Ace October 2019

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In Hamburg behind Forcht Bank 2721 Old Rosebud Road 859.264.0923 | mftky.com 2 | aceweekly.com | October 2019

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Downtown MT. STERLING October 2019 Volume 30, Issue 10 WWW.ACEWEEKLY.COM @aceweekly

in this issue October 2019 | VOLUME 30, ISSUE 10 | ACEWEEKLY.COM

on the cover

CREATIVE DIRECTOR Tread

18-21 o C ur t D r e b o Kentucky’s ay t c Oldest Festival

s

Eat, Shop and Enjoy LIVE MUSIC Key of She

Multimedia Designers AJ Mitchell Maggie Cardwell

Distribution ACE is free, one per reader. Removal of more than one paper from any distribution point constitutes theft. Ace racks and boxes are private property. Distribution of any other publications in an Ace rack or Ace box constitutes criminal trespass (trespass includes but is not limited to: college publications, Yard Sale flyers, tagging, and so on).

OCTOBER

AWN to DU en D SK

Saturday 10am - 6 pm

EDITRIX Rhonda Reeves

Contributing writers (online + print) Evan O. Albert, Kevin Faris, Brian Gardner, Bridget Johnson, Blair Montgomery Brian S. Powers, Raj Ranade, Nick Stump, Kakie Urch, Kristina Rosen, Tom Yates –––––––––– Display Advertising 859.225.4889, ext. 235 ads@aceweekly.com Classified Advertising 859.225.4889, ext. 237 ––––––––––– COPYRIGHT © 2019 Send Letters to the Editor: editor@aceweekly.com 250 words or less include full name and daytime phone. To submit a calendar listing for consideration, email acelist@aceweekly.com. —— Display Ad Deadlines are the 15th of each month for the next month’s issue: Email ads@aceweekly.com. Space reservation, production art, and payment should be delivered no later than by Noon.

O

Op

P9 Vitale Buford’s new memoir chronicles overcoming her addiction to success, and Adderall

features P5 Hey 19: The Palindrome Sequel to Ace Eleven p6 Move it Lexington. October MPO p17 classifiedS

a&e

P8 Great moments in Sports p7 Community p14 ACE EATS OUT

Clay Street Brothers

Grits & Soul Local Honeys (Square Dance & Concert)

Sunday Noon - 5 pm WKQQ Jam session with Freakdaddy and Dead Air Dennis Singer / Songwriter - Cliff Kretzer

SOUND STAGE

Lexington Restaurant News

p15 ACE DRINKS OUT Lexington Spirits News

p16 Food by Chef Tom p18 REAL ESTATE

Brad Alford & Band

DOWNTOWN CITY LOT HOSPITALITY AREA BEHIND MAIN CROSS

Catch a FREE ride

I - 64 at Exit 110

More information at “October Court Days in Mt. Sterling, KY” on Facebook and at

www.mtsterlingtourism.com

On the Commonwealth Counseling Court Day Express (Sat. & Sun.)

aceweekly.com | October 2019 | 3


Out and About with

Photos by Paul Martin for Ace

4 | aceweekly.com | October 2019


Palindrome Project

Hey Nineteen I The Sequel to Ace Eleven Photo by Tom Yates

Photo by Letha Drury

The Yeti-winning photo was submitted by Letha Drury, who snapped a selfie at 9:19 am on 9.19.19, announcing that it was also her birthday. Photo by Laura Fuller Lacy Photo by Kakie Urch

Photo By Sherry ODowd

f the economy is judged (as many suggest) by the number of construction cranes you see in a given city, Lexington is booming. September 10 marked the beginning of Palindrome Week . On 9.19.19, we asked Ace readers to set their alarms for 9:19 am and pm, to capture their unique snapshot of Lexington. They shared their photo(s) on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter using the hashtags #AceNineteen and #AcePalindrome. Each photo on each channel was an entry for a Yeti Roadie. This year’s project yielded photos of dogs, kids, babies, cyclists, and food, and a huge glut of construction pics. The Jefferson Street viaduct is in ruins. High Street at Rupp Arena is nearly unrecognizable. City Center is still rising. The quest was: think global, shoot local. This year’s Palindrome Project was a sequel to a recurring Lexington photo series called the Ace Eleven Project. We’ll revive the project again for the next Palindrome Week in 2021. (See gallery on facebook, and full post at aceweekly.com).

Photo by Marie Rere Eldridge

Photo by Alaina Short

Photo by Wanda Green

Photo by Brian Powers

aceweekly.com | October 2019 | 5


Get on Board

MPO

October is ‘Move It’ month for Lexington BY KRISTINA ROSEN gerial capacity.”

F

“T

he more you invest yourself in learning what other people care about, I think the better kind of person it makes you,” says Mike Sewell by way of introduction. Even a quick conversation with him might leave you wondering why you don’t make the 20 minute commute to the interview via bicycle. Sewell, an engineer and owner at Gresham Smith, is collaborating with the Lexington Area MPO in his role as the project manager for Town Branch Commons Project, the new transformative public-private park and trail system along Midland Avenue and Vine Street. “The initial intent of why the city of Lexington is here is based on transportation. The Town Branch Commons project is hoping to reinvigorate and transform a modern city to get back to its roots.” The project is about the overall quality of life. Think 22 miles of uninterrupted trail providing the downtown area with more green space, better pedestrian settings, and an improved environment. Sewell is most surprised with how well the LFUCG and Lexington Area MPO functioned together on this project. “From the get-go LFUCG exhibited a lot of coordination which is unusual for a municipality. They tied it to the overall vision of the community and worked well with the Lexington Area MPO. It was refreshing to see how well the city functions in a mana-

6 | aceweekly.com | October 2019

or most of his life and especially as an engineer, Sewell relied on his car, but when he began commuting to work by bike, his life changed and he reevaluated his entire career. One day on his way to work, he got caught in traffic and hadn’t moved an inch in fifteen minutes. He was furious as the people walking and biking by were beating him across the bridge. He hopped the curb, parked his car, and started walking. As he fumed his way across the bridge, a bike bell rang and he heard the cyclist say pleasantly, “On your left.” The next day he packed his bike in his car and decided the moment he hit traffic he would ditch his car and bike the rest of the way. That was nine years ago. He has biked to twork nearly every day since. He stopped paying to park downtown and saved $130 a month. His mood improved and he lost weight, and he started taking both his physical and mental health more seriously. Biking changed his life and his career. He went from focusing his career around cars to focusing on the front end of roadway Sewell says the Town Branch Commons project “can mean so many positive things for the city of Lexington. Ladders of opportunity for people who depend on multimodal, a (mobile) shift when people see the benefits of getting out of their car. It can mean transformation on an entire corridor between the land use, overall enjoyment, and making the commute to downtown a lot more fun.”

I

nterested in joining the Lex on the Move movement in October?

Businesses and organizations can head to the Lexington Area MPO website to sign up. The more active a workforce is throughout the month, the better their chance of redeeming the benefits and good publicity while the most active individuals receive company perks or incentives provided by employers. (Results will be submitted at the end of November.) Sewell says, “It’s like every time I get on my bike, I love my community just a little more than when I get in my car.”

LFUCG MPO Transportation Director Max Conyers with Mike Sewell at the recent MPO luncheon

BONUS LIGHTNING ROUND: Next transportation trend to takeover Lexington in next five years: Electric bikes. They’re great for the aging population, they give you a little boost and you don’t get too sweaty. They’ll continue to be a major force that helps to showcase how to get around short trips inside a city. Favorite place to bike in Lexington: Around campus. The University of Kentucky has done phenomenal things for bikes to make it very comfortable, but also connecting. Name five things in your fridge right now: Crank & Boom ice cream (we had to remind him fridge, not freezer), almond milk, aloha turkey (he says it tastes like pineapple), turkey sausage, and eggs. (He puts one scoop of Crank & Boom Bourbon & Honey ice cream in his coffee everyday — apparently we’ve been drinking our morning coffee all wrong.) Favorite meal in Lexington: The mock crunchwrap supreme from girlsgirlsgirls Burritos is to die for, but it’s tied with the shrimp or buffalo catfish from Smithtown.

The Lexington Area MPO works to ensure that transportation projects and programs are based on local priorities and mutually agreed upon goals. A Metropolitan Planning Organization made up of representatives from local, state and federal government, transit agencies, transportation providers and other local stakeholders. Urban cities with more than 50,000 people must designate an MPO to conduct transportation planning activities. The Lexington Area MPO is making October the month to ‘Move It” with Lex on the Move, a monthlong initiative to encourage local area businesses to engage in active commuting. The challenge invites participating companies and their staff members to “step up” to find healthier, greener ways to commute to work in October. Walk, share a ride with a coworker, hop a bus, or ride a bike. With ConnectLex, the new bicycle and pedestrian master plan, the Lexington Area MPO plans to build on past efforts and create a new vision for walking and biking in the region. As of now, Lexington has over 100 miles of bike lanes and shared use trails with more than 218 miles on the way.


COMMUNITY

Rendering of new facility in former Kennedy’s Bookstore.

New life to former Kennedy’s lot

The University of Kentucky and Signet Real Estate Group broke ground on a mixed-use parking facility in the former Kennedy’s Bookstore location. This new structure will include over 900 new parking spaces and over 23,000 square feet of innovation and retail space.

Women in Business Expo

The 7th Annual Women in Business Expo is October 18 at the downtown Hilton. Keynote speakers include Azur Food Group restaurateur Sylvia Lovely and Felecia Hatcher, bestselling author of Start Your Business on a Ramen Noodle Budget. This annual conference is a day filled with informative breakout sessions, exhibitor booths, networking and a highly anticipated business pitch contest.

Home Sweet Home

US News recently came out with a ranking of the top 125 places to live in the United States. Lexington made the list at #29. They describe this great town as a cultural blend of South and Midwest. How the University of Kentucky is a large employer for Lexington and the equestrian industry is the main economic driver. To be considered for this ranking, a city must have good value, a desirable place to live, have a strong job market, and high quality of life.

And the winner is…

Congratulations to Jeremey Burch for winning Lexington-Fayette County Health Department’s mural contest.

His painting has featured the mission of the health department and their CARES values (Caring, Accountability, Respect, Equity, and Service).

Burn ban for Fayette County

Fayette County is under a burn ban by the Lexington Fire Marshal until October 7 at 7 am. This means people living within the county lines cannot set fires outdoors including: refuse, cooking, and construction debris. Even those with open burn permits are not allowed to burn outside.

Shillito Park has been around since 1993, and with a completely wooden structure, it was time for an update. Lexington Parks and Recreation asked the community to help rebuild the neighborhood staple. The new playground features the same design concept as the original, but materials were improved for longevity and there are more accessible opportunities so all children can enjoy.

aceweekly.com | October 2019 | 7


UK Athletic Schedule FOOTBALL

UK vs ARKANSAS 10/12 UK vs MISSOURI 10/26 UK vs TENNESSEE 11/9

BASKETBALL

PRO DAY 10/6 5:30 pm BIG BLUE MADNESS 10/11 7 pm BLUE-WHITE GAME 10/18 7 pm UK vs GEORGETOWN COLLEGE 10/27 5 pm UK vs K-STATE 11/1 7 pm

VOLLEYBALL

UK vs USC 10/4 7 pm UK vs FLORIDA 10/6 1 pm UK vs GEORGIA 10/11 7 pm UK vs TENNESSEE 10/16 7 pm UK vs ALABAMA 10/20 3 pm UK vs LSU 10/23 8 pm UK vs TEXAS A&M 11/1 7 pm

Bluegrass Hospitality Association annual games

8 | aceweekly.com | October 2019


FEATURE

Poison Pill

Vitale Buford’s new memoir on the high cost of perfection BY KRISTINA ROSEN

V

itale Buford is relaxing at Martine’s Pastries at the exact table where she sat and wrote her book, Addicted to Perfect, four months ago. No one who runs into her would guess that she survived a 10-year love affair with Adderall. But that’s the truth about addiction. You never really know who is struggling with it, and you can never really know what someone is using, or has used, to numb their pain. “When people think of recovery, they think of drugs and alcohol, but as humans we are all using something to numb the pain,” says Buford. “Whether it’s television, relationships, food, gambling; all of us have something we use to cope with the things happening in our lives.” Buford’s upcoming memoir details her real and raw journey through an addiction to Adderall and ultimately perfection, and how she finally broke free. She was introduced to Adderall as a “study drug” during her junior year of college. She lost 20 pounds and received the best grades of her life with her hardest course load yet. She loved the weight loss and the newfound effortless ability to accomplish projects. By her senior year, she was able to obtain her own prescription. She sensed it was going to become a problem, but found it irresistible. For the next ten years, she successfully hid her addiction from everyone. She got her first job in public relations, and recalls, “because of my work ethic and my ability to work 24 hours a day, I got promoted.” In her marketing role for a prominent law firm, she quickly rose through the ranks to become a department director at the age of 25. At the height of her addiction, she was taking 360mg a day, while the recommended daily allowance is 50mg. No one had any idea she was a slave to this drug or the lengths she

was going to obtain it — from doctor shopping, which is illegal, to the brink of going to jail.

M

ore than a New York Times bestselling author, and more than a survivor of addiction, Buford now describes herself as a transformational coach, speaker, eating disorder survivor, podcast host, mother, and Kentucky native. None of which are in chronological order. As a coach and speaker, she’s a pro at giving advice, but the best piece of advice she has ever been given is actually what got her sober and changed her life. In May 2014, someone told her, “I see in you what I refuse to see in myself.” Buford didn’t think much of it until the following week when her mom relapsed along her path to alcohol sobriety. She remembers being infuriated with her mother. “I was so upset and angry. I looked at her like ‘why can’t you just get sober?’ Then I took a step back and I remembered that quote. I realized in that moment that I saw in my mom what I refused to see in myself, which was that I was struggling with addiction and I was the one unwilling to get sober. I was pointing my finger at her when I should’ve been pointing the finger at myself.”

“I look at fear as a compass now. If it’s scary and uncomfortable, I am going to do it anyway.” Several weeks later, on June 7, 2014, Buford made the decision to get sober and check herself into rehab. She knew something had to change, but Adderall had been her crutch for ten years, and by that point, it had become part of her identity. “I had to grieve that,” she remembers.

I

f she could go back and tell collegestudent-Vitale one thing, she says, “I would remind her that she is so lovable as she is. [She’s] more than her body and her weight and she doesn’t have to have everything figured out right now.” But even if she could, Buford wouldn’t change her past. She believes those experiences and obstacles have led her in the direction to tell her story and in her line of work to help others heal. After she got sober five years ago, Vitale knew she had to write a book. She started writing this past June and it took her four weeks to finish. As she wrote, she discovered that her need for perfection was the underlying issue that ultimately led to her Adderall addiction. Buford grew up in a home where alcoholism and workaholism reigned. Perfection was how she was going to find love and praise. She turned to everything outside of herself to feel valued, seen, and heard. “Perfectionists don’t allow life to be an experiment,” she says. “It’s black or white, and we don’t give ourselves room to err. The life you want is on the other side of your fear. I look at fear as a compass now. If it’s scary and uncomfortable, I am going to do it anyway.” September was National Recovery Month and Buford spent it sharing her story, not only to warn of the dangers of Adderall addiction, but to remind

us, “the more we walk toward pain instead of hide from it, then the more we heal, and the more life opens up. We think to avoid pain is freedom but really to confront our pain and sit in it is freedom.” “You don’t have to have an Adderall addiction to read this book,” she says. “It’s a message of hope, and I hope it inspires [readers] to be vulnerable in their own lives and tell their own story.” “The more vulnerable you are,” she says, “the more your life opens up. People want to be seen and heard, they want to have real conversation and connection. Vulnerability actually gives you connection.”

Addicted to Perfect will be released next year and the book is now available for pre-sale.

aceweekly.com | October 2019 | 9


sun

mon

Call today to reserve your ad in our upcoming holiday issues

tue

1

EAT Lexington

Pasta Garage Takeover, 5 pm, DV8 Kitchen

wed

2

BIZ Equine Career & Opportunity Fair, 4 pm, Woodford Reserve Suite (Kroger Field)

thu

3

ART Studio 300 Digital Art & Music Festival, 9 am, Transylvania University (thru Friday)

LIT Author Signing with Tayari Jones, 7 pm, UK Gaines Center for the Humanities

ads@aceweekly.com

LIT Kentucky Proud Evening, 6 pm, Fayette County Cooperative Extension Family & Consumer Sciences

LIT Kentucky Great Writers Series, 6 pm, Carnegie Center Show #5, 7:30 pm, Lexington Opera House

Patch Golf Classic, 8:30 am, Tates Creek Golf Course

6

RUN/WALK The Raven 10K and Robin 5K, 10 am, Raven Run Nature Sanctuary

FAMILY Lil’ Oktoberfest

at West Sixth, 12 pm, West Sixth Brewing

STAGE The Very Hungry Caterpillar & Other Eric Carle Favourites, 2 pm, Lexington Children’s Theatre

WELLNESS

7

HEALTH

8

Senior Lifestyle, Health & Wellness Expo, 10 am, Signature Club of Lansdowne

Medicare 2020 Lunch and Learn, noon, Sayre Christian Village

ART Pumpkin Painting

BIZ Job Fair, 12:30 pm,

with On The Move Art Studio, 3 pm, A Cup of Commonwealth

Always Best Care of Greater Lexington

WOODSONGS Darin and

On: The History of Hemp in Kentucky, 6 pm, McConnell Springs

Brooke Aldridge, 6 pm, Lyric Theatre

TALK History to Chew

MUSIC Fall

9

Concert “Peace Love Music,” 7 pm, Paul Laurence Dunbar High School

MUSIC Lyle Lovett and

his Acoustic Group, 7:30 pm, Norton Center for the Arts

FILM Elvis Unleashed,

13

EAT One Year Birthday

LIT Author Signing with Kathleen Brooks, 6:30 pm, Arts Place

14

Celebration of Traditional Music, Berea

10

BIZ Roundtable Luncheon with Susan Elkington, Toyota TMMK President, 11:30 am, Women Leading Kentucky Flu Shots at Fayette Mall, 1 pm

7 pm, Movie Tavern (Brannon Crossing)

4

AutoUpdate: Photography in the Electronic Age, The Carnegie in Northern Kentucky (Oct 4-5)

15

HG Potting Shed Lecture Series with John Michler, 5:30 pm, Michler’s

BIZ Fall Career Expo, 9:30 am, Sullivan University

16

EVENT

17

Hemp Social, 5:30 pm, Ashland, The Henry Clay Estate

sat

5

FEST Wilmore Arts & Crafts Festival, 9 am, Wilmore

STAGE Paw Patrol Live, 10 am & 2 pm, Rupp Arena (thru Sunday) THINK PINK Polo for the Cure, 6 pm, Commonwealth Polo Club

HORSE Keeneland’s Fall Meet begins, 11 am

MOVIES Freaky Friday

FEST

Oktoberfest 2019, 5 pm, Harrodsburg (thru Sunday)

11

FEST Mary Queen of the

Holy Rosary Fall Festival, 4 pm

MOVIES Freaky Friday Flicks: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, 6 pm, MoonDance Amphitheater BALL Big Blue Madness, 7 pm, Rupp Arena

CONCERT John Michael Montgomery, 7 pm, Manchester Music Hall MOVIES Firepit Cinema: Scream, 8 pm, Rock House Brewing

BALL

Kentucky Football vs Arkansas, Kroger Field

12

THINK PINK Yes Mamm! 5K, 9 am, RJ Corman (Nicholasville, KY) FEST South Elkhorn Fall

Festival, 9 am, South Elkhorn Christian Church

NATURE Lexington Cemetery Tree Walk, 1:30 pm, The Lexington Cemetery CONCERT Styx, 7:30 pm, Norton Center for the Arts

LIT Author signing with Ann Patchett, 7 pm, The Kentucky Theater

pm, The Kentucky Theater

Secretariat Festival (Oct 11-13)

MUSIC

HEALTH

MUSIC John Lauter, 7

HORSE

ART

Flicks: Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, 6 pm, MoonDance

CONCERT Secret Sessions

GOLF Pumpkin

fri

FEST Mt.

18

Sterling Court Days, Mount Sterling, KY (Oct 18-21)

RUN The Bourbon Chase

19


HORSE

Secretariat Festival (Oct 11-13)

13

EAT One Year Birthday

Arts

Kentucky Theater

pm, The Kentucky Theater

LIT Author Signing with Kathleen Brooks, 6:30 pm, Arts Place

14

Bash, noon, NoBaked Cookie Dough

HG Potting Shed Lecture Series with John Michler,

15

16

17

5:30 pm, Michler’s

BIZ Fall Career Expo, 9:30 am, Sullivan University

FILM Horror Noire, 7 pm,

LIT Fall Book Sale, 10 am, DRINK Rhinegeist

The Lyric

STAGE Gianni Schicchi and Suor Angelica: A Puccini Double Bill, 2 pm, Singletary Center SAFETY Fire Prevention and Wellness Festival, 2 pm, Masterson Station Fairgrounds

EVENT

Hemp Social, 5:30 pm, Ashland, The Henry Clay Estate

Friends of the Lexington Public Library (thru Sunday)

Beer Dinner, 6:30 pm, Winchell’s Restaurant and Bar

NATURE Let’s Plant Trees, 6 pm, The Arboretum

COMEDY Nicole Byer

CONCERT Uncle Kracker, 7 pm, Manchester Music Hall

from Netflix reality bake-off show Nailed It!, 7:15 pm, Comedy Off Broadway (thru Sunday)

FEST Mt.

Sterling Court Days, Mount

18

SHOP Holiday Market Craft and Vendor Fair, 6 pm, St. Luke United Methodist Church (thru Saturday) pm, Rupp Arena

Jerry Douglas, 7 pm, The Lyric

20

PUMPKIN Pumpkin

Jamboree, 10 am, Eckert’s Orchard

GAME Board Game Night Kick Off, 6 pm, Gather On Main

21

FEST Mt. Sterling Court Days wraps up, Mount Sterling, KY

FILM

Blacula, 7 pm, The Lyric

22 23 DRINK

DRINK Halloween Beer Dinner featuring Alltech (Lexington Brewing Co.), 7 pm, HopCat

1792 with Josh Hollifield of Barton 1792 Distillery, 6 pm, Liquor Barn (Beaumont)

TRIVIA Hocus Pocus

Trivia, 7 pm, World of Beer Kentucky Theater

Live, 7:30 pm, Rupp Arena

Vintage Market Days “Home for the Holidays,” 11 am, Kentucky Horse Park (thru Sunday)

HALLOWEEN Trunk or

Treat, 6 pm, First Christian Church

RUN/WALK The Black

Cat Chase 5K Fun Run/ Walk, 7 pm, Frankfort

CONCERT Boo Fest feat.

T.I. & Jeezy, 7 pm, Rupp Arena

PUMPKIN

Carving for 2019

27 28

PumpkinMania, 12 pm, Transylvania University

PARADE Thriller Parade,

4 pm, downtown

BALL UK vs Georgetown College, 5 pm, Rupp Arena

EAT

Mystery Dinner, 7 pm, The Kentucky Castle

MOVIES

Us, 7 pm, The Lyric

PUMPKIN

29 30

PumpkinMania 2019, 5 pm, Transylvania University

DRINK

Evening Ghost Tea at Waveland, 6:30 pm, Waveland

BIZ Roundtable

19

FAMILY Little Goblins

Galore, 1 pm, McConnell Springs

CAUSE Lexington Light the Night, 5:30 pm, Kroger Field

24 25 26 MARKET

FILM Moonbow, 7 pm, The

SHOW The Price Is Right

HALLOWEEN Mystery & Magic Mixer, 5:30 pm, Creatures of Whim

CONCERT

Casting Crowns, 7 pm, Rupp Arena

Chase

Sterling, KY (Oct 18-21)

BALL Blue/White Game, 7

MUSIC

RUN The Bourbon

HAPPY HALLOWEEN

31

Visit aceweekly.com for where to Trick or Treat in Lexington, KY.

BALL

Kentucky Football vs Missouri, Kroger Field

FILM If He Won’t Love You, I Will, 7 pm, The

Lyric

LIT Booktacular: A Great Gatsby Affair, 7 pm, Limestone Hall STAGE George Orwell’s

1984, 7:30 pm, Norton Center for the Arts

ART Halloween with Pop Stars!, 9 pm, 21c Museum Hotel Lexington

AROUND THE CORNER NOV 1 NOV 2

Peppermints & Pearls

NOV 15

Junior League of Lexington’s Holly Day Market

NOV 17 NOV 28

Ariana Grande

The Avett Brothers

Luncheon with Erica Kellem Beasley, KY Executive Director of American Cancer Society, 11:30 am, Women Leading Kentucky

Thanksgiving


Think Pink Yes Mamm! All month long Lexus of Lexington is participating in the Yes Mamm! Program. With every new or preowned vehicle sold in the month of October, Lexus will donate to the program that helps spread breast cancer awareness.

Confection for the Cure

Candles for the Cure

Race for the Cure

My Favorite Things in Hamburg is partnering with Susan G. Koman in October for Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Throughout October, a portion of sales from the pink Capri Blue Volcano candle will be donated to the Susan G. Koman Foundation.

Race for the Cure is typically held in October for the Lexington area, but Lexington’s race has been rescheduled to April 2020. Louisville’s Race for the Cure is on October 12 at Cardinal Stadium beginning at 7 am.

12 | aceweekly.com | October 2019

Last month, select Lexington restaurants participated in Susan G. Komen Kentucky’s Confection for the Cure. Coles 735 Main, DV8 Kitchen, Lockbox, Missy’s Pies, Ramsey’s Diner, Ramsey’s Country Store, Red State BBQ, and Saul Good. Eppings on Eastside also joined in on the fun and served a rose white chocolate mousse, prickly pear gelee, and rose pepita crumble as a dessert. Proceeds from the desserts went to the foundation for cancer research.

Think Pink Calendar October 5

Polo for the Cure, 6 pm, Commonwealth Polo Club

October 12

Yes Mamm! 5K, 9 am, RJ Corman (Nicholasville, KY)

October 12

Race for the Cure, 7 am, Cardinal Stadium (Louisville, KY)

October 13

Support Susan G. Koman Kentucky, 5 pm, Grassa Gramma (Louisville, KY) Events may require tickets or registration Times, dates, and locations subject to change


Health and Outdoors Flu Season

New Commissioner

Cold and Flu season has officially started in Lexington. The Lexington-Fayette County Health Department is reporting the city’s first lab-confirmed case of the flu for the 2019-20 flu season. The health department is providing free flu shots to the community 1-7 p.m. Oct. 10 at Fayette Mall, near the interior entrance of Dillard’s, as part of its annual preparedness exercise. Flu shots are also available in the health department’s Public Health Clinic. Please call 859-288-2483 for details.

Pups

The sweet therapy pups at Bluegrass Care Navigators were finally given names from the hundreds of suggestions submitted by supporters. The first is Grace, a female Golden Retriever and will serve Eastern Kentucky. Her name means “in favor

Last month, the State Department for Public Health named Doctor Angela Tackett Dearinger as the new commissioner. She is an associate professor at the University of Kentucky’s College of Medicine and is board certified in internal medicine, pediatrics, public health, and general preventive medicine.

EVENTS Medicare Educational Update, 6 pm, Beaumont Library

15 th Annual

HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE

October 5

Polo for the Cure, 6 pm, Commonwealth Polo Club

October 6

The Raven 10K and Robin 5K, 10 am, Raven Run Nature Sanctuary

Thursday, November 7th 2pm–6pm

October 10

Flu Shots at the Mall, 1 pm, Fayette Mall

October 18

The Bourbon Chase, Bourbon Trail

October 19

October 1

or good will” and “to honor.” The second is Rosemary, a female Yellow Labrador. Her name means “remembrance.” Lastly is Sampson, a male Yellow Labrador. His name means “service” and “sun.”

Walk to Remember with UK Children’s Hospital, 4 pm, The Arboretum

The Pumpkin Run, 9:30 am, Wellington Park

October 27

Cupcake Classic 5k, 4 pm, Spindletop Hall

November 7

Holiday Open House, 2pm, Skin Secrets

Complimentary consultations with Board Certified Dermatologists: Erika N. Music, M.D. Kelli G. Webb, M.D.

James P. Lagrew, M.D. Audra I. Grossman, M.D.

Meet with licensed estheticians, skincare representatives and enjoy sweet treats

Donate $5 to Angel Tree to be entered to win a YETI cooler filled with Botox, Juvederm and skincare products (over $3000 value)

Glo Minerals Consultations, Paraffin Wax Hand Treatments

With every $100 gift card Over $10,000 in door prizes to include Dysport, Restylane, purchase, receive a $20 Botox, Juvederm, Sculptra, skincare products and services bonus certificate!

% 20 OFF

ALL PRODUCTS

RSVP BY NOVEMBER 4

th

TO BE ENTERED TO WIN A YETI COOLER FILLED WITH DYSPORT, RESTYLANE, SCULPTRA AND SKINCARE PRODUCTS (OVER $5000 VALUE)

WWW. SKINSECRETSCENTER.COM

859.977.0141

aceweekly.com | October 2019 | 13


Openings and Closings Complete stories, photos, and videos available for Lexington restaurant openings are posted at aceweekly.com, Ace facebook/twitter/and instagram, and are also included in the weekly e-dition, Ace Eats Out. Cowboy Brazilian Steakhouse on Richmond Road, in the former Coba Cocina location near Idle Hour, has closed.

McLeod’s Coffee House is opening at 376 Southland Drive.

Southland Bagel, popular for their stand at Lexington Farmers Market, open at 428 Southland Drive. The Southern Deli & Tavern opened in the former Graze location on South Limestone.

Metropolitan Donuts and Coffee is closing its doors in the Beaumont area. The owners plan to continue serving coffee and baked goods at Barista Social on Malabu Drive. Nash’s Southern Table & Bar closed their doors in September after four months on Southland Drive in the former Willie’s Locally Known location.

Spotz Gelato opened a new location at 128 North Broadway in the former site of Clawdaddy’s.

EVENTS FRI OCT 4

It is National Taco Day and Chuy’s is celebrating all day long with taco specials on Friday, October 4 beginning at 11 am.

14 | aceweekly.com | October 2019

Housewarmings is hosting LexVegFest, a community street-fair-like event promoting a plant-based lifestyle on Saturday, October 5 at 11 am. The Barn in The Summit at Fritz Farm is having a Rise & Dine brunch on Saturday, October 5 at 11 am, featuring one-time only brunch items, a full bloody mary bar, & more.

SUN OCT 6

West Sixth Brewing is hosting a Lil’ Oktoberfest on Sunday, October 6 at 12 pm. There will be free activities for kids, an extended kids menu from Smithtown Seafood, and proceeds from the event will go to FoodChain.

THU OCT 17

Winchell’s is hosting a five course dinner paired with different Rhinegeist beers for each course on Thursday, October 17 at 6:30 pm.

The Garage, a new neighborhood bar, opened at 3092 Leestown Road near Masterson Station.

Gather on Main opened last month in the former location of The Casual Pint at 233 East Main Street.

SAT OCT 5

TUE OCT 22

This October marks Alltech’s 20th Anniversary and HopCat is celebrating with a Halloween Beer Dinner featuring Alltech (Lexington Brewing Co.) on Tuesday, October 22 at 7 pm.

The 21C/Lockbox crew celebrated a big win at last month’s Bluegrass Hospitality Association games.

To submit a Lexington, Kentucky food, wine, or spirits news item for consideration in Ace Eats Out, email acelist@aceweekly. com. For restaurant advertising, call Ace Advertising at 859.225.4889 ext229 or email ads@aceweekly.com.


Six new members from the bourbon world were inducted into the Kentucky Bourbon Hall of Fame last month. The new members are: Katrina Egbert, Visitor Center Marketing Coordinator, Wild Turkey Distillery; Wesley Henderson, Co-Founder/Chief Innovation Officer, Louisville Distilling Co.; Larry Kass, Director of Trade Relations (Ret.),Heaven Hill Distillery; Charles W. Medley, Master Distiller, Medley Distilling Co./Charles Medley Distillery; Peggy Noe Stevens, Founder & President, Peggy Noe Stevens & Associates; Even G. Kulsveen, Executive Director, Willett Distillery (Parker Beam Lifetime Achievement Award) RC6 is the newest bourbon to come out of Maker’s Mark Wood Finishing Series for 2019. It is called RC6 because it was made with a proprietary finishing stave called RC6 and took two years to develop. It enhances the fruit notes and baking spice flavors found in regular Maker’s Mark with a brighter finish.

EVENTS FRI OCT 4

Blue Stallion Brewing Company releases their Patchwork Purple Blackberry Sour on Friday, October 4. This release benefits the Carnegie Center.

Gather on Main opened last month in the former location of The Casual Pint at 233 East Main Street.

SAT OCT 5

Join West Sixth Brewing for their Oktoberfest benefitting Food Chain on Saturday, October 5 at 11 am. Bourbon and Ballet with the Kentucky Ballet Theater is on Saturday, October 5 with cocktails beginning at 6 pm at the Bodley-Bullock House. After the dance is done, mix and mingle with the artists and listen to sweet music by the Youth Orchestra.

THU OCT 10

Early Times Whisky wanted to find that All-American Dog to go with their All-American brand. They searched all over the country and have found their 10 winners for their national campaign. One of the winners is Lexington’s own Toy Austrailian Shepherd, Callie. “She’s always ready to let you know what’s on her mind,” said Joe, Callie’s owner. “She’s very vocal and it didn’t take her much time to warm up to me. She was following me around within the first few days we had her home.”

Experience a ‘Kentucky Hug’ as Ranada’s Bistro and Bar explores what is lovingly referred to as ‘The Olds’: Old Crow, Old Forester, Old Fitzgerald, Old Overholt, Old Grandad and Old Rip Van Winkle (85). This bourbon experience is Thursday, October 10 beginning at 6:30 pm.

FRI OCT 11

Celebrate Kentucky’s best food, culture, and music at the Bulleit Frontier Fair in Shelbyville on Friday, October 11 beginning at 6:30 pm.

SAT OCT 12

Travel through different regions spanning the globe by sampling wine and spirits at the Wine on the River in Louisville, KY on Saturday, October 12 beginning at 2 pm.

THU October 17

Winchell’s and Rhinegeist team up for a five course beer dinner on October 17 at 6:30 pm. Limited seating, reservations required.

SAT OCT 19

The 7th Annual Bardstown Craft Beer Festival on Saturday, October 19 from 6-10 pm.

FRI OCT 25

The official first Boos & Booze Bar Crawl in Lexington is Friday, October 25 beginning at 4 pm.

aceweekly.com | October 2019 | 15


You Say Pumpkin,

FOOD

I Say Pasta BY TOM YATES

A

s much as I adore summer and the abundant ripe produce, I am, at heart, a total sucker for autumn. We all have our autumn triggers. Football. Horse racing. Pool closings. School openings. While we might resist the change, pumpkin spice seems to rush the process as we slowly adapt. For me, the flood of sugar pumpkins (or pie pumpkins), winter squash, ornamental gourds, and late season produce at our local markets sets my autumn rhythm. Much like butternut squash, acorn squash, or any other variety, sugar pumpkins have no bounds when it comes to application. Sweet or savory, the sky’s the limit. When winter squash hit the markets, I jump on the pasta bandwagon.

16 | aceweekly.com | October 2019

A

fter scrubbing and rinsing 3 medium sized Casey County sugar pumpkins, I split them in half, scooped out the seeds, placed them cut side down onto parchment paperlined sheet pans, and slid them into a preheated 350 degree oven. When the skins were knife tender and the flesh softened (about 45 minutes), I pulled the pumpkin halves from the oven, scooped out the flesh, and blended it in batches for a smooth puree. To pull out any excess moisture from the puree, I spooned it into a large saucepan set over a medium flame, let it reduce until it thickened, pulled it from the heat, and set it aside. Pumpkin Pasta. Garganelli. Without a pasta extruder to form the short hollow shapes, scratch made tubular pasta can be tricky. Garganelli pasta is hand rolled on a garganelli board to form the ribbed tubes, leaving visible external seams that distinguishes it from extruded penne pasta. Flour. Eggs. Olive oil. Salt. Ratio ratio ratio. Scratch made pasta needs to feel right. After sifting 2 cups all purpose flour into a soft pillowy mound, I formed a well in the center before adding 2 large local eggs yolks, 1/4 teaspoon salt, 1/3 cup of the reserved pumpkin puree, and 1 tablespoon olive oil. Working from the outside in, I pulled the flour

into the well bit by bit, mixing it with the egg/puree combo until it formed a rough dough. I gathered the dough into a ball, kneaded it for 20 minutes until smooth, wrapped it in plastic wrap, and set it aside to rest. After 45 minutes, I divided the dough into eighths. Working with one piece at a time (keeping the remainder covered in plastic to prevent drying out), I rolled the dough through a pasta roller, narrowing the setting after each pass until I reached the second to last setting on the pasta machine. With the pasta rolled out into sheets, I trimmed them into workable lengths, floured them, stacked them onto each other, cut them into 2� squares, and set them aside to dry just a tad. Without a garganelli board, I simply could have rolled the pasta squares on a floured work surface for smooth garganelli. Scratch made penne for the win. Rolling right along. I placed each pasta square (pointed sides vertical) onto the ribbed garganelli board and, starting from the corner ends, rolled each piece around a small floured wooden dowel before sliding them off of the dowel onto a floured work board and setting them aside. Roll. Press. Repeat. Not wanting the kill the delicate pasta in a heavy sauce, I took the brown butter-ish route. I placed a saucepan over a medium high flame and carefully tumbled 8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter into the hot pan. When the butter started to sizzle, I tossed a handful of fresh sage into the butter, flash-fried it until crisp, scooped the sage onto paper towels to drain, and reduced

the heat to medium. There’s a fine line between browned butter and burned butter. It goes fast. The moment the butter turned toasty-brown, I carefully added 2 tablespoons white balsamic vinegar, let the butter settle down, and whisked 1/4 cup pumpkin puree into the mix before pulling the sauce from the heat. After bringing a large pot of water to a rolling boil, I hit it with salt and dropped the ribbed penne pumpkin pasta into the water. When the pasta floated to the top, I scooped them into the brown butter pumpkin sauce and used 1/2 cup pasta water to loosen the sauce before finishing with flaked sea salt, curled cracked black pepper parmigiano-reggiano crisps and fried sage. Get your pumpkin on.


FREE WILL ASTROLOGY by Rob Brezsny ARIES (March 21-April 19): In 1956, the U.S. federal government launched a program to build 40,000 miles of high-speed roads to connect all major American cities. It was completed 36 years later at a cost of $521 billion. In the coming months, I’d love to see you draw inspiration from that visionary scheme. According to my analysis, you will generate good fortune for yourself as you initiate a long-term plan to expand your world, create a more robust network, and enhance your ability to fulfill your life’s big goals. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Taurusborn Youtube blogger Hey Fran Hey has some good advice for her fellow Bulls, and I think it’ll be especially fresh and potent in the coming weeks. She says, “Replacing ‘Why is this happening to me?’ with ‘What is this trying to tell me?’ has been a game changer for me. The former creates a hamster wheel, where you’ll replay the story over and over again. Victimized. Stuck. The latter holds space for a resolution to appear.” GEMINI (May 21-June 20): “The soul has illusions as the bird has wings: it is supported by them.” So declared French author Victor Hugo. I don’t share his view. In fact, I regard it as an insulting misapprehension. The truth is that the soul achieves flight through vivid fantasies and effervescent intuitions and uninhibited longings and non-rational hypotheses and wild hopes and maybe also by a few illusions. I bring this to your attention because now is an excellent time to nurture your soul with vivid fantasies and effervescent intuitions and uninhibited longings and non-rational hypotheses and wild hopes. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Every time my birthday season comes around, I set aside an entire day to engage in a life review. It lasts for many hours. I begin by visualizing the recent events I’ve experienced, then luxuriously scroll in reverse through my entire past, as if watching a movie starring me. It’s not possible to remember every single scene and feeling, of course, so I allow my deep self to highlight the moments it regards as significant. Here’s another fun aspect of this ritual: I bestow a blessing on every memory that comes up, honoring it for what it taught me and how it helped me become the person I am today. Dear Libra, now is an excellent time for you to experiment with a similar celebration. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Depression is when you think there’s nothing to be done,” writes author Siri Hustvedt. “Fortunately I always think there’s something to be done.” I offer this hopeful attitude to you, Scorpio, trusting that it will cheer you up. I suspect that the riddles and mysteries you’re embedded in right now are so puzzling and complicated that you’re tempted to think that there’s nothing you can do to solve them or escape them. But I’m here to inform you that if that’s how you feel, it’s only temporary.

Even more importantly, I’m here to inform you that there is indeed something you can do, and you are going to find out what that is sooner rather than later. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “How inconvenient to be made of desire,” writes Sagittarian author Larissa Pham. “Even now, want rises up in me like a hot oil. I want so much that it scares me.” I understand what she means, and I’m sure you do, too. There are indeed times when the inner fire that fuels you feels excessive and unwieldy and inopportune. But I’m happy to report that your mood in the coming weeks is unlikely to fit that description. I’m guessing that the radiant pulse of your yearning will excite you and empower you. It’ll be brilliant and warm, not seething and distracting. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I envision the next twelve months as a time when you could initiate fundamental improvements in the way you live. Your daily rhythm twelve months from now could be as much as twenty percent more gratifying and meaningful. It’s conceivable you will discover or generate innovations that permanently raise your long-term goals to a higher octave. At the risk of sounding grandiose, I predict you’ll welcome a certain novelty that resembles the invention of the wheel or the compass or the calendar. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Modern literary critic William Boyd declared that Aquarian author Anton Chekhov (18601904) was “the best shortstory writer ever,” and “the first truly modern writer of fiction: secular, refusing to pass judgment, cognizant of the absurdities of our muddled, bizarre lives and the complex tragi-comedy that is the human condition.” Another contemporary critic, Harold Bloom, praised Chekhov’s plays, saying that he was “one of the three seminal figures in the birth of early modernism in the theatre.” We might imagine, then, that in the course of his career, Chekhov was showered with accolades. We’d be wrong about that, though. “If I had listened to the critics,” he testified, “I’d have died drunk in the gutter.” I hope that what I just said will serve as a pep talk for you as you explore and develop your own original notions in the coming weeks. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Pisces-born Dorothy Steel didn’t begin her career as a film actress until she was 91 years old. She had appeared in a couple of TV shows when she was 89, then got a small role in an obscure movie. At age 92, she became a celebrity when she played the role of a tribal elder in Black Panther, one of the highest-grossing films of all time. I propose that we make her one of your inspirational role models for both the coming weeks and the next twelve months. Why? Because I suspect you will be ripening fully into a role and a mission you were born to embody and express.

HELP WANTED Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital seeks Associate Veterinarian in (Lexington, KY) to perform primary equine veterinary ambulatory duties in Lexington, KY & surrounding area. Requires a Doctorate in Veterinary Medicine. Requires 1 year of veterinary practice experience, which must include experience with the following with Thoroughbred & Standardbred Racehorses: Radiology, including obtaining standard & advanced views of the limbs, vertebral spine, skull, & pelvis & interpretation of radiographs for presale evaluations, lameness diagnosis, & screening for common areas of OCD lesions; Ultrasonography focused on the musculoskeletal system, diagnosing & treatment of soft tissue injuries, ultrasound guided injections of dorsal spinal process, & sacro-iliac & lumbosacral regions, & ultrasound guided treatment of tendon & ligaments; Lameness Evaluation & Treatment, including diagnosis & treatment of acute & chronic cases of lameness; regional and local nerve blocks as well as joint blocks; systemic, local, & intra articular treatments with conventional medications & autogenous sources (PRP, Prostride, IRAP, Stem cells, bone marrow);

rehabilitation protocol design & implementation for orthopedic & soft tissue injuries; regenerative laser treatment; & shockwave therapy. Requires experience with the following field services: Upper airway endoscopy; Conformation evaluations of foals, yearlings, & racehorses; Pre-purchase examinations in the racehorse and show horse industries; Vaccinations, deworming, and general herd health; Field castrations; Routine dental work; Emergency evaluation & treatment, including colic & lacerations. Must be an AVMA accredited veterinarian with a Kentucky license.Requirements Applicants preferred to have at least a Bachelors degree or equivalent Applicants are preferred to have had at least 1 years experience. To apply, send resume to ssmith@roodandriddle.com Alliance Medical and Home Care supplies qualified nurses and other clinical staff to facilities, and private duty caregivers to homes throughout Central Ky. We have openings for Specialty RNs, RNs, LPNs, SRNAs, CMAs, and Private Duty Caregivers. Please complete our online application at www.alliancelexington.com/careers.

Pet Pick

Sapphire

1 1/2 years old 46 lbs Pit Bull Mix

If you love a happy, goofy, smiley dog, Sapphire is a real gem! This gorgeous girl needs a home with no cats or small critters, but with any other playmates it’s GAME ON! (And as a bonus she’ll keep the squirrels out of your yard free of charge.) Sapphire loves squeaky toys and treats, and can’t wait to learn all kinds of tricks in her new home. If you’re active enough to keep her mind and body busy and help her grow into a perfect canine citizen, come meet Sapphire at our Adoption Center today or call 859.873.5491 to find out more! Photo by Regi Goffinet

Ace Weekly and the Woodford Humane Society remind you to spay and neuter your pets.

aceweekly.com | October 1, 2019 | 17


HOME & GARDEN Got a Tree?

Burn ban for Fayette County

The winner is...

Trash it!

Fayette County is under a burn ban by the Lexington Fire Marshal until Octoberober 7 at 7 am. This means people living within the county lines cannot set fires outdoors including: refuse, cooking, and construction debris. Even those with open burn permits are not allowed to burn outside.

The community of Lexington has spoken and the official flower is the Purple Coneflower. For the past few months people of Lexington submitted their votes for the Official Flower of Lexington. Mayor Linda Gorton made the announcement last month during a news conference.

Saturday Octoberober 12 is Trash Disposal Day at the Bluegrass Regional Transfer Station at 1505 Old Frankfort Pike. Drop off a level pickup load of bagged household waste and up to four tires (off the rim). This event is not for hazardous waste.

Do you have a large evergreen tree that is nicely shaped that you want removed from your property? If so, consider donating it for the city to use for Lexington’s holiday season City officials will evaluate all trees and select the two chosen for the city Christmas trees. If your tree is chosen, the City and Kentucky Utilities will coordinate with the property owner remove it in early November. There’s no financial compensation, however, removal of the tree and stump grinding is free. The chosen trees will be placed in Triangle Park and in front of the KU building on Quality Street. They will be decorated and lit Saturday, November 30, as part of Luminate Lexington presented by Kentucky Utilities. The trees need to meet the following guidelines: 40- to 50-feet high 20- to 25-feet wide Be a Norway spruce; Colorado blue spruce; or a Douglas fir Access must be provided with clear-

REAL ESTATE: Properties recently sold in Fayette Co. 40502

26-Jul-19 ..................1236 INDIAN MOUND RD ...........$930,000 15-Aug-19 ................1928 LAKES EDGE DR ..................$740,000 15-Aug-19 ................433 LAKESHORE DR .....................$685,000 16-Jul-19 ..................774 CHINOE RD........................... $670,000 26-Aug-19 ................3501 CASTLEGATE WYND .............$595,000 19-Aug-19 ................223 MCDOWELL RD .....................$549,000 12-Aug-19 ................2096 NORBORNE DR ...................$506,500 19-Aug-19 ................295 CASSIDY AVE ..........................$493,000 20-Aug-19 ................762 CHINOE RD ............................$450,000 13-Aug-19 ................3412 WESTRIDGE CIR ..................$410,000 16-Aug-19 ................148 LINCOLN AVE .........................$395,000 12-Aug-19 ................319 LEAWOOD DR ........................$370,000 29-Jul-19 ..................440 QUEENSWAY DR ...................$330,000 02-Aug-19 ................3441 OVERBROOK FOUNTAIN ....$234,000 21-Aug-19 ................446 PARK AVE ...............................$230,000 28-Aug-19 ................3174 LAMAR DR............................$275,000 12-Aug-19 ................2100 ST CHRISTOPHER DR ..........$200,000

40503

28-Aug-19 ................247 SHADY LN ...........................$1,520,000 26-Aug-19 ................128 EDGEMOOR DR .....................$452,000 16-Aug-19 ................2012 REBEL RD .............................$390,000 23-Aug-19 ................230 GLENDOVER RD ....................$335,000 15-Aug-19 ................2409 TOPEKA RD ..........................$324,000 18 | aceweekly.com | October 2019

16-Aug-19 ................136 GOODRICH AVE .....................$319,500 31-Jul-19 ..................3028 ARROWHEAD DR ................$312,500 30-Jul-19 ..................330 GLENDOVER RD ....................$305,000 02-Aug-19 ................2406 HEATHER WAY .....................$298,000 09-Aug-19 ................3156 HYDE PARK DR ....................$295,000 15-Aug-19 ................694 HILL N DALE RD .....................$287,000 26-Aug-19 ................933 WITTHUHN WAY ....................$268,000 16-Aug-19 ................704 PASADENA DR .......................$266,050 23-Aug-19 ................3351 KEITHSHIRE WAY ................$260,000 05-Aug-19 ................460 CROMWELL WAY ...................$255,000 06-Aug-19 ................687 SPRINGRIDGE DR ..................$245,000 01-Aug-19 ................258 ROSEMONT GARDEN ............$233,000 16-Aug-19 ................3490 BIRKENHEAD DR ................$227,000 15-Aug-19 ................3518 RAMSGATE CT ......................$225,000 01-Aug-19 ................2864 ARK ROYAL WAY ..................$224,000 19-Aug-19 ................2038 CLAYS MILL RD ....................$221,000 19-Aug-19 ................687 HILL N DALE RD .....................$218,000 27-Aug-19 ................2067 RAMBLER RD .......................$217,500 29-Jul-19 ..................234 E VISTA ST ...............................$212,000 19-Aug-19................. 628 PASADENA DR ......................$212,000 26-Aug-19 ................139 PENMOKEN PARK .................$212,000 13-Aug-19 ................2928 NEAL DR ...............................$211,257 15-Aug-19 ................613 PORTLAND DR .......................$210,000 08-Aug-19 ................638 LONGVIEW DR .......................$207,000 16-Aug-19 ................668 LONGVIEW DR .......................$202,800

40504

29-Jul-19 ..................4004 MAYFLOWER LN ..................$247,200 19-Aug-19 ................720 HAGGIN PL ............................$245,000

40505

31-Jul-19 ..................2207 PATCHEN LAKE LN ...............$571,362 09-Aug-19 ................317 RADCLIFFE RD .......................$450,000 09-Aug-19 ................320 RADCLIFFE RD .......................$450,000 09-Aug-19 ................328 RADCLIFFE RD .......................$450,000 09-Aug-19 ................344 RADCLIFFE RD .......................$450,000 09-Aug-19 ................348 RADCLIFFE RD .......................$450,000 15-Aug-19................. 1977 LACLEDE CT .........................$235,000

40507

12-Aug-19 ................350 E SHORT ST #226 ...................$340,000 01-Aug-19 ................136 DEWEESE ST ..........................$240,000 26-Aug-19 ................121 MARTIN LUTHER KING BLVD.$235,000

40508

20-Aug-19 ................200 E BELL CT ................................$660,000 06-Aug-19 ................512 MARYLAND AVE #106 ...........$354,000 22-Aug-19 ................75 HAMPTON CT #3 ......................$285,000 23-Aug-19 ................413 DELCAMP DR .........................$280,000 19-Aug-19 ................171 OLD GEORGETOWN ST .........$235,000 16-Aug-19 ................535 S UPPER ST #425 ...................$215,000


HOME & GARDEN ance of at least 10 feet in width, with no power lines growing in the trees; There should be no other obstacles, such as buildings that may prevent access; Must be able to back a low-boy trailer up to the tree and place KU trucks on either side. Property owners should call LexCall at 311 or Victoria Hamm at (859) 277-8703 if they want to donate a tree. You will be contacted by the city if your tree is chosen.

Hazardous Waste?

Fayette County residents may drop off household hazardous waste for disposal on Saturday Octoberober 19 at 1631 Old Frankfort Pike. Info, LexingtonKY.gov/HHWevent.

Leaf Collection The city’s 2019 vacuum leaf collection program is scheduled to begin on Monday, November 4. The vacuum pickup is offered once a year for singlefamily homes that receive city waste collection service. The vacuum leaf

collection program is a supplement to the year-round yard waste options.

EVENTS October 2

Gardening 101: Ask and Expert, 2 pm, downtown Library

October 5

Fall Plant Exchange, 9 am, The Arboretum

October 11

Log & Timber Home Show, 1 pm, Lexington Convention Center (thru Sunday)

October 12

Lexington City-wide Free Trash Disposal Day, 6 am, 1505 Old Frankfort Pike

October 19

Getting Your Home Ready For The Holiday Season? Make sure to visit Lexington Habitat ReStore! Donate your new or gently used items and shop furniture, appliances, building materials and more.

Household Hazardous Waste Collection, 1631 Old Frankfort Pike

817 Winchester Road I 451 Southland Drive LexingtonReStore.com I 859.252.2224

REAL ESTATE: Properties recently sold in Fayette Co. 40509

15-Aug-19 ................3981 REAL QUIET LN ....................$950,000 15-Aug-19 ................3244 BRIGHTON PLACE DR .........$580,000 23-Aug-19 ................3308 BRIDLINGTON RD ...............$460,000 26-Aug-19 ................3756 STOLEN HORSE TRCE ..........$429,900 21-Aug-19 ................2120 RUTLEDGE AVE ....................$399,000 29-Aug-19 ................1516 CARNER BLF ........................$392,900 13-Aug-19 ................3541 BLACKWELL PL ....................$369,852 15-Aug-19 ................700 ANDOVER VILLAGE DR ..........$366,500 16-Aug-19 ................1405 GADSTEN CT ........................$362,549 26-Aug-19 ................532 LAKE VALLEY DR ....................$362,500 09-Aug-19 ................3659 BAY SPRINGS PARK .............$349,802 12-Aug-19 ................1912 CATTLE PATH ........................$336,848 09-Aug-19 ................1069 MARCO LN ..........................$325,000 30-Aug-19 ................103 TRADITION CIR .......................$320,000 12-Aug-19 ................1044 SAWGRASS CV ....................$316,500 22-Aug-19 ................1205 PASSAGE MOUND WAY ......$316,000 23-Aug-19 ................4105 BOONE CREEK RD ..............$310,900 26-Jul-19 ..................2313 THISTLE PARK ......................$310,000 02-Aug-19 ................1062 MARCO LN ..........................$310,000 16-Aug-19 ................3064 POLO CLUB BLVD ................$310,000 26-Aug-19................. 2689 FLYING EBONY DR ..............$310,000 29-Aug-19 ................2241 DUNHILL LN ........................$309,000 03-Jun-19 .................1216 ANGUS TRL ..........................$305,000 20-Aug-19 ................3573 STOLEN HORSE TRCE ..........$304,900

02-Aug-19 ................945 JOUETT CREEK DR .................$300,000 12-Aug-19 ................3505 POLO CLUB BLVD ................$297,000 14-Aug-19 ................1791 SANDHURST CV ..................$287,500 09-Aug-19 ................1208 MOON RISE WAY ................$284,900 21-Aug-19 ................504 VONBRYAN TRCE ...................$284,900 13-Aug-19 ................2316 PATTON CT ...........................$280,000 16-Aug-19 ................508 HUNTINGTON CT ...................$279,000 05-Aug-19 ................4437 RIVARD LN ...........................$277,500 09-Aug-19 ................905 ANDOVER GREEN ..................$270,000 29-Aug-19 ................3688 PARK POINTE DR .................$259,900 29-Aug-19 ................2376 ICE HOUSE WAY ..................$257,500 23-Aug-19 ................400 LARKHILL CV ..........................$249,900 15-Aug-19 ................3613 BROOKGREEN CIR ..............$246,000 30-Jul-19 ..................979 STAR SHOOT PKWY ...............$240,000 12-Aug-19 ................192 HAYS BLVD .............................$221,000 08-Aug-19 ................3012 OLD HOUSE RD ...................$219,000 30-Aug-19 ................3301 SCOTTISH TRCE ....................$218,000 23-Aug-19 ................3357 HIBERNIA PASS ...................$215,000 28-Jun-19 .................3213 PUTTER LN ...........................$210,000

40513

14-Aug-19 ................2284 BARNWELL LN .....................$784,636 23-Aug-19 ................1316 MOULTRIE CT .......................$600,000 09-Aug-19 ................1217 LITCHFIELD LN .....................$565,000 07-Aug-19 1..............209 JEKYLL DR ..............................$560,000

08-Aug-19 ................3228 MANTILLA DR ......................$459,000 16-Jul-19 ..................2269 MANGROVE DR ...................$455,000 12-Aug-19 ................3214 BEAUMONT CENTRE CIR ....$360,000 21-Aug-19 ................817 TIFFANIE CT ............................$352,000 15-Aug-19 ................1433 PINE NEEDLES LN #040 ......$326,000 26-Aug-19 ................1313 COPPER RUN BLVD .............$315,000 05-Aug-19 ................3893 ARIA LN ................................$280,000 21-Aug-19 ................3224 LINVILLE LN .........................$265,000 23-Aug-19 ................3825 LANDRIDGE DR ...................$245,500 15-Aug-19 ................2273 STONE GARDEN LN .............$245,000 26-Aug-19 ................601 TOWNSEND RIDGE ...............$232,000 09-Aug-19 ................1121 ROLFE LN .............................$225,000 22-Aug-19 ................1213 SPRING RUN RD .................$221,000 26-Aug-19 ................580 TWIN PINES WAY ...................$217,500 09-Aug-19 ................3475 LYON DR #58 .......................$207,000

40514

01-Aug-19 ................4324 STEAMBOAT RD ...................$464,245 14-Aug-19 ................3973 WINTHROP DR ....................$294,800 23-Aug-19 ................3924 WESTBROOK DR .................$282,500 23-Aug-19 ................3751 KINGS GLEN PARK ..............$279,900 23-Aug-19 ................325 KELLI ROSE WAY ....................$261,500 15-Aug-19 ................352 KELLI ROSE WAY ....................$252,000 05-Aug-19................. 4701 BUD LN............................... $228,038 14-Aug-19 ................3881 PINECREST WAY.................. $218,500 aceweekly.com | October 1, 2019 | 19


20 | aceweekly.com | October 2019


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