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From
Corporate Life to Country Life The Murrays insist that it wasn't as radical a change as one might think. Jack was raised in suburban Philadelphia and Suzanne was originally from Davenport, Iowa. Unlike many native-born New Yorkers, they felt an affinity for the woods. They often spent their weekends away from the city in their country home in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Jack says, "You know you have a vocation and an avocation. My avocation was playing in the dirt and my vocation was corporate life." They describe their move from the 7 acres in Bucks County to the 130 in Lycoming as a "ramp up." Nor have they completely left the corporate world behind. As part of The Knockroe Group, the couple's part-time consulting business, they occasionally leave Hughesville to meet with clients. Suzanne says, "We do just enough to keep our hand in," and Jack adds, "It keeps us current." They use their business skills for local volunteer work as well. Suzanne and Jack co-chaired the Hughesville sesquicentennial celebration committee, which planned the 2002 celebration including a parade, exhibits, live entertainment, and fireworks. They are secretary and president, respectively, of the Lycoming Woodland Owners' Association and they hold similar leadership positions with the VIP-Coverts Steering Committee. The excellent communications skills that the Murrays developed as executives have contributed to their work in forest stewardship. Believing strongly in the power of woodlands associations to promote sustainable forestry, they are active in helping interested landowners form such associations. Suzanne says, "Those are the people that are on the ground talking to other woodland owners who are thinking about say, a timber harvest, and to have those people educated is really the way we're going to move the ball forward in forest stewardship." Soon after they arrived at Knockroe (the Murray's name for their woodland), their neighbor, then district forester, Bud Kiehl, mentored their stewardship efforts. Kiehl helped them mark timber stand improvement areas and build recreational trails. Drafting a stewardship management plan, they decided not to harvest, but to maintain the forest, keeping it healthy and beautiful and welcoming for wildlife. They do much of the work themselves, from clearing out trash along their mile-long section of a township road to planting vegetation around the pond for wildlife cover. They have named and made signs for their trails: oak hill, scenic overlook, bear, and elderberry. Jack enjoys the maintenance too much to consider it work. "I love cutting lawns. You know, sense of accomplishment. Then you look behind and it looks so good and it smells nice." Suzanne has found the lifestyle she craved for years. As a financial vice president, her boss would call at any hour on nights or weekends to discuss business. When she wasn't working she spent much of her time in the car, commuting back and forth from Bucks County. "I used to be driving and I'd look into people's windows and I'd see them in front of the television or reading a book and relaxing and I'd think, some day I'm not going to be doing this commute. I'm not going to be doing this drive. I'm going to be relaxing at my own place-and here we are." According to the Murrays, every day at Knockroe is a beautiful day. Jack loves to watch the low cloud cover in the trees. Suzanne enjoys cooking with the culinary herbs she grows in her herb garden. Knockroe is the name of the township in Ireland from which Jack's family emigrated. Although the Murrays haven't crossed oceans to reach Hughesville, Pennsylvania, they agree-the New York City corporate world is a different world. "We just felt that we'd had enough of it and it was time for a change," Jack says. "Looking back, it was a great decision for us. It's not a good decision for everybody necessarily." So why was it a good decision for them? Suzanne explains, "We felt like we had accomplished what we had set out to do for our individual careers and we were ready to make the switch." The greatest accomplishment of their careers, they say, was helping others achieve success. Jack says, "It's nice to be able to look back and remember whom you've helped." No longer immersed in the business world, the Murrays'desire to help others continues with their contribution to the Pennsylvania Forest Stewardship Program. They may have retired, but the Murrays have not stopped making a difference. |
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Last modified Thursday, August 14, 2008 14:44 |