Ace August 2021

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Lexington’s original citywide magazine great writing for the best readers, since 1989

table of contents

August 2021 Volume 32, Issue 8 www.acemagazinelex.com

AUGUST 2021 | VOLUME 32, ISSUE 8 | ACEMAGAZINELEX.COM

@acemagazinelex

in every issue P8

COMMUNITY NEWS

EDITRIX

Rhonda Reeves

P12

CREATIVE DIRECTOR

CALENDAR

Megan McCardwell

August pull-out centerfold

ART DIRECTOR Austin Johnson

P16

ASSOCIATE EDITOR Kristina Rosen

CHEF TOM

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS (ONLINE + PRINT)

P17

Evan Albert, Rob Brezny, Erin Chandler, Kevin Elliot, Atanas Golev, Trish Hatler, Johnny Lackey, Michael Jansen Miller, Kevin Nance, Claire Ramsay, Bridget Wilkerson, Tom Yates, Kakie Urch ––––––––––––––––––––––

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ACE EATS OUT

P18

ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

on the cover You CAN Go Home Again

Chris Offutt pulls it off in latest novel, The Killing Hills

Due on the 15th of each month for the next month’s issue: Email ace@firstmedialex.com. Space reservation, production art, and payment should be delivered no later than by Noon.

P19

ASTRO & CLASSIFIEDS

P20

HOME AND GARDEN

P22

REAL ESTATE What Sold, Where, for How Much?

CALENDAR LISTINGS

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COPYRIGHT © 2021

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4 | August 2021 | acemagazinelex.com

Ace has been the Voice of Lexington — offering Lexington’s best literary journalism — in print and online, for over 32 years.

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1591 Winchester Rd. Ste. 103 Lexington, KY 40505 • (859) 303.7009 • DogwoodHomeFurnishings.com

P6

BUSINESS IS BOOMING IN LEXINGTON

P14

RUN FOR IT August’s sampling of summertime runs/walks

- Locally owned

- Designers available to assist

- American Made Furniture

- Living Room, Dining Room

- Free Local Delivery

- Bedroom, Work from Home

- Open Monday- Friday

- Rugs, Lamps, & Wall Décor

TAMBRA WOODS, OWNER

P17 READ IT AND EAT IT Recommended Summer Food Reads 2021

P20

2021 TOUR OF HOMES BIA Central KY announces postponed dates

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BUSINESS Lexington’ at the Keeneland Paddock. Celebrate a return to connecting with friends, colleagues, and fellow Commerce Lexington members, while honoring resiliency of our community.

EQUINE Full Capacity Fall Meet

Keeneland plans to open at full capacity for its 2021 Fall Meet on October 8-30. Tickets for the event will go on sale to the public beginning at 9 am on Monday, August 16. Fans are encouraged to visit Keeneland’s website in advance for information on available ticket options, pricing, and the process to purchase tickets.

Paul Martin

INNOVATION

BANKS, BUSINESS, AND COMMERCE Central Bank Toast

Central Bank’s Luther Deaton [pictured above] gave a spirited welcome to guests at Ace’s 2021 Lexington Restaurant Week preview celebration, co-hosted by Chef Ouita Michel in the Atrium of the old Courthouse at Cheapside Square.

Best Place to Live

Lexington was ranked 33rd in best Places to Live in a list compiled by U.S. News & World Report. The city was also ranked as the 19th cheapest place to live and 102nd best place to retire.

Commerce Lexington’s Business Link afterhours networking event returns on Thursday, August 12 at Marriott City Center, from 4-6 pm.

Transylvania University plans to launch a new Center for Entrepreneurship this fall. As Lexington ranks among the top ten best cities in the country for entrepreneurs (in a study done by The Penny Hoarder), Transy’s new center will help in creating opportunities for students to connect with local business leaders through jobs, internships, and networking. The center will initially focus on engaging students with extracurricular, experiential programs and events, including startup competitions, workshops, a speaker series, and opportunities to introduce Transy students to successful, innovative entrepreneurs, businesses, and organizations. The goal of the center is to encourage students in any academic major to pursue their passion, promoting creativity and innovation, and providing exposure to a vast range of entrepreneurial career paths.

Commerce Lex Annual Event

Ideas Wanted

Applications Open for 2021 Salute to Small Business Awards

Apply or nominate a business online at CommerceLexington.com for the 2021 Salute to Small Business Awards. The deadline to submit an application is Friday, August 6, 2021. The Salute to Small Business Awards Luncheon has been scheduled for Friday, September 24, beginning at noon at Central Bank Center in downtown Lexington.

Business Links Return

The Commerce Lexington Annual Dinner (also affectionately known as Biz Prom) has been re-imagined for 2021. On August 5 from 5:30 - 8 pm, spend ‘An Evening With Commerce

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Center for Entrepreneurship

Innovators are invited to Pitch Uses for Kentucky Bourbon Industry’s Surplus Stillage. With the number of Kentucky distillers increasing 250% the past decade, the need to


Courtesy Bluegrass Airport

address the industry’s spent-grain byproduct known as stillage has grown as well. The growth of the industry also means a rise in byproduct within the industry, so the hunt is on for ideas to use this stillage in ways that create jobs and moves Kentucky’s agritech industry forward. Innovators and entrepreneurs can submit creative ideas, technologies, and solutions for expanded uses of distilling byproduct. Proposal deadline is Aug. 30, and five winners will be selected to present their ideas at the reverse pitch competition during the Distillers Grains Symposium in Louisville in October.

After nearly 10 years and a $66 million investment, Blue Grass Airport celebrated the completion of its Taxiway Safety Enhancement Program. This construction program involved the realignment of the airport’s primary taxiway, the building of two new support facilities, and the construction of a new taxiway connecting the runway to the airlines’ parking apron.

AUG 1

Small Business Sunday, pop-up shops and local vendors at Rock House Brewing

AUG 6

Deadline for Small Biz Award Nominees, CommerceLex

AUG 6

Deadline to apply for Community Environmental Academy

AUG 12 Chamber Business Link, Marriott City Center AUG 18 Women Leading Kentucky, Griffin Gate Marriott

PLANES, TRAINS, AND AUTOMOBILES Airport Improvements

BIZ CALENDAR

Airport Construction Closure

As one airport project finishes, another begins. Work is already underway on the runway rehabilitation project that focuses on the paving of the airport’s 7,000-foot main runway. It will involve a 72-hour closure of the runway August 19 thru 22.

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COMMUNITY EDUCATION Back to School

August 11 is the first day of school for Fayette County Public Schools. First day of classes at UK is scheduled for August 23.

Fired up!

The Lexington Fire Department invested in a new education trailer which allows the department to teach fire safety to nearly 30 kids at a time—almost three times as many kids as before. The new trailer includes a working fire alarm and smoke demonstration. The updates were made possible by funds raised through the FOF’s annual golf scramble and other fundraising efforts, donations, and with the help of the many sponsors shown on the trailer.

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Read all about it

The Lexington Public Library announced it has extended hours at many of its branches as well as adding back Saturday hours at their Central Branch. Executive Director Heather Dieffenbach says “We are thrilled to expand the Library’s hours of operation to meet the needs of our customers,” adding, “and, as a reminder, for customers not ready to visit us in person yet, there are still a myriad of online and curbside services available.”

GOVERNMENT Show me the money?

The City of Lexington has been allocated $120 million in federal American Rescue Plan Act funds and now the community has the opportunity to help prioritize this funding. Residents can give input via a survey. For those who have a specific transformative project for the City to consider, complete the ARPA project idea form. Both forms close on August 27, 2021. Public hearings and town halls will be held during the weeks of August 2 and 9, with additional opportunities for public input as the decision-making process moves forward.

A little rain didn’t stop the annual Keeneland Concours d’Elegance from raising funds to support Kentucky Children’s Hospital.


COMMUNITY Interested in a Public Safety career?

The Department of Public Safety hosts a Job Fair on Wednesday, August 4, from 3 – 6 pm at the Police Training Academy located at Bluegrass Community & Technical College Newtown campus. Prospective employees will have the opportunity to meet with hiring representatives from the Lexington Police Dept., the Lexington Fire Dept., Community Corrections, E-911, and Code Enforcement.

Appointments

Chris Ford is the new Commissioner of General Services, and Kacy Allen-Bryant is the new Commissioner of Social Services.

NEIGHBORHOODS Improvements to Kenwick’s Neighborhood Park

Kenwick Neighborhood Association has partnered with LFUCG to add more park amenities, including swings, picnic tables, native plantings, and trees. Construction is underway to renovate the basketball courts at the park. The neighborhood received a matching NAMP (Neighborhood Action Matching Program) grant from LFUCG to provide funding for these improvements.

STREETS & ROADS Clays Mill Road Widening Project Update

Clays Mill Road between Pasadena and Stratford is planned to reopen for traffic in August — in time for back to school. The diversion between Waco and Cecil Way was recently milled and paved to improve the conditions. Work will continue on that area in mid-August, after Clays Mill reopens, to complete the work that began earlier this year.

Versailles Road

Crews have begun milling and paving a section of Versailles Road between Oxford Circle and Angliana Avenue. State transportation officials said one lane of traffic will remain open during the repaving, which will continue over the next several months.

Legacy Trail

A portion of Legacy Trail between Nandino Boulevard and Citation Boulevard is closed through August 30 to allow for two utility relocations. A safe detour for the trail is not available due to the size and location of the area, and pedestrians and cyclists are advised to avoid the area. This temporary closure was determined as the best way to complete the work as quickly and safely as possible.

Transportation Improvement Program

Lexington Creek Sweep

Help protect our creeks by cleaning up your neighborhood, backyard, or park. Free Creek Sweep kits are available for pick up from partner locations on August 7-15. Find out more at LexingtonKY.gov/CreekSweep.

Make a Splash!

The Lexington Area Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) is conducting a 15-day public review period for Amendment 1 to the MPO’s FY 2021 – FY 2024 Transportation Improvement Program (TIP). This amendment commits $1 million in state funding to advance the design phase of the Nicholasville Road project, which spans from Man o’ War Boulevard to 1,000 ft. south of Brannon Road in Jessamine County. Public comment on Amendment 1 to the TIP is accepted through August 7. The design phase, which occurs at a later time, will include opportunities for the public to review project details and to comment on various design aspects of the project. The amendment and full TIP document are available at the Lexington Area Metropolitan Planning Organization website.

WILDCATS TAKE THE GOLD UK celebrated 22 current and former students head to Tokyo to compete in the delayed 2020 Olympics, beginning on July 23. Lee Kiefer, a Lexington native, Dunbar alumna, and current UK College of Medicine student, competed in her third Olympics in the discipline of foil fencing. She captured the gold and became the first American woman to win an Olympic medal in individual foil. Will Shaner, a current UK senior, took gold in the men’s 10-meter air rifle and became the first Wildcat to medal in Tokyo. UK sophomore Mary Tucker competed in the women’s 10-meter air rifle, women’s 50-meter smallbore and mixed team shooting 10m air rifle — making her the only UK athlete to qualify for the Olympics in both air rifle and smallbore. Three other UK students, along with a coach, competed in softball and track and field. Alexia Lacatena is an incoming freshman and UK softball player; Megan Moss is a UK junior competing in track and field; Dwight St. Hillaire is a Graduate student and UK track and field runner; and Devynne Charlton, a volunteer assistant coach for UK’s track and field team, also competes in track and field. 14 UK alumni also headed to Tokyo. The Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 began in late July and continue through August 8, 2021.

A $900,000 grant from the Blue Grass Community Foundation will go towards a new interactive water feature, Splash!, in Lexington’s East End. Groundbreaking is scheduled for the spring of 2022.

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Home Coming Chris Offutt’s new novel is thinking about it BY KEVIN NANCE

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The universe of

The Killing Hills

is a fictionalized version of “the four square miles where I grew up” in Haldeman, as Offutt puts it. “I just change the names and play fast and loose with the geography.”

plotted short chapters, fast-moving story line, minimal characterizations and strong regional atmosphere.” It has also generated a certain amount of buzz about the possibility of being adapted into a movie or, as Oates put it, “a highquality crime series set in rural America” such as HBO’s Mare of Easttown or True Detective. The buzz is not entirely wishful thinking, Offutt tells us in a recent from his home near Oxford where he teaches screenwriting at the University of Mississippi, drawing on lessons learned writing episodes of Weeds, True Blood, Treme and other shows during a stint in Hollywood a few years back. “Let’s say there has been serious interest,” says the author, now 62. “I have an agent who’s handling that, and I think it would be great. I would love it. On the other hand, I know better than to pin any hopes on Hollywood. I learned that lesson that the hard way.” (Offutt wrote several much-praised pilots for new series during his years in Los Angeles, all of them ultimately unproduced. “Each one I wrote, I thought it would be on the air,” he says, “but none of it happened.”) In the meantime, Offutt is having what he describes as the most productive and enjoyable time of his writing life with the Mick Hardin books. Yes, books: The Killing Hills, originally planned as a one-off, has spawned a series of novels, all set in Eastern Kentucky and centering on Hardin. Shifty’s Boy, the sequel — in which Mitch returns to his hometown of Rocksalt to recover from war wounds, only to get caught up in another harrowing investigation — is complete and set for publication by Grove next June. A third, as-yet-untitled Hardin novel is well under way (“I’m on page 233,” Offutt says) and will see print in 2023. “I never enjoyed writing anything as much as The Killing Hills,” he says. “I wanted to show the world where I grew up, how the people are there, and I thought Mick was the ideal candidate for a protagonist because he was from there but had left and come back. He benefits both from having grown up there, which gives him all this knowledge of the place and the culture, and from having gone away, which gives him more objectivity.”

“Every Kentuckian is going home or thinking about it, and that’s part of why I love writing the Hardin books. It puts me right back in the woods in my mind, feeling safe and comfortable. It allows me to go home.” —Chris Offutt, paraphrasing Happy Chandler

pushing aside mayapple and horseweed, seeking ginseng,” goes the novel’s opening sentence. Later, “Mick left the blacktop for a single-lane dirt road that rose and dipped with the land. Glade fern swayed near mudholes in the low parts while the higher sections held chickweed and groundcherry.” “Early in his career, it was important for Chris to establish a literary reputation,” says his wife, the poet and novelist Melissa Ginsburg. “But he’s always loved reading crime novels, so I was glad to see him embracing something he’s loved. And as it turns out, the voice in this new novel is his actual voice, more than anything else he’s written.” Offutt agrees, paraphrasing the late Gov. Albert “Happy” Chandler: “Every Kentuckian is going home or thinking about it, and that’s part of why I love writing the Hardin books. It puts me right back in the woods in my mind, feeling safe and comfortable. It allows me to go home.” ☐

W

ith all due respect to Mick, it’s fair to say that the main character of these novels is Eastern Kentucky itself, specifically a thinly veiled fictional version of “the four square miles where I grew up” in Haldeman, as Offutt puts it. “I just change the names and play fast and loose with the geography.” And for all the tautness and high velocity of The Killing Hills, the author manages to lay on ribbons of his trademark local color and texture, particularly in his descriptions of the landscape, which thrum with a spartan poetry reminiscent of James Dickey and Cormac McCarthy. “The old man walked the hill with a long stick,

Photo by Sandy Dyas

A

fter Chris Offutt burst onto the scene in the 1990s with the short story collection Kentucky Straight, the memoir The Same River Twice and the novel The Good Brother, he built a reputation as a distinctly literary writer. His sentences gleamed. His characters were etched with economy and precision. His insights penetrated and resonated. Best of all, he swathed his stories in a glimmering robe of rich detail about the landscape and culture of Eastern Kentucky, drawn from his life growing up in the small coalFrom the archives: mining community Chris Offutt in 2000 of Haldeman in Rowan County. It may come as a surprise to his most loyal readers, then, that his new book, The Killing Hills, is a crime novel. Set like most of Offutt’s work in Eastern Kentucky, this lean page-turner races along in brief chapters punctuated by spasms of violence, along the way observing all the major conventions of the genre. They include the discovery of a murder victim in the opening scene (here a middle-aged local woman with no known enemies, her body dumped “like trash” in the woods) followed by an investigation by a tough, smart sleuth, in this case Mick Hardin, a native of the area currently on leave from his job as a U.S. Army detective. (He takes the assignment as a favor to his sister, the local sheriff, and ends up so engrossed in it — and so ticked off by its mounting obstacles, including the corrupt local powers-that-be — that he risks going AWOL to finish the job.) The book has made something of a stir, including a New York Times review by novelist Joyce Carol Oates, who noted its “deftly

acemagazinelex.com | August 2021 | 11


1

8

Legends vs. Gastonia Honey Hunters, 5:05 pm, Legends Ballpark

BALL Lexington

Hershberg, 7:15 pm, Comedy Off Broadway

COMEDY Raanan

PETS Wiener Dog Races 11:30 Red Mile

PETS Wiener Dog Races 11:30 Red Mile

Epps 7:15 Comedy Off Broadway

COMEDY Mike

vs York Revolution, 5:05 pm, Ballpark

BALL Legends

SHOP Small Business Sunday Market, 2 pm, Rock House Brewing

sun

9

MOVIES UK Libraries’ “Monday Movie Nights: The Star Wars Saga.” The Last Jedi & Star Wars Trilogy Bonus Material, 5-10 pm, Willy T. Library

2

UK Libraries’ Monday Movie Nights: The Star Wars Saga. The Force Awakens & Mythology of Star Wars with George Lucas and Bill Moyers, 5-10 pm, Willy T. Library

MOVIES

mon

3

Jazz: DiMartino/ Osland Jazz Orchestra (DOJO), 7 pm, Ecton Park

MUSIC Big Band &

10

Kara Shepherd and Bill Yackey, 5 pm, Talon Winery

MUSIC

Crowes, Riverbend (Cinci)

CONCERT The Black

Point Rockers, 7:05 pm, Legends Ballpark

BALL Legends vs. High

MUSIC Big Band & Jazz: Brass Impact, 7 pm, Ecton Park

Under the Stars, 8 pm, Woodland Park (thru Aug 8)

DANCE Ballet

tue

5

With Commerce Lexington, 5:30 pm, Keeneland Paddock

BIZ An Evening

Maracas, 5 pm, Cheapside Park

TNL The Big

thu

pm, Comedy Off Broadway

COMEDY Dustin Sims, 7

11 First Day of School for Fayette County Public Schools.

SCHOOL

vs. High Point Rockers, 7:05 pm, Legends Ballpark

BALL Lexington Legends

Castle & Key Distillery

Riverbend (Cinci)

CONCERT Jason Aldean,

SENIORS Seniors Got Talent, Lexington Opera House

pm, Comedy Off Broadway

COMEDY Kelsey Cook, 7:15

Cheapside Park

TNL The Ranahans, 5 pm,

12 Commerce Lex’s Biz Link 4-6 pm, Marriott City Center

BIZ

MUSIC James Taylor Tribute: Sweet Baby James, 7 pm, The Lyric Theatre

pm, Unitarian Universalist Church

MUSIC Springhouse Music H&G Wild Ones Picnic, 6:30 Series: Lauren Mink, 6 pm,

4

“Mornings with Planning” panel series w/ focus on Placemaking and Placekeeping, 9 am, Zoom

CITY

wed

6

Crow Medicine Show, Riverbend (Cinci)

CONCERT Old

13 Sunflower Festival, 10 am (music and food truck) 6 pm, Evans Orchard

FEST

vs. Gastonia Honey Hunters, 7:05 pm, Legends Ballpark

BALL Lexington Legends

Evening with Lexington’s First Registered Distillery, 6 pm, Waveland State Historic Site

DRINK An Historic

PETS Lexington Humane Society’s Pins for Paws fundraiser, all day, Southland Bowling Lanes

fri

7

Midsummer Night’s Run, 7:30 pm, downtown Lexington

RUN/WALK

MUSIC Picnic with the Pops, Keeneland

Drunken Flea, noon, James E. Pepper Distillery

SHOP Summer

14 Small Town America Festival, 10 am, Mt. Sterling

FEST

OUTDOOR Elkhorn Creek Float Fest, 11 am, Peninsula Park in Georgetown

FEST Kentucky Wine & Vine Festival, 1-9 pm, historic Jessamine County

BUILD Kre8Market Fair & Expo, 12 pm, Kre8Now Makerspace on Codell Drive

Lexington Creek Sweep kicks off thru Aug 15

GREEN

sat


GOLF

Lexington CONCERT Zac Brown Band Habitat Golf at Riverbend (Cinci) Tournament, 11:45 am, Champion Trace Golf Club

MUSIC Railbird Festival, Keeneland

29 30

MUSIC Ben Sollee, 5 pm, Oleika Temple Great Lawn on Southland Drive

Oates | Squeeze at Riverbend (Cinci)

CONCERT Hall and

TRAFFIC First day of classes at UK

23

22

Shannon’s “Somewhat Annual” Waveland Car Cruise, 2 pm, Waveland State Historic Site

CARS Karl

Triathlon, 7:30 am, Beaumont YMCA

RUN/ WALK Kids

WOODSONGS Old-Time Radio Hour with Rhonda Vincent and the Rage, 6:45 pm, The Lyric

16

15

Riverbend (Cinci)

CONCERT Kings of Leon,

Legends vs. West VA Power, 7:05 pm, Ballpark

BALL

31

24

The Matchbox 20 | The Wallflowers at Riverbend has been RESCHEDULED to 2022

CONCERT

Jane Smiley, and Braudie Blais-Billie discuss Horse Girls, 7 pm (Joseph Beth via zoon)

READ Halimah Marcus,

17

MUSIC Big Band & Jazz: Young at Heart Big Band, 7 pm, Ecton Park

25

The Fun Tour, 7:30 pm, Rupp Arena

COMEDY Jim Gaffigan:

18

Leading Kentucky hosts a Summer Celebration, Noon, Griffin Gate Marriott

BIZ Women

19

Riverbend (Cinci)

CONCERT Buddy Guy at

pm, Comedy Off Broadway

COMEDY Josh Wolf, 7:15

JAMBOREE Southland Jamboree: Blue Eagle Band, 7 pm, Beaumont’s Moondance Amphitheater

26

Kenny Owens & Group Therapy, 5 pm, Cheapside Park

TNL

closes Aug 19 thru Aug 22

PLANES Bluegrass Airport

pm, Comedy Off Broadway

COMEDY Matt Rife, 7:15

JAMBOREE Southland Jamboree: Custom Made Bluegrass, 7 pm, Beaumont’s Moondance

Honeychild, 5 pm, Cheapside Park

TNL

Riverbend (Cinci)

28 CONCERT Maroon 5,

Railbird Festival, Keeneland

MUSIC

Golf Dinner, 6 pm, Castle & Key Distillery

FUNDRAISER Markey

Fair thru Sunday (final funnelcake of the season)

ART Woodland Art

21

DV8K Life Changing Run, 8 am, Keeneland

RUN/ WALK

Waveland Art Fair Chamber Music Festival of Lexington returns Christ the King’s Oktoberfest Southland Street Fair Mt. Sterling Court Days Festival Latino, downtown Chris Stapleton, Riverbend (Cinci)

SEP 16-19 SEP 24 SEP 26 OCT 15 OCT 15 OCT 21

Doggie Paddle, Woodland Aquatic Center SEP 11-12

SEP 11

AROUND THE CORNER

MUSIC Summer Nights in Suburbia: Honeychild, 7 pm, Moondance Amphitheater

Classic 3K, 7:30pm, Wellington Park

RUN/WALK Cupcake

27 Cabernet Canter Cross Country 5k/10k, 7 pm, Talon Winery

RUN/ WALK

Weekend at UK begins

TRAFFIC Move-in

vs. High Point Rockers, 7:05 pm, Ballpark

BALL Legends

20

Natural Bridge Artisan Festival, Natural Bridge State Resort Park (thru Sun)

FEST


HEALTH AND OUTDOORS EVENTS POSTPONED

Yes, Mamm! Charity Tennis Event to benefit CHI Saint Joseph Health Foundations was rescheduled from its original date in July until the fall. The inaugural tennis event will take place at the Top Seed Tennis Club in Nicholasville, featuring several national tennis stars, to raise funds to support local cancer patients. The Markey Golf Dinner, one of UK Markey Cancer Foundation’s biggest fundraisers of the year, is on Saturday, August 21 at Castle & Key Distillery from 6-10 pm.

NEWS Bluegrass Care Navigators is among the top-ranked healthcare providers in the 2021 list of 100 Best Places to work in Kentucky, as designated by the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce, the Kentucky Society for Human Resource Management, and ClearPath Mutual Insurance Company.

CHI Saint Joseph Health recently awarded $100,000 to Kentucky CancerLink, a Lexingtonbased nonprofit that helps reduce barriers patients face for screenings, diagnoses and cancer treatments. This gift was the third part of a $300,000 commitment to support cancer screenings in Kentucky. Lexington Public Library extended its weekly vaccination pop-up clinics at the Tates Creek and Village Branch locations. The Tates Creek Branch, located at 3628 Walden Drive, offers vaccinations every Wednesday until August 25. Village Branch, located at 2185 Versailles Road, has vaccinations available every Monday until August 30. Both branches will expand their hours from 11 am to 4 pm. Residents can make a reservation or walk-in. Toyota Kentucky partnered with the Saint Joseph Hospital Foundation to donate a modified Toyota Camry to the rehabilitation department. The vehicle will help rehabilitation patients, including total joint replacement patients, practice getting in and out of their vehicle before traveling home.

Sayre Christian Village celebrated their Friendship Towers Expansion and new Assisted Living Memory Care community with a Ribbon Cutting and Open House in July.

14 | August 2021 | acemagazinelex.com

The University of Kentucky Albert B. Chandler Hospital at UK HealthCare remains the No. 1 hospital in Kentucky by the 2021-2022 Best Hospitals rankings and ratings from U.S. News & World Report for the sixth consecutive year. Additionally, the UK Markey Cancer Center has maintained its U.S. News Top 50 ranking for the past five years (ranked 41st this year). Markey has also been a National Cancer Institute-designated cancer center since 2013, the only one in Kentucky and one of just 71 in the country.


RUN FOR IT! AUG 14

Midsummer Night’s Run, 7:30 pm, downtown Lexington

AUG 21

DV8K Life Changing Run, 8 am, Keeneland

AUG 22

Kids Triathlon, 7:30 am, Beaumont YMCA

AUG 27

Cabernet Canter Cross Country 5k/10k, 7 pm, Talon Winery

AUG 27

Cupcake Classic 3K, 7:30pm, Wellington Park

acemagazinelex.com | August 2021 | 15


ACE EATS IN

The Watermelon Patch BY CHEF TOM YATES

M

y grandmother’s vegetable garden was a wonderland. Tucked inside white planked fencing covered with grapevines, rows and rows of vegetables flourished in the well plowed clay-packed soil of our western Kentucky farm. Meticulously attended to and lovingly cared for, her garden was a lush and harsh workhorse of a garden that provided fresh food for our family during the summer months and cellar provisions for the bleaker months. As a newly transplanted city-to-farm boy, I was the fetcher of the family. Tomatoes. Green beans. Corn. Potatoes. Summer squash. Zucchini. Onions. Beets. Carrots. I didn’t harvest. I fetched. My grandfather’s watermelon patch, on the other hand, was a whole other story. Yards from the farmhouse and vegetable garden, the watermelon patch covered a large portion of a cow pasture. Surrounded by a single row of barbed wire to keep the cattle at bay, the patch was left mostly unattended through the long summer growing season, lying in wait for the August and September harvest. Out of sight and out of mind, dozens of watermelons were left to meander and grow through the dusty patch. If one split open from neglect, the wet beady seeds fell into the soil for the hovering hungry birds. As it wasn’t my charge, I didn’t tend to the watermelon field. I was the watcher. I knew

16 | August 2021 | acemagazinelex.com

their every move. I watched them grow, roam, ramble, roll, split, and sometimes rot. Most importantly, under my watchful eye, I knew when it was watermelon time. We didn’t fuss over watermelons. They didn’t need to be prepped, processed, preserved, canned, put up, or cooked. They were simply grown for pleasure. We’d throw a few newspapers over an outdoor table, slice open a watermelon, chop it into wet wedges, slurp the sweet juices, spit the seeds, and drink in the long hot summer. Right now, varieties of watermelon are hitting their stride. Summer might be waning, but there are still picnics, cookouts, barbecues, and tailgates to be had. Stop by a local farmers’ market and bring the watermelon patch home. Watermelon plays well with others. Salty feta. Briny black olives. Cucumbers. Tomatoes. Basil. The sky’s the limit, really.

Thai Watermelon Salad.

Few things match the addictive mysterious tart and sweet umami of a Thai vinaigrette. Embrace the fish sauce. It’s transformative.

After dissolving 1 tablespoon light brown sugar into 5 tablespoons fresh squeezed lime juice, I added 1/4 cup fish sauce, 1/2 cup water, 2 minced garlic cloves, 1 teaspoon crushed fresh ginger, 3 thinly sliced Stonehedge multi-colored Thai bird chilies, Thai basil, purple basil, and fresh mint. I mixed the vinaigrette until combined and set it aside. Chopped salted roasted peanuts. Check. Thai basil. Check. Sweet basil. Check. Purple basil. Check. Mint. Check. Watermelon. Double check. After slicing and sectioning a five-pound Pulaski County Sugar Baby watermelon, I removed the rind and sliced the firm flesh closest to the rind into 4” by 1/2’ batons. I stacked the batons across each other Jengaesque and drizzled the vinaigrette over the watermelon until it spilled through the crevices and puddled underneath. After splashing the melon with fresh lime juice, I finished with bits of crispy fried garlic, crunchy roasted peanuts, basil, mint, and additional chiles. Simple. Fresh. Unexpected. Find a watermelon patch. Quick. There’s still time.


ACE EATS OUT Frank & Dino’s Lexington opens inside the Security Trust Building on the corner of W. Short and N. Mill streets.

Read it and Eat It

Pour Decisions is opening on East Main. Rise Up! Pizza Brick and Mortar is now open at Greyline Station.

A delighted crowd turned out for Ace’s 2021 Lexington Restaurant Week preview celebration, co-hosted by Chef Ouita Michel in the Atrium of the old Courthouse at Cheapside Square. Guests dined on tasty creations by Lee Initiative chefs and Chef Ouita, along with Maker’s Mark signature cocktails.

E

The Saucy Crab has opened on Richmond Road in the former Texas Roadhouse location.

OBITS

Sunrise Bakery Cafe closed its cafe on West Main, but wholesale bakery sales continue.

BIRTHS

COMING ...EVENTUALLY

Greentree Tearoom, a hidden treasure for high tea and tasty treats tucked away on W. Short Street, will remain closed.

Construction has begun on Lexington’s newest Chick-fil-A at the intersection of New Circle and Russell Cave roads, with an expected completion this fall. Can Lexington ever have too many Ramsey’s? Five and counting, the fifth Ramsey’s is planned to open off Leestown Road at The Villages at Great Acres in spring/summer 2022. Kenwick Table, a new coffee and wine bar in the heart of the Kenwick neighborhood will open on Owsley Avenue.

DV8 Kitchen’s new East End location opens soon.

Finding Freedom: A Cook’s Story Remaking a Life From Scratch BY ERIN FRENCH

pic tacos and southern Italian make a home in downtown Lexington while Ramsey’s announces its plans to have a restaurant in every suburb. Dubbed as “a Lexington institution,” we surely could use a Ramsey’s in every neighborhood.

Agave & Rye opened a second Lexington location in the former Saul Good space downtown.

I

f there’s anything that’s almost as fantastic as eating great food, it’s reading great books about food, and this summer’s crop does not disappoint.

Ace Eats Out is curated by Kristina Rosen. Email her at kristina@firstmedialex.com.

(Celadon Books) Erin French’s culinary bona fides began early and stemmed from her childhood days working her family’s diner (to save up for her first bike) and her eventual triumphant return to her hometown of Freedom Maine to open her own restaurant. If you loved Gabrielle Hamilton’s Blood, Bones, and Butter, this is a safe bet for your beach bag.

What’s Good? A Memoir in Fourteen Ingredients BY PETER HOFFMAN

(Abrams Press) This memoir from the former chefpreneur at Savoy is a memoir of the restaurant industry, populated with autobiography, anecdotes, anthropology, and recipes. The New York Times points out that Peter Hoffman was “a locavore before the word was invented.” If you enjoy inside-baseball restaurateur memoirs like Joe Bastianich’s 2012 Restaurant Man or Bill Buford’s seminal Heat and Dirt, you’re on the right track with this one. —RR

To advertise in Ace’s food section, email ace@firstmedialex.com

acemagazinelex.com | August 2021 | 17


ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

What to Watch

KET is airing the documentary, Walter Tevis: A Writer’s Gambit, produced by Tom Thurman. Tevis’s novels The Hustler, The Man Who Fell to Earth, and The Color of Money were all adapted into successful Scan to view movies, and Ace’s video of The Queen’s The Harmon Room at Gambit (based 21C, inspired by on his book of The Queen’s Gambit the same name) scored 18 Emmy nominations for Netflix.

The Hollywood Reporter in a July interview “I was sitting on this farm for eight months, living in 1850, and worrying about not working. I would’ve done anything, really. To have this brilliant script fall into my lap and have it be in Hawaii? It was green lights all the way. We were at the Maui Four Seasons. It was closed, so we were truly in a bubble. It felt like film camp.”

Call for Artists

PRHBTN is back for its tenth year. PRHBTN and The Lexington Art League are seeking submissions for the 2021 PRHBTN Exhibition. This exhibition is produced in tandem with the 10th annual PRHBTN public art/mural festival. The PRHBTN Exhibition began in 2011 and is now responsible for facilitating over 30 major murals by artists from all over the world, and covering some of Lexington’s most prominent walls. Deadline for Submissions: September 1. Submission Fee: $10. Open to Kentucky artists of all ages and experience levels, all media, all subject matter. ​Submissions: Artists may submit up to four (4) total works of art for consideration. Selections will be made per artwork submitted. Selections will be made by PRHBTN and Lexington Art League staff.

National Recognition Although not technically a Kentucky native, Lexington has long claimed actor Steve Zahn as a native son. His newest project, White Lotus, airs Sundays on HBO. Like everyone, he spent much of his time at home in 2020, telling

The Jenny Wiley Amphitheatre in Prestonsburg won a national award for stage combat and earned state recognition for its production of Bloodsong: The Story of the Hatfields and the McCoys, inspired by the family’s historic feud.

18 | August 2021 | acemagazinelex.com

LIVE MUSIC

FRI AUG 13

SUN AUG 1

Zach Brock, Bob Lanzetti & Keita Ogawa from Snarky Puppy, 7 pm, Downtown Arts Center

TUE AUG 3

Big Band/Jazz: Brass Impact, 7pm, Ecton Park The Black Crowes, Riverbend (Cinci)

WED AUG 4

Springhouse Music Series: Lauren Mink, 6 pm, Castle & Key Distillery Emmylou Harris | Los Lobos, 8 pm, Riverbend (Cinci)

THU AUG 5

TNL The Big Maracas, 5 pm, Cheapside Park James Taylor Tribute: Sweet Baby James, 7 pm, The Lyric Theatre

SAT AUG 7

Wish Fest 2021 12:30 pm, Wildside Winery Harry Connick Jr at Riverbend (Cinci)

TUE AUG 10

Kara Shepherd and Bill Yackey, 5 pm, Talon Winery Big Band & Jazz: DiMartino/ Osland Jazz Orchestra (DOJO), 7 pm, Ecton Park

THU AUG 12

TNL The Ranahans, 5 pm, Cheapside Park Jason Aldean at Riverbend (Cinci)

Old Crow Medicine Show, Riverbend Music Center (Cinci)

SAT AUG 14

THU AUG 26

TNL Kenny Owens & Group Therapy, 5 pm, Cheapside Park Southland Jamboree: Blue Eagle Band, 7 pm, Moondance Buddy Guy at Riverbend (Cinci)

FRI AUG 27

Picnic with the Pops | REVOLUTION: The Music of The Beatles The Meadow at Keeneland

Lauren Mink & Dale Adams, 6pm, Talon Winery

Counting Crows at Riverbend (Cinci)

SAT AUG 28

MON AUG 16

Woodsongs Old-Time Radio Hour with Rhonda Vincent and the Rage, 6:45 pm, The Lyric

TUE AUG 17

Summer Nights in Suburbia: Honeychild, 7 pm, Moondance

Railbird Festival, Keeneland Maroon 5, Riverbend Front Porch Jazz, 6 pm, Isaac Murphy Memorial Art Garden on corner of 3rd St. and Midland Ave.

Big Band & Jazz: Young at Heart Big Band, 7 pm, Ecton Park

SUN AUG 29

THU AUG 19

Jazz on the Porch: The Baja Yetis 4 pm, Talon Winery

TNL Honeychild, 5 pm, Cheapside Park Southland Jamboree: Custom Made Bluegrass, 7 pm, Moondance in Beaumont

SAT AUG 21

Robert Cray, 7:30 pm, Grand Theatre (Frankfort)

SUN AUG 22 Tahlsound Music Festival: Ben Sollee, 5 pm, Oleika Temple Great Lawn on Southland Drive

MON AUG 23 Hall and Oates | Squeeze at Riverbend, Cinci

Railbird Festival, Keeneland

Nappy Roots with Devine Carama and RMLLW2LLZ, 8 pm, Manchester Music Hall Zac Brown Band at Riverbend (Cinci)

TUE AUG 31

Kings of Leon at Riverbend (Cinci)


ROB BREZSNY’S FREE WILL ASTROLOGY ARIES (March 21-April 19): What does it mean to feel real? Some people have a hard time doing that. They have such false ideas about who they are that they rarely feel real. Others are so distracted by trivial longings that they never have the luxury of settling into the exquisite at-home-ness of feeling real. For those fortunate enough to regularly experience this treasured blessing, feeling real isn’t a vague concept. It’s a vivid sensation of being conscious in one’s body. When we feel real, we respond spontaneously, enjoy playing, and exult in the privilege of being alive. After studying your astrological potentials, Aries, I suspect that you now have an enhanced capacity to feel real. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): When she was a child, author Valerie Andrews visited her secret sanctuary at sunset every day for seven years. She lay on the ground among birch trees and aromatic privet plants, feeling “the steady rhythmic heartbeat of the earth” as she basked in the fading light. I’d love for you to enjoy the revitalizing power of such a shrine. The decisions you have to make will become clear as you commune with what Andrews calls “a rootlike umbilicus to the dark core of the land.” Do you know of such a place? If not, I suggest you find or create one. CANCER (June 21-July 22): A Tumblr blogger named Cece writes, “The fact that you can soak bread in sugar, eggs, cinnamon, and vanilla, then butter a pan and fry said bread to make a meal is really liberating.” I agree. And I share this with you in the hope of encouraging you to indulge in other commonplace actions that will make you feel spacious and uninhibited. You’re in a phase of your astrological cycle when you’ll thrive on doing day-today details that excite your lust for life. Enjoying the little things to the utmost will be an excellent strategy for success. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Leo poet Rene Ashley articulates a perspective I recommend you adopt. She writes, “I’m drawn to what flutters nebulously at the edges, at the corner of my eye just outside my certain sight. I want to share in what I am routinely denied, or only suspect exists. I long for a glimpse of what is beginning to occur.” With her thoughts as inspiration, I advise you to be hungry for what you don’t know and haven’t perceived. Expand your curiosity so that it becomes wildly insatiable in its quest to uncover budding questions and raw truths at the peripheries of your awareness.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “There are many things in your heart you can never tell to another person,” declared Virgo actor Greta Garbo (19051990). “It is not right that you should tell them,” she concluded. “You cheapen yourself, the inside of yourself, when you tell them.” I presume Greta was being melodramatic. My attitude is the opposite of hers. If you find allies who listen well and who respect your vulnerability, you should relish telling them the secrets of your heart. To do so enriches you, deepens you, and adds soulful new meanings to your primary mysteries. The coming weeks will be a favorable time to seek this wise pleasure in abundance. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Now is a fantastic time to seek out effervescent socializing and convivial gatherings and festive celebrations. If you surround yourself with lively people, you’ll absorb the exact influences you need. May I suggest you host a fun event? If you do, you could send out invitations that include the following allures: “At my get-together, the featured flavors will be strawberry chocolate and impossibly delicious. There’ll be magic vibrations and mysterious mood-enhancers. Liberating conversations will be strongly encouraged. Unpredictable revelations will be honored. If possible, please unload your fears and anxieties in a random parking lot before arriving.” SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Scorpio author Andrew Sean Greer writes, “As the Japanese will tell you, one can train a rose to grow through anything, to grow through a nautilus even, but it must be done with tenderness. I think that’s a vivid metaphor for one of your chief tasks in the coming weeks, Scorpio: how to carefully nurture delicate, beautiful things as you coax them to ripen in ways that will bring out their sturdiness and resilience. I believe you now have an extra capacity for wielding love to help things bloom. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Suggested experiments to try soon: 1. Remember a past moment when you were touched with the sudden realization that you and a person you’d recently met were destined to fall in love. 2. Remember a past moment when you kissed someone for the first time. 3. Remember a past moment when someone told you they loved you for the first time or when you told someone you loved them for the first time. 4. Allow the feelings from the first three experiments to permeate your life for five days. See through the eyes of the

person you were during those previous breakthroughs. Treat the whole world as expansively and expectantly as you did during those times. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Capricorn poet Kenneth Rexroth was shirtless as he strolled along a rural road. To his delightful amazement, a fritillary butterfly landed on his shoulder, fluttered away, landed again, fluttered away performed this dance numerous times. Nothing like this had ever happened to him. Later he wrote, “I feel my flesh / Has suddenly become sweet / With a metamorphosis / Kept secret even from myself.” In the coming days, I’m expecting at least one comparable experience for you. Here’s your homework: What sweet metamorphoses may be underway within you perhaps not yet having reached your conscious awareness? AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “Each time we dont say what we want to say, were dying.” Aquarian artist and singer Yoko Ono said that. I will add a further nuance: Each time we’re not aware of the feeling or experience or situation we want, were dying. And these will be key themes now that you’ve entered the “I KNOW WHAT I WANT AND I KNOW HOW TO ASK FOR IT” phase of your cycle. The most healing and vivifying thing you can do during the next six weeks is to be precise about your desires.

Data Mgmt Analyst Sr (Lexington, KY). Analyze lg data sets, ID important data relationships and trends, and communicate findings to rsrch teams within Dept of Pharmacy Practice and Science. BS, Stats, Math Decision Sciences, or related. 2 yrs exp analysis of lg, health-related datasets; must incl some solid exp in each: SQL; SAS; R; Python; Tableau; MS Office; VBA; Lucidchart; Zotero. Telecommuting is an option for this position. MUST follow these specific application instructions in order to be considered: Mail CV, cvr ltr to Dr. Chris Delcher, University of Kentucky, 789 South Limestone, Lexington, KY 40536 within 30 days and mention Job #2020-246. The Department of Public Safety will host a Public Safety Job Fair Wednesday, Aug. 4, 3 pm to 6 p.m. at the Police Training Academy located at Bluegrass Community & Technical College Newtown campus, 500 Newtown Pike. Prospective employees will have the opportunity to meet with City of Lexington hiring representatives from the Lexington Police Dept., the Lexington Fire Dept., Community Corrections, E-911 and Code Enforcement.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In 1829, Piscean author Victor Hugo began work on his novel, The Hunchback of Notre Dame. He had other projects, though, and by September 1830, he had made scant progress on Hunchback. Growing impatient, his publisher demanded that he finish the manuscript by February 1831. In response, Hugo virtually barricaded himself in his room to compel himself to meet the deadline. He even locked his clothes in a closet to prevent himself from going out. For the next five months, he wore only a gray shawl as he toiled nonstop. His stratagem worked! I recommend you consider trying a somewhat less rigorous trick to enforce your self-discipline in the coming weeks. There’s no need to barricade yourself in your fortress. But I hope you will have fun taking stringent measures.

acemagazinelex.com | August 1, 2021 | 19


HOME AND GARDEN Applications for 2021-22 Community Environmental Academy

Have you ever wondered what happens at the Recycling Center, or how traffic signals are programmed? Applications are now open for the Community Environmental Academy. Deadline to apply is Friday, August 6. Participants get an insider’s view of the Department of Environmental Quality and Public Works through a series of talks, tours, and hands-on learning experiences, then work together to develop and execute projects related to academy topics. Sessions are held over five Saturdays from August through November. After November, participants work together to develop and execute projects related to academy topics. Projects must be completed by the end of May 2022.

Blue Grass Home Entertainment hosted BIA Central KY’s Food Truck Friday.

Best City for First-time Homebuyers

Buying a house for the first-time in Lexington? You’re in luck! A recent study released by SmartAsset, ranked Lexington among the best 25 cities in the nation for first-time homebuyers. To determine its rankings, SmartAsset considered 163 of the largest U.S. cities and analyzed 12 metrics across four major categories, including home market favorability, affordability, livability, and employment.

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Lifstyl Real Estate hosted a live auction and vendor fair.

2021 Tour of Homes

BIA of Central Kentucky has announced the dates for the 2021 Grand Tour of Homes and the 2021 Tour of Remodeled Homes. Both home tours will feature projects by Professional BIA Builder & Remodeler Members, available in-person and virtual. Sep 17-19 Grand Tour of Homes Sep 24-26

Grand Tour of Homes

Oct 16-17

Tour of Remodeled Homes

acemagazinelex.com | August 2021 | 21


Sold In Lexington 40502

1329 COOPER DR ................................................... $935,000 795 LAKESHORE DR............................................... $925,000 512 CULPEPPER RD ................................................ $899,000 617 SUMMERSHADE CIR ....................................... $872,500 1234 COOPER DR................................................... $815,000 3517 CASTLEGATE WYND ....................................... $790,000 501 CHINOE RD ...................................................... $780,000 344 QUEENSWAY DR .............................................. $775,000 2980 FOUR PINES DR UNIT 3 ................................. $775,000 3314 BROOKHILL CIR ............................................. $729,000 421 HART RD..... $715,000 2369 THE WOODS LN ............................................. $691,000 2956 FOUR PINES DR UNIT 4 ................................. $665,500 2105 WOODLEY CIR............................................... $650,000 627 TATESWOOD DR ............................................... $650,000 433 BRISTOL RD ...................................................... $640,000 306 GARDEN RD ..................................................... $625,000 333 LAKESHORE DR ............................................... $570,000

40503

105 EDGEMOOR DR ............................................... $669,000 3440 RABBITS FOOT TRL ......................................... $605,000 785 WELLINGTON WAY........................................... $565,000 3304 GRASMERE DR .............................................. $565,000 105 SHADY LN ......................................................... $525,000 3116 COMANCHE TRL ............................................ $510,000 220 GREENBRIAR RD .............................................. $440,000 105 SOUTHPORT DR ............................................... $425,000 668 SHASTA CIR ...................................................... $420,000

40505

2409 WILLIAMSBURG ESTATES L ........................$1,200,000 2131 PATCHEN LAKE LN ......................................... $724,999 605 LOMBARDY DR ................................................ $450,000 2516 BRIDLE CT ....................................................... $427,000

40507

468 W SECOND ST .................................................. $785,000

40508

601 E MAIN ST ......................................................... $930,000

40509

516 MIST FLOWER LN ............................................. $760,000 2537 PASCOLI PL .................................................... $680,000 2400 LORENZO WAY ............................................... $620,000 1764 BAHAMA RD .................................................. $595,000 2612 LUCCA PL ........................................................ $549,900 761 LOCHMERE PL .................................................. $548,500 765 ANDOVER VILLAGE DR .................................... $540,000 2584 PASCOLI PL .................................................... $525,000 213 EMILIE LN ......................................................... $495,000 916 STAR OF DANUBE WAY .................................... $490,000 3128 ALTHORP WAY ............................................... $475,000 3424 CHESTNUT HILL LN ........................................ $475,000 708 BROADMOOR PL ............................................. $435,000 655 MINT HILL LN ................................................... $435,000 2021 TIDEWATER FLT ............................................... $428,274

Property sales info source: Fayette County Property Valuation office (www.fayettepva.com)

22 | August 2021 | acemagazinelex.com


2121 RUTLEDGE AVE .............................................. $424,900 3184 BAY SPRINGS PARK ....................................... $423,000 3532 ANTILLES DR .................................................. $420,000

4200 NUTMEG DR .................................................. $426,000 2824 ASHBROOKE DR ............................................ $420,000

40510

4364 STEAMBOAT RD ............................................. $528,685 3874 BOSTON RD ................................................... $457,600 1465 CORONA DR .................................................. $426,000 1300 COPPER RUN BLVD ....................................... $425,000 1484 COPPER RUN BLVD ....................................... $422,000 1388 CORONA DR .................................................. $400,000

3732 SALISBURY DR ............................................... $535,000

40511

701 THE GRANGE LN ...........................................$1,955,000 2142 IRON WORKS PIKE ........................................ $730,000 228-230 BOILING SPRINGS DR ............................. $575,000 792 HOLLYHOCK DR ............................................... $422,000 2804 SATIN LEAF PARK ........................................... $405,000

40513

4804 WATERSIDE DR .............................................. $985,000 3136 HEMINGWAY LN ............................................ $675,000 1229 LITCHFIELD LN ............................................... $632,000 1304 MUMFORD LN .............................................. $557,000 2228 SHANNAWOOD DR ....................................... $550,000 3350 MANTILLA DR ................................................. $491,000 4220 EVERGREEN DR ............................................. $490,000 3537 LYON DR ......................................................... $465,000 3304 PASTERN CT .................................................... $450,077

40514

40515

121 DAMAR DR ....................................................... $930,000 3845 BRANHAM PARK ........................................... $606,158 469 WESTON PARK ................................................. $590,000 4938 HARTLAND PKWY .......................................... $570,000 220 SOMERSLY PL ................................................... $570,000 4866 WYNDHURST RD ........................................... $560,000 3837 BRANHAM PARK ........................................... $540,000 964 HAMMOCK OAK LN ........................................ $497,000 4408 BREAKWATER CT ............................................ $486,000 4062 LIVINGSTON LN ............................................. $470,000 1090 ROCKBRIDGE RD ........................................... $465,000 913 CALYPSO BREEZE DR ....................................... $454,000

2221 CASCADE WAY ............................................... $444,900 4072 MOONCOIN WAY .......................................... $444,900 461 SPENCER PARK................................................ $440,000 3768 KENESAW DR ................................................ $427,000 913 HENDERSON DR ............................................. $425,000 1070 FOREST LAKE DR ............................................ $425,000 3604 AFTON PL ........................................................ $420,000 3745 KENESAW DR ................................................ $410,000

Property sales info source: Fayette County Property Valuation office (www.fayettepva.com)

acemagazinelex.com | August 2021 | 23



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