Home Blog Page 80

St. Croix EDC 2023 Small Business of the Year Winner named – Part II

0
Aves Studio Founder & CEO Dave Brummel formulated Critter Clay which became the standard in the taxidermy industry. Aves Studio operates a retail store at its Hudson location open to the public Monday – Friday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Photo by Tom Lindfors

Submitted by Amanda Connelly, St. Croix EDC

HUDSON, WI – Dave Brummel has a larger-than-life personality. In many ways, he is at heart, a showman. In another life he might have donned a top hat, epaulets and a whip as the ringmaster in The Greatest Show on Earth. His enthusiasm is infectious, and he always has a story or two up his sleeve.

Brummel is also an extraordinary entrepreneur, a self-made man in the old-world sense. He is someone who rolled up their sleeves, got their hands dirty, some might argue all the way up to his elbows, and built his business from the ground up out of clay.

Brummel’s business, Aves Studio, won the St. Croix Economic Development Corporations’ 2023 Small Business of the Year Award.

The big break – In 1980 Brummel booked a booth at the first ever World Taxidermy Expo in Atlanta, Georgia. For five days taxidermists from around the world entered their mounts and competed for thousands of dollars in prizes. For the first time, anybody and everybody who was a name in the taxidermy industry was in Atlanta. That opportunity would change everything and enable Brummel to build an empire out of clay.

“It was my debut. I came with 2,100 lbs. of Critter Clay in large blocks. I used a harp to cut it into small pieces, 25 per block,” Brummel said.

Like any good baker gives away doughnuts, Brummel handed out free samples of his Critter Clay.

“People could touch it, feel it, smell it. They were taking the sample back to the rooms at night and making their own miniature critters,” Brummel said.

The clay was gone in three days.

Brummel walked out of Atlanta with six international accounts and a reputation that was spreading like wildfire throughout the taxidermy industry.

“To satisfy what I considered the needs of that industry, which had to do with the pH, toxicity, malleability and longevity of the product, we created our own parameters,” Brummel said.

The potential for clay – The market for Critter Clay has grown exponentially over the years. It has been driven organically by the users themselves, artists and taxidermists who promote the product based on their own experience using the product. That built-in credibility has allowed Brummel to expand the use of his clays and machés into markets he never imagined possible.

“We developed what I call our customer advocacy base. I started working with people at that level heavily in the 1980’s,” Brummel said. “I take care of them, and they take care of me.”

Brummel cites a respected doll artist, considered a guru in his industry, who he has been working with for more than 10 years.

“You can’t find a better person to sell for you than one of the professionals in the doll industry who does doll repairs. He has been using my clay to repair his 100-year-old dolls, Brummel said. “I enable him to do that and then he writes articles and speaks to people promoting me and my product and it goes on and on. He is our new advocate.”

People started approaching Brummel asking him to create a product to meet their specific need or in a specific color. He responded by going back into the lab and creating solutions to their requests. After 40 years Aves Studio sells more than 40 products ranging from Critter Clay to machés and more recently two-part clays that include epoxy ingredients to add strength and set up faster.

His products can be found in schools where using a kiln can be a liability. A multitude of artists and industries use his products including sculptors, jewelers, prop makers, people who repair artifacts and people who build outdoor displays. His products have been used on the space shuttle and are popular with model makers for building prototypes including cars, rockets and even mice for computers.

Brummel has built and maintained relationships with several large commercial clients including the Smithsonian and for more than 30 years with Walt Disney World Services where his products are used for repairs at water and amusement parks around the world.

“We’re a clay company. Our products last longer in repairs because they are made with real minerals which are millions of years old. We provided 1,700 lbs. of our product to the Chicago Field Museum to make Sue the T. rex whole again. Thousands of pounds of our product were used to create a textured ceiling in a Las Vegas casino. Our products are talking to people every single day,” Brummel said.

Challenges and opportunities – Brummel learned early on that competitors would try to imitate or reverse engineer his formulas. To combat that piracy, he instituted a legal strategy that employs registered trademarks and pending patents to protect against knockoffs.

There are still a lot of people who do not know clay can be a solution for their needs.

“It’s grown every day since day one. We’re just babies in the world marketplace,” Brummel said. “Every building’s got something broken on it that could be fixed with one of our products. That’s 300 million buildings in the U.S. How in the world are you going to make that much clay? It blows me away when I think of what the possibilities are.”

Brummel does not own a cellphone and he leaves the computer work to others. He begins most days by personally returning calls from friends and longtime clients.

“My favorite part of the business is to hear back about the successes that people have professionally and otherwise using our products. I encourage them to try to make a difference in the world, to lead by example. That’s powerful,” Brummel said. “At the end of the day, it kind of makes me who I am. If I can’t help people, I feel like I’m not doing what I’m supposed to be doing.”

As he approaches 70 Brummel has no plans to slow down. He only knows one way to do business, hands on, full speed ahead.

“If you give me a problem, I will sleep on it a bit and I’ll tell you, in short order, whether or not we can solve it.”

Here are the facts about the St, Croix EDC 2023 Small Business of the Year: Aves Studio, LLC, Dave Brummel – Founder / CEO / 1st Generation Clay Maker. Formed: 1976, address 455 WI-35, Hudson, WI 54016, 715-386-9097. Aves Studio operates a retail store at its Hudson location open to the public Monday – Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Website: avesstudio.com. Employees: 8, Sq. Ft.: 20,000.

Congratulations to Aves Studio, LLC!

DNR reviews Ridge Breeze Dairy’s application to expand with virtual public hearing

0
Danny Akenson a field organizer for GROWW, Grassroots Organizing Western Wisconsin welcomed everyone to the virtual DNR Public Hearing regarding the expansion proposal for Ridge Breeze Dairy’s permit application to expand their CAFO. Photo by Paul J. Seeling

ELMWOOD, WI – The Wisconsin DNR held a virtual Public Hearing in conjunction with GROWW (Grassroots Organizing Western Wisconsin) on Thursday, July 11, 2024. This was regarding the expansion proposal for Ridge Breeze Dairy’s permit application to expand their CAFO (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation, some would say “factory farm”) livestock numbers from the current 2,431 animal units (1,700 cows) to amend their Wisconsin Discharge Elimination System (WPDES) permit to allow for the increase to 9,010 animal units (6,200 cows) on the Pierce County farm (formally the Son-Bow Farms of Maiden Rock). 140 people came to the virtual Public Hearing in the Elmwood Auditorium. There were 300 in total involved in the call that originated from the DNR office in Baldwin and was moderated by Jeff Jackson.

There was testimony from 30 or more concerned people who were given three minutes to speak. Additional comments were allowed to be submitted to the DNR by Thursday, July 18, 2024.

The expansion proposal would allow waste generation to increase from 24 million gallons of liquid manure per year to approximately 78 million gallons. Owners of neighboring farms spoke of their concerns of having their water wells contaminated or depleted (the amount of water needed to support all the additional cows is significant). Professional engineers spoke of the potential adverse effects that this expansion could create and stated that an Environment Impact Study should be undertaken. This expansion could adversely affect the Rush River and Plum Creek watersheds and Nugget Lake due to the close proximity of this CAFO.

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the July 25, 2024 issue of the Sun-Argus newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

Staying Put holds open house

0
Kendall Vingua, Kathy Nyeggen and Janice Ottman enjoying the sunshine at the Staying Put open house on Thursday, July 18. Submitted photo

SPRING VALLEY, WI – It was a beautiful sunny day on Thursday, July 18 for an open house at the office of local non-profit Staying Put.

Over 26 people stopped to learn about what Staying Put does in the community. Gordo’s Taco Truck was on site offering delicious food, and there were plenty of activities for kids and seniors alike.

Events coordinator Sheryl Sutherland had a fishing pond set up where kids could scoop rubber ducks and win prizes, Sophia Koch, Administrative Assistant was offering face-painting and Jenny Nyffeler was dressed to entertain in clown makeup to wave down passerby.

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the July 25, 2024 issue of the Sun-Argus newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

Queen’s Corner – St. Croix Falls/Taylors Falls, and Luck was fun!

0
Here is the 2024-25 Syttende Mai Royalty. Pictured (L to R) standing are 2nd Princess Addisyn Wichelman, First Princess Jessica Albers and Third Princess Adeline Haugen, (Center, on the swing) Syttende Mai Queen Katelyn Gustafson. Photo by Susan Wynveen Photography

Submitted by Syttende Mai Third Princess Adeline Haugen

WOODVILLE, WI – This past weekend, Saturday, July 20 and Sunday, July 21, 2024, was lots of fun for the 2024-2025 Syttende Mai Royal Court!

On Saturday, we (Syttende Mai Queen Katelyn Gustafson, First Princess Jessica Albers, and Second Princess Addisyn Wichelman and me), went to the beautiful towns of St Croix Falls, Wisconsin and Taylors Falls Minnesota to represent Woodville.

It was 2024 Falls’ Wannigan Days – July 19-21, 2024, River Spirit Celebration with a Two City Parade! A wannigan was a floating cook shanty and occasional bunkhouse used by the “river rats” who drove spring log drives down the St. Croix River.

We attended the St Croix Falls Royalty Court’s Barbie themed Queen’s Tea and they a had delicious meal for us. Before the parade we got to enjoy the band by the river and saw the vendors on Main Street. During the parade we were able to see the river on the way to the end of the parade in Taylor falls.

We were surprised to find that the parade was for both the town of St Croix Falls, Wisconsin and Taylor Falls, Minnesota.

Sunday, we visited the town of Luck, Wisconsin for their Lucky Days Festival. Their Queen’s Tea was held in the Luck Lutheran Church where it was filled with western decor.

Before the parade, we had the chance to meet the King and Queen of the nursing home in Luck. Although the weather wasn’t ideal, we all had a great time and everyone there was very enthusiastic.

It was a fun weekend, and everyone had a wonderful time as ambassadors for our wonderful Village of Woodville!

Western Wisconsin Health welcomes Christian Gausman to Board of Directors

0
Western Wisconsin Health is proud to announce the appointment of Christian Gausman to the WWH Board of Directors. Submitted photo

By Ryma Lindquist, Community Relations Director, Western Wisconsin Health

BALDWIN, WI – Western Wisconsin Health (WWH) is proud to announce the appointment of Christian Gausman to the WWH Board of Directors. As a Baldwin, Wisconsin native, Christian is dedicated to serving and giving back to the community in which he was raised. Christian is excited to leverage his experience to contribute to the organization’s strategic direction and continued success in providing the community with high-quality healthcare services.

Christian graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Stout with a Bachelor of Science in Engineering Technology and a Master of Science in Manufacturing Engineering. He later graduated from the University of St. Thomas with a master’s degree in business administration. Christian currently serves as the Director of Strategic Initiatives for OEM Fabricators, headquartered in Woodville, Wisconsin, leading strategic planning and initiatives for the company. He has worked for OEM for two decades, working in various areas including quality, project management, plant management and engineering management.

Christian has been actively involved in community leadership roles, including serving as president of the Baldwin-Woodville Chamber of Commerce. Additionally, he serves on the German American Chamber of Commerce- Minnesota. WWH CEO, Eilidh Pederson, expressed enthusiasm for Christian’s appointment, stating, “Christian’s extensive experience and dedication to his community make him a great addition to the WWH board. We are excited to leverage his strategic mindset and engage him in planning for the future of the Hospital.”

Christian has been married to his wife, Lynsey, for thirteen years. Together, they have three daughters: Amelia, Addison, and Lainey. The family shares a love for traveling and visiting new places, as well as biking and spending time outdoors.

Christian shared a multitude of reasons for joining the board, stating, “As someone who grew up in Baldwin, I am deeply invested in the well-being of our community. Joining the board of Western Wisconsin Health is a meaningful way for me to give back and support an invaluable asset that serves us all. Having a strong hospital is crucial for our community, and I am excited to contribute to the continued success and improvement of this vital institution.”

The appointment of Christian Gausman highlights Western Wisconsin Health’s ongoing commitment to local leadership and community engagement. With the addition of Christian to the WWH Board of Directors, the organization is well-positioned to continue to deliver compassionate and innovative care to patients across the region.

45th Annual UFO Days Celebration will be ‘Out of this world!’

0

ELMWOOD, WI – The 45th Annual UFO Days Celebration is set for the last weekend in July – July 26-28, 2024. With a universe of new activities, all of your favorite classics will still be in orbit and prepared to send all “Out of this world.”

Beginning on Friday, July 26, the food and souvenir stand will be open at 6 p.m. along with a 50/50 raffle hosted by the American Legion, Medallion Hunt, inflatables featuring a bounce house, Slide, Snow cones and more!

The Flying Saucer Toss will begin at 6:30 p.m. with a chance to win some cash! At 8 p.m., Three Bucks and Change will be hitting the bandstand for live street dance music.

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the July 25, 2024 issue of the Sun-Argus or Woodville Leader newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

John Haller

0

John Haller, age 76, passed away at his home July 17, 2024.

He was born November 29, 1947 to Clarence and Edith Haller in Red Wing, Minnesota. He spent most of his youth with his family on a farm by Goodhue, MN. When John was 5 his family moved to a farm by Spring Valley, WI. He was involved in 4H, and even as a youngster loved to fish and hunt.

He graduated from high school in 1965 from Spring Valley, WI school, 1968 came and he went to Vietnam to serve his country, He came home in 1969, shortly thereafter he met his soon to be wife, Jan. Christmas Eve 1969, he proposed, Jan accepted and on August 8, 1970 they were married.

John was a long-time member of the Baldwin Legion.

John worked most of his adult life at North Star Steel in St. Paul, MN where he retires in 2004.

He loved fishing, hunting, reading, playing cards, teasing his kids and grandkids, and even great-grandkids. He would spend days at a time fishing on Lake Wapogasset by Amery, WI where we have a trailer on a resort. Every boat we ever had, had many miles on them. He also liked mowing lawn, grocery shopping, and napping. When he was able, he loved to plant and care for flowers.

He is preceded in death by his parents, Clarence and Edith Haller, his in-laws, Galen and Millie Anderson, sister and brother-in-law Karen and Glenn Hague and other relatives.

Left to mourn and remember him are his wife Jan, children Mike (Bonny) Haller, Tim Haller, Laurie Haller and friend Brad Greene; brother Rick (Peggy) Haller, sister Linda Sneer; grandsons Tyler (Sophia) Branstad, Cody (Samantha) Luby; great-grandchildren Emma, William, and Teyla Luby and Beau and Oliver Branstad; brother-in-law and sister-in-law Jeff (Sue ) Anderson; many family and friends. He will be missed by all.

Memorial Gathering 4-7 PM Thursday July 25 at O’Connell Funeral Home, 1010 Newton St. Baldwin, WI.

June Knegendorf

0

June L. Knegendorf age 85 of Menomonie, formerly of Hatchville, died Tuesday July 16, 2024, at The Neighbors of Dunn County in Menomonie.

No services are being planned.

Rhiel Funeral Home & Cremation Services of Menomonie is serving the family.

Crain-Ottman American Legion installs new officers

0
Submitted photo

Submitted by Jerry Thompson, Post 207

ELMWOOD, WI – At their July 10 monthly meeting the Crain-Ottman American Legion Post 207 and Auxiliary Unit 207 installed their new Officers for Fiscal Year 2025.

Legion Officers (from left to right) are: David Hauschildt, Chaplain; Dean Marsh, Adjutant; Jerry Thompson, Commander/Finance Officer; Pat Hines, Vice-Commander; Jim Baier, Sgt-at-Arms; (not pictured) Marilyn Galoff, Historian. Auxiliary Officers are: Colleen Flanscha, Secretary; Donette Stewart, Vice-President, Brenda Bechel, President/Treasurer/Sgt-at-Arms; Marilyn Galoff, Chaplain.

St. Croix EDC 2023 Small Business of the Year Winner named – Part I

0
Aves Studio is a self-contained business, mixing, packaging, labeling and shipping all of its own products. Pictured is Founder, CEO Dave Brummel. Photo by Tom Lindfors

Submitted by Amanda Connelly, St. Croix EDC

HUDSON, WI – Dave Brummel has a larger-than-life personality. In many ways, he is at heart, a showman. In another life he might have donned a top hat, epaulets and a whip as the ringmaster in The Greatest Show on Earth. His enthusiasm is infectious, and he always has a story or two up his sleeve.

Brummel is also an extraordinary entrepreneur, a self-made man in the old-world sense. He is someone who rolled up their sleeves, got their hands dirty, some might argue all the way up to his elbows, and built his business from the ground up out of clay.

Brummel’s business, Aves Studio, won the St. Croix Economic Development Corporations’ (EDC) 2023 Small Business of the Year Award.

The semitrailer out front promoting Aves Taxidermy and Cheese has stood as a local landmark in Hudson for more than 40 years. Brummel married into the cheese business when he married his wife of 47 years, Sandy, whose father was a master cheese maker. A true entrepreneur, Brummel assisted his father-in-law in the cheese business, tried his hand at growing Christmas trees as a way to finance his four daughters’ education, is a master taxidermist and a beekeeper, but he was destined to make his name in clay.

Brummel grew up with 10 siblings on a dairy farm not far from Watertown, Wisconsin.

Surrounded by a landscape of woods and water filled with wildlife, Brummel fell in love with hunting, fishing and trapping, ways to explore the rural landscape that fueled his imagination.

At the age of 11, Brummel used the money he had made from trapping muskrats to pay for his first correspondence course in taxidermy.

“Taxidermy was a way to express the artistic ability that I’d been given. I have a knack for it and I knew that very early in my life,” Brummel said.

It was a purchase that would pay dividends for the rest of his life.

Clay is one of the foundational materials in the taxidermy process. It was also the weakest link. It can be applied to an armature, used to set eyes and ears, and sculpted into the shape of the mount. Once it hardens, it can be painted, and the fur or feathers attached.

By the time he was 13, Brummel had built a budding taxidermy business. As he perfected his craft, his mounts were becoming more popular. He had experimented with almost every kind of clay available, and he was not satisfied. The existing clays required firing to harden correctly, but taxidermists used them as self-hardening. As a result, they didn’t have the required strength or elasticity causing them to crack, shrink and peel. They were also very alkaline in nature which would react chemically with leather and other materials and cause glass eyes and other features to change colors over the years.

Brummel did what any good entrepreneur would do, he made his own.

Although Brummel had a thriving taxidermy business, by the time he entered college he intended to become a veterinarian. It wasn’t until his internship senior year that he was informed that because he was colorblind, he would not be able to complete his degree in veterinary medicine.

“Color blind people were not accepted into veterinary school, but they have an advantage in the clay business,” Brummel explained. “I see things you don’t. It’s just grays and browns to you, but I see a whole world in there and I’m able to do things with it that other people can’t.”

In hindsight, although extremely disappointed Brummel sees that rejection as a moment when fate intervened.

“Once I realized that I wasn’t going to be a veterinarian, I think the good Lord put it in my head I had something bigger to do and it was an even bigger challenge,” Brummel said.

Brummel put the knowledge of chemistry he had acquired while studying to become a vet to work.

By the time he sold his first synthetic clay in 1978, he had already created 33 different recipes.

“I liken it to the process of making a cake. You combine the flour, the butter, the eggs and the sugar and you make your cake. That’s how this works. I buy raw materials, some of them are natural from minerals, some are minerals that have been patented and have different properties than when they were dug out of the ground. Then I combine them in a proprietary process to meet my expectations,” Brummel explained.

Although he was able to sell the different variations of clay, they were limited to specific uses, and he struggled financially.

Brummel knew there had to be a better solution and proved it by combining all the best characteristics from his 33 recipes including into a new product that he called “Eye Set Clay.”

The “secret sauce” included the addition of fiber, the equivalent of rebar, ingredients which were non-toxic and the most innovative feature of all, it was made to self-hardening. Brummel’s innovations revolutionized the synthetic clay industry and earned him the moniker “The Father of Self-hardening Clay.”

Brummel’s own taxidermy business was experiencing significant success and word of his invention started to spread within the industry.

“It turns out the uses taxidermists put the clay through are so extensive and brutal … if you can survive the taxidermy industry, you can survive anything,” Brummel said.

People began to call Brummel’s invention “Critter Clay,” a brand he would later trademark.

Next week will be “St. Croix EDC 2023 Small Business of the Year Winner named – Part II” that will conclude with the story of the big break for Dave Brummel and Aves Studio.

Weather

River Falls
few clouds
58.9 ° F
58.9 °
58.9 °
41 %
2.1mph
24 %
Wed
75 °
Thu
70 °
Fri
64 °
Sat
58 °
Sun
55 °