Those are still the basic projects of the club, but the 4-H organization has tried to involve the “city kids” in projects that encompass literally any field of interest from leathercraft to rocketry to raising dogs for the blind.

A Bit of Lorane History
In November 1927, Della Crowe of Lorane received the following letter from the Lane County 4-H Club agent, Arnold D. Collier. “The club year is finished for 1927. You worked all year for your club members. They tried to Make the Best Better. They appreciate your untiring help. You have been the one who has helped them to better practices in their homes. Do you realize you have made a better club member by your time which you spent with each member? And a better community, a better county, therefore, a better state and nation? In this most humble way, I want to thank you for the splendid cooperation you have given…”

In 1940, the 4-H Builder Club of Lorane spent much of the school year designing and building a scale-model city through their woodworking class under the guidance of their 4-H leader Archie Keener and shop teacher Leslie Godard. It was exhibited at the Lane County Fair and the Oregon State Fair, and was said to have been chosen to be exhibited at the 1939 Golden Gate Exposition in San Francisco, California. These miniature buildings included models of a house, barn, machine shed and windmill among others. The house, worked on by Charles Schaffer had rooms with plastered walls and composition roofs.

Lowell Davis’ project was the machine shop. Lowell remembers the times during the late 1930s and early 1940s when he participated at 4-H Summer School. He and a couple of other boys from Lorane took the train to Oregon State College in Corvallis where they joined dozens of other 4-Hers, living on campus and taking part in the scheduled activities.

In the early 1960s, Lorane resident, Barbara Brewer, remembers that Jim Kotrc led a 4-H club in woodworking. He held his meetings and workshops in the basement of the Lorane High School building. (From Sawdust and Cider to Wine, 2006)