Admin
Macon County non-profit organizations have until July 30 to apply for grants through the Macon County Community Funding Pool.
Organizations applying for funds must provide financial statements such as budgets and federal tax-exempt reports, organization goals and objectives and program descriptions, and board/staff roster. Groups not incorporated as non-profits may enlist an established non-profit to serve as their fiscal agent.
Application forms and instructions are available on the Macon County website, www.maconnc.org, or at the Macon County Public Library.
First-time applicants should contact Karen Wallace, 828.524.3600, or Mary Ann Sloan, 828.526.4280, to discuss their proposal.
Governor Beverly Perdue nixed the $19.7 billion state budget put on her desk by the General Assembly Sunday, winning herself a place in state history.
She is the first governor to veto a budget since veto powers were granted in 1997, and she told lawmakers that education was the impetus for her action.
“For the first time, we have a legislature that is turning its back on our schools, our children, our longstanding investments in education and our future economic prospects,” said Perdue in a statement and speech last Sunday.
Perdue’s veto is unlikely to hold, however. The GOP is expressing confidence that it has the votes necessary to override her historic thumbs down. Five House Democrats voted with Republicans to pass the budget, enough to override the veto if they continue bucking their party. Republicans have a tight enough grasp of the Senate not to need Democrat help for an override vote in that chamber.
Perdue posited that the budget as-is would cause “generational damage” by cutting funds to K-12 schools, preschool programs More at Four and Smart Start and elderly care.
It takes a super-majority of 60 percent to override the Governor’s veto.
In the House, that means 72 votes. There are 68 Republicans in the House — four short of what’s needed to buck the Governor’s veto. But five Democrats had previously sided with Republicans in voting for the budget, and Representative Phil Haire, D-Sylva, doesn’t think those five Democrats can be persuaded to come back to their own party.
“Some of them were promised something in the budget,” Haire said.
Haire personally voted against the budget proffered by Republican leadership.
“I think it is going to have a devastating effect on North Carolina, and it will takes us years to regain the status where we are now,” said Haire.
In the Senate, there are 31 Republicans compared to 19 Democrats, one more than needed to meet the super majority criteria.
The Governor and Democrats in the legislature are pushing to keep a 1-cent sales tax that Republicans want to eliminate. Keeping the extra sales tax, say Perdue and other Democrats, could raise $900,000 to fill the more than $2 billion funding gap facing the state.
Haire doubts Republicans will capitulate on their position on the sales tax.
“Not no, but heck no. If they do that they renege on their whole campaign promise,” Haire said.
Sen. Jim Davis, R-Franklin, said keeping the sales tax, billed as a “temporary measure” when it was put in place two years ago, is non-negotiable.
“It expires June 30, and if they thought that they needed a tax for longer than that, they should’ve voted for it. If the legislature wanted to have a penny sales tax, they’d have to introduce a bill and vote on it, and that’s just not going to happen,” said Davis.
With Republicans unwilling to compromise on the sales tax, Perdue’s veto, if it stood, would accomplish little but a prolonged stalemate.
“The first of July you get to a shut down if you don’t have a budget,” Haire said.
The Nantahala Outdoor Center’s Canoe Club Challenge 2011 is scheduled for 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. on June 18, July 16 and Aug. 13. The timed slalom course will be set up between the bridges at NOC. An awards ceremony will follow at 7 p.m. on the porch of Slow Joe’s Café.
The race is open to everyone, even beginners and first-timers. Paddlers can make as many runs through the course as they would like and only their best time will count. Each completed run will earn points toward a trophy awarded to the canoe club with the most points at the end of the event series. However, participants need not belong to a paddling club to participate; boaters can team up with clubs or start their own.
Paddlers are welcome to practice on the course all day leading up to the event, and at 2:30 p.m., 1996 Canoe/Kayak Olympian Wayne Dickert will be on hand for a demo run of the course as well as advice, tips and encouragement for the paddlers. Free live music will begin at 8:30 p.m. at The Pourover.
828.423.0158.
“Woodsy Owl’s Curiosity Club,” a nature and educational series presented by The Cradle of Forestry, will be held from 10:30 a.m. to noon every Thursday this summer, ending Aug. 4. The club is for kids ages 4 to 7 and their guardians to participate in activities, explore the theme of forestry and learn to care for the land alongside Woodsy Owl, the U.S. Forest Service’s conservation symbol.
During the program, each child will receive a copy of the book Woodsy Owl’s ABCs and will make a craft specific to a forestry topic to bring home. Kids can also participate in the Forest Discovery Center scavenger hunt or the Adventure Zone, designed for children on the autism spectrum. Topics for the series include Plants: Parts and Crafts on June 9, Critter Tricks on July 21, Fire Safety on Aug. 4 and many others.
The curiosity club costs $4 per child and $2.50 for adult guardians. The Cradle of Forestry is located in the Pisgah National Forest, six miles north of Looking Glass Falls at milepost 412 on Highway 276.
828.877.3130 or visit cradleofforestry.org.
The Basulto Academy of Defense, located in downtwown Waynesville, has expanded the schedule of its successful Brazilian Jiu Jitsu program to include more classes in the art/sport of Vale Tudo.
Also known as No-Holds-Barred (NHB) or as Mixed-Martial Arts (MMA), the term Vale Tudo means “anything goes” and its roots are part of the Brazilian fight culture from which the world-reknowned martial art of Gracie Jiu Jitsu spawned in Rio de Janiero.
MMA has evolved into one of the fastest-growing sports in the world, with events being televised even on national networks. Many people take up Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and Vale Tudo classes with no intention of ever fighting in the octagon but for the benefits of the very intense workouts.
“When the Gracie family helped create the Ultimate Fighting Championships in 1993, their goal was to showcase the effectiveness of their martial art,” says Armando Basulto, chief instructor at Basulto Academy of Defense. “What most people didn’t realize is that in Brazil, this type of MMA event already had an established history stretching back to the 1920’s. The modern sport of MMA requires a solid foundation in different disciplines including Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, kickboxing and wrestling.”
Instructor Armando Basulto is not only a professor of Gracie Jiu Jitsu, holding a black belt under Royler Gracie, but is also an experienced and fully-accredited kickboxing coach with more than 20 years experience coaching boxing, Muay Thai and Savate. In Europe, Basulto was both a boxer and coach and achieved the rank of Silver Glove in Boxe Française Savate (the highest rank in the sport) and teaching credential (Moniteur) by the Fédération Internationale de Savate in Paris, France. His boxers have fought in the USA and in Europe
Classes are currently offered at the Basulto Gracie Jiu Jitsu Club, located at GroundSwell Fitness 218 Branner Ave. downtown Waynesville. www.wncbjj.com or 828.230.5056.
The Family Farm Tour, organized by Appalachian Sustainable Agriculture Project (ASAP), will be held on the weekend of June 25 and 26. The event is a self-guided driving tour into the farms of 41 Western North Carolina food producers — many of which are not regularly open to visitors.
The four Haywood County farms are Chambers Farm Market, Mountain Organic Research and Extension Unit, Sunburst Trout and Ten Acre Garden. The remaining 37 farms are located in Buncombe, Yancey and Madison counties.
During the tour, participants can taste farm-fresh treats, interact with farm animals, learn how food grows and meet the community’s food producers. An admission button, which admits an entire carload, can be purchased online or at several local businesses (a list of these can be found online). Buttons are $25 in advance. A tour guide, including a map and direcetions, tour tips and details, is also available at these vendors or online for download.
Familyfarmtour.com or 828.236.1282.
Curtis Smalling, the mountain region biologist for Audubon N.C., will speak at a program for the Highlands Plateau Society at 8 p.m. on Monday, June 13. The next day, Smalling will lead a bird watching field trip at 7:30 p.m. around Highlands.
Smalling began keeping bird lists in elementary school and has used his birding skills to survey golden-winged warblers in Western North Carolina for Audubon. He has taken part in Cornell University’s golden-winged warbler Atlas Project, which was designed to determine the population status and habitat of the golden-winged warbler, the blue-winged warbler and their hybrids.
The golden-winged warbler is a small, strikingly marked and near-threatened species. It’s generally declining across its range, most likely as a result of habitat loss and competition/interbreeding with the very closely related blue-winged warbler. Smalling has done extensive research on these warblers in the wintering grounds in Nicaragua, and his program will feature photographs of these and other warblers in WNC.
The program is free, open to the public and will be held at the Highlands Civic Center. 828.787.1387.
A Birding Eco Tour is set for Thursday, June 9. The hike is held by The Highlands-Cashiers Land Trust (HCLT) will hold a Birding Eco Tour on June 9 led by Highlands Plateau Audubon Society members. Hikers will have the chance to identify indigo buntings, red-eyed vireos and black-throated blue warblers, among others.
According to the one of the hike leaders, Don Shure of the Highlands Plateau Audubon Society, this time of year is ideal for observing these birds, as the colors are vibrant and the calls will be sharp during nesting season. The Highlands Plateau has been designated an Important Bird Area by state, national and international bird conservation organizations.
Eco Tours are $5 for HCLT members and $35 for nonmembers, including the easy, guided hike, lunch and a HCLT membership. 828.526.1111 or hitrust.earthlink.net.
Discover Life in America (DLIA) is holding a number of events this summer for the public to experience the synchronous fireflies that illuminate the Great Smoky Mountain National Park during the first weeks of June.
A fundraising event will be held from 7:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. on June 10 and June 11 at Norton Creek Sanctuary near Gatlinburg. Participants will be able to view and learn about synchronous fireflies and ask questions to a firefly expert on site. Heavy hors d’oeuvres, beer and wine will be provided. There will be a short walk to the site. $75.
The annual Firefly Festival will be held from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on June 11 at the Nantahala Outdoor Center Great Outpost in Gatlinburg. It is a free event open to the public with live music provided by Captain Firefly, as well as artwork, an insect zoo, kids’ activities, food and drink vendors, a bioluminescence room and two synchronous firefly presentations.
Another firefly presentation and picnic will be held from 7:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. on June 12 at the Park Grill. After the presentation, food and drink, participants will carpool to a secret site in the park. There will be a short hike, and guests should be prepared for inclement weather. $50.
For all events except the Firefly Festival, space is limited and reservations are required. 828.430.4756.
The newly formed chapter of Nantahala Area SORBA, the Southeast Off-Road Bicycle Association, will host an event called “Ride, Rinse and Recover” at Tsali Recreation Area starting at 1 p.m. on Sunday, June 12.
Club members and others interested in the chapter’s trail maintenance and building efforts are invited to join a casual group ride at 1 p.m. followed by a trip to the lake and picnic. Participants are encouraged to bring a bike, family and friends, camp chairs, picnic food to share, and ideas for future trail projects.
Membership applications will be available at the event. For more information, send an email to Sae Smyrl, club president, at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and join the Nantahala Area SORBA Facebook group.
The Land Trust of the Little Tennessee, the North Carolina Coastal Land Trust, and the Wildlands Network received a Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) conservation grant to help private landowners and government agencies in the southeastern United States protect special forest sites though working-forest conservation easements.
The three nonprofit conservation organizations were awarded a total of $65,000 over two years to work with hardwood forest owners, government agencies and SFI program participants to encourage owners to consider easements, and to offer advice and technical assistance.
Project activities will include community education and outreach workshops, training and technical assistance, and production of materials showing the value of easements. Other project partners are the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission, the Nature Conservancy – North Carolina Chapter, along with SFI program participants, Louisiana-Pacific Corporation and Resource Management Service LLC.
A working-forest conservation easement is a voluntary contract between a landowner and a land trust, government agency or other qualified organization in which the owner places permanent restrictions on future uses of the property to protect forest resources, while still managing it responsibly. It can result in potential tax benefits for the landowner, who still owns the property.
Backpackers who take on the challenge of hiking in the Southern Appalachian Mountains can attest to the fact that hauling a pack up a steep mountain trail is much more difficult than carrying one on level ground, and some Western Carolina University faculty members and students have put that notion to the test.
A study that involved volunteers carrying a pack while walking on a treadmill set on an uphill grade was used to test the “energy mile” theory first proposed by the late American mountaineering legend Paul Petzoldt. Overseeing the project was Maridy Troy, an assistant professor in WCU’s health and physical education program, and Maurice Phipps, professor of parks and recreation management, who also knew Petzoldt as a friend and mentor.
Phipps first met Petzoldt and found out about his energy mile theory in 1982, when Phipps, a young immigrant from England, went on a Wilderness Education Association training trip in Wyoming’s Teton Mountains that was led by the renowned outdoorsman.
Petzoldt first proposed his theory in his 1976 book Teton Trails to help backpackers plan trips and calculate their energy needs on mountain trails. “Petzoldt defined one energy mile as the energy required to walk one mile on the flat. He recommended adding two energy miles for every 1,000 feet of elevation gain, so a person hiking one mile and 1,000 feet upward would use the equivalent of three energy miles,” Phipps said.
Petzoldt’s energy mile theory was just a reflection of the mountaineer’s “gut feeling,” Phipps said. The theory had never been tested in a laboratory before the study began in WCU’s Exercise Physiology Laboratory in the spring of 2010, Phipps said.
To determine the validity of the theory, the study measured the energy cost and perceived exertion for walking on flat ground, with and without a 44.5-pound backpack, and up an elevation gain of 1,000 feet, with and without the backpack, through the collection of metabolic data, Phipps said.
Twenty-four student, faculty and staff volunteers, including 12 males and 12 females, went through four testing sessions as the research continued into fall semester of 2010. The study results showed that the additional energy cost for ascending 1,000 feet ranged from 1.34 to 2.02 energy mile equivalents, for an average of about 1.6 miles, compared to Petzoldt’s use of two energy miles for each 1,000 feet. The range revealed by the study was due to the “hikers’” personal weight differences, Phipps said.
“It is remarkable that Petzoldt’s energy mile theory is so close to the actual energy cost measured during our study,” Phipps said. “In the field of outdoor education, it’s important for leaders to include an estimation of energy requirements during the planning of hiking trips.”
Phipps said the energy required for hiking up steep mountain trails would vary for individuals and groups, and the variables of the trail would also factor in, but he recommends that backpackers stick with Petzoldt’s idea of adding two energy miles for every 1,000 feet of elevation gain when planning trips.
Petzoldt, the founder of the National Outdoor Leadership School who is considered to be the father of outdoor education in the United States, later amended his theory, stating that 1,000 feet of elevation gain is equivalent to four miles worth of energy for trail novices with expedition packs in the Tetons. Petzoldt suggested adding three energy miles — instead of two — per 1,000 feet of elevation gain in the North Carolina mountains when he visited the WCU campus to teach a WEA expedition course in 1987, Phipps said.
An article detailing the study titled “The Validity of Petzoldt’s Energy Mile Theory” has been published in the Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education and Leadership.
The Friends of the Library will hold its annual book sale Thursday, June 9, though Saturday, June 11, at the Albert Carlton-Cashiers Community Library.
The summer sale offers additional bargains, and shoppers will find a selection of hardback and paperback fiction, non-fiction, books-on-tape, CDs and videos.
All proceeds from the sale are used to purchase additional materials for the library.
A new book club will meet at Southwestern Community College’s Cashiers Center starting at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, June 14.
The club will have both afternoon and early evening meetings and the first meeting June 14 begins at 6 p.m. and features Thrive: Finding Happiness the Blue Zones Way by National Geographic journalist Dan Buettner. The book is available at Chapter 2 in Cashiers.
An Afternoon with Bill McClendon will be held 3 p.m. on Wednesday, June 22. McClendon, author of Dealmakers: Negotiating More Effectively Using Timeless Values, will speak and sign books at this informal event.
828.339.4497.
Broadway singer Jeri Sager takes the stage at 8 p.m. on Saturday, June 11, at the Martin Lipscomb Performing Arts Center in Highlands.
Sager will perform songs from “Cats,” “All That Jazz,” “Evita,” “Sweet Charity,” “Cabaret,” “Sound of Music” and many more. She is best known for her portrayal of “Grizabella” in “Cats,” Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Tony Award-winning musical.
Sager has enjoyed critical acclaim for her portrayal of Fantine in “Les Miserables” and Eva Peron in “Evita.”
In addition to her Broadway roles, Sager has worked other theatrical productions such as “City Of Angels,” “Brigadoon,” “West Side Story,” “Pippin,” “The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” and “Pump Boys and Dinettes.”
When not touring with her one-woman show, Sager can be seen co-hosting the cable TV show, RV Today.
828.526.9047.
Music lovers are starting to gather again each Friday at the historic Rickman Store in Franklin. Everyone is invited to join to play and sing along.
Sally DeLawter from the Nikwasi Dulcimer players opened the musical season and will continue offering her musical talents every week. Visitors will also be able to enjoy tunes by Richard Byrd on the mandolin, his grandson Tristan on the banjo and Arnold “Smoky” Burnette on the guitar.
The Friends of the Rickman Store invite the community to visit the historic building every Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. A special exhibit of collectibles will be in display.
The next Second Sunday Contra Dance will be held from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. on Sunday, June 12. The dance will be held at the new Jackson County Library Complex.
There will also be a potluck dinner following the dance. Please bring a covered dish, utensils and a water bottle.
The dance is free. No previous experience is required and all dances will be taught and walked through before dancing.
Local musicians will play music and all musicians in the community are invited to sit in with the band to learn how to play music for dancing.
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
The 27th-annual Dillsboro Arts and Music Festival is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, June 11.
Featured will be two dozen artisans, and attendees can browse and purchase a variety of crafts, including pottery, paintings, metal works, gourd art, hand-made jewelry, wood carvings, basket weaving, quilts and homemade soaps. There will also be raku and horse-hair pottery demonstrations all day beside Tree House Pottery.
Music will be provided by Rock III, a band from nearby Cullowhee, who will play from 12 to 3:30 p.m.
The Spirit of Appalachia will take the stage for live storytelling from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Food vendors will also be on hand, and free parking is available.
828.962.1911 or visit www.visitdillsboro.org.
Brandon Kirkley and the Firecrackers will play at 7 p.m. on June 16 on the University Center lawn at Western Carolina University. With a vocalist and guitar and bass players from Charlotte and Raleigh, pop-savvy BKTF mixes catchy lyrics, melodies, guitar solos and rhythm to inspire fans to pump their fists and sing along.
The show is part of WCU’s 2011 Summer Concert Series, held on Thursdays in June and July. The events are free and open to the public.
The 2011 Folkmoot Festival will take place July 21 through 31 throughout 12 counties in Western North Carolina, with new performances in Hickory and Jonesborough, Tenn.
Folkmoot performances can be seen in 16 cities, including Asheville, Hendersonville, Franklin, Burnsville, Maggie Valley and Waynesville.
Dancers and musicians in colorful traditional costumes from Trinidad, Croatia, Finland, Burundi, Puerto Rico, China, Guadeloupe, Turkey, Italy and the USA are expected to appear in more than 70 performances during the two-week event.
Performers travel to North Carolina for two weeks of entertainment, cultural exchange and education, to share cultural traditions with broad audiences and ensure these traditions are not lost in a fast-paced modern world.
Festivals like Folkmoot do not provide payment to the groups for their performances. Instead, all expenses are covered by the Festival, from the group’s arrival at a nearby international airport to their departure from the same airport two weeks later. Folkmoot staff will prepare 20,000 meals for performers and buses will travel more than 10,000 miles transporting groups to performances.
There are more than 300 international festivals like Folkmoot USA across the globe, but Folkmoot is one of only two similar international festivals in the United States.
The Parade of Nations is scheduled for Friday, July 22, from the historic courthouse down Main Street in Waynesville to the Waynesville First Baptist Church. The Folkmoot 5K Run/Walk & Kid’s Fun Run will be held Saturday, July 23, in front of the Folkmoot Friendship Center.
Haywood County Arts Council’s International Festival Day takes place on Saturday, July 30, and features Folkmoot performers on stages throughout the day. In addition to 21 ticketed public performances, Folkmoot dancers and musicians are featured at many other private and charitable performances during the two-week Folkmoot Festival.
For a full performance schedule and to purchase tickets, visit www.FolkmootUSA.org.
The Haywood County Arts Council’s Quilt Trails project will dedicate its sixth quilt block at 1:30 p.m. on Friday, June 10, at the historic Boone Orchard Apple House in Waynesville.
The Apple House block joins other blocks on the Shelton House in Waynesville, the Shook House, Lil’s, and Haywood institute in Clyde, and Town Hall in Maggie Valley.
The Boone Orchard block is based on the Biloxi or Fox Chase quilt pattern design and was selected by Waynesville artist Sylvia Everett. The block is a gift from the neighbors of the Apple House on Wolf Pen Mountain for allowing them to park at the Apple House in inclement winter weather.
The 8-foot by 8-foot 8 wooden block is the largest square on the Haywood County Quilt Trails and is comprised of four 4-foot by 4-foot blocks hung together. The block was painted by Sylvia Everett, Dawn Johnson, and Zibs Reiter.
The Boone Orchard Apple House was built around 1920 and was in operation until 2010. At one point, some 20 varieties of apples were produced on the adjacent land.
As the Haywood County Trail grows, self-guided trails maps will be developed to direct sightseers to view these icons of tradition.
For up-to-date information and block locations visit www.haywoodquilttrails.org.
The Museum of North Carolina Handicrafts at historic Shelton House in Waynesville will host three Civil War commemorative groups from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 11.
The Civil War tribute event is held in conjunction with Downtown Waynesville Association’s Appalachian Lifestyles Celebration. The occasion will also recognize the 150th anniversary of the Civil War.
The Shelton House, built in 1875 by Civil War veteran Stephen Jehu Shelton and his wife Mahala Conley Shelton, will be open and free to the public all day. Curator Jackie Stephens and docents will conduct guided tours until 4 p.m. Civil War era clothing and memorabilia will be on display during the house tour.
The 25th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, Company C, will be re-enacting the enlistment of the 25th NC Infantry, Company C, which was the second unit to enlist in Haywood County. The group will set up a recruitment table and portray new raw recruits and how they may have been trained when they first enlisted.
The Captain Julius Welch, Camp 229, Sons of Confederate Veterans, will also participate. The group will set up a memorial of 294 replicas of the Southern Cross of Honor, engraved with each soldier’s name, rank, unit and company, cause of death, and death date. The chapter will also display a large interpretive board with information about soldiers, Haywood County’s part in the Civil War, and photographs.
The third assembly of Civil War partners will be representatives from Mountain Rose, Chapter 33, Order of the Confederate Rose, an auxiliary of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. Members will dress in period clothing.
The Blue Ridge Watermedia Society will meet from 6:45 until 9 p.m. on June 14 at Haywood Community College.
The meeting will feature Jo Ridge Kelley, who will demonstrate the various techniques she uses to get started, mix the correct values and color temperatures and accent with textural impasto using painting knives.
Jo is also offering a Plein Air Painting Workshop in July and September.
828.456.3003 or 828.226.0549 or visit www.joridgekelley.com.
Haywood Community College will offer a “Handles and Guards” course through the American Bladesmith Society, 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. on June 13 through 17. Students will be instructed on how to create a knife of professional quality.
Students should know how to forge and grind blades before taking this course and should have at least two finished blades to bring to class. The course will cover handles, guards, butt caps, decorative file work, spiral dagger handles, silver inlay work, finished blades and more.
The course will be taught by John Perry, a mastersmith since 2005. His specialties are investment grade and working with folders, Bowies, and hunters.
The cost is $700. 828.565.4243.
The Jackson County Green Energy Park is offering a new round of blacksmithing courses this summer, taught by blacksmith Brock Martin.
Beginning knife-making and an introduction to medieval chainmaille armor will be held from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 to 7 p.m. on June 11 and 12.
The knife-making course is designed for adults with some blacksmithing experience. Participants will learn the proper technique for making knives ranging from butter knives, to larger examples.
The chainmaille course focuses on the creation of chainmaille weaves. Students will learn the European 4-in-1 weave and will begin creating a chainmaille hood, or coif.
A parent-child blacksmith class will be held from 1 to 6 p.m. on June 18 and 19.
The course is designed as a cooperative learning experience, where participants will learn basic blacksmithing through the creation of a simple object. From there, they will apply those skills to create larger tools, such as a grill set.
828.631.0271 or visit www.jcgep.org/events.html.
Cashiers’ Groovin’ on the Green concert series, now in its third year, opens at 6:30 p.m. on June 10, at the Village Commons. Shows will continue on selected Friday evenings into October.
The 2011 season opens June 10 with return artists Moonshine Babies, a popular group with concertgoers.
New to Groovin’ this year is the opportunity for organizations and businesses to sponsor specific concerts. RE/MAX balloon rides will be available at the June 10 concert, weather permitting.
The free concerts begin at 6:30 p.m. rain or shine, at the Village Commons on Frank Allen Road. For complete descriptions of each evening and additional information on bands and sponsors, visit cashiersvalleyleaffest.com and click on Groovin’ on the Green.
A drumming circle for all ages will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, June 12, on the Courthouse Plaza on Main Street in downtown Franklin.
Mary Eileen Ferrick is the circle leader. People may bring their own drums and rhythm instruments, or choose from the wide assortment provided, including African djembes, guiros, shakers, and buffalo drums. Large take-home “can” drums will be provided for the children. Bring a lawn chair and sit in the shade of the Macon County Courthouse. Peppermint Patti’s ice cream is sold at all Council outdoor concerts.
This program is part of the Arts Council’s Sunday-on-the-Square series, which ends June 19 with an old-time sing-along and a demonstration by Franklin’s Umbutu a cappella ensemble.
828.524.7683, or visit www.artscouncilofmacon.org.
To the Editor:
As the opening of the new Jackson County Library Complex draws near, it brings to mind the many contributions The Smoky Mountain News made during difficult as well as good times. From timely editorials, feature articles, and the printing of many letters, this newspaper truly served the community as it fostered a gorgeous new facility.
I am especially appreciative of the feature article regarding “The Sounds of Jackson County” which appeared five years and six months ago. I call attention to a mini “Sounds of Jackson County” to be performed this coming Saturday evening (June 11) at 7 p.m. in the new community room at the library. Performers are Will Peebles with the GamelanGunung Biru (Blue Ridge Gamelan), the Deitz Family Band, Liberty Baptist Choir, “Sugar” Barnes with Dave Magill, the Smoky Mountain Brass Quintet, and the Sweet Tater Band with Betty Brown.
Linda Watson
Cullowhee
To the Editor:
Jeff Minick has always provided informative and insightful book reviews. His review of Till We Have Faces reads like a college presentation. His contributions are a valuable addition to your fine newspaper.
Bill Sullivan
Raliegh
To the Editor:
It was shocking to read the article entitled “Crossing the Line” published June 1 in The Smoky Mountain News. This was classic tabloid reporting with more drama than fact reporting, filled with innuendos and hypotheticals.
It is impossible to take Ms. Ellison’s article seriously additionally because of her amazingly inadequate writing skills. It is astounding The Smoky Mountain News would publish an article riddled with poor grammar (i.e., incomplete sentences and entire paragraphs without a clear subject matter) and illogical progression of reporting “details.” The element of foul, four-letter words only emphasized the desperate nature of this article in portraying a seemingly judicial injustice, according to Ms. Ellison.
There is no room for tawdry sensationalist journalism in a local newspaper which prides itself on reporting facts to keep the community abreast of information and events.
Carrie Hahn
Franklin
When planting season is upon us, gardeners and farmers of all stripes are making plans and counting seeds. As long-time gardeners and seed savers know, the winter months make for great opportunities to do both easily from the comfort of an easy chair beside the woodstove.
Last growing season I raised a couple of varieties of squash and a watermelon that were big hits at the market and here at home, so I kept the best fruits for next year’s seed and set them in the cool storage in October to fully mature. A chilly winter day is perfect for cutting into a still beautiful squash and seeing next season’s opportunities hanging in sweet-smelling strands of vegetable innards. I carefully separated the magical capsules from the slippery gook and set them in a container of water for a relaxing bath, the first of their life’s projects accomplished.
After a day or two of soaking and a good rinse, I set my five types of seed aside on dinner plates in the kitchen where they’ll sit for a couple weeks while being irregularly rearranged for optimum drying and personal reassurances that spring would return. A week quickly passed and soon we were hosting a get-together at our home, whereupon my wife instructed me to “move my seed mess” from the dining table, which I dutifully did for the safety and protection of the seeds, as well as my own personal welfare. I marched the plates into the living room and tucked them out of the way on top of our wine cabinet, sliding aside the old, Chinese-style vase that my wife rescued from her grandmother’s throw-outs 40 years ago. A week or so later I remembered that they were still there and went to finish the job only to discover the seeds missing — all of them — everything. Ouch. The picture of a starving hill family flashed in front of my eyes at the thought of next year’s crop being robbed before even being planted.
After the initial shock had worn off and my heart rate returned to more normal levels, I began to examine the evidence. I suspected a visiting (or resident) mouse had made off with the goods in the still of the night and had stashed those hundreds of gene packets somewhere for later distribution and use, probably as dinner. Like Sherlock Holmes, I set out to recover the stolen merchandise the little nemesis had absconded. Applying my best mouse-like intelligence, I began my search, checking both the obvious and the most dubious of possible caches, but I came up empty-handed.
The search continued for days, even reluctantly enlisting the help of my wife, who found the whole parade quite amusing, and thinking the thieving rodent’s antics were “cute.” A couple of days later, when I had all but given up my quest, I went to move the old vase from the top of the wine cabinet for some overdo dusting. The chunky, sentimental artifact has graced our homes all these years, and we’ve often kidded about taking our “Ming” vase to the “Antiques Road Show” and discovering it to be a rare piece worth thousands, if not millions.
As I moved the vase aside from the oncoming cloth, I heard a strange rattle from deep inside. I shook it once again and turned it over to find the source of the noise and seeds of several shapes and sizes began to flow from its mouth, my stash of garden hopes being found.
That silly old vase may not be a rare antique nor worth the stack of cash we’ve joked about, but this year it proved itself quite valuable, and I doubt I’ll ever look at it in quite the same way again, thanks to my own neglect and one small, forward-looking mouse.
(John Beckman is a farmer, builder and part-time seed saver in Cullowhee. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..)
A free class covering the basics of food preservation will be offered at the Albert Carlton-Cashiers Community Library from 1 to 3 p.m. Thursday, June 9.
Cheryl Beck, a family and consumer sciences agent with the N.C. Cooperative Extension Service, will show how to can, freeze and dry food. Resource materials will be provided. Beck will test dial pressure gauge canner lids from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. Lids should be checked each year for accuracy. Registration is required by June 7.
828.586.4009
The Jackson Paper Manufacturing Company has awarded a $500 scholarship to Candace Erin Ridley, a senior at Smoky Mountain High School.
Her father, Merle Ridley, is a Jackson Paper employee. Ridley will attend Southwestern Community College in the physical therapist assistant program.
Jackson Paper has awarded scholarships annually since 1992. Recipients are selected based on grade point average, letters of recommendation, honors and activities.
This month’s lunch with the League of Women Voters of Macon County will focus on a presentation discussing the background and mission of the organization.
The event will be held at 12 p.m. Thursday, June 16, at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Franklin in the Celebration Hall in the lower level. Lunch is $5 by reservation made by June 14.
The program will begin at 12:15 p.m.
The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan political organization that promotes participation in government and public policy through education and advocacy. It regularly meets on the second Thursday of every month at Tartan Hall in Franklin. Meetings are open to the public.
828.371.0527
Those interested in the history of world wars can join a new discussion group launched by Western Carolina University history Professor David Dorondo.
The group, called Carolina Round Table, will address various aspects of world wars and the interwar period covering the years from 1914 to 1945. It will focus on the military history, political, economic, technological and social factors associated with the wars. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Registration is open for the Meet Me in the Smokies Open at Sequoyah National Golf Club.
The event will have a gunshot start at 10 a.m. on Saturday, June 18.
This captain’s choice golf tournament is $100 per golfer. Each registration includes 18 holes of golf, a boxed lunch at the start of the round, refreshments throughout the round, an Oakley backpack, Oakley T-shirt, post round sit-down dinner, prizes and more. There will be prizes for hole-in-ones, men and women’s longest drives, first and second place foursome in two flights and more.
Sponsorship opportunities are available starting at $75 and ending at $1,000, and have limited availability. Volunteer opportunities available.
The tournament is hosted by the Cherokee Chamber of Commerce with a portion of the proceeds going to the Sequoyah National Junior Golf Program to teach Native American children the enjoyment and lifelong values of golf.
828-497-6700 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
The Human Race 5K Road Race/Walk is scheduled for 8 a.m. on June 11 at the Waynesville Middle School. The annual race is sponsored by the Haywood Jackson Volunteer Center.
Proceeds from the event will be used to help the center continue to connect volunteers and help educate seniors on Medicare. The Human Race was started in 2002 as a major source of financial support. For four years, the race was a hilly course around The Shelton House.
In 2006, the race moved to the Waynesville Middle School and now features a course in Waynesville and Hazelwood. It is a lollipop-shaped loop, the flattest and fastest race in Western North Carolina during the month of June.
The first 130 people to register will receive a T-shirt, and are eligible for category.
828.356.2833 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
The 4-H Summer Golf Day Camp will be each Thursday beginning June 9 through July 28. The day camp is free and will meet at the Junaluska Golf Course.
4-H is a community of young people from ages five to nineteen who “learn by doing.” Though a historically agriculture focused organization, 4-H today focuses on citizenship, healthy living and science programs. There are six 4-H clubs in Haywood County, and numerous day camps and special interest programs are offered to promote youth leadership and life skills. The 4-H Summer Golf Day Camp is an opportunity for novice golfers to learn the basics of golfing. The 4-H dress code will be followed at the golf course.
Participants must bring their own equipment, including balls, tees, clubs, snacks and water bottle. Registration deadline is June 9. 828.456.3575. Limited spots are available.
A short online survey to help guide a new comprehensive bicycle plan for Haywood County is available for completion at www.surveymonkey.com/s/Haywo-odBikePlan. The survey may be shared with anyone, including children, residing in Haywood County.
Input received from the survey will help identify both obstacles and opportunities for cyclists of all abilities and ages — including commuters, recreational riders, racers and touring cyclists. To alternately print out the survey and mail it in, or to learn more about the Haywood County bicycle plan, visit www.bicyclehaywoodnc.org/BikePlan.html.
Lifeguard training and group swimming lessons will be provided by Medwest Health & Fitness Center beginning June 2 and June 10, respectively.
In response to high demand, the American Red Cross Lifeguard Training Course will be offered again this summer from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. on June 2-3, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on June 4 and 11 and from 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. on June 5 and 12 at the Medwest Health & Fitness Center in Haywood County. All classes are required to achieve certification. Enrollment is $150 for members and $175 for nonmembers and includes all instructional materials and CPR certification.
The center will also be offering the American Red Cross group swimming program’s summer session, beginning June 10. Classes will be held on Friday evenings and Saturday mornings for eight weeks (except July 1 and 2 for the July 4 holiday) at the Medwest Health & Fitness Center. Enrollment is $30 for members and $50 for nonmembers.
828.452.8056
The Appalachian Trail Conservancy needs volunteers to eradicate invasive plants choking out native flora on the AT in Graham County on Friday, June 3, and Saturday, June 4.
Volunteers will target multiflora rose, Japanese stiltgrass, Chinese privet, autumn olive and other weeds known to occur around Stecoah Gap. Volunteers get a free guidebook for the identification and control of invasive exotic plants, as well as a T-shirt, in appreciation for their efforts.
Meet at 10 a.m. at the Stecoah Gap parking area on N.C. 143 (seven miles east of Robbinsville). Bring lunch, two quarts of water, rain gear, sturdy hiking boots or shoes, durable pants and long sleeve shirts.
The second workshop coincides with the 2011 National Trails Day.
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 828.254.3708.
A discussion about the future of Pinnacle Park outside Sylva will be held at 9 a.m. Saturday, June 4, followed by a short hike from the Fisher Creek trailhead.
The 1,100 acre tract once served as Sylva’s source of drinking water and has now been preserved.
Those interested in the hiking and biking potential of the park, as well as those who use the park for birding, wildlife and native plant activities, are encouraged to attend, and future volunteer opportunities will be discussed. Information from the discussion will help the town of Sylva and the Pinnacle Park Foundation determine future park needs.
The Jackson County Greenways Project is organizing the event in honor of National Trails Day.
828.293.3053 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
“Growing Up Wild,” a free professional development workshop sponsored by Haywood Soil and Water Conservation District for educators who work with young children, will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Wednesday, June 22, at the USDA Service Center in Waynesville.
Tanya Poole, an education specialist with the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, will teach the workshop. Participants will receive the activity guide Growing Up WILD: Exploring Nature with Young Children and six hours of renewal credits or .6 CEUs with the option of adding .4 with homework.
The workshop will be held downstairs at the center at 589 Raccoon Road, across from the Mountain Research Station. Participants should bring a bag lunch and wear comfortable clothes for outdoor activities. Call Gail Heathman 828.452.2741, extension 3, or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
“From Mowing to Growing,” a workshop with Sara Martin, a biology instructor at Haywood Community College with a B.A. in wildlife management, is scheduled for Saturday, June 4, as part of the Great Smoky Mountains Audubon Society summer program and event schedule.
A main goal of the Audubon society is to help the community create and preserve an appropriate habitat for butterflies, dragonflies, flying squirrels, bees and more in their own backyards.
The “From Mowing to Growing” workshop will focus on transforming a backyard into a habitat of native flowers and plants. Martin will help participants “go native,” so they should bring a photograph of their backyard, as well as a notebook, pen and packed lunch to the event.
The event will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Maggie Pavilion and costs $20.
828.550.5449.
The Main Street Mile, a series of 1-mile races highlighting the state’s Main Street Program, will hit the streets of Sylva Friday, June 3.
Sylva’s Main Street Mile course will start in Sylva’s Bridge Park, cross Grindstaff Cove Road and take a left on Central Street. The figure-8 route then takes runners to Brendle, Storybrook Lane and Bartlett Street.
Sylva’s leg of the Main Street Mile is being held in conjunction with the “Concert on the Creek” series held at Bridge Park. Race awards will be presented during the concert’s first intermission. Blue Ridge Multi Sports, Main Street Mile’s race producers, will donate $2 from every race entry to the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce’s Concerts on the Creek Series.
Start times for a men’s and women’s heat will be staggered by approximately 15 minutes. Awards will be presented to the top 10 overall finishers. Results from each of the Main Street Mile Series races will be combined and calculated to determine the overall series winners. Runners must participate in at least three Main Street Mile events to be eligible for series awards.
Registration is $15 in advance or $20 day-of. www.MainStreetMiles.com or 828.400.5868.
The Watershed Association of the Tuckasegee River will hold its fifth-annual summer picnic at 6 p.m. Friday, June 10, on the banks of the Tuckasegee River at Carol’s Cabins (formerly Ward’s Cabins).
All members of the watershed association are urged to attend, and any others interested in learning more about the nonprofit organization that works with many others to help preserve the Tuckasegee River and its feeder streams.
Bring a dish to share. Soft drinks and tea furnished. RSVP to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 828.488.8418.
The annual summer membership meeting will be held on Monday, June 17, with the location to be announced.
A Mountain Black Bear Festival is set for June 10 and 11 at the Highlands Civic/Recreation Center, featuring exhibits, artisans and programs related to black bears.
• A free program on “co-existing with bears” will be held at 7 p.m. Friday, June 10, by renowned photographer Bill Lea, co-founder of the American Bear Association. One of Bill Lea’s large framed bear prints will be raffled off.
• From 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, there will be exhibits, fine art, crafters and bear experts, including Lea. A chainsaw carver will be there with his chainsaw and recent creations. Bear-oriented activities for kids will be provided by bear experts Anne Allison and Kathy Sherrard of Appalachian Bear Rescue. Fine art prints by Jan Lemmons and Robert Tino prints will be for sale, as well as other art and crafts.
• At 2 p.m., Joel and Kathy Zachry will present a program based on their book, Bears We’ve Met.
The cost of admission on Saturday is $2, with kids 12 and under free.
The program is sponsored by Jackson-Macon Conservation Alliance, which has launched the Bear Smart Initiative. Its mission is to “reduce conflicts between bears and humans and to promote their peaceful coexistence by fostering appreciation for bears, addressing the root causes of bear-related problems, and teaching principles for living safely with bears.”
828.526.0890, ext. 320.
It started out simply enough.
Fresh out of college on his new job in Vicksburg, Miss., on the banks of the mighty, muddy Mississippi, Bill Lea decided to try a new hobby. He laid down his fishing pole and picked up his camera.
“I had always fished, but the waters around Vicksburg were just too muddy,” Lea explained as the reason he decided, almost on a whim, to take up a new outdoor pastime that day.
Some 36 years later, Lea, who lives in Franklin, is a nationally recognized nature photographer, author and wildlife lecturer. More than 6,000 of his images have been featured in calendars, books, advertisements and other publications, including several works on the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, National Geographic books, Nature Conservancy, Outdoor Life and Field and Stream magazines.
During his nearly four decades behind the lens, Lea has spent countless hours watching and observing wildlife.
“I learned about animals as I photographed them. And as I photographed them, I kind of formed a bond with each one,” Lea said. “When you spend hours in the woods with an animal, you get to know them individually.”
Lea studied forestry in college and got a job with the forest service shortly after graduating. He moved to the mountains of WNC in 1983 to work for the Pisgah National Forest and then later the Nantahala National Forest.
Lea’s love of photography and wildlife, especially black bears, grew as he encountered wild creatures on his job and during his outdoor photo sessions. Lea learned through his interaction with wild creatures, that each animal, even those of the same species, had its own distinctive features and personalities and that seemed especially true of the black bears.
“That’s what I really love about photographing animals,” Lea said. “For instance, take a bear. Look in their eyes. You can tell they’re thinking about something. They look at you with intelligence. Bears have personalities. Some are playful, some aren’t. And if you study them, you’ll see there is a lot of similarities between them and dogs.”
Lea began to specialize in studying and photographing black bears in the mid-1990s and about 10 years later, he took an early retirement from the forest service to devote full time to his hobby-turned-career.
An eye-opening bear encounter produced some of his favorite bear photographs and impressed Lea with the black bear‘s ingenuity and intelligence. As he watched through his camera lens, a female bear trying to cross a swift-moving mountain stream laid down a log and walked across it, then repositioned the log and walked back across.
The budding photographer was astonished by the bear’s purposeful action. He still speaks with unabashed appreciation for what he saw the bear do many years ago. “She was using a tool. That indicates the highest form of intelligence,” Lea said.
Lea now dedicates much of his life to “speaking for the bears.”
“They have given me so much pleasure in my life. I have so much gratitude. It’s a way to pay back to them for what they have brought into my life and to rectify an injustice that has been done to them,” Lea explained.
Lea is co-founder of the American Bear Association, a non-profit foundation that operates a wildlife sanctuary in Minnesota.
Recently, Lea is lending his expertise to the new Bear Smart Initiative, an effort by the Jackson-Macon Conservation Alliance to educate residents and visitors how to safely co-exist with bears.
“As more and more people move into bear habitat, there will be more and more human/bear encounters,” Lea said. “Bears have nowhere else they can move, so we humans need to learn to co-exist peacefully with our black bear neighbors.”
A quiet-spoken, reserved individual who doesn’t relish public speaking or the limelight, Lea has become a frequent lecturer to civic groups. His entertaining, informational presentations are accompanied by slides of his outstanding bear photos. Lea uses these talks, his writings and photos, to teach people about bears because he feels he must give a voice to the bears since “they cannot speak for themselves.”
“So often, bears end up being killed because of what people think they are going to do, as opposed to what they are going to do. They are very misunderstood by most people because of negative human attitudes, some created by the media and taxidermists poses. They are not ferocious, unpredictable animals as they are commonly portrayed,” Lea emphasized. “They are not cuddly Teddy bears, but black bears are not grizzlies either. They are shy and tolerant and they are predictable.”
Bears are also “very intelligent, and very, very curious” with extremely good memories, according to Lea. All those attributes need to be considered when living or camping in bear country. Lea also warns that feeding bears is not helpful to them. It may be fun for humans at first and enable them to enjoy seeing bears up close, but in the end, teaching bears to eat human food is a bad thing for both humans and bears.
“By closely watching the bears in the wild and at the Minnesota sanctuary in particular, it has taught us why you should never feed bears,” Lea said. “There’s always going to be someone who has intolerant feelings toward the bears. And by feeding them, you are basically setting them up for death.”
Lea hopes his work with the J-MCA Bear Smart Initiative and his other efforts will eventually pay off in a better relationship between humans and bears that will help keep both safe.
“Our best avenue is to teach people about bears…and once people understand them, they will be greeted with respect. With education, we can make a difference, changing attitudes, one person at a time.”
Karen Spencer is a free-lance writer who divides her time between homes in Cashiers and the Florida panhandle. A descendant of early Smoky Mountain pioneers, her life-long interest and fascination with wild black bears began as a child on excursions with her “Tennessee cousins” in the mountains of Eastern Tennessee and Western North Carolina. Her journalism career has included jobs at both large and small newspapers, as well as specialty publications, in several states.
By Karen Spencer • Contributing writer
See Bill Lea’s work
Bill Lea has authored two books, Great Smoky Mountains Wildlife Portfolio, and, Cades Cove: Window to a Secret World.
An artist’s rendition of one of Lea’s bear images is featured on the Tennessee wildlife license plate, and he contributed photos and information for a the recently-published book, Frequently Asked Questions About Smoky Mountain Black Bears, written to inform park visitors about how to enjoy the park and its black bear inhabitants by the Great Smoky Mountain Association.
Author Alice Sink will read from her new book, Hidden History of the Western North Carolina Mountains, at 1 p.m. on June 4 at City Lights bookstore in Sylva.
In her book, Sink introduces readers to the people, customs and folklore of the region, exploring old-time traditions, real-life characters and tall tales.
Sink is author of several other books on North Carolina history, including The Hidden History of the Piedmont Triad and Wicked Greensboro.
828.586.9499.
Jackson County writer Thomas Crowe and illustrator Marilyn K. Dawson will celebrate the publication of their children’s book, The Wake Up Man, at Grateful Steps Publishing and Bookshop at 159 S. Lexington Ave. in Asheville at 10:30 a.m. on June 4.
In the tradition of the tale of “The Sandman,” poet and author Crowe and illustrator Dawson have brought to life an imaginary sequel to the Sandman myth with the creation of The Wake Up Man.
Since it is the Sandman who visits each night and with magic dust puts people to sleep, it is only logical, therefore, that there should be a “Wake Up Man” who is responsible — with his own brand of magic — or waking us up. This is the tale of who the Wake Up Man is and how he came to be
The public is welcome and refreshments will be served along with the reading, talk and booksigning. Children are welcome at both the evening and following morning’s events.