Tag: competition

  • Orienteering team is recruiting new members at Loveland High School

    Orienteering team is recruiting new members at Loveland High School

    Students encouraged to “find their way…”

    The Loveland Orienteering Team won numerous awards last season, including at the Flying Pig XXII, a national event: (left to right) Joe Roman (team mentor), Sam Richardson (LHS student), Nathan Stewart (LHS student), Isaac Jouwstra (Loveland resident) Leslie Nash (LHS student) and Greg Fasig (team mentor)

    Loveland, Ohio – Have you ever wondered how people found their way from one place to the other before there were well-established roads, trails, and Google maps? Have you ever wanted to go into the woods, really into the woods, but worried you might get lost? If you’d like to develop skills to navigate in the wilderness while racing from one place to the other, you’re in luck. Loveland High School (LHS) is the only high school in the area – in fact, the only one in Ohio – with an orienteering club. While unfamiliar to most, orienteering is a competitive sport that combines running and navigation in timed races. The Loveland Orienteering Team, which completed its second year in May, was adopted as a club at LHS last fall.

    Several of our members placed in their respective categories for the season standings and at the national Flying Pig Orienteering event in April.

    “It’s really exciting to introduce this awesome sport to the students and athletes at the high school,” said Sam Richardson, LHS senior and club president who also runs competitive cross country for Loveland. “With a team of 22 – 15 youth and seven adults – our team had a great past year. Several of our members placed in their respective categories for the season standings and at the national Flying Pig Orienteering event in April.”

    Loveland Senior Sam Richardson approaching a control flag during an orienteering event.

    Often associated with the military, orienteering started in Scandinavia as a land navigation training exercise for military officers more than a hundred years ago, and the U.S. Orienteering Federation was established by officers at Quantico Marine Corps Base. As an off-road, off-trail running race where participants cross land with the help of just a map and a compass, orienteering requires a high degree of fitness and the ability to navigate through unknown terrain to various checkpoints. The season runs November through May, when the frozen ground allows for less impact on the land. The freezing, followed by thawing and spring rains, often erases all signs of orienteering during the winter. And, there are no worries about poison ivy or tick bites.

    Orienteering offers a great reason to get outside this time of year.

    “Orienteering offers a great reason to get outside this time of year,” said team mentor Greg Fasig, who has been an orienteering enthusiast since 2010. “People quickly learn how easy it is to stay warm, trekking up and down the hills of the Tri-State. It’s also easier to see the contour of the land when the trees are bare, which allows you to navigate using the contour lines on the map.”

    During the 2017-18 season, the Loveland Orienteering Team participated in 18 competitions. Some of the most memorable events happened in a lot of mud, rain, and even snow – it’s rare for an orienteering event to be cancelled for inclement weather.

    “The competition at Mt. Airy Forest was especially muddy,” said Fasig. “For the season finale at Governor Bebb MetroPark it snowed, reducing visibility to less than 10 feet at times – that combined with fogging glasses makes for a much more challenging event.”

    The sport does not only require physical stamina, but also mental skills.

    The sport does not only require physical stamina, but also mental skills. Orienteers learn and develop proficiency in analyzing, planning, monitoring, assessing, modifying, and other problem-solving skills.

    “Participants practice these skills in a fun and safe environment, while under the duress of trying to complete the course as quickly as possible when racing,” said Dave Volkman, LHS teacher and club advisor for the team. “No other sport in the world combines these elements of fitness and problem solving.”



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  • Amazing Charity Race awards $65K to charities

    Amazing Charity Race awards $65K to charities

    WHAT IS the Amazing Charity Race

    It is a full day of good natured competition, music and food and laughs. The race committee is laughing itself silly coming up with fun challenges. It is not a triathlon or a 5K race. It is not limited to runners or highly athletic individuals. It is a race in that it has a start and finish line but along the way it challenges the contestants in many ways. It is a fun, quirky, adventure that challenges the contestants agility, balance, coordination, strength, intelligence, problem solving skills, fine motor skills, and most important their sense of humor. You are invited whether it is to compete or join our team of over 500 volunteers.

    The Amazing Charity Race started in 2005 as Loveland’s Amazing Race and has grown into one of the biggest races in the whole Cincinnati tristate area!  With a a little bit of this and a little bit of that – we make you walk, run, ride, think and do – all for the fun of it!

    On September 3rd, the Amazing Charity Race held their annual awards party when checks were distributed to select charities and all of the organizations who provided volunteers for the event. Dozens of small grants are made to local groups, schools, churches, and teams that help out at the race.

    Loveland Magazine is the Media Sponsor of the AMAZING CHARITY RACE.

    A total of $65,000 was awarded as a result of the 2018 Race.

    2018 AMAZING CHARITY RACE VOLUNTEER GROUP AWARD RECIPIENTS

    1. InReturn $8,000

    2. Karen Carns Foundation $8,000

    3. CancerFree Kids $5,000

    4. Valley View Foundation $5,000

    5. Dan Beard Council (Boy Scouts of America)

    6. Ovarian Cancer Allicance (Cancer Support Community)

    7. NEST Community Learning Center

    8. Boy Scout VC 128 (Milford First UMC)

    9. Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation

    10. Boy Scout Troop 452 (St Thomas More Church)

    11. Boy Scout Troop 617 (Lakeview United Church of Christ)

    12. Boy Scout Troop 888 (Loveland Presbyterian Church)

    13. Girl Scouts of Western OH – Cadette Tr 45868

    14. LADD, Inc. (Living Arrangements for Developmentally Disabled)

    15. Milford Aquatics (Milford Athletic Boosters)

    16. Orienteering Cincinnati

    17. Outdoor Adventure Club of Cincinnati

    18. Transformations CDS (COS Community Development Corp)

    19. Tukandu

    20. Boy Scout Troop150 (St Paul United Church of Christ)

    21. Boy Scout Troop 468 (Trinity UMC)

    22. Boy Scout Troop 55 (St Columban Church)

    23. Boy Scout Troop 635 (Epiphany UMC)

    24. Boy Scout VC 150 (St Paul United Church of Christ)

    25. Dan Beard Camp Staff Alumni Assoc (Boy Scouts of America)

    26. Izaak Walton League

    27. Knights of Columbus (St Columban Church)

    28. Landmark Christian Soccer

    29. Loveland City Church

    30. Loveland HS Marching Band (Loveland Music Boosters)

    31. Loveland Stage Co

    32. Milford Girls Cross Country (Milford Athletic Boosters)

    33. OH Daughter’s of American Revolution

    34. Owensville Basketball (Clernont NE Athletic Boosters)

    35. St Margaret of York

    36. St. Columban Boosters (St Columban Church)

    37. Team Handmade Road Racing

    38. Cincy Swish

    39. Cub Scout Pack 46 (McCormick Elementary)

    40. Cub Scout Pack 50 (St Columban Church)

    41. Faith Evangelical Church

    42. Girl Scouts of Western OH – Tr 43534

    43. LIFE Food Pantry (Lovelad Interfaith Effort)

    44. Little Miami Conservancy

    45. Loveland Robotics

    46. Loveland Youth Baseball (Loveland Youth Diamond Sports)

    47. Miami Valley Christian Academy

    48. Promiseland Church

    49. River Hills Christian Church

    50. Inner City Youth Opportunities


  • 4th annual Frogman Race

    4th annual Frogman Race

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    Join us for the 4th annual Frogman Race in Historic Downtown Loveland and along the State and National Scenic Little Miami River!

    Saturday September 15th

    5 Mile Canoe/Kayak
    8 Mile Bike
    5K Run

    REGISTER NOW >

    You may compete as a two person team (use a canoe)
    or individually (use a kayak).

    Please note: The minimum age for competing on a team is 10 years old and as an individual is 16 years old.

    $130/Team
    $70/Individual

    The race will begin at 8:30 a.m. with a staggered start.
    Registration/Check-in will begin at 7:30 a.m.

    Race will begin and end with all transitions at Loveland Canoe & Kayak (174 Karl Brown Way). All participants will be bused to start line (Carl A. Rahe Access).  Singles in kayaks will start the event, followed by team canoe divisions.

    Race Divisions:

    Team (16+), Parent/Child Team (10+), Male (16+), Female (16+), Senior (55+)

    Event t-shirts will be available for purchase for $15 each (deadline for advanced purchase is September 9th).

    Canoes, kayaks, life jackets, and paddles will be provided. Participants are to provide their own bicycle (road bike is recommended). Life jackets must be worn at all times while on the water. Bike helmets must be worn at all times while on your bike. No headphones are allowed during any portion fo the race. Failure to comply with the safety rules will subject contestants to disqualification.

    A photo ID is required and waiver must be signed and submitted in order to receive your race packet and bib/timing chip. This is a rain or shine event and there are NO refunds. In the event of severe weather the start may be delayed and the course may be altered for safety reasons.

    Please respect your fellow participants.  There will be all types of skill levels competing so please stay aware of your surroundings at all times.

    Bike’s can be rented locally at Loveland Bike Rental and Montgomery Cyclery.

    This race can be used as a Warm-up to Morgan’s Little Miami Triathlon.

    REGISTER NOW >

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  • Milford’s 13th Annual Art Affaire

    Milford’s 13th Annual Art Affaire

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    When:  Saturday, September 22, 2018 (11 AM – 5 PM)

    Where:  Main Street, historic Milford, Ohio 45150

    The 13th Annual Art Affaire, presented by GMAHS, will be held Saturday, September 22, 2018 – always the 4th Saturday in September.

    Art Affaire is a juried outdoor show that features art and fine craft. The emphasis is on original work, both in concept and execution, by artists working in the following mediums: clay/ceramics; digital art; drawing; fiber art; glass; jewelry; leather; metalwork; mixed media; painting; photography; paper/print making; sculpture; wearable art; wood; other.

    The winner of its third annual Art Affaire poster image competition is June Pfaff Daley of Pleasant Ridge. She received $1,000 for her winning design.

    June Pfaff Daley wins Milford’s Art Affaire Poster Image Competition

    Winning Image Will Support 13th Annual Art Affaire Promotion

    Milford, Ohio—May 24, 2018—The Greater Milford Area Historical Society (GMAHS) and poster competition sponsor, the City of Milford, are pleased to announce the winner of the 2018 Art Affaire Poster Image competition. June Pfaff Daley of Pleasant Ridge (Cincinnati) created the winning poster and will be awarded $1,000 for her entry.

    Daley’s “The Promont Art Cart” image features a Promont steeple-inspired umbrella that shades a whimsical old-time cart peddling a variety of creative wares and entertainment. The mixed-media work includes vintage catalog and music papers, various trim pieces and embroidery.

    The nine artists that entered this year’s competition included:  Kate Albert (Milford); Chris Clements (Milford); June Pfaff Daley (Cincinnati); Marian Fisher (Liberty Township); Joyce Grothaus (Milford); Scott Hempleman (Cincinnati); Ann Huddleston (Cincinnati); Bobbi Thies (Milford); and Dee Turner (Milford).

    The Historical Society would like to thank this year’s judges:  Michael Doss, city manager, City of Milford; Fred Albrecht, mayor, City of Milford; and Carl Samson – an internationally acclaimed portrait artist, figurative and plein-air landscape painter, based in Cincinnati and residing in historic South Milford.

    “GMAHS is proud of the response to its Art Affaire poster competition,” says Suzette Albrecht, GMAHS board member and poster competition coordinator for Art Affaire. “In its third year, the program has gained momentum and the posters are becoming a collector’s item. It will be exciting to see how the competition evolves, as each year will bring something new for the collector.

    GMAHS will use the winning image to create promotional materials for Art Affaire, including the collectible 20”x30” poster, which will be available in July. Posters will cost $10 and will be available for purchase at Promont, 906 Main Street, Milford, Ohio (open most Sunday’s 1-4 PM); and at Row House Gallery and Custom Framing located at 211 Main Street, historic Milford. Row House is open Tuesday-Friday, 10 AM to 5 PM and Saturday 10 AM to 4 PM. Posters will also be available during the 13th Annual Art Affaire, which will be held on Saturday, September 22, 11 AM to 5 PM on Main Street in Historic Milford.

    Art Affaire is presented by the Greater Milford Area Historical Society in association with Lykins Energy Solutions with major sponsorship from Proforma Albrecht & Company, City of Milford; D.E.R. Development, and Jeff Wyler Automotive Family. Other contributors include Accounting Plus LLC, Miami Township, and Park National Bank. The event is a key fundraiser for GMAHS.

    Stay connected!  To stay up-to-date on Art Affaire happenings, join us on Facebook. Be sure to LIKE and SHARE our posts.



  • Amazing Charity Race this Saturday

    Amazing Charity Race this Saturday

     

    Loveland Magazine has been proud to partner with other sponsors to help make the Races a success

    The Amazing Charity Race is this Saturday in Miami Township and Milford, however, will not enter the Loveland City limit.

    This year, they will be starting the race at 8 AM at PAXTON RAMSEY PARK and finishing at VALLEY VIEW FOUNDATION FARM  in Milford.

    ROAD CLOSURES:

    The Race Map is not made public until Friday night.

    Here are the lane closures during the race starting at 7:45 AM until the race ends on these roads:

    1) Southbound lane of Price Road from Paxton Ramsey Park to Ibold Road;

    2) Westbound lane of Ibold Road from Price Road to Camp Friedlander entrance; and

    3) Southbound lane of Price Road between Cub World entrance and Milford city line (just north of Miami Woods Dr in Milford).

    (Note that both lanes between the Ibold and Price intersection to Cub World are open.)

    This is a rain or shine event.

    It’s so terribly hard to describe – that’s why we say, “Loveland Magazine is proud to present this LOVELAND MAGAZINE TV video highlight reel of the 2016 Race.

    You just have to SEE it to UNDERSTAND it.

    The Amazing Charity Race started in 2005 as Loveland’s Amazing Race and has grown into one of the biggest races in the whole Cincinnati tristate area!  With a a little bit of this and a little bit of that – we make you walk, run, ride, think and do – all for the fun of it!

    All of your entry fees go straight to all of our charities after we pay off our expenses for the race.  

    WHAT IS IT??: It is a full day of good natured competition, music and food and laughs. The race committee is laughing itself silly coming up with fun challenges. It is not a triathlon or a 5K race. It is not limited to runners or highly athletic individuals. It is a race in that it has a start and finish line but along the way it challenges the contestants in many ways. It is a fun, quirky, adventure that challenges the contestants agility, balance, coordination, strength, intelligence, problem solving skills, fine motor skills, and most important their sense of humor. You are invited whether it is to compete or join our team of over 500 volunteers so come enjoy, have a great time for a good cause and as always expect the unexpected. 

    This year’s race will feature more fun, less stress and an all new course!


    Watch this LOVELAND MAGAZINE TV video from the 2017 race.



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  • Award-winning: Loveland High School Teaching Professions Academy

    Award-winning: Loveland High School Teaching Professions Academy

    Award-winning LHS Teaching Professions Academy students with State Superintendent of Public Instruction Paolo DeMaria at the Educators Rising Conference.

    Andrea Conner is Director of Secondary Programs Loveland City School District

    By Andrea Conner

    Take 40 Loveland High School (LHS) students with a passion for education and a teacher with a vision to not only provide rich course offerings for students but also help develop future educators, and you have Loveland’s new Teaching Professions Academy (TPA). That’s right – in Loveland, we are teaching Tiger students how to become Tiger teachers for their future careers.

    This program, designed and instructed by Bre Sambuchino, gives our high school students the unique opportunity to make real-world connections between the curriculum and instructional strategies they study in this new class when they apply them to field-placement experiences within our district. From Loveland Elementary School to Loveland Intermediate School, TPA students get hands-on experience learning the different skills teachers must possess to be successful at the various levels of student development. TPA students work together to prepare real, vibrant lessons for our young Tigers – taking care and pride in representing their program with professionalism.

    A table-top sized tree quickly grew with various versions of what might be the best technique to use to create a tree that both captured the passion of the group while still making certain it was versatile enough to be transported.

    The pinnacle of the program’s successful first year was evident on March 15 when the TPA students and Ms. Sambuchino traveled to the EdRising Ohio conference at Ohio Dominican. TPA students participated in various speaking and lesson-planning competitions and worked as a group to create their chapter display with the theme “Where do we grow from here?” A table-top sized tree quickly grew with various versions of what might be the best technique to use to create a tree that both captured the passion of the group while still making certain it was versatile enough to be transported. “Their ideas continued to grow with the tree!” commented Sambuchino.

    The conference and the tree certainly delivered in true LHS TPA fashion! The tree won first place (chapter display), and LHS Senior Maddy Butts won second place in the STEM lesson planning and delivery competition teaching a robust “states of matter” lesson to her field placement class. She is now a National Qualifier, and she will be competing in Orlando, Fla., in June. In addition to these accolades, Loveland High School’s program was awarded as an Honors Chapter, one of 12 out of 64 total state chapters. The students, along with their award-winning tree, even made State Superintendent of Public Instruction Paolo DeMaria’s Twitter feed!

    Success like this isn’t based on luck. It is the result of focused, strategic effort; the LHS TPA is the first of a series of Academic Pathways the Loveland City School District is developing to prepare our students for tomorrow, today. It is our mission, in action – and – it is award-winning.



    RP Diamond Printing & Embroidery

      RP Diamond is the exclusive retailer of LOVELAND HIGH SCHOOL SPIRIT WEAR Welcome to  RP Diamond Printing & Embroidery located at 370 Loveland Madeira Road