Category Archives: 4. Fellowship Groups

Recent Rotary Fellowship Events – Hitting the Open Road!

Motorcycle Ride 7 27 14

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Pictured above, the Motorcycle Fellowship Group is crossing the Wisconsin River on the Merrimac Ferry.

Our club’s Motorcycle Fellowship Group headed out on the open road on Sunday, July 27, for LaFarge, Wisconsin, and the Rockton Bar’s World Famous Chicken Feed. Located in the heart of the beautiful Kickapoo Valley, on scenic Hwy 131 between Ontario and La Farge, the Rockton Bar is a favorite destination for hungry and thirsty patrons, especially motorcyclists in Wisconsin. The group rode through the amazing countryside of the Driftless region and enjoyed a great meal of BBQ chicken and fixin’s with great conversations and a positive Rotary experience!  Thanks to Jeff Bartell for organizing this event.

Brewers Trip 7 27 2014

Our club’s Baseball Fellowship Group boarded a bus on Sunday, July 27, for Milwaukee to see the Brewers take on the New York Mets. Final score:  Mets 2, Brewers 0.

Rotary Wine Fellowshippers Enjoy Another Great Event on June 24

–submitted by Mike Wilson

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The Wine Fellowship Group had a Bring Your Own (BYO) Event at Mike and Patty Wilson’s on Tuesday the 24th of June. There were 15 attendees, and each Rotarian brought a bottle of wine, their story to go with it and a snack to accompany it. Great fun was had by all!  I rated every bottle of wine as excellent (17.75-18.5/20 on my scale),for an extraordinary fleet of wines.

From left: Nona Hagen, Dan Dieck, Mike Casey & Carolyn Casey

From left: Nona Hagen, Dan Dieck, Mike Casey & Carolyn Casey

They started with three cold wines: a Santinori Assyrtiko to accompany a tapenade; an Alsatian Pinot Gris (Rotenberg from Domaine Zind-Humbrecht) with a Greek dip; and a Rose of Sangiovese from Amorosa (called Goia) with the winery being a large “Napa Castle” which was viewed from their parking lot on the successful Wine Fellowship tour of Napa exactly one year ago.  These were accompanied by feta and watermelon kebabs.

Next, two beautifully soft Pinot Noirs were tasted:  Acrobat from Oregon and Husch from the Anderson Valley.  Both were paired with great artisanal Wisconsin cheeses and a basket of cherries.  Just like the cold wines described above, these were excellent, and the tasting group was evenly divided in preference.

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(Photo 1: Mike & Mandy McKay; Photo 2: Juli & Keith Baumgartner; Photo 3: Patty Wilson & Cheryl Wittke)

Two “racy reds” were then tasted:  A Domaine de la Janesse Cotes Du Rhone with a colorful story of how it came to be selected (Dan Dieck’s son had sent a case from France) and an A Venge wine called Scouts Honor (a dog story, not Baden-Powell) California blend (Zinfandel, Petite Sirah, Charbono and Syrah).  Once again, the tasting group liked both equally well.

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(Photo 1: Steve & Meryl Mixtacki; Photo 2: Meryl Mixtacki & Mike Wilson; Photo 3: Mary Barbieri & Beverly Simone)

Finally the hosts provided two very different ports.  A 1960 Warre’s Vintage Porto as a traditional base, and a 1947 “Royal Reserve” Mazuran “Port” from New Zealand. This previously unknown vineyard in Henderson , NZ, has been producing Port for years.  The initial winemaker was a descendant of the Dalmatian Kauri tree gum diggers that emigrated to New Zealand early on for just this purpose, but when the Kauri trees were significantly reduced (now a protected tree) they switched to other work.  Dalmatia is near where the original Zinfandel vines have been located, and these immigrants formed the basis of the early New Zealand wine industry.  Chocolate covered strawberries and other chocolates were the accompanying snack made by Hostess Patty.  Here the New Zealand port was the absolute winner.  The 67 year old Royal Reserve is the very first Mazuran port Mike tried some 40 years ago, and was released for the visit of the young Queen Elizabeth in her 1952 tour of New Zealand as part of the new monarchs tour of the antipodean british Commonwealth.  Perhaps the Mazuran was rated so well as the tasters were informed that it now sells for NZ$700.

Our thanks to Mike & Patty Wilson for hosting another great event!

Our thanks to Mike & Patty Wilson for hosting another great event!

A great time was had by one and all!

Dedication of Rotary Club of Madison Centennial Plaza on June 11

–submitted by Bob Dinndorf; photos by Valerie Johnson and Uriah Carpenter

Madison Rotary Square June 2014 3912 (1 Of 11)

Led by members of the Hiking Fellowship Group, Rotary Club of Madison members trekked from Inn on the Park to the Rotary Club of Madison Centennial Plaza (corners of Hamilton & Mifflin Streets) to witness a special moment capping the first Rotary century and inaugurating the second century. Club members participated in the official dedication of the Rotary Club of Madison’s Centennial Plaza.  John Bonsett-Veal and Uriah Carpenter arranged a creative aerial photo of Rotarians fresh from their post-lunch constitutional. This indisputable visual evidence of Rotary pride was summarized by Mayor Paul Soglin who read a proclamation commemorating June 11, 2014, as a day to celebrate Rotary and one of Madison’s newest landmarks.

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(Photo 1: Steve Goldberg addresses the gathering; Photo 2: Deb Gilpin reads a poem; Photo 3: Rotarians peering into the sky for a group photo [below])

Madison Rotary Square June 2014 3976 (3 Of 11)

Earlier at Inn on the Park, Steve Goldberg regaled the club with his now signature Palooza Pleaser, a song about the club’s summer spectacular. The 2014 SummerPalooza takes place Saturday, June 14 around Capitol Square and the Madison Children’s Museum.

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Mayor Paul Sogilin reads the proclamation with Club President Renee Moe

Laura Peck, chair of the Plaza Project Committee, reviewed how the art installation developed. Deb Gilpin, Executive Director of the Madison Children’s Museum provided an introduction to the art piece, “Roads Diverge” which provides whimsical food for thought to plaza visitors. Deb expressed appreciation for the daily inspiration that the art provides. Finally, appreciation is extended again to Dave Ewanowski who chaired the initial 2008 Centennial Project Planning Committee and all Rotarians as well as friends of Rotarians who participated in celebration of the club’s 100 years past. Our brave march into the future continues.

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Note from a Visiting Rotarian on June 11, 2014:
“Thanx for the warm hospitality shown by your club’s Rotarians. Today’s visit to the Rotary Club of Madison will always remain a memorable day in my life.   I am fortunate enough to be able to witness the centennial plaza dedication event. Yours is indeed a vibrant and unique club in the world.  May your club achieve still greater heights in the  forthcoming years.”

Yours in Rotary, PP KISHOR OSWAL, Rotary Club of PUNE FAR EAST India

Wine Fellowship Group Tasting on April 29

–submitted by Mike Wilson

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The Wine Fellowship Group had a great tasting at Steve and Meryl Mixtacki’s house on April 29.  This time there were several new Wine Fellowship attendees, which everyone thought was great.

The theme was an ALL WHITE WINE tasting, in preparation for the long awaited spring season. We started with three sparkling wines: a Cremant from France but not from the Champagne appellation, a Spanish Cava made by the same Traditionale Methode and an Italian Proseco where the secondary fermentation (the source of sparkling wine bubble formation) occurs in steel tanks and then the sparkling wine is bottled, rather than the actual bottle being the site of bubble production as in the traditional Champagne method.  These wines represented different price points: $5-10, $11-20 and $20-30.  The Champion that evening by the vast majority of tasters was the Spanish cava of Juame Serra Cristalino extra-brut (made by the traditional method) with a retail price of between $6-7, a real bargain of a wine and well worth stocking up on for the short-term future.

We then tried New World/Old World Sauvignon Blancs, with the new world represented by New Zealand and California, and the old world by the Loire Valley in France.  The grapefruit aromas on the NZ wine was recorded as the best by the fellowship, and NZ Sauvignon Blancs have been accepted as the best of that grape varietal. The Loire version was more steely, and the Californian had some oak perceived on the palate, and both these tastes typify the respective regions.

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Then three unknown varietal’s were tried of a group called Anything But Chardonnay (ABC) and the Riesling was most recognizable being slightly sweet with a typical “petroleum” aroma.  The apricot-like Viognier was then recognized and by deduction when the three wines were revealed, the Portuguese (usually Spanish) Albarino was established by simple elimination when the other two wines were identified.  As far as the participants were concerned, there was similar preferences for favorite of each of these three very different wines.

The last part of the formal tasting was a selection of Mike Wilson’s Robert Young Vineyard Chardonnays from the 2006/2008/2010 vintages. These wines were quite old by Chardonnay standards, and it was revealing that the oldest 2006 vintage was the preferred wine.

Thank you to hosts Steve & Meryl Mixtacki!

Thank you to hosts Steve & Meryl Mixtacki!

Because the group was larger than usual Steve Mixtacki produced two spicy Gurwurtztraminers and Mike Wilson matched a Brut with the ExtraBrut Cristalino sparkler, to show the contrast in dryness’s (the brut was dryer than the Extra brut).

Four cheeses were provided by the Wilson’s: Manchego (Spanish hard sheep cheese), Brie, a German Triple Cream Blue Cambazola, and a cow cheese Dubliner.  Meryl Mixtacki provided nuts, fruit spears, proscuitto wrapped melon, chocolate coated strawberries,and a yellow citris cake.

A great time was had by all!  Many wines, many appetizers, some education, and particularly good fun was had by everyone.

 

Rotary Hiking Fellowship Outing at Blue Mound State Park

–submitted by Bob Graebner; photos by Ken Yuska

"Bumps on a Log"

“Bumps on a Log”

On Saturday, April 26, members and guests of the Hiking Fellowship summited Blue Mound in perfect climbing conditions.   This was the loftiest altitude ever achieved during a Hiking Fellowship event!  The participants were properly acclimated and conditioned for the ascent.   We were accompanied by Dan Dieck’s beautiful German Shorthair (pictured below), the latter failing to point even a single pheasant. The hike was followed by a high-energy meal at Sjolind’s Chocolate House in Mt. Horeb.

Dan Dieck and Sassy - Version 2  DSC_0392

Dan will be coordinating a summer hike on the Ice Age Trail and Karl Gutknecht  a late summer/early fall event at the Aldo Leopold Headquarters.   Virginia Bartelt will coordinate a Thursday evening hike during the summer.  All of these dates are to be determined by the respective coordinators.   Stay tuned for more information.

Cultural Awareness Event on March 27

–submitted by Frank Stein; photos by Rob Stroud

Sushi

Club members Sharyl Kato and Majid Sarmadi organized a beautiful evening dinner and Japanese cultural program at the Sushi Muramoto Restaurant on March 27. The food, in buffet-style, was artistically arranged.  Rotarians and their guests attending mixed with members of the Japanese community in Madison.

former Rotary scholar & grad students  cultural presentation  Sharyl & Frank

Jo Oyama-Miller presented an excellent overview of the relationship between the sister cities of Madison and Obihiro which was formed in 2003. Because of this relationship, there have been a number of inter-cultural exchanges between the two cities. One of the commonalities between the two cities is the mutual interest in organic farming. There are plans to establish an all-year farmers market in Madison with the help and experience from the Obhiro community. Another common interest is in community mental health. A vocational rehabilitation program centered around organic farming in Obhiro has been established as a model program.

Matt Morris, one of the chefs in the Muramoto Restaurant, told us about his experience spending 7 weeks learning Japanese cuisine and sharing his knowledge of American cooking.

SharylWe also were shown the kimono (Sharyl Kato shown at left with a traditional kimono) and some of the newer versions where the obi is already tied. We had a lively discussion of the do and don’ts in the Japanese culture and the significance of bowing and eye contact. All in all, it was a delightful evening of good food, camaraderie, education and cultural exchanges.