Crozet Gazette
Transcription
Crozet Gazette
INSIDE SECRET SANTA page 3 TURN HERE page 4 NEW SIDEWALKS page 5 STREET VIEW page 6 FEBRUARY 2015 VOL. 9, NO. 9 BRIDGES page 7 Developers Propose Increased Housing Density in Foothill Crossings SNP FEES page 11 SHRIMP ÉTOUFÉE page 12 DEMON SUGAR page 14 UP AND DOWN pages 15 A Day at the Races. See Pinewood Derby story page 19. HOME TECH FIX page 18 OLD SCHOOL page 19 CO2 & H2O page 22 CORYLOPSIS page 24 WAHS ROBOTICS page 26 PALM OIL page 27 VACCINATE NOW page 30 NO PRIVACY page 31 THE WORLD HACK page 32 CROSSWORD page 33 FEED THE BIRDS page 34 SNOW SOON? page 35 BEREAVEMENTS page 36 Crozet Has Two Pages Serving in the General Assembly For the first time since former Fifth District Congressman Tom Perriello of Ivy had the job in 1988, two Henley Middle School students are serving as pages in the 2015 session of the Virginia General Assembly. Owen Thacker and Isabel Brown, both eighth graders from Crozet, have been first-hand observers and helpers in the legislature, Brown in the Senate and Thacker in the House of Delegates. “I like civics,” said Brown. “In school you learn about laws, but I wanted an experience where I could see it happen.” “My sister went to The Village School and one of her friends did it,” said Thacker to explain how he got interested. “They made it sound like a lot of fun and it is.” To be eligible, a page must be in grade seven through nine. A page may only serve one year, but two veteran pages, typically tenth graders, are chosen to come back and serve as mentors. The senate has 42 pages and the House has 41, said Thacker. Pages sit on benches on the back wall of the legislative halls and typicontinued on page 21 Civil engineer Scott Collins and Riverbend Development President Alan Taylor introduced the Crozet Community Advisory Council to the possibility of rezoning 15 acres on the west edge of Foothill Crossing from R-1, one house per acre, to three or four houses per acre at its meeting January 21. The site is in eastern Crozet at the future junction of Park Ridge Drive and “eastern avenue,” a planned artery for the area, part of which will be built as part of the West Lake Hills development, which recently broke ground on the east side of the Westhall neighborhood. No formal request for the rezoning has been submitted yet. “We’re trying to rezone to be transitional,” explained Taylor. The county’s Comprehensive Plan allows the site to be developed with three to six units per acre. Taylor said the rezoning would result in 60 houses, rather than 15, being built. Asked by CCAC member Leslie Burns what sort of houses they would be, Taylor said, “They’ll be very nice homes, but at a lower price point because the lots will be smaller.” continued on page 13 New Crozet Business Offers Athletic Apparel with a Message By Rebecca Schmitz becca@crozetgazette.com Laura Futty and Jean Momorella had to tell their daughters “no.” At a Virginia Beach gymnastics meet last May, their elementary school-age daughters were clamoring for commemorative T-shirts. But when the two Crozet moms strolled over to check out what was available, they were disappointed. Where were the high-quality, colorful, flattering T-shirts featuring positive messages for young girls? The lack of appealing clothing was striking. Even their daughters eventually agreed. “There was nothing available they really wanted to wear,” Futty said. Back at the bleachers, waiting for their gymnast daughters to perform, continued on page 9 Courtesy 4 Sporty Girls HOMES RECENTLY SOLD BY THE DENISE RAMEY TEAM 6623 Woodbourne Lane, Old Trail 3077 Glen Valley Drive, Old Trail 158 Hessian Hills, Charlottesville 2260 Rocky Run, Waverly 2125 Quail Ridge, Barboursville $835,000 $522,070 $97,900 $615,000 $583,000 1780 Bentivar Lane, Charlottesville 20 Mossy Creek Ct, Zion Crossroads 5025 Dachsund Lane, Scottsville 1688 Monet Hil, Montgomery Ridge 101 Pepper Place, Willoughby 6505 WOODBOURNE LANE $785,000 $389,000 $199,000 $575,000 $140,000 OLD TRAIL • One of a kind, custom home built to the highest standards • 5 spacious bedrooms including one on terrace level • Gourmet kitchen adjoins family room and back deck • Finished basement with rec room, kitchenette, exercise room & craft room • Don’t wait to build, this home has it all!! MLS#: 527598 $799,900 Call if you’re thinking of buying or selling! We sell Central Virginia! Cynthia Peepas, Assistant Denise Ramey Kathy Hall, Buyers’ Agent DENISE RAMEY (434) 960-4333 for homes in albemarle county 2013 Salesperson of the Year deniserameyrealtor@gmail.com www.deniseramey.com Charlottesville Area Association of REALTORS 350 Old Ivy Way, Ste 200 • Charlottesville 22903 434-296-0188 Early Intervention Teen & Adults Braces Invisalign In-Ovation Brackets Charlottesville office: 2202 N. Berkshire Road Visit our Crozet office in Old Trail! 1005 Heathercroft Circle Suite 200, Crozet Dr. David Hamer of Hamer & Hamer Orthodontics has been awarded the designation of Elite Preferred Provider by Align Technolgy for the third consecutive year (2012, 2013, and 2014), awarded to only the top 1% of Invisalign Providers in the nation. CROZET gazette the Published on the first Thursday of the month by The Crozet Gazette LLC, P.O. Box 863, Crozet, VA 22932 © The Crozet Gazette MICHAEL J. MARSHALL, Publisher and Editor news@crozetgazette.com | 434-466-8939 ALLIE M. PESCH, Art Director and Ad Manager ads@crozetgazette.com | 434-249-4211 LOUISE DUDLEY, Editorial Assistant louise@crozetgazette.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: John Andersen, Clover Carroll, Marlene Condon, Elena Day, Phil James, Charles Kidder, Dirk Nies, Robert Reiser, Rebecca Schmitz, Roscoe Shaw, Heidi Sonen, David Wagner, Denise Zito. Don’t miss any of the hometown news everybody else is up on. Pick up a free copy of the Gazette at one of many area locations or have it delivered to your home. Mail subscriptions are available for $25 for 12 issues. Send a check to Crozet Gazette, P.O. Box 863, Crozet, VA 22932. CROZETgazette From the Editor The Community Comes Before Profit Milestone Partners, the new owners of the 20-acre former Barnes lumber yard in downtown Crozet, has repeatedly raised as an issue the “marketability” of the site as its future uses are currently defined in the Crozet Master Plan (CMP) and more specifically in the Downtown Crozet District (DCD), a special set of zoning rules designed to enable the core of town to prosper and continue as the commercial and cultural center of life in Crozet.Those rules essentially promot a traditioanl twon center that foremost seeks to offer employment opportunity. Milestone’s implication is that the rules raise too high an expectation and therefore they must be watered down. Tellingly, their first effort in their development approach was to effectively sabotage the DCD rule against first-floor residential uses by arguing the rule should be waive-able, a proposal that the Albemarle County FEBRUARY 2015 Board of Supervisors enacted with unaccustomed alacrity in 2013. The effect of this change, not well understood as it was happening, is to make residential uses comparable to commercial ones. Thus the wheel spokes were sawed halfway through and the cart was put back on the road. For all the economic consequences of formal town planning, its purposes are fundamentally social and only secondarily about commerce. The goal of the rules is to foster a place where people want to live. Fate looked on Crozet’s advantages, among them a substantial independent water supply at Beaver Creek, and made the former village an official Growth Area, a tactic in the county’s long-term aim of preserving the its suitability for agriculture— which is a worthy and even necessary goal. The Crozet Master Plan is the determined, strategic, public effort of Crozet’s citizens to cope with the pressures of growth while preserving our long-held values, generally considered small town values, continued on page 20 3 To the Editor A Westhall Christmas Story Send your letters to the editor to news@crozetgazette.com. Letters will not be printed anonymously. On December 1, 2014, a small Christmas bag appeared on our doorstep. In it were two chocolates, a Christmas tree ornament and an inspirational quote. There was no tag or any other indication of who had left it there for us. The only clue was that it had the number 24 on it and we wondered. Did this mean we would be getting one every day until Christmas? Yes, it did! The bag was usually on the doorstep before 7:30 a.m., but on weekends it would be later in the day. As my husband had recently become ill, we surmised that a group of neighbors had decided to make this Christmas magical for us, but no one would admit to knowing anything about it! I thought about hiding at a front window to try to spy on our secret Santa but was persuaded by others not to spoil the surprise. On Christmas Eve Day, McKenna Riley, a neighborhood high school student, came to visit with the last gift. She was the spirit of kindness Pi Day Swing Dance in Crozet 3.1415. 3-14-15 Mark your calendars to Swing into Spring with Pi at the Field School on March 14. Salute to Swing band will again provide the music for your swing dancing and listening pleasure, with Jessica and Taylor Moore teaching a dance lesson. The Crozet Community Association will hold a pie contest and a Pi costume contest for all ages. Bake a pie, win a raffle to be a judge, buy a slice of pie, create a costume about Pi. Bring your dancing shoes and have a wonderful evening March 14. All ticket and food receipts will be divided between the Crozet Fire Volunteer Department and the Western Albemarle Rescue Squad. Start planning your pie and costume entries now. Read more details in the March Gazette. Ann Mallek Earlysville continued on page 6 Professional CPA services located in Crozet Independent Perspective, Individualized Attention www.jonesandcompany.net Accepting New Clients for 2014 Taxes Victoria W. Jones, CPA, CGMA vjones@jonesandcompany.net 434.823.5559 4 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Here We Go Again Resale Store 10% OFF All Jewelry Left Turn Lanes to Be Marked on Rt. 250 at Clover Lawn until Valentines Day! Almost one year in present location! Between Dollar General & Crozet Great Valu • 434-205-4570 To find Spiritual life one must seek it. Great Lent is the path. Join us on February 22 to start the journey. St. Nicholas Orthodox Church Rt. 250 West • 434-973-2500 stnicholasorthodoxchurch.org A Place to Breathe © Meditation and Yoga Studio A variety of styles at A Place to Breathe ensures there is something for everyone. From flow to restorative, breathwork to meditation, this is a studio for you to find you. Located minutes from the heart of Crozet on 250 Chairs and Props Available • Beginners Welcome Classes Ongoing/Drop-ins Welcome • Easy Parking The Virginia Department of Transportation will mark off four dedicated left turn lanes in the central “suicide” lane on Route 250 at Clover Lawn as soon as warm weather allows, VDOT Charlottesville residency agent Joel DiNunzio said. “We are looking at ways to make that section of 250 more in line with a small developed area,” he said. “They added right turn lanes there. The central left turn lane is more appropriate where there is less traffic. We’re looking at striping them with left turn lanes. It’s just striping, so it’s interim. “I think that will help slow speeds in there. The county has YOUR Lwww.aplacetobreathe.com OCAL SOURCE FOR LOCAL, ORGANIC MEATS 4405 Ivy Commons • Charlottesville, 22903 • 434-245-8080 Crozet money for pedestrian improvements [at the entrance to Harris Teeter] so we will be revisiting the area. I think lighting would help in there.” VDOT will have to eradicate current markings first, DiNunzio explained, and no work will be undertaken until the risk of snow is past. Future alterations to the section could include a roundabout. “We’ll have to see if it works,” said DiNunzio. “It would reduce speeds and make pedestrians safer. We could get a decent size circle in there. But we don’t know if it works from a traffic perspective yet.” www.greatvalu.com Where respect for YOU is ALWAYS in stock YOUR HOMETOWN GROCERY STORE LOCAL HYDROPONIC BOSTON LETTUCE $2.49/head Locally-made Red Hill Farms DIPS & SALSAS $3.99 each Remember your sweethearts! We have candies and roses for Valentine’s Day, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14 Western Albemarle’s Local Grocery Store Since 1946 5732 THREE NOTCH’D ROAD • CROZET Serving Crozet & Surrounding Areas Since 1980 CALL TODAY! 434-823-4622 We Offer Duct Cleaning Monday – Friday 7 a.m. – 5 p.m. 24 HOUR ANSWERING SERVICE “Where Quality Counts” 5391 Three Notched Road, Crozet, VA 22932 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 North Crozet Sidewalk Project to Begin www.stayincrozet.com First announced when a grant for it was awarded in 2010, construction of a new section of sidewalk on Crozet Avenue connecting Crozet Elementary School to Ballard Drive will begin by March 1. The 600-foot stretch of sidewalk is paid for through a Safe Route to School grant administered by the Virginia Department of Transportation. Last month county officials awarded the construction contract to Plecker Construction of Staunton, whose bid came in at $268,750, according to county transportation engineer Jack Kelsey. The project includes curb and gutter drainage improvements and a crossing light installed where Crozet Avenue meets the driveways to Crozet Elementary and The Field School. Pushing a button at the crosswalk will cause a “cross alert” system to flash to stop traffic. The sidewalk will be seven feet wide, to allow bicy- cles to use it and pass in opposite directions, and will be set off from the road by a six-foot– wide grassy strip. The contract allows Plecker 120 days to complete the project. Kelsey said the five-year delay was due to “processes and procedures and requirements that we didn’t know about when we applied [for the grant]. We would have asked for more money if we had known.” A second 1,100-foot phase of the project will build a new sidewalk with the same character from St. George Avenue to The Field School. That project is part of a second grant in which it is bundled with a sidewalk project on Pantops that still has unresolved easement issues. Kelsey said he expected those to be settled within two weeks and the county’s hope is that contracts will awarded in time to allow the work on the second section of sidewalk to pick up as the first nears completion. 434-996-0394 Get Ready for Winter! C CENTRAL V VIRGINIA R RENTAL AS LLOW OW AS We SELL, SERVICE & REPAIR . . . $ 588 Generators AS LLOW OW AS $ 749 Snow Blowers Heaters For Location Near est Y ou Nearest You www.crozetgazette.com WAYNESBORO • HARRISONBURG • STAUNTON • CHARLOTTESVILLE • LEXINGTON SEE www.CVRRental.com 5 6 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 R. J. Garner CPA & Associates, plc Welcomes Jeff Blatter back to the area Gone out west for 30 years, Jeff is now back Preparation & Financial Providing TaxTax Preparation and FinancialPlanning Planning Services for Individuals & Businesses Give Jeff a Call! 434-529-6921 jpblatter@rjgarnercpa.com rjgarnercpa.com CCA Considers Cameras in Downtown Crozet The Crozet Community Association quizzed Albemarle County Police officer Andy Gluba, a community resource officer, about the utility of camera surveillance of downtown streets at its January 8 meeting at The Field School. Gluba discouraged the CCA audience from aiming for a publicly installed system. Some privately installed cameras already cover some sections of Crozet Avenue and The Square. “Experience shows that cameras are not a deterrent to crime,” said Gluba, who noted that all ACPD patrol cars are equipped with cameras and that there is a move afoot to have officers themselves wear cameras while on duty. “Over 1,000 cameras are on Charlottesville’s downtown Mall,” he said. “The average big city resident is on camera 75 times a day and the average college student is probably on camera 50 times a day. A $500 system is now capable of reading a car license plate at 100 feet,” he said. “Police support cameras because they can provide clues and evidence for court.” He noted that cameras did identify the kids egging a house in Old Trail, which put an end to it once they were confronted. “You’re better off pushing for homeowners and businesses to install cameras for their own reasons,” he advised. He said more downtown lighting would be a better deterrent to crime. ACPD Captain Greg Jenkins, who commands the Blue Ridge District, told the CCA that police arrested three men in a spate of shed break-ins that occurred in various parts of the county, including several in Crozet. Jenkins said police suspect there is another ring of thieves still operating in the Batesville/Crozet area. Jenkins also reported that two Crozet juveniles were identified in the vandalism of trucks owned by Allied Portable Toilets that were parked at the lumberyard when they had their windshields smashed out. In the CCA’s Crozet history moment, local historian Phil James displayed a photo of Three Notch’d Road that shows Sandridge’s Esso, which sat roughly where the ramp to Crozet Great Valu is now, and includes a glimpse of the former freight depot in the distance. The station was built in 1923 and torn down in 1965. It was the first in town to offer separate restrooms for men and women, James noted. The CCA meets again March 12 at 7:30. To get its local news, notifications and upcoming agendas online, go to crozetcommunity.org. To the Editor Christmas and so we wanted to share this with everyone as a tribute to that spirit of love and kindness and to the amazing young person who made it all happen. Thank you, McKenna. —continued from page 3 Mulch & Compost Double Ground Hardwood Mulch Pine Bark Mulch Black, Red, Brown & Natural Colored Mulch Organic Compost CROZET, VIRGINIA 434-466-2682 and magic behind the whole plan. She delivered the bags before she went to swim practice every morning and went to great lengths not to be discovered. We feel that this is a wonderful example of the true spirit of Gerry and Chris Walters Crozet CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 By Phil James phil@crozetgazette.com Bridges Were it not for our nation’s network of functional roadways and bridges, our lives would differ from our ancestors much less than we might imagine. From bridges built to carry one person on foot, to heftier structures allowing passage by horse or automobile, to awe-inspiring spans that support mile-long, fully-loaded freight trains, Americans have constructed bridges from any number of available resources to get them where they were going. Here are three stories that describe our not-too-distant past: Bettie Via Gochenour grew up during the 1880s and ’90s at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains in western Albemarle County. She shared memories of her life in the active community of Sugar Hollow, surrounded by extended family and trusted neighbors. “Mother was quite a pessimist,” Bettie wrote. “She could always see something to worry about. Father would say, ‘Don’t cross the bridge till you get there.’ Mother crossed lots of bridges she never got to. There was one bridge she fell off that was a real bridge. She loved to 7 to the fish, and she and Mrs. [John] Wood were fishing one day when the river was up. Mother started across the [footbridge] to come home and got halfway when Mrs. Wood hollered that she had caught a fish. Mother turned around and fell in the river. “Georgie Wood, a little girl, jumped in and kept her head up until help came. Someone ran to the house for help. A young man by the name of Lynn Chism was there, and they say he didn’t take time to open the yard gate. He went over the top. He and Georgie got Mother out. What a narrow escape, for Mother couldn’t swim and she weighed about 200 lbs. Georgie said that she never touched the bottom of the river. Father said that Georgie reminded him of a wasp because she had such a small waist. We lived just opposite the Woods’, with the river between us.” Rev. D.G.C. “Alphabet” Butts was appointed to the Albemarle Circuit in 1895. His seven Methodist churches in the western end of the county required dozens of miles of rugged travel by horseback, and more to reach the homes of his Past Chesapeake & Ohio steam locomotive #606 pulled the westbound Sportsman beneath Dry Bridge at Ivy in 1947. The engineer’s next scheduled stop that April afternoon was at 3:01 p.m. at Crozet station. [Courtesy of the Phil James Historical Images Collection] charges. He rightly knew the value of a well-placed bridge and the inherent perils of navigating low and high water fords. In his memoir From Saddle to City by Buggy, Boat and Railway, he recollected fifty years of experiences in the Virginia Conference. He wrote, “Up in the very heart of the Blue Ridge in Sugar Hollow, near the head of Moormans River, lived Oscar Early. He could entertain by the hour with miraculous stories of mountain adventure… of the rushing floods that swept down the Hollow, and cut him and his devoted wife and adopted daughter off from civilization for weeks at a time. Oscar Early was my friend and brother. To get the full value of such a trip, one should leave the parsonage, in summer of course, after an early breakfast, strike out up the banks of Moormans River, C.W. Sandridge Sr. worked on railroad bridges throughout the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway system. crossing that Nearby this C&O trestle bridge across Mechums River, he was introduced to his future career as a stream 23 times in merchant by storekeeper Moelick Mitchell. An earlier railroad bridge across the Mechums met a dramatic fate during the Civil War. [Photo courtesy of Cole W. Sandridge Jr.] the ten miles to Mr. Early’s home. See that you let him know that you are coming, and do your utmost to arrive there in time for a bountiful dinner.” The storied high bridge used by trains to cross the Mechums River in western Albemarle County was the scene of one of the most dramatic events this region has ever witnessed. Completed in 1852, this bridge complemented another placed across the South River in Waynesboro. The two bridges joined the Commonwealth’s 18-mile-long Blue Ridge Railroad with the Virginia Central Railroad’s dream of connecting eastern Virginia with the waters of the Ohio River. The original wooden high bridge across the Mechums was a spectacle to behold. Roughly 75 feet tall and 300 feet long from bank to bank, its stick-constructed trestles may have mirrored those of its much larger and more historic High Bridge counterpart across the Appomattox River, downstream from the town of Farmville. The two bridge projects were completed the same year. During the waning days of America’s un-Civil War, a division of Maj. Gen. Philip continued on page 8 8 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Bridges —continued from page 7 Sheridan’s Union forces, led by Brig. Gen. George Armstrong Custer, defeated Confederate Lt. Gen. Jubal Early’s forces at Waynesboro on 2 March 1865. Having captured most of Early’s forces, armaments and supplies, Custer’s troops pursued a remnant of fleeing Confederate cavalry through Rockfish Gap. Word of that impending battle had already reached Greenwood, on the eastern mountain slope in Albemarle County. Railroad men and Confederate soldiers had hastily loaded three train cars with commissary supplies stored there in a siding depot. Just as Union cavalry swarmed into the station area, the train began slowly to pull away amid the dangerous confusion and gunfire. The Virginia Central steam engine “Albemarle” pushed three cars and pulled four others as it slipped away downgrade toward Mechums River. Eight miles later, the train engineer and his remaining crew of two—a frightened, inexperienced brakeman and an assistant depot agent who had managed to escape the fray—carefully drifted across Mechums River’s wooden trestle bridge. Passing safely over, their relief was short-lived as they started up the hill toward Ivy. The little engine that had weathered enemy bullets not many minutes earlier now struggled for traction on the uphill grade. Its traction sand depleted, the crew frantically dug dirt from the trackside, tossing it onto the rails beneath the drivers in hopes they could get their train over the hump and on to Charlottesville and Richmond. Their efforts were in vain as the drive wheels refused to bite on the incline, and a painful decision was made to detach the last two loaded supply cars and leave them parked on the grade. Simon and Virgie Hildebrand enjoyed an after-picnic stroll at Sugar Hollow, c.1935, with two of their grandchildren. This attractive bridge over the north fork of Moormans River connected with the south fork road, which carried traffic through Jarmans Gap to Waynesboro. Its massive cement and stone center-support was pushed a short distance downstream during the catastrophic flood of 1995. [Photo courtesy of Ella Sandridge Bailey] “Miller School, Va: The new concrete bridge over the creek at the foot of the hill leading down from the school has been completed. This is the first concrete bridge that has been built in Albemarle County... The bridge has a 25’ span and the roadway over it is 20’ wide... a handsome structure and quite an addition to the beautiful driveway through the school grounds.” Daily Progress, 23 July 1910. [Photo by Phil James] They successfully pulled away with their lighter load and finally made it into Charlottesville, a town greatly on edge from reports of approaching enemy troops. The next morning, Friday March 3, Federal cavalry came upon the two loaded supply cars abandoned on the track. Releasing the wheel brake, they rolled the cars back downgrade and onto the fated trestle. After dowsing the cars and bridge with oil, the cavalry set them afire and then guarded the conflagration while their spoils and the structure were consumed and dropped, flaming and steaming, into the muddy river below. No better way existed to impede the movements of one’s enemy than to destroy his bridges. The tactic was employed equally well by both sides. When Custer and his troops arrived in Charlottesville later that day, civic leaders met them outside the town under a white flag of surrender. The town and university were spared. Meanwhile, the good people of Mechums River and points west stared with disbelief at the still-smoldering destruction left in the enemy’s wake. Pete and Charles Woodson flank their neighborhood playmate Lydia Pittman, c.1925, on the iron bridge over Moormans River at Millington. Regarding this photo, Lydia’s older brother Avis wrote, “There was an ice house between the bridge and Millington House. Ice was given away for medicinal purposes.” [Photo courtesy of the Guy Pittman family.] Follow Secrets of the Blue Ridge on Facebook! Phil James invites contact from those who would share recollections and old photographs of life along the Blue Ridge Mountains of Albemarle County. You may respond to him through his website: www.SecretsoftheBlueRidge.com or at P.O. Box 88, White Hall, VA 22987. Secrets of the Blue Ridge © 2003–2015 Phil James CROZETgazette 4 Sporty Girls —continued from page 1 Momorella and Futty batted around ideas. The two women, who met playing tennis eight years ago and quickly became friends, have been athletes all their lives—Momorella as a swimmer and triathlete, and Futty as a field hockey and lacrosse player. They now play USTA tennis for the Boar’s Head Inn. Each has two daughters, all of whom are involved in sports. They had been shopping with their daughters for athletic wear countless times, and were frustrated by the lack of clothing that was appropriate, functional, and appealing to gradeschool girls. The styles, while marketed to girls, were often more appropriate for boys. Many T-shirts featured messages that made them cringe. Rather than just lamenting the lack of quality athletic apparel for girls, the women decided to take action—and 4 Sporty Girls was born. It would offer athletic clothing that “sporty” girls would be proud to wear and their parents would be FEBRUARY 2015 proud to buy. “Our girls live in T-shirts and shorts,” Futty said. “We just wanted to see positive messages on sports-specific apparel.” Momorella agreed. “We wanted our girls to wear something that brought them up, without bringing someone else down,” she said, referencing the tendency of some brands to market T-shirts with boastful messages. Futty, who has a background in apparel production and design, and Momorella, a physical therapist, spent the next few months doing intensive market research. They also began paying close attention to what was available in stores, noting what girls were wearing, and realizing there is a demand for the type of clothing they wanted to offer. Their mission is greater than just creating stylish, cute clothing that girls would be proud to wear. “We want our clothes to empower girls and give them the confidence to be independent, and think for themselves, and be kind,” Momorella said. When it came time to design and create the new clothing line, their greatest sources of 9 Laura Futty (left) and Jean Momorella. Photo by Robert Radifera. inspiration and guidance could be found at home. Their own four sporty girls—Momorella’s daughters, Ainsley, 12, and Reese, 10; and Futty’s daughters Megan, 11, and Emily, 8—were instrumental in helping their mothers decide which designs would be most appealing. “Our first big sit-down was in front of the four girls,” Futty said. The girls keep their mothers up to speed on what they see in catalogs and what is popular with the girls at school. Futty, who said, “my passion is designing,” tends to handle the creative side of the business. She sketches potential designs, runs them by Momorella and her daughters, and then passes them on to graphic designer Suzanne Amelung. “She takes my sketches and makes them beautiful,” Futty said with a laugh. Like the others involved in 4 Sporty Girls, Suzanne is an athlete—she runs marathons and is a triathlete. Momorella tends to handle the business side. continued on page 17 DENTISTRY FOR KIDS, YOUNG ADULTS & CHILDREN WITH SPECIAL NEEDS INSURANCE ACCEPTED 10 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 community events MARCH 14 Sugar Hollow Three Bridges 5K and 10K The Sugar Hollow Three Bridges 5K and 10K Race will be run rain or shine March 14 at 8 a.m. on Sugar Hollow Road. The race is sponsored by the White Hall Ruritans. Proceeds will aid in the restoration of the White Hall Community Center, a historic building in western Albemarle County, and for the many community services provided by the organization, including scholarships to area college-bound students, fifth grade achievement awards, highway clean up and many other projects. Both a 5K and a 10K course will be available on beautiful Sugar Hollow Road alongside the Moormans River. The course is measured so that the 5K runners will run over two bridges to the iconic sycamore tree. The 10K course will incorporate all three bridges with a run to the Sugar Hollow reservoir. The starting line is approximately 1.5 miles west of Piedmont Store at 5275 Sugar Hollow Road. Ample parking will be available. Pre-race registration is $30. To register online, go to whitehallva.org. On-site registration is $40, cash or check only. Following the race, a pancake breakfast will be held from 9 to 11 a.m. at the Community Center, 2094 Brown Gap Turnpike. Race runners free. Donation will be accepted, with a suggested minimum donation of $5. MARCH 14 Crozet Swing Dance Fundraiser Beauty and the Beast at WAHS March 6-8 The fifth annual Crozet Swing Dance fundraiser for WARS & CVFD will be held Saturday, March 14 at the Field School. There will be a free lesson at 7 p.m., followed by live-music and dancing at 8 p.m., with music by “Salute to Swing” 15 piece band. For more details visit CrozetCommunity.org. MARCH 22 Crozet Orchestra Concert The Crozet Community Orchestra will perform a free concert at Crozet Baptist Church on St. George Avenue March 22 at 4 p.m. under the music direction of Philip Clark. The CCO will be performing in the sanctuary, with greatly increased seating capacity and with additional parking in the large lot across the street from the church. Highlights include the Karelia Suite by Sibelius, the beautiful Pavane by Faure and the spectacular Navarra by de Sarasate for orchestra and violin duo featuring world-class husband and wife solo violinists Monika Chamasyan and Master Sgt. Mark David Dorosheff. Dorosheff is a violinist with the U.S. Air Force Strings, which performs for the President and First Lady at the White House. Monika Chamasyan is an ArmenianAmerican prizewinner of many competitions. This is a rare opportunity to hear violinists of such stature locally. Lily Winkler, Chloe Horner, Brennan Reid, Virginia Garey, and Emma Pastorfield (as Gaston and the Silly Girls) rehearse a scene for the WAHS production of Beauty and the Beast, March 5 - 8. By Olivia Gallmeyer The Western Albemarle Theatre Ensemble will present their next great musical showstopper, Beauty and the Beast, the classic story of looking past outside appearances to find true love within, March 6-8 at Western. Directed by Caitlin Pitts, the show stars a cast of 55 talented children in elementary, middle, and high school, as well as a 15-student orchestra. Numerous more backstage volunteers, such as assistant directors Laura Barnes and Emma Gore, as well as the Western Albemarle Technical Theatre class, round out the group developing this musical masterpiece to nearly 100 students and parents. With performances of classic songs such as “Be Our Guest” and “Home,” this show full of colorful costumes, charming characters, and fantastical special effects is sure to please children and adults alike. Shows are March 6 and 7 at 7:30 p.m. and March 8 at 2 p.m. Tickets are available in the WAHS main office, or online at ticketriver.com/ event/14338. Prices for students and seniors are $6 in advance and $8 at the door, and $12 in advance and $14 at the door for adults. A charity benefit preview will be held March 5; tickets for this performance are by donation. CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 11 Winter Programs for Adults at Crozet Library Everything Austen Thursday, Feb. 12, 7 p.m. (Inclement weather make-up date Feb. 19) Step into Jane Austen’s dancing shoes to watch (and learn, if you’d like) a period dance with live music and dance instruction, then spend the evening enjoying games, contests and Austentacious fun. Costumes are encouraged, but if you lack ‘formal’ attire, do not be dissuaded from attending. Adults, please. Registration required. Call 823-4050. Stories by the Fireside Thursday, Feb. 26. Actors from Live Arts and the University of Virginia’s Drama Department and will read selected short stories by the library’s fireplace. With Cady Garey, Chris Patrick, Kate Monahan, and Joe Monahan. Warm drinks provided. Adults only, please. No registration required. Savvy Parents: Trending Topics for Parents of Teens How do we help teens make healthy choices? What are the best strategies to help them through difficult times? When should we ask for help, and from whom? Parents, educators, and anyone who lives with, works with, or loves a teen won’t want to miss this informative series of discussions with guests Lou Hanson and Alphonso Underwood of ReadyKids. Adults, please. No registration required. Upcoming topics include: February 23, 7 p.m. Social Media and Bullying March 23, 7 p.m. Cutting and Eating Disorders, and the Struggle for Emotional Health April 20, 7 p.m. Drugs and Peer Pressure May 18, 7 p.m. Sex and Healthy Relationships SNP Decides to Phase-in Entrance Fee Hikes Officials at Shenandoah National Park have modifed increases to park entrance fees that were announced in November. The proposed increases will now occur in two phases. Under the revised plan, which still must be approved by the NPS Headquarters in Washington, an increase will take place May 1 and another increase will take effect January 1, 2017. The cost of an annual park pass will go from $30 to $40 in May and to $50 in 2017. Per vehicle rates will go from $10/15 to $20 in May and later to $25. Per person rates will go from $8 to $10 in May with no further increase planned, and motorcycle fees will go from $10 to $15 in May and to $20 in 2017. Entrance fees are not charged to persons under 16 years of age or holders of the America the Beautiful National Parks and Federal Recreational Senior, Access, or Military passes. These passes may be obtained at the park. The park begin charging a $10 per-person fee for visitors participating in special ranger-led van tours to Rapidan Camp, President Hoover’s former retreat and a National Historic Landmark located within the park. Children 12 and under will not be charged. The park has also decided to move the group campsite currently at Loft Mountain to Dundo Picnic Grounds, reducing conflicts within the main campground. Two 20-person group sites will be established at Dundo. The cost per site will be $45. A discounted entrance fee rate for “local” citizens is not permitted under the federal law that governs fee collection in national parks. CarolBoersma Boersma MD, MD,Stephanie Stephanie Grice GriceMD, MD,Robert RobertMichel MichelMD, MD, LLtoto R:R:Carol Mary Anne Mayo MD, Angella Stitely-Lamm CPNP, Arika Roy Cocke CPNP, Mary Anne Mayo MD, Angella Stitely-Lamm CPNP, Arika Roy Cocke CPNP, Gretchen Wasserstrom Brantley MD, .Jocelyn Schauer MD Gretchen Wasserstrom Brantley MD, Joelyn Schauer MD Kids quickly Kids can can get get sick sick quickly and without warning. and without warning. We are ready with same day sick We are readyatwith sick * bothsame-day of our offices appointments * appointments at both of our* offices. for established patients *for established patients Specialized pediatric care from birth through the college years Specialized pediatric care from birth through the college years Charlottesville: 900 Rio East Court (434) 975-7777 Crozet: 1193 Crozet Avenue www.piedmontpediatrics.net Bag Sale: Sat. Feb 21st Home SAVE 20% & Garden on 2/21/15 only! Feed • Fertilizer • Fencing Mineral • Animal Health Garden Seeds Triple Crown & Legends Horse Feed & Pet Food by Visit us online at www.rockinghamcoop.com for info on our SPECIAL AG PROMOTIONS for 2015 HOURS: Mon-Fri 7:30 AM - 6 PM Sat 8 AM - 5 PM 1000 W. Broad St. • Waynesboro • Exit 94 off I-64 (540) 949-8229 • www.rockinghamcoop.com 12 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Visit Roy Wheeler Realty’s Western Albemarle Office. Conveniently located in Old Trail Village. Beth Bassett 434-987-4801 Kathryn Bentley 434-989-6769 Shrimp Étouffée As we plow on through the winter, there is a little fun to be had on Fat Tuesday, i.e. Mardi Gras. What could be better than a mid-week party before getting serious (if you’re one of the liturgically inclined who observes Lent)? Mardi Gras is a great excuse to break the winter monotony with your family, or have a few friends over for this traditional meal of shrimp and rice. It takes so little time that it’s a perfectly reasonable meal to cook on a weeknight. One year, I invited a bunch of friends, cleared the dining room and set up a ‘café’ of card tables and side tables. We had some fun, some songs, some étouffée, and then I chased everyone home by 8:30 pm. (school night). What follows is my adaptation, with a bit of a surprise. I will never ever forget a shrimp dish prepared by my friend and fellow Free Unioner, Doug Little. He shared his secret: white chocolate in the sauce. I urge you to whoop it up on Tuesday, February 17, and then settle in to finish the winter, be a bit reflective and prepare for Spring to unfold. And please go ahead and make good, old white rice. You can return to brown rice during Lent. Shrimp Étouffée with a Doug Little Twist (Serves 4) For the rice: 1 ½ cup white rice 3 cups water Dan & Sue Ann Conquest 434-242-8573 Karen Dowell 434-531-6948 1 tsp. salt 2 T. butter Combine the water, rice, salt and butter. Bring to a boil, turn to low and cook for 15 minutes. For the shrimp: 8 T butter 1 large onion 1 large green or red pepper 3 cloves garlic Cayenne pepper to taste Mattie Fuller 434-305-5671 Tom Noelke 434-770-8902 3 oz. shaved white chocolate 1 lb. medium shrimp (or those wonderful gigantic prawns!) 1 T. flour 1 cup water Chopped spring onions for garnish Use a large frying pan or Dutch oven. Melt the butter and sauté the chopped onion and pepper till translucent, about 10 minutes. Then add the minced garlic, the cayenne and whisk in the chocolate. Add the shrimp and cook for ten minutes or until they are pink. Mix the flour with water and stir into the shrimp and vegetables. Stir over medium heat until you have a sauce. Serve over the rice. Garnish with spring onions. Sharing the Love of Jesus Since 2002 John Updike 434-242-7711 Steve White 434-242-8355 www.ROYwHEELER.cOm 1005 HEatHERcROft cR., cROzEt Va 22932 CROZETgazette CCAC —continued from page 1 Collins said that Park Ridge Drive will be extended to connect to Parkside Village in the next 12 months, giving the Crozet Park neighborhoods a new way to reach Rt. 240 and a second exit besides Tabor Street. Taylor said the connection to Park Ridge Drive would happen before a connection southward to West Lake Hills. The company is proceeding with a by-right development of 67 townhouses and three single-family homes on 17.4 acres directly adjacent to Parkside Village that is to be known as The Villas at Foothill Crossing. Taylor was not forthcoming about this project and CCAC members were alarmed two days after the meeting when they received a notification about the Villas from county planning staff informing them of a plan submission. CCAC members at first thought they had been misled by the presentation they had heard until they got a clarification about the second project. Residents of the Crozet Park neighborhoods complained sharply about the heavy traffic on their inadequate roads and wondered how more units could be planned for a congested area. This raised again the question of how eastern avenue could come into existence. Its completion requires either a bridge over Lickinghole Creek to connect to Cory Farm on Rt. 250, or a crossing of the railroad tracks in the vicinity of the former Acme Visible site on Rt. 240, which was recently cleared of its buildings as part of an environmental cleanup. Residents of existing houses in Foothill Crossing complained that they chose their homes with the expectation that others similar would be built in their neighborhood, not others more crowded. “We’re asking the CCAC to make a recommendation not to add density until new roads are in,” said Terri Kostiw. “This community, and every growth area, has been asking for ‘concurrency of growth’,” said White Hall District Planning Commissioner Tom Loach, “meaning that infrastructure should keep up with housing FEBRUARY 2015 construction.” “This is the first look,” said White Hall Supervisor Ann Mallek. “There will be later versions of the plan.” Milestone Partners president Frank Stoner told the CCAC that his firm has completed the purchase of the Barnes lumberyard and the CSX parcel adjoining it. “We’ve started conversations with several people in this room,” he said, “and hopefully that will expand to the whole CCAC.” Stoner has been meeting with CCAC members privately, those who are willing, to try to persuade them to his view of the as-yet undescribed project. The CCAC agreed to form a nominating committee composed of out-going chair Meg Holden, whose term cannot be extended, and John Savage to find candidates for CCAC vice chair. Jennie More was previously elected to succeed Holden as chair. CCAC member David Stoner nominated himself in a message to council members the next day. A vote will be held at the February 19 meeting. The CCAC then turned to the matter of Crozet’s economic development, a matter that CCAC member Kim Connelly described as arising from Frank Stoner’s suggestion last summer that Crozet form a community development corporation, which typically is created to revive decaying urban areas, not small boom towns. “What’s economically feasible for Crozet?” asked Connelly. “Is this part of the mandate of the CCAC, or we should take it on as a discussion? Should other groups like the Crozet Community Association or the Downtown Crozet Association take it up?” David Stoner had prepared a six-point outline of a discussion and action agenda on economic development, which the CCAC turned to next, but without enthusiasm. Much of it struck them as issues—such as ‘What is the community’s vision?’— already investigated and addressed in the Crozet Master Plan. “It is hugely important to know, but I don’t think we can take this on as the CCAC,” said John McKeon. “We don’t have time for this. I’d be much more continued on page 23 13 Happy Valentine’s Day Accutron, Bulova & Caravelle Watches Y Lockets Y Diamonds Y Wedding Bands TUEL JEWELERS – ON THE DOWNTOWN MALL – 319 East Main Street Charlottesville, VA 434-295-4258 Your Friendly Family Jewelry Store Since 1945 5690 Three Notch’d Rd., Ste. 100 • 434-823-4080 Dr. James W. Willis • Dr. Emery Taylor • Dr. Brian Podbesek THANK YOU FOR VOTING US #1 DENTAL OFFICE CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner 2014 IN THE CHARLOTTESVILLE AREA FOR 2014 Over 130 unique patient reviews on Rate-A Dentist.com, 4.9/5 star rating! “I consistently feel that the staff at Crozet Family Dental cares about me as a person, and listens to what I have to say. That makes all the difference.” (5 stars) by M. H. on 10/09/2014 “Very thorough and professional. The repair work done feels superior to previous repair of the same problem.” (5 stars) by M. B. on 09/27/2014 “Fantastic, great atmosphere from the minute you enter this office!... Two fillings, one upper and one lower... virtually painless and in and out in under 45 minutes. This team makes you actually look forward to going to the dentist.” (5 stars) by G. R. on 09/20/2014 Insurance Accepted! 434-823-4080 www.crozetfamilydental.com 5690 Three Notch’d Rd., Ste. 100 • Crozet (Beside PT Plus) Blue Ridge Psychotherapy pllc Benjamin pumphrey mD Providing Psychodynamic Psychotherapy By Appointment Only 434-242-9621 1186 Crozet Avenue, Crozet VA 22932 14 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Now is the time to jumpstart your health & wellness. by John Andersen Are You Fed Up? Award-winning p.r.e.p.® is a great way to try acac Fitness & Wellness. Don’t stall - visit or contact us today to get started. acac Albemarle Square 500 Albemarle Square Charlottesville, VA 22901 phone 434.978.3800 acac Crozet full access to fitness center 1015 Heathercroft Circle Crozet, VA 22932 phone 434.817.2055 intro to group exercise acac.com acac Downtown 1 1 1 Monticello Avenue Charlottesville, VA 22902 phone 434.984.3800 expert support Live your best. Give your little smiles some love! February is National Children’s Dental Health Month NEW PATIENT OFFER! Bring in this ad during February for an exam, any necessary x-rays, and consultation for just Total value of exam and x-rays: $194 Valid for new patients only. Offer transferable. Please share with your family & friends! Call 823-2290 or 361-2442 NOW for an appointment! Crozet Dentist NellysfordDentist Offer not valid for previous services. New patients only. Cannot be combined with other offers or discounts. Expires 2/28/15. 325 Four Leaf Lane–Suite 10, Charlottesville, 22903 | 2905 Rockfish Valley Hwy, Nellysford, 22958 Last month, my wife, my 8-year-old son and I all sat down together and watched Fed Up, a documentary on America’s obesity epidemic. I thought initially that this would be a bit too heavy for an 8-year old, but I was quite impressed by his attention span and understanding of the movie, and it has been a positive experience as we as a family discuss what it means to eat more healthily. Narrated and produced by Katie Couric (along with producer Laurie David and director Stephanie Soechtig), Fed Up exposes how much of what we have been told about diet, exercise, and weight loss over the past 30 years has been wrong. Traditional nutrition advice for weight loss has focused on calorie intake, assuming all calories are created equal. Further, because fat has more calories per gram than carbohydrates or protein, fat content in food has been looked at as unhealthy. Yet why is obesity still such a rising problem? Despite having “healthier” lower calorie, fat-free foods available everywhere, why do our waistlines continue to grow? Fed Up clearly and convincingly tells us the answer: It’s not the fat. It’s the sugar. It’s amazingly simple, really. Added sugar. It has zero nutritional benefit, yet it’s in everything. We have demonized fat for so long that we have been completely blindsided by the lacing of most every processed food with sugar. Bread, tomato sauce, sausage, yogurt… Let’s quickly review what sugar does in our body. When we eat or drink foods with added sugar, this is absorbed into our bloodstream. Our bodies are not meant to handle all of these simple sugars we consume, so quite quickly our liver becomes overwhelmed and has Give Y ou r S So m e Love mile Va le nti n e’st his Da y! no choice but to just start turning the sugar into fat. Let’s say that again: when we eat sugar, much of it goes directly into fat storage. Similarly, our body sees simple carbohydrates that are in bread, pasta, and bagels just like sugar. So, by eating that whole wheat bread, organic pasta, or everything bagel you are adding to your fat stores. It is also amazing that though the science is very clear, this has not yet trickled down into our grocery stores or into our political system. Despite obesity being arguably the largest health care crisis our country is facing, nobody seems to be doing anything loud and concrete about it. We are still stuck on fat-free yogurt and “Let’s Move.” Fed Up is surprisingly non-partisan, blasting both George Bush and Michelle Obama for their inaction in addressing the root cause of our obesity epidemic, sadly because of obvious political pressure. Throughout the film, Dr. Robert Lustig, a renowned pediatric endocrinologist from the University of California, San Francisco, explains the toxicity of sugar using easily understandable facts and explanations. He tells the following points: • Calories are NOT all equal. Our body uses 100 calories of almonds completely differently than 100 calories of soda. Why are we so hung up on counting calories? This has been ineffective as a sole means for weight loss. • Sugar is a toxin. He equates the toxic effects of sugar on our bodies as comparable to ethanol: fat storage, hormonal changes, inflammation and agitation. I recommend that every reader of this column, regardless continued on page 23 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 15 Western Albemarle Fourth Quarter Real Estate Report Crozet-area Sales Decline Slightly in 2014 as Prices Rise by david ferrall | ferrall@crozetgazette.com 2013 was a great year for real estate in Crozet, the best for sales since before the “Great Recession” of 2009-2010. So 2014 had a tough act to follow. And while fourth quarter sales in 2014 bested the mark in 2013, total sales for the year in 2014 fell slightly year-on-year for the first time since 2007. This 5 percent drop is not terribly significant, and probably just represents a leveling off of sales that is somewhat expected after years of post-recession increases. Suffice it to say that sales in the Crozet area (as defined by those properties that feed Brownsville and Crozet Elementary Schools) were robust in 2014, and most signs point to the same in 2015. Real estate in the Charlottesville area as a whole also fared well in 2014. According to the Nest Realty Annual Report, 2014 saw a 4 percent increase in total sales in the Charlottesville metropolitan statistical area (see data table provided courtesy of Nest Realty). Average prices rose 5 percent, as did the average price per sqft by a similar amount. Properties did sell much closer to their listing price then in recent years (98.8 percent), though in contrast the average number of days-on-the-market somewhat surprisingly rose slightly. This last trend coupled with months of inventory being up 6 percent at year’s end really provide the only slight pushback to our relatively healthy market. On the plus side, conven- tional 30-year mortgages are again under 4 percent and trending downwards. This helps make properties more affordable on the lower end of the price scale, and lets buyers in the middle and upper end of the price scale get more property for their money. For renters, increasing financing affordability certainly makes rising rents less attractive and might convert a few to buyers. Total fourth quarter sales in Crozet were up 24 percent over the same period last year. Two were for properties over $1m (which will be excluded for statistical purposes), one of which was the historic 100-acre Seven Oaks Farm, which closed in October for $5.5m. Quite a discount on the $12.5m original list price! Of the total sales, 48 were for detached properties, of which nine were on an acre or more. Nineteen properties were new construction, with nine of these being in Old Trail, four in Wickham Pond, and a couple each in Foothill Crossings, Grayrock West, and Haden Place. There were 13 sales of attached properties, up from only three at the same time last year. Three of these sales were for new construction in Old Trail. Of the remaining resales, seven were in the Highlands and one each in Wayland’s Grant, Wickham Pond, and Old Trail. In the quarter there were three land sales, up from two in 2013. Over the year there were 17 land sales, roughly in line with the 16 sales in 2013. There were three distressed sales (foreclosure, short sale, bank CHART COURTESY NEST REALTY owned) in the fourth quarter, compared with four at the same time last year. The more encouraging figure is that in 2014 there were only 12 such sales in Crozet, as compared to 32 for 2013. It is great to see this distressed inventory depleting, as clearly fewer homeowners are experiencing whatever stress forces such sales. While sales were up for the fourth quarter, so were prices for detached homes. Price per finished square foot for a detached home rose slightly in the quarter from last year to $153. The average price for the same home rose 5.5 percent to $434,000, in line with slightly larger average home size quarter to quarter. This was an anomaly for the year, though, as 2014 saw a reduction in average house size for the first time since 2009. For the year, there were two more detached homes sold in 2014 than in 2013 (184 vs. 182), and the average price for these homes rose about 3.3 percent to $419,000. Average price for new construction for the year rose almost 10 percent to $515,000. The opposite was true for attached homes. Prices for attached homes dropped to $137sqft and an average of $278,000 for the quarter. Attached home sales cooled in 2014; there were 19 fewer sales in 2014 than in 2013 (45 vs 66), and the average price dropped over 10 percent to $272,000. There are current new construction attached homes for sale in Old Trail and Haden Place, and in Wickham Pond there are some designated affordable housing units waiting to be built. What 2015 brings to the Crozet real estate market is anyone’s guess. If interest rates stay at current low levels, job growth continues, and rents continue to rise, sales should remain strong. If interest rates turn and start increasing, perhaps due to inflation from wage growth (which is currently stagnant) or a turnaround in gas prices, sales could slow. And of course geopolitical risk and current high stock market levels are constant wildcards. But two things are certain: sellers who price their properties appropriately should be able to sell, and buyers will have nice inventory to choose from in the coming months. 16 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 CLIP THI S AD & GET $2 0 OFF YOUR FIRST VI SIT! Dr. Michael Rose Dr. Kim Bohne Dr. John Andersen Dr. Kristin Heilmeier Compassionate care for your pets! • Routine health care • Family-friendly office— • Advanced surgical, medical bring the kids! & dental procedures • Traveling Vet available for housecalls 434-979-DOGG Get to know us on Facebook! www.cvillevet.com Serving Crozet and all of Albemarle County 1193 5th Street SW • Charlottesville, VA 22902 • 434-979-3644 We provide medical, surgical and Dental care for your family pet with a loving touch. We are now taking new patients. Call us to set up an appointment today! By John Andersen, DVM gazettevet@crozetgazette.com Freezing Is No Fun for Outdoor Dogs to think about if you have an outside dog. First, dogs are not wolves! The domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris) in all of its current breeds and mixes originated from the gray wolf (Canis lupus) around 15,000 years ago. Our most familiar picture of the gray wolf would be the ones we see in Yellowstone National Park and other areas out west. Here are dogs who were meant for cold weather, having many natural attributes that allow them to tolerate the extreme cold. Their coats are incredibly thick, making a Labrador’s coat seem like a T-shirt. They have special circulation in their feet to keep their toes and footpads from freezing. They sleep with their long bushy tails wrapped over their noses and feet, retaining warm exhaled air, which also helps to keep their feet warm. Their larger body size is efficient at generating and conserving heat. I’m talking about wolves because only a small percentage of the dogs around here are breeds that remain close to their wolf ancestry and are cold weather-adapted. These “arctic breeds” include Huskies, Malamutes, and Chow Chows to name a few. If you have one of these purebreds, your dog Winter is in full force for one more month. What does it mean for your pets? For most of us, not much. I think I can safely say most dogs and cats around these parts are sleeping inside at night. Many are even fighting you for bed and pillow space! These pets have it made. Well done, moms and dads! But this article is about those poor outdoor dogs. I know this is one of those topics where not everybody sees eye to eye. I suppose it’s old school vs. new school. Let me state that I am not some unrealistic, save-themall PETA veterinarian. I like to hunt and fish, my dogs sleep in their own beds. But I do disagree with forcing dogs to stay outside on cold winter days and nights (below 40-ish). I think this is a practice that is done because “that’s the way it’s been done,” or “that’s the way my dad raised dogs,” or “because they’re fine.” But they’re not fine. Being cold is one of the most miserable sufferings we can have. So, in order to bring some more light on the subject on the dogs’ behalf, here’s my argument, plea, discussion. I ask you continued on page 25 Celebrating over 30 years of service to our local area We provide medical, surgical and Dental care for your family pet with a loving touch. We are now taking new patients. Call us to set up an appointment today! Medical • Surgical • Dentistry Boarding • Grooming • Laser Therapy Acupuncture • Herbal Rx • Digital Radiology House Calls • Comprehensive In-House Lab 1263 Parkview Drive, Crozet, 22932 434-823-4300 www.crozetvet.com CROZETgazette 4 Sporty Girls —continued from page 9 Initially, Momorella and Futty decided to focus on creating T-shirts and hoodies geared toward just three or four sports. But by the time their website went live in November, 10 sports were represented, with five designs each. The messages and designs on the shirts and hoodies promote self-esteem and are free from “in-your-face” flash. One shirt features a heart forming the phrase “Be Kind, Confident, Strong, You.” Another features a series of soccer balls with “be YOUnique” written below. Most shirts are offered in a wide range of colors and come in fits flattering to girls. The two women promoted their new venture using Facebook and word of mouth. When they held their first trunk show in December at the Fox Chase Lodge, the response was overwhelming. They worked nonstop meeting customers and filling orders from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. “The response and support from the community has been wonderful. We couldn’t be more thrilled,” Momorella said. Moms and their daughters were attracted not just to the designs on the clothing, but to the variety of styles and colors offered. “They like having choices, and they like all the colors we are providing,” Futty said. Crozet mom Barrie Scheivert said she was relieved to find clothes for her girls that are high-quality, sports-specific, and simple in design: “It is really, really hard to find cute girls’ athletic wear without sparkles or glitter.” She also praised the brand’s wide range of styles: “It is personalized in that we can pick out the sport, the style, the color and the fit. My girls play the same sports but are not the same size. They don’t always like the same color and they definitely don’t like the same fit. Girls fit versus a boxy fit is a huge thing for us.” Scheivert’s daughters were instant fans. Ten-year-old Lillie likes the clothes “because they make me feel good about myself FEBRUARY 2015 and about what I play.” Katie, age 11, agreed: “I like their clothes because they are super cute and sporty too, but not too girly.” Futty and Momorella soon discovered that girls are not the only ones eager to sport their apparel. Moms also wanted to wear them, so 4 Sporty Girls began offering T-shirts and hoodies in both youth and women’s sizes. Customers from all over the country have discovered 4 Sporty Girls online. Orders have poured in from states as far away as California. And they’re eager for more. As the business grows, Futty and Momorella hope to include designs for cheerleading, gymnastics, and winter sports such as skiing and snowboarding. They also want to expand into offering headbands and socks. They will also be offering limited edition designs—their first is Valentine’s Daythemed. In mid-January, Futty and Momorella launched a “Sporty Girl Spotlight” feature on their Facebook page. McKenna Peterson, a 12-year-old Arizona basketball player who gained national attention when she wrote a letter to DICK’s Sporting Goods lamenting the lack of female representation in its catalogs, is their inaugural subject. “McKenna is the ultimate ‘sporty girl’,” Futty said. “We admire her passion for her sport, and applaud the way she stood up for a cause that she believes in.” She said they are always looking for local and national female athletes to highlight in future spotlights. 4 Sporty Girls has proven to be about much more than just clothing. “We want girls to be confident and realize that you can be strong and pretty and athletic,” Momorella said. Futty added that, “One of our cornerstones is our desire to partner with, and contribute to organizations that help promote the development of healthy, positive, strong girls and young women.” For more information on 4 Sporty Girls and to order their clothing, go to 4sportygirls.com or facebook.com/4sportygirls. 17 run better. walk better. live better www.crozetrunning.com | 434-205-4452 facebook.com/crozetrunning | @CrozetRunning Located on the first floor of the Crozet Library building Five course dinner paired with Blue Mountain Brewery and Blue Mountain Barrel House seasonal brews, hosted by Taylor Smack. $55 per person, plus gratuity & tax Join Us Reservations Required Purchase tickets at www.BMBBeerDinner.com ON VALENTINE'S DAY FOR OUR SPECIAL AVAILABLE ALL DAY SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14 Open for Lunch & Dinner 7 Days a Week Mon. – Sat. 11 am – 10 pm Sun. 11 am – 9 pm 9519 CRITZERS SHOP RD, AFTON 540-456-8020 BLUEMOUNTAINBREWERY.COM 18 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Home Cloud Technologies LLC Sprouts from Crozet A business aimed at helping people solve their home technology problems launched from a townhouse in Crozet last summer and now finds that demand for its help is causing it to expand rapidly. “We want to help consumers with technology devices in their homes,” said Clayton Kenerson, a co-founder of Home Cloud Technologies LLC. “There are so many more now—not just computers or game consoles. Now there’s the ‘Internet of things.’ Normal-type things are getting connected to the Internet, like a toothbrush that reports to mom when a child brushes his teeth. Or your grandfather needs to take his medication and when the bottle gets opened relatives get notified. You buy four different brands of things and they are using different standards. They don’t always work together. “Now we’re helping a lot of businesses too,” said Kenerson, so much so that they are thinking they may have to change their name. “We make house calls or at business offices, and we make hardware and software repairs. We can handle a lot of different problems.” Raised in Tidewater, Kenerson is a College of William and Mary graduate who majored in finance and Chinese. He went to work for a company doing data analysis and began learning about technologies. “We started with the idea last year and launched in July. We exceeded our six-month revenue goals and hiring didn’t turn out to be a problem. The business market has been better than we expected. It’s working out really well,” he said. “We’re trying to solve the ‘geek squad problem’ [where a customer discovers he needs to get more than one expert to help with his trouble]. People call about one problem and then they bring up other ones. Our people can solve lots of problems at one time. We’re charging for time. While you have our person, they work on all your problems. Clayton Kenerson “We work on any make. We’re ‘vendor neutral.’ We help people with specific purchases they need to make and we give honest advice about what would work best. We have some vendor connections that allow us to offer discounts. “Crozet is my roots now,” he said. “We’re trying to serve Crozet and Charlottesville and the surrounding area. We started with the idea that Crozet is the test market and now we’re studying how to expand. We’re looking for a general manager and we’re building a data management system for the company. We’re probably going to expand in the state when we think we can generate quality control. “The most common problems we see are viruses and connectivity issues where the signal continued on page 25 Brownsville your neighborhood market Grab & Go or Made to Order! BREAKFAST STARTING AT 5AM Biscuits Bagels Croissants Sausage Country Ham Bacon Pork Tenderloin Steak Biscuits Egg & Cheese Fresh Coffee Come Tr yO HOME ur Famous FRIED MADE CHICK EN! LUNCH Call 823-2385 today to make an appointment! 5974 JARMANS GAP ROAD CROZET, VA 22932 434-823-2385 Dr. John Schoeb Dr. Kevin Albert — We are a locally-owned practice with a community-based staff. — ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS AND INSURANCE ACCEPTED | LARGE PRIVATE ROOMS Homemade Fried Chicken Homemade Sides (change daily!) Steak & Cheese Ready Coffee’s am! at 4:30 0 am) (Sundays at 5:3 Chicken Filet Sandwich Corndogs Burgers Daily Specials MON. - SAT. 5 am – 10 pm SUNDAY 6 am – 9 pm Route 250 • Next to Western Albemarle High School • Crozet • 434-823-5251 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 19 Pinewood Derby Overcomes Digital Challenge Crozet Cub Scout Pack 79 six. Cars have a five-ounce held its annual Pinewood Derby weight limit. Boys start with a January 24 at Crozet United block of wood and set of wheels Methodist Church, where it weighing three ounces when meets. Cars built by Turner they make their cars. BBs and Smith, Luke Vance and Keegan fishing weights are strategically Scott took the three top spots, added to get to the weight limit. respectively. Dennis Pupo, who has been an Things did not go as planned, “adult scouter” for 30 years, however, when the digital race brought an impressive display timing system failed and race of car designs to show off. officials were obliged to “go old- Among them were cars that school” and do the timing and looked like tanks, sticks of race records by hand. The comdynamite, slices of pie, dollar puter system had been tested bills, candy bars, mummy casthe night before, but when the kets, an old shoe, a waving projection system was added, American flag, and a chunk of compatibility issues arose and cheese with a mouse riding it. despite best efforts it could not The races started after cubbe made to work. But mean- master David Vance, first holdwhile the lunch pizza arrived. ing up two fingers, signaled to The race pitted 46 cars cub scouts to quiet down, and against each other. Cars speed the pack respectfully recited the down an inclined aluminum Pledge of Allegiance. Vance track with four lanes. Each car reminded scouts that the pack’s races four times, once in each core value is “positive attitude.” lane. At the halfway point in the He thanked the scouts’ moms races the track was vacuumed. and dads for helping put on the Scouts built 36 cars (every event. It was Vance’s last official boy in the pack made one), duty, as Jaime Brady now takes adults entered four cars and sib- over the cubmaster role. lings entered another Hand 1 recordkeeping TLOT of Thirdscouts ThursdayFEB'15_Ad_CrozetGazette_Layout 1/28/15 11:48 AM slowed Page 1 Keegan Scott, Turner Smith and Luke Vance down the pace of the heats. But the scouts, true to their Be Prepared motto, adapted and used hand signals to start races as the gate at the top of the track was dropped. “That’s scouting,” said one dad. “You get a challenge and you overcome it.” The fastest car belonged to Turner Smith, next came Luke Vance’s car and in third was Keegan Scott’s. Awards also went to the fastest cars for each den (top finishers were not counted in this) and they went to Braden Fuller (Tiger), Mason Cobert (Wolf ), Alex Covington (Bear), Will Schweitzer (Webelos I) and Jude Sanborn (Webelos II). Creativity trophies went to Max Schinstock and Hunter Brady. Hands-on awards went to Alex Flamm and Ketner Pleasants, and Scout Spirit awards went to Duncan Healey and Sean Sanborn. Third Thursday at The Lodge at Old Trail Bring your child between 4 - 7 p.m. for a FREE SCREENING! FEBRUARY 19 2:00 pm 4th Annual Definitive Downsizing Workshop Don’t miss this valuable presentation. Seating is limited and this event fills up very quickly. Local experts will advise on how to: Understand the spring real estate market; Prepare your home for sale; Downsize and dispose of unwanted things; Stage your home; Work with an auction house; Hire the right moving company. Make your reservation early. RSVP to 434.823.9100 or rsvp@lodgeatoldtrail.com Pre-Screening is the Best Way to Identify and Prevent Concussion in Sports FREE SCREENINGS Tuesday, March 3 4 p.m. - 7 p.m. Location: Connections Crozet Office 375 Four Leaf Lane #202 Charlottesville, VA 22903 Please note the special time for this event only – 2:00 PM Pre-screen your child before the spring sports begin! 330 Claremont Lane, Crozet, Virginia 22932 | www.lodgeatoldtrail.com INDEPENDENT LIVING • ASSISTED LIVING • MEMORY CARE If you cannot attend the screening on March 3, please call one of our offices to schedule your child’s pre-screen before their spring sports begin! CHARLOTTESVILLE 434-823-2199 375 Four Leaf Lane #202 Charlottesville, VA 22903 ROANOKE 540-400-8505 5430 Peters Creek Road, Suite 108 Roanoke, VA 24019 www.connectionsatc.com 20 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 From the Editor —continued from page 3 Shenandoah Valley's premiere outdoor store since 1987. 1461 E. Main Street • Waynesboro • 22980 540-943-1461 • RockfishGapoutfitteRs.com Charlottesville’s Early Childhood Leader since 1984 Enroll Now! Receive $600 Towards Tuition* & Enter to Win an iPad Mini! Tour Now for Spring Semester & Summer Camp! Voted #1 By: CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner 2014 Crozet • 823-7129 Forest Lakes • 973-8414 Mill Creek•979-8585 brightbeginningsva.com *$600 towards tuition applies only towards 5 day full time students. Nancy Fleischman Principal An independent agency offering a choice of companies. Let us compare for you. crozetinsurance.com namely self-reliance and a love of neighbor that is compassionate but not meddling. Economic growth follows organically from a plan that attracts people because it shows that it puts people first. Thus protection of the permanent social goal trumps in all cases the merits of any particular economic possibility. The terms of CMP and the DCD have been thoroughly hashed through by Crozet’s citizens and subsequently ratified by our local political authorities. They are not broken and they do not need fixing. They need our loyalty and perseverance. We are trying to bequeath the legacy of community solidarity we inherited, only on a bigger scale that welcomes more people and offers them, too, a bright future. But the build-out of Crozet is not on a timer and nothing is lost in letting it happen in small, digestible steps. After the adoption of the CMP in 2004, the people of Crozet learned a bitter lesson in how a document could be interpreted by local government with the saga of the rezoning of what is now Old Trail. What was first presented to Crozet as a plan for 800 houses was eventually transmogrified, mainly through behind-the-scene arrangements the public was not privy to, into a 2,600-unit project. Stung, Crozet fought back in the revision of the plan in 2010, pulling down allowable residential densities and insisting again on the primacy of a vibrant downtown. The county saw the wisdom of the plan and supported it with storm water and street improvements and a new library. A second lesson of the Old Trail betrayal was the institution of the Crozet Community Advisory Council (CCAC), a citizen review panel for development projects that the CMP called for but did not then exist. Previously, in line with the town’s tradition of self-reliance—we created a fire department for ourselves, a public park and a pool, a rescue squad, and a town hall forum, the Crozet Community Association—the CCA organized town views on issues presently facing it or bearing on its future. Its luster is now somewhat eclipsed by the CCAC, whose members are appointed by the supervisors and whose meetings are effectively controlled by local government policies. But the CCA continues as Crozet’s grassroots expression of pure democracy. The CCAC is meant to be a jury of citizens that evaluates development proposals against the plan—the law, to continue the analogy—and makes a recommendation to the supervisors—the judge—about the proposal’s conformity to the community’s social values. Is this project good for our posterity is the question CCAC members must answer. And they must answer truthfully. Besides introducing the worm of “marketability” as the standard by which the success of the CMP should be judged, Milestone has pursued a strategy of meeting privately with some CCAC members to persuade them individually of its agenda. In the last year clear factions have appeared for the first time on the CCAC: those who defend the Master Plan and those who defend Milestone. One side talks about the integrity of the plan, the other about that elusive prey, economic development, which every town everywhere is in the hunt for. The legitimacy of the CCAC as a voice of the people is now being called into doubt. Recent county rule changes about council membership terms, designed to deal with a dysfunctional advisory council for Rt. 29 North, potentially give supervisors the ability to pack the councils with members who will recommend in agreement with a supervisor’s agenda, regardless of wider public opinion. This is ominous. The CCAC must redouble its determination to stand up for the welfare of the town as a whole and not allow itself to be played as a tool of development interests. Milestone has yet to reveal an enlightened plan for the lumberyard. That is what the CCAC is entitled to expect. Comment online at crozetgazette.com CROZETgazette Crozet Pages —continued from page 1 cally their job is to run errands for representatives, who usually do not leave the room while the Assembly is in session. The Virginia General Assembly is the oldest continuous legislative body in the U.S. This year is a “short session,” which meets for FEBRUARY 2015 have a book to read when they come to study hall, in case they finish assignments early. (No phones are allowed in study hall either.) They take their tests under proctors. Curfew at the hotel is 10:30 p.m. and all lights must be out by 11. Thacker said the only class that’s been hard to keep up with is Spanish, but he has found language apps and other electronic assistance. 21 CROZET PARC YMCA Swimming Fitness and Family Fun ADULT PROGRAMS Group Exercise Cardio—Belly Fit, Kickboxing, Hip Hop, Kettlebell Training, Step & Sculpt & Tabata Strength—30-20-10 & Athletic Conditioning Mind Body—All/Multi-Levels, Power and Vinyasa Yoga & Nia Water Fitness M-F 9-10 AM Adult Masters Swim M/T/Th 5:30-6:30 AM; Sat 7-8:15 AM YOUTH PROGRAMS Chito-ryu Karate February 2-27; M/W/F 4:30-5:45 PM Girls Lacrosse—Grades K-4 Feb 23-May 2; Weekday Practices, Sat Games Soccer—Ages 3-8 March 14-April 25; Sat AM programs Swim Lessons—All Ages Parent/Child, Preschool, Youth-Various Times Tennis—All Ages March 14-28; Sat/Sun programs Tumbling—Ages 3-11 Isabel Brown and Owen Thacker 45 days. In the alternating long session, the Assembly meets for 60 days and drafts a two-year budget for state government. “We carry messages, lunches, whatever,” said Brown. Most of their trips are between the Capitol building and the General Assembly’s office building nearby where the representatives’ staffs have offices. “We all do the same jobs,” she said. Pages are not allowed to have cell phones with them while they are at work. Pages are on duty from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays and are allowed to go home for 48 hours on weekends. They live in the Omni hotel in Richmond (at the expense of the General Assembly) under supervision by chaperones and they are paid a salary. They are not allowed to be absent. While they are gone from their schools, pages go to a mandatory study hall, (monitored by teachers from the Richmond area) at the hotel for two hours every evening where they keep up with school assignments, which their families and schools are responsible for providing. Applicants are expected to have discussed this requirement with their school officials before they apply to be pages. Pages are admonished to always “It’s been nice to be in the hotel,” Brown volunteered. Neither complained of being homesick while serving, though Thacker said he feels like he is missing a lot of the basketball season. Brown called the page program “well organized.” Its history dates to the 1850 session. Applicants are expected to have A or B averages as students and they must write an essay that explains why they think they would be good pages. They must arrange for three letters of reference and Henley also submitted supporting documents. Applications are due by November for the year following. Brown and Thacker met with local representatives Steve Landes and Creigh Deeds when they applied. “I’ve always seemed to have leadership skills and I like history,” said Thacker, who added that he has visited many Civil War battlefields. “I like being informed about current events,” said Brown, who also agreed that the leadership component is attractive inducement. Pages go to classes on how to handle money and on etiquette during two days of orientation continued on page 39 February 22-March 14; Sat/Sun program Haircuts|Beard Trims|Shaves Free eyebrow, ear & mustache trim with haircut Straight razor shaves include hot lather, hot towels & aftershave HAIRCUTS ONLY $12! Mon. Tues. Thurs. & Fri. 7:30 - 5:30 Wed. 7:30 - 12; Sat. 7:30 - 3 Walk-Ins; No Credit Cards 1075 Claudius Crozet Park 434 205 4380 • piedmontymca.org Crozet’s Local Burgers, Shakes, Fries, And More! Check out our new menu! Taco TuesdayS! $1 Tacos Yummy Smoothies & Shakes! 1/2 dozen Wings only $5.50 mon. – Sat. 11 – 8 IN CLOVER LAWN ON RT. 250, ACROSS FROM HARRIS TEETER SERVING CROZET SINCE 1933 1202 Crozet Avenue 434-823-4223 22 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Welcome, Little Ones! Madeleine and Sienna Gaya © J. Dirk Nies, Ph.D. Carbon Dioxide: The Essential Pollutant (Part Three) Madeleine Hilda Gaya and Sienna Taylor Gaya were born at Martha Jefferson Hospital on January 21st at 4:15 and 4:18 pm, respectively. Both are healthy and beautiful. Madeleine weighed 5 lbs 12 oz and was 19.5”, and Sienna weighed 5 lbs 6 oz and was 19.25”. Mom Lydia Taylor Gaya, Dad Mark Gaya, grandparents Clover Carroll and Henry Taylor, and Uncle Ben Taylor are head over heels in love! Last time, in Part Two of this series, we learned that edible yields of cassava, an important root crop, doubled when its leaves were exposed to elevated levels of CO2 in the atmosphere; levels we are likely to see by the middle of this century. This dramatic example of the ‘CO2 fertilizer effect’ arises as a direct consequence of plants having more carbon dioxide readily available for photosynthesis. In this article, I wish to highlight a related but different direct impact that higher levels of CO2 currently are having on terrestrial plants and indirectly on hydrology as well. The subject I have in mind is water, more specifically, how efficiently trees use water. A recent communication in the journal Nature addresses this subject. Researchers at Macquarie University in Australia “find a substantial increase in water-use efficiency in temperate and boreal forests of the Northern Hemisphere over the past two decades.” They assert that the most credible explanation for this observation is the “strong CO2 fertilization effect” brought on by rising levels of CO2 in the air. The boreal forests of North America and Eurasia (also referred to as the taiga) are the world’s largest terrestrial community of plants occupying a distinct region (biome). They are found just south of the polar tundra. Tree species found within these forests consist mainly of cold-hardy, cone-bearing evergreens, such as firs, pines, and spruces, along with some deciduous trees such as larches, birches, and aspens. Temperate forests are located further south and contain a higher abundance of deciduous trees such as oak, hickory, poplar, maple, beech and birch. In both these forest types, the trees are not passive; they react dynamically to changes they perceive in the environment. In response to the enhanced availability of CO2 in the air, these forests and woodlands have adapted and are becoming ever more economical in their use of water. They now need less water to thrive than they did just 20 years ago. But why is there any relationship between the amount of CO2 in the air and the amount of water trees need to grow? Trees need both water and carbon dioxide to make food. The only source of CO2 available to trees is from the air. Trees absorb CO2 from the air through tiny, adjustable pores in their leaves called stomata. While doing so, however, they lose precious water through these very same pores. Under hot, dry conditions, upwards of 95 percent or more of the water absorbed by the roots of trees simply wafts away through the leaf canopy and is lost to the atmosphere (this phenomenon is called transpiration). Under ordinary conditions, roughly 400 water molecules are lost to the air for every single CO2molecule taken in. Four hundred-to-one are not good odds when water is scarce! Clearly, the exchange of gaseous CO2 and H2O at the surface of leaves creates a biological conundrum. To maximize the amount of CO2 absorbed, trees open their stomata to make it easier for carbon dioxide to enter the leaf. To prevent becoming desiccated by water loss through transpiration, trees close their stomata as much as possible. Trees are tugged in opposite directions by these two opposing priorities. As our human economy has pumped more and more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, we have begun to tip the balance and ease this dilemma. Our inadvertent, unintended fertilization of the air with CO2 is making it easier for trees to get all the CO2 they need for photosynthesis. As a consequence, trees are reducing the size of the continued on page 29 CROZETgazette Back to Fitness —continued from page 14 of your weight, watch this documentary. And what are some solid, practical points that everyone can take from this movie? Let me suggest a few: -Start counting grams of sugar, NOT calories. Recent guidelines suggest taking in no more than 25 grams of sugar a day, though there is zero nutritional value of added sugar in food! We get plenty of natural sugars through fruits and through carbohydrates. People who are battling weight should dramatically reduce if not eliminate sugar completely. Try counting grams of sugar and you’ll quickly be surprised how many you likely consume. -Read ingredients! Know what you’re eating, don’t be fooled by “healthy” labeling. Again, don’t worry about how many calories a food has, worry about how many grams of sugar it has. Our son has this nailed. We regularly hear “Daddy, look how unhealthy this food is. It has 22 grams of sugar!” (That was one of his chocolate milks, by the way.) -Try to eat as much whole foods as possible. Avoid processed foods. This usually means get most of your groceries from the outside/perimeter of the grocery store. -Never drink soda, juice, or diet soda. Just drink water. Saying you don’t like water is like saying you don’t like air! Get a Nalgene bottle and cut the cord of soft drink addiction. -Avoid fake sugars like sorbitol, stevia, etc. They can induce some of the same hormonal changes as sugar that FEBRUARY 2015 lead to weight gain. -Avoid fat free, low calorie foods. They all have added sugar and will ultimately cause more weight gain than their higher-fat counterparts. To me, the most real and discouraging parts of the documentary were the families they interviewed. One in particular was a family where the son, who was in high school, was obese. When looking at the family’s diet, it was pretty typical – lots of cereal, pasta, juice, soda, etc. Over time, the family decided to go on a “sugar detox,” where they agreed to just do whole foods for 30 days. Everyone lost weight. This new way of eating continued and the son lost a substantial amount of weight. It really showed the power of everything that had been discussed through the whole documentary. However at the very end of the documentary, they added a note that the son and family reverted back to their old ways of eating and the son gained all the weight back. That broke my heart. It was a clear message that the system is broken and it is way harder than it should be to eat well, and way easier than it should be to consume mass amounts of sugar. The movie makes a charge that people and our government should start to vilify sugar like we do tobacco. How much time will it take before this is mainstream? Even Michelle Obama won’t go there. Fortunately, I think the wheels are in place, but it starts with you. Your home. Your family. Your kitchen. For a good intro, watch Dr. Lustig’s viral YouTube video, “Sugar: The Bitter Truth.” 23 Tabor Presbyterian Church (USA) Worship Service Sundays • 10:30 a.m. FOLLOWED BY FELLOWSHIP Rev. Dr. Jewell-Ann Parton, Pastor Traditional in worship, Prgressive in outreach, Inclusive of All Shrove Tuesday Supper Tuesday, February 17 • 6 PM Sample Louisiana Favorites: Gumbo and Red Beans & rice Please bring a dish-to-pass Followed by a musical performance at 7:15 p.m. Ash Wednesday Service Wednesday, February 18 • 6 PM Tabor Presbyterian Church USA, Sanctuary Services will include Holy Communion & imposition of ashes An Outreach of Tabor Presbyterian Church All Events are in the Pickford-Chiles Fellowship Hall Unless Otherwise Noted Second Saturday Art Gallery Opening Saturday, February 14, 5 - 7 p.m. Celebrate Valentine’s Day by stopping in for our art show! February’s featured artist is Nancy McDearmon. In addition to being a fine painter, Nancy is aprofessor at Sweet Briar College. Musical Pasta! Friday, March 6 • 6:30 p.m. Come listen to some great local musicians (to be announced soon) and enjoy a pasta supper. Free to attend, $4 per person for supper. R.A.D. Self Defense for Women Saturday & Sunday, March 14 & 15 • 1 - 5:30 p.m. Both days required. $100 per woman (sliding scale available). For women & girls ages 13 years old and above. To register: http://we2empower.com/upcomingclasses2.html. For questions, please email Michele at info@we2empower.com Crozet Community Orchestra Concert Sunday, March 22 • 4 p.m. Crozet Baptist Church, 5804 St. George Ave, Crozet, VA Violin soloist Monika Monica Chamasyan will perform with the orchestra. Crozet Combined Choir Easter Performance Thursday, April 2 • 7 pm Crozet Baptist Church, 5804 St. George Ave, Crozet, VA CCAC —continued from page 13 comfortable if it came from other members of the community.” Lee Catlin, an assistant to county executive Tom Foley, was at the meeting and agreed to review the outline to see what information that it asks for is already known to the county. She said she would have answers by the February meeting. “We want to do organic Crozet Community Handbell Choir Concert growth and not hurt the community,” offered county economic development facilitator Susan Stimart. “We want to know what we want and what we don’t want,” said Mallek. “The CCAC is the guardian of the Master Plan,” said More. “But how much should we be proactive and how much reactive?” “We should be proactive about certain locations, such as the Acme site,” suggested Loach. Wednesday, April 29 • 7 p.m. See crozetcares.com/handbells for details. Kindergarten 911 Three Saturdays beginning in April 2015 Free workshop series for parents and caregivers of preschoolers. Not all children have the opportunity of the preschool experience. Learn how to prepare your preschooler for kindergarten success! Childcare and dinner provided for all participating families. Camp Hanover Daycamp June 22 - 26, 2015 Summer camp for rising 1st-6th graders. An affordable and fun week with old friends and new. Cost $100. Contact crozetcares@gmail.com with questions. For more information visit CrozetCares.com Click on Upcoming Events Tabor Presbyterian Church 5804 Tabor Street • Crozet www.taborpc.org • 434-823-4255 24 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 John W. Clayton & Son Doublegrind Hardwood Mulch Pine Bark Mulch Composted Horse Manure Screened Topsoil Brick Sand Blue & Brown Driveway Gravel Custom Application of Lime & Fertilizer inthegarden@crozetgazette.com Final Jeopardy P.O. Box 167, Ivy, VA 22945 johnwclaytonandson@earthlink.net LOCALLY GROWN PRODUCE, FRUITS & MEATS! We are excited to continue offering the best in local products that we can find in 2015. Be sure to check our website and Facebook for new products and services and upcoming special events. www.themarketatamfog.com Facebook.com/themarketatamfog Open Wednesday – Friday Noon - 5 pm Saturday 9 am - 5 pm • Sunday Noon - 5 pm 9264 Critzers Shop Rd. (Rte. 151) Afton 540-456-7100 AugustA Audiology AssociAtes is celebrAting 20 yeArs of service for your heAring heAlthcAre needs! We are the only center in the Shenandoah Valley and surrounding areas that offer complete evaluation & management of your hearing healthcare needs, including: Complete Assessment of Hearing, The Vestibular System and Auditory Processing. stAte-of-the-Art heAring Aid technology: To help you hear what you have been missing, our hearings aids are available in different styles and a wide range of prices for your budget! We Specialize In Custom Earmolds For: Musicians, Hunters, Swimmers, Nascar Fans, MP3 Players, Industrial Employees and MORE! Our Services Also Include: Assistive Technology For Personal Listening, T.V., and Telephone We care about you and your family! We are here to serve you! Call 540-332-5790 to schedule your appointment! Julie Farrar-Hersch, Ph.D., Clinical Audiologist 540-332-5790 • Augusta Health Medical Office Building 70 Medical Center Circle, Suite 204 • Fishersville, VA 22939 “Contestants, the category is Ornamental Shrubs. This shrub blooms at about the same time as Forsythia and has pale yellow, fragrant flowers? Please be sure your answer is in the form of a question.” (Cue the Final Jeopardy jingle. And now that will be going through your head for the rest of the day.) Time’s up. “What is Corylopsis or Winterhazel”? And I would indeed be impressed if anyone guessed this based on the fairly scanty clue. Hailing from East Asia, these shrubs are not well known in American gardens, certainly a shame. Flowers and fragrance in early spring are hard to beat. The Winterhazels should not be confused with the Witchhazels, although they are in the same family of plants, possibly accounting for the early spring bloom time and the fragrant flowers found in both groups. Another possible source of confusion if you’re using scientific names: Corylus, the Filbert or Hazel, has a similar name, but is in the birch family. And there’s that “hazel” bit to add to the muddle. Getting to know the winterhazels is a bit difficult, since they are “taxonomically confused,” as the botanists would say. (Are the plants confused, or the botanists?) They have at various times determined that there are as many as 30 species, or as few as seven. We’ll only look at a few here, and even then with the caveat that you might run across a plant with a different name, albeit similar to the one that I have used. The upshot: it’s probably the same plant, so buy it if you like it. Corylopsis (Anybody reminded of T.S. Eliot’s The Naming of Cats?) All the winterhazels are multi-stemmed shrubs, and they can get pretty sizeable, particularly in spread. Leaves are ovate and slightly toothed, sometimes with a blue-green cast, and don’t provide much in the way of fall color. Prominent veins on the leaves give a natty, pleated effect. Flowers are generally described as buttercup yellow; although individually small, they’re clustered in dangly racemes, and open before the leaves appear. If you want a relatively tall specimen, look for Corylopsis sinensis var. calvescens (sometimes known as Chinese Winterhazel), which can reach heights of 12’ to 15’. Fragrant Winterhazel (C. glabrescens) can be almost as large, but it can be found in a much smaller variety, ‘March Jewel’. This little guy only gets to about 1½ feet tall and 5 feet wide in 10 years. Plant guru Michael Dirr says it “appears woven from willow stems.” Fairly tidy in size, C. spicata (Spike Winterhazel) will generally get to 4’ to 6’ high, with a somewhat greater spread. This CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Gazette Vet —continued from page 16 Corylopsis may be the most floriferous of all the winterhazels, with little flowers hanging like tassels. In spring, the leaves emerge wine-purple, then change to bluish green. A few cultivars of Spike Winterhazel are out there, ‘Aurea’ likely being the most widely available. (Plants labeled as ‘Ogon’ or ‘Golden Spring’ are either the same plant or very similar.) Leaves will emerge yellow-gold, but will gradually change to green in our summer heat. ‘Red Eye’ has reddish stamens protruding from the flower, but this would only be noticeable on close inspection. Also modest in size is C. pauciflora, the Buttercup Winterhazel. It’s generally listed as a plant that reaches 4’ to 6’, with a slightly greater spread. In the U.K., where ornamental plants have often been in the ground for centuries, there is a fifteen-foot specimen, however. Notwithstanding, it’s a daintier shrub than the other winterhazels. As for the pauciflora epithet, don’t worry that there will be a paucity of flowers. The individual flowers are just slightly smaller, and fewer are in each cluster. The differences among all the winterhazels are not great— again, are there 30 species, or is it seven?—and their growing requirements are essentially the same. Partial shade is best, meaning high, overhead tree cover for most of the day, or perhaps a few hours of morning sun. Soils should provide that elusive combination of moisture and good drainage. If you can’t provide that ideal mix, at least insure that your winterhazel has adequate moisture and is not sited in a soggy corner of your yard. Also, avoid windy, exposed situations; this can be easily achieved by putting your plant in a woodland. You may not find winterhazels at every garden center or big box store, but specialty places should either have them in the spring or be able to order one. They are a nice alternative to the “Hey, over here, look at me!” screaming-yellow of forsythia. If you happen to have both, keep the winterhazel away from the forsythia, or you might end up with an unfortunate color clash. And now, how much did you wager in the Final Jeopardy round? probably welcomes the cold weather. But most people don’t. hounds, beagles, pit bulls–great dogs, very common around here—but none of these have coats for cold weather. Even the retrievers, with their winter duck hunting roots, do not have coats thick enough to adequately keep them warm when temperatures drop. I would argue that a hound’s coat would be like us wearing a lightweight fleece. A retriever’s coat is more like a winter jacket, but still not comfortable for an all-nighter. So, will a night in the 20-degree weather kill them? Not likely. Will they still be happy to see you in the morning? You bet—their loyalty is beyond measure. But was that a terrible night for them? Absolutely! Being cold for extended periods of time is misery. Most people with outdoor dogs do have doghouses or some other form of “shelter” for them, but unless they are heated, these are a far cry from adequate shelter when it’s freezing out. I went out to my shed one recent night and it was mis- Home Cloud —continued from page 18 gets dropped. For business, we see data management issues, information being on a different platform than it needs to be to be integrated and for back-up security. Subcontractors, including a 25 erably cold in there despite my heavy coat, hat, and gloves. Bedding, doors, and straw are better than nothing, but still there is no heat. My plea? Let those outdoor dogs inside at night, and during the day during cold spells. If they can’t spend the night in the back hallway or mudroom, how about in the garage? If no garage, how about a doghouse that’s directly adjacent to your house to get a little bit of that heat transferred. I think if people stop and think about it, there are some pretty simple things that can be done to make these animals incredibly more comfortable. I can still remember a commercial from when I was a child. It was a shot of the outside of a house with all the lights on during a cold winter’s night. You could hear the voices of the people inside laughing and enjoying themselves. Then the picture zoomed out to include the poor outdoor dog, shivering inside its doghouse as the wind was whipping by. The sad thing about that image is that it’s happening all over Crozet and Albemarle County tonight. So if you’ve got an outside dog, think about these things and I think we’ll all sleep a little better. programmer, handle most of the issues that arise with customers. “We’ve found great people. IT people usually don’t like marketing and getting business. We’re connecting the people with the problem to the problem solvers. Everyone’s happy.” You can reach Home Cloud Technologies at 434-326-1997 or 434-326-3011. Now offering quality veterinary care in the comfort of your home! Dr. Anne DAgner compassionate care, convenient for you comprehensive physical exams vaccines • parasite screening senior wellness • end of life care forpawshousecalls.com 26 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 WAHS Robotics Teams Qualify for State Championship in Richmond By Rebecca Schmitz becca@crozetgazette.com After strong showings at a series of qualifying matches, all three of Western’s Robotics Club teams—The Geek Gods, the Loose Screws, and Her Majesty’s Engineers—will compete in the state championship match in Richmond on February 28. This makes the fourth year that all of Western’s teams have qualified for states, an achievement that has become progressively harder to attain as the robotics challenge grows in popularity and more and more clubs from around the area begin to compete. The matches are part of the FIRST Tech Challenge (FTC), which requires teams of up to 10 students to design, program, and build their own robots. The robots then compete head-tohead in a sports-style arena, with loud rock music flooding from speakers and enthusiastic students in costumes surrounding the 12 x 12 foot square playing field and cheering on their teams. The atmosphere is as raucous as any high school football or basketball game. “The FIRST organization wanted to create a sport for the mind and a feeling of excitement,” said Western’s Career Specialist Caroline Bertrand, who helped found the club four years ago. Each team designs its own costumes, with the Geek Gods cloaked in headgear, togas, and armor; and the Loose Screws donning tool belts, hard hats, and safety goggles. Inspired by “steampunk,” a genre of science fiction and fantasy literature that focuses on the 19th century and features steam-powered machinery, male members of Her Majesty’s Engineers wear burgundy vests, yellow cravats, and top hats; the females wear big bustle skirts and white tops. Both genders wear a burgundy tool belt. “If you don’t look silly, you’re doing something wrong,” senior Josh Reid, lead builder for the Geek Gods, said with a laugh. This year’s challenge, “Cascade Effect,” requires the robots to score points by racing around the arena and placing golf balland softball-size whiffle balls 1664 WICKHAM WAY WICKHAM POND • • • • • • • 4 bedrooms 3 1/2 baths $95k in custom upgrades Impeccable condition Fully fenced yard Blue Ridge Mountain views Convenient to all Crozet shopping & dining • Western Albemarle schools • MLS#527678 Offered at $442,000 David H. Ferrall Associate Broker, Nest Realty df@NestRealty.com 434.882.LAND (5263) Western’s “Her Majesty’s Engineers” team gathers after a recent match. Left to right: Aaron Poulter Martinez, Alex Krasner (graduated from Western’s robotics program, is now at Virginia Teach studying engineering and helps the team when he is home), Idan Hananel, James Krasner, Drew McConville, Austin Germani, Gayathri Prakash, Brynn Jefferson, Justin Zambrana, and Mentor Courtney Christensen. into three tall, bucket-style rolling goals. Robots had to fit into an 18-inch x 18-inch box at the beginning of the two-minute long match, but they could increase in size as the competition progressed, growing taller to grasp things up high or toss balls into the goal. In such a celebratory environment, it’s easy to overlook the tremendous work these ninth through twelfth graders pour into preparing for each competition. While their usual practice schedule consists of two 2-hour sessions each week, the students and their mentors often work until 8 p.m. at night during the week of the competition. “We live on pizza and caffeine,” Reid said. It’s only natural that the late evenings have created a bond among the students. “You can’t judge each other when you’re stuffing your face with pizza and cake and building robots all at the same time!” said Reid. Their hard work and dedication have paid off. Last year, the Loose Screws were ranked fifth in the state, and were the only team in Central Virginia to compete in Super Regionals against teams from the entire mid-Atlantic region. The Geek Gods were a runner-up to go to Super Regionals, barely missing the cut-off. The club is headed by Tom Larson, who teaches computer-assisted design, and Bertrand. Both are dynamic, have an easy rapport with the students, and have put in countless hours guiding and mentoring them. The team also gets help from parents and volunteers. Last spring, local continued on page 28 WAHS Robotics Club Members Geek Gods Samuel Carey Daniel Du Jesse Galloway George Hiss Hamilton Ibbeken Tatum Norris Josh Reid William Stewart Sarah Watkins Cole Weiss Her Majesty’s Engineers Haochen Gao Austin Germani Idan Hananel Brynn Jefferson James Krasner James Mahoney Drew McConville Jessica Novotny Gayathri Prakash Justin Zambrana Loose Screws Amie Benson Dylan Boatner Colton Forry Dor Hananel Maddie McKalips Sarah Meng Aaron Poulter Martinez Sophie Salomon Maggie Stewart Nelson Zambrana CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 27 Palm Oil Plantations Accelerate Tropical Deforestation [ by elena day • elena@crozetgazette.com \ When I was 13 years old in 1964 I visited the New York World’s Fair. The song “It’s a Small World (After All)” reverberated over and over in my brain after visiting the ride Disney debuted at the fair that is now replicated in all Disney theme parks globally. The fair’s theme was “Peace through Understanding” dedicated to “Man’s Achievement on a Shrinking Globe and Expanding Universe.” (I believe women’s achievements were minimalized at the time.) In ’64 there was a lot of hope in the air. In 2015 we haven’t arrived at the “peace” part of the theme, but no one can deny that the “shrinking globe”—which I interpret to mean globalization—is far advanced. However, it didn’t turn out the way I envisioned as a young teenager. Globalization has opened to our current human population a Pandora’s box of problems. Today, global/multinational corporations have limited and standardized consumers’ technological options, energy choices/distribution, and available foodstuffs. A global model of agriculture has been evolving (and is in place) that is environmentally destructive, threatens biodiversity, bankrupts smaller farmers, depresses farm laborers wages, uses immeasurable amounts of chemical fertilizers, poisonous pesticides and insecticides, and contributes to greenhouse gas emissions. Palm oil is an apt example of a food product almost unknown 25 years ago that is now monocropped and threatens rainforests and endangered species in Southeast Asia. Given that demand for palm oil is projected to double by 2030 and triple by 2050, rainforests in Africa and South and Central America may be at risk as well. Palm oil was traditionally used for cooking in tropical West Africa. European traders brought it to Europe as a cooking oil. British traders sought it as an industrial lubricant beginning in the Industrial Revolution. The African oil palm tree, Elaeis guineensi, was introduced by the Dutch to Indonesia and the British to Malaysia in the mid and late 19th century.* It was originally planted as an ornamental. In the late 1800s both Lever Brothers (now Unilever) and Colgate began production of palm oil soaps. These were marketed as Sunlight and Palmolive respectively. Beginning in the 1970s both Malaysia and Indonesia increased palm oil plantings in an effort to lift rural populations out of poverty. Rainforests were leveled at an accelerated rate to make way for palm oil trees in the 1990s. Multinationals like Cargill invested in palm oil plantations. (Cargill is the world’s largest grain trader. It owns grain terminals, cargo ships, storage facilities and cattle feedlots. I noticed its name on the entrances to every other farm on Rte. 340 from north of Luray to Elkton.) In 1995 Cargill acquired its first palm plantation in Indonesia. By 2005 it had three large planta- tions as well as a processing facility in Papua New Guinea. Other multinationals bought the palm oil for consumer products. Today Malaysia and Indonesia produce 85 percent of the world’s palm oil. Between 1990 and 2010, 3.5 million hectares of tropical rainforest in Indonesia were replaced by palm oil plantations. (One hectare is 2.47 acres, so that is 8.6 million acres.) Indonesia overtook Brazil as the number one rainforest destroyer in 2012. It has also distinguished itself as the third largest emitter of CO2 after the United States and China. Whether the clearing method is slash and burn or mechanical uprooting, animal species are decimated and plant biodiversity is lost. One-third of the animal species, including Sumatra’s tigers, rhinos, elephants, and orangutans, are endangered. The Sumatran orangutan has lost 90 percent of its habitat. Orangutans are also threatened on Malaysia’s island of Borneo. Poachers are relatively unmonitored and have increased access into intact rainforest areas because of palm oil plantation roads. Palm oil trees are thirsty for water and palm oil processing facilities routinely contaminate water sources with their waste. Plantations in general have a poor record regarding worker protections from applications of herbicides such as Paraquat. In 1992, in response to concerns regarding rainforest destruction and global warming, Malaysia agreed to limit its deforestation to 50 percent of its original tree cover. Progress Emmanuel Episcopal Church implementing this pledge has been slow. Currently 50 million tons of palm oil are produced annually. Palm oil constitutes 30 percent of the world’s vegetable oil. It is included in baked goods and household products such as shampoo, cosmetics, cleaning agents and toothpaste. Palm oil is cheap and the trees are high-yielding. It is a saturated fat. Unsaturated and trans fats have lost favor and have been implicated in coronary artery disease. Saturated fats like palm oil, lard (amazing) and completely hydrogenated fats are preferable in those fast and fried and convenience foods Americans consume, according to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). In 2013 the FDA announced its intention to ban/phase out all trans fats from the American diet. The American Soybean Association (ASA) immediately protested. ASA includes all the usual cheerleaders for genetically modified (GM) soybeans —Monsanto, DuPont, Dow, Bayer, Syngenta, and German chemical giant BASF. According to Food and Water Watch, these multinationals don’t want to lose market share until GM soybeans (DuPont Plenish and Monsanto Vistive) that have been engineered to have less saturated fat than palm oil have replaced current GM cultivars. In 2004 the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil was formed. It has not been very effective to date in promoting “sustainability” or curbing / reversing the negatives of this new mono-cropping disaster. A Dec. 2014 article in Fortune continued on page 39 Emmanuel Greenwood is on the National Register of Historic Places 7599 ROCKFISH GAP TURNPIKE | GREENWOOD, VA 22943 | 540.456.6334 3.4 miles west of Western Albemarle High School on Route 250 WELCOME TO OUR PARISH! Mission: May we live in Christ and seek to do His Work from this place. SUNDAY WORSHIP September - May 9:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist with Children’s Worship 11:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist with Adult Choir Christian Education 10:00 a.m. For All Ages Nursery Care Available 9:00 a.m. – Noon Join us in the Parish Hall for Coffee Hour after services! www.emmanuelgreenwood.org info@emmanuelgreenwood.org 28 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Robotics —continued from page 26 climate CLIMATE controlled CONTROLLED units UNITS • Resident Manager •• Monthly Resident Manager Leases climate controlled • Tractor Trailer Accessible units •• Insurance MonthlyCoverage Leases • Resident Manager Available Gate Access ••Passcoded Tractor Trailer Accessible Monthly Leases ••24-hour Access Available Tractor Trailer Gate Accessible •• Packing Passcoded Access Materials • Insurance Coverage Available now rentin •• Passcoded 24-hour Gate Access Available Access g • 24-hour Access Available •• Packing Packing Materials Materials now 434-823-2340 rentin RENTIN G www.charlottesvilleselfstorage.net NOW g 434-823-2340 434-823-2340 Bill tolbut 5390 Three Notch’d Rd Resident Manager Crozet, VA 22932 www.charlottesvilleselfstorage.net www.charlottesvilleselfstorage.net Bill tolbut 5390 Three Notch’d Rd Resident Crozet,Manager VA 22932 WilliamManager E. Tolbut | Resident 5390 Three Notch’d Rd | Crozet, VA 22932 Preschool Ages 2 ½ - 5 A gentle, safe and loving atmosphere for young children to begin to explore the world and to prepare for kindergarten. Summer Camp Ages 3 - 6 Sign up by the week or for the whole summer. Creative weekly themes. Private, in-ground wading pool for daily swimming. Close to Crozet, Charlottesville & UVA NUMEROUS SCHEDULE OPTIONS Half Day, Extended Day & Full Day Programs DISCOVER... CREATE... HAVE FUN! (434) 979-2111 www.millstoneofivy.com network forensics company nPulse (which was just bought by FireEye) “adopted” the club, and two of its employees, Whit Sheldon and Courtney Christensen, volunteer to help. Riley Chandler, a former nPulse employee who has since moved onto another job, also continues to volunteer. They typically spend four hours a week helping the students, but, during the lead-up to competitions, they volunteer for up to 12 hours a week. With such a successful track record, it’s no wonder more and more students are eager to join this lively group. The club has increased to 30 members— nearly double the number who joined last year. Interest was so high that some students had to be turned away at Western’s club fair. The students who do join have a wide range of skills and interests—not all are budding engineers. “We have drama people, we have artists, we have football players, and we have future med students,” Larson said. “Our diversity is our strength. If everybody were an engineer, we would not succeed. If you have same-minded people, you get the same results. Some people are good at design, some are good at programming, and some are good at mechanics. Some do our artwork and some handle the paperwork.” One-third of the club members are girls. Seniors Hamilton Ibbeken and Tatum Norris appreciate that being in the club has taught them to work and communicate effectively in a field that still tends to be male-dominated. They are also proud of the example they’re setting for young girls. As part of its outreach efforts, the club has helped with “Girl’s Geek Day” at local elementary schools. “It’s fun to see the little girls get that spark of interest,” Ibbeken said. Norris says the club has helped her develop skills that will last well after her high school career ends. “It helps with interviewing skills. It puts you in a situation where you have to explain your work,” she said, referring to the competition’s requirement that teams explain their robots to the judges. Since the program began at Nelson Zambrana and Dor Hananel hard at work on their robot before a match Western four years ago, it has expanded to other schools in the area thanks to the guidance and support of Bill Gardner. Gardner, an independent technical patent consultant, moved here from California in 2010 and quickly became involved in robotics at the schools, using his knowledge and expertise to mentor middle and high school students. After working with his oldest son’s robotics club at Henley, when his son moved up to Western he continued to help by mentoring the Geek Gods, which was Western’s newest team at the time. Gardener is responsible for introducing the program to other schools in the area as well. “After the 2012-13 season, I saw how wonderful the program was and was surprised that Western was the only school in the area sponsoring FTC teams. In the spring of 2013, I decided to try to expand the program into the other public high schools in our area by finding and speaking with potential new mentors at Albemarle High School, Charlottesville High School, and Monticello High School. I also organized a ‘new mentor’ information session about FTC with Caroline Bertrand, Theresa Harriot [another founder of the group; she no longer teaches at Western], and the WAHS robotics students, where we showed potential new mentors the robots and what FTC was all about.” Western, Albemarle, and Monticello now each have three teams, Charlottesville High School has one team, and Henley and St. Anne’s Belfield have also started teams, bringing the total number of school-based teams in the area to 12. Gardner has seen first-hand the benefits that students reap from the program: “Kids get to see their math, science, and tech- nology skills applied in a fun and competitive way. They also get to work together in a team in a way that many academic extracurricular activities do not offer. Hopefully, this shows a lot of the kids that technical and engineering professions can be fun and causes them to consider technical and engineering career paths.” Bertrand also believes that working together on long-term projects benefits the students in many ways: “It helps students find peers with common interests, it helps them identify and confirm their interests, and it helps them learn critical thinking, problem solving, and technical skills while applying their creativity.” Not surprisingly, their biggest challenge has been learning to work together as a cohesive team. When the club was first formed, group discussions could get heated, with everyone trying to speak at once. Club president Dor Hananel, a founding member of the club, remembers those early days with a chuckle. “We had very passionate students, each with their own strong opinions,” he said. The solution? A talking stick—actually, a talking sword, made out of cardboard. “Whoever was holding the sword at the time could talk, and no one could interrupt them,” he said. Four years later, the sword isn’t used as often, but has still been known to emerge when discussions get too loud. Because the club gets no money from the school, it is constantly raising money to buy parts and pay for competition fees and travel expenses. The club has held fundraisers at Sal’s Pizza and was outside Brownsville Elementary on Election Day, selling baked goods and coffee while showcasing their robots. “We are grateful CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 to the local businesses and families that support our efforts,” Bertrand said. Companies who sponsor the teams have their logos displayed prominently on the robots and on the back of the club’s T-shirts. At the competitions, teams are also judged on their community outreach efforts and other real-world accomplishments. Western’s outreach, which they carefully detail with text and pictures in a large binder to present to judges, is extensive. They have conducted hands-on workshops and demonstrations for younger children at local schools, worked with Henley’s Robotics club, and provided mentorship and demonstrations at robotics ses- sions at the U.Va. science and technology camps for rising ninth and tenth graders. Clearly, the club is about more than just building robots. “We have the opportunity to not just design and build a robot, but to help the community and represent our school,” Larson said. Bertrand believes that being part of the club will give students the skills to succeed in whatever endeavor they choose. “Engineers tell us that these kids will be leaders in engineering school. Yet not all are going into engineering, some are going into artistic or other professions. This experience will help them grow in a fun and creative way.” Science ning of the story. Other effects, not measured in this study, may become apparent over time. For example, less transpiration, which naturally cools the tree canopy (like perspiration cools our bodies), may lead to higher temperatures near the ground. More efficient water use may lead to more surface runoff and flooding, or conversely, may result in more moisture ending up in groundwater. Who knows? What’s clear is that the carbon-based and water-based economies of large swaths of terrestrial vegetation are shifting in response to our changing the composition of the earth’s atmosphere. Until recently over the course of human history, we could go about our lives without consequence, blissfully ignorant of the presence, properties, functions of CO2, and our alteration of its concentration in the air. The biological and environmental impact of our economic activities powered by burning fossil fuels has grown, however, from local and negligible to global and transformative. We are dramatically increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere around the world and we are producing measurable impacts on the economy of life on earth. As more consequences emerge, blissful ignorance becomes less tenable. Next time, I will report on recent and surprising research findings that describe how the world’s tropical rainforests are responding and adapting to higher levels of CO2 in our atmosphere. —continued from page 22 openings of their leaf stomata. This in turn reduces water evaporation rates from their leaves. In the presence of higher levels of CO2, trees are drawing less water from the ground while still maintaining vigorous growth. Nature’s biological economy is built around CO2. The vibrancy and diversity of plants, indeed all organisms populating earth, depend upon and are influenced by the presence of carbon dioxide in the air. This study has shown that in boreal and temperate forests today, photosynthesis is stronger, uptake of carbon from the atmosphere is increasing, water use is down, and these changes principally have arisen from increased concentrations of CO2 in the air over the past couple of decades. This study also has reaffirmed that nature is surprising and complex. The adaptations occurring within these forests of the Northern Hemisphere have turned out to be greater than scientists expected. Our best theories and our finest, most sophisticated computer models did not predict the magnitude of the changes we see happening in these woodlands today. In the words of the Australian researchers: “The observed increase in forest water-use efficiency is larger than that predicted by existing theory and 13 terrestrial biosphere models.” And this is only the begin- Contact us today for a free consultation! 434-531-2108 kenco292@gmail.com 29 Chuck Kennedy, Owner, 1973 5792 St. George Avenue Crozet,VA 22932 Licensed/Insured • State Registered • Commercial & Residential Giving back is my way of saying “Thank you.” Larry Whitlock, Agent We’re all in this together. all in this State together. Farm® has a long tradition Clover Lawn Shops,We’re Crozet of being there. That’s one reason State Farm® has a long 434-971-9966 tradition of beingwhy there.I’m That's proud to support the www.larrywhitlockagency.com one reason why I'm proud toAlbemarle Community. Western support THE GLOW RUN CROZET ELEMENTARY Get toPTO a better State®. COMMUNITY. Get to a better State®. Larry Whitlock, Agent 325 Four Leaf Lane, STE 7 Charlottesville, VA 22903 Bus: 434-971-9966 www.larrywhitlockagency.com 1211004 1211004 State Farm, Bloomington, IL State Farm, Bloomington, IL David A. Maybee, DDS Family Dentistry $775,000,000 is the annual consumer spending on toothbrushes. Why not get a free one from your dentist? New Patients Welcome! 434-823-1274 No Babysitter? No Problem! Keep an eye on your children with our playroom cam crozetdentistry.com Ad design and copy provided in part by fifth graders at Brownsville Elementary School 540 Radford Lane, #100 • Across from Harris Teeter, behind BB&T in Crozet 30 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 BY DR. ROBERT C. REISER crozetannals@crozetgazette.com On Being More Judgmental CONVENIENT CARE Get in... & feel better Dr. Sudhir’s excellent article last month nicely highlighted the challenges to empathy that are ever present in the chaotic and unpredictable ER. Patients will indeed ignore the eminent doctor’s grand entrance while continuing to text or talk on their cell phones. I understand this; patients are busy and perhaps I have come at a bad time. I can always reschedule. Fortunately I have never seen anyone who is dying feel the need to text so I find such ostensibly rude behavior actually reassuring. I have enough to do sorting out the critically ill from the temporarily unwell and anything that makes that job easier is welcome. Another thing that makes it easier for me to discover serious illness is not vaccinating your children. It is the rare physician who could miss the characteristic rash of measles, for example. I suppose it is possible, though; the majority of doctors in the current generation have never seen a case of measles (rubeola or red measles). This is because measles was eliminated in the U.S. in 2000 thanks to a highly effective vaccine. Case closed. I liked having one less serious illness to worry about. And yet measles is back! Last year there were 644 cases in the U.S. The average has been about 60 cases per year for the last two decades, mostly cases imported by travelers from other countries where measles is still endemic. The majority of last year’s cases, 382 of them, were in a community of unvaccinated Amish people in Ohio. The Amish are known as plain people. They tend to avoid technology like cars and telephones, but also vaccines. The source of their outbreak of measles was an Amish missionary who had traveled (by plane, interestingly) to the Philippines and back. The Philippines has seen 60,000 cases of measles in a multi-year epidemic of measles. The wide world is full of measles to import home to the U.S. The Amish missionary did see his doctor in Ohio when he fell ill, but was misdiagnosed as having dengue fever. Three hundred and eighty one patients later I bet every physician in that community is now up to speed on diagnosing measles. And virtually all of the Amish HOURS: Monday-Thursday 8am-5:30pm Friday 8am-5:00pm X-Ray Services Available On Site LOCATED AT THE FOLLOWING WALMART SUPER CENTERS: 1028 RICHMOND ROAD, STAUNTON • 116 LUCY LANE, WAYNESBORO Mark Keeley, MD • Russ Sawyer, MD Amie Munson, MD • Peter Taylor, MD continued on page 37 New Patients Welcome! 434-823-4567 • 1646 Park Ridge Drive • Crozet CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Neighbor Law CLASSIFIED ADS © Alice Neff Lucan Picture You Shopping? Adding city-owned surveillance cameras to the Downtown Mall has prompted the American Civil Liberties Union and others to say these cameras will “invade people’s privacy.” The possibility of cameras being added in downtown Crozet also came up at the Crozet Community Association’s January 8 meeting. Well, guess what: there is no legal claim for invasion of privacy in the Commonwealth. And if we’re talking about cameras that are owned and operated by merchants, there is no tort claim. When law enforcement gets involved, another body of law surrounding the Fourth Amendment applies, but it is most likely to allow evidence of criminal activity to be taken from a government-owned surveillance video. Few (to none?) of the people bemoaning loss of “privacy” have explained that it is not a viable legal issue here in Virginia. The tort, “invasion of privacy,” is a state issue, not a federal constitutional issue. It was an invented tort, created by two law partners in Baltimore in 1890 who were offended when newspaper reporters (allegedly) crept through a hedge to crash a daughter’s engagement party. They wrote a law review article about the legal concepts and since then, nearly every state has adopted the invasion of privacy tort, but not Virginia and not New York. “Invasion of privacy” often means that an unwanted third party has taken an embarrassing photograph, intruded into a secluded place where there is a “reasonable expectation of privacy, ” or published intimate information that is not newsworthy. It might be joined with a valid claim for trespass, but no private citizen is trespassing when they are taking pictures from a public thoroughfare. The General Assembly did pass a law (Virginia Code 8.0140) that forbids one entity to use another person’s name, face or likeness for “advertising or 31 trade purposes.” The fact that the legislators had the choice to include other kinds of privacy claims when that law was written means those claims were rejected as law in Virginia, at least according to the Virginia Supreme Court. There are other types of claims. For example: if those government-owned Mall cameras record a conversation where the subjects show that they reasonably expected privacy, Virginia Code 19.2-62 (against illegal wiretaps) might be enforced against the merchants or it might be considered a violation of Fourth Amendment rights. The Fourth Amendment creates a federal right protecting citizens against illegal searches and seizures; “illegal” usually means that the police have not followed correct procedures. But there is no “procedure” required when government cameras are installed in public places. According to a 2011 decision from the Virginia Court of Appeals, “The United States Supreme Court has made it clear that a constitutionally protected reasonable expectation of privacy exists under the Fourth Amendment only if a person has a subjective expectation of privacy and if society recognizes that subjective expectation of privacy as reasonable.” In a decision in 1984 Supreme Court ruled: “[w]e conclude, from the text of the Fourth Amendment and from the historical and contemporary understanding of its purposes, that an individual has no legitimate expectation that open fields will remain free from warrantless intrusion by government officers.” “Open fields” are the legal equivalent of the Downtown Mall or any other public space. It is always the case that if you’re in public space, or in a place visible from public space (like your front lawn or at your bedroom window), or in the midst of a police action, there continued on page 37 Become a CAREGiver: Make a difference in a senior’s life! It takes a special person to be a Home Instead Senior Care CAREGiver, not a special degree. We are always looking for people who are dependable and compassionate to join our team. No experience necessary! Paid on-going training is provided. We provide services such as companionship, meal preparation, transportation, and personal care. Must be 21 years of age and consent to pre-employment State and National Background checks and Drug Screenings. Please call 434.979.4663 with any questions or fill out an application online atwww.homeinstead.com/532. GET FIT AND FEEL GOOD: Boot Camp for REAL People is an outdoor exercise class for all ages and abilities. This popular class is going on its sixth year of help- ing Crozet residents improve their health and get in shape. Make the decision to do something positive for YOU this year! Visit www.m2personaltraining.com for more information or call Melissa at 434962-2311. AM and PM drop in classes available. Try your first class for FREE! HELP WANTED: Looking for part-time cleaning person. Inquire in person, Monday Friday, 8:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.. Region Ten, 1205 Crozet Avenue. 823-9823. 17 YEAR OLD TWIN GIRLS available to babysit, dog walk and pet sit. Both drive and are Red Cross Certificated. Contact 434465-9019. WANTED grazing land for cattle in Crozet and White Hall area. Call Lowry Abell at 434-960-1334. Classified ads start at $16 (repeating) and include free online placement. To place an ad, email ads@crozetgazette.com or call 434-249-4211 Ever seen what your real estate agent takes from you? Keep more of what’s yours with our 1% business model for buyers and sellers of real estate. WE PAY BUYER CLOSING COSTS! FULL SERVICE REAL ESTATE. 1% COMMISSION For more information: EquitySaverUSA.com An Old Dominion Realty & Investment LLC company 32 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Hack Attack by Clover Carroll | clover@crozetgazette.com Like millions of perennially optimistic Americans, I started the new year by reading a diet book. With high hopes and renewed determination, I dove into the latest diet bestseller, recently featured on NBC 29 News: The Bulletproof Diet. Leaving aside for a moment the violent metaphor of the title, what caught my attention more than this new diet’s guidelines or recipes were the terms in which it was presented—that is, the words and ideas used to explain and sell it to the American public. The author, Dave Asprey, who describes himself as “an early innovator in the Internet (i.e., a hacker),” had become a Silicon Valley millionaire at a young age. Turning his computer skills and unconventional approach to solving the problem of his poor health and obesity, Asprey explains in his introduction that he “learn[ed] to hack my biology using the same techniques I used to hack computer systems and the Internet,” a process he dubs “biohacking.” You, too, he boasts in the book, can “biohack your diet to lose weight and upgrade your life.” Unfortunately, this diet didn’t work out too well for me. While I did lose some weight, the “bulletproof coffee with butter” touted on the cover made me sick to my stomach, and I got so weak that I ended up in bed with laryngitis. But it got me started on the path of weight loss, as well as on a fascinating word/concept adventure, so I can’t complain! I was struck by the application of the word “hacker” to this completely non-technological problem. It seemed out of place and gimmicky, as well as appearing to celebrate something I considered to be a criminal activity. But once I started looking around, I soon realized that this word is everywhere, a new trend, lending marketing cachet to everything it touches. I found myriad other contexts in which the word “hacker” and the concept of hacking have invaded our culture, becoming a kind of watchword of the 21st century zeitgeist. From Walter Isaacson’s new book The Innovators: How a Group of Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution, which chronicles the lives and careers of inventors and entrepreneurs such as Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, to the film Fifth Estate (2013) (with Benedict Cumberbatch as Julian Assange), society is suddenly fascinated with hackers. In my opinion, the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) should have chosen “hacker” as their 2014 word of the year instead of “vape” (i.e., smoke e-cigarettes). You can visit the blog lifehacker.com for “tips and downloads for getting things done,” with international editions in India, the UK, Japan, and Australia. When making flight reservations online, you just might get the best price by using Kayak’s trademarked “hacker fares,” touted on their Travel Hacker blog as “a new way to find deals on flights.” Academic computer conferences often feature “hackathons” in which attendees compete to design the best app or website, and public schools have begun creating “hacker spaces” where students can tinker with electronic programming tools like Arduino boards. And if you create something really cool, it might be featured in the online journal Hacker News. But wait! Aren’t hackers the worst kind of criminals? Aren’t they the perpetrators of cybercrime—think WikiLeaks, the Target and Home Depot data thefts, Chinese infiltration of U.S. companies, the Great Sony Hack of 2014, and many more? Since when did hackers become heroes? Temporarily outraged by this new glorification of criminality, I began to wonder where this word came from. What do “hack” and “hacker” mean, anyway? Among its several definitions—such as using a hoe to break up clods of dirt into small clumps--the OED now includes “a person with an enthusiasm for programming or using computers as an end in itself,” as well as one “who uses his skill with computers to try to gain unauthorized access to computer files or networks.” This is a truly schizophrenic set of definitions. But I was also amazed to notice that the usage examples of both meanings went back as far as 1976. With further research, I discovered that although this concept has long had a split personality and its definition is still the subject of heated controversy, the more positive connotation definitely came first. The use of “hack” as a computer term was first used by computer geeks at MIT in the 1970s to refer to computer programmers and hobbyists. Turns out, hackers have been heroes since the beginning! According to the website “How to Become a Hacker” by Eric S. Raymond (author of The New Hacker’s Dictionary), being a “hacker” has to do with “technical adeptness and a delight in solving problems and overcoming limits.” That’s a nice way of saying, of course, that hackers have an innate disregard for the rules, and that is one source of their success. My son Ben Taylor, who teaches computer music and digital media, defines hackers as people who build creative things with code. “In programming,” he explains, “we call something a ‘hack’ if it uses quick/dirty methods to accomplish a task quickly.” Raymond defines the original hacker community as “a shared culture of expert programmers and networking wizards.” Like the innovators celebrated in Isaacson’s book, these original hackers built the Internet. So I was dead wrong to think that marketing and education trenders have co-opted a criminal term to sell their products— it is actually the other way around! In the computer security context, a hacker is someone who seeks and exploits weaknesses in a computer system or computer network. This use of the term by the media didn’t really take hold until the 1980s. But Raymond and other “ethical hackers” strongly dissociate themselves from those who enjoy or profit from breaking into computers and stealing data. “Real hackers call these people ‘crackers’ [analogous to safecrackers] and want nothing to do with them.” The difference is that hackers build things, while crackers break them. Hearkening back to old Westerns, observers have identified those who use their hacker skills for positive ends as “white hats” and those who use them for nefarious purposes as “black hats.” While mainstream usage of “hacker” has mainly referred to computer criminals for many years, this is now changing and the original good-guy hackers are simply reclaiming the term. Raymond further broadens the concept by pointing out that “the hacker mind-set is not confined to this software-hacker culture. There are people who apply the hacker attitude to other things, like electronics or music—actually, you can find it at the highest levels of any science or art.” Eureka! This explains Asprey’s use of “biohacking” in the context of losing weight, as well as the application of the concept to airline fares and a range of other life problems. Still, I do think marketers play on the word’s double meaning to lend their products a certain bad boy cachet. To resolve the controversy about its meaning, we could think of “hacking” as a neutral term, referring to a collection of skills which can be used for either good or evil. While the media may portray the hacker as a villain, a book like The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (2012) by Stieg Larsson presents an independent, savvy heroine who uses her hacking skills and disdain for convention to put bad guys in prison. Perhaps it takes a good hacker to stop a bad one! The world has changed. While innovation—thinking in new ways about old problems— has always been a major American strength, today we are witnessing a new kind of innovation. Networking and computer mobility allow individuals to share creative and original ideas at lightning speed. The Internet, mobile devices, and soon-to-be-developed smart watches, smart cars, and smart houses offer seemingly unlimited opportunities for success. Startups—a play on upstart— are going mainstream and redefining how we live. So I say, hats off to the hackers! CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Lincoln: A Great Leader ACROSS 1 Laslo _____, eponymous inventor of the ball point pen 5 School org. for grownups 8 Scienctific settings 12 Special venue film format 13 TV streaming device 15 One who vents 16 Mayberry boy 17 _____ go bragh 18 Sidewalk eateries 19 One like Scrooge 22 Conscious coupling vow 23 Author Fleming or McEwan 24 Internet access corp. 25 Color for communists or Republicans 28 Point of balance 32 Full-bodied beer 33 British dance judge _____ Goodman 34 Skin flare up 35 State of matter 38 Boy 39 Poodle parasites 40 Turing or Alda 41 South Sea souvenir 42 Bali _____ 43 Some cemeteries 49 Letters for mind readers 50 FS Key preposition 51 Word with MGM lion 52 Republican acronym for Obama proposals coming to Congress 53 Very narrow view 56 _____ Martin, British sportscar 59 Jazz singer Fitzgerald 60 _____ quam videre: “To be rather than seem.” 61 Mild 62 Christian of fashion 63 Eeny meeny endings 64 Great lake 65 Important conjunction 66 Part of MIT DOWN 1 Daniel Day-Lewis plays Lincoln in one 2 Get in the way 3 Spoil, as in “_____ my parade” 4 Pulling team 5 Get ready 6 Gran _____ 7 Related 8 Prevaricator 9 Kennel call 10 Spelling contest 11 SAT takers 14 Free-range 15 Amtrak express train 20 Give in 21 Orchestra brass 25 Houston college 26 Europe’s largest active volcano Kids’ Crossword Across 3 Valentine shape 5 Valentine’s ____ 7 Valentine’s Day Month 10 Violets are ___ 12 ___ is sweet Down 1 Bouquet of ___ 2 Chocolates 4 Opposite of boy 6 Last word after 8 Down and 10 and 12 Across 8 ___ are red 9 ___ and kisses 1 1 Adore by Mary Mikalson Solution on page 39 33 Solution on page 38 by claudia crozet 1 2 3 4 5 5 12 13 16 17 19 20 22 23 28 29 31 32 35 36 6 7 8 14 8 9 15 9 10 11 25 26 27 15 18 21 24 32 37 30 31 33 34 38 40 8 39 41 42 46 43 44 45 46 49 50 51 52 56 56 53 57 54 58 61 66 64 60 62 66 63 27 Colorants 29 Pre-Columbian Caribbean people 30 Thrash wildly 31 Legal 35 Identical 36 Stadium shouts 37 Word after lava or oil 38 Erudite 39 Widely spoken Persian language 65 41 Property encumbrance 42 Cambridge university Lincoln did not attend 44 Boxing unit 45 Cowboy hat unit 46 Wizard of Menlo Park 47 Hanging implements 48 Most rational 53 _____ of voice 54 Director Kazan 55 Half prefix 48 55 59 6 47 66 56 Nickname of 16th president whose last name can precede first word in 19A, 28A, 43A, and 53A 57 Mirror/prism camera, now digital: Abbr. 58 Half of a rum cocktail Reverse Mortgages A Reverse Mortgage can significantly increase your quality of life in retirement years by eliminating debt and providing funds to keep up with the cost of living. 434-249-4080 TheReverseMortgageDoctor.com The Crozet Gazette is seeking a high school sports reporter. Contact news@crozetgazette.com 34 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 To Feed or Not to Feed: That Was the Question At my last talk of the season in Shenandoah National Park, an audience member asked me about bird feeding. He’d heard that this activity was linked to the increase in Lyme disease because it increased the number of mice around people’s homes. White-footed Mice serve as the main reservoir for Lyme bacteria. These microorganisms are transferred to people when larval ticks that have fed upon infected mice reach the nymph or adult stage of their life cycle and feed upon humans. (Ticks prefer deer, but people make an acceptable substitute.) The man was quite concerned about the possibility of contracting this illness, and he was rather upset that I didn’t agree that people should stop feeding birds. He felt that if people maintained the nature-friendly garden that I was advocating, they wouldn’t need to feed birds anyway. While it’s true that people could—and should—supply food to wildlife by properly landscaping their property, the reality is that very few people understand the value of replicating the natural world around their homes. Thus very few yards are truly capable of supplying food to birds and other wildlife. Bird feeding can help animals survive, especially during harsh weather when it’s absolutely crucial for them to have easy access to food. However, people should feed responsibly, which means understanding the consequences of their actions and addressing potential problems. You can avoid increasing mouse populations by simply putting out only the amount of seed that birds will consume in a day. An organism’s population can grow only if there is plenty of food to sustain its expansion. You can figure out how much to feed by checking the ground at the end of the day to assess how many seeds remain. It’s not a problem for some seeds to be on the ground; after all, the mice have to eat too! But there shouldn’t be an abundance of them. If necessary, cut back on how much you dispense in the morning. Some years ago, many ornithologists were also quite concerned about bird feeding and wanted people to stop. They worried about the spread of disease among birds in close contact day after day, and they also felt it made birds more vulnerable to predation by hawks. Again, such situations can be easily addressed. First of all, no feeder should be much more than 9-12 feet from shrubs and/or small trees, or at least a brush pile, where birds can have a chance to escape a hawk attack. That distance provides a barrier to prevent Gray Squirrels from jumping from the plants or brush pile to the feeder (a squirrel can jump about 8 feet horizontally), but it’s close enough for a bird to make a prompt dash to safety. If there aren’t woody plants near your feeder pole, you should consider placing a fast-growing evergreen (such as Photinia serrulata) close by. Evergreen shrubs and trees are better than deciduous woody plants as they provide cover all the year around. However, the best cover for birds is provided by a nearby brush pile. Small birds can navigate through the interlocking branches and twigs to reach the safety of the interior of the pile, while the larger hawk is unable to get through the small openings. [For a free brochure on brush piles that I wrote several years ago for the Virginia Department of Forestry, please contact me at marlenecondon@aol.com] To avoid the spread of disease Brightly colored American Goldfinches will visit feeders as well as plants to obtain the seeds they need throughout the year. (Photo credit: Marlene A. Condon) among birds at feeders, you should watch for sick animals. They can be recognized by their sluggishness and hesitation to fly away from food. If you notice a bird behaving this way, you should take down all of your feeders, empty them completely, and then wash them well with plenty of soap and water to wash away microorganisms. Rinse the feeders well and let them air dry completely, preferably in sunlight, before refilling them. Healthy birds will move off during this time to find food elsewhere (in your natural landscaping, I hope), and the sick bird will die more quickly, relieving it of its misery. In addition to believing that bird feeding can be quite helpful to birds, I also believe that birds—via bird feeders—can be quite helpful to us. More than 20 years ago now, I took care of my mother in my home for the last 11 months of her life. She had cancer and became bedridden about two months after I brought her to live with me. I had placed her bed where she could watch the bird feeder on the deck. I knew she needed something to entertain her and watching birds was just the ticket! Not only did my mom get to see birds she had never seen before, which she found interesting, but she also felt useful by filling the role of research assistant. Because I couldn’t stay right with my mother all day (there was plenty that needed to be done elsewhere in the house), she would give me a report about what I’d missed when I had been out of the room. I was thrilled to get her obser- vations as they added to my knowledge, and they provided us with wonderful conversations that could relieve us both of thoughts about her impending death. One of the most meaningful things my mother did for me under these heartbreaking circumstances was to call me whenever there was a photo opportunity. One photo, of a male Northern Cardinal bathing in my deck water pan, will always bring back that day so long ago when my mom helped me to get that bird’s picture. For some people, bird feeding has played a lasting role in family relationships under happier circumstances. Nancy, a birder I know by way of the Virginia bird list-serve, shared with me her experience as a very young child. Her grandmother would feed Blue Jays. She’d hold up Nancy, who wasn’t even three years old yet, to see the birds eating. To this day, Nancy loves Blue Jays. They are the first kind of bird she can remember being aware of and, of course, they will always make her think of her loving grandmother who introduced Nancy to a lifelong hobby. My only concern with this activity is when people start to believe that birds are somehow more precious than other kinds of wildlife, and then proceed to try to banish some species from around their homes. Your environment can only support birds if it contains a tapestry of organisms living and working together to fulfill their natural roles. If you want your feathered friends to live well, don’t try to make them live in a vacuum. CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 35 Crozet Weather Almanac JANUARY 2015 By Heidi Sonen & Roscoe Shaw | weather@crozetgazette.com Where is the Snow? When it snows a lot, people complain. When it doesn’t snow, people complain. This season has been the latter complaint. Through the end of January, just one inch of snow has fallen. We have recorded nine different days with snow this winter but the cumulative total is just one inch. We are constantly bombarded with the complaint that “It doesn’t snow like it used to.” Of course, last year had a whopping 37” of snow and 2010 was a record snow year with 53 inches, but memories are short. The 1960s were the snowiest decade here but otherwise, there appears to be no trend. So, will it snow this year? We can’t forecast snow more than a couple of days in advance, but the odds are we will get some. February is the snowiest month of the year here with an average of 6 inches. Statistically, the rest of the year brings us 10 inches of snow. Since 1950, there have been six years where we made it to Jan. 31 with an inch or less: 1950, 1986, 1992, 2009, 2012, and this year. The only year that was a complete skunk was 1992, when no snow had fallen and the season finished with just 2.3 inches. Only 1981 ended with less for a season. The other years, however, had nearly normal snowfall after the slow start. 2012 and 1950 rallied to finish the season over 10 inches and 2009 and 1986 produced a couple of decent snows late season. Overall, years off to a fast start do slightly better the rest of the year. But don’t despair, kids big and small, a sled-able snow will most likely come soon! January Recap Despite the lack of snow, January was cold with temperatures running two degrees below normal. Only four days failed to get below freezing and the coldest was 4 degrees on the 8th. Precipitation was frequent but light, finishing below normal with 1.78 inches. The infamous Crozet wind howled on a regular basis. Rainfall Totals Mint Springs Farm 1.78” Charlottesville Airport 1.70” Univ. of Virginia 2.84” Greenwood 1.74” White Hall 2.10” Nellysford 1.76” Waynesboro 2.87” Meet Dr. Garber, your hearing’s new friend. 1 FRIENDS • 57 FEBRUARY 8 • 10:30 A.M. The Field School • 1408 Crozet Avenue Fr. Joseph Mary Lukyamuzi Holy Comforter Catholic Church Call to schedule for a free hearing consultation and meet Dr. Tammy Garber, Au.D. New office now open in Crozet! Join in! Email crozetmass@gmail.com 580 Radford Ln, Ste 106 Charlottesville (off 250 W in Crozet) HearingHealthAssoc.com 434.422.3169 36 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 BEREAVEMENTS Jayne Rauch Tietz, 91 Perry Alan Hopkins, 87 Anne Page Via Wayland, 88 Ann Griffith Dublirer, 66 Lisa Ann Elledge, 49 Barbara Jean Dillard Ford, 59 Mary Ann Chappell, 74 Warren Rockwell Lambert Jr., 68 David Paul Kavanaugh, 83 Bobby Franklin Minter, 65 Justin Michael Frazier, 24 Charlie Austin Gray, 82 David Crenshaw Mahone, 87 Virginia May Haney Tomlin, 96 James Brady Murray, 94 Hatcher Tyree Witt, Jr., 74 Margaret Gabler Bibb, 92 Kenneth Lee Fisher, 64 Grace Jeanette Moss Barnett, 89 Arthur Tracy Coogan Jr., 91 Frederick Taylor Dove, 72 Robert Bruce Baumgartner, 75 Robert Allen Shiflett I, 67 Mary Frances Wood, 69 Russell F. Burnley, 66 Therese Ruth Meslar, 87 Mildred Alice Collins Wood, 91 Willie Beezal Via, 89 Mary Anna Loughridge Rushia, 92 Bernadette M. Mullin, 78 David Smither Spicer, 84 Minnie Coleman Sullivan, 99 Benjamin Hamilton Powell, 63 Thomas Clayton Inskeep, 72 Phillip Leslie Jordan, 61 Herman Wayne Blankenship, 73 Eugene Pannill Brooking, 80 Lorraine C. Brown, 82 Virginia Herron Dodd, 89 Kathryn Rittenhouse Hall, 87 Ida Davis Defibaugh, 70 Mary B. Fields, 93 Margaret Desire Boggs Meek, 81 Ruby Jane Walton, 93 William F. Suter Jr., 74 Zada Izetta Jackson Wells, 77 Robert Horan, 78 Lawrence McDaniel, 98 David Deaderick Stone, 82 Leslie Suzann Diehl, 50 Bobbie Jeannine Hamrick Bowyer, 85 Margaret Ann Houchens, 66 Hazel Hughes Hickman Phillips, 90 Russell Edward Thurston Jr., 78 Patricia B. Francis, 78 McKinley Hobart Herring Jr., 81 Mary Pope Hirsch, 80 December 12, 2014 December 25, 2014 December 26, 2014 December 27, 2014 December 27, 2014 December 27, 2014 December 29, 2014 December 29, 2014 December 31, 2014 December 31, 2014 January 1, 2015 January 1, 2015 January 1, 2015 January 1, 2015 January 2, 2015 January 2, 2015 January 4, 2015 January 4, 2015 January 5, 2015 January 5, 2015 January 6, 2015 January 7, 2015 January 7, 2015 January 7, 2015 January 8, 2015 January 8, 2015 January 8, 2015 January 9, 2015 January 10, 2015 January 12, 2015 January 12, 2015 January 12, 2015 January 14, 2015 January 15, 2015 January 15, 2015 January 16, 2015 January 16, 2015 January 16, 2015 January 16, 2015 January 16, 2015 January 17, 2015 January 17, 2015 January 19, 2015 January 19, 2015 January 21, 2015 January 22, 2015 January 23, 2015 January 23, 2015 January 23, 2015 January 24, 2015 January 25, 2015 January 25, 2015 January 26, 2015 January 26, 2015 January 27, 2015 January 27, 2015 January 28, 2015 Ann Louise Nice Ann Louise Nice aka ‘Weezie’ passed peacefully from this life the morning of January 19 after a gradual decline in health. She was surrounded and supported by her loving family and caregivers during the last days of her life. She is survived by her siblings and their spouses Butch and Diana Moldenhauer, Mouse and ‘Willy’ Williams, John and Ann Moldenhauer and Paul and Barbara Moldehauer, her son Eddy Nice and wife Martha, her daughter Diana Keeton and husband Josh and her 5 grandchildren Jasmin, Shane, Jeremiah, Alex and Samantha. She was preceded in death by her parents, Ernest and Ethel Moldenhuer and brother, Peter Moldenhauer. Weezie was an amazing daughter, sister, mother, grand- mother. She lived 71 awesome years full of love, compassion, support, adventure and faith. She will be greatly missed and never forgotten. She will be laid to rest in the town of Carolina Shores, NC where she retired for 15 years and played many games of golf and bridge. Therese Ruth (Horton) Meslar Therese Ruth Meslar, 87, of Charlottesville, died Thursday, January 8, 2015 in the loving arms of four generations of her family. She was born to the late George and Agnes Horton, May 14, 1927, in Racine, Wisconsin. Terri graduated from Horlick High School in 1945. She was married to Robert Joseph Meslar Sr., her husband of 65 years, and they moved to the Charlottesville area in 1993 after raising their family in New Jersey and Wisconsin. Terri was the beloved matriarch of her family, instilling the values of love, faith and community in all of her children and grandchildren. Whether it was through her incredible cooking or bright humor, it was impossible not to feel her love. Many of her favorite dishes have become as treasured as family heirlooms. She loved everything Wisconsin including a good cheddar, O&H Danish Bakery and the Green Bay Packers. She also volunteered at the Martha Jefferson Hospital gift shop for five years. Terri is survived by her husband and children: Debbi Meslar-Little and her spouse Jack Little, and Robert Meslar Jr. and his spouse Mary Meslar, of Crozet; Larry Meslar of Barboursville; Roger Meslar and his spouse Patti Meslar of Chicago Ridge; and Jerry Meslar of Albion, Wisconsin. She is also survived by her sister, Annella Gedemer, of Racine; 13 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. She was preceded in death by her daughterin-law Laurel Meslar, spouse of Larry. The family is requests that donations be made to the Blue Ridge Area Food Bank, P.O. Box 937, Verona, VA 24482 or the Dolores Dalton Mallo Nursing Scholarship Fund. Gazette obituaries are only $25 for up to 500 words, including a photograph. Call 434-466-8939 or emails ads@crozetgazette.com for details. CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Law Medicine would be no claim for invasion of privacy anywhere. But let’s say you’re buying a bottle of wine while you’re enrolled in Alcoholics Anonymous and have promised the world you will not drink again. Casting cautious glances over your shoulder, you sneak into the wine store and place your purchase in a Belk bag. Then that very videotape is used to explain to the public how the surveillance program works and your guilty-looking face is framed against the wine shop sign. Or, if you’re engaged in an affair and are indiscreet enough to make an assignation at a restaurant, then a television crew bursts in to report on health code violations, no matter how embarrassing or damaging those pictures might be, there is no cause of action in Virginia. If you’re under the hair dryer or at the barber shop, you might think those are private places, but in Virginia you would have no invasion of privacy claim. In those places, the Fourth Amendment might set up an argument against police surveillance, but predicting such an outcome, without supporting case law, would be fraught with peril. Unlike last month’s discussion on trespass, privacy law is frequently NOT the product of common sense, especially in Virginia where we have no “invasion of privacy.” Disclaimer: Don’t use this information as legal advice. Ask a lawyer who takes you as a client and can get your specific facts first hand. The tiniest Circumstance can change any outcome. got vaccinated after seeing what measles looks like first hand. What does measles look like? Fever up to 105 degrees with cough, coryza (runny nose) and conjunctivitis (pink eye)—the three C’s that herald the onset of the disease before the dramatic spotted rash spreads from the face to the torso and then to the limbs. Patients are contagious as much as four days before the characteristic rash shows up and for about four days afterward and, by the way, it is the most contagious disease in the world. The virus is spread by respiratory droplets from person to person. The virus remains infectious in a room for two hours after an infected person has left the room. The transmission rate is an astonishing 90 percent among the unvaccinated. The overall mortality rate is 3 percent (lower in the U.S.) and the complication rate is about 30 percent. Complications include severe pneumonia and encephalitis (inflammation of the brain). There is a vaccine, the MMR, given in two doses, that is 99 percent effective at preventing rubeola, but a surprising number of parents are choosing to not vaccinate their children. There are likely several reasons for this, but the most common reason is the belief that vaccines are not safe. The most famous anti-vaccine advocate is Jenny McCarthy, a Playboy Playmate and reality show B-list actress. She believes that vaccines cause autism. No reputable medical authority supports that belief. And so measles has roared back. Already in 2015, one —continued from page 31 —continued from page 30 Serving Western Albemarle Families Since 1967 Robert S. Anderson & John W. Anderson, Jr., D I R E C T O R S 823-5002 5888 St. George Avenue Crozet, VA 22932 month into the year, we have 98 cases spread out over 14 states, almost all of it in unvaccinated kids exposed at Disney Land in California. Most of the unvaccinated children’s parents are affluent and highly educated, the demographic most associated with the anti-vaccination movement. While a healthy child may ultimately do well after contracting measles, he or she is risking spreading it to contacts who may be immuno-compromised by age (very old or very young), illness, or transplant patients, whose mortality can then be as high as 55 percent. Here at home in Crozet we had a long hiatus from the measles. In fact until 2011 we went for twenty-one years without a single case of measles in the Thomas Jefferson Health District. Twenty-one years without a case of measles! In 2011 we did have a small outbreak of measles in Crozet in unvaccinated children. A rigorous quarantine and vaccination campaign halted that outbreak but many kids missed the last two weeks of the school year. Parents have to choose who to believe, Ms. McCarthy, 1993’s Playboy Playmate of the Year, attractive no doubt, but possessing no scientific training or background, or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization, the AMA, the American Academy of Pediatrics, The American Red Cross, UNICEF, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and the National Institutes of Health, who all have declared vaccines crucial for the health and safety of our children and completely refuted the link between vaccines and autism. But perhaps neither Jenny McCarthy nor the AMA holds much sway over the average parents. Perhaps we need to look to a more familiar advisor, someone like Roald Dahl, beloved children’s author (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Fantastic Mr. Fox). Here is his open letter to parents regarding measles: “Olivia, my eldest daughter, caught measles when she was 37 seven years old. As the illness took its usual course I can remember reading to her often in bed and not feeling particularly alarmed about it. Then one morning, when she was well on the road to recovery, I was sitting on her bed showing her how to fashion little animals out of coloured pipe-cleaners, and when it came to her turn to make one herself, I noticed that her fingers and her mind were not working together and she couldn’t do anything. ‘Are you feeling all right?’ I asked her. ‘I feel all sleepy,’ she said. In an hour, she was unconscious. In twelve hours she was dead. The measles had turned into a terrible thing called measles encephalitis and there was nothing the doctors could do to save her. That was twenty-four years ago in 1962, but even now, if a child with measles happens to develop the same deadly reaction from measles as Olivia did, there would still be nothing the doctors could do to help her. On the other hand, there is today something that parents can do to make sure that this sort of tragedy does not happen to a child of theirs. They can insist that their child is immunized against measles. I was unable to do that for Olivia in 1962 because in those days a reliable measles vaccine had not been discovered. Today a good and safe vaccine is available to every family and all you have to do is to ask your doctor to administer it. Incidentally, I dedicated two of my books to Olivia, the first was James and the Giant Peach. That was when she was still alive. The second was The BFG, dedicated to her memory after she had died from measles. You will see her name at the beginning of each of these books. And I know how happy she would be if only she could know that her death had helped to save a good deal of illness and death among other children.” 38 CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Crozet Gazette Business Card Ads Crozet Readers’ Rankings Last Month’s Best Sellers at Over the Moon Bookstore ADULT We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves Karen Joy Fowler The Boys in the Boat Daniel James Brown McAllister Painting All the Light We Cannot See Anthony Doerr Licensed and Insured Over 20 Years Experience - Free Estimates Deep Down Dark: the Untold Stories of 33 Men Buried in a Chilean Mine, and the Miracle That Set Them Free Hector Tobar All aspects of painting Interior and Exterior Gutter Cleaning & Power Washing “No job too small” Call Todd at 434-960-4775 The Girl on the Train Paula Hawkins Start your day with a look good, feel great, got-my-stride-on-and-you-love-it confidence. Join us at 5:50am and 8:50am for pulsepounding, beat-pumping fitness program that gets your results... fast. Jane Rogers 434-466-9933 jazzercise.com MATT ROBB CHILDREN/YOUNG READERS Phone: 434.531.6060 Fax: 888.251.3406 EMail: matt@robbconstruction.com The Flying Beaver Brothers and the Hot Air Baboons Maxwell Eaton III 8803 Dick Woods Road Afton, VA 22920 www.robbconstruction.com Nuts to You Lynne Rae Perkins Class A Lic. #2705073818A The Girl From Felony Bay J.E. Thompson ALL ENGINES POSSIBLE Theodore Boone: The Activist John Grisham New location! 6037 Rockfish Gap Turnpike, Crozet Allie Marshall Pesch Open Monday - Friday 9 am - 6 pm; Saturday 8 am - 1 pm; Closed Sunday Rain Reign Ann M. Martin Quality Work | Affordable Rates 434.823.8392 434.953.7931 cell RECOMMENDATIONS alliepesch@gmail.com 434.249.4211 alliepesch.com www.allenginespossible.com Recommended by Anne: Adult: The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins Children: Writer to Writer by Gail Carson Levine Recommended by Scott: Adult: The Work: My Search for a Life That Matters by Wes Moore MBING & EXPERT HOME R EPA ET PLU Z O IR CR A E I R E I D A N D L B A L L E T S A V L E U N N P S E O N T M E THE MASTER MULTITASKER Emergency Service 24-7 434-882-FIXN R GIVE ME YOUR LIST Priceless Estimates PMI Charlottesville P.O. Box 2796 Charlottesville, VA 22902 Office: 434.326.4786 www.pmicville.com Cell: 434.270.5586 michael@pmicville.com A L S O E O I M O R L A N L N E C D O I P E D I L A T I N N E I X M A I O R B O P I E Y E L L O E R P I R F E G I A C H N U I S E O N I S D O A E N S I S A E L E N C A I R L T E Y D R C A A T S A V E E S S A S E R D F R N M O N A O N O K T H A D A N P R G A I L E R A R A I N D O R I L F R A E E B S R S CROZETgazette FEBRUARY 2015 Add yours for as little as $45 a month! Insight Meditation (Vipassanā) www.whitehallmeditation.org Beginner and Experienced Meditators Welcome Crozet’s Favorite Flicks What’s hot now at Maupin’s Music and Video Top Rentals in January The Equalizer Efficient Works, llc Breathe easy knowing your house is safe from Radon Chris Farrish Certified Radon Specialist chrisfarrish@efficientworksllc.com 434-953-6399 EfficientWorksLLC.com NRSB Certification number 13SS064 | Crozet, VA (Action with Denzel Washington) Guardians of the Galaxy (Sci-fi with Chris Pratt) This is Where I Leave You (Comedy with Jason Bateman) The 100 Foot Journey (Rom Com with Helen Mirren) Gone Girl (Thriller with Ben Affleck) Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Family with Megan Fox) Boyhood (Drama with Patricia Arquette) AcrossfromMusicToday&NexttotheLaundromat 434-823-4523 P.O. 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They learned the history of the capitol building. “Like when the ceiling fell in and killed 60 people during Reconstruction,” Thacker offered. “[The General Assembly] is sort of like middle school,” said Thacker. “There are groups [of representatives] and they are all trying to get things done. It wasn’t what I expected, but it makes sense. I don’t know how they pass laws because the [political parties] are mostly even.” Pages are summoned by representatives through a “button” system, they said. “Usually it’s taking things to their office,” said Thacker. “I really like it,” said Brown, “but some senators are rowdy. Some are really funny. They’re all nice.” “They like to mess with us and tease us,” said Thacker. “We get to go bowling with [Lt. Governor] Ralph Northam. There’s a basketball game between the delegates and the senators and we make posters for that and cheer.” At the end of the session, there is a mock session where delegates and senators switch roles with the pages. “I think [the people of Virginia] are in good hands,” said Thacker, who noted that because the session is available on the Internet through live-streaming, citizens can judge for themselves how well the legislature is performing. “You learn a lot about the parts of Virginia” as a page, said Brown, who is now friends with pages from Northern Virginia and Southwest. “I’m definitely more interested in politics,” she said. “I’m also interested in law. It’s cool to see the Courts of Justice committee.” “I’d look into public office for sure,” agreed Thacker. “What I like is you have to work together and deal with your differences and be sure the laws work.” Palm Oil —continued from page 27 Phone: 434-823-1420 Fax: 434-823-1610 DOUG SEAL & SONS 39 magazine reported that in response to consumer pressure and shortly after the UN climate conference in New York this past September, Cargill CEO David MacLennan pledged to green his company’s palm oil. Unilever and Nestle’s strengthened their green commitment to sustainable palm oil as well. Twenty other companies, including Kellogg’s and Proctor & Gamble, committed to zero deforestation in their consumer products. Thirty other companies including McDonald’s and Walmart have agreed to eliminate deforestation from their supply chain by 2020. One may ask why not 2015? I will be anxious to hear that forthcoming monitoring systems are effective in enforcing palm oil “greening.” Consumer concerns have become global. Consumers have integrated their health concerns into those of environmentalists and farm laborers to restore our fragile planet. I’ll stop here. My optimism remains limited. February is the time to start lettuces and Brassicas. Color Lock technology matters. ® Exceptional resistance to fading and scrubbing makes our paint extraordinarily irresistible. Only Benjamin Moore® offers Color Lock Technology, for truer, richer colors that are extremely fade resistant and washable. And with a Benjamin Moore store in your neighborhood, it’s incredibly convenient too. Visit benjaminmoore.com brbs.net Charlottesville 434.964.1701 Crozet 434.823.1387 Real People... 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