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LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
WHEREVILLE, AL
Whereville, AL. February 24, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by March 9 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative.FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
The American Village is an educational institution whose mission is to strengthen and renew the foundations of American liberty and self-government by engaging and inspiring citizens and leaders. Its address is 3727 Highway 119 in Montevallo; for more information, visit americanvillage.org. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
ALABAMA GARDENS: GARLIC Garlic: An easy-to-grow and tasty protector. It has been used for some 7,000 years to fuel the building of pyramids and the athleticism of early Olympians, ward off vampires and other pests (including some humans), treat all manner of illnesses and add exceptional flavor to food. “It” is garlic, a relative of onions, shallots, leeks and ALABAMA'S HEALTH: SCOPE OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS Expand scope of practice for nurse practitioners. The lack of primary care physician service in rural Alabama is well documented. Fifty-two of Alabama’s 54 rural counties are currently classified by the Health Resources and Services Administration as having a shortage of such physician service. SO YOU WANT TO BE A LICENSED BOAT CAPTAIN? Take the course, pass the test and you could be taking clients fishing in your own boat. And if you see a tow boat operating on Lake Martin give it a wave. There is a good chance Captain Wes Davis, a man who made his dream come true, will be at the helm. For more information on Sea School contact Nellie Fuller, (800) 247-3080. THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE: WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN On top of that, by adding the Panhandle’s 10,000 square miles to Alabama, it would have become the largest, territory-wise, east of the Mississippi! Apparently sentiment for such a move had been growing in West Florida. A few years earlier, a legislator from Escambia County had drawn up a bill that would allow Panhandle residents to vote on HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide, SURVIVING A COVID YEAR IN ALABAMA Safiya Johnson, of Selma, is a registered nurse who worked at a Montgomery hospital and became ill with COVID-19 in October. A long-haul COVID survivor, sheLATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
WHEREVILLE, AL
Whereville, AL. February 24, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by March 9 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative.FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
The American Village is an educational institution whose mission is to strengthen and renew the foundations of American liberty and self-government by engaging and inspiring citizens and leaders. Its address is 3727 Highway 119 in Montevallo; for more information, visit americanvillage.org. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
ALABAMA GARDENS: GARLIC Garlic: An easy-to-grow and tasty protector. It has been used for some 7,000 years to fuel the building of pyramids and the athleticism of early Olympians, ward off vampires and other pests (including some humans), treat all manner of illnesses and add exceptional flavor to food. “It” is garlic, a relative of onions, shallots, leeks and ALABAMA'S HEALTH: SCOPE OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS Expand scope of practice for nurse practitioners. The lack of primary care physician service in rural Alabama is well documented. Fifty-two of Alabama’s 54 rural counties are currently classified by the Health Resources and Services Administration as having a shortage of such physician service. SO YOU WANT TO BE A LICENSED BOAT CAPTAIN? Take the course, pass the test and you could be taking clients fishing in your own boat. And if you see a tow boat operating on Lake Martin give it a wave. There is a good chance Captain Wes Davis, a man who made his dream come true, will be at the helm. For more information on Sea School contact Nellie Fuller, (800) 247-3080. THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE: WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN On top of that, by adding the Panhandle’s 10,000 square miles to Alabama, it would have become the largest, territory-wise, east of the Mississippi! Apparently sentiment for such a move had been growing in West Florida. A few years earlier, a legislator from Escambia County had drawn up a bill that would allow Panhandle residents to vote onLATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
GARDENING - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of its type in the state, reaching some 400,000 electric cooperativeconsumers.
2020 PHOTO CONTEST WINNERS 2020 Photo Contest Winners. July 27, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. They’re off the beaten path, or right on your front porch. Sometimes they’re the first thing in the morning, other times they’re in the quiet of the concluding day. And some feature young ones in the first few years of life, while others feature those in their sunset years.SPOTLIGHT | JUNE
The so-called “Lady in the Lake,” at Barber Marina in Elberta, is a fiberglass sculpture created by artist Mark Cline. Cline also created Bamahenge, a sculptural installation also on the Barber property (and also the very first Whereville photo in January 2016). ALABAMA OUTDOORS: PANFISH Fishing for panfish, from the bank, dock or a boat, offers an excellent way to teach children, and novice adults, about the outdoors. To start fishing for panfish, anglers don’t need much complex, expensive gear. Many people use cane poles without reels. Add a few hooks, bobbers and some bait to the list and start fishing.STATE OF SAUCE
The company is based in Montgomery, and the sauces are made in Chancellor, Ala. Today, in addition to the steak and barbecue sauces, Berdeaux’s produces Sweet Island Dipping Sauce, a lively blend of pineapple and pungent horseradish. All the sauces are completely natural, with no MSG, high-fructose corn syrup or liquid smoke, apoint Jim’s
OUTDOORS: NATUREPLEX EXPLORED In October 2015, the AWF opened the NaturePlex on a magnificent wilderness oasis in Millbrook just up Interstate 65 from Montgomery. Today this complex more than achieves the three AWF conservation goals. In the first year, more than 30,000 people, half of them school children, visited the 23,000-square-foot facility.TOOTHY TERRORS!
The Alabama state record weighed 6 pounds, 6 ounces and came from the Perdido River system in Baldwin County. A similar species, redfin pickerel, range across southern Alabama, but rarely weigh more than a pound. The state record redfin only weighed 13 ounces. “Chain pickerel are native to Alabama, but not many people target them,”says
40 YEARS AFTER THE KOPPER KETTLE EXPLOSION A gas leak caused the explosion in January 1978 that destroyed the Kopper Kettle restaurant and several nearby businesses. Photos courtesy Auburn University archives. Jan. 15, 1978 was a quiet Sunday in downtown Auburn. At that time, Auburn was a sleepy little village still on the cusp of the economic boom it would see years later. FAITH IN THEIR FARM: BARBOUR COUNTY COUPLE REVITALIZE Jewell Bean learned about hard work and community commitment from her parents, Roy and Rosa Stanford, pictured here. Expanding the calling. The Beans work as farmers and as educators, and they embrace everyone who visits their farm. HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide,LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
SURVIVING A COVID YEAR IN ALABAMA Safiya Johnson, of Selma, is a registered nurse who worked at a Montgomery hospital and became ill with COVID-19 in October. A long-haul COVID survivor, sheSPOTLIGHT | JUNE
Submit by email: whereville@alabamaliving.coop, or by mail: Whereville, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124. Contribute your own photo for an upcoming issue! Send a photo of an interesting or unusual landmark in Alabama, which must be accessible to the public. A reader whose photo is chosen will also win $25.WHEREVILLE, AL
Whereville, AL. February 24, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by March 9 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative.FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
The American Village is an educational institution whose mission is to strengthen and renew the foundations of American liberty and self-government by engaging and inspiring citizens and leaders. Its address is 3727 Highway 119 in Montevallo; for more information, visit americanvillage.org. SUN-WORSHIPING PLANTS FOR THE SUMMER GARDEN A number of plants — morning glories, most daisies, tulips, magnolias, altheas, dandelions, some lettuces and many legumes like beans, peas and alfalfa — close their blooms and/or furl their leaves at night. Other plants such as moonflowers, evening primroses, datura, four-o’clocks and several lilies, orchids and cacti open asthe sun
TRUE GRITS - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINESEE MORE ON ALABAMALIVING.COOP ALABAMA GARDENS: GARLIC Garlic: An easy-to-grow and tasty protector. It has been used for some 7,000 years to fuel the building of pyramids and the athleticism of early Olympians, ward off vampires and other pests (including some humans), treat all manner of illnesses and add exceptional flavor to food. “It” is garlic, a relative of onions, shallots, leeks and THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE: WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN On top of that, by adding the Panhandle’s 10,000 square miles to Alabama, it would have become the largest, territory-wise, east of the Mississippi! Apparently sentiment for such a move had been growing in West Florida. A few years earlier, a legislator from Escambia County had drawn up a bill that would allow Panhandle residents to vote on HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide,LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
SURVIVING A COVID YEAR IN ALABAMA Safiya Johnson, of Selma, is a registered nurse who worked at a Montgomery hospital and became ill with COVID-19 in October. A long-haul COVID survivor, sheSPOTLIGHT | JUNE
Submit by email: whereville@alabamaliving.coop, or by mail: Whereville, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124. Contribute your own photo for an upcoming issue! Send a photo of an interesting or unusual landmark in Alabama, which must be accessible to the public. A reader whose photo is chosen will also win $25.WHEREVILLE, AL
Whereville, AL. February 24, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by March 9 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative.FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
The American Village is an educational institution whose mission is to strengthen and renew the foundations of American liberty and self-government by engaging and inspiring citizens and leaders. Its address is 3727 Highway 119 in Montevallo; for more information, visit americanvillage.org. SUN-WORSHIPING PLANTS FOR THE SUMMER GARDEN A number of plants — morning glories, most daisies, tulips, magnolias, altheas, dandelions, some lettuces and many legumes like beans, peas and alfalfa — close their blooms and/or furl their leaves at night. Other plants such as moonflowers, evening primroses, datura, four-o’clocks and several lilies, orchids and cacti open asthe sun
TRUE GRITS - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINESEE MORE ON ALABAMALIVING.COOP ALABAMA GARDENS: GARLIC Garlic: An easy-to-grow and tasty protector. It has been used for some 7,000 years to fuel the building of pyramids and the athleticism of early Olympians, ward off vampires and other pests (including some humans), treat all manner of illnesses and add exceptional flavor to food. “It” is garlic, a relative of onions, shallots, leeks and THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE: WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN On top of that, by adding the Panhandle’s 10,000 square miles to Alabama, it would have become the largest, territory-wise, east of the Mississippi! Apparently sentiment for such a move had been growing in West Florida. A few years earlier, a legislator from Escambia County had drawn up a bill that would allow Panhandle residents to vote onBACKYARD BIRDING
According to a study published in 2019, the population of breeding adult birds in North America (including the U.S. and Canada) dropped by 2.9 billion from 1970, a loss that scientists call “staggering.”. Habitat loss is a major cause of these declines, exacerbated further by climate change and numerous other natural and human-caused threats. SUN-WORSHIPING PLANTS FOR THE SUMMER GARDEN A number of plants — morning glories, most daisies, tulips, magnolias, altheas, dandelions, some lettuces and many legumes like beans, peas and alfalfa — close their blooms and/or furl their leaves at night. Other plants such as moonflowers, evening primroses, datura, four-o’clocks and several lilies, orchids and cacti open asthe sun
2020 PHOTO CONTEST WINNERS 2020 Photo Contest Winners. July 27, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. They’re off the beaten path, or right on your front porch. Sometimes they’re the first thing in the morning, other times they’re in the quiet of the concluding day. And some feature young ones in the first few years of life, while others feature those in their sunset years. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
ALABAMA BOOKSHELF
Just Jones, by Andy Andrews, Thomas Nelson publishing, $24.99 (fiction) The third book in The Noticer series, this is a stand-alone novel following the character of Jones, a mysterious elderly man with endless wisdom who always seems to show up exactly when he’s needed most. The author lives in Orange Beach and is a motivational speaker who weaves life lessons into tales of adventure and ALABAMA RECIPES: COOKIES Line a baking sheet or tray with waxed paper. In a large microwave-safe bowl, combine peanut butter and cream cheese. Microwave, uncovered, on high (100% power) for 30 seconds or until mixture is slightly softened, stirring once. Stir in powdered sugar and pretzels. Shape the peanut butter mixture into 1-inch balls. WETUMPKA IS READY FOR ITS CLOSE UP Wetumpka – population about 8,000, county seat of Elmore County – beat out 2,600 other towns from around the country that applied to have their homes, businesses and historic structures revitalized and reimagined with the help of Erin and Ben Napier. The Napiers are the married couple who use their design and building skills to work SO YOU WANT TO BE A LICENSED BOAT CAPTAIN? Take the course, pass the test and you could be taking clients fishing in your own boat. And if you see a tow boat operating on Lake Martin give it a wave. There is a good chance Captain Wes Davis, a man who made his dream come true, will be at the helm. For more information on Sea School contact Nellie Fuller, (800) 247-3080. DREAM HOMES FOR POLLINATORS: WELCOME BENEFICIAL INSECTS TO Photo by Bob Farley. Many of us work hard to make pollinators feel at home in our landscapes, but there’s always more we can do for these and other beneficial insects, such as providing them with dream homes. BLUE AND GRAY MUSEUM IS A MUST FOR CIVIL WAR BUFFS Blue and Gray Museum is a must for Civil War buffs. October 31, 2017. -- By Alabama Living Magazine. Robert Parham, curator of the Blue and Gray Museum of North Alabama, talks about some of the displays at the museum, which is believed to be the largest privately owned collection of Civil War artifacts in the U.S. Photos by Michael Cornelison. HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide,LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
SURVIVING A COVID YEAR IN ALABAMA Safiya Johnson, of Selma, is a registered nurse who worked at a Montgomery hospital and became ill with COVID-19 in October. A long-haul COVID survivor, sheSPOTLIGHT | JUNE
Submit by email: whereville@alabamaliving.coop, or by mail: Whereville, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124. Contribute your own photo for an upcoming issue! Send a photo of an interesting or unusual landmark in Alabama, which must be accessible to the public. A reader whose photo is chosen will also win $25.WHEREVILLE, AL
Whereville, AL. February 24, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by March 9 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative.FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
The American Village is an educational institution whose mission is to strengthen and renew the foundations of American liberty and self-government by engaging and inspiring citizens and leaders. Its address is 3727 Highway 119 in Montevallo; for more information, visit americanvillage.org. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
SO YOU WANT TO BE A LICENSED BOAT CAPTAIN? Take the course, pass the test and you could be taking clients fishing in your own boat. And if you see a tow boat operating on Lake Martin give it a wave. There is a good chance Captain Wes Davis, a man who made his dream come true, will be at the helm. For more information on Sea School contact Nellie Fuller, (800) 247-3080. ALABAMA GARDENS: GARLIC Garlic: An easy-to-grow and tasty protector. It has been used for some 7,000 years to fuel the building of pyramids and the athleticism of early Olympians, ward off vampires and other pests (including some humans), treat all manner of illnesses and add exceptional flavor to food. “It” is garlic, a relative of onions, shallots, leeks and ALABAMA'S HEALTH: SCOPE OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS Expand scope of practice for nurse practitioners. The lack of primary care physician service in rural Alabama is well documented. Fifty-two of Alabama’s 54 rural counties are currently classified by the Health Resources and Services Administration as having a shortage of such physician service. HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide,LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
SURVIVING A COVID YEAR IN ALABAMA Safiya Johnson, of Selma, is a registered nurse who worked at a Montgomery hospital and became ill with COVID-19 in October. A long-haul COVID survivor, sheSPOTLIGHT | JUNE
Submit by email: whereville@alabamaliving.coop, or by mail: Whereville, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124. Contribute your own photo for an upcoming issue! Send a photo of an interesting or unusual landmark in Alabama, which must be accessible to the public. A reader whose photo is chosen will also win $25.WHEREVILLE, AL
Whereville, AL. February 24, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by March 9 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative.FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
The American Village is an educational institution whose mission is to strengthen and renew the foundations of American liberty and self-government by engaging and inspiring citizens and leaders. Its address is 3727 Highway 119 in Montevallo; for more information, visit americanvillage.org. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
SO YOU WANT TO BE A LICENSED BOAT CAPTAIN? Take the course, pass the test and you could be taking clients fishing in your own boat. And if you see a tow boat operating on Lake Martin give it a wave. There is a good chance Captain Wes Davis, a man who made his dream come true, will be at the helm. For more information on Sea School contact Nellie Fuller, (800) 247-3080. ALABAMA GARDENS: GARLIC Garlic: An easy-to-grow and tasty protector. It has been used for some 7,000 years to fuel the building of pyramids and the athleticism of early Olympians, ward off vampires and other pests (including some humans), treat all manner of illnesses and add exceptional flavor to food. “It” is garlic, a relative of onions, shallots, leeks and ALABAMA'S HEALTH: SCOPE OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS Expand scope of practice for nurse practitioners. The lack of primary care physician service in rural Alabama is well documented. Fifty-two of Alabama’s 54 rural counties are currently classified by the Health Resources and Services Administration as having a shortage of such physician service.SPOTLIGHT | JUNE
The so-called “Lady in the Lake,” at Barber Marina in Elberta, is a fiberglass sculpture created by artist Mark Cline. Cline also created Bamahenge, a sculptural installation also on the Barber property (and also the very first Whereville photo in January 2016). 2020 PHOTO CONTEST WINNERS 2020 Photo Contest Winners. July 27, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. They’re off the beaten path, or right on your front porch. Sometimes they’re the first thing in the morning, other times they’re in the quiet of the concluding day. And some feature young ones in the first few years of life, while others feature those in their sunset years. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
40 YEARS AFTER THE KOPPER KETTLE EXPLOSION A gas leak caused the explosion in January 1978 that destroyed the Kopper Kettle restaurant and several nearby businesses. Photos courtesy Auburn University archives. Jan. 15, 1978 was a quiet Sunday in downtown Auburn. At that time, Auburn was a sleepy little village still on the cusp of the economic boom it would see years later. THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE: WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN On top of that, by adding the Panhandle’s 10,000 square miles to Alabama, it would have become the largest, territory-wise, east of the Mississippi! Apparently sentiment for such a move had been growing in West Florida. A few years earlier, a legislator from Escambia County had drawn up a bill that would allow Panhandle residents to vote on ALABAMA OUTDOORS: PANFISH Fishing for panfish, from the bank, dock or a boat, offers an excellent way to teach children, and novice adults, about the outdoors. To start fishing for panfish, anglers don’t need much complex, expensive gear. Many people use cane poles without reels. Add a few hooks, bobbers and some bait to the list and start fishing.STATE OF SAUCE
The company is based in Montgomery, and the sauces are made in Chancellor, Ala. Today, in addition to the steak and barbecue sauces, Berdeaux’s produces Sweet Island Dipping Sauce, a lively blend of pineapple and pungent horseradish. All the sauces are completely natural, with no MSG, high-fructose corn syrup or liquid smoke, apoint Jim’s
DECORATION DAY
Decoration Day – or just Decoration, as most say – is a tradition so prevalent in northeastern Alabama that natives toss off the name like “Christmas” or “Easter.”. But people who grew up in other parts of Alabama may never have heard the term. The internet is equally clueless. Google “Decoration Day” and you will learn it is FAITH IN THEIR FARM: BARBOUR COUNTY COUPLE REVITALIZE Jewell Bean learned about hard work and community commitment from her parents, Roy and Rosa Stanford, pictured here. Expanding the calling. The Beans work as farmers and as educators, and they embrace everyone who visits their farm. BLUE AND GRAY MUSEUM IS A MUST FOR CIVIL WAR BUFFS Blue and Gray Museum is a must for Civil War buffs. October 31, 2017. -- By Alabama Living Magazine. Robert Parham, curator of the Blue and Gray Museum of North Alabama, talks about some of the displays at the museum, which is believed to be the largest privately owned collection of Civil War artifacts in the U.S. Photos by Michael Cornelison. HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide,LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
SURVIVING A COVID YEAR IN ALABAMA Safiya Johnson, of Selma, is a registered nurse who worked at a Montgomery hospital and became ill with COVID-19 in October. A long-haul COVID survivor, sheSPOTLIGHT | JUNE
Submit by email: whereville@alabamaliving.coop, or by mail: Whereville, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124. Contribute your own photo for an upcoming issue! Send a photo of an interesting or unusual landmark in Alabama, which must be accessible to the public. A reader whose photo is chosen will also win $25.WHEREVILLE, AL
Whereville, AL. February 24, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by March 9 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative.FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
The American Village is an educational institution whose mission is to strengthen and renew the foundations of American liberty and self-government by engaging and inspiring citizens and leaders. Its address is 3727 Highway 119 in Montevallo; for more information, visit americanvillage.org. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
SO YOU WANT TO BE A LICENSED BOAT CAPTAIN? Take the course, pass the test and you could be taking clients fishing in your own boat. And if you see a tow boat operating on Lake Martin give it a wave. There is a good chance Captain Wes Davis, a man who made his dream come true, will be at the helm. For more information on Sea School contact Nellie Fuller, (800) 247-3080. ALABAMA GARDENS: GARLIC Garlic: An easy-to-grow and tasty protector. It has been used for some 7,000 years to fuel the building of pyramids and the athleticism of early Olympians, ward off vampires and other pests (including some humans), treat all manner of illnesses and add exceptional flavor to food. “It” is garlic, a relative of onions, shallots, leeks and ALABAMA'S HEALTH: SCOPE OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS Expand scope of practice for nurse practitioners. The lack of primary care physician service in rural Alabama is well documented. Fifty-two of Alabama’s 54 rural counties are currently classified by the Health Resources and Services Administration as having a shortage of such physician service. HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide,LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
SURVIVING A COVID YEAR IN ALABAMA Safiya Johnson, of Selma, is a registered nurse who worked at a Montgomery hospital and became ill with COVID-19 in October. A long-haul COVID survivor, sheSPOTLIGHT | JUNE
Submit by email: whereville@alabamaliving.coop, or by mail: Whereville, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124. Contribute your own photo for an upcoming issue! Send a photo of an interesting or unusual landmark in Alabama, which must be accessible to the public. A reader whose photo is chosen will also win $25.WHEREVILLE, AL
Whereville, AL. February 24, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by March 9 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative.FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
The American Village is an educational institution whose mission is to strengthen and renew the foundations of American liberty and self-government by engaging and inspiring citizens and leaders. Its address is 3727 Highway 119 in Montevallo; for more information, visit americanvillage.org. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
SO YOU WANT TO BE A LICENSED BOAT CAPTAIN? Take the course, pass the test and you could be taking clients fishing in your own boat. And if you see a tow boat operating on Lake Martin give it a wave. There is a good chance Captain Wes Davis, a man who made his dream come true, will be at the helm. For more information on Sea School contact Nellie Fuller, (800) 247-3080. ALABAMA GARDENS: GARLIC Garlic: An easy-to-grow and tasty protector. It has been used for some 7,000 years to fuel the building of pyramids and the athleticism of early Olympians, ward off vampires and other pests (including some humans), treat all manner of illnesses and add exceptional flavor to food. “It” is garlic, a relative of onions, shallots, leeks and ALABAMA'S HEALTH: SCOPE OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS Expand scope of practice for nurse practitioners. The lack of primary care physician service in rural Alabama is well documented. Fifty-two of Alabama’s 54 rural counties are currently classified by the Health Resources and Services Administration as having a shortage of such physician service.JUNE 2021 ARCHIVES
June 2021 Issue of Alabama Living Magazine. Read all about it. Issue:June 2021
SPOTLIGHT | JUNE
The so-called “Lady in the Lake,” at Barber Marina in Elberta, is a fiberglass sculpture created by artist Mark Cline. Cline also created Bamahenge, a sculptural installation also on the Barber property (and also the very first Whereville photo in January 2016). 2020 PHOTO CONTEST WINNERS 2020 Photo Contest Winners. July 27, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. They’re off the beaten path, or right on your front porch. Sometimes they’re the first thing in the morning, other times they’re in the quiet of the concluding day. And some feature young ones in the first few years of life, while others feature those in their sunset years. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
40 YEARS AFTER THE KOPPER KETTLE EXPLOSION A gas leak caused the explosion in January 1978 that destroyed the Kopper Kettle restaurant and several nearby businesses. Photos courtesy Auburn University archives. Jan. 15, 1978 was a quiet Sunday in downtown Auburn. At that time, Auburn was a sleepy little village still on the cusp of the economic boom it would see years later. THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE: WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN On top of that, by adding the Panhandle’s 10,000 square miles to Alabama, it would have become the largest, territory-wise, east of the Mississippi! Apparently sentiment for such a move had been growing in West Florida. A few years earlier, a legislator from Escambia County had drawn up a bill that would allow Panhandle residents to vote on ALABAMA OUTDOORS: PANFISH Fishing for panfish, from the bank, dock or a boat, offers an excellent way to teach children, and novice adults, about the outdoors. To start fishing for panfish, anglers don’t need much complex, expensive gear. Many people use cane poles without reels. Add a few hooks, bobbers and some bait to the list and start fishing.STATE OF SAUCE
The company is based in Montgomery, and the sauces are made in Chancellor, Ala. Today, in addition to the steak and barbecue sauces, Berdeaux’s produces Sweet Island Dipping Sauce, a lively blend of pineapple and pungent horseradish. All the sauces are completely natural, with no MSG, high-fructose corn syrup or liquid smoke, apoint Jim’s
FAITH IN THEIR FARM: BARBOUR COUNTY COUPLE REVITALIZE Jewell Bean learned about hard work and community commitment from her parents, Roy and Rosa Stanford, pictured here. Expanding the calling. The Beans work as farmers and as educators, and they embrace everyone who visits their farm. BLUE AND GRAY MUSEUM IS A MUST FOR CIVIL WAR BUFFS Blue and Gray Museum is a must for Civil War buffs. October 31, 2017. -- By Alabama Living Magazine. Robert Parham, curator of the Blue and Gray Museum of North Alabama, talks about some of the displays at the museum, which is believed to be the largest privately owned collection of Civil War artifacts in the U.S. Photos by Michael Cornelison. HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide,LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
SURVIVING A COVID YEAR IN ALABAMA Safiya Johnson, of Selma, is a registered nurse who worked at a Montgomery hospital and became ill with COVID-19 in October. A long-haul COVID survivor, sheWHEREVILLE, AL
Whereville, AL. February 24, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by March 9 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
The American Village is an educational institution whose mission is to strengthen and renew the foundations of American liberty and self-government by engaging and inspiring citizens and leaders. Its address is 3727 Highway 119 in Montevallo; for more information, visit americanvillage.org. 2020 PHOTO CONTEST WINNERS 2020 Photo Contest Winners. July 27, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. They’re off the beaten path, or right on your front porch. Sometimes they’re the first thing in the morning, other times they’re in the quiet of the concluding day. And some feature young ones in the first few years of life, while others feature those in their sunset years. ALABAMA GARDENS: GARLIC Garlic: An easy-to-grow and tasty protector. It has been used for some 7,000 years to fuel the building of pyramids and the athleticism of early Olympians, ward off vampires and other pests (including some humans), treat all manner of illnesses and add exceptional flavor to food. “It” is garlic, a relative of onions, shallots, leeks and ALABAMA'S HEALTH: SCOPE OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS Expand scope of practice for nurse practitioners. The lack of primary care physician service in rural Alabama is well documented. Fifty-two of Alabama’s 54 rural counties are currently classified by the Health Resources and Services Administration as having a shortage of such physician service. BLUE AND GRAY MUSEUM IS A MUST FOR CIVIL WAR BUFFS Blue and Gray Museum is a must for Civil War buffs. October 31, 2017. -- By Alabama Living Magazine. Robert Parham, curator of the Blue and Gray Museum of North Alabama, talks about some of the displays at the museum, which is believed to be the largest privately owned collection of Civil War artifacts in the U.S. Photos by Michael Cornelison. HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide,LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
SURVIVING A COVID YEAR IN ALABAMA Safiya Johnson, of Selma, is a registered nurse who worked at a Montgomery hospital and became ill with COVID-19 in October. A long-haul COVID survivor, sheWHEREVILLE, AL
Whereville, AL. February 24, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. Identify and place this Alabama landmark and you could win $25! Winner is chosen at random from all correct entries. Multiple entries from the same person will be disqualified. Send your answer by March 9 with your name, address and the name of your rural electric cooperative. THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga marble, the city’s second most famous rock, has been on the scene a lot longer than the 8.5-pound meteorite that fell out of sky on Nov. 30, 1954. That rock punctured the roof of a house and landed on 31-year Ann Hodges while she was dozing on her couch, leaving her with bruises. And, Sylacauga marble also has a festival inits honor.
FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
The American Village is an educational institution whose mission is to strengthen and renew the foundations of American liberty and self-government by engaging and inspiring citizens and leaders. Its address is 3727 Highway 119 in Montevallo; for more information, visit americanvillage.org. 2020 PHOTO CONTEST WINNERS 2020 Photo Contest Winners. July 27, 2020. Alabama Living Magazine. They’re off the beaten path, or right on your front porch. Sometimes they’re the first thing in the morning, other times they’re in the quiet of the concluding day. And some feature young ones in the first few years of life, while others feature those in their sunset years. ALABAMA GARDENS: GARLIC Garlic: An easy-to-grow and tasty protector. It has been used for some 7,000 years to fuel the building of pyramids and the athleticism of early Olympians, ward off vampires and other pests (including some humans), treat all manner of illnesses and add exceptional flavor to food. “It” is garlic, a relative of onions, shallots, leeks and ALABAMA'S HEALTH: SCOPE OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS Expand scope of practice for nurse practitioners. The lack of primary care physician service in rural Alabama is well documented. Fifty-two of Alabama’s 54 rural counties are currently classified by the Health Resources and Services Administration as having a shortage of such physician service. BLUE AND GRAY MUSEUM IS A MUST FOR CIVIL WAR BUFFS Blue and Gray Museum is a must for Civil War buffs. October 31, 2017. -- By Alabama Living Magazine. Robert Parham, curator of the Blue and Gray Museum of North Alabama, talks about some of the displays at the museum, which is believed to be the largest privately owned collection of Civil War artifacts in the U.S. Photos by Michael Cornelison. SURVIVING A COVID YEAR IN ALABAMA Safiya Johnson, of Selma, is a registered nurse who worked at a Montgomery hospital and became ill with COVID-19 in October. A long-haul COVID survivor, she RECIPES - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE Recipes Archive - Alabama Living Magazine. Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of its type in the state, reaching some 400,000 electric cooperative consumers.JUNE 2021 ARCHIVES
June 2021 Issue of Alabama Living Magazine. Read all about it. Issue:June 2021
SPOTLIGHT | JUNE
Submit by email: whereville@alabamaliving.coop, or by mail: Whereville, P.O. Box 244014, Montgomery, AL 36124. Contribute your own photo for an upcoming issue! Send a photo of an interesting or unusual landmark in Alabama, which must be accessible to the public. A reader whose photo is chosen will also win $25. THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE: WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN On top of that, by adding the Panhandle’s 10,000 square miles to Alabama, it would have become the largest, territory-wise, east of the Mississippi! Apparently sentiment for such a move had been growing in West Florida. A few years earlier, a legislator from Escambia County had drawn up a bill that would allow Panhandle residents to vote on GHOSTS, SPIRITS SAID TO WANDER THE GROUNDS AT FORT MORGAN Ghosts, spirits said to wander the grounds at Fort Morgan. October 1, 2020. -- By Alabama Living Magazine. By Marilyn Jones. As the days shorten and Halloween approaches, there are always whispers on the wind of ghosts lingering in cemeteries, houses and public buildings. Fort Morgan, a masonry fort located along the Gulf Coast at the mouthof
40 YEARS AFTER THE KOPPER KETTLE EXPLOSION A gas leak caused the explosion in January 1978 that destroyed the Kopper Kettle restaurant and several nearby businesses. Photos courtesy Auburn University archives. Jan. 15, 1978 was a quiet Sunday in downtown Auburn. At that time, Auburn was a sleepy little village still on the cusp of the economic boom it would see years later. OUTDOORS: NATUREPLEX EXPLORED In October 2015, the AWF opened the NaturePlex on a magnificent wilderness oasis in Millbrook just up Interstate 65 from Montgomery. Today this complex more than achieves the three AWF conservation goals. In the first year, more than 30,000 people, half of them school children, visited the 23,000-square-foot facility.STATE OF SAUCE
The company is based in Montgomery, and the sauces are made in Chancellor, Ala. Today, in addition to the steak and barbecue sauces, Berdeaux’s produces Sweet Island Dipping Sauce, a lively blend of pineapple and pungent horseradish. All the sauces are completely natural, with no MSG, high-fructose corn syrup or liquid smoke, apoint Jim’s
ALABAMA HAS ITS PLACE IN THE TRAIL OF TEARS Marker on Hwy. 72 near Bridgeport. “For centuries the Cherokees lived on and hunted the lands in what is now Kentucky, parts of Virginia, South Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, and North Carolina,” says Troy Wayne Poteete, executive director of the Oklahoma-based National Trail of HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide,LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
2020 PHOTO CONTEST WINNERS First place: Drew Senter of Oxford, Ala. “I took this photo in April at Bains Gap on a rainy day. The COVID-19 pandemic has pushed me to re-explore the wild places nearby, just to find some sanity.FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
A New York Times bestselling author of 15 novels including the critically-acclaimed historical novel, Becoming Mrs. Lewis – The Improbable Love Story of Joy Davidman and C.S. Lewis, Henry is also a USA Today, Publishers Weekly, and the Globe and Mail bestseller. Henry hosts the popular seven-part original “Behind the Scenes of Becoming Mrs. Lewis Podcast Series” launched in OctoberWHEREVILLE, AL
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of its type in the state, reaching some 400,000 electric cooperativeconsumers.
THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga is home to three marble quarries. Photo courtesy of Sylacauga Magic of Marble Festival. It may be Sylacauga’s second most famous rock, but considering the city’s most famous rock came from outer space, being number two isn’t too shabby.SPOTLIGHT | JUNE
The so-called “Lady in the Lake,” at Barber Marina in Elberta, is a fiberglass sculpture created by artist Mark Cline. Cline also created Bamahenge, a sculptural installation also on the Barber property (and also the very first Whereville photo in January 2016). OUTDOORS: NATUREPLEX EXPLORED A simulated beehive, left, and bat cave are among the displays inside. Photo by John Felsher “The NaturePlex represents a unique and extraordinary opportunity to touch the lives of both youth and adults,” says Marla Ruskin, an AWF communications specialist. 40 YEARS AFTER THE KOPPER KETTLE EXPLOSION Jan. 15, 1978 was a quiet Sunday in downtown Auburn. At that time, Auburn was a sleepy little village still on the cusp of the economic boom it would see years later. BLUE AND GRAY MUSEUM IS A MUST FOR CIVIL WAR BUFFS Figurines are on display, some of which are for sale. Photos by Michael Cornelison. From weapons to supplies to uniforms, the items on display at the Blue and Gray Museum are believed to be the largest privately owned collection of Civil War artifacts in the UnitedStates.
HOME - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE From booming suburbs to remote rural farming communities, Alabama’s electric cooperatives are energy providers and engines of economic development. Statewide,LATEST ISSUE
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of itstype in the state,
2020 PHOTO CONTEST WINNERS First place: Drew Senter of Oxford, Ala. “I took this photo in April at Bains Gap on a rainy day. The COVID-19 pandemic has pushed me to re-explore the wild places nearby, just to find some sanity.FEBRUARY SPOTLIGHT
A New York Times bestselling author of 15 novels including the critically-acclaimed historical novel, Becoming Mrs. Lewis – The Improbable Love Story of Joy Davidman and C.S. Lewis, Henry is also a USA Today, Publishers Weekly, and the Globe and Mail bestseller. Henry hosts the popular seven-part original “Behind the Scenes of Becoming Mrs. Lewis Podcast Series” launched in OctoberWHEREVILLE, AL
Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of its type in the state, reaching some 400,000 electric cooperativeconsumers.
THE STONE THAT BUILT A CITY Sylacauga is home to three marble quarries. Photo courtesy of Sylacauga Magic of Marble Festival. It may be Sylacauga’s second most famous rock, but considering the city’s most famous rock came from outer space, being number two isn’t too shabby.SPOTLIGHT | JUNE
The so-called “Lady in the Lake,” at Barber Marina in Elberta, is a fiberglass sculpture created by artist Mark Cline. Cline also created Bamahenge, a sculptural installation also on the Barber property (and also the very first Whereville photo in January 2016). OUTDOORS: NATUREPLEX EXPLORED A simulated beehive, left, and bat cave are among the displays inside. Photo by John Felsher “The NaturePlex represents a unique and extraordinary opportunity to touch the lives of both youth and adults,” says Marla Ruskin, an AWF communications specialist. 40 YEARS AFTER THE KOPPER KETTLE EXPLOSION Jan. 15, 1978 was a quiet Sunday in downtown Auburn. At that time, Auburn was a sleepy little village still on the cusp of the economic boom it would see years later. BLUE AND GRAY MUSEUM IS A MUST FOR CIVIL WAR BUFFS Figurines are on display, some of which are for sale. Photos by Michael Cornelison. From weapons to supplies to uniforms, the items on display at the Blue and Gray Museum are believed to be the largest privately owned collection of Civil War artifacts in the UnitedStates.
2020 PHOTO CONTEST WINNERS First place: Drew Senter of Oxford, Ala. “I took this photo in April at Bains Gap on a rainy day. The COVID-19 pandemic has pushed me to re-explore the wild places nearby, just to find some sanity. RECIPES - ALABAMA LIVING MAGAZINE Recipes Archive - Alabama Living Magazine. Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of its type in the state, reaching some 400,000 electric cooperative consumers.SPOTLIGHT | JUNE
The so-called “Lady in the Lake,” at Barber Marina in Elberta, is a fiberglass sculpture created by artist Mark Cline. Cline also created Bamahenge, a sculptural installation also on the Barber property (and also the very first Whereville photo in January 2016).STATE OF SAUCE
Berdeaux’s. Since he was old enough to eat table food, Jim Berdeaux has been enjoying the thick, tangy steak sauce and the tomato-based, slightly sweet barbecue sauce his grandfather whipped up when he was the chef at Montgomery’s Pickwick Café in the 1940s.BACKYARD BIRDING
Cardinals are year-round residents of Alabama that bring vivid color to feeders, tree limbs or anywhere they perch. Photo by Katie Jackson. A “big year” in serious birding circles typically entails traveling across an entire continent trying to spot as many UNDERSTANDING APPLIANCE ENERGY USE By Pat Keegan and Brad Thiessen. Q: Several of my appliances are getting old and will need to be replaced soon.Will the appliance choices I make have much impact on my energy bill? A: Your energy use varies month to month, so it can be difficult to see how much difference an appliance purchase makes.It’s best to view the purchase over the lifetime of the equipment. ALABAMA HAS ITS PLACE IN THE TRAIL OF TEARS Marker on Hwy. 72 near Bridgeport. “For centuries the Cherokees lived on and hunted the lands in what is now Kentucky, parts of Virginia, South Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, and North Carolina,” says Troy Wayne Poteete, executive director of the Oklahoma-based National Trail of 40 YEARS AFTER THE KOPPER KETTLE EXPLOSION Jan. 15, 1978 was a quiet Sunday in downtown Auburn. At that time, Auburn was a sleepy little village still on the cusp of the economic boom it would see years later.OUTDOORS: BIG CATS
A rehabilitated Florida panther is released back to the wild in Okeechobee County, Fla., in January 2015. The Florida panther is an endangered subspecies of cougar; cougars were the only big cat speciesnative to Alabama.
GHOSTS, SPIRITS SAID TO WANDER THE GROUNDS AT FORT MORGAN Award-winning Alabama Living is the official statewide publication of the electric cooperatives in Alabama and the largest magazine of its type in the state, reaching some 400,000 electric cooperativeconsumers.
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PORTRAITS OF HONOR
Photographer memorializes WWII veterans with images By Lenore Vickrey Of the 16 million Americans who served in World War II, only about 300,000 are still alive today. Jeff Rease has made it his life’s goal to memorialize as many of them as possible. Dr. Donald...October 29, 2020
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Hardy Jackson's Alabama APPRECIATING VETERANS, AND ANCHOVIES By Hardy Jackson Veterans Day. I grew up among veterans. World War II, mostly. Though I had an uncle who served in World War I, the veterans who defeated Hitler and Tojo are the ones I remember. My Daddy was one. What I recall...October 29, 2020
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ALABAMA CO-OPS MOBILIZE TO RESPOND TO HURRICANE SALLY By Allison Law In the late summer, electric utility employees keep a close and wary eye on the tropics. Tropical cyclone activity generally kicks into high gear in late August, and 2020 was no exception. Hurricane Laura, a deadly and destructive category 4 storm,pummeled...
October 29, 2020
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We’ve enjoyed seeing photos from our readers on their travels with Alabama Living! Please send us a photo of youRead More »
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October 29, 2020 No Comments SUBMIT and WIN $10! Submit “Mountain views” photos by November 30. Winning photos will run in the January issue. Submit Online Right Here Mail: Snapshots P.O. Hardy Jackson's Alabama APPRECIATING VETERANS, AND ANCHOVIES October 29, 2020 No Comments By Hardy Jackson Veterans Day. I grew up among veterans. World War II, mostly. Though I had an uncle who served in World War I,Alabama People
PROVIDING HELP AND HOPE FOR PEOPLE AND ANIMALS IN NEED October 29, 2020 No Comments If Kyes Stevens sees anyone or anything in need, she’s going to stop and help. It’s why she’s served as a volunteer firefighter for theRecipes
TIME TO BAKE A PIE!
October 29, 2020 No Comments “Good apple pies are a considerable part of our domestic happiness.” Author Jane Austen If the thought of making a homemadepie makes you a
Worth the Drive
TWO STATES PLUS TWO ’CUES EQUAL ONE WINNING COMBO October 29, 2020 No Comments Story and photos by Jennifer Kornegay At most Alabama barbecue joints, meat of the porcine persuasion is king. But at TexarBama BBQ inFairhope, beef
THE BEST OF ALABAMA LIVING FAVORITE RECIPES FROM ALABAMA'S LARGEST LIFESTYLE MAGAZINE This recipe collection, _The Best of Alabama Living_, includes the magazine’s winning recipes from the past eight years, along with winners of AREA’s Alabama National Fair cooking contests. From delicious appetizers to main dishes and desserts, you’ll find more than 250 of your fellow Alabamians’ best dishes.Grab A Copy!
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Worth the Drive: Bella Vista Bella Vista by the Creek 153 W. Main St., Prattville, AL 36067334-356-6863
Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday-Wednesday; 10:30 to 3 p.m. and 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday-Saturday Find them on Facebook @BellaVista19Posts not found
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CHECK STATE’S GAME LAWS BEFORE DEER SEASON October 29, 2020 No Comments By John Felsher Alabama deer hunters should check the regulations before hunting this year. The state made some changes to game laws including creating twoRead More »
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October 1, 2020 No Comments Unusual game birds becoming more common in U.S. By John Felsher Sounding like squeaky wheels needing grease, about 50 noisy long-necked birds with prominent whiteRead More »
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WHAT TO PLANT IN THE FALL (AND WHY) August 31, 2020 No Comments A survey conducted by Scotts Miracle-Gro showed that, from March to July, some 21 million Americans took up gardening, most for the first time ever, and apparently they liked it.Read More »
FERNS ARE MADE FOR THE SHADE — AND MORE July 27, 2020 No Comments This time of year, there’s nothing like spending time in a shade garden, and with the help of a few well-selected plants, any shadyspot
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SUBMIT and WIN $10! Submit “Mountain views” photos by November 30. Winning photos will run in the January issue. Submit Online Right Here Mail: Snapshots P.O.NOVEMBER SPOTLIGHT
‘Alabama Living’ writers take top awards. Two of Alabama Living’s writers have won awards at the national level. Hardy Jackson took first place in the * __ View All Articles * __ View Digital CopyNEVER MISS A STORY.
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