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Tag: St. George

Dave Nelson, Mt. Zion Church

Stone tablet, Mt. Zion Church
Stone tablet, Mt. Zion Church

There’s a revival going on down at a church east of Manhattan. No, I don’t mean another service; literally, the church building itself is experiencing a revival.

In this case, a historic stone church is being saved and repurposed into a center for the community.

Dave Nelson is a financial advisor in Wamego. A Manhattan High and K-State grad, he has worked on various land development projects. One of the forgotten landmarks near where he lives is the long-closed Mt. Zion Church, a stone building in the countryside five miles east of Manhattan.

“A new client walked into my office one day,” Nelson said. “When she told me where she lived, I said, ‘Oh, that’s across from the old Mt. Zion Church.’ Yes, she said, and it’s for sale.”

That got Nelson thinking. Soon after, he was out on his daily morning walk with a friend and neighbor, retired city official Jerry Petty. Nelson said: “What would you think if I bought a church? Would you want to be involved in fixing it up?”

Petty wasn’t sure.

The next morning, the two were walking again. Nelson said, “Well, I own a church. Can you help work on it?”

“When?” Petty replied.

“Well, I have two college kids coming at 9 o’clock this morning,” Nelson said.

Continue reading “Dave Nelson, Mt. Zion Church”

Nicole Hedges-Campos, Bling Glamour

Nicole Hedges, Bling Glamour
Nicole Hedges, Bling Glamour

“Bling.” My daughters would say that this term refers to fun, shiny jewelry.

Today we’ll meet a remarkable young woman entrepreneur who has built a business around providing fashionable bling for women. She is not only overcoming the challenges of business, she has found that doing so is helping her overcome the challenges of health and life itself.

Nicole Hedges-Campos is the founder of Bling Glamour, a clothing and fashion accessory business. She grew up in the rural community of Scott City, population 4,113 people. Now, that’s rural.

Hedges-Campos attended Kansas State University and joined a sorority. After college, she moved to Las Vegas with two sorority sisters. She was working in a marketing position when an unknown health disorder popped up.

“I got really sick,” she said. On one occasion, she passed out on an airplane. No one could identify the cause. Ultimately she lost her driver’s license and moved back with her parents in Scott City.

“We were going to doctors all over the country, trying to figure out what was wrong,” Hedges-Campos said. Finally a physician at the Cleveland Clinic identified that she had a connective tissue disease, and prescribed treatment.

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Samuel Beachy, Beachy’s Flowers and Produce

Man and woman standing in front of tomato plant
Samuel and Maryann Beachy

An eight foot tall tomato plant? It sounds like a gardener’s dream, but one innovative young rural Kansas couple is making it become reality using a gardening technique known as hydroponics.

Samuel and MaryAnn Beachy are the founders and owners of Beachy’s Flowers and Produce. They were living in Kentucky and then moved to Kansas to be closer to MaryAnn’s parents in Lyndon.

Samuel was operating a locker plant in Osage City until he sold that business. The Beachys’ church was looking to expand in the Wamego and Manhattan area, and Samuel wanted to pursue a new enterprise there.

“I’ve always been intrigued with growing things,” Samuel said. “I loved to grow things in the garden.”

As he and MaryAnn considered a move, they thought about the type of produce operation that could work best in northeast Kansas and decided to try an indoor, hydroponic system. “He did a lot of studying,” MaryAnn said.

Continue reading “Samuel Beachy, Beachy’s Flowers and Produce”

Casey Amerin, Manhattan CHIEF Thunder

Not once…not twice…not three times. For four years in a row, a basketball team of small town, homeschooled high school boys has claimed the championship in a national basketball tournament. This team is based in rural Kansas.

Team photo, Manhattan CHIEF Thunder
Manhattan CHIEF Thunder

Casey Amerin is coach of this championship team. Jeff Schurle and Travis Goff from the Keats/Riley area are the volunteer athletic directors. Their team is the Manhattan CHIEF Thunder.

Casey grew up at Plains. He enjoyed playing basketball and football. He studied business education at K-State, became a teacher and coach, and met and married Rebekah. They moved to her home area near Clifton, where Casey manages LCL Buffalo Ranch and worked as a basketball official for several years.

Casey and Rebekah had four sons and a daughter. When they decided to homeschool their children, they learned of a Manhattan-area organization named Christian Homes In Educational Fellowship, or CHIEF for short.

CHIEF is a non-profit organization that provides support to Christian homeschooling families through group meetings, field trips, curriculum and athletics.

CHIEF sports include football, girls volleyball, and boys and girls basketball and golf. The team home court is at the Beacon Center gymnasium owned by Lighthouse Baptist Church in the rural community of St. George, population 639 people. Now, that’s rural.

The Amerins joined CHIEF. When their oldest son Gage became old enough to play basketball, Gage joined the junior high team. Casey made the hour-long drive to take his son to practice and eventually was asked to help coach. In 2017, as Gage moved up to the high school level, Casey became the head boys basketball coach.

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Cody Liming, Back Roads Broadcasting

“Friday night lights.” That phrase refers to the exciting atmosphere of hometown high school football games, played in communities across the nation on Friday nights.

Three men wearing headsets, Back Roads Broadcasting
Back Roads Broadcasting. Pictured l to r are Eddie Greer, Isaiah Dobbins and Cody Liming

The sights and sounds of those games are part of the fabric of small town life. Today we’ll meet some innovative Kansans who are finding a way to bring the excitement of those Friday night games to many more people, using the tools of technology.

Cody Liming is the co-founder of Back Roads Broadcasting, which he founded with his friend Cody Roche. Both of them graduated from Rock Creek High School in Pottawatomie County, where Cody Liming had played football, baseball and wrestling. Cody Liming now works for the Kansas Division of Emergency Management and Cody Roche is a systems engineer at K-State.

The two Codys did some video production on the side. Over time, they accumulated more cameras and video production equipment.

“We came to realize that we had an entire set of live video production equipment,” Liming said. “We could use this to benefit the community.”

In the spring of 2020, Covid-19 hit and people were not allowed to gather in person. “The athletic director at Rock Creek reached out to us to see if we could livestream a couple of games so that people could see them,” Liming said. The broadcast was fun and generated positive reaction from the viewers.

When the 2021 football season came around, they decided to livestream the whole season. “Let’s invest in more equipment, get some commentators and go whole hog,” Liming said. Continue reading “Cody Liming, Back Roads Broadcasting”