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Go Green With Gross Electric


Gross Electric Wins National Marketing Award

 

Gross Electric received the TED Magazine Best of the Best award for Integrated Promotional Campaign. This is the second year in a row that Gross Electric has been awarded this honor.

The Best of the Best Awards Competition is sponsored by TED (The Electrical Distributor) Magazine to honor marketing excellence and recognize creativity within the electrical industry in companies of all sizes. A panel of judges comprised of marketing and industry experts decide who the winners are in 12 competitive categories. Categories are split by sales volume, to ensure that competition is fair and occurs between like-sized firms. More than 300 entries were submitted this year. The awards were presented during the National Association of Electrical Distributors (NAED) Sales & Marketing Conference in Chicago.

Gross Electric won the Best of the Best award for its Go Green with Gross Electric campaign. This integrated promotional campaign was designed to promote energy efficient lighting and electrical products and services offered by Gross Electric.

"We are proud to offer various energy efficient products and services to our customers," says Sue Sweeney, Director of Marketing at Gross Electric. "And we are honored that this program has been recognized by TED Magazine and NAED."

Gross Electric is a family-owned and operated lighting and electrical supply company, which has been servicing customers in northwest Ohio and southeast Michigan since 1910. The company currently has three locations: the main office in Toledo, and branches in East Toledo and Ann Arbor.

CONTACT: Sue Sweeney

Director of Marketing

(419) 537-8265

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2010 Master Gardner Classes
2010 Master Gardener Classes Now Being Formed

(Toledo, OH) OSU Extension at Toledo Botanical will begin recruiting individuals interested in joining the 2010 Master Gardener Volunteer Class. 

The Lucas County Master Gardener Volunteer Program has 160+ active members, and is putting the wheels into motion to start a new class in February, 2010.  The classes run for nine weeks, on Tuesdays, from 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. at the Toledo Botanical Garden Conference Center.

We will be hosting an informational meeting on Monday, August 17th, one session at 2:00 p.m. and the second session at 7:00 p.m.  Interested parties need only attend one session.  The program and its volunteer commitment will be discussed in detail, and application packets will be passed out.
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Lucas County Master Gardener Volunteer Program


Lucas County Master Gardener Volunteers Honor One of Their Own

(Toledo, OH) The Lucas County Master Gardener Volunteer Program held a dedication ceremony on July 20th, to honor the loss of Master Gardener Linda Besendorfer, who passed away from Breast Cancer in October, 2008.  Linda never gave up hope, and always wore a smile on her optimistic face.

The Pink Cancer Memorial Garden was dedicated to the memory of all victims who fought valiantly; to hope and strength for those currently engaged in battle; and to the celebration of all who have survived this disease.  A quotation on the garden signage states:
God gave us memories, so we might have roses in December. –J M Barrie
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Wildflowers at Blue Creek Nursery

Wildflowers Take Root At Blue Creek Nursery

 

How does Penny's garden grow? With the help of a lot of hands.

Seeds collected throughout the Metroparks are going into one of the area's most unusual gardens at the Blue Creek Conservation Area. There, Penny Wagner tends to plots of native wildflowers and grasses that she and other members of the land management staff use to restore Lucas County's natural areas.  Other plants are used for stream bank stabilization or in landscaped areas, such as the Metz Visitors Center at Wildwood Preserve, where people can appreciate and learn more about them.

Cardinal-flower, blue lobelia, hoary mountain mint, Swamp milkweed, New England aster, tall coreopsis, wild sienna, bergamot.

"We collect everything we can," Wagner said. "We have a lot of species."  Priority is given to nectaring plants, such as lupine, butterfly-weed and dotted horsemint.  By June, the land management crew had already planted about half the 3,000 lupine plants it expects to plant this year at the Campbell Prairie and other areas of Oak Openings Preserve. Lupine is critical to the survival of the federally-endangered Karner blue butterfly, which was reintroduced in the Oak Openings region.  In a remote area of Blue Creek - a farm in Whitehouse now owned by Metroparks and jointly operated with the Lucas Soil and Water Conservation District - Wagner uses a truck with a water tank, a sprinkler system, a small greenhouse and lots of care to nurture the plants. Grasses - big bluestem, little bluestem and Indian grass - are grown in larger, one-acre plots nearby.

It's a lot of work, but she has hundreds of helpers.

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For Better Or Worse - A1

 

alisonphoto

 

WHY WE NEED A SUSTAINABILITY MOVEMENT IN NORTHWEST OHIO


The word sustainability is everywhere these days.  It's often associated with the environment and being "green."  But sustainability is not about one thing or one color.  Sustainability is about the effect that our choices have, not just on ourselves, but on our community, on others and on future generations.  So why do we need a sustainability movement in NW Ohio?  It's very simple...survival. 

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