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INSIDE BARN SWALLOW ARTISTS page 3 PERFECT ATTENDANCE page 4 C.C.C. GIFT 0F CHRISTMAS PAST page 5 HISTORIC BUILDINGS page 7 CARDINAL POINT page8 HOLIDAY EVENTS page 11 MUTUAL AID page 13 BILL DOLLINS page 14 FLYING TO THE RESCUE page 16 TURKISH STAR page 17 SCHOOL REDISTRICTING page 18 NEW TRAIL page 20 NEW IN TOWN page 21 MT. ZION’S ANNIVERSARY page 22 BETHLEHEM VILLAGE page 23 CROSSWORD page 24 SANTA DROPS IN page 28 CROZET gazette the DECEMBER 2006 VOL. 1, NO.7 crozetgazette.com DCA Prepares for Downtown Zoning Changes Anticipating the County’s hiring of an urban planning consultant who will draft zoning rule changes for a special downtown Crozet district, the recently formed Downtown Crozet Association has begun investigating the relevant ordinances for themselves. At a meeting at Mountainside Senior Living Dec. 4 they discussed building setback requirements that leave virtually all the downtown properties with no space left to build on should they need to make a change. Downtown business owners are trying to become sufficiently informed about the planning rules to be able to assert their own specific ideas about what changes would be effective. Discussion also touched on building height limits, the status of Crozet Avenue under the County’s entrance corridor policy, and a regional storm water drainage solution. The thorny problem of defining a flexible parking requirement will be discussed at the DCA’s next meeting Jan. 8, and the issue of how Crozet businesses and property owners will influence the oversight of the new district is slated The Crozet Volunteer Fire Department Auxiliary hosted the 2nd Annual Crozet Christmas Parade on Saturday, Dec. 2. The parade went through downtown, ending at the Crozet Firehouse where the children young and old met with Santa. Story on page 28. ASAP Asks Crozet for Backing on County Growth Limit Some 400 affordable housing units are slated to be built in the Crozet Growth Area, Ron White, the County’s affordable housing planner, told the Crozet Community Advisory Council at its Nov. 16 meeting, all proffered by developers during recent rezoning actions. None have actually been built yet. White did not know how many of the houses in Crozet are currently Albemarle County should ask what its optimum population size would be and base its growth policies on the answer, Jack Marshall told the crowd at the Crozet Community Association meeting Nov. 9. Marshall is the president of Advocates for a Sustainable Albemarle Population [ASAP], now four years old and with 300 dues-paying members. He came to explain ASAP’s position and to ask the CCA to make a formal declaration of support. “The local population has grown at 2 percent per year over the last four decades, resulting in a doubling of the population every 33 years,” Marshall said. That rate is about 2,000 new residents in the County every year and an additional 1,300 cars. “It will be much faster here in the Crozet Growth Area. You know better than most the impacts of that.” You can “applaud, ignore or complain” about growth, Marshall said. Most localities settle on a so-called “smart growth” coping strategy. But that approach is faulty too, he said, “because it is premised on the myth that growth is inevitable. They don’t ask whether it should occur.” Designated growth areas are a smart growth policy that is supposed to protect the rest of the community. Then when the growth areas get full, they are either expanded or the allowable densities in them are increased, both admissions that the policy didn’t really work. “Growth will stop,” Marshall asserted, “if it runs out of resources such as water; if the expanded population makes the area unattractive; or because residents look down the road and ask what kind of community they want to be. “Growth is counterproductive after a point. No finite area can grow forever. A thoughtful county must identify the point at which it wants growth to stop.” “There is little [growth] planning above the day-to-day level of looking at continued on page 19 continued on page 12 continued on page 9 CCAC Investigates Local Availability of Affordable Housing page 2 CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 from the Editor to the Editor Santa’s Elves VIVA THE VILLAGE Santa Claus is the ultimate world traveler. He’s seen it all over many times. So it’s always pleased me that Crozet is one place he’s guaranteed go early in the runup to Christmas. Of course he likes the view as he flys in, the undulating crest of the Blue Ridge that looks like mighty ocean waves holding still, but when I interviewed Santa at the Crozet Christmas parade recently I found out the real reason he likes being here. The first thing Santa brought up was his elves. He’s so grateful to them. Nothing would happen if it weren’t for the bustling elves, cheerfully working around the clock, trying to make everybody’s Christmas wish come true. From the way Santa talked, you’d think he had nothing to do with Mr. and Mrs. Claus’s unblemished track record of causing joy. Santa doesn’t think it’s about him. It’s all about the elves. But, I bet if you asked the elves they’d say they don’t deserve any credit either. It’s hardly surprising that Santa has a special relationship with the volunteer firemen, guys who work their jobs all day and still get out of bed in the middle of the night to answer the siren’s wail that is calling out danger, or maybe tragedy, somewhere near us. They’ve got the same work schedule as the elves. And obviously they don’t think it’s about them either. Any of you who have last minute messages to send to Santa should get them to Preston Gentry at the Firehouse. He seems to have Santa’s unlisted number and is sure to get him here every year to hear from Crozet’s kids. Or try Donna Pugh. She’s obviously tight with Mrs. Claus. Or Judy Schmertzler. She’s got great elf connections. Santa has got other helpers around Crozet too. Wayne Clark at Henley’s Orchard is spearheading a drive to get 500 bushels of apples to Southwest Virginia before Christmas to share with people who can’t get Virginia’s best. That’s too many to fit in Santa’s sleigh, so Wayne took on the job. June Andrews and Nancy Virginia Bain at The Green Olive Tree, two veteran elves who have earned goldbraided rank, are busy sorting and packing Crozet’s cast-off clothing to send it to missions on Indian reservations in the frigid Midwest. At Mountainside Senior Living, super-elf Charlie Bell is checking off a special part of Santa’s Christmas list. But more on that next month. The fact is that Santa’s got such a strong roster of elves in Crozet that if global warming melts the foundations under his North Pole home, I expect he’ll call Crozet his new hometown. He has a mighty workforce already in place. Elves prefer to keep a low profile. It’s part of their it’s-not-about-me attitude. But Santa has seen them all over Crozet. Dear Editor, Thank you for printing Marlene Condon’s thoughts [November Letters to the Editor]. Developers and corporate industry have a vision of progress, but it is in most cases unsustainable. I believe you would not want to replace all of Crozet village with one giant Walmart, would you? The common consensus seems to be that this would wipe out all small businesses that have been sustained for decades by local people. But the small steps to the larger Walmart store are subtle. You have a wonderful small but full service grocer in Great Valu; you have your own farmer’s market on Saturday; you have the small Green Olive Tree thrift store that is not part of the national Goodwill super chain and you have a unique small train station library. These are all worth keeping. A strong County would diversify and sustain these things. A strong County might build a French-German library in Covesville, or Afton, or Earlysville; or a small political history library, or even a geology or mountain folklore library in one or more of these places and keep the old railroad library and develop its strengths unique to Crozet. But an industrial development corporation would do the opposite. It will fold in all the small guys: businesses, libraries, elementary schools to concentrate in the name of economizing (and profit). It would build one super library or regional library. And as it goes for schools and libraries, it will go for super stores and super streets (Main streets, malls and 29 North developments). The small village, the small library approach is very expensive. Lancaster County in Pennsylvania has struggled to keep the small village alive for rural folk and they are as a result one of the richest ag counties in the U.S. The small unique villages, which Marlene Condon wrote to defend, have a greater chance at sustaining and creating this diversity than all the moneyed developers “with dollar signs in their eyes.” This conflict of global developers trying to remake every American village is already carefully examined by Wendell Berry, whose books are in our small train station library of Crozet. GENE KIM Crozet the Meet Kathy Johnson CROZETgazette Don’t miss any of the hometown news everybody else is up on. Pick up a free copy of the Crozet Gazette at one of the many area locations or have the Crozet Gazette delivered to your home or dorm room. Mail subscriptions are available for $18 for 12 issues. Send a check to Crozet Gazette, P.O. Box 863, Crozet, Virginia 22932. Published on the first Thursday of the month by The Crozet Gazette LLC P.O. Box 863 Crozet, Virginia 22932 z Michael J. Marshall Publisher and Editor 434-466-8939 www.crozetgazette.com Kathy Johnson is a contributing writer for the Gazette. © The Crozet Gazette LLC CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 3 BARN SWALLOW ARTISTS OFFER ART INSPIRED BY NATURE By Kathy Johnson pieces of driftwood, handcrafted chairs made of maple, giant stoneIf the beauty of a bird’s egg, the cast seashells, semi-precious gemsmoothness of wood weathered by stones of jewelry, miniature birdnature and the mystery of seashells houses with dried flowers, small combined with the artful skill of a stone barn swallows, paintings and talented craftsman add joy to your photographs of flowers and leaves, personal nest, then a trip to The Barn and Magnolia leaves covered in gold. Swallow should be just the thing. “We keep changing and adding to Mary Ann Burk and Janice Arone the barn—we’re going online next have found the perfect setting at The year selling barn swallow-type things. Barn Swallow to showcase their talThe things you find here are a little ent and that of other area artists simdifferent,” Mary Ann grins, “out-ofilarly inspired to create functional the ordinary, one of a kind,” she pieces from glass, pottery, wood and paused to smile and then, “We like stone. to do (and offer) things that are Arriving here from Illinois after a unique, handmade and special.” 10-year stay in Fort Collins, Janice started at Virginia Colorado, Mary Ann and her husCommonwealth University and she’s band were looking for a new home. been working as a potter for 30 years. “We moved here on our second trip Teapots, special lamps, plates, dishes to Virginia. We thought it was advenand bathroom sinks are her specialty. turous,” said Mary Ann and she “I have tons of sketchbooks that are laughed. She laughs easily, and you my idea books,” she says. “I like could see the twinkle in her eye as doing commissioned pieces.” She the adventure played back in her takes the more thought-driven path, mind. working from her designs and ideas “We were sort of waiting for a and then offering high-fired stonesign.” They had little luck finding ware. Celadon is one of her favorite what they wanted as a home and glazes and the rich green patina is were ready to try North Carolina visible in many of her finely crafted when Mary Ann’s mother-in-law pieces. said, “Just try one more time.” She, Janice Arone and Mary Ann Burk welcome visitors to their Crozet shop, the Barn Swallow. Big supporters of the Artisans the mother-in-law, liked the Crozet Center of Virginia, both artists area and thought they might find something here. “We came in from the appreciate the support of the organization and recently participated in the west end, over Mechums River. We saw the barn here.” They stopped. annual Studio Tour. “Other artists who want to have a place to showcase The barn was the Crafter’s Gallery at the time, owned by Bob Leiby. Mary their work should check out the center,” said Janice. The Barn Swallow is Ann looked around and mentioned she was a potter. She told him they were located on Gilliums Ridge Road (Rt. 682, just off Route 250 near Mechums looking for a home but couldn’t find what they wanted. Leiby had a house River.) For other information, call 979-4884. nearby that he had stopped showing because of the “less than appealing” possible tenants that had wandered by. “He told us to go on back and take a look. There was a potter’s wheel in the basement and I knew it was a sign. I was still supposed to do pottery.” It must have been a sign for Bob Leiby too. He sold the house to them, and Mary Ann and her husband have been working on the house for 20 years. “It was really meant to be!” she says. “First I sold pots in the Crafter’s Gallery and then later, Janice and I purchased the barn.” Backtracking on her story, Mary Ann said she comes from a family of artists, including several photographers. “Art was an integral part of how we lived. I remember throwing my very first pot and then I knew.” In addition to selling at the gallery, Mary Ann would do shows in the area and that’s where the partnership began. She and Janice Arone would set up near one another and then if one needed to go to the bathroom or get something to eat, the other would watch her things. It grew into a deep friendship. “Would you be interested in having a gallery together?” Mary Ann asked Janice. She was. “We’ve been going strong for six years.” Asked about her pottery, Mary Ann says, “I’m always thinking of the functional part of it, but we really try to keep our things nature-inspired. Rustic (mixed) with some really fine pieces.” The Barn Swallow showcases not only the work of Burk and Arone, but also the work of other area artist’s work with a similar interest in nature-inspired creations. On display, there’s a beautiful pottery bowl filled with downy bird feath- Nature inspired pottery, paintings, furniture, jewelry and other finely crafted pieces at the Barn Swallow Gallery. ers, a beautifully crafted teapot, a large mirror surrounded by weathered page 4 CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 Perfect Attendance Ben Hurt (left) accepts a Lions Club lapel pin marking his 35 years of perfect attendance at club meetings from vice president Bob Stamara at the Crozet Lions’ annual Charter Night dinner Nov. 6, this year at Golden Corral. Lions can make up a missed meeting if they attend another Lions Club meeting somewhere within 13 days of the one they missed. “It’s hard to do,” acknowledged Hurt about his astonishing attendance record. Hurt has been in the Lions Club 60 years and made a few remarks on Club history. The club’s name is a reminder of its motto, Hurt said: liberty, intelligence, our nation’s safety. “We’ve done a lot for Crozet,” he said, “But we won’t go into that. To me it’s a real inspiration to be in the Crozet Lions Club.” Club president Susan Miller (center) was emcee for the event, which included a door prizes raffle and a “50/50” cash raffle in which $130 was split among three winners. McCauleys Mark Golden Anniversary Ray Page McCauley, the barber of Crozet, and June Bernice Van Nosdoll McCauley celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Nov. 25, Thanksgiving Day, with a family party hosted by Gordon and Sandy Merrick. On that day in 1956, they stood before Rev. Robert Harold at Crozet Baptist Church and said their heartfelt vows. From that union came three children, Virginia Leigh, Ray Page Jr., and Lisa Ann, now married to Troy Gardner Miller, and all make their homes in Crozet. The golden couple have five grandchildren: MacKenzie Page Smith, Jordan Hurst Smith, Tiffany Skylar Miller, Ariel Kaylyn Miller and Shannon Nicole Miller, all of Crozet. June’s wedding dress was sewn by Ray’s mother, Virginia McCauley. Lions Club Traveler Snack Stop Crozet Lions Club member Phil Eaton (left)—joined Lions from Waynesboro, Jim Friend, Choppie Witry, and Vince Emmett—for the late morning shift at the Crozet rest stop on Interstate 64, where the Clubs traditionally joint-sponsor a travelers’ snack stop on Sunday of the Thanksgiving weekend. With gregarious hospitality, the clubs gave away gallons of coffee, soft drinks, coffee cakes, honey buns and snack cakes to people headed home from holiday visits. The highway was crowded with Hokie fans feeling expansive after Virginia Tech defeated U.Va. 17-0 in Blacksburg the day before. “There’s a lot of Hokies on the road,” noted Witry, who was wearing a Tech cap and sweatshirt. It was true; Hokie garb was everywhere in the parking lot. “We do our best to tolerate them,” answered Friend jovially. “We didn’t have to listen to the Good Ol’ Song even one time!” gloated Hokie fan Kathy Barefoot of Virginia Beach, who visited the stand along with her husband Ken, a former Hokie player who went on to an NFL career with the Redskins and the Detroit Lions. Both of their sons also played football for Tech. The holiday dinner table has nine Tech grads at it, Kathy said proudly. She was in a mood that took everything as fun. Other Crozet Lions manning the snack stop were Tom Amato, Chris Scherer, Leigh McCauley, Larry Claytor, Dave Ellis, Skip and Pat Thacker, and Carrol Conley. Eroded Base Forces New Light to Be Installed The earth under the foundation of the traffic light boom at Miller School Road eroded away and forced the construction of a new pole, which is supported by a massive 12-foot-deep footing. The new light has cameras and a “preemption” system that allows fire engines to control the signal as well as those at Henley Middle School and Western Albemarle High School. CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 5 by Phil James The C .C. C. Christmas Gift Christmastime in the 1930’s was a study in contrasts. The 1920’s had closed out with the collapse of our nation’s financial system. The subsequent economic depression affected nearly everyone in some way. Big city newspapers pictured urban families waiting in long lines for a free bowl of soup. The country’s rural midsection had been devastated by a historic drought. Western Albemarle County’s economy during the 1920’s and ’30’s continued to be grounded in the fruit industry. Local peach and apple growers employed many of the available local hands during the fruit harvests. For most of the workers in the fruit industry, however, it was a seasonal bonanza. As local populations gradually increased, fewer agricultural labor positions remained, and the nation’s economic woes pressed ever closer to home. The Presidential administration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt hit the ground running in the spring of 1933. Elected in the fall of 1932 by a nation of voters clamoring for a reversal of fortunes, the new administration quickly put into operation a plethora of government–backed programs designed to restore hope and initiative. History has proven that many of these programs were crucial to the recovery of our nation. Along with economic recovery a social/psychological recovery also took place. The Civilian Conservation Corps, considered to be among the most successful of Roosevelt’s recovery programs, established Camp Albemarle at White Hall in May 1933. Although the camp had begun as a tent camp, the boys—many enrollees in the CCC program were previously unemployed teenagers—by November had erected a mess hall and several barracks on the White Hall site and were well settled into the camp’s daily work routine. Beginning in 1933, a Crozet native, Capt. Russell Bargamin, Jr., the CCC Company Commander at White Hall, initiated a camp–sponsored Christmas outreach to the less–fortunate children in the surrounding communities. Enrollees erected a huge Christmas tree on the camp’s parade grounds. The tree was trimmed with tinsel and other decorations and lit with 175 electric lights of many colors—an amazing display since many homes in rural areas still didn’t have electrical service. Children were invited from a list supplied by the local welfare agency. Many area retailers and wholesale suppliers contributed toys, candies, cakes, nuts, oranges, apples and tangerines. On Christmas Eve the children were picked up by transport trucks and delivered to the camp site where they were greeted by camp personnel and Santa Claus (played by the camp’s Educational Advisor). The party began with caroling around the lighted Christmas tree, followed by refreshments. Crozet’s early prosperity was a result of the local fruit industry. This winter view, looking north from the C&O Railroad tracks, showed orchards where homes now stand. Afterwards each child was handed presents in addition to a red stocking filled with candy, nuts and fruit. At the end of the evening’s festivities, the children were returned to their homes. By 1935 this local Christmas tradition was serving 125–150 children, and the White Hall CCC camp had garnered the interest of people all over Virginia. Happy Days, the nationwide The Civilian Conservation Corps camp in White Hall weekly newspaper of the was in operation 1933–1942. The ‘boys’ were carried to Civilian Conservation remote job sites on the back of transport trucks. Corps, headlined the camp’s benevolent celebration in its Spotlight Department. Many CCC camps published bi–weekly or monthly camp newspapers with an emphasis on their local camp’s activities. Camp Albemarle’s newspaper, The Trumpeter, carried this feature in 1935: OUR CHRISTMAS GIFT Once more the members of old 338th Co. have jointly and conclusively decided to bring Yuletide greetings to the unfortunate youngsters of this vicinity. Following the custom of the past two years, a huge Christmas tree will be erected and appropriately lighted for an ideal kiddie’s Christmas. The program in short, will be much the same as that of last year … This is done, not as duty to humanity, but as a privilege. To watch the faces as they gaze appreciatively upon the tree, as they thankfully receive the gifts, as they gratefully express their thanks, is more than continued on page 6 CCC enrollees performed manual conservation work, and many also seized opportunities to further their education during their ‘free’ time. This 1934 group was also involved in hosting area children for a Christmas Eve party in the camp. page 6 DECEMBER 2006 CROZET gazette Christmas—continued from page 7 Main Street with a blanket of snow. The village Christmas Tree in The Square has often been the site of community caroling in Crozet. enough to soften the most cruel heart, to bond the strongest will. In the face of these facts, we do not strive to be heroes or philanthropists, but merely a part of the community, to do our part toward assuring a happier Christmas, a brighter life, and to perform the ordinary community function. The CCC camp did not close for the holidays, but camp personnel were allowed a week to return home for Christmas. Half of the boys returned home the week leading up to Christmas, while the other half went the week following Christmas. Many of the fellows who were assigned to Camp Albemarle were from areas in the northeastern United States, and a significant part of their time off was spent in travelling to and from their home states. Local boys like Truman Huckstep of Free Union and Early Baber of Batesville only had to begin walking towards home with the hope that a benevolent local driver would pick them up and carry them on their way. Some other local Christmas–season traditions were shared by Crozet’s own Pete McCauley during a recent visit I made to the Modern Barber Shop. During the 1940’s and ’50’s, there was more emphasis on observing the birth of Jesus Christ. Many get-togethers were centered around singing: area churches combined their choirs for a special program of song and celebration; local residents gathered in The Square for the lighting of the community Christmas tree and the singing of carols; homes with a piano or organ often hosted family and neighborhood Christmas sing–a–longs. Hot chocolate seemed always to be available along with other fresh–baked treats. The Capt. Russell Bargamin, Jr. organized an annual Christmas party at the White Hall CCC camp for under-privileged area youth. Camp personnel also learned the responsibility of community service during those economically depressed years. Crozet Volunteer Fire Department collected and repaired toys for redistribution to the less fortunate children in the region. Stringing popcorn, painting pine cones, making paper chains for tree garlands, collecting running cedar and hunting mistletoe—these and other traditions were once commonplace locally. As the CCC boys worded it in their newspaper, much that was done was only considered “ordinary community function.” We would all do well to begin—or begin again—similar traditions that bring us together as family and neighbors and community. As the year draws to a close, I want to express my special thanks to Mike Marshall and his Crozet Gazette staff for allowing me the privilege of passing along some glimpses of our shared local heritage. My wife, Sally, and I hope for you a renewed reality of the Christ of Christmas this holiday season. Merry Christmas, 2006! Phil James invites contact from those who would share recollections and old photographs of life along Albemarle County’s western mountain border. Contact him at: P.O. Box 88, White Hall, VA 22987 or philjames@firstva.com. © 2006 Phil James CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 7 Crozet’s Historic Buildings to Be Identified expected to begin after the first of the year. Details about survey criteria will be announced later. Nearly 300 buildings in Crozet will be evaluated for their historic importance thanks to a grant from the Virginia Department of Historic Resources. “The Crozet Master Plan does not include specific guidance for proceeding with new development while preserving Crozet’s significant historic resources,” said Albemarle County Communications Director Lee Catlin. “The survey will provide up-to-date documentation to help in developing effective strategies for the coexistence of new development with resources that define the special character of Crozet and its place in Albemarle County history.” The survey will create a reliable information base to coordinate downtown development with historic preservation goals, she said. Owners of properties identified as historic will be eligible for tax credits for renovations of the building so long as the improvements are consistent with the building’s original condition. The grant will be administered by the Virginia Department of Historic Resources in coordination with Albemarle County. DHR will provide $12,500 in funding for the project, and Albemarle County and the Piedmont Environmental Council (PEC) will combine to provide the matching $12,500. Work on the project is Crozet Water Supply to be Studied To meet a new state law passed in response to the drought conditions of three years ago, the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority will prepare water supply plans for Albemarle County, the City of Charlottesville and the Town of Scottsville. ‘”The Local and Regional Water Supply Planning Regulations require that all cities, counties, and towns in Virginia develop a water supply plan by 2011 to describe current water supply resources, document projected growth of the area, and identify the need for future water supply sources,” said RWSA Executive Director Thomas L. Frederick, Jr. “The significant recent work by the Authority leading to the decision to expand the Ragged Mountain Reservoir will meet the legal requirements of this new state regulation for the City of Charlottesville and the urban area of Albemarle County around the City. Most of the new work by the Authority will focus on water supply planning for the Crozet Growth Area and Scottsville,” he said. RWSA officials have met with County planners to talk about the data needed to conduct the study, especially what population size the Crozet water supply is meant to serve, and the County is now collecting that information. An official population projection for Crozet by the County is expected by spring, Frederick said. The study will include a field analysis of Beaver Creek reservoir. The RWSA received a $20,000 grant to perform all the studies. It will run out July 1, 2007. page 8 CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 Jorgensen Honored for Helping the Disabled Find Jobs Cardinal Point An Afternoon’s Delight By Kathy Johnson Wine, oysters, music, and great weather stirred gently—not shaken—created an afternoon delight during the 2006 Annual Oyster Festival at Cardinal Point near Afton. Terrific weather (at least the first day) added to the enjoyment of those who attended the last official Cardinal Point festival for the year. Family and friends (volunteers) were pressed into helping with the festival. Several hundred people turned out for the warm weather, wine and entertainment on Saturday (and even braver souls for the cool weather on Sunday). Everyone celebrated the Indian Summer event by kicking off their shoes, wearing shorts and sleeveless shirts, and enjoying the taste sensations along with ocular and culinary opportunities. A family-owned and operated winery located in the foothills of the Blue Ridge, Cardinal Point was established in 1985, when Paul (and Ruth) Gorman retired from the army and moved their family to the shadows of Afton Mountain. During the next two years they planted two acres each of Riesling and Cabernet Sauvignon on what is now Cardinal Point Vineyard. John, an architect, and the eldest Gorman son oversaw renovation of the old farmhouse (and later designed the winery buildings), while his younger sister Sarah and brother Tim tended the vines when they were home from school in the summer. After receiving a bachelor’s degree in horticulture in 1993 from James Madison University, Tim Gorman returned to Cardinal Point, experimenting with trellising systems, adding acreage to the winery and becoming the official Cardinal Point Winemaker. “It’s totally family and that’s the fun,” said Sarah Gorman. “Mom did a lot of rain dancing” (to get the vines started). Sarah now spends her time managing the business side of the winery, overseeing festivals, planning and managing the events and taking her turn in the wine tasting room. The Oyster Festival was followed closely by the release of their first vintage of 2006, the Nouveau Red. “Nouveau is never in oak,” said Sarah at the official release. “It’s very fruity—fruit forward—with a nice little tartness at the end.” A group from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, was there tasting and the first comment was, “Oh wow.” Sarah explained, ”It’s a great wine for the holidays,” and the group must have agreed since the two couples each left with a case of the Nouveau and several other wines, as well. Tim Gorman is the only Virginia winemaker producing this early release red and the winery produces only a short run. Seventy-five to 80 percent of the grapes used by Cardinal Point for their wines are grown in their own vineyards, with the balance coming from vineyards from the same area. For more information about Cardinal Point, their wines and 2007 events, log on to www.cardinalpointwinery.com. Thomas C. Jorgensen of Greenwood, the owner and president of The Bradford Company, located in Verona, recently received both local and statewide awards for the company’s work with the disabled. Recognized as the “Disabilities Employer of the Year” by the local Disability Awareness Council, The Bradford Company was also selected as one of the five statewide “Disability Employment Champions” by the Virginia Department of Rehabilitative Services. At a Governor’s Employment Champions Awards Breakfast, Jorgensen received the award with other honorees: Busch Gardens, John F. Kennedy Center, Food City and Virginia Crossings Resort. “It was beyond exciting to even think that the Bradford Staffing Company could be an equal with organizations like Busch Gardens and the Kennedy Center. I and everyone in the company has worked hard doing what is only right to do in society,” Jorgensen said. “We will continue the work we have done for years, helping all types of candidates become productive and find the correct staffing solutions so desperately needed by companies in the area.” Two of the Bradford Group’s seven in-house staff are disabled. During the past year, the company has secured the permanent placement of 22 people with a disability and also has 37 disabled employees on their present payroll and 59 individuals with disabilities awaiting placement. According to Jorgensen, The Bradford Company has filled over 12,000 positions with their candidates since 1967. CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 9 Zoning —continued from page 1 for their February meeting. Cliff Fox will compile a summary of issues and options to facilitate the next discussion. Fox praised the rules in effect in Charlottesville’s Downtown Mall and will provide them for consideration as well. The group had first thought to name itself the Downtown Crozet Business Association, but agreed, at President Sandy Wilcox’s suggestion, to remove the term business from the name to make clear that the group’s aims are not purely commercial, but include preserving the downtown area as Crozet’s cultural heart and the center of the town’s identity. Organizers wrestled with how to define membership terms for the association, some concerned that including citizens with no commercial stake in downtown would distract from the Association’s emphasis on commercial issues. Downtown business owners and property own- ers are natural members and after some deliberation it was agreed that membership is open to anyone committed to working for the prosperity and vitality of downtown. Fabulous Foods owner Heather Penny said, “I like the idea of interested community members being in these meetings if they have pride in downtown. I see my business as a service to the community. I take pride in that. I would want to open up the membership.” The question of whether the DCA should formally incorporate and set dues was deliberated, but those decisions were deferred in order to make progress on the substantive zoning issues. The County has advertised for the consulting job and the selection process expected to begin in January. The County has invited Blue Goose Building owner Sandy Wilcox and Crozet Gazette editor Mike Marshall to sit in on the interviews. Maupin Music and Video November Fought-for Flicks Pete’s Picks* Pirates of the Caribbean II Cars Da Vinci Code Superman Returns Ice Age II MIII Little Man Me, You and Dupree Monster House Danny Deck Chair Millions The Station Agent Eulogy Powder *backed by Zack page 10 DECEMBER 2006 CROZET gazette CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 11 Upcoming Ev ents The Virginia Consort to Present “A Blue Ridge Christmas”at Rockfish Presbyterian Church Wintergreen Performing Arts will present “A Blue Ridge Christmas” with The Virginia Consort, Judith Gary, conductor, Sunday, Dec. 10 at 4 pm at the Rockfish Presbyterian Church, 5016 Rockfish Valley Highway, Nellysford. Now in its 13th season, the Virginia Consort is a 35-member Charlottesville-based chamber chorus that has performed at The White House and the World Bank in Washington, DC., and has provided background music for several television offerings, including a PBS documentary. Tickets are $30. To order tickets: (800) 594-8499; www.wintergreenperformingarts. org. For information: (434) 3258292; (866) 984-6874; info@winte rgreenperformingarts.org. Albemarle-Charlottesville Pilot Club meets the second Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Meadows Community Center in Crozet. New members welcome. 295-1783. Holiday Events at Tabor Presbyterian The Tabor Presbyterian Church choir will present their annual cantata, “Born a Savior, Born a King,” Sunday, Dec. 10 at 11 a.m. and at 3:30 p.m. A reception for the choir following the morning service will be held in the Fellowship Hall. This event is open to the public and everyone is invited. The “Tabor Tabernacle,” as they call themselves, has given holiday concerts for many years. Music director Ruth Chiles leads the 15member choir. Since Christmas Eve falls on Sunday this year, Tabor will have a Christmas Eve service at 11 a.m. and a candlelight service at 5:30 p.m. During the morning service, the children of Tabor will present a play, “Michael Mouse,” depicting one aspect of the Christmas story, as seen through the eyes of a mouse. The candlelight service will feature lessons, carols, readings and poetry, with communion offered. Everyone is invited. Blue Ridge Family Chorus’s Winter Cabaret December 17 The Blue Ridge Family Chorus will offer its 6th annual winter performance—Winter Cabaret—on Sunday, Dec. 17 at 5:30 p.m. at the Earl Hamner Theater in Nellysford. Come for a little light and warmth as this community chorus sings winter and holiday music and shares free refreshments. Admission is free. Donations to cover the cost of renting the theater gladly accepted. For more information, please call 434-823-5717 (Katrien) or 434361-1999 (Hamner Theater). Zephyrus to Present Christmas Music at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Ivy Zephyrus, Central Virginia’s Early Music Ensemble, will present two Christmas concerts, at 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 9, at First Presbyterian Church on Park St. in Charlottesville and at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 10, at St. Paul’s Ivy. These a cappella programs will feature a set of contemporary Christmas music as well as a selection of favorite early works from Zephyrus’s first two recordings. In addition, the group will perform a selection of carols in a variety of languages: English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Czech and Polish. General admission tickets are $15 for adults, $10 for students and elders. They are available at Greenberry’s at Barracks Road, Mincer’s on the Corner, New Dominion Bookstore on the Downtown Mall and at the door. For more information, call 2935339. page 12 CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 ASAP —continued from page 1 cumulative effects. It’s like counting calories but not portions. A ‘smart growth’ strategy is unacceptable for the best place to live in America,” said Marshall. “This is a cutting-edge idea even though it’s common sense,” he said. Acting on this reasoning, ASAP in September asked the County to pass a Comprehensive Plan amendment to require identification of a sustainable optimal population size, or range, for the Charlottesville/Albemarle community, which has a combined population of about 130,000 now. No zoning changes should be made until the optimal figure is known, they said. “Nobody has identified that goal,” said Marshall. “It’s driven now by those who want growth.” The figure should be “democratically arrived at and in harmony with environmental factors. If any county can do it, Albemarle should be able to do it,” he claimed. He mentioned Boca Raton, Florida; Petaluma, California; and Boulder, Colorado as other places where similar growth planning is being undertaken. Marshall asked for a formal resolution from the CCA that supported the ASAP initiative. “We want to stipulate the ideal size of the County,” he reiterated. “County planners are sympathetic, but they are worried it will mean a hell of a lot more work for them. Jack Marshall “This is entirely legal,” Marshall reassured the crowd. “The Comprehensive Plan is a policy document. We’re not talking about a moat around the County. There is already a cap. That’s what’s in the zoning. Add it up. Is that the number we want? We may need to downzone in an equitable way.” Heidi Sonen asked, rhetorically as it turned out, why conservation easements, which she called a “highly underutilized tool,” were not more widespread. “We’re driving out families who have lived here for ages,” she said. “I would be in favor of us supporting it,” said Mary Rice, chair of the Crozet Community Advisory Council. Others declared support too. Rice recalled the town’s experience with the County’s pre-existing zoning for the Growth Area, according to which the Master Plan was premised on a final town population of 12,500. Then the County’s first rezoning decision effectively raised the official projection to 24,000. “There was no context whatsoever for the implications of that,” she said. CCA rules forbid action on a motion or resolution until the meeting after it is introduced. The rule aims to prevent action from being taken impulsively or on topics that were not published on the agenda until the public has a chance to weigh in. So the matter of a formal endorsement of the concept was deferred until the Jan. 11 meeting. Marshall said ASAP suggests that a citizens committee be established to do the work of calculating the optimum population. “We’ve been working on a methodology,” he said. “There are four variables to consider: natural resources, public services and infrastructure, fiscal and tax issues, and community character and scale.” ASAP has not suggested a figure. The CCA also discussed the need for a recycling center in Crozet and it elected officers for 2007. They are: David Wayland, president; Heidi Sonen, vice president; Emery Taylor, treasurer; and Judi Burbes, secretary. CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 13 A New York Yankee in Chief Bubba and Hubba’s Firehouse By Tom Loach YOUR FIRE IS OUR FIRE: HOW MUTUAL AID PLANS BOND OUR COMMUNITIES Make no mistake, fighting a fire is both man-and-machine intensive. Putting out a fire is accomplished by small teams of fire fighters going toe-to-toe with it. And the fire always has the opening advantage. The truth is a fire of any significant size will need additional help from outside the local fire department. Because of this need for additional resources, the concept of mutual aid developed. Mutual aid is a predetermined plan for requesting assistance from fire departments in the areas surrounding the one in need. Several weeks ago, the Crozet Volunteer Fire Department, along with the Wintergreen and the Faber Fire Departments, was called to aid the Rockfish Volunteer Fire Department in fighting a house fire. Crozet sent a fully staffed engine company directly to the scene. Assistant Chief Mike Walton was in charge of the Crozet contingent, with Captain Will Schmertzler in command of the engine company. Driver and engineer Kevin Sandridge was in charge of pump operations with the help of two Junior Fire Fighters, Chase Sandridge and Adam Shifflett. On arrival, Chief Walton conferred with the Incident Commander from Rockfish to coordinate the attack on this fully involved house fire. Then Captain Schmertzler was ordered to lead the remainder of the engine company—firefighters Eric Marshall, Rick Hagedorn, Mike Barnett and me—to the second floor of the house to search for and put out any extension of the fire. Twice Chief Walton pulled us out of the building when the fire threatened to reach the room below us. Once allowed back on the second floor, we hastily made openings in the wall—only to face a wave of flame, which we quickly knocked down. After we had the fire contained there, we moved to the roof, where we helped establish ventilation openings to allow heat and smoke to escape the structure. It took time, but the fire was finally put out. Totally exhausted by the ordeal, we dragged ourselves back to the engine for the ride home. It’s an incredible compliment to the men and women of the fire service who, at any time day or night and regardless of the weather, answer the call to protect not only the lives and property of Crozet residents, but also those of neighboring communities. And there are other unsung heroes behind the scenes who make mutual aid work. Once the need for help is apparent, it’s the job of the staff at the Emergency Communication Center (ECC) to put the plan into operation. Sitting in the engine cab listening to the radio communication, it is indeed impressive to hear ECC personnel choreograph the movement of men and machines to assigned locations. The radio chatter reminded me of war movies where radar operators would vector Spitfire and Hurricane pilots to meet the enemy bombers over the skies of England, only in this case the enemy, just as lethal, is fire, injury or illness. Twenty-five percent of firefighter deaths occur on the way to an emergency. ECC operators are responsible for helping fire fighters headed into unfamiliar territory get to the emergency safely in the shortest amount of time. They do a tremendous job. The community can take comfort in knowing that 24 hours a day, someone will answer a call for help. If you think you would like to be part of the team, just stop by the Crozet firehouse any evening, sit down and talk with a firefighter about how you might help. Remodeling to Close Page’s Store in Batesville Teresa Parker, of Page’s Store in Batesville, says that shocked looks are the order of the day. “What’s going on?” people are asking. “Why are you closing?” All good questions and all in response to the innocent-looking little notice at Page’s Store in Batesville announcing that the store will close on December 23. Unless patrons continue reading, they may assume that the closing is for the holidays. Wrong. Page’s Store, at the heart of the Batesville community and lifeblood for lunch items, milk, bread, pop, conversation, information, wine, and forgotten items, will close on December 23, and not reopen until sometime toward the end of February or mid-March. “It’s just a good time to get some needed remodeling done,” said Parker. “It’s a nice time to get some things done that need updating.” Parker said they would be back and better in the spring. But meanwhile it’s going to be a long winter in Batesville without Page’s. page 14 CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 One of Us: Bill Dollins, Cattleman The radio in the blue Dodge pickup was tuned to 107.1 FM, a Christian station out of Appomattox. It was not noticeably loud, but it was the good old time religion. God is always there, it was saying, telling you the truth, even when you’re not really listening in. When the truck rumbled across the cattle guard into the back field on Yellow Mountain Farm, a couple of miles south of Crozet, three donkeys picked up their ears, then flicked their heels, and let go excited squeals. Bill Dollins had a five-gallon bucket of bread slices in the back— easily enough to make ten loaves—and they knew it. They knew it like they’d been listening in. There were two ninnies and one gelding and they rushed the back of the truck as Dollins stopped. “They’ll follow me anywhere,” he said. “I just have ‘em for pets. That’s all.” But that’s his philosophy of animal husbandry: Be calm. Be gentle. Throw out plenty of treats on a frequent basis. Get rid of bad behavers fast. Most times, if you love them, they love you back. Farther on down the pasture slope were some dozen or so cows and their new calves. They recognized the truck too, and there was a frolicsome stampede towards it. A big Hereford cow got there first and insisted on more than her share. One, two, three, five, eight slices disappeared across her pleading tongue. “It’s a good thing they haven’t got teeth on the top,” Dollins remarked. “I’d get bit pretty bad.” Dollins finds out-of-date loaves and buys them up to keep his stock swooning over the sight of him. The calves are rather young for the season— there’s a bull back in the pasture now—but they’re vigorous. “I like to have them in good shape before bad weather,” Dollins said. “I wean them off in the spring.” He has 40 to 50 head on the place over the course of a year. Nestled in a clearing beyond the fence is a log cabin, built around 1845, the only building on the place when Bill and his wife Charlotte bought it in 1959 and had it cleared with a bulldozer. They renovated the cabin (“It still has all the original timbers in it,” Dollins noted.) and now it’s rented out. A former tenant gave them the handsome farm sign that swings at the driveway. A hundred years ago the land was in his family. His granddad’s sister owned it. They gave it up and even- Bill Dollins tually he bought three parcels back. His family’s roots in the neighborhood trace to the 1700s, maybe earlier, he thinks, but he’d have to consult his genealogy records before he would say so positively. Five years ago his road was a familiar rural lane with cattle grazing behind old fencerows. Not long before that it was still just gravel tracks. Now it’s lined with new manor-style houses set back on small acreages. “They’ve been rocking ‘em,” said Dollins about the building boom. “It ain’t much you can say about it. If you don’t own the land you can’t control it. There’s not a lot you can say about it any more. “Most of us poor farmers, if we weren’t under land use [taxation rules] we couldn’t stay where we’re at.” Dollins keeps his pipe handy in his left shirt Bread slices fly like parade candy when Dollins checks on his cows and calves. pocket, stem down, bowl cradled up on the pocket lip. He’s stuck with Carter Hall boxes for 40 years. Every little bit he’ll relight it or tap out a little ash and aromatic shavings of tobacco. His pipe and his green cap with “Yellow Mountain Farm/ Bill Dollins/Crozet, Va.” in yellow embroidery are pretty much part of his uniform. Dollins was on his way to Union Stock Yard in Staunton, where he’s a fixture in Fridays. Saturdays he goes to the sale in Charlottesville, but as farming declines in Albemarle that sale has shrunk. It’s all over in an hour and a half. “The prices aren’t a whole lot different,” he said about the two sales, “but you’ve got a lot more buyers in Staunton,” where sales still last several hours. “I don’t miss many,” he said. For 40 years he’s been there virtually every week. “This is where I do my selling. I get the best prices. They’ve got good men who really know cattle. Lots of cattle from over the mountain come here—Free Union, White Hall, Nelson.” He goes mainly to follow prices and to snag a bargain or two to bring home. He used to hire out to transport cattle, too. “I gave up hauling. My heath isn’t the best any more,” said Dollins, now 78. “I do a little bit.” Maybe the cattle have a sprightliness advantage too. “I can’t move fast enough to work ‘em,” he lamented. But the fact is he can read their minds and can anticipate their moves. The stockyard’s truck docks are infrequently used now that trailers have become popular. “Trailers are better because you can load anywhere,” Dollins explained. “Cattle will just step up in there.” Mainly, he doesn’t like to drive at night and doesn’t want to have to stay at the stockyard late into the evening to load. He’ll leave the sale these days sure to have plenty of time left to do his chores before evening falls. His father was a carpenter who built the building that now houses Parkway Pharmacy, the apple packing shed on White Hall Road and numerous local houses. “I never did much of that,” Dollins said. “I kinda liked foolin’ with my cows. If I get a wild one, they don’t stay around. I like ‘em gentle.” CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 15 The sale ring at Staunton Union Stock Yard He keeps up with wider agriculture news by following the Mid-Atlantic Country Folks Farm Chronicle, a two-section weekly tabloid published in New York that does a surprisingly good job of noticing things in the Virginia Piedmont. He brought one with him to pass along an article to a friend he hoped to see at the sale. Everybody—that’s everybody—around the yard knows Dollins. “Hey, Bill! Get your money out. There’s good stuff in there,” one called out as he neared the steps. Friends from Nelson County stop him to visit first. “I’m doing well,” he told them, in a modest, reassuring tone. The first stop was the scale office where Dollins checked in with David Hewitt. The scale is now David Hewitt and Dollins in the scale office electronic, but only last year it was still a beam scale that Hewitt adjusted with a gear-driven weight to reach the balance point. “His uncle [Clay, who runs the stockyard] is a mighty nice man,” Dollins commented. “I can’t say enough [good] about him.” The next stop was the catwalk to scout the pens from above and watch the sorting and grading. “I’ve been here when every one of these pens was full,” he mused. A yellow sticker on the spine means sell separately. A dab of paint there means sell with the other animals in the pen with the same color dab. There’s a head gate handy along an alley so that pregnancy tests can be run. The pens are kept dimly lit to help calm the animals. Sales are organized by sex and weight, with lighter animals going into the ring ahead of heavier ones. “They do a right good job here, but I tell them that [the market] should be in the middle of a 50-acre field.” Jack Clark of White Hall was at the sale, taking the pulse of the market just as Dollins was. “Ethanol [manufacture] is driving up the price of corn, so cattle prices are falling,” Clark said, meaning that fear of feed prices was keeping buyers wary, worried that they won’t be able to recover their costs next year when the cattle reach slaughter weight. “I expect a larger corn planting next spring if corn prices stay up,” he added, noting that competition for feed from Valley poultry raisers was an additional pressure on cattlemen. Prices have been falling since last spring, sinking as gas prices spiked. Outside the lunch counter, Dollins met Conrad Hicks of Ivy, who runs 300 cows now, down considerably from his heyday, Dollins said. “I’m just looking today to see what they’re doing,” Hicks said. They sat on a bench outside the lunch counter together, quietly, two taciturn farmers, or maybe long, long friends who know each other’s minds too well to bother with talk. They were glad for each other’s company. There was tale-telling going on before the sale started, and they listened in, but were not much amused. Then they went to their familiar seats in the sale room, high on the right, above the ring entry door, where they could watch Clay Hewitt as he bought on order for buyers who weren’t there and because it made a better perch for surveying the crowd to pick up on who was bidding, bids being the most subtle, secretive and fleeting gestures that would seem to be undetectable—except that the auctioneer Jeff Showalter in fact could catch them. “I stay up here in case someone doesn’t like my tobacco smoke,” Dollins said. And that was true too. The ring was hosed down to dampen dust. Nearly 100 men, mostly wearing weathered baseball caps, some in cowboy hats, a pair of brothers in snappy black fedoras, most looking to be past continued from page 26 page 16 CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 BY DR. ROBERT C. REISER said, “and we’ll be fine.” And, furthermore, “Nope, haven’t got any radar, Doc.” My initiation into the mysteries of flight medicine continued when we got to the outlying hospital. The patient we were to transport was brain-dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. He was being tenuously maintained on a ventilator and dopamine and dobutamine blood pressure drips. It was hopeless and I asked the crew why we had bothered to come. The crew E U C S E R E H T O T G N I FLY One of the more glamorous aspects of Emergency Medicine is the flying ambulances we use to transport patients. Christened with wonderfully evocative names such as Pegasus, Lifeguard, Nightingale, Angel 1, Aircare, etc., they cast a halo on the institutions they serve. But the recent rapid proliferation of such helicopter services has created significant concerns about flight safety and about the overuse of such services for patients who don’t need to fly. I remember well my first flight on Lifeflight as an emergency medicine resident in Pittsburgh. It illustrates both the great promise for lifesaving that helicopters offer as well as the associated risks. Knowing little of aeronautics, but aware that summer was the high season for trauma, I elected to do my flight month in August. A heat wave had settled over the city and the police, fire and emergency response services were on alert. In my Nomex flameproof jumpsuit, flight helmet and new boots, I approached the flight line on a sweltering summer evening for my first foray. It was 8 p.m., dusk was closing in and the temperature hovered around 100 degrees. There were four crewmembers on this flight: me, a flight nurse, a flight medic and the pilot. I sat in the front bubble in the copilot’s seat. Excellent! The twin jet engines began to whine as they spooled up and then screamed when the pilot pushed the throttles forward. The doors were closed and the pilot hauled up on the collective. The ship gave a slight shudder but nothing else happened. The pilot thrust the throttles to the firewall and the ship shuddered a little more and wobbled a bit but could not break the bonds of earth. Over the roar of the engines came the pilot’s laconic drawl on the intercom, “Folks, I may have ask one of you to get off. In this heat we can’t seem to generate enough lift to get off the ground.” I was happy to volunteer but the pilot said, “No, Doc, let’s just get these engines really hot and we should be good to go.” Sure enough, after some more wobbling we slowly rose above the city and headed south into the gloaming. At that point it occurred to me to wonder how we could return carrying one more soul, the patient we were en route to pick up. “No problem, Doc. We will have burned enough fuel that we should be light enough by then. “You just keep a sharp lookout for any planes or power lines,” he eyed me with the suspicion that I was a simpleton. Organ donation of course. Our flight that night (and the family’s noble decision) helped save two lives, a father dying of heart failure, and a 23-year-old cystic fibrosis patient dying of lung disease. Two kidney failure patients were freed from dialysis and sight was restored to a patient awaiting a corneal transplant. That was back in the early days of helicopter medicine when calling Dr. Robert C. Reiser for a flight was a monumental decision. Since then the ships have not become much safer (with an average of one fatal crash per month) but the number of flights has skyrocketed. Any first responder can request helicopter dispatch with little review of the indications for flight. I recently received a patient by helicopter who had dislocated his shoulder falling off his mountain bike. I relocated his shoulder and he was discharged from the ED before the continued from page 26 Crozet gazette DECember 2006 s page 17 Turkish Star : The Bonds of the World Draw Tighter Anxious to preserve traditional rural Turkish craftsmanship from dying out as poverty forces Turkish people off farms into cities, where they abandon their traditional crafts, Peter Kaya, a Turkish immigrant to the U.S. who fate brought to Charlottesville, came up with the idea of forming a cooperative of Turkish farm weavers and marketing their rugs in America. That’s Crozet, America, to be exact, because the Turkish Star, a new store in the new Clover Lawn shops on Rt. 250, is the cooperative’s first retail outlet. The concept traces back to 1987, when a German chemist researched traditional Turkish natural dyes and discovered which plants and flowers make which colors. He then encouraged local weavers to use the natural dyes in rug designs that would be Hanri Kaya and one of her Turkish rugs popular in Europe and he formed a cooperative of weavers. Some of those weavers have since left the original cooperative and “the Turkish Star is buying those weavers’ rugs directly,” explained Hanri Kaya, Peter’s wife, a native of South Africa, who now runs the store while Peter travels in his home country looking for craft goods to import. Peter knew about the weaving cooperative and conceived of the plan to help more Turkish weavers find a market three years ago. “He’s a real ‘heart’ person. He has to help,” explained Hanri. “I’m coming behind with the details.” Peter recently returned from a buying trip to Turkey, this time with an eye to expanding the variety of products the store offers and finding more ways to support more rural craftsmen. “They are so grateful to us for giving them a market,” Hanri Kaya said. Turkish Star is representing 50 weaver families, most living in the districts of Ayvacik, Afyon and Balikeser in western Turkey. The store mainly features handmade rugs, but also carries Turkish ceramics, glassware and Travertine tile. “We’re trying to increase the variety of things, but all of it will be handmade by Turkish artisans.” “Ceramics are handmade on wheels and hand-painted,” Hanri explained. Many designs feature the tulip, the national symbol of Turkey. “Some are ancient designs and some are contemporary ones that art professors make up.” Turkish designs tend to be geometrical or involve animals. The rug weavers raise the sheep the wool is sheared from, collect the dye materials and are completely engaged with the entire process that results in a rug, Hanri said. Every weaver’s initials are woven into their creations. Weavers use simple looms. They farm during the day and work on rugs at night and through the winter. Weavers are usually women, though the store has one rug woven by a man. “Usually men don’t weave,” Kaya said. “They don’t have the patience.” A rug 10 feet by 8 feet would be considered large and two people would work on it. Rugs at the store vary in size but most are 6 x 8 feet, some are 5 x 3, and some are 10 x 8. Runners are typically 2.5 feet by 7 or 10 feet. Normal pricing of Middle Eastern rugs is in the range of $75 to $85 per square foot, Hanri said. The Turkish Star’s prices are in the $50 to $65 per square foot range. “We need enough profit to grow the project and keep them busy. Our aim is to provide work. We don’t want to hold a big inventory. We want to keep things moving,” she said. “Mothers are now training their daughters to weave.” “Rugs can last generations,” said Hanri, who is still using one that was made in 1896. “Turks do not wear shoes in the home. It’s against their culture,” she explained. So rugs suffer a great deal less wear there. “A good quality rug with a deep pile should last a minimum of two generations,” she said. “The yarns still have their natural oils in them so they resist stains.” A Turkish rug knot is tied to two strands of the warp, not tied to one and looped under a second in the way Persian rugs are made, she noted. This knotting system also contributes to durability. All the store rugs are inspected by a fine arts professor at a Turkish university who provides written certificates of the knot count and assurance that the Weaver Emine Onen in Cinarpinar, Turkey rugs are properly made according to traditional methods. When Kaya first came to the United States eight years ago, he headed for Charlottesville because he knew someone living there. The Kayas have two children now and live in Lyndhurst. They picked Crozet for the store location because of the construction boom. Weaver Gulseren Kaya and her two daughters “We noticed Crozet is a very developing place. We wanted to be where new houses are being built and there might be a need for our things. We’re getting there.” page 18 CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 Attendance Zones for Crozet and Brownsville Schools Likely to Shift Some students now attending Crozet Elementary are likely to be students at Brownsville Elementary next fall. The School Board scrapped plans to add on to Crozet Elementary at its Nov. 29 work session, scrubbing the item off its fiveyear Capital Improvements Projects list. An addition to Brownsville will proceed at the earliest possible date. A board vote on the building plan is set for Dec. 14. County school officials will meanwhile begin working on the details of a boundary shift between the two schools. Crozet has been over its capacity of 342 students since 2002. It currently has 423 students. The abandoned plan called for its capacity to be raised to 608 students. Happy Merry Joyful Winter Break December 22, 2006 to January 2nd, 2007 Warrior Marching Band was a highlight of the Crozet Christmas Parade Unweighted GPAs Unfair To Honors Students By Scot Masselli, WAHS Western Hemisphere Features Editor Albemarle County Schools recently studied the high school’s weighted GPA system and whether or not to drop it. Currently, students are awarded one point for AP classes, half a point for honors and a quarterpoint for advanced classes. The points are added to the number 1-4 given based on grade in the class. Standard classes do not receive bonus points. As with most committees, the Program of Studies Steering Committee seems to feel that they must recommend change to justify their existence, no matter how illogical the change may seem. The reasons and justifications committee members gave, even though they supported the same change, directly conflicted with each other. Committee Director Don Vale, the County Schools’ director of curriculum and instruction, said students would be more likely to take difficult classes if it did not affect their GPA. However, Monticello High School senior Britt Beringer, a student member of the com- mittee, believes that eliminating the current GPA system will stop kids from taking classes that may be over their heads, and therefore not take rigorous classes. Mr. Vale gave no explanation as to why students would take on the challenge of harder material and more work without any reward. The extra work that an AP class entails, which they might have to take to attract competitive colleges, may not be worth the effort as it could potentially pull down their GPA. As for Beringer’s assessment, assuming the new system is passed, complacent students who take standard and advanced level classes will be rewarded the same as those who do challenge themselves and often work late into the night to get a B in an honors or AP class. Western Albemarle math teacher Chuck Witt’s comments about students not wanting to challenge themselves with a lack of reward seems to be the most realistic opinion. People want and deserve to be rewarded for their extra efforts, he said. This belief is not only applicable to high school and college admissions, but also an intricate part of our society. Committee member Mark Rooks, a guidance counselor at Western, attempted to defend the new system. Rooks said that most colleges have their own system of weighing a student’s GPA. However, John Blackburn, dean of admissions at the University of Virginia, believes that most colleges do not go through the process of re-weighing GPA. While it seems that Albemarle County wants to recognize student accomplishments more completely at graduation, a point made by Beringer, it cannot be forgotten that they are diluting the achievements of others. In a feel-good world, this may be an attractive approach, but in the merit-based world we live in, it would be best to quantify students’ achievements and reward them all accordingly. CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 19 Affordable Housing —continued from page 1 assessed by the County at the affordable threshold, $191,000 (80 percent of the median County house value), or what the same percentage across the White Hall and Samuel Miller magisterial districts might be. He estimated that 40 percent of houses countywide probably qualify as affordable and that the percentage in Crozet is likely to be higher because of the history of housing types built here. According to federal data, the median income per household in Albemarle is $66,500, White said. The County’s goal is to see 15 percent of the units in a development project that goes through a rezoning process priced at or below the affordable threshold, White explained. But those units cannot be mandated and the Planning Commission and the Board of Supervisors “have consistently used the affordable housing policy as a guide” in evaluating development proposals, White said. Albemarle would need state enabling legislation in order to enact a binding County ordinance on affordable housing. Since the current policy was adopted in 2004, 600 units (Countywide) meeting the affordable criteria have been proffered by developers asking for rezonings. “We think that is pretty successful up to this point,” White said. Of the 400 in the Crozet Growth Area, 330 are in Old Trail and the remainder in the West Hall, Liberty Hall, and Wickham Pond developments, with all the projects offering about 15 percent of their planned units. “We expect an affordable housing component regardless of where the development is,” said White, meaning even in future developments in downtown Crozet. White said the Planning Commission is investigating ways to increase the use of a “bonus density” provision enacted by the County in the 1980s that allows developers proceeding with by-right projects to increase their allowable units by 30 percent if those meet affordable criteria. “It’s only used in rare cases now,” White said. The CT3 zoning type (a semi-dense residential area) allows a � ���������������� ������������������������� ��������������������������� ��������������������������������� ������������������������������� ������������������������� ����������������������������� ���������������������������� �������������������������� ������������������������� ����������������������������������� �������������������������������������� �������������������������������������� ���������������������������������� ����������������������� �������������������� ���������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������ ��������������������������� ���������������������������������������� �������������������������������������� � � ������������������ �� ������������������������ ��������������������������������������� ����������������������������������� � �������������������������� �� ��������������� �� �������������� ����������������������������������������� �� ������������������������� ������������������������� ������������������������������������� � � ������������ � ���������������� �� ���������������� �� ���������������������������� ������������� � ��������������������� � ������������ �� ���������������������������� ��������������������������������������� � �� ������������ �� ��������������������������������� �� ������������������������������� �� ������������������������ ������������������ � � ���� � �� � � � � � � � �� � �� ���� ��� �� � � � �� � � � ��� �������������������������������� density bonus for “accessory units,” rental units such as garage apartments that cannot be sold separately from the main dwelling. “We don’t have an incentive– based policy now. The only incentive [developers] have is they get the rezoning.” White said the County is looking for additional incentives. “Every development is different. In the end, the planning Commission and Supervisors look at the development in total,” said White. In other words, if the developer is proffering expensive road improvements, County leaders are less willing to press for affordable housing concessions as well. Builders are unwilling to discount their investment in the construction because they suspect the affordable house buyer would simply put the house back in the market and pocket the value the builder had sacrificed. White said raw land cost in Albemarle is the main factor in high housing cost in Albemarle. A ¼-acre developed lot (meaning it has a driveway, water and sewer) is worth $125,000. “That’s what the market will pay,” he said. White put the cost of actual construction in Albemarle at between $170 and $180 per square foot. The same cost in Fluvanna County is $130, he said. People have a preference for single family homes, White said, and rather than buy a townhouse in Albemarle will live farther away from their jobs, such as in Waynesboro or Augusta County, where land values are lower, if they can afford a single family home there. “Many people understand that a condo may be their only opportunity,” he said. In Crozet Crossing, an affordable housing project in which the Charlottesville Housing Foundation (which has since folded into the PHA) and the County jointly developed 30 small houses at the end of Cling Lane, houses sold for $80,000 to $90,000 in 1993-94 and are now worth $130,000 to $150,000, White pointed out. So even houses built to answer the need gradually become more expensive than many people can afford. Because mortgage lenders have a 75-25 rule of thumb they apply when evaluating house value in loan applications—75 percent of the value is the building and 25 percent is the land value—then high lot costs mean that lenders are looking for an equally expensive house to judge the loan sound, White said. Asked how the CCAC could promote more local affordable housing, White offered three thoughts: pressure developers to offer more units, pressure large employers to build housing for their employees, and increase funding for the County’s housing subsidy programs. The County provides $1 million a year to the Piedmont Housing Alliance and the Albemarle Housing Improvement Project for their affordable housing programs. The CCAC also agreed to investigate school crowding issues, especially at Crozet Elementary, and learned that the County has received a state grant to inventory historic buildings in Crozet. page 20 CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 30th Anniversary of Rockfish Gap Hawk Watch By Nancy King Every fall, armed with binoculars and lots of patience, a small army of dedicated birders watch for hawks on top of Afton Mountain just west of Crozet. Thousands of raptors migrate south from mid-August through mid-November, skirting the Blue Ridge Mountains at Rockfish Gap, on their way to their wintering grounds in Mexico, Central and South America. For 30 years, local hawk-watchers have been counting the hawks, eagles, vultures, and falcons as they soar overhead. Hawk-watchers scan the skies and find what look to the untrained eye to be tiny pin-pricks in the distance. As the tiny blobs get closer, the real experts in the group can tell by the shape, the flight pattern, and the number of wing-beats what kind of raptor is heading their way. The birds, at this point, are so far away or so high that observers can’t make out color, markings or size! “All raptors fly differently,” explained Jennifer Gaden, president of the Monticello Bird Club. “Some fly on steady wing-beats, others ride the thermals, and others do a kind of ‘flap, flap, glide.’” Raptors depend on strong updrafts to help follow the ridgelines. They ride thermals—rising bubbles of heated air—to great heights and then try to glide long distances without flapping, thus conserving their energy as they migrate thousands of miles to their winter ranges. Rockfish Gap is a popular migration corridor for 16 different kinds of raptors and it offers a panoramic view of both the Shenandoah and Rockfish Valleys. By far, the most common raptor on Afton Mountain is the Broadwinged hawk, a large chunky bird with snappy black and white bands on his tail. This year the team has tallied more than 14,000 Broadwinged hawks among the 16,000 total birds spotted. Other birds seen in large numbers include: sharpshinned hawk, Cooper’s hawk, American kestrel, osprey, and turkey vulture. The Rockfish Gap Hawk Watch began three decades ago with a small group of friends sitting on folding chairs in the parking lot of the Holiday Inn. On one September day in 1976 they counted 765 raptors, and a tradition was born. Thirty years later, the folding chairs have migrated to the patio of the Inn at Afton, and most of the observers come from three nearby bird clubs. Volunteers try to put in at least a few hours every day to count the hawks. Observers end up with sore necks and weary arms after four hours of hoisting binoculars and counting hawks, but most return year after year. “It’s a very personal experience to watch this phenomenon that has been going on for thousands of years,” Gaden said. “Migration is a beautiful mystery to me. It may seem dull and prosaic to sit and count birds for hours on end, but these numbers are necessary for bird preservation.” All the data collected at Rockfish Gap is sent to the Hawk Migration Association of North America, which works to conserve raptor populations. New Trail Being Built in Mint Springs Mint Springs Valley Park is getting a new hiking trail on Little Yellow Mountain thanks to the efforts of volunteer trail builders. Designed to accommodate two walkers side-by-side, not just single-file, the new trail will connect to the Hollow Trail near its start (not far from the playground) and meanderingly climb the north slope of Little Yellow until it merges with an old logging road and eventually rejoins the Hollow Trail. Two dozen volunteers from the Charlottesville Albemarle Mountain Bike Association [CAMBA] spent several hours Dec. 2 “benching” (cutting into the slope to make the trail level) the new route. County greenways director Dan Mahon said he is organizing volunteer groups, plus inmate trustees, to keep up the effort and plans to have teams on the trail every other Saturday for the next few months. CAMBA volunteers are experienced trail builders and until this first visit to Mint Springs had put their energy into the 15 miles of bike trails at Walnut Creek Park. “This is not the kind of trail they like to build because it’s not death-defying,” Mahon observed. “Our emphasis on the trails here at Mint Springs is hikers first. “I want more contemplative trails with places along them to stop, overlooks,” said Mahon, who noted that the trail needs a name, preferably one with local meaning. The County employs two men to maintain Mint Springs Park, Beaver Creek reservoir, the Meadows, Greenwood Community Center and all the local schools, Mahon said, and with that work load it is impossible for them to tackle projects like trails. CAMBA trail builders and other volunteers “The County is trying to find a way to connect trails being built in the Crozet Growth Area to Mints Springs, “ Mahon said. Tucker Rollins, a new parks and trails service officer, will do some maintenance work on the MSVP trails and monitor them. Carlos Otoya of Crozet, who retired recently from Caterpillar Tractor in Fishersville, has been volunteering to work on the trails and has cleared most of the heavy obstacles, said Mahon. “He’s done magic up there.” Also on hand with muscle power was Bobby Anderson, Crozet’s champion 24-hour mountain bike racer, who has trained on the same slope and 10 years ago blazed a route with Mike Lamb that follows nearly the same path. Carlos Otoya, trail-building volunteer Jeff Claman (left) of Crozet joined fellow mountain–bikers Greg Castner (who is also an EMT-in-training with the Western Albemarle Rescue Squad) and Eric Anderson of Charlottesville to work a section of the trail that requires a stone retaining wall. CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 21 New in Town • Linda and Ran Henry By Margaret Kramer Family ties and the beauty of the Blue Ridge Mountains have brought Ran and Linda Henry to Crozet. “I grew up in Ohio; Ran grew up in West Virginia,” Linda explained. “After 21 years in the Florida flatlands, we were ready for a change. Ran has family ties to Virginia.” “My great grandfather, Robert Randolph Henry (I’m number IV), was a confederate lieutenant and led the Petersburg Rifles,” said Ran. “He had 7 sons. One was my grandfather. Another was Ashby Henry, my great-uncle. He lived in Greenwood. His portrait hangs in U.Va.’s Alumni Hall—he was president of the alumni association. His son, my uncle Dick Henry, can remember sitting with his father in the President’s box in the 1930’s when HampdenSydney College beat U.Va. 8 – 0. Also, my cousin Sam Weems was head of the Parks Department in the 1930’s and oversaw the construction of the Blue Ridge Parkway.” “We were in Florida,” Linda continued, “talking about moving, and Ran said, ‘What about Virginia?’ We looked at a map and decided to check out the Charlottesville area. So we came to Charlottesville, looked at houses there, picked up a homes magazine, and saw a house for sale in Crozet. We drove out to have a look. I just didn’t want to be way out in the country in the middle of nowhere. Crozet turned out to be right up our alley. When we first rode into Crozet, we were in awe. There at the BP gas station there’s a clock tower, with the mountains behind it, and it was so pretty and we were so taken with it. We had done our time in Florida. We wanted something more—mountains, camping, change of seasons.” “She was raised a little more rural than I was,” Ran said, “and she was concerned that if we just bought a house in the country it would be a little lonesome. But we found Gray Rock, and it’s a great community. People are all embraced. Sometimes we get together with the neighbors and we’ll be outside for 2 hours before a single car goes by.” Answers to this month’s puzzle. Linda and Ran Henry The Henry’s own Blue Mountain Weddings. Ran is also a journalist and author, recently completing a book about football great Steve Spurrier. “We were trying to create our life after our daughter left for college,” Ran said. “We wanted to move somewhere that we could continue our wedding business,” Linda added. “And to our delight, this area is a wedding mecca. One recent Saturday we did two weddings. One was at Wintergreen—the couple was from Tasmania. The other wedding was at U.Va. chapel, with the reception in Ivy.” “I tell you,” said Ran, “if someone has spent even 6 minutes in this area in their whole lives, they want to come back here to get married.” Our talk turned to hiking. “Ran wanted to be close to the Appalachian Trail, so he could just hop on and hike.” “We found out this summer that hikers have trail names like Internet users have screen names.” “We ran into this one man on the trail,” explained Linda, “and introduced ourselves as Ran and Linda, and he introduced himself as Whispers. We must have looked surprised because then he told us, ‘That’s what we do here; we have trail names.’” Ran also expressed admiration for the Trail Angels. “I’ve always been fascinated by the Trail Angels network over in Waynesboro. What a great tradition they have of helping hikers.” The conversation came back to Crozet. “Just about everything you need is here,” Linda commented. “You have your library, your little grocontinued from page 27 page 22 CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 Greenwood Church Celebrates 121st Anniversary By Kathy Johnson Members and friends of the Mt. Zion Baptist Church of Greenwood celebrated 121 years of service Sunday, November 12. Current pastor Kathleen H. Burnett delivered the morning sermon and guest pastor Tracie Daniels, from Mt. Calvary Baptist Church in Ivy, spoke in the afternoon. Those attending were given a printed history of the church with photos of the current pastor and her family and church members and officers. After the morning service, a potluck celebration was held, followed by personal remembrances of church history and the afternoon service. Choirs from both churches provided music. Established in 1858 in the small black community known as Newtown, and now known as Greenwood, the original church met in an old house by the Greenwood Depot. A tract of land was donated by a Mr. Dolling and the original church was built in 1885. Later, with donations from the community and as far away as New York, the church relocated to its present site. Money to assist in erecting the current building was given by both white and black community members, including Mrs. Gordon Smith, Lady Astor, Reverend and Mrs. Marston, Langhorne Gibson and Ben Smith. In November of 1946, the first sermon in the new church was given by Reverend Sylvester Spears, but the building was not completed until sometime after that when additional funds were raised by a committee including Mabel Alwood (chairman), Deacon Robert Green (co-chairman) T. C. Smith (secretary) and B. F. Smith (treasurer). Pastors for the church included Reverend W. T. Hughes (the first minister), Reverends Emmet Green, Joe Lias, A. L. Upshaw, Carter Carr and Reverend Wilson. Sylvester Spears (who organized the internal structure of the church) was the last pastor to serve the early years of the church; he was followed by the Reverend James Lockett. The pulpit was vacant between 1957 and 1959, when Reverend Calvin Chew came Celebrating 121 years of service in the Greenwood Community, Mt. Zion members Tressie Boyd (left) and Phyllis White (right) are also busy getting the food out of the kitchen and to the many guests there for the celebration. A joyous celebration, members enjoyed sharing stories from the past and celebrating the future of Mt. Zion. to Mt. Zion. In 1962, Roger J. Ford was appointed pastor and he was followed by the Reverend A. C. Jones. In 1972, Reverend Booker came to the church. Between 1984 and 1999, when Reverend Kathleen Burnett came to Mt. Zion, the pastors were Reverend Betty W. Creasy, followed by Reverend Wayne Stevens. Over the years a number of fundraisers have taken place and much work has been accomplished including completion of the church basement, installation of storm windows, the addition of heating and central air, installation of a bathroom off the vestibule, renovation of the Fellowship Hall and making the church handicap-accessible. Currently, church services at Mt. Zion are held at 11 a.m. on the first through fourth Sundays. During those months with a fifth Sunday, that service is held at 10 a.m. Communion is given on the second Sunday of the month and is open to all. R a s ; CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 23 The Green Olive Tree Snippets By Sheila T. Freeman Green Olive Tree volunteers come in all shapes sizes and vintages. We have a number of retirees, as well as younger workers who can lend us a hand when time allows. On occasion a whole family will come to sort, haul and clean. Length of service is variable. This ranges from a passing gentleman’s “Let me carry in this heavy bag for you,” to 27 continuous years. As life’s directions change, so do the volunteers move to new ventures and paths. They stay for varying lengths of time, depending on their circumstances. Except for two most exceptional Crozet Ladies: June Andrews and Nancy Virginia Bain. They are the “Founding Mothers” of the Green Olive Tree and have been running the organization for 27 years. June and Nancy are two of the seven originators of the Community Christian Thrift Shop. June is the chairman of the Board of Directors. Nancy Virginia is the official treasurer. They are the team who, together with other active members of the board, pray, propose policicies, ponder problems and practicalities. June and her husband Martin “Boots” taught and lived at Miller School for a number of years. They raised four children and now live in Crozet. June keeps up an active pace. She is a gifted musician, plays piano, and sings in her church and at other events. Would you believe June has time to teach piano? June, our capable leader, keeps us focused on the task at hand. Nancy Virginia Bain is hard to miss with her twinkling eyes and snow white hair. She and her late husband Kirk raised six children in Crozet. Nancy, an avid reader, is involved with numerous Charlottesville ministries, including serving with the Hospice of the Piedmont. It is said that customers visit us just to see and talk to her. She knows no strangers and caringly listens and remembers all you share with her. Although these founding mothers are involved with home, community, grandchildren, trips and friends, the Green Olive Tree service has been unselfishly integral in their lives. Thanks again to the generous community for all their donations. This enables us to help many neighbors. Come in and shop our wellstocked Christmas Bazaar. Peace on Earth Dennis Hutchins of Western Ridge paused before loading his Christmas tree for a picture with his daughters Ellie and Madeleine. The Hutchins got their white pine from Henley’s Orchard, where Wayne Clark is trying to raise money to send a truckload of apples to Southwest Virginia to distribute to poor families. Hauling 500 bushels to Wise County would cost $5,000, total, Clark said, and so far his campaign to raise money from tree and wreath sales has netted about $1,400. Clark had 30 trees delivered the last weekend of November and sold a dozen in the first afternoon at $25 each. “If the money comes in, we’ll go [to Wise] the week before Christmas,” said Clark, who is praying for Crozetians to show their usual charity toward others. An account has been set up at the BB&T bank in Crozet to accept donations. Volunteers Get Ready for Annual Hebron Bethlehem Village Volunteers from throughout the area are preparing their wardrobes for this year’s annual Bethlehem Village at Hebron Baptist Church in Rockfish Valley. Focusing on bringing to life the little village of Bethlehem during the time Jesus was born, their efforts have already been acknowledged by receipt of the Mayor’s Choice Award at the holiday parade held December 1 in Waynesboro. Conceived in 1999 by Jim Ailor (Hebron Baptist Church pastor at the time), Hebron church members, along with volunteers from Afton, Crozet, Nellysford, Waynesboro and Charlottesville churches do their best to bring to life the Bethlehem experience. “We have several shops, a baker, weavers, potters, all working away at their crafts,” says David Riley, director of the Bethlehem Project. “The Bethlehem Village is a way of taking you back and seeing what it was really like.” Roman Soldiers, Wise Men with camels and shopkeepers add authenticity to the experience, which will typically draw some 6,000 to 8,000 people from throughout the state during the three weeks of operation. Guests are invited to stroll the streets of Bethlehem, enjoy an authentic meal (typically fish or beef with some vegetable of the day, nuts By Kathy Johnson and dried fruits), and watch reenactments of the nativity scene. The event is scheduled for Friday, December 15 through Sunday, December 24, from 6 to 9 each evening. Special afternoon hours will be available one day only, on Sunday, December 17, and the restaurant will be open December 15–17 and December 21–23 from 6 to 9 p.m. only. Visitors are invited to join church members for communion in the Village on Christmas Eve at 8:30 p.m. This special event is held at Hebron Baptist Church on Tanbark Drive, just 3.5 miles south on Route 151 from Route 250. Pastor Jim Hardwick is the current pastor at Hebron. Bethlehem Village is free to all those attending, but a donation box is available. For more information log on to www.bethlehemvillage.org or call the church at 540-4566868. page 24 CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 Christmas” 26. Sweet potato or pumpkin: e.g. 28. Scrap of food 29. 1st ladies, in a sense 30. Small compact mass 31. Difficult 32. Malevolent 33. Inhabitant of an ancient Persian kingdom 34. Mental image 35. _______ Ball (toy) 36. Meat for scallopini 37. Simpleton 40. Wheat: French 41. Cool drink 43. Average grade 44. Keenly eager 45. Low (animal sound) 46. Wearies or annoys 49. You may have one on each side of your throat 50. Depart 51. A local mountain or “What can _______ do for you?” 52. Steer 53. Greek god who holds up the heavens 54. Son of Adam 55. Something est. as a model 56. The Greek “Mars” 57. River tamed by the Aswan Dam 59. Lhasa ______ (breed of dog) 61. One type of PhD exam 63. Snug, private retreat 65. Expression of surprise Answers on page 21. By Mary Mikalson AC RO S S 1. Caviar source 4. Functions 8. The Mona _______ 12. A local mountain or a native of Istanbul 13. Soccer great 14. Habituate 16. Fifi to Pierre 17. Small food fish 18. Lancaster et al. 19. Push from below 21. Petty quarrel 23. Instruct. period 24. Coffee or tea server 25. Sheriff Taylor’s son 27. Sorrowful state 29. Speaker’s platform 30. “_____ and Peace” (Tolstoy novel) 31. Shorten a skirt 34. Encroach upon 37. Malt kiln 38. “Hail” to Caesar 39. Azalea eaters 40. Below standard 41. Barren 42. Epoch 43. A local mountain or a leg muscle 45. A local mountain or the inbetween part 47. Half of a labor org. 48. Eden inhabitant 49. Ran swiftly 50. Hawaiian necklace, maybe 51. Packet of stamps 52. Nitrous oxide: e.g. 55. Not deranged 58. Way to fix a toe? 60. _______ River (Waynesboro waterway) 62. Major or minor: e.g. 64. “How much?”: Modern Greek 66. Irritate 67. Dig deeply 68. What the Gators do best 69. Actor ______ Sandler 70. Perceived by the eye 72. “_____ Miserables” (Hugo novel) D OW N 1. Hearsay 2. Hunter constellation 3. Stretches 4. See 51 down 5. Blood infection 6. Reason for a ladder? 7. A coarse, stiff hair 8. Ad ____ (improvise) 9. Sign on a restroom door 10. Fully convinced 11. “Live _____” (theater in Charlottesville) 12. Forbidden: var. 15. Letter before “tee” 20. A tailless, leaping amphibian 22. “______ the night before CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 25 CLASSIFIED ADS ONCE A YEAR WINTER DISCOUNT-SAVE 20% Jennie’s Landscaping and Groundskeeping knows what is good for your garden even in the dormant months. No job too small, no one turned away due to finances. References available. 434-531-8272 [email protected] LOG/WOOD STACKER: Keep your wood high and dry with a homemade LOG/ WOOD STACKER! Pressure treated wood and a special metal bracket ¼ cord rack $ 50.00 ½ cord rack $ 65.00 Free Delivery • Senior Discount • Great Christmas Gift! Call Dudley (434) 973-6828 Office Space for Lease Downtown Crozet at “The Square.” 655 sq.ft. renovated suite with kitchen, bath & 12 ft. pressed tin ceilings. Owner/ Agent 823-4694. ADOPTION – INFANT Friendly, active Virginia couple looking to adopt an infant. Will pay legal and medical expenses. Neighborhood with great schools, full of children. Susan & Tom: toll-free 1-877-494-6366 or e-mail [email protected]. Happy Hanukkah page 26 DECEMBER 2006 CROZET gazette Medicine —continued from page 16 flight crew finished their paperwork. In fact, 25 percent of helicopter patients are discharged from the ED without requiring hospital admission. The problem is not the flight crews, who have my deep respect for their talents and sense of duty, but rather a lack of oversight of the industry. This is not just an abstraction here in Charlottesville, where the EMS and ER community stills mourns the loss of C.A.R.S. Assistant Chief Nikki Keilar last year in a crash into the Potomac river. While the FAA dithers, I call on all of our local first responders to consider carefully their role in promoting the safe use of air evacuation for those who really need it and continuing the good work you do for our community. Dollins —continued from page 15 retirement age, turned their attention to the auctioneer’s pulpit, where the pattering chant of price bids was about to start. Gas heaters hung from the ceiling were burning and Showalter lightheartedly scolded the crowd not to get drowsy. “What young men you see are managers for a rich man’s farm,” Dollins explained. Two women were on hand, wives probably, and a half-dozen inattentive kids. “Those calves don’t have the legs for me,” Dollins remarked as the first pair came through. Eleven Angus steers came in averaging 450 pounds. They went for $1.13 per pound. “That one’s too short from front to rear. I’ve seen ‘em get down in the 60s [cents] when they get short like that,” said Dollins. “You’ve got have a long body if you want them to ring the bell.” Next, seven steers @ 470: $1.10. Five steers @ 463: $0.98. (One had horn buds that just shouldn’t have been there.) Four steers@ 500: $1.07. Dollins puffed along contentedly, scanning the bidders, and finally peeled off his quilt-insulated shirt. He and Hicks exchanged knowing nods now and again. They were tracking bidders. “You’ve got a lot of order buyers here,” Dollins said. Three bull calves @ 496: $0.77. “It’ll take a month for them to recover [from castration] and maybe by spring they’ll look like steers,” he said to explain the discount price. A 500-pound Hereford steer came through. “That was a good buy,” he said continued from page 27 CROZET HARDWARE CO, INC. CROZET gazette DECEMBER 2006 page 27 Dollins —continued from page 26 approvingly. Nine Angus steers @ 536: $1.02. Fifteen more steers @ 566: $1.00. Nine steers @ 571: $1.06. Dollins leaned forward to tap his pipe clean on the rail and coughed a little. There are two tykes in the crowd now but still not more than two dozen souls under age 60. “That bull wasn’t worried about much,” Dollins observed as a calmly confident bull made stately strides out of the ring, oblivious of having been sold. Bull calf prices were “a little soft,” Dollins said. “Look for conformation first and then at the price,” he said. “If you get a bad one, cut him out and take him back next week and take the loss then. You’ve got to get rid of the wild ones. They’ll make the rest wild. “You want a straight back and a good distance from front to back. You don’t want them too tall. If they’ve got their head up high, back out. If they run around and around the ring . . . .” You can bet you’ll be hauling them back next week. It means they weren’t getting bread slices at home. From long experience on the farm, he knows: it’s calm, steady love that gets the happiest results. Henry —continued from page 21 cery store. We get our hair cut here, shop at the hardware store – we go to a lot of places here in town. I would like to have a bookstore, though. If we do need to go to the city for something, the ride to Charlottesville isn’t bad. Many of our neighbors work there.” Ran laughed as he said, “Now that we are here, we don’t want to let anyone else in!” In a more serious vein he said, “I certainly don’t want to see the downtown lose its character and flavor. Linda and I are so over-extended time-wise; I wish we had more time so we could get involved with civic matters. I think that perhaps a real hard look needs to be taken at how this growth is going to be managed. I know a lot of people are concerned. I can only imagine the sense of outrage that some people who live here must feel, seeing the place go from a community of 1200 souls to all this growth, with no end in sight.” “We love Crozet,” Linda summed up. “I can’t say enough about it. It’s perfect for us.” Ran and Linda Henry are here to stay in Crozet, along with their darling dog Greta. Consulting • Loans • LLC Formations Copyediting • Proofreading • Publishing Asst. Happy Holiday s ! Have a safe and joyous holiday season. 5974 Jarmans Gap Road [email protected] Ph: 434-823-2274 [email protected] Santa Claus Visits Crozet Kate and Mackenzie Whitely of Crozet asked Santa for an American Girl doll, a craft set, a tea set and an Ariel talking vanity. Sara Nottingham of Charlottesville, who comes to Crozet to meet Santa every year, asked him to bring her moon shoes, moon sand, and a Bratz Diamond Doll. Santa Claus took a break from the frantic bustle of his North Pole workshops to star in the Crozet Christmas parade Dec. 2 and hang out at the Firehouse to hear the latest updates to Christmas wish-lists from Crozet kids. He and Mrs. Claus stayed long enough for the Firehouse’s tree to be lit before dashing back north with a longer list of toys to make before Christmas Day. Santa and Mrs. Claus rode in a freight wagon driven by Trey Dillard and pulled jauntily along by Charlie and Gunner, two geldings known as the Stage Junction Clydesdales, who had their harnesses merrily decked out with holiday decorations. Trey’s wife Patty and kids Adam and Emily kept Santa company as the parade wound from Carter Street, through downtown, and culminated at the Firehouse where heaps of cookies and vats of hot chocolate waited. Also starring in the parade were the Western Albemarle High School marching band and cheerleaders, Engine 34 from the North Garden Volunteer Fire Department, three antique tractors, and Country 99.7 WCYK provided Christmas carols along the route though a loudspeaker system. “The elves are working 24/7,” reported Santa proudly, “but we’ll be able to meet the need.” The things he heard the most demand for were cell phones and iPods, he reported, with dolls and skateboards also popular. The CVFD Auxiliary, 10 devoted women who support the firefighters, sponsored the parade again this year and sold 3,000 raffle tickets, making Santa’s visit one of the CVFD’s most important fundraisers. When the raffle was drawn, Dana Stickler’s name was called for both the $50 and $100 prizes (proving the value of buying multiple chances). The $250 prize went to Blair Anderson and the top money, $500, was won by Todd McAllister. Judy Schmertzler, the Auxiliary’s president this year, announced that the parade prizes went to the WAHS band for best marching entry, to the Stage Junction Clydesdales (first prize for best-appearing entry—but they did have Santa after all) and the WAHS cheerleaders (second prize for best-appearing entry). Library Pumpkin-Carving Contest Winners Crozet Library patrons voted for their favorite carved pumpkin and chose three winners out of nine contenders: Turner Smith, Daisy Sandridge and (not pictured) Elizabeth Groth. The contest was open to pumpkin sculptors of all ages.