Tag: loveland

  • [Local Weather] Do you know where the Loveland Whirlpool is and what lies at the bottom?

    [Local Weather] Do you know where the Loveland Whirlpool is and what lies at the bottom?

    Loveland, Ohio – The Little Miami River was swollen this afternoon and rising slowly, however no flooding is predicted.

    The photo above was taken this afternoon at what local folks call the Loveland Whirlpool.

    • Can you identify the location?
    • Do you know how deep the pool of water is beneath the Loveland Whirlpool?
    • Do you know what local legend says is at the bottom of the pool?

    Use the comment section below if you think know the answers.


    Tonight: A chance of showers, mainly before 10pm. Patchy dense fog before 4am. Otherwise, cloudy, with a low around 33. South wind 8 to 11 mph becoming west in the evening. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.

    Thursday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 46. West wind around 7 mph.


     

  • [Photo Album] Full-house caught on camera swinging to Loveland Jazz Program

    [Photo Album] Full-house caught on camera swinging to Loveland Jazz Program

    Loveland, Ohio – A full-house of swingers had shined their shoes and showed their moves, some in their best “big band era” attire last Saturday when the three Loveland jazz bands performed.

    The “Loveland Jazz Swing Dance” with dance instructors, was an evening out at Loveland High School, dancing to Swing Era tunes played by the outstanding Loveland jazz bands: The LHS Jazz Lab Band, Loveland Middle School Stage Band, and the LHS Jazz Orchestra. Refreshments and desserts were served throughout the evening.

    All proceeds from the event benefited the Loveland Jazz Program.

    These photos are protected by Federal Copyright laws and must not be downloaded from this site. For re-prints or to purchase files, please send an email to editor@lovelandmagazine.com.



  • (Photo Album) After visit: Loveland 1st graders write about Valentine Lady

    (Photo Album) After visit: Loveland 1st graders write about Valentine Lady

    Loveland, Ohio – As part of Loveland Magazine’s on-going discussion and lesson plan for becoming better young writers, after Loveland Valentine Lady, Kathy Lorenz visited the 1st grade class of Ms. Miller, the students were asked to write about her.

    Loveland’s very own Valentine shares her love for the community

     

    Hanna said, “I learned that when you say I love you it is true.”

    Gabby said, “It made me feel like I was happy and my friends were happy too.”

    Axel said, “I love valentines.”

    Cy said, “Valentines is about love and care and respect.”

    Ashlynn  said, “Love. Love Katherine Lorenz. She told me about love.”

    Avery said the Valentine Lady told them to tell their friends, “I like you. Be Kind.”

    Dylan A.  said, “I learned that hearts can be anywhere and on anything.”

    Lillian said, “The Valentine Lady taught me that other things can be hearts.”

    Constance said, “I feel like hope.”

    Dean said, “I learned how to be caring and how to see hearts in a different way.”

    Charlotte said, “The Valentine Lady taught me that we should be nice to everybody and never be mean.”

    James said, “When the Valentine Lady was here, I felt happy.”

    Muhammdjon said, “We read a book about love and we drew heart pictures.”

    Natalia  said, “I was very happy. Valentines Day is awesome!”

    Rayana said, “The Valentine Lady was Kathy Lorenz.”

    Dylan S.  said, “When the Valentine Lady was here she made me happy and caring.”

    Emily said, “It made me happy and it made me loving.”

    Ben said, “The Valentine Lady is made of Love.”



    Loveland Sweets is a purveyor of hand-crafted chocolates, caramels, marshmallows, and ice creams. Our house-made candies are prepared in small batches.


  • Special Meeting Notice for City Council

    Special Meeting Notice for City Council

    Loveland, Ohio – In a press release issued today:

    Loveland City Council will hold a special meeting on Tuesday, February 19, 2019, at 6:00 p.m. at City Hall, located at 120 W. Loveland Avenue.  The purpose of the meeting is to hold an executive session pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Section 121.22 (G)(1) to consider the employment, dismissal, discipline, demotion or investigation of charges or complaints against a public employee or official.  And any other business as may properly come before the municipal body at the meeting may be considered and acted on.   This meeting is open to the public.

  • Splashing In – Welcome!

    Splashing In – Welcome!

    by Fran Hendrick

    Professional clinical counselor, parenting columnist, and instructor Fran Hendrick has provided coaching and counseling for hundreds of women and girls for twenty-five years. Clients appreciate Fran’s calm, empathic style, her practical strategies and solid advice, and her playful spirit. In addition to her therapy practice at Wildflower House in Loveland, Fran provides consultation, through private video chat and by phone, for moms participating in her online course “Helping Confidence Bloom: The Step-by-Step Approach to Raising Confident Girls”.

    “I don’t want my daughter to struggle with confidence and anxiety issues. I want to learn what I can do to help her become strong and confident – and really have fun with her life.”

    This is the concern – and the heartfelt wish — that many of my clients share with me. 

    Join Fran’s Raising Confident Girls Facebook Group – especially for moms.

    What I find both fascinating and empowering is that your daughter’s trust and confidence are not built by big actions and grand gestures; they’re actually built in the small moments of everyday life. Moments like when she’s late for school – or puts down her iPad to help her little brother with his spelling; says she hates what you’re having for dinner – or does her first headstand. 

    Believe it or not, these are the moments where what you say and do can make all the difference in building her confidence – or unintentionally eroding it. (And – by the way – what we generally think of as praise is likely to backfire completely!)

    It’s easy to miss the opportunity in these moments, not because you don’t want to be there for her but because you aren’t fully aware of what she needs from you. It’s easy to get discouraged and even feel powerless to help your daughter become less anxious and more assertive; or to help her persist at a hard task instead of feeling stupid and quitting in a storm of frustration. What you need is a lens that allows you to see things you couldn’t see before – along with the insight, tools, and a clear framework to know what to do or say. 

    And it’s so important! Confidence is not only a goal in its own right. Beyond that, a strong sense of self-confidence and self-worth provides lifelong protection against depression.

    I’m not one to step up to a microphone without major provocation. But the statistics on depression and self-harm in girls and women today in this country demand it.

    I’m not one to step up to a microphone without major provocation. But the statistics on depression and self-harm in girls and women today in this country demand it. According to the National Institute of Mental Health, a whopping 17.3% of girls ages 12-17 have experienced a major depressive episode1, along with 8.2% of adult women2.  It has even been estimated that girls’ self-esteem, their greatest protection against depression, peaks (yes, peaks) before they are ten years old!

    What makes this all the more unacceptable is that it is largely preventable! We have the knowledge to raise girls to feel whole, adequate, and joyful so they experience the world confidently and in bright colors. The knowledge exists to protect our girls from depression, from lifelong battles against feeling not good enough, from desperation – in short, to prevent rivers of tears and needless pain.

    They can joyfully become exactly who they’re meant to be.

    But for parents to actually be able to implement that knowledge in the small moments that make up everyday life with children requires a clear approach, intentional action — and a strong dose of self-reflection, because it can be scary. With that investment, our girls can be spared the lifetime of depression and anxiety that so many women experience. They can joyfully become exactly who they’re meant to be.

    They kick upwards, their arms reach for the sky, they seem to fairly prance, all with their own dance steps, their own vivid colors, their own lively style.

    On my desk at Wildflower House, I have a colorful drawing, spontaneously crayoned by a spectacular six-year-old girl. In it, twelve children jubilantly dance two-by-two in all directions across the fluorescent green paper. They kick upwards, their arms reach for the sky, they seem to fairly prance, all with their own dance steps, their own vivid colors, their own lively style. 

    That is how our girls should feel! I believe our daughters simply must be given that opportunity. Parents need a clear approach to evade those awful statistics and, in their place, to create something wonderful.

    I invite you to be part of improving the odds for today’s little girls, especially the ones within your own reach.

    “So let’s fix it together.”

    Why? Because each little girl has the potential to bloom uniquely. Because it is a sacred responsibility to learn to nurture, to discover that. And because there should be, there must be no lost voices. Each individual human being is entitled to self-expression.  Without it, our sparks dim and become buried out of our reach, hopelessness gains ground, despair sets in.  Human beings should not be locked away inside themselves. Ever.

    So let’s fix it together. 

    You really can build your daughter’s confidence right there in the midst of simple everyday conversations. I’ve designed this new column to show you how.

    I hope you’ll join me!

    Located at 111 N. Wall Street in Downtown Loveland, Wildflower House, Fran’s cozy personal development studio for coaching, counseling, and classes provides a space for women and girls to confidently become exactly who they’re meant to be. 

  • East Kemper in Loveland closed because of high water

    East Kemper in Loveland closed because of high water

    Loveland, Ohio – East Kemper Road at the 200 block is closed because of high water from the Little Miami River. Currently Karl Brown Way at the R.R. underpass is open.

    The National Weather Service says the current level of the Little Miami at Milford is 15′ with a forecast of 16.8′. The flood stage in Milford is 17′ where minor flooding would be expected.

    The Little Miami River from the 200 block of Kemper Road at 10 AM on February 12, 2019.


  • Junior Kate Garry honored

    Junior Kate Garry honored

    Loveland, Ohio – Junior Kate Garry was with her parents, Brian and Kathy, along with Coach Darnell Parker and Athletic Director Brian Conaster at center-court when Kate was honored last Thursday.

    Kate received the game ball that she used to break the record of career three-pointers on December 1st.



    Jarvis Global is an investment advisory firm in Symmes Township, Ohio which offers private portfolio management and retirement services to high net worth individuals.



  • Loveland Schools celebrate the launch of Hope Squad

    Loveland Schools celebrate the launch of Hope Squad

    Students at Loveland High School signed post-it notes of hope at the official launch of Hope Squad on Monday, February 4.

    Hope Squad members greeted their peers with life saver candies as they arrived at Loveland Middle School on Monday morning.

    Loveland, Ohio – Monday, February 4, was a day of celebrating the official launch of Hope Squad at Loveland High School (LHS), Loveland Middle School (LMS), and Loveland Intermediate School (LIS). Over the past several months, approximately 140 students, staff members and external experts have worked to prepare for the implementation of the program, which is a model using faculty advisors and trusted peers to identify students at risk for suicidal ideation and behavior, and ultimately, to save lives.

    “We are very excited that our partnership with Grant Us Hope has led to this new initiative of student CARE at Loveland,” said Eric Dool, Loveland City School District director of student services. “Our Hope Squad student representatives were all nominated by their peers. They have been training and learning about Hope Squad and how to connect fellow students at risk with the critical resources they need.”

    Students at Loveland Intermediate School signed banners of hope during Hope Squad activities at lunch.

    Hope Squad members greeted other students with life saver candy, wallet resource cards and words of inspiration as they arrived to school on Monday morning. At both LIS and LHS, videos made by Hope Squad members were shown during Tiger Time and news announcements. At LIS, students worked on “compliment” activity sheets, passing them out to each other. At lunch, they played their Hope Squad theme song and shared messages of hope on banners.

    “It is a wonderful experience to work with these students – they are an amazing group of kids,” said LHS Counselor Jamie Gordon. “We will continue to train and work through the Hope Squad curriculum over the course of the year. This launch event was an opportunity to create awareness about the program throughout our schools and underscore that we are here to support one another.”

    About Grant Us Hope

    Grant Us Hope is a Cincinnati nonprofit focused on creating communities of leadership and advocacy that enhance mental wellness, safety and prevention in schools. The organization has developed a school-based, peer-to-peer suicide prevention program for students with a three-year curriculum that emphasizes suicide prevention fundamentals, self-care and anti-bullying. During the 2018-19 school year, Grant Us Hope has assisted more than 25 schools in Cincinnati and Columbus with the implementation of Hope Squad. Loveland Intermediate School is the first school in Ohio to put in place a “Jr.” Hope Squad program for fifth and sixth graders.



  • Cast announced for “The Drowsy Chaperone” which opens  March 1

    Cast announced for “The Drowsy Chaperone” which opens March 1

    Stephanie Mackris, Loveland, rehearses for her role as Janet Van De Graaff in Loveland Stage Company’s production of “The Drowsy Chaperone” which opens  March 1.

    Loveland, Ohio – The cast has been announced for Loveland Stage Company’s early spring production of “The Drowsy Chaperone”, scheduled to open March 1.  The musical comedy, with music and Lyrics by Lisa Lambert and Greg Morrison and Book by Bob Martin and Don McKellar, is the winner of five Tony Awards, including Best Book and Best Original Score. “The Drowsy Chaperone” is a loving send-up of the Tony Awards, featuring one show-stopping song and dance number after another.

    Jill Gornet, producer of the show, says its hard to name a lead role because “all roles are so important and the cast is all so talented.”

    Familiar faces on the LSC stage are Stephanie Mackris who  portrays Janet Van De Graff; Tom Cavano as “the man in the chair”; Cathy Alter, Mrs. Tottendale; Dave Marcus, Feldzieg; Megan Archibald, Kitty; John Sloan, Gangster #1; Christina Siciliano, the drowsy chaperone and Jonathan Eckman, Superintendent.

    Joe Moreland will play Underling, with Joshua Marcus as George; Vincent Eldridge, Gangster #2; Tom Morris, Aldolpho, and  Melinda Hubbard as Trix the Aviatrix. Michael Kiser is playing the role of Robert Martin.

    Ensemble players are: Elizabeth Carras; Izy Jones; Terry Neack; Caitlyn Sanderson; Madeleine Weinkam, Norm Lewis and Zac Holman.

    Carissa Sloan is directing the production with Jill Gornet as producer. Marjory Clegg is choreographer, Brian Harvey is Music Director, and Jeanne Bilyeu is Orchestra Director.

    The hilarious musical comedy opens on March 1 at 7:30 PM at the Loveland Stage Company Theatre located at 111 S. 2ndSt (Rt. 48), in Loveland, 45140. (Directions and Parking)

    The show continues March 2, 8, 9, 15 and 16 at 7:30 PM and Sundays, March  3, 10 and 17 at 3 PM.  Tickets are $20 each and can be obtained at www.lovelandstagecompany.org.

    For handicapped accessible seating or for groups call 513-443-4572.