Thiensville Lifestyle Coalition
The TLC includes providers of health, wellness and quality of life services and products who choose to locate their businesses in our community.
The goal: to recognize health, wellness & Thiensville style.
Wednesday Walk- July 28 at 7:00 p.m.- Curious about the structure on the corner of Cedarburg and Mequon Roads? Thiensville Trustee David Lange, who served on the committee that made this dream a reality wil lead our walk to the Gateway on Wednesday! Please meet at the Thiensville Village Hall at 6:55 pm. Walk will begin promptly at 7:00 pm.
Non perishable food for Family Sharing is welcomed.
The TLC Wednesday Walks are back! Come out, meet your neighbors and have some fun on our themed walks, starting on Thiensville Village Park, 250 Elm Street.
YES-WEDNESDAY WALKS WILL BE BACK IN JULY! We look forward to walks led by TPD Chief Kleppin, Dog Walk with Fromm, walk to the new Mequon Thiensville Welcome structure, and before we know it, October and the Ghost Walk with Scott Shully! Stay tuned!
Our first Wednesday Walk is less than a week away!! We welcome Ron Heinritz fro Thiensville’s Historic Preservation Commission which will highlight our Village’s first bank sites.
We will meet at 6:55 pm at the Municipal Center for a walk that will depart promptly at 7:00 pm. You are encouraged to practice COVID-19 appropriate behaviors. Thanks!
The Thiensville Lifestyle Coalition is proud to announce the first two of our summer Wednesday Walks. We look forward to seeing you at 6:55 p.m. at the Village Municipal Center on Elm Street. Please see details regarding some “homework” for your family and you to do before the July 22 Walk.
Wednesday July 8– “ Historic Walk”. We’ll kick off this year’s series with a walk highlighting our Village’s Historic District. Don’t miss this opportunity to explore with us some sites not normally open to the public. We will also accept decorated rocks which will be used for our next Walk.
Wednesday July 22– “Rockin’ Thiensville Walk” To prepare for the walk we are inviting you to decorate a rock that will be hidden along the walking route. You can pick up 2 rocks outside the Interior Garden Art Studio at 100 South Main Street.The buckets of rocks will be on the porch at the Green Bay Road door.
Decorate these rocks with paint, markers, nail polish, glitter, beads, etc. Keep one rock for yourself and return the other to the Studio by July 20th.
Then join us on the Rockin’ Thiensville Walk on Wednesday July 22 at 6:30 p.m. Have fun creating and see you on the Walk.
This video with Dr.Gary Lewis explains why immune system boosters are useful before you contract a virus, but can cause harm after the virus is active in your body. He also reviews supplements and dosages that can make your immune system stronger and help you resist infection.
https://youtu.be/BjzrWGAcUW4
COVID-19 Report - Dr. Gary Lewis - Ep3 - Recommended nutritional supplements & daily dosages In Episode 3 of the COVID-19 Special Report series, Dr. Gary Lewis of the Thiensville Health Alliance gives the latest update on what we know about the coron...
Dr. Lewis gives us some local updates and answers questions. This video taught me some new things I didn't already know. I especially like the ending. The views expressed are by Dr. Lewis and don't necessarily reflect the views of the TLC.
COVID-19 Special Report with Dr. Gary Lewis - Episode 2 Dr. Gary Lewis of the Thiensville Health Alliance give the latest update on what we know about the coronavirus & COVID-19. Also, Dr. Lewis provides some reco...
Special Report on COVID-19 with Dr. Gary Lewis
https://youtu.be/vi70Oq8ezqo
Dr. Gary Lewis of the Thiensville Health Alliance shares what we know about the COVID-19 Corona virus and takes questions from the community. Questions Facilitated by Nick & Andy Mayerson, produced by Studio 3xd. Recorded March 22nd, 2020.
Special Report on COVID-19 with Dr. Gary Lewis Dr. Gary Lewis of the Thiensville Health Alliance shares what we know about the COVID-19 Corona virus and takes questions from the community. Quesitons Facil...
Do you have questions related to the coronavirus? Send your questions to Dr. Gary Lewis, M.D. [email protected]. Dr. Lewis has been the medical officer for the Northshore Health Department since 1994. He has volunteered to educate Thiensville residents on the COVID-19 virus. In a video that will be posted next week, Dr. Lewis will answer your questions and explain the facts/impact of the virus for us here in Thiensville.
Many thanks to Dr. Lewis of Thiensville Family Healthcare, and Michael Klug of Studio 3xd for donating their time, knowledge and talents for the benefit of Thiensville residents.
This video will replace Dr. Lewis's scheduled talk on March 25, 2020. The video will be posted here when completed.
Thiensville Lifestyle Coalition - Creating Community Around Wellness.
Thiensville Lifestyle Coalition Wednesday Talks - "True Love Rules – Attract Love, Create Intimacy, and Ease Loneliness”- for people who are single or in a relationship, presented by Dr. Karin Flodstrom, Licensed Psychologist. Join me for this feel good presentation. February 26, 2020, 6:30 to 7:30 pm, Thiensville Health Alliance, 136 North Main Street, Thiensville, WI, 3rd Floor
Thiensville Health Alliance To Present Free Talks on Healthy Living to the Community
*October 28, 2019—Thiensville, WI--Thiensville Health Alliance is pleased to announce the lineup for its Fall 2019 Healthy Living Speaker Series taking place November 6-December 3. The talks are free and open to the public and take place in the 3rd floor community room of Thiensville Health Alliance located at 136 N. Main Street, Thiensville. The scheduled talks are as follows:
*Wednesday, November 6, 6:30-7:30 p.m.: Consciousness Rising: Where We Are, Where We Have Been, Where We Are Going
With so many huge challenges in almost every aspect of our outer lives, what is happening with our “inner” lives? Is the old paradigm of human consciousness being challenged as well? Many astute observers from many disciplines feel it is. Let’s take a look and gain some insight as to what is happening within as well as without. One hint: our old relationship with time is up for grabs.
This talk is presented by Ron Moor, spiritual director of The Sheltering Oak and energy healer, who has been a student of the evolution of human consciousness for over 40 years.
*Wednesday, November 13, 6:30-7:30 p.m.: 7 Practical Ways to Get Healthy and Live Your Best Life
In this information-packed presentation, psychotherapist Jenny Strom, MA, LPC of North Shore Center will share 7 practical ways to promote a healthy mind-body and gut-brain connection and how to add a layer of Mindfulness to them in order to live your best life. This presentation is for you if you want to:
• Reduce stress, anxiety, and the intensity of your negative emotions
• Feel better in your body
• Let go of what you can’t control
• Sharpen your concentration skills
• Reduce likelihood of conditions related to heart disease, stroke and type 2 diabetes
• Reduce pain sensations
• Improve sleep
• Live a longer and more connected life!
Jenny will cover how Mindfulness tools used in conjunction with 7 Practical Healthy Habits can ultimately give you choices and power over your thoughts, your feelings, your health and your life!
*Wednesday, November 13, 6:30-7:30 p.m.: Low Dose Naltrexone: A Promising Treatment for Autoimmune Disease, Thyroid Disorders, Fibromyalgia, Multiple Sclerosis & More
Naltrexone is a little known generic drug that holds revolutionary potential for treating Autoimmune Diseases, Depression, Thyroid Disorders, Fibromyalgia, Crohn's Disease, MS and more when administered in small daily doses.
Pharmacist Omar Eliwa, owner of Welltopia Pharmacy, will share the most recent research and applications of this promising treatment.
According to David Gluck, M.D., a New York-based board-certified specialist in both Internal Medicine and Preventive Medicine, “Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) may well be the most important therapeutic breakthrough in over fifty years. It provides a new, safe and inexpensive method of medical treatment by mobilizing the natural defenses of one’s own immune system...LDN substantially reduces health care costs and improves treatment of a wide array of diseases.”
*Tuesday, December 3, 6:30-7:30 p.m.: Female Sexual Dysfunction (FSD): What It Is, What You Can Do About It
Join Danish Siddiqui, M.D. OB/Gyn and co-founder of RemedyNow Aesthetics for a presentation about optimizing your intimate wellness. The purpose of this presentation is to provide an overview of female sexual dysfunction (FSD), to outline criteria for diagnosis, and to discuss currently recommended management strategies based on the best available evidence.
Topics covered will include ways to address common issues, such as:
• Low sexual desire/libido
• Vaginal laxity and dryness
• Pelvic floor dysfunction
• Painful in*******se
• Difficulty achieving or**sm
• Hormonal imbalance
• Mild stress incontinence
• Sexual health complications after cancer
• Menopause symptoms
Dr. Siddiqui will discuss the very latest ways to support improving female intimate wellness, including:
• Bio-identical hormones
• Laser vaginal therapy
• Healthy lifestyle choices
Dr. Siddiqui is a member of the nationally acclaimed Intimate Wellness Institute and certified by the International Society of Cosmetic Gynecology.
Thiensville Health Alliance is a group of independent holistic health practitioners and therapists all working under one roof at 136 N. Main Street in the heart of Thiensville, WI. The practitioners at Thiensville Health Alliance believe achieving optimal health is more than just resolution of the medical condition. It is being proactive about changing the course of a patient’s health away from pain and disease toward healing and wellness. At Thiensville Health Alliance the practitioners provide the key ingredients to work together with patients to achieve this goal. www.thiensvillehealthalliance.com
Please RSVP for each talk to [email protected]
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Thiensville Health Alliance Thiensville Health Alliance, ProHealth Chiropractic, CranioSacral Therapy, Margie Jankowski, Ron Moor, Energy, Gary Lewis, Zuza's Way, Dagmara Beine, Ryan Beine, IV therapy, Prolozone therapy, Lisa Lacy, Rob Reader, Medication Management, Therese Laeckle, Maria Viall, Nutritional Practicioners, Fysi...
At Halloween - Coping with Candy
By Karin Flodstrom, Psy.D.
As our trick or treaters get ready for another Halloween, parents often worry about their child’s candy consumption. How can you encourage your child’s celebration while minimizing the negative effects of sugar? Karen Krchma and I put our heads together to come up with some suggestions. Karen Krchma is a Registered Dietitian Nutritionist. She is also a mother and has raised four children. Her practice “New Newtrition,” is located at 184 S. Main Street in Thiensville.
I am a licensed psychologist. My practice is in the little yellow Victorian next to glaze in Thiensville. Also a mother, I have raised one child. Both Karen and I have experience in the treatment of clients struggling with eating disorders. Our hope is that these ideas will help parents encourage healthy eating patterns in their children.
Keep it Positive
It’s important to educate our children about the health benefits of food. Children need to know that some foods are less nutritious than others. However, setting up power struggles and food fears can be counterproductive. Educate your children about which food helps them grow strong and healthy, while you avoid shaming or fearful messages about junk food. Encourage your child to focus on how different foods feel in their bodies. Does this food help them become strong and energetic? Or do they feel sick to their stomach or sad? Don’t tell your child how they should feel. Encourage them to listen to their bodies and notice how they feel.
Food we criticize can paradoxically become more attractive. If we fight with our children about the food they eat, we set up a power struggle and may make the forbidden food more attractive. Children can become more determined to win the power struggle than they are to eat the food their bodies most desire. It is better to help your children develop an internal guidance system that naturally and instinctively leads them to choose the foods that best nourish their bodies.
Karen strongly recommends that parents set an example of balanced eating with a wide variety of fresh, whole foods available for children to choose from. We are in a world of quick food. Ripping open a premade package of some delight to snack on or pop in the microwave for a meal is easy but may not be the healthiest choice. Families are busy. Sometimes you must eat less healthy food in order to get through your day. At the same time, supporting the habit of washing, cutting up, and enjoying fresh whole food is a greatly desired practice. Intuiting what your body wants right now to nourish itself is certainly welcome and essential to feeling satisfied and energized. Karen suggests involving your children in meal prep as much as possible. Even once a week is helpful. Children love vegetable soup even more when they have participated in the cooking process.
Very few of us were raised with the principles of intuitive eating. Most of us grew up believing that we need to have strict control of our eating. For this reason, intuitive eating can seem misguided, foreign, scary and impossibly idealistic. However, this is an approach that has been shown to be very successful. My own daughter, Clare, is an intuitive eater. Clare was encouraged to eat what she wanted, when she wanted. I told her to eat when she was hungry and stop when she was full. I used a method we called “special snack.” I put small amounts of a wide variety of food on a tray. Clare ate the foods she found most appealing.
When Clare was growing up, I kept a full cookie jar and candy dish in our home. She was allowed to eat as much as she wanted at any time. As a result, Clare had very little interest in cookies or candy. To this day, she has no trouble controlling her eating. In contrast, Clare’s friends from more restricted households had trouble controlling their consumption of the cookies and candy when they visited our home. They had no internal guidance system to help them monitor their eating.
Even though we recommend intuitive eating, it’s also useful to know that children may need some time to become accustomed to new food. Karen recommends the “One Bite Tasting Challenge.” It often takes about 10 taste tests to become accustomed to a new flavor. Broccoli is a good example of this. Karen’s four children responded well to charting 10 tastes of a new food and observing if their response to the food changed over time.
Please be aware, when your transition your child from regular eating to intuitive eating, food that was previously restricted will often initially be eaten in larger quantities. However, with time, eating will stabilize into a healthier pattern. Another warning – so many families today live with considerable stress. It is more difficult to access intuitive impulses when your body is flooded with stress hormones. If your family is undergoing a period of high stress, it may make sense to focus on alleviating stress before you teach your children intuitive eating principles.
To learn more about intuitive eating for children, check out this excellent article:
https://www.todaysdietitian.com/newarchives/0318p14.shtml
Susie the Switch Witch
Ask your child if they would like to trade some of their candy for a new toy, book, etc. Let them set aside the candy they want to leave for Susie the Switch Witch.
The Freezer Method
This exercise is most effective if parents do this with their children. Place the Halloween candy in the freezer. Each day you and your child pick out 1 to 3 pieces to enjoy. Then follow these steps:
1) Enjoy a satisfying, healthy meal. Then bring out the candy.
2) Smell the candy while still in the wrapper. What smells do you and your child notice?
3) Unwrap the candy and smell again. Has the smell changed?
4) Look at the candy. What can you tell about the taste just be looking at it? Is this a candy that will taste good?
5) Lick the candy once. What do you taste? Do you like the taste? Is this one of your favorite tastes?
6) Drink something.
7) Eat the candy very slowly. Savor the flavors and let them fill your mouth. Enjoy the flavors as much as you can for as long as you can.
8) Swallow.
9) Drink a beverage after each bite.
10) When eating candy this way, do you feel satisfied with one piece? Or do you want another?
11) Notice, how does this candy feel in your body after you have eaten it?
Bartering
Karen’s children traded candy with their sibs to get their own personal favorites. This process teaches discernment and thoughtfulness about eating. Then her children were allowed to keep their treat bags in their rooms. They were in charge of when they ate their candy. Karen found that her children eventually tired of their Halloween candy. They were ready to throw away the rest of their bags by Christmas.
Do you have some tips you’d like to share? Please send your ideas to Karin ([email protected]) or Karen ([email protected]). We would also be happy to answer questions.
Happy Halloween from the Thiensville Lifestyle Coalition!
The Thiensville Lifestyle Coalition, a committee of the Thiensville Business Association, sponsored Wednesday Walks on the second and fourth Wednesday of each month from June to October. Our Ghost Walk October 9th had over 80 participants! Look for our walks again next year. We will be back in January 2019 for our Speakers Series hosted at the Thiensville Health Alliance Building.
The TLC includes providers of health, wellness and quality of life services and products who choose to locate their businesses in our community. The goal: to recognize health, Thiensville style.
For more information about upcoming TLC events, please go to https://thiensvillebusiness.com/thiensville-lifestyle-coalition/
and that's a wrap folks! What a Season! A special THANK YOU to Village BP for donating coffee and donuts for our vendors every morning of the market! It surely helps with the long day! We love you Theresa Umhoefer & Dan Umhoefer!
Today is the FINAL Village Market of the season! Open from 9am - 3pm! Thank you to all of our sponsors and volunteers - without you, we couldn't make this happen!
Ascension Columbia St. Mary's, Port Washington State Bank, Suburban Motors Harley-Davidson, Thiensville Village Park, Thiensville Village Park Re-Imagined, Thiensville Fire Department, Thiensville, WI - Village Government, Andy LaFond & his Park's Crew, Thiensville Business Association
Phil Eckert, owner of glaze, tells stories about ghosts he and his employees have seen over the years. Glaze, located along Green Bay Road in downtown Thiensville, was one of four stops on the first-ever Ghosts of Thiensville walk last night.
Approximately 80 people came along on the Halloween-themed final Wednesday Walk of the season.
Other stops included Heartspace, Shully's Cuisine & Events -- both on Green Bay Road -- and CORE Consulting, the old Leather Strop building at Main Street and Buntrock Avenue.
All the business owners told stories about strange noises, unexplained footsteps and other spooky occurrences they and their workers experienced. Many of the children who came along dressed in Halloween costumes.
There have been eight walks in the season-long Wednesday Walks series. This is the first year of the event organized by the Thiensville Lifestyle Coalition.
Thanks to all who have made this a huge success!
Thiensville Ghost Walk
Wednesday, October 9, 2019
Leader – Scott Shully
Time: Meet at 6:55 pm for a 7:00 start time, projected end time 7:45pm, but the ending can be flexible.
Where: In front of the Thiensville Village Hall
First Stop: Heartspace
Ava Azinger, daughter and office coordinator for her acupuncturist mother, Jori Azinger, will meet in front of the Village Hall and walk with the group to Heartspace. Her two children, Mariah and Ruby will be with her. Ava will tell about her experiences when the walkers get to Heartspace.
2nd Stop: glaze
Phil Eckert, glaze owner will be at their location to tell their ghost story.
3rd Stop: Shully’s
Scott Shully, the walk leader, will talk about their ghost, George.
4th Stop: Core – (The old Leather Strop Salon Building)
Jesse Daily will let the walkers in; but will probably not be able to stay to talk about his ghost. However, if he can fill you in on the recent ghost hunters, that would be great. (I don’t know anything about the ghost hunters myself – only that Barkha told me ghost hunters came around recently and talked to Jesse) A narrative is attached describing Core’s ghost who has been called “Luke.” Scott can read this narrative, or ask someone else to read it, or talk about Luke in his own words.
Narrative about Luke:
Robin Olson, the owner of the Leather Strop Salon, gave an interview to the News Graphic on August 18, 2003 describing his ghostly inhabitant “Luke.” Robin purchased the building in 1972. Built in 1910, the structure was originally a home. The building was remodeled into a landmark downtown funeral home by Louis Bartelt sometime in the 1920’s or 30’s. the building remained a funeral home until about 1966.
Robin’s first real contact with Luke occurred 10 years after he’d been living in the flat above his salon. One winter evening in the early 1980’s, he was watching TV with his two dogs. Suddenly, one of his dogs ran into the kitchen and began growling. “You could see the hackles on the back of her hair stand up. Then my other dog gets up and both of them are standing by the kitchen door.”
Robin went into his bedroom to get his pistol. He loaded it thinking someone was trying to break in through his kitchen window. When he went into the kitchen, he felt a cold wave pass through him. In the doorway he saw a cloudy image about 5 feet tall. It lasted maybe 10 seconds, then it was gone in a whoosh.
Before that encounter, Robin said he had heard Luke for years and years. “You’d hear footsteps coming up and down the stairs and doors closing when I knew no one else was in the house. I had a guest one time who told me, “What the hell have you got in your house? I heard footsteps last night.” His guest says he got out of bed and opened a bedroom door to see an apparition melt into invisibility at the same time as he felt a sudden, steep drop in temperature.
Patsy Ratzel, a nail tech at the Strop also believes she also had an encounter with Luke. Patsy was renting the third-floor apartment. She came home to her apartment one Friday evening in December while there was a Christmas party going on in the salon downstairs. She says, “I went upstairs and went to bed. I had been in bed for maybe 15 minutes and I could hear the sound of footsteps on the carpeting. The footsteps came up to the bed. I knew it couldn’t be anyone from the party because I would have heard them coming up the steps.”
Patsy was too scared to turn around and face the direction of the footsteps. A minute later she heard the footsteps going in the opposite direction. She says, “When I did turn around there was nothing there; so I figure that was my encounter with Luke.”
Robin said he has heard that ghosts only show themselves to a person once. His experience with Luke has suggested this might be the case.
In the 1970’s, officials considered tearing down the building for a parking lot. Lucky for Luke, those plans fell through. Robin never feared Luke. He saw him as a friendly guy, guarding the place and happy he didn’t lose his home back in the 1970’s – It was Robin’s feeling that Luke wouldn’t cause any trouble as long as he was treated like the friendly ghost he is.
The most infamous dead body to pass through the building when it was a funeral home was Isadore (“Izzy”) Pogrob. Pograb, a 300-pound man, had at one time been the owner of the Brass Rail st******se club in downtown Milwaukee. Izzy was killed gangland style January of 1960. His bullet-riddled body was dumped into a cornfield culvert near the Little Menomonee River just off Mequon Road in Mequon. By the time his co**se was found, he was frozen solid. Because Izzy was so large, he had to be hauled out of the culvert with a line-and-winch before being taken to Densow’s funeral home. He was taken into the garage at Densow’s and thawed out before his body was brought inside.
Is Luke Izzy? No one knows of course. Since this was a funeral parlor for many years, Luke could be many people. Luke has never bothered any customers or caused any real trouble. Like Caspar, Luke seems to be a friendly ghost.
Gearing up for a great day at the market! Open at 9!
TLC Wednesday Walk “Thiensville Ghost Stories”
with chef extraordinaire Scott Shully
by Karin Flodstrom
Learn about the spooky side of Thiensville and join chef Scott Shully for our Thiensville Ghost Walk on Wednesday, October 9, 2019 at 7:00 pm. Muster your courage and meet us for our final Thiensville Lifestyle Coalition Wednesday Walk at 6:55 pm in front of the Village Hall. If it rains, bring your umbrella. The ghosts aren’t afraid of a little rain, and neither are we.
This walk will not only scare you; it will also warm your heart. One ghost is of the friendly “Caspar” variety. He or she creates healing spaces and soothes cranky babies. Other spirits are more frightening. They slam doors, throw things, walk with heavy footsteps, change room temperatures and scare employees. Thiensville ghost stories include: a child who looks out of a front window when no one is home, an orb that swirls, and a visage that appears and disappears. Some of Thiensville’s ghosts have names – George and Luke. Thiensville has no shortage of ghost stories and questions about their otherworldly inhabitants.
Charismatic, creative and energetic, Scott Shully’s business has been a Thiensville tradition for over 30 years. Beth and Scott purchased their first building at 154 Green Bay Road in the early 1980’s. The Shullys wanted to live European style with their business on the first floor and their residence on the upper floors. Beth was expecting their eldest child, Nina. Buying the building took every penny they had. The young couple even collateralized their wedding gifts for the loan, down to their typewriter and wedding candleholders. Shully’s Cuisine and Events was born. Scott and their parents did most of the renovations themselves. Jake and Hadley quickly joined their sister, Nina, blessing the Shullys with 3 children under the age of 4. As the children grew, so did the business. An interesting fact: Shullys is a woman-owned business. Beth owns 51% to Scott’s 49%.
The kids were raised in this first location for 9 years before the family moved their business next door to 146 Green Bay Road. They bought a home in Mequon. Their 3 children launched into the world- Nina as a teacher, Jake in New York City in the marketing and retail department for Major League Baseball, and Hadley as a chef like her father. Beth and Scott were shocked and thrilled when all three children recently moved back to rejoin the family business.
The Shullys enjoy telling their story. They also enjoy telling others’ stories. When you cater an event from Shully’s, they listen to your story and design a menu and celebration that reflects your tastes, interests and life. Their clients do not pick from a standardized menu. Everything is custom.
Other communities have encouraged Shullys to relocate, but they refuse to move. Scott explains, “This village is friendly – for example the police chief says hello. Thiensville is a great place to work. The local government handles every issue capably. I like seeing so many familiar and new faces. The park is beautiful and a major draw. Our history is here. Why would I want to move?”
In fact, they just added another location across the street from their current business. Shully’s ATS stands for “Across the Street” and features culinary classes and events. Upcoming classes include Stocks and Soups, Wine and Cheese, Winter Wreath and Centerpiece making classes. ATS also provides an additional meeting place for parties.
The Shullys are a part of Thiensville’s story. Scott's walk will tell another part of our story –Ghosts! The TLC’s last Wednesday Walk will include 4 businesses – Heartspace, glaze, Shully’s and Core. At Heartspace, Ava Azinger will tell some amazing tales about their friendly, healing ghost. glaze’s story, told by Phil Eckert, may raise the hair on the back of your neck. glaze attracts more than just earthly children. You may also find Shully’s Catering stories about the ghost they call “George” a bit frightening. Watch out for flying objects! The Thiensville Ghost Walk will end at Core with an account about a ghost named “Luke.” Jesse Daily will let you in to hear about Luke’s many antics and the ghost hunters who recently came looking for him.
This is the last Wednesday Walk of this year. The Thiensville Lifestyle Coalition will be back in January for our Speakers Series hosted at the Thiensville Health Alliance Building. Happy Halloween and have a wonderful holiday season. BOO!
The Thiensville Lifestyle Coalition, a committee of the Thiensville Business Association, sponsored Wednesday Walks on the second and fourth Wednesday of each month from June to October. Look for our walks again next year.
The TLC includes providers of health, wellness and quality of life services and products who choose to locate their businesses in our community. The goal: to recognize health, Thiensville style. Each walk featured a different Thiensville-related theme.
Please help the TLC create community around wellness. Walk with us, celebrate beautiful Thiensville, and expand your mind with the Thiensville Ghost Walk. All are welcome, including dogs! Optional: We will be collecting non-perishable food items for donation to Family Sharing of Ozaukee County.
For more information about upcoming TLC events, please go to https://thiensvillebusiness.com/thiensville-lifestyle-coalition/