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Fluvanna County Public Schools

Fluvanna County Public Schools

The Fluvanna County Public School system is comprised of five schools: Carysbrook Elementary, West Central Primary, Central Elementary, Fluvanna Middle School, and Fluvanna County High School. All of Fluvanna’s schools are fully accredited. Fluvanna County Public Schools will:
• Provide a quality education to all students.
• Build a culture that is conducive to learning in a safe and nurturing environment.
• Foster relationships with our community.
• Operate in an effective and efficient manner.

Student enrollment is a little over 3,800 students with a targeted student-teacher ratio of 22:1. The school system offers a variety of student programs including special education, gifted and talented education, career and technical education, and alternative education. Parental involvement is high, as is the school system’s expectation of its students.

Fluvanna County Public Schools Points of Pride (2012-2013 FCPS points of pride are located at www.fluco.org):
• Fluvanna County High School finished 17th at the Destination ImagiNation Global Finals.
• 18 Students from Fluvanna County Public Schools participated in the Regional 24® Math Competition. One student placed first and another placed fourth
• For the second consecutive year, Fluvanna County High School earned a Silver Medal in U.S. News and World Report’s rankings of Best High Schools in America.
• Over 500 Fluvanna County High School students earned Industry Credentials during 2012-2013 school year.
• Fluvanna County Public Schools graduation rate surpasses the State average.
• Fluvanna County Public Schools has one of the lowest dropout rates in the State of Virginia.
• 19 former and current Fluvanna County High School students earn AP Scholar Awards; one awarded College Board’s highest Honor of National AP Scholar.
• Fluvanna County High School continues to outperform the Nation in the area of English on both SAT and AP exams.
• The Television Production class at Fluvanna County High School added a new component to their curriculum: FLUCO TV, FLUCO TV includes broadcasting home football games as well as broadcasting at least one other home event for the other sports. FLUCO TV has also started broadcasting the monthly School Board meetings. In addition to these events, FLUCO TV is developing a Fluco magazine show which will highlight events, people, and courses at the High School. Future plans are underway for cooking and carpentry shows. The group hopes to invite community members to come in and participate in their broadcasts.

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Real Estate News – Week of March 27

Real Estate Related News

Tommy Brannock joins Loring Woodriff Real Estate Associates
Loring Woodriff Real Estate Associates is thrilled to welcome Tommy Brannock. A Charlottesville native and UVA grad, Tommy is well known in our community for his years of success in real estate sales as well as for his commitment to giving back to the community.  Professional awards and accolades for Tommy number too many to detail here but suffice it to say, he is not only well respected as an authority in the business but well loved too, for decades of selfless and integrity-drive service to his clients.

On the community service and personal passion fronts, Tommy has worked tirelessly for many years on behalf of the Virginia Institute for Autism and the Alzheimer’s Association.  In addition to serving as coach for dozens of local youth lacrosse teams, he has been a Collegiate Lacrosse Office since 1978!  In a town he feels lucky to call home, Tommy is truly a tireless public servant.

What’s Happening Around Town?
Create2 Exhibit by Artist Roundtable Group at CitySpace
What: Create2 Exhibit & First Fridays Opening Reception
When: First Fridays, April 4, 5:30-7:00pm
Where: CitySpace (100 5th Street NE, Charlottesville, VA 22902 on the Downtown Mall)
Piedmont Council for the Arts (PCA) is excited to present Create2, an exhibit in the CitySpace Gallery by an artist roundtable group formed through the support of the PCA in November 2012. Artist Roundtable members include Adrienne Dent, Terry Coffey, Matalie Deane, Leah Geiger, Keith Alan Sprouse, Kelly Oakes, and Susan Stover.

There will be a First Fridays opening reception from 5:30-7:00pm on Friday, April 4 with light refreshments at CitySpace (located at 100 5th NE on the Downtown Mall). This event is FREE and open to the public.

Guillermo X Ubilla is a photographer and digital artist based in Charlottesville where he combines his passion for creating visual imagery with creative storytelling. Ubilla comes from a mixed background of computer science, psychology, and graphic design. He is currently focused on creative expression through portraiture.

Kelly Doyle Oakes was born into a family of artists in Baltimore. Oakes honed her skills at Parson’s School of Design and Maryland Institute College of Art, where she received a BFA in Illustration in 1985. She worked in advertising until starting a family in 1990. Her passion for art led to her start a business painting murals and decorative furniture, working with many accomplished designers and interior decorators. Oakes moved to Charlottesville in 2002 and opened an art gallery/studio space where she started painting and showing her artwork again. She has exhibited at McGuffey Art Center and Firefish Gallery and is an art teacher at The Covenant School.

Adrienne Dent works with mixed media. Dent attended summer classes at the Maryland Institute of Art and moved to Charlottesville in 1994 where she studied painting and pursued a degree in Italian Literature at the University of Virginia.

Terry M. Coffey learned the art of calligraphy over 35 years, while raising two children and working full-time in human services. Terry has also in that time developed techniques in watercolor and oil painting. Terry has exhibited locally and regionally in Virginia while maintaining a studio in Charlottesville.

Matalie Deane is a native of Charlottesville. She has been drawing and painting since she could hold a pencil. She has a Bachelor of Arts in Applied Art from James Madison University. Recently she has been an active member of Bozart Gallery in Charlottesville, Palette Gallery in Stanardsville, Shenandoah Valley Art Center, Central Virginia Watercolor Guild, Piedmont Pastelists, and Miniature Painters, Sculptors and Gravers of Washington D.C. In 2013 she was juried into Smithsonian Annamarie Sculpture Gardens Art Center in Maryland, International Miniature MPSGS in Washington D.C. and Rehoboth Gallery, Maryland with an honorable mention award. Her artwork was also selected for the Artizen Magazine cover. Her present focus is on small works, miniature art and the freedom of watercolor design. Her website is www.mataliestudio.com.

Keith Alan Sprouse is a documentary and portrait photographer based in Charlottesville. Among his recent projects are “The Cville People Project,” which has been featured in The Hook and on NBC29 news, a series of portraits of individuals with mental illness entitled “A View Inside,” and “Grace Under Pressure,” a collaboration with Charlottesville Ballet. A selection of his work can be seen at www.keithalansprouse.com

The exhibit will remain on display through Friday, April 25. There will also be an exhibit by local artist Katie McKinley on display inside the PCA office within CitySpace.

CitySpace is open to the public Monday-Friday, 9:00am-5:00pm and is located at 100 5th Street NE on the Downtown Mall in Charlottesville. To learn more, visit www.charlottesvillearts.org.

Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA to Host Rabies & Microchip Clinic
On Sunday, April 6th from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., the Charlottesville- Albemarle SPCA is holding its spring low-cost Rabies Vaccine and Microchip Clinic. Pet owners can have their pet(s) vaccinated at the SPCA during this Clinic for just $10.00 per pet, have their pet microchipped for $25.00 or receive both services for just $30.00. Flea and tick preventative will also be available for purchase at a discounted rate. This is the perfect time for the public to protect their pets in three important ways at a very low cost. The Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA is located at 3355 Berkmar Drive; the clinic will take place on the left side of the SPCA, in the building’s ground-floor education room.

Rabies is a deadly but preventable virus. In an effort to protect people and pets against the rabies virus, Virginia state law requires that all dogs and cats over the age of four months get vaccinated against rabies. The SPCA asks that Clinic attendees bring all dogs on a leash and all cats in a carrier. Pet owners will need to show proof of current rabies vaccine in order to receive a three-year vaccine. The clinic is first come, first served and limited to vaccine and microchips available. The microchips include a lifetime registration. This clinic is made possible with support from Zoetis Pet Health.

“One in three pets will get lost in their lifetime and proper identification is their quickest ticket home,” says Lisa Lane, Director of Marketing and Development at the Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA. “We are happy to provide these three important services at an affordable price to help keep pets in our community healthy, safe and with their families.”

The mission of the Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA is to provide a safe and nurturing environment for the lost, abandoned, and homeless animals of the City of Charlottesville and the County of Albemarle and to increase the number of these animals being placed in appropriate, loving, and permanent homes through adoptions, foster care, and outreach, and to set a standard of excellence and leadership in shelter animal care, humane education, and progressive animal welfare programs.

For more information about the Charlottesville-Albemarle SPCA call 434-973-5959 or visit our website at www.caspca.org. The SPCA’s main adoption center is located at 3355 Berkmar Drive in Charlottesville and is open seven days a week from 12 PM– 6 PM.

The Wild and Scenic Environmental Film Festival Coming to Charlottesville and Staunton
Charlottesville: 
Wednesday, April 16th – 7:30pm
Dickinson Performing Arts Center – PVCC
Staunton: 
Thursday, April 17th – 7pm
Visulite Cinema

Wild and Scenic On Tour brings together a selection of films that tell a story about our planet, our beautiful and precious wildlands, and the people of the communities who love and defend them.  They open our eyes and hearts to fantastic experiences in remarkable places.  They beckon us towards action, highlight issues, and provide solutions.

Attendees can win door prizes and there will be a special raffle for a framed print of an enormous 1,600 year old redwood tree generously donated by National Geographic photographer, Michael ‘Nick’ Nichols.

Raffle tickets can be purchased at any of Wild Virginia’s 2014 Film Festival screenings or in advance online at www.wildvirginia.org

Wild Virginia will be offering special $10 Wild Virginia memberships at the door ($35 value).

There will be 17 different short films, with entirely different films at each venue.

The Charlottesville show will feature a series of short films, including Ryan’s Stories. Living in poverty for as long as he remembers, Ryan Hudson grew up in and out of homeless shelters.  At 14, Ryan was introduced to snowboarding through Outdoor Outreach, a non-profit organization dedicated to using outdoor activities to empower at risk youth, and his life took a 180. Now competing as a semi pro athlete and serving as a brand ambassador for The North Face, Ryan’s story shares just how transformational the outdoors can be.

Other short films at the Charlottesville show will include:
• Right Now: Living with Mountain Lions. This high impact music video was designed as an urgent wake up call to spotlight public apathy towards mountain lions. As one of America’s few apex predators, they should be revered, not feared, as popular media portrays. The video challenges us to consider and respect the wild animals around us as we–and they– go about our daily lives. WE have become disconnected from nature. WE are causing the decline in Puma populations, and with them goes a healthy ecosystem, which WE also need for our own survival. Some people care. Most people don’t. How can we turn this thing around?
• Sacred Headwaters. Sacred Headwaters is a multimedia piece featuring National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Wade Davis and photographer Paul Colangelo on the fate of the Sacred Headwaters in northern Canada. The shared birthplace of three salmon rivers, the traditional territory of the Tahltan First Nation, and home to an incredible ecosystem of large mammals, the Sacred Headwaters is at risk of losing all that makes it sacred to resource extraction.
• The Staunton Show will feature a series of short films, including Reynaldo. Reynaldo lives in the Amazon Rainforest. He used to cut down trees and farm the land to survive. He learned the hard way that it was not a sustainable way to live. He saw his land turn barren and his crops die. Then he woke up. He changed the way he worked and began planting trees. Then he learned how to farm in balance with the forest. Now he travels all over the region helping others to do the same.
Other short films at the Staunton show will include:
• A Brief History of the 5cent Bag Tax. When your city is overflowing with plastic bags, how will you react? Jack Green, head of the Department of the Environment, is on a mission to rid the city of its plastic bag scourge in this short film by DC-based DunkYourBagel promoting reusable bags to protect the environment.
• Backyard. Backyard tells the stories of five people in four states, all with very different backgrounds and perspectives, but all at odds with the natural gas extraction occurring around them. Despite their differences, unnerving similarities emerge from their shared experiences with the massive unseen entity that is “the industry.” Brief, animated interludes remind us to ask the bigger picture questions as well.
Film content is appropriate for everyone. Tickets are $10 each night.Purchase tickets in advance or for more information, visit www.wildvirginia.org.
Fluvanna Spca Continues 25th Anniversary Celebrations With 5K Run/Walk
Celebrating 25 years of serving the Fluvanna community, the Fluvanna SPCA welcomes all to participate in the 4th Annual 5K Run/Walk on Saturday, April 12, 2014.  The race will be held at the scenic Lake Monticello Golf Course at 51 Bunker Blvd., Palmyra, VA 22963, and is not restricted to Lake residents.  All proceeds support the FSPCA’s no-kill mission by providing life-saving animal care.

The race begins promptly at 7:30 AM with registration opening at 6:45 AM.  Early-bird registration through 3/29/2014 is $20 for ages 16 and up; after 3/29/2014 is $25.  Registration is $15 for ages 15 and under.  Registration by 3/29/2014 guarantees a race t-shirt and goodie bag.  T-shirts and goodie bags are available only while supplies last for registrations after 3/29/2014.  Race will be held rain or shine, and registration fees are non-refundable.

Prizes will be awarded to top male and female finishers overall and per age group.  Awards ceremony will be held immediately following race.  Water will be available during the race and light refreshments will be provided after the race.
Visit www.fspca.org for more information and to register.  Early-bird deadline is 3/29 so register today!  Come run or walk with your family and friends, enjoying a healthy spring activity while supporting life-saving care of the FSPCA’s homeless, furry residents.

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Choose Historic Madison County for Gorgeous Views and a Friendly Country Lifestyle

If you like the idea of living where you have space and privacy without having to worry about encroaching development, then Madison County may be the perfect place for you to find a new home. Madison County residents love its beautiful scenery and rural lifestyle and are committed to keeping it in this unspoiled state free of big box stores.

Once part of Culpeper County, Madison became its own entity in 1792 when it was created by an act of the General Assembly. It was named for the Madison family who owned property along the Rapidan River, of which James Madison, our fourth president who helped draft the US Constitution and author the Bill of Rights, is a descendent. Montpelier, his estate in nearby Orange County, continues to be a major tourist attraction today.

Madison has much to offer, including gorgeous mountain views and a host of outdoor activities to attract campers, hikers, hunters, and fishing enthusiasts. Graves Mountain Lodge, known for its rustic cabins and generous family style meals, is in Madison as is Old Rag Mountain, a popular destination for hikers and climbers. The county’s comprehensive plan that limits sewer facilities means large commercial developments are unlikely any time in the near future. At the same time, however, the county does encourage smaller businesses such as its thriving tourist industry.

The real estate market in Madison is doing well, and is finally recovering from the downturn of the last few years. While retirees (and people planning for retirement) often purchase property there, it is also a popular spot for people from DC and other nearby urban areas who want a quiet, private place to go on weekends as well as for those who choose to settle there and commute to jobs in cities such as Charlottesville, Culpeper and Fredericksburg.

Why Madison?
Every location has its own special appeal. Madison is “very rural,” said Christiane Lindsay with Montague Miller & Co. It has great farmland and wonderful views. If you live in the east end of the county you can enjoy the panoramic views at a distance, she explained, while those in the western end of the county can “live in the views.”

People enjoy Madison’s private and rural atmosphere, which is close enough to urban centers to be a convenient weekend getaway while not too remote to easily access modern conveniences. “You can be back in the hills, but in short order be in Charlottesville or even DC,” Lindsay continued. “It’s truly a country retreat,” but, she added that those who want to get out quickly and find good restaurants, theatres or shopping in town can do so.

There are also good places to eat without leaving the area such as the nearby Willow Grove Inn which, Lindsay says, “is as good as it gets.” It has a great restaurant and she explained she is “thrilled” to be able to show it off to visiting friends and real estate clients. A variety of local B & Bs are good stopping points for those passing through or those who want to enjoy Madison’s natural beauty or many activities. They also are convenient for county residents who need a comfortable place to put up guests when they come for a visit.

Tomarie Boyd, with Re/Max Crossroads in Culpeper, described the Madison lifestyle in glowing terms, pointing out that the county is not only lovely it is also “very laid back compared to Culpeper or Spotsylvania. It’s just a less hectic way of life,” she said, explaining that once people settle in Madison “they never want to move anywhere else. There isn’t a lot of turnover there,” she added.
Boyd also explained that many people don’t like the kind of restrictions they face when they buy a home in a subdivision. Madison doesn’t have a lot of subdivisions and people appreciate that they can purchase a rural property and paint their house any color they choose. At the same time, it’s close enough to urban areas that they can still easily commute to town for work, she added.

There is a long tradition of people moving to Madison to get away from the stress of urban life. Herbert Hoover, our nation’s 31st President, made Madison County his getaway place after he purchased land for a summer home, which he later called Rapidan Camp. Today it is sometimes referred to as the “first Camp David” or Camp Hoover. During Hoover’s time, many people also referred to his retreat as the “Brown House,” to distinguish it from his main residence in DC.

Today Rapidan Camp lies within the boundaries of Shenandoah National Park. As the first ever presidential retreat, it consists of 13 buildings that have been restored to look like they did when Hoover used to vacation there during his time in office.

Madison’s Real Estate Market
Local agents are very positive about Madison’s real estate market.

“The market is definitely picking up,” Lindsay said, adding that they were seeing sales across all of the different price ranges. Her office is having what she described as a “great year,” already having exceeded their goals for where they expected to be at this point. “We are definitely ahead of the game,” she said.

Bill Gentry, owner and principal broker with Jefferson Land and Realty said, “we are seeing slow incremental improvement in the market.” Last year he said that most of the sales were in homes selling for less than $250,000. Today they are seeing more sales in the $250,000 to $400,000 price range. “There are more of them on the market and they are selling within a fairly short time frame,” Gentry said of this higher price range.

Of course, he cautioned, this applies to properties that are priced correctly for the market, which may not reflect what a particular seller has invested in their home. For example, recently Gentry advised some sellers that they would be lucky to get as much as $219,000 for a lovely cottage on a few acres, in spite of the fact that their investment exceeded $270,000.

There is also some movement in the $400,000 to $900,000 price range, Gentry said. He recently sold a farm with a restored home on 80+ acres on what he described as an “idyllic” piece of property. He previewed it when it first went on the market and thought it was priced too high. Sometime later the owners reduced the price by $150,000, which was more in line with the market, and Gentry’s buyers didn’t hesitate to write a contract on it.

While the market is active, Gentry noted that today’s buyers are more cautious than they once were. Many people have concerns about income and job security, and may not make an offer on a home if it seems outside of their comfort level. This may be the case even if they qualify for a higher mortgage and the home is correctly priced.

Madison County Buyers
Who is moving to Madison County? While it is a popular place for retirees, they aren’t the only ones looking for homes there.

Gentry described some buyers who purchased a nice farm property twenty years ago at age 55. Today at age 75 they have no debt but can’t take care of the property anymore and don’t want such a large house. People like this have a lot of equity and frequently choose to downsize, but when they move, they stay within the county.

Other types of buyers are people coming in from out of the area looking for a place for a weekend retreat. Many have the intention of eventually making it their retirement home, Lindsay explained. She described one of her clients, a family from northern New Jersey. They are getting ready for what she called “the next step,” purchasing land on which to build a home in the near future.

Living in the country is a dream for many people that can be realized in Madison County. Gentry described a couple he worked with from northern Virginia. The husband retired from practicing law and they purchased a house in Madison that reminded them of one they rented when he was in law school.

Given the difference in prices, people can sell a home in northern Virginia and buy a farm in Madison and still put some of their sale proceeds in the bank. Lindsay’s clientele includes a couple approaching retirement who bought a horse farm where they were able to realize a long time dream of working with handicapped children, introducing them to horses and riding. This couple also loves breeding and raising dogs, a business that can be noisy and disruptive to neighbors. Their new horse farm in Madison County with plenty of acreage allows them to enjoy both of these activities without fear of bothering anyone else.

Madison is also appealing to younger people still in the work force. Lindsay described yet another family who lives in DC because both spouses like their jobs. However, they wanted a getaway place where they could bring their dog and a young child on weekends. They were willing to drive, but not too far. Madison County was the perfect location.

Madison also suits first time home buyers who have jobs in nearby towns, but want a country lifestyle. The continuing low interest rates mean they can find a country home to meet their needs, said Patti Lillard with Montague Miller & Co.

Many buyers who relocate to Madison do so for the privacy, but many also appreciate what Lillard refers to as the “rural lifestyle.” She described this as a lifestyle where everyone knows everyone else and if they so desire can choose to get involved in the community. This sense of belonging is a draw for many first timers and retirees alike.

Madison is Popular with Tourists
Tourism is the Madison County industry that has enjoyed the largest incremental growth, Gentry said. While visitors will find lots to do when they visit, these same activities are also popular amongst residents.

Over 33,000 acres within the boundaries of Madison are today part of Shenandoah National Park where hiking, climbing and camping are popular activities. Hunting and fishing enthusiasts will find many opportunities including streams with native trout, as well as several others stocked by the Department of Game and Inland Fisheries between the months of October and May.

President Hoover was especially fond of fishing, describing it as an “opportunity for refreshment of one’s soul and clarification of one’s thoughts by solitude.”

Visitors to Madison can select from several B & Bs in the county and many also enjoy visiting the local wineries, which Gentry said are all doing very well. In addition to tours and wine tastings, they offer scenic locations for parties or special events such as weddings.

Celeste Smucker is a writer, blogger and author. She lives near Charlottesville.

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The Twelfth Annual Charlottesville Marathon: A Premier Event in our Running Town

“This whole area loves to run,” declares Francesca Conte who, with her partner James Gill, operates Bad to the Bone Endurance Sports. Both have a long-time passion for running and organize running events all over the country. “Physical fitness is a huge part of life here. It’s always been part of the culture here simply because it is such a great environment.”

This is reflected on DailyFinance.com—a website devoted to helping readers “live a better life financially”—which recently named Charlottesville as the #6 healthiest small city in America. The basis: a Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index including healthcare coverage, low incidence of diabetes and obesity, optimism, fresh produce consumption, and frequency of exercise

Marathon Is A Big Positive
On April 5th, Bad to the Bone will operate the Miller Lite Charlottesville Marathon, the Whole Foods Charlottesville Half Marathon, the Charlottesville 8K Run, and the popular Kids’ Mile.

“The Charlottesville Marathon was our first event,” Conte recalls. “We both had been professional runners—that is, we ran for companies who sponsored us. James saw the need for a destination marathon and we had experience in the industry, and knew many companies and sponsors. So we did it.”

The 2002 inaugural event attracted about 350 registered runners. And this year? “We’re expecting 2300-2500,” Conte says. “Many are from Virginia, DC, and Maryland, but about a third are from other states. We usually have all the states represented—minus Alaska—plus international entries.” In the past, runners have come from Japan, Sweden, Italy, Spain, and other countries.

“The marathon really kicks off the running season in Central Virginia and it’s such a great place to come in the spring,” continues Conte. “The New York Times named us as one of the top five destination marathons in the whole country and Runner’s World Magazine lists this is one of the Best Races in the Best Places.”

And who can argue with the beauty of spring in Virginia? “We have people who come, run, and stay to buy a place,” Conte points out. In addition, the runners and their supporters have a big financial impact on the area. Projections set that impact at close to $1.3 million counting hotel rooms, meals, and shopping. “We estimate close to $1million just on the Downtown Mall,” she says. “Hotels are filled early.”

“I have done this race twice and love it every time,” was the online post of an Alexandria runner last year. “The course is beautiful, the officials and volunteers are so nice, and the finish line is fun and lively. If you’re looking for a great, scenic run with great people, I would definitely recommend this race.”

Other Running Events
A very different event is the late-summer Charlottesville Women’s Four Miler. Open to runners and walkers, it raises funds for the UVa Cancer Center Breast Care Program. Last year set a record by raising more than $370,000—the most in its 31-year history.

“I love volunteering for the Four Miler Training Program,” says REALTOR® Sara Greenfield, founder of Charlottesville Fine Homes and Properties. “There are hundreds of women who join the program, get inspired, and get fit as well as contribute to a good cause.”

There are many other local runs and races. For example, Bad to the Bone celebrates Halloween by mounting the quirky Danger! Zombies! Run! Local running clubs also organize a variety of races.

Running Clubs
“There are some great running clubs in our area,” says marathon organizer Conte. “The largest is the Charlottesville Track Club.” The CTC helps sponsor more than 25 race events in our community including the Women’s Four Miler, the New Year’s Day 5K and, the upcoming Charlottesville Ten Miler on March 29th. This year the event will raise funds for Charlottesville’s Barrett Early Learning Center.

“The Charlottesville Area Trail Runners are another group,” Conte notes. Members train together and usually meet for weekend group runs in various locations and terrains. Their website has a detailed list of more than a dozen running trails in the area including length, elevation, approximate time, technicality, maps and photos.

“Another great group,” continues Conte, “is associated with Crozet Running.” Crozet Running is a store operated by fitness devotees John and Michelle Andersen. Their website has a running-related blog and lists local runs.

Another store is Ragged Mountain Running Shop, which has been in business for a long time. Most local sports stores also offer running products. “If you’re new to running, it’s good to go to a place where people really know what you need for running,” Conte recommends. “If you already know, you can find what you need in most sports stores.”
In short, whether you are a long-time resident or new to the region, a marathoner or someone who jogs around the block, you can find races as well as just-for-fun running trails and companions in our area.

Marilyn Pribus lives in Albemarle County near Charlottesville. She once finished in the top 1500 of a 10K run.

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Virginia Festival of the Book: Celebrating Twenty Years

How many books do you read each year? How many do you first hear about at the Virginia Festival of the Book? A five-day celebration designed to honor book culture and promote reading and literacy, the festival has enchanted readers, encouraged writers, and made Charlottesville a book lover’s paradise every March since 1994.

This year’s 20th annual festival, March 19-23, largely on and around Charlottesville’s Downtown Mall and the University of Virginia grounds, will feature 134 events for adults and oodles more – 71, to be exact – for kids. Most are free.

Thanks for Twenty

As an anniversary gift, the festival is presenting free evening programs with poets Gregory Orr and Patricia Smith and novelist Alice Hoffman. Free tickets may be reserved at vabook.org or at the UVA Arts Box Office. “These are our gifts back to the community, thanking them for the twentieth anniversary,” says Susan Coleman of the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, which produces the festival.

Orr and Smith will read from their work during the Cities of Poetry program, Wednesday, March 19 at 8:00 p.m. at the Culbreth Theatre. Orr founded the MFA Program in Writing at UVA , where he has taught since 1975. He has published eleven collections of poetry, and his memoir, The Blessing, was one of Publisher’s Weekly‘s fifty best non-fiction books of 2003. Smith’s six volumes of poetry include Shoulda Been Jimi Savannah and Blood Dazzler. She was a finalist for the 2008 National Book Award and recently won the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize from the Academy of American Poets.

Alice Hoffman has written young-adult and children’s fiction, but she’s best known for blending fairy tales, romance, and magical realism in adult works like Practical Magic (1995) and The Story Sisters (2009). Toni Morrison called her novel The Dovekeepers “a major contribution to twenty-first century literature.” Hoffman’s newest novel, Museum of Extraordinary Things, is a love story set in early 20th-century Brooklyn. An Evening with Alice Hoffman: A Twentieth Anniversary Event, will take place on Thursday, March 20 at 8 pm in the Culbreth Theatre.

Homecoming

Five acclaimed writers who have delighted audiences at previous festivals will return for Homecoming: A Conversation with Some Favorite Authors, Saturday, March 22 at 8:00 p.m. at the Paramount Theater. Sonia Manzano is author of The Revolution of Evelyn Serrano, a young adult novel set in New York City’s Spanish Harlem in 1969, plus the picture books No Dogs Allowed! and A Box Full of Kittens. She’s also a star and Emmy Award-winning writer on a certain beloved television show. “We always have lots of young men who want to come see her,” Coleman says, “because they fell in love with her when they were little boys watching Sesame Street.”

Festival favorite Lee Smith’s eleven honors include the 2002 Southern Book Critics Circle Award, and the 2010 Lifetime Literary Achievement Award from the State of Virginia. Our annual literary blowout “ is my favorite event in the world,” Smith says. “It is like a family reunion. It is so exciting to meet new writers and see old friends. Also, writing is a two way transaction, you know, requiring both writer and reader . . . but we seldom get to meet our readers face to face. I love this opportunity to hear from them for a change.” Smith’s 17th and most recent novel, Guests on Earth, proposes a solution to the unsolved mystery of the fire that killed Zelda Fitzgerald and eight other patients in an Asheville, North Carolina mental hospital in 1948. 

Poet, children’s book writer and playwright Kwame Alexander has created more than 1000 student authors through his Book-in-a-Day program. His debut young adult novel, He Said She Said, is a Junior Library Guild Selection.

Joanne V. Gabbin edited The Furious Flowering of African American Poetry and directs the Furious Flower Poetry Center at James Madison University. Gabbin is author of Sterling A. Brown: Building the Black Aesthetic Tradition.

Poet and “literary activist” E. Ethelbert Miller has written two memoirs, The 5th Inning and  Fathering Words: The Making of An African American Writer. He directs the African-American Resource Center at Howard University. Homecoming program tickets are $20.

Gardening

For Garden Lovers from Henry Thoreau to Today is for everyone dreaming of spring. Young adult fiction author Ruth Kasinger blogs on the intersection of gardening, history, and science. Her new book for grownups is A Garden of Marvels: How We Discovered that Flowers Have Sex, Leaves Eat Air, and Other Secrets of Plants. Michael Sims has written on everything from E.B. White to Victorian vampire stories. Fresh Air book critic Maureen Corrigan calls his latest work, The Adventures of Henry Thoreau: A Young Man’s Unlikely Road to Walden Pond), “a rich, entertaining testament to the triumph of a young man who never comfortably fit in, but who made a place for himself, nonetheless.” The program takes place at New Dominion Bookshop, Thursday, March 20 at 6:00 p.m.

Little Stories

The ability to pick up a book and read it at will is something most adults take for granted – but not the proud adults on the Voices of Adult Learners program, Thursday, March 20 at Buford Middle School. The event will feature 16 stories chosen from more than 100 submissions by new local readers, many of them recent immigrants, in GED, ESL, or volunteer literacy programs. The reception takes place at 5:30 p.m.; readings begin at 6:00 p.m. Audience members will receive a small book with the winning stories. This annual reading “always turns out to be a breathtaking cross section of life,” says Susan Erno, of Charlottesville’s Adult Learning Center. “It’s a wonderful snapshot of our community in little stories.” 

Irish-American

Kathleen Curtis Wilson was such a popular guest in her last festival appearance that her books sold completely out. Wilson will join Mary Lyons this year for Two Stories of the Irish in America, Friday, March 21 at 2:00 p.m. at City Space. Wilson’s Textile Art from Southern Appalachia: The Quiet Work of Women features 43 bed coverlets and 2 quilts and demonstrates that the region’s renowned textiles were created to satisfy aesthetic – not financial – need. Lyons’s The Blue Ridge Tunnel: A Remarkable Engineering Feat in Antebellum Virginia tells the story of the Irish miners and African-American slaves who hand-drilled and blasted the Nelson-to-Augusta- County railroad tunnel. Heartwood Books owner and festival co-founder Paul Collinge of the Blue Ridge Tunnel Foundation, which hopes to restore the tunnel for trail hikers, walkers and bicyclists, will speak as well.

Publishing Day

“In Charlottesville,” says the VHF’s Jane Kulow, “If you don’t know a writer, you must know ten people who want to be a published writer.” That’s for sure, and that’s why each Publishing Day, Saturday at the Omni Hotel, is packed.

This year writers and scribblers of all sorts will want to hear one of the country’s premier publishing experts, Jane Friedman, in the Digital Publishing Landscape program, Saturday, March 22 at 10:00 a.m. Formerly publisher of Writer’s Digest, Friedman is web editor of Virginia Quarterly Review and teaches digital publishing an online writing at UVA. She will speak on what it takes to succeed in today’s rapidly changing publishing world. Seven more “Pub Day” events are scheduled, including programs on building author’s platforms, hooking editors on the first page, and publishing literary work.

StoryFest

While published and aspiring writers trade tips and secrets at the Omni, kids will enjoy

their own day-long literary treat, StoryFest. For the first time, the festival has worked with local schools and community creative writing teachers to develop programs for teen authors. In First Page Panel for Aspiring Teen Writers, Saturday at 10:00 a.m. at Village School, teens 13 to 18 can receive anonymous feedback from authors Tommy Hays, Andrew Auseon, Carrie Brown, and Susann Cokal. Interested teens should submit one page of their writing to  VABookTeenWriters@gmail.com.

In Q & A for Teen Writers, Saturday noon at Village School, writers, creative writing teachers, and editors will answer questions about improving writing, studying writing, and writing for a living.

Wild About Reading, Saturday, March 22 at 10:30 a.m. at the Virginia Discovery Museum, will facilitate face-to-face encounters between Virginia wildlife species, animal and human. The first 100 young humans will receive a free wildlife-themed book. 

In the 19th annual Kids Book Swap, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Oakley’s Gently Used Books, kids can trade their own gently used books for others they haven’t read.

Chip Kidd has been designing book covers for Alfred. A. Knopf since 1986. Publisher’s Weekly calls them “creepy, striking, sly, smart, unpredictable covers that make readers appreciate books as objects of art as well as literature.” USA Today calls Kidd “the closest thing to a rock star in graphic design today.” He will talk about his career and his new book, Go: A Kidd’s Guide to Graphic Design, at 4:00 p.m. in the Monroe Room of the Omni Hotel.

StoryFest spills over into Sunday this year, with appearances by two-time Newbery Medal Recipient Lois Lowry and National Book Award recipient Kathryn Erskine. Lowry’s latest book, Son, completes her celebrated Quartet series, set in a seemingly perfect future world. “I have always been impressed by Lois Lowry’s books,” Erskine says. “She is able to say so much and convey so much emotion in strong, stark prose. Number the Stars [about the Danish Resistance during World War II] is one of my favorite books, and I’m excited that The Giver [the first in the Quartet series] is going to be a movie, since so many kids have read that book.”

Born in the Netherlands, Erskine settled in Virginia after living in South Africa, Israel, Canada, and Scotland. In her award-winning 2010 novel, Mockingbird, an 11-year old girl with Asperger’s finds healing from grief as she learns that life isn’t always black and white. In her latest book, Seeing Red, 12-year old Frederick “Red” Porter discovers dark family secrets when his father dies and his mother wants to sell the family’s car repair shop. 

“Growing up, I spent more time overseas than in the U.S.,” Erskine says. “Seeing Red is inspired by the racism I saw as a child, both in the south and in South Africa. I didn’t want today’s youth to forget the people and events of the Civil Rights and post-Civil Rights era.  I also want them, and all of us, to think about what still needs to be done.”

An Afternoon with Lois Lowry and Kathryn Erskine takes place Sunday, March 23 at 2:00 p.m. in the Culbreth Theatre. Tickets are $10 for adults and $3 for children in grades K-12.

Authors love readers. And readers love authors. “I have been coming to the festival from California for years, and wouldn’t miss it,” Kathleen Curtis Wilson says. “The way it’s organized makes it easy to attend numerous presentations each day and still have time to visit with friends, enjoy a stroll on the Mall, and peruse the huge number of books that I want to buy.”

Kathryn Erskine lauds Charlottesville’s “rich writing community of poets, novelists, and historians,” and the festival’s “southern hospitality yet worldly outlook. We’re a city of readers and book lovers. Sure, people come from all over but I still like to claim it as our hometown literary event.”

– Ken Wilson

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Magazines Real Estate

An Open-and-Shut Case for Going Green

Going “green” is a good strategy for homeowners to save energy and money at the same time. When you look around any home, you’ll see that doors and windows have a big potential to be energy drains—letting in cold air in winter and hot air in the summer. While even Energy Star windows and doors can let in air, older doors and windows are especially vulnerable. Check for obvious leaks by shining a bright light around the edges while someone is inside to see. Then use putty caulk or rope caulk to seal cracks, both on the inside and the outside. 

Next, install weather stripping which comes in easy-to-install styles from sticky-backed foam to bronze. If air sneaks in under your doors (or windows), think old-fashioned draft stoppers also called “snakes.” They can be purchased inexpensively or you can create your own from fabric remnants or old socks filled with sand or even use a rolled-up towel. With a window, you can just leave the snake on the sill, but for coming-and-going convenience through a door, it’s easy to secure a vinyl “door sweep” to the bottom of the door.

Especially for single-pane windows, plastic film insulation is an inexpensive, although not highly durable, option. It comes in kits, can be applied with tape and in some cases a hair dryer is used to shrink it into place. The film can be removed easily at the end of the season and can sometimes be reused. Once the film is installed, you can’t open the window, however, so be sure it is sealed and the lock (which often serves to make the window seal more snug) is secure. You won’t be able to reach window blinds either, so you must decide whether you want blinds open, closed, or partly closed.
A more expensive, but practical energy-saving tactic is a vestibule—a small room with an outside door on one side and a well-insulated interior door on another. (Many commercial establishments have them.) A vestibule serves as an air lock, preventing icy (or sweltering) air from pouring in when people are coming and going. It also helps to keep out pollen and dust out.

If you lack a vestibule, but have a large foyer, creating an indoor vestibule could be as easy as framing in a wall for that second door. An exterior vestibule can also be built on an existing porch or veranda. It’s also a great option for a high-traffic door where kids are always coming and going. With a bench for boot removal, hooks for coats and jackets and some shelves for storage, it also becomes a mudroom. All a simple vestibule needs is a floor, basic wall framing, a roof, a window or two, and a door. Since it’s unheated, non-insulated windows and doors work fine.

A “door” that many people forget about, is attic access through the ceiling. If it’s simply a removable panel, glue two slabs of 2” rigid foam board insulation to the back and add weather stripping around the lip of the opening.

Attic access with pull-down stairs, however, is more complicated because of the folding steps themselves which rest atop the access panel when it’s closed. These hatches are not always well insulated, but there are several strategies. Attic stair “tents” are available in a variety of styles for purchase. A less expensive option for a reasonably handy homeowner employs rigid foam insulation and duct tape to build a light-weight, well insulated and easily removable “box” to provide protection from cold. The vent for whole-house fan can also be a big heat loser in winter and should be covered with insulation.

Remember, the sun is your ally in winter, so open your blinds to sunshine whenever possible. When the sun isn’t shining, close your blinds or drapes to keep the warm air inside. If you don’t have drapes, you could temporarily tack up a heavy beach towel in particularly cold weather.

In summer, the sun is not your friend so block direct rays with those same blinds and drapes. If your budget allows, purchase insulated “honeycomb” blinds, which work year round. You might be able to supply one room at a time with insulating blinds until your house is completely furnished.

For a longer-term strategy, plant deciduous trees near the house to block the sun in the summer, but let it shine in during cold weather. Framing windows with trellises supporting deciduous vines for shade in summer and sun in winter is practical and attractive at the same time.

There are useful how-to videos about caulk, weather stripping, insulating window film, attic access insulation, door sweeps, and even building a vestibule on the Internet.
So remember, some energy-saving tactics are inexpensive and immediate while others take time and money. Thinking green can become a rewarding way of life, both philosophically and economically.

Marilyn Pribus lives near Charlottesville in Albemarle. In winter, she welcomes the morning sun streaming through a window into her home office. In summer, that same window is completely shaded by a maple tree.

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Magazines Real Estate

CAAR Celebrates 2013 Professional Honor Society Class

Forty-seven Local REALTORS® Recognized for Excellence

Congratulations to 47 REALTORS® of Greater Charlottesville for being recognized in the 2013 CAAR Professional Honor Society class. The distinguished group of professionals is committed to raising the bar for the industry and being a role model in the local community. CAAR members earn points throughout the year in four focus areas: association involvement (attending events); professional development activities (earning certifications/designations or instructing real estate classes); leadership roles (serving on local, state or national committees or earning awards); and sales production.

More than 100 CAAR members attended the traditional brunch ceremony on Thursday, March 6 at Farmington Country Club. To date, a total of 155 different REALTORS® have achieved this pinnacle in the program’s history. Voice of the Cavaliers and Director of Broadcasting for Virginia Athletics Dave Koehn served as Master of Ceremonies to announce the following 2013 Honor Society members:

1 – 4 Years Honor Society Recognition

Jack Crocker

Pam Dent

Bonnie Field

John Ince

Tele Jenifer

Sherry Orrell

Kathleen Ritenour

Kay Sands

Tom Woolfolk

5 Years Honor Society Recognition

Michael Guthrie

6 – 9 Years Honor Society Recognition

Tammi Campbell

Kelly Ceppa

Brad Conner

Sasha Farmer

Kathy Markwood

Denise Ramey

Margaret Ramsey

John Updike

10 Years Honor Society Recognition

Carol Costanzo

Gaby Hall

11 – 14 Years Honor Society Recognition

Byrd Abbott

Marjorie Adam

Linda Broadbent

Pat Crabtree

James Dickerson

Alice Fitch

Barbara McMurry

Donna Patton

Sue Plaskon

Marina Ringstrom

Barbara Seidler

Greg Slater

Sabrina Thompson

Drake Van de Castle

15 Years Honor Society Recognition

Pat Sury

16 Years Honor Society Recognition

Rives Bailey

17 Years Honor Society Recognition

Anita Dunbar

Judy Savage

18 Years Honor Society Recognition

Kim Armstrong

Tim Carson

Pat Jensen

Bill May

Percy Montague

Ginny Nelson

Trish Owens

Pat Widhalm

Arleen Yobs

The event was made possible through the generous support of brunch sponsor Stanley Martin Homes; awards sponsor Student Services Moving & Storage; and event sponsors Wells Fargo Home Mortgage and Real Estate Weekly. Check out the Charlottesville Area Association of REALTORS® Facebook page for more photos from the event. Congratulations to all the winners.

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Magazines Real Estate

Real Estate News – Week of March 13

Real Estate News & Views

CARR Member Ginger Slavic Honored with Good Neighbor Award 

Better Homes & Garden/REIII REALTOR® Recognized for Volunteer Work for Ronald McDonald House

The Charlottesville Area Association of REALTORS® (CAAR), the voice of real estate in the Central Virginia region, has announced Ginger Slavic as a Good Neighbor Award recipient. This recognition program highlights local REALTORS® who dedicate significant time and interest to projects that make a lasting impact on our communities.

“The REALTOR community is so inspired by Ginger’s energy and devotion to creating a home-away-from-home atmosphere for families in need,” Anita Dunbar, CAAR president-elect and associate broker at Montague Miller & Company, said.

Slavic has been involved in Ronald McDonald House Charities Charlottesville since the late 1980s, where she typically volunteers at least 40 hours each month. Currently she serves as president of the board of directors. About 900 families each year have benefited as a result of her volunteer activities.

Given her professional background, Slavic has been invaluable in the extensive facility renovation project over the past year from consulting with the architect and builder to processing the paperwork for a $200,000 grant from the RMHC global organization. She also has recruited other local residents to volunteer and donate.

“Ginger’s expertise has been invaluable to us during this major renovation project,” Rita Ralston, executive director of RMHC, said. “The Charlottesville Ronald McDonald House will be a beautiful respite for families dealing with very difficult circumstances. Ginger always keeps those families in the forefront of her mind.”

Slavic has been an active CAAR member since 1988. A $100 donation was made to Ronald McDonald Charities in her name.

About CAAR –
The Charlottesville Area Association of REALTORS® (CAAR) represents more than 1,000 real estate professionals in Charlottesville and Albemarle and the surrounding areas of Greene, Fluvanna, Nelson, Louisa counties. For more information on CAAR, pick up a copy of the CAAR Real Estate Weekly, visit www.caar.com, or contact your REALTOR®.

Low Cost Rabies Clinic
The Fluvanna SPCA announces a low-cost, drive-thru rabies clinic to be held March 29 at the Augusta Cooperative at 8173 Scottsville Road in Scottsville from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.  Rabies vaccines will cost only $10 and will be good for one year or three years, if proof of a prior current rabies vaccine is presented at the time of the vaccine.

“The Fluvanna SPCA presents these drive-thru rabies clinics as a service to the community,” says Jennie Shuklis, FSPCA Executive Director.  “We’re working to help people retain their pets and keep them healthy by making this legally-mandated rabies vaccine affordable and available.  It’s a drive-thru clinic because we ask that people keep their dogs in their cars, and cats in cat carriers, until veterinarian Jim Starkey is able to give the vaccine.  Then people and their pets are free to go about their day!”

The Fluvanna SPCA is a no-kill shelter located in Troy, Virginia, serving approximately 1000 animals per year.

For more information, please call the Fluvanna SPCA at 434-591-0123 or email director@fspa.org.  You may also find more information at www.fspca.org.

Jimmy “Magic Man” Miller Bracket Breakfast for Piedmont CASA
“I love everything about this team.  The chemistry, passion, unselfishness … I wouldn’t want to play us!” – Jimmy Miller about the UVA men’s basketball team

For the first time in 33 years, UVA men’s basketball won the ACC regular-season championship. And for the first time ever, Jimmy Miller – selected Most Valuable Player in the 1984 NCAA Eastern Regional Championship – is hosting a Bracket Breakfast, right here in Charlottesville.

At 7:00 a.m. Monday morning, March 17, a group of basketball professionals are gathering at the Omni Hotel on the Downtown Mall. Norman Nolan, Barry Parkhill, Junior Burrough, and Wally Walker are the panelists – lively bracketologists who are going to share stories, tips, and picks for the Final Four. The emcees will be David Koehn, UVA Director of Broadcasting and Voice of the Cavaliers, and Rachel Ryan, Newsplex Anchor and Reporter.

Three members of the UVA men’s basketball coaching staff will be there, too: Assistant Head Coach Ritchie McKay and Assistant Coaches Ron Sanchez and Jason Williford.

Over a big breakfast and steaming cups of coffee, ticket holders will get inside stories about the tournaments, and inside scoops on the Final Four. Then they get a chance to fill out their own bracket – and win a giant 60” LG Plasma Screen TV from Crutchfield.

For more information or to purchase tickets, go to the Bracket Breakfast website, or call the Piedmont CASA office at 434-971-7515.

It’s all for the benefit of Piedmont CASA – Court Appointed Special Advocates. The children it serves range in age from newborn to 18 … they live in Charlottesville and the counties of Albemarle, Greene, and Louisa … and they are victims of abuse and neglect. The worst cases end up in court, and that’s when judges appoint Piedmont CASA Volunteers to represent the best interests of the children – hundreds of them each year.

Research shows that children with CASA Volunteers spend less time in court, less time in foster homes, and find safe and permanent homes faster – all keys to breaking the vicious cycle of abuse and neglect. No other organization performs this service, and they do not charge fees.

Haydn Meets Gershwin At Charlottesville & University Symphony Orchestra Concerts
Unlikely travel companions Franz Joseph Haydn and George Gershwin explore London from two different centuries when the Charlottesville & University Symphony Orchestra continues its 39th season on March 22, 8:00 p.m., at Old Cabell Hall on the U.Va Grounds, and Sunday, March 23, 3:30 p.m., at Monticello High School in Charlottesville.

Conducted by Music Director Kate Tamarkin, the concerts open with Johannes Brahms’s Variations on a Theme by Haydn.  Haydn’s joyful and humorous Symphony No. 104, dubbed the “London”, provides the other bookend.  In between, the orchestra’s Principal Trombone, Nathan Dishman, performs the Concerto for Trombone and Orchestra by Launy Grondhal, a Danish composer from the early 20th century.  Rounding out the program is the world premiere of London Town Fantasy by Virginia composer Antonio García.

London Town Fantasy was commissioned by the Charlottesville Symphony Society, a non-profit organization that provides administrative, financial and marketing support to the orchestra.  García, who is also an Associate Professor of Music and Director of Jazz Studies at Virginia Commonwealth University, has taken Haydn’s “London” Symphony as his point of departure in this new work for trombone and orchestra.  He includes a clever fusion of the theme from the symphony’s finale with a nod to George and Ira Gershwin’s famous ballad, A Foggy Day (in London Town), recorded by Wynton Marsalis, Tony Bennett, Sarah Vaughan, David Bowie and many others.

Nathan Dishman is a member of the music faculty at the University of Virginia.  During the 2013-14 academic year, he is serving as a Visiting Professor at Morehead State University in Kentucky.  He also maintains a busy freelance schedule, playing regularly in orchestral, jazz, recording and church settings.  He is a former member of the acclaimed Fountain City Brass Band, Kansas City Symphony Brass Ensemble and Des Moines Symphony.

Both performances are sponsored by Castle Hill Cider.

Know the Score pre-concert lectures will be presented 45 minutes before each concert.  Free of charge, these informative and entertaining lectures by McIntire Department of Music Chairman and Associate Professor of Music Richard Will offer both novice and experienced patrons a deeper appreciation of the performances.  Friday’s lecture will take place in Minor Hall; Sunday’s lecture will be held in the Forum at Monticello High School.

Free parking is available in the U.Va Central Grounds Parking Garage, located on Emmet Street, on Saturday night and at the high school on Sunday afternoons.  Both venues are wheelchair accessible.

Tickets are $10-40 for adults and $10 for students.  U.Va students may request one complimentary ticket in advance.  Tickets may be purchased at The University of Virginia Arts Box Office, (434) 924-3376, 12:00-5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday in the lobby of the Drama Building at 109 Culbreth Road, or online at www.artsboxoffice.virginia.edu.

All University of Virginia employees are entitled to a 20% discount on tickets to individual performances.  This offer does not apply to subscriptions or previously purchased tickets.

Remaining dates in the orchestra’s Musical Kaleidoscope season are:
April 26-27
• Mussorgsky – Triumphal March from Mlada
• Shostakovich – Symphony No. 5
• Mozart – Symphony No. 25 for Piano and Orchestra with world-
renowned pianist Anne-Marie 
McDermott
Sponsored by Katherine and Richard Douglas

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Magazines Real Estate

The Farms and Estates Market Expected to Prosper in 2014

From the time of the earliest colonists, farms and estates have played a pivotal role in Virginia’s history and economy. The first settlers cultivated food crops to feed their families and early on adopted tobacco as a major cash crop, which continued to grow in importance until well into the 19th century. It was Virginia colonists in the 17th century who first introduced tobacco to England, opening what may have been the first foreign market for this commodity.

Over the years our state’s economy has become more diverse and urbanized, but the rural areas continue to dominate. The Virginia Department of Agriculture reports that farming is the state’s largest industry by far, generating $52 billion annually and creating over 350,000 jobs.

However, farming is not the only reason people move out to the country. Many buyers like the privacy and the ability to take long walks on their own property. Others want to own and ride horses or tend large gardens free from the prying eyes of well meaning neighbors.

Regardless of the reasons, farm and estate properties continue to be popular. While the market slowed some during the down turn of the last few years, it is coming back to life today as more and more people take advantage of lower prices and interest rates to enjoy all of the benefits that come from living in Virginia’s rural areas.

Farms vs Estates

While we often group farms and estates together, they are not necessarily the same, although they may share some characteristics.

“Estates are on a large tract with a significant house,” said Justin Wiley with Frank Hardy Inc., who added that farms often lack this kind of grand dwelling. In addition to their size, estates may have historic significance and be listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

Donna Patton, with Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate III, suggested a property could have as few as 20 acres, but should have at least 6,000 square feet to be considered an estate. She added that while estates are typically priced in the millions of dollars, you may be able to buy a farm for several hundred thousand.

Steve White, with Roy Wheeler Realty Co., explained that while many estates may be considered farms, the opposite is not necessarily the case. He described a 4,300 square foot house on 14 acres he once sold. Although it had a generous amount of square footage, the property would more appropriately be called a mini-farm rather than an estate because of the home’s contemporary style and its relative newness; it was built in 2008.

Bunny French, with Loring Woodriff Real Estate Associates, described a farm as a “working facility.” This means you would expect the owners to be raising crops or animals such as chickens, llamas, horses or cattle for the market. An estate can also be a farm, but will be distinguished by having a grand house.

In some cases rural properties don’t fit either category. Murdoch Matheson, with Frank Hardy, Inc., described an historic rural property, which (while it boasted 150 acres), had a house that was too small to fit the estate category, yet it was no longer a farm.

Farms and Estates Buyers

Rural properties have appeal to a broad range of buyers, French said. She has worked with relatively young people in their early 40s who purchased large parcels of land. Others are families who appreciate the rural lifestyle. They like the quiet, French said, and particularly enjoy the privacy. These are also the people who love to go out every day and enjoy a long walk knowing they never have to leave their own property.

Often the buyers are local families who want enough property to subdivide amongst various children and grandchildren, White added. They 
aren’t all local, though. He described a recent buyer who came from the northeast looking for just this kind of property in the $3 million range.

“We see a scattering of people from all over,” Wiley said, and that includes DC and Florida as well as the northeast. However he has also worked with families from both California and Texas. The topography of our area appeals to the Texans, he explained, and they also appreciate the weather and the seasonal changes.

Wiley added that traditionally the largest group of farms and estates buyers from out of the area came from the northeast. However, that changed after the financial crash in 2008, as the northeast was particularly hard hit by that event.

Farms and Estates Market

Like the rest of the real estate market, the farms and estates sector has seen some recent improvement.

The market has “picked up some,” Wiley said. He explained that it is improving from the lower price ranges and up. A year ago the biggest improvement was in the $1.5 million price range, but today that extends up to $2 million. Larger properties are also selling, said Wiley who cited a recent sale for $8.5 million.

“We have never been this busy,” said Rick Walden with Virginia Estates, who had negotiated five successful contracts by the middle of January. One recent contract was for a $5 million historic property in Augusta County on over 600 acres, which is also a dairy farm. His other listings are “all over the state,” he said, and buyers come from everywhere.

Some of Warren’s recent clients include local people from as far away as Colorado and New York, all of whom are in the market to buy wineries. He is also working with someone from India looking for a country inn north of Charlottesville, and someone from England looking for an historic home.

The $1 million buyers are out and about, White said, and properties are selling but frequently they require lots of negotiation. He recently sold a $1.7 million property, his only piece of land sold in the last four years. Before the deal was concluded, the parties negotiated a lower price as well as the addition of several acres to the piece to make it an even 100 acres.

White described another situation where a seller turned down the first offer he received as well as the buyer’s counter offer. The buyer waited awhile and was rewarded for his patience. After a period of time, the seller changed his mind and decided that the offer was a good one after all. White cautioned that negotiations today require more patience, but added that when the parties are willing to participate, the sales are happening.

French agrees that the farms and estates market is improving. The prices have adjusted downward, she explained, and “quite a few of the larger parcels are moving.”

“There is also more stability in the market,” White added. He explained that it’s no longer a market that favors either the buyer or the seller, but reflects an overall stability which benefits everyone.

Marketing Farms and Estates

Compared to more conventional homes, farms and estates are larger and more complex. The market is also much narrower as there are many fewer buyers who can afford these properties. As a result, their marketing is somewhat different from what may be done for other kinds of homes.

These days everyone has an online presence as the vast majority of buyers, and especially those out of the area, start their searches there. “We use a combination of Internet marketing and hard copy ads in glossy publications,” Wiley said.

White uses a professional photographer to take the photos he needs to display his farms and estates listings in the Multiple Listing Service (MLS). The photos then become a visual tour for visitors to the MLS and also to multiple websites, which automatically pick up and display new listings as soon as they are entered.

Like many farms and estates agents, White takes listings in our area and around the state. To help with marketing and showing properties that are further away, he often teams up with a local agent who can help extend the marketing effort and be available for showings.

Marketing of farms and estates is on a “larger scale,” French said. She added that she always includes lots of pictures and multiple views to show off not only the house but also the barns, outbuildings, the land and any views. Her company has a marketing program that includes an Internet presence but also involves ads in bigger publications such as the New York Times and the Washington Post. “We target where our buyers are, and many of them are in the northeast,” she continued.

Unlike his competitors, Warren explained that his company relies “100 percent on the Internet,” for their marketing and doesn’t do any media ads.

Both Warren and French acknowledged that there are always farm and estate sellers that don’t want splashy ads. Warren frequently lists properties that have active businesses, such as wineries. In those cases the owners often are concerned about keeping the sale of the business a secret.

French said sometimes sellers are concerned about the vulnerability associated with strangers coming onto their property and into their homes. For that reason, agents also don’t do open houses for these kinds of listings, she added.

Land Conservation
A special feature of the farms and estates market is the potential to conserve the land and protect resources, such as water or migration routes, by using conservation easements. These easements are legally binding agreements that continue at the sale or inheritance of the property. The result is large areas that are guaranteed to remain country properties, assuring the continuation of this rural lifestyle.

Conservation easements are a benefit to the community because they keep the land “beautiful and open,” French said, “and protect the integrity of Mr. Jefferson’s village.”

“The conservation easements protect the land and impact value,” White said. They also offer a “huge tax advantage,” he added, which appeals to property owners. On the other hand, by definition, they limit subdivision even for family. This means when there are multiple heirs it is likely they can’t each receive a piece of a family farm if the property is under a conservation easement. The ultimate result may be that a multi-generational farm can’t stay in the family as the heirs may be forced to sell to assure that everyone receives their share of any inheritance.

Wiley described the conservation easement as “a great tool for selling farms.” He cited the tax credits and the preservation of the property. He added that Virginia is one of only three states where the state tax credits can be sold to someone else. That means if the owner of the property can’t use them, they still benefit from putting their land in an easement.

While conservation easements are found everywhere, Albemarle County is especially well represented. Walden explained that you will find just about every large property protected this way in Albemarle.

Celeste Smucker is a writer, blogger and author. She lives near Charlottesville.

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Magazines Real Estate

Is Now the Time to Invest in a Second Home or Rental Property?

Whether it’s buying a college-town condo for a son or daughter in school, a vacation home, or a property for eventual retirement, investors are putting their money into Central Virginia property. And the market for real estate investment properties is definitely bullish.

Much of the attraction is in the “livability” of our area, which is mentioned repeatedly in publications like Money Magazine. In the past two years, Charlottesville has been rated America’s Smartest City by Luminosity.com, #4 Book-Loving City and #4 Most Romantic City by Livability.com, #4 Best Small City For Working Women by nerdwallet.com, one of America’s Best Intergenerational Communities by Met Life & Generations United, and the second best Small Community City for Overall Well-Being by Gallup. Another major positive is the economic stability of our region, which translates to a generally safe investment climate for real estate.

“As far as a positive return on investment, real estate dominates,” declares Bill May of ERA Bill May Realty. “My wife and I own a number of homes we don’t live in.” He notes that the stability of the economy in the area, especially because of the University of Virginia, makes investment properties a good deal. “If you’d bought real estate in 2000, it would have appreciated today more than the stock market,” he says. He adds that he can’t speak for the whole country, but he can for the Charlottesville region.

“Owning second properties in the Charlottesville urban area is good because you can always find tenants,” he says. He cautions that such an investment may not be profitable initially. “Many times a property you buy will not rent for enough to cover your mortgage payment with PITI [principal, interest, taxes and insurance], but over a period of time it will cross that line.” In the meantime, he points out, “You have someone helping you with payments, building equity, and gaining appreciation.” Some put their money in real estate for an additional reason. “Some people like real estate investments because you can touch them as opposed to stocks and bonds,” May says. “You can always rent a property for some price, no matter how bad the market gets. You can’t say that about some stocks that have just gone away.”

REALTOR® Michael Guthrie of Roy Wheeler Realty Co., notes that some out-of-town investors buy condos or a pied-a-terre in Charlottesville for themselves to use for football weekends or for their children who are students at UVa. “They might buy a condo along JPA [Jefferson Park Avenue] or a little house along Stadium Road. A significant number of people do this.”

Buying living quarters for a student can be a shrewd investment, agrees Pam Dent, a REALTOR® with Gayle Harvey Real Estate. She recalls working with a man who was looking for a house to buy for his daughter while she was attending UVa. “He wanted something walking distance to the grounds,” she says. “The plan was to rent rooms to her friends, then when she graduated, he would keep it as a rental property.”

Potential retirees are also looking at property in the region. In fact, that’s nothing new.

In the mid-1990s, Ray and Joy Calfo were living in Pittsburgh, Pa, but looking ahead to retirement. After reading complimentary reports about retiring in our region and considerable reconnaissance in several states, they purchased a lot at Lake Monticello in Fluvanna County. Finally, in 2007, they left Pittsburgh, rented a local place and built their retirement dream home.

Dent isn’t surprised at the Calfos’ tactics. “I find a number of people I work with are retirees or getting close,” she says. “For example, I recently sold a house in Glenmore to a retired couple. They already have a home in Maryland, but eventually want to be in Charlottesville because of the medical facilities. This will become their primary residence and the one in Maryland will become their secondary.”

She also worked with a Virginia Beach couple who bought a short-sale home. “They got a good price and for now this will be their getaway home on some acreage,” she says. “They’ll have a garden and when they eventually retire, it will be their primary residence.”

This may be the perfect time to get into real estate. Last year’s home sales in the Charlottesville region were up 10 percent from 2012 making it the second consecutive year of double-digit gains. “There are some great buys in Charlottesville and surrounding counties,” concludes May of ERA Bill May Realty. “The long and the short of it is: this is a good place to own property over the long haul. Let it accumulate. Study what prices have done in our area. Real estate investment around here keeps up with inflation and keeps up with return. I’m bullish on it, absolutely.”

Marilyn Pribus and her husband live in Albemarle County near Charlottesville.