Jay Fergusonjay@deepcreekvacations.com301-501-0420
Menu

Wounded Warriors Week Taking Place At ASCI, Garrett College

Jun. 7, 2012

The Team River Runner Leadership Conference and Rendezvous began Monday at Garrett College and the Adventure Sports Center International (ASCI). More than 65 wounded warriors are participating in outdoor and indoor learning exercises and activities. This event is one of a number of community service activities coordinated and hosted by ASCI.

Team River Runner (TRR), a 501(c)3 non-profit organization, gives active duty service members and veterans an opportunity to find health, healing, and new challenges through whitewater boating and other paddling sports.

“The benefits of TRR have as much to do with creating a social network and support system as they do with learning water sports skills that provide an exciting adventure lifestyle that suddenly seemed lost due to injury,” a spokesperson said. “The program also encourages family members to participate whenever possible.”


‘Like’ on Facebook!

Support the Republican Newspaper! It’s only $9.95/year for the online edition!

In this process, paddlers are put through a step-by-step approach in which they learn to control a kayak in a pool, and then they move to ASCI, which provides a controlled environment where they are introduced to whitewater. The participants then move on to rivers, lakes, and oceans, where they gain additional experience and skills.

Leadership training is being provided in cooperation with the Continuing Education program at Garrett College.

“The college family looks forward to hosting these men and women, who have done so much for us,” said Dr. Rick MacLennan, president of the college. “We are pleased to be here to help them develop their growing management and adventure skills so they may take them home to share with veterans in their community.”

The conference is in its second year. It brings together vets from the TRR chapters around the country to help them with skills to run their chapters, the spokesperson said. The range of offerings includes topics such as the latest developments with adaptive equipment to sessions on how to accomplish local fundraising and recruit volunteers.

Monday’s kick-off speaker was Jeannette Rudy Fitzwater, who conducted a seminar on helping the participants identify their work and management styles to aid them in being able to communicate and work productively with staff and volunteers in their chapters.

The Rendezvous portion of this week’s event is in its 4th year. It brings back vets who have gone through the rehabilitation and therapy programs at Bethesda Naval and Walter Reed Army hospitals (and what are now combined as Walter Reed National Military Medical Center) and gives them the opportunity to reconnect with one another. They are also encouraged to bring their families.

“A great deal of the healing process is with the families, and all too often they are excluded from events to which the vets are invited,” the spokesperson said.

Suzanne Nicolas, events coordinator at ASCI, said the support of the local community has been key in making the conference and rendezvous possible.

More here.

Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free — 

 Search Homes & Lots for Sale at Deep Creek Lake & Garrett County, Maryland
 —

"Maryland Access Point" Launch To Be Open To Public

Jun. 7, 2012

Garrett County Community Action Committee Inc. and the Area Agency on Aging are inviting the public to the launch of Maryland Access Point (MAP) on Thursday, June 14, from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the Mary Browning Senior Center, 104 E. Center Street, Oakland.

MAP is an aging and disability resource center providing “one-stop shopping” for services that can assist in long-term and short-term care, maintain independent living, and provide research for future needs for aging adults and adults with disabilities.


‘Like’ on Facebook!

Support the Republican Newspaper! It’s only $9.95/year for the online edition!

MAP is committed to encouraging independence and personal choice, according to a spokesperson. It assists residents by creating a single point of entry to access resources for lifelong independence.

“MAP envisions a Maryland in which aging adults and adults with disabilities receive consolidated quality care that is efficient and effective in supporting full quality of life,” the spokesperson said.

MAP, administered by Community Action’s Area Agency on Aging, serves aging adults and adults with disabilities of all income levels who are in need of assistance. Family members and caregivers trying to support a grandparent, spouse, or adult child may also receive information and assistance.

The MAP office is located in the AAA administrative offices at 104 E. Center Street, Oakland. Partners include Resources for Independence, Social Services, the Garrett County Health Department, and CORE services.

The launch marks the official implementation of Maryland Access Point in Garrett County. Persons who would like more information on MAP or other services may contact Allison Layton, MAP manager, at 301-533-9000. Persons may also go to the web site at www.marylandaccesspoint.info.

More here.

Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free — 

 Search Homes & Lots for Sale at Deep Creek Lake & Garrett County, Maryland
 —

Flag Day program needs volunteers

MCHENRY — The Flag on Mountain Maryland Foundation will hold the eighth annual Flag on Mountain Maryland program at the Wisp Resort on June 14 at 6 p.m.

The indoor program will honor the civic organizations of Garrett County. Delegate Wendell Beitzel will be the speaker. The event will include music by Maria Rose and Danny Elswick, a parade of state flags and performances by Jessica’s Dance Creations.

Volunteers are needed to be part of the “living flag” on the mountain at the Wisp. Call Sandy Blamble by June 13 at 301-501-0786 or 301-334-4728. Student service-learning hours are available for students who help with the living flag.

More here.

Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free — 

 Search Homes & Lots for Sale at Deep Creek Lake & Garrett County, Maryland
 —

Increase to Non Resident Withholding Rate on Property Sales

By: Mike Kennedy
June 1st, 2012
Category: Deep Creek Lake Real Estate, Garrett County Real Estate

Effective June 1st the withholding rate for non-Maryland residents who sell property in the state of Maryland is increasing 0.25% to 7.00%. This withholding does not apply to Maryland residents.

Garrett County has numerous property owners who aren’t full time residents of Maryland that own vacation homes and real estate on or around Deep Creek Lake. Some owners are full time residents from northern Virginia, Washington D.C, and Pennsylvania that will be affected by this law change.

It’s important to note this is not a new tax. It’s simply a withholding. The withholding is calculated as follows at settlement;

The net amount of the purchase price of the house being sold less closing costs less any mortgage balance x 7%.

More here.

Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free — 

 Search Homes & Lots for Sale at Deep Creek Lake & Garrett County, Maryland
 —

More Deep Creek Lake, Md. Boat Rentals Eyed

June 5, 2012 10:27 AM
OAKLAND, Md. (AP) — The Garrett County Commissioners are considering a proposal that would increase the availability of boat rentals on Deep Creek Lake.

The board is set to consider on Tuesday a zoning amendment requested by the owner of the Lakeside Creamery ice cream shop. It would permit boat and personal watercraft rentals at his business and other locations that lack marina services.

Creamery owner Bill Meagher says he would only rent out watercraft. He would not sell fuel or boats, store boats or make boat repairs.

At least four businesses on the lake currently offer watercraft rentals from their marinas.

The county planning commission is recommending approval of the plan.

(Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

More here.

Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free — 

 Search Homes & Lots for Sale at Deep Creek Lake & Garrett County, Maryland
 —

'Old Lil' helps honor Allegany-Garrett Fire & Rescue Association


Liz Beavers

News-Tribune
Posted Jun 04, 2012 @ 05:24 PM

Westernport, Md. —

WESTERNPORT – “Old Lil,” Keyser’s 1914 fire truck, was among many fire trucks and EMS units that moved up Main Street in Westernport during the parade Saturday in honor of the 100th anniversary of the Allegany-Garrett County Fire and Rescue Association.

The association held its convention Saturday in Westernport, hosted by Potomac Fire Company No. 2.
More here.

Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free — 

 Search Homes & Lots for Sale at Deep Creek Lake & Garrett County, Maryland
 —

Opportunities for local artists

6:01 p.m. EDT, June 3, 2012
GRANTSVILLE, Md. -—

Spruce Forest Artisan Village at Penn Alps in Grantsville, Md., provides studio space for three guest artists in traditional or contemporary art or craft media each month during the summer and fall season.

Guest artists are part of a larger educational program in which working artists open their studios to Artisan Village visitors. Guest artists pay a small fee that covers utilities, but then have access to the studio seven days a week for the month. Resident and guest artist studios must be open and artists working on their craft five days a week, during which time artists may sell their wares.

“Being a guest artist is a great opportunity because I am able to expand my audience,” said Lenore Lancaster, an award-winning artist who has shared her colored pencil drawings with visitors to Spruce Forest for five years. “Working in my own studio or even doing weekend craft shows doesn’t allow me to really talk to and get to know the customers. The setting here is really intimate and because of that sales are good.”

Spruce Forest Artisan Village is home to a number of historic house museums, art studios, galleries, an 1800s grist mill and is adjacent to the Historic Casselman Bridge which will celebrate its 200th birthday next year. The three studios available to artists are housed in historic buildings.

More here.

Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free — 

 Search Homes & Lots for Sale at Deep Creek Lake & Garrett County, Maryland
 —

‘Better road, cleaner streams and less cost’

Instructors share techniques to reduce erosion, lessen sediment

Michael A. Sawyers Cumberland Times-News

FROSTBURG — Dirt and gravel roads throughout the region can expect to get some environmentally sensitive maintenance from those who attended a recent training session on the campus of Frostburg State University.

And, the techniques taught by instructors from the Center for Dirt & Gravel Road Studies at Penn State are also less expensive than traditional ones. The idea behind the training is to keep sediment from running into streams and rivers.

“Who could be against that? Better road, cleaner streams and less cost,” said Donnelle Keech of The Nature Conservancy. That organization, paired with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources sponsored the training.

Sixty-five attended the two-day training, some representing distant agencies such as the Anne Arundel Soil Conservation District.

“We can help with some funding to get people started using these techniques,” said instructor David M. Creamer. “When we know we have had an impact is when they start to use those same techniques with their own dollars.”

Traditionally, erosion on roads was corrected by digging up the entire roadbed and placing a 100-foot pipe beneath it, according to Creamer. The center teaches an approach whereby a 20-foot pipe is inserted through a bank on one side of the road, providing equal or superior erosion control.

Creamer tells students not to use more equipment than necessary because it would be “like picking your nose with your elbow.”

Bo Sliger is the maintenance chief for the Potomac-Garrett State Forest where he and his crew of three have 25 miles of dirt and gravel roads in Garrett County.

“Our road work is pretty much dependent on getting grants,” Sliger said. “We have gotten a number of them, mostly for $30,000. Our forest roads get used not just by motor vehicles but by ATVs, hikers and others.”

This week, the forest crew will be maintaining Piney Mountain Road near Cranesville. Snaggy Mountain Road is another that requires regular attention, Sliger said.

As the manager of the Allegany County Soil Conservation District, Craig Hartsock works with private landowners to help them maintain roads.

“Every farm has a farm lane or a woods road with bridges or stream crossings,” Hartsock said. “We have cost-sharing programs to help them improve roads and reduce erosion.” These projects are contracted, he said. “We have up to 200 of those projects a year.

“We also approve all forest harvest roads for loggers,” Hartsock said. “There are 40 or 50 of those every year.”

One inch of rain that falls in an hour can cause 13 to 54 tons of sediment to be discharged into streams, according to the maintenance specialists. The techniques taught by the center are meant to reduce that discharge. In the case of the Potomac River drainage, that would mean less sediment flowing to the Chesapeake Bay.

Contact Michael A. Sawyers at msawyers@times-news.com

More here.

Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free — 

 Search Homes & Lots for Sale at Deep Creek Lake & Garrett County, Maryland
 —

Eight fire companies founded association

From Staff Reports Cumberland Times-News

WESTERNPORT — Organized on Sept. 15, 1912, by eight companies, Frostburg, Mount Savage, Chapel Hill, Cumberland Hose, GoodWill-Lonaconing, Midland, Tri Towns and Potomac No. 2, the local fire and rescue association was originally known as the Allegany County Association.

Peter McFarland, GoodWill-Lonaconing, served as the first president, and to date, 86 men and women representing 28 departments in the two-county area have followed in his footsteps.

In order to strengthen and unify the voice of the firefighters of Allegany and Garrett County, the Allegany County Association and the Garrett County Association joined together to form the Allegany-Garrett Counties Volunteer Firemen’s Association on Aug. 14, 1930.

As a result of the growth of the association over the years, the organization formally changed its name to the Allegany-Garrett Counties Volunteer Fire & Rescue Association on June 2, 1990.

Today, the association represents 36 companies, 24 from Allegany County and 12 from Garrett County.

Over the years, this association has hosted the Maryland State Firemen’s Association twice, 1951 and again in 1955.

Eight members of the Allegany-Garrett Counties Volunteer Fire & Rescue Association have led the MSFA, including John Stump, Cumberland, 1898; Peter McFarland, GoodWill-Lonaconing, 1908; Conrad Herpick, Cumberland, 1919; James McAlpine, GoodWill-Lonaconing, 1922; Cromwell Zembower, LaVale, 1951; David E. Kirk, Bowling Green, 1953; Robert Shimer, Potomac No. 2, 1988; and Robert E. Knippenburg, Midland, 1998.

The local association provided the MSFA with eight treasurers that covered a span of almost 100 years, from 1908-2003. William Wilson, Midland, served a tenure of 30 years from 1945-1975, followed by David E. Kirk, 1975-1990; Bob Saville, Bowling Green, 1990-2001; and John Shuhart, Barton, 2001-2003.

J. Francis Fatkin served a 26-year tenure on the MSFA Board of Trustees. Robert H. Shimer, Potomac No. 2, served eight, including two as chairman of the trustees, and Robert E. Knippenburg was appointed to Board of Trustees upon the death of Shimer in 2003, for the remainder of his unexpired term.


More here.

Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free
— 

 Search Homes & Lots for Sale at Deep Creek Lake & Garrett County, Maryland
 —

Md. ski resort owner talks with prospective buyers

By AP | May 31, 2012

HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) — The owners of Wisp, Maryland’s only ski resort, have met with a number of potential buyers in their efforts to stave off financial failure, one of the partners said Thursday.

But selling the western Maryland resort is not inevitable, as one of the group’s major creditors claimed in a U.S. Bankruptcy Court filing this week, said co-owner Karen Myers….

…Myers said Thursday that Wisp ended the winter in better shape than many other ski resorts by trimming expenses.

“We are, and will continue to do, business as usual,” she said.

More here.

Buying or selling real estate in Garrett County or Deep Creek Lake, Maryland? Call Jay Ferguson of Railey Realty for all of your real estate needs! I take great pride in referrals, and I assure you, I will take great care of your friends, family & colleagues!

877-563-5350 – toll free