Thursday, December 1, 2011

Ryan Ruble - December 2011 Column

                Dreaming of a white Christmas sounds all well and good … until the reality sets in that there is also plenty of the ice and cold that go along with that white stuff.
                I’m guessing if you asked most longtime hardy northwest Ohio residents what they dream about when they picture a perfect Christmas it might include crystal blue water, warm tropical breezes, maybe a day or snorkeling after a quick round of golf on a pristine course.
                To get that kind of holiday experience life may have to take you “far from home” … maybe to the far reaches to the Caribbean, just off the coast of Venezuela, to be beautiful island paradise of Curacao. That’s where you’ll find Montpelier graduate Ryan Ruble, working hard and playing just as hard in the glow of the equator’s winter sunshine.
                Ryan Ruble, that Ruble boy who grew up driving tractors and making a few bucks selling corn at the end of the family’s driveway on Brown Road, took his rural Montpelier upbringing and gambled that there was more to life if you say yes when opportunity comes to call.
                “After high school I attended The Ohio State University ATI campus in Wooster, Ohio,” explained Ryan. “I chose that school for the familiar rural surroundings and small class sizes, unsure if I was ready for the main campus in Columbus. I majored in Turfgrass Management which, in a nutshell, is how to maintain a golf course … which is not just sitting on a mower or picking up golf balls.  Not knowing much about golf and always curious how they maintained such short grass and immaculate conditions, I wanted to know more. I received an Associate of Science degree in Turfgrass Management and became certified in Commercial Turf Equipment.”
                After an internship at the Montclair Golf Club in New Jersey, Ryan landed a job on a nine-hole golf course In Michigan. “Hungry to get on a more recognized and elate golf course, I had a great opportunity to be involved in a new construction project in Sarasota, Florida as an equipment technician at The Ritz Carlton Members Club. We completed the grow-in in one year and I stayed on an extra year.”
“Not ready to leave Florida, and wanting to learn more about the golf industry, I joined a large Toro distributorship. Wesco Turf services all Toro golf course equipment in central Florida, and I worked as an equipment repair technician. After two years of being off the golf course I had the itch to get back.”
And the road … well, technically no road can reach his next destination … took him a little farther from home.
“I inquired about new projects and developments.  I received a call asking if I wanted to tackle a new project on the island of Curacao at the Santa Barbara Plantation, a 1500 acre ocean front community. The course was nearing completion but had no grass, no equipment, and no name for the course. I flew down for a site visit and I signed on as the equipment manager. The course has been named “Old Quarry,” and it opened in April 2010.”
Ryan obviously found a location and a job he could love.
“My position as an equipment manager on a golf course is exciting every day. At the beginning of the day I could be ordering and figuring out the logistics on shipping replacement excavator tracks on the island. In the afternoon I could be repairing a flat tire on a golf cart, and toward the end of the day I could be running to the local machine shop to have a part made for the next day. We currently have a fleet of over 100+ golf carts and 30 pieces of various golf course equipment, ranging from mowers, backhoes and dump trucks. My main objective is to keep everything running in safe operating condition, which means scheduling preventative maintainence and performing unscheduled repairs. I am unsure of where I see myself in the future, but I am really enjoying the lifestyle here in Curacao. It is always
rewarding taking part in a project and seeing it being developed from nothing to something magnificent.”
Ryan may love the work, but the lifestyle he refers to has as much to do with play. He said scuba diving is something he enjoys almost every weekend. He recently traveled to Europe, taking in some great golf courses in Holland.
“The local language in Curacao is Papiamento which is a mixture of Portuguese, Spanish, and African, Dutch is also spoken widely and English is spoken only when requested.”
Ryan said e-mail and Skype have helped him stay in touch with his family back in Ohio. He suggested Leader readers may enjoy checking out his golf course at www.santabarbaraplantation.com, and shared his e-mail address (fltechnician@gmail.com).
And is he dreaming of a white Christmas?
“I don't miss snow, but I do miss the activities that go with it, like snowmobiling and skiing. One of my most memorable Christmases was last year. Some coworkers and friends who were also away from home and missing family had a BBQ on a small remote beach … with no Christmas tree, just feet in the sand, a glass of champagne in hand, watching the sun set.”

Friday, October 28, 2011

Mark McCool - November 2011 Column

             Most of the people I have interviewed for this column have found that being “far from home” means discovering new experiences that Montpelier could not provide. For 1991 graduate Mark McCool, the road that started at home has become the road that has taken him to places of awesome wonder and danger.
            Mark’s Montpelier life was at a home in the middle of a wooded plot at the end of a dirt road. “I just would spend all day in the woods exploring. I knew whatever I was going to do in life it was going to be in the woods.”
            Mark credited MHS science teacher Cindy Sutter with guiding him to her alma mater, Lake Superior State, in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.  There it was Professor Sally Childs who helped him focus on a career in park management. She helped Mark land a job working as a volunteer backcountry ranger in a remote corner of Yellowstone National Park. Like an extension of his childhood, Mark found himself living and working at the end of a 36-mile dirt road.
            “I fell in love with the job of being a ranger,” Mark explained. “Most parks have resource management, interpretation, maintenance, resource & visitor protection, cultural resource, and administrative divisions.    I chose to pursue a career be a ranger in the Resource and Visitor Protection division.  To me it was a no brainer, resource protection rangers got to do all the exciting emergency operation stuff like law enforcement, search and rescue, wildland and structural fire, and emergency medical services.    I also realized that Resource Protection Rangers lived at ranger stations in our National Parks and managed operations which included backcountry and wilderness management.  Out of all the places to live in the United States I couldn’t ever think of a better place than our nation’s National Parks.”
            Mark worked as a season park ranger for seven years (five at Yellowstone and two at Olympic National Park) before he was finally assigned to a permanent position at Glen Canyon National recreation Area in southern Utah … this time at the end of a 90-mile road in the middle of a desert.
            After a year he was transferred back to Olympic National.  “I spent six years at Olympic as the Sub-District Ranger at the Hoh Rain Forest, which is a World Heritage site, this time at the end of an 18 mile road.    The Hoh is the wettest place in lower 48 and receives 14 foot of rain annually.  Yes, 14 foot!  The forest was magical and I was able to manage a 200,000 acre wilderness area including the glacier covered Mount Olympus, which is the tallest mountain in the Olympic Range.”
            “After six years hiking up the mountains in the Olympic Range I decided, or at least my body started to decide, that I needed a change. In July of this year I transferred to water based park on Lake Superior called Apostle Islands National Lakeshore in Wisconsin.   This summer I have spent most of my days patrolling the 27 islands by boat and saving kayakers from drowning in big water.   Yes, at the end of a five mile road.  The roads are getting shorter, I might add.”
The awesome scenery Mark sees each day is also coupled with danger … danger he might not have encountered growing up in Montpelier. “There have been several experiences that have thought I would never do growing up in Montpelier.    From being charged by a grizzly bear in Yellowstone to leading a rope team up a glacier.   I have saved many lives as ranger and have seen my share lost, some that were rangers very close to me.   What we do is very dangerous, but that is what I like about the job.   I think what I enjoy most about being a ranger is helping people.”
Mark does say his Montpelier background played a role in preparing him for his life as a ranger.  “I was definitely influenced by the teachers and coaches at Montpelier.    Athletics started me on a path of leadership that has definitely helped me throughout my life and career.    It also established a lifestyle of fitness that I have maintained throughout my career.”
Mark keeps a special place in his heart for Coach Hip Klotz. “He was a wonderful motivator and I learned a lot about leadership from him.”
Mark’s family has moved from that home at the end of the road, so he does not get back to Montpelier often. However, a trip last year was special for him. Coach, and longtime friend, Robert Houk invited him to attend a game and stand along the sidelines. “I saw the memorial for Hip Klotz on the field.   We were playing Hilltop, and Coach Mike Bumb, who I played with, had his team honor Hipper by touching the memorial.   It brought a tear to my eye.   I sure do miss Hip.  He was a good man and changed many young lives.”
Those who have had their lives saved or who have been helped out of tough spots by Mark would probably say the same things about him.
Some roads lead home.
And sometimes home is where the road leads you.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Deidre (Deedy) Donaldson - October 2011 Column

When she was a child, Dr. Deidre Donaldson was simply known as “Deedy.” That nickname, like the simplicity of her youthful life in northwest Ohio, is many years behind her. While a successful career in pediatric psychology on the south shore of Massachusetts and the responsibilities of being a wife and mother of two have taken her “far from home,” Deidre has the fondest memories of her youth in Montpelier.
When I was selecting a subject for this month’s column, Deidre came to mind. When Barb and I moved to Montpelier in the late 1970’s we were friends with her parents and watched Deidre and her brother Steve grow up. Deidre also has a Leader Enterprise connection as her grandmother Milly Taylor was a longtime Leader employee, although she had retired before I came on the scene.
“My Grandma Milly did work at the Leader for many, many years,” explained Deidre.  “I have memories of going to a couple of the old office locations and picking her up for lunch or checking in with her.  I also had old Leader Enterprise stationery for doodling as a kid and used many a roll of newsprint for sign-making in cheerleading and art.”
Once she started sharing memories, they just started flowing: “ … watching the high school football team in the Class A state playoffs in 1973 … visiting my parents at work (Mohawk Tools, Inc. and the Post Office) …  model airplane club with my father … Girl Scouts at the Presbyterian church … the St. Joe River Canoe Races … the sounds of the active rail yard and trains late at night … ice cream at Howe’s Restaurant (and the Dairy Queen prior to that) …  Wermer’s Pet Shop … Trautman’s 5 and Dime…  working as a lifeguard at the Montpelier Pool …  the ‘new’ Superior Middle School.” 
 “I graduated from Montpelier High School in 1985.  I had some of the same teachers as my mother and father!  I have many positive memories of Montpelier.  It has changed over the years, but it will always be my home.  I have vivid memories of many, many experiences around the town.”
Like many of Montpelier’s best and brightest, all the joys of small town life were not enough to keep her here.  On the advice of friend and fellow lifeguard Amy Meier, Deidre headed to Miami University for her first degree, then headed to Bowling Green State University (like many others from her family) where she earned both a Master’s Degree and a Doctor of Philosophy Degree in clinical psychology.
Ready to begin her career, Deidre headed to Massachusetts. “I always thought Ohio was a great state, yet I was eager to expand my horizons beyond those of Ohio.  I think the fact that my parents had the opportunity to do so …  and that I was born in Ireland … was always such a big part of my life early on.”
And in Massachusetts she has found considerable success in her career.
“For nearly 15 years, I have worked for May Institute as the Director of Pediatric Psychology Services.  In that capacity, I have been contracted to a local community hospital setting on the south coast of Massachusetts to manage their outpatient pediatric specialty services.  I oversaw the creation of that hospital program and have since acted as chair of the department which currently has about 30 staff members, several consulting physician specialists and annually serves approximately 2,000 children with special healthcare needs and their families.  As part of my role, I supervise masters’ and doctoral level students write professionally and occasionally still see patients.  My clinical interests include pediatric psychology (the application of behavioral principles in helping manage often complex medical and developmental issues), coping with medical disorders, family adjustment to illness, psycho-oncology, adolescent suicide, sleep problems, feeding disorders, and neurodevelopment.”
Still, Deidre knows how much her Montpelier roots have grounded her.
“Now that I have ‘grown up’ and reside elsewhere, I truly have great respect and pride for my upbringing. I grew up in a time and place where respectful behavior and personal relationships were important and nurtured within the community. I didn’t always understand the value of that growing up, but I have a deep appreciation and am thankful for those values today.”
Deidre and her husband Bob Paschke have two young children. They live about 18 miles from downtown Boston.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Dan Burcham - Column for September 2011

If you lived in Montpelier in the 1990’s there was a sight you could see almost every day of the year: the Burcham family (Richard and Lori and their kids Brooke and Dan) running either up or down the Platt Street bridge on their route around town. . Brooke now lives in Savannah, Georgia, but it is Dan who has run “far from home” to a new life in Singapore.
Dan’s road to Singapore went through Ohio University where he quickly came to the conclusion that he did NOT want to study journalism. 
“I remember feeling frustrated with the coursework I was taking, and I had to take stock of what I was going to do with my life,”  Dan related. “At some point, I kind of realized that what I enjoyed the most was spending time in the natural environment. I had this epiphany of sorts about the amazing beauty and complexity of natural systems, and I have always enjoyed being outdoors working with my hands. I guess I had known that for a while, but it took me some time to make peace with my blue-collar reality. In high school, I worked for Violet Bible and helped out with her yard work a lot, and I spent several summers helping with the landscape maintenance at Riverside Cemetery. I always enjoyed that kind of work, and I made up my mind to pursue that simple enjoyment. “
Dan left Athens to study horticulture at Ohio State.  “During my first quarter in Columbus, I took some plant materials identification courses and I immediately understood that I found my calling.”
He also found his way to Brazil for a study abroad trip. “I had a crash course in cultural fluency, language, and food. It really helped me grow up from being a small-town kid with a limited view of the world.” The trip helped him focus on his love of both nature and travel, leading to his bachelor’s degree in  2007 with a major in horticulture and a minor in international studies.
His next stop was for a master’s degree at the University of Delaware, a program that included work with the famous Longwood Gardens in Philadelphia. “They have an MSc program to train young horticulturists to assume leadership roles in the field of public horticulture, which is basically the cultivation of plants in spaces for public use and enrichment. In this field, you might work in a botanic garden, municipal park, nature center, zoological park, or any other public landscape. By then, I was mostly interested in arboriculture and urban forestry as a career. This is basically the cultivation of street trees in cities and towns for their environmental, social, and economic benefits.”
A graduate program trip to Asia led to a fascination with the garden city-state of Singapore.  “I took up a position in the National Parks Board, a Singapore statutory board, after I graduated from Delaware. Here, I’m conducting research on tree health issues. I’m working with others here to characterize the diseases of tropical street trees, develop diagnostic instruments, and seek treatment solutions. In one project, we’re attempting to use a beneficial microorganism (a fungus) to treat wood decay lesions in street trees. In the long term, we should be able to improve their health and increase their service life. It’s really exciting work for me to be involved in, and I’m very fortunate to have had the opportunity. “
I asked Dan how a Montpelier upbringing prepared him for adult life in Singapore.
“Would it be bad to say that virtually nothing I experienced in Ohio prepared me to live in Singapore? Living successfully abroad as an expatriate isn’t so much a skillset as it is an attitude. It requires a lot of patience and openness. Singapore has four official languages, including Chinese, Malay, Tamil, and English, which is the business language. It is incredibly diverse. The young Singaporeans speak a kind of creole language that mixes English, Chinese, and Malay words. They call it “Singlish.” It took me a long time to understand.”
“There were other stumbling blocks, including the “squat pot” in public toilets or the broad affinity for durian fruit that smells akin to rotting gym socks. However, Singapore is also a very easy place to live. It has a world-class public transportation system, cheap taxis, and delicious restaurants. I didn’t know Chinese food at all until I moved to Singapore. Now, I don’t know if I could live without xiao long pao (steamed soupy pork dumpling) or dan dan mian (spicy peanut sauce noodles). It’s also very safe. I don’t have to worry about wandering in any dark alleyways or anything.”
It hasn’t been all work in Singapore for Dan. It was there that he met his girlfriend Jui. “She’s a self-employed entrepreneur from Thailand, and she’s been living here in Singapore much longer than me.”
Dan said he is looking forward to a visit from his parents. “I've planned a lot of sightseeing in Singapore, and we'll go to Thailand for several days as well. I can just see the culture shock on their faces now”
Maybe they will all take a run together.  “I run a few times a week and ride my bike to work every day!”
(Dan asked that I include his email address: danielburcham@gmail.com, noting he would enjoy hearing from Montpelier friends and Leader readers.)


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David Belden was a longtime Montpelier educator and a former managing editor of The Leader Enterprise, now living near Nashville, Tennessee. He can be contacted at david.belden@comcast.net.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

"Far from Home" for August

Hopefully those who are in the Montpelier area are buying The Leader Enterprise each week, but for those who can't get their hands on a print copy, here is my "Far from Home" column for August featuring Chris and Michelle McCrea.


There were some years - when I was the sports editor of The Leader Enterprise and the football/basketball announcer for the Locomotives – which I enjoyed more than others. Winning teams always made the job “easier,” but any time I could write about the good kids that Montpelier had produced it was worth the effort, despite any team records.
Looking back, one of the most enjoyable times I spent writing and announcing was the boys’ basketball season of 1991-1992. The team was led by Mike Bumb and Chris McCrea and during the season each was able to join the “1,000 Point Club.” What made it even more fun was that both young men were just such nice guys.
Mike Bumb did not wander “far from home” as he has stayed in the Montpelier area. He and his wife Andrea and their girls were our neighbors when we lived on John Street and have always been special folks to Barb and I. Mike, of course, is now well into a successful career coaching and teaching at Hilltop.
Chris McCrea, however, did decide to go “far from home,” so this column will catch up with Chris and his wife Michelle (Wolf), also a Montpelier High School graduate.
The first stop for Chris was the United States Military Academy at West Point. He graduated from West Point in 1996 with a degree in economics. Michelle headed to Athens, Ohio, and graduated in 1996 with her degree in elementary education.
“In 1996 I was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the U.S. Army and was assigned as a PATRIOT missile officer in the Air Defense Artillery Corp,” Chris explained.  “Michelle and I were married three weeks after I graduated West Point, and three weeks after that we shipped off to El Paso, Texas.”
The road got a little farther from home when Chris and Michelle were sent to Germany and stationed at a PATRIOT Missile Battery.
“Michelle and I spent the next three and a half years living in the small Bavarian town of Ansbach and while there took the time to travel most of Europe and parts of the Middle East before being sent  back to the states to finish out my tour of duty. It was a wonderful experience as a young couple. Michelle taught fifth grade at the local American military base, while I worked on my newly assigned missile battery. It was a wonderful time for both of us.”
After a stint in Yorktown, PA, where their first daughter, Annie, was born, Chris left the military in 2001 as his five year tour was completed.
A return to northwest Ohio was slated, and Lima was the next stop for the McCreas.  Chris took a job as a Plant Manager with BOS Gases in their hydrogen production division. “Never thought in a million years I’d be in the chemical business or doing any type of engineering related work, but it’s kind of funny how things work out.
While in Lima, Chris received a master’s degree in finance from the University of Dayton, and he and Michelle welcomed a second daughter, Olivia.
The family of four hit the road again in 2005, heading back to Texas to work for The Linde Group selling large scale hydrogen plants primarily to multinational and petrochemical firms.
“Michelle and I currently live in Kingwood, TX, a northern suburb of Houston. I now work as a business manager serving Linde’s refining and petrochemical customers, and Michelle is again teaching fifth grade at the local elementary school here in Kingwood. Oil, gas, and energy firms are the large employers in the city, and most of our neighbors, friends … everyone really, is touched by this sector in some way. One never realizes how many people and how much effort it takes to bring oil up from the ground, and in turn, put gasoline in your car. The scope of the effort is truly amazing.”
Chris said he and Michelle and the girls enjoy living in Texas, although they always enjoy a trip back home to see family and friends.
“Our lives are filled with the usual family and work related activities – school functions, kids’ activities, and work … the usual. We hope to someday start traveling again like we did when we were a bit younger, however, given the constraints of work and family, we may have to wait a bit longer.

Monday, July 11, 2011

July 2011 - Featuring Charmayne Cooley

Last month I told you that this column would feature people with a Montpelier connection who are now “far from home.” This month we travel all the way to Cameroon in Africa for our visit with Charmayne Cooley.

Charmayne is a 2002 graduate of Montpelier High School, and is the daughter of Larry and Christy Cooley of rural Montpelier. Her journey from Montpelier to Africa took her through Gambier, Ohio, where she graduated from Kenyon College with a degree in American Studies. She stayed in Gambier, working by day as a higher education administrator in the school’s admission office, and working nights as a certified paramedic and firefighter.

While that may sound like an interesting start to life for most people, Charmayne looked for something more.

“Despite loving my job and my friends, I still didn’t feel personally fulfilled,” she explained. “In an attempt to ‘force my own hand,’ I resigned during the summer of 2009. I knew that the future had something else in store for me, and I needed to explore what that was. At the age of 25, I felt at a crossroads in my life – too old to be young and too young to be old.”

A trip home to the family farm in Montpelier led her to a box which contained an old Peace Corps catalog she had picked up during her college years. Things moved rapidly from that point, and in the summer of 2010 she learned she had been assigned to be a community health educator in Cameroon for the next 27 months.

“My group of community health and agroforestry volunteers arrived in-country in September and began 11 weeks of training together while living with host families. Our training included French language immersion, technical classes, as well as general medical/safety lessons and discussions on the cultural context,” she noted. On December 1 she was officially sworn in as a Peace Corps volunteer in front of the country director and the U.S. Ambassador to Cameroon.

“Cameroon is an incredibly diverse place, often called ‘Africa in Miniature.’ For a country the size of California, the variety is immense,” Charmayne explained. “The geography ranges from Sahel desert to lush forest, religion is divided between Muslim and Christian, and each region boasts its own traditional custom, dances, and foods. I have been assigned to Bapa, a small village in the mountainous western region. This area is francophone (French speaking), but Cameroon has approximately 250 languages.”

In her duties as a community health educator, Charmayne works to sensitive people on major health issues like malaria, cholera, HIV/AIDS, mother/child health, and nutritional deficiencies.

Charmayne said her rural upbringing in Montpelier was a good preparation for this setting. For example, “As I’m sure most people can attest, news travels fast. We’re all familiar with the gossip wheel that exists in small-town America, and that principal is carried over here. In other words, if I buy six tomatoes at my weekly market, I am sure to be asked about it by some village mamas. Of course, there’s always the phenomena of casually observing the unexpected – like the random chicken that always manages to wander into my kitchen, wake me up at 4:00 a.m., or share a taxi ride with me!”

Charmayne said she appreciated being able to share her Peace Corps experience with the Leader readers because parts of the Peace Corps goal is not only helping people, but helping to promote a mutual better understanding between the peoples served and the American people.

While at Montpelier, Charmayne was very active in the band, choir, Locomotion, the musicals, student council, and many may remember her as the resident piano accompanist during her high school years. “I can’t say I do much with music these days, though I’ve always had a love of music – which has made me appreciate the stuff I hear in this country. In the span of one hour, you can go from hearing traditional call-and-response chanting, to Nigerian pop, to Celine Dion circa 1996. I even heard Christmas music blaring out of speakers in the regional capital last week!”

Charmayne appreciates hearing from friends and those from her hometown. Her e-mail address is ccooleypccam@gmail.com.

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David Belden was a longtime Montpelier educator and a former managing editor of The Leader Enterprise, now living near Nashville, Tennessee. He can be contacted at david.belden@comcast.net.

June 2011 - Featuring Amy Myers

It was three years ago that I wrote my final “Amid the Clutter” column for The Leader Enterprise. I reread that column this morning and discovered I had tossed around … and dismissed … the possibility of continuing to write a column from my new home in Nashville, Tennessee. I reasoned that The Leader is, and ought to be, a “hometown” newspaper. What I failed to realize is that just because you live far from home you are never too far from your hometown.

So here I sit at my computer in Nashville, writing a column for The Leader. After spending almost a quarter of a century writing for The Leader, it is almost like coming home.

Since Barb and I are living in the Nashville area, not far from our son Grant, let me start out by catching you up on our transition to the Music City.

True retirement didn’t stick. I taught for a year, and now I substitute teach and work part of the year as a professional test evaluator, grading essay exams for states across the country. Barb works part-time for the Nashville Visitors and Convention Bureau where she can talk to strangers to her heart’s content.

But Nashville is also an entertainment mecca and it is easy to be pulled in. Barb and I did not retire to Nashville to become “stars,” but, alas, if that is what you are destined to be, you may as well let your life shine!

Barb and I both sing in groups that regularly (well, once a year) sell out arenas all around the country. I never knew what a thrill it could be to sing in front of ten thousand screaming fans. Am I kidding? No way! We both sings in barbershop choruses that rank among the best in the world, and best in the world choruses draw some big crowds. Barb’s chorus released a new CD last week, and I was all over Nashville television in May with a close-up spot in a commercial for my chorus’s annual show at Vanderbilt University.

And I have a movie coming out next year! I am just an extra (as is Grant), but I AM in a movie. We already have invitations to the red carpet world premiere next spring.

Last week Barb and I were invited to a VIP reception where we mingled with the likes of Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman. Okay, Barb won those tickets, but we were VIPs for a day! We sing in church choir with a co-star of the movie “Country Strong” and one of Nashville’s top music video directors.

Last month Grant had a photo spread in “Nashville Lifestyles” magazine.

Yes, we found our retirement niche in Nashville.

But this column isn’t about me ... although I may throw in some tidbits now and then. “Far from Home” is hopefully going to be a monthly feature about folks who once called Montpelier home, but whose lives have taken them in another direction … far from home.

One of those people is former Montpelierite Amy Dohm Myers. Amy graduated from Montpelier in 1990, grew up attending First United Methodist Church, and was Miss Montpelier 1990.

She also lives just down the road from Barb and me in Mt. Juliet, Tennessee.

Amy grew up taking advantage of all the good things small town life has to offer. Athletically, she was always a cheerleader. Musically, she played flute in the band, sang in the chorus and Locomotion, and appeared in the high school musicals (“Music Man,” “Seven Brides for Seven Brothers,” and “The Sound of Music”).

Amy said that all of those high school activities, and the good education she got at MHS, prepared her for her transition of college. “I went to Ball State, and suddenly I was all alone. None of my high school friends were there. But doing all of those things in high school gave me a lot of confidence, and it really helped when I got to college.” She graduated with a degree in deaf education … with honors … and has since earned her master’s degree at Grand Canyon University.

Married to her husband Tim, Amy started her career as a special education teacher in Indiana. (In the interview she graciously said my wife Barb, who spent her career teaching special education at MHS, was someone who inspired her to enter the field).

Three children later (Mariah, Jacob, and Addison) and with the upwardly mobile career of her husband, Amy taught in several school districts in Indiana, from small towns (which she says she loved the best) to a school right outside of Chicago.

And last fall the family ended up in Tennessee. “I love the Nashville area. The weather is great, and the people are so friendly. We have found we really enjoy and take advantage of all the readily available activities.”

And like everyone down here, she has met and has seen the “regular side” of some celebrities, including American Idol singer Bo Bice and members of the Oak Ridge Boys.

Now at home in Tennessee, Amy is again teaching special education at the high school where Mariah and Jacob attend, and she is hoping to attend Middle Tennessee State University to pursue an education specialist degree.

“I don’t get back to Montpelier very often,” she explained, “but my mom still lives in Bryan, so I do make it back to Williams County from time to time.”

And while she says her family loves it here in Tennessee, she does indeed sometime feel far from home. “I still miss that slow moving and relaxed life.”