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Tag: Now That’s Rural

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Tracy Hett – Trace of Copper

As the wheat in a Kansas field ripens, it turns from green in color to a rich gold, tan, and brown – accented with just a trace of copper. Today in Kansas Profile we’ll meet a Kansas craftsman who creates beautiful works of art representing Kansas symbols such as wheat, using actual copper, brass and steel.

Tracy Hett's business Trace of Copper in Marion, Kansas specializes in Kansas and rural-themed metal sculptures.
Tracy Hett’s business Trace of Copper in Marion, Kansas specializes in Kansas and rural-themed metal sculptures.

Tracy Hett is owner of Trace of Copper in Marion, Kansas. “My grandfather started this whole thing,” Tracy said. “He was a very creative man.” It seemed he could fix anything on the farm, and in the winter months, he would tinker in his shop.

“He would weld together nuts and bolts and make a figurine or a windmill,” Tracy said. Then people wanted to buy them.

“I was close with my grandpa,” Tracy said. “As a little kid, I wanted to do what he was doing. I learned by watching him as he cut out designs and welded them together.”

One of his favorite designs was a head of wheat. If someone was visiting his shop, Tracy’s grandfather would build a metallic head of wheat, and then give it to them.

Tracy worked in his father’s grain elevator business. In 1985, he started to make these metallic creations of art himself. Like his grandfather, he created these hand-crafted metal sculptures by welding or brazing pieces of brass, copper or steel together and selling them. As a play on his first name, he called the business Trace of Copper.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Michael Hook and Jim Gray – Chisholm Trail 150

“The Chisholm Trail.” The name evokes cattle and cowboys, independence and daring, the frontier and the wild, wild West. All those things are part of the history of the Chisholm Trail, which will honor its 150th anniversary beginning with a celebration in the town where it really all began: Abilene. This is today’s Kansas Profile.

The 150th anniversary of the Chisholm Trail will be celebrated from Kansas to Texas in 2017.
The 150th anniversary of the Chisholm Trail will be celebrated from Kansas to Texas in 2017.

Michael Hook is an events coordinator for the City of Abilene. He is from Kansas City but grew up in Texas where he became a western history buff. “Davy Crockett was my hero,” Michael said. A business career took him around the Midwest but he became interested in possibly teaching history.

“I stumbled upon Abilene, and it’s everything you would ever want,” Michael said. He moved to Abilene, met his wife, studied local history and became the coordinator for a landmark series of events marking the 150th anniversary of the founding of the Chisholm Trail.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Clint and Jenny Osner – Hired Man’s Grocery & Grill, Inc.

“Homegrown.” It’s nice to enjoy homegrown products fresh from the garden, for example.  Today we’ll learn about a store which is providing lots of good products in a rural community. A key to its success is that the business itself is homegrown.

The Hired Man's Grocery & Grill in Conway Springs, Kan. is owned by the Clint & Jenny Osner family.
The Hired Man’s Grocery & Grill in Conway Springs, Kan. is owned by the Clint & Jenny Osner family.

Jenny and Clint Osner are owners of Hired Man’s Grocery & Grill, Inc. in Conway Springs near Wichita. Jenny and Clint grew up and went to school at Conway Springs.

Clint became a certified welder. “I’m a teacher,” Jenny said. She got her education degree from Wichita State and earned a master’s degree in curriculum and instruction. She also taught swimming and lifeguarding.

After the old grocery store in Conway Springs closed, Jenny and Clint decided to open a store themselves. “We did it because we believe in the community,” Jenny said.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Pam Budenbender – Onaga Country Market

“Well, if I had a grocery store, here’s what I would do…”  That statement on the part of one Kansas woman may have been prophecy, as she has become the owner of an innovative grocery store serving rural Kansas.

The Onaga Country Market in Onaga, Kansas.
The Onaga Country Market in Onaga, Kansas.

Last week we met Paul Budenbender who operates a floor coating business while living in rural Kansas. His wife Pam has strong opinions about grocery stores, and she recently had the opportunity to put those opinions to work.

“I was a military brat, from everywhere and nowhere,” Pam said with a smile. Along with other duty stations, her dad served at Fort Riley and Fort Leavenworth near Kansas City. While working on a construction job in Kansas City, Pam met Paul Budenbender and they ultimately were married. Paul’s family came from a farm in northern Pottawatomie County. Pam and Paul would frequently come to the farm on the weekends. The nearest store was in Onaga, but it was small and limited.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Paul Budenbender – Epoxy Coating Specialists

Let’s go to Kauffman Stadium, home of the defending world champion Kansas City Royals.  Note how the concourse floor is smooth, clean, and beautiful. That’s because this floor was coated with a special treatment, produced by a company with ties to rural Kansas.

Paul Budenbender of Epoxy Coating Specialists or ECS.
Paul Budenbender of Epoxy Coating Specialists or ECS.

Paul Budenbender is co-owner of Epoxy Coating Specialists, or ECS, which coated the concourses at Kauffman Stadium as well as floors and walls in many other facilities across the country. Paul’s family has roots in Pottawatomie County, where his ancestors homesteaded near Fostoria. Paul’s dad went to K-State and then worked for the Corps of Engineers, which eventually transferred him to the head office in Kansas City. Paul grew up at Shawnee but spent summers on his grandparent’s farm.

Tragically, Paul’s father passed away from cancer at age 48. Paul went to work for a painting and flooring contractor in Olathe. He worked there 16 years and met his wife Pam. Paul’s work involved the emerging use of epoxy to paint floors and walls.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Kim Thomas – Stockton

Kim Thomas, mayor of Stockton, Kansas is about to become the president of the League of Kansas Municipalities.
Kim Thomas, mayor of Stockton, Kansas is about to become the president of the League of Kansas Municipalities.

October 2016. It is the League of Kansas Municipalities annual conference, and it is time to pass the gavel to a new president. This new president will have several distinctions: She is a woman, she is an African-American, and she comes from rural Kansas.

Kim Thomas is the mayor of Stockton, Kansas. Her family has deep roots in northwest Kansas, where she is the fifth generation to come from the community of Nicodemus. As we have previously profiled, Nicodemus is a historic African American community which was settled after the Civil War.

“My great-grandfather had the annual Nicodemus community celebration in his grove,” Kim said.  She grew up in Plainville but spent lots of time with her grandparents in Nicodemus.

While still in high school, she worked for Southwestern Bell as a telephone operator. She went on to Emporia State and then came back to northwest Kansas to work for Southwestern Bell on equipment. She spent 32 years before retiring as a communications technician with the company, located at various towns throughout the region.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Conard Family – Part 2

Six-year-old Clara Conard plays the violin with the help of an assistive device designed by the Fab Lab at Independence Community College.
Six-year-old Clara Conard plays the violin with the help of an assistive device designed by the Fab Lab at Independence Community College.

The bow sweeps across the strings of the violin and the sound of the music floats across the room. But this isn’t just any violinist. It is a girl originally from China who is missing one hand.  She’s using an innovative and unique type of device with a prosthesis to play the violin, and she lives in rural Kansas.

Last week we met Shawn and Gayly Conard. Shawn is a family doctor at Minneola District Hospital, south of Dodge City.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Conard Family – Part 1

“If you’re looking for fame and fortune, you may not find it. But if you’re looking for a place to serve, you can definitely find it here.” Those words of wisdom might apply to many places and types of careers, but in this case, it refers to a family physician who is serving rural Kansas and beyond.

Hospital in Minneola, Kansas.
Hospital in Minneola, Kansas.

Shawn Conard is a family doctor at Minneola District Hospital in Minneola, Kansas. Minneola is a rural community in Clark County, south of Dodge City.

Shawn grew up in Hays and went to K-State. He got involved with Intervarsity Christian Fellowship where he went on a mission trip with a young woman named Gayly. Their relationship flourished and the two were wed.

Shawn attended medical school at KUMC and became part of a pilot program for Primary Care in which he was placed in McPherson with Dr. Thomas. He then “matched” at Via Christi Family Medicine where they taught full scope family practice including obstetrics.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Randy Kemp – Eskridge Lumber

It’s been called a “step back in time,” a local resource for hardware and materials, and a lifesaver when somebody is in a jam. It’s a small town Kansas lumberyard which now has new life under local ownership.

Eskridge Lumberyard in Eskridge, Kansas
Eskridge Lumberyard in Eskridge, Kansas

Randy Kemp is the manager of Eskridge Lumber LLC in Eskridge, Kansas. Eskridge has had a lumberyard for a long time. Eldon Roberson and Dean Miller had owned the lumberyard since 1970.

Randy Kemp came to work at the lumberyard in 1981. He is a local, having been born and raised here.

“I tell people that I’ve never gotten off the main street of Eskridge,” Randy said. “My dad ran a gas station and shop here and we lived down the street.” Randy continued to live on main street when he finished school and started going to work on construction projects. After he got married, his wife didn’t want him to travel so much so he took a job at the lumberyard, right there on main street. In 2004, he took over as manager.

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Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural: Brian Hansen – Dustrol

From a lonely highway in Montana to a busy interstate near Bristol Motor Speedway in Tennessee, there are highways being repaired by a business which is the largest rotomilling company in the United States – and that company is headquartered in rural Kansas.

Dustrol, Inc., based in Towanda, Kansas recycles asphalt and provides other highway maintenance services across numerous states, from Tennessee to Montana.
Dustrol, Inc., based in Towanda, Kansas recycles asphalt and provides other highway maintenance services across numerous states, from Tennessee to Montana.

Brian Hansen is president of Dustrol Inc., this innovative asphalt maintenance business. Brian explained that the company was founded by Ted Dankert more than 40 years ago.

Ted Dankert served in the Army. After retiring from the military, he went to work for his father-in-law who had an asphalt paving business in El Dorado, Kansas. In 1973, he went out on his own and founded his own company to sell emulsions for sealing asphalt and controlling dust.  Because it worked so well in controlling dust on roads, he named the business Dustrol.

Ted Dankert expanded the business over time. In 1975, the company began using rented equipment to recycle asphalt in order to complement its pavement maintenence operations.

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