Categories
Living

May 2010: Kids

Free-form for all

Problem: Integrating kids in every room

When architect and mom of two Kendra Guiffre designed her family’s home on Lake Monticello, her struggle was to create a modern structure that would reflect her professional and personal aesthetic, but also respect the more traditional lake community where she was building. But she had an even bigger challenge than convincing the homeowners association of the beauty of her flat roofline and bright orange door. 

Architect and mom Kendra Guiffre designed a “napping/play area/kid sick bed” that helps integrate 7-year-old Piper and 9-year-old Owen into the family’s common space.

“One of our design criteria was that the house be child-friendly rather than childproof,” says Guiffre.

Instead of relegating the young ones to separate wings or the basement, Guiffre went for an egalitarian approach: “Everybody has a view of the lake, not just the master bedroom,” she says.

In fact, everyone has a view of the lake from just about everywhere thanks to Guiffre’s open, window-filled floor plan, where spatial distinctions among living, lounging, working and playing are minimal. Guiffre designed the spaces to be easily adapted and transformed as the family’s needs and desires change. For example, a toddler play corner of the kitchen has become an arts and crafts area as the kids have matured, and Guiffre plans to turn a built-in outdoor sandbox into a garden bed.

The house is so free-form and flowing that the family even shares a large bathroom where the kids’ end, with double sinks, toilet and showers, is connected to the parents’ end, with its own double sinks, toilet and showers, by a central bathtub flanked by privacy curtains on each side.

Incorporating a space of one’s own for the kids in every area of the home meant Guiffre often thought under, up and in. A small finished space tucked beneath the staircase has become a dressing room for 9-year-old Owen and 7-year-old Piper’s plays and skits; partial walls that don’t quite meet the 9′- to 14′-foot ceilings throughout the home have become reading nooks and hideaway lofts; and an alcove built into the partial wall of shelves in the kitchen has become a special lounging area of the arts and crafts corner.

“We call it the ‘napping/ play area/kid sick bed,’” says Guiffre.—Katherine Ludwig

 

Buried treasure

Tired of hunting for firemen’s hats, tiaras, fairy wings and superhero capes strewn about the house? Keep the dress-up attire contained in a large toy chest, like this one that doubles as a bench from Kidkraft, and your junior actors will be ready for the next impromptu performance. Natural Finished Toy Box, $144.99 at BedBathandBeyond.com.—K.L.

 

Categories
Living

May 2010: The little kit that could

“Living carefully, purposely, frugally just. makes. sense. And is tons of fun.” 

Green living enthusiast Copeland Casati wrote that recently on her blog, and it’s as good a summary of what she and her family are up to as you could find. For the moment, this clan—pink-haired, tech-minded Copeland, her German-born husband Christoph and their two kids—live in Richmond, in a mid-century house that’s not particularly efficient and doesn’t offer much in the way of neighborhood connections or walkability.

 

But they have an ace up their sleeves: their 55-acre plot in Charlotte County. They’ve been spending weekends there since 2005, first in a camper and, since fall 2008, in a small, modern house designed by Charlottesville architect David Day to be highly energy efficient. The house isn’t connected to the electric grid, and it has no well. When it’s eventually finished, the Casatis plan to live there full-time, but they’ll stay off-grid.

The Casa Ti—both a play on its owners’ last name and a foreign language mashup (Spanish for “house,” Chinese for “substance”)—is a passive solar structure that needs little energy for heating or cooling. It’s also a business: Designed as a kit, the Casa Ti is sold through Copeland’s website, greenmodernkits.com. Even as the Casatis continue work on their own Casa Ti (on the list this summer: installing solar panels), the same kit is going up in New York State and Colorado. 

Copeland expects those other kits will wind up looking substantially different than her own. Whereas she’s a fan of modern design (her own kit is clad in corrugated galv-alum panels), she says, “Somebody might clad the Casa Ti in reclaimed cedar shingles. The person that’s building in Colorado, he doesn’t care about industrial modern design. We might even see some quilts [in his house].”

She takes a delighted view of these variations, which is also her attitude toward the search for salvaged mod goodies with which to furnish her own abode. And even more broadly, she’s preaching the gospel of living well with less—and thoroughly enjoying it. “How many bathrooms do you really need? How many minutes a day are they actually being used?” she asks. “Take away the amenities so that people can live better, so families are together.”

Off-grid living: Copeland telecommutes using a tractor battery.

Kits for the rest of us

A web developer by trade, Casati spotted a niche in the green building market that she judged needed filling. “As somebody who is steeped in design and technology, green building, and energy efficiency,” she says, “prefab house kits just made sense to me. I researched forever and fell in love with line after line of gorgeous green prefab designs that I couldn’t afford.” 

Her response was to charge David Day and several other architects to design house kits that were energy efficient, affordable and aesthetically pleasing. Besides Day’s 1,200-square-foot Casa Ti, the results include the R1 house (a 2,000-square-foot, modern-style dwelling), three traditional-style cottages in various sizes, and two modern-style cabins. 

Buying a “kit” in this case means structural insulated panels (SIPs) for walls and roof, complete documents for contractors, and a list of doors and windows that customers order separately. Exterior and interior finishes—cabinets, flooring, wall surfaces, and so on—don’t come with the kit, so each client can customize her house’s looks. “At the end, it looks like that person’s home,” says Casati. Kit prices range from roughly $22,500 to $39,000.

 

"Put up what you can afford"

Mod finds from thrift stores bring style to the still-unfinished kit house.

Customers can also decide whether to stay off-grid or tap into standard utilities. Near Appomattox, the Casatis are spending their weekends edging their own Casa Ti toward off-grid liveability. On a recent spring Friday, Copeland showed up with a ceramic duck that she put in her 7-year-old son’s room, savoring the chance to do a little decorating before the summer’s big push to install solar panels for electricity and hot water, radiant floor heat, and rainwater collection (the latter designed by Charlottesville’s Rainwater Management Systems).

She and her family are used to being unplugged—they have a solar cooker, a composting toilet, and a skeptical eye toward excess power and water use. “I have been known to telecommute off my tractor battery,” says Copeland. She expects that even when she has power and water in the Casa Ti, she’ll strive to minimize the demand she puts on the off-grid systems.

“They’re not trying to make this into a normally functioning house with microwaves and hair dryers,” says David Day, their Charlottesville architect. “They are fitting their lifestyle to the limitations of systems. In other words, it’s very expensive to put in solar electricity, so they’re downgrading their electric use to meet that. Rather than a whole roof of panels, put up what you can afford.”

The passive-solar attributes of Day’s design should certainly help. With a small, efficient design, “You don’t need some big honkin’ air conditioner trying to cool a 10,000-square-foot house,” Casati says. 

Small bedrooms and built-in storage make the most of the house’s 1,200 square feet.

Day stretched the house’s long axis along east and west, creating a long south-facing wall that’s 25 percent glass to collect light and heat in winter. A concrete slab foundation, doubling as the floor, will collect and store this energy; in summer, overhangs will provide shade to keep the sun out. 

The roof is split into two parts: a slanted south-facing roof where solar panels will go, and a flatter section to the north. This arrangement makes space for clerestory windows in the main open living space, which—when they and the south windows are opened on summer nights—will allow hot air to flow up and out. 

Meanwhile, SIPs construction makes the house extra tight, further slashing energy demand for heating and cooling. “Last summer it was 100 degrees in the field, and with the combination of SIPs and clerestory windows, inside it was 80 degrees,” says Casati. SIPs also mean speedy construction. The Casatis’ SIPs, manufactured in Winchester, arrived by truck in late 2008 and a local Amish crew assembled them into a weathertight structure within a week.

 

 

Wallet-friendly style

“My mission is frugality,” says Copeland, conjuring a lifestyle not of sacrifice but of gleeful treasure-hunting. “We go thrifting and have a mental checklist of what we could use in five to 10 years,” she explains. She’s found beds at Richmond’s Habitat for Humanity ReStore and Diversity Thrift, secondhand cafeteria chairs for $4 each, a livestock trough to use as a bathtub. 

A solar cooker affords the family hot meals even without electricity.

Her biggest score of all: salvaged maple flooring from a basketball court at Virginia Military Institute, which is being installed on many of the Casa Ti’s interior walls. That find popped up on govdeals.com. “I love the patina of all the stories on there,” she says.

For Day, designing a kit house, adaptable to all kinds of sites, was an unusual challenge. “I typically do very customized projects—looking at context and particular views,” he says. “We decided intentionally to not do that; [we said] ‘let’s just work on this as a basic idea of a house.’” He didn’t visit the Casatis’ site until construction was already underway. “It’s a shell you can inhabit and turn it into your own,” he says. “That’s exactly what they’re doing with this gym floor.”

They’ll also be employing lots of quirky touches, from modern lighting to a collection of secondhand cuckoo clocks for their son’s room. Walls not covered in gym floor or wallpaper (a pink and white print for the Casatis’ daughter, a faux-forest print for their son) will get a coat of ceramic paint, which will smooth the rough surface of the SIPs and provide a touch more insulation.

The Casatis have made one big change to Day’s three-bedroom, one-bathroom floor plan: moving the kitchen from the southwest corner to the center of the large open common space. “We as a family eat together at every meal and we sit down for dinner,” Copeland explains. “I really wanted to picture us sitting down for a leisurely late meal and lingering over our supper at sunset.” The dining table, then, gets the southwest corner and the site’s longest views.

The family represents a combination, very of-the-moment, of back-to-the-land ethics with technical savvy and D.I.Y. chutzpah. “The irony is we’re not some crunchy [couple]. We’re both in technology,” says Copeland. Still, she thinks playing outside is the best possible way for her kids to spend time. She gestures out the Casa Ti’s big south windows: “Our children’s big entertainment is that tire swing, and that play equipment [handed down by a neighbor],” she says. “It’s ridiculous that people would even consider throwing that away.”

 

Copeland Casati’s green house kits

 


Sinda Cabin

Price: Starts at $28,053

Square footage: 886 (1,126 with sleeping loft)

Bedrooms: 1 (loft)

The Dogtrot Mod

Price: $26,595

Square footage: 1,505

Bedrooms: 3


Casa Ti

Price: Starts around $22,537

Square footage: 1,200

Bedrooms: 3

Midway

Price: $34,500

Square footage: 1,495

Bedrooms: 2

CornerHouse

Price: Varies; starts at $85/square foot

Square footage: Varies; roughly 1,100-1,200

Bedrooms: 2-3 

R1 Residential

Price: $30,000

Square footage: 2,000

Bedrooms: 2

Bienvenue

Price: Starts at $39,280

Square footage: 2,084

Bedrooms: 3

 

 

 

Categories
Living

May 2010: Real Estate

 With interest rates still at a historic low, some homeowners may consider refinancing from a standard 30-year fixed rate mortgage to a 15-year mortgage. Nationally, it seems a lot of folks are doing just that—the Mortgage Bankers Association says that one in four refinance applications in March was for a 15-year loan, up from 12.2 percent the year before.

 

There are a few key advantages to this strategy, says Jason Crigler, residential mortgage specialist with Crown Mortgage in Charlottesville. 

First of all, 15-year mortgages generally have lower interest rates than 30-year mortgages. Right now, interest rates on a 15-year FRM (fixed rate mortgage) stand at 4.4 percent, compared to 5.07 percent for a 30-year FRM, according to the most recent available figures from Freddie Mac. Both rates have been declining on average since January 2009, and may continue to fall.

Why the differing rates? It’s because “the shorter the term, the less likely inflation will become a factor over time—it’s a less risky investment for the lender,” explains Crigler. “But when a loan is spread out over the course of 30 years, inflation becomes a bigger concern. The interest rate has to absorb those fluctuations.”

The second plus to a 15-year FRM is that while the monthly payments are higher—though not double, notably—the term of the loan is half (down from 360 to 180 months), so the borrower saves a huge amount in financing charges. A larger portion of each month’s mortgage goes toward paying down the principle, not interest.

As an example of just how much savings, consider the following: The monthly payment on a 15-year FRM of $200,000 at 4.4 percent is $1,520. The monthly payment on a 30-year FRM for the same amount at 5.07 percent is $1,082. That additional $438 per month for a 15-year FRM might seem painful in the short term until you consider the long term savings. Interest paid over the full term of that 15-year FRM is $73,561 compared to a whopping $189,598—nearly the amount of the loan itself—for the 30-year FRM. 

One would think that the low-low-low interest rates would drive demand for 15-year mortgages, but Crigler says that hasn’t been the case in the Charlottesville area. Not only do a lot of people erroneously assume the monthly payments will be double—they’re not, they’re more like 25 to 40 percent higher—many can’t afford increased monthly payments of anything right now, given the current economy.

But a 15-year mortgage is a great option for those looking to refinance or who’ve already paid down a portion of their 30-year FRM. “I love seeing clients choose a 15-year fixed over a longer term loan, if they can afford it and it makes sense for their situation,” he says.

If you’re concerned you can’t afford a 15-year mortgage, the lender will remove any guesswork by taking you through a much more stringent application process to determine whether your income qualifies. This is a sharp contrast to the application process of years past, when anyone “with a pulse could basically qualify for a loan,” says Crigler. “These days, it’s a lot tougher to get into a real estate situation you can’t afford.”  

For more information about current (and always changing) interest rates on various types of mortgages, check out Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey at www.freddiemac.com.

Categories
Arts

“Saturday Night Live,” “Worst Case Scenario,” “Best Food Ever”

“Saturday Night Live” 

Saturday 11:30pm, NBC

Finally, proof that the Internet is good for something other than porn. A few months ago hipsters launched an online campaign to get comic legend Betty White to host “SNL.” More than 50,000 people got behind the movement, and it paid off: The 88-year-old former star of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and “Golden Girls” will host the Mother’s Day Eve episode of the venerable sketch show. Even though White has no children, she’s kind of a nana to us all—a totally awesome nana, I would add. Even though White could totally handle this by herself, the “SNL” producers are upping the ante by bringing in a bunch of great lady alums, including Molly Shannon, Rachel Dratch, Ana Gasteyer, Maya Rudolph, Amy Poehler and UVA’s own Tina Fey.

 

“Worst Case Scenario”

Wednesday 10 & 10:30pm, Discovery

Embarrassing confession: I have this compulsion that no matter where I am—theater, restaurant, friend’s house, dentist’s office—one of the first things I do is mentally map out an escape route should something go awry. I can’t relax until I’ve done that. This is problematic for my current living situation, a sixth-floor apartment with no fire escape. I’ve had to resign myself to the fact that when the zombie apocalypse comes, I’m cadaver chow. Perhaps I’ll learn some new tricks from celebrity survivalist Bear Grylls, who has parlayed his “Man Vs. Wild” success into this new show, in which he shows us how to live through urban disasters. For instance, you learn how to best get out of a burning car, or how to outrun a pack of wild dogs. Great, wild dogs. Something else to obsess about…

 

“Best Food Ever” 

Monday 9pm, TLC

Americans love food shows, but I personally find them frustrating. The stuff looks so good, but I can’t actually taste any of it. For that reason this new documentary series will be especially hard to watch. “Best Food Ever” sets out to find, well, the best food ever, with episodes dedicated to outrageous sandwiches, astonishing sweets, revolutionary food carts, incredible cheeses and more. You’ll be introduced to a $100 cheesesteak made from Kobe beef, to peanut-butter French toast, and other treats. Narrating the cross-country food search is “Roseanne” star John Goodman, who knows a little something about eating. 

Categories
News

Separation anxiety

Dear Ace: I called my trash removal company today and they’re telling me that I don’t need to recycle, but that if I put all my trash in the receptacle, they’ll separate the recyclables from the garbage. This just seems too good to be true. What’s really up with trash removal and recycling?—Doubting in Fluvanna

If your garbage gets picked up by Dixon, All American, Fluvanna Disposal or one of six other independent waste disposal contractors in Central Virginia that send their trash to the Van der Linde Recycling Center for processing, then it’s true: Now, even if you don’t recycle, you still recycle.

If you missed the news about Van der Linde Recycling’s new household waste facility, Ace doesn’t blame you—it opened for operations in November 2009 in the midst of a long-standing lawsuit against the Fluvanna-based private waste collector by the Rivanna Solid Waste Authority. The suit ended in January with Van der Linde paying the RSWA $600,000, but Ace isn’t going to recapitulate the details of the messy legal saga. Instead, he’ll bring you up to speed on the particulars of your newly sustainable, albeit slightly less conscientious, disposal practices.

The Van der Linde Recycling Center, located near the Zion Crossroads off of Route 250 East, describes itself as “the landfill of the future,” separating and recycling nearly all types of household garbage—everything except hazardous or Freon products, toxic chemicals, or tires—and also sorts through construction and demolition debris. According to the Center’s website, its mammoth “Green Machine” can process 100 tons of trash per hour and recycle over 90 percent of it—although after several phone calls and an e-mail to Van der Linde, Ace wasn’t able to get an answer about what happens to the remaining refuse.

But on the whole, it’s a brilliant idea, right? Never mind that the reason we need a recycling center is because, by and large, we can’t be trusted to separate our own garbage. There aren’t many ways to derive a sense of civic responsibility so easily as tossing a depleted handle of Wild Turkey into the red receptacle instead of the green one. Even if those feelings were contrived, Ace will miss them.

If your trash removal company isn’t one of the contractors that go to the Van der Linde plant for processing, however, you can drop off your garbage at the facility yourself. You’ll feel like part of the conservation process again, at least, if you don’t consider the gas you burn getting there. 

You can ask Ace yourself. Intrepid investigative reporter Ace Atkins has been chasing readers’ leads for 21 years. If you have a question for Ace, e-mail it to ace@c-ville.com.

Categories
Living

Social networking and the rise of the regional wine movement

Holding a spit cup and tasting sheet in one hand, a wine glass and pen in the other, and cradling a sheath of papers between her forearm and chest, with her glasses sliding halfway down her nose, the wine blogger shuffled into the hallway to square off with eight wines from Maryland. Pressed around the little table to which the Free State’s vino was relegated, another half dozen bloggers were typing onto the tiny screens of their smart phones, all the while swirling and spitting. Inside the adjoining conference room, the scene was writ large as 80something wine types sampled and rated 40 or more Virginia wines. Welcome to the new age of instant wine judging: The Twitter Taste-Off.

 

A couple of weekends ago, I joined five or six dozen people from across the wine industry (though most were bloggers) for the annual conference hosted by drinklocalwine.com, whose mission is exactly what the name tells you, and which this year set up shop in Leesburg. (Media were comped for the entire weekend at Lansdowne Resort courtesy of the Virginia Wine Board, which, thank you ladies and gents of the Commonwealth, are your tax dollars at work.) Drinklocalwine is a labor of love for Jeff Siegal of Texas, now known as The Wine Curmudgeon, and Dave McIntyre, who covers wine for The Washington Post. Two geekier and more enthusiastic wine lovers you won’t meet. Prior to the Taste Off, topics of concern at the two-day conference included which grape varietals thrive in Virginia and why; whither local wine in restaurants that nonetheless tout local food; and the role of social media in the wine business.

Wine writing has changed dramatically in the past decade, with blogs and social link-up sites like Twitter crashing the gates once guarded by scorekeepers such as Robert Parker and Wine Spectator. Events like virtual tastings, or VTs, are now SOP on Twitter—notes being rapidly shared to the tune of 140 characters max. Once the drink-what-you-like school of wine writing took off, it was inevitable that regionalist factions would surface, too. 

Here at The Working Pour, where the philosophy “Drink local. And often.” prevails, we delight in finding the bandwagon so darn full, but while we made a valiant effort at tweeting and tasting simultaneously, eventually we gave up in favor of tasting and schmoozing. (Virginia has an abundance of personable winemakers, and, as an indication of how important this event was to their work, many of them poured at the Taste Off in person.) Our blogosphere colleagues managed well, however, with comments rapidly springing up on the big screen, such as this one from Sean Sullivan of Seattle, a.k.a. @wawinereport: “Finding lots of pretty cedar aromas on a lot of the #vawine BDX varieties.”

Ninety minutes later, the winners were announced. Breaux Vineyards led the reds with its 2002 Merlot Reserve and picked up the Media Choice award, too. Best white was the 2008 Albarino from Chrysalis. People’s Choice for best wine overall went to Michael Shaps’ 2008 Viognier. 

If you want to start drinking local wine, those are three lovely suggestions.

Big news for wine-related tourism in the state: Last week, Governor Bob McDonnell announced that the Wineries Unlimited trade show will relocate to Richmond from Pennsylvania next year. His office estimates the 2011 event will bring over 2,000 visitors and $1.5 million to the Commonwealth.

And, as promised, Claude Thibaut, the stellar sparkling winemaker, released his Virginia Fizz late last month. A crémant-style sparkler, it’s now on the shelves at local wine retailers. 

Categories
Arts

Capsule Reviews

Alice in Wonderland (PG, 108 minutes) 
Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Carmike Cinema 6

The Back-up Plan (PG-13, 98 minutes) In this romantic comedy, Jennifer Lopez plays a single woman who wants to get pregnant without waiting any more to meet Mr. Right. So she gets pregnant. Then she meets Mr. Right (Alex O’Loughlin). Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Regal Downtown Mall 6

Clash of the Titans (PG-13, 106 minutes) Louis Leterrier directs this reboot of the 30-year-old animated epic, whose technological feats were eclipsed by the original Star Wars. See if the new one does justice to the old. Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Carmike Cinema 6

Date Night (PG-13, 88 minutes)
Steve Carrell and Tina Fey both act below their talents in this far-out comedy about a couple whose night on the town goes awry. Fortunately, a comedy below their mighty talents is still pretty good. Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Regal Downtown Mall 6

Furry Vengeance (PG, 90 minutes) Brendan Fraser plays a real estate developer whose new Oregon subdivision provokes the wrath of various woodland creatures. Brooke Shields, Dick Van Dyke and Ken Jeong co-star. Carmike Cinema 6

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (R, 152 minutes) Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Vinegar Hill Theater

Hot Tub Time Machine (R, 92 minutes) The title should tell you all you need to know, but if not, here’s a partial cast list: John Cusack, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson, Crispin Glover, Chevy Chase. And the plot: A bunch of dudes with midlife crises pass out in a hot tub and wake up in 1986. Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Regal Downtown Mall 6

How to Train Your Dragon (PG, 98 minutes) From Cressida Cowell’s kids’ book, and DreamWorks Animation, comes this 3D tale of vikings and dragons, featuring the voices of Gerard Butler, Jonah Hill, Jay Baruchel and Christopher Mintz-Plasse. Regal Seminole Square 4

Iron Man 2 (PG-13, 125 minutes) Robert Downey Jr. resumes his role as Marvel Comics’ billionaire inventor/armored superhero, again struggling to keep his deadly technology out of the wrong hands—like those of Mickey Rourke, for instance. Gwyneth Paltrow, Don Cheadle, Scarlett Johansson and Sam Rockwell also co-star. Opening Friday

Kick-Ass (R, 117 minutes) A real comic book nerd fashions himself as a fake superhero in this bawdy and acclaimed comedy directed by Matthew Vaughn. Read C-VILLE’s full review here. Regal Seminole Square 4

The Last Song (PG, 107 minutes) Another tearjerking rom-com from writer Nicholas Sparks, starring Miley Cyrus and Greg Kinnear. Regal Seminole Square 4

The Losers (PG-13, 98 minutes) Zoe Saldana, Idris Elba, Columbus Short and others star in this adventure thriller about a special-ops team fighting for their lives in the Bolivian jungle. Regal Downtown Mall 6

A Nightmare on Elm Street (R, 102 minutes) This reboot of the 1980s Wes Craven horror franchise stars Jackie Earle Haley as a razor-fingered serial killer who stalks attractive young people in their dreams. Carmike Cinema 6

Oceans (G, 100 minutes) Disneynature’s newest documentary goes underwater in search of the widescreen wonders of the deep. Pierce Brosnan narrates. Regal Downtown Mall 6

Tyler Perry’s Why Did I Get Married Too? (PG-13, 121 minutes) Four couples’ Bahamian vacation when one woman’s jilted ex-husband returns to rock the boat. Pop stars Janet Jackson and Jill Scott run the show. Carmike Cinema 6 

Categories
News

UVA boosts prices

 In response to crippling budget cuts and a rocky economy, the UVA Board of Visitors approved increases in tuition, housing rates and student dining services last Friday. The increase in student housing rates will help pay for the construction of new residence halls on campus, as well as renovations for older dorms including Copeley and Lambeth. The meal plan rate hike will help offset increasing personnel costs and sustainable dining programs. All increases go into effect as of the 2010-2011 school year.

CLICK TO ENLARGE

 

 

Categories
Living

Give a dog a home

 It’s a dog eat dog world, folks. Hot dogs, that is. And while the hot dog cart is a growing trend—as Restaurantarama touched on last week—one local chef is bringing the craze back indoors. The Downtown Hotdog Company will move in to York Place at the end of this month. The goal? To “give the hot dog a better name than it has now,” says owner Eric Saunders.

Eric Saunders’ Downtown Hotdog Company will be open in a few weeks. For now, your mouth will just have to keep watering. 

Saunders, formerly of Starr Hill and Prince Michel Vineyard and Winery, will serve Chicago-based Vienna Beef hot dogs and tells us he’s worked up a menu for all tastes: Chicago dogs (“A hot dog dragged through the garden, is what [Chicagoans] call ’em,” he says), Buffalo dogs with mild wing sauce, diced celery and crumbled blue cheese, and even, he tells us, a hot dog with peanut butter and banana. Plus, veggie hot dogs and something Saunders calls the “invisible dog.” Does “invisible dog” mean “invisible price”? Not quite, he says. But, diners will be able to get a hot dog, chips and a drink for about $7. 

Frozen, in time

Good news, fro-yo lovers. Yofina, a new high-culture probiotics frozen yogurt restaurant, is moving in next to the Downtown Mudhouse. Says owner Robert Lupica, it’ll be similar to popular L.A. yogurt spot Pinkberry, but with a more self-service feel. 

Customers will choose a yogurt, then add their own toppings at a topping bar. Five or six different smoothies will be on the menu, too.

For now, Lupica plans to be serving up some tasty yo’ by June 1, if not sooner, depending on what happens to the front of the shop. Late last year, the storefront at 219 W. Main generated controversy, as building owner Joe Gieck demolished the original 1947 curved glass façade without approval from the Board of Architectural Review. Lupica says he’s just waiting for the renovation to be finished.

When it opens, he tells us, a familiar face will manage the restaurant. Vita Nova owner Giovanni Sestito is a partner in the business and will manage its day-to-day operation. 

Bluegrass to move?

 

When it comes to Bluegrass Grill, you like it, you love it, you want some more of it. Restaurantarama is here to tell you: Your wish may be coming true. Bittersweet, Bluegrass’ Glass Building neighbor, is gearing up for a move onto the Mall, leaving its (much bigger) space vacant. Says the restaurant’s general manager Chrissy Benninger, the brunch favorite is considering moving next door. 

Benninger qualifies that, by saying, “It’s a huge, gigantic maybe,” but she predicts that by mid-May, the folks at Bluegrass will have a much better handle on what’s going on. 

 

 

 

Categories
News

Rising pollution and private development threaten the Appalachian Trail 

There is a point where you are so deep in the woods, with trees looming large and their leaves stitched across the skyline, that you feel the vastness of the landscape and can’t shake the sense that you are out of your element. Tree frogs yammer back and forth while birds chirp wildly. Something scurries past the dry leaves under your feet. You suddenly realize that you are four or five miles from the nearest road and you’ve forgotten which direction you came from.

From Charlottesville, the Greenstone Trail, along the Blue Ridge Parkway, is one of the best ways to experience the AT.

A new corridor of trail up ahead looks like a long dried-up river bend, now just jagged rocks on an uphill slope. You amble softy through the rough terrain, trying not to slip and crack your head wide open, and then, around the bend, a lone figure appears. He’s holding two titanium walking sticks and shouldering a large backpack. He sports a Boston Red Sox baseball cap and a full blonde beard, stopping to introduce himself by his trail name: Frijole.

Why is he called Frijole? “It kind of evolved,” he says. “You don’t give yourself a trail name, someone gives it to you.” In this case, the etymology comes from the fact that he hails from Boston, which is famous for its beans. “Frijole” is Spanish for “bean,” so there you have it.

Frijole looks like a cross between an American nomad who travels west by foot and by freight train, and a modern hippie, whose earthen zeal is only outweighed by Burning Man desires for bonding and revelry. He’s already walked five miles on the Appalachian Trail (or simply “The AT”) today, and he plans to walk 10 more before reaching the shelter where he’ll camp tonight.

Yet, according to a new assessment released at the end of March by the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) and the Appalachian Trail Conservancy (ATC), the AT is in trouble. Challenges such as adjacent development on privately owned land, air pollution and funding shortfalls continue to affect the ability of trail managers to preserve the trail’s natural beauty. “The goal of protecting those lands,” said David Startzell, ATC’s executive director, “and the adjacent landscapes surrounding them remains a never-ending challenge—one that requires ongoing public and private support.” 

The AT extends from Springer Mountain in Georgia to Mount Katahdin in Maine, the majority of the trail being in vast wilderness (although some portions traverse towns and roads). It has emerged as something of a modern rite of passage for oblivion-chasers, loners, hiking mavens and even average souls who are disoriented by the rhythm of asphalt and looking to make sense of their North American narrative.

Frijole continues. His sojourn into the hills alone has become somewhat compulsory: He hiked the AT for three months last year and he’s doing a month this year. Of all the places that people like Frijole could go, the AT seems as good a place as any to reconnect with our own sense of wonder.

Appalachian Trail FAQs

Where does the AT start? Springer Mountain in the Chattahoochee National Forest in Fannin County, Georgia, is the southernmost point of the Appalachian Trail.

Where does the AT end? Mount Katahdin, the highest point in Maine, is the northern terminus of the Appalachian Trail, located on a stretch known as the Hundred-Mile Wilderness.

Where do Central Virginians pick up the trail? The parking lot at Greenstone Trail/Humpback Rocks on the Blue Ridge Parkway (near Route 250) is an ideal place to pick up the AT. Hike a mile in from the lot and take the AT north or south. 

When was the AT started? The trail was conceived by Benton MacKaye in 1921. On October 7, 1923, the first section of the trail, at Bear Mountain (near Rockland, New York) was opened. The completion of the AT came in 1936. 

Who maintains the trail today? More than 4,000 volunteers contribute over 175,000 hours annually in an effort to preserve the Appalachian Trail’s natural habitat. The ATC organizes many of these volunteer efforts, though individual states maintain sections of the trail and upkeep of shelters through local volunteers, as well. 

How long is the entire trail? The AT is approximately 2,178 miles (3,505 km) long. The length has changed over the years, as periodic changes and maintenance alters the trail’s length, making an exact figure difficult to ascertain.

How many hikers travel on the AT each year? The ATC estimates that more than  1 million hikers use the AT each year, though the number who actually thru-hike the entire trail is extremely low. On average, around 200 hikers complete the AT in a single six- to seven-month period.

What songs reference the AT? Composer Rick Sowash created Music for the Appalachian Trail, a pastoral song cycle that features music representing each of the regions through which the trail passes. Bruce Springsteen’s “Outlaw Pete Song” begins with lyrics about the young buck’s origins near the AT. Jim Stoltz’s “The Appalachian Trail” is a heartfelt ode to the trail’s transformative effect on hikers, while Mark Sanford’s word-of-mouth YouTube hit by the same name utilizes the AT moniker as a saucy metaphor. 

 

Virginia hosts 550 miles of the AT, more than any of the other 14 states along the trail. Some consider this state to be the most challenging section of the AT for northbound hikers because of its wet spring thaw, where on average it rains 20 out of 30 days during the vernal equinox. Substantial portions of the trail closely parallel Skyline Drive and the Blue Ridge Parkway in Shenandoah National Park. Virginia’s southern end of the AT travels westerly through the George Washington and Jefferson National forests from Roanoke County to Giles County. According to the ATC, this portion of the trail is the most remote and least traveled. 

For a day hike here in Central Virginia, the Greenstone Trail, along the Blue Ridge Parkway, offers one of the best ways to experience the AT. This is where my girlfriend and I set off with our black Labrador mix for what we assumed would be a walk in the park, as the saying goes. We entered the forest from the Greenstone Trail parking lot at Humpback Rocks, three miles south on the Blue Ridge Parkway from Route 250. From the parking lot we hike a mile into the forest before picking up the AT heading north. After walking five additional miles in, and exhausting all of our food and all but a drop of water, we encounter a man named Dave Marshall. His trail name is “Red,” because he sports short red hair underneath his ski cap.

“I haven’t seen another person on the trail for two days now,” says Red. “Most days you only see maybe one person every 24 hours.” Red is a retired schoolteacher from Iowa. He had planned to hike the AT for years, but never found the time to get away from his responsibilities until last year, when he planned to hike the entire trail. Two months in, Red tripped and sprained his ankle. He left the trail a few days later. This year he’ll hike for about six weeks. Red is what’s known as a “section-hiker.” He says it’s a bit early to be seeing “thru-hikers,” yet he’s seen a few who have gotten an early start this year. “A fella named ‘Nature Boy’ is on the trail just north of here,” says Red. “This is his third thru-hike of the AT.”

When serious section-hikers speak of thru-hikers, there is always a hint of reverence for someone who attempts to hike the entire 2,178 mile trail in a single season. The AT is more frequently hiked south to north. Thru-hikers typically begin in March and finish sometime around September or October. 

“Most of the thru-hikers you meet out here are either college age or retired like me,” says Red. “Those in-between years, most people have a family to raise, a mortgage and a full-time job, so it’s hard to pull off a long-term hike.” Just another 2.5 miles ahead is a lake with a shelter, where Red plans to set down for the night. The trail has more than 250 of these shelters (sometimes called lean-tos or huts), which are generally three-walled structures with a wooden floor, usually spaced a day’s hike or less apart, most often near a water source. Local volunteers maintain the shelters, which, during the summer months, can be crammed with hikers who sleep like a pack of canned sardines.

The AT was conceived in 1921 by a forester named Benton MacKaye, whose idea was to establish a grand trail connecting a series of farms and wilderness work/study camps for city-dwellers. It wasn’t without its share of early controversy. With MacKaye publicly describing the trail with phrases like “self-owning,” “cooperative” and “a retreat from profit,” some saw the concept, as one biographer wrote, as “smacking of Bolshevism.” 

In the fall of 1923, the first section of the trail opened near Bear Mountain in Rockland, New York. Two years later, MacKaye established the Appalachian Trail Conservancy in Washington, D.C. By the early 1930s, a lawyer named Myron Avery took up the cause, quickly abandoning MacKaye’s idea of the AT as a series of connected work/study camps, adopting instead a more practical goal of building a simple hiking trail. Avery soon found himself clashing with MacKaye over many issues regarding the AT, and while MacKaye remains the figurehead most recognized with creating the trail, he in fact left the organization in 1932, while Avery continued as Chairman of the ATC until his death in 1952.

Earl Shaffer of York, Pennsylvania, wrote the first real memoir  about the AT in 1948. He also became the first documented thru-hiker to complete the entire trail. Shaffer’s account was followed by AT books too numerous to mention here, each bringing their own unique sensibility to time spent on the trail. What binds these tales of American odyssey is the innate sense that both scientist and thrill-seeker alike walked into the woods as one kind of person and exited radically changed by the experience. 

No book on the AT has sold as well as Bill Bryson’s A Walk in the Woods, which gives a humorous view of the trail from a less-than-fit person’s perspective. Through a bizarre collection of characters and anecdotes, Bryson managed to put the AT back on the map for many Americans. Seeing the trail through his dandified writing style, it became all the more compelling when the AT’s fragile beauty crept into Bryson’s rather neatnik soul. Published in 1998, A Walk in the Woods also offered high-minded consciousness to the many social issues surrounding the AT. 

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Running primarily along the Appalachian highlands, trail lands protect headwater streams for major East Coast watersheds. Thirty-two areas of significance to the AT and its corridor have been identified as high-priority sites for protection, largely under threat from encroaching development. Additionally, in all 14 states along the trail, increasing development of lands that buffer the AT are being converted from pastoral, agricultural and forested uses to residential or commercial uses at an alarming pace. With rising land prices, it is becoming harder to protect these remaining landscapes.

As for problems of pollution, 40 years ago one could still see the Washington Monument some 75 miles away on a clear day. These days, pollution is so pervasive that in the summer months visibility through the dirty haze caused by vehicles along Skyline Drive is reduced to an average of five miles or less. The park’s conservation association is advocating for stronger regulations on nearby coal-fired power plants and other sources of pollution, in an effort to protect the thousands of species of plants and animals that call the Appalachian Trail home. But in far too many instances, it is too late. 

The AT serves as a living laboratory that could help warn 120 million people along the Eastern Seaboard of looming environmental problems. The most distressing feature of the trail’s vegetation is the number of fallen trees that line its slopes and peaks in every direction. The immediate cause of this is the Balsam Woolly Adelgid, an insect that relies on acid rain to weaken the conifers’ immune system, whereby it can swoop in and imbue the trees with an untreatable fungal disease. Ninety percent of the park’s trees have been damaged, with indigenous American icons like the dogwood threatened with extinction.

What’s more, stories abound of the American black bear aggressively chasing hikers who have encountered this mammoth omnivore off the trail. In truth, bear sightings on the AT are uncommon, and confrontations rarer still, as black bears typically avoid humans and are usually frightened away by loud noises. 

Violent crime, however, has occurred on the trail in a few instances. Since 1974, nine homicides have been documented on the AT, including four in Central Virginia. Randall Lee Smith, who murdered two social workers visiting from Maine in 1981, re-appeared on the trail in 2008, where he shot two fishermen near Giles County. The fishermen survived, but Smith died in jail four days later from injuries sustained after crashing his getaway pickup truck.

Yet despite these rare, tragic occurrences, everyday life on the trail seems peaceful and unthreatening. “The people out here are harmless,” suggests Frijole. “Sure, there are some eccentric people, especially the thru-hikers. But by and large, everyone out here has a good heart.” 

 

Another popular Virginia hike near Roanoke is the Big Rocky Row loop at Fuller Rocks. Just off of Route 81, this portion of the AT heading north goes through a series of ascending switchbacks and ends with a peak view of the James River, before descending back down to the valley below. 

Bethany and Doug are firefighters from Washington D.C., who travel Central Virginia for long weekends, hiking the trails around Lynchburg and Staunton as well as off Skyline Drive. Today they are crossing Mill’s Creek, which, along the AT sees a slow moving creek bed burst into a beautiful series of river pools, ending in a majestic waterfall about two miles south of where we encountered Red. Like a lot of day-hikers, Bethany and Doug had no idea what to expect along this portion of the AT. “We try to get out here as much as we can,” says Bethany. “It’s hard to explain, but when we get back to the city all we can think about is where we’re going to go next on the trail. It gets in your blood.”

 

Throughout the next several weeks, the bulk of the south-to-north thru-hikers will be coming through the Central Virginia portion of the AT. By the middle of the month, they will congregate at the Trail Days Festival in Damascus, Virginia. Known as “Trail Town U.S.A.,” Damascus (population 981) is a convergence of four scenic trails, including the U.S. Bicycle Route 76, the Virginia Creeper Trail, the Iron Mountain Trail, and the AT. Each year, the Trail Days Festival draws in excess of 20,000 tourists, making it the largest single gathering of Appalachian Trail hikers anywhere.

“Trail Days is wild,” says Red. “Too wild for someone my age. But it’s a good place for some hikers to stop and go home, and others just to blow off steam.”

Dusk is creeping in, as my girlfriend and I emerge from the forest after our second long day on the AT. Our feet ache. We load the dog into the car, take off a few layers of smelly, sweaty clothes and chug a big bottle of water from the back seat. As we drive away from the trail, we talk a lot about the conveniences that we can’t wait to get back to. Yet as we get closer to town, a sudden feeling comes over us. Bombarded with neon words bursting from commercial business signs inviting us to chow down on double cheeseburgers for $1.99, or buy a new car at no money down, things seem unbearably constricted by comparison. I fall silent in that moment, breathing in deeply and exhaling a great sigh. She turns to me and says the only thing that seems logical in that moment: “We should go again next week.”