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Please welcome Dr. Barbara Stastny, DVM & Dr. Becky Arthur, DVM of Thurmont Veterinary Clinic to their new location in the Thurmont Plaza, 224 North Church Street. Thurmont Veterinary Clinic was previously located at 23 North Carroll Street.

Thurmont Veterinary Clinic will be increasing its hours of operation in the new facility, with appointments on Monday and Friday mornings and Wednesday afternoons and evenings, and will be out-patient only. This is the Opossum Pike Veterinary Clinic’s second location, and currently has a four-doctor AAHA-accredited (member of the American Animal Hospital Association) veterinary clinic on Opossumtown Pike in Frederick. They offer medical care for dogs and cats, as well as exotic pets such as rodent pocket pets (mice, rats, hamsters, guinea pigs, chinchillas), rabbits, birds, and most reptiles, excluding snakes.

You can contact them at 301-271-3212. Check out their services at www.opossumpikevet.com.

Dr. Barbara Stastny and Dr. Becky Arthur will be the attending veterinarians at this location and are two of the four partners of Opossum Pike Veterinary Clinic.

Courtesy Photo

Thurmont Veterinary Clinic staff are shown during the ribbon-cutting at their new location.

Hoping to get some relief from a pain or injury? What about improving your cardiovascular health and reducing stress and anxiety? Maybe a good night’s rest is what you are trying to find. Floating is an increasingly popular form of therapy that can help. And, it’s much more exciting than going to the doctor’s office or standing in the prescription line.

The Time Out Float Center will be located at 224 N. Church Street in the Thurmont Plaza. The projected opening is January, and with the holidays coming up, owner Michael Blevins, wants folks to be in the know because he’s offering a pre-opening member sign-up special: a FREE float session. It’s as simple visiting the website and signing up.

Blevins grew up in Thurmont. A dog trainer, steam fitter, and paint welder by trade, he has shifted his life’s goals, as a result of a spiritual awakening that took place for him about eighteen years ago. Now, he has clear direction to help other people and has attended the Monroe Institute in Virginia for training. He has also completed an apprenticeship at the Chrystal Waters Float Spa in Tolle, Utah.

By opening the float center, he is creating a facility where his clients can work to achieve desired results in many different areas of their lives. You can simply lie back in the magical waters of the float pod and receive the wonderful healing properties of the Epson salts.

In addition to float therapy, Time Out Float Center will provide light journeys by Lucia no3 and the Pandora star. Both are hypnogogic light machines, capable of inducing altered states of consciousness. A special type of audio guidance called Hemispherical Synchronization® (Hemi-Sync for short), engineered and patent by the Monroe institute in Virginia, can be used for your light journey or your floating experience. It’s like meditation on steroids.

When someone chooses to go inside and do some work on themselves, for whatever reason, it helps to have some tools in your backpack that you can use. Floating and the light journey, combined with the audio guidance called Hemispherical Synchronization®, gives the user a brand new set of tools that they might not know exist. At that point, the possibilities are endless!

Michael is the only light therapy service center in the state of Maryland. There are only thirty-five light therapy providers in the United States.

The Center’s space will be fully renovated, with six tank rooms that have showers. A restroom is located outside of the room. The float takes place in a highly concentrated Epson Salt bath, in a big fiberglass tank that has a lid.

When you enter the Time Out Float Center, a receptionist logs you in, walks you to the room, and explains what to do during the float. You shower before you enter the tank, so you don’t get oils in the tank, and you shower when you get out of the tank, so you don’t leave with salt residue on you.

A chemical injection pump cleans the tank water between clients. Shampoo, conditioner, soap dispensers, and towels are provided. When finished in the tank room, you exit the room after dressing to free it up for the next person. A styling room is the next stop, where you can do your hair, etc.

The benefits of these therapies are many, including relaxation, meditation, relief from pain, faster recovery from injury, improved sleep and mood.

Everyone is a potential customer at the Float Center. The customer just has to have the intent to stop feeling bad and start feeling healthy and happy. Anything is possible. Start the healing process and feel the layers of stress fall away. It’s up to you. It’s always been up to you.

For more information, view their ad on the back cover, visit FloatationTankTherapyInMaryland.com, email timeoutfloats@gmail.com, or call 240-549-4019.

Michael Blevins is shown in front of his Time Out Float vehicle, equipped to transport wheelchair-bound individuals to give them access to float therapy services.

Wine, Cupcakes, and Art in Thurmont

James Rada, Jr.

It was a nice night for a stroll on the evening of May 8, 2015, and residents took advantage of the pleasant weather to come to downtown Thurmont for the Art & Wine Walk.

Ten downtown businesses shared their storefronts with local wineries, cupcake bakers, and artists for the evening. Visitors strolled along the streets and popped into the businesses to sample a locally made wine, snack on a gourmet cupcake, or speak with an artist. For instance, Gnarly Artly showed off his custom T-shirts at the Thurmont Bar & Grill, while Kathy Larson with Detour Winery offered samples to customers who stopped into Gateway Flowers.

“This is nice. It’s a nice event for the family,” said Dee Carr of Dearbought. She had come to the stroll to support an artist friend who was showing her work at the Creager House.

The participating stores included Brown’s Jewelers, ESP Dance Studio, Gateway Flowers, Heart & Hands, Hobbs Hardware, Mechanicstown Park, Thurmont Bar & Grill, Thurmont Historical Society, Thurmont Kountry Kitchen, Timeless Trends, Thurmont Main Street Center, and Twice Is Nice.

Each of these businesses had guests, such as Rebecca Pearl, who unveiled her latest painting “Springtime at Roddy Road Covered Bridge”; Fine European Catering; Pet Portraits by Nancy Houston, Linda Sandagger, Sharon Crider, Cindy and Russ Poole, who make up The East End Artists; Mountain Gate Restaurant; Gnarly Artly; artist Yemi; Catoctin Breeze Vineyard; Detour Winery; and Thurmont Lions Club. Professional cake makers, Michele Nolan and Joan Hurd, displayed their scrumptious cake flavors with cupcakes. Another addition this year, along with the cupcakes, were performances by ESP dancers in their studio. Great music genres were performed by Paul Zelenka in Mechanicstown Park, while Main Street businesses hosted the attractions.

Mel and Joanne Goble came downtown just to see what the stroll offered, and planned to try to visit all of the stores that were participating.

“It’s a lovely night, and we’re enjoying seeing everything that is here tonight,” Joanne said.

For more information on any of the participants, contact vgrinder@thurmontstaff.com.

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Kathy Larson with Detour Winery offered samples to customers who stop by Gateway Flowers during the Wine, Cupcakes, and Art Walk in Thurmont on the evening of May 8, 2015.

Photo by James Rada, Jr.

Catoctin Mountain Trains and Hobbies Closes After 25 years

James Rada, Jr.

Paul Johnson received his first train set when he was seven months old. The train was set up around the Christmas tree as part of a Christmas train garden that Johnson delighted in every Christmas.

“I looked forward to it every year and when I turned eight, my father showed me how to set it up and take care of it. From then on, it was my responsibility,” Johnson said.

As Johnson got older, he saved the money that he earned from cutting lawns in order to buy new pieces for the train layout. His interest died off when he entered his teens. Like most teenage boys, Johnson found girls and cars more interesting than trains.

“I got interested again in my mid-20s,” Johnson said. “I had visions of a big layout that I wanted to build.”

His interest in trains remained a hobby until he retired from the U.S. Park Police after twenty years. He then decided to open Catoctin Mountain Trains and Hobbies, at 1 East Main Street in Thurmont.

“There was no place in Frederick County that sold trains,” Johnson said.

In its early years, the store had something for everyone. Johnson sold cards, games, puzzles, and other things.

“More and more people wanted the trains, though, so eventually that became the only thing we sold,” said Johnson.

After five years, the store moved to 3 West Main Street. The new store specialized in O-gauge scale trains, although they had some HO- and N-scale trains. Johnson also developed relationships with three men in the area who could repair broken trains. With Johnson attending shows and selling trains and pieces through mail order, the store’s reputation began growing.

“We’ve had customers drive here from two or three hours away,” Johnson said.

Although the Catoctin Mountain Trains and Hobbies was a local business, most of its customers came from out of town.

After twenty-five years in business, Catoctin Mountain Trains and Hobbies closed its doors on March 31, 2015, so Johnson and his wife, Marcia, could retire and enjoy some traveling.

“I enjoyed my time with the store,” Johnson said. “I met a lot of good people.”

While Johnson sold plenty of trains over the years to people across the country, he doesn’t have a large layout in his own home and he never built the grand layout that he had dreamed of in his mid-20s.

“I am more into collecting,” Johnson said. “I have a collection of older trains. Most of them are from the 1940s and 1950s.”

His most-valuable car is a Lionel model of a 1950 Hudson that still has its original box. Johnson said it is worth $3,500.

Now that he is retired and traveling, Johnson may even take some trips on the railroad.

taking down the sign from Marcia Johnson

Pictured are Catoctin Mountain Trains and Hobbies owner Paul Johnson and his wife, Marcia, shown taking down the sign.

Courtesy Photo

Farewell to Cozy

This May 19, 2015, photo shows the rubble of the former Cozy Inn Hotel. The tree in the foreground was removed later in the day. The gazebo still stood several days later but was removed.

 

The community observed as the former landmark restaurant and cabins continued to disappear as the days went by.

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Photo by Deb Spalding

Pam’s Rusty Treasures to Open in Thurmont

Deb Spalding

IMG_20150508_142016_5271The day of June 6, 2015, will be the grand opening of Pam’s Rusty Treasures, next to the CVS in the Thurmont Plaza on North Church Street in Thurmont.

Owner Pam Garber had a similar store that she operated out of her house in Biglerville, Pennsylvania. She closed that shop when she moved back to Maryland (she’s originally from Emmitsburg).

Pam’s Rusty Treasures will carry primitives, candles, scents, and more. Pam operates the shop in memory of her husband, Rusty, who passed away from Melanoma ten years ago.

The grand opening will be held from 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. on June 6. Normal hours of operation will be Saturdays, Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays, from 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Sundays, from 12:00-2:00 p.m.; and closed on Tuesdays.

The store is located in Suite M at 224 N. Church Street in Thurmont. Call 240-772-6782 for more information.