Celebrating Karen Renee Interiors’ 30th Anniversary

AROUND THE PARK AGAIN by Sharon Lee Tegler

Nestled in the historic Winkelmeyer Building at 540 Baltimore Annapolis Boulevard, the design studio of Karen Renee Interiors has hosted many a celebration. Just five years ago, the community gathered in the studio to mark the firm’s quarter-century as one of Severna Park’s most outstanding businesses. Every bit as festive, the 30th Anniversary Open House on May 23rd brought home just how much founder Karen Renee Osborne and her family have meant to the community. It also highlighted how, in spite of a tragic personal loss, Osborne has moved ahead taking her family and firm forward in new directions.

As always, Karen Renee Interiors’ parties are a treat for both the eye and the tastebuds and this one was no exception. There was a sumptuous buffet of easy-to-eat finger foods for guests to enjoy.

Karen Renee Interiors sure knows how to throw a party. Osborne, husband Scott and son Ryan surveyed the tasty selection of meat and seafood filled tarts, cherry tomatoes filled with mozzarella, fruits and cheeses, deviled eggs and more provided for their guests to enjoy. Photos by Sharon Lee Tegler

Guests included family, friends, clients and former clients, as well as business and political contacts from around Anne Arundel County and beyond. They quickly divided into large or small conversation groups.

Conversation groups, both large and small, gathered at various points around the studio.

Karen and Scott Osborne enjoyed greeting old friends and meeting a few new ones like LaToya Nkongolo who is running for the House of Delegates for District 31B.

Osborne and husband Scott circulated through the room greeting guests as did Scott’s mother Betty Winkelmeyer Wells. When not busy serving drinks from an impromptu bar, so did designers Stephanie Simmons and Sophie Honeywell and other members of the Karen Renee Interiors staff.

Anita Dewling greeting friend Liz League who’d be conducting a ribbon cutting and presenting a citation on behalf of the Chamber.

They all had fun meeting old friends and business acquaintances like Anne Arundel County Economic Development Corporation’s Anita Dewling and Greater Severna Park & Arnold Chamber CEO Liz League. A highlight of the anniversary open house was to be a celebratory ribbon cutting ceremony conducted by League.

Members of the media circulated throughout the event and cameras flashed from time to time as the celebration unfolded.

Floating here and there through it all was Betty Winkelmeyer Wells, the individual who inspired daughter-in-law Karen to start her own business and provided a place for her to do it.

Seen here with Petra Ligmond Roche, a friend who was also representing the Severna Park Voice, Betty Winkelmeyer Wells remains an active and important member of the community, Wells is the owner of the historic Winkelmeyer Building.

In 1947 Well’s father, Walter “Wink” Winkelmeyer purchased the building then on the site, collapsed it into the basement and constructed the current Winkelmeyer building over it. Operating as Severna Park Coal & Feed, the company handled supplies brought in by train. It gradually transformed into a hardware store. Today Wells leases the building to several businesses with Karen Renee Interiors a continuous tenant.

Karen Osborne moved between husband Scott, son Ryan and daughter Kaitlyn (who is peeking out from behind the flowers) and their guests.

Karen Osborne moved between her family and her guests catching everyone up on what’s been happening over the past five years. Most significant was the fact that, after careful consideration, the Osbornes moved to Florida. Their decision was partly based on the need for a fresh start for the family – a place in which to heal following the death of their son Justin. It was also based on the fact that Karen had gravitated, almost entirely, to designing interiors for model homes that are primarily located out-of-state.

“We’d discovered during the pandemic that we all could work remotely more than we thought we could. I was traveling much of the time anyway for my model home installations in Ohio, North Carolina, Indiana and elsewhere,” she said. “I found that I could conduct Karen Renee Interior’s business just as easily, efficiently and productively from wherever I was working or from Florida, especially since we can conduct weekly staff meetings via Zoom. Our family still has homes in both places, so I come back to Severna Park once a month to work with my staff in person.”

For residential designers Simmons and Honeywell and the rest of the staff, the arrangement has worked out well.

Designers Stephanie Simmons and Sophie Honeywell run things from the Karen Renee Interiors studio on a day-to-day basis while owner Karen Osborne comes back from Florida once a month.

Honeywell concentrates on residential design for homes in the Severna Park and Annapolis areas as well as other parts of the county. Simmons focuses, to a large extent, on designing interiors for waterfront homes. In fact, her designs for a home in Bethany Beach (one of which is pictured below) are featured in the current edition of Annapolis Home Magazine.

Pictured here is one of the rooms designed by Karen Renee Interiors’ designer Stephanie Simmons for a Bethany Beach house designed and built by Marnie Oursler. Photograph by Dana Hoff

Scott Osborne, a pilot for Jet Blue, caught up with longtime friend Larry Sells who told him about a country music event he and Mike Hall of Severna Park Lanes have teamed up to produce as a benefit for the Baltimore Washington Medical Center Foundation at Severna Park Taphouse on July 9.

At 4 pm, Liz League caught everyone’s attention as Karen, her family and six members of her staff lined up across one wall of the studio and were introduced. Asked by League how she came to start Karen Renee Interiors, Osborne related the somewhat surprising story.

Speaking on behalf of the Greater Severna Park & Arnold Chamber of Commerce, Liz League encouraged Karen Osborne to talk about starting her firm.

Returning home to Severna Park in 1992 from Alabama where Scott was in flight school, she couldn’t find a job. The first Gulf War was going on and it was an economically difficult time.

“I was looking for employment as a designer and nobody was hiring,” Osborne said. “My mother-in-law Betty asked, “Why don’t you start your own business?”

The comment spurred her into action. Once she set her mind to creating the business, quitting wasn’t an option. She worked day and night and took a part-time job drafting systems furniture by hand in a commercial design firm to help things along.

“It took me a year and a half to get the company off the ground. Soon, I moved into my studio in the Winkelmeyer Building where I’ve been ever since,” the designer said.

She emphasized her gratitude for her mother-in-law Betty’s help, for her children Ryan and Kaitlyn’s willingness to share her with a career, and especially for Scott’s unwavering support of her dream.

“Scott and I are also celebrating our 30th Anniversary. On this day 30 years ago, I applied for my business license and our marriage license all on the same day in Annapolis two floors apart,” she said. “Without my husband and my family and my wonderful staff I couldn’t have done any of this.”

A number of representatives from state and county politics were on hand to present citations honoring Karen Renee Interior’s 30th Anniversary. They included Maryland State Delegates Brian Chisholm and Sid Saab and Anne Arundel County Council member Amanda Fiedler. Before presenting the citation on behalf of the council, Fiedler regaled attendees with a hilarious tale about an attempted decorating scheme carried out with her husband that turned out badly.

“Our first mistake was buying the red velvet couches. The second was painting the walls bright yellow. We ended up with a living room that resembled a McDonald’s,” she said.

An official ribbon cutting, held outside the studio, came next. But one of the best parts was yet to follow. Dessert was served with a special 30th Anniversary Cake with icing and trim in Karen Renee Interiors’ signature color, Tiffany Blue.

Following a champagne toast, a 30th Anniversary Cake iced in Karen Renee Interiors signature color, Tiffany Blue, was cut and served along with cake truffles.

A champagne toast by Karen and Scott in honor of the 30th Anniversary of Karen Renee Interiors and of their marriage was the perfect capper for the celebration.

Cardboard boat race makes buoyant return

Monday, May 23 was a beautiful day and an exciting one for students watching a St. Martin’s-in-the-Field Episcopal School tradition – the annual Cardboard Boat Race. Two seventh-grade classes, totaling 25 students, competed in groups of two or three. The teams had spent months engineering boats to race on the Severn River using only cardboard and duct tape.  The students launched their craft from the Cleven family dock with a bit of trepidation but much laughter.

The girls’ boat that won the race managed to stay afloat for the duration. Photos courtesy of Christine Hickey

 While some boats were successful, others were not, but all the teams had fun trying.  Adding to the fun, St. Martin’s eighth-graders also constructed boats that they used to spectate from the water.  Fifth and sixth grade students watched from the shoreline and cheered on their friends.

Unfortunately, the boys piloting the losing boat below went into the drink.

Luckily, all of those who raced arrived safely back at the dock to hurrahs from the sightseers along the shore.

Country music artist Chad Bearden to headline benefit for BWMC Foundation

Country music fans will want to Save The Date for a fundraiser for the Baltimore Washington Medical Center Foundation being held at Severna Park Taphouse on July 9th from 12 to 8 pm. Nashville recording artist Chad Bearden will headline the event along with special guest Brent Stover.

Two Good Guys Productions partners Larry Sells and Mike Hall, in coordination with Severna Park Taphouse, are in the process of lining up additional bands and will have an update shortly. They’ll also feature a 50-50 raffle and are selling 100 raffle tickets for $100 with the winner getting a crab feast for 10 at Donnelly’s Dockside.

Tickets are $20 in advance ($25 at the door) and can be purchased on-line at Severna Park Tap House Fundraiser | UM Baltimore Washington Medical Center (umms.org) .

Inflation a worry for our area’s small businesses?

AROUND THE PARK AGAIN By Sharon Lee Tegler

A noontime or early afternoon lull in business is not an uncommon occurrence for Hair Cuttery stylists Michele Meir, Tammy Fyffe, Tabitha Ford and Holly Mollick. Mornings and late afternoons are the busiest times at the Park Plaza salon with most every chair filled with a male or female client looking for that perfect haircut. Lately, however, there are times when one, two or even more chairs are empty. All four stylists lay the blame on inflation.

Consumer Price Index data shows the annual inflation rate for the United States is 8.3% for the 12 months ended April 2022 after rising 8.5% previously, according to U.S. Labor Department data published May 11.

The stylists said they are acutely aware that the slowdown in the number of clients they’re seeing is related to the inflationary pressure families are experiencing.

“We’re seeing that some people aren’t getting services done anymore,” Mollick said. “Some are opting out of color and coloring their hair at home. Others are learning how to cut their own hair or spacing their appointments for services further apart.”

Ford added that shipping costs for needed supplies, including hair coloring, are rising as the cost-of-living soars. She also noted that the shop is having trouble staying fully staffed. A recurring problem is that prospective hires will call to set up an interview and ten minutes before the appointed time will call to cancel.

Mollick and Meir believe that’s happening because individuals applying for unemployment benefits are required to show that they are looking for work.

At Park Plaza neighbor Honey Baked Ham Company, Tom Lumsden was enjoying a sandwich and checking his phone while waiting for a friend. Otherwise, things were quiet except for walk-in customers placing orders at the counter with employee Shannon Stry.

The scene was relatively quiet at the Honey Baked Ham Company in Park Plaza Tuesday afternoon. Customer Tom Lumsden enjoyed a sandwich while waiting for a friend as other patrons passed by him on the way to the counter for take-out items. Photos by Sharon Lee Tegler

According to Stry, prices for honey baked hams and all the trimmings for local stores are set by the corporate office and have remained steady in spite of inflation.

“Sales are slightly down at the moment but then they always are in the spring and summer. Our sales are heaviest over the holidays for Thanksgiving, Christmas and the New Year,” she said.

Just a mile-and-a-half north at 342 Ritchie Highway, Cakes & Confections Bakery Cafe owner Michael Brown was surrounded by cream-filled pastries, fruit tarts, chocolate-covered cake balls and other delights as he waited on a succession of walk-in customers. His inflation-related experiences are somewhat similar to those of the Hair Cuttery but have been both good and bad.

Surrounded by cream-filled pastries, fruit tarts, lavishly iced cupcakes and other bakery items, Cakes & Confections Bakery Cafe owner Michael Brown waited on a number of customers. He’s recently had a big increase in orders for custom-made cakes for family celebrations.

“We’ve had a big increase in the demand for our cakes,” Brown said. “However, staffing challenges, inflated prices for ingredients, and a lower volume of traffic for the lunch counter have caused us to discontinue the cafe side of the business.”

When asked if he’d ever consider bringing the cafe side back in view of the fact that locals loved the selection of homemade quiches, salads and sandwiches Cakes & Confections served, Brown answered that he just couldn’t staff the lunch counter anymore. Already shorthanded, he didn’t want to take anyone away from the baking which is his bread and butter.

“If the job market improved and the hiring situation changed for the better, I might consider bringing the lunch counter back,” he said. “As things now stand, when I’d advertise for job openings, I’d have people call for interviews and then not show up… or they’d start the job and almost immediately leave. That’s what we’ve been up against.”

Regardless, Brown is grateful for a backlog of orders for spring and summer – his usual busy season for bakery items. He doesn’t see that slowing down.

Vintage or more modern rattan furniture is very saleable at The Red Apron Shoppe.

Back in Olde Severna Park, two second-hand retailers are holding steady or picking up business. Mary Ann Neal, owner of The Red Apron Shoppe at 4 Riggs Avenue, notes that more and more young people are being drawn to the store’s estate sale-based inventory as they realize they can get great value for their money.

The estate sales Red Apron also runs are doing a brisk business themselves. Currently, the shop’s rattan furnishings are the “hot” items and they’re suitable for indoor or outdoor living.

A rustic outdoor island with a vintage picnic basket and colorful sunflowers.

Across the way at 553 B&A Boulevard, Savvy Consignment was doing a brisk business Tuesday afternoon. Customers were immediately drawn to racks of spring and summer fashions.

However, it was hard to miss some of the outdoor furnishings displayed. A rustic island with sunflowers and a vintage picnic basket was particularly eye-catching.

Savvy owner Stacey Cassidy said inflation is having little effect on sales although costs have risen for bags and other supplies. She said there has been no need to raise prices for anything. Clothing sales remain strong as they always are at this time of year.

Cassidy noted that furniture sales generally fall off in the spring and summer and pick up again in autumn, but outdoor items are the exception. A pair of camp chairs dressed up with a watermelon print fabric brought smiles to faces of passersby who spied them through the front window.

This pair of champ chairs attracted lots of glances through Savvy Consignment’s front window.

Next door at Garry’s Grill, things were quiet as the staff prepared for the dinner hour. Giving an occasional stir to a pot of something on the stove that smelled delightful, manager Nick Bordenski said he believes the restaurant’s customer base remains solid.

Readying for dinner service, the staff at Garry’s Grill put out their “Looking for a Table” sign.

Bordenski has noticed that the cost of the goods he orders is going up. He also remarked on the same sort of staffing problems being experienced by the Hair Cuttery and Cakes & Confections.

“Staffing is hit or miss every week,” he said.

Back across B&A Boulevard at The Big Bean Coffee Shop, Autumn Weslow, Paige Kaiser and Olivia Wright were still busy making Frozen Lattes though it was late in the afternoon.

Though late in the afternoon at the Big Bean, Olivia Wright, Paige Kaiser, and Autumn Weslow were busy serving customers and making the shop’s popular Frozen Lattes.

Business appeared to be satisfactory as Olivia made yet another frozen drink. Autumn finished waiting on her customer and observed that The Big Bean seemed to be doing well. She added that the shop is well-staffed for the season. Still, there are a few problems the staff has seen related to inflation.

“For one thing, the price of protein powder we use in some of our drinks has gone up. Prices for alternative milks like almond or coconut are rising too,” she said. “The owners and staff have considered the possibility of charging extra for them.”

The final stop of the day was at Severna Lawn & Power at 1244 Ritchie Highway where an unexpected effect of inflation has been an abundance of gas-powered push mowers, riding mowers and other power equipment brought in for repair. According to the staff, people are holding on to their power equipment or mowers longer instead of buying new ones.

An unexpected effect of inflation at Severna Lawn and Power is the amazing number of lawn mowers brought in daily to be repaired.

The shop is also selling parts or ordering them for individuals who are experienced enough to fix their own mowers.

Last ever Chesapeake Bay Blues Festival takes place this weekend

Blues lovers will be glad but sad to know that the Chesapeake Bay Blues Festival will be held for the last time this Saturday, May 21 and Sunday May 22 at Sandy Point State Park.

Katcef Brothers, an Annapolis-based, family-owned beer distributor, Stella Artois, and the Chesapeake Bay Blues Festival are teaming up with the Anne Arundel County Foodbank for a “Sing the Blues and Buy a Family a Meal” campaign. A tent will be stationed at the entrance to the blues festival to encourage $5 donations to the campaign. All donations will go to the Anne Arundel County Food Bank to buy the food. For each $5 donation the food bank can provide 15 meals for area families.

Don Hooker, founder of the Chesapeake Bay Blues Festival noted that the event was started in 1998 as a way to raise money for charity. All the work involved in putting the festival together is done by blues-loving volunteers and all profits go to charities, one of which is the food bank.

“The festival has become a large event in the blues community worldwide,” Hooker said. “We’ve raised more than $1.5 million for various charities over the years.”

Reflecting on the fact that this is the final year for the festival after 22 years, Hooker said it was time for it to end for financial and other reasons.

“The people who volunteer, including me, are getting long in the tooth,” he said. “It’s gotten harder and harder to get out there on a Wednesday and work for four days.”

Known for bringing world class music to Annapolis, the 2022 Chesapeake Bay Blues Festival will uphold the tradition with performances by Joss Stone, the Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band, The Spinners, Samanth Fish, North Mississippi Blues, Bernard Allison and more.

For information or tickets to the festival, visit Chesapeake Bay Blues Festival – May 22st & 22nd, 2022.

A busy Spring for area residents with lots to look forward to

AROUND THE PARK AGAIN by Sharon Lee Tegler

The natural area adjoining the Baltimore Annapolis Trail Park Ranger Station at Earleigh Heights Road is a beautiful, tranquil stop-off point for walkers, runners and cyclists and a particular joy for birdwatchers. It was deceptively quiet and peaceful Tuesday afternoon until a sudden stirring in the reeds drew observers’ eyes to a handsome pair of geese feeding on aquatic grasses. On closer inspection one, then two, three and four downy goslings appeared around them industriously nibbling the same tender shoots.

Soon, the goslings followed their parents down the hill to the water and swam off into the afternoon sunshine.

Two of many snakes that inhabit the marsh by the Ranger Station – one larger and one smaller.

Life stirred elsewhere in the marsh too. Two different species of snakes shared the same stretch of water with a gray terrapin with yellow stripes.

The terrapin took off across the marsh in a different direction at an amazing rate of speed.

The gray terrapin with yellow stripes seen on the left was streaking away toward the opposite side of the marsh.

On Tuesday morning, the Earleigh Heights Ranger Station (which is also a train museum put together by the Severna Park Model Railroad Club, the Friends of Anne Arundel County Trails and the Anne Arundel County Department of Recreation & Parks) had light traffic. But, by afternoon, the scene became lively as cyclists whizzed past on the B&A Trail or wheeled through to the parking lot. Several runners stopped by for water or to use the restrooms and dog walkers and their pets enjoyed the gardens.

Bicyclists whizzed past the Earleigh Heights Ranger Station as they headed north on the Baltimore Annapolis Trail. Photos by Sharon Lee Tegler
B&A Trail user Linda Clinch enjoys walking her five-month-old AussieDoodle on the grounds of the lovely former train station that is now the Earleigh Heights Ranger Station.

Many locals are heading back to the great outdoors, visiting Anne Arundel County’s parks and trails. Behind the scenes at community churches, businesses and organizations, however, work is ongoing to promote current and upcoming projects and events.

Woods Church projects and events unfold one after another

We caught up with Cam Laque, Communications Coordinator for Woods Memorial Presbyterian Church, who reports that, after months of planning, several mission projects, environmental initiatives and events are coming to fruition. The first, the long-awaited replacement of the 35-year-old chairs in the church sanctuary, has already taken place.

Slanting rays of afternoon sunshine illuminated one section of Woods’ newly installed Sanctuary chairs as they awaited the return of the congregation.

Though worn, 450 of the old chairs that were in decent condition were donated to three other churches. Replacement day was hectic. The congregation’s REHAB group oversaw the removal of the chairs to an empty space while the new seats were installed. Then the men helped load the recycled chairs onto trucks bound for the Baltimore, Delaware and North Carolina churches receiving them.

A first-time happening for the church took place between May 1 and May 8. Concerned that their holiday bazaar fundraiser had not be held for two years due to the pandemic, the Presbyterian Women of Woods decided they’d, instead, hold an online auction. The virtual auction would feature the same handcrafted items traditionally sold at the bazaar. To the women’s amazement, the event went off without a hitch.

Communications Coordinator Cam Laque shows off two oil-on canvas florals by Woods’ bridge pastor, Rev. James V. Colson that were sold in the online auction. They were from a collection of his work currently on display.

“PWOW received many unique auction donations from our congregation members including socks, handmade quilts sewn by our Woods Quilters Group, handknit prayer shawls, handmade pottery, paintings, and some antiques,” Laque said. “They also received financial donations from the Severna Park Community Center, Mission Barbeque, Park Books, the Severna Park Taphouse, Blended Essentials, The Cottage and Baltimore’s Center Stage among others. It was great how everyone came together for such a good cause. The funds raised will support our many missions.”

Spearheaded by Peggy Newman, the auction was a satisfying success, and the ladies are still celebrating the fact that they had 243 bids and raised $8,726.

No matter the season or the weather, the Woods Garden Group has been busy planning, planting, weeding, and caring for the native and ornamental plants, flowers and trees spread across the church campus. The group is renowned for its scenic parking lot gardens, erosion preventing hillside plantings and beautiful rain garden – all filled with native species that attract, insects, birds, bees and butterflies while providing cover for wildlife.

Currently in bloom near the entrance to Woods is the lovely “Bell garden” with its profusion of purple and gold Iris and Lynnhaven Carpet flowers that resemble daisies. An early blooming native, Lynnhaven Carpet is both an erosion control and a food source for early emerging bees.

Woods Bell Garden is currently abloom with gold and purple Iris and Lynnhaven Carpet flowers that resemble daisies. The Woods Garden Group stages its plantings so there is continuous flowering of native species across the campus.

Nearby, one of Woods RENEW campaign projects was taking place with gents on ladders installing wider rain gutters on all the church roofs to better protect the building foundations and direct the flow of water where it’s needed. The upgraded gutters are particularly important for the steeper parts of the roof.

As part of Woods’ RENEW project to save energy and create a sustainable environment across the church campus, widened rain gutters were being installed this week.

Lots of other activities are in the planning stage, the most notable of which is the return of the church youth’s WoodsWork project. Open this year to high school freshmen as well as sophomores and juniors, the ambitious group of students and their adult advisors will head for Pennsylvania on June 23 and will spend a week working on two different homes. As usual, training sessions on the use of various tools will be held beforehand. The teens will also be holding a car wash on June 4 to defray the expenses for the trip.

For information on what’s happening at Woods, visit Woods Memorial Presbyterian Church | Facebook.

Friends of Anne Arundel County Trails schedules multiple events

Dependent on the weather, The Friends of Anne Arundel County Trails, the Anne Arundel Community College Astronomy Club, the Astrophysics Science and Planetary Science Divisions of the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center and the Universities Space Research Association have teamed up to offer a day of public programs focusing on our solar system. Participants can walk or bicycle the 4.7-mile course between the Sun Sculpture, located just south of Aquahart Road behind Harundale Plaza in Glen Burnie and the Pluto sculpture, located just north of the Earleigh Heights Road Ranger Station in Severna Park from 10 am till 2 pm. There is also an evening presentation by Dr. Alexander Pavlov and the DaVinci Team titled DaVinci: NASA’s continuing exploration of Venus at Anne Arundel Community College’s Student Union Hall from 7:30 to 8:30 pm followed by stargazing (weather permitting) at the AACC campus observatory.

Equally dependent on the weather, the Friends of Anne Arundel County Trails is presenting Karen Collins and the Backroads Band for some delightful honky tonk country music this coming Sunday, May 15th at Hatton-Regester Green in Severna Park. Karen writes songs about subjects ranging from heartaches to traffic jams in an upbeat, authentic country sound. Free and open to the public, the concert takes place between 4 and 6 pm.

Karen Collins and the Backroads Band will bring their own brand of county music to Hatton-Regester Green this Sunday, May 15 from 4 to 6 pm. Photo courtesy of Karen Collins

More concerts are scheduled for Hatton-Regester Green through May and June which we will announce as they occur.

Burgers & Bands for Suicide Prevention presents 20 bands at Severna Park Taphouse

Burgers & Bands for Suicide Prevention invites the public to join them at Severna Park Taphouse this Sunday, May 15 from 11 am to 7 pm for a great day of music from some of the area’s finest bands.

Severna Park Taphouse will host the Burgers & Bands Suicide Prevention music festival this Sunday from 11 am to 7 pm. More than 20 bands will be on hand to entertain.

More than 20 bands will be appearing at the music festival including several associated with the Priddy Music Academy. Among the groups slated to appear are The Doug Segree Band, the Kelly Bell Band, and the Lopsided Chickens.

Founded by Ann Brennan and son Ethan, Burgers & Bands Suicide Prevention is a fundraising and awareness initiative dedicated to helping fund mental health programs in our local communities.

“We hope to create a comfortable atmosphere with our events that enables people to speak about the problem of depression with a sense of normalcy. It’s a lonely experience for young adults dealing with depression and their parents. Most often, there is no one to talk with about it,” Ann said. “We created Burgers and Bands after Ethan dealt with a deep depression that could have led to suicide. But it wasn’t a hopeless situation, and he came through it alright. Now we want to share that there is help for everyone.”

For information, visit Burgers & Bands for Suicide Prevention | Facebook .

Chamber again postpones SHOP LOCAL FUN FIESTA

Once again, the threat of rainy weather has prompted the Greater Severna Park & Arnold Chamber of Commerce to postpone its SHOP LOCAL FUN FIESTA at Park Plaza that was schedule for this Saturday to June 18th. The rescheduled event will feature the same mix of music, entertainment, food, games, shopping and more. For information on the chamber’s many activities, visit Greater Severna Park and Arnold Chamber of Commerce (gspacc.com) .

Good Neighbors Group’s Earth Day Festival at Severna Park High a delightful scene

AROUND THE PARK AGAIN by Sharon Lee Tegler

From the Anne Arundel County Animal Care & Control tent, where children were admiring “Two Toes” the bunny, to the farthest end of Severna Park High School’s front sidewalk where recycled books were being given away, the return of Good Neighbors Group’s Earth Day Festival was a happy occasion indeed.

Cradled in the arms of Jessica Galuardi, “Two Toes” (so named because she’s missing a couple toes) was just one of the adoptable bunnies and pups brought along to call attention to the organization, its work and its need to find permanent homes for the animals it cares for.

Opposite A.A. Co. Animal Care & Control were booths along the front sidewalk including those of Power Factor Company , specializing in solar installations, and Echoes of Nature. Popular throughout Maryland, Washington, D.C. and Virginia, Echoes of Nature brought along its own “animal ambassadors” ranging from snakes and lizards to birds of prey like their red tailed hawk. The animal ambassadors were primarily adopted by EON from rescues and shelters.

Booths stretched along the front sidewalk on both sides of the school. The Echoes of Nature booth, on the left, brought their “animal ambassadors” and was a favorite stop-off for kids. The Power Factor booth next to them touted solar energy. Photos by Sharon Lee Tegler

The footprint of the 2022 Earth Day celebration seemed larger than the last time the event was held two years ago. Booths extended from the school courtyard across the sidewalks on both sides of the buildings. Even the parking lot was used to accommodate a line of trucks from charitable organizations. Among others was a truck from Millersville-based Orphan Grain Train – the ultimate recycler of much needed clothing, home goods and medical equipment that is sent to countries overseas including sub-Saharan Africa and Ukraine. Another truck was from Hope for All in Glen Burnie – a non-profit that helps those transitioning from homelessness through local residents’ donations of furniture and household goods as well as shoes, clothing and personal care items.

The sidewalk booths were busy from the moment the festival opened as can be seen in the photo below with Severna Park High students unpacking and laying out gently used books they’d collected to be given away.

At the far end of the school’s front sidewalk, Severna Park High students were assembling, displaying, and giving away boxes and boxes of books they’d collected covering a wide range of subjects. Some were even best-sellers.

Inside the courtyard, the array of exhibitors was quite diverse. Magothy River Association president Paul Spadaro and member Bob Royer’s booth not only held information about conserving the watershed but also a supply of the organization’s new educational Magothy River game. They’d spread one out across the pavement for kids and adults to play.

Royer, who also heads Woods Memorial Presbyterian Church’s environmental and sustainability projects, reported that the church recently won an Interfaith Power & Light Cool Congregations Annual Award for Sustainability. They also were awarded the Energy Saver Award for reducing their energy consumption by 52%. (Woods’ Renew campaign significantly reduced the church’s energy usage through installation of ultra-high efficiency HVAC systems, upgrades to LED lighting, installation of highly efficient windows and building insulation improvements for a cost savings of $30,000 per year.)

A table full of recycled items attendees were invited to add to or take home.
The CNR Lighting booth contained bins where attendees could dispose of the LED and Fluorescent Lighting or batteries.

In keeping with the Earth Day Festival’s theme “Do a World of Good, Think Outside the Landfill”, there was an entire table devoted to recycled donations that attendees were welcome to add to or take home at no cost. Items ranged from a stroller to wallpaper, books, candlesticks, garden seeds, cleaning supplies, fabric and batting and a coffeemaker.

One of the simplest, yet most helpful and efficient exhibits at the Earth Day festival was that of Baltimore-based CNR Lighting (C.N. Robinson Lighting Supply Co.). CNR representative Angela Schwartz explained that the various bins on her table were marked for attendees to deposit used fluorescent and LED lights and used batteries (all of which are extremely toxic to the environment if consigned to landfills).

According to Schwartz, CNR sends the batteries collected to a company called Veolia Environmental Services which recycles them through a process that extracts environmentally dangerous metals which can be reused.

The sight of Jing Ying Institute owners Nancy and Billy Greer performing an educational Tai Chi demonstration mid-courtyard brought a smile to everyone’s face. The pair was fresh from their earlier World Tai Chi Day celebration on the lawn of Boone Station Hall where dozens of practitioners joined them in performing the art’s graceful movements. Jing Ying Institute has participated in every local Earth Day festival and, though late, the Greers were determined to carry on the tradition.

Jing Ying Institute’s Nancy and Billy Greer brought a smile to everyone’s face demonstrating the graceful and incredibly beneficial movements of Tai Chi in the middle of the school courtyard.

On the far side of the courtyard, Brittany Neff, Isaac Sears and Nathan Wheeler from Let’s Grow in Pasadena were selling cactus, succulent and foliage plants while entertaining customers with a running commentary about the interactive plantscape-themed private parties the company hosts. The miniature flowerpots containing easy-to-grow cacti and succulents were particularly appealing to children

Brittany Neff, Isaac Sears and Nathan Wheeler from Let’s Grow in Pasadena were selling cacti, succulents and foliage plants – some of which were in miniature pots appealing to children.

One booth over, at Pasadena-based Rise Above Animal Rescue & Sanctuary, kittens and cats were the order of the day though the organization takes in other pets. The non-profit focuses on animals that need help including those injured, elderly or in need of medical care and relies on volunteers and families that are willing to foster them.

Rise Above Animal Rescue & Sanctuary brought various kittens, like the one above, and adult cats needing foster or permanent homes to the Earth Day celebration. They were also selling collars and leashes to raise funds.

In addition to being a boon for those who like to purchase local eggs, herbs and plants, Amy Timme’s pretty Chesapeake Homestead booth was a lesson in organic, sustainable agriculture. Eggs fresh from the family farm’s flock of 60 pasture-raised chickens shared the table with adorably witty egg containers, bundles of freshly picked herbs, and pots of farm-grown plants ready to be transplanted. They included organically raised red, yellow and green pepper plants, red raspberry plants, and tomato plants among others.

“By June, our homestead farm store in Pasadena will be selling freshly picked vegetables, fruits and flowers. We’re also raising turkeys for Thanksgiving and have some jars of our homemade brine mixture for those who like to prepare early,” Timme said.

Amy Timme’s Chesapeake Homested booth held farm-grown eggs, wittily named plastic egg cartons, bunches of fresh organic herbs and organically grown transplants of pepper plants, raspberries, and tomato plants among other things.

Jewelry designer Felicite Hawkins shared a table on which Sasswell co-owner Kate Langston (with Laura MacKay) had an array of health-related products. Langston and MacKay practice therapeutic massage, yoga and other healing techniques and just opened a new Severna Park location off Ritchie Highway behind Donut Shack. Hawkins, seen here trying a pair of earrings on Langston, sells her unique handcrafted jewelry on Etsy

Sasswell co-owner and massage therapist Kate Langston displayed some of the health-related products her business sells. Here, she was about to model a pair of earrings by designer Felicite Hawkins who was displaying some of her work.

Nearby, at the Mom’s Organic Market stand, Earth Day festival visitors were encouraged by Aaron Montillano, Alysse Betha and Scout Yardumian-Grubb to take a free banana, consider a cloth shopping bag, or drop off cell phones no longer in use. The trio was from the Jessup branch of the organic food market which got its start in Rockville, Maryland but now has branches in Washington, D.C. and five states.

Next to them, bins at hand, was Greg Brummitt from Annapolis Compost, a local non-profit with curbside collection services.

Almost at the end of booths at the far end of the school, festival attendees had the pleasure of checking out and perhaps selecting several titles from the books, by then well arranged, at the SPHS student’s Books & Our Earth Display for free.

Aware that only 20% of children are currently found to read regularly, the students were determined that more kids should be introduced to the joy and adventure found in books. Judging by their wide-ranging selection of recycled children’s storybooks, novels, mysteries, biographies and scientific tomes, there was something for everyone.

Mia Slave, Maggie Mullerty and Cooper Powell (nealing), took the lead in keeping the table filled with interesting books of all kinds for people to take home for free.

Catching up with Good Neighbors Group president and primary organizer Julie Shay as the event was winding down, she noted how happy she was to have had such a beautiful day for the 20th Annual Earth Day Festival.

For information on Good Neighbors Group’s upcoming activities, visit Home – Good Neighbors Group .

BREAKING NEWS: SHOP LOCAL FUN FIESTA rescheduled to Saturday, May 14

Greater Severna Park & Arnold Chamber of Commerce CEO Liz League announced this morning that due to the National Weather Bureau’s rainy weather forecast for this weekend, the organization’s SPRING SHOP LOCAL FUN FIESTA has been rescheduled to Saturday, May 14 from 11 am to 3 pm.

There will still be food, games, animals, and fun for the whole family. For additional information, visit Greater Severna Park and Arnold Chamber of Commerce (gspacc.com) .