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BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT

Sikma Odds n ends

Sep_2023_BusinessSpotlight.jpg

Sikma Odds N Ends Receives Spotlight Award

The Water Valley Area Chamber of Commerce presented the Business Spotlight Award to Sikma Odds N Ends on Monday, Sept. 11. Launched in 2016, the spotlight award honors merchants, businesses and individuals who excel in their support of the community and are involved in local activities.

Owners Bill Sikma and his wife, Tina, took a leap of faith when they pursued his lifelong dream to open his own shop. Bill has always loved working on anything with a motor since he was a child. He previously worked for Case International, Chandler Motor Company and was a certified technician for Express Oil. Bill and Tina were both raised in Water Valley and left in 2004. In December, 2019, they decided it was time to pursue this dream and move back to their hometown. They had land and a house to come to, so they moved the family home.

“It was a scary decision, but we went on faith. We knew if we waited any longer we would never do it,” Tina explained.

With the pandemic hitting in early 2020, everything slowed down including construction on the new shop. Bill and Mike Eubanks were able to do all of the dirt work for the building – old friends working together to make a dream come through. Once that was completed, the contractors started construction.

“When the slab was poured, it all became real,” Bill said. “The building went up pretty quick once the crews arrived.”

The crews worked at night with large spotlights as much as possible to avoid the blazing summer heat. Construction was finally completed and Sikma Odds & Ends opened Monday, Sept. 14, 2020. 

“We have been very blessed with a growing customer base,” Bill said. “We are so thankful for the support from people in Water Valley and surrounding communities. Even being gone so many years, we still had some long-term relationships with people in Water Valley. Their support and spreading the word has been a blessing. We have been able to develop new relationships and new business from this.”

Bill is a one-man show but will do everything he can to provide exceptional service for his customers. With the exception of boats and motorcycles, he works on pretty much anything with a motor – cars, trucks, tractors, ATVS, golf carts, lawn mowers, RVs and others.

Tina is a realtor with McMinn Realty & Land Company and a health coach, while also working alongside Bill in the business. The couple have two children, Taylor and Ward. Taylor is an entrepreneur with a custom-made children’s clothing business (Mini Made Magnolias) and the mother of their beautiful granddaughter, Lorelai. Ward is a junior at Ole Miss in the Bachelor of Fine Arts program.

“It is our pleasure to be back and to be able to serve the needs of our fellow Water Vallians and others,” Bill said.

Sikma Odds N Ends is located at 8802 Hwy. 32.

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Mulberry lane resale shoppe

BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT - MULBERRY LANE RESALE SHOPPE

Mulberry Lane Resale Shoppe was presented the Business Spotlight Award by the Water Valley Area Chamber of Commerce on Monday, February 12.

First launched by the Chamber in 2016, the award honors merchants, businesses and individuals who excel in their support of the community and are involved in local activities.

Mulberry Lane Resale Shoppe opened its doors in March of 2023 and is the brainchild of Clant Harrison and his wife, Katelynn Dillard. They run the shop together, and often bring their 2 year old daughter, Rosemary, to work with them.

Clant grew up in Pontotoc, where he learned an appreciation of all things history from his father, Dr. Charles Harrison. As a teen, Clant developed a love for running that brought him to Water Valley for the first time. “I ran a lot of road races when I was a youngster. One of my favorites each year was at the Watermelon Carnival. The heat was tough, but the festival was a delight, and the fresh watermelon really hit the spot” said Clant.

Clant graduated from Pontotoc high school in 1998, then attended college at Ole Miss and continued to frequent Water Valley. “My friends and I regularly roundtripped to the Valley to peruse our favorite shop, Blue Heaven. From first moment in that shop, I’ve been addicted to vintage” says Clant.

Since graduating college, Clant has made a career in the restaurant industry, where he was able to hone his skills and develop a love of cooking. Since 2013, Clant has practiced his culinary arts at Lenora’s Restaurant in Oxford, where he was head chef until 2022 and worked on his specialty of making fresh pasts from scratch.

The year 2013 was special for another reason; it was also the year that he met his wife, Katelynn. Katelynn moved to this area in 2011 when she started at Ole Miss. She graduated with a degree in Biology, but loves gardening, environmental education and art.

She worked for the USDA after college, but her true passion is teaching, and has worked as an outdoor educator ever since. “While I was in college, I shopped a lot at Rip-It-Up, it’s one of the things that brought me to the Valley, and it was the first vintage shop I’d ever stepped foot in. Water Valley is such a warm and welcoming place, the whole town feels like the neighborhood I grew up in, and I knew I wanted to start a family here” says Katelynn.

In 2018, the couple bought their first house, got married in the backyard and made Water Valley their home. They have been renovating their turn of the century farmhouse, and decorating it with vintage finds ever since. “It’s important to us to preserve the historical character, and charm of our old house. It’s the main thing that got me interested in vintage, and the perspective we’ve gained from restoring our home has, to a large degree, shaped everything we stock at Mulberry Lane” says Katelynn.

The couple approaches running Mulberry Lane from a conservation standpoint. “A big goal of mine is to salvage as many materials as possible. Mississippi is such a beautiful place, I’d hate to see our resources get thrown out, and languish in a landfill” says Katelynn.

But Clant has a different perspective “every item in the shop has a unique story, and there’s a spiderweb of history behind it that connects them all, revealing the story of times past, and learning about these relics from our community’s history can help shape our future.”

Clant and Katelyn started collecting vintage together when they were dating, but it quickly became a shared passion which led them to selling vintage via a booth at the BTC and at yard sales, and they used the money they made from that to open their storefront. “We started Mulberry Lane as a way to make a living on our own, for our growing family, everything we do is with our daughter, Rosemary in mind” says Clant.

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