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Pedestrian struck by car, injured in Alto crosswalk

A South Carolina driver was charged after troopers say he struck and injured a Cleveland woman in a crosswalk outside Lee Arrendale State Prison.

52-year-old Robin Hood was injured Thanksgiving evening

According to the Georgia State Patrol, Hood was walking east across Gainesville Highway in a marked crosswalk with flashing lights and warning signs when the accident occurred.

Lloyd Wensel of Westminster told troopers he did not see Hood due to her dark clothing.

Troopers say the 39-year-old Wensel was driving a Hyundai Elantra northbound on the highway when he failed to yield the right of way at the crosswalk. The right front side of the Elantra struck Hood with enough force to cause functional damage to the vehicle.

Habersham EMS transported Hood to Habersham County Medical Center in Demorest with visible injuries.

Wensel and three passengers in the vehicle were uninjured. The state patrol charged him with failure to yield to a pedestrian in a crosswalk.

Rabun County seeks public’s help locating wanted men

The Rabun County Sheriff’s Office is asking for the public’s help to find two men wanted on outstanding arrest warrants.

Preston Michael English and James Matthew Hicks are wanted on felony counts of theft by receiving stolen property and theft by taking.

The sheriff’s office says both men are known to frequent Rabun, Gwinnett, and Hall counties.

“This duo has been involved in criminal activity for some time,” Rabun County Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Scott Cheek tells Now Habersham. He says on March 22, 2021, Rabun County deputies were involved in a short chase with the duo as they pulled a stolen excavator from Gwinnett County on a UHaul through Rabun.

The deputies caught up with the men and arrested them. They charged English with fleeing and attempting to elude officers, theft by receiving stolen property, possession of meth, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon during the commission of a felony, and driving on a suspended license.

Hicks, who is from Gwinnett County, was charged with several offenses in connection with that incident, including possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, possession of meth, and theft by receiving stolen property.

English was released on bond. In August of 2021, he was arrested again on warrants out of Franklin County, Georgia, and placed back into the Rabun County Detention Center the following November for failure to appear. Cheek says English has been arrested 15 times in Rabun County alone.

Patricia Louise Graham

Patricia Louise Graham, age 66, of Clarkesville, entered rest Monday, November 28, 2022, at her residence.

Patricia was born in Toccoa, Georgia to the late Roy David & Mary Louise Hudson May. She retired from the Ingles Bakery in Cornelia and was of the non-denominational faith.

Left to cherish sweet memories, husband, DeWitt “Bud” Graham, III; sons, Stuart Matthew Brock & DeWitt Graham, IV; daughters, Sarah (Eric) Marlowe & Shana Elias; brothers, David May, Stephen May, Kevin May & Richard May; 8 grandchildren, several great-grandchildren, nieces, nephews & a number of other relatives also survive.

Private family services will be held at a later time.

You may sign the online guestbook or leave a condolence at www.wardsfh.com.

Ward’s Funeral Home of Gainesville is honored to serve the family of Patricia Louise Graham.

Traffic shift begins Tuesday for Appalachian Parkway bridge construction

Cleveland Bypass Traffic Shift (Photo GDOT)

Work is set to begin this week on the addition of a new bridge on the Appalachian Parkway north of Cleveland.

Beginning Tuesday, November 29, the Georgia Department of Transpiration will implement a traffic shift in the area of the White County Sheriff’s Office and Detention Center to install the new bridge which should have been part of the parkway’s original design.

The shift is expected to remain in place for approximately nine months, or until the bridge is complete. Drivers should expect delays and exercise caution when traveling through the work zone.

The department of transportation encourages drivers who often travel that route to follow the Georgia DOT-Northeast social media pages on Facebook and Twitter for up-to-date announcements regarding this project.

Cyber Monday deals lure in consumers amid high inflation

NEW YORK (AP) — Days after flocking to stores on Black Friday, consumers are turning online for Cyber Monday to score more discounts on gifts and other items that have ballooned in price because of high inflation.

Cyber Monday is expected to remain the year’s biggest online shopping day and rake in up to $11.6 billion in sales, according to Adobe Analytics, which tracks transactions at over 85 of the top 100 U.S. online stores. That forecast represents a jump from the $10.7 billion consumers spent last year.

Adobe’s numbers are not adjusted for inflation, but the company says demand is growing even when inflation is factored in. Some analysts have said top line numbers will be boosted by higher prices, and the amount of items consumers purchase could remain unchanged — or even fall — compared to prior years. Profit margins are also expected to be tight for retailers offering deeper discounts to attract budget-conscious consumers and clear out their bloated inventories.

According to Adobe, shoppers spent a record $9.12 billion online on Black Friday, up 2.3% from last year. E-commerce activity continued to be strong over the weekend, with $9.55 billion in online sales.

Salesforce, which also tracks spending, said their estimates showed online sales in the U.S. hit $15 billion on Friday and $17.2 billion over the weekend, with an average discount rate of 30% on products. The two groups said that electronics, activewear, toys, and health and beauty items provided a big boost.

Meanwhile, consumers who feared leaving their homes and embraced e-commerce during the pandemic are returning to physical stores in greater numbers this year as normalcy returns. The National Retail Federation said its recent survey showed a 3% uptick in the number of Black Friday shoppers planning to go to stores. It expects 63.9 million consumers to shop online during Cyber Monday, compared to 77 million last year.

Consumers are spending cautiously

Mastercard SpendingPulse, which tracks spending across all types of payments, including cash and credit card, said that overall sales on Black Friday rose 12% from a year ago. Sales at physical stores rose 12%, while online sales were up 14%.

RetailNext, which captures sales and traffic via sensors, reported that store traffic rose 7% on Black Friday, while sales at physical stores improved 0.1% from a year ago. However, spending per customer dropped nearly 7% as cautious shoppers did more browsing than buying. Another company that tracks store traffic — Sensormatic Solutions— said store traffic was up 2.9% on Black Friday compared to a year ago.

“Shoppers are being more thoughtful, but they are going to more than a few retailers to be able to make a determination of what they are going to buy this year,” said Brian Field, Sensormatic’s global leader of retail consulting and analytics.

Overall, online spending has remained resilient in the past few weeks as eager shoppers buy more items on credit and embrace “buy now, pay later” services that lack interest charges but carry late fees.

In the first three weeks of November, online sales were essentially flat compared with last year, according to Adobe. It said the modest uptick shows consumers have a strong appetite for holiday shopping amid uncertainty about the economy.

Still, some major retailers are feeling a shift. Target, Macy’s, and Kohl’s said this month they’ve seen a slowdown in consumer spending in the past few weeks. The exception was Walmart, which reported higher sales in its third quarter and raised its earnings outlook.

“We’re seeing that inflation is starting to really hit the wallet and that consumers are starting to amass more debt at this point,” said Guru Hariharan, founder and CEO of retail e-commerce management firm CommerceIQ, adding there’s more pressure on consumers to purchase cheaper alternatives.

Shifting demand

This year’s Cyber Monday also comes amid a wider e-commerce slowdown affecting online retailers that saw a boom in sales during most of the COVID-19 pandemic. Amazon, for example, raked in record revenue, but much of the demand has waned as the worst of the pandemic eased, and consumers felt more comfortable shopping in stores.

To deal with the change, the company has been scaling back its warehouse expansion plans and is cutting costs by axing some of its projects. It’s also following in the steps of other tech companies and implementing mass layoffs in its corporate ranks. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said the company will continue to cut jobs until early next year.

Shopify, a company that helps businesses set up e-commerce websites and also offers offline software, laid off 10% of its staff this summer.

The company said Monday that its merchants have surpassed $5.1 billion in global sales since the start of Black Friday in New Zealand. And spending per U.S. customer went up $5 compared to last year, said Shopify President Harley Finkelstein.

Despite the bump, Finkelstein said shoppers were more intentional about their spending this year and waiting for discounts before making a purchase.

Georgia Power’s long campaign for 12% rate hike nears final showdown

Georgia Power’s rate case calls for 12% increases in electricity rates over the next two years, but the nuclear expansion at Plant Vogtle and reimbursement for fuel costs could add to the burden on ratepayers. The Georgia Public Service Commission is expected to vote on the 2022 rate case by Dec. 20. (John McCosh/ Georgia Recorder)

The final several weeks of Georgia Power’s $2.9 billion rate case will determine whether state regulators sign off on plans for customers to pay hundreds of dollars more per year to keep the lights on.

On Dec. 20, the Georgia Public Service Commission is set to vote on the months-long 2022  rate case. This week marks the end of expert testimony as environmental and consumer watchdog groups hope to curb a dramatic increase in electricity costs charged by the state’s largest utility provider. After the pending rate case is settled, customers will likely absorb more hits to the wallet in 2023 as Georgia Power seeks compensation from higher fuel costs and expenses tied to the snake-bit nuclear plant expansion at Plant Vogtle.

The deadline for parties to explain their positions on Georgia Power’s rate case is in December before commissioners are scheduled to vote on the company’s proposal Dec. 20. The decisions will affect 2.7 million customers in Georgia.

Tuesday and Wednesday are the last days set aside for expert witness testimony regarding Georgia Power’s proposal for a 12% hike in residential electric rates.

Georgia Power’s proposal would increase a typical household’s bill by more than $195, or $16.29 per month. In 2023, the worst sticker shock would be $14.32, followed by smaller increases in 2024 and 2025.

The Sierra Club of Georgia is among the environmental groups pushing for Georgia Power customers to testify during this week’s public comment period about the harm that higher rates could do to their finances.

Brionté McCorkle, executive director of Georgia Conservation Voters, said that members of the state PSC must take into account the many Georgians struggling to make ends meet.

“This is not just a metro Atlanta issue,” McCorkle said. “This isn’t just a poor Black folks issue. Everyone is feeling the strain economically right now.”

Georgia Power CEO Chris Womack has said that the company is preparing for a rapidly changing energy future as it tries to become carbon neutral by 2050.

“At Georgia Power, our customers are, and will always be, at the center of all we do,” Womack said earlier about the rate case hearings.

Georgia Power says the planned billion-dollar investment in the electric grid will reduce power outages for customers and help build for a growing population. As it transitions from fossil fuel-based electricity to renewable energy, the company is allocating a large amount of funding to transmission and distribution wire projects, a cost critics say calls for an independent monitor.

Coal ash cleanup tab

So far, Georgia Power has recovered hundreds of millions of dollars in coal ash cleanup costs from its customers and its executives have said it expects to ask the PSC to approve more cost-shifting to ratepayers next year.

Georgia Power is asking for reimbursement for coal ash cleanup and intends to seek to recover fuel costs tied to skyrocketing natural gas prices in a volatile energy market.

The U.S. Supreme Court ordered an Ohio utility last week to stop dumping coal ash into unlined storage ponds and speed up cleanup efforts. Georgia Power has been sealing toxic ash in unlined pits at some of its coal-fired plant cleanup sites as it prepares to close the two polluting power generators still operating.

Since 2020, Georgia Power’s customers have been paying coal-related cleanup fees. Analysts for the state’s largest electricity generator are forecasting another $1.1 billion in costs to clean up coal ash ponds and store the waste in landfills in the next several years. The utility provider is asking commissioners to approve a cap-in-place method that will leave coal ash in groundwater instead of permanently sealing ash ponds, as has been done in North Carolina and other locations.

Charline Whyte, senior campaign representative for the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal Campaign, said that the Ohio court’s decision is a game changer for the environment since it sides with a safe method of getting rid of the toxic waste.

“I just don’t see a scenario where the Public Service Commission doesn’t have a duty to look into the legality of closing without a liner,” she said. “This issue should be taken into consideration during this rate case because Georgia Power  is asking money from the customers to recoup the costs.”

“Our position is that ratepayers should not have to pay to clean up coal ash at all, but if they do, it should only be for the safest option, which is full excavation and removal to lined landfills,” Whyte added.

If they raise the rates 12% again this year and they get all these additional increases (in 2023), then another three years from now, it’s gonna be another rate case, and they’re gonna come to us with another dramatic sob story about why they need even more. – Brionte McCorkle executive director of Georgia Conservation Voters

Rate case discussions over the last few months have also focused a great deal on the prospects for more solar-powered residences and businesses.

The company claims non-solar customers are subsidizing the ones employing green technology. Georgia Power opposes continuing its monthly solar pilot program that reached its cap in 2021 of 5,000 customers. Moreover, the utility plans to charge customers $200 for rooftop solar connections to its electrical grid.

But the solar energy and environmental organizations weighing in on the rate case claim Georgia Power is misrepresenting why its rates are going up. They argue that the spread of solar use in Georgia’s market is small and the costs shifted to non-solar customers is negligible.

Commissioner Tim Echols has taken issue with the company’s plans, arguing that it could help define energy modernization in Georgia.

“It shows the kind of paltry penetration of rooftop solar in Georgia compared to other states, including neighboring states like Florida and South Carolina, and even Tennessee,” said Bryan Jacob, solar program director for Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.

The dispute pits how much profit Georgia Power shareholders should make against a chance for consumers to pay less for the utility company’s services. Georgia Power is asking commissioners to approve a 11% return on equity, a half-percent increase over its current return, which translates into about $94 million in additional benefit to shareholders per year.

In January, finance and insurance company Fitch Ratings reported that utility companies’ authorized returns remained relatively stable at a median average of 9.5% for the past two years.

“If they raise the rates 12% again this year and they get all these additional increases (in 2023), then another three years from now, it’s gonna be another rate case, and they’re gonna come to us with another dramatic sob story about why they need even more money,” McCorkle said.

“It’s not a lot when you put it in the context of things like Plant Vogtle, this billion-dollar boondoggle that’s sucking all the money out of the room,” she said.

Former Colorado Public Utilities Commission chairman Ronald Lehr, who is an expert witness for the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, said Georgia Power should come back to regulators for a review every year to account for tax credits, rebates, and other savings available under the federal Inflation Reduction Act. The law was not in place when the company filed its rate case early this year.

“It would be imprudent to approve the next year rate plan the way Georgia Power has proposed it without taking any of that money into consideration,” Jacob said.

Gainesville prepares for first state semifinal game in 9 years

The Gainesville Red Elephants head into the GHSA Class 6A semifinals this week against Roswell. The game will be played Friday at 8 p.m. at McEachern High School in Powder Springs.

No. 4 Gainesville advanced to the semis after knocking off 10th-ranked Houston County in the 6A state quarterfinals, 49-35. Gainesville used a 35-point run to turn a 14-7 deficit into a 42-14 lead in Friday’s game against the Bears. Baxter Wright passed for 283 yards and three touchdowns and scored on a 45-yard run. Naim Cheeks had 133 yards rushing and 101 yards receiving and scored three touchdowns. Tre Reece had 110 yards and a touchdown receiving and scored on a 95-yard kickoff return.

This marks the first time since 2013 that the Red Elephants have made it to the semifinal round. They achieved it under new head coach, former Hoover (Ala.) head coach Josh Niblett.

“First of all, for us to be here and now going to the semifinals, God’s been good to us,” Coach Niblett told reporters after the quarterfinals. “I can’t say enough about these kids. We can talk about the game all we want to, but it’s about our kids being resilient, believing in the plan.”

Roswell is in the semifinals for the first time since reaching back-to-back state finals in 2015 and 2016.

Gainesville is 13-0, the No. 1 seed from Region 8-6A and No. 4; Roswell is 12-1, the No. 1 seed from 7-6A and No. 3. Both teams were in Class 7A last season. Roswell went 10-3 and reached the quarterfinals, while Gainesville was 5-5 and missed the playoffs.

When the teams last met in the 1985 Class 3A quarterfinals, Gainesville won 14-6.

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Todd Holcomb of Georgia High School Football Daily contributed to this report. To join the GHSF mailing list, click here.

Early in-person voting starts statewide Monday

(nowhabersham.com)

Early in-person voting in Georgia’s U.S. Senate runoff opens statewide on Monday. Over the weekend, approximately 70,000 voters went to the polls in the 27 counties where Saturday voting was offered.

A state supreme court ruling last week gave counties the option to offer Saturday voting over the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend.

Across the state, polls will be open for early voting from Monday, November 28 to Friday, December 2.

RELATED: GA Senate runoff between Warnock, Walker has bitter closing

In Habersham County, all early voting will take place at the Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center in Clarkesville. Polls in Habersham will be open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily. For precinct locations and times in other counties, contact your county registrar’s office.

The deadline to request an absentee mail-in ballot for the runoff is Monday, November 28. Mail-in ballots must be returned no later than 7 p.m. on election day.

Anyone who was registered to vote in Georgia as of November 7, 2022, is eligible to vote in the runoff, regardless of whether they voted in the general election. To check your voter registration status, visit the My Voter Page on the secretary of state’s website.

 

SEE ALSO

Habersham South Precinct moving

Ga. Senate runoff between Warnock, Walker has bitter closing

Sen. Raphael Warnock and Herschel Walker (John Bazemore/Brynn Anderson/AP)

WARNER ROBINS, Ga. (AP) — Ads with the candidates’ ex-wives. Cries of “liar” flying in both directions. Stories of a squalid apartment building and abortions under pressure. Questioning an opponent’s independence. His intellect. His mental stability. His religious faith.

The extended Senate campaign in Georgia between the Democratic incumbent, Raphael Warnock, and his Republican challenger, football legend Herschel Walker, has grown increasingly bitter as their Dec. 6 runoff nears. With Democrats already assured a Senate majority, it’s a striking contrast from two years ago, when the state’s twin runoffs were mostly about which party would control the chamber in Washington.

“Herschel Walker ain’t serious,” Warnock told supporters recently in central Georgia, saying that Walker “majors in lying” and fumbles the basics of public policy. “But the election is very serious. Don’t get those two things confused.”

Walker casts Warnock, the senior pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church, as a “hypocrite” and servile to President Joe Biden. Underscoring the insult, Walker calls the incumbent “Scooby-Doo,” complete with an impression of the cartoon hound’s gibberish.

The broadsides reflect the candidates’ furious push in the four weeks between the Nov. 8 general election and runoff to persuade their core supporters to cast another ballot. For Walker, it also means drawing more independents and moderates to his campaign after he underperformed a fellow Republican on the ticket, Gov. Brian Kemp, by 200,000 votes.

Warnock led Walker by 37,000 votes out of almost 4 million cast in the first round, but the senator fell short of the 50% threshold needed to avoid a runoff.

In many ways, the shift from his first runoff campaign is exactly what Warnock wanted: a straightforward choice between two candidates. Two years ago, then-President Donald Trump, fresh off his defeat, and Biden, then president-elect, made multiple Georgia trips to illuminate the national stakes of the races between Warnock and Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler and between Democrat Jon Ossoff and Republican Sen. David Perdue as control of the Senate hung in the balance.

Trump ended up alienating his own supporters and many moderates with his false claims of a rigged 2020 presidential election. Victories by Warnock and Ossoff put the Senate at a 50-50 split, with Democrats gaining control by virtue of Vice President Kamala Harris’ tiebreaking vote. Warnock also became Georgia’s first Black senator.

This year, with Warnock vying for a full six-year term after winning the 2021 special election, Democrats have already guaranteed control of the Senate by flipping a seat in Pennsylvania. A Warnock win would give Democrats an outright majority at 51-49, meaning that the parties would not have to negotiate a power-sharing agreement.

Warnock’s preferred emphasis for most of his reelection bid has been his deal-making in Washington and the personal values he brings to the job. It took until the campaign’s final stages — only after two women accused Walker, an opponent of abortion rights, of encouraging and paying for their abortions — for the senator to ratchet up his attacks, arguing Walker is “unprepared” and “unfit” for the job.

“My opponent lies about everything,” Warnock said in a recent campaign stop, ticking off a litany of Walker’s repeated falsehoods and exaggerations. “He said he was a police officer. He’s not. He said he worked for the FBI. He did not. Said he graduated from the University of Georgia. He did not. Said he was valedictorian of his class. He was not. … He said he had another business with 800 employees. It has eight.”

Walker, alternately, has relished the jousting since he won the GOP nomination in the spring.

“Herschel is a competitor. He’s very comfortable with the mano a mano,” said Scott Paradise, Walker’s campaign manager, noting the candidate’s athletic prowess as a football running back, kickboxer and Olympic bobsledder.

Indeed, Walker takes his attacks right to Warnock’s strengths as the pastor of the famous church where Martin Luther King Jr. once preached. Walker has criticized Warnock over an Atlanta apartment building, owned by a foundation of Warnock’s church, where residents have complained to The Washington Free Beacon, a conservative media outlet, of eviction notices and poor conditions.

“What he’s doing in this apartment building at Columbia Towers is not right,” Walker said recently at a suburban Atlanta campaign stop. “You shouldn’t put Jesus’ name on what you’re doing to people, and don’t put Martin Luther King name on it. … You’re not Jesus, and you’re not Dr. King.”

Warnock, who says no residents of Columbia Tower have been evicted, incorporates Walker’s attacks into the list of the challenger’s documented exaggerations and falsehoods. “What kind of a person lies on the church?” Warnock said in Macon. “This isn’t the first time people attacked Ebenezer Baptist Church. They attacked Martin Luther King Jr. I’m in good company.”

Still, asked whether he’s reconsidered his church’s stewardship of Columbia Towers, Warnock sidestepped: “I’ve already answered the question. I’m proud of what my church does to feed and house the hungry and the homeless every single week.”

Walker also accuses Warnock of “getting rich” as a senator, a nod to the pastor’s $7,500-a-month housing allowance from the church. The payments are not a violation of Senate ethics rules that limit senators’ outside income.

On at least one occasion during the runoff, Walker has suggested Warnock is a negligent father. Warnock told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution the comment “crossed a line.” Earlier in the campaign, Walker publicly acknowledged three of his children for the first time, doing so only after The Daily Beast reported on their existence. Warnock has not mentioned those children in any of his critiques of Walker.

Walker, meanwhile, has not taken reporters’ questions at an open campaign event since late October, when a second accuser came forward to say he had pressured her to have an abortion — a contradiction of his advocacy as a candidate for a national ban on all abortions. Walker has denied the women’s claims.

Both candidates’ former wives also loom in the campaign, though the two men avoid the topic themselves, leaving the discussion of their marriages mostly to paid advertising. In one ad, Warnock’s former wife tells Atlanta police that he ran over her foot. The Republican ad doesn’t note that a police report states that officers found no physical evidence supporting her claim. A Democratic ad features an interview with Walker’s first wife detailing that he threatened violence against her, circumstances Walker has confirmed in an autobiography.

Since the two men met for their lone debate Oct. 14, Warnock has hammered Walker for a lack of policy details and sometimes flubbing what policy he does discuss.

Warnock promotes his new federal legal provision capping insulin costs for Medicare recipients and notes Walker said diabetics could manage their health by “eating right,” a practice that isn’t enough for insulin-dependent diabetic patients.

“Maybe he ought to apply to be a dietician. I’m running for the United States Senate,” Warnock said in Macon.

He pounced when Walker declared the United States is “not ready” for climate action and should “keep having those gas-guzzling cars” that he said already have “good emissions” standards. Warnock added gleeful mockery when Walker recently introduced a tangent about vampires to a campaign speech.

“I mean, who says that kind of stuff?” Warnock asked supporters.

Warnock’s aides say that the personalized arguments help convince core Democrats that they should not sit out the runoff, while also swaying the potentially decisive middle of the electorate in the senator’s favor. “Herschel Walker continues to be bogged down by his pattern of lies and disturbing behavior, all of which led him to underperform” in the first round, said Quentin Fulks, Warnock’s campaign manager, in a statement.

From Walker’s camp, Paradise insisted that Republicans’ best argument remains Warnock’s alignment with Democrats on economic policy. Still, he acknowledges the campaign’s tone has darkened.

“We’re certainly going to continue to aggressively prosecute the case against Warnock,” he said, “and I suspect they’ll do the same.”

Roads Less Traveled: From a Distance

Here’s a throwback to an article I wrote back on Thanksgiving Weekend, 2015. I’ve added some extra shots to the end of this article that I have taken since then. This is one of those times when I look back and think, “Man, I was really not a great photographer back then.” So enjoy musing over my amateur photography and the incredible phenomenon I still marvel over to this day. 

With time, nearly every hiker/photographer will find something specific they like to image. Some enjoy certain types of leaves, flowers, trees, mushrooms, rocks, sticks, fog, or a myriad of other things. Me? I found something slightly different. Buildings.

On the surface, this photo looks harmless, just another great view from the great granite ledges of Mount Yonah.

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View south from Mt. Yonah; 10-21-15

But a closer glance will reveal something incredible.

On a cool March hike in 2013, I was hiking Mount Yonah with a friend, and we noticed something looking to the south. This particular day was incredibly dry thanks to a recent cold front and void of the haze that so often lingers in the valleys below. This allows for things to be visible from a great distance, including cities.

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Atlanta skyline; March 19, 2013

I was still in my budding days of photography and had a cheap camera with a very dirty lens, but visible on the horizon was the skyline of Atlanta. As the crow flies, the tallest buildings in Atlanta lie approximately 72 miles from the cliff faces of Yonah. But, on a clear day, it stands out like a sore thumb on the vast horizon.

From the start, it amazed me how far away this could be seen. This man-made structure(s) was so amazing that it could be seen from over 70 miles away. From this distance, all the things we locals know and hate about Atlanta (the traffic, crime, air pollution, etc) disappear on a cool breeze, and all that’s left is its vastness. From here, Atlanta becomes a picture of both the largeness and smallness of mankind. God has allowed these great structures to be built, but yet it is still nothing more than a few pixels on the horizon from a [relatively] short distance away.

From that day forward, though, I would be fascinated by this phenomenon and continue looking for Atlanta from greater and greater distances. I got my best photograph to date from Blood Mountain in late 2014. I was also able to photograph Stone Mountain on this trip.

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Atlanta from Blood Mountain; December 2014
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Stone Mountain

Blood Mountain lies approximately 74 miles from Atlanta, making it a new personal distance photo record. But the best was yet to come. In late 2014, I was able to snag it from Brasstown Bald, the highest point in the state, and possibly as far away as you can get.

brasstownatlanta
Atlanta lies to the right of Pink Mountain in this frame

This is a whopping 85 miles from downtown Atlanta. Amazing, to say the least.

Since then, I have also viewed Atlanta from Preacher’s Rock near Blood Mountain, as well as Hogpen Gap above Richard Russell (seen center frame below).

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View of Atlanta skyline taken at Hogpen Gap above Richard Russell

As you can probably tell from the varied success, these photos are incredibly difficult to take based on a number of factors (equipment, overall lighting, amount of haze, cleanliness of lens, etc). This can sometimes get frustrating, but it’s quite worth it in the end.

Charlotte can also be seen from great distances. So naturally, I decided to try my hand. A couple of weeks ago, weather conditions finally cooperated. With some help from a borrowed ultra-zoom lens, I was able to snag some fantastic photos from atop Rough Ridge on Grandfather Mountain, 82 miles away.

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Charlotte, NC, from 82 miles away
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Charlotte, somewhere around 50x zoom

When I originally wrote this article in 2015, I mentioned wanting to set my own personal record of getting Charlotte from Mount Mitchell (around 90 miles). I accomplished that goal in May 2017. I’ve actually accomplished it twice since then, as I generally visit Mount Mitchell during the spring and summer months when the air is far too hazy to see that far.

The first time I actually caught it before the sun came up, and you can see the sun glinting off the buildings in the photo below. The sun rose from my vantage point less than a minute later.

The next time was far more “classic” with just a low-humidity day. The buildings appear faint from this far of a distance, but they are still easily visible to the trained eye.

While we’re on the subject of distance, arguably the most impressive shot I’ve gotten to date was taken of mountains rather than buildings. In March of 2020, I captured the Smoky Mountains outside Gatlinburg/Cherokee from southwestern Virginia. These shots were taken from The Channels near Lebanon.

So, the next time you’re out hiking, take time to scan your surroundings. You might just be amazed by what you can see from the wilderness.

I’ll see you on the road…~TW

 

From tiny to tremendous

Dolly Parton (Facebook)

On a cold January day in 1946, their fourth child, a girl, was born in a one-room cabin in the hills of Tennessee. More babies arrived in the following years, and the parents had little to offer their twelve children except for music, love, and faith.

When the spirited girl with dimpled cheeks walked to school in her hand-sewn clothes and dusty shoes, she would often be teased and mocked because she was poor. But even though she was tiny, she stood proudly tall. Perhaps, her mama read the Bible to her youngsters each day, and her child recalled the words, “It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God. “Those bullying kids were like the camels and would have trouble getting into heaven while she would fly right on in! “That’ll teach ’em!” Little Dolly thought.

God must have looked down on the mountain child that day and given her a spirit of courage and love that would eventually change countless lives. The Lord continued walking with Dolly, blessing her with a song in her heart and gratitude in her soul.

I was questioned years ago, “Who would you invite to dinner if you could ask anyone living in the world today?”

“Well, I guess if Jesus isn’t available, it would be Dolly Parton.”

Shocked at my response, they simply replied, “Why?!”

I had left Tennessee when Dolly began singing with Porter Wagner, but I remember catching a glimpse of her on television. At the time, I didn’t love country music even though I came from the land where the Ole Opry is revered. It wasn’t the music that sparked my interest in her; it was something more. It was something that I understood without understanding why.

It could be because I sound like Dolly with the same Tennessee mountain twang that must form in the blood. One cannot change it, and I have often said it would be an insult to my ancestors if I did. Because we are nearly the same age, I have watched Dolly from afar grow from a little mountain girl to owning the mountain!

So, Robert and Avie Lee Parton’s girl became an icon, a movie star, a bigger-than-life presence, a builder of dreams, a singer/songwriter, an aunt, a sister, a wife, and a faithful steward of God.

Dolly Parton is one of those rare folks who doesn’t let fame inflate her ego nor allow money to empower her unless it is through philanthropy. She understands that her gifts are blessings and knows how to use them to bless others.

These types of people don’t spread gossip, shout, belittle, or shame anyone because they understand they are living only for a while. They know they will go home where Mom and Dad are waiting, and the light shines eternal. People like Dolly are brilliant enough to know it is not what you make of yourself on earth; it is what you give of yourself to all.

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos recently awarded Dolly Parton his “Courage and Civility Award,” presenting her with $100 million. Why would he give so much to someone who has so much? He understands that a big heart will use gifts wisely, and a humble spirit will fly miles spreading compassion, kindness, and hope. She has proven her worth by the value of her soul.

If we want to learn about leadership and charity, don’t look much further than a tiny Tennessee woman who sends books to the children of Appalachia. She aims to whip illiteracy and open doors for impoverished children to become rich with knowledge. When fires flame, tornados or floods ravage, or diseases need cures, she is there with a pen and checkbook, a song, and a loud voice.

Dolly laughs at herself and never at others. She treats everyone with respect and knows the heartache and scars that folks carry when others are made to feel less.

No, we need to look no further than the Parton’s fourth child, who thankfully listened to her parents and believed God was the only way to greatness.

Politics, policies, and trends change like the wind, but goodness and benevolence never will because God never changes.

With her infectious smile, Humorous Dolly said, “It costs a lot of money to look this cheap!”

Dolly Rebecca Parton also proclaimed, “If your actions create a legacy that inspires others to dream more, learn more, do more, and become more, then you are an excellent leader.”

And the Lord still leads her down the mountain path toward home.

_________________

Lynn Gendusa

About the author: Lynn Gendusa is an author and columnist whose work appears weekly in newspapers in her home state of Georgia. She is regularly featured in the USA Today Networks around the country, including, The Tennessean. In addition, her stories appear in senior magazines across the US as well as in Guideposts. Lynn Gendusa’s latest book is “Southern Comfort: Stories of Family, Friendship, Fiery Trials, and Faith.” She can be reached at www.lynngendusa.com.

Richard Dale Greenway

Richard Dale Greenway, age 62, of Demorest, passed away on Saturday, November 26, 2022.

Born on September 23, 1960, in Atlanta, he was a son of the late Quillian J. Greenway and Annie Sue Poole Greenway. Mr. Greenway had worked in residential construction and was a talented woodworker. In his spare time, he enjoyed playing the drums and going fishing and taking the boat on the lake. Richard loved his family, and his greatest achievement was being a Poppa. His Christian faith was the rock of his life. He loved to help those who needed it, and donated money to different organizations.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his former wife, Sandra Greenway; sisters, Brenda Bell and Beverly Roebuck.

Survivors include son, Jonathon Greenway of Demorest; daughter, Brittany Maichryc of Demorest; grandchildren, Matthew J. Greenway, Haley Greenway, Aubrey Maichryc, Allison Maichryc, Zoey Maichryc, and Maci Maichryc; brother, Scott Greenway of Alto; sisters, Susan Jaworski of Alto, and Genieve Colston of Mt. Airy; uncle, Kenneth Poole; several nieces, nephews and cousins; and special dog, Leroy Greenway.

The family will receive friends from 3 – 5 pm and 6 – 8 pm on Wednesday, November 30, 2022, at McGahee – Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home.

No services are planned at this time.

An online guest register is available and may be viewed at www.mcgaheegriffinandstewart.com.

McGahee-Griffin & Stewart Funeral Home of Cornelia, Georgia (706/778-8668) is in charge of arrangements.