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From the darkness Near-death experience changed a Bryant man Mobile Medicine Bus brings health care to residents in rural areas Back in the saddle Jesse Tatum turns lifelong passion into new career Connected Published for customers of September/October 2012

Connected Sept-Oct 2012

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Page 1: Connected Sept-Oct 2012

From thedarknessNear-death experience changed a Bryant man

Mobile MedicineBus brings health care toresidents in rural areas

Back in the saddleJesse Tatum turns lifelong passion into new career

ConnectedPublished forcustomers of

September/October 2012

Page 2: Connected Sept-Oct 2012

DEMAND BETTER!

Perhaps I should avoid the topic, but political decisions have a real impact on us. This column is likely to be a

bit controversial, but I feel strongly about the principles upon which our country was founded and I am totally annoyed with the way our political debates unfold. The United States of America faces unparal-leled challenges at home and abroad. We should be demanding firm, constructive and deliberate leadership from those we elect to lead us. Instead, much of the cur-rent debate centers on things that, frankly, are insignificant except for the fact they inflame emotions and divide Americans among ideologies.

In past issues of Connected I’ve ex-pressed my frustration with dysfunction within our government. One agency harm-fully changes rules that we relied on to build a robust broadband network, while yet another arm of government hands out grants to others elsewhere for the same exact purpose. Within 48 hours of writing this article I will be called upon to make two separate economic development pre-sentations. Both involve the prospect of hundreds, if not thousands, of good jobs for this area. They are the type of jobs that pay off mortgages, educate children, and provide health insurance and retirement benefits. In both cases, optical-fiber-based broadband is an absolute requirement. Without it, the jobs go elsewhere. It is my responsibility to make sure FTC can and will deliver on that need. It frustrates me when the government has no clear picture either of this reality or of the practical re-sults of its dysfunction. Still, I quickly real-ize this is nothing compared to the larger issues facing our country. It is tempting to get carried away here but I will only dis-cuss two critical points.

First, the total debt of the United States is rapidly approaching a level that cannot be sustained by our economy. Many politi-cians deny that it is possible for the U. S. to become insolvent and to default upon its debt. They are wrong. No nation in mod-ern history has ever gone down the path we are on without disaster. We can argue amongst ourselves all we want over who should receive government benefits or who should pay “more” in income taxes but we

must remember this: if the U.S. defaults on its debt, there won’t be ANY government assistance. Our way of life as we know it will be over. You will find no historical ac-count to contradict this.

Second, we face forces around the world that are determined to seek our destruc-tion because we are the most formidable obstacle preventing them from reaching their ideals. They are willing to sacrifice anything, themselves included, for this purpose. We can deny it all we want and try to paint a prettier picture of it. That is a mistake. It is a fact. We must resolve oth-erwise.

We either deal with these issues respon-sibly or we suffer the consequences, plain and simple. We deserve and should de-mand respectful, intelligent debate from all players on the political landscape. I have no use for campaigns that seek to di-vide us or rely upon character attacks rath-er than trying to rally us around a common cause. These campaigns may be successful, but they solve few problems and the last-ing damage to society has severe conse-quences.

Ron Chernow’s exhaustive biography of Alexander Hamilton documents the fierce personal rivalry between Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson. Many people, includ-ing me, believe these were the two great-est minds of the American Revolution. De-spite their human frailties — and trust me, they had their share — the only thing that surpassed their personal animosity was the absolute commitment of both men to the survival of the new nation. We should demand no less today. If those who win in November care more about personal power and influence, or party loyalty, than they do about the reality of preserving our Union, there will be only one reason for their victory: too many Americans failed to demand better.n

Fred Johnsonis Executive Vice President and GMof FarmersTelecommunications Cooperative, Inc.

is a member-owned corporation dedicated to providing communications technology to the people of Northeast Alabama. The company has more than 15,000 access lines, making it the state’s largest telecom-munications cooperative.

ConnectedVol. 16, No. 5 September/October 2012

is a bimonthly magazinepublished by Farmers Telecommu-nications Cooperative, © 2012. It is distributed without charge to all customers of FTC. Send address

corrections to:

Farmers TelecommunicationsCooperative, Inc.

P.O. Box 217144 McCurdy Ave. N.

Rainsville, Alabama 35986Telephone: (256) 638-2144

www.farmerstel.com

Produced for FTC by:WordSouth Public Relations, Inc.

www.wordsouth.com

On the Cover:

Nickajack Cave in Marion Co., Tenn.Twenty years ago, David Gant of Bryant found more than he bargained for when

he and two friends went scuba diving for catfish inside the cave. Read his story on Page 12.

(Photo by Andy Johns)

“We Keep You Connected”

General Manager Comments

Board of TrusteesRandy Wright, President

Flat Rock Exchange

Gary Smith, Vice PresidentFyffe Exchange

Danny R. Richey, SecretaryGeraldine Exchange

Lynn Welden, TreasurerBryant Exchange

Kenneth GilbertPisgah Exchange

Gregg GriffithHenagar Exchange

Randy TumlinRainsville Exchange

2 Connected - September/October 2012

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Some areas not yet capable of receiving this service. All services subject to

FTC Standard Terms and Conditions, FTC Acceptable Use Policy (Internet) and

provisions of the FTC Price List (subject to the advertised discount). These can

be found at www.farmerstel.com.

Connected - September/October 2012 3

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The 58th Annual Meeting of Farmers Telecommunications Cooperative took place at the Northeast Alabama Agri-Business Center in Rainsville on Saturday, Aug. 4 and

was marked by fair weather and a larger crowd than last year’s event.

Those in attendance enjoyed the gospel and patriotic music performed by The Rick Webb Family from North Carolina and the bluegrass, country and gospel music performed by the Fyffe FFA String Band.

All registered members took home an ice cream scoop compli-ments of FTC, and everyone enjoyed free homemade ice cream.

During the business meeting, members were given a financial update on the cooperative from Tyler Pair, FTC CFO, who an-nounced that “FTC has given back to its members almost $16.3 million. On average, this amounts to more than $1,000 refunded to each member since the beginning of the current capital credit retirement policy.”

General Manager Fred Johnson told the crowd about the tri-umphs and frustrations that the cooperative had faced since the last annual meeting. “There is much about 2011 I would like to forget,” he said.

Johnson explained that last year was the most difficult year FTC has faced — both economically and with government regu-lations. “But through that year we learned a lot,” he says. “We learned a lot as a community about ourselves, and for that I am very grateful. And at FTC we learned a lot about ourselves also. And we have, for the most part, recovered.”

Due to several storms, including the tornadoes of April 27, 2011, FTC’s fiber project was delayed while crews worked on repairing damage and restoring service to its members. “Despite the fact that most of our operational objectives and plans were pushed out at least six months, we are beginning to catch up,” said Johnson.

Even with 2011’s setbacks, the cooperative has experienced significant success with its fiber project. Though finishing later than they had hoped, crews are back on schedule and FTC has realized several million dollars in savings over the projected budget. “We are going to be able to take that project further than we thought we would,” said Johnson. “And we are now facing the very real possibility that by the end of the year 2013, we will have the finest technology known to man available to over 80 percent of our membership from north to south – all the way from Georgia and Tennessee down to our southern boundaries.”

Johnson also told those in attendance about another milestone in the cooperative’s history. At a time when many rural telecom-munications companies are struggling or even going under, FTC has more traditional customers than they had one year ago. This comes as a result of the board’s decision to expand service into areas such as Section, Crossville, Fort Payne and Dutton.

Johnson shared other victories as well. “Probably the most significant gratification that I got this year,” he told the crowd, “is that this company made it through the entire year, despite

By Kerry Scott

FTC experiencing significa nt success on fiber projectAnnualMeeting Recap

LIFE IS SWEET — Those in attendance enjoyed

homemade ice cream.

FYFFE FFA STRING BAND — (l to r) Jesse McClendon, Tom

George, John Hicks, Levi Thompson and Avery Rains.

ENTERTAINMENT — The Rick Webb Family entertained crowds with gospel melodies.

By Kerry Scott

4 Connected - September/October 2012

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FTC experiencing significa nt success on fiber project

List of PrizeiWinnersEdward Adams Grand Prize Winner of 1998 Chevrolet Pickup

Marty Myers One year of Advanced Services from FTC

Janice Gilbert iPad

Tenbroeck Volunteer Fire Department Samsung LCD HDTV

Five Points Baptist Church XBox 360 Bundle

Glenda George Canon Digital Camera

Sharon Byrd Kindle Fire E-reader

Billy D. Higdon iPod Touch

Charles Williams Samsung Blu-ray Player

Virginia Bailey Flower Arrangement

everything we had to do, and did not have a single employee lose time because of an accident on the job.”

He summed up the past year by saying, “We have what it takes to do what it takes.” He then introduced key employees at FTC and encouraged everyone who had a question of any kind to seek out those key employees to get answers. “Please don’t leave here today if we have not addressed a problem you’re hav-ing,” said Johnson. “That’s the kind of focus that at FTC we are trying to demonstrate.”

On a sadder note, FTC lost one of its long-lasting board members last year. Mr. Robert Burkhalter resigned in 2011 due to health problems and passed away a few months later. His widow, Patsy Burkhalter, was presented a plaque in recogni-tion of his years of service to the cooperative by Board President Randy Wright.

At the conclusion of the business meeting, FTC awarded sev-eral door prizes. The grand prize was a 1998 Chevrolet pickup truck and other prizes included technology gadgets that winners could use with services they receive from FTC. All incumbent FTC Board of Trustees were reelected to serve another three-year term. Those reelected were Danny Richey, Lynn Weldon and Kenneth Gilbert.

By Kerry Scott

August 4, 2012

PRIZE WINNERS — Great technology gadgets were

awarded to FTC members.

GRAND PRIZE — Chris Bryant, Asst. GM, delivers the keys to Edward Adams.

FTC BOARD OF TRUSTEES — Sitting are: Lynn Weldon,

Randy Wright, Gary Smith and Danny Richey. Standing are:

Gregg Griffith, Randy Tumlin and Kenneth Gilbert.

Connected - September/October 2012 5

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When the April 2011 tornadoes blew off a 20- by 70-foot strip of Jesse Tatum’s back barn and beat up his

front barn, the destruction wasn’t just physi-cal. It also took its toll psychologically on the Henagar resident.

“The tornado changed everything,” says Tatum, who was working for Heil Environ-mental in Fort Payne at the time. “After it came through, I took medical leave and then vacation. Then, I sort of lost interest in work-ing altogether and ended up getting a volun-teer layoff.”

He still had to make a living though. The question now was how. “I sort of thought I would do something with horses,” he says, fondly recalling his childhood days spent riding his cousin’s ponies. “I would always be over there after I got my chores done, and later in life my wife and kids and I would go to Pigeon Mountain and ride.”

A lesson on how toGet back on your horse

By Diana LaChance

JUST HORSIN' AROUND - Kids love the pony carousel that is part of the party package offered through Highpoint Trail Pony Parties in Henagar.

6 Connected - September/October 2012

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So he started thinking about the po-nies he already owned, the ponies that his kids rode. “We had a lot of people come over and want to ride them,” he says, “so I decided I’d see if these people would pay to ride.” And they did, though Tatum would be hard- pressed to explain the attraction.

“I couldn’t tell you why kids love pony rides so much,” he says, “but there’s probably only 1 out of 50 who are afraid. Even then, they’ll still look – and they usually end up riding!”

Whatever the reason, the kids kept coming, and eventually those rides-for-pay turned into a bona fide busi-ness: Highpoint Trails Pony Parties. From there, business spread by word of mouth. “Once I did one birthday party, everyone at that party knew about us and then their kids wanted a pony party,” he says.

Before long, he was providing pony, trail, and carriage rides for Bible study groups, corporate events, and even reunions and weddings. “Nowadays, we do a lot of standing events, like the Potato Festival, the Rainsville Rodeo and the Latino Festival,” says Tatum, “and we partner with places like John Jones Elementary and Westbrook Christian Schools in Rainbow City and the Crosspoint Community Church, among others.”

He’s also expanded into making saddle frames, known as saddle trees, using the equipment at his son’s saddle store and a workshop that sits by his barn. “I didn’t know how to do it — I had to learn,” he says. “The guy that sold us the equipment came down and taught me how to saw them out. Now I sell them to the saddle makers, and they put the leather on them and sell the saddles.”

Is it profitable? “If I didn’t have so many horses that I don’t need, it would be profitable!” says Tatum, who currently has 25 Shetland and Welsh ponies, 14 horses and one mule. Like any animal lover, he is a victim of his own huge heart. “It’s never an easy decision to get rid of one. I also take in horses I shouldn’t and ones that aren’t trainable. I keep thinking I can teach them.”

His mule, Bonnie Sue, is a perfect example. She has been ridden only a handful of times and hardly comes close to earning her keep. But while

Tatum threatens to sell her and makes such statements as “If you got a mule, you need to be a mule person!” and “You don’t need a mule and forty horses!” it is clear his beloved Bonnie Sue isn’t going anywhere.

Tatum’s profits are further dimin-ished by the unavoidable expenses that horse ownership conveys. “It’s not cheap. You have to have land, fences, grass, the horse, the tack, the trailer, the truck,” he says. So even if he wanted to give up the business and retire, he couldn’t. “I can’t afford to saddle up and go into the wild blue – I have to pay the light bill!” he says.

That’s why he and his grandsons do so much on their own, from feeding and training to shoeing and medical care. “Anything you don’t know, some-body else does. Just don’t be ashamed to ask,” he says. “We don’t pretend to know it all, we just know who to ask.” And unlike Bonnie Sue, most of the horses do earn their keep, which Tatum says is “one way of having them and them not being dead weight.”

Yet despite the cost and the aggrava-tion, Tatum says he wouldn’t change a thing — except maybe to have begun this second chapter of his life much earlier. “I wish I had left (Heil) sooner, and I kept telling myself I would,” he says. “But I’m going to do this as long as I can.”

Certainly he never takes it for granted that he is able to make a living doing what he loves, a fact of which his father would be proud. “My dad hated horses with a passion, so he never encouraged me. To him, a pony was useless,” he says. “But every time I do a birthday party, I get on one and ride, because I promised my dad that someday somebody would pay me to ride my own pony.”

That promise seemed a long way from being fulfilled in April 2011. But they say when a door closes, a win-dow opens. For Tatum, that window opened to his life-long passion. And just as those damaged barns were patched back up in the aftermath of the tornado, so too was their owner. n

BACK IN THE SADDLE - When he's not taking care of his ponies and doing parties and pony rides, Jesse Tatum is making saddle trees, which are the frames for saddles. "I sell them to saddle makers and they put the leather on them and sell the saddles," he says.

Connected - September/October 2012 7

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Mapping the fiber optic buildout

By Diana LaChance

THEPOWER OF FIBER

Note: This is an ongoing series ex-amining how world-class broadband Internet access will benefit various sectors of our community.

It can be hard enough for the aver-age person to keep up with the rapidly changing technological

landscape, but imagine doing it for more than 25,000 customers. That was the challenge facing FTC as telecom-munications began an in-dustry-wide effort to replace copper telephone cables with fiber optics.

“Over the last five years, it became apparent that the needs and expectations of our customers were undergo-ing the greatest shift that the telecommunications industry had ever seen,” says Shane Trotman, senior operations and engineering supervisor at FTC. “Customers today need the ever-increasing data speeds, as well as vari-ous multimedia and video demands that fiber optics can provide.”

FTC’s response was a mul-tistage buildout of their fiber optics network that goes above and beyond that of their competitors. “We decided to commit to provid-ing the very best service possible to as many customers as we could — a single dedicated fiber to each home,” says Trotman. “But to complete a proj-ect of this scale, it became apparent

that we needed to break the fiber proj-ect into phases. By doing so, we could make each area available to customers as soon as possible and our installers could begin installations in these areas even though the overall project was not complete.”

Alan Akins, Engineering CAD Specialist at FTC, says installation crews have installed fiber optic cable to more than half of the homes in the

FTC service area. “We feel blessed to have reached 60 percent of the homes in our original area and we plan to reach more than 80 percent by the end of 2013,” he says.

To find out what communities are next, FTC has provided customers

with an interactive Fiber Availability Map. “The idea of the Fiber Avail-ability Map is to provide customers with Internet access an opportunity to quickly discover when our services will be available in their area via fiber optics,” says Skeeter Logan, CAD Systems Administrator at FTC. “If the user inputs a valid local address, the program will immediately locate and zoom into that location, informing the

user about the availability of fiber at that location.” The map is also color-coded to represent the different stages of fiber availability across the service area.

Given all of this advance planning and the success it has yielded thus far, it’s no wonder Trotman was award-ed the national FTTXcellence Award last year for his part in bringing fiber optic tech-nologies to rural America. But while it’s nice to be honored, Trotman says the real reward is secondary to the success of the buildout. “I feel that we

have struck a great balance of being able to offer fiber to the most people possible while addressing quality of service

issues in areas that may not be heav-ily populated,” he says. “We really are building a fiber-optic network in rural Northeast Alabama that is as ad-vanced and future-proof as anywhere else in the world.”n

When you enter your address into the Fiber Availability Map at www.farmerstel.com, it lets you know if fiber is already available at your location or when it is expected to be available. The color-coded map also shows projected dates for completion.

1 Go to FTC’s website, www.farmerstel.com

Click on the link to the Fiber Availability Map, found in the lower center of the home page.

2 3 4 5Type your address in the address search bar. Be sure to include the city.

Click the “search” button.

See color coded results.

Find out if fiber is available

where you are

8 Connected - September/October 2012

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With more Americans plac-ing a priority on supporting homegrown businesses, the

first-ever “Made in DeKalb” event is timed perfectly. Hosted by the DeKalb County Economic Development As-sociation (DCEDA), this day-long assembly of local industries, break-out sessions and networking opportunities will take place from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 18, at the Northeast Alabama Agri-Business Center in Rainsville.

Pam Clay, director of business reten-tion and expansion for the DCEDA, says that a variety of sectors — manu-facturing, warehousing and distribu-tion, logistics, tourism and agribusi-ness — will be present, with the goal of helping area businesses get to know each other. “We want our industries to have an opportunity to build relation-ships with each other,” she says. “And if there’s a local company that can be-come a vendor or supplier for another local company, that would be great!”

The event is not just for companies, however. Local high school seniors are invited to attend the morning portion to meet with representatives from the Alabama Career Center and Northeast Alabama Community College.

For industries, six break-out sessions will be held covering topics from tax abatements to energy savings programs

to workforce development and techni-cal careers.

Also on hand will be several robotics teams from across DeKalb, Jackson and Marshall counties, all preparing for the Oct. 27 Boosting Engineering Science and Technology Robotics Competition. “It’s essentially a practice day where the students set up and demonstrate their robots,” says Clay. “And Made in DeKalb is a really good opportunity for them to showcase what they’ve done.”

If it sounds like a lot of planning has gone into the event, it has. In fact, Clay says the idea for the event has been a long time in the making.

Nathaniel Ledbetter, key accounts manager for Sand Mountain Electric Cooperative, approached Clay about an event. “I’d have industrial custom-ers looking to buy a product from a dif-ferent part of the country, only to find out it was being made a couple of miles down the road,” he says. “So I thought, if we could get everyone together and they could start buying from each other, it may not create a job, but it may save a job."

Clay says Ledbetter’s idea mirrored plans within the DCEDA for something they were working on — Made In DeKalb.

Not long after the two met, a steering committee was convened. Since then, says Ledbetter, “the steering committee

has done an outstanding job” – even going so far as to make a special lunch for industry leaders at the event an all-local affair. “We’re using smokers made in DeKalb County and serving chicken, which is one of the county’s top indus-tries,” he says. “So we’re really trying to tie everything in!”

And while the DCEDA is currently focused on this year’s meeting, there is hope it will become an annual occur-rence. “We’re excited,” says Jimmy Durham, executive director of the DCEDA. “We think it will be a pro-gram we can continue that will help get our young people interested in the jobs available in our area and help people learn more about our local industries.”n

No place like home

By Diana LaChance

“Made in DeKalb” one-day event spotlights county businesses

Made in DeKalbThursday, Oct. 18

at the Northeast AlabamaAgri-Business Center1571 McCurdy Avenue N, Rainsville

The event will be open to participating businesses from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. and open to the public at no charge from 3

to 6 p.m. For more information, contact the DeKalb County Economic Develop-ment Association at 888-421-7957 or

256-845-7957.

Page 10: Connected Sept-Oct 2012

At 1,069 square miles, Jackson County is the third largest in the state of Alabama. Yet its

population is a modest 53,000 resi-dents. For county residents in need of medical care, that leaves a lot of distance to cover. Too much distance, says Kim Bryant, CEO of Highlands Medical Center in Scottsboro, Ala.

“Jackson County has a lot of rural communities, so you’ve got pockets of people who have limited [access to] health care,” says Bryant. As a result, many end up treating Highlands as a one-stop shop, a primary care provider and hospital all rolled into one. “A lot of people who don’t have primary care come to our ER. We get patients with illnesses like congenital heart failure that come to the hospital two, three, four times a month,” he explains.

That has become an even bigger problem over the last few months given the government’s recent changes to health care. Under the new plan, says Bryant, “the government is going

to start reducing payments to hospi-tals for multiple admissions for the same illnesses.” All of which leads to some difficult questions. “How do you address the patients that have these illnesses?” he asks. “And how can we work collectively together to keep those patients well and at home?”

Bryant knew that to address these challenges he would have to get creative. This is how Medicine on the Move, a fully stocked mobile medi-cal unit — or bus — that brings free clinical and educational services to patients, evolved. Medicine on the Move brings patient care directly to Jackson County’s underserved popu-lations. Bryant says he purchased the “completely outfitted” bus this past September with the blessing of the Highlands Board, even driving it back from New York himself, though the concept was one he had been mulling over long before then.

“Three years ago when I came into this role, I thought of this idea to get a bus,” he says. “The dream was to

get out to those communities in our county and our adjacent counties and provide a service to the people.” But he also knew the bus would ensure that Highlands could keep up with the changing health care landscape. “With the bus, we have the oppor-tunity to help keep people out of the hospital,” he says. “We can identify problems early on so they can get the treatment they need before it becomes severe.”

Since its inaugural outing on March 1, the bus has gone out two to three times a week across the county, pro-viding everything from blood sugar and cholesterol screenings to blood pressure checks. “We see you on the bus whether you are insured or not. It doesn’t matter,” says Bryant. “We also refer patients to their doctor if neces-sary, or if they have no doctor, we refer them to a physician accepting new patients. And we educate the commu-nity on the services they may qualify for, such as a state insurance program or Medicaid.”

Medicine on the Move:Rolling out health care to rural residents

By Diana LaChance

10 Connected - September/October 2012

Page 11: Connected Sept-Oct 2012

Bryant says the bus is normally staffed by one clerical person and one medical person, but as of August, oversight has been provided by Dr. Maggie Belue, medical director for Medicine on the Move and family medicine physician at Highlands Fam-ily Medicine. It’s a perfect choice, giv-en Belue’s experience in community outreach. “During my residency at the Mayo Clinic, I was involved in a lot of community outreach and education,” she says. “So as the director here, I want to take the opportunity to go out in the community where the bus may be the only option. It’s just an excellent resource to be able to introduce health care, and to reach out to communities that are in need.”

It’s also an excellent way to educate Jackson County residents about local health care options. “Hopefully, the bus will be a resource to let Jackson County residents know about the services offered at Highlands Medical Center,” says Bryant. “We can provide many of the same services as other hospitals in surrounding counties with the convenience of being close to home.”

So far the bus has proved to be a success and the staff at Highlands keep thinking of new services to offer based on feedback from the commu-nity. Bryant says he is pleased by the community’s response to the bus. “I’m actually looking for a second bus!” he says. “I want this mobile program to grow.”

In the meantime, the bus is helping those in need, and even those who may not know they are in need. “For some of the people who visit the bus, it might not occur to them that any-thing is wrong,” says Bryant. “But they see the bus and think, ‘Why not check and see?’ These are people who may not even want to go to the doctor, but who are now more likely to have a checkup if the bus is right there.”

That type of preventive health care is exactly what Bryant set out to achieve three years ago when he first envisioned Medicine on the Move. “We’re here to make a difference in the lives of people throughout the rural communities we are serving. We want you healthy and we’re pleased that our mobile medical unit is helping us achieve that goal.” n

Visit highlandsmedcenter.com/medicine_on_the_move.php to learn more about the services offered by the bus.

Click

KNOWLEDGE IS POWER— Highlands Medical Center Marketing Manager Jennifer McCurdy shares information about services available with Virginia Smith (left) and Argel Graham.

MOBILE MEDICINE — Dr. Maggie Belue, medical director of Medicine on the Move, believes the bus is an excellent outreach tool for rural communities.

Scan this QR Code from your mobile device for more information.

Scan

Connected - September/October 2012 11

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After 14 hours in a tiny air pocket clinging to a stalactite in a flooded cave, David Gant

thought it was time to die.His scuba tank was empty, his brain

was foggy from a lack of oxygen and the Bryant resident thought he had just passed out briefly.

In the darkness, he cried out for God to save his soul, asked for forgiveness and prepared to die. It was at that moment, he recalls, that his life took a dramatic and unexpected turn.

Gant says he felt God’s presence like never before. He felt the sensation of a hand enter his heart and cleanse it of impurities. He then felt himself being rolled onto his back and immersed in the water that moments earlier he thought would drown him. When he came out of the water, an unbeliev-able feeling of purity rushed over him. “I had no control over my body,” he remembers of what he now calls his baptism. “I’ve never felt so clean in my life before.”

Next, Gant had a vision of being

rescued by two men and leaving the cave in a boat. In the vision, he started telling his story and sharing the gospel as soon as he hit the shore. “The best way to describe it is like a movie play-ing out in front of you,” he says.

For David Gant, it wasn’t time to die. It was time to change.

CHASING THE FISHBy all rights, Gant should have died.

He’d run out of air and gotten lost 1,200 feet deep into Nickajack Cave in Marion County, Tenn. He lucked into a small air pocket and clung to a stalac-tite for a total of 18 hours to stay above the water.

“I’ve only seen a couple of men I know get a second chance and one of those is David Gant,” says Den-nis Curry, one of the rescuers. “We were fully expecting to bump into his body.”

Around 11 p.m. one night in Au-gust 1992, Gant, Scott Clarke and Alex Miles dove into the Tennes-see River and swam into Nickajack

Cave. The trio hoped to spear some of the 200-pound catfish rumored to roam the cave. In addition to being incredibly dangerous, the fishing trip was also illegal. Since 1980, the cave had been closed to humans because a colony of endangered bats had taken up residence there. A fence with posted warnings about dangers and $10,000 fines still blocks the entrance above water.

But despite the risks, the men swam under the fence and entered the cave. They searched for the monster cats until their scuba tanks began run-ning low on air. Gant signaled for Clarke and Miles to surface, declar-ing an end to the trip. But when they surfaced, expecting to feel fresh, cool air on their faces in the large room at the mouth, all they found was water and rock. Their hunt had taken them farther back into the cave than they’d planned.

The men dove and swam quickly toward where they thought the mouth was. But when they surfaced, they

Catfish, angels& second chancesA near-death experience changes a Bryant man’s outlook on lifeBy Andy Johns

David Gant nearly lost his life while scuba diving for monster-sized catfish in forbidden Nickajack Cave twenty years ago.

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were met by only the cave ceiling with no room for air. In their panic, the div-ers were making escape more difficult as their fins kicked up sediment. “As soon as you swim by, it stirs all of the silt up,” Gant says. “Visibility can get to zero.”

They split up. By pure luck, Clarke and Miles made it to the room at the entrance where they found sweet air. Gant mistakenly swam deeper into the cave where the only air he could find was a pocket in the rock about seven inches above the waterline.

He didn’t know if his friends es-caped, his air tank was empty and he had no idea how he was going to get out alive.

MIRACULOUS RESCUELuckily for Gant, his friends made it

out and contacted emergency officials who dispatched a dive team.

While everyone was hoping to find the missing diver, who had not been seen for several hours by the time search crews were mobilized — no one at the scene expected good news. “It was being treated as a recovery, not as a rescue,” says Mark Caldwell, who in 1992 was a state emergency services coordinator based in Chattanooga. “The thought was that even if he had found an air pocket he would have been hypothermic and that would

have killed him.”Eventually, officials at the scene

contacted highly-respected cave rescue specialist Buddy Lane in Chattanooga. He and Dennis Curry obtained a map from TVA and noticed that there were a few air pockets where Gant could have been holding on. “When we saw that, we actually had a little bit more hope for him,” Lane says.

By late morning, about the time Gant had his visions, Lane, Curry and Caldwell persuaded TVA to lower the level of the lake to hopefully open up more air pockets in case the diver was still alive. The decision would cost TVA tens of thousands of dollars, but soon after Caldwell placed the call, water began spilling through Nicka-jack Dam and the lake dropped 14 inches in one hour.

That drop was just enough to open a two-inch passage for fresh air to reach Gant, who had just passed out from the thin air in his chamber. Gant remembers the rushing air sounding like an oncoming train. Shortly there-after he saw the light from Lane and Curry’s headlamps.

“You guys are angels right?” a be-wildered Gant asked.

“Dude,” Curry responded. “We’ve been called a lot of things, but not angels.”

The two men escorted Gant to a boat

waiting in the large room near the mouth of the cave. He left the cave in a boat with his two rescuers, exactly as it was in his vision.

DIFFERENT MANWhen Gant came out of the cave

and reached the shore, he immediately began telling the amazed crowd what had happened. The experience had obviously left Gant a changed man. “The guys at work the next day said ‘You’re different’,” says Gant, a logger and mine supervisor by trade. “They just knew instantly.”

Days later another incident drove home his new purpose in life. While driving he felt guided to pick up a hitchhiker near the I-24/I-59 split. The men struck up a conversation and eventually Gant recounted his mi-raculous rescue. The hitchhiker burst into tears and began talking about the challenges and uncertainty in his life. When they reached the hitchhiker’s destination and he stepped out of the truck, he told Gant that their meeting was no accident.

“He said ‘I needed to hear that,’” Gant remembers “‘God brought you out of there to tell me that story.’”

Gant went on to speak at churches from Colorado to North Carolina. “I never turned down a church group or anybody, and I never took a penny,” Gant says. “How could I charge them for something that God didn’t charge me for? He’s the one that got me out of there. He’s the one that set all of that up.”

His story has been featured on the Discovery Channel, in Outside maga-zine, on the 700 Club and in the media as far away as Japan and Australia. Twenty years later, he still gets chill bumps when he talks about the rescue. Every time he has told the story, it’s had an impact on his audience. “I’ve seen a lot of people that got saved after that testimony,” he says.

But the life that has changed the most has been his own. While Gant always considered himself a good person, he admits turning away from God in his teens. An encounter with God in a dark, wet cave two decades ago turned him around — and he’s worked hard to be a living testimony of Christian love ever since. n

Buddy Lane, left, and Dennis Curry rescued David Gant from Nickajack Cave 20 years ago by persuading TVA to lower the level of the lake to aid in the rescue attempt.

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Pecan Pie Cupcakes with Brown Sugar Buttercream Frosting 1 cup chopped pecans 1 cup brown sugar, packed 1/2 cup all-purpose flour 2 eggs 2/3 cup butter or margarine, melted

Preheat oven to 350º. Place paper liners in 9 muffin cups and spray with nonstick cooking spray. In a large bowl, combine pecans, sugar and flour. Make a well in the center of the mixture. In a separate bowl, beat the eggs until foamy. Add the melted butter and stir to combine. Pour egg mixture into the well in the dry ingredients, stirring just until moistened. Spoon batter into the cups, filling each two-thirds full. Bake 20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Remove from pan immediately and cool on wire racks.

Brown Sugar Buttercream Frosting: 1 stick butter or margarine, softened 1 box confectioner’s sugar 1/4 cup brown sugar

Mix well and spread on cooled cupcakes.

Vanilla Cupcakes with Strawberry Buttercream Frosting 1 box white cake mix 2 eggs or 3 egg whites 1 cup water 1/4 cup vegetable or canola oil 1/2 teaspoon vanilla

Preheat oven to 350º. Place paper liners in muffin cups and spray with nonstick cooking spray. In a large bowl, mix eggs, water, cake mix and oil until moist. Add vanilla and mix for 2 minutes. Spoon batter into cups, filling each two-thirds full. Bake 18 to 20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.

Strawberry Buttercream Icing: 1 stick butter or margarine, softened 1 box confectioner’s sugar milk (to thin icing) 1/4 cup strawberry puree (recipe be-low)

Cream butter, then add sugar. When thick, add milk one tablespoon at a time until you reach desired consistency. Add puree. Mix until well blended.

Strawberry Puree: 1/2 carton fresh strawberries (washed and dried) 1/2 cup of sugar

Blend strawberries and sugar in food processor or blender until smooth.

Toffee Cupcakes with VanillaButtercream Frosting 1 box yellow cake mix 3 eggs 1 cup water 1/2 teaspoon vanilla 1/3 cup vegetable or canola oil Toffee pieces

Preheat oven to 350º. Place paper liners in muffin cups and spray with nonstick

cooking spray. In a large bowl, mix cake mix, eggs, water and oil until moist. Add vanilla and beat for 2 minutes. Spoon batter into the cups, filling each two-thirds full. Sprinkle toffee bits over batter. Bake 18 to 20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.

Vanilla Buttercream Frosting: 1 stick butter or margarine, softened 1 box confectioner’s sugar milk (to thin icing) toffee pieces (for decorating)

Cream butter, add sugar. Add milk one tablespoon at a time until desired con-sistency. Ice cupcakes and sprinkle toffee on top.

Tea Cakes 1 stick butter-flavored Crisco 2 cups sugar 3 eggs 1/4 cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 5 cups self-rising flour

Mix all ingredients. Roll out and cut out with cookie cutters. Bake at 375º for about 12 minutes or until golden brown around the edges.

Icing: 1-1/2 sticks butter or margarine, softened 1 box confectioner’s sugar 1 teaspoon almond extract Food coloring (optional)

Mix together, then add food color to make desired color. Spread over cooled tea cakes.

While she has always loved helping

her mother in the kitchen, 11-year-old

Alexa Bailey of Fyffe has spent the last

three years baking and creating her

own recipes that her family and friends

are more than happy to sample.

CupcakesAnyone?

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Cream Cheese Pound Cake 1-1/2 cups butter or margarine, softened 8 ounces cream cheese, softened 3 cups sugar salt to taste 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 1 teaspoon almond extract 3 cups flour 6 eggs, at room temperature

Preheat oven to 300º. Cream margarine, cream cheese and sugar in mixing bowl until light and fluffy. Add salt and flavorings; mix well. Add flour, alter-nating with eggs and mixing well after each addition. Spoon into greased and floured tube pan. Bake for 1-1/2 hours. Cool in pan on wire rack.

When she’s not working on back hand-springs and somersaults with her com-petition cheer squad at Maxim Athletics,

Alexa spends her free time watching Food Net-work and baking. “My favorite show is ‘Cupcake Wars’ and I also really like ‘Giada at Home’ with Giada De Laurentiis,” says the Fyffe School sixth-grader.

Shows like those stirred a desire to try baking on her own when she was about 9 years old. “I think if you’re really interested in something, like I was, you should try it,” says Alexa. “You never know if you will like it until you try something new.”

And that’s exactly what she did. “I thought it looked fun to measure ingredients and start mixing them together,” explains Alexa. “And I wanted to use the oven by myself.”

Her parents, Kristie and Brian Bailey, and her little sister, Ady, don’t mind at all since they get to sample everything she makes. “I also share the cupcakes and cookies I make with my friends,” she says.

Alexa says one of her favorite things is baking with her family during the holi-days. “I use my tea cake recipe for all oc-casions by using different cookie cutters and decorating them for the season or holiday,” she says.

And all the time she has put into bak-ing has really paid off. In September, Alexa entered her Cream Cheese Pound Cake in the DeKalb County VFW Fair and walked away with “Best in Show” in the junior baking division.

Alexa says she plans to make a career out of bak-ing. “I want to open my own cupcake shop when I grow up,” she says. Until then, she continues to perfect her cupcakes, creating new and tasty versions for her family and friends.

Among the recipes Alexa has chosen to share with readers are some of her favorites for cupcakes, her award-winning pound cake and her tea cake recipe.n

Alexa Bailey dreams of having her own cupcake shop one day.

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Mentone ColorfestOctober 20-21 • Sat. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Scenic Mentone has a festival each year to celebrate one of nature’s most beautiful times of year. The Fall Colorfest brings artisans and vendors together to demonstrate their crafts and show their wares in Brow Park and throughout historic Mentone.

NACC Theatre presents The MousetrapNov. 9-11 & 16-18 (Fri. and Sat. at 7 p.m., Sun. matinee at 2 p.m.)Tickets $5 each • All seats reserved • Handicap seating available For tickets or info call 256-638-4418 or visit www.nacc.edu/nacctheatre

NACC is pleased to present, for the first time, Dame Agatha Christie’s classic whodunit, The Mousetrap. This play first opened in the West End of London in 1952 and holds the record as the longest initial run of any play in history with more than 25,000 performances. It is best enjoyed by audi-ences 10 & over.

When strangers are stranded at a bed and breakfast during a snow storm, it isn’t long before they discover one of them is a murderer. Is it the newlyweds whose rampant suspicions jeopardize their marriage? Perhaps it’s the nagging spinster with the curious background. Could it be the architect, the retired Army Major or the mysterious gentleman who claims his car overturned in a snow drift? We’re not telling.

4TH ANNUAL

Little RiverCanyon Fest

November 3 • 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Little River Canyon Field School and Interpretive Center invite you to come and enjoy live music, nature and arts activities, arts demonstrations and sales, great food, children’s activities and more. For more information call 256-782-5697.

Blood Assurance Blood Drivein honor of Bobby Rains

Oct . 16 • 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Location: FTC, 144 McCurdy Ave. N., Rainsville, AL

Be a hero,give blood!

P.O. Box 217• 144 McCurdy Ave. N.Rainsville, Alabama 35986

“We Keep You Connected”