Saturday, June 27, 2015

Contract Sales Representatives Needed For New Digital Company

Independent Contract Sales Representatives Needed for Information/Content Technology Company.


Location: Quad Cities.



HBT Productions is a new mobile phone app and digital media solution company. The focus is to build community pride and connect businesses to a larger consumer base. HBT Productions is seeking independent, motivated outside sales to support our ongoing expansion in the its Kansas marketplace. Responsibilities include: Demonstrating products, Selling business memberships and advertising options, Maintaining client relationships with excellent customer service. Commission position.

Candidates should have customer service experience, Exceptional presentation and communication skills, A smart phone or tablet is required to be able to demonstrate products.

Candidate's for the positions should enjoy helping others to succeed, being able to build rapport with people, and interested in problem solving.

Will train the right person with a positive attitude.

If you want the ability to make above average income and are willing to work hard please call me at (563) 362-0904 ext. 700 or email michael@hbtproductions.com 

Keep up-to-date with everything in the Abilene Kansas Community!!
GET The Free Mobile App HERE.  
Keep up-to-date with everything in the Abilene Kansas Community!!  GET The Free Mobile App HERE.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quad-cities/id980150055?mt=8

A Traditional Farm Life - Ham and Asparagus

A Traditional Farm Life

By Shasta Hamilton


Greetings from Enterprise, dear friends!  The emerging sense of a life-long dream being fulfilled is heady stuff.  Realizing you are but a step or two away from a goal, that has hereto now always seemed just out of reach, gives you light for one step more.

The lamp of sustainable living has been burning for my husband and I for more than seventeen years now—as long as we have been married, in fact, and perhaps even longer.  Sometimes it burns bright, sometimes the lamp is trimmed and only a soft glow fills the room, but it has remained burning nonetheless.  The circumstances of our life together have ebbed and flowed, precipitating frequent moves even though the desire to “settle down” has always been there. 

And now we find ourselves owners of 11 acres on the edge of a quiet rural Kansas town, and current circumstances seem to be indicating our desire to put down roots is at long last being fulfilled.

For us, sustainable living means knowing how to provide—with God’s help—for our daily needs of food, clothing, and shelter.  We may never be completely independent of the local grocery store, but our goal is to provide as much of our “daily bread” as possible—fruit, vegetable, herb, meat, dairy, grain, etc.—and know how to preserve the bounty for future consumption.

Throughout the years of our marriage, we have managed to put different pieces of the sustainability puzzle together, but unfortunately, not necessarily at the same time. We’ve learned many useful rural life skills, but until now there has always been a corner of the barn our lamp of sustainability has never filled with light—the draft horse stall.

My husband grew up around horses on the farm, but they were not used out in the field.  Since he was a child he has dreamed of farming with draft horses, and has passed this dream down to his sons. 

The boys recently finished their round pen for horse training.  Their desire for working with horses grows with each new fence they install, as the horses graze down the tall grass and reveal the possibilities of what our property can become as scrub trees are cleared and pasture reclaimed.  The lamp burns brightly now.

It is heartening to see some of the pieces of sustainable living with draft horses slowly start falling into place, and in typical Hamilton fashion, we put the cart before the horse--literally. 

Our boys went to an auction last Saturday, drawn by the dream of a team of Percheron draft horses.  The team brought more than they were prepared to spend, but a “people hauler,” manure spreader, and horse tack were very much within their price range. 

The “people hauler” is a long wagon with benches along each side, designed for the specific purpose of giving folks horse-drawn rides.  Barring a coat of fresh paint, it will need few improvements.  The only piece missing was the draft horse to pull it.

Though disappointed to return home without draft horses Saturday, Monday morning found the boys in a pickup with horse trailer heading towards Holton to consider an older Belgian draft horse mare. 

Our sons purchased a “Jewel.”  Their gentle giant is quite literally twice the size and weight of our buggy horse Jack.  Her feet are the size of dinner plates—better watch your toes!  This week the horseshoe farrier measured the circumference of one trimmed hoof at a whopping 19 inches!

Once shod she will be able to pull the aforementioned people hauler to give rides on Friday nights at the Enterprise Farmer’s Market.  In the meantime, she has other roles to fill.

We were at a point in our attempt to clean up our property in which we knew some horsepower was necessary, whether it be the type with rubber tires or iron shoes.  Michael and the boys spent some time with Jewel in our garden one evening this week, using a horse-drawn cultivator on an unplanted weedy patch. 

Out of the garden, both older boys practiced “ground driving” Jewel, walking behind her without an implement, holding the lines and giving appropriate commands to be used in future farming scenarios. 

This, dear friends, is the dream:  to see our boys farming successfully with horses.  Our lamp is full of oil; the flame burns bright.  Its light reflects back upon us from a Jewel, and we bask in its warm glow.

While waiting for the boys to return home with Jewel from Holton, my eight-year-old daughter took the reins and cooked our “ladies‘ lunch” while I cut out a nightgown for our four-year-old.  The asparagus spears sautéed in bacon grease and ham drippings were simply sublime.
  
Ham and Asparagus Skillet Dinner
bacon grease
ham slices
asparagus spears
salt and pepper

Melt enough bacon grease to cover the bottom of your skillet.  Fry ham slices to desired doneness, turning once.  When ham is fried, add more bacon grease if necessary and sauté asparagus spears until crisp-tender, sprinkling with salt and pepper and turning occasionally until lightly browned.

Copyright © 2015 by Shasta Hamilton

Shasta is a fifth generation rural Kansan now residing in Enterprise, Kansas.  She and her husband own and operate The Buggy Stop Home-Style Kitchen with their six home-schooled children.  You can reach The Buggy Stop by calling (785) 200-6385 or visit them on the web at www.thebuggystoprestaurant.com.

Keep up-to-date with everything in the Abilene Kansas Community!!
GET The Free Mobile App HERE.  
Keep up-to-date with everything in the Abilene Kansas Community!!  GET The Free Mobile App HERE.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quad-cities/id980150055?mt=8

The Vintage Spoke - A Life in Motocycles


The Vintage Spoke

By Lisa Eastman 

Chad Chebultz never planned on ending up in Abilene.  A missed turn or mistake reading a map led him to the town he now calls home.

Chebultz was driving through from Texas and thought he was on Highway 77 but had actually ended up on Highway 15.  Chebultz shared, “I came into the middle of Abilene and saw this town and thought, yeah man, this is 1950.  This is ok. I went home and told my girlfriend about Abilene and we were looking over here within two weeks.  Next thing, we’re here and it’s been a good place for us ever since.”


At the time, Chebultz was in the collections business.  But motorcycles had been a part of his life in the past.  He was a successful flat-track racer with three national championship wins under his belt.  Then it all changed with an accident in Paducah, Kentucky.  Chebultz suffered a head injury and decided that along with seeing two close friends injured, that was enough for him.  He quit riding but still considered motorcycles art.


After losing his job a few years ago, Chebultz went back to his passion for the art of motorcycles and started a business.  Chebultz explained, "My neighbor had a motorcycle for five hundred dollars and I had lost my job.  My money was running out.  So I thought, “ I wonder if I can buy that bike?” I knew it had to be worth more than that.  So I bought it and I think it sold for $2100 and I had a $500 investment.” Chebultz reinvested his profits and the business took off from there.

Chebultz saw a need for parts for older motorcycles and found a way to manufacture these through partnerships with other companies.  Chebultz has been very successful and has built his business to include nine full-time and two part-time employees.  He sells both restored motorcycles as well as new parts for vintage motorcycles.

Chebultz summed it up with, “It’s been a great journey.” 

To fine more information about the Vintage Spoke visit the Quad Cities App under the listing of Motorcycles.

Keep up-to-date with everything in the Abilene Kansas Community!!
GET The Free Mobile App HERE.  
Keep up-to-date with everything in the Abilene Kansas Community!!  GET The Free Mobile App HERE.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quad-cities/id980150055?mt=8

Sunday, June 21, 2015

A Traditional Farm Life - Tart Cherry Lattice Pie


A Traditional Farm Life

By Shasta Hamilton 

Greetings from Enterprise, dear friends!  As we examine our property in order to plan future sites for an orchard, berry patch, and greenhouse, our current lush green surroundings increase our anticipation of bountiful harvests to come.   

Fueling the fire was a recent invitation to come pick a good friend’s cherry trees. What a dream come true!  We loaded up the family and arrived in a backyard in Chapman to find two trees absolutely loaded with the tart, red orbs.  Visions of cherry pies danced in our heads as eight eager amateur cherry pickers prepared to fill bowls and ice cream buckets to the brim. 

How did we know they were tart and juicy?  To a person, our first cherry picked went in immediately for a taste test. After warnings to the children of the dire consequences of eating too much ripe fruit in one sitting, we turned to the task at hand.

How do you even begin such a monumental task?  In our naiveté, we began by delicately “cherry picking” the best cherries, but it soon became obvious this method would take way too long.  (We were in someone else’s backyard, after all.) 

We then began attempting to reach up and grab clusters of cherries all at once, but found we could not keep a hold on them and they ended up rolling off hat brims onto the ground.  After clumsily picking for what seemed like an eternity, we combined our small bowls and ice cream buckets to discover we only had enough to fill one large stainless steel bowl.

Providentially, about this time the owner came out to check on us and to casually mention there was someone else who was coming to pick cherries as well.

Should we feign disappointment or shout, “Hallelujah!”?  We chose the middle ground and said we would be happy to leave some cherries for the next folks.  (You could barely even tell we’d picked from the trees.)

This morning the girls and I sat down at the kitchen table and had a nice mother/daughter chat while pitting cherries.  We tried several methods we had heard about.  The most creative was using the tokens from our Sorry!™ board game to push out the pit.  We also poked out pits with toothpicks, but we found the best method to be using the curved end of our (clean) hairpins.  (A paper clip bent open would have the same result, but wouldn’t be nearly as fun to tell about.)

The cherries had not held up well in their two days in the fridge, and when all was said and done we had a grand total of only SIX CUPS pitted cherries. 
So much for that recipe for canning cherry pie filling requiring 24 cups of fruit.  Plan B was quickly implemented, and the “Tart Cherry Lattice Pie” recipe was selected from on old Taste of Home annual cookbook.

The recipe required 4 cups for one pie, so I prepared the filling for one pie while my daughters used the remaining 2 cups to prepare a similar recipe.  When I poured the filling into my pastry-lined 9” pan, I knew I was in trouble.  It was mounded full and the juices were ready to overflow the sides of the pan.  I plowed on ahead and carefully put on the lattice top, struggling to retain the juices in the pie while building up the pastry rim “retaining wall” around the edges as high as possible.       

Expecting the worst, I carefully set the pie on a cookie sheet before putting it in the oven.  The pastry dam broke as anticipated, and about one fourth of the outside edge of the crust fell off the pie into the caramelized juices below, effectively cementing my pie to the pan.  Not a pretty sight.  (A quick review of the recipe afterward revealed I should have drained off the accumulated juices before making the filling.)

The girls made two small cherry tarts, which came out beautifully.  Later in the afternoon we took the fruit of our labors to the restaurant for hubby to admire.  After a quick glance at the lopsided lattice pie, my husband made an astute observation: “Well, I guess it won’t win a ribbon at the county fair.”

Well, dear friends, we all know you can’t judge a book by its cover.  Hubby declared after his second slice it was absolutely, without a shadow of a doubt, the best cherry pie he had ever eaten.  It was certainly a lot more work than opening up a can from the store, but by next year we’ll have forgotten all the trouble and be ready to do it all over again.
  
Tart Cherry Lattice Pie

1-1/3 cups sugar
1/3 cup all-purpose flour
4 cups fresh or frozen unsweetened
pitted tart cherries, thawed
and drained
1/4 teaspoon almond extract
Pastry for a double crust pie (9 inches)
2 tablespoons butter, cut into small
pieces

1.  Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
2.  In a large bowl, combine sugar and flour; stir in cherries and extract.  Line a 9-in. pie plate with bottom pastry; trim to 1 inch beyond edge of plate.  Pour filling into crust.  Dot with butter.
3.  Roll out remaining pastry; make a lattice crust.  Seal and flute edges.  Cover edges loosely with foil.
4.  Bake 20 minutes.  Reduce heat to 375 degrees.  Remove foil; bake 20-25 minutes longer or until crust is golden brown and filling is bubbly.  Cool on a wire rack. Yield:  6-8 servings.

Copyright © 2015 by Shasta Hamilton

Shasta is a fifth generation rural Kansan now residing in Enterprise, Kansas.  She and her husband own and operate The Buggy Stop Home-Style Kitchen with their six home-schooled children.  You can reach The Buggy Stop by calling (785) 200-6385 or visit them on the web at www.thebuggystoprestaurant.com.


Keep up-to-date with everything in the Abilene Kansas Community!!
GET The Free Mobile App HERE.  
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.app_quadcities.layout            https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quad-cities/id980150055?mt=8

Monday, June 15, 2015

A Traditional Farm Life - Roasted Baked Potato Chunks


A Traditional Farm Life

By Shasta Hamilton

Greetings from Enterprise, dear friends!  This may come as a shock to you, but it’s raining again this week as I write!  Fortunately, this time I can look out our window and see our garden is fully tilled.  After somewhat helplessly watching those weeds grow for what seemed like weeks on end, the feeling of satisfaction and relief of looking out on black earth is indescribable. Let is rain!

Weed control activities have not been limited to our garden here on the farm this week. The boys spent a morning this week helping their friend and business partner Dean Hansen hoe around their 183 tomato plants.  In my mind that feat is amazing in and of itself, but in the course of the same morning they also put cages around 120 of those same plants!  This turned out to be the most difficult job, as it took two men just to get each overgrown plant into each concrete reinforcement wire cage—one to gather up the plant and the other to carefully put the cage over the top.  Some labor was saved, however, by using the bucket of a Bobcat to insert the stabilizing posts in the ground.

While I was baking cinnamon rolls this week for the restaurant, Michael packed up a crew of five children and headed to Detroit to see if some friends who grow watermelons for local Farmer’s Markets needed any help with weed control. It turned out the melon patch was in pretty good shape, so the children grabbed hoes and helped in their vegetable garden.

The children also spent some time in a local cornfield one hot afternoon this week, gathering some of last fall’s field corn for this year’s squirrels.  They are harvesting from a corner of a field that was unable to be picked last fall, and the owners have generously given the children whatever they can glean from what’s left in the field.  This time they shucked it out in the field, and have bagged up the dry ears for sale as squirrel corn at the Farmer’s Market.

We have felt the Lord’s blessing upon our home this week as I have been able to shift from restaurant duties to domestic duties around the home.  The girls and I have been engaged in a massive decluttering effort as we seek to make up for lost time away from home.

I’m also trying to make up for lost time in the sewing room.  I guess it is no surprise that as the girls get taller their dresses get shorter.  My free time on Monday was spent drafting patterns as necessary and cutting out garments to be sewn in snatches of free moments throughout the week.  Yes, it takes time and effort to sew our girl’s dresses, aprons, and bloomers, etc, but we find great joy and blessing in doing so.

We recently stumbled upon a new way to use Friday night’s leftover baked potatoes from the restaurant for a weekend meal at home.  The back of the Lipton Onion Soup and Dip Mix box had a recipe for Onion Roasted Potatoes.  While it called for raw potatoes, we substituted our baked potatoes instead. 

I saved the empty box in the pantry for future reference, and today as I went to the pantry to find it for this week’s recipe I discovered it missing.  This, friends, is the one downside I have found to our recent cleaning spree.  Certainly the one straightening up the pantry saw no need to keep an empty Onion Soup and Dip Mix box!  

Thankfully, it’s a pretty simple recipe and easily doubled for a larger crew.  The recipe would, or course, be the same if you use raw potatoes, although the baking time may be longer.

Now, you might be wondering why folks who usually cook from scratch are using convenience food.  While it might be that using a purchased dip mix doesn’t quite qualify as “old-fashioned farm food,” being thrifty and using leftovers to make something new for the family is an age-old rural skill.  Waste not, want not!
  
Roasted Baked Potato Chunks

4 leftover baked potatoes
1/3 cup vegetable oil
1 pkg. Onion Soup and Dip Mix

1.  Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
2.  Cut potatoes into 1” chunks.
3.  In a large mixing bowl, combine the potato cubes, vegetable oil, and Onion Soup Mix; mix until evenly coated.
4.  Spread in a single layer on a greased baking pan.  Bake 30-35 minutes, until golden brown and crisp to your liking. Yield:  4 servings.

Copyright © 2015 by Shasta Hamilton

Shasta is a fifth generation rural Kansan now residing in Enterprise, Kansas.  She and her husband own and operate The Buggy Stop Home-Style Kitchen with their six home-schooled children.  You can reach The Buggy Stop by calling (785) 200-6385 or visit them on the web at www.thebuggystoprestaurant.com.


Keep up-to-date with everything in the Abilene Kansas Community!!
GET The Free Mobile App HERE.  
Keep up-to-date with everything in the Abilene Kansas Community!!  GET The Free Mobile App HERE.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quad-cities/id980150055?mt=8

5 Star Arts Festival Call for Entries

5 Star Arts Festival Call for Entries


The Abilene Convention and Visitors Bureau requests artist entries for the 5 Star Arts Festival in historic downtown Abilene, Kansas. The festival includes the juried fine art and craft show, live entertainment, food vendors, and children's activities.  

The showcase dates of the festival are Saturday, Sept. 26 and Sunday, Sept. 27. Setup and optional events for the artists will begin Friday, Sept. 25. Salina-based artist Karla Prickett will be the juror selecting artists. Prickett, a visual arts consultant/mixed media artist, is the former director of the Smoky Hill River Festival Fine Art Show. Entry submissions are due by July 1.

The 5 Star Arts Festival is open to all artists. All artwork must be original in interpretation ad composition. Some amenities provided to artists will include a welcome reception, Sunday morning breakfast, free parking, 24-hour security, and volunteers to assist with load-in and load-out.

For more information and submission details, please e-mail 5StarArtsFest@gmail.com or visit @5StarArts on facebook, twitter, and instagram.

Special thanks to the Community Foundation of Dickinson County for their generous support. 

The CVB is the marketing arm of the City of Abilene promoting all Abilene has to offer and attracting visitors to this community. The CVB located at 201 NW 2nd Street, Abilene, is housed in the restored 1928 Union Pacific Depot along with the Abilene Visitor Information Center and 160-person meeting room.