CharlottesvilleFamily May June 2020 Digital Issue

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Bloom Family’s

at Home!

Local Moms Making Parenting Easier & Growing Up Fun!

SPECIAL GRADUATION ISSUE

Celebrating Moms & Dads Backyard Fun TEACHER TIPS FOR LEARNING AT HOME

MAY/JUNE 2020 • FREE


VOTED 1 #

FAVORITE FAMILY ORTHODONTIST

2009-2019 CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner

Bart Weis, DDS & Nancy Stranix, DDS

2019

Beautiful Smiles

They’re Our Specialty!

Call Now to Schedule Your Free Consultation!

971-9601

Welcoming children, Teens & AdulTs

Clear BraCes | Platinum Plus invisalign Provider Flexible PAymenT PlAn | insurAnce Filed Northside Adjacent to Target

Spring Creek at Zion Crossroads

cvilleorthodontics.com

Downtown/Pantops Near Martha Jefferson


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Where Deep Insight Equals Powerful Advantage

Charlottesville: 434-973-7474 | Lake Monticello: 434-589-3636 | Harrisonburg: 540-217-5470

We care. We fight. We help our clients put their lives back together. PLEASE CONTACT US TODAY.

CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner 2019

PERSONAL INJURY, WORKERS COMP & SSD

FAMILY LAW & ESTATE PLANNING

What We Do

CRIMINAL DEFENSE, DUI & TRAFFIC

BANKRUPTCY & CIVIL LITIGATION

REAL ESTATE & PROPERTY DISPUTES

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LEGAL SOLUTIONS FOR SMALL BUSINESS


Get ready

for the all NEW CharlottesvilleFamily website!

Watch for the new website coming this summer! On CharlottesvilleFamily.com—the ultimate resource for making parenting easier and growing up fun—you will find a calendar of local events, daytrip ideas, contest and giveaways, feature stories on learning and health, recipes, gardening and home décor ideas, local resource guides, crafts and projects for kids, and much more!

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SAVE UP TO

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FAMILY FUN FOR EVERYONE

KID-FRIENDLY FUN AT 2-PARKS This is the year to make forever memories. Enjoy thrills for all ages and experience Finnegan’s Flyer™ Screamin’ Swing at Busch Gardens®. Even our youngest guests can enjoy fun at Sesame Street® Forest of Fun™ or Land of Dragons®. Then head over to Water Country USA® to explore the new Cutback Water Coaster™.

VISIT BUSCHGARDENS.COM/VA FOR BEST OFFERS

©2020 SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment, Inc. All rights reserved.


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Just Between Us…

volume 21 issue 3 may/june 2020 PUBLISHERS

Robin Johnson Bethke Jennifer Bryerton

CREATIVE DIRECTOR Robin Johnson Bethke EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Jennifer Bryerton TECHNICAL DIRECTOR Peter D. Bethke

Dear Friends,

SENIOR EDITOR Sarah Pastorek Short ASSOCIATE EDITOR Ellen Sewell

As our family celebrated New Year’s Day, we jokingly named 2020 “The Year of Cake” and planned a big party in June for a joyful celebration of graduations,

ONLINE EDITOR Jennifer Carroll GRAPHIC DESIGNER

Barbara A. Tompkins

milestone birthdays and our 25th wedding anniversary. Since then, COVID

SENIOR MARKETING CONSULTANT

has changed the world in ways we have yet to understand; and now, we find

ourselves working from home while tutoring the kids and negotiating how to

MARKETING CONSULTANTS

get groceries the safest way possible. But, the most important things have only grown in clarity. Friends and family, long walks and phone calls, board games and roasting

Susan Powell Carter Schotta, Jenny Stoltz

FAMILY HEALTH EDITOR Katharine Paljug CONTRIBUTING WRITERS & PHOTOGRAPHERS

Kris Bordessa, Jennifer Carroll, Tracey

marshmallows fill our time—things we are even more grateful for now. I feel

Crehan Gerlach, Tiffany Doerr Guerzon,

guilty for how much I’m enjoying having all my favorite people in quarantine

Sharon Harrigan, Jennifer Heyns,

with me. If you have kids old enough to drive or go off to college, you’ll totally

Stacey Loscalzo, Whitney Woollerton

Morrill, Katharine Paljug, Teri Pilcher,

Mandy Reynolds, Krissy Vick,

Cheryl Wetmore-Simpson

get it! We are, of course, so grateful for work, health, time with the kids and all the many blessings, but this is an anxious time and little disappointments like struggling with seesaw and zoom or missing prom and graduation are still real. To help, we’ve created this special At-Home Issue of Bloom! to share the resources we know you need. From learning-at-home advice and expert tips on helping the kids manage their fears to safely visiting the doctor for well-baby visits, we’ve got you covered. And, we found the silver linings, too—from community success stories to ways to support local. And, since CharlottesvilleFamily was with you 18 years ago as a new parent and along every step of the way, we wanted to create a tribute to the remarkable class of 2020. They are the bright future! Be well, stay strong and parent on. We will get through this together,

BOOKKEEPER Theresa Klopp OFFICE ADMINISTRATOR

Christine DeLellis-Wheatley

INTERNS Kathryn Jewusiak, Mary Allen Talley DISTRIBUTION Ray Whitson CharlottesvilleFamily™ Bloom Magazine and CharlottesvilleFamily. com™ are published jointly by Ivy Life & Style Media. CharlottesvilleFamily.com™ is published weekly online at www. CharlottesvilleFamily.com, the weekly Newsletter is distributed via email, and the Magazine is published in print format 6 times per year along with a CharlottesvilleFamily.com™ Directory. The views and opinions expressed by the writers and advertisers do not necessarily represent those of CharlottesvilleFamily magazine, its officers, staff or contributors. The information presented here is for informational purposes only and although every effort has been made to present accurate information, we do not in any way accept responsibility for the accuracy of or consequences from the use of this information or for the businesses and organizations presented herein. We urge all parents to confirm any information given herein and consult with your doctor or an appropriate professional concerning any information of question. All images not credited are property of and provided by iStock by Gettyimages. No portion of this publication may be reproduced in part or in whole without the express written consent of the publisher. Copyright ©2020. All rights reserved.

We welcome reader comments, submissions and the support of advertisers! Please direct all correspondence to Ivy Life & Style Media 4282 Ivy Road, Charlottesville, Virginia 22903 voice 434.984.4713 www.CharlottesvilleFamily.com editor@IvyLifeandStyleMedia.com We reserve the right to refuse or edit any materials submitted to us that we deem inappropriate for our audience. Include a SASE with any submission to be returned. We do not accept responsibility for unsolicited materials.

2004 Community Award Winner

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May/June 2020


Contents TABLE OF

52

OUR TOWN

The Buzz Around Town 10 Are you talking about COVID-19 and the news in front of your children?

INSPIRATION

News 8

Snapshot 12

Jennifer Koym, Volunteer Director & Local Mom

Healthy Family 22 Boosting Immunity

Our Mother’s Day Essay Winner, Bumble’s “Dad & Me Having Fun” Photo Contest Winner & Festive Craft

Tips & Trends 24 Fabulous Finds and Fun

Exercise & Pregnancy 36 Finding the Activity That’s Right for You

Backyard Water Fun 42 8 Easy DIY Summer Water Activities

Our Schools 14 Stay Safe, Stay Connected & Keep Learning

Editor’s Pick

Things To Do 16

Mother’s & Father’s Day Special Section 32

LIVING WELL

As we continue in a season of change, we wanted to arm you with everything you could need, from successful and continued at-home learning activities and advice (pg 52), pregnancy tips (pg 36), Mother’s & Father’s contest winners (pg 32) and more.

Virtual Events, Local Hikes & Fishing Holes

Learning Fun At Home Section 52 Teacher Tips for Homeschooling, Library & PBS Resources, Science Fun & More Special Graduation Section 60 Congratulation Messages, Grad Ads & Well Wishes from Area Celebs

HOME & GARDEN Food, Family & Home 26 Ways to Improve Your Family’s Health

Home & Garden 30 Formal Gardens Go Small

24

Inspiring a Love of the Outdoors 46 20 Reasons Why Playing Outdoors Makes Children Smarter

Cool Stuff 58 Support Local

RESOURCES

2020 Pregnancy & Baby Guide 38

Local Resources for Parents-to-Be

Summer Camp Guide Find the Perfect Camp

53

So Love This! “I am excited to see the special graduation section (pg 60). It’s only fitting that we congratulate our graduates even more so during these difficult times.” — Jenny, marketing consultant

60 CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{our town community}

News

local buzz

Be A Helper & Get Help No Family Should be Hungry • Blue Ridge Area Food Bank 434-296-3663 • Loaves & Fishes Food Panty 434-996-7868 Every Family Should Have A Safe Home • Charlottesville Rental Relief 434-970-3170 • Piedmont Housing Alliance 434-817-2436 • Salvation Army 434-295-4058 • Shelter for Help in Emergency 434-293-8509

Every Family Deserves Support • Charlottesville Area Community Foundation 434-296-1024 • Monticello Area Community Action Agency 434-295-3171 • Partner for Mental Health 434-977-4673 • Thomas Jefferson Health District 434-972-6244 • United Way 434-972-1701 • Virginia Career Works 434-529-6828 • Virginia Employment Commission 866-832-2363

AT-HOME FUN The Virginia Discovery Museum’s Teddy Bear is seeking a name. Share your idea by tagging @vadiscovery and putting a picture of the teddy bear in your home’s window.

City of Promise Serves Kids In New Ways Local nonprofit City of Promise aims to end generational poverty, and create a community where children graduate from high school and are well equipped to realize their full potential for higher education and beyond. Their mission is more important now than ever, because increased time away from school can widen the achievement gap. Due to the pandemic, City of Promise has suspended on-site programs, but online resources include the Gateway Services and Adult Empowerment program. The Virtual Promise Baby Academy private Facebook group is providing support

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May/June 2020

for mothers of children ages birth–8. The organization is also coordinating incentives like pizza delivery and toys/games to keep kids fed, learning and having fun. City of Promise’s Pathway Coaching programs are now connecting with kids in grades 5–8 and 9–12 by phone and online to help support their schoolwork and to encourage them. These virtual “hang outs” often feature special guests and incentives. In addition to their new online services, City of Promise is collecting cleaning supplies and grocery gift cards for families in need. To give or get help, visit cityofpromise.org/covid19.


UVA Students Create Mutual Aid Fund

STAB Teachers Produce Daily Podcast for Students at Home After school closings, the staff at St. Anne’s-Belfield School wanted to find a way to remain connected with students and help parents navigate the hundreds of resources available to assist with at-home learning. To solve the issue, Librarian Sarah FitzHenry and learning village coordinator of computer science Kim Wilkens began Morning Meeting, a daily 15-minute podcast for families. During the daily podcast, the teachers tell jokes, give advice to parents on teaching at home, and provide fun daily challenges for listeners. Sarah FitzHenry perfectly sums up the podcast’s goal, “If learners can’t come to our library [and school], we’ll bring it to them!”

As classes continue to advance online and the university’s day-to-day operations have changed greatly, students at the University of Virginia (UVA) have set up a mutual fund to help students struggling with the change. The unexpected changes of closed dorms and online classes have led to a variety of needs among students, causing student bodies across the nation to set up mutual aid funds to assist with the unforeseen costs and necessities of the adjustment. At UVA, Student Council has led the effort, jumping in to help students immediately and matching donations made. In under five days, the Student Council raised over $10,000 for students, making a great impact on the immediate needs of students.

May is National Foster Care Awareness Month

Share a moment, change a life! Discover the skills you already have to be a foster parent.

On any given day, there are nearly 445,000 children in foster care in the United States, with more than 5,000 in Virginia and over 900 in our region.

People Places offers:

• • • • • • •

Foster Care and Adoption Services Comprehensive Pre-Service Training Careful Matching of Children with Foster Families Dedicated Case Workers with Small Case Loads 24/7 On-call Crisis Intervention Monthly Support Group Meetings And more!

“I can see lives changing while we do the ordinary, everyday things that families do.” —People Places foster parent

Call us today! Staunton: (540) 885-8841 Charlottesville: (434) 979-0335 Harrisonburg: (540) 437-1857

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

9


{our town community} The

Buzz

AROUND

TOWN

Are you talking about COVID-19 and the news in front of your children?

75% say “yes”

25% say “no”

“It’s hard not to. Also, we want to make sure that he knows it is serious and needs to follow the rules. We don’t talk about the number of deaths, as he is too young, but we make sure he understands that it is a big issue, and it’s important to know the details and what to do.” – Liz B.

“My children, ages 11 and 8, have asked us to leave the news off because it’s too intense and scary. We now read our news exclusively. The 8-year-old has many questions, while my 11-yearold does not want to hear any more, so we make a point to take walks with each to address their needs separately. But, it took a while to figure out that we needed to do that and how to do it!”

“I think it’s valuable for our kid to know what’s happening and why our life has changed.”

– Amanda B., Mother of two girls

– Adrianne, Charlottesville, Mom of a toddler

Visit CharlottesvilleFamily.com to answer next issue’s question:

Do you plan to make changes to how your family lives after COVID?

Give the Gift of Charlottesville with 100% Local Ingredients

Custom-made to suit every step of your gift needs from Welcome Bags to Thank You Gifts, our thoughtfully curated selection of locally made artisan foods, wines and craft beverages will make your luxury gift uniquely Charlottesville.

4282 Ivy Road | WineAndCountryShop.com Shop@WineAndCountry.com • 434-295-0306

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May/June 2020

Shop

TM

Come learn to play *Boys and Girls the sport of kings ages 10-15 (and queens) while M-F 9am-4pm having a fantastic summer $400/week experience on the farm. *Must be a We will teach you the confident rider who knows how to walk, rules of the game, the trot and canter. language of polo, and have you hitting a ball while riding a horse by the end of the week. CONTACT VIRGINIA POLO AT: info@vapolo.org 434-979-0293 | vapolo.org


BIZ BITS OPENINGS Mahana Fresh, Barracks Road Shopping Center, 2142 Barracks Road

CLOSINGS Blue Grass Grill, 313 2nd Street SE The Downtown Grille, 201 W Main Street The Flat Creperie, 111 E Water Street

ANNOUNCEMENTS The Bridge Progressive Arts Initiative has created a CommUnity Coloring Book everyone can contribute to at thebridgepai.org/ community-coloring-book.

Buy Local! New online shops and curbside pick up at: The Wine & Country Shop, Alakazam Toys, Hedge Fine Blooms, Rebecca’s Natural Food, Shenanigans Toys and others. The Charlottesville Albemarle Technical Education Center (CATEC) received over $37,000 from the state superintendent to upgrade equipment. Deputy Chief Joe Powers has been appointed as Charlottesville City Fire Marshal and Fire Official, taking over after Battalion Chief Jay Davis retires. Socially responsible farmers markets are open. CityMarket To-Go created online ordering and touchless pickup at multiple locations, which you can see at charlottesvillecitymarket. luluslocalfood.com. Food Hub drive-

thru market (& welcomes donations) can be reviewed at localfoodhub.org/ micromarket. Green Bean Baby Boutique is relocating to the North Wing of The Barracks Road Shopping Center with plans to open in June. STEAM Discovery Academy created a Virtual Camp-In-A-Box, customized with tools and materials to complete workshops online with instructors. And, Community Climate Collaborative (C3) launched Virtual Climate Camp for kids and parents.

Submit Biz Bits to: editor@IvyLifeAndStyleMedia.com

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

11


{our town interview}

SNAPshot

Jennifer Koym Volunteer Director & Local Mom

For local mom Jennifer Koym, her journey towards starting a nonprofit began when their 4-year-old daughter, Lily, was diagnosed with a congenital heart defect. After being housed by a host family in Boston while their daughter was being treated, they decided to start LilyPads Housing, a similar non-profit, back in Charlottesville to help serve out-oftown patients and families coming to the University of Virginia Children’s Hospital. Today, LilyPads places pediatric families in volunteer host homes; and since starting in March 2019, they’ve hosted 52 patients and their family members for over 100 nights of lodging. Although they aren’t taking in new families due to COVID-19, they are following the lead of the housing collaborative and the Ronald McDonald House about re-opening. What inspired you to start LilyPads Housing? Our daughter, Lily, was born with a very rare and often terminal congenital heart defect. At the time, the only hospital treating this rare condition was Boston Children’s Hospital. However, we were having a difficult time finding housing. The hospital housing there is usually full, and it was going to be a huge financial burden to stay in a hotel for three weeks. Thankfully, we were put in touch with an organization that places families in volunteer host homes. Within a day, we were placed with a host family willing to house us for whatever time we needed to be there following Lily’s open-heart surgery. When we returned home, we wanted to sign up to be a host family to pay it forward, but we realized there wasn’t a program here. How do you find host families, and how can someone apply to be a host? Most of the first families that signed up to host were through wordof-mouth recommendations. Currently, we work to get the word out about LilyPads Housing by being an active part of our community, attending events and venues. We are always looking for more hosts, especially those living within a few miles of the hospital. To be notified when the next information session at the Downtown

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Library will be scheduled, you can sign up at lilypadshousing.org. How has starting LilyPads changed you? I am, by nature, a bit of an introvert and homebody. Starting LilyPads has catapulted me out of these comfort zones in the best way possible. I now find myself having to speak at public events, to network with organizations, attend fundraisers, etc. In doing this work, I’ve had the privilege to meet, befriend, and work with some of the most wonderful, compassionate and hard-working people. I’m humbled by the work being done in our community. What are the best parts of your job? The best part of my job is being able to support a family during one of the most difficult times in their lives. When your child is sick, the last thing you want to worry about is the logistics of getting them care. So many host families provided this for us in Boston, and I feel so very blessed I am now in a position to help other families. What is one thing your parents instilled in you that plays an important role in your work? My parents have always been active and engaged in their community. From an early age, my sisters and I witnessed them working towards making the world a better place through volunteering, leadership roles and financial donations. When we were old enough, “Paying it forward” and “giving back” became acts of love we enjoyed doing as a family. Over time, these values became knitted into the fabric of who we are. What would you say to someone thinking about starting a non-profit? That’s a great question. I would tell them to try and find people that share their passion and vision. It really does take a village. Thankfully, I was able to convince amazingly experienced, knowledgeable and connected people to serve on our board.


THE COVENANT SCHOOL

NOW ENROLLING! P R E -K T HROU G H G R A D E 1 2 admissions@covenantschool.org | www.covenantschool.org |434.220.7330

Watercolor WITH

CLASSES

SWETT DENTISTRY

Lee Alter

CharlottesvilleFamily

Painting & Drawing | Clay & Collage @McGuffey Art Center in Studio 6

2019

Favorite Award Winner

(in the basement on the park side)

SUMMER ART CAMP FOR CHILDREN 10am – 12:30pm July 6-10 and 20-24 August 3-7 and 10-14

Dr. David Swett

Dr. Rebecca Swett

N N N N N I have complete faith in the excellent quality ... — D. S.

I have complete faith in the excellent quality of care and complete trust in this dental practice. I don’t know if it’s possible to find better care anywhere. I enthusiastically recommend them without reservations. N N N N N Polished, Professional & Positive — D W. Unlike most people who dread going to the dentist, I love being treated by David & Rebecca and their polished, professional, positive crew! They are tops in my book because I know my family and I will receive the utmost in dental care.

Call 760-9658 to register www.leealterartist.com

Caring for you like family. 900 Rio E Court, Suite B, Charlottesville | swettdentistry.com | 434.979.3940 CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{our town community} Physical erapy Occupational erapy Speech erapy

Providing compassionate, individualized care, in a quiet supportive environment to meet the unique needs of each child, adolescent and family. 3010 Berkmar Drive Charlottesville, VA 22901 434-973-5031 info@blueridgerehab.com Be sure to follow us on Facebook and Instagram!

Full service dentistry for children with Medicaid

Win a free Regal movie ticket when you come 3 visits in a row with no cavities!

Translation in multiple languages available

Emergency services for adults over 21 with Medicaid

Call now to schedule an appointment 434.293.9300 259 Hydraulic Ridge Rd. Suite 101. Charlottesville

Located across from Albemarle High School

cdcva.org

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May/June 2020

Ouorols

Sch

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Stay Safe, Stay Connected & Keep Learning Learning never stops. Even though ​ traditional face-to-face school ended abruptly in March for our Virginia students due to the coronavirus, teaching and learning have continued through the creativity and resourcefulness of our Charlottesville school teachers, staff, students and families. ​Our first priority was to make sure students stayed safe—a necessity for learning. We are grateful to an army of nutrition workers, and community volunteers and organizations who have prepared thousands of weekly meals for students in need. This alone is a great reminder to us all that we live in a community that cares deeply for one another. And, we also honor the custodial staff who have continued to keep our buildings clean and safe. We also know it’s important to ​ stay connected. After the closings of schools, principals and teachers quickly turned to platforms like YouTube and Facebook to reach out with daily morning announcements or read-aloud storytimes. Gym teachers have also led virtual dance parties! And, other staff have organized car parades through their students’ neighborhoods to wave, and say “I love you” and “I miss you.” Additionally, our teachers and staff have posted online exploratory and review activities to keep students connected and learning. Meanwhile, our

technology staff has worked to ensure that all families, grades kindergarten through twelve, have access to a computer and the Internet. Once the governor cancelled face​ to-face classes for the rest of the year, we moved to teaching through new instruction to ensure students continued to learn. The goals of every school are to prepare students for next fall, to maintain relationships with students, teachers and the school, and to promote everyone’s well being. For students in kindergarten and first grade, we have sent home learning books. For those in grades two and up, we have asked our teachers to keep learning by picking up new skills for delivering online instruction, whether it be through utilizing learning tools like See Saw and Google Classroom or Canvas. (We also wanted our teachers and staff to stay safe and connected, so they, too, could care for their own families and household needs.) And, our families had to keep learning, as they moved in to new technologies and at-home learning routines. Stay safe, stay connected and keep ​ learning. That sums up our hopes for our community this spring. To learn more about our efforts, visit charlottesvilleschools.org/learning and follow together on social media.

Krissy is the Community Relations Liaison for Charlottesville City Schools. She can be reached at goodnews@charlottesvilleschools.org.


Sentara Commits $1 Million for Food System

County Students Win 46 Science Awards At the 39th Annual Virginia Piedmont Regional Science Fair, students from Albemarle County won 46 awards across 17 different categories, including both Grand Awards. The two Grand-Awardwinning projects came from two sophomores. Meena Ambati’s research took home one of the Grand Awards for its potential to become the first treatment for dry macular degeneration—studying the effects of the antidepressant Fluoxetine on the retina. The second Grand Award winner was Katharina Ravichandran for her mathematical model on the percentage of a population needed to create herd immunity for measles, which could also potentially be applied to other diseases, such as COVID-19. Both girls attend Albemarle High School and will receive $2,000 scholarships, as well as qualify for the Intel International Science & Engineering Fair.

Sentara Healthcare and Truist are each giving $500,000 to the We Care COVID-19 Virginia Emergency Food Support Plan in the form of a one million-dollar grant. The grant will help families facing food insecurity during the pandemic and beyond, as the ongoing crisis impacts the income and job security of Virginia residents around the state. The state’s system of food banks and meal delivery services will use the generous donation to help provide nutritious meals to the some of the most vulnerable in our communities. The We Care program includes an emergency food care package containing five days of non-perishable food items to help with the effort of staying indoors, by lengthening the time between necessary food bank trips to both feed and protect our neighbors.

Pediatric Associates of Charlottesville, PLC is pleased to welcome

Dr. Morgan Newsome to our medical practice!

Dr. Newsome will be seeing patients beginning this July at our West Office 2411 Ivy Road

434-296-8300 CharlottesvillePeds.com

Open 365 days a year. Urgent care is available evenings , weekends, and holidays for sick and injured children. Please call for an

appointment.

Pediatric Associates of Charlottesville

PLC Comprehensive care from infancy to young adulthood CharlottesvilleFamily.com

15


{our town calendar}

to

Things Do Check out our online calendar for more virtual and at-home activity ideas!

VIRTUAL EVENTS VIRTUAL EXHIBITION: THIS FAMILIAR SPACE Now–July 17 Online on Second Street Gallery An exhibition of work by Stacey Evans in collaboration with high school students from Charlottesville and its sister city of Besançon, France, Charlottesville artist Nina Burke, and Besançon artist Gabriel Hopson. secondstreetgallery.org

30IN30 VIRTUAL PERFORMANCE

VIRTUAL BIRDWALK: EXPLORING NATURAL & HISTORIC LANDSCAPES May 16, 2pm Online on James Madison’s Montpelier Learn about bird habitats with Dr. Drew Lanham. montpelier.org

Through May, 7pm on Live Arts – Facebook Live Every evening in May at 7pm, Live Arts will be going live on their Facebook page to share an episode of their 30in30 festival. Each episode will spotlight a different artistic season at Live Arts as they journey through three decades of forging theater and community in Charlottesville. livearts.org

VIRTUAL PROGRAM – EDIBLE TERRARIUM CREATION

CURATORS AT HOME VIDEO SERIES

June 8–July 11 at Wildrock Tiny Worlds Trail – a magical daytrip experience featuring installations under the willow, in the woods and along the banks of the stream. Visitors of all ages can enjoy a day of discovery and nature connection. Prepare to find fairies, gnomes and all of their homes. Reserve your spot for a 90-minute timed-trail experience. Visits are scheduled in 30-minute intervals. $20 per car. 434-987-0638, wildrock.org

May 15, 12pm on Virginia Museum of History & Culture Facebook Discover what period images of suffragists tell us about historical attitudes toward women and their role in American civic life. virginiahistory.org

May 26 on JMRL Instagram Tune into the JMRL teen Instagram to see how to build your own edible terrarium using food around your house. jmrl.org

WILDROCK TINY WORLDS TRAIL

MAY + JUNE 2020

MOVIN’ MONDAY VIRTUAL CLASS

Mondays, 3pm on Brooks Family YMCA – Facebook Live Kids join Bonita and Cassandra from the Brooks Family YMCA for a virtual Movin’ Monday exercise class. facebook.com/groups/brooksymca

VIRTUAL CLASS - MUSIC MONDAY Mondays, 4–4:45pm Online on DMR Adventures A virtual music class for all ages. dmradventures.com

VDM @ HOME

Mondays–Thursdays Online on Virginia Discovery Museum Try some activities at home from VDM each day, every Monday–Thursday. vadm.org

VIRTUAL CLASS – THEATRE CHALLENGE TUESDAY Tuesdays, 3–3:20pm Online on DMR Adventures A virtual theatre class for all ages. dmradventures.org

LIVE VIRTUAL WORKOUT FOR KIDS

Tuesdays & Thursdays, 11:30am on Camp4Real – Facebook Live Get moving and join Camp4Real on Facebook for a live kids workout every Tuesday and Thursday. camp4real.com

STORYTIME VIDEOS

Tuesdays & Thursdays, 3pm on Brooks Family YMCA – Facebook Live Younger children can learn with storytime videos from the Brooks Family YMCA Early Learning Center every Tuesday and Thursday. facebook.com/groups/brooksymca

LIVE STREAMED CONCERTS - SAVE THE MUSIC

Virtual Events See this page.

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May/June 2020

Tuesdays, Fridays & Sundays on The Front Porch – Facebook Live Enjoy a live-streamed artist/band from The Front Porch’s venue. You can also find these concerts broadcasted live on WTJU (91.1 FM) and streamed on wtju.net. The Tuesday concerts will broadcast the following Wednesday evening from 6–7 pm, the Friday concerts will


THE INSIDE WORLD: CONTEMPORARY ABORIGINAL AUSTRALIAN MEMORIAL POLES

Enjoy a video tour of The Inside World with Henry Skerritt, curator, via The Fralin’s website. The Inside World presents 112 memorial poles by 55 artists from remote Aboriginal communities in the tropical northern region of Australia known as Arnhem Land.

uvafralinartmuseum.virginia.edu

Color me!

kluge-ruhe.org

The Inside World: Contemporary Aboriginal Australian Memorial Poles originated at the Nevada Museum of Art in Reno, Nevada and was organized by Henry F. Skerritt, Curator, Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia. The exhibition is drawn from the collection of Debra and Dennis Scholl and the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection of the University of Virginia. This exhibition is made possible through generous funding from The Fralin Museum of Art Volunteer Board, The UVA Arts Council, The Embassy of Australia, UVA Arts Endowment and Arts$. We also wish to thank the Mapping Indigenous World Lab of the Institute of the Humanities & Global Culture for their programming support to this exhibition. The Fralin Museum of Art’s programming is made possible through generous support of The Joseph and Robert Cornell Memorial Foundation.

Free Weekly Activities & Walkthroughs Discovery Detectives Cooperative Mysteries Print-at-Home Kits & Pre-Order Box Kits Discovery Challenge Fitness Fundraiser

Science-Powered Fun Premiering Summer 2020

Recommended Free Content & Resources

CharlottesvilleFamily vpm.org/schedules

Favorite Award Winner 2019

Learn more at vadm.org/vdm-at-home! Thank You to CharlottesvilleFamily for Donating This Ad on Behalf of the Museum

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{our town calendar} The annual Discovery Dash has been transformed into “30 Days, 30 Exercises Discovery Challenge” fitness fundraiser for the Virginia Discovery Museum.

with Deon Ridley from Broadway’s “The Lion King.” dmradventures.com

TRAIL ADVENTURES PROGRAM BY APPOINTMENT Every day at Wildrock Wildrock is currently welcoming families to their trail system through their 90-minute Trail Adventures program. This is by reservation only and is designed to ensure social distancing. Make reservations online. wildrock.org

TRIPLE C CAMP ONLINE

GREENSKY BLUEGRASS SUMMER TOUR 2020

sunday, August 2

broadcast live from 8–9 pm, and the Sunday concerts will broadcast the following Tuesday from 6–7 pm. frontporchcville.org

STEM WEDNESDAY VIRTUAL CLASS

Wednesdays, 3pm on Brooks Family YMCA – Facebook Live Kids join Bonita and Cassandra from the Brooks Family YMCA for an educational STEM class online. facebook.com/groups/brooksymca

DRIVE-THROUGH FARMERS MARKET

Wednesdays, 4–6pm & Fridays, 3–5:30pm at Local Food Hub, 1801 Hydraulic Road Preorder items online from Virginia farmers and pick up via drive-through on Wednesdays and/ or Fridays. localfoodhub.org

MONTICELLO FOR KIDS LIVE Thursdays, 2pm Online on Monticello Learn from home with Monticello for Kids LIVE. Watch on the Monticello website, Facebook Live or on YouTube. monticello.org

ART FRIDAY VIRTUAL CLASS

Fridays, 3pm on Brooks Family YMCA – Facebook Live Kids join Bonita and Cassandra from the Brooks Family YMCA for an online art class each Friday. facebook.com/groups/brooksymca

CHARLOTTESVILLE CITY MARKET – DRIVE THRU MARKET Saturdays at Penn Park New safe drive-thru pickup at Penn Park. Browse, preorder and select a time block for your pickup. charlottesvillecitymarket.org

SPRING FARMERS MARKET

Friday, September 18

TICKETS ON SALE NOW SprintPavilion.com, Downtown Visitor Center

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Saturdays, 9am–12pm at IX Art Park The market layout, vendors and customers will comply with Coronavirus protocols. Safety is the highest priority. There are several safe ways to access food. You can now order from several vendors online and pick up at the market site, at the booth or in your car. Email: cecile@ marketcentralonline.org. ixartpark.org

VIRTUAL CLASS - SHAKE IT SATURDAY

Saturdays, 2–2:50pm Online on DMR Adventures. A virtual movement and dance class for all ages

Online on Triple C Camp’s Facebook This Charlottesville summer camp program is now offering free facebook live events and activity ideas for families. facebook.com/Tripleccamp

SHAKESPEARE ONLINE

Virtual Streaming on American Shakespeare Center’s Website The American Shakespeare Center in Staunton, the only re-creation of Shakespeare’s indoor theater, is offering families the opportunity to stream performances from the comfort of their home. americanshakespearecenter.com

HIKE IT UP! Plan a family outing, immersed in the natural beauty of our area. Try one of the many local hiking spots still open during the COVID restrictions, however be sure to check online for adjusted hours, facilities and playgrounds being open, etc. For those in the family less interested in “hiking,” try phrasing it as “adventuring” and get the kids involved in the preparation process. Have them help you look up places on a map, pack snacks and water bottles, and select the best clothing. Take advantage of this learning opportunity with the different types of tress or plants you might see, or make a game of it—the first to identify five different plants gets to pick a post-hiking snack.

RAGGED MOUNTAIN (Charlottesville)

This 5.9-mile trail promises an exhilarating hike with scenic views. Dogs are allowed, so you can bring man’s best friend out for some exercise. visitcharlottesville.org

IVY CREEK NATURAL AREA (Charlottesville)

Located six miles north of Charlottesville, the natural area is home to open fields, streams and seven miles of walking trails. The trails range from easy to difficult, so you can choose the right one for your family’s skill set. ivycreekfoundation.org

WALNUT CREEK (North Garden)

With various trails to choose from ranging from .5 miles to 3.9 miles, Walnut Creek has plenty of rugged terrain to travel. Most trails wrap around the 45-acre lake where you can canoe, kayak or swim. ablemarle.org


RIVANNA TRAIL (Charlottesville)

A handicap-accessible trail that starts at Riverview Park, Rivanna Trail ends 2.3 miles north after a tranquil walk along the riverfront. Dogs are allowed off-leash on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays on marked portions of the trail. rivannatrails.org

PEN PARK NATURAL TRAIL (Charlottesville)

Located in Pen Park, this two-mile trail winds along the banks of the Rivanna River and offers an excellent opportunity to observe the local wildlife. charlottesville.org

SHERANDO LAKE (Lyndhurst)

This family campground provides the ideal camping destination with its beautiful lake and the many hiking trails surrounding it. Located in George Washington National forest, this lake is the jewel of the Blue Ridge Mountains. recreation.gov

GONE FISHIN’ There is nothing that gets your pulse racing like feeling the tug of a fish on the line. Charlottesville and surrounding areas are homes to numerous fishing holes, many of which also include other family-friendly activities such as canoeing and hiking! Some sites require fishing licenses or access permits, and some have

Local Hiking Trails See page 18.

Mail Order & Pick-up Available! The Green Valley Book Fair is closed to the public, but you can still take advantage of our great deals by ordering online! Browse our inventory on our website preview page, Facebook, or Instagram, and order online at GoBookFair.com. Huge Selection of

Workbooks Up to 90% off retail prices! 800.385.0099 Large Variety of

Puzzles

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Hours

Mon. – Thu. 7:30am – 5pm CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{our town calendar} limitations right now with COVID restrictions, so make sure to call ahead and check online. Be sure to also pack hand sanitizer, masks and other essentials. For more information, visit dgif. virginia.gov/fishing/. Here are a few spots for aspiring and experienced anglers alike:

BEAVER CREEK LAKE (Crozet) welcomes

boats and crafts, but swimming is not allowed. After a day on the water, stop at one of the several picnic areas to relax with a pre-packed meal. (434) 296-5844

CHRIS GREENE LAKE (Earlysville) is a

popular spot for fishing that also offers boating, swimming, canoe rental, picnicking, a dog park and a wheelchair-accessible pier. (434) 296-5844

LAKE GORDONSVILLE (Gordonsville),

also known as Bowler’s Mill Lake, is a smaller impoundment that harbors excellent warm water fish, such as largemouth bass, crappie, bluegill and pumpkinseed sunfish. A gravel ramp makes for easy shore fishing access. (540) 967-0401

Area Fishing Holes See this page.

W

E

L

C

O

M

E

B

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O

K

Please call for Fountain Cave Adventure tour information!

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JAMES RIVER REELING & RAFTING (Scottsville) provides transportation and basic equipment for camping, fishing, canoeing, kayaking, tubing and rafting. (434) 286-4386, reelingandrafting.com

! For safety, the City and County have closed public playgrounds and pavilions, bathrooms facilities are unavailable and masks ought to be worn when out in public. However, hiking and biking trails remain open, though officials remind people to stay home if they have any symptoms of illness. Before heading out, people should make sure they have properly washed their hands and pack some hand sanitizer to bring with them. In the dog parks, officials say there should be no more than 10 people at any one time right now. For keeping up-to-date on changes and re-openings, visit charlottesville.gov/923/coronavirus-updates.


LAKE ALBEMARLE (White Hall), owned

by the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, is a 35-acre impoundment at the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. The lake supports a variety of sport fish, such as largemouth bass, bluegill, redear sunfish and black crappie. (434) 296-4731

MINT SPRINGS VALLEY PARK (Crozet)

stocks a wide variety of fish for a successful day on the water. It also allows swimming and provides a playground and ample space for picnicking and grilling. (434) 296-5844

RAGGED MOUNTAIN NATURAL AREA (Charlottesville) is made up of 980 acres of

forest, two lakes totaling 50 acres and four miles of trails. The reservoirs offer excellent fishing and hiking opportunities. (434) 296-5844

RIVANNA RESERVOIR (Charlottesville)

spans 450 acres and is considered one of the best small fishing lakes in Virginia with excellent fishing for anglers, including largemouth bass, bluegill, black and white crappie, redear sunfish and channel catfish. (434) 970-3268

SHENANDOAH RIVER ADVENTURES (Shenandoah) offers river trips by appointment for everyone from beginners to experts. Spend a day canoeing, rafting, kayaking or tubing on this scenic Virginia river. (888) 309-7222, shenandoahriveradventures.com

SUGAR HOLLOW (White Hall) sits on the

Moormans River with 47 acres stocked with rainbow and brook trout. Closed as of early May, so check for updates on bank fishing. (804) 367-1000

TOTIER CREEK RESERVOIR (Scottsville) is

ON SALE NOW!

HOW CHARLOTTESVILLE GOT ITS THEATER BACK WRITTEN BY: JANE GOODMAN • ILLUSTRATIONS BY: KEITH DAMIANI

PURCHASE THIS STORYBOOK ONLINE AT THEPARAMOUNT.NET

a 66-acre reservoir filled with largemouth bass, bluegill, redear sunfish and channel catfish. Facilities include a ramp, parking area and restrooms. (804) 367-1000

WALNUT CREEK PARK (North Garden) is

popular for its 45-acre lake with two beach areas and is regularly stocked with a wide variety of fish. In addition to canoe and kayak rental, the park also provides ramp facilities for accessing the lake. (434) 296-5844

WILD GUYDE ADVENTURES (Harrisonburg) provides guided, beginner level outdoor adventures, including rock climbing, caving, canoeing and more. (540) 433-1637, wildguyde.com

THE PARAMOUNT THEATER

215 EAST MAIN STREET, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA • 434.979.1333

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{living well healthy family}

Boosting Immunity

Healthy Family

How Parents Can Help Kids Stay Strong & Healthy

If you feel like your child is always getting some new bug or infection, you’re not imagining it. Kids get sick more than adults because their immune systems are still developing. “Infants are born with a certain degree of immunity they received from their mothers in utero,” explains Gemma Furman, a registered nurse who has worked in Acute Care Pediatrics in the University of Virginia Health System and as a school nurse at Burnley-Moran Elementary. “As babies begin to age, the antibodies from mom go away, and they are left with a ‘naïve’ immune system.” As children interact with their world, their bodies are exposed to viruses, bacteria, microorganisms and other pathogens. This teaches their immune systems to build antibodies to fight future infections. How to boost immunity. Exposure to things that can make us sick is the primary way the immune system grows. However, parents can encourage a healthy lifestyle to strengthen children’s immune response. by Katharine Paljug Sleep. Children under 1 years old need 12–16 hours of sleep a day, including naps; those under age 5 should get 11–14 hours; and children up to age 12 do best with 9–12 hours per day. Teens even need 8–10 hours of sleep a day. Diet. The nutrients in a balanced diet, especially from fruits and vegetables, are essential to a healthy immune system. “Vitamins can be helpful if your child is a picky eater, but they don’t replace a healthy diet,” Furman says. Gut health. A healthy diet also helps build healthy bacteria in the intestines, which is an essential part of a strong immune system. Probiotics, should the doctor recommend, can support gut health, especially after taking antibiotics. Vaccines. Vaccines allow your child to build immunity to serious diseases, such as whooping cough or measles, without the risk that comes with actually contracting these infections. With diseases like the flu that have multiple strains, a vaccine teaches the immune system to fight that specific type of virus, making the infection less severe even if your child is exposed to a different strain. What about essential oils? Alternative treatments like essential oils or herbal medicine may offer some benefit in boosting immunity or navigating an illness. However, many For more information on affect children differently than adults, and the research immunity and vaccine safety, about their use in young people and babies is limited. “It’s visit the American Academy easy to assume that because a product is [labeled] ‘natural’ of Family Physicians at or ‘pure’ that it’s safe and helpful,” Furman cautions. But these aafp.org. products aren’t regulated, and companies often don’t disclose ingredients or provide evidence to support claims about their benefits. If you are considering alternative medical treatments for your child, discuss them with your child’s doctor. When to see a doctor. In general, the many small germs of childhood aren’t something parents should be worried about. However, there are instances when exposure to new illnesses can be dangerous. If your child has a compromised immune system, this level of normal childhood exposure can be life-threatening. And even if your child is otherwise healthy, some diseases can be serious. Don’t hesitate to reach out to your child’s pediatrician if you notice: Symptoms that go beyond a common childhood illness; symptoms are persisting for several days; a high fever; trouble breathing; and anything that seems irregular or concerns you. “When it comes to your kids, trust your gut and be their loudest advocate.”

MORE INSIGHT

Katharine is a freelance writer, Bloom’s Family Health Editor and mother to one busy toddler. You can see more of her work at katharine-writes.com.

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First Presbyterian Church Preschool

CharlottesvilleFamily

A Play-Based Christian Preschool

Favorite Award Winner 2019

9AM to Noon Serving ages 20 months to 5 years old

See our website for additional information!

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23


{living well tips & trends} Less

by Andrew Sean Greer

Arthur Less is about to turn 50, and his ex-boyfriend is about to get married. So, what does he do? He plans a trip around the world. Full of witty humor and poignancy, this Pulitzer Prize winner follows the failed novelist as he discovers truths and himself. Available for $8.99 on amazon.com.

&

Tips

TRENDS

Lockdown Fun

by Mandy Reynolds Try these three activities alone, with a significant other or as a family!

1. Theme Night. Pick a theme and plan entertainment, attire and cuisine around it. Try a 70s night complete with fondue, tie dye and The Muppet Movie. 2. Soap Bubble Painting. Mix together 3 tbsp of bubble solution and 2 tbsp of paint in a cup. Dip a bubble wand

WHEREVER YOU GO, LEAVE JOY.

or straw into the mix, and blow bubbles so they land on paper to create cool stationery or to entertain little ones. 3. Plan Your Next Getaway. While you’re daydreaming about your next getaway, use the time to look into some travel deals and new destinations.

d hope you an g your s is m We Brin e well. you ar es together in end s n o op and loved de - sh 24/7 on u it t a r g ts and gif com or call cards al etful. k s a b person y p sho r a free ve e li ir e h d l o us t ee loca r F . r e shopp side pickup. b or cur

434.218.2481 | shopbasketful.com | @shopbasketful Main Street Market | 416 West Main Street, Charlottesville Follow @shopbasketful on Facebook for up-to-date store hours in 2020

UVA® CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL & KOHL’S CARES

Children’s Dentistry with a Mother’s Touch® Laughing gas and Sedation Services

Kathryn A. Cook,D.D.S. Board Certified Pediatric Specialist childrensdentistrycharlottesville.com

WORKING TO MAKE OUR CHILDREN HEALTHY

The Kohl’s Hoo’s Fit Program is a UVA® Children’s Fitness Clinic initiative whose mission is to promote healthy eating and active living among area children. It includes innovative nutrition education and fitness programs provided in schools and community centers.

Kohl’s Hoo’s Fit • UVA® Children’s Fitness Clinic® 434.982.1607 • uvahealth.com/kohlshealthykids 24

May/June 2020

CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner 2019

Thank you for voting for us! Participating providers with United Concordia, Delta Dental, Anthem, Aetna, and Cigna. Language Assistance Services Available

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Q A

Summer Makeup Trends What is your prediction for makeup trends this summer and what’s your best unusual tip for summer makeup? “For this summer, my prediction would be very fresh-looking healthy skin with little highlights, minimal eye makeup and any shade of pink-berry lip gloss,” shares Gohar Beaver of Gohar Makeup in Charlottesville, “[And] Try wearing bright yellow or white eyeliners! It would look fun and unusual!”

DUOLINGO Wanting to learn a new language? This free website and app offers 30 languages you can learn during quarantine, from Spanish and French to Klingon. Available for iOS and Android.

Mandy enjoys reading, traveling and exploring local gems with her loveable puppy.

“We all have an unsuspected reserve of strength inside that emerges when life puts us to the test.” – Isabel Allende

NYX White Eyeliner In a retractable tube that never needs sharpening, this best-selling eyeliner is easy to apply. Try lining your inner lids to make your eyes appear bigger and brighter. Available for $5.50 at nxycosmetics.com.

A safe, nurturing, age-appropriate learning environment for children that fosters inquiry, exploration and reflection.

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CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{living well food & family}

SMART EATS "It is health that is the real wealth, and not pieces of gold and silver.” – Mahatma Gandhi

8 Easy Ways to Improve Your Family’s Health Now

If you’re like most parents, you started 2020 with a resolution to make this a healthier year for you and your family. But, with the restrictions and limited supply of certain items, it may already feel like you don’t have enough time or money for nutritious meals. However, you can make a big difference for the whole family with a small amount of effort.

by Sharon Harrigan

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May/June 2020

​Start the Day with Breakfast. It kicks up our metabolism, regulates our blood pressure immediately, and starts the day off on the right foot. It’s almost impossible to get all the nutrients you need if you skip a meal. If you can’t stomach solids in the morning, try drinking a smoothie. Get a Good Night’s Sleep. When we ​ don’t sleep well, our bodies turn on a hormone called greylin that gives the brain a signal that we’re hungry. ​Eat a Healthy Lunch. Try a sandwich on whole-grain bread and a lean protein source, such as turkey, chicken or peanut butter; a lean dairy product, such as cottage cheese, yogurt or string cheese; and a serving of fresh fruit and vegetables. You can wash and cut celery or a red pepper for the week and store it in the refrigerator. Add variety by using different kinds of whole-wheat breads like rolls, bagels, tortillas and pitas. Take out two pieces of bread from the freezer in the morning, and by lunchtime, they will be thawed. Get Children Involved in Food Preparation. Children are more interested and invested in foods when they help

choose and prepare them. Make note cards for each of the food groups with a list of suggestions and then have them pick something from each food group for their meal. You could even take the kids grocery shopping, or help them order the groceries online, allowing them to find the items and teach them how to read labels and compare prices. Get a Boost from Super Foods. Potatoes provide plenty of electrolytes. Fish is another “super food” because it has Omega-3, almost no saturated fat and is an anti-inflammatory. And, remember to eat more fruits and vegetables. Try packing a pasta sauce with earthy, seasonal vegetables or a chili with beans. Beans are not only inexpensive, but also high in potassium and fiber, and offer a natural way to lower cholesterol. Nuts and nut butters are high in potassium, magnesium and protein, and are good for blood-pressure regulation. Try identifying a super food by its color. The darker the flesh, the more anti-oxidants. Dark purple grapes, for instance, are better than light ones. Dark plums are better than apples. Dark greens like kale and spinach are


Canning for a New Generation by Liana Krissoff, Photos by Rinne Allen This updated and expanded edition of Canning for a New Generation now includes 250 innovative recipes that incorporate fruits and vegetables of your labor, filling your pantry with bold, fresh flavors. Available for $27.50 at Wine & Country Shop.

&

Food

Family

Kilner Vintage Preserve Jars

Preserve jars are perfect for canning and features an easy-to-use metal screw top lid made up of two pieces, a replaceable vacuum seal and a metal screw band to secure the seal that can be used up to 10 times. Available for $3.50 for 8.5 oz Jar and $4.00 for 17 oz Jar at Wine & Country Shop.

Voted Best South of the Border Restaurant! CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner 2019

Locally Family-Owned & Operated since 1988 Your go-to natural food, supplements and products store for 33 years and counting. We are happy to be open to our community and keep adjusting with the times. Call or email for current hours and pre-gathered items for pick-up, mail order or delivery.

Four Locations! 29 North 395 Greenbrier Dr | 434-978-4313 UVA Area 2206 Fontaine Ave | 434-979-2424 Downtown 806 East Market St | 434-977-2676 Pantops 108 Town Country Ln | 434-293-3538

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434-977-1965 RebeccasNaturalFood.com rebnatfoodcs@gmail.com CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner 2019

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

27


{living well food & family}

Spring Vegetable Salad by Jennifer Heyns It’s a rare occasion in my house when I can find a dish that pleases all four of us equally (with the exception of desserts, of course). Typically, I can expect someone at the table to make a funny face, rearrange food to make it look like less than it really is, or offer up some sort of half-hearted compliment like, “It’s OK, but it’s not my favorite.” So naturally, when I find something that makes all eight eyes go wide with happy anticipation, it’s a recipe that makes it into my special recipe book.

things start to get back to normal and picnics with friends pick-up again, all you have to do is throw the salad together and go—the dressing and bacon can be added on-site.

After a long winter and all of the recent events, it’s sometimes difficult to remember how to lighten up the meals and incorporate fresh, local vegetables back into the daily repertoire. Luckily, a trip into my special recipe book reminds me of great family favorites that hint of spring and summer’s arrival. While this Spring Vegetable Salad offers a melody of various flavors, I think the one that really cinches it for my family is the bacon. I live in a house full of carnivorous males, so adding a meaty taste and texture to an otherwise vegetarian dish garners me extra brownie points. And, while the bacon really does add a lot by way of texture, color and taste to the dish, it’s an easy ingredient to omit, if you’re looking for a completely vegetarian dish. ​Happy faces and bacon aside, one of the things I truly appreciate about this recipe is that you can prepare parts of it ahead of time and it stores easily. I like to double the dressing and bacon and keep the overage in the refrigerator for future use. Even when

• • • • • • •

INGREDIENTS • 1/3 cup vegetable oil • 2 tablespoons lemon juice • 1 egg yolk • 1 clove garlic, minced • ¾ teaspoon salt • ¼ teaspoon sugar 1/8 teaspoon dry mustard 1/8 teaspoon ground pepper 1 pound fresh mushrooms, sliced 6 strips bacon 6–8 asparagus spears cut into ½-inch pieces 10 ounces fresh spinach 6 spring onions, sliced

DIRECTIONS Combine the oil, lemon juice, egg yolk, garlic, salt, sugar, mustard and pepper. Pour over the mushrooms and refrigerate for several hours. Fry the bacon until crisp. Crumble. Set aside. Just before serving, toss mushrooms and dressing with bacon, asparagus, spinach and onions.

Jennifer is the proud mother of two sons and author of “Bargaining for Our Lives.”

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packed full of essential nutrients. And, they don’t have to be expensive or hard to prepare. Canned beans and frozen spinach are inexpensive, easy to have on hand and can be zapped in the microwave. Put Healthy Foods at Eye Level. People don’t eat what they don’t see. Put clementines in the middle of the table and see how quickly they disappear. Fill a bowl of whole-grain dry cereal. Make a jar of unsalted sunflower seeds, nuts, dried fruit and a few chocolate chips. Buy Fewer Beverages. One way to quickly cut costs is to eliminate all fluids except milk from your grocery list. Don’t buy orange juice; buy oranges. They not only have more fiber and nutrients but also have fewer calories. Don’t Forget Snacks. Skipping snacks, like skipping breakfast, is counterproductive. People who go for long periods without eating often eat too quickly to realize they’re satisfied, and most oftentimes they overeat, since it takes 20 minutes for the body to tell the brain that it’s full. Try making your own trail mix. Add dried fruit, and children will feel like they’ve had dessert. Muffins are another great choice, especially if they are made with whole-wheat pastry flour. Celery with peanut butter or other nut butter is a good way to slip in a vegetable, while a hard-boiled egg offers quick protein. Children love fingerfoods, such as grapes and cherries, so be sure to make the selection healthy and easily accessible for even the littlest eaters. Sharon is a freelance writer in Charlottesville who always eats breakfast (or will from now on).


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Pick droughttolerant plants native to Virginia that require little water beyond normal rainfall. Also putting them in the right place by grouping plants with similar watering needs together helps save water!

For Charlottesville specific outside info: Charlottesville.gov/WCOutside CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{living well home & garden}

There are no gardening mistakes, only experiments. – Janet Kilburn Phillips

by Tracey Crehan Gerlach

Formal Gardens Go Small In the world of horticulture, the formal garden seems like the ultimate rendering of order-throughnature. The myriad elements create calm and peace through their tidy, repeated designs. Centerpieces and sitting areas along paths surrounded by carefully clipped hedges and mowed grass beckon. The orderliness is pleasing to both the eye and the brain, and you don’t need vast amounts of land to create a formal garden of your own. Repeated Patterns and Shapes. The garden beds will offer the base for setting off on the formal gardening course. Think geometrically, and embrace rectangles, square or circles, using the plants within those beds to connect and resonate the feel and flow of the garden. ​Balance and Symmetry. Formal gardens usually work around an axis, as in crossing paths or one long path down the center with the beds on either side in equal, symmetrical measures. Also, maintain this element with the plants, as well as with hardscaping. ​Interest Piece(s). Consider an architectural piece in the center, such as a birdbath, a sundial, a statue or a bench. Or, include pieces that repeat in expected

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May/June 2020

spots throughout the plantings, such as upright clipped evergreens, container plantings that offer an injection of color or height, willow wattle fencing or rustic trellises. ​Plants. To maintain their drama during the offseason, formal gardens should be anchored by year-round greenery, such as boxwoods and other small evergreens. Another “rule” is to constrain the plant palette, limiting it to just a few colors. English gardens usually include antique roses, peonies and hollyhocks, while Italian formal gardens stay closer to clipped evergreens and boxwood topiaries with very little color other than the natural green. ​Need Inspiration? Examples around

Virginia that you can look up online, include: Agecroft Hall (especially the Elizabethan knot garden) and Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden in Richmond; the Pavilion Gardens at the University of Virginia; Anne Spencer’s garden in Lynchburg; and The Enchanted Garden at the Poe Museum in Richmond. For other online inspiration, check out Prince Charles’ gardens at Highgrove Gardens, specifically the formal Sundial garden, or do a search on French parterre gardens. Tracey lives on five acres in Sugar Hollow with her husband and two children. Find her online at lifeinsugarhollow.blogspot.com.


Gardening Notebook

In Old Farmers Almanac style, the Garden Notebook is the perfect tool for tracking your work outside, and it gives you a place to make notes for future seasons. Available for $18.00 at Wine & Country Shop.

&

Home Canvas Gardening Tool Belt

Garden

Handmade from full grain leather and olive green canvas, this Canvas Gardening Tool Belt is the perfect addition to your gardening attire. You’ll be able to have some of your most important tools right there when you need them, from your trowel and pruning shears to a bottle of water and your gardening journal. Available for $48.00 at Wine & Country Shop.

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{inspiration mother’s day}

I Love You, and I Like You, and How Are You?

winner

by Joanna Breault

The seed that would eventually germinate into motherhood was planted when I was in middle school…maybe earlier. I had always wanted to be a mom, but the desire was undoubtedly fed by the dozens of kids I babysat. As I think about motherhood—from its inception in my pre-teen heart all the way up to watching my oldest leave the nest a couple of years ago—I remember a note, given to me by a little boy named Jonathan when I had arrived at his house to babysit. “I love you and I like you and how are you?” I think I remember those words 30 years later because they are a perfect kidsummation of every true relationship, including the connection I share with my children. ​I love you… I love you just because I do. It’s encoded in every cell of my body, and I couldn’t stop if I wanted to. I love you when you’re being kind and working hard; I love you when you’re making mistakes, doing things you’ll be ashamed of later.

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I love you when you leave messes. I love you when you wake me as you’re getting a snack at 3 a.m. (thank you, shelter-inplace sleep schedules). I love you when you fight with your brother, and I love you when you play that game you hate because it’s his favorite. And, you love me. In spite of my many mistakes and failures—and there’s no doubt my own brokenness has hurt you—this unrelenting love is reciprocal. You love me when I make an elaborate birthday dinner, and you love me when I’m too tired to cook. Your love sees beauty where I see age and imperfection. You love me in return. ​And I like you… ​I don’t just love you—I like you. I think you’re funny and cool, and destined for some kind of greatness. I like the way you think, the way you joke around and the way you talk. I like that you are interested in things I know nothing about and that you broaden my horizons in a thousand ways. And, you like me (mostly, except maybe during a couple of years of high

school). It’s especially fun when you start to see who I am apart from a mom who does mom stuff, and you let me know you like that person, too. ​…And how are you? ​This is my favorite part of Jonathan’s note, because it’s a funny surprise, and it’s right on. It’s not enough to know we are loved and liked—we want to be known. I treasure the daily checking-in that happens when life is lived together. How did you sleep; how are you doing; what are you thinking about these days? Sometimes, those inquiries are answered expansively, while other times they are not. Either way, the questions themselves stand as humble tokens of love, of wanting to see and know, of not assuming I do because you’re my blood. And, now, you ask me the same. The green-eyed middle kid knows when I’m lying and asks again. And so, this is what I love about motherhood—it’s the fulfillment of that construction paper note given to me so many years ago, that run-on sentence of affection and curiosity. I love you, and I like you, and how are you?


Pediatric Associates of CharlottesvillePLC Sponsored by

Pediatric Associates of CharlottesvillePLC

Pandemic Mom by Kristie Shifflett

runner up

I recently met a new super hero. ​ She is my favorite one yet. I love that she is supernaturally gifted, yet so very relatable. She gives me hope in this very confusing, scary time. Her name is Pandemic Mom. Since March of 2020 she has been quietly keeping the world spinning. ​Her days are filled with teaching her children, working from home, working on the frontlines of a healthcare crisis, and figuring out how to feed the herd of people that live in her home and seem to eat all day long. She is amazing under pressure. Her quick thinking enables her to scrap the “new” math her child is struggling with and go back to the old-fashioned “carry-the-one” method, which has saved many tears, including her own. ​She reaches deep within herself and produces the wisdom to let go of her tightly held, previous parenting convictions for the good of her family. She realizes that these are not normal circumstances. And, she is aware that an increase in screen time does not mean her child will fail at life. Pandemic Mom is open to suggestions. She discovers that a day off from school

and just plain missing friends have a tremendous impact on her kids, and she recognizes it. She, too, grieves for these missed opportunities and understands that, yes, her kids are safe, healthy and well fed, but they should still be allowed their feelings. She discovers the healing power of a snack and a nap. She realizes that birthdays, holidays and milestones don’t stop even when it feels like the world has. And, she figures out ways to make these times special—something her kids will remember long after this crazy time in their lives is over. ​She is not perfect, though. That is one super power she lacks. But, she becomes aware that there is a whole gang of Pandemic Moms and that they are there for each other. She rediscovers the truth behind never underestimating the joy that a funny, sometimes inappropriate, meme can bring. She discovers there is power in just checking in on her friends as well as in receiving a check-in herself. She discovers how a simple card in the mail or a sweet text can bring so much happiness and give her the strength to keep on going. She has come to understand and ​ appreciate she is not alone. Her faith, which has always sustained her, reminds

spent at the river is in fact good for every soul living in her house. She is an expert in offering grace. She understands that her kids are grieving, even when they don’t understand. Missed sports seasons, graduations, proms

her that she can do all things…she can do amazing things. Pandemic Mom was born out of necessity, but I believe she will live long after this pandemic is over. Pandemic Mom is you. And, she is me. CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{inspiration father’s day}

Pediatric Associates of CharlottesvillePLC

A huge thank you to everyone who submitted to this year’s annual Father’s Day “Dad & Me Having Pediatric Fun” Photo We enjoyed seeing all of the AssociatesContest. of Charlottesville sweet and endearing photos. PLC

Sponsored By

Pediatric Associates of CharlottesvillePLC

WINNER!

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A Personalized Grilling Apron ​ sweet gift idea for Father’s Day could be this Personalized Grilling Apron. ​For this A special gift, I decided to make a totally custom design and you can find the link below to access the design.

SUPPLIES FOR APRON GIFT • • • •

Apron Iron Painter’s tape Stencil Cricut (or other cutting machine that accepts SVG files) • Vinyl or other

plastic stencil material • Craft paint for fabric • Stencil brush • Piece of cardboard

Visit celebratingeverydaylife. com/free-printables-signup/ to get your Free SVG Stencil File to Make Your Own Awesome BBQ Apron!

1.

2.

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Prepare your apron. Iron your apron before you begin. A hot steam iron works well and makes for a better surface to attach the stencil. Once ready, tape it down to the table with painter’s tape to keep it from moving. Download and cut out the stencil. Download the file from my member’s library page and upload it to your Cricut Design Space or other papercutting system. Size it to the apron and choose the material; I made mine 11.5” wide and printed on a piece of Cricut Premium Vinyl. Attach your stencil to the apron. If you’re using a non-adhesive surface, simply peel the stencil off and position it onto your apron. Use painter’s tape to hold it down, and go. Make sure you have the stencil fastened tightly so the paint won’t

4.

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bleed under it. Tip: It can be helpful to run a border of painter’s tape around the entire outside edge of the stencil to give you a little extra wiggle room. Prepare your stencil brush and use a light hand. Don’t load up your brush and start dabbing. It’s best to get some paint on your brush and then “off-load” a bit of it before starting to dab it onto your apron. Paint your stencil. Once you have a bit of paint on your brush, start to stencil! I “worked” the brush in a couple of directions to make sure we were thoroughly getting into the grain of the fabric. Allow it to dry for a few minutes, then add a second coat if necessary. Allow it to dry for about five minutes (check it’s not wet to the touch), and then peel off your stencil.

Jennifer is a photographer, blogger, designer and home entertainer and committed to celebrating everyday life. Visit celebratingeverydaylife.com.

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{resources pregnancy + baby}

Exercise & Pregnancy

Finding the Activity That’s Right for You

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by Teri Pilcher

​ e know that moderate physical activity is good for expectant mothers and the babies they W are carrying, but what kind of exercise should pregnant women do, and how much is the best amount? Here are some guidelines for healthy activity during pregnancy. While three months pregnant with ​ her first child, Shana Hersch ran a 13.1mile half-marathon in two hours and 15 minutes. “I consulted with my doctor, who agreed since I had been training for months, to go ahead and run the race. He advised me to ‘listen to my body’ and ‘stay hydrated’.” ​Even those of us who don’t want to run marathons will benefit from exercise during and after pregnancy. According to the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), “Exercise may make pregnancy more comfortable, shorten labor and reduce the need for obstetric

interventions.” Other benefits include increased energy levels, relief from back pain, reduced constipation and an overall feeling of well being. ​Most women in good health without obstetric problems can exercise, and the AAFP suggests that moms-to-be exercise through walking, stationary cycling, lowimpact aerobics and swimming. Be sure to always get your doctor’s permission to exercise during pregnancy. ​If you exercised before your pregnancy and have your doctor’s permission, “you can continue your current program with some modifications,” says Candace

Ripken, a mind/body coordinator. “If you’re beginning an exercise program, you should begin slowly with gentle exercises like walking and light-weight training,” she adds. “Yoga is an excellent choice for ​ pregnant women, as it focuses on posture and breathing, and can help relieve both the physical and emotional stress women may experience before, during and after birth,” says Ripken. She also recommends Pilates. “Like yoga, Pilates focuses on posture and breathing. Pilates also builds a strong ‘core’ (abdominals, back and pelvic floor). Many exercises

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{resources pregnancy + baby} 2020 Pregnancy Guide

PREPARING FOR BABY American Red Cross Child and Infant CPR Course 434-979-7143 centralvirginia.redcross.org Birth Matters of Virginia bmva.state@gmail.com facebook.com/birthmattersvirginia Child Safety Seat Awareness Course 434-531-6614 albemarle.org Maternity Education Program 434-654-7009

PRE- & POST-NATAL / MOMMY & ME CLASSES *ACAC 434-226-5121 acac.com/charlottesville See ad page 45 *Piedmont Family YMCA 434-974-9622 piedmontymca.org See ad page 48

BREASTFEEDING SUPPORT & SPECIALTY GEAR CharlottesvilleFamily.com 434-984-4713 charlottesvillefamily.com Lactation Corner, Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital 1-800-736-8272, sentaramjhmaternity.com La Leche League Meeting lllcville@gmail.com lllcville.blogspot.com UVA Breastfeeding Medicine Program 434-924-0000 uvahealth.com/breastfeeding

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PREGNANCY & WOMEN’S HEALTH *Birth & Biodynamic Midwifery, LLC 434-996-5095 birthandbiodynamics.com See ad page 40 *Center for Advanced Gynecology 434-234-4903, virginiagyn.com See ad page 39 Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital 1-800-736-8272 sentaramjhmaternity.com University of Virginia Health System 434-924-0000, uvahealth.com

FAMILY HEALTH, SUPPORT & MORE Blue Ridge Area Food Bank 434-296-3663, brafb.org *Cook, Kathryn DDS 434-817-5437 childrensdentistrycharlottesville.com See ad page 24 *Heppner Family Chiropractic & Wellness Center 434-974-7955 heppnerfamilychiropractic.com See ad page 41 Parenting Network of Charlottesville (PNOC) 434-823-1665, groups.yahoo.com/ neo/groups/PNOC/info *Piedmont Pediatric Dentistry 434-973-4344, piedmontpd.com See ad page 23 *Pediatric Associates of Charlottesville 434-296-9161, 434-974-9600, 434-296-8300, 540-406-4100 charlottesvillepeds.com See ads pages 15 & back cover *Piedmont Pediatrics 434-975-7777 piedmontpediatrics.net See ad page 41

For the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists official guidelines for exercise during pregnancy, visit www.acog.org.

will have to be adapted for pregnancy.” “Using the guidance of personal ​​ trainers, I learned how to modify my workouts,” Hersch explains. “While doing step and interval workouts, I lowered a riser, used the platform solely or simply used the floor. As my center of gravity was constantly changing, the balance needed for the bosu and kickboxing became too challenging. In the third trimester, I chose to do basic cardio classes and swim laps.” Many women find it difficult to get ​ out to a gym, but there are plenty of excellent exercises and stretches you can do at home. ​Ripken offers a few tips to keep you and your child safe and injury free. “The pregnancy hormone Relaxin softens connective tissue, allowing them to potentially stretch beyond end range, causing injury to the tendons or ligaments,” she warns. Be careful when stretching not to overdo it. “Avoid exercises that require lying on your back after the first trimester and always work in a neutral, extended spine.” “Your balance changes as the body ​ changes, and standing poses may present a safety issue. Use the wall or a chair for


support and stability,” suggests Ripken. “Always perform a 10-minute ​ warm-up prior to exercise,” says Ripken. “Walking is an excellent choice for both your warm-up and for easing back into a cardio routine.” She also recommends Kegel exercises before, during and after pregnancy to strengthen the pelvic floor muscles. ​Having trouble choosing a piece of exercise equipment? Try an exercise ball. With its convenience, light weight, ease of use and exercise variations, this might be the ideal equipment for a pregnant mom exercising at home. “I use a stability ball for standing squats and wall squats,” says Hersch, “I’ve seen incredible results with squats.” To find the exercise that’s ​ comfortable for you, try a variety of types of movement and equipment. Listen to your body and your doctor, and have fun while you stay active during your pregnancy. You may even find a new physical pursuit that you’ll continue to enjoy for years to come!

Exercises Candace Ripken uses the following ​ exercises when working with pregnant women. Carefully read her explanation of each exercise’s benefits and techniques beforehand, and perform them as directed to prevent injury and to achieve the maximum benefit. ​Child’s Pose. This yoga pose is a great low back/glute release. It helps relieve low back pain and encourages muscle relaxation. Start on all fours and slowly move your hips back towards your heels, lowering the torso and hips. Rest your arms alongside your body. Your forehead can rest on floor with or without a pillow or blanket for support. Knees can remain separated to allow a deeper fold at the hip and/or accommodate a pregnant belly. Breathe deeply. ​Hip Stretch. This is another deep stretch that alleviates back and hip pain. It can be performed seated on the floor or in a chair after the first trimester. Lie

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{resources pregnancy + baby} Well Baby Visits During COVID Alaina Brown, M.D., FAAP at Pediatric Associates of Charlottesville shares, “All of the major health organizations including the AAP and the CDC have recommended that children under age 2 continue to get their wellness checks during the COVID-19 pandemic. First, this is when a lot of routine vaccinations take place that can prevent serious viral and bacterial infections in infants and young children. When vaccination rates, overall, drop below a certain amount, there is risk of losing herd immunity, and it would be a shame to get through

developing normally. This is a huge time for growth and development, and seeing a doctor can catch issues early on. To manage these checkups during COVID-19, I recommend calling your doctors office and asking what policies they have in place for separating well and sick children. Also, find out if there are different check-in policies. Many offices are having patients wait in their car rather than the waiting room to maintain appropriate distancing, and they are having anyone old enough to tolerate wearing a mask to wear one while in the office. Try to limit

the COVID-19 pandemic only to have outbreaks of measles, chickenpox or other vaccine-preventable illnesses. Secondly, well visits are important to monitor children are growing and

the number of family members that accompany parents to the visit, and definitely don’t have anyone with symptoms of illness come to the office.”

What to Expect When You Deliver During COVID Jennifer M. Wray, MSN, BSN, RN in the Birthing Center at Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital shares, “At the Family Birthing Center, we recognize that birth is a unique and unforgettable experience. Your safe experience is of paramount importance, so we have implemented extra precautions to ensure moms and babies stay safe and healthy. • For the safety of our patients and our healthcare team, we ask everyone to wear a mask during their stay. • Each laboring mom may have one

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designated partner for the duration of her birth and postpartum stay. • Behind their masks and other protective equipment, our caring OB team is here to support moms and babies through the birth and bonding experience. We continue to make adjustments to our policies as the situation evolves, so for continually updated information and answers to more of your frequently asked questions, visit sentaramjhmaternity.com.”

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24-hour hotline: 434-293-8509 Please support our work with a donation at

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on your back on the floor. Bend both of your knees, keeping your feet on the floor. Cross one ankle above the opposite knee, allowing the top leg to release deep in the back hip. To increase the stretch, you can lift the bottom leg off the floor and reach through the center to hold onto the thigh or hamstring. ​Stability Ball Wall Squats. This exercise is a great lower body strengthener. The ball provides support for the spine and also challenges the core muscles to stabilize the body while maintaining a safe, neutral spine position. With a 55–65cm exercise ball, stand with your back towards the wall. Place the stability ball behind you, towards the low back. Stand with your feet hip width apart and forward of the hips. With your torso supported against the ball, slowly bend your knees, lowering your body towards the floor. Stop when the knees are at a 90-degree bend and in line with the hips. Knees should be directly over ankles (you may need to make adjustments). Slowly reverse the direction and rise to the start position. ​Lunges with the Ball. Another terrific lower body exercise, these lunges target the glutes. There are many variations of this exercise. A simple version uses the ball simply as a support mechanism. You can also use the ball to add balance challenges (holding the ball between both hands in front of body) and core challenges (holding the ball between both hands and adding small torso rotations with the lunge). These variations are


good for the experienced exerciser. Stand with both feet hip-width apart, with the ball to one side. Step the opposite leg back. Keeping the torso upright with no lean forward, bend both knees, lowering the body towards the floor. Stop when the knees are at a 90-degree bend. The forward knee should always remain over the ankle, but make adjustments if necessary. Slowly rise to start position.

Voted Charlottesville’s Favorite Chiropractor 2009 - 2019 Charlottesville 2 0 1 4

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CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner 2019

Maternity Care • Pediatric Services Low Back/Neck Pain • Massage Therapy Sports Injury, Prevention & Treatment

Dr. Michelle Heppner

Stability Ball Bicep Curls with ​ Shoulder Press. Sit on the ball with your feet hip-width apart or wider for stability. Hold small hand weights naturally beside your body. Turn your palms up. Begin by bending the elbows, bringing the weights towards your shoulders. Once you reach the end of range, rotate the palms in towards one another and press the weights towards the ceiling. Arms are slightly forward rather than directly over your shoulders. Reverse the movements and slowly return to start position. The ball creates a balance and core challenge. You can increase this challenge by moving your legs closer together and/or by lifting one foot off the floor. Pregnant women should maintain a wider base for stability by not moving their feet too close together. ​ S tability Ball Trunk Curls. This exercise can be done by pregnant women and provides an inclined position (perfect for after the first trimester). It helps to maintain abdominal and core strength during pregnancy and aids in redeveloping that strength after childbirth. Seated on the exercise ball, slowly walk your feet forward, allowing your hips to move down the ball just a few inches toward the floor (Note: this is a gentle downward motion, not a deep squat.). Your body is in an inclined position. Place your hands behind your head at the base of the skull. Slowly curl torso forward feeling the ribs move towards the hips. Hips do not change position. Return to start.

Freelance writer Terri receives compliments from her husband and friends about her trim figure, even after giving birth to five children.

• www.heppnerfamilychiropractic.com •

3450 Seminole Trail Forest Lakes • 974-7955

CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner 2019

Compassionate, intelligent and up-to-date pediatric care at two convenient locations!

Charlottesville Office now Open 7 days a week! Also, offering walk-in appointments, Monday through Friday from 8am to 9am at both locations.

Charlottesville: 900 Rio East Court, Suite A Crozet: 1193 Crozet Avenue Check our website or follow us on Facebook for updates! www.PiedmontPediatrics.NET Facebook @piedmontpediatrics

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{resources parenting}

Backyard Water Fun I​ n the dog days of summer, kids love to cool off by playing in water, but they eventually tire of playing in the sprinkler or a kiddie pool. Here are eight easy and inexpensive DIY outdoor activities to keep kids of all ages both occupied and cool this summer!

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8 Easy DIY Summer Water Activities by Tiffany Doerr Guerzon

Soda Bottle Sprinkler ​urn a two-liter soda bottle into a T sprinkler. Take a clean, two-liter plastic bottle and drill holes all over the sides of the bottle using a handheld drill. You can use a smaller bit and drill lots of tiny holes, or use a larger bit and drill fewer holes. Next, attach a hose connector to the end of a garden hose. Attach the bottle to the hose by screwing it into the connector. Turn on the hose and let the kids play! This sprinkler is fun just laying on the grass, or toss the hose with the attached sprinkler over the swing set or a tree branch to make a “shower.”

Liquid Chalk Paint ​or outdoor art that is a step above F sidewalk chalk, try making your own liquid chalk paint. First, purchase jumbo-sized washable chalk from your local dollar store. You will need to break up the chalk into a powder by either putting the chalk into a sealed plastic bag and pulverizing it with a hammer, or “grating” the chalk using the smallest holes of a cheese grater.

Add the powdered chalk to a food storage container, and mix in water. About onehalf cup of water per jumbo size piece of chalk makes a nice consistency. You will have a few chunks, but the mixture should be mostly liquefied. Repeat the process with different colored chalk until you have several different colors of chalk

with water. Using the handles of the bag, tie the water- filled bag over a tree branch. The bag doesn’t need to be sealed. Let the kids hit the water bag with tennis rackets, plastic bats or a cardboard wrapping paper tube. What a great way to recycle those plastic grocery bags! These water piñatas won’t last long, but getting wet is

paint, each in it’s own container. Give the kids paint brushes and let them paint the fence, concrete porch or sidewalk, then turn the hose on their creation to wash it away and begin again.

the point of this activity, so who cares?

Squirt Gun Target Practice When the kids get tired of squirting each other, set up targets for them to aim and hit! One way is to simply draw targets with washable sidewalk chalk onto a fence. Draw several circles, starting with a small “bulls eye” in the center, then add three or four more circles around the bulls eye, each one bigger than the last. Assign each circle a point value and let the kids compete to see who can rack up the most points. Plastic disposable drinking cups also make great targets. Line up plastic cups side-by-side on a deck railing or stack them upside down into a pyramid shape and shoot away.

Water Piñata Let the kids release some pent-up ​ energy and cool off with a piñata filled with water. Take a plastic grocery sack and fill a b o u t halfway

Ice Excavation ​ reeze plastic toys into blocks of ice for F kids to excavate. To prepare this activity, fill plastic cups or small food storage containers about two-thirds full with water, and then drop one or two small toys into each container. Freeze each filled container until the water is a solid block of ice, then remove the ice block and place outside in a large plastic bowl or metal baking dish. Now, let the kids figure out how to get the toys out of the ice. Offer options such as squirt guns filled with warm water, salt, or cups of warm water. Older kids can chip away at the ice with metal forks. For a fun twist, try tinting the water blue with food color and using ocean-themed toys, or pair green water with tiny dinosaur toys.

Sponge Balls ​ ake fun “sponge balls” from dollar-store M sponges. Cut two rectangular sponges lengthwise into four pieces each, and then stack the strips into two layers of four pieces each. Wrap a rubber band tightly around the midpoint of the stacked sponges. “Fluff” and pull the sponge strips until you have a ball shape. To play, give kids a bowl or bucket of water for dipping

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{resources parenting} Make up for lost time! One-to-one instruction Tutoring Small class sizes Academics-focused Fun

the sponge balls. Wet sponge balls are great for tag, target practice, or just tossing back and forth between kids.

Colored Ice Cubes ​his is a great one for toddlers. Take T an ice cube tray and add several drops of food coloring to the bottom of each section of the tray, and then fill the entire ice cube tray with water. Once the cubes are frozen, dump the colored ice out into a baby pool or plastic bowl filled with water. Toddlers will enjoy playing with the colored ice, and watching it melt and turn the water pretty colors. Since the water is tinted with food coloring, ice cubes will be safe to nibble on. Of course, parents should always closely supervise children when near any water.

Set on 450 acres of Charlottesville countryside, our camp for ages 613 is the perfect blend of fun and academics.

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Water Race Track or Lazy River ​ ids love to watch stuff float down a K stream! Here are two ways to create a mini river or water racetrack. For a racetrack, purchase a short length of a gutter (the kind on roofs) from your local home improvement store. Set the gutter up against the seat of a lawn chair in the backyard so that the gutter slopes down to the ground. To cover up the sharp edges of the gutter, pool noodles can be cut long ways and added as a guard on each edge of the gutter. Place a garden hose at the top of the gutter and turn on the water. Kids can float leaves, dandelions and bathtub toys down the waterway. You can even set up two “tracks” side-by-side and hold a race! Or, make a lazier river by shaping aluminum foil into a gutter shape and put directly on the grass in a place where the ground slopes gently. You can use the hose to create the waterway, or let the kids pour water down your river with a cup or bucket.

Tiffany has three children and cleans only when absolutely necessary. Read more at TDGuerzon.com.

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CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{resources parenting}

INSPIRING A LOVE OF THE

Outdoors! by Stacey Loscalzo

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20 Reasons Why Playing Outdoors Makes Children Smarter ​ ummer isn’t an escape from S education, especially right now, although your children may think so! It’s about children learning and exploring without a script. As more time at home recently has been spent in front of some kind of screen, time for children’s curiositydriven learning is even more important. But, outdoor play over the summer is full of opportunities for wonderful unstructured, open-ended exploration.

Author and clinical psychologist Kay Redfield Jamison writes, “Children need the freedom and time to play. Play is not a luxury. Play is a necessity.” It is through unstructured, open-ended creative play that children learn the ways of the world. While playing outside, children explore with all their senses, they witness new life, they create imaginary worlds and they negotiate with each other to create a playful environment. Here are reasons supporting why playing outdoors boosts a child’s intelligence.

1. Outdoor play is a multi-sensory activity. While outdoors, children will see, hear, smell and touch things unavailable to them when they play

Often, children who have difficulty with pen and paper tasks or sitting still for longer periods of time are significantly more successful after time spent outside.

inside. They use their brains in unique ways as they come to understand these new stimuli. 2. Playing outside brings together informal play and formal learning. Children can incorporate concepts that they have learned at school in a handson way while outdoors. For example, seeing and touching the roots of a tree will bring to life the lesson their teacher had taught about how plants get their nutrients. 3. Playing outdoors stimulates creativity. Robin Moore, an expert in the design of play and learning environments, says, “Natural spaces and materials stimulate children’s limitless imagination and serve as the medium of inventiveness and creativity.” Rocks, stones and dirt present limitless opportunities for play that can be expressed differently every time a child steps outside. 4. Playing outdoors is open-ended. There is no instruction manual for outdoor play. Children make the rules and in doing so use their imagination, creativity, intelligence and negotiation skills in a unique way. 5. Playing in nature reduces anxiety. Time spent outside physiologically reduces anxiety. Children bring an open mind and a more relaxed outlook back inside when they are in more traditional learning environments. 6. Outdoor play increases attention span. Time spent in unstructured play outdoors is a natural attention builder.

7. Outdoor play is imaginative. Because there are no labels, no preconceived ideas and no rules, children must create the world around them. In this type of play, children use their imagination in ways they don’t when playing inside. 8. Being in nature develops respect for other living things. Children develop empathy, the ability to consider other people’s feelings, by interacting with creatures. Watching a tiny bug, a bluebird or a squirrel scurrying up a tree gives children the ability to learn from others. 9. Outdoor play promotes problem solving. As children navigate a world in which they make the rules, they must learn to understand what works and what doesn’t, what line of thinking brings success and failure, how to know when to keep trying and when to stop. 10. Playing outside promotes leadership skills. In an environment where children create the fun, natural leaders will arise. One child may excel at explaining how to play the game while another may enjoy setting up the physical challenge of an outdoor obstacle course. All types of leadership skills are needed and encouraged. 11. Outdoor play widens vocabulary. While playing outdoors, children may see an acorn, a chipmunk and cumulous clouds. As they encounter new things, their vocabulary will expand in ways it never could indoors. 12. Playing outside improves CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{resources parenting} For More Outdoor Fun!

CAMP Hidden

• Old sheets and rope for making tents under the trees (some supervision required). • Paints, brushes and an easel (or butcher paper tacked to a wooden fence) for painting in the garden. • Plastic or weighted paper plates in two colors for life-size checkers games— draw a board with chalk or alternate square pavers and grass.

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Fun STEAM Activities Safety Enhancements

Register today!

434.974.9622 PiedmontYMCA.org 48

May/June 2020

listening skills. As children negotiate the rules of an invented game, they must listen closely to one another, ask questions for clarification and attend to the details of explanations in ways they don’t have to when playing familiar games. 13. Being in nature improves a child’s communication skills. Unclear about the rules in an invented game? Not sure how to climb the tree or create the fairy house? Children must learn to question and clarify for understanding while simultaneously making themselves understood. 14. Outdoor play encourages cooperative play. In a setting where there aren’t clear winners and losers, children work together to meet a goal. Perhaps they complete a self-made obstacle course or create a house for a chipmunk. Together they compromise and work together to meet a desired outcome. 15. Time in nature helps children notice patterns. The natural world is full of patterns. The petals on flowers, the veins of a leaf, the bark on a tree are all patterns. Pattern building is a crucial early math skill. 16. Playing outdoors helps children notice similarities and differences. The ability to sort items and notice the similarities and differences in them is yet another skill crucial to mathematical success. Time outdoors affords many opportunities for sorting. 17. Time spent outdoors improves children’s immune systems. Healthy children are stronger learners. As children spend more and more time outdoors, their immune systems improve.


CAMP FOR ALL!

It’s summer! In environments created especially to cater to their interests, campers can make new friends, explore new interests and learn real-life skills. Whether your child is looking for a camp focused around nature, science, sports, the arts, music or another interest, they will have countless opportunities to make a lifetime of memories, gain a sense of independence and just have fun! The camps listed below are only a select few that offer an array of focuses for your children. For a more extensive list and COVID-19 camp updates, be sure to see our online listing at CharlottesvilleFamily.com.

ACAC

In the heart of Charlottesville, ACAC is hosting summer camps beginning at age 3 and spanning to rising eighth graders, for both members and non-members. Camps include specialty and sports in half- and full-day options with swimming everyday. From Preschool Camp (ages 3–4) and Day Camp (rising K–5th grade) to Middle School Camp (rising 6th–8th grade) and Specialty & Sports Camps (rising K–5th grade), ACAC allows campers to pick from a variety of activities at different times of the day. 434-978-7529, cv-summercamp@acac.com, acac.com/camp

Online Registration CAMP HIDDEN MEADOWS Set in Bartow, WV, two hours west of Charlottesville, Opens 1/15: Camp Hidden Meadows is a co-ed, non-sectarian camp offered at 1, 2, 3 and 4-week sessions for boys and girls ages 6–16. Activities include acac.com/camp horseback riding, white-water rafting, sailing, sports, mountain boarding, canoeing, backpacking, rock climbing, performing arts, organic gardening, 1,000-foot zip line and much more. Camp Hidden Meadows is ACA Accredited. 1-800-600-4752, camphiddenmeadows.com

SP

Open to the Year-ro Sa Pres Indoor

L

acac.com/camp | 434.978.7529

Live your best.

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{resources parenting} Thank you for choosing SOCA!

Thanks for voting for us!

amily CharlottesvilleF ard Aw Favoriteinne W 19r 20

Soccer!

• Hula-hoops for hopping in, tossing through and, of course, hula-hooping. • Plastic wading pool for water play (bubbles!), sand play or dirt and mud play. • Baskets for nature-themed scavenger hunts and other adventures. • Two-liter bottles filled with water for bowling pins or ring toss. • Sidewalk chalk for drawing and hopscotch.

• Leagues for All Youth & Adult Players! • Summer Camp Options, Top Quality Instruction • Visit Us on the Web or Call...

SOCA 975-5025 www.SOCAspot.org

SERIOUS. FUN.

NIKE TENNIS CAMPS CHARLOTTESVILLE NIKE TENNIS CAMP

JUNIOR OVERNIGHT AND DAY CAMPS | BOYS & GIRLS | AGES 9-18 | ALL SKILLS TOURNAMENT TRAINING | HIGH SCHOOL | JUNE 14-18 | JUNE 21-25 JUNE 28 - JULY 2 (+TOURNAMENT TRAINING) | JULY 19-23 | JULY 26-30 (+ HIGH SCHOOL) DIRECTED BY: Jon Sarosiek: Director of Tennis at Boar’s Head Resort Brian Rasmussen: Volunteer Asst Coach at UVA; Scott Brown: Asst Coach at UVA

1.800.NIKE.CAMP | USSportsCamps.com All Rights reserved. Nike and the Swoosh design are registered trademarks of Nike, Inc. and its affiliates, and are used under license. Nike is the title sponsor of the camps and has no control over the operation of the camps or the acts or omissions of US Sports Camps.

SUMMER CAMP UPDATES Looking for updates and information on summer camps in the area? Our Online Camp Fair is filled with ideas on who is offering programs locally, and we are constantly updating it with programs moving online, rescheduled camps and cancellations for 2020. Visit charlottesvillefamily.com/dir_ campfair.htm for more info.

Camp Holiday Trails www.campholidaytrails.org

We will get through this TOGETHER. 50

May/June 2020

Must-Have Inexpensive Outdoor Toys

Carriage Hill Farm

• Keswick •

Celebrating 24 Years of Equestrian Fun! SUMMER PONY CAMP BARNYARD BIRTHDAY PARTIES HORSEBACK RIDING LESSONS LICENSED

434-296-2672

www.charlottesvillehorses.com

18. Outdoor

play

increases

children’s physical activity level. Children who play outdoors are less likely to be overweight and more likely to be active learners. Children who move and play when out of school are ready to give the attention often needed for classroom/indoor learning. 19. Time spent outdoors increases persistence. Outdoor games often require persistence. Children must try and try again if their experiment fails. If the branch doesn’t reach all the way across the stream or the bark doesn’t cover their fairy house, they must keep trying until they are successful. 20. Outdoor play is fun. Children who are happy are successful learners. Children are naturally happy when they are moving, playing and creating outside. This joy opens them up for experimenting, learning and growing. So it may look like your toddler is just making mud near the hose, and your camper may be short on specifics when you ask about her day, but remember that their social skills were honed, their intelligence was stretched and their imagination was tickled—all by being outside and engaging with others and the world around them.

Stacey is a freelance writer and mother of two girls. She and her girls have been getting outside to play for over a decade.


CAMP HORIZONS

Located in Harrisonburg, Virginia, Camp Horizons has been offering a residential experience for campers ages 6–16 since 1983. Programs are differentiated by age, including: Discover (6–8), Journey (9–11) and Explorer (12–16). Campers gain more independence to choose from 50+ activities and seven off-site trips as they age through the programs. Camp Horizons also offers a specialty Equestrian Camp2020 (8–16), horseback lessons and trail KidsCollege@PVCC rides. ACA Accredited. 540-896-7600, SUMMER ACADEMIES camphorizonsva.com

KidsCollege@PVCC KidsCollege@Fluvanna KidsCollege@Louisa NEW! KidsCollege@Albemarle NEW! Registration opens January 20 www.pvcc.edu/kidscollege 434.961.5354

KidsCollege@PVCC Learn today...Lead tomorrow

KIDSCOLLEGE@ PVCC

At PVCC, summer STEM and Arts Academies include everything from science, technology, engineering and math to arts enrichment. Campers in grades Pre-K–9 can enjoy activities like maker labs, virtual reality, robotics, coding, engineering, drones, sculpture, 3D art, music, fashion design, mixed media, photography and much more. Summer STEM, Arts and Technical Academies are also available at Fluvanna, Louisa and Albemarle. 434-961-5354, pvcc.edu/kidscollege

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{resources at-home learning}

fun

LEARNING

AT HOME

The Secret to Keeping Your Kids Happy, Busy & Learning

Time at home is a great opportunity to learn, whether it is skill-building activities like cooking, gardening and building a model or deep dives into a favorite topic and doing something creative like singing or drawing. We know you are navigating ways to support and nurture your child’s learning and that it can be overwhelming, so we invite you to explore this curated collection of engaging activities and expert tips to help fill your family’s days with wonder and exploration. Visit CharlottesvilleFamily.com for more stories and activities to help keep your kids reading, thinking and growing all summer long...and beyond!

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May/June 2020


Tips from a Local Teacher on Supporting Your Child’s Learning At Home

1. Create a daily learning schedule for your child to follow each day. Think about your child and what time of day is best for his/her learning. Is your child an early riser? Does he benefit from a wake-up period to ease into the day? 2. Set up a learning space in your home where your child can be free of distractions. Consider involving your child in the planning of this space. Ask what would make it more comfortable, such as a favorite stuffed animal, markers and drawing paper, puzzles, etc. If you have more than one school-age child, think about creating individual spaces for each student so siblings do not disturb each other. Ask your child to help decorate the space and give it a name. 3. Check in with your child’s teacher to see what might be needed at home to successfully complete assigned work. This might include notebook paper, pencils with a sharpener, markers, highlighters, a calculator, or even a laptop or iPad. Be sure that your child is ready to start each day with everything necessary nearby. 4. Consider your homeschool day to be the same as a regular school day. For each school day, ask your child to get dressed, eat a healthy breakfast, and get ready to do his best in his school work.

5. Do your very best to stick to the schedule you’ve created in order to help your child make the easiest transition possible into the online learning environment. It’s not always easy to get our own children to cooperate with us as “teachers,” but we increase the likelihood of cooperation and success if it’s something a child understands is part of a daily routine and not optional. 6. Take frequent breaks so your child does not get frustrated with the work. Working online can be a challenge for any child no matter the age. Remember that in the school environment your child is used to having breaks for PE, music, recess, guidance and library lessons throughout the day. There’s no race to get the work completed. If your child needs a break, allow him to get up and move around. 7. Know how to contact your child’s teacher if difficulties arise. Don’t let your child become frustrated with the technology and allow this to get in the way of his learning goals for the day. 8. Create a list of activities or projects that might be exciting when the school day is finished. Start a family garden, build a tree house, dive into an art project, take regular family hikes, or learn to play a new instrument. Consider what your child enjoys doing the most in his free time and then create a family project that gets all onboard. Since social distancing has become a new reality, our daily schedules have been thrown to the wind. As the parent of three college-age/adult children, I recognize that the time we have with our families goes by way too quickly! Although social distancing can be extremely stressful at times, it’s also an opportunity to grow closer to one another and strengthen our family relationships.

Cheryl Wetmore-Simpson, a mother of three daughters, has been teaching elementary school for Albemarle County for 20 years. She previously practiced Social Work both in Hawaii and internationally before becoming an educator. Cheryl is active with several non-profits in the community.

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{resources at-home learning} VPM|PBS KIDS

has been focusing on sharing important educational resources with the community to help families and teachers as they work, teach and learn from home. Their teams have created a variety of engaging online, distance learning resources, including programs that provide instruction for students who don’t have access to high-speed Internet. Here are a few ways VPN|PBS KIDS is helping families learn, grow and connect during this time. Information about these resources and others can be found at vpm.org/resources. • PBS Learning Media is a free online educational resource for distance learning. It includes videos, interactive activities and lesson plans for Pre K–12th grade Virginia students. • VPM PLUS television now features daily programs designed specifically for students. This resource is especially helpful for families without Internet access. VPM PLUS is available on channel 41.2, or with Comcast on channels 265 and 1146. • PBS KIDS 24/7 television channel features programing for toddlers and elementary school students. This channel can be accessed on TV, online or on the PBS KIDS app. • The PBS KIDS app encourages children to engage in skills related to science, math, creativity and more, all while playing free learning games. • Parents and teachers can also take the opportunity to sign up for the PBS KIDS daily newsletter. This short email offers daily ideas for learning at home.

AGENCY, CREATIVITY, CURIOSITY,

DIVERSITY, INTEGRITY, IMPACT, EXEMPLARY CITIZENS, VISIONARY LEADERS

Two-Year-Olds through Grade 12 www.stab.org | (434) 296-5106 | admission@stab.org 54

May/June 2020


If you want to talk to someone at the library from home, try the “What Do I Read Next” service, where you complete an online form at jmrl.org/wdirn.htm. It’s as easy as telling them three books or authors you have enjoyed and what type of book you are in the mood for next. Anyone under 18 should provide their age, so recommendations can be tailored appropriately. Within three days, you’ll have an email with some book suggestions.

Let JMRL help you find your next favorite book! Here are a few online resources to keep your family reading and learning at home!

• For online databases, try Novelist, Plus—a database of recommendations that can help you find a book matching your interests. Also, Novelist K–8 provides recommendations for younger readers. • If you are looking for a compilation of lists for all ages, be sure to check out JMRL Reads Wiki webpage (jmrl.org/ wiki/Main_Page). You’ll find titles read by JMRL book groups. • On the Same Page Library Podcast (onthesamepage.blubrry.net/author/ jmrl) features staff recommendations and recordings from some JMRL programs.

• For a wide range of digital resources from JMRL, visit jmrl.org/on-download. htm. Here, you will be able to access a variety of online services for magazines, a comic book collection, ebooks and downloadable audiobooks, and more through services like RBdigital and Overdrive/Libby. • Get a temporary library card to access all of these resources, and that will not expire until a couple weeks after the library reopens, at hestia.jmrl.org/ onlinecardregistration

For book recommendations broken down by age, see our CharlottesvilleFamily.com website, where you’ll find reading lists compiled by our own JMRL librarians that will last you all summer long.

WHERE BOYS LEARN BEST At Blue Ridge School, we are the experts in how boys learn best. The result is a college prep program that guides boys to reach their full potential. Individual success is achieved through a tailored learning environment and an accepting culture that fosters the best in each of our students. ALL BOYS. ALL BOARDING. ALL COLLEGE BOUND. WWW.BLUERIDGESCHOOL.COM

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{resources at-home learning}

INSPIRING A LOVE OF

SCIENCE

The World is Your Science Classroom With school cancelled for the rest of the semester, parents have been catapulted front and center to also be a school teacher. But, we all know that “Wonder Drives Knowledge.” Randy Bell, a former program coordinator for science education at the Curry School of Education, says, “When children can explore a concept first,” says Bell, “they become more engaged and able to think for themselves when the idea is pursued further.” Your role as a teacher-at-home is ​

magnification and life cycles,” says Nancy

challenging, and the experts say perhaps

Newman, an outreach educator with

the best thing you can do besides model

the Virginia Museum of Natural History,

calm, is share your wonder and curiosity

“all

about the world. Encourage exploration,

vocabulary,

and teach your child to be a learner.

and understand there are sometimes

“Learning

about

multiple answers,” she says.

weight,

length,

textures,

amounts,

opposites,

help

children think

explore, about

develop

possibilities

The World Is A Science Classroom. Participating in a bird walk, feeling the wind and listening to the leaves in trees all help children become more aware of their surroundings. “Becoming an observer of nature helps with observing the world in general,” says Newman. “Parents also need to get over their reluctance to pick up a worm, to watch a bee gather pollen, to watch a snake slither by or to even hold a toad. Fears— like prejudices—are learned from adults.”

Oobleck Water and cornstarch make an intriguing su bstance that w ill keep kids of all ag es — and ad ults! — busy for hours. Materials: • Water • Shallow tray

• Cornstarch For each ch ild, provide one cup each of corn starch and w ater, a shallo w tray for mixin g and spoons for stirring. (Hands are go od for this, to o!) Have kids blend the w ater and corn starch. Some kids will m ix a spoonf ul at a tim e; whereas, ot hers will du mp it all at once. Either way is fine. Yo u may need to add a bit more water or cornstarch to get the mixture just right. When the cornstar ch and water are entirely mixed, the co nsistency will be unusual. It will appear to be a liqui d, yet when pressure is applied it fe els like a solid.

A child’s innate need to explore and discover will inevitably lead to experimentation. The following projects offer the chance to experiment with some simple science concepts, using items you probably have around the house. Make every effort to allow as much hands-on experimenting as possible. Of course, when using sharp instruments or matches, caution should be used, and there should always be an adult on hand. When you’ve tried all these, visit CharlottesvilleFamily.com for more projects. Have fun exploring!

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May/June 2020

Kris Bordessa has written for both national and regional magazines, including Parenting, FamilyFun, American Girl and Home Education Magazine.


Borax Crystals What makes a crystal a crystal? It is a solid with a symmetrical shape and flat sides, due to the arrangement of its molecules in a repeating pattern. Snowflakes are examples of a crystal; they always have six sides. With this easy experiment, you can see firsthand how crystals form over a few days. Materials: • Pipe cleaners • String • A wide-mouth jar • Boiling water (with adult help) • Borax (such as 20 Mule Team Borax) • Pencil Twist pipe cleaners into the desired shape. Try wrapping one around a pencil to create a spiral or bend one into a star shape. Attach a short length of string to the pipe cleaner and tie the other end to a pencil. Fill a wide-mouth jar with boiling water. Mix borax into the water one tablespoon at a time. You will use about 3 tablespoons of borax per cup of water. Stir in each addition of borax until dissolved. When you can no longer dissolve any more borax in the water, the water is saturated with borax and you are ready to grow a crystal! Insert your pipe cleaner shape into the jar of water so that it hangs suspended from the pencil but submerged in the water. Place the jar in a safe place where it won’t be disturbed for

Water B

ottle W

:

• Small nail • Plastic water bo ttle • Water • Food co loring Using a small na il, poke around a three–fou plastic w r holes ater bott the botto le, about m. (Heati 1 inch fr ng the ti om this easi p of the nail will er.) Fill each bott make and then le with colored replace th water, e cap. Set clear cass the bottle erole dis s out in h a a n d encoura investiga ge your te. They kids to will quic kly find th cap (ther eby lettin at openin g air into g the water to the bottle flow from ) allows the holes. the When ca pped, it st ops.

two or three days. Hot

water

holds

more

borax

crystals than cold water. As heated water molecules move farther apart, they make room for more borax crystals to dissolve. This is saturation. As the borax solution cools, the water molecules move

See More

closer together again, leaving less room for the dissolved borax, which

Charlottesville High School’s Best

creates crystals on the

BACON

All-Around Club of Nerds, filled a trough with ooblek and walked on it! See the video at tinyurl.com/ CHSBACONoobleck.

pipe cleaner.

onder

Materials

in a Tornado

Bottle

: Materials ch bit ith 3/8-in • Drill w s le iter bott • Two 2-l • Water

s. da bottle • Glue 2-liter so sing two g u in o k d a a m rn le caps, Make a to both bott , ch hole in n -i s together /8 3 a e Glu cap Drill aligned. to n re o a d ey th double li sure that crew this empty inforce. S re to g in the other tap r. Invert te a w f o d. To full other en a bottle onto the w re ted sc ec nd the conn bottle, a flow, turn o d a in s rn le to tt irl the bo make the n and sw w o d r e te d a psi . As the w bottles u few times a n o ti m o o m the bott a circular escapes to top bottle e th nnel that m fu o a fr ill create w r te a w e bottle, th rnado. e like a to looks quit

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

57


{resources at-home learning} In support of local businesses and in support of at-home learning, we have compiled some items for the kids to enjoy during our time at home. Be sure to also check out new online sites and curbside pick-up options for numerous local shops and stores, including: Alakazam Toys, Hedge Fine Blooms, Rebecca’s Natural Food, Shenanigans Toy Store, The Wine & Country Shop and many others.

COOL

STUFF CANDY SCIENCE This kit allows kids to make their own candy, including jellybeans, marshmallows, lollipops and more, all while teaching them the science behind many of their favorite treats. Shop online or over the phone, and then choose whether to have your item picked up, delivered or shipped. Available for $24.99 at Shenanigans Toys.

ABCville by Karen Moulis and Cary Oliva This book is a great way for children to learn about their Charlottesville community while at home. Featuring local spots and teaching children about them, ABCville is an educational way to alleviate cabin fever. This book, along with other kid-friendly toys and games, can be purchased over the phone and picked up curbside. Available for $20 at Wine & Country Shop.

HEADBANZ A fun activity for the whole family, Hedbanz encourages curiosity by prompting children to ask silly questions in order to correctly guess their own identity. The variety of cards and identities children can take on widens their ability to correctly identify objects from creative descriptions. Purchase it online and either pick it up at the shop or have it delivered to your home. Available for $24.99 at Alakazam Toys.

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May/June 2020

Nature-Inspired

Crafts

​ oung gardeners will love celebrating Y the seasons with these easy and fun crafts that use items in the home and garden. 1. Make a tissue cherry-blossom tree with gathered, fallen branches. Cut out 2-inch squares of pink tissue, pinch tightly in the middle to create blooms, and glue them to branches. Display in a tall container. 2. Use eggshells as pots to start seeds and Popsicle sticks to foretell what will pop up. Plant seeds according to package instructions and nestle planters in an egg carton on a sunny windowsill. 3. Pansies and violas have flat, vibrant blossoms that press and dry wonderfully long after the blooms have faded from the garden. Place the petals between paper towels and press in a heavy book for two to six weeks. Apply pressed pansies with glue to make handmade cards or notepaper.

P​P P​P P​P


We are here for you. Find news,

entertainment and educational resources for these challenging times at vpm.org/resources.

A ClAssiCAl ChristiAn sChool • GrAdes K-12 Challenging Academics • Biblical Worldview Affordable Tuition • Small Class Sizes • Team Sports

Tours Every Thursday (434) 293-0633 • regents-school.org CharlottesvilleFamily.com

59


{congratulations graduates}

60

May/June 2020


Congratulations

Graduates! CLASS OF 2020

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

61


{congratulations graduates}

lass of 2020:

eC Dear Members of th

le ugh the crucib en shaped thro be ve ha t en ea om gr en and w ic collapse, man history, m emic or econom nd pa e, w in m ne Throughout hu fa opel us to ther war or respond can pr accident. Whe in us. How we ith of crisis. It’s no w st be rsevere and ry pe ve to r capability n call out the ou te n, of te es Of . ng ar le ity al ch memorable ye and opportun is traditionally ngth, ambition th re n st he of W s . ht e le ig th ib he d, while ought poss it would end. An eds what we th es imagined how to prosper exce ve ha d of our daily liv ul rt co pa e of you, no on have become ch at th ea s r es ha fo ng u n le yo ga al be ancial ch hat each of ic health and fin not diminish w bl ld pu ou t sh an d fic an ni ot sig they cann our attention, you. e now dominates e future before der of Intel, th th e promise of st and co-foun gi th r lo no no ch ed an te ev a w, hi , ac Moore as Moore’s La ars ago, Gordon e to be known m ca t every ha w le More than 50 ye ub ed , proclaim uit would do industry leader electronic circ or y ct tin du a le on in ab ic s in m nt se r at unimag of compone at the number er of a compute w th n po io e at th to g rv n in se ea m ob would m s, transfor ions of what it d for many year its see the implicat year. And, it di re fo d ul invention and co of en ce bility. Few th e energetic pa m sa at u. Th . yo es speed and capa on our liv every one of ct of technology w frontiers for ur have the impa It opens up ne s. or av de is moment in yo en l th s today in al ought you to br ve ha at e m th certainty exist alities ys that co ose personal qu interests, the jo Think about th ng passionate pi lo ve de having pride in , , rs rs he ie ly about ot ercoming barr ov e, iv y ct pe rs life: Caring deep e and pe fit well into an g your knowledg these qualities of l Al . or ut rib from expandin ing a cont ments, and be your accomplish aits you. hool community aw at or career th r making our sc fo de itu at more for gr t circumstance deepes are to do even mily have our es as you prep ish w st be ! You and your fa d ns an tio nfidence Congratula our highest co years to come. y an m y, an m better. You have unity for d in your comm your family an ty Public Schools Albemarle Coun of t en nd te rin as, Supe – Dr. Matthew Ha

62

May/June 2020


Congratulations, Graduates!

“How far you go in life depends on your being tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving and tolerant of the weak and the strong. Because someday in life you will have been all of these.” –George Washington Carver

CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner 2019

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

63


{congratulations graduates}

64

May/June 2020


VOTED 1 #

FAVORITE FAMILY ORTHODONTIST

2009-2019 CharlottesvilleFamily Favorite Award Winner

Bart Weis, DDS & Nancy Stranix, DDS

2019

CONGRATS 2020 GRADS!

Beautiful Smiles

They’re Our Specialty!

Call Now to Schedule Your Free Consultation!

971-9601

Welcoming children, Teens & AdulTs

Clear BraCes | Platinum Plus invisalign Provider Flexible PAymenT PlAn | insurAnce Filed Northside Adjacent to Target

Spring Creek at Zion Crossroads

cvilleorthodontics.com

Downtown/Pantops Near Martha Jefferson CharlottesvilleFamily.com

65


{congratulations graduates}

“My wish for the graduating class of 2020 is to have faith in yourselves

and your ability to not only react to events of our present day but to take advantage of the opportunities that they present. Buckminster Fuller said, ‘Don’t fight the forces, USE them.’ Yes, these are difficult times, but you will surmount the challenges! I pray that where others see only crisis, you will learn to see OPPORTUNITY. Wishing you the best now and going forward!”

– Corey Harris, Blues & Reggae Musician

“My wish for the graduating class of 2020 is that years from now, your life will have given you wonderful stories to tell.”

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May/June 2020

– Anne Marie Pace, Children’s Book Author


Congratulations

Dear C H S Class of 2020, ​ et’s face it… You didn’t get the ending L you deserved. For 13 years, we have been watching you grow, learn, stretch your wings, make new friends, develop new skills and passions, and so much more. This spring, we wanted to celebrate with you face-to-face with hugs and smiles, or a handshake and a pat on the back.

to the GRYMES MEMORIAL

Class of 2020!

I​ ’m so glad that we have found a way to invite families to stop by CHS for a walk across the graduation stage and a “victory lap” around the school for photos and more. I’m eager to share our graduation video on June 4 at 7pm—our original date and time for graduation. I hope you’ve enjoyed our other displays of love and appreciation, ranging from social media campaigns and a virtual decision day to yard signs outside your home. ​ ut whether we see each other virtually B or face-to-face, know that you were seen. We cheered you on during games and meets. We have watched you grow from understudies to stars. We have listened to your first (surprisingly good) concerts in fifth grade, and your performances at Buford and CHS took our breath away and earned superior ratings. We saw you overcome challenges inside and outside of class, not the least of which was this coronavirus closure.

Grymes Memorial School • 13775 Spicers Mill Road • Orange, VA • 22960 • 540.672.1010 • grymesschool.org

I​ n all of this, we will continue to see you at your place of work, when you’re home on break, on social media and more. And, we will keep cheering you on! Congratulations and Go Black Knights!

congratulations Class of 2020

– Dr. Atkins, Superintendent of Charlottesville City Schools CHARLOTTESVILLE HIGH SCHOOL

MONTICELLO HIGH SCHOOL

WESTERN ALBEMARLE MONTICELLO HIGH SCHOOL HIGH SCHOOL environmental health and medical studies academy sciences academy WOODBERRY FOREST SCHOOL

THE MADEIRA SCHOOL

we wish you the best of luck next year! .

434-296-6901

Serving academically advanced students PreK — 8th grade

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{congratulations graduates} “My wish for you is that this life becomes all that you want it to. Your dreams stay big, your worries stay small and that you never need to carry more than you can hold.” – Rascal Flatts

CONGRATULATIONS!

from the staff of Ivy Life & Style Media

68

May/June 2020


Soundtrack of Central Virginia since 1922

STEPHEN R. LAYMAN MUSIC DIRECTOR

2020 OUR 98TH SEASON! Congratulations, Graduates! Our Summer SeaSOn haS changed - pleaSe viSit facebOOk.cOm/cvilleband and cvilleband.Org fOr updated infOrmatiOn

Village School Congratulations to these students for their performance on the 2020 National Latin Exam Best Wishes and Congratulations to the Class of 2020 Charlotte Bassett Emma Bevacqua Kristen Billings Hannah Cohn Somers Grey Davis Sohie Freeman Ryang Sahana Gupta Maggie Heaphy Larken Hendricks Mariette Hollins Eliza Jaffe

Nava Khurgel Kathryn Lenert Campbell Murray Ellie Schundler Dorothy Seek Carson Stultz Esme Tobias Greer Welte

ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Amalie Hendricks, Teresa Pannone, Hazel Brown, Dahlia Becker, Piper Stultz, Sally Beights. OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT Shreya Mahadevan*, Isadora Hrabe*, Dahlia Heysell, Leelee Keevil, Elizabeth Cook, Gabby Reppucci, Lily Curtis, Cate Slaughter.

CUM LAUDE Zoë Kershner, Tenzin Pittard, Mariette Hollins, Sohie Freeman Ryang, Grey Davis. MAGNA CUM LAUDE Maggie Heaphy, Greer Welte, Emma Bevacqua, Esme Tobias, Carson Stultz, Dorothy Seek, Elena Reyes, Alice Hoskins.

villageschool.us

MAXIMA CUM LAUDE Nava Khurgel, Ellie Schundler, Kristen Billings, Larken Hendricks, Amelia Lynch, Violet Wiley, Maija Eisenberg, Lili Diamond. SUMMA CUM LAUDE Eliza Jaffe, Campbell Murray, Hannah Cohn Somers, Annie Fruscello*, Nora Hayden*, Sophie Mathew, Charlotte Hubert, Lily Allan, Bridget Ciambotti, Caroline Funk, Tess Chirichetti. * indicates perfect score

215 East High Street, Charlottesville, Virginia 22902 | 434-984-4404 CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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{congratulations graduates} “My wish for the graduating class of 2020

is that you use this opportunity to focus on what’s important. Over the last couple of months, we’ve all had to do without much of what makes up our normal lives. My guess is that this has helped you think about what matters and what doesn’t, and my hope as you prepare to begin a new chapter in your lives is that you think hard about what you want to bring with you. The answer will help you determine what really matters in life, and to live your very best version of that life.”

– James E. Ryan, President of the University of Virginia

“My wish for the graduating class of 2020 is that in the midst of uncertain times they become generational catalysts for change in American History.”

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May/June 2020

– Chris Long, Former NFL & UVA Football Player


UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY BROWN UNIVERSITY JAMES MADISON UNIVERSITY VIRGINIA TECH UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO LONGWOOD UNIVERSITY VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY NEW YORK UNIVERSITY HARVARD UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF WILLIAM & MARY SEWANEE: THE UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA BARNARD COLLEGE PURDUE UNIVERSITY PACE UNIVERSITY HAMPDEN-SYDNEY COLLEGE EMORY UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO BOULDER UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT MONTANA STATE UNIVERSITY RYERSON UNIVERSITY BOSTON UNIVERSITY TRINITY COLLEGE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN UNIVERSITY OF MARY WASHINGTON WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY WELLESLEY COLLEGE SWARTHMORE COLLEGE SANTA CLARA UNIVERSITY WOFFORD COLLEGE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY CHRISTOPHER NEWPORT UNIVERSITY CLEMSON UNIVERSITY DAVIDSON COLLEGE VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITY WINGATE UNIVERSITY

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 2020! Learn more about our School and students at www.stab.org St. Anne’s-Belfield School

CharlottesvilleFamily.com

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Pediatric Associates of Charlottesville, PLC 2019

Comprehensive care from infancy to young adulthood Office Hours By Appointment Evening & Weekends until 9pm Urgent Care Available One of Our Physicians On Call After Hours Onsite Lactation Consultant

Downtown Office & | 296-9161 Adolescent Center | 971-9611 1011 E. Jefferson St West Office 2411 Ivy Rd | 296-8300 North Office 29N at Hollymead (1522 Insurance Lane, A) | 974-9600 Zion Crossroads Office 71 Jefferson Court | 540-406-4100

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