Next, is Bull Creek Valley. Even when the color is not in full display, the mountain vista, the clouds, and horizon speak to time immemorial.
On the side road toward the picnic tables at Craggy Gardens, the full beauty of RED leaps out from a tree.
Just beyond Craggy Gardens en route to Mount Mitchell, the trees cast a yellow tint. All these sites can be reached within a 30-minute drive!
President's Note
During these past two years, even though we have not been able to meet regularly as a community because of Coronavirus Pandemic, our board has met monthly to ensure the business needs of the center are handled. As a community we still have provided support to our local outreach with monthly donations of food, school supplies, and holiday gifts. Members of the board, along with volunteers have also coordinated to maintain traditions such as the hanging of flags during the summer season, quarterly highway litter sweeps and beautification projects along with our holiday greenery displays.
There is a lot of work involved in maintaining our center and its many initiatives. We encourage all of our community members to get involved and help their neighbors. I believe it is important to remind everyone that the board of directors are all volunteers and donate their time because of their love of Gerton. The board votes on all major issues and makes decisions as a team, so if you have a comment, complaint, suggestion, or a compliment, it is always best to share it with the entire board via e-mail. By sending an e-mail to groundedingerton@gmail.com it will be shared with the entire board rather than a specific member having to pass along your feedback. If needed, the entire board can craft a response to the issue.
In the coming weeks current members will be receiving their annual dues request. Dues are $10 per person and are vital to maintaining the center and paying the monthly expenses. Many individuals use this time to make additional donations which are greatly appreciated. If you are not a current member and wish to join you can send an e-mail to groundedingerton@gmail.com with your contact information and we will reach out to you about joining.
I hope everyone has a very safe and happy holiday season, and we are hopeful we can resume meetings in the near future as more of our community is vaccinated and the pandemic continues to subside.
Thank you for the opportunity to serve the Gerton Community. I look forward to seeing you soon.
All the Best!
Stan Mobley
Hey Gerton Neighbors!
The last Gerton Highway Trash Pick-up of 2021 will take place Friday, November 5.
We
will meet at the Upper Hickory Nut Gorge Community Center at 10 a.m.
instead of 9:30. We will provide safety vests, trash/recycle bags, and
water.
Join your neighbors in keeping Gerton a beautifully clean place to live!
Greens Workshop on Monday, December 6, 10 a.m.
Mark your calendar for Monday, December 6, at 10 a.m. to meet at the UHNGCC to turn the greens into our roadside decorations. We will cut, arrange, tie on a red bow, and then someone will tie each festive arrangement to each street sign that runs through Gerton off 74A. We need greens, so please send a note to groundedingerton@gmail.com or call a member of the board to say you will be bringing some. Bring your trimmers and join your neighbors.
Deliveries to Hickory Nut Outreach Continues
One of our September Outreach deliveries.
With your help, Hickory Nut Gorge Outreach will feed 225 families this Thanksgiving!- Canned green beans
- Canned corn
- Canned sweet potatoes
- Instant mashed potatoes
- Stuffing mix
- Cake mix
- Cake frosting
News from Gerton Fire and Rescue
4975 Gerton Highway Gerton, NC 28735
828-243-0411 (Make a note of the new phone number)
From Robert (Jay) Alley
Update on Fund Raiser:
On August 28, 2021, we held a fundraiser at Gerton fire station. The reason for the fund raiser was to help with the purchase of a Lucas Compression Device. The Lucas Compression Device is an automated compression device to be used on a patient who is suffering from cardiac arrest. Once applied to a patient, it maintains continuous compressions on a patient. As you all know, compressions can be very demanding and tiring for any first responder. By using this machine, we will be able to provide continuous and consistent compressions. Evidence has shown that the survival rate when using this device goes up tremendously and there have been many more “saves” using it. As you are all aware, we wait many times up to 45 minutes for a paramedic ambulance to arrive on the scene here in Gerton. All Henderson County EMS units have a Lucas device and once they arrive, it is put in place and activated. Until they arrive, your firefighters and EMS workers are doing compressions along with many other lifesaving skills.
By our purchasing this life saving piece of equipment, we will be able to free up as many as four workers to do other things needed in a cardiac arrest. We have been researching the data on the different automatic compression devices available, and we chose the Lucas. There are many reasons, but it has been proven to be reliable and we can swap out equipment with Henderson County since they have them also. After doing our research, we decided to purchase one. We searched out many grants and funding opportunities and found that the best we could do was a 50/50 matching grant from the state. We have applied for the grant, and I feel sure we will be awarded the grant. The Lucas device cost almost $19,000. The state grant will provide us with 50 percent of that.
This brings us to the fundraiser. We held the fundraiser to help offset the other 50 percent. We determined we would need approximately $9300 to meet the match. On August 28, 2021 the community of Gerton came together and met for a barbeque and fundraiser. Over 100 people came and ate with us and looked at the equipment we have. The food was paid for by an anonymous donor, to whom we are deeply appreciative. Folks came out from all over our fire district and gave. I am proud to say that with everyone’s donations, we raised almost $7,000. We still are having a few donations to come in. With these donations and the grant, we will be ordering the Lucas device in mid-January. We hope we never need to use this equipment, but it will be priceless when we do.
Thank you all for the support you have given Gerton Fire and Rescue over the years, and I look forward to serving you in the future. By the way, make sure you make note of the phone number. We had to change our number to 828-243-0411 due to an issue with Verizon, and we lost our old station number. I hope to give a report more often here, but ask you to follow us on Facebook and our website, www.gertonfire.org. Thanks and be safe.
If you haven't had the opportunity to give to this worthy cause--or would like to give again--just mail your check to Gerton Fire Department, PO Box 52, Gerton, NC 28735.
Information on Vaccine Boosters:
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New Community Room inside the UHNGCC
Steve Jones, in the bright sunlight of an October morning, works at putting down the new flooring. All paint, furniture, light fixtures, and the flooring have been given to the project by neighbors---and neighbors have volunteered all the labor.With the floor near completion, Steve stops to chat with Jim Earnhardt and Chuck Mallory. After the final touches are added to the molding, the room has been swept, the new furniture will be placed in the room. The room will be ready soon for individual reservation. Look for further information in an email and the next issue of the ECHO.
Neighborhood News
On July 20, 1926, the Cyclone Auction Company advertised lots for sale at “Chestnut Hill.” Lots had been prepared for houses, with costs “good enough for the richest and cheap enough for the poorest.” “We have lights, water and streets,” the posters assured readers.
One owner remembered signing for his lot alongside the highway, a card table and chairs serving as the office.
Before the Chestnut blight hit, the Appalachian mountainsides were described as “creamy with blossoms” in the springtime. Chestnuts served as a staple in the diet for humans and animals. Chestnut logs were transformed into buildings and furniture still used today on Chestnut Hill.
Once upon a time you could leave a glass quart jar with two dollars on a certain rock near the highway, and next day find the jar was filled with ‘white lightning.'
The colorful Douglas family—from New Orleans, with their two sons David and Bill, for whom our Pavilion is named, liked what they saw when they found the present Shutrump cabin for sale. Bertha, from French Algeria, spied a life-sized drawing of an Arabian horseman inside the house through a front porch window. She interpreted it as a sign to buy the cabin. Her Scots husband, sea Captain William Douglas, believed our surrounding mountains resembled his home country. They bought the house as a summer home. The Arabian horseman turned out to be the famous movie star Rudolph Valentino as “The Sheik,” the drawing itself a houseguest’s thank-you gift.
Bearwallow Baptist Collects Christmas Boxes for Samaritan's Purse
Seated: Riley Lyda and Tucker Lyda; standing: Jay Alley and Norris Lyda (by organ). The team delivered 24 boxes to the Boone Distribution Center on October 28; they hope do add another 20!ECHO of the Gorge is published bi-monthly by the UHNGCC. News and photos may be sent to Margaret Whitt at margaret.whitt@du.edu. Photos for this issue provided by Margaret Whitt, Sylvia Sane, Sam Earnhardt, Mollie Warlick.
Officers of UHNGCC for 2021: President - Stan Mobley; Vice-President - Jim Earnhardt; Secretary - Karen Owensby; Treasurer - Sylvia Sane; Board Members - Jean Bradley, Chuck Mallory, Margaret Whitt
Thank you everyone for the lovely and informative ECHO of the Gorge. I really enjoy reading it, usually several times to keep up and involved in this community. What a wonderful and caring place to live! Thanks to all involved 🍁🌿☮️
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