Black-Eyed Susan along the Pumpkinvine Nature Trail

Black-Eyed Susan along the Pumpkinvine Nature Trail

Sunday, April 3, 2016

The Shorts are an ‘example of what every town or city wants’

On a Thurs­day in May 2011, Spencer Short accepted a job to help manage three bike shops in Michigan.
The very next day, the owner of Pumpkinvine Cyclery in Mid­dlebury offered to sell him that bike shop and they shook hands on the deal.

On the Sunday two days later, he and his wife, Brittany, found out she was pregnant with their first child.

“It was just like, whoa,” he said. “Within two weeks we were running the shop.”

Nearly five years later, they just moved the shop into a new, larger building at 420 N. Main St., Middlebury. Spencer, 29, and Brittany, 30, work together, along with employee Neil Yoder, to sell, rent and main­tain bikes.

Their proximity to Pumpkin­vine Nature Trail is a huge fac­tor in growing the business, in needing a larger space. “We wouldn’t be there without the trail,” he said.

There are other bike shops in Elkhart County, probably more than you think. Other places also offer great service and have
been doing so for years. What’s remarkable about the Shorts is how they’re living in and into a community in a way they never expected.

The couple went to Northridge. He graduated from Goshen College right before those fateful days in May. She was working as the manager of a dental office in South Bend, working 60 to 65 hours a week in addition to a longer-than-de­sired commute by car. It wasn’t very long until she quit her job and went to work in the shop.

In late 2010, as the Great Re­cession was abating, Brian Cole started the bike shop. Seven months later, he got his job back and found Short to take over. “I never thought I would own a business in Middlebury,” Short said. “We’re rooted.”

They’re buying a house. Their kids are ages 4 and 2. Rather than moving to Michigan, they’re operating a bike shop in their hometown.

“They’re a model example of what every town or city wants,” said Grace Bonewitz, executive director of the Middlebury Chamber of Commerce.

Towns need businesses that prevail through the decades. Middlebury has them, ranging from Cardinal Bus at more than 90 years and Das Dutchman Essenhaus at 45. Yet they also need new places to serve changing needs. “We’re going
to be growing. The question is going to be starting the busi­nesses,” Bonewitz said.

When the recent Vibrant Communities conversation happened in Middlebury, the main topic was trails, particu­larly ones that bikes or pedes­trians
use. Residents want the Ridge Run Trail to be completed. They want Middlebury and Bristol to be connected with one, Bonewitz said.

More bike trails would be good for bike business, but that’s not why Spencer helped build the Bonneyville Mill mountain bike trail. He just wanted a place to
ride his bike. He rode the trail in Warsaw, ate at the restaurants there, and wanted that experi­ence closer to home. “You can be part of a change in your commu­nity,” he said.

So he and others built a trail. It gets less traffic than the Pump­kinvine trail, and that may al­ways be. Aside from the thou­sands of local residents who pack the Pumpkinvine on sum­mer days, tourists are coming. They’re coming from Chicago, Fort Wayne and Indianapolis. But they’re also coming from Australia, China and Spain.

“We never expected there would be as much tourists as
there is,” said Brittany.

On a Saturday, half the cus­tomers at Pumpkinvine Cyclery are from more than 30 miles away, she said. They rent them bikes and sell them accessories.

They praise the other young people in Middlebury opening businesses and making the town a place they’re excited to live, a place with more to do. They cite Austin Slabach at 41 Degrees North, a downtown restaurant featuring craft brew, locally raised food and a different vibe.

“There are younger couples wanting this community to thrive, so they’re doing what they can to make it better,” Brittany said.

Conversations are underway about how to make our com­munity better and what we want. Bike trails are high on the list. But it also takes the Shorts and others like them who take chances, invest and find ways to serve as they make a living.

“We like to see things im­prove.
We like to fix things that need fixed. We want to see things grow and improve,” Spencer said.

A few people like that and you have a vibrant community.


Marshall V. King is community edi­tor for The Elkhart Truth and food columnist for Flavor 574. You can reach him at 574-296-5805, mk­ing@ elkharttruth.com, and on Twit­ter, Instagram and Facebook.





Brittany and Spencer Short have operated Pumpkinvine Cyclery for nearly five years.

Elkhart Truth photo/Marshall V. King





MARSHALL V. KING

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The variety on the Pumpkinvine Nature Trail

Reading the book, A walk in the woods, by Bill Bryson, I was struck by the comment he made about his walk on the Appalachian Trail, the subject of that book. His comment was that for all the joy the trail gives to hikers, he finds the change of pace that results from leaving the mile-after-mile of wooded trail and going into a town very refreshing. That small change makes the trip more interesting and breaks up the monotony on the endless walking in the woods. He promotes the idea of variety  -- some wilderness and trees and also some civilization as in a motel or restaurant -- as the more enjoyable way to hike.

When I read that, I thought of the Pumpkinvine Nature Trail and the fact that it also has more variety than some trails I've been on, like the Little Miami Scenic Trail in Ohio. It is a lovely trail, but it is pretty much the same mile after mile. The Pumpkinvine from Goshen to Middlebury in contrast, has wooded areas that give way to open fields, another wooded area and then another open space. I think that variety is one of its charming features.