Rossford
Lifestyle
Possible Locations for Buc-ee's Expansion in Toledo
TOLEDO, OH - As Buc-ee's continues its expansion into new states, Toledo, Ohio, presents several viable locations for one of its famous travel centers. Known for its massive convenience stores, fresh food offerings, and dozens of gas pumps, Buc-ee's locations typically thrive along busy highways and at key travel junctions. Here are a few possible spots in Toledo:
Health department hits Toledo restaurant with cease and desist, orders it closed
TOLEDO, Ohio — A Toledo restaurant was shut down Tuesday after it was ordered to close by the Toledo-Lucas County Health Department. The health department sent a letter Monday to Vida Cantina/R&R Restaurants to cease and desist, stating that the current license holder is not a valid LLC. WTOL...
Lucas County Dogs for Adoption: 10/10
Dogs remain available at the Lucas County Canine Care & Control Office. For information, call 419-213-2800. For a complete list of available dogs, go to lucascountydogs.petfinder.com. A $100 adoption fee includes spay-neuter, a heartworm check, microchip ID, vaccinations, and a behavioral evaluation. Dogs killed Dogs killed Oct. 4 under the direction of Lucas County chief of staff Michael Hart, interim warden and director of the Lucas County Canine Care & Control: Breed and description; reason; intake type and date with location found if stray. Dogs killed for poor behavior on body-handling and resource-guarding assessments are scored on a scale of 5, with higher scores being more aggressive. Dog-aggression assessments are not scored:
'The Trail Fire of 1961' documentary to air on WGTE-TV
The Trail Fire of 1961, a documentary about the deadly gasoline tanker truck fire that killed four Toledo firefighters and injured 80 people will air Thursday night on PBS. The film is written and directed by Phillip Kaplan of The Blade and narrated by longtime TV personality Jerry Anderson. The tanker jackknifed on a curve on Anthony Wayne Trail, burst into flames, and then exploded. The injured in the June 10, 1961, fire included 38 children and a dozen firefighters. “The documentary includes interviews with firefighters that were at the scene that day and little-seen video of the fire and explosion,” Sheldon Collins, spokesman for Toledo Fire and Rescue, said in a news release. A premiere of the film at Imagination Station earlier this year drew 300 people.
Eclectic guitar: Local filmmaker works with Ohio music legend on new documentary and album
BOWLING GREEN — The opening scene of Matt Donahue’s documentary Skip McDonald: One Man-One Night...One Life in Music provides a riveting moment. There stands Skip “Little Axe” McDonald amidst the children’s section of Grounds For Thought in Bowling Green. Armed with his trusty guitar, which had provided music for everyone from Sugarhill Gang to Sinead O’Connor to Donna Summer, McDonald addresses the crowd. “I’ve had a very mixed up musical career that started with gospel, blues, went to funk, a little jazz kind of thing, hip hop, reggae, dub ... and now I’m all messed up,” said McDonald, 75. “My daddy used to say there’s only two kinds of music — the kind you like and the kind you don’t.” McDonald doesn’t get hung up on labels or genres. To him, music is music.
Perrysburg's Blue Pacific Grill to celebrate being around for 20 years
Blue Pacific Grill has survived many events in its history. According to owner Kirk Falknor, actually being around for 20 years is almost a miracle. Mr. Falknor and his wife, Becky, were living in Greenville, Ohio, when they first heard about the establishment. “Our kids, Brandon Falknor and Kasey Moon, were at Bowling Green State University when this place opened,” Mr. Falknor said. “They both were working here and told me how much they loved it. My wife and I ended up buying it through the Wood County court. Eighteen years later we are still going strong and still loving the business.”
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.