C-VILLE.COMWEEKLYARTSANDNEWSCHARLOTTESVILLE’S20226,SEPTEMBER–31AUGUST AMOSEZE all TogetheR The Bridge's new Executive Director Jay Simple thinks public art should be made by and for the community now VOL. AUGUST 31 2022 WWW.C-VILLE.COM CHARLOTTESVILLE ALBEMARLE, FLUVANNA, GREENE, LOUISA,MADISON, ORANGE, AUGUSTA30 The TownofShowsMadisonOff 2022 INSIDE GEN NOW! A monthly guide to aging gracefully Charlottesvillein PAGE 16






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6August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly P.O. Box 119 308 E. Main Charlottesville,St.Virginia 22902 Facebook:www.c-ville.comfacebook.com/cville.weekly Twitter: @cville_weekly, @cville_culture Instagram: @cvilleweekly Charlottesville’s News & Arts Weekly CIRCULATION: 20,000 WEEKLY
C-VILLE is published Wednesdays. 20,000 free copies are distributed all over Charlottesville, Albemarle, and the surrounding counties. One copy per person. Additional copies may be purchased for $1.99 per Unsolicitedcopy.news articles, essays, and photography are carefully considered. Local emphasis is preferred. Although care will be taken, we assume no responsibility for submissions. First-class mail subscriptions are available for $140 annually. ©2022 C-VILLE Weekly. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written of the publisher. Press Association
EDITORIAL EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Richard DiCicco richard@c-ville.com NEWS REPORTER Brielle Entzminger reporter@c-ville.com CULTURE EDITOR Tami Keaveny tami@c-ville.com COPY EDITOR Susan Sorensen EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Maeve Hayden INTERN Eshaan Sarup CONTRIBUTORS Rob Brezsny, Amelia Delphos, Matt Dhillon, Carol Diggs, Shea Gibbs, Mary Jane Gore, Will Ham, Erika Howsare, Justin Humphreys, Kristin O’Donoghue, Lisa Provence, Sarah Sargent, Jen Sorensen, Julia Stumbaugh, Courteney Stuart, Paul Ting, Sean Tubbs, David Levinson Wilk DESIGN AND PRODUCTION ART DIRECTOR Max March max@c-ville.com GRAPHIC DESIGNER Tracy Federico designer@c-ville.com ADVERTISING advertising@c-ville.com ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Gabby Kirk (434) 373-2136 gabby@c-ville.com ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Annick Canevet annick@c-ville.com, Lisa C. Hurdle classyexec@c-ville.com, Brittany Keller brittany@c-ville.com DIRECTOR OF EVENTS & MARKETING Stephanie Vogtman REAL ESTATE WEEKLY Beth Wood (434) 373-0999 PRODUCTIONbeth@c-ville.comCOORDINATOR Faith Gibson ads@c-ville.com BUSINESS PUBLISHER Anna Harrison anna@c-ville.com CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Debbie Miller debbie@c-ville.com A/R SPECIALIST Nanci Winter (434) 373-0429 CIRCULATION MANAGER Billy Dempsey circulation@c-ville.com C-VILLE HOLDINGS, LLC Bill Chapman, Blair Kelly INSIDE THIS ISSUE V.34, No. 35 NEWS 11 12 Concern over police chief survey. 13 Meet WillowTree’s first diversity officer. 15 Alzheimer’s Foundation grant allows county to expand Project Lifesaver. CULTURE 21 23 The Working Pour: Cheers to area breweries’ Virginia Beer Cup wins 24 Extra: The Bridge’s new exec director on the power of art. 27 Galleries: What’s on view this month. CORRECTION In this year’s Best of C-VILLE magazine, Atlantic Coast Mortgage should have been listed as Best Mortgage Lender, and Animal Connection should have been listed as Best Pet Supply Store, with Crate & Marrow as the runner-up. We regret the errors. 36 Sudoku 37 Crossword 38 Free Will Astrology CLASSIFIED 39 Real Estate Weekly Page 43 AMOSEZE 24
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THIS
Instagram: @EquitySaverUSA
I love talking to artists. I’ve had many opportunities to chat with creative individuals throughout my career, and they continue to be among the most fascinating people I meet in life. While I consider myself an artist through my fiction and poetry, it’s altogether different conversing with someone like Simple, who has multiple arts degrees and an impressive span of professional work. And while he’s got plenty to be proud of, he enjoys talking about what other people bring to the arts scene, and how the community can be activated and engaged in the arts.
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IN CHARLOTTESVILLE CELEBRATING 14
The article is about the new mural at Ix Art Park, its powerful message—“There are Black people in the future”—and the organizers who made it into a community-driven project. Featured is Jay Simple, the new executive director of The Bridge Progressive Arts Initiative, who I was delighted to interview.
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Hello, Charlottesville! Thank you for reading C-VILLE Weekly. I’m happy to say that I wrote our cover story this week (p.24), and it was a joy to be back at the keyboard working on a longform piece again.
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Our fruitful conversation yielded plenty of topics that I couldn’t reasonably accommodate within the article. In particular, Simple talked with passion about his efforts to reach out into Charlottesville’s “vibrant artistic community”—a crowd that includes anyone who creates, from gardeners to bakers. His interpretation of what it means to lead a creative life is radical; he sees The Bridge not as a beacon to rally artists around, but as a vehicle for outreach, understanding, and support. I think he’s really on to something.—Richard DiCicco WEEK
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WATCHVALLEYMOUNTAIN PHOTOSUPPLIED
The commission’s August 5 order approving the 176-turbine wind farm—now temporar ily suspended—contained a performance guarantee, which would prevent Dominion from charging customers for replacement energy “if the Project does not generate the amount of electricity upon which Dominion bases its request.” Anyone who objects to Do minion’s petition must file a response by September 13, then the utility company will have until September 22 to respond to argu ments. If the farm moves forward, it is ex pected to be completed in 2026. PHOTOSUPPLIED
The executive director of the Police Civilian Oversight Board will conduct a “neutral evaluation” of the 2020 violent arrest of a man on the Downtown Mall.
Location,location,locationPAGE15
11August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_weekly
NEWSINBRIEF
According to Aguilar in an email to C-VILLE, before Fogel and the CPD could meet with hearing examiner Cecil Creasey for the alternative dispute resolution, “[city attorney Lisa Robertson] expressed con cern that: 1) Mr. Creasey’s contract with the Board only allowed him to serve as a hearing examiner and not an ADR facilita tor and 2) while the ordinance and interim hearing procedures mention informal resolution, the City Council had not yet passed the operating procedures which specify the process for ADR resolutions.”
I n July, Charlottesville’s Police Civilian Oversight Board was scheduled to hold its long-awaited first hearing concern ing the 2020 violent arrest of a man experi encing homelessness, but on the day of the hearing, complainant Jeff Fogel, a local at torney, and the Charlottesville Police De partment agreed to an alternative dispute resolution after Fogel claimed that board members Jeffrey Fracher and Bellamy Brown were biased against him. Last week, there was another change in plans—PCOB Ex ecutive Director Hansel Aguilar will conduct a neutral evaluation of the case.
After reviewing the CPD’s investigative files and meeting pri vately with the two parties, Aguilar will decide if the department “thoroughly, completely, accurately, objectively, and impartially” in vestigated Fogel’s claims that the unnamed officer assaulted, kicked, and used a chokehold on Gonzalez, as well as Fogel’s concern over the appropriateness of Gonzalez’s arrest and felony charge.
The State Corporation Commission is recon sidering forcing Dominion Energy to include a ratepayer protection in its plans to build a wind farm off the coast of Virginia Beach, after the utility company filed a petition last week claiming the protection would cause financial losses and force it to scrap the $9.8 billion project, reports the Associated Press.
Russell Chisholm, co-chair of the Protect Our Water, Heritage, Rights Coalition, on the Mountain Valley Pipeline’s four-year extension
PCOB director to review first case
Hansel Aguilar
Fogel believes the case is an example of the unjust criminaliza tion of people experiencing homelessness and poverty, particu larly on the Downtown Mall. “The officer told him, ‘If you leave the mall, I won’t arrest you.’ … If we had the same rules for the mall as we have for the rest of the town, he wouldn’t have been arrested,” says Fogel. The attorney hopes Aguilar’s decision will clarify the CPD’s policy regarding intoxication on the Downtown Mall, as well as highlight the need for a downtown center where people can sober up—and not get arrested or jailed. Addition ally, Fogel wants to prevent CPD officers from filing felony charg es against residents “just because [the police are] angry.” Aguilar will issue his decision by September 28. The CPD will have 10 days to respond to the report, then Fogel will have 10 days to follow up. The report and responses will be posted on the PCOB website.
MVP developers will have four more years to finish the controversial 303-mile natural gas pipeline.
“This project should never be built, and this decision subjects our communities to prolonged harm.”
“In an attempt to preserve the spirit of the parties’ willingness to resolve this matter informally and to honor Mr. Fogel’s con cerns [about] … ‘hostilities’ he has been subjected to by Board members, I proposed utilizing the neutral evaluation option,” added Aguilar. After Fogel and the CPD agreed to the neutral evaluation, the board adopted a resolution allowing Aguilar to review the complaint on August 18. Fogel filed his complaint against the CPD in July 2020, after a Charlottesville police officer arrested 36-year-old Christopher Gonzalez, who had been lying down on the Downtown Mall. After Gonzalez admitted to drinking alcohol, and said he was homeless, the officer threatened to arrest him for public intoxication unless he left the mall, which Gonzalez refused to do. The officer tried to handcuff him, but he pulled away. The officer then pinned Gonzalez to the ground, and put him in a headlock for nearly a minute, according to a now-deleted Instagram video. Gonzalez was later charged with felony assault of a police officer, and was held without bail for almost three weeks at the local jail. Though Gonza lez’s charges were later dismissed, in September 2020 the CPD ex onerated Fogel’s allegations of excessive force and concluded that the allegations of bias-based policing were unfounded.
Up in the air
Pipeline extendeddeadline
Federal regulators have given the developers behind the Mountain Valley Pipeline four more years to complete the controversial 303-mile project, which would carry natural gas from West Virginia to southern Virginia. The pipeline, initially set to be completed in 2018, now must be finished by October 13, 2026. Since the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved the $6.6 billion proj ect in 2017, activists concerned about the pipeline’s environmental impacts and legal violations have fought the project in court, causing construction delays. The developers hope to have the pipeline completed by next year, but must first secure three federal per mits that have been repeatedly denied, ac cording to The Roanoke Times.






When asked about the accessibility con cerns surrounding the online survey and community outreach, Mayor Lloyd Snook said in an email that although he has not personally been involved in the police chief search, he has “confidence that the process will include lots of community input at the outset, application of that input to the winnowing process, an opportunity for a diverse set of viewpoints during that win nowing process, and an opportunity for the finalists to be presented to the public before the decision is made.”
The survey, which closed on August 22, first asked respondents if they were a Char lottesville resident, student, city business owner, employed within the city, or living in a neighboring jurisdiction, requiring city residents to specify which neighborhood they live Respondentsin. selected what they consider the most important public safety issues in the city: not enough police presence, trust of the police, improved police response times, more personal connections with police officers in their neighborhood, ac cess to crime data, drugs, vandalism, bur glaries/theft, violent crime, or other. They then chose what the top focuses should be for the next chief: more police presence, accountability for actions, agency that is professional, foster awareness and respect for cultural differences, or other.
NEWS (Not) reaching out
Echoing concerns she’s heard from other Black residents, Parker is increasingly wor ried that the outreach process will leave out Black and brown residents, when the city should be seeking the most input from communities who’ve been disproportion ately harmed by police.
As the police chief search continues, the activists urge POLIHIRE to host multiple in-person engagement events with com munity leaders. “They need to be out in the community talking to the people, because they will never know what we truly want unless they talk to us,” says Turner.
City Councilor Michael Payne said in an email that the outreach process will specifi cally include one-on-one meetings “with stakeholders and leaders from across the community,” as well as potentially “a focus group of stakeholders who could help vet finalist candidates. … Some of these meet ings have already occurred, but they’re still being scheduled. If anyone has in mind a specific community group/individual they believe should be included, they can let City Council/the city manager’s office know [and] a meeting can be set up.”
“I don’t have Wi-Fi where I can take my computer out in the community and sit and ask them these questions.”
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Sarah Burke, who served on the initial Police Civilian Review Board, also thinks the questions did not feel tailored to Char lottesville’s needs, and were “skewed to wards the assumption that more policing improves public safety.”
Community members express concerns over police chief survey, outreach process
By Brielle Entzminger reporter@c-ville.com A
“You got a lot of the elders that are ask ing what’s going on with the search for the new police chief, and I’m like, ‘They want it online,’ and they’re like, ‘Online? I can’t do it online!’” says local activist Rosia Parker. “I don’t have Wi-Fi where I can take my computer out in the community and sit and ask them these questions.”
Though the city hopes to select a new chief by November, “we’ll make the decision when we’re ready. … I don’t intend to rush the decision,” said Snook.
Besides an improved online survey, Parker, Turner, and Burke think POLIHIRE should have created a paper survey, in addi tion to sending outreach workers into the city’s neighborhoods. The city also could have sent the surveys along with utility bills in the mail, and installed drop-off boxes in different neighborhoods, suggests Parker.
fter firing former Charlottesville police chief RaShall Brackney last year, the City of Charlot tesville has finally begun looking for her replacement. In July, it paid D.C. executive search firm POLIHIRE $35,000 to assist interim City Manager Michael Rogers with recruitment, interviews, and other aspects of the selection process. The firm launched an online survey August 2 asking community members what they would like to see in the next chief, and the survey’s results will be used to create a recruitment profile. However, some community members are concerned that certain populations—those that lack access to adequate internet, or a computer—were unable to take the online survey or didn’t know about it at all, par ticularly people experiencing homelessness, elderly folks, youth, illiterate people, and low-income residents.
Respondents also identified what leader ship qualities—including diversity, com munity concern, integrity, and commu nication—and what type of experience they think the next chief should have— including a track record of building and maintaining community relationships, and anti-racist policing policies—as well as shared how satisfied they were with the relationship between Charlottesville police and the community. Lastly, the survey asked respondents to give “one piece of advice” to the future police chief.
ROSIA PARKER, LOCAL ACTIVIST
The City of Charlottesville has begun searching for a replacement for former CPD chief RaShall Brackney.
12August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_weekly
Reading the first few questions upset lo cal activist Katrina Turner, deterring her from completing the survey. “These are things that the community has been asking for for a long time. They’re paying someone to ask the questions that we’ve been ask ing,” she says.





Kelli Palmer becomes WillowTree’s first diversity officer
By Eshaan Sarup news@c-ville.com
“It’s hard at first,” she acknowledges. “Then over time, it’s like, ‘Oh, you’re gonna underestimate me too? Here I come.’”
Palmer encourages women interested in STEM to “do it all, go to a hackathon and code, try it even if you don’t know how to do it.” Citing Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000 hours thesis, she emphasizes that nobody becomes an expert overnight— consistency is key. “If you’re the only girl, so what?” she says. “If it’s interesting to you, keep showing up.”
Breakingbarriers
Since starting her new job as WillowTree’s chief diversity officer, Palmer has begun developing a North Star program for diver sity, equity, and inclusion, which she hopes will set an example for other companies. “That means doing this work in ways that not just impact the way we think about talent and the people who work here, but also how we live in community,” she says. Palmer aims to look at everything through the lens of ESG—environmental, social, and governance—with a strong emphasis on WillowTree’s environmental impact. She believes businesses have an obligation to protect and conserve the environment, and plans to expand sus tainability efforts at the tech firm, which is a member of the Community Climate Collaborative.“Ifwe’rethinking like a business, we want to have employees, and they need to have an earth that they can exist on,” she says. “If you and I and our neighbor down the street and other people recycle, and the business recycles, then we’re in a space where we can make an impact.
W
13August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_weekly NEWS
illowTree has always been sort of an enigma: It used to have a reputation for being what Kelli Palmer calls “this tech firm in the Downtown Mall where everyone wore matching hoodies.” But the 14-year-old, rapidly expanding tech company is actu ally “a digital consultancy” that “works with businesses to strategize around and to build their digital landscape,” including apps, software, and websites.
Palmer earned a bachelor’s degree in elementary education from Elon Univer sity (where she now serves on the board of trustees), a master’s degree in counselor education from Wake Forest University, and a Ph.D. in higher education adminis tration from UVA. She’s also received graduate certificates from Boston College and Harvard University, and has studied at Oxford University. As a Black woman in tech, Palmer is in an extremely underrepresented minority: Black women account for only 3 percent of all women in tech. When she gradu ated from college and entered the profes sional space, Palmer “didn’t often ques tion whether I should be there,” but did wonder “how effective I was going to be able to be if other people didn’t want me there.” Palmer soon realized she had to be “willing to be the person that walks up and extends my hand, even if the other person is not walking towards me with that same gesture.”
“If you’re the only girl, so what?”
KELLI PALMER, WILLOWTREE
Kelli Palmer hopes the diversity, equity, and inclusion program at WillowTree will be an example for other companies.
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15August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_weekly NEWS
“It’s all about providing … a little peace of mind that if they do wander, then we can quickly locate them,” says Albemarle County Sheriff Chan Bryant. She says many of the 39 children and adults cur rently enrolled in Project Lifesaver in Albemarle have autism, Alzheimer’s, or some other form of dementia. According to the Alzheimer’s Association, six in 10 people living with Alzheimer’s will wander at some point in the progression of their disease. A study published in the jour nal Pediatrics found that about half of par ents whose children have autism reported wandering behavior. That same study found that 65 percent of those incidents involved a close call with traffic. Nearly a quarter involved some risk of drowning. In the Buckingham tragedy, Landon “Waldy” Raber wandered away around 8pm on Sunday, July 10. A massive search fol lowed, with volunteer fire departments, the Virginia Department of Emergency Man agement Search and Rescue, and Virginia State Police scouring the area. The search ended in heartbreak when Raber’s remains were discovered in a pond on the family’s property the following day. Lt. Bo Jamerson with the Buckingham County Sheriff’s Office says another trag edy was averted earlier in the year when a 10-year-old with autism became lost. That child was enrolled in Project Lifesaver, and his parents alerted authorities who located the boy within 20 minutes.
Bryant says her department has received five or six Project Lifesaver call-outs this year, all of which ended with the missing person located safely. One of those people is Sunita Singh’s 75-year-old father, who suffers from de mentia and has repeatedly become disori ented and lost on occasion. A software engineer, Singh tried to keep tabs on her father by providing him with a cell phone that could be tracked. The downside of that method: He made repeated international calls to people he didn’t know, racking up hundreds of dollars in phone bills that she had to dispute. A family doctor introduced her to Project Lifesaver, and she signed up to have her father tracked.
Alzheimer’s grant expands Albemarle County tracking program
“I’m so glad that we did this,” she says, not ing that Project Lifesaver has already located her father multiple times in the past year.
W hen a 6-year-old boy with autism was found dead after he wandered away from his Buckingham County home last month, officials there urged the media to publi cize Project Lifesaver, a program that outfits people at risk for wandering with a tracking device that can be used to lo cate them. A $6,000 grant from the Al zheimer’s Foundation of America is now allowing Albemarle County to expand its PL program.
Sheriff Chan Bryant says a $6,000 grant will allow the county to purchase more Project Lifesaver transmitters and bracelets.
The Alzheimer’s Foundation grant will allow the purchase of more bracelets and transmitters, says Bryant. It costs about $300 per tracker, and the program is free to community members diagnosed with a qualifying condition. For more informa tion, call 972-4001. Courteney Stuart is the host of “Charlottesville Right Now” on WINA. You can hear inter views with Albemarle County Sheriff Chan Bryant and Lt. Bo Jamerson at wina.com.
SCHUBERT Rosamunde Overture HUMMEL Bassoon Concerto with Elizabeth Roberts, Bassoon MAZZOLI Sinfonia (for Orbiting Spheres) BRAHMS Hungarian Dances SAINT-SAËNS “Bacchanale” from Samson and Delilah UVA Arts Box artsboxoffice.virginia.eduOffice434.924.3376 Tickets Very Special Thanks to Benjamin Rous, Music Director Kate Tamarkin, Music Director Laureate Saturday, September 24 Old8:00pmCabellHall Mask optional Sunday, September 25 3:30pm Martin Luther King, Jr. Performing Arts Center Mask optional Best Classical Music Group
By Courteney Stuart courteney@c-ville.com
OFFICESHERIFF’SCOUNTYALBEMARLE
Saving Lives






16 GEN NOW SeniorNavigatingC-VILLE’sMonthlyGuidetoLivingOptionsinCentralVirginia Engaged. Included. Valued. Jefferson Area Board for Aging jabacares.org Respite & Enrichment Centers JABA offers an inclusive community where we fully embrace and value members through activities, socialization, and intergenerational connections— all in a safe and secure environment. And for loved ones, a comprehensive support system so you can go to work, or simply have some time for yourself— with peace of mind. Personalized, weekday enrichment for adults with dementia or disabilities: Engaging Supportive,activitiestrained staff Nutritious lunch and snacks Affordable, with scholarships available Call today to schedule a visit. Charlottesville (434) 817-5235 Louisa (540) 500-5961



20226,September-31August17 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_cultureCONTINUE YOUR LIFE STORY WITH US ANTHOLOGY OF CHARLOTTESVILLE 343 Archer Ave. / Charlottesville, VA Independent Living / Assisted Living / Memory Care AnthologyCharlottesville.com RSVP BY SEPTEMBER 5: 434-218-5102 Grandparents’National Day Friday, September 9 4 – 6 pm You’re invited to capture your whole family in a professional portrait and preserve the cherished images forever. To celebrate National Grandparents’ Day, every family will be treated to a complimentary mini photo session. You’ll want to tour our brand-new community while you’re here. This will be a socially distanced event. Masks required.





yourself
18August31-September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture
the
Sandwich Generation Feels the Squeeze
Indeed, experts agree - without community and government sup port, an emphasis on self-care, and a willingness to share feelings about the struggles of caregiving, the po tential for caregiver burn-out only increases.Sowhat can those in Sand wich Generation do for help, be sure of first, and Davidchange.McNair tions,
now? Reach out
to take care
handles communica
media relations, and social media efforts for JABA. At Our Lady of Peace, the health and well-being of our residents remains—as always—our top priority. Welcoming new residents! Call today to learn more about the compassionate care, lovely apartments, wonderful amenities, and active, family-oriented lifestyle that makes our community one-of-a-kind. What Residents Are Saying “Here I feel safe, loved, respected, and not alone.” Barbara Allison, Our Lady of Peace Resident 434-973-1155 MemoryResidential751our-lady-of-peace.comHillsdaleDr.|CharlottesvilleLiving•AssistedLivingCare•NursingCare Coordinated Services Management, Inc. Professional Management of Retirement Communities Since 1981 small friendlypet (434) 985-4481 422 William Mills Dr. | Stanardsville, VA Call and schedule your tour today! Follow our community!Premiertheharboralf.ccAssisted Living and Memory Care
We’ve been hearing about the “Sandwich Generation” for some time: people, mostly women, caring for children under 18 and older rel atives at the same time. But it has now reached a point, according to a Pew Research Center survey con ducted in October 2021, where near ly a quarter of adults in the country (23%) are dealing with this situation. And that percentage is expected to increase. By 2040, nearly 1 in every 5 people in Virginia will be older than 65. Meanwhile, weak parental leave policies, a lack of subsidized child care, and the increasing cost of elder care (along with a shortage of care professionals) are putting the squeeze on the Sandwich Gen eration.Forexample, UVA employees who pay for a long-term care benefit through Genworth are in for a shock this October. Under pressure from insurance companies, the Virginia State Corporation Commission ap proved a 51.9% increase in their long-term care premium costs. For others with long-term care insur ance in Virginia, the premium in creases have been even greater, as much as 150% for some. Why the increases? Because insurance com panies understand what 1 in every 5 people in Virginia being older than 65 means – more people are going to need expensive care, and more claims. The federal government has recognized the problem as well, re cently passing the Inflation Reduc tion Act, which will cap prescription drug costs at $2,000 out-of-pocket annually for Medicare recipients and allows seniors earning less than 150% of the federal policy level to receive the full low-income subsidy benefit. Previously, seniors earning that amount received only partial benefits. But many feel more needs to be “Thisdone.isonly a first step in the right direction,” said Avenel Joseph, vice president for policy at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, after the Act was signed into law by Pres ident Biden. “Congress must renew efforts to extend the expanded Child Tax Credit, create a national paid family and medical leave stan dard, create affordable and stable housing, and, finally, provide health insurance for those left behind in states that haven’t expanded Med icaid.”Unfortunately, for too long we have normalized the idea that it’s a family’s responsibility to take care of their own, but family dynamics have changed -- people are having children later, and have been for some time, and overall family size in our country has been growing smaller. Many parents and families simply don’t have the time or the financial resources to care for chil dren and aging relatives at the same time. And while plenty of mid dle-class families are feeling the strain of this, the dynamic falls es pecially hard on poor and margin alized people in our society. Never mind the emotional strain of caring for people we love. Never mind being torn between the re sponsibility of addressing the needs of your child and the obligation to care for a parent who once cared for“Nothingyou. can be hidden from me, because I’m managing everything,” a mother in Maine who lives with her aging parents and two teenage daughters told Parents Magazine recently. “On my bluer days, I feel extremely squeezed and scattered at the same “Emotionaltime.”labor requires our whole being,” said Jessica Stern, Ph.D., a psychology researcher at the University of Virginia, in the same article. “It asks us to be emotionally regulated ourselves, to have emo tional intelligence about other peo ple, and to have a lot of self-control.”
advocate for









20226,September-31August19 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture ROSEWOOD VILLAGE ARE YOU READY TO ENJOY DISCOVERY CLUB SAVINGS CALL TODAY TO LEARN MORE & SCHEDULE YOUR VISIT (434) 205-9465 www.RoseWoodVillage.com | Celebrating more than 39 years of Caring | Let’s keep in touch FI/RoseWoodVillage HOLLYMEAD | 2029 LOCKWOOD DRIVE, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA | GREENBRIER | 500 GREENBRIER DRIVE, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA Two Awarding Winning Locations in one great place called Charlottesville.










20August31-September6,2022 c-ville.com We need volunteers who love animals! Email:Laundryvolunteer@caspca.orgRummageStore GreetersLobby WalkersDog434-973-5959caspca.orgx303







Celebrate friendship and love, and learn a few life lessons too, at a Steel Magnolias Drag Brunch. Don any shade of “blush and bashful,” tease up your hair, and enjoy the sweet Southern drawls of Dolly Parton, Shirley MacLaine, Olympia Dukakis, and Sally Field as they navigate life in a small town. Munch on brunch classics, sip on coffee and cocktails, and make sure to arrive early for a live pre-show performance from local drag queens Bebe Gunn and Cherry Poppins.
Following a demonstration from festival artistic director Timothy Summers, a randomly selected group of volunteers will have the opportunity to feel how music is made and heard through the use of a six-dimensional audio and visual VR environment. Other festival highlights include performances of classical masterpieces and modern works by top musicians, as well as a special outdoor concert at King Family Vineyards. Time, price, and location vary. cvillechambermusic.org
Jason Isbell is often called the best singer-songwriter of his generation. His lyrics conjure ghosts, beckon brighter futures, and offer an intimate look at the human condition that comes from time spent successfully battling his own demons. After six years with rock band Drive-By Truckers, Isbell went solo, making his own blend of rock with a Southern twist, accompanied by backing band The 400 Unit. Georgia Blue, Isbell’s most recent album, is an homage to the state’s pivotal role in the 2020 election. Featuring guest artists like Béla Fleck and Brandi Carlile, the record consists of 13 covers of songs with ties to the state, including tracks from R.E.M., Indigo Girls, and The Allman Brothers Band. $49-79, 7pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com
PHOTOSUPPLIEDPHOTOSUPPLIED
31August21–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly
SUNDAY 9/4
STEEL A MOMENTSFEW
SUNDAYCULTURE
THROUGH SUNDAY 9/18
TAKING THE REINS
PICTURESTRISTAR
9/4
Music is multidimensional at Mozart in Virtual Reality: Music as Immersive Experience, a special presentation as part of the Charlottesville Chamber Music Festival
HEAR IT TO SEE IT
$13.27, 12:30pm. Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, 5th Street Station. drafthouse.com






Daily Tour of Indigenous Australian Art. See listing for Wednesday, August 31. Free, 10:30am and 1:30pm. Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of UVA, 400 Worrell Dr. klugeruhe.org High Contrast: Drive An action drama about a mysterious Hollywood stuntman and mechanic who moonlights as a getaway driver, and finds himself in trouble when he helps out his neighbor. $8-10, 7pm. Violet Crown Cinema, 200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. violetcrown.com
CULTURE THIS WEEK Wednesday 8/31 music
Live Music. Live music every Saturday at the winery. Free, 5pm. Eastwood Farm and Winery, 2531 Scottsville Rd. eastwoodfarm andwinery.com Miles Pearce. Performing live in chard. Free, 2:30pm. Albemarle Cider Works, 2545 Rural Ridge Ln., North Garden. albemarleciderworks.com Night Teacher Duo. Enjoy Labor Day at tasting room with live music, cider, and food. Free, 5:30pm. Potter’s Craft Cider, 1350 Arrowhead Valley Rd.
Fridays After Five: 100 Proof Band. 100 Proof Band and Show brings an array of local musicians that collectively blend a broad range of music, to produce one sound. Free, 5:30pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com Live Music at the Winery. Performance at the outdoor terrace bar. Free, 5pm. East wood Farm and Winery, 2531 Scottsville Rd. eastwoodfarmandwinery.com Music on the Lawn. Join Cake Fight for an evening of modern pop and classic rock, benefitting On Our Own of Charlottesville. Donations encouraged, 6pm. The Shops at Stonefield, 2100 Hydraulic Rd. shopsat stonefield.com SummerStage No. 10: Scott Miller. The roots-rock singer-songwriter was recently inducted to the East Tennessee Writers Hall of Fame. $10-25, 6pm. The Blackburn Inn and Conference Center, 301 Greenville Ave., Staunton. blackburn-inn.com words Friday Night Writes: A Reading Series for Emerging Writers. Performing short sto ries, poetry, and music. Free, 7pm. New Dominion Bookshop, 404 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. ndbookshop.com classes Kizomba Fridays. A bi-monthly social in Kizomba and related dances. Free, 8pm. Ashtanga Yoga of Charlottesville, 906 Mon ticello Rd. @core4kizomba etc. Magic: The Gathering. A casual evening with multiple formats, including draft, mod ern, legacy, and pioneer, and prizes for par ticipants. $5, 6pm. The End Games, 374 Hillsdale Dr. theendgames.co Daily Tour of Indigenous Australian Art. See listing for Wednesday, August 31. Free, 10:30am and 1:30pm. Kluge-Ruhe Aborig inal Art Collection of UVA, 400 Worrell Dr. kluge-ruhe.org
the or
Berto and Matt. Performing Brazilian and Latin treasures. Free, 7pm. The Bebedero, 225 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. the bebedero.com Wavelength trio. A midweek music boost. Free, 6:30pm. The Whiskey Jar, 227 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thewhiskeyjarcville.com Wednesday Night Karaoke. Jen DeVille hosts this weekly song party. Free, 9pm. Rapture, 303 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. rapturerestaurant.com dance Dance with SwingCville. Learn vintage swing dance. $5-10, 7pm. The Front Porch, 221 E. Water St. swingcville.org outside Farmers in the Park. Local farmers with seasonal produce and meats, cut and potted flowers, baked goods, hot meals, value-add ed products, prepared food, and crafts. Free, 3pm. Farmers in the Park, 300 Meade Ave. charlottesville.gov Wind Down Wednesday. Acoustic music, food trucks, and a stunning Charlottesville sunset. $5, 6pm. Carter Mountain Orchard, 1435 Carters Mountain Trl. chilesfamily orchards.com etc. Daily Tour of Indigenous Australian Art. Explore the only museum devoted to Indige nous Australian art in the U.S. Free, 10:30am and 1:30pm. Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Col lection of UVA, 400 Worrell Dr. kluge-ruhe.org Thursday 9/1 music Berto and Vincent. A night of wild gypsy rumba and Latin guitar. Free, 7pm. The Bebedero, 225 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thebebedero.com outside Summer Celebration Series: First Thurs days. Featuring live music from Skribe, drinks from Starr Hill Brewery and Veritas Winery, food trucks, and games. Free, 5pm. Boar’s Head Resort, 200 Ednam Dr. boars headresort.com Sunset Market. Explore local vendors’ fresh produce, grab dinner from a food truck, enjoy artisan goods, make art at the outdoor art room, relax with a craft cocktail in The Look ing Glass, and more. Free, 4:30pm. Ix Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. ixartpark.org Sunset Thursday. Enjoy a glass of wine from the outdoor terrace bar while listening to live music. Free, 5pm. Eastwood Farm and Winery, 2531 Scottsville Rd. eastwood farmandwinery.com Tailgate Thursdays with The Pollocks. Enjoy a laid-back evening in the vineyard with live music, wine, oysters from Salty Bottom Blue Oysters, and BYO lawn games, picnic blankets, and food to grill. Free, 6pm. Stinson Vineyards, 4744 Sugar Hollow Rd., Crozet. stinsonvineyards.com Thursday Evening Sunset Series. Live music, food trucks, Carter Mountain wine, Bold Rock hard cider, and a beautiful view of the sunset. $10, 6pm. Carter Mountain Orchard, 1435 Carters Mountain Trl. chiles familyorchards.com etc. Arts From Underground. Artmaking, drinks, and karaoke inside The Looking Glass. Free, 7pm. Ix Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. ixartpark.org
22August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly
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potterscraftcider.com CONTINUED ON PAGE 26 FIRST FRIDAY Opening reception: Friday, September 2, 5:30-7:30PM SEPTEMBER EXHIBITIONS September 2 - October 2, 2022 201 Second Street, NW | Charlottesville | 434.295.7973 Tuesday - Saturday: 10am-6pm | Sunday: 1-5pm mcguffeyartcenter.com Maryanna Williams Vessels Williams: Vessel Ten reduction linocut McGuffey Members Group Show Reflections: From the Physical to the Metaphysical Mary Jane Check Good Humor: A Mini Show of Happy Art Jennifer Billingsly & Anuja Jaitly There is another world, but it is inside this one.
Saturday 9/3 music Berto’s Brunch. Join Berto and Vincent for brunch and wild gypsy rumba and Latin guitar. Free, 11am. Tavern & Grocery, 333 W. Main St. tavernandgrocery.com
local
Friday 9/2 music









South Street Brewery Second place, Wood: Barrel-Aged Satan’s Pony South Street has brewed Satan’s Pony Red/Amber ale since the brewery’s very beginning, and it has always been popular. The barrel-aged version spends time in bourbon barrels, and the result is a big, flavorful, higher-alcohol beer with lots of body and hops, caramel, oak, and vanilla flavors.
Blue Mountain Barrel House Third place, Experimental: Raspberries in Acid This is an imperial witbier brewed with lactobacillus, and fermented with one pound per barrel of raspberry purée in wine barrels from Thatch Winery (recently purchased by Michael Shaps Wineworks). It’s a popular beer, and the brewery holds an annual release party for it.
Decipher Brewing Second place, Strong Ale: Artemis In addition to winning the overall Cup, Decipher’s Artemis wheat wine took home second place in the Strong Ale category. While wheat wine is not as well known as other styles, it is popular among some craft brew lovers. Brewing it involves a labor-intensive process and uses a portion of wheat in its grain bill (in addition to barley malt). The Artemis is a sweet, malty, high-alcohol beer that’s smooth and balanced on the palate. Of note, this beer also won a bronze medal at the World Beer Cup competition, the largest beer competition in the world with over 10,500 entries from 57 different countries.
Blue Mountain Brewery Second place, Pilsner: Classic Lager The name of the beer truly speaks for itself, as this checks off every box when you think of what a tradition al lager should be.
Local VirginiabigbreweriescraftwinattheBeerCup
Sept.Sept.Friday23,2022Saturday24,2022 20th TournamentTennisAnnual
To Benefit Women’s Health and Breast Cancer Prevention In Our Community at Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital
theyieldspre-prohibition-styleBMB’srecipealightaroma,grassyhops,andsweetgrainsonpalate.
Decipher Brewing’s Barley Late Kölsch won Best in Show at the Virginia Craft Beer Cup competition.
By Paul H. Ting living@c-ville.com
Grab a racquet and join us at seven clubs around town for tennis and pickleball to fight breast cancer and women’ssupporthealth at Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital
A ugust is Virginia Craft Beer month and, as part of the celebration, the Virginia Craft Brewers Guild hosted the annual Virginia Craft Beer Cup competition. This year, a record 106 brew eries submitted 396 beers, and several Charlottesville-area breweries won sig nificant awards (see below). Noteworthy among local winners is Three Notch’d Brewing Company’s firstplace award in the Hazy IPA category for its King of Clouds Juicy IPA, and Decipher Brewing’s Best in Show win, grabbing the Cup for its Barley Late Kölsch. The King of Clouds is a flagship brew at Three Notch’d, and something that brew master Dave Warwick is proud of. Hazy IPAs are extremely popular with consumers right now and, as a result, it is one of the event’s most competitive categories. Three Notch’d brews its winning hazy with Idaho 7 and Citra hops, resulting in citrus and tropical
Blue Mountain Brewery Third place, Fruit: Drink a Peach This is a classic gose recipe that is sour fermented with peach purée. A crisp, light-bodied beer, it is full of the aromas and flavors of peach that then transition into a tart, sour flavor on the palate with some slight salinity at the finish.
South Street Brewery First place, Fruit: Blues Buster Of note, Blue Mountain Brewery acquired South Street Brewery in 2014, so the Blue Mountain Brewery family essentially received both the first and third place awards in the Fruit category this year. That’s quite a showing considering the competition received entries from all over the state. Their Blues Buster beer is a very popular sour-fruited gose fermented with blueberry purée. Unfortunately, this beer isn’t available in distribution, but cans are available at breweries. For fans of the Blues Brothers, the can’s art will bring a smile.
31August23–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly THE WORKING POUR
Wallace, an accomplished brewer in his own right, helped found local homebrew ing club Charlottesville Area Masters of Real Ale in 2007. During his 23 years of homebrewing, Wallace won several local and regional homebrewing awards, includ ing the one that resulted in his collabora tion with Decipher. Wallace has assisted Burton with brewing Barley Late several times since 2019, and is very excited that the resulting Kölsch is now recognized across the state.
mjhfoundation.orgRegisterstartingJuly1,2022atmjhfoundation.org/in-the-pinkHostedbyTheWomen’sCommitteeofMarthaJeffersonHospitalFoundation
Thirstplace
fruit aromas and flavors that combine for a smooth, sweet mouthfeel and delicate finish. The winning Decipher brew, in addition to being a significant accolade for co-found er and head brewer Brad Burton, is also a nod to the Charlottesville homebrewing community. Burton says that Barley Late had its origins in 2019 when homebrewer Tom Wallace won the Stanardsville Oktoberfest homebrew competition, sponsored in part by Decipher. The prize included the chance to brew the beer through Decipher’s com mercial system and release it to the public. On brew day, the shipment of barley had not yet arrived, and they had to scramble to find some. Just after they started brewing, there was a knock on the door and the original order was delivered, hence the name.
WILLIAMSTRISTAN
Raising a glass Charlottesville-area breweries pour it on to win at the Virginia Craft Beer Cup




While Simple acknowledges that the mu ral itself can’t change the struggles of fami lies in Friendship Court, he knows the pow er of the work is in how it activates the community. The Ix mural was made not by a single artist but by 2022 Soul of Cville attendees, who had the opportunity to par ticipate in group painting sessions. The artwork features a dotted outline of an Air stream, as it was initially to be a communi ty-led ideas board for what the vehicle should look like, but clearly that shape couldn’t contain the enthusiasm of the art work’s many contributors.
24August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly
“I was one of the first people to get to paint on that wall, and it felt liberating,” says Jones, who painted the words “Phoenix Rising” and “Stronger, wiser, better” on the wall as a refer ence to overcoming the deadly Unite the Right rally, which marked its fifth anniversary the same weekend as the festival. But like many local events, Soul of Cville and the Charlottes ville Mural Project sought to uplift the com munity on a somber weekend. “That was what my theme was because of August 12, about resilience and unity and rising up from ashes and coming back strong, better, and wiser.”
The Bridge’s new executive director on the latest Ix mural
AMOSEZE
“[If] you’re gonna put a mural somewhere ... it needs to be a conversation with the public as well.”
“They were all painting on that wall and acknowledging that, being Black, we have things to offer, we have a presence, and we’re not going anywhere,” says Jones. “And we’re to be celebrated just like the rest of the world is to be celebrated. And here’s a mural to re mind you of it.”
So, as Simple puts it, when someone goes for a jog, or heads out to grab something to eat, they’ll see that message from the street: “There are Black people in the future.” And unlike a statue that glares down at them, or a massive wall painting done by a single hand, it’s a group effort designed to uplift. Instead of imposing or advertising or direct ing, the mural insists. It beckons, it encour ages, it has a conversation with the viewer. And that’s its true power.
Simple was enamored with the arts from a young age. He was born in Chicago and grew up in Philadelphia, and as a child, his creative interests ran the gamut—he played saxophone, drew, and took up photography and theater, anything to express himself. And his parents encouraged his interest in the arts, which Simple considers an acknowl edgment by them that “engaging with some clay or having to think about an idea and get it down on a piece of paper … are all these lessons that you can apply to the great er goals that you have in life.”
Simple’s belief in independent creative liberation is at the core of his character as a leader. He believes that arts institutions like The Bridge are just one part of a thriv ing artistic community in a city, rather than an epicenter where what he calls “cap ital-A” art happens. And he considers the new Ix mural to be an example of the kind of relationship he hopes to have with Char lottesville, by “bringing art to the public where they’re at, and making it accessible for them to be able to engage with. But also to make that engagement something that can be meaningful for the people that have to see it on a regular basis.”
Jay Simple, the executive director of The Bridge Progressive Arts Initiative, sees Ix Art Park’s new community-made mural as a message to the surrounding neighborhood: “I see you.”
By Richard DiCicco richard@c-ville.com
For Jay Simple, the new executive director of The Bridge Progressive Arts Initiative, which shepherds the Charlottesville Mural Project, the visibility of Wormsley’s quote from the street is paramount. The park sits across from Friendship Court, an affordable housing community, and so the work was carefully considered for its potential audi ence. “If you look at the current situation with gentrification in Charlottesville, you see they are actively, within that communi ty, fighting for their right to be there,” says Simple. “So the idea of being able to see that wasn’t anything more for me than a way to be able to say ‘I see you.’”
At a glance, Simple is a photographer. He earned his BFA in photography from Co lumbia College Chicago, a master of liberal arts from the University of Pennsylvania, and an MFA in photography from the Rhode Island School of Design, in addition to hold ing a photo teaching position at The New School in New York (along with appoint ments at Longwood and VCU). But as an artist, Simple has never settled on a single discipline, preferring instead to keep a prac tice that incorporates elements from all sorts of mediums and traditions.
T here’s a new wall mural at Ix Art Park. It’s an explosion of colors, shapes, and symbols. There are words of advice—“Be humble”—and state ments of power—“Black women built this,” “Lesbian pride.” It’s made of hearts and rainbows and flowers and peace signs. And above it all, a bold and insistent proclama tion: “There are Black people in the future.” The quote by artist Alisha B. Wormsley calls to onlookers from across the street in large white letters. It’s a prophecy and a gesture of solidarity, advocating for more than just a Black presence in humanity’s far-off cosmic future, but also for Black lives and Black relevance in the near future—the future of changing neigh borhoods and redrawn districts.
CULTURE EXTRA Art from the future
JAY SIMPLE, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE BRIDGE Jay Simple
“The mural stands out to me because we did it together,” says Khalilah Jones, an Ix Art Park board member and image consultant.
There’s a more abstract idea behind the mural, however, something that speaks to the nature of arts institutions and of pub lic art itself. As executive director of The Bridge, Simple is particularly concerned with what role an arts organization plays in a community. Public art can sometimes impose, either by being built without lo cal input or by being physically obtrusive. The many Confederate monuments that have dotted the South are painful exam ples of this, as artwork that antagonizes and ignores communities. But, in other cases, even galleries can be unwelcome and considered agents of gentrification. Repairing that communication break down is key to Simple’s philosophy. “I come into this position with the thought process that [if] you’re gonna put a mural somewhere, it can’t just be an en deavor between the institution and the art ist, but it needs to be a conversation with the public as well about what’s going there,” says Simple, “because just two people can’t possibly parse out all the feelings one may have when they come to that public art.”
AMOSEZE
“Anything really that comes to mind, I give myself the agency, like, ‘Hey, I wanna do that, I can be a painter,’” he says.




31August25–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly AMOSEZE



WHY SHOULD WE CARE ABOUT WHAT WE WEAR? This is the and we’re all town.about ON STANDS NOW!
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Geeks Who Drink Trivia Night. Useless knowledge means everything at this au thentic homegrown trivia quiz. Free, 8pm. Firefly, 1304 E. Market St. fireflycville.com
This shirt makes me feel bold, flowy, and free. was originally worn by my uncle, then my dad, then passed down me. This green wrap dress symbolizes love, calm, and feeling soothed. was gift from my husband, and reminds SCHOOLING THE EMOTIONS
CULTURE THIS WEEK
Gin & Jazz. Brian Caputo Trio performs in the hotel lobby bar. Free, 5:30pm. Oakhurst Hall, 122 Oakhurst Cir. oakhurstinn.com Jazz Connection. Jazz quartet playing stan dards and originals with occasional guest performers. Free, 5pm. Starr Hill Brewery Tap Room, 5391 Three Notched Rd., Crozet. starrhill.com outside Summer Celebration Series: Music Mondays. Live music from Matt Johnson, and complimentary access to the one-acre putting course. Free, 6pm. Birdwood Bar & Grill, 410 Golf Course Dr. boarshead resort.com
All about town. SUMMER 2022 A BOUQUET A WEEK | IX'S NEW IT MAN | BETTERING BLACK BUSINESS
26August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly
Saturday 9/3 22
words Bigger than Buckets. Join Amaka Agu gua-Hamilton (Coach Mox), UVA’s Women’s Head Basketball Coach, as she discusses the team’s culture on and off the court. Free, 10am. Online and Alumni Hall, 211 Emmet St. S. engagement.virginia.edu
Phil Casey. Performing a mix of familiar, deep cut covers and originals. Free, 2:30pm. Albe marle CiderWorks, 2545 Rural Ridge Ln., North Garden. albemarleciderworks.com Sundays at the Winery. Mimosas, awardwinning wine, cider, beer, food, and live music. Free, 1pm. Eastwood Farm and Winery, 2531 Scottsville Rd. eastwoodfarm andwinery.com etc. Daily Tour of Indigenous Australian Art. See listing for Wednesday, August 31. Free, 10:30am and 1:30pm. Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of UVA, 400 Worrell Dr. klugeruhe.org
The shoes wore when sharing Empathable with the chief medicine at Mass. General Hospital. Wearing them, feel playful, brave, and daring.
Josh Mayo’s Tunesday Tuesday. A bi-week ly jam session with local artists. Free, 9pm. Rapture, 303 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. rapturerestaurant.com Vincent Zorn. Solo wild gypsy rumba. Free, 7pm. The Bebedero, 225 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thebebedero.com etc. Daily Tour of Indigenous Australian Art. See listing for Wednesday, August 31. Free, 10:30am and 1:30pm. Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of UVA, 400 Worrell Dr. klugeruhe.org Family Game Night. Enjoy dinner, refresh ing cocktails, mocktails, and beers, and play a variety of games for all ages, including corn hole, jumbo Jenga, cards, and more. Free, 5pm. Dairy Market, 946 Grady Ave. dairymarketcville.com
Jason Isbell and The 400 Unit. With Adia Victoria. $49-79, 7pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com
Dungeons and Dragons. Start a group or join an existing one. No materials or expe rience required. $5, 4pm. The End Games, 374 Hillsdale Dr. theendgames.co Monday 9/5 music
Baby Jo’s. Tunes from the seven-piece, New Orleans-inspired boogie and blues band. Free, 6:30pm. The Whiskey Jar, 227 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thewhiskey jarcville.com Berto & Vincent. Rumba rumba. Free, 7pm. South and Central Latin Grill, Dairy Market. southandcentralgrill.com
The Pollocks. Enjoy live music, draft beer, wine, cider, and more. $15, 5pm. The Bates ville Market, 6624 Plank Rd. batesville market.com
Storytime. All ages are welcome at this storytime featuring readings from a variety of books. Free, 11am. New Dominion Book shop, 404 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. ndbookshop.com outside Charlottesville City Market. Fresh produce, handmade gifts, homemade baked goods, and more. Free, 8am. Charlottesville City Market, 100 Water St E. charlottesville.gov Farmers Market at Ix. Over 60 local ven dors with produce, prepared foods, artisan goods, and more. Free, 8am. Ix Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. ixartpark.org etc. Daily Tour of Indigenous Australian Art. See listing for Wednesday, August 31. Free, 10:30am and 1:30pm. Kluge-Ruhe Aborig inal Art Collection of UVA, 400 Worrell Dr. kluge-ruhe.org Sunday 9/4 music
Tuesday 9/6 music





Matalie Deane at Botanical Plant-Based Fare GALLERYTHEOFCOURTESYIMAGE open daily 118 E. Main Street | Downtown Mall | 434-972-9500 | cvillearts.org | follow us on Facebook and Instagram! Making the Cut Visit the Monday–Thursday,gallery10AM–6PMFriday–Saturday,10AM–7PMSunday12–5PMShopOnlineAnytimehttps://cvillearts.org/store the art of paper cutting by Ming featured at C’ville Arts during September Meet Ming on First Friday, Sept. 2, 5–7Pm
Central Library 201 E. Market St. In the third floor lobby, works by library staff member Dominic Brown. Chroma Projects Inside Vault Virginia, Third St. SE. “Light: Illusions” showcases recent works by Beverly Ress. Through Sep tember 30. First Friday opening. Corner Gallery Campbell Hall, UVA School of Architecture. “In The Garden: A Com parative Study Of Public Parks In Paris,” features Howland Fellow Madeline Smith’s perceptions and experiences in eight different public green spaces in Paris. September 5-26.
Crozet Library 2020 Library Ave. Watercol ors by John Russell. C’ville Arts Cooperative Gallery 118 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. “Making the Cut—the Art of Paper Cutting by Ming,” showcases works in the traditional art of paper cutting by Ming Qiu Chen. First Fri day opening.
The Center at Belvedere 540 Belvedere Blvd. “Capturing the Color,” an art exhibit by The MidAtlantic Pastel Society. Through October 27. First Friday opening.
Elmaleh Gallery Campbell Hall, UVA School of Architecture. “Finding Virginia’s Freetowns,” a collaborative exhibition that documents Freetowns in Albemarle, Buck ingham, Fluvanna, and Orange counties.
Through September 8.
New City Arts 114 Third St. NE. “Feed Them,” drawings by Warren Craghead III and paintings by Mara Sprafkin, made in collaboration with her children. Through September 23. First Friday opening.
The Fralin Museum of Art 155 Rugby Rd., UVA Grounds. New exhibitions include “Power Play: Reimagining Representation in Contemporary Photography,” “Earthly Exemplars: The Art of Buddhist Disciples and Teachers in Asia,” “The Little Museum of Art,” and “Kenji Nakahashi: Weighing Time.”
East Wing Gallery Campbell Hall, UVA School of Architecture. “Densifying In Place: Five Proposals For Inclusive Infill Housing By The Charlottesville Zoning Design Work shop” features five speculative design propos als representative of a range of architectural and topographic conditions across the city. Through September 13.
PVCC Gallery V. Earl Dickinson Building, 501 College Dr. Through September 9, the Annual Student Exhibition. Opening September 23, the Annual Faculty Exhibition and a retro spective of works from PVCC’s The Fall Line literary magazine. Through November 9.
Ruffin Gallery 179 Culbreth Rd. “The Tran substantiation of Shoe Polish,” works by Michelle Gagliano. Through September 23.
Northside Library 705 Rio Rd. W. In the quiet room, works by Ellen Moore Osborne.
Random Row Brewery 608 Preston Ave. Ste. A. “Art for Life,” an exhibit of pastel works by Joan Dreicer supporting the UVA Cancer Center. Through October 31.
Second Street Gallery 115 Second St. SE. In the Main Gallery, “Teeny Tiny Trifecta 5,” the fifth annual group exhibition and fundraiser. In the Dové Gallery, an artist-in-residence exhibition featuring Somé Louis. Through September 30. First Friday openings.
Visible Records 1740 Broadway St. “This is the Place,” mixed media by JaVori Warren and Megan Richards, Freeman Artists in Residence. Through October 2. First Friday opening.
Shenandoah Valley Art Center 126 S. Wayne Ave., Waynesboro. In the Cabell/Arehart In vitational Gallery, the annual exhibition by the Virginia Watercolor Society. Through September 23. Studio Ix 969 Second St. SE. “Inspired by Gauguin’s Tahiti,” a group exhibition from Fiber and Stitch Art Collective that reinter prets the bold forms, colors, and themes of Gauguin’s exotic Tahitian locales. Through September 25. First Friday opening. Artist talk and happy hour September 22.
Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library 170 McCormick Rd., UVA Grounds. “No Unity Without Justice” centers around the work of UVA students and Charlottes ville community racial justice activists who organized demonstrations and events that resulted in significant anti-fascist victories in response to Charlottesville’s 2017 Summer of Hate. Through October 29. Botanical Plant-Based Fare 421 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. Acrylic works by Matalie Deane. Through October 4.
Crozet Artisan Depot 5791 Three Notch’d Rd. “Stained Glass in the Dalle-de-Verre Technique” by Vee Ovalds. September 1-30.
Les Yeux du Monde 841 Wolf Trap Rd. “Bright Lines,” works by David Summers.
Top Knot Studio 103 Fifth St. SE. “Where abouts,” works by Andrew Sherogan. Through September. UU Congregation of Charlottesville 717 Rugby Rd. “Connections,” paintings by Tim Burgess. Through September 30.
The Garage 100 E. Jefferson St. “In Season,” acrylic paintings on canvas and wood panel by Brittany Fan. Through September 28. First Friday opening.
Guild Gallery Inside Vault Virginia, 300 E. Main St. “The Future and Beyond,” works by Hannah England, Feixue Mei, Raneem Tarfa, and Sha Li in a variety of mediums, including acrylic paint, illustration, collage, and oil paint. Through October 14. First Friday event.
31August27–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly CULTURE GALLERIES
Jefferson School African American Heri tage Center 233 Fourth St. NW. “Witness ing Resistance,” images taken by photo-jour nalist Eze Amos between 2016 and 2017 that represent activist resistance to the alt-right. Through September 16.
ExhibitionsSeptember
Opens September 24.
McGuffey Art Center 201 Second St. NW. In the Smith Gallery, “Vessels,” reduction linocuts by Maryanna Williams. In the First Floor Hallway, “There is another world, but it is inside this one,” recent mixed-media works by Anuja Jaitley and Jennifer Bill ingsly. In the Second Floor Hallway, “Re flections: From the Physical to the Meta physical,” a McGuffey member show. In the Associate Gallery, “Good Humor: A Mini Show of Happy Art,” oil on panel by Mary Jane Check. Through October 2. First Friday opening.
Quirk Gallery 499 W. Main St. “With a Thousand Other Heartbeats,” acrylic paint ings by Kathleen Markowitz, and “Slant,” paintings by Don Crow. Through October 9.






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Timberlake’s Drug Store and Soda Fountain A variety of sandwiches, soups, salads, and old fashioned milkshakes. 322 E. Main St., Down town Mall. 296-1191. $ Tip Top A wide range of diner staples, including all day breakfast. 1420 Richmond Rd. tiptop restaurant.com. $ Villa Diner Mainstay with housemade pan cakes, biscuits, and more. 1250 Emmet St. N. thevilladiner.com. $
Asian Cuisine
MarieBette Café & Bakery European-inspired fare. 700 Rose Hill Dr. mariebette.com. $ Paradox Pastry Known for biscuits, European pastries, and the legendary DMB cookies and brownies. 313 Second St. SE. #103. paradox pastry.com. $ Petite MarieBette MarieBette’s little sister. 105 E. Water St. mariebette.com. $ The Pie Chest Homemade breakfast and hand pies, plus by-the-slice options. 119 Fourth St. NE.; 1518 E. High St. thepiechestcville.com. $
Farm Bell Kitchen New-Southern cuisine with local farm-to-table ingredients. 1209 W. Main St. farmbellkitchen.com. $$ First Watch Breakfast, brunch, and lunch chain with locally grown ingredients. Barracks Road Shopping Center. firstwatch.com. $$ Mel’s Café Southern soul food, including all day breakfast. 719 W. Main St. 971-8819. $ Moose’s by the Creek All day breakfast and lunch favorites. 1710 Monticello Rd. 977-4150. $ The Nook All day diner classics. 415 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. thenookcville.com. $
The Château Lobby Bar Creative cocktails, wine, craft beer, and small plates sourced from local purveyors. 122 Oakhurst Cir. oakhurstinn.com. $$ Dürty Nelly’s Pub—Deli Subs and sandwiches, with a late-night pub menu. 2200 Jefferson Park Ave. durtynellyscharlottesville.com. $
Soul Food Joint A homecooked meal made up of your favorite Southern staples, sides, and fix ins. 300 E. Market St. soulfoodjoint.com. $
CULTURE RESTAURANT LISTINGS
Ralph Sampson’s American Taproom An up scale sports bar experience. 973 Emmet St. N. americantaproom.com. $$ Rapture Playful Southern cuisine. 300 E. Main St. rapturerestaurant.com. $$ Red Crab Seafood Seafood boils, po boys, and more. 905 Twentyninth Pl. Ct. redcrabseafood. com. $ The Rooftop Bar Serving up pizzas, alongside cocktails, locally-sourced craft beers, and local wine. 499 W. Main St. quirkhotels.com. $
$
Three Notch’d Craft Kitchen & Brewery Local ly sourced, beer-infused dishes including South ern classics and a kids menu. 520 Second St. SE. threenotchdbrewing.com. $$ The Whiskey Jar Saloon-style Southern spot with more than 90 varieties of whiskey. 227 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thewhiskeyjarcville.com.
The Peidmont Bar & Kitchen Everything from sandwiches and pizza, to salads and burgers. 1791 Richmond Rd. thepiedmontva.com. $$ Peloton Station Cycle-centric tavern and bike shop. 114 10th St. NW. pelotonstation.com. $$
$ Multiverse Kitchens A digital food hall home to seven different restaurants—Fowl Mouthed Chick en, Firebox, Brookville Biscuit + Brunch, Keevil Tea Room, Smashing Salads, Long Strange Chip, and Toad in the Hole. McIntire Plaza. multiverse kitchens.com. $-$$ Riverside Lunch Smashburgers, dogs, and fries.
$ Wayside Takeout & Catering Fried chicken and barbecue sandwiches. 2203 Jefferson Park Ave. waysidechicken.com. $
Afghan Kabob Authentic Afghan cuisine. 400 Emmet St. N. afghankabobcville.com. $$ Akira Ramen & Sushi Japanese cuisine. 3912 Lenox Ave., Ste. 320. akirasushiramen.com $ Asian Express Chinese and Japanese with healthy options. 909 W. Main St. newasian express.com. $
Glass Half Full Taproom A large selection of beers, wines, and spirits. 5th Street Station. glasshalffullbar.com. $ Kardinal Hall An extensive list of brews. 722 Preston Ave. kardinalhall.com. $$ The Lobby Bar Playful takes on classic cocktails and mocktails, with a menu of bar snacks. 499 W. Main St. quirkhotels.com. $
Selvedge Brewing Elevated bar fare from Chef Tucker Yoder. The Wool Factory. thewool factory.com. $$ Skrimp Shack Shrimp, fish, and chicken tacos, sandwiches, and baskets. 1970 Rio Hill Center. theskrimpshack.olo.com. $ South Street Brewery Draft brews, cocktails, wine, and an extensive food list. 106 South St. W. southstreetbrewery.com. $$ Texas Roadhouse Steaks, ribs, and from-scratch sides. Albemarle Square. texasroadhouses.com. $$
30August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly
Order up! These local establishments are open and waiting to take your order. Email living@c-ville.com to add your restaurant to the list.
$$
Kanak Indian Kitchen Offering traditional home made Indian food, plus cocktails. 5th Street Sta tion. kanakcville.com. $ Lemongrass Vietnam meets Thailand. 104 14th St. NW. 244-THAI. $$ Lime Leaf Thai An upscale Thai experience. Rio Hill Shopping Center. 245-8884. $$ Marco & Luca Chinese snack food, including dumplings, sesame noodles, and pork buns. 112 W. Main St., Downtown Mall; 107 Elliewood Ave.; Seminole Square Shopping Center. $ Maru Korean BBQ & Grill Traditional Korean food with modern additions. 412 E. Main St., Down town Mall. marudowntown.com. $ Manila Street Filipino food. Dairy Market. dairy marketcville.com. $
Pineapples Thai Kitchen Thai favorites from the Monsoon Siam team. 722 Preston Ave. pine applescville.com.
Citizen Burger Burgers, salads, and other favor ites. 212 E. Main St., Downtown Mall; Dairy Market. citizenburgerbarcville.com. $$ Five Guys Fast-casual hamburgers, hot dogs, and fries. Barracks Road Shopping Center; Hol lymead Town Center. fiveguys.com. $$ GRN Burger Griddle smashed burgers, salty fries, and crunchy nuggets, all meat free. Dairy Market. grnburger.com. $ Lazy Parrot Wings and Brews Ribs, chicken, and brisket served in a tropics-themed space. Pantops Shopping Center. lazyparrotwingsandbrews.com. $$ Luv’n Oven Gizzards, livers, fries, and shakes. 162 Village Sq., Scottsville. luvn-oven.com. $
Mashu Festival Authentic Asian festival food. Dairy Market. dairymarketcville.com. $ Milan Indian Cuisine Authentic Indian cuisine with all the standards. 1817 Emmet St. milanindian-cuisine.com $$ Mochiko Hawaiian eats and suggested Hawaiian beer pairings. 5th Street Station. hawaiianfood cville.com. $ Monsoon Siam Original Thai cuisine. 113 W. Market St. monsoonsiamcville.com. $$ Mashumen Japanese ramen and rice bowls. 2208 Fontaine Ave. mashumen.com. $$ Now & Zen Gourmet Japanese and sushi. 202 Second St. NW. nowandzencville.square.site. $$ Pad Thai Homestyle Thai cooking from an expe rienced chef. 156 Carlton Rd. padthaicville.com. $$ Pei Wei Asian Kitchen Chinese staples from fresh ingredients. 5th Street Station. peiwei.com.
Quality Pie Ex-Mas chef Tomas Rahal serves Spanish-inspired fare. 309 Avon St. qualitypieva. com. $$ Sliced. cake bar Mobile bakery offering whole cakes, cake flights, cake pops, and buttercream shots. slicedcakebar.com. $
Vision BBQ Meats smoked the old fashioned way. 249 Ridge McIntire Rd. visionbbqcville.com.
Michie Tavern Southern midday fare from an 18th-century tavern. 683 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy. michietavern.com. $$ The Milkman’s Bar Led by mixologist River Haw kins, the joint serves creative cocktails that pay homage to the ‘50s. Dairy Market. milkmansbar. com. $$ Miller’s Old-school bar serving up elevated Southern pub fare. 109 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. millersdowntown.com. $
Timberwood Grill All-American eatery and af ter-work watering hole. 3311 Worth Crossing. timberwoodgrill.com. $$
$$ Whistlestop Grill American comfort food. 1200 Crozet Ave., Crozet. thewhistlestopgrill.com. $ Breakfast Joints and Diners
Coconut Thai Kitchen Thai favorites from the Monsoon Siam team. 1015 Heathercroft Ln., Crozet. coconutcrozet.com. $$ Doma Korean-style barbecue, kimchi, and more. 701 W. Main St. domakoreankitchen.com. $ Himalayan Fusion Indian, Nepalese and Tibetan cuisine. 520 E. Main St. himalayanfusion.com. $
Burgers, BBQ, and Chicken Ace Biscuit & Barbecue Breakfast and lunch spot with BBQ and soul food by the biscuit. 600 Concord Ave. acebiscuitandbarbecue.com. $
Martin’s Grill Hamburgers, veggie burgers, and fries. Forest Lakes Shopping Center. martinsgrill.com. $
Mission BBQ Pulled turkey, pork, and chicken, plus racks by the bone. The Shops at Stonefield. mission-bbq.com. $$ Moe’s Original BBQ Alabama-style pulled pork smoked in-house. 2119 Ivy Rd. moesoriginalbbq.com.
Bars and Grills Alamo Drafthouse Burgers, pizzas, salads, snacks, and desserts prepared fresh from lo cally sourced ingredients. 5th Street Station. drafthouse.com. $ Beer Run Massive tap and packaged beer offer ings, plus food. 156 Carlton Rd. beerrun.com. $$
Doodle’s Diner Country cookin’ from breakfast to burgers. 1305 Long St. doodlesdiner.com. $
Angelic’s Kitchen Soul food eatery serving chick en, seafood, ribs, and more. Dairy Market. angelics kitchen.com. $ Brown’s Fried chicken and sides. 1218 Avon St. 295-4911. $ Burger Bach New Zealand-inspired gastropub. The Shops at Stonefield. theburgerbach.com. $$
1429 Hazel St., 971-3546; 1770 Timberwood Blvd., 979-1000. $ Royalty Eats Soul food staples, including chicken and waffles, plenty of sides, and desserts. 820 Cherry Ave. 923-3287. $
Thai Cuisine & Noodle House Traditional Thai food, noodle dishes, and vegetarian specials. 2005 Commonwealth Dr. thaicuisinecville.com. $$ Umma’s Korean and Japanese-American cuisine. 200 W. Water St. ummasfood.com. $$ Vu Noodles Fresh, vegetarian Vietnamese noo dles, pho, bahn mi, and more. 111 E. Water St. vunoodles.com. $ Bakeries Albemarle Baking Company Breads, cakes, and pastries. 418 W. Main St. albemarlebaking co.com. $ Bee Conscious Baking Company Pastries, cakes, and organically-grown produce. Dairy Mar ket. beeconsciousbakingcompany.com. $ Bowerbird Bakeshop Pastries, breads, and cook ies using locally sourced ingredients. 120 10th St. NW, bowerbirdbakeshop.com. $ Caked Up Cville Small-batch cupcakes and cakes. cakedupcville.com. $
Bobboo A curated list of whiskeys from Virginia and around the world, with bespoke charcuterie boards and classic, hand-crafted cocktails. 499 W. Main St. quirkhotels.com. $$ Bonefish Grill A seafood-centric menu, plus steaks and cocktails. Hollymead Town Center. bonefishgrill.com. $$
Bamboo House Korean and Chinese options. 4831 Seminole Trail. 973-9211. $$ Bang! Asian-inspired tapas and inventive marti nis. 213 Second St. SW. bangrestaurant.net. $$ Chimm Thai Thai street food. 5th Street Station; Dairy Market. chimmtaste.com. $$
Outback Steakhouse Bloomin’ onions and giant steaks. 1101 Seminole Trl. outback.com. $$
Chickadee Comfort food crafted with care. The Glass Building, 313 Second St. SE. chickadee cville.com. $
Lucky Blue’s Bar Fast-casual bowls, burritos, and cheesesteaks. 223 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. luckybluesbar.com. $ Matchbox Wood-fired pizzas, salads, salmon, steak dinners, and gourmet burgers. 2055 Bond St. match boxrestaurants.com. $$
$
$$ Peter Chang China Grill Authentic Sichuan cui sine by a renowned chef. Barracks Road Shopping Center North Wing. peterchangcharlottesville. com. $$ Red Lantern Chinese cuisine by the pint or quart. 221 Carlton Rd. redlanterncharlottesville.com. $ Silk Thai Fresh, authentic Thai. 2210 Fontaine Ave. charlottesville.silkthairestaurant.com. $$ Tara Thai Affordable Thai faves, with multiple meat, fish, and veggie options. Barracks Road Shopping Center. tarathai.com. $$ Taste of China Chinese standards from a lengthy menu. Albemarle Square Shopping Center. taste ofchinacharlottesville.com. $$ Ten Upscale second-floor spot serving modern Japanese. 120 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. ten-sushi.com. $$$ Thai ’99 II Thai noodle and rice dishes, curries, and stirfrys. Albemarle Square. thai99usa.com.
Sedona Taphouse Lots of craft beers and an all-American menu. 1035 Millmont St. sedona taphouse.com. $$
Cake Bloom A cake and bubbles bar with fresh ly-baked treats by the slice or whole. 705 W. Main St. cakebloom.com. $$ Cou Cou Rachou Croissants, tatins, financiers, danishes, cake slices, muffins, and more. 917 Preston Ave. Suite B; 1837 Broadway St. coucou rachou.com. $ Gearharts Fine Chocolates Freshly baked pastries, cakes, cookies, brownies, and chocolates. 243 Ridge McIntire Rd. gearhartschocolates.com. $ Great Harvest Bread Co. Sandwiches, sweets, and bread baked from scratch every day. McIntire Plaza. greatharvestcville.com. $
Fardowners Local ingredients liven up pub fare like sliders and sandwiches. 5773 The Square, Crozet. fardowners.com. $$ Firefly Craft beer, burgers, salads, vegetarianfriendly menu. 1304 E. Market St. fireflycville.com. $ The Fitzroy A kitchen and bar offering updates of comforting classics. 120 E. Main St. thefitzroy cville.com.
Belle Breakfast and lunch sandwiches, pastries, and coffee. belle-cville.square.site. $$ Blue Moon Diner Serving breakfast and lunch options like pancakes, breakfast burritos, burgers, and BLTs. 600 W. Main St. bluemoondiner.net. $


$
The Bebedero Upscale, authentic Mexican. 225 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thebebedero.com. $$
RESTAURANT LISTINGS
The Bradbury Cafe Serving breakfast, brick oven pizza, sandwiches, and salads, with coffee and espresso. 300 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. thebradburydowntown.com. $
Dino’s Wood-Fired Pizza & Rotisserie Chicken A selection of wood-fired artisan pizzas and ro tisserie chicken with flavors from around the world. Dairy Market. dinos.restaurant. $$ Dr. Ho’s Humble Pie The alternative pizza. 4916 Plank Rd., North Garden. drhoshumblepie.com. $$ Fabio’s New York Pizza Pizza, subs, salads, and calzones made by natives of Naples. 1551 E. High St. fabiosnypizza.com. $ Fry’s Spring Station Fire-roasted pizza and Ital ian eats. 2115 Jefferson Park Ave. eatatfrys.com. $ Lampo Neapolitan-style pizza and snacks. 205 Monticello Rd. lampopizza.com. $$ Lampo2go Lampo’s to go location. 929 Second St. SE. lampopizza.com. $$ Luce Literal hole in the wall serving fresh, hand made pasta to go. 110 Second St. NW. lucepasta. com. $$ Mellow Mushroom Trippy-themed franchise, with pizza and beers. 1321 W. Main St. mellow mushroom.com. $ Red Pump Kitchen Upscale eatery featuring local, seasonal Mediterranean and Italian dishes. 401 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. redpump kitchen.com. $$ Sal’s Cafe Italia Family owned and operated, from Sicily and Brooklyn. 221 E. Main St., Down town Mall. salscaffeitalia.com. $ Tavola Rustic Italian with housemade pastas, craft cocktails, and a Wine Spectator award-win ning list. 826 Hinton Ave. tavolavino.com. $$ Vita Nova Creative ingredients on hearty pizza by the slice. 310 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. vitanovapizzapasta.com. $ Vinny’s Italian Grill & Pizzeria This regional chain has pies plus a slew of subs, pastas, and stromboli. Hollymead Town Center. vinnysitaliangrill.com. $$
Grit Coffee Espresso beverages, with breakfast and lunch fare. 610 Riverside Shops Way; The Shops at Stonefield; 112 Main St., Downtown Mall; 19 Elliewood Ave.; 1110 Old Trail Dr., Crozet. gritcoffee.com.
Iron Paffles & Coffee Sweet and savory puff pastry waffle sandwiches, with vegan options. 214 W. Water St. iron-made.com. $
$ Eleva Coffee The Brooklyn-based coffee roasting company offers espresso drinks, smoothies, and bagged beans. Dairy Market. elevacoffee.com. $ Greenberry’s Java, specialty drinks, and fresh baked goods. Barracks Road Shopping Center. greenberrys.com.
Billy Pie at Random Row Brewing Stone oven Neapolian style pizza in a brewery taproom. 608 Preston Ave. randomrow.com. $ Christian’s Pizza Fresh pies, by-the-slice or whole. Multiple locations. $
Italian and Pizza Anna’s Pizza No. 5 Family-owned and operated. 115 Maury Ave. 295-7500. $ Belmont Pizza and Pub Fresh, stone-baked piz za. 211 Carlton Rd., Ste. 10. belmontpizzaandpub. com. $
Chipotle Made-to-order burritos and tacos. Barracks Road Shopping Center; 2040 Abbey Rd., Ste. 101. chipotle.com $ Cinema Taco A movie-themed joint offering tacos, burritos, empanadas, and margaritas. 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. jefferson theater.com. $ Continental Divide Tacos and enchiladas. 811 W. Main St. continental-divide.square.site. $$ Farmacy Café Organic, local superfood Mexican fusion. The CODE Building. farmacy.guru. $$ Fuzzy’s Taco Shop Baja-style tacos and other Mexican eats. 5th Street Station. fuzzystacoshop. com. $
The Mill Room An upscale, resort eatery with an American menu. 200 Ednam Dr. boarshead resort.com. $$$ Mockingbird A dinner-only menu with a modern take on Southern classics. 421 Monticello Rd. mockingbird-cville.com. $$
CULTURE
Crozet Pizza Family-owned pizza parlor. 5794 Three Notch’d Rd., Crozet; 20 Elliewood Ave. 601 Fifth St. SW. crozetpizza.com.
Jersey Mike’s Subs Subs, salads, and wraps. 2040 Abbey Rd., Ste. 104; 5th Street Station. jerseymikes.com. $ Jimmy John’s Sandwiches and gourmet subs. 1650 E. Rio Rd.; Rivanna Ridge Shopping Center. jimmy johns.com. $ Kitchenette Sandwich Shop Sandwiches, soups, and salads made fresh. 920 9 1/2 St. NE. kitchenette va.com. $ Mane Course Sandwiches A fast-casual, equestrian themed restaurant. 179 Connor Dr. mancourse sandwiches.com. $ Organic Krush Organic foods and cold-pressed juices, including all day breakfast, smoothies, wraps, and bowls. The Shops at Stonefield. organickrush. com. $$ Panera Bread Chain with casual fare. Barracks Road Shopping Center; 5th Street Station. panera bread.com. $$ Revolutionary Soup Soups and sandwiches. 108 Second St. SW., Downtown Mall. revolutionary soup.com. $ Roots Natural Kitchen Fast-casual salads and grain bowls. 1329 W. Main St. rootsnaturalkitchen. com. $ Take It Away Sandwiches on freshly baked breads. Dairy Market; 115 Elliewood Ave. takeit awaysandwichshop.com. $ Taste Shack Fast-casual soups, sandwiches, burgers, and more. 2291 Seminole Ln. 956-4782.
Riverbirch Restaurant Fresh and local Ameri can-style cuisine. 630 Riverside Shops Way. river birchrestaurant.com. $$ Siren American-Mediterranean inspired fare with a seafood focus brought to you by Chef Laura Fonner. 247 Ridge McIntire Rd. sirencville.com. $$ Southern Crescent Cajun and Creole fare. 814 Hinton Ave. thesoutherncrescent.com. $$ Tonic Seasonal, local café fare with craft cocktails and curated wine list. 609 E. Market St. toniccville.com. $$ Zocalo Flavorful, high-end, Latin-inspired cui sine. 201 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. zocalorestaurant.com. $$
Soups, Salads, and Sandwiches Baggby’s Gourmet Sandwiches Sandwiches, salads, and soups. 512 E. Main St. Downtown Mall. baggbys.com. $ Bodo’s Bagels Sandwiches on bagels made in-house daily. 1418 N. Emmet St.; 505 Preston Ave.; 1609 University Ave. bodosbagels.com. $ Botanical Plant-Based Fare Sandwiches, bowls, mac and cheese, and shareables, all meat and dairy free. 421 E. Main St., Down town Mall. botanicalfare.com. $$
$$ Brasserie Saison Modern European fare and house-brewed beer. 111 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. brasseriesaison.com. $$ C&O Restaurant An à la carte menu, with musttry cocktails. 515 E. Water St. candorestaurant. com. $$$ Café Frank Chef Jose De Brito brings everyday food from a classic French kitchen. 317 E. Main St. cafefrankcville.com. $$ Fleurie Upscale, modern French cuisine with à la carte and tasting menus. 108 Third St. NE. fleurierestaurant.com. $$$ Hamiltons’ at First & Main Contemporary Amer ican cuisine with a full bar and extensive wine list. 110 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. hamiltons restaurant.com. $$$ Ivy Inn Fine dining in a charming tollhouse. 2244 Old Ivy Rd. ivyinnrestaurant.com. $$$ The Local New American cuisine and wine. 824 Hinton Ave. thelocal-cville.com. $$ Marigold by Jean-Georges Committed to sus tainable and seasonal dishes by an acclaimed chef. 701 Club Dr. marigoldjg.com. $$$ Maya Locally sourced Southern fare and imagi native cocktails. 633 W. Main St. maya-restaurant. com. $$ The Melting Pot Fondue fun for all. 501 E. Wa ter St. meltingpot.com. $$$
Sombrero’s Mexican Cuisine & Café Authentic Mexican cuisine. 112 W. Main St., Ste. 6. sombreros cville.com. $ South and Central Latin Grill Small plates, steaks, sides, and more. Dairy Market. southand centralgrill.com. $$ Torchy’s Tacos Mexican street-food-style tacos. The Shops at Stonefield. torchystacos.com. $
$ Higher Grounds Serving Trager Brother’s coffee. 1215 Lee St., UVA. hg-uva.com. $ JBird Supply Coffee Roaster Ethically sourced, specialty coffee. 969 Second St. SE. jbirdsupply. com. $ Lone Light Coffee Quality coffee drinks. 119 Fourth St. NE.; 1518 E. High St. lonelightcoffee. com. $ Milli Coffee Roasters Espresso drinks, waffles, paninis, and more. 400 Preston Ave., Ste. 150. millicoffeeroasters.com.
Mediterranean & Caribbean Aromas Café & Catering Mediterranean and Middle Eastern fare. 900 Natural Resources Dr. aromascafeandcatering.com. $ Bacio Mediterranean Cuisine Rustic and mod ern Greek, Lebanese and Italian cuisine. 375 Four Leaf Ln. baciomed.com. $$ Cava Fast-casual Mediterranean with lots of veg etarian options. 1200 Emmet St. N, #110. cava. com. $ Fig Southern and Mediterranean bistro fare 1331 W. Main St. figuva.com. $ Orzo Kitchen & Wine Bar Dishes from Spain to Greece and wines of the world. 416 W. Main St. orzokitchen.com. $$ Otto Turkish Street Food Go for the doner ke babs and stay for the rosemary fries. 111 W. Wa ter St. otto-cville.com. $ Pearl Island Cafe Caribbean-inspired lunch spot with vegan options. 233 Fourth St. NW. pearl islandcatering.square.site. $ Smyrna Simple, locally sourced dishes from a Mediterranean, Aegean cuisine. 707 W. Main St. smyrnacville.com. $$ Sticks Kebob Shop Kebobs, bowls, and more. 917 Preston Ave.; 1820 Abbey Rd. stickskebob shop.com. $ Sultan Kebab Authentic Turkish cuisine with vegetarian options. 333 Second St. SE. sultan kebabcville.com. $ Thyme & Co. Lebanese flatbread, dips, salads, bowls, and desserts. 104 14th St. NW., Ste. 2. thyme-co.com. $
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31August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly
Atlas Coffee Espresso, coffee, tea, and freshbaked pastries. 2206 Fontaine Ave. atlascoffee cville.com. $ Baine’s Books & Coffee Wide selection of cof fee, tea, pastries, and paninis. 485 Valley St., Scottsville. bainesbooks.com. $ Brews on High An independently owned, drive-thru coffee shop. 406 10th St. NE. brews onhigh.com.
$ Milli Second Cafe & Wine Bar An offshoot of Milli Coffee Roasters. The CODE Building. @millicafe. $ Mudhouse Coffee and pastries. 213 W. Main St., Downtown Mall; 116 10th St. NW.; 5793 The Square, Crozet. mudhouse.com
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Al Carbon Coal-fire prepared chicken, plus plen ty of sides. 1875 Seminole Trl.; 5th Street Station. alcarbonchicken.com. $ Brazos Tacos Austin, Texas-style breakfast, lunch, early dinner, and brunch tacos. 925 Second St. SE. brazostacos.com. $
Guadalajara Family-run authentic Mexican food. Multiple locations. guadalajaramexicanva.com. $ Guajiros Miami Eatery Miami-inspired, with strong Cuban influence as well as Central and Southern American dishes. 1871 Seminole Trail. guajiros.net. $ La Michoacana Taqueria & Restaurant Hearty Mexican standards, including tacos, tamales, and tortas. 1138 E. High St. 202-1336. $ Little Star Spanish- and Mexican-inspired food. 420 W. Main St. littlestarrestaurant.com. $$ Mas Spanish tapas and wines. 904 Monticello Rd. mastapas.com. $$ Morsel Compass The taco food truck’s brick-andmortar spot. 2025 Library Ave., Crozet. morsel compass.com. $$ Passiflora A Baja-Mediterranean-inspired menu. 422 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. passiflorava. com. $$ Qdoba Mexican Grill Spicy burritos, quesadillas, and Mexican salads. 3918 Lenox Ave. qdoba.com. $
Zoës Kitchen Fresh made Mediterranean. Bar racks Road Shopping Center. zoeskitchen.com.
Oakhart Social Seasonal, creative, modern American food for sharing. 511 W. Main St. oakhartsocial.com. $$ Petit Pois Locally sourced French dishes paired with wine in cute bistro quarters. 201 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. petitpoisrestaurant.com. $$
$ Daily Grind Coffee & Creamery Family-owned and operated, serving coffee and espresso drinks, all-fruit smoothies, milkshakes, and ice cream scoops. 3450 Seminole Trl. dailygrindcville.com.
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Chopt Creative salad chain with ingredients from local purveyors. Barracks Road Shopping Center. choptsalad.com. $
$ Upscale Casual Aberdeen Barn A classic steakhouse. 2018 Holiday Dr. aberdeenbarn.com. $$$ The Alley Light Classic, French, shared plates, craft cocktails and small grower wines. 108 Secpnd St. SW. alleylight.com. $$ Bizou Playful French-American bistro. 119 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. bizoudowntown.com.
Pink Grouse A game-forward menu and a curat ed wine list with highlights from across Virginia and Europe. 499 W. Main St. quirkhotels.com. $$ Public Fish & Oyster East Coast seafood, includ ing a raw bar, craft cocktails, and microbrews. 513 W. Main St. publicfo.com. $$ Restoration Great views and American fare. 5494 Golf Dr., Crozet. oldtrailclub.com. $$ The Ridley Black-owned experiential Southern cuisine and craft cocktails. 1106 W. Main St. the ridleyva.com. $$
$ Oakhurst Inn Cafe A contemporary eatery with freshly baked treats and artisanal coffee. 122 Oakhurst Cir. oakhurstinn.com. $ Poindexter Coffee All-day breakfast, lunch, and coffee. The Graduate, 1309 W. Main St. graduate hotels.com.
Coffee Places and Cafés
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The Workshop A coffee and wine shop featuring Grit Coffee and pastries from Cou Cou Rachou. The Wool Factory. thewoolfactory.com. $
C’ville Coffee & Wine Full menu of coffee, sandwiches, and wines. 1301 Harris St. cville coffee.com.
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Quirk Cafe Serving locally-roasted selections from Blanchard’s Coffee Roasting Company, cold brew on tap, and other beverages and bites. 499 W. Main St. quirkhotels.com. $$ Shenandoah Joe Local roaster with a coffee bar and pastries. 945 Preston Ave.; 2214 Ivy Rd. shenandoahjoe.com. $ Snowing in Space Freshly brewed nitro cold brew coffee. 2415 Ivy Rd. snowinginspace.com. $$ Starbucks Coffee and tea drinks, pastries, and sandwiches. Multiple locations. starbucks.com.
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Ivy Provisions Deli and retail food shop offering fresh, housemade breakfast and lunch all day. 2206 Ivy Rd. ivyprovisions.com. $
Green House Coffee Coffee, smoothies, sand wiches, salads, and from-scratch cakes, cookies, sweet breads, and more. 1260 Crozet Ave., Crozet. greenhousecrozet.com.
Vivace Every kind of pasta imaginable, plus sea food. 2244 Ivy Rd. vivacecville.com. $$ Vocelli Pizza Pizza, pasta, paninis, salads, strom boli, and antipasti. Woodbrook Shopping Center. vocellipizza.com. $ Latin American


32August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly



2021 Sparkling Chardonnay Bright and effervescent, our sparkling chardonnay is perfect to enjoy with these hot summer days! With light notes of granny smith apples, clementine, and jasmine, this bottle of bubbly will pair with just about every dish. Try it with our new cheese and charcuterie boards, a bright summer salad, or as a toast while watching the sunset from our Withporch!a glass in hand, enjoy the beautiful scenery from our lawn, or a cozy chair inside, where you’ll discover a variety of inviting spaces. While indoor seating is limited, there are many options for outdoor seating, including rocking chairs on the covered porch and dining tables on the lawn for small groups. You’re also welcome to bring your own folding chairs and blankets to sit further out on the hill. All seating is first-come, first-served. Ages 21+, no dogs or other pets permitted on the property. For a family-friendly experience, visit our wine shops at Chiles Peach Orchard or Carter Mountain Orchard. Wine is currently available by the glass, flight, or bottle. We also offer a curated selection of snacks, boards, and sandwiches that pair well with any of our wines (outside food is not permitted). Wine sales stop 30 minutes prior to closing.
Fridays - Summer Sundown Series with live music until sunset! Enjoy wine, or our new spritzes featuring fruit from our own farm. Sundays - Brunch featuring mimosas with juices from our farmgrown fruit. Hours: Wed, Thurs, Sun 11 AM–6 PM / Fri & Sat 11 AM - Sunset 430 Greenwood Rd, Greenwood, VA 22943 434.252.2947 • www.chilesfamilyorchards.com/chiswell SPECIAL ADVERTORIAL SECTION 81 64 64 29 29 15 340 33 33 GORDONSVILLEORANGE LOUISA CROSSROADSZION AFTON STANARDSVILLE MADISON CROZET 29 CHARLOTTESVILLE 15 53RD WINERY & VINEYARDFARMEASTWOOD&WINERYDUCARDVINEYARDHARRISONBURG WINERY Guide Map REVALATIONVINEYARDS PIPPIN HILL FARM & VINEYARDS HORTON VINEYARDS REYNARD FLORENCEVINEYARD HARK VINEYARD CHISWELLWINERYFARM CUNNINGHAM CREEK
Open 7 days a week, 11 am – 5 pm 13372 Shannon Hill Rd • Louisa, VA (540)23093894-5474 • 53rdwinery.com
WHAT’S DELISH AT LOCAL WINERIES? WINEDOWNCHISWELLFARMWINERY
VINEYARDSDUCARD
Saturdays - Music on the Patio (2:30 – 5:30 pm) enjoy a wide variety of artists each Saturday Sept. 4th & 5th – Labor Day Weekend Music on the patio (2:30-5:30 pm) Sept. 10th- Second Saturday Concert Series with Jimmy O (6-9 pm) 40 Gibson Hollow Ln • Etlan, VA 22719 (540) www.ducardvineyards.com923-4206
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Open daily – Mon-Thurs. 12-5 pm Fri. 12-9 pm, Sat/Sun. 12-6 pm Fridays- Friday Night Out (5:30-8:30) Kick off the weekend with live music! Check our website for details on artists and dates.
53RD WINERY AND VINEYARD 2021 Vidal Blanc We’ve just released our 2021 Vidal Blanc, and it’s perfect for the late summer season! With a nose of fresh peaches and pineapple, this wine is very well balanced with the perfect amount of acidity and freshness to cool you off from the heat. Lychee fruit and honeydew dominate the palate, and should be enjoyed with curries, fruit salads, or around the Wepool!are
2020 Gibson Hollow White Crisp, “off dry” white wine with classic Traminette notes of ripe lychee on the nose and hints of tropical fruit in the background. Enjoy on the porch after a day in the pool, or enjoy with spicy curry, smoked BBQ ribs, or a fresh strawberry shortcake! Our uncrowded rural Madison County area has mountains, streams and plenty of beautiful views along scenic back roads.
THE
open 7 days a week, 11am to 5pm offering our 100% Virginia wine by the bottle, glass and tasting flights. Enjoy your visit at our intimate, meadow-like setting in rural Louisa County. we offer well-spaced indoor and outside seating and customers are welcome to bring their own picnic baskets, chairs and blankets. Children and pets are welcome, but pets must always remain outside of buildings and on a leash. Quality wine, friendly staff at a great escape! Visit our website, www.53rdwinery.com.
The tasting room is near hiking and biking trails along the Shenandoah National Forest and is a perfect respite after your day out! Enjoy some peace and quiet relaxation in this challenging environment. Sit on our lawns and sip or pick up a bottle or three of our awardwinning wines to take home. Reservations available and recommended (especially for Saturdays). No reservation fee or minimum purchase. Walk-ups accommodated on a spaceavailable basis. To order wine for local delivery or UPS shipping, visit our website!















Charity Concert for Women of the Vine and Spirits Foundation! The Women of the Vine & Spirits Foundation is the charitable arm of Women of the Vine & Spirits. The Foundation provides scholarships for the purpose of helping women advance their careers in the food, wine, spirits, beer, and hospitality industries through education, leadership, and professional development. We will be hosting a charity concert for the foundation on September 17th and 18th! Tickets are available on Eventbrite.
Winery Hours: Wednesdays-Saturdays (12-8 PM), Sundays (12-6 PM) 2531 Scottsville Rd. (5 mi from Downtown Charlottesville) Charlottesville, VA 22902 (434) www.eastwoodfarmandwinery.com264-6727
34August31–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly
Wine Club Members: The August allocation will be shipped and available for pickup beginning on Wednesday, August 10th. We look forward to welcoming members on Thursday, August 11th for a special tasting. The Eastwood team will guide participants through a tasting of the August wines and Emily Harpster of SugarBear will discuss all-thingsice-cream while guests enjoy a tasting of her delicious ice creams using fruits & more harvested from the Eastwood farm. Ticket Information: Wine Club Members & Guests $15 / Non-Members $30 - If you are interested in joining the wine club or participating in this event, sign up on our website, send an email to happycalleastwoodfarmandwinery.com,megan@or(434)264-6727andwewillbetoassistyou.
VINEYARDSHORTON
EASTWOOD FARM AND WINERY 2021 Chardonnay We are thrilled to announce that our 2021 Chardonnay is here! Made entirely in stainless steel, it is deliciously dry and crisp with notes of green apple and grapefruit. Pour a glass at your next backyard BBQ, the lake, beach, or anywhere you enjoy a chilled glass of white wine. Currently available for sale online & in the tasting room. Visit the winery on Wednesdays for 10% off all bottles, on Thursdays for live music and the sunset, on Fridays for oysters and live music, or stop by over the weekend for live music and special events. The full events calendar can be found on our website. Join us for award-winning wines, great ciders, beers, and delicious food along with yoga, paint & sip classes, events for families and kids, and more throughout the month of August.
Upcoming events: Sept. 3rd- Live Music by Sue Harlow + Crustworthy Pizza (1-4 pm) Sept. 3rd- Live Music by Project Bluebird + Crustworthy Pizza (4:30-7:30 pm) We will be closed September 4th and September 10th for private Hours:events!12pm-6pm on Friday/ Sunday and 12pm-8pm Saturdays 434-964-9463 (WINE) 1465 Davis Shop Rd, Earlysville, VA 22936 www.harkvineyards.com
Sept 17th – (4-6pm) We are pleased to have the Terri Allard Trio! American/Country Folk style music from a group of local artists. Award-winning singersongwriter Terri Allard combines sultry sweetness and grit with an intimately personal writing style, lending a strong, authentic voice to the Americana music scene. On each of Allard’s five notable recordings, her original material chronicles the highs and lows of living day-to-day. Come and be enchanted by the Sweetheart of Barboursville! Food Truck: Just a Bite Sept 18th – (2-4pm) There’s a lot of excitement to be had listening to the original sound of Emma G! A favorite musician of the Washington Post, Washingtonian Magazine and Thrive Global:
HARK VINEYARDS 2021 Albariño Bright and refreshing, our Albariño is a brand-new addition to our white wine lineup! With classic lime and citrus flavors, enjoy this with a variety of seafood, roasted veggies, or a rich apple pie. August is for Albariño! And that’s in addition to our popular Pinot Gris and all the other varietals of summer on our August tasting menu. Every Saturday evening in August, join us for a perfect pairing of local music, local food, and local wine! And mark your calendars now for Saturday October 1, when Hark Vineyards kicks off Virginia Wine Month with an all-day party of oysters, live music, and wine. There’s no better place to start the best month of the year, than on the beautiful grounds of our vineyard as it moves from harvest into the cooler Fall months. Visiting Hark: Hark Vineyards is a family-owned winery focused on the belief that beautiful views and delicious wine can bring people together. We offer two tasting menus, poured as flights for you to take back to your picnic area. Each feature five wines, and provides experience with both the Hark and Jake Busching Wines brands. Our wines are also available by the bottle or glass. We welcome — and encourage — you to bring a picnic and enjoy the experience our estate offers. Some picnic foods such as cheese, charcuterie, jams, crackers, and chocolate are available for purchase in our tasting room.
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Cherry Rosé Sangria Enjoy the hot days of summer with a refreshing sangria made with our own 2020 Rosé and house-made cherry puree featuring fruit from Jenkins Orchards. Served with lemonade ice cubes, our summer sangria is only available by the glass at the tasting room for a limited Harvesttime. time is almost here, and we are looking for volunteers to pick the grapes. If interested, email your name, phone number and email address to info@revalationvineyards. com. We are looking for people who are available to work a few early mornings starting August 15th through October 1st. Volunteers must be at least 14 years old. Hours: May 1 – October 31, Friday 12pm – sunset, Saturday 12pm –6pm and Sunday/Monday 12pm - 5pm. Mondays 10% off bottle purchases for seniors 65+ with a valid I.D. Fridays pen late to enjoy the sunset. Sept. 2nd- Book World Meets Wine World with author Missy De Graff (4:30-7 pm) with New Iberia food truck (3-7pm) Sept. 4th- Pop-up at the Vineyard, featuring Once the Wine is Gone (12 noon – 5 pm) 2710 Hebron Valley Road, Madison, VA 540-407-123622727www.revalationvineyards.com
Reynard Florence Vineyard is excited to be releasing its 2021 Grenache, Estate Reserve this month! We have several rows of Grenache fruit that grow onsite. This delicious varietal is special as it does not usually grow in this region, and this is the first Grenache harvest we’ve had since 2017. A truly special, Virginia treat! This vintage is a crisp, light red wine and can enjoyed slightly chilled. This is a fun wine just in time for the dog days of summer and is bursting with candied fruit notes and raspberry flavors. This delicate yet dynamic wine pairs beautifully with a turkey sandwich, roasted chicken and vegetables, a light pasta dish such as shrimp scampi or a front porch and rocking chair. This wine has a beautiful, light cranberry color and will be available beginning 8/21 and there is limited stock (only 25 cases produced). Hours: Thrus/Fri 12-5pm; Sat/Sun 11am – 5pm Open Holiday Mondays, as well as by appointment or chance! Don’t hesitate to give us a call! 16109 Burnley Rd.; Barboursville, VA 22923 540.832.3895 / www.reynardflourence.com434.962.1849
VINEYARDSREVALATION
31August35–September6,2022 c-ville.com @cville_culture facebook.com/cville.weekly
2021 Viogneir
The Viognier grape was almost extinct in the 1960’s, with only 35 acres growing in France, but Virginia has played a big role in its dynamic comeback. While the color and aroma may suggest a sweet wine, Viogniers are predominantly dry and are known for producing heavy aromatics with low acidity. Our 2021 vintage is fruit forward with a creamy feel and light acidity, making it delightful to sip or pair with food. **Sip, Stroll, Sample, Savor**: Join us on the Hill for our newest Estate tour and wine tasting experience! Join us for a unique, in-depth exploration of our wines, vines, and land. The experience starts with a glass of awardwinning bubbly and a guided tour of our Estate vines. The tour is followed by an intimate tasting featuring a selection of six exclusive Reserve and Library wines and concludes with our culinary favorites such as our cheese & charcuterie board and seasonal burrata. Make your reservation on our Website! Plan to visit: Pippin Hill is a culinary vineyard in the heart of Virginia’s wine country. There are two types of standard reservations available: Indoor Table or Covered Veranda for table service. Walk-ins are welcome for lawn seating. Reservations via Resy are recommended for Indoor and Veranda seating. Hours: Tuesday – Thursday: 11 am – 5 pm; Friday – Sunday: 11am to 4:30pm Sundays- Live music on the hill! Each Sunday from 1-4 PM, Pippin Hill welcomes local musicians to perform on our Veranda. Check our website for varying artists. 5022 Plank Rd., North Garden, VA 22959 www.pippinhillfarm.com(434).202.8063
SPECIAL ADVERTORIAL SECTION
VINEYARDSFLORENCEREYNARD 2021 Grenache Estate Reserve
the New Zealand-born singer/ songwriter has expanded her mission of saving the world one song at a time to incorporate her history as an award-winning youth-worker, launching YES Youth Coaching. Youth Empowerment through Songwriting coaching is a completely new approach to youth work: combining Emma G’s history as a teacher, lecturer, YMCA youth coordinator and – of course – an award-winning musician. Food Truck: Catch the Chef Ticket holders are encouraged to come early, bring your lawn chairs and set up prior to the concert. Grounds will close to the general public at 3:30 pm on Sept 17th and 2:30 pm on Sept. 18th. Tickets are 6399nonrefundable.SpotswoodTrail, Gordonsville, Virginia (540) www.hortonwine.com832-7440
PIPPIN HILL FARM & VINEYARDS






36 20226,September–31August c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly CULTURE PUZZLES SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column, and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively. #1 #4#1solution #2 solution #3 #5#2solution #4 solution









37 31August–September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly 35. ____ noire (pet peeve) 36. Home of Iowa State 38. Port on many TVs 39. Some people read them 40. Earth Friendly Products detergent 43. Landing guess: Abbr. 44. Insinuates 45. Big name in chocolate 47. Rogaine target 48. Midafternoon hour 49. “The Ant and Grasshopper”theauthor 50. Dims 51. “Later!” 53. Drink with a Blue Lemonade flavor 54. Oodles 55. Work without ____ (take risks) 58. Sounds in a yoga studio 59. ____ Schwarz (toy company) 60. “1 sec” 61. Title sitcom character with eight stomachs ACROSS 1. It means “sulfur island” in Japanese 8. Corn throwaway 11. Virtual city dweller 14. St ands the heat 15. K.C.-to-Detroit direction 16. “____ kingdom come ...” 17. Buzzy body? 19. Maritime law drama from 1995 to 2005 20. “Huzzah!” 21. Much work ahead 23. Bottom part of an open sandwich 27. Unwakeable, say 30. “Just a heads-up...” 31. Southern region of South America 34. Counsel council, in brief 37. Biblical beacon 41. Work started by London’s Philological Soc. 42. Do away with 43. Early bird? 46. Levies, as a tax 47. Euphoria 52. Dieter ’s time of indulgence 53. “Give ____ rest!” 56. Horace’s “____ Poetica” 57. Omelet’s go-with at brunch, maybe 62. Soccer st ar Messi, to fans 63. One of 17 in Monopoly: Abbr. 64. Actress Dietrich 65. Vigor 66. Aides for profs 67. Big tear-jerker ... or a de scription of this puzzle’s theme DOWN 1. ____-bitsy 2. East Coast 7-Eleven competitor 3. “Sure 4. What Kramer often called Seinfeld 5. Ideology suffix 6. Ay, dios ____!” 7. DOJ division 8. Green with the 2010 hit “Forget You” 9. Singular event 10. Words before a date on a package 11. Missouri cit y, familiarly 12. “If ____ nickel for every time ...” 13. “Unbelievable!” 18. Modern love? 22. Prefix between bi- and quad23. Sign of an old wound 24. A t arget for Target, say 25. “____ the opinion... 26. “... all that you ____” (Army slogan) 27. ____ facto 28. Nick Mohammed’s “Ted Lasso” role 29. Slightly 32. Suffix with court or cash 33. “Garfield: ____ of Two Kitties” 34. Cries of discovery Sobfest BY DAVID LEVINSON WILK WILKLEVINSONDAVID2022© CROSSWORD ANSWERS 8/24/22 numeralsRoman #5 #6#3solution #6 solution 1234567 89 10 111213 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23242526 272829 30 31 3233 343536 37 383940 41 42 434445 46 474849 5051 52 535455 56 57 58596061 62 63 64 65 66 67 CHAPS GRAIL FAT HYDRO LEDTO LIE AGEOF UNDERSIDE MIXMASTERMIKE BEE RAE ISEE ENCL LIVULLMANN RESOD IMAY TOT XIJINPING LAD SORE NEWDO PRINCESSDI LOAD SMUG ABS MID ROMANNUMERALS HANSOMCAB TANIA UVA SMITE TILER GAL HOSED ELYSE





Cancer (June 21-July 22): “My own curiosity and interest are insatiable,” wrote Cancerian au thor Emma Lazarus. Inspired by the wealth of influences she absorbed, she created an array of poetry, plays, novels, essays, and translations—including the famous poem that graces the pedestal of America’s Statue of Liberty. I recommend her as a role mod el for you in the coming weeks, Cancerian. I think you’re ripe for an expansion and deep ening of your curiosity. You will benefit from cultivating an enthusiastic quest for new information and fresh influences. Here’s a mantra for you: “I am wildly innocent as I vivify my soul’s education.”
38 20226,September–31August c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “Now that I’m free to be myself, who am I?” Virgo-born Mary Oliver asks that question to start one of her poems. She spends the rest of the poem speculating on possible answers. At the end, she concludes she mostly longs to be an “empty, waiting, pure, speechless receptacle.” Such a state of being might work well for a poet with lots of time on her hands, but I don’t recommend it for you in the coming weeks. Instead, I hope you’ll be profuse, active, busy, experimental, and expressive. That’s the best way to celebrate the fact that you are now freer to be yourself than you have been in a while.
Virgo
Aries (March 21-April 19): In his poem “Autobi ographia Literaria,” Aries-born Frank O’Ha ra wrote, “When I was a child, I played in a corner of the schoolyard all alone. If anyone was looking for me, I hid behind a tree and cried out, ‘I am an orphan.’” Over the years, though, O’Hara underwent a marvelous transformation. This is how his poem ends: “And here I am, the center of all beauty! Writ ing these poems! Imagine!” In the coming months, Aries, I suspect that you, too, will have the potency to outgrow and transcend a sadness or awkwardness from your own past. The shadow of an old source of suffer ing may not disappear completely, but I bet it will lose much of its power to diminish you.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22): Blogger Scott Williams writes, “There are two kinds of magic. One comes from the heroic leap, the upward surge of energy, the explosive arc that burns bright across the sky. The other kind is the slow accretion of effort: the water-on-stone meth od, the soft root of the plant that splits the sidewalk, the constant wind that scours the mountain clean.” Can you guess which type
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During these interludes of refreshing emp tiness, you recharge your precious life en ergy. You become like a fallow field allowing fertile nutrients to regenerate. In my astro logical opinion, now is one of these revital izing phases for you.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): To be the best Aquarius you can be in the coming weeks, I suggest the following: 1. Zig when others zag. Zag when others zig. 2. Play with the fantasy that you’re an extraterrestrial who’s engaged in an exper iment on planet Earth. 3. Be a hopeful cynic and a cheerful skeptic. 4. Do things that in spire people to tell you, “Just when I thought I had you figured out, you do something unexpected to confound me.” 5. Just for fun, walk backward every now and then. 6. Fall in love with everything and everyone: a D-List celebrity, an oak tree, a neon sign, a feral cat. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20): A blogger who calls herself HellFresh writes, “Open and raw communication with your partners and allies may be uncomfortable and feel awk ward and vulnerable, but it solves so many the Reinvent Your Relationships Phase of your astrological cycle.
WILL ASTROLOGY
Taurus (April 20-May 20): In his poem “Auguries of Innocence,” William Blake championed the ability “to see a World in a Grain of Sand. And a Heaven in a Wild Flower. Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand.” According to my read ing of the astrological omens, Taurus, you are primed to do just that in the coming days. You have the power to discern the sacred in the midst of mundane events. The magic and mystery of life will shine from every little thing you encounter. So I will love it if you deliver the following message to a person you care for: “Now I see that the beauty I had not been able to find in the world is in you.”
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Author Zadie Smith praised Sagittarian writer Joan Didion. She said, “I remain grateful for the day I picked up Joan Didion’s Slouching Towards Bethle hem and realized that a woman could speak without hedging her bets, without hemming and hawing, without making nice, without sounding pleasant or sweet, without defer ence, and even without doubt.” I encourage Sagittarians of every gender to be inspired by Didion in the coming weeks. It’s a favor able time to claim more of the authority you have earned. Speak your kaleidoscopic wis dom without apology or dilution. More fiercely than ever before, embody your high “My grandmother used to tell stories about women that change into birds and lizards. One day, a church-going man dared to laugh at her; he said it was too much for him to swal low. My grandmother looked at him and said, ‘I bet you believe Jesus turned water into wine.’” My purpose in telling you this, Capricorn, is to encourage you to nurture and celebrate your own fantastic tales. Life isn’t all about reasonableness and pragmatism. You need myth and magic to thrive. You require the gifts of imagination and art and lyrical flights of fancy. This is especially true now. To para phrase David Byrne, now is a perfect time to refrain from making too much sense.
ily shed your ambitions and avoid as many of your responsibilities as you safely can.
THE ARC STUDIO A visual arts program & open studio space for adult artists with disabilities Get to know Follow us on Instagram to view art, schedule a tour, or learn more about our amazing artists
By Rob Brezsny Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In her book Tales From Earthsea, Libra-born Ursula K. Le Guin wrote, “What goes too long unchanged de stroys itself. The forest is forever because it dies and dies and so lives.” I trust you’re embodying those truths right now. You’re in a phase of your cycle when you can’t af ford to remain unchanged. You need to enthusiastically and purposefully engage in dissolutions that will prepare the way for your rebirth in the weeks after your birthday. The process might sometimes feel strenuous, but it should ultimately be great fun. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): As a Scorpio, novelist Fyodor Dostoevsky was rarely guilty of oversimplifi cation. Like any intelligent person, he could hold contradictory ideas in his mind without feeling compelled to seek more superficial truths. He wrote, “The causes of human ac tions are usually immeasurably more complex and varied than our subsequent explanations of them.” I hope you will draw inspiration from his example in the coming weeks, dear Scorpio. I trust you will resist the temptation to reduce colorful mysteries to straightforward explanations. There will always be at least three sides to every story. I invite you to relish glo rious paradoxes and fertile enigmas.






39August31-September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly CLASSIFIEDSDEADLINE Friday at 5 PM for inclusion in the next Wednesday’s paper. QUESTIONS? classifieds.c-ville.comsalesrep@c-ville.comEmail PRICING Rates starting at $40. Email for specific pricing. Pre-payment Required. We accept all major credit cards, cash or check. SIZES AVAILABLE Full Page Half 1/16QuarterPagePageEightPage(BusinessCard) EMPLOYMENT Direct Support ProfessionalsResidential Services (FT and PT, $15 - $17/hr) For more details and positions, and to apply, please visit http://arcpva.org/employment Offering competitive compensation, paid training, and - for full time staff -an attractive benefits package including paid leave, health, dental & vision insurance, as well as life & long-term disability insurance. 434-977-4002x124 arcpva.org • @arcpiedmont.va Want to apply your skills to ensure the greatest quality of life possible for our fellow community members in need? If so, The Arc has these opportunities to offer. The Arc of the Piedmont is an Equal Opportunity Employer. We’re very eager to hear from candidates interested in working in Crozet & C’ville! We'reHiring! Ourmissionistoensurefullcommunityinclusionandparticipationofpeoplewithdevelopmental disabilitiesthroughtheprovisionofhigh-qualityservicesandadvocacy.Ourvisionistoremainthe leadingproviderofservicesandadvocacyforthisdeservingpopulation.Ifyousharethesevalueswe urgeyoutoconsiderthefollowingcareeropportunities: AboutUs Apply now! 434-977-4002x124 arcpva.org@arcpiedmont.va SeniorDirectSupportProfessionals(2openings,$15-$17/hr) DirectSupportProfessionals-CharlottesvilleDaySupport($13-$15/hr) DirectSupportProfessionals-ResidentialServices(FTandPT,$13-$15/hr) DirectSupportProfessional-Floater(overnights,$16/hr) We'reveryeagertohearfromcandidatesinterestedinworkinginCrozet andC’ville! Toseeadditionaldetailsandafulllistingofallourpositionsortoapply, pleasevisitourwebsiteathttp://arcpva.org/employment Inadditiontoofferingachallengingandrewardingexperience,TheArcalsoofferscompetitive compensation,paidtraining,and-forfulltimestaff-anattractivebenefitspackageincludingpaid leave,health,dentalandvisioninsurance,aswellaslifeandlong-termdisabilityinsurance.TheArc ofthePiedmontisanEqualOpportunityEmployer. Our mission is to ensure full community inclusion and participation of people with developmental disabilities through the provision of high-quality services and advocacy. Our vision is to remain the leading provider of services and advocacy for this deserving population. ApplyDirectnow!Support Professionals (FT and PT, $15 -$ 17/hr) Looking for Experienced Gardener to work full time on private farm in Albemarle county. Outdoor work year round. Plant knowledge a must. Able to lift heavy loads, squat or stand for extended periods. Duties include assisting head gardener with various tasks including planting, plant care, watering, mulching, raking, stick and leaf removal, pruning, weeding, etc. Salary plus benefits. If qualified please e-mail contact info and resume to jimbobav@juno.com. Come work for a "Best of C-VILLE" winery! Email your resume to us Hiringinfo@eastwoodfarmandwinery.comatformultiplepositions including: Experienced Line Cooks Prep Cooks Food Runners/Dishwashers Part-time and full-time positions. Competitive pay and opportunities for advancement.










VA
The above establishment VIRGINIA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL (ABC) AUTHORITY for
NOTE:
40August31-September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly WORK IT SHORTOUT!STAFFED?C-VILLECLASSIFIEDSCANHELPYOUWITHHIRING! LEGALS For more details Call Jay: HelpPersonal434-295-2348CareNeededforinHomeHealthcareBelmontArea• Private & comfortable home setting • Easy work in a relaxed & inviting atmosphere • No heavy lifting • Reliable transportation a must* 7 Days a Week NursingPleaseStudentsApply! * Bus #1:Sunday required,alternate transportation needed.
Objections to the issuance of this license must be Submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia.gov or 800-552-3200. Get Hired For A OnlyInterviewCareerforaJobAtCharlottesville’s4-DiamondResort • Health Benefits & 401k • Childcare Discounts • Paid Vacation • Free Sports Club Access • Career Advancement • Employee Gatherings • Resort Discounts • Beautiful Work Environment Start a new and exciting career at a place that strikes a balance between fun, family and work. With openings in many of our departments, there are abundant opportunities. Whether it be sports and fitness, hotel and spa operations or dining and hospitality, there’s something for everyone. OurJoinTeam! Join us for open interviews on Sept. 9 from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. and Sept. 10 from 11 a.m. – 3 p.m. Visit our careers web page for more info at BoarsHeadResort.com/Careers.
MOES ORIGINAL BBQ 2119 Ivy Road, Charlottesville, 22903
The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL (ABC) AUTHORITY for a Wine and Beer Off Premise license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Banana Stand LLC, Owner
BLUE RIDGE COUNTRY STORE 518 E Main St, Charlottesville, VA 22902
is applying to the
NOTE: Objections to the issuance of this license must Submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia.gov or 800-552-3200.
be
a Mixed Beverage Restaurant License to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Derek Bond, Owner





ORDERED that all interested parties appear on or before September 16th, 2022 in the Clerk’s Office of this Court and do what is necessary to protect his interest in this matter ENTER: DATE: H. Thomas Padrick, Jr. 8/3/2022
The object of this suit is to Approve the foster care plan of Albemarle County Department of Social Services with the goal of adoption and the petition to terminate the residential parental rights of Megan Fultz in the child born to them on May 26, 2006 in Charlottesville, Virginia
The object of the above-styled suit is an adoption action
8/10/2022
VIRGINIA: IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316
It is hereby
It is ORDERED that the X defendant Megan Fultz appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before September 21, 2022 at 2:00 p.m.
8/10/2022 David M. Barredo DATE JUDGE ORDER OF PUBLICATION
PETITIONERORDER
OF PUBLICATION
The object of this suit is to Approve the foster care plan of Albemarle County Department of Social Services with the goal of adoption and the petition to terminate the residential parental rights of Megan Fultz & Jason Henry in the child born to them on January 12, 2012 in Charlottesville, Virginia
David M. Barredo DATE JUDGE
Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: A.M.Z. The object of this suit is to: Terminate residual parental rights in A.M.Z (dob 4/26/07) and approve a foster care plan with a goal of adoption. It is ORDERED that X Moises Morales, appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before October 3rd, 2022 at 9:00 8/1/2022a.m.
It is ORDERED that the X defendant Megan Fultz appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before September 21, 2022 at 2:00 p.m.
Albemarle County Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court
Albemarle County Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: D.C.
David M. Barredo DATE JUDGE
Albemarle County Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: T.H.
ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
InALBEMARLEthematterof the adoption of a child known as AUBREY LYNNE JOHNSON a minor, born on February 8, 2016 by Lynda Donel Keller
An affidavit having been filed that due diligence has been used by the Petitioner to ascertain the identity and address of the natural father, Jerod Michael Johnson, without success.
41August31-September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly
Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316

42August31-September6,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 Albemarle County Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re: E.M. and R.S. The object of this suit is to terminate residual parental rights of E.M. (2/10/20) and R.S. (1/14/2021) and aprove plan with adoption goal. It is ORDERED that the X defendant Katie Shaver appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before September 27, 2022 at 9:00 8/3/2022a.m. David M. Barredo DATE JUDGE &CommunityMISC. Notices Upgrade Your Home witha NEW METAL ROOF Guaranteed to Last a Lifetime! New orders only. Does not include material costs. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Minimum purchase required. Other restrictions may apply. This is an advertisement placed on behalf of Erie Construction Mid-West, Inc (“Erie”). Offer terms and conditions may apply and the offer may not be available in your area. Offer expires December 31, 2022. If you call the number provided, you consent to being contacted by telephone, SMS text message, email, pre-recorded messages by Erie or its affiliates and service providers using automated technologies notwithstanding if you are on a DO NOT CALL list or register. Please review our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use on homeservicescompliance.com. All rights reserved. VA License Number: 2705029944 Call today to schedule your FREE ESTIMATE 1-844-902-4611 Made in the USA LIMITED TIME OFFER 60% off TAKE AN ADDITIONAL 10 % off YOUR INSTALLATION Install for Military, Health Workers and First Responders + Warranty- Limited Lifetime. Transferable to 1 subsequent owner from original purchaser. Terms and conditions apply. Hail up to 2.5”, Appearance of the surface coating beyond normal wear and tear. Limited time offer. Expires 12.31.22 1-877-614-6667CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE Promo Code: 285 FINANCING THAT FITS YOUR BUDGET!1 1Subject to credit approval. Call for details. THE NA TION S GUTTER GUARD1 EXCLUSIVE LIMITED TIME OFFER! TO THE FIRST 50 CALLERS ONLY! ** SENIORS MILITARY!&YOUR PURCHASEENTIRE* & + 5 1015%% % OFFOFF OFF LIFETIMEWARRANTY WE YEAR-ROUND!INSTALL *For those who qualify. One coupon per household. No obligation estimate valid for 1 year. **Offer valid at time of estimate only 2The leading consumer reporting agency conducted a 16 month outdoor test of gutter guards in 2010 and recognized LeafFilter as the “#1 rated professionally installed gutter guard system in America.” Manufactured in Plainwell, Michigan and processed at LMT Mercer Group in Ohio. See Representative for full warranty details. CSLB# 1035795 DOPL #10783658-5501 License# 7656 License# 50145 License# 41354 License# 99338 License# 128344 License# 218294 WA UBI# 603 233 977 License# 2102212986 License# 2106212946 License# 2705132153A License# LEAFFNW822JZ License# WV056912 License# WC-29998-H17 Nassau HIC License# H01067000 Registration# 176447 Registration# HIC.0649905 Registration# C127229 Registration# C127230 Registration# 366920918 Registration# PC6475 Registration# IR731804 Registration# 13VH09953900 Registration# PA069383 Suffolk HIC License# 52229-H License# 2705169445 License# 262000022 License# 262000403 License# 0086990 Registration# H-19114 BACKED BY A YEAR-ROUND CLOG-FREE GUARANTEE Mon-Thurs: 8am-11pm, Fri-Sat: 8am-5pm, Sun: 2pm-8pm EST WALK-IN BATHTUB SALE! SAVE $1,50000 Walk-In Tubs ✓ Backed by American Standard’s 150 years of experience ✓ Ultra low ease of entry and exit ✓ Patented Quick Drain® Technology ✓ Lifetime Warranty on the bath AND installation, INCLUDING labor backed by American Standard ✓ 44 Hydrotherapy Jets for an invigorating massage Limited Time O er–Call Today! 855-864-5500MA E USA W H M O EDPA TS








































43 20226,SEPTEMBER31AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3135ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COM VOL. 31 NO. 35 n AUGUST 31 - SEPTEMBER 6, 2022 WWW.C-VILLE.COM CHARLOTTESVILLE ALBEMARLE, FLUVANNA, GREENE, LOUISA, MADISON, NELSON, ORANGE, AUGUSTA30 OFYEARS ESTATEREAL The Town ofShowsMadisonOff BY KEN WILSON 2022



WILEYPROPERTY.COMFOSTERFARM
JUSTIN H. WILEY | 434 981 5528
GREYLEDGE $6,950,000 A spectacular 1842 Virginia Landmark situated on a 739-acre estate with magnificent views of the Blue Ridge & Allegheny mountains. The original architectural elements: 17-inch thick, Flemish bond laid brick walls, oversized 6 over 6 windows, 13 fireplaces, plaster walls and tongue and groove flooring have been expertly paired with all the modern conveniences. The 9723 sq ft Greek Revival residence has been meticulously renovated to a pristine level rarely seen. The residence sits at 1200 feet overlooking the beautiful 6-acre lake w/ layered mountain views beyond. The level of natural beauty & privacy enjoyed from the residence is unparalleled. 20 min south of Lexington & 30 min to Roanoke airport, 7 min to Town of Buchanan.
A rare, first-time offering. An exquisite, custom brick residence designed/built by the renowned team of Jay Dalgliesh, AIA, and Jeff Smith of Altera Construction. Only 6 miles west of Charlottesville and the University with incredible Blue Ridge views. Rooms flow together with an easy elegance, each showing off the high level of detail and materials for which the architect and builder are known. First and second floor master suites. One of the highest quality homes currently on the market.
PETER A. WILEY | 434 422 2090 Coming Soon
WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE 20226,SEPTEMBER-31AUGUSTWWW.C-VILLE.COM 443135ISSUE
$825,000 | MLS 627319 140 beautiful acres, very private, yet conveniently located to both towns of Gordonsville, and Orange. This parcel consists of 35 acres in pasture, with numerous great building sites, and 105 wooded acres, which surrounds the open land. The parcel has numerous springs that flow into the White Oak Creek, which bisects the property, and there is natural area suitable for constructing a pond. Property is further enhanced by a recently updated driveway, long frontage on Mallory's Ford Road, and a deeded access out to Mountain Tract Road.
CUSTOM RESIDENCE $2,595,000 | MLS 630576
Exceptional estate less than 15 minutes south of Charlottesville. The elegant residence is perfectly sited for views of the surrounding Ragged Mountains and a 30-acre lake with private dock, while also providing complete privacy. Constructed by Shelter and Associates, the home features superior craftsmanship and materials. Outside, large patios with fireplace and outdoor kitchen are the perfect setting for entertaining. Also featured are an attached, car-enthusiast's 3-car garage, geothermal HVAC and a separate two-car garage with living quarters.
HEADQUARTERS
JUSTIN H. WILEY | 434 981 5528
PETER A. WILEY | 434 422 2090 FOSTERS BRANCH $575,000 | MLS 623681 First time ever on the open market, two exceptional parcels with incredible views over Charlottesville and layered Blue Ridge Mountains beyond. These private parcels, perched on the western slope of the Southwest Mountains, offer complete seclusion yet are only 15 minutes from downtown Charlottesville, its restaurants and amenities and UVA. Perfect as a family compound or build on one and sell the other. Please do not drive on property without an appointment.
JUSTIN H. WILEY | 434 981 5528
JUSTIN H. WILEY | 434 981 5528 ORANGE VA | 540 672 3903CHARLOTTESVILLE VA | 434 293 3900
SOLITE FARM $910,000 | MLS 630924
$2,600,000 | MLS 633952 Headquarters, circa 1837, is located west of Charlottesville in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, one of White Hall's/Browns Cove's most historically significant and best preserved properties married with a tastefully designed 2005 addition. The 5 bedroom, 4 bath home sits on 50 acres of pasture and mature hardwoods with stunning views of the pond and surrounding mountains. The estate includes a managers house, stable, utility barn, and numerous other dependencies. Incredibly private surrounded by the natural beauty of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Doyles River frontage. Property can also be purchased with 428 acres for $5,250,000.
PETER A. WILEY | 434 422 2090
PETER A. WILEY | 434 422 2090






Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
Steve White (434) 989-4415 6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355
6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards.
WWW.HOWARDHANNA.COM What's your home really worth? Scan to get THREE estimates instantly OASIS OF 35+ ACRES 286 Ghost Ridge 6 BR, 3 BA, 2392 SQ FT $615,000 mls 633824 Jan Shiflett, 434-242-6057 AWESOME PROPERTY IN ROCHELLE 39 Jacks Shop Road 3 BR, 2 BA, 1622 SQ FT $425,000 mls 633616 Jan Shiflett, 434-242-6057 LIVE AT SPRING CREEK 302 Deer Run Drive 4 BR, 3.5 BA, 3791 SQ FT $520,000 mls 633909 Susan Stewart, 434-242-3550 EXCELLENT CITY LOCATION 106-C Melbourne Park 3 BR, 2.5 BA, 1698 SQ FT $379,000 mls 633908 Logan Wells Klalo, 434-981-3097 THE LEESBURG 4820 Blue Run Road 3 BR, 2 BA, 1481 SQ FT $342,900 mls 633681 Susan Stewart, 434-242-3550 GORGEOUS YEAR-ROUND VIEWS 2646 Boonesville Road Private and elevated 8 acres $395,000 mls 633334 Jim McVay, 434-962-3420 1-LEVEL HOME WITH SUITE 115 Old Mill Road 4 BR, 3 BA, 2702 SQ FT $449,900 mls 632299 Karen S. Dowell, 434-531-6948 THE MONTPELIER 850 Jefferson Drive 4 BR, 2.5 BA, 1719 SQ FT $357,225 mls 629975 Susan Stewart, 434-242-3550 GREEN VALLEY Barrow Lane Rural building lot of 3.02 acres $17,000 mls 614404 Jan Shiflett, 434-242-6057
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres
6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415
6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415
Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards.
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
C H A R L O T T E S V I L L E 4 3 4 9 5 5 5 1 5 5 Z I O N C R O S S R O A D S 4 3 4 5 8 9 2 6 1 1 G R E E N E C O U N T Y 4 3 4 . 9 8 5 . 2 3 4 8 OPEN 11/3
511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355
Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355 |
511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355
511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355
Steve White (434) 989-4415
convenient
OPEN 11/3 | 12-3pm PRICE REDUCED
45 20226,SEPTEMBER31AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3135ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COM
511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres
6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355 511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355 6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve (434)989-4415White
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres
Steve White (434) 989-4415
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355
6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards.
12-3pm
511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355
511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick 6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. ROY WHEELER REALTY REAL ESTATE SERVICES
















he tiny town of Madison has barely 350 people— and no stoplights—but once a year down on Main Street thousands come to visit. They come for the crafts and the doit-yourself activities, for the pony rides and the antique cars, for the music and the magic, and they come—of course—for the food. They find all these small town pleasures, and a whole bunch of friendly people, at the Taste of the Mountains Street Festival, where Madison puts on a free party and everyone’s invited.
The
Wet festivalgoers and laughing friends are already in the mood for feel-good music. The Marching Mountaineers will spread their good cheer over in the park ing lot at Jenny Lynd’s Pizza. The boys in Madison County’s own Dark Hollow Bluegrass Band, the self-described “Best Dressed Bluegrass Band In Town,” will play old-time mountain music, and the Hurt Family will play bluegrass gospel tunes. Town ofShowsMadisonOff BY KEN WILSON 2022
A certified animal trainer, and a magic consultant for the Carbonaro Effect on Tru TV, for ten years in a row he put on a 24-hour magic show for the annual Children’s Miracle Network Telethon.
WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE 20226,SEPTEMBER-31AUGUSTWWW.C-VILLE.COM 463135ISSUEFEATURE
Entertainment Head to the Madison Drug Company parking lot for great entertainment: ma gician and illusionist Wes Iseli, back this year “by popular demand.” Iseli has been doing magic tricks since he was sevenyears-old, and started his own business, Party Magic, after graduating from high school. His fast-paced shows feature Ve gas-style Illusions, comedy routines, and animal effects, and perhaps most fun of all, audience participation.
Kids will enjoy face painting and a bounceable balloon typhoon, develop a little artistic skill with craft activities like sand art, and take guided pony rides. Adults who like to stroll can pick up town maps and take self-guided walking tours to historic buildings including the Greek Revival-style home that belonged to James Lawson Kemper, Virginia’s gov ernor from 1874 to 1878. In 1993 the Madison Chamber of Commerce held the first Taste of the Mountains, intended as a celebration of the town’s 18th and 19th century Blue Ridge Mountain heritage. Good things start small. Most vendors that first year were local, like Early American furniture
Since then, the Festival has been named by the Southeast Tourism Soci ety as one of the top 20 festivals in the southeastern United States. Willard Scott of the Today Show talked it up in 2001.
Nowadays annual attendance is es timated at 10-15,000, including all the former residents who come back to catch up. “We have lots of people who come from outside of Madison,” says Gardner.
Iseli has escaped after having his audi ence tie him with 100 yards of rope, and has accurately predicted the headline of a national newspaper a month in advance.
“Virginia is for lovers,” as the state slogan goes, and the 16-foot-wide, 7-foothigh LOVEwork sculpture on the Mad ison County Public Library lawn will provide a perfect family photo-op. The Madison County Youth Baseball league, serving kids ages four to fifteen, will have a dunking booth on that same lawn: Dunk the one you love!
crafters Clore Furniture (formerly E.A. Clore), a leading Madison firm since 1830.Madison native Tracey Gardner, the county’s Economic Development and Tourism Director, remembers a tractor, “a hay ride type thing,” being used to transport festivalgoers from their cars to Main Street.
T
This year as always, festivalgoers will peruse 170 arts, crafts, and antiques booths, fill up on the volunteer fire de partment’s famous steak sandwiches, and enjoy music from, among others, Madison County’s high school band, the Marching Mountaineers.
Covid canceled the festivities in 2020 and 2021, but the 28th annual Taste of the Mountains Street Festival will finally take place this year on Saturday, September 3 from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Come one, come all!
“It’s a good time to see people that you don’t see year round.”


47 20226,SEPTEMBER31AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3135ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COM FEATURE Dana Williams REALTOR, ABR, SFR 540-718-0621 danawilliams.exprealty.comdanaw0621@gmail.comcell 609 S Main ST • Culpeper, VA 540-825-9898 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY on RT. 29 in Madison County Location!! 9.6 Acres, 1643 S Seminole Trail, Zoned B1. This property already has a crossover in place in front of the business. Previous Chevrolet Dealership, the property currently consists of 2 parcels, 5.497 Acres with the 60x80 building, 30x50 garage and 12x21 shed. The 2nd parcel consists of 4.103 Acres. A creek goes through the property. Septic currently serves the property. Brand new survey. MLS ID# VAMA2000702, $869,900 Conveniently Located This 1,544 sq.ft. home with 3.18 acres on 3830 Lillards Ford Road, Brightwood, is in an ideal location for jumping on Rt. 29 to commute to Northern Va or Charlottesville! Inside you will find a nice spacious open kitchen, 3 bedrooms and 2 baths upstairs, plus an additional room and full bath with a soaking tub in the basement. Wood stove hookup in the basement. Roof, water heater, and outside HVAC unit were replaced in ‘09. Paved driveway! Comcast high speed internet. MLS ID# VAMA2000670, $339,900 Bohannon - Amazing Mountain Views on 11.270 Acres Incredibly serene 11.270 acre secluded site located in Syria, VA, a stone’s throw away from Shenandoah National Park, nearby sites include White Oak Canyon, Old Rag Mountain, and many hiking trails -- an outdoor adventurer’s dream come true. Just down the road is Graves Mountain Lodge. Across the road is the crystal clear Robinson River, stocked with trout. This property boasts awe-inspiring mountain views and has a scouted location perfect for a primary home or mountain retreat. All that’s missing is your vision to make this dream property complete. MLS ID# VAMA2000698, $279,900












vegetables,
Newcomer Salsa Street Grill will offer tacos, quesadillas, burritos, and bowls. Naturally there will be plenty of cold beer, and a wine tent for both buying andThesampling.Volunteer Fire Department has served the citizens of Madison County since 1946, and currently has 50 active members. They’re beloved at Taste of the Mountains for their grilled steak sandwiches---they sell hundreds. The nearby Madison County Farmers Market, a producer-only market, runs Saturdays from May to October, 8 a.m. to noon in Hoover Ridge Park. Festivalgo ers will find fresh fruit, and pasta, and a whole lot more: pastured, allnatural eggs, beef, pork, chicken, lamb, goat, duck, turkey, herbs, specialty wools, honey, homemade baked goods and and cut flowers. Madison Now and Then Chartered in 1792 and named the family that produced the country’s fourth president, Madison County was VA
22701 Great Rambler 2 Miles From The Town of Madison Remodeled in 2020 with new kitch en cabinets & counters, hardwood floors, newer Architectural roof. Back deck with a nice big back yard & Big Shed. Detached garage with electric & AC, all appliances convey and most of the furniture. MLS ID# VAMA2000704, $274,900 Bonnie Coffey ABR, GRI, CRS, PSA, SRS (540) 270-5362 www.coffeyhouse1.combonniecoffeyrealestate@gmail.com 159 Little Church Lane, Madison ROGER VOISINET, ePro, 434-981EcoBroker1076www.cvilleproperties.com Realty Specialists 21.04 Acres in Madison Co. on Etlan Road Midway between Syria and Etlan. One mile of road frontage on Etlan Road starting from Leathers Road to 1/10 mile past the entrance to DuCard at Gibson Hollow Lane. At top of land Leathers Lane and Leathers Road border the 21 acres providing additional access points. A very peaceful parcel close to recreational opportunities, this private parcel would make an excellent primary home or mountain chalet with gorgeous views. MLS#631270, $199,000. Price Reduced, Motivated Seller. We’ve COVERED!VirginiaCentralGot 24 HOURS • 52 WEEKS 365 DAYS PER YEAR ONLINE & IN PRINT Real Estate Weekly CHARLOTTESVILLE ALBEMARLE, FLUVANNA, GREENE, LOUISA, MADISON, NELSON, ORANGE, AUGUSTA30 OF ESTATE MAY 18 24, 2022 $$$ Rising Rates & Higher Costs What’s a Buyer to Do?
The Bennie Dodd Band will play good ole country music. Born and raised in Nelson County, Dodd got his start sing ing in the choir when he was young. Before long he was playing music with his friends in the garage. Thirty-five years later, Dodd is still performing in the local club scene and has become a Central Virginia favorite. Made by Hand Handmade baskets, wooden ink pens, collectible teddy bears, iron picture hang ers, personalized wooden benches, pan pipes, Blue Ridge bonsai trees, pet toys, stained glass—if it’s handmade, it’s for sale at Taste of the Mountains. That includes excellent furniture. E.A. Clore Sons, Inc. has been building and selling handcrafted Early American fur niture in Madison since Moses (Moses Clore, that is) began making chairs back in 1830, and the Clore family still owns and operates the company today. As al ways, they’ll display their popular fur niture, including a selection of tables, chairs, and footstools. Long one of Madison County’s des tination shops, Madison Art Exchange (MAD Arts), in a lovingly restored co lonial building on Route 29, is home to hundreds of Central Virginia artists, including painters, sculptors, jewelers, carvers, stone masons, blacksmiths, ce ramic artists, knitters, growers, produc ers, writers and musicians. Its two floors are packed with original artwork, handmade jewelry, beautiful textiles, hand-thrown pottery, quirky books and gift items. MAD Arts helps browsers become mak ers through its fine art instruction, craft classes for the young and youngish, and private music instruction at the beginning, intermediate and advanced levels. The Madison County Historical Society will be open, and the Kemper Residence will be open for tours. James Lawson Kemper and his family moved to the three-story, 1851 mansion (now restored and furnished in period style) in 1865. Before his governorship he repre sented Madison in the Virginia House of Delegates (1853-1863), served as Speaker for the final term, fought in the Mexican War, held the rank of Major General in the Confederate Army, and was badly wounded in Pickett’s Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg.Outsidethe residence, Clyde Jenkins will sell his handwoven baskets, and dem onstrate the art of basket-weaving. Across the street at Beth Car Baptist Church, the Madison Quilt Guild will show their lovely work. The Fredericksburg Antique Auto Club will be on hand as well to exhibit their meticulously maintained classicWithincars.four miles as the crow flies are eight other roadside markers and histori cal structures. Jackson’s March to Fred ericksburg is a mere 700 feet away. Other markers, most only about a third of a mile away, refer to the Madison County Confederate Dead; Madison County Courthouse; Herbert Hoover; Corporal Clinton Greaves; The Fallen Warriors Monument; Hebron Lutheran Church; and the Joseph Early Home. Good Eats Hungry festivalgoers can get lunches and early suppers from a variety of food carts, including those of Kite’s Ham, Valentine’s Country Bakery, Jenny Lynd’s Pizza, Miranda’s Restaurant, Mad Local, Pop Pop’s Concessions, Catch the Chef, Over the Top Chef, the Bavarian Chef, and The Little Country Store in Etlan.
WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE 20226,SEPTEMBER-31AUGUSTWWW.C-VILLE.COM 483135ISSUEFEATURE
jams,
after
Samson Properties 471 James Madison Hwy, Culpeper,










county, close to Old Rag mountain, Shenandoah National Park, and many wineries!
49 20226,SEPTEMBER31AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3135ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COM FEATURE COMING SOON * GIBBS ROAD * $345,000 * Beautiful Brick Home with 3BR/3BA * 3,000+ Fin.Sq.Ft; 2 Car Garage & Full Basement * 2+/- Acres Situated Just ¼ Mile to Route 29 MLS 628887 * HAWK CIRCLE * $149,000 * 5.22 Acre Tract w/Tremendous Privacy! * Access Easement to the Robinson River * 2 Custom-Made Buildings & Set-Up for RV 125 N. Main Street, Madison, VA 22727 Office 1-877-948-3838540-948-3838 We Live, Work, & Serve In The Community We Know And Love So Well! CARL BROYLES Cell Carl@BroylesRealEstate.com540.718.3599 LISA BROYLES Cell Lisa@BroylesRealEstate.com540.718.2653CAAR ReAl eSTATe Weekly | www.charlottesv Illerealestateweekly.com LISTINGS & VIRTUAL TOURS AT WWW.GERRIRUSSELL.COM Sales Associate, Farms & Estates tel 434-951-5162 • cell 434-531-9581 • 1-800-205-4779 gerri@gerrirussell.com • www.GerriRussell.com Roy Wheeler Realty Co. peace and serenity of Primwelcoming haven for those enjoyable lifestyle. The updates and upgrades. The will enchant you on those storage with a walk up attic. well as a stocked pond, ve stall barn for your included are two sheds and an front porch and enjoy the RIMROSE Bee Gum Way maintained home in Wonderful Subdivision. Truly a must see with lot, basement and two car all for $224,500! $66,900 under assessment. TRUE VALUE!!! $224,500 shop, 3200 sq.ft. barn & several other outbuildings. Fenced & cross fenced; well suited for cattle &/or horses. Blue Ridge Mountain Views! MLS#489158 $695,000 1235 N Seminole Trail • Madison, VA 22727 • 1-877-948-3838 Specializing in Central Virginia Farm, Residential, Land & Investment Properties ing throughout! Outdoor enthusiast can relax on the expansive rear deck or patio, or enjoy a number of activities/hobbies on the sprawling 9.5+ acres! MLS#490857 $379,900 Malvern of Madison Great Value, Great Location! Wonderful home w/loads to offer! With just under 4 acres, property boasts a beautifully landscaped, open yard along w/wooded privacy, & frontage on Dark Run. Home has 3BR/3.5 BA; huge, finished bonus room over garage, a sunroom addition full of natural light, & a full, mostly finished basement w/a full bath, family room & office! MLS#490267 $299,000 Aroda Ranch Brick Ranch with FIVE bedrooms, 2 baths & walk-out basement in Madison County! Home has open floor plan, has been scrubbed inside & out and freshly painted! 4.8 acres both open and wooded, with 2 separately fenced pastures; agricultural zoning offers flexibility for the lands usage (3 Bedroom Septic). MLS#486596 $239,000 Great Starter Home
view you’ll appreciate magnificent sunsets & the quiet serenity of the country! Offering 104+ ac. in 2 separate tax map parcels. The 83 ac. tract has a beautiful brick home w/ 3BR, 3.5BA, full fin. basement (complete w/2nd kitchen, full BA, etc.), as well as a det. 2 car garage. So many possibilities with this amazing farm property! MLS# 503224 | $925,000 253 SAWMILL RD - Picture-Perfect Farm! Stun ning mtn & pastoral views surround this immaculate home on 304+/- acres! Hardwood floors, spacious eat-in kitchen w/sep dining room, family room & living room, as well as 4 BRs & 2 BA. Currently a working farm with crops and grazing land, stream & NUMER OUS outbuildings/barns. Farm has incredible value with extensive frontage on 3 state maintained roads, in 4 tax map parcels! MLS# 493270 | $2,250,000 MLS 633286 * WILDERNESS ROAD * $525,000 * Offering Gorgeous Blue Ridge Mountain Views! * 3BR/3BA on Almost 10 Acres (Total of 2 Lots) * Attached 2-Car Garage, Detached Garage & Shed MLS 633677 * ETLAN ROAD * $159,000 * Gorgeous 10+ Acres in Stunning Syria Area * Fronts Paved, State Maintained Road (Etlan Rd) * Offers Beautiful Mountain & Pastoral Views MLS 627835 * INDEPENDENCE ROAD * $165,000 * 2 Building Lots Totaling 18.9 Acres * Tremendous Privacy, Yet Minutes to Route 20 * Property Offers Excellent Hunting Potential MLS 615449 * HIGH ROAD * $29,000 * Just Over 5 Acres of Wooded Privacy! * Perfect for Full Time or Vacation Home * 3BR Perk; Middle River Retreat 125 North Main Street • Madison, VA 22727 (540) 948-6655 CINDY REED REALTOR, GRI, CPM, SRS, PSA, e-PRO 540-395-2167 (c) 540-672-2157 cindy.montaguemiller.comcinders44@gmail.com(o) KAREN PAYTON (434)REALTOR960-1085 (c) (540) 948-6655 ext. 111 kpayton.montaguemiller.comkpayton@montaguemiller.com(o) SPECTACULAR 5.78 ACRE MOUNTAIN RETREAT... Home
First home or just wanting to downsize? Then start here in this 2BR/2BA ranch in Madison County. Enjoy the spacious, open floor plan on the main level & customize the full, unfinished bsmnt to suit your needs. A giant, sunny yard & oversized workshop complete the exterior of this wonderful 3 acre property. Made for comfortable living, just waiting for its new owner! MLS#487566 $229,000 Unique Chalet Style Looking for that secluded feel but not a world away, this unique, spacious chalet is for you! Nestled on 3.5+ acres in the gorgeous Graves Mill area of Madison Cnty, home offers 2BR/2.5BA, office, & a bonus room (could easily be used as a 3rd BR). Huge living room addition opens up to a private deck & screened porch, great for entertaining or just simply relaxing! MLS#491409 $219,000 Make your dreams of owning your own home finally come true! MLS# 507437 | $185,000 off, you’ll love the in-town convenience of this homecentral to everything! MLS# 504078 | $269,000 85 POWDER HORN LN - Inside the pri vate community of Malvern, you’ll find this fabulous 3BR/3BA home on just over 3 ac. Outside enjoy your beautiful, private screened porch & deck overlooking a park-like setting! Separate living & family rooms; expansive master suite addition, garage, partial base ment, & so much more! Privileges of the community include private lake, pool, playground, & clubhouse. MLS# 502978 | $275,000 1472 CHAMPE PLAIN RD - Panoramic Views! A rare offering in Etlan; enjoy front row views of breathtaking Old Rag Mtn right from your front porch! 35 ac. of open, rolling land, a pond & a gorgeous home that’s only 8 years old! With over 4,000 fin. sq. ft., home offers 3 BR, 4.5 BA; 2 huge bonus rooms on the 2nd level, living rm on main level, as well as a family room & another fin. room in the basement. Possibility of additl. acreage! MLS# 497009 | $595,000 328 BEAUTIFUL RUN RD - Oak View Farm - With the sweeping, miles-wide nestled in the highly desired Madison With 3,240 fin.sq.ft., 5 BR and 5 baths, there is plenty of room for everyone. The main level is composed of the gorgeous kitchen and dining room with an additional space for breakfast or coffee. There is a cozy living room with central-heating RSF wood-burning FP and a BR with a full bath. Make your way out to the covered wraparound porch and take in the beautiful surroundings. On the upper level you will find the laundry room, the master suite with bath, jetted tub, and walk-in closet, plus 2 other BR suites, each with their own bath. The finished lower level also has a BR with a full bath and walk-in closet, a recreation room, and 2 additional bonus rooms. Wooded trails, small spring and many varieties of plants. 2313 Poor House Road is completely turn-key as a full-time residence or vacation home/rental - perfect for large family gatherings. Endless possibilities!
Banco/Etlan area of
bar, eat-in kitchen, & a formal dining room. To top it
lot! Amenities include a private lake, pool, playground, & clubhouse.


















capacious
largely settled by families of German, English and Scots-Irish descent that live there to this day. President Herbert Hoover was so fond of the area that he bought 164 acres along the upper Rapi dan River in what is now Shenandoah National Park and established Camp Rapidan, his country retreat throughout hisTodaypresidency.thetown of Madison, only 0.2 square miles, is not only the county seat but has no less than six structures on the National Register of Historic Places, including the Madison County Court house, which dates to 1828.
WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE 20226,SEPTEMBER-31AUGUSTWWW.C-VILLE.COM 503135ISSUEFEATURE
“It also offers a variety of activities for people who have a sportsman lifestyle,” she notes. “You have river fishing and fox hunting and really nice trails for bi cycling. You have the scenic byway (Route 626 from Route 29 to the intersection with Route 231 in the town of Madison). So for day trippers, it’s a really nice place to come to.” One thing you notice in Madison is how friendly people are. Just ask Gard ner. Holding Taste of the Mountains again after three years, she says, “is like welcoming back your biggest, best family reunion along with thousands of your new friends.” “I grew up here,” she says, “and when I was a teenager, I couldn’t wait to get out. I went into travel and tourism and quickly realized what we have: it’s a sense of peace that you get when you come home. We call it ‘Madison Pride.’” Charming Madison is only 27 miles north of Charlottesville and 17 miles south of Culpeper, not far off of Route 29. The festival will take place rain or shine. Shuttle buses—more than the of old—will run from Madison County High School, where the parking will be free, to Festival downtown
What’s more, he believes, Madison’s slow growth philosophy ensures that “we’ll be able to maintain a way of life that people have been used to for years and years“Thehere.”town of Madison is very quaint,” says Virginia Piedmont Region REAL TOR® Vanessa Massaro. “It’s very familyoriented, and it has small town charm with extraordinary views.” As for Madison County, it’s “storybook country perfect,” she says, “because it sits in the foothills of the mountains, and you have some spec tacular views of mountains as backdrop to a lot of the properties.
tractors
Montague Miller and Company REAL TOR® Bud Kreh has called the county home since 1967, and prizes its proximity to Shenandoah National Park, as well as Early Mountain and Prince Michel winer ies and Graves Mountain Lodge, which have festivals and events throughout the“It’syear.a nice country place to grow up in,” he says. “The school system’s been great. This area has a lot to offer for people looking for a relaxed lifestyle.”
the
“Most people who come to the coun try are looking for space and views, and Madison certainly offers both.”
on Main Street. Annie Gould Gallery A unique art gallery located in the heart of historic Gordonsville. 109 S. Main Street, Gordonsville, VA • (540) 832-6352 anniegouldgallery CALL SHARON Over 25 years of Real Estate experience. email: callsharon.today@yahoo.comcell:434.981.7200 Farm, Estate and Residential Brokers 503 Faulconer Drive ∙ Charlottesville ∙ VA ∙ 22903 WWW.MCLEANFAULCONER.COM DOUGLAS AVENUE Fantastic condo at Belmont Lofts. Great location on a quiet street. Large rooftop terrace with sunrise and sunset views. Mountain views to the East. 3 bedrooms and 3 full bathrooms. Condo features an open kitchen with an island, gas fireplace and large closets. $1,050,000 CLUB DRIVE RESORT STYLE LIVING Enjoy Resort Style Living in Keswick Estate with newly remodeled Keswick Hall and Country Club. French Normandy style home set on a 2.7acre corner, wooded lot. Elegant and gracious custom designed residence, built by Baird Snyder. Light filled, comfortable rooms, thoughtfully planned. Interior archways, arched windows and doors. A 20’ high sweeping entry with curved staircase. Custom door design and carved white statuary marble fireplace mantel. Cast stone work on the exterior Solid mahogany arched, leaded beveled glass front doors lead to the limestone foyer. Extensive gardens and terraces. $2,950,000










51 20226,SEPTEMBER31AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3135ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COM FEATURE HISTORIC GREEK REVIVAL HOME 9345 Bridgeport Road • Arvonia, VA Built in 1847, this Greek Revival home has 17.93 surrounding acres and sits in the middle of a 550 acre property. These additional acres have been placed in a conservation easement. Here you will find amazing river and mountain views. A deep front porch lined with columns welcomes you. Once you step inside, there is a sweeping staircase and a spacious foyer. This home offers up to 6 bedrooms and 2 full baths. It has large rooms, high ceilings, 9 fireplaces, original wood floors, doors, and windows add to the unmatched historic charm. The exterior features a 3-bay garage/workshop, plus 3 other outbuildings. MLS #2205608 • $695,000 Cory Metts Hometown Realty (804) corymettssellsrva@gmail.com366-3431 Jeni Spessard Monticello County Realtors (434) 906 jenifick@yahoo.com-2152



































AERIE FARM 170 ac. of rolling to hilly fenced pastures, hardwood for est, several creeks & pond, features an elegant & reno vated c. 1850 manor home (4 BR, 3.5 BA) with depen The perfect for almost particularly horse/cattle MLS#633483 $2,200,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076
farm.
grazing farm
dencies.
any agricultural endeavor,
ROUND HILL Panoramic views of the Blue Ridge Mtn. and scenic Rivanna Reservoir frontage is offered from this 120acre Albemarle County estate featuring a 5 BR manor home. Excellent location and close to the city limits and Charlottesville-Albemarle airport! MLS#625402 $5,450,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863
WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE 20226,SEPTEMBER-31AUGUSTWWW.C-VILLE.COM 523135ISSUE WWW.MCLEANFAULCONER.COM 503 Faulconer Drive| Charlottesville | VA 22903 | office: 434.295.1131 | email: homes@mcleanfaulconer.comGREYOAKSSpectacular 53-acre country estate with incredible custom-designed home, wonderful outdoor spaces, multi-functional 1,800 sf barn, 2-acre lake, Blue Ridge views, and a private, serene setting—all within 15 miles of Charlottesville. MLS#617485 $3,965,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 greyoaksfarmva.com WOOD’S END Striking residence on a private 5+ acres in the heart of Keswick, one of the most beautiful and protected areas in Albemarle County. Architecturallydesigned with numerous custom features, the floor plan of this stunning residence is thoroughly thought out; one level living with flexible space. The front entrance opens into a lightfilled, vaulted ceiling great room with chef’s kitchen and spacious living area. Minutes from the world class Keswick Hall, Charlottesville, UVA, and Pantops. MLS#626196 $1,195,000 Charlotte Dammann, 434.981.1250 WOLFCREEK FARM Situated near the Blue Ridge Mtns. in Madison County on 333 acres. Currently runs as a grazing farm for beef cattle. There are 2 homes on the property and a complement of necessary farm buildings. NOT IN CONSERVATION EASEMENT! MLS#630435 $3,200,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076
location
HATTON RIDGE FARM 175 acre with 2/3 mile frontage Impressive 4-5 brick MLS#632477 $2,670,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076
on the James River.
Georgian home, circa 2000 in excellent condition. Fertile James River bottomland for gardens, plus many recreational uses.
STONY POINTE A spacious and meticulously maintained 4 bed room, 5.5 bath Manor home on 57 acres of tran quility, and panoramic views of the Southwest Mtns. and to the west are winter views of the Blue Ridge Mtns. 6 miles from Charlottesville. MLS#626941 $2,650,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076 WILLOWFIELDS FARM Virginia farmhouse perfectly sited on 156 protected acres overlooking a pond and the rolling hills of Southern Albemarle. 4-BR, 4-full & 2-half BA. Enhancing the main residence is a charming, 1-BR, 1-BA log “barn”. Close to Pippin Hill and other vineyards! MLS#629743 $5,985,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863
PEA RIDGE FARM Stunning 317 acre estate that has it all, location, views, water, stunning main res idence, event center and more! The 15+ acre lake is centered among lush rolling fields of rich grass and a spectacular 5 BR home with heart pine floors, 4 FP, study, garages, and unparalleled views exists. Lo cated 25 minutes west of Charlottesville in Greenwood, this exceptional property is a one-of-a-kind, not to be replicated, gem. Also includes a large metal barn, log cabin with FP, stunning party barn and a 2 BR cottage. Additional acreage avail able. MLS#631962 $8,875,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 GREENFIELDS FARM 763-acre country estate approximately 25 miles south of Charlottesville. The property showcases a stately southern residence, built circa 1904, extensive equestrian facilities, recreation opportunities, creeks and a pond. MLS#623792 $6,295,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 greenfieldsfarmva.com UNDERCONTRACT
bedroom,














53 20226,SEPTEMBER31AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3135ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COMWWW.MCLEANFAULCONER.COM 503 Faulconer Drive| Charlottesville | VA 22903 | office: 434.295.1131 | email: homes@mcleanfaulconer.com BROOMFIELD FARM 29 acres fronting Blenheim Rd. a small agricultural & residential subdivision with CCR’s, but NO HOA. 2 buildable lots, with an historic red barn, silo, & an 8-stall stable. Driveway in place, underground power, well & water, & several building spots with mountain views. MLS#624834 $495,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076 SOUTHWIND ESTATES 3 separate, parcels with commanding Blue Ridge Mtn. views, level building sites 15 minutes from Charlottes ville. Sites have been perked, have wells, and ready for your dream home. MLS#632482 $375,000 (7.8 acres), MLS#632490 $275,000 (2.4 acres), MLS#632487 $175,000 (2.0 acres), Court Nexsen, 646.660.0700 LAMBS ROAD Private, 6+ acre wooded lot, that’s conveniently close to Charlottesville, but still in Albemarle County. The property contains large, mature trees and a small stream that winds through the middle. Three potential division rights. MLS#626128 $180,000 Jeremy Fields, 434.270.1220 MCGUFFEY HILL Spacious first floor living within seconds of the many amenities of the Historic Downtown Mall. Residence offers a large bright LR w/FP, kitchen with breakfast area, DR, MBR and BA and second BR. Great op portunity for convenient, spacious downtown living! MLS#633696 $775,000 C. Dammann, 434.981.1250 GREEN ACRES Pastoral views from this 3 BR brick home set on over 159 acres in Southern Albemarle. Ideal for farming with fenced pastures and ample water sources. Property is not under easement and has 4 division rights. MLS#630428 $1,685,000 MLS#630428 $1,685,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 EVERGREEN A private 18 acre horse farm, with 4 BR main residence, 1 BR cottage, beautiful 8 stall center aisle barn, outdoor riding ring, and several fenced pastures and hay fields. With access onto 570 plus acres of parkland with trails. MLS#632164 $1,295,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076 RIVER LAWN FARM Southern Albemarle estate with 1.5 miles of frontage on the James River with 540± acres of highly fertile, gently rolling landscape. Historic farmhouse dating to the late 1700s offers extensive views of the river. Under conservation easement with the VOF. MLS#630470 $4,865,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 FRAYS MILL Mostly wooded preservation tract of 81.395 acres next to Frays Mill Subdivision in highly desirable northern Albemarle. This beautiful gently rolling land has a great, private homesite with Blue Ridge Mt. views, and creek on property. MLS#608509 $995,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076 ESTATE PARCEL IN AFTON Stunning, mountain views available on this attrac tive 14± acre property, possessing lovely streams and woods. This parcel is only 1.5 miles from Route 151 Brew Trail, with easy access to Wintergreen, Charlot tesville & UVA. MLS#629702 Charlotte Dammann, 434.981.1250 or Robert Mellen, 434.996.7386 SIMMONS GAP ROAD 5-acre lot with mature hardwoods. Great opportunity to build with no HOA. Private building site amongst beautiful woods. Located between Free Union and Earlysville but so convenient to Charlottesville & UVA. MLS#621177 $140,000 Charlotte Dammann, 434.981.1250 SOUTHERN ALBEMARLE 87+ acre pine forest property is a good investment tract, or use as a hunting and recreational tract, or with multiple division rights, a place to build a home or more than one home. Potential mountain views, and private settings. MLS#629213 $499,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076 REDUCED COMMONWEALTH DRIVE One story 2,147 SF commercial office building at corner Westfield RD just off Rte 29S. Zoned Commercial Office (CO) use includes administrative and business offices, professional offices, medical, dental and more. MLS#30317750 $749,000 Mark Mascotte, 434. 825.8610 UNDERCONTRACT
















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LOUISA COUNTY Realwww.louisacounty.comestatetaxrate:$.72 COUNTY Realwww.madisonco.virginia.govestatetaxrate:$.71per
$.804 per $100 THERE WERE 106 SALES IN THE 11 COUNTY AND CITY AREAS n 41 were in Albemarle with an average price of $540,570 n 7 were in Charlottesville with an average price of $630,678 n 7 were in Fluvanna with an average price of $487,775 n 7 were in Greene with an average price of $348,843 n 13 were in Louisa with an average price of $520,868 n 4 were in Madison with an average price of $397,010 n 5 were in Nelson with an average price of $489,900 n 10 were in Orange with an average price of $367,590 n 3 were in Staunton with an average price of $298,000 n 9 were in Waynesboro with an average price of $260,400 279 TENNIS DRIVE FOUR SEASONS 827 COLE STREET BELVEDERE 305 MIDDLETON LN MONROE PARK 408 MONTGOMERY AVENUE STAUNTON 60 RED OAK COURT SPRING CREEK 93 TYRO LN WINTERGREEN REALTORS® are members of the National Association of REALTORS® REALTORS®ofAssociationNationaltheofmembersareREALTORS® REALTORTHECODEOFETHICS Never heard of it? It’s probably because our code is something we like to practice rather than preach. It’s a commitment to honesty, integrity, and trust that’s been protectingownerspropertylikeyousince1913.
per $100 MADISON
$100
$.72 per $100 ORANGE
NELSON COUNTY Realnelsoncounty-va.govestatetaxrate: COUNTY Realorangecountyva.govestatetaxrate:
WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE 20226,SEPTEMBER-31AUGUSTWWW.C-VILLE.COM 543135ISSUE
308 E. East Main Street • Charlottesville, VA 22902 • e-mail: ads@c-ville.com Send your news and/or press releases to editorREW@gmail.com THE Staff: EDITORIAL COORDINATOR Celeste Smucker • REWeditor@c-ville.com MARKETING SERVICES Beth beth@c-ville.comWood•434.996.4019FaithGibsonads@c-ville.com DESIGNER Tracy designer@c-ville.comFederico The Real Estate Weekly Is printed on 100% recycled paper HOMESTATSSALES ENDING THE WEEK OF AUGUST 28, 2022 HOMES GOVERNMENTLOCALSOLD (Note: Real estate tax information gathered from local government Web sites and is believed but not guaranteed to be accurate as of publication date. Towns may assess real estate taxes in addition to those charged by each county.) CITY OF CHARLOTTESVILLE Realwww.charlottesville.govestatetaxrate:$.96 per $100 CITY OF STAUNTON Realci.staunton.va.usestatetaxrate: $.92 per $100 CITY OF WAYNESBORO Realwww.waynesboro.va.usestatetaxrate:$.90 per $100 ALBEMARLE COUNTY Realwww.albemarle.orgestatetaxrate: $.854 per $100 FLUVANNA COUNTY Realfluvannacounty.orgestatetaxrate: $.884 per $100 GREENE COUNTY Realgreenecountyva.govestatetaxrate: $.82 per $100







55 20226,SEPTEMBER31AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3135ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COM1100 Dryden CharlottesvilleLanestevewhiterealtor.com Steve White (434) info@stevewhiterealtor.com242-835529YearsofSpecializinginBuyer&SellerRepresentationforResidential,Farms&Estates
PLANK
overlooking
available
COUNTRY RETREAT Only 5 miles to Zion Crossroads and I-64, this 41.84 acre property will make the perfect family compound or live in the cottage while you build your dream home. The quaint cottage features an inviting covered front porch, cozy woodstove in the great room, eat-in kitchen, 2 bedrooms, full bath and 2 additional finished rooms on the 2nd floor. Multiple outbuildings include a workshop with electric, run-in shed and more. Bold year-round stream. Bring your horses, ATV’s, etc and enjoy the privacy and natural beauty this land offers. Please note all improvements being sold in AS-IS condition. MLS # 632112 $449,900
South River Meadows ~ Spectacular one-of-a-kind estate parcel located in Greene County. Create your own family compound. Parcel is dividable and features a mature hardwood forest with driveway in place. Meander through the hardwoods and then approach the elevated private building sites which overlook rolling pasture plus a gorgeous multi-layered view of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Frontage along the South River. Multiple dwellings allowed. MLS # 622032 $595,000
and
BROWNS GAP TPKE Located in Western Albemarle, close to Whitehall, this 3.37 acre parcel offers an elevated building site with pleasant pasture views as well as frontage along a bold stream. Entrance to property is shared with adjoining neighbor therefore road costs to enter parcel will be minimal. Great investment in a wonderful western Albemarle County location.. MLS # 629281 $129,000
and
HILLTOP HOUSE Delightful, walkable community of Scottsville. Charming vintage 4 BR cape with apartment, 2 story detached masonry studio and separate city lot. New appliances. 3 full baths. In excellent condition and move in ready. Brand new standing seam roof on both buildings, with natural gas fireplace, beautiful kitchen porch garden, fenced yard, multi-level decks terraced gardens the MLS # 628406 $450,000 ROAD Beautiful elevated 2.25-acre parcel located just outside the Batesville in Western Albemarle County. Parcel is open in the front with hardwoods to the rear. Small storage shed in place. Additional 2.68acre wooded parcel is behind this parcel. MLS # 628665 $179,500 FREDERICKSBURG ROAD
town. Private parking. Excellent Investment
RECREATIONAL PARADISE Absolutely private and pristine deep water lake of 50+/- acres, with (2) miles of shoreline, in Nelson County, surrounded by nearly 800 acres of commercial pine forest, designed for staggered harvests into perpetuity. An incredibly rare recreational paradise. A new lake home, with quality appointments at waters edge, a boat house with (2) lifts and a large steel storage building to house toys and equipment. Internet and generator are in place. Nearly 7 miles of interior roads and trails with mountain views. Includes access to nearby James River! MLS # 632112 $4,400,000







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