Places to go and things to see by Gypsy Bev

Posts tagged ‘gardening’

The Farm at Old World Garden

An amazing new venue, The Farm at Old World Garden has opened in the area in 2025 with a beautiful garden, overnight cabin accommodations, and multiple event rental spaces.

Jim and Mary Competti established The Farm at Old World Garden in 2025.

Jim and Mary Competti have purchased 46 acres at 65780 Pisgah Road, Quaker City to showcase many of the Home & Garden articles they write on their websites. They both grew up working in their family gardens and continue that love of gardening to this day.

Since 2010, they have been writing gardening blogs and websites and have developed a large following. At this time, they have six websites, Simple Garden Life podcast, and YouTubes to give gardening advice. They enjoy participating in Garden Shows and Garden Conferences all around the country. Their Simple Garden Life podcast was the #1 Home and Garden Podcast recently.

This attractive entrance sign lets you know you have arrived!

When they retired, they searched for a place to establish a garden. When they found the location they liked in 2020, it was an old property that had not been used for years and needed lots of work to clear. They moved to the land in 2021 in a camper and began clearing the land. They could picture what they wanted to develop for their dream to appear; however, they knew they had to be flexible in their approach.

Their day begins at 5:30, where they enjoy sitting outside whenever possible to plan their day. At 6:00, they spend time writing their gardening articles. They post three articles each week – a gardening article, a cooking/canning project, and a weekly farm update. The rest of the day is spent working on the grounds. “We enjoy being outside and want to teach the younger generation to love the outdoors.”

The Courtyard is the perfect place for dinner or a special event.

It all began as a home for a Grassland Garden but it didn’t take long for that idea to expand. First, their daughter thought it would be a beautiful place for her wedding. So a Party Barn Courtyard was created for that special occasion. Friends who attended the wedding thought others would enjoy having a wedding there. The expansion began.

Their Cottage in the Woods provides a perfect place for relaxation.

Bulldozers came in and removed mountains of dirt to create trails, pond, courtyard, pickleball court and more. They love living in their new creation and continue to get new ideas every day for improvements. It will be exciting to watch it develop. Recently, they have paved the main parking lot as well as several pathways, which makes for easier walking.

The entrance to The Grassland Garden has a beautiful new sign.

Their Grassland Garden with an impressive 10′ tall entrance sign is a special feature, and will be open this summer with walkways to lead you through 10,000 ornamental grass plants, along with sculptures, water features, and more. Their intent in the next few years is to increase that garden to 40,000 plants. It is the only garden in the country dedicated to ornamental grasses. A section of it contains a lovely Japanese Rake Garden.

Grow and Show Garden Club from Cambridge visited Grasslands for a tour.

Already Garden Clubs are visiting to see the beauty and get ideas. They plan to hold frequent classes and workshops about plants and gardening. In the spring, they held their annual Old World Garden Conference at their new home. This year they focused on gardening techniques with practical, helpful hints for vegetable gardens.

Walk, or sit and rest in The Grassland Garden, which has over 10,000 plants at this time.

A special bonus of The Grassland Garden is that deer don’t like the ornamental grasses, which are native to the area. Most of the plants are also drought resistant. Much of the watering is done from rain water collected in cisterns on the farm.

A beautiful event center prepared for a special wedding reception.

Their Old World Garden Event Center was one of the more recent places developed. They have a dozen weddings scheduled for this year and some already for next. When visiting, they were planning for the Buckeye Trail Prom and hold numerous birthday parties, showers, and graduation parties. This is the spot where countryside charm creates unforgettable experiences.

Special dinners will be held each month, June through September, with the first one being a family style Italian dinner with musical entertainment. Other plans now include: Cowboy Steak Dinner, Southern Supper, and a BBQ.

Relax by their pond, which also supplies water to the garden.

Spent the night or the weekend in their Airbnb or one of their three sleeping cabins. Then you’ll have time to explore the beautiful grounds on their three and a half miles of hiking trails. Walk over the rolling hills to the lovely pond they have built with a Pond Pavilion for outdoor gatherings and a pickleball court close by. The pond also provides an extra source of water for the garden.

A pickleball court provides a place for fun near the pond.

Mary said, “There is something for everyone here. We want people to have fun in the outdoors and learn something about gardening while they are here.”

Jim and Mary take January and February as vacation time. Some of their favorite spots are Summerville SC, Yuma AZ, and San Diego CA. While on vacation, they are busy picking up new ideas along the way. Their passion for gardening follows them wherever they venture.

The annual Old World Garden Conference was held there in April.

If you would like more information about events there contact them by email at thefarm@owgarden.com or call 740-309-3811. Visit their website at www.owgarden.com or visit their Facebook page for more detailed information. They are located just a few miles off the I-70 Quaker City exit.

They are enthused about their new project and have so many ideas for the future. Jeff commented, “We can’t wait to see what the next five years bring to The Farm!”

Grow & Show Garden Club Touches the Community in Many Ways

To plant a garden is to believe in tomorrow.

Creative ladies who enjoy gardening, flowers, and nature started the local Grow & Show Garden Club sixty-one years ago. As part of the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs, their purpose is to stimulate knowledge and love of gardening among members, increase their interest in knowing, growing, and sharing, and to promote protection of our environment.

Members of Show and Grow Garden Club prepare to decorate the Downtown Branch of the library for Christmas. Pictured are Kay Bennett, Kat Bennett, JoEllen Hayes, Marti Reed, and Sue Cowden.

One of their first projects was a flower show downtown. Area residents have fond memories of the beautiful Guernsey County Fair booths and the Christmas wreaths they used to display.

The committee working on the Scarecrow named Garden Goddess Antheia-Flora included Paula Shockley, Marti Reed, Kat Bennett, and JoEllen Hayes.

Today they enjoy decorating for many occasions. Just recently they took part in the Scarecrow on Parade Decorating Contest at the Great Guernsey Trail. They built a ten-foot-tall scarecrow with grasses for the skirt, a wreath collar, and a hat decorated with plants and flowers. After the contest, they moved the scarecrow to the Guernsey County Senior Center so it could still brighten someone’s day

They decorate two fireplaces each year with greenery and Christmas decor.

One project at this season of the year is decorating the Downtown Branch of the Guernsey County Library for Christmas with a Victorian touch to honor the popular Dickens Victorian Village. The library display continues through November and December.

Charles Dickens writes beside the Christmas tree decorated with handmade Victorian angels.

The tree is decorated with handmade Victorian angels. Marti Reed’s grandmother made the doilies and the club members turned them into angels. Marti’s grandmother always took her to the library so she thought it fitting her doilies would end up there. Large wreaths hang above two fireplaces and the mantles are covered with greenery and touches of the holiday. The 12 Days of Christmas vignettes appear in the windows.

Next time you visit the library, take time to appreciate the work involved in creating a holiday venue.

A special Easter Egg tree is part of the holiday decorations during the Easter season.

But that’s only one season of decorations for the group at the library. Another time they enjoy decorating is at Easter. At that time, they have stuffed animals and an Easter egg tree. Fluffy yellow chicks and bunnies of all sizes rest on the shelves and windowsills.

The first week of December, Grow & Show holds a Gingerbread House workshop for their members at Crossroads Library. Wonder if their gingerbread houses have plants or flowers around them.

Members take time to visit Cardinal Place each month where they take candy and treat bags to the residents while visiting them. They hope to expand this to other care facilities in the future.

A tree was planted for Sue on her 50 years of being a member. Pictured are Cheryl Lowry-Miller, Kat Bennett, Sue Cowden, Marti Reed, and Pat Graven.

The garden club plants and helps maintain trees that are dedicated in someone’s memory or just to honor someone special. There are two gardens where they plant trees. One is Shafer Park in East Cambridge while the other is a donated park at the corner of Beatty Ave and Clark St.

Jo Lucas has not only a beautiful flower garden but many fruit trees. At this time, she placed parachutes over them to protect the fruit from the birds.

They hold one public meeting related to gardening each year at the Cambridge Senior Center. This year the topic will be Gardening for Pollinators. Light hors d’oeuvres and a selection of desserts will be available. Reservations must be made for this March 26 meeting. Cost is $15.

Kat Bennett, Violet Scott, and Pat Graven explain using straw bales for planting.

Every year in May, they hold a Mother’s Day Garden Sale the Saturday before Mother’s Day where you can find some beautiful plants or flowers for mom. This year the event will be on May 10 at the Cambridge City Park Big Pavilion from 8-12.

Indoor plants are also a joy. Pat Graven has a green house in her bathroom.

Purchasing a couple hanging baskets to beautify downtown Cambridge is one of their projects. Some of their members also participate in watering the baskets throughout the summer months.

Much work has been done on the Great Guernsey Trail by members. They have contributed benches, trees, and flowers as well as helped with the Butterfly Garden. Plans are now being made for another display of plants there.

As you can tell, their community is very important to the members and many projects revolve around the beautification of Cambridge.

Bonnie Perkins has a beautiful koi pond in her yard surrounded by a variety of plants and flowers.

Grow & Show Garden Club meets the fourth Wednesday of each month at Crossroads Library at 1:00. Programs are always garden-related. A couple of times a year, the group visits a member’s garden. Some of them include waterfalls surrounded by plants, while others might have plants inside or a garden or orchard for their own food. Perhaps they might also visit a greenhouse or apple orchard. New members are always welcome so if you have an interest in gardening, stop by for a meeting..

These busy ladies know how to have fun while making the world a more beautiful place!

Seneca Lake Pottery Designed by Chuck and Shana Fair

Chuck and Shana (2)

Chuck and Shana become a Victorian couple during the Dickens Victorian Village season.

   When people retire, they often search for something to fill those empty hours. Chuck and Shana Fair found the perfect retirement project – making pottery. They took classes at OU Zanesville and had so much fun that Chuck decided to set up a studio in their garage. That led to the creation of Seneca Lake Pottery.

   Shana grew up on the water at Lake White near Waverly so Seneca Lake seemed the perfect place to retire. She loves the feeling of weightlessness in the water and enjoys meeting a school of fish as well as exploring the beauty of the underwater colors.

thumbnail_CF as town crier

Chuck became the town crier for Dickens’ Opening Night.

   Chuck grew up locally near Kimbolton and met Shana when they were students at Ohio State University. They married after graduation and each had fulfilling careers. Chuck worked as a buyer in the electronics industry, where he saw the progression from tubes to transistors to microprocessors. Shana’s career led her to work as a library director.

Chuck at Potter Wheel

People enjoy watching Chuck throw a pot on the wheel.

   Today at Seneca Lake Pottery, Chuck focuses on wheel throwing to create pots with strong lines. He embellishes his pots by altering the thrown forms, adding texture and finishing with bold glazes.

   He frequently demonstrates making pottery at downtown events and festivals. People, especially children, gather around to watch his creations magically take form.

Shana at SF Festival (2)

Shana displays yarn colored with natural dyes.

   Although pottery was new to Shana, she has been interested in crafts since she was a Brownie Scout and wove her first lanyard. Since then her passion turned to creating objects in macrame and she is presently working on a window treatment.

   She also hand spins yarn, silk, and cotton using her great-great grandmother’s spinning wheel. Then she dyes the yarn with native plants such as marigolds, onion skins, walnut husks, Queen Anne’s Lace, or insects. These were the kinds of natural materials the early settlers could find near their homes.

 

Seneca Pottery at Ellie's Cottage

A display of their Seneca Lake Pottery can be seen at Ellie’s Cottage in downtown Cambridge.

 Last season Shana created some beautiful pottery Christmas ornaments with silkscreened original sketches of the scenes done by Bob Ley before the Dickens Victorian Village project ever began. The idea was so popular that she is going to do more scenes this year.

Santa's Stockings

Collecting for Santa is one of the roles they play at the Byesville Rotary Club.

   Both Chuck and Shana are active in not only the making of pottery but also volunteering in the community. They are a husband/wife team that works together at so many functions.

Chuck at Rotary Chicken BBQ

Chuck enjoys working the chicken BBQ on a Rotary weekend fundraiser.

   They play leadership roles in the Byesville Rotary Club by organizing events to help the community. The Rotary Club provides scholarships to many area youths, Health Screenings. and Christmas food baskets to mention a few of their projects.

Shana - Guatemala

Chuck and Shana traveled to Guatemala to present books for their Literacy Program.

   A recent mission trip took them to Guatemala where they donated books to the Literacy Program there. This country is making an attempt to be self-sustaining, so Rotary is assisting with scholarships and books to help keep children in school. The Fairs enjoy meeting interesting people wherever they travel.

Creative Team 2015

They both are part of the Creative Team that designs the Dickens Victorian scenes.

   They also are a tremendous help with Dickens Victorian Village in nearby Cambridge. In fact, without their long hours spent with the Dickens Creative Team, the Victorian scenes may never make it to the streets. Chuck is the carpenter in residence as he builds and repairs platforms as well as figures. He is now responsible for making the framework for any new or replaced characters.

Shana Mannequin head

Shana recently put the finishing touches on one of the mannequin heads.

   Shana has been working on the scenes for years as she has an eye for perfect costumes. Her needle and thread are often at work here. In the last couple of years, she has expanded her talents to making the heads for some of the figures.

Downtown Potters

Chuck and Shana enjoy demonstrating their pottery skills in downtown Cambridge.

   Both Chuck and Shana will be found in the Heritage Arts Tent at the 50th Anniversary of the Salt Fork Arts & Crafts Festival demonstrating their creative talents. Chuck will be throwing pots on the potter’s wheel while Shana will be demonstrating slab building on molds.

thumbnail_2a Chuck

thumbnail_2t Shana--Cpt. Don's

Chuck and Shana enjoy scuba diving in the Caribbean.

   They enjoy exploring new places so take exciting vacations each year. A favorite spot is the island of Bonaire in the Caribbean where they enjoy scuba diving in the coral reef at the National Park. This year their plans are to head to Glacier National Park on a Roads Scholar tour.

thumbnail_CF at Bryce

Chuck enjoys the view on one of their adventures at Bryce Canyon.

   As you can tell, this is a busy couple. When asked what they do for relaxation, both answer, “Gardening.” Chuck also enjoys golfing and woodworking while Shana, with her library background, enjoys reading a book at the water’s edge. They both enjoy frequent trips to the theater.

   Chuck admonishes young people to “keep an open mind about what is going on around you. Don’t be complacent about what you learned in your childhood.” Chuck finds changes in technology fascinating. “There’s no way to guess what you are going to see in life in the next hundred years.”

   People like Chuck and Shana who share their talents are vital to the success of the community. We’re happy they decided to make their home on Seneca Lake.