Nebraskaland

December 2022 Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1485990

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T here is a long list of ways to raise money. In the outdoor world, it's often banquets, auctions or raffles. Others host fishing tournaments, shoots or competitions like one-box hunts. One Johnson County resident, however, came up with an entirely different plan to raise money to support his community. Arlen Beethe, with the support of the Elk Creek Men's Club, had a thought: Why not introduce a 16th century game made popular in Europe, combine friends, family and absolute strangers to compete, and raise money to help their neighbors? "Every year the Elk Creek Men's Club gives scholarships to local kids," Arlen said. "We raise money for the Johnson County 4-H and offer help to any number of benefits. If someone has an injury and needs some help — if something needs funding — we try to raise it." And that's how the Elk Creek curling event began. "I had always enjoyed watching curling during the Olympics," said Arlen, "so I had this idea to do it on Main Street in Elk Creek. But that didn't work." "Well, that's not the exact way it started," said Arlen's son, Cole, with a chuckle. "Originally, over a couple of years talking in the Village Tavern, our local bar, the idea was to use cow patties for a curling event. We'd freeze them, add weights, and somehow fashion a handle to them." Luckily, this idea gave way to buying actual curling stones. 40 Pounds of Granite Curling, like every other sporting event, comes with a list of terminology just about as long as a curling "pitch," the sheet of ice on which the game is played. The object of curling, similar to shuffleboard, is to slide granite stones, also called "rocks," into a target area, or "house." The path of Elk Creek Curling Story and photos by Jeff Kurrus Cole Beethe, perennial Johnson County curling powerhouse, releases a stone. 40 Nebraskaland • December 2022

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