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REW Feature: July 4th Naturalization Ceremony at Monticello

The University of Virginia is a magnet for men and women from all parts of the globe to come to Charlottesville and often to remain here. Others come for a variety of reasons: an Internet meeting leading to marriage, a new job or fleeing a homeland that is becoming dangerous. This Independence Day will mark the 50th Fourth of July Naturalization Ceremony at Monticello—a powerful experience celebrating the ideas and ideals of the Declaration of Independence and what Thomas Jefferson termed “the great birthday of our Republic.” 

This inspiring event reminds us that we are indeed a nation of immigrants. Since 1963, more than 3,000 people from many nations have become naturalized at this memorable annual ceremony. Last year, for instance, more than 75 men and women from over 40 different nations took their Oath of Citizenship. Standing on the steps of Monticello as new Americans, their faces wearing wide smiles—and in some cases emotional tears—they created a remarkable living snapshot of our “melting pot” nation.

The ceremony is actually a court proceeding and this year’s presiding judge will be the Honorable Glen E. Conrad, Chief Judge for the United States District Court of the Western District of Virginia. The featured speaker will be gold-medal-winner Nadia Comaneci. The first Olympic gymnast to score a perfect 10, Romanian-born Comaneci became a naturalized citizen 2001. If you have never attended this memorable American moment, it is worth your while to see this testament to how culturally diverse central Virginia has become over the years. 
 
If You Go
Monticello’s grounds open at 7:00 a.m. for the 9:00 a.m. ceremony. (While the ceremony and bus are free, those wishing to take an inside tour of Monticello following the ceremony must purchase a ticket.) The staff suggests allowing an hour to park at the Visitor Center and take a shuttle bus up to the ceremony. Once you reach Monticello’s West Lawn, you will receive a program, a fan and a small American flag. Bottled water is also available and free courtesy of the Coca-Cola Company.
 
There are plenty of chairs. The Charlottesville Municipal Band, playing for our community since 1922, will perform rousing music, so be prepared for a swell of patriotism. 
 
An Interaction of Cultures
“We who live in and around Charlottesville are privileged to witness an interaction of cultures,” declares John Ince, a country property specialist for Nest Realty Group. “We see it on an international level and a local level as academics and blue collars, good ol’ boys and preppies, goths and jocks all mingle on the stage that Thomas Jefferson set so long ago. On the whole, I think we do it very well.”
 
And there is definitely a mix of people. According to the most recent U.S. Census, almost 12 percent of Charlottesville’s population—nearly one in eight—is foreign born. And this figure doesn’t even include persons born in Puerto Rico, a U.S. possession such a Guam, or persons born in another country who have at least one parent who is a U.S. citizen.
 
This diversity is reflected at the University of Virginia, in city and county school classrooms, in audiences at Fridays After Five and local theaters, in many of the small businesses in our community—well, in every facet of life. One very visible example is Charlottesville’s mayor.
“It says a great deal about our community that they accept diversity,” says Satyendra S. Huja, referring to his selection as mayor early this year. A Sikh, he came from India as a 19-year-old student in 1960 to attend Cornell University where he studied architecture, psychology and city planning. He subsequently served as the City of Charlottesville Director of Planning and Community Development for 25 years and then became Director of Strategic Planning for the City of Charlottesville from 1998 to 2004.
 
Huja was naturalized 25 years ago at Monticello’s 1987 Fourth of July ceremony.  “It was wonderful,” he says of that day.  “I go back every year.”  He sees our region as enjoying an appealing environment with a mix of “physical, natural and cultural facilities that most communities don’t have,” and adds, “I think it enriches the lives of all the people when you see other cultures and ideas.”
 
Another example of our international diversity was clear at the recent graduation ceremonies from Charlottesville High School where the class treasurer was first-generation American and the salutatorian was Romanian-born. First names of the graduates included such diverse monikers as Aung, Heather, Xae-Vaun, Rakiya, Paolo, Priscilla, Isaquiel, Bridget, Byadunia, Leah, Tek, Zunaira, Emily, Ingenieur, Onaing, Emma, Saskia, Wazhma, Fakhria, Butoyi, Abigail, Quanisha, Bakar, Vishnu, Jane, Tatiana, Gawa, John, Gonpo, Amanda, DaQuan, Jacob, Watta, Rebecca and Fazel. 
 
Celebrating Diversity
Charlottesville doesn’t just have diversity, it showcases it.  One example is the Festival of Cultures held the second Saturday of May in Lee Park.  Its mission: to celebrate linguistic and cultural diversity, to build a bridge of communication between new Americans and long-time residents and invite attendees to  “travel the world in Lee Park.” 
 
“It’s a celebration of cultures, not necessarily nations,” explains festival coordinator Debra Tuler. Sponsored by the Charlottesville City Schools Adult Learning Center, this past May’s event featured dances and music ranging from Appalachian banjo tunes and cloggers to klezmer music to representative dances from Nepal, India and Mexico. 
 
Cultural exhibits included tables with arts, information and maps from such diverse countries as Bhutan, Congo, Honduras, Indonesia, Japan, Russia and Ukraine and also an exhibit about our own Buffalo Soldiers. Ethnic food was available from vendors such as Monsoon Siam, the Balkan Bistro and Meryem’s Bakery which served Turkish baklava.
 
While many American cities have a foreign “sister” city, Charlottesville has not one, but four. We have ties to Besançon (France), Pleven (Bulgaria), Poggio a Caiano (Italy) and Winneba (Ghana). 
 
“I love that we have real relationships with our sister cities,” says Charlottesville Vice Mayor Kristin Szakos enthusiastically. “Cultural and educational exchanges with Besançon and Winneba in the past year have been exciting windows into the lives of people in other parts of the world.” The sister-city program is aimed at both adults and young people, she explains. “We’re looking forward to sending our high school students to study abroad and to hosting students from our sister cities here.  In our increasingly small, globalized world, we are offering them a critical leg up in preparing for careers in almost any field.”  
 
The Big Draw
What draws people from other countries to the Charlottesville area? Olga Morse, an associate broker at Sloan Milby Real Estate Partners, was born in Puerto Rico. This made her an American citizen, but she still faced difficulties when she first came to U.S. in the mid-70s. “The first experience I had when I first came to this country, I felt like an outsider,” she recalls.  “I was trying to learn the language, but it was very difficult.”
 
Then in 1987, she came to Charlottesville, although she was apprehensive about moving to a small inland city. “To my surprise,” she says, “it was very special from the first day I came here.  It was friendly hearing people talking other languages. People were welcoming and I didn’t feel too unique.”
 
Morse definitely has a niche in her real estate business where she specializes in residential properties. “Because of its diversity, Charlottesville is a welcoming city,” she says, “and because of language I can facilitate services, especially for first-time [Spanish-speaking] home buyers.” She points out that even Spanish-speakers who are fluent in English, may be unfamiliar with the special language of real estate and they have confidence that they understand transactions in their native language.
 
Morse is also the publisher of “FORWARD-ADELANTE” a bilingual magazine with its main circulation in the greater Charlottesville area. FORWARD-ADELANTE aims to connect the English-speaking business owner with the Spanish-speaking market place and vice-versa.
AnnaMaria Bakalian, an instructor of Italian at Speak! Language Center in Charlottesville, met her New Yorker husband in Milano while he was working for an American company there.  In 1993, they returned to the U.S. but her husband’s company was bought out.  “Then 9/11 made it really hard to find another job,” she explains, “so we did some research for a place to live.” They found Fortune magazine’s article on Best Places to Live. “Charlottesville was on the top list,” she says, so they came for a visit and liked our small city.
What did they like? “The strategic location,” she states. “Not too south with storms and heavy rains. Not too north with cold and snowy winters. Close enough to an international airport and the capital. And abundances of lakes, walking trails and outdoor activities.” 
 
In addition, she says, “I see Charlottesville as very cosmopolitan. I believe the university is the pulling force of it. There are students and professors from around the world.” Although Balkalian is not now a citizen, she says, “Someday I will!” Perhaps at Monticello on a future Fourth of July?
 
Another person who felt “at home” in Charlottesville from the start is restaurateur Brice Cunningham, a U.S. citizen since 2007. Born in Paris, Cunningham lived in Tahiti for six years and along the way he learned the art of professional French cooking.
 
“There is a huge heritage of life with Thomas Jefferson and all,” he says. When he first came to the U.S., he worked at a restaurant in Washington, D.C. where he became friends with a co-worker from Charlottesville. In 2001, the two created Fleurie and later opened Petit Pois. In 2011, Cunningham’s father came from France and together they launched Tempo Restaurant on Fourth Street just off the Downtown Mall.   
 
Cunningham sees Charlottesville as “a niche city” that has more than many American cities can offer. “I can surely say I think the quality of the food is better here than in New York City,” he says. “There is a style of life here that is close to European living and it makes coming to America easier. This is a very nice place to live.” 
 
Indeed, restaurants reflect the personality of a city and Charlottesville boasts a remarkable roster for a city of its size. Often menus reflect the birthplace of foreign-born owners of eateries and our local list includes (alphabetically) Afghani, African, Balkan, Chinese, Dominican, French, German, Greek, Honduran, Indian, Jamaican, Japanese, Mediterranean, Mexican, Moroccan, Salvadoran, Spanish, Thai, Turkish, Vietnamese and probably a couple others.
 
Many neighborhoods, from rental apartments to condos to single-family dwellings are home to residents from a variety of countries. Neighbors have a way of getting together for block parties or potlucks in a social hall, tasting each other’s foods, watching their children playing together and learning about each others’ cultures. All of this makes the area around Charlottesville a desirable place to settle.  
 
Marilyn Pribus and her husband live in Albemarle County near Monticello. One of their daughters-in-law is a recently naturalized American citizen from Kazakhstan and Marilyn’s paternal grandparents were naturalized citizens from the Netherlands.
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Mom, I'm Bored!

 
Most kids in our Central Virginia publishing area have been out of school for a while now and their summertime cry “I’m bored!” is second only to “Are we there yet?” 
 
Happily, our region abounds with kid-oriented events, activities and outings to keep them happily occupied during the summer months. Options range from visits to museums and historic sites to sports and pastimes in nature or theater or water.
 
“We love living in this area because there are so many options for things for kids to do,” confirms Kelly Ceppa, a REALTOR® associate with Nest Realty Group in Charlottesville. “My son is 12 now and we have found fun activities all along the way starting with the McIntire Wading Pool when he was only one. In grade school, he loved the swimming lessons, soccer and basketball programs offered by the City in the summers and the spray pool at Belmont Park.”
 
Ceppa adds that the entire family likes walking, biking and roller blading on Charlottesville’s Rivanna Trail, which is accessible from many points around the city. “We also enjoy some Albemarle County amenities like a day at the beach and a picnic at Mint Springs Park or Walnut Creek Park and really love canoeing and fishing at Beaver Creek Reservoir Park near Crozet.”
 
Other nearby counties also have activities and attractions for families and young people—often through recreation departments.  
 
Parks and Recreation Programs
Many counties have a wealth of recreational opportunities for children. Some have swimming beaches or pools, often with season passes. Others have a wide range of summer camps and classes for children. Google “parks and recreations” plus your county for specific information. Here’s a quick thumbnail for counties in our circulation area.
 
Albemarle County
Albemarle County Parks and Recreation has 12 parks including three with sand beaches and lifeguards for swimming. Some parks rent canoes. There is an extensive list of programs for youth ages 4 and up including summer playground programs, and classes from swimming to volleyball to tennis and karate.
 
City of Charlottesville
Charlottesville Parks and Recreation has three swimming pools, several spray parks, hiking trails, and a number of classes in arts, dance, fitness, gymnastics, martial arts and play groups. An extensive on-line catalog lists 43 facilities including pools, recreation centers and parks plus many special activities such as movies. 
 
Fluvanna County 
Fluvanna County Parks and Recreation has an extensive on-line catalog of locations and activities for everything from ballet lessons to martial arts, horseback riding to dog obedience, flag football to a kite festival and a youth swim team. Also offers discount tickets to area theme parks. Summer camps for youngsters from 6-17 include guitar, pottery, lacrosse, gymnastics and much more. 
 
Louisa County
Louisa County Parks and Recreation has a three-pool complex for swim lessons and a swim team. It also sponsors family-friendly concerts, summer camps for kids including TeenQuest Adventure Camps for middle school aged teens, plus t-ball, tennis, gymnastics, horseback riding, and a summer basketball league to keep youth of all ages moving and active. Classes include guitar, dog obedience, sewing machine basics, and even an introduction to wildlife class as well as courses in boating safety, hunter education, firearm safety, CPR, and First Aid. 
 
Orange County 
Orange County Parks and Recreation offers instruction in CPR, First Aid, karate, dance and hunter safety. Other programs include a youth soccer league and discount tickets to many area theme parks. Madison County Parks and Recreation operates Hoover Ridge Park with a Farmers’ Market, trails, a fishing pond, fields for youth sports including football, soccer, baseball and softball and an outdoor amphitheater. 
 
Libraries Keep Kids “Up To Speed” 
“At about age three, my son started the summer reading programs at the Jefferson-Madison Regional Library,” recalls Ceppa, the Charlottesville mom with Nest Realty Group. “He loved them.”
 
Indeed local library systems offer activities that are not only fun, but reinforce learning over the summer. Nancy Cook is the Children’s Services Manager for the Jefferson Madison Regional Library (JMRL) that serves Charlottesville plus Albemarle, Louisa, Greene and Nelson Counties. “We also serve a lot of patrons from Fluvanna County,” she says. 
 
“Each branch sets up its own year-round programs,” she explains, “and in the summer there is a special high-quality reading program.” This year’s summer reading program—titled “Dream Big: Read”—is the result of a collaboration involving the whole staff of JMRL Children’s Services. In addition, Cook started last December to book performers for summer family programs which this year will include the Wildlife Center of Virginia and a wide variety of musicians both local and out of state such as a drumming group from North Carolina.
 
“I’ve been given the mission to beef up the kids’ web pages,” she says, “so I’ve added links to play game with favorite characters like Clifford and Magic School Bus.” Cook notes that all JMRL libraries have public access to computers. “On our web page [www.jmrl.org], go to ‘Kids and Programs’ and link to Tumble Books,” she suggests. “It’s a nice source for listening to tons of stories on line, some in different languages.”
 
JMRL also is part of Overdrive with its special downloadable free software program to download free audio- and e-books including many children’s titles. This requires a library card. For more information, visit www.jmrl.org.
 
The Fluvanna County Public Library’s home page includes a calendar and a place to sign up for email announcements of events such as free movies, Tumble Books and a summer reading program. It also provides Overdrive access. For more information visit: www2.youseemore.com/Fluvanna 
 
The Madison County Library is one of only 8 independent libraries in the state. It offers Internet and wireless access. It is also provides access to the Overdrive system which requires a library card. Visit: www.madisoncountyvalibrary.org. 
 
Orange County Libraries offer activities from crafts to movies for toddlers through teens, including the “Dream Big: Read” summer program. Visit: www.ocplva.org for more information.
 
In The Footsteps of Presidents
Three historic presidential homes in the area offer tours and often have special events targeting children’s interests. For example, Monticello, the home of our third president, Thomas Jefferson, offers daily hands-on tours designed for youngsters from 6-11 as well as other specialized tours. 
 
The visitor center is home to the Griffin Discovery Room where youngsters—especially those ages 6 to 12—can explore history through hands-on activities revealing the lives of children in the early 1800s. Children can write on a polygraph machine like Jefferson’s—the way he made copies of his hand-written documents—try on old-style clothing, weave, and play games popular in Jefferson’s time.
 
Montpelier was the home of James Madison, our fourth president. The massive recent restoration back to its brick Colonial appearance from the time it was covered in pink stucco is just about complete. There is also a new visitor center plus archeological sites, hands-on activities and historic buildings. Summer has special family-friendly tours, as well as a Kids Only! tour on Fridays in July and August where youngsters cook over an open fire, use old tools and search for artifacts like archeologists.
 
Ashlawn-Highland, the home of James Monroe—our fifth president—offers special workshops such as making candles, rope, ornaments and tin lanterns and paperquilling. Families or other groups can also opt to bring their own sleeping bags to overnight in the Conference Room (until 10 a.m. the next day) and explore the grounds at their leisure. Camp-in minimum is 10 persons, maximum 30.
 
Day Trips
There are many potential destinations for entertaining day trips in the region. In Nelson County, for example, the Crabtree Falls Highway—rather a misnomer, since it’s a winding scenic two-lane road—takes visitors to the spot where the Tye River creates the tallest cascading waterfall east of the Mississippi. There are a variety of hikes, little waterfalls and swimming areas, picnic tables and a campground. Nearby hikes include the Appalachian Trail with a unique swinging bridge and Spy Rock. About seven miles farther up the highway is the Montebello Fish Hatchery, which is also fun to visit.
 
The Shenandoah Valley is home to two major cavern systems open to the public and both are excellent refuges from summer heat. Shenandoah Caverns, near Exit 269 on I-81, has been open since 1922 with a trail of about one mile. With its elevator and no stairs, it’s suited to those with disabilities. An adult discount coupon may be printed from their web site. A large exhibit of parade floats, the Yellow Barn with restored antique farm equipment and the Main Street of Yesteryear with more than 100 animated exhibits are included with the guided caverns tour. Information at www.ShenandoahCaverns.com.
 
Luray Caverns, about 10 minutes from the central entrance to the Skyline Drive and Shenandoah National Park, can be reached traveling east from I-81 or west on Route 33 from Route 29. Since the discovery of this largest series of caves in the East, the attraction has been expanded to include a Garden Maze with a half-mile pathway and 40 decision points as well as a Car and Carriage Museum. The web site www.LurayCaverns.com lists a variety of available discounts and some on-line activities for youngsters from cave science facts to coloring pages.
 
The Frontier Culture Museum, near Staunton, is an outdoor living history museum open seven days a week for self-guided tours including hands-on activities, living history interpreters and heirloom livestock breeds. The new American Indian Exhibit is nearing completion. Weeklong summer camps are available for children 5-12 with activities varying from one week to the next. Information at www.FrontierMuseum.org. 
 
The Discovery Museum is a landmark on Charlottesville’s Downtown Mall and includes activities and exhibits for children from toddlers on up. “Our mission,” says Museum director Amy Wicks-Horn, “is to engage minds, excite imaginations and encourage exploration of the world.” Visit www.vadm.org. The first Sunday of each month is a pay-what-you-wish day at the museum. The nearby Free Speech Wall gives youngsters an OK to chalk their names and ideas in public. And the Visitors Center by the wall offers many brochures, guides and maps to more things to do in central Virginia. And there’s lots more to do from tours at the Ivy Creek Nature area to concerts, to picking your own fruits at local farms to festivals, movies, theater activities and so much more.
 
Marilyn Pribus and her husband live in Albemarle County near Charlottesville and pursue the wide variety of opportunities in the region from family birthday parties at Walnut Creek Park to a getaway for two on the Blue Ridge. 
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Central Virginia is Horse Country

With the semi-annual Foxfield Races scheduled for Saturday, April 28th, what better time to focus on the tradition of Central Virginia steeplechase races along with the steady demand for equestrian property in our scenic multi-county area?

“I love watching the beautiful horses at Foxfield,” declares Pam Dent of Montague, Miller and Company Realtors. Foxfield fan Dent moved to Charlottesville in the second grade, explored the area on horseback and came to deeply appreciate this part of the world as a lovely center for horse properties. Except for her college years in Ohio, she has lived here ever since and raised two daughters at her Albemarle County country home complete with dogs and ponies.
 
“People go to Foxfield for different things,” she says. “There are students who go to party and maybe never see a horse running. There are horse lovers who love the social aspect of bringing friends and lots of food and watching each of the races. Some people are very knowledgeable and go very seriously.” She explains that there are 5-7 races a day, some on the flat and some with hurdles. Horses come not just from Virginia, but from surrounding states as well. 
 
The Foxfield Racing Association has provided this well-regarded steeplechase course for more than 30 years. On the last Saturday in April, thoroughbred owners, trainers and jockeys will face the challenging course over spring-green turf.  Reserved parking places provide the perfect venue for a traditional tailgate picnic with delicacies from home or purchased from the select on-site caterers. This year the purveyors of edibles will include: BBQ Connection, BBQ Exchange, Chef Ted, Everyday Gourmet, From Scratch Catering, Harvest Moon Catering, Hot Cakes, Sandy Motley Catering, Simply Delicious Catering, The Catering Outfit, The Event Company and 20 South Catering.
 
Foxfield’s venue was once Charlottesville’s local airport and the hangar is still there. Since 1978, however, this has been home to steeplechase and has been recognized by the National Steeplechase Association (NSA) for maintaining an excellent equine course. The term “steeplechase” dates back about 200 years to the days when cross-country horse races stayed on course by sighting on church steeples.
 
The Foxfield races, held both spring and fall, are fully sanctioned by the NSA. The Spring Race is always the last Saturday in April and often attracts as many as 25,000 guests.  Family Day, held on the last Sunday in September, is usually smaller and includes a variety of activities for families and children.
 
Local charities receive a part of the proceeds from both race days. For more information, visit www.Foxfield Races.com  
 
Long-time horseman John Ince, founder of Charlottesville Country Properties Ltd, points out that the Montpelier Races each November are just as prestigious.  “Both are major steeplechase tour races with top riders and races.”  The Races are adjacent to Montpelier, James Madison’s handsome Orange County estate.  “It’s transformed into a social event, but you’ll really enjoy the paddocks,” Ince says. “The Races attract a full crowd in a magnificent setting.” For more information, visit www.MontpelierRaces.org.    
 
“This is fox-hunting country, too,” adds Pam Dent. “In Albemarle there is the Keswick Hunt that goes into the Rapidan area of Orange County. The Farmington Hunt is west of Charlottesville with kennels in Free Union and there are hunts in Madison and Nelson Counties, too.” She says the hunts are very careful to keep good relations with their neighbors and always have landowners’ permission to be on their properties.
 
Horse Properties Popular
“Central Virginia is probably one of the top five horse areas in the country,” says Montpelier Races-supporter Ince who has worked in real estate for nearly 30 years following ten years of training, breeding and showing Arabian horses. “There are Olympic quality trainers and breeders, excellent farriers who shoe Olympic horses and a great number of equine vets,” he says. “You really couldn’t ask for better. They make house calls at 4 a.m. like old country doctors and cover for each other if they’re away.” 
 
There are many purveyors of feed and tack as well. “One interesting place is Crawford Saddlery in Ruckersville,” he says. “It’s a great tack shop—half Western with silver conchos all over them and the other half is traditional English tack. They have everything for show riders, trail riders and pleasure riders.”  In addition, the new Dover Saddlery in Seminole Square will be holding a grand opening tent sale from Friday through Sunday, April 27th to 29th.
 
“There are many reasons this area is great for horses,” chimes in accomplished equestrian Bridget Archer of Gayle Harvey Real Estate, who loves life in this part of the world.  Archer was not loving life in Los Angeles back in 1983 when she undertook a nine-month cross-country reconnaissance mission to find a better quality of life. Torn between Santa Fe and Charlottesville, she ultimately settled here because “it offers more for families.” 
 
And more for horse lovers, too. “There are beautiful trails, the hunts, the steeplechase and lots of competitions and trainers,” Archer enumerates. For example, she says, in 2010 alone there were nearly 1200 horse shows across Virginia with a favorable contribution to the commonwealth’s economy.  In fact, a 2011 study by UVa’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service showed that Virginia’s horse industry has an economic impact of well over one billion dollars annually. 
 
“The Virginia Horse Center in Lexington is a facility for horse shows for all sorts of breeds,” Archer continues. She also cites our summers which are mild compared to other places, explaining that some Florida horse owners will bring their animals north during the heat of the season.  “A lot of buyers are escaping taxes in New York, North Carolina and Florida,” she notes, “and some people go back and forth.” She adds that some out-of-town buyers are seeking a second property to pasture their horses during hunts since there are quite a few hunts in the area.
 
“There are some really great trails,” Archer continues enthusiastically. “Many large farms will permit you to ride if you ask permission.” She lists Fulfillment Farms in the Esmont Area, the Virginia Blue Ridge Railway Trail in Amherst and Nelson Counties, as well as the Fork Mountain and Rapidan River Trail in Madison County.  Preddy Creek Trail Park has plenty of parking for trailers. Oak Grove in Fluvanna offers access to the Rivanna River and there are many miles of mountain trails in both Shenandoah National Park and George Washington National Forest. The Internet has ample information about trails. One particularly useful website is www.virginiaequstrian.com 
 
“It’s funny,” she continues. “A lot of people want horse properties even if they don’t have horses.  Or they just want something big enough for a couple horses or ponies.”  She explains that two acres would an absolute minimum for a horse and it’s preferable to have enough acreage to rotate pasture usage to maintain the grass. Other requirements are decent fencing and protection for animals from the weather such as a barn or at least a run-in shed.
 
Interestingly, it’s not just horse people seeking small farms, says Ince.  “I’ve sold a couple places to people with llamas and alpacas.  People love them and it’s a good land use.” He says there can be a business aspect to raising these creatures, but for most it’s a hobby.  “Alpacas are an entertaining livestock and they can be a labor of love. People like the idea of shearing, making yarn and knitting in all these wonderful colors.”   
 
Is It Hard To Find The “Perfect” Property?
“It’s not hard to match people to properties,” continues Ince, who himself lives on a small horse farm in Barboursville. “I could show probably ten properties in a specific class in Albemarle and the six surrounding counties today. Turn-key. Ready to go.” The closer to Charlottesville a property is, he notes, the more expensive it is likely to be.
 
“When I am working with people looking for horse property, we are talking the same language,” he points out. “The most important thing is how comfortable and healthy a buyer’s horses will be on a certain property.”
 
He recommends purchasing an established property or something well suited to turning into a horse farm. “Value-wise,” he says, “it’s better to find something that already has fences and shelter for your horses because improvements depreciate more rapidly than homes do.” In addition, when moving into an established property, you don’t have to worry about boarding your horses while improvements are made with the almost inevitable delays.
 
“Buying a horse property is a different process from buying a home,” Dent emphasizes. “People want to see the land and horse facilities first and if all of that suits, then they’ll see the house.” She says that if the dwelling isn’t quite what they want, most people will just make the best of it to get what they need for their horses.  
 
There are a number of things that make finding a horse property more complicated than simply buying a house, Dent cautions. For one thing, different counties may have varying requirements for keeping horses or there may be restrictions on the land itself. In addition, she points out, requirements can change and it can be hard to determine the acreage.
 
Some people want a state-of-the-art riding ring, tack rooms and hay storage. Others picture a certain style of fencing or natural water or level land or want to be in a specific school district.
 
“It’s important to consider how will your horses live,” she continues. “Do you want show horses in stalls who are just turned out briefly or animals who will be out all the time?” Other things to consider: the quality of nourishment from grass or feed, how many horses the property can ultimately hold. Do you ride in a ring or cross-country? In some cases, she says, you could have a smaller farm if you have permission from neighbors where everyone knows everyone. In other cases you’d be limited to trails or your own property. 
 
There are some developments specifically designed as equine properties. South Keswick, for example, has miles of community riding trails and lots between 10 to 12 acres so owners can keep their horses on their own land. Another horse-friendly development is Glenmore, once a famed horse farm, which features an on-site equestrian center with a boarding barn, training arena and professional show ring.
 
Whether searching for a small farm to keep a single horse or a large professional operation with stables,  rings and generous pastures, Central Virginia is prime horse country.
 
Marilyn Pribus lives with her husband in Albemarle County near Charlottesville.  She is still waiting for Santa to deliver her pony.
 

 

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Antiques In Charlottesville

Antiques In Charlottesville is returning to town from March 23rd to 25th at the Main Street Arena. Mounted by the respected show management team of Melrose and Johns, the event will directly benefit our community with three days of shopping and more than forty antique exhibitors. Jay N. Melrose, the senior partner at Melrose and Johns, began selling antiques himself in the 1980s and has more than 25 years of experience on the show circuit.

“I believe Charlottesville is the ideal venue for an antiques show,” he declares. “It’s steeped in history, has great architecture and is a center of higher education. Antiques enthusiasts in and around Charlottesville are sophisticated and have a hunger to gather knowledge—a huge advantage to the exhibitors who will be visiting in March.”
 
Some enthusiasts love antiques in general, while others become very specific collectors. For example, Beth Davis of Keswick recalls her father giving her mother an antique- reproduction doll that led to Davis and her mother opening a antique-reproduction doll shop in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. “We began learning about antique dolls, attending dolls shows, and buying and selling antique dolls,” she says. “Sometimes we were our own best customers.” 
 
She now has an engaging collection of dolls and doll accessories. “Each one has a story, if only they could talk,” she reflects. “Just think, they survived clumsy little girl ‘mothers’ and a hundred years later, they are still beautiful and ready to play with.” 
 
Today she enjoys seeking out small doll accessories in antique stores or shows and utilizing a bit of old lace or silk to make a new outfit for a doll. “Mostly,” she concludes, “I think the dolls allow me to hold onto small piece of my childhood.” 
 
Melrose says that antiques shows are perfect venues to explore the market, and to compare quality and prices. Unlike antique auctions, they offer novice collectors an opportunity to build knowledge and learn from experts in their fields.
 
He laments that the number of shows has declined recently, but contends, “This idea that people aren’t collecting any more is nonsense. People have always collected, but what is changing is the type of objects that entice new collectors to begin collecting.”  
 
He says that today’s economic climate means that the current antiques market is full of bargains. “This is the time to buy,” he says. Melrose explains that the exhibitors for Antiques in Charlottesville have all been carefully vetted and have agreed to properly identify and totally guarantee their wares.  “The dealers are chosen for their reputations and the quality of their merchandise and their honesty must be unassailable.”
 
Preservation Virginia
Founded in 1889, Preservation Virginia is a private non-profit organization dedicated to saving historic places and to perpetuating and revitalizing Virginia’s cultural, architectural and historic heritage. “It’s the oldest state-wide continuous preservation group in America,” explains Judy Rasmussen, president of the group’s Thomas Jefferson Branch, which covers four counties in the Charlottesville area. The local chapter offers programs, tours and preservation awards.  
 
This is only the second year the show will benefit Preservation Virginia. “They say you usually don’t make any money for the first couple years,” Rasmussen continues, “but last year they did make some money. Not a lot, but some.”  Funds earned from the show go to the state organization that owns properties as diverse as Jamestowne, the Walter Reed birthplace in Belroi, the Cape Henry Lighthouse in Virginia Beach and other historic places. Rasmussen explains that the moneys will support the promotion of preservation and the maintenance of existing properties.
 
One example is Bacon’s Castle in Surry, which opened earlier this month after being closed for more than a year for much-needed restoration and stabilization work. Built almost 350 years ago, the Castle is the oldest datable brick dwelling in North America and includes the best preserved, largest, and most sophisticated colonial-era garden in North America.  For more information, visit www.preservationvirginia.org 
 
“Mary Howard is really the mother of this wonderful event,” Rasmussen concludes.
“Well, I don’t know about that,” Mary Howard demurs graciously.  “I love antiques and decorative arts and my background is in preservation planning. I go to antique shows often and many these days are for non-profit organizations. So I thought, Why not Preservation Virginia?  Why not here?”
 
Howard was the Director of the Western Region for Preservation Virginia and when she proposed a high-end benefit antique show in Charlottesville, people liked the idea. “We started to organize in May of 2010,” she says. “I approached Jay [Melrose] because he’d done shows here before and he said it would be a perfect fit and a fun thing to do.”
 
The Main Street Arena was chosen for several reasons, Howard explains.  “We wanted to bring people to the Downtown Mall with its many restaurants and stores in historic buildings. Adaptive use of these old buildings allows us to keep these historic properties, which in turn let us maintain our sense of place. It’s a social anchor to our history and to the history which makes each community distinctly special.”
 
She adds that exhibitors love the venue at the Main Street Arena. “It’s the right sort of space,” she continues, “not huge and not crowded. It’s pretty with nice decorations like backdrops, columns and curtains and also has tables and places to sit.”
 
These venue-loving exhibitors come from Michigan, Kentucky, Alabama, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maine, South Carolina, Ohio and New York City.  What would bring an exhibitor all the way from the Big Apple we asked Zane Moss of Zane Moss Antiques on East End Avenue in New York? 
 
“We did the show in Charlottesville last year,” he explains. “Virginia has always been a sophisticated area with a long historical tradition in fine quality antiques and we found the people knowledgeable and incredibly interested in antiques.”
 
This year he will be bringing 18th and 19th century English furniture with a wide range of complementary accessories such as paintings, wonderful desk objects and tea caddies. “We’ll have an assortment of extremely fine Black Forest carvings,” he notes, “including a rare large wall-hung eagle.”
 
It’s important to have both a good venue and a well-run operation to convince dealers to return year after year but last year—the first year—there was a big glitch, Howard admits ruefully. Not only was it pouring rain, but only one truck at a time was permitted on the bricks of the Mall, so the exhibitors had to wait far too long for their turn to bring in their wares. 
 
Problem solved for this year, emphasizes Howard.  “We’ve rented electric carts to help dealers move in so we can put their minds at rest. We have wonderful dealers and we want them back.”
 
Focus On Education
The main focus this year will be education, Howard says, starting with the Gala Preview Party on Friday, March 23rd from 6 – 9 p.m. It’s an excellent opportunity to benefit Preservation Virginia while getting a chance to meet the exhibitors and having the first look at their wares. By reservation only, it is an evening of fine food and wine from a dozen of the area’s top caterers, restaurateurs and vintners. 
 
Alphabetically, these are: Barboursville Vineyards, the C&O, Camino, The Catering Outfit, Fellini’s #9 Restaurant, Glorious Foods, Harvest Moon, Horse and Hound Gastropub, Hotcakes, Maya, Mona Lisa Pasta and Sandy Motley Catering. Tickets are $55 per person or $100 per couple. “You can hardly go out to dinner these days for that cost,” Howard notes.
Either before or early in the party, the Best-in-Show pieces are selected. “There are usually 10-20 outstanding pieces,” Howard says, “based on rarity and value.” Viewing these prizewinners is always popular with visitors.
 
Saturday morning brings the Walk-Thru with Experts from 9:15 – 10:00 a.m. offering visitors an early chance to view the exhibits. The fee for this special sneak peek is $25 and includes a weekend pass to the show.  
 
The show opens to the public at 10:00 a.m. on Saturday, March 24th. The show is open Saturday, from 10:00 a.m. to 7:00  p.m. and Sunday, March 25th from 11:00  a.m. to 4:00  p.m. General admission is $10, purchased at the door and is good for both days.
 
Furthering the educational program will be Dealer Talks when various exhibitors will give talks at their booths. Specific times, which will be posted on a signboard, and the talks are covered by the general admission. “Our object is to educate the public,” says Howard. “It’s great if you buy antiques, but a lot of people have inherited pieces and don’t know exactly what they have or its value or how it’s made.” She explains that when visitors spot an item similar to one they have at home, exhibitors often can provide general information such as its history and—in the case of one of those mysterious what-is-it objects—its function.
 
“We also will be fortunate to have Wallace Gustler, former curator of Colonial Williamsburg Foundation and an expert in 18th century guns, porcelain and other items,” Howard says. “He not only will be giving a booth talk on Sunday, but he also will give a special lecture on his and his wife Liza’s own collection on Saturday at the Omni Hotel’s Lewis and Clark room.”
Another very popular event is Meet the Appraisers, a sort of mini “Road Show” evaluating items visitors bring with them. This is available both Saturday and Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Two independent appraisers, Will Paulsen or Sandra Perry, will provide a verbal Professional Opinion of Value for each item. The curious may purchase tickets at the door of $10 for one item or $25 for three items.  It is not necessary to buy a general admission ticket.
 
Paulsen is well known in central Virginia as a collector, appraiser and a University of Virginia instructor. He began collecting when he was young and is still collecting and appraising in areas including furniture, fine art, militaria, manuscripts, letters and documents. 
 
Perry is an appraiser for Harlowe-Powell Auction Gallery in Charlottesville, which offers University of Virginia, Jeffersonian, and other historic collectibles and ephemera. She has been a credentialed appraiser since 1984. “Between my time in New York galleries and here in Charlottesville, just about everything has come through my hands. Our appraisals are the opinions of someone who has been doing this for a long time.”
 
Sometimes, of course, some old thing is just an old thing, but you never know. “People often have no clue what they have,” Perry points out. “It’s come down through the family or they’ve been given it by a friend or it’s part of an estate.”
 
She mentions a woman who came to her with two framed works of art—one a large landscape—a couple years ago which she’d gotten from her parents. “I saw enough of the signature on the bottom of the larger one that I flew to the Internet. I found it was by Samuel Colman, one of the foremost ‘Hudson Valley School’ artists.”
 
When she described it to a New York City dealer over the phone, he drove directly to Charlottesville where he bought it at auction for $40,000. 
 
And did Mary Howard, “mother” of Antiques in Charlottesville, buy anything last year? “Oh, yes,” she says with a chuckle. “I bought a sweet painting of ships in a harbor by a woman named [Yvonne] Canu. She was a pointillist painter, probably a friend of Seurat.  It’s hung in my hallway.”
 
So whether you are a browser, a novice or a dedicated collector of antiques, be sure to stop by the Main Street Arena for this wonderful benefit Antique Show.  You, too, might discover a “sweet painting,” a piece of furniture to make a statement in your home or a perfect one-of-a-kind gift for someone you love.
 
To learn more about the show, including scheduled events, tickets, and reservations, please visit: www.antiquesincharlottesville.org. 
 
Marilyn Pribus and her husband live in Albemarle County near Charlottesville.  They have many “early” antiques, a.k.a. second-hand furniture, as well as treasured family items dating back as far as wedding gifts received by their grandparents.

 

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Why Seniors Love Central Virginia

Central Virginia is considered a great place to retire—and with good reason. In fact, Money Magazine, working with Sperling’s BestPlaces.net, shows Charlottesville as Number Two on their national top-ten list of Places to Retire Young. Criteria include a thriving economy, reasonable cost of living and housing coupled with positive population and job growth. They also seek an airport served by major airlines, sports, recreation, arts and culture and a major college in the vicinity.

Yes, yes, yes and yes. Clearly this area fulfills everything on that list, plus activities and housing developments designed specifically for the over-55 crowd, and the exceptional medical care provided by the University of Virginia’s Healthcare System and Martha Jefferson Hospital. Add in abundant recreation options from skiing to golf and an remarkably active arts scene and you have a vibrant community for seniors. 
 
Activities and Services for Seniors
Of course, many seniors join activities for all ages such as church functions, musical groups, sports activities and volunteer programs. Some also like programs exclusively for older folks. 
 
The SENIOR CENTER, INC., (www.SeniorCenter.org), on Pepsi Place is an extremely active organization with both paid staff and volunteers and membership open to those 50 or older. Their mission statement: Our vision is to be an indispensable asset to seniors and the community. 
 
Programs and services embrace health and fitness, lifelong learning, recreation, arts and community service. An Open House is held the first Tuesday of each month where visitors attend a noon orientation session to learn about programs, classes and activities such as trips.
 
The Jefferson Area Board on Aging, (www.JabaCares.org), locally dubbed JABA, aims to help elders remain as independent as possible. Each year JABA helps older adults and their families by providing food, health care, cooling and heating assistance, insurance counseling, transportation and companionship. JABA volunteers visit the homebound and JABA nurses make home visits and provide checkups at JABA housing, community centers and adult day care facilities. JABA has several affordable independent living facilities as well as Mountainside Senior Living, an affordable assisted living community with memory care. 
JAUNT, Inc., (www.RideJaunt.org), is a regional transportation system providing independence to seniors who cannot drive or easily get to a bus stop. Transportation is available to get to doctor’s appointments, the airport, shopping and other activities. 
 
Seniors Love to Volunteer 
There are many avenues to volunteering in the area. Recently, for instance, www.volunteermatch.org listed 77 volunteer-needed requests for everything from Habitat for Humanity to helping out at the Discovery Museum on Charlottesville’s Downtown Mall. JABA offers a variety of volunteer positions such as mentoring, working at the JABA Thrift Shop, delivering meals, recording for the blind and other services.
 
Local SPCAs need foster homes and dog walkers and some of Charlottesville’s many entertainment venues use volunteers. “We have approximately 250 volunteers,” says Jason Williams, Facilities Manager at The Paramount Theater (www.TheParamount.net). “I’d guess that at least 60 percent are over the age of 65.” Another example is Live Arts (www.LiveArts.org), where volunteers work as performers, creating sets and costumes, ushering and other aspects of live theater. 
 
Housing Options Abound
People who retire to the Charlottesville region have a wide range of housing options. Here are some examples from the most to least independent living.
 
Mixed Generation Community
This is the classic American community. It could be a long-time existing in-town neighborhood or a brand new development for homeowners from young families to retirees. One example is Lake Monticello in Fluvanna County. 
 
Ray and Joy Calfo purchased a lot there in the mid-1990s, although they didn’t move from Pittsburgh, PA until 2007 when they came to build their retirement home. “We explored Charlottesville as a possible retirement location because we liked its proximity to outdoor activities like skiing, golfing and hiking,” says Joy Calfo. “We didn’t want a senior community that would primarily be filled with people in their 70s because we felt that younger families with retired people would make a better blend of energies.”
 
She continues, “We chose Lake Monticello, www.lmoa.org, specifically because it offered a gated community, a beautiful lake with beaches and a marina, a golf course, tennis courts, a dedicated fire/rescue squad, and a number of developing businesses for shopping nearby rather than driving into Charlottesville or Richmond.” 
 
Active Adult Communities 
Generally these developments require that at least one person in the family be at least 50 or 55. These are usually comprised of owner-occupied homes or condos and include recreational facilities such as fitness centers, golf courses, tennis courts, hiking trails and such. Children’s visits may be limited to a certain number of days each year and other child-related restrictions may pertain to hours of using common facilities.
 
One example is Four Seasons of Charlottesville, (www.khov4Seasons.com/Charlottesville), located in Ruckersville. “It’s a very nice community with a great clubhouse,” declares Linda Broadbent of Better Homes & Gardens Real Estate III, a REALTOR® in this area for 21 years. “Residents come from different areas and they have formed a close-knit, intellectually active community that does a lot of things together.”
 
Various floor plans are available for the senior-friendly detached homes and a full-time activities director oversees the Clubhouse with a fitness center, cyber café, billiards room, library, sports TV area, bocce and croquet lawns, tennis courts, indoor and outdoor pools and spa, a putting green and five miles of paved walking trails.
 
Homes are low-maintenance and the community maintains all roads including snow removal and mows all lawns, both personal and in common areas. 
 
Another example is the Villages at Nahor, (www.TheVillagesatNahor.com), the first active adult community in Fluvanna County offering patio homes with garages. Planned amenities include exterior maintenance, a swimming pool, fitness center, tennis courts, a fitness track, picnic pavilion, playground for young visitors and community gardens. 
 
Age-Restricted Communities
These communities generally require that at least one person in the family be older than a specific age such as 55. Some are for homeowners and others are rental properties. Accommodations might be single-family homes or multi-family units such as duplexes, townhouses or apartments. Visiting children are frequently restricted to a limited number of days each year and to usage of common areas such as game rooms or swimming pools.
 
Options range from completely independent living to some assistance such as partial or full meal plans and housekeeping. In some cases transportation is provided for medical appointments or shopping. Often emergency alert systems are included in units and many have activity directors who plan in-house entertainment as well as outings. Some permit pets.
 
University Village, (www.universityvillage.biz), is one of the first such communities in the area requiring buyers to be 55+, although 20 percent of the units are for persons of any age and often are bought by people associated with UVa. Realtor® Broadbent describes it as a well-maintained, well-operated community. “It’s independent living with different floor plans, an indoor pool and a fitness center,” she says. “People live there for many years.” 
 
An aptly named example of independent rental living is The Independence, (www.TheIndependenceCville.com), in Charlottesville. This was the choice of Jane Holbrook, 82, who moved from Minneapolis about a year ago. “Yes,” she admits with a grin, “That’s my face on their website. I’m even on the back of the little bus they use to take residents to appointments and daytrips, although I still have my own car.” There are upscale apartments with full kitchens for 55+ renters. “We have an activities director,” Holbrook adds. “She arranges exercise classes and outings and such. There are even gardens for residents to have their own little plot.” 
 
Jefferson Heights, (www.JeffersonHeights.com), in Charlottesville is poised between independent and assisted living with rental apartments “as care-free as you would like.” There is a fitness center, indoor therapy pool, business center, lending library and regular social events and outings. Optional extras include at-home health care, housekeeping, laundry service, furniture rental and meals. 
 
Branchlands, (www.Branchlands.com), is another 55+ Charlottesville rental community combining independent living with “all the amenities of assisted living, minus the health care,” according to Resident Services Manager Sue Liberman. She adds that most residents are in their 80s and 90s and don’t want to leave, so she can assist families in arranging for extra help on a private basis. 
 
Residents have most meals provided in the refurbished Manor House, built circa 1860. Other amenities include housekeeping, transportation services, day trips and outings to local theaters and concerts and even out of town, and visits by the bookmobile, lecturers and musicians. “We are small enough to be intimate,” she concludes, “but large enough to have good community offerings.”
 
Assisted Living Communities offer meals, medication management, assistance with dressing, bathing and other daily needs, transportation services to personal appointments or for outings. Often an activities director arranges for pastimes ranging from exercise classes, entertainment from outside, bingo or bridge and outings to theater performances, luncheons or shopping excursions. Staff is available 24 hours a day. 
 
Skilled Nursing Communities offer assisted living plus medical care such as daily injections or care for a chronic disease. Some offer temporary accommodations for persons recovering from surgery or an injury. Meals may be offered in a central dining room or in a person’s room. Rooms may be private or shared. Many have activity directors. 
 
Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs) offer a ladder of care from independent living to assisted living, nursing care and often memory care. Once residents move into the independent living portion, continuing care allows them to move to a higher level of care. This can be especially valuable when one partner may require temporary or permanent nursing care, or the safety of a memory care facility. The other partner can remain in the independent portion of the community, easily able to visit.
 
CCRCs in the area include The Colonnades, (www.sunriseseniorliving.com), which offers rental independent and assisted living and nursing care and Our Lady of Peace, (www.Our-Lady-Of-Peace.com), a non-denominational rental community with residential living or assisted living plans in the same apartment. Assisted living residents have priority admission to the on-site nursing care center or memory care.
 
Westminster-Canterbury, (www.WestminsterCanterbury.org), in Charlottesville is a “buy-in” CCRC with accommodations from cottages to apartments. It has a Fitness and Aquatic Center with exercise classes and a heated indoor pool and hot tub. An important feature of this “Life Care” community is that monthly fees do not increase when a resident must move to assisted living or nursing units and all rooms in those facilities are private. 
 
It’s clear there are good choices for seniors in the area and REALTOR® Broadbent believes there will be more built in the future. And where will she go when it’s time for her to retire? “I think I’m going to stay right here!” she says with a chuckle. “The cultural environment and medical facilities are really strong in Charlottesville. We’re a little big town for all ages with things you usually find in big cities.”  
 
Marilyn Pribus and her husband, Glenn, moved from California to Charlottesville to retire, but well ahead of time. They live in a Mixed Generation Neighborhood.
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Life in a College Town

When retiree Sharon Baiocco and just-getting-started Amber Ward moved to Charlottesville, the University of Virginia was a factor in both their choices. Baiocco, a former dean at a university in another state, and her sports-loving high-school-teacher husband, John, knew they wanted to be on the East Coast near their children in Richmond and New Jersey. “We could have lived anywhere,” Baiocco says, “but we preferred a place that was open to all faiths, cultures and political views. We looked at Charlottesville and just knew right away it was where we wanted to be.” 

 
As an example of diversity, she cites their development of Fontana.  “On our little street—only 13 homes—there are young families and retirees, Eastern Europeans, Chinese Americans, African Americans, Christians, Jews and even Unitarians like me. We are so proud of our Unitarian member, [Satyendra] Huja, a Sikh from Pakistan, who has become Charlottesville’s mayor. It shows there are diverse faith communities in this area where you can practice your faith without fear.”
 
Another consideration for the Baioccos was that the market for homes would not drop dramatically. “With UVa as the largest local employer,” she points out, “stability and growth are almost guaranteed. That is very important because our home is our biggest investment.”
 
Ward’s story is a little different since she was nearing the end of an internship in another state to complete her education, but she was also seeking a place to settle permanently. “I spent about three months using the Internet to analyze demographics and other data,” she explains. Raised in Los Angeles, she wanted to be near the big city of Washington, but live a small “slowed-down” city. “I also wanted a place committed to sustainability because that’s an investment for our future.” 
 
Was UVa a factor in her decision? “Absolutely! I knew the university would contribute to ‘young’ ideas like buy local and be green—by seeking new approaches to these issues.” She considered Blacksburg, Roanoke, Richmond and Harrisonburg before settling on Charlottesville.
 
Charlottesville Tops Lists
Last year, Charlottesville landed on many of those ubiquitous “top” lists including (but definitely not limited to): #1 City to Live in the Country by Sperling’s Best Places (www.bestplaces.net), #1 City to Retire by Kiplinger.com and “Locavore” Capital of the World by Forbes. Often, an important criterion for being a “top” is having a great institution of higher learning and the area certainly has that in the University of Virginia.
 
“The Charlottesville region is frequently recognized as one of the best places to live in the country,” declares Teresa Sullivan, President of the University of Virginia (UVa). She cites many elements including natural beauty, historic sites, a vibrant cultural scene and a strong economy. “The University of Virginia is thoroughly engaged in every aspect of community life,” she continues. “This strong relationship with the Charlottesville region creates a stronger community overall.”
 
The prestigious U.S. News & World Report ranking of colleges rates UVa as the second best public university and 25th best overall in the entire nation. It also boasts the country’s highest graduation rate for African-American students.
 
UVa employees live in the city and in the surrounding counties where they are involved in civic, school and volunteer organizations and support local businesses. Sullivan point out, “For those of us who work at UVa, the Charlottesville region is not just our workplace, it’s our home, so we want to help build a strong, prosperous region.”
 
Major Impact On The Local Economy
With 12,000 employees, UVa is the area’s largest employer, which contributes to keeping employment stable in the community. Its payroll of $1.3 billion in the academic year 2011-2012, plus expenditures for services, supplies and maintenance, directly impact the community. In fact, direct spending in the Charlottesville region by people and programs associated with the university amounts to more than $1 billion annually.
 
In addition, UVa students support community businesses from landlords to grocers to the tune of more than $210 million every year.
 
UVa’s local real estate taxes amount to nearly $1.9 million each year and UVa pays the city of Charlottesville more than $200,000 annually to subsidize local bus and trolley service. UVa also supports local emergency services including more than a half million dollars to support 9-1-1 services, $250,000 to the City of Charlottesville for fire services and $750,000 for the new fire station on Fontaine Avenue. The Charlottesville-Albemarle Rescue Squad receives more than $40,000 annually and UVa employees and students contribute about 25,000 volunteer hours of service to the squad each year. 
 
Construction and renovation are also substantial economic contributors. In 2011 more than $290 million was spent, divided almost equally between materials and labor and in 2012 an estimated $200 million will be spent. The majority of materials are purchased within 50 miles of Charlottesville. 
 
U.S. News & World Report recently ranked the UVa Medical Center in the top 50 nationally for five adult specialties and high-performing in six other adult specialties. The School of Nursing was ranked in the top two percent nationally. This means Charlottesville shines because high-quality medical care often leads the list of desirable attributes in a community. In fact, recommendations for ideal retirement locales often specify a teaching hospital.
 
Patients can access their medical records and communicate with their personal healthcare provider on-line. Same-day appointments are often available. Searchable on-line medical files include information of topics ranging from clinical trials open to the public, healthy lifestyles, treatments for many medical problems and much more.  Club Red, aimed at improving heart health in women, offers information, local healthy-eating discounts, and a monthly newsletter.
 
In the last fiscal year, the Healthcare System treated well over 750,000 individuals. At the same time, it provided close to $100 million of free care through financial aid and Medicaid. For more information about health care, visit www.healthsystem.virginia.edu.
 
Charitable Activities
UVa employees and students are generous with both dollars and time. For example, close to 7,000 hours are donated to the Charlottesville Free Clinic with a value of about $7.5 million. Each September during the National Day of Caring, about 1,000 volunteers pitch in on close to 100 projects ranging from painting schools to visiting with the elderly. 
 
University students participate in community service in many ways, including operating fundraisers to support disease prevention, performances that promote awareness of different cultures, weekly carpentry efforts to renovate area homes, and volunteering in settings ranging from area rescue squads to day care centers and animal shelters.
 
In a typical year, students provided well over 5,000 hours of tutoring and scholastic assistance to area youth at more than 20 community locations while the Young Women Leadership Program arranges for UVa students to mentor more than 100 eighth- and ninth-grade girls addressing issues related to self-esteem, scholastic achievement and decision-making.
 
The largest student-volunteer effort is Madison House, a student volunteer center, which recruits, trains and mentors over 3,300 student volunteers each year. These students contribute more than 10,000 hours of community service to the Charlottesville-Albemarle area, partnering with almost 100 community non-profits organizations, where volunteers directly impact more than 15,000 residents.
 
Finally, at the end of the academic year, UVa students donate household goods and furniture to support Charlottesville nonprofit organizations that serve low-income residents through Chuck It For Charity and the Sofa Shuffle. 
 
Community Outreach
Every year UVa serves over one million people through more than 500 public service and outreach programs. Through OutreachVirginia, local residents can find interesting programs in music and drama, opportunities to volunteer at UVa, and the chance to learn how the university and the community are engaged.
 
“Residents in the area enjoy the UVa museums and its multitude of events year round,” says Broker Sara Greenfield, owner of Charlottesville Fine Homes and Properties. “For just one example, every year since 1968, the UVa music department has presented a Messiah Sing-a-long in early December. This is a time when townspeople mingle with University singers and Old Cabell Hall reverberates with laughter and singing. Anyone can take part in either the orchestra or the singing and I wouldn’t miss it for anything.”
 
Other musical treats include the Charlottesville & University Symphony Orchestra comprised of music faculty members, talented students and community musicians. The Orchestra presents concerts, has a special program to introduce community youth to orchestral instruments and performs a free Symphony Under the Stars. 
 
In addition, there are a number of other musical groups from chamber music to jazz to singing ensembles offering concerts. Free Lunchbox Recitals are presented throughout the academic year and a Music Department Colloquium is free to the public and convenes on select Friday afternoons.
 
UVa’s Office of Diversity and Equity has numerous outreach efforts, including the Charlottesville Community Health Fair. During the African-American Cultural Arts Festival in July, UVa provides free sports physicals and free health screenings, including mammograms. The Medical Equipment Recovery of Clean Inventory program collects clean, unused medical supplies and distributes them to both local and international nonprofits. 
 
Another popular outreach is the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute. Designed for senior citizens, this program is for people who seek intellectual stimulation. Formed in association with UVa, it was inspired by Thomas Jefferson’s own deeply held view of education as a lifelong enterprise to invigorate the mind. Volunteer course instructors are specialists in their fields—many are professors from UVa and other universities across the United States. 
 
Other outreach programs embrace persons with disabilities, elementary and secondary school teachers, men, women, minority groups, children, families and senior citizens.
 
For more information on the many programs, visit www.OutreachVirginia.org. 
 
With no professional sports teams nearby, local residents substitute a passion for the orange and blue. Although the Cavaliers lost their recent New Year’s Eve bowl game, the community always enjoys rooting for teams which are often nationally ranked in sports from football as well as men’s and women’s basketball, lacrosse, golf, soccer, tennis swimming and diving. Additional teams include men’s baseball, women’s softball and other sports.
 
A Great Place To Be
Now that Ward, the young Registered Dietician, has found employment as a Nutritionist with the area’s Head Start program, a “great apartment with great neighbors,” and adopted a rescue dog named Oscar, she is delighted with her decision to settle here in what she enthusiastically terms “a great city.” She loves the rural surroundings, the music, the City Market and the personality of Charlottesville, including UVa. 
 
“The university and community utilize each other very well,” she observes. “There is a beautiful partnership with their priorities in parallel, which isn’t true in every college town.” 
 
And retiree Baiocco, now a Charlottesville resident for some five years and an activist against mountain-top removal, says she and her husband love the fact that the area is amidst beautiful scenery and has a wonderful small-town feel. “Southern society can be closed, but there is a significant population from other places and you run into friends wherever you go.” 
 
Marilyn Pribus and her husband relocated to Charlottesville from California more than four years ago. “We love it here,” she says.
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Re-Use, Re-Cycle, Re-Purpose

About twenty years ago, Judy Johnson—former manager of Charlottesville’s City Market—bought a home in Charlottesville’s Woolen Mills neighborhood. Built in 1900, the home was on a generous lot.  Johnson, now owner of Renaissance Woman Flowers & Gardens, is a professional florist and garden designer and one of the attractions was the land itself. It was a double lot with an orchard on one side.

 
“I’d always envisioned creating and building a house,” she says, crediting her childhood when family members were involved in homebuilding. Her great-grandfather was a carpenter and her Uncle Spike was constantly working on houses. “He would bring things home from houses being renovated and they would re-appear in the house he was developing.”
 
Johnson took a course on home-building course at CATEC [Charlottesville-Albemarle Technical Education Center] more than twenty years ago. She used that knowledge to build an addition for a bedroom and second bathroom on the existing house and dreamed of building herself a cottage for her later years on the “B” part of the lot.
 
Finally the right moment arrived. “I knew I wanted a house that would fit in my neighborhood,” Johnson says. “I chose the ‘Winona’ because there are a number of them in Charlottesville. Once you know the style of those Sears houses, it’s very easy to notice them.”
 
The “Winona” was one of the more than 100,000 Sears mail-order houses that essentially came complete in a box on a train. The “Winona” was one of the most popular. Houses By Mail, a publication of the national Trust for Historic Preservation, shows the “Winona” originally sold in 1916 for $744 and was shipped until 1940 with the price rising to almost $2000. Johnson’s new cottage, however, didn’t arrive ready-to-build. 
 
One of the best parts about Johnson’s building of her cottage, is that she found many things to reuse and recycle, lending it a mellow, not-harshly-new or mass-produced ambiance. Doing this also prevented quality items from ending up in a landfill and was a great way to economize.
 
“I call it ‘Renaissance Cottage’ which relates to rebirth,” she says. “Not just the Sears house and fulfilling my dream of creating it, but also rebirthing many of the things in it.” For example, she collected used interior doors and cabinetry from various sources while the “built-in” shelving in the upstairs is a former entertainment center, bought for $25, turned on its side and painted to match the walls.   
 
“It’s a wonderful house,” declares current tenant Kem Spaulding. “It’s light. I tell people I have a brand-new old cottage.” Renaissance Cottage has two downstairs bedrooms. A room upstairs isn’t technically a bedroom because there is no closet, but it works as either an office or a spare bedroom. In fact, Johnson points out, the original Sears houses did not have bedroom closets. 
 
“I love all the woodwork and the beautifully framed windows,” Spaulding continues. “The kitchen has an old-style porcelain drain board and sink. I’m sure the kitchen cabinets were recycled, but they are all perfect and the bathroom has an old pedestal sink and a claw-foot tub. It’s just all in keeping with the look.”
 
Where to Look for Used Items 
Finding the right things takes time. In fact, Johnson spent months trolling for the things she needed. “You can’t just walk into a place and expect to find exactly what you want in one day,” she points out. In Richmond, she often browsed both S. B. Cox Demolition and Caravati’s Architectural Salvage, which has a diverse collection of items—including the cottage’s sink and bathtub. 
 
She was also a regular at the Habitat ReStore at 1221 Harris Street in Charlottesville and when she was out of town she’d stop by similar stores in Richmond, Staunton or Lynchburg. Habitat ReStores are retail outlets selling quality used and surplus building materials ranging from new flooring to old doors and odd lots of tile or paint and tools. They also offer home furnishings such as furniture, rugs, appliances and plumbing fixtures as well as other items which are sold at a fraction of usual retail prices. 
 
Materials are usually donated from building supply stores, contractors, demolition crews and individuals who wish to support their local Habitat. Proceeds help local affiliates fund the construction of Habitat houses within the community. 
 
While stores have some paid employees, Habitat volunteers help to keep costs low. In addition to raising funds, ReStores protect the environment by re-channeling usable materials into additional life. For information on Habitat ReStore locations and hours in Virginia, visit www.habitatvirginia.org. 
 
Charlottesville’s Habitat store is the perfect example of a place to find a wide variety of both new and used items. There is an always-available stock inventory including new and used windows and doors, tile, flooring, lock sets, furniture, cabinetry, lamps, paint and much more. 
 
Then there is the one-of-a-kind inventory which changes constantly depending on donations. Recent one-of-a-kind items included an inside dog gate, a metal bunk bed frame, new lighting fixtures, name-brand all-wood kitchen cabinets in several styles and sizes and new furniture. Other stock includes a variety of previously used plumbing fixtures (but sinks don’t fade or shrink, after all) in various styles and colors, desks, shelving, appliances, ceiling fans, drawer pulls—the list goes on and on. 
 
The local website at www.cvillehabitat.org  lists inventory and weekly specials. Recent specials included 20 percent off all dishwashers, mantels and new paint accessories. Users may also sign up to receive weekly e-mailed news of special sales and inventory changes.
 
In Charlottesville, Circa at 1700 Allied Street and Possessions Recycled just across the way at 1713 Allied Street are just down the road from the Habitat Store and are eminently browse-able. The Salvation Army Store at 604 Cherry Avenue is also a place to visit.  In fact, this is where Johnson forked over the $25 for the entertainment center now “built-in” at her cottage.  
 
Yard sales, moving sales and estate sales also provide good hunting grounds. Even curbsides yield possibilities. “I found an old ‘New Home’ brand, very early treadle sewing machine on the street near a place where I garden,” she confides. “It’s now a little table in the bathroom waiting to be refinished.”
 
How to Use “Used Stuff”
Recycling old pieces was of special interest to Johnson. For instance, she pounced on an interesting old door with glass panes, designating it for a bathroom door and replacing the glass with mirrors on both sides. 
 
“It takes time and energy to re-use things,” Johnson cautions. She found a wonderful sturdy front door, but its glass didn’t match the lines of the house and her made-to-order windows. “I found a Norwegian carpenter in Lynchburg who reworked the door and also replicated the woodwork of the 1920s in the cottage,” she says. “The door was not expensive, but then there was the work involved.”
 
Older architectural features lend real personality to a home and often homeowners can use some elbow grease to strip paint, sand and refinish. Others may prefer to utilize the item in its “distressed” state. Take an old mantel, for instance. It can serve as a mantel, of course, but also as a window frame, shelving or, with interesting added hooks, a coat rack. 
 
Old windows may not be as efficient as modern double-paned windows, but when installed in an inside wall, they can serve as a pass-through from kitchen to dining room or bring light into dark interior rooms. In a bathroom, an interesting old window can frame a mirror. In the bedroom, a large window can serve as a headboard with wooden panels replacing panes of glass. Windows can also be used for tabletops, to create a cold frame or even a mini-greenhouse.
 
Old doors are frequently made of fine wood—often unavailable today except in high-priced custom work—which can be refinished to use as countertops, vanities, tables, desks, headboards or even as doors. They also can become room dividers —either as a solid wall or as a visual separation. Several old doors can be hinged together as a moveable screen. They can be suspended horizontally as a room divider or fastened horizontally against a wall to provide architectural interest. When shopping, be aware that old doors often are not the standard sizes of today’s typical hollow-cores. 
 
Repurposing
The classic re-purposing is probably those first-apartment brick-and-board bookshelves. Or the table made with the old sewing machine legs. 
 
“I had two wonderful antique stained-glass windows with no place to put them,” says Charlottesville resident Dell Erwin. Eventually she and her husband suspended one from the ceiling to provide a visual divide between the open-style living room and kitchen. The other became a door for a custom-built cabinet with an interior cabinet light bringing the old window to glowing life.
 
And it’s not just homes that are candidates for re-purposed items. Spaulding, the tenant in the cottage, opened Java Dragon, her Charlottesville coffee house, last June. “I got all my equipment on Craig’s List or eBay,” she says. 
 
Habitat, she notes, was the source of “door knobs, sinks, shutters and a lot of paint.” She had her eye on one sink’s faucet, so she removed it, then re-donated the sink back to Habitat. She cut the shutters in half to serve as café doors to the kitchen area. And she painted just about everything in sight.
 
“The place is all about comfort and I didn’t want some mass-produced furnishings,” she adds. So she headed to Circa where she furnished her place in one day with tables, chairs and couches. “It’s all very stylish and unique.“  
 
A Tie to the Past
“There’s something about the care with which these things were made,” homebuilder Johnson says about the things she has re-employed in her Renaissance Cottage. “There’s the coziness of sharing something that other people used.  I wonder about the people who washed dishes in this sink and looked out these windows. Things weren’t done cheaply then and I’m still valuing the craftsmanship which reflects the tradition of real workmanship.”  
 
Frequent contributor Marilyn Pribus and her husband once combined a piece of driftwood (complete with barnacles) with four no-hands door handles from a demolished hospital in Monterey, California, to create a handsome wall-hung coat rack.
 
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Murals Bring New Moods To The Home

Human beings have always been artists. Cave inhabitants dabbed the first murals on their walls many centuries ago. Many, many centuries. In fact, the carbon dating of cave drawings found in France puts the time back at least 30,000 years! When ancient civilizations began building walls, it wasn’t long before people began decorating them, too. Some ancient Egyptian murals survive to this day. In medieval times, murals were often religious such as Michelangelo’s revered paintings in the Sistine Chapel created in the early 1500s. In Colonial America, murals were popular for enlivening the décor, but were usually something only the wealthy could afford.

 
Murals are still being painted on interior walls and ceilings as well as outdoor walls and even the sides of entire buildings. Today they are available in a variety of methods and media. 
 
Murals Many Ways
Murals are popular for the way they can personalize the home and there are several ways to create a mural. First, of course, is painting directly on the wall. One talented Mom painted Winnie-the-Pooh characters around her daughter’s bedroom walls, later replacing them with dancing pixies when her daughter grew older and began dancing lessons. Other people, like Dell Erwin who lives in Albemarle County, turn to a professional.
 
“I love original art—in almost any form,” Erwin declares as she happily shows off her home’s special enhancements. “Instead of using wallpaper, I hired a local muralist to paint a bathroom area, matching the flowers on my towels.” In addition, muralist Wendy Custer (www.wendycuster.com) painted ceiling medallions around light fixtures in the foyer and dining room as well as designs around all the light switches. “She also did a mural under a window seat, again matching flowers in the fabric I decorated with,” Erwin explains. “I love admiring this art that is totally unique to my house.”
 
“My greatest reward is in seeing the joy people receive in my creations,” says Custer who recently painted the murals for Charlottesville’s new Martha Jefferson Hospital Nursery and Chapel. She had previously created murals in the old hospital’s nursery and was tickled when a nurse said that having Custer’s artwork at the new hospital was like bringing a piece of home with them when they moved.
Working with a local artist has several advantages. You can plan your one-of-a-kind mural together and changes can be made during the process. Says Custer, “I enjoy the creative experience of working with my clients from concept to completion.” 
 
On the other hand, custom work is generally more expensive than do-it-yourself projects. Still, you don’t need to be an artist to create mural-like effects in your home. For example, some wallpaper is manufactured in panels, often appearing hand painted. The designs can be classic, whimsical or contemporary.
 
An Internet search reveals many websites with pre-fabricated murals in a variety of themes, styles, sizes and shapes. Usually digitally reproduced on vinyl, high-quality photographic paper or canvas, they are relatively easy to install. Another advantage is that they generally can be removed intact and repositioned should you move or decide to replace one mural with another. The variety of images is virtually endless—one site brags that it stocks 60,000 different images, but we didn’t count them. Prices range from modest to hundreds of dollars depending on the mural’s size and material. 
 
Themes include scenes with a hand-painted appearance as well as photographs ranging from the subtle to the spectacular. It’s even possible to have your own photograph reproduced as a mural if the resolution is sufficiently high. The designers at websites offering this service will review your photo to be sure it will print clearly at the size you desire.
 
One intriguing mural application is to mount a “window” or even a door in a windowless room. This sort of mural comes in a variety of shapes, sometimes with the door or window frame seeming to open out into the scene. Some websites, such as www.windowmurals.com, offer the opportunity for you to view such a mural using one of your own photos. 
 
Stencils are another artful way to create interest on walls. Some—such as a Colonial American scene, for instance—may cover an entire wall while others provide accents around windows and doorways, above a chair rail (or in place of one) or along the ceiling. Stencils are available at many paint and building supply stores and the Internet reveals a variety of stencils in many price ranges with themes ranging from historically accurate Pennsylvania Dutch motifs to flowers and elves. With only a little practice, most people are able to effectively apply the paints.
 
So when you’re ready to give your home a cosmetic boost, consider murals to deliver a new mood to your room—from the whimsical to serene to dynamic. 
 
Charlottesville writer Marilyn Pribus once decorated the family bathroom by painting an abstract mural that met a mirrored wall, thus doubling the impact.
 
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18th Annual Martha’s Market Will Benefit Women’s Health

Charlottesville’s annual Martha’s Market is a very special opportunity to have some wonderful shopping fun while supporting The Women’s Committee of Martha Jefferson Hospital (MJH) in one of the community’s most successful fundraisers. The Committee has been busy preparing for the Market for the past year.

“I compare my excitement to planning a wedding,” declares Terri Bailey, the endlessly enthusiastic Chair of this year’s Market. She says the efforts of the dedicated members of the committee have laid the groundwork for a joyous and festive occasion. For example, Beth Wertheim is this year’s Decoration Chair and Bailey says the results are well worth the effort. “Our Market will have the look and feel of a charming and lovely garden oasis,” she says. “We are thankful for Snow’s Garden Center in helping us to turn our vision into such a beautiful reality.”
 
The Market will be a three-day delight, with boutique-type merchandise from all over the country which has been chosen to have a variety of price ranges to appeal to every shopper including clothing, jewelry, toys, gifts, gourmet foods, home furnishings and much, much more. Last year’s Market brought in more than $250,000 to benefit MJH programs. That’s a quarter of a million dollars!
 
In fact, over the past 17 years, through the tremendous success of Martha’s Market, the In The Pink Tennis Tournament and the annual Martha Jefferson 8K Run and 4K Walk, The Women’s Committee has raised nearly $3 million to benefit areas such as breast health, technology, women’s midlife health, heart disease and outreach to underserved populations.
 
Outstanding Vendors 
Are The Key  
Purveyors of everything from jewelry to women’s fashion, games, toys, antiques and home décor will make their way to Charlottesville from as far as New York, Illinois and Florida as the John Paul Jones Center is transformed into an amazing shopping galleria. There will be nearly 70 vendors and about one-third are first-time participants. The Women’s Committee has a Vendor Jury to help with the selection process and ensure both outstanding collections and a nice variety.
 
The Market contracts only with vendors outside of the MJH service area—that is, vendors beyond Charlottesville and the surrounding counties of Albemarle, Greene, Nelson, Louisa, Fluvanna, Madison, Orange and Buckingham. This has been the policy since the beginning of Martha’s Market, aimed at offering local shoppers access to vendors not ordinarily available to them. There is a real effort to keep the Market fresh and unique each year and fifteen percent of every sale goes directly to support women’s breast health programs.
 
“We’ve participated in Martha’s Market since 2002,” says Trisha Anderson, President of Frontier Soups in Waukegan, Il., which offers dried, all-natural gourmet soup mixes. “Taking part in holiday markets is the way the company started and now—celebrating our 25th anniversary—we still love those markets where we offer tastes of our 37 varieties. This is our only East Coast market and we love returning year after year.”  
 
“We are truly honored to be a part of this wonderful show,” says Maggie Cabot. She and Ed Cabot own Little Indulgences, an upscale jewelry shop way down in Sarasota, Florida. “It’s well worth the time and distance because of many factors,” she continues. “First and foremost, the proceeds have such a profound impact on so many women and their families in the Charlottesville area. Second, The Women’s Committee is the best organized and most helpful of any shows we exhibit at, hands down, and we’ve made many wonderful friends over the past five years. Last, the shoppers have responded in a very positive way to our jewelry and accessories line and we have a very loyal customer base who look for us every year.” 
 
J.L. Lane/Crossing Borders of Washington, D.C., specializing in handmade handbags, jackets, shawls and accessories, will return for their third year. “Our primary emphasis is on supporting women in Vietnam, India and Laos through education, business training and micro-finance,” explains Jennifer Woodsmall Larson, the daughter in the mother/daughter team who founded the company. “We very much believe in empowering women, whether in the States or abroad, and so are committed to supporting The Women’s Committee of MJH through participation in Martha’s Market.”
 
One of the new vendors this year is Janet Egan Designs from South Dartmouth, MA, which specializes in silk haute couture. “Part of our mission statement is philanthropy,” says founder/owner Janet Egan, “and in the five years we’ve been in business we’ve contributed more than $145,000 to 89 charities.” She says they are very excited to participate in Martha’s Market for the first time. “We understand that the show is excellent and it supports a cause very dear to my heart—breast cancer and the MJH Foundation. My mother died of cancer several years ago and my father was involved in the medical field his entire adult life.”
The wide variety of top-notch boutiques makes the Market a shopping destination from Roanoke to Richmond, Staunton to Washington. First, because visitors know they’ll find one-of-a-kind gifts to share with friends and loved ones and second, because they know their money goes toward a worthy cause.
 
What the Market Supports 
Since 1994, The Women’s Committee has helped fund many facets of women’s healthcare, with the primary emphasis on breast health. Fundraising supports computer-assisted-detection software that increases the accuracy of digital mammography imaging, women’s midlife health, and heart disease as well as access to mammograms for under- and uninsured women, and support for women and families who are dealing with breast cancer.  
Nearly 20 programs are assisted. Here are just three that indicate some of the scope of the work to which The Women’s Committee contributes includes:
  • The Cancer Resource Center where Coordinator Vicky Brunjes offers educational materials and other programs dedicated to supporting individuals receiving treatment in the Cancer Care Center.
  • Support for Early Detection through the Biannual Breast Health Screening Days, Breast Health Liaison, Digital Mammography, Computer-Assisted Detection (CAD), and MRI.
  • Our Cloak of Caring through support for Palliative Care, Breast Health Fund, Lymphedema Care, Infusion Center chairs, blanket warmers, and robes.
The big news this year, of course, is that the hospital staff has completed the move to the new facility at Pantops with beautiful views inside and out. All patients coming for appointments at the Phillips Cancer Center walk past the highly visible and convenient Cancer Resource Center. Adjoining the Center is Marianne’s Room, where last year 200 patients who had lost their hair were gifted with wigs—especially important to those who lacked the resources to make such a purchase. Marianne’s Room also provides scarves, special chemo caps, soft post-operative prostheses, education, restorative makeup and other support to women undergoing cancer treatment in an effort to address not only their physical needs, but also their emotional needs.
 
For more information, visit www.mjhfoundation.org and take a look at “Martha’s Matters”—an impressive list of the nearly 20 programs supported by funds from The Women’s Committee. 
 
The Women’s Committee 
and the Charlottesville 
Community Make It Happen
Planning Martha’s Market is a yearlong enterprise involving hundreds of people dealing with accounting, decorations, tickets, hospitality, mailing, membership, preview party, public relations, special events, sponsors, and vendors. In short, Martha’s Market would be impossible without the dedication of The Women’s Committee. It takes some three days to set up and decorate for the Market, three hectic but rewarding days while the Market is open followed by a concerted (and exhausting) clean-up effort. 
 
Market Chair Bailey says, “My first encounter with the Market was seven years ago as a shopper.  I immediately became interested in becoming a part of it because I believed in the cause.” She notes that The Women’s Committee members join for a variety of reasons. “I think the most compelling reason is because they also believe in the cause,” she says.
“Some are breast cancer survivors themselves or have had a family member or friend that has been touched by the disease. Other women are new to our community and join to network.”
 
There are nearly 150 active members of The Women’s Committee. Each one has a strong interest in being an ambassador for MJH and supports the Committee financially as well as with countless volunteer hours. 
 
And applause for Martha’s Market success is also due the generous community sponsors. 
The presenting sponsor is Wells Fargo. Event sponsors—some are “in kind” donors—include Lite Rock Z-95.1, the Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of Central Virginia, SMG, and Snow’s Garden Center.
 
The Major Sponsor roster includes ACAC, BMW of Charlottesville, CenturyLink, Charlottesville Radiology Ltd. & CRL Surgical Associates, Flow Audi of Charlottesville, McGuireWoods LLP, NBC 29/CW 29 and StellarOne. The Special Sponsors and Partners list is very long—representing a wonderful outpouring from the community.
 
Mark Your Calendar
So put Martha’s Market on your calendar and invite some friend for a great day of giving while shopping. Martha’s Market will be open on Friday, October 21 from 9:30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.; on Saturday, October 22 from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., and on Sunday, October 23 from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. at the John Paul Jones (JPJ) Arena in Charlottesville. The $8 ticket admits shoppers for all three days. Discounted admission rate of $5 is offered to active duty and retired military personnel and their families with ID, college students with ID and teenagers 14 and over. Children 13 and younger are admitted free. Gourmet lunch, convenient parking, and complimentary coat and package check are available. 
 
For additional information, as well as a complete list of all the sponsors, donors, businesses, and the many people who help make Martha’s Market so successful, visit www.mjhfoundation.org, www.facebook.com/MarthasMarket, and www.johnpauljonesarena.com or call 434.654.8258.