River lovers will have new access option | Mt. Airy News

2022-09-25 18:41:07 By : Ms. Sophia Feng

Residents are seen enjoying the Yadkin River near Elkin. A new river access to the Ararat River will be established off of Park Drive in Mount Airy and the Burch River Access has been converted from a lease to a perpetual easement, signifying access will be available for years to come.

The scenic beauty of Surry County is hard to ignore. County Parks and Recreation Director Daniel White has said that the unique location of Surry County and its proximity to four rivers makes the community an ideal place to live and enjoy nature.

A change is in the works that is going to allow greater river access to the residents of the county and tourists alike.

County Manager Chris Knopf told the county board of commissioners that a 23-year lease agreement exists with the Colwell family for river access at Burch Station where the Yadkin and Mitchell rivers meet. The county asked the landowners to convert that lease into a perpetual easement so that future residents and guests can enjoy the rivers and they have agreed to do so.

“I would like to thank Clyde and Pat Colwell, they are the reason that access that is so heavily used is there. They had the foresight to acquire that, and they have been so good to work with. They are very good community-minded citizens,” Commissioner Eddie Harris added.

Secondly, there will be a new river access to the Ararat River courtesy of Luck Stone, the new owners of Ararat Rock, and the efforts of Commissioner Larry Johnson. Funding for this project will come from existing Invest in Surry funds that were previously set aside for river access improvement with the board’s approval.

Having met with Charlie and Richard Luck of Luck Stone, Johnson said collaborating with them had been a breeze. “It would be an honor for me to make a motion that we accept the memo of understanding pertaining to Luck Stone with access being at the corner of Sheep Farm Road and Park Drive,” Johnson moved, and the board accepted his resolution unanimously to create the Luck Stone River Access.

Knopf informed the board the Bill Hall bridge across the Mitchell River on Zephyr Mountain Park Road is scheduled to be replaced. The new bridge will take up more space and the NCDOT offered the county $6,000 to purchase the additional land needed to complete the bridge work.

Commissioner Eddie Harris felt this was a low-ball offer and having had some experience with these negotiations he advised the county to seek $10,000 instead which Knopf notified the board this week was accepted by the state. “A guy told me one time; I told him I was negotiating for the county, and I asked him why did he think the property was worth so much? He said: because I have it and you want it,” he recalled.

“We have had more interest in river access than we have in many, many years,” Commissioner Van Tucker said while acknowledging he has been trying to work on a new river access project too. He said these accesses can be hard to get as landowners may be hesitant to give up their land, so he offered hearty congratulations to his colleagues on their success.

In other board of commissioner’s news:

– The commissioners approved a budget amendment. Additional funds were requested and approved for the Surry County Sheriff’s Office building in the amount of $78,000 to replace a chiller.

– Funds were also requested to be added to the EMS budget for a new Ford E-450 Type III chassis and a remount of the ambulance box onto said chassis. The amount to cover these costs is projected at $116,598 and was approved.

– Jessica Montgomery of Public Works had three items for the board. She informed that the skid-steer her team uses at the recycling shed at the county landfill needs new grapples. The board approved the purchase of the grapple and the delivery fee totaling $4,095.

She also sent through two sets of bid proposals for the board to consider. The first was for roof repair at the county’s Resource Center on State Street in Mount Airy. There are several leaks in the building that are causing damage and Gallaher Management Group Inc. was approved to do the repair work estimated at $172,900. This total includes unexpected repairs to foam closures that were found during inspection in need of needed replacing.

The Judicial Center in Dobson needs weatherproofing and $80,000 was budgeted for the repair. Montgomery recommended Foxhill Construction do the work as well as make repairs to a wall in the front of the building for an estimated total of $68,627.

Both approved bids are estimated to come in under the amounts previously budgeted for these repairs.

– Mark Willis of the office of substance abuse recovery has requested converting a temporary part-time position with the Community Transport Program into a full-time position. He noted the program transported more than 1,200 patients in its first year of operation and the reclassification to full-time is needed to meet demand. Funding for the position would be paid for from Partner’s Health Management fund and opioid settlement monies after current federal funding ends in 2024.

– County tax administrator sent word to the commissioners that in just two months of collecting property taxes the residents of Surry County have already paid approximately 60% of what is due. Commissioner Larry Johnson has previously, and again on this occasion, thanked the taxpayers for their diligence in on-time payment.

– The Office of State Budget and Management sent notification that House Bill 103 passed that contained $75,000 earmarked for the YESurry Entrepreneurial Competition. The competition is held annually among local high school students who design a small business and then compete at their local schools, with the winners at each school moving on to countywide competition. This year’s winner was Grace Phillips of North Surry High for Grace Got Cakes.

– Finally, the board opted to not act on a bill totaling $23,410.70 for 32 transports of COVID-19 patients. The costs for these transports had been assumed by the federal government but the fund for Surry County to pay out from has been depleted. The commissioners had several questions about these charges and asked the item to be removed from the Consent agenda for future consideration.

The scenic beauty of Surry County is hard to ignore. County Parks and Recreation Director Daniel White has said that the unique location of Surry County and its proximity to four rivers makes the community an ideal place to live and enjoy nature.

A change is in the works that is going to allow greater river access to the residents of the county and tourists alike.

County Manager Chris Knopf told the county board of commissioners that a 23-year lease agreement exists with the Colwell family for river access at Burch Station where the Yadkin and Mitchell rivers meet. The county asked the landowners to convert that lease into a perpetual easement so that future residents and guests can enjoy the rivers and they have agreed to do so.

“I would like to thank Clyde and Pat Colwell, they are the reason that access that is so heavily used is there. They had the foresight to acquire that, and they have been so good to work with. They are very good community-minded citizens,” Commissioner Eddie Harris added.

Secondly, there will be a new river access to the Ararat River courtesy of Luck Stone, the new owners of Ararat Rock, and the efforts of Commissioner Larry Johnson. Funding for this project will come from existing Invest in Surry funds that were previously set aside for river access improvement with the board’s approval.

Having met with Charlie and Richard Luck of Luck Stone, Johnson said collaborating with them had been a breeze. “It would be an honor for me to make a motion that we accept the memo of understanding pertaining to Luck Stone with access being at the corner of Sheep Farm Road and Park Drive,” Johnson moved, and the board accepted his resolution unanimously to create the Luck Stone River Access.

Knopf informed the board the Bill Hall bridge across the Mitchell River on Zephyr Mountain Park Road is scheduled to be replaced. The new bridge will take up more space and the NCDOT offered the county $6,000 to purchase the additional land needed to complete the bridge work.

Commissioner Eddie Harris felt this was a low-ball offer and having had some experience with these negotiations he advised the county to seek $10,000 instead which Knopf notified the board this week was accepted by the state. “A guy told me one time; I told him I was negotiating for the county, and I asked him why did he think the property was worth so much? He said: because I have it and you want it,” he recalled.

“We have had more interest in river access than we have in many, many years,” Commissioner Van Tucker said while acknowledging he has been trying to work on a new river access project too. He said these accesses can be hard to get as landowners may be hesitant to give up their land, so he offered hearty congratulations to his colleagues on their success.

In other board of commissioner’s news:

– The commissioners approved a budget amendment. Additional funds were requested and approved for the Surry County Sheriff’s Office building in the amount of $78,000 to replace a chiller.

– Funds were also requested to be added to the EMS budget for a new Ford E-450 Type III chassis and a remount of the ambulance box onto said chassis. The amount to cover these costs is projected at $116,598 and was approved.

– Jessica Montgomery of Public Works had three items for the board. She informed that the skid-steer her team uses at the recycling shed at the county landfill needs new grapples. The board approved the purchase of the grapple and the delivery fee totaling $4,095.

She also sent through two sets of bid proposals for the board to consider. The first was for roof repair at the county’s Resource Center on State Street in Mount Airy. There are several leaks in the building that are causing damage and Gallaher Management Group Inc. was approved to do the repair work estimated at $172,900. This total includes unexpected repairs to foam closures that were found during inspection in need of needed replacing.

The Judicial Center in Dobson needs weatherproofing and $80,000 was budgeted for the repair. Montgomery recommended Foxhill Construction do the work as well as make repairs to a wall in the front of the building for an estimated total of $68,627.

Both approved bids are estimated to come in under the amounts previously budgeted for these repairs.

– Mark Willis of the office of substance abuse recovery has requested converting a temporary part-time position with the Community Transport Program into a full-time position. He noted the program transported more than 1,200 patients in its first year of operation and the reclassification to full-time is needed to meet demand. Funding for the position would be paid for from Partner’s Health Management fund and opioid settlement monies after current federal funding ends in 2024.

– County tax administrator sent word to the commissioners that in just two months of collecting property taxes the residents of Surry County have already paid approximately 60% of what is due. Commissioner Larry Johnson has previously, and again on this occasion, thanked the taxpayers for their diligence in on-time payment.

– The Office of State Budget and Management sent notification that House Bill 103 passed that contained $75,000 earmarked for the YESurry Entrepreneurial Competition. The competition is held annually among local high school students who design a small business and then compete at their local schools, with the winners at each school moving on to countywide competition. This year’s winner was Grace Phillips of North Surry High for Grace Got Cakes.

– Finally, the board opted to not act on a bill totaling $23,410.70 for 32 transports of COVID-19 patients. The costs for these transports had been assumed by the federal government but the fund for Surry County to pay out from has been depleted. The commissioners had several questions about these charges and asked the item to be removed from the Consent agenda for future consideration.

The following marriage licenses were issued in Surry County:

– Travid Edward Kinney, 28, of Carroll County, Virginia, to Brittany Nicole Payne, 27, of Carroll County.

– Dustin Alexander Goins, 30, of Surry County to Anita Marlene Mullis, 29, of Surry County.

– Marshall William Spencer, 25, of Carroll County, to Leigha Nicole Albert, 22, of Carroll County.

– Christopher Thomas Osborne, 56, of Wilkes County to Joy Lela Hinson, 46, of Surry County.

– Charles William Blankenship, 36, of Surry County to Tiffany Lynn Hale, 35, of Surry County.

– Guillermo Manuel Hernandez, 24, of Surry County to Adriana Landaverde, 21, of Surry County.

– James Joseph Rollins, 47, of Surry County to Lori Ellen Brannon, 53, of Surry County.

– Joseph Trent Dollyhigh, 48, of Surry County to Camellia Sonshine Allen, 40, of Union County.

– Christopher Allen Ferrell, 52, of Randolph County to Angelia Kay Carter, 53, of Randolph County.

– Lonnie Gray Booe Jr., 50, of Surry County to Dawn Marie Wood, 50, of Surry County.

– Jesus Aguliar Solano, 21, of Blanch County to Arelis Perivan Bautista, 18, of Surry County.

– Austin Storm Utt, 27, of Surry County to Emily Brook Martin Wilber, 23, of Surry County.

– Daniel Isiah Bowman, 41, of Surry County to Ashley Elizabeth Boles, 35, of Surry County.

– Kermit Mack Edwards, 43, of Alleghany County to Kimberly Ann Nichols, 41, of Surry County.

– Alan Lee Vaughn, 36, of Rockingham County to Ami Isaacs Mills, 41, of Carroll County.

– Christopher Austin Warren, 31, of Surry County to Catherine Anastasia Jenkins, 28, of Surry County.

– David William Fessenden III, 54, of Surry County to Patricia Elizabeth Meyer, 51, of Surry County.

– Sean Eric Wood, 50, of Surry County to Jessica Rae Llewellyn, 43, of Surry County.

– German Munoz Lopez, 23, of Surry County to Cindy Ojeda, 23, of Surry County.

– David Lee Owings, 37, of Surry County to Jill Nicole Eller, 37, of Wilkes County.

– Dylan Jared Slate, 26, of Surry County to Emerencia Kish, 24, of Surry County.

The North Carolina Department of Public Safety, Division of Adult Correction is seeking information on the whereabouts of the following individuals:

• Sabrina Walker Brooks, age 35, a white female wanted on probation violations who is on probation for two counts of felony obtaining property by false pretense;

• Cody Ryan McMillian, 30, a white male wanted on a post-release warrant who is on supervision for two counts felony possesson of methamphetamine, felony possession of a schedule I controlled substance, sell and deliver schedule II controlled substance and use/possession of drug paraphernalia;

• Cody Jackson Epperson, 43, a white male wanted on probation violations who is on probation for felony possession of heroin, resisting a public officer, shoplifting and use/possession of drug paraphernalia;

• Brenda Kay Easter Lawson, age 57, a white female wanted on probation violations and is on probation for level 2 driving while impaired.

View all probation absconders on the internet at http://webapps6.doc.state.nc.us/opi and click on absconders. Anyone with information on any probation absconders should contact Crime Stoppers at 786-4000, county probation at 719-2705, or the Mount Airy Police Department at 786-3535.

Good things supposedly come to those who wait, and for fans of a locally based dessert it’s been nearly three years since they’ve been able to experience the Surry County Sonker Festival.

That pause will end next Saturday when the festival returns after being cancelled in 2020 and 2021 because of the coronavirus.

The Oct. 1 event, scheduled from 1 to 5 p.m., offers a chance to savor sonkers — its namesake deep-dish fruit dessert that originated in this area — along with old-time and bluegrass music performed by The Roaring Gap Rattlers. Other attractions are to include flatfoot dancing, quilters, basketry, a pottery display, 18th- and 19th-century artifacts and more.

All this will take place against the backdrop of the historic (1799) Edwards-Franklin House at 4132 Haystack Road west of Mount Airy, to also be open for tours.

Next weekend’s gathering marks the 41st year of the Sonker Festival spearheaded by the Surry County Historical Society.

And Dr. Annette Ayers, the group’s president, indicated that the event basically will pick up where it left off in 2019.

“I think the greatest problem, of course, is personnel,” she said of organizing the group of volunteers needed to stage the festival each year. Some of the older participants no longer are available after its lengthy interruption, but they have been replaced by a new contingent.

“Actually, the weather is a big concern,” Ayers said of an early October mixed bag that can include chilly temperatures in addition to the possibility of rain.

“We do encourage everyone to bring a lawn chair,” she said, which typically creates a laid-back setting of folks seated around the front yard of the house eating sonkers and listening to the music.

Ayers added that the focal point of the festival — the sonkers — will be just as appealing as ever for the hundreds of people who might attend based on past turnouts.

Flavors to be available include blackberry, sweet potato, peach, strawberry and cherry. Sweet potato sonkers tend to the most popular, with strawberry close behind.

“And I can promise they’ll all be delicious,” Ayers said.

While the event itself is free and open to the public, the price of the sonkers will be $4 each, with beverages to be sold for $1. As many as 800 to 1,000 dishes of sonker have been doled out from large trays laid out on a table under a tent on the grounds of the Edwards-Franklin House.

Surry County Historical Society officials also are excited about the musical talent.

“They are people that are very renowned in traditional and bluegrass music,” Ayers said of The Roaring Gap Rattlers.

One of the musicians to be involved is Mecca Jackson Lowe.

“And I think they’re going to have a group of young people — the next generation of artists,” the Surry Historical Society official said. “I think that was wonderful to include younger people.”

Organizers are hoping for a good turnout at the festival, especially by first-time attendees.

In past years, people have made their way to the event from areas both locally and throughout the Southeast.

Publications will be available for purchase.

Ayers also mentioned that membership is open for the Surry County Historical Society, which begins at $25 per year and can be done by mail at P.O. Box 469, Mount Airy, NC, 27030.

In late September, the soil of the garden plot is cool and workable. The vegetables of onion sets, turnips, Siberian kale, mustard greens, collards, cabbage, and broccoli can be planted or set out. Use plenty of peat moss in the bottom of the furrows and for a root crop like turnips, place a layer of peat moss on the bottom and on top of the turnip seed. Use Plant-Tone or Garden-Tone organic vegetable food during the cold winter to side dress the vegetables and hill up the soil on both sides of the row. As the season gets colder, cover between the rows with a layer of crushed leaves.

The leaves of autumn are now falling. Stay ahead of them and pile them up to use for compost, mulch, blankets, protection as well as crushed leaves. If you pile them up, use a sprinkling can of water on them to prevent wind from blowing them around. Vacuum them up as you need them.

Snow predictions for Saint Michael’s Day

Saint Michael’s Day will be Wednesday, Sept. 28. Special weather lore on his day says that if the mighty oaks are filled with acorns on his day, the fields will be filled with snow on Christmas Day. Could it be possible to have a snow that covers the fields on Christmas Day? Yes, and it happened on Dec. 25, 2010 when we received an eight-inch snowfall. In Northampton County, my grandma’s old homeplace, they received 13 inches of snow. The prediction of Saint Michael could have a bit of truth in it. My grandma may not have known about Saint Michael, but she knew about acorns on the mighty oaks and had her prediction about them as they bounced off her tin roof in Northampton County. She always said that a yard full of acorns in late September meant plenty of snow covering the yard in winter. Could fogs in August and acorns in September connect with the snows of winter?

The tomato plants that will produce green tomatoes in October to be harvested just before frost now have tiny green tomatoes that are developing. Feed them with Tomato-Tone organic tomato food this week so they can have one more boost of food. Keep an eye on the first frost and gather the harvest of green tomatoes. Wrap them in sheets of newspaper and store them in a shallow box. Check them in the box every ten days for ripeness. Keep the tomatoes sheltered in a warm dry place in the house.

Making a maraschino cherry pound cake

This cake has cherries in the cake and also in the frosting which makes it moist as well as colorful. You will need one and a half cups of Crisco shortening, three cups of sugar, three forth cup of milk, six eggs (separate whites from yolks), half teaspoon baking powder, three and three fourths cups plain flour, one and a half teaspoons vanilla flavoring, one and a half teaspoons cherry flavoring, one half of a ten ounce jar of maraschino cherries (chop the cherries into small pieces and save juice for the frosting.) Cream the Crisco and sugar. Add milk and egg yolks and beat until smooth. Add the dry ingredients and mix thoroughly. Add the flavorings. Beat the egg whites until stiff and fold the chopped cherries into the egg whites and add to the mixture. Grease and flour a tube pan with Crisco shortening. Preheat oven to 275 degrees. Bake at 275 degrees until batter starts to rise then reduce temperature to 250 degrees and bake for two hours until cake is firm and a toothpick comes out clean. Cool completely before frosting. For the frosting, you will need three ounces of cream cheese, half stick light margarine, two cups 10X powdered sugar, one cup of chopped pecans, half of the ten ounce jar of chopped maraschino cherries, one teaspoon of cherry flavoring and juice from the cherries. Mix all the ingredients together except the juice from the cherries. Add only enough juice from the cherries to make the frosting smooth enough to spread.

American bee balm has long history

Bee balm has been a part of American history for more than 250 years and a part of the American Indian history for much longer than that. It was traditionally used by native Americans to sooth bronchial conditions, coughs, and colds. Leaves can be made into tonics and tea. The lavender and pink petals can be used in salads. When you trim back the bee balm for winter, trim back all the stems because next spring, the balm will produce a whole new season of stems, foliage, and flowers.

Splendor of September winding down

The calling card of September is now down to the last six days. We still have a few more weeks of comfortable weather and a bit of a nip in the night air to remind us that autumn is now with us. Days are still getting shorter by a minute each evening. Indian Summer is certainly being seen as well as felt. The wet dews are lingering each late September morning and the harvest of acorns is falling from mighty oaks. The season is slowly transitioning to future events of the first frost, colorful sunsets, and the departure of humming birds, as well as falling leaves as the autumn has officially arrived.

Row or bed of Siberian kale lasts all winter

Siberian Kale can now be planted in autumn’s garden plot. It is a tough, winter hardy green that will winter over. It can be be used as a salad or fresh cooked sweet greens. Seed of Siberian kale costs less than $3 an ounce and can be sown in rows or beds until the middle of October.

Preparing the Christmas cactus for a move

The Christmas cactus has been outside on the front porch since mid-May, and the first steps are being made to move all of them to the sunny living room where they will spend late autumn, winter, and early spring. The first step is to make sure they have enough cactus medium and to feed them with Flower-Tone organic flower food before they are moved inside in late October. Inside the house, they will bloom in late November. Inside the house, do not expose them to direct sunlight because this causes the foliage to turn reddish.

Still time to plant the flowering spring bulbs

The frost date is Oct. 15, and we usually don’t get a hard freeze until late in the month of November. That means you still have plenty of time to set out the spring flowering bulbs of daffodils, hyacinths, tulips, jonquils, narcissus, snowdrops, and crocus. Most hardwares, nurseries, and garden centers, as well as Home Depot, Lowe’s Home Improvement, Ace Hardware, and Walmart still have plenty of bulbs. You can buy them in mesh see-through bags or from individual bins. This makes it easy to inspect bulbs for rot or mold. Purchase a bag of bone meal or bulb booster to promote bulb growth and development. Apply a layer of peat moss when setting out bulbs.

Heating season near; keep filters ready

Autumn is now in its fourth day and we are in the beginning stage of the heating season. Many furnaces have already flexed their muscles or they will be in a few days. Keep several new filters on hand as the heating season gets underway. Change or clean filters once a month for a cleaner air flow and less dust in the home write the size of the filter on the side of the furnace with a black permanent marker so you won’t forget the size of filter to purchase.

Covering the air conditioner outside condenser

As the season of the furnace begins, the season of the air conditioner will soon be over. As the season of cooling comes to a close, cover the outside condenser unit with a vinyl cover to protect against winter temperatures and freezes. Find the size of the condenser and purchase a cover at a plumbing and heating contractor or Home Depot or Lowe’s Home Improvement, or at the dealer where your unit was purchased.

Organizing storage buildings for winter

The outdoor barn or shed during spring and summer becomes a storage area for tools, plant foods, peat moss, and supplies and as the gardening season moves along, it becomes filled and disorganized. This makes it difficult to keep up with objects you frequently need. As we approach the first days of autumn, it’s time to devote an afternoon to reorganizing the outdoor shed or barn and place lawn and garden tools in an order where they can be easily located to where you need them and they can be found when you need them. Remove everything from the building and sweep it out. Spray the area to control insect pests and critters. Replace the items in the order that you will need them next season. Leave rakes, snow shovels and tools for use in autumn and winter near the front of the barn or shed. Use control measures to prevent mice and other varmints from wintering over in the buildings.

“Tripped Up!” Jan: “I always get sick the night before I leave on a trip.” Fran: “Then why don’t you leave a day earlier?”

“Polluted Space.” Professor: “Do you know what will happen if we keep polluting outer space?” Student: “Yes, the Milky Way will curdle.”

“Alienated.” People are always criticizing my looks. Last week, I had a blind date, and she went home and reported having a close encounter of the third kind!

“Return to Sender!” Teacher: “Mrs. Philton, your son is a constant troublemaker. How do you put up with him?” Mrs. Philton: “I can’t, that’s why I send him to school!”

Protecting American bee balm in winter

Autumn has arrived and it is time to prepare the American bee balm for a long winter’s nap. It can winter over on the back of the front porch, but it will need covering and protection from harsh winter winds and freezing temperatures. You will need to trim back tall growth to about six to eight inches. Move the plant to the rear of the porch away from winds and exposure to extreme temperatures. Use several sheets of cardboard glued together place the cardboard on top of the bee balm and then place a dry towel on the cardboard. Remove them each day when temperatures warm up. Water lightly every week to keep container from freezing.

The students of Millennium Charter Academy in Mount Airy participated in their 2022 Service Day Thursday.

Students were split between projects on campus and at off-campus sites such as the Riverside Park and the L. H. Jones Family Resource Center.

“One of the ways we can build virtue and cultivate good character in our students is through an emphasis on service,” said Dr. Jarrid K. Looney, director of the upper school at Millennium Charter Academy.

MCA teacher Brandon Rouse echoed Looney, “Service Day reflects our commitment to developing our students’ character and giving back to our community.”

“We hope that our students will gain an appreciation for the importance of community service and an awareness of how rewarding serving your community can be. By partnering with local nonprofits and community organizations, we’re encouraging our students to continue helping their neighbors even after the service day ends,” he said.

Service is a requirement for students of Millennium Charter Academy. Rouse explained beginning with 2022-2023 school year, freshmen, sophomores, and juniors are all required to perform and log ten hours of community service each year in order to participate in extracurricular activities.

Incentivizing good acts from the lower-level students with rewards that may further benefit them appears to be a solution where everyone benefits for the students, educators, and the community at large. Educators and parents can agree that an engaged student is one who will have a greater likelihood of success both inside and out of the classroom.

For the upper-level students, seniors have their own set of requirements and will need to log an additional 22 hours, for a total of 32 hours of community service and submit their hours to both their advisors and instructor for government.

Dr. Looney said the goal is to have well rounded citizens exiting MCA’s halls and becoming the future leaders of Surry County. “We hope that by working alongside our students to serve our communities we can help our students to develop a love for our communities and their fellow citizens.”

Editor’s Note: Community Comment is a feature of The Mount Airy News, presenting commentary from community leaders in Mount Airy and Surry County.

As a district, we know that safety is at the forefront of the minds of our students, parents, and staff. In the wake of one tragedy after another across the nation, many in our community rightly wonder what can be done in our area to ensure these acts of violence do not reach our schools. Surry County Schools commits to taking preemptive safety measures and having continued conversations evaluating our approach to safety in schools.

The Surry County Board of Education Safety Committee exists to provide Board of Education members, Senior Cabinet, law enforcement, and district personnel an opportunity to meet and identify safety solutions for schools and offices. Over the summer, the committee met three times to identify current needs and phased solutions. As a result of our safety committee, Surry County Schools will focus on enhancing communication during a safety event, provide additional staff training with the Surry County Sheriff’s Office on addressing daily safety protocols, providing additional uniformed officers at elementary school campuses, adding more keyless entry systems, and increasing the number of security cameras.

At this time, the district is evaluating all funding sources to place additional officers at all school campuses. Surry County Schools has nine school resource officers. The goal is to have a uniformed officer at each of our elementary schools to protect students in the case of an emergency.

As a result of the meetings, the committee identified the need to create a safety communication campaign that reaffirms safety norms for students and staff through visual cues. Our communications department was charged with developing this campaign over the summer. This fall, schools will participate in practice lockdown drills across all campuses to further prepare for emergency situations. The department has also created a video for the community that outlines safety norms in our schools and what families can expect when they visit one of our campuses. The goal of this video is to be transparent with our families and let them know what the district is doing to keep students and staff safe.

Along with the videos, another facet of the campaign is to promote the use of the Say Something Anonymous Reporting System. Last year, Surry County Schools began using the Say Something tool to allow students, staff, and families to submit secure, anonymous safety concerns. The district urges anyone to submit a tip if they are worried about someone, see something concerning on social media, or overhear a threat to submit a confidential tip to a licensed counselor who can help. The tip line can be accessed at 1-844-5-SAY NOW, online at www.saysomething.net, or on the Say Something mobile app.

The Surry County Schools is upgrading our mobile app to offer push notifications to our students, staff, and families. These push notifications will be able to alert anyone of a lockdown, shelter in place, or any other situation that may be occurring at their selected school. The mobile app will be available for download on the App Store and Google Play this fall.

If there is one thing we want our community to know, it is this: Surry County Schools is committed to being transparent with our families and providing learning environments that prioritize safety, trust, and wellness for our students. We look forward to ongoing discussions to look at our needs and resources to provide the best schools for our community.

PILOT MOUNTAIN — East Surry improved to 6-0 on the season and 2-0 in Foothills 2A Conference play with a 63-24 win over North Surry.

Everything clicked for the Cardinals early as they reached the end zone of each of their first five possessions while holding the Greyhounds scoreless for most of the first half. The visiting Hounds got on a roll late in the second quarter by returning a kickoff for a touchdown, then stopped East twice before halftime.

North Surry scored on its first two drives of the second half, but wasn’t able to slow the East offense down as the Cards forced a running clock at the end of the third quarter.

“Obviously we’ll never be satisfied with a loss, but I thought we came out of halftime and challenged our kids to fight through adversity. We as a team also wanted to finish strong for Ty,” said North Surry coach Jackson Smith. Greyhound junior Ty Gwyn went down with an injury during the second quarter and was carted off as a precaution.

“We had a lot of young guys having to step up because of injuries and we just asked our seniors to take the second and put us on an upward trend heading into the rest of our conference play, and they did that. They left it all out there against a really good team with fantastic players and a really fantastic coaching staff.”

It was a huge night for both passing offenses. East Surry’s Folger Boaz finished with a career-high 30 completions on 39 attempts (76.9%) for 300 yards. Boaz also tied a career high in passing touchdowns with seven.

With Boaz’s fourth touchdown pass of the game, which went to Luke Brown for 42 yards, he became East Surry’s all-time leader in career yards passing. The previous record was set by Folger’s older brother Jefferson (Class of 2020) at 6,738 yards.

“What an honor it’s been to coach both of them, and how special it is for them as competitive brothers to be No. 1 and No. 2,” said East Surry coach Trent Lowman. “Folger just broke the school’s all-time record set by his own brother, who just happened to be the NCHSAA Male Athlete of the Year, a state champion QB, and the holder of several NCHSAA records. That’s a pretty cool accomplishment.”

Folger Boaz is already Surry County’s leader in career completions with 463. He trails Jefferson in career passing touchdowns by 18, and trails North Surry’s Chase Swartz (Class of 2020) in career yards passing by 118.

Seven Cardinal players recorded receptions and five caught a touchdown pass. Kyle Zinn was the team’s leader in yards receiving with five catches for 72 yards. Luke Brown was next with three catches for 65 yards and two touchdowns, followed by Stephen Brantley with five catches for 59 yards and a touchdown, Colby Johnson with eight catches for 57 yards and a touchdown, Brett Clayton with three catches for 34 yards and two touchdowns, Matthew Keener with four catches for 10 yards, and Gabriel Harpe with two catches for 3 yards.

Greyhound quarterback Colton Allen set a new career high for the second-consecutive week. Against East, the sophomore completed 13-of-30 passes (43.3%) for 264 yards, two touchdowns and one interception.

Jahreece Lynch was North Surry’s leading receiver in what Smith called “hands down one of the most dominant high school performances I’ve ever seen.”

Lynch caught 10 passes for 218 yards and two touchdowns. Five of his receptions were for at least 20 yards, and three were for 39 or more yards. Lynch also scored North Surry’s first touchdown of the game by returning a kickoff 76 yards through a minefield of Cardinal defenders.

Makiyon Woodbury added one catch for 27 yards, Fisher Leftwich had one catch for 11 yards and Talan Vernon had one catch for seven yards.

According to North Surry football guru Tyler Beamer, Friday’s performance marks Lynch’s third career game of at least 200 yards receiving. He set his career high with 232 yards against Surry Central in March 2021, then recorded 220 yards receiving against North Forsyth in October 2021.

“We knew that Jahreece is a heck-of-a ballplayer, and we knew that stopping him was not going to be easy,” Lowman said. “He proved tonight why he’s got the attention that he has. He played an amazing game.

“I think we walk away from this defensively realizing we’ve got to tighten up in the secondary and lock in to get better there.”

The Cardinal defense started the game with a takeaway. After East scored first on a 9-play 4:55 drive, Will Jones picked off Allen’s first pass and returned it to the Greyhound 5-yard line. Boaz found Johnson the very next play, and Joshua Parker hit his first of six PATs to make it 14-0.

East Surry added another takeaway early in the fourth quarter when Clayton forced a fumble that was recovered by Hatcher Hamm for a touchdown.

The Cardinals contained North Surry’s running game and held the Hounds to 42 yards rushing on 31 attempts. Clayton led East with 4.0 sacks, and Hamm added one. Hamm and Zinn each added 2.0 tackles for a loss.

Jake Simmons rushed 21 times for 57 yards for North Surry, and Allen recorded 10 carries for -15 yards and a 1-yard touchdown.

Though the Cardinals elected to pass on more than 75% of their offensive plays, East also found success on the ground. Clayton had East’s only rushing touchdown by going for 73 yards to make it 21-0 in the first quarter. He was also the Cards’ leading rusher with 89 yards on two carries.

Boaz added three carries for 76 yards, and Zinn had six carries for 60 yards. The Cardinals’ 225 yards rushing brought the team’s total yardage to 525 for the game.

North Surry got on the board late in the first half. After East scored to go up 35-0, Lynch returned the ensuing kickoff 76 yards for a touchdown. East Surry went into the red zone on its next drive and looked to score when Boaz connected with Brown. North’s Zeke Moore chased Brown down, forced a fumble and recovered it himself.

The Hounds had to punt deep in their own territory, but came up with another stop to get the ball back before halftime. However, a Brantley punt put North Surry on its own 4-yard line, so the Greyhounds elected to just run out the clock.

North Surry opened the second half with an 11-play 3:14 drive that ended with Allen finding Lynch for a 6-yard touchdown. The Hounds converted on fourth down twice during the drive.

Vernon nearly had the Greyhounds’ second kickoff returned for a touchdown after the Cards scored again, but East’s Daniel Villasenor saved a touchdown by dragging Vernon down on the Cardinal 17. North Surry used the excellent field position to set up an Allen rushing touchdown.

The Greyhound offense got into a better rhythm after halftime and the Hounds scored on three of their first four second-half possessions.

“I think it was a slow start,” Smith said. “We just had to find ways to get Jahreece Lynch the ball, and we did that and he did a lot of it on his own. I can’t describe the performance he put on. I know the scoreboard says otherwise, but he put on a historic performance for North Surry football and we’re hoping to really build on that.

“We’re going to meet on Sunday and come up with ways we can cultivate the defense and the offense to put our kids in a better position to win.”

The Cardinal offense continued to dominate in the third quarter. All three of East Surry’s third-quarter possessions ended with touchdowns, with Boaz connecting with Brantley, Brown and Clayton in the end zone.

East Surry’s 525 yards of offense all came in the first three quarters.

“We try to find things each week to get better at, so we had our things we wanted to get better at tonight and I feel like we did for the most part,” Lowman said.

North Surry started the fourth quarter with the ball, then Hamm scored a 13-yard fumble recovery less than two minutes in. North was able to add another touchdown in the fourth, with Allen finding Lynch for a 39-yard TD pass, then Surry’s Vernon recovered an onside kick for the Hounds.

Though the Greyhounds didn’t score again after Vernon’s recovery, Smith applauded his team’s resilience Friday night.

“We fought for four quarters, and we’re going to continue to do that. We’re going to continue to hold our kids to that standard and try to put some more tallies in the win column,” Smith said.

“They (East Surry) have every right to be at the top of that 2A poll. They have a fantastic coaching staff and personnel, and they have a lot of great things coming their way for the rest of the season. For us to come out in the second half and compete against them – that’s something we can build on.”

Conference play continues next week for both teams. East Surry (6-0, 2-0 FH2A) hosts Wilkes Central (4-2, 2-0 FH2A) in a battle of two unbeaten FH2A teams. North Surry (1-4, 0-2 FH2A) looks to break into the win column in conference play when they host Forbush (1-4, 1-0 FH2A).

7:05 ESHS 7-0 – Kyle Zinn 10-yard TD reception on Folger Boaz pass, Joshua Parker PAT

6:44 ESHS 14-0 – Colby Johnson 5-yard TD reception on Folger Boaz pass, Joshua Parker PAT

1:28 ESHS 21-0 – Brett Clayton 73-yard rush TD, Joshua Parker PAT

7:07 ESHS 27-0 – Brett Clayton 10-yard TD reception on Folger Boaz pass, PAT no good

4:36 ESHS 35-0 – Luke Brown 42-yard TD reception on Folger Boaz pass, Joshua Parker 2-point conversion rush

4:18 NSHS 35-6 – Jahreece Lynch 76-yard kickoff return for a TD, PAT no good

8:46 NSHS 35-12 – Jahreece Lynch 6-yard TD reception on Colton Allen pass, 2-point conversion no good

6:04 ESHS 42-12 – Stephen Brantley 22-yard TD reception on Folger Boaz pass, Joshua Parker PAT

4:56 NSHS 42-18 – Colton Allen 1-yard rush TD, 2-point conversion no good

4:29 ESHS 49-18 – Luke Brown 13-yard TD reception on Folger Boaz pass, Joshua Parker PAT

0:00 ESHS 56-18 – Brett Clayton 19-yard TD reception on Folger Boaz pass, Joshua Parker PAT

10:34 ESHS 63-18 – Hatcher Hamm 13-yard fumble recovery for a touchdown after Brett Clayton forced fumble, Joshua Parker PAT

6:04 NSHS 63-24 – Jahreece Lynch 39-yard TD reception on Colton Allen pass, 2-point conversion no good

Two weeks ago Surry County resident Melissa Hiatt requested the county commissioners consider enacting a 45-day moratorium on rezoning and planning requests that involve discount or dollar stores.

Hiatt is one of the leaders of the Sheltontown group that recently won a victory over such development in their community, when the board voted against a rezoning request by a development firm to put a Dollar General at the intersection of Quaker Road and Westfield Road.

At the board’s Monday meeting the commissioners heard polling data from the opposition to retail development but also for the first time heard pushback from a resident saying public opinion has no place policing private enterprise.

Word had spread of the latest targeted location for another Dollar General at Westfield Road and Indian Grove Church Road, less than one mile from the last attempted location. Hiatt said it is a rumor no longer and that residents have pieced together the facts as neighbors talked to neighbors about the potential land moves taking place.

For some of them it is not deja vu all over again because they never got over it the first time. The previous attempt by Teramore Development LLC to have the corner lot at Quaker and Westfield Roads rezoned for commercial were defeated by the county commissioners in July.

At the board’s next meeting Hiatt again explained her standing objections based on that plan and asked the board to consider issuing the moratorium on rezoning, or planning board requests pertaining to “like-fashioned” retailers such as Family Dollar or Dollar Tree to permit the county time to reexamine its land use policy. Proximity of other like retailers to the one planned would alone negate the necessity of adding another discount retailer and may dissuade future developers from considering placing a full-service grocery store in a saturated area.

Two weeks removed from the request there was no agenda item pertaining to the moratorium at this week’s board meeting. A lack of movement did nothing to calm the nerves of residents fearing what may be coming.

“We thought we made it abundantly clear we do not want their store,” Teresa Levia said of Teramore Development LLC and their previous efforts to rezone in Sheltontown. Speaking in support of the moratorium and controlled growth however does not mean she is anti-development or business she said stating, “I am for free enterprise.”

Heather Moore, of Moore’s General Store, agreed and presented the board with data from a poll their group had conducted and found the answers to be consistent amongst themselves: the same percentage answered the same way across the questions.

Of the nearly 100 participants of the survey, she reported that 94% supported a county ordinance on like-fashioned retailers and that 97% said those stores hurt locally owned businesses. The survey was confirmed to have been open to all members of the public and Moore said it remains open at this time.

The survey is found at: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/35TLV6C

Like a politician with a polished stump speech, the opposition has talking points they use to make their case. Often referenced is a moratorium in Wilmington on such retail growth that never came to be. The city council there dropped the proposed language change to their land use plan when the final version was approved.

It was reported that council members perceived that there was not enough research presented on the issue and it was removed from the final language that was approved. Melissa Hiatt said she has spoken to local representatives there who have told her the issue will be revisited.

“There appeared to be no consensus on council concerning those requirements,” a city spokesperson explained in an email that was cited by the Port City Daily of Wilmington on the same date. Melissa Hiatt said Friday she has had conversations with local authorities and that they are “continuing their efforts” to make a change.

Free will vs. public want

In a new twist to the recent discussions, there was an opponent to those seeking to limit dollar-type stores. Angela Leonard said her parents had worked hard to get the money together to open a business and that after many years they retired due to health reasons. That land though is her family’s and if they wanted to open a new business on land they own, and have owned, she feels that is their right to do so.

Leonard was the first to give voice to the counterargument that individual liberties are being infringed upon by the side opposing the dollar-style stores. She asked if it was fair for residents to have such power over the potential growth or expansion of private businesses.

Moore’s General Store is often mentioned as an example of one of the existing businesses that could be hurt by new retail grown, but Leonard asked if they too would be subject to judgment on the merits of expansion by the collective opinions of the neighborhood. She went a step further asking the board rhetorically if such opposition from residents may one day follow to home improvement projects as well.

The survey that was shown to the commissioners showed that on almost all questions the answers were 90% the same – meaning Leonard knew walking up to the podium she would be speaking for a minority point of view, but she felt that was exactly the point. She asked the board, “Who is looking out for the citizens who are afraid of the backlash and may be scared to speak out?”

William Lawrence sees it differently and was one of the property owners of the home on Quaker Road where Teramore Development LLC last attempted a new location.

He noted the strong opposition and the dozens of yellow signs that had dotted Sheltontown as perhaps being part of what changed the outcome of that scenario.

Townships and communities that lack strong representation are being targeted by Teramore, he claimed, adding that not all communities have the strength to coalesce as Sheltontown did for a coordinated fight. He feels residents have a right to have a say about the quality of life in their communities.

• A Dobson woman was arrested Tuesday afternoon as a fugitive from justice in Mount Airy and jailed under a large secured bond, according to city police reports.

Amy Wall Riddle, 46, of 446 Roy Stanley Road, was encountered by officers during a suspicious-person call at a residence on Junction Street, and they found that her name had been entered in a national crime database as being wanted in Patrick County, Virginia, on an unspecified matter.

Riddle was confined in the Surry County Jail under a $20,000 secured bond and is scheduled to appear in District Court in Dobson on Oct. 17.

• A possible break-in attempt occurred Tuesday at the residence of Amanda Gail Bledsoe on Northwood Drive, where an unknown object was used to break a rear window. The damage was put at $200.

• A man who allegedly hit his girlfriend in the face with a lighter, causing her lip to bleed, and choked her was jailed without privilege of bond on Sept. 15.

Markus Evan Beamer, 28, listed as homeless, is accused of assault on a female, identified as Brittany Michelle Jackson, also homeless.

The incident occurred in a roadway area on North Main Street at West Pine Street. Beamer is scheduled to be in Surry District Court Monday.

• Camper and Mobile Home Supply, a business on Merita Street, was the scene of a break-in discovered on Sept. 14, which involved the attic of the building being entered in order to gain access to the interior. Nothing was listed as stolen, but police records indicate that damage was caused to ceiling tiles.

• A break-in involving a felonious larceny was discovered on Sept. 10 at Mayberry Portable Buildings in the 1000 block of North Andy Griffith Parkway, where equipment and other property worth thousands of dollars was taken after a lock was cut.

Included were DeWalt products listed as an air compressor, a table saw, miter saw, an impact driver, drills, a skill saw, five power tool batteries and five power tool battery chargers; a Honda generator; a Craftsman tool box with miscellaneous tools; an Rx skill saw; a Flex impact driver; a Little Giant collapsible ladder; Romex wiring cable; and three bags containing miscellaneous wiring tools.

The monetary loss from the crime totaled $7,920.

The official opening ceremony of Mayberry Days is usually a joyous occasion, with plenty of laughs and jokes, introduction of the show’s stars and other entertainers in town to put on shows, and the mayor’s proclamation recognizing Mayberry Days.

This year’s opening had all of that, but plenty of tears as well. Tears of emotion when describing friendships, and tears of longing and grief as fans said good-bye to one of “The Andy Griffith Show’s” favorite stars.

Perhaps the most emotional part of the opening ceremony was the Betty Lynn memorial. Lynn, famous for her portrayal of Thelma Lou and a Mount Airy resident for more than 15 years, passed away in October. Tanya Jones, executive director of the Surry Arts Council and a close friend of Lynn, said earlier this year that, instead of a memorial service held immediately after Lynn’s death, she wanted to include the service in this year’s Mayberry Days so that her fans could take part.

Many of those fans packed the Historic Earle Theatre Friday morning, with a standing-room only audience for both the opening ceremonies and the memorial to Lynn.

That service featured images of Lynn from her life — including pictures of her youth, on set with Andy Griffith and Don Knotts, promotional and on-set photos from various films and television shows she appeared in, along with photo spreads and other pictures. While the photos faded one to another, a recording of the song “Precious Memories,” sung by Andy Griffith, played over the theater’s speakers.

Among the crowd were fans of “The Andy Griffith Show” — some dressed as their favorite Mayberry character, or at least the character they most resembled — others dressed in Mount Airy or Mayberry t-shirts, and nearly everyone there watched in rapt attention, the only sounds that of Griffith’s deep baritone voice and the occasional sniffling or quiet sobbing from Lynn’s fans and friends.

Shortly prior to the memorial presentation, Jones and Allan Newsome, a long-time Floyd the Barber tribute artist and host of the long-running podcast “Two Chairs No Waiting,” led the opening ceremony. Guests who were in town — those who appeared on the show, their family members, or other entertainers here to put on a presentation for Mayberry Days fans — took their introductions, some making remarks, others simply acknowledging the fans.

Toward the end of the ceremony, after the mayor’s proclamation for the annual event, Jones became emotional as she described the person who would be this year’s You’re the Cats award winner, recognizing someone or some group which has made significant contributions to Mayberry Days and the effort in keeping the spirit of Mayberry, and the memories of those actors who starred in the show, alive.

Jones recalled how she had even played a role in his meeting the woman who would become his wife before revealing Jeff Koontz was winner.

Koontz said afterward he was shocked to be named the award-winner.

“I’m just a volunteer,” he said of his role in the annual gathering of the Mayberry faithful. Koontz, who lives in Brevard with his wife, Claire Armbruster, said he began volunteering with Mayberry Days in 1990, during the first such gathering when it was just a one-day event.

And he confirmed that Jones did, indeed, play a role in he and his wife meeting.

“She introduced us,” he said, adding they had been married since 2000. “I owe that to Tanya.”

While several hundred Mayberry fans were inside the Earle Theatre for the morning’s ceremonies, hundreds more were already outside, walking Main Street, taking in the sights and doing some shopping.

Among the sights many were checking out were no less than four autos made up to look like Sheriff Andy Taylor’s squad car, all parked along Main Street, while additional such cars patrolled the street.

Walt McClelland, of Johnston, Pennsylvania, was among those in town for the festival — an annual sojourn he makes with his wife and their Ford Galaxie gussied up just like one of Andy Taylor’s old squad cars.

“I bring that car down every year,” he said of the squad car, adorned with a life-sized photo of Deputy Fife in the back seat, along with pictures and flyers detailing places McClelland had taken the car. “We’ve been here every year since 2010,” he said. McClelland said he spends a good bit of the day sitting in a folding chair, next to his car, while others come along and sit next to him, ask questions about the car, striking up conversations about “The Andy Griffith Show” and untold other subjects that pop up.

Mike Pyburn and Pete Taggett were two local musicians spending their day on Main Street, next to Pyburn’s 1931 Ford Model A, while the two of them strummed a few bluegrass tunes — Pyburn on the claw hammer banjo and Taggett on the washtub bass.

Pyburn, who is retired, said he spends some time most days on Main Street, playing his music for anyone who passes by.

“I usually get a smile from people who pass by, which is all I can ask for,” he said. Pyburn said he regularly played in the downtown gazebo, but construction work at the partially collapsed Main Oak building is too much competition.

“My throat’s not strong enough to sing over that,” he said, so he moved several blocks down the street, where he and Taggett were set up on Friday.

There, Sue Creager, of Springfield, Ohio, was fascinated with the washtub bass, getting an impromptu lesson on playing the instrument from Taggett, and even a few tips on how to build her own when she returns home.

“I can’t get over the sound,” Creager said several times after stroking the long string of the instrument. Her husband, Kevin Creager, said his wife plays the dulcimer, though she may be pursuing a new interest in the washtub bass.

Kevin Creager said he and his wife have made several trips to Mount Airy, but his is the first time they’ve been able to visit the town during Mayberry Days.

“Usually, we’re working. But now we’re both retired, so we were able to come,” he said, both clearly having a good time.

And why not? Even during an emotional opening earlier in the day, Newsome, the ceremony’s emcee and resident Floyd the Barber, put it succinctly when he described what Mayberry Days means to Andy Griffith Show fans.

“It’s like going to Disney World.”

https://www.mtairynews.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/MTA092222V.pdf

Regulatory entanglements regarding a sign initially disallowed for a new body shop in Mount Airy didn’t end with an August vote permitting it — now the owner must remove a banner supporting a candidate who aided him.

Frank Fleming recently had the banner placed on a metal sign structure in the parking lot of a former Winn-Dixie supermarket on Merita Street where he is developing the shop — a $2 million endeavor that will create jobs.

It states, “Jon Cawley For Mayor.”

Fleming says the banner was erected in response to the present city commissioner and mayoral candidate backing his efforts to finally get the existing sign approved after a lengthy ordeal surrounding municipal regulations which almost wound up in Surry Superior Court.

But a new wrinkle has materialized with Fleming being told to remove the political banner, which — yes — also violates a city ordinance, as was earlier the case with the metal sign structure. The longtime local businessman was advised of this latest development by Chuck Morris, Mount Airy’s codes enforcement officer.

“He called me yesterday,” Fleming related Thursday.

“I didn’t know there was a banner ordinance,” said the shop owner, who added that he would not have had it installed if he was aware such a regulation existed. He has been given until next Wednesday to remove the banner.

Fleming said he simply was trying to boost the candidacy of a person who assisted him during every step of the ordeal to get the metal sign structure approved.

“Jon played a big role in helping to teach me and guiding me in all this stuff,” said the local businessman, also a veteran modified race car driver of 43 years, who had little knowledge of local government beforehand.

Fleming had been denied a permit to re-use the existing sign framework Winn-Dixie left behind because it exceeded a 15-foot height limit imposed for new business developments under updated, appearance-minded municipal regulations adopted in 2016.

This led to the recent emergence of an amendment that altered distance requirements for such non-conforming signs which ultimately allowed Fleming to utilize the old one — already wired and sitting on a concrete foundation.

The Mount Airy Board of Commissioners approved that amendment in a late-August vote as a huge crowd of Fleming supporters — including state Rep. Sarah Stevens — watched from the audience.

Fleming mentioned repeatedly Thursday that he does not want to step on the toes of anyone at City Hall. He appreciates the attention everyone devoted to the sign case, even those who didn’t support his position, including members of the Mount Airy Zoning Board of Adjustment whose action led to a possible Superior Court appeal.

Yet Fleming thinks Cawley deserves extra support for his efforts in the sign issue and the sentiments behind that.

“Jon Cawley is for the citizens of this town,” the shop owner commented, including owners of businesses such as himself. Fleming has long operated his body shop from a location on Springs Road and many see the new project on Merita Street as serving to improve a long-unsightly area.

After becoming aware of the sign denial and learning that Fleming, a self-described “competitor” who planned to fight the initial ruling, Cawley assured him, “I’m going to help you all I can.” The veteran commissioner agreed that it made sense for the existing sign to be re-used, Fleming said.

His motive in erecting the banner during recent days was not to become a focal point of this year’s municipal election in which Cawley, Mount Airy’s longest-serving council member, is running against Mayor Ron Niland.

“I’ve never been a very political person,” Fleming said. “I’ve never got into politics too much.”

It was more a matter of timing.

Since the refurbishing of the old metal sign and its listing of the new body shop will take two to three months to complete, Fleming saw this as an ideal time to put up the banner promoting Cawley’s candidacy in the meantime.

However, the city regulatory bureaucracy has nixed that.

On Thursday, Morris, the codes officer, cited a restriction listed under Section 9.3-Temporary Signs in the City of Mount Airy Municipal Code of Ordinances. It states in part that such signs “shall not be affixed to a permanent sign or its supporting structure, including both building-mounted and freestanding permanent signs.”

The ordinance also makes specific reference to banners, which generally are limited to those promoting community events — while apparently ruling out ones that are political in nature.

Although the majority of the commissioners eventually came around to Cawley’s side, it was he who stood alone at first in supporting him, Fleming said.

His backing of Cawley is not intended as any disrespect toward the present mayor, Fleming stressed.

“Ron Niland has been nothing but good to me,” he said.

However, the whole sign episode has revealed special characteristics on Cawley’s part which Fleming believes are needed locally.

“Jon Cawley will be good for the citizens of Mount Airy,” the shop owner believes, if elected to its top position.

“I just think that without Jon Cawley,” Fleming asserted, “our city, our local government, won’t be as good.” `

EAST BEND — Forbush extended its undefeated streak by taking down Surry Central 4-0 on Sept. 21.

The Falcons’ offensive barrage threatened to score early, but the Golden Eagles held out for more than 25 minutes in the first half. Forbush finally broke free and scored in the 26th minute before adding another quick goal less than three minutes later.

Following the break, a rejuvenated Central squad switched to attack mode and put pressure on Forbush’s back line. The Eagles were held scoreless despite playing with new energy, and Forbush only needed a small opening to strike for a third time. One final goal in the closing minutes of the match led to a 4-0 Falcons win.

Forbush coach Seth Davis, who recorded career win No. 300 in Wednesday’s Foothills 2A Conference match, credited the team’s strong start for their success against Surry Central.

“I think that was it: coming out with some energy,” Davis said. “Getting around the corners on them a little bit and getting balls in service in the box, and we put a couple of those shots away. I don’t think you put those shots away every game – curling one into the back post and one under the crossbar doesn’t happen all the time. Things bounced our way.

“Coach [Adan] Garcia is a really good coach and they were really prepared, but they were down a guy tonight. We knew that, and it’ll be a different game there if they can get their guy back and have their whole team. It’ll be tough.”

Central (3-6-1, 1-1 FH2A) has been without one of its only two senior players, Eliazar “Eli” Gonzalez, for much of the 2022 season. Gonzalez is Surry Central’s only returning All-Region or All-Conference player from 2021 season.

“We’re still trying to figure things out as a team,” Coach Garcia said. “I’m not going to put any of our losses on one player. We’re still trying to mix some players around to try to fill Eli’s spot because his shoes are big to fill. That made us try things a little bit different, and unfortunately we slacked off a little bit too much in the first half. We gave them two crucial possessions that we lost in the middle and they hit us.”

Gonzalez’s absence has impacted Central’s ability to create offense, as some of the players Coach Garcia would like to use to make runs up the sidelines are needed at center mid. The Eagles only took one shot in the opening half against Forbush, and even that was taken by Daniel Urquiza from 40 yards out.

Central spent most of the first half either fending off Forbush attacks or possessing the ball on defense. Keeping possession in its defensive third was dangerous for Central, and Forbush even managed to get a steal and shot on goal less than 30 seconds after the opening whistle.

Forbush (8-0-1, 3-0 FH2A) did well to take away Central’s passing lanes and keep the Eagles from making sudden counters. Falcon senior Axel Garcia set up the home team’s opening goal this way. Axel picked off a pass from Central’s back line, then found teammate Omar Arzate to his left. Arzate settled, cut back to his right and fired a shot into the back of the net.

Three minutes later, Donovan Mingus intercepted a Central attempt to pass horizontally and shot from 30 yards out. The Falcon’s shot sailed perfectly over the hands of Eagle keeper Jose Marquez and just under the crossbar.

A 2-0 halftime lead wasn’t enough to comfort Davis. Even though the Falcons are one of only three unbeaten teams in the 2A West, as well as the only FH2A team that hasn’t lost a conference match, they have still had issues with consistency this season.

“We’ve been hit or miss,” Davis said. “We’ve played 40 minutes about every game pretty well, and the other 40 have been a little lackluster. If you come to see us one half you’re like, ‘Hey, this team’s pretty beatable,’ but if you see the other half, ‘This team is going places.’”

Central came out fighting in the second half. Striker Luke Creed quickly worked his way up the right sideline with Luis Gonzalez, but the Eagles were held without a shot. Soon after, Tino Martinez was able to cross in from the left to Creed and the sophomore got a shot off but it wasn’t on frame.

Forbush had its chances to strike in the second half, but possession was more balanced compared to the Falcon-dominated first half. Coach Garcia mentioned a change in formation, going from a 4-4-2 to a 3-4-3, but said the true difference between halves was the Golden Eagles’ sense of urgency.

“In the first half we were kind of relaxed and were passing it too safe in the back,” Coach Garcia said. “We got out of the half three or four times maybe. At halftime we as coaches told the guys that we had to have that sense of urgency or we were just going to play a lot of defense again. It showed because, even though most of our shots weren’t on frame, we were pressing them.”

Forbush goalkeeper Freddy Pena kept the clean sheet with a pair of second-half saves. The keeper also left his line to intercept crosses before Central could set up a shot.

Play was stopped deep in Falcon territory with 10 minutes left on the clock, and one player from each team was sent off with a yellow card. From here, Forbush earned a throw-in and progressed up its left sideline. Arzate created separation between himself and Golden Eagle defenders before sending a through ball ahead to Gabriel Angulo.

After chasing down the through ball, Angulo crossed to an open Axel Garcia to finish in the center. Garcia added another goal in the 78th minute to round out the 4-0 final score.

“That second half was a lot better for us all around, but one mistake cost us and it brought down our mood unfortunately,” Coach Garcia said. “We have a young team and it brought their heads down and allowed that final goal.”

Forbush picks up its third shutout victory of the season, while Central was held scoreless for the third consecutive match. The Eagles haven’t been playing just any teams, though, as their last three matches have been against MaxPreps’ No. 1-ranked team in the 1A West (Mount Airy), No. 6 team in the 3A West (Hibriten) and the No. 3 team in the 2A West (Forbush).

Surry Central’s strength of schedule is the third-highest of the 52 teams in the 2A West.

Coach Garcia was happy with the team’s second-half performance and said the Eagles’ top concern is maintaining that same mentality as they move forward.

“For some reason, the second half just seems to be our better one – even against Hibriten on Monday,” Coach Garcia said. “We need to have that sense of urgency in the first half because so far we’re losing games in the first half. We give up a couple of simple goals and we just can’t get them back. By the time we get our sense of urgency it’s a little too late.”

Davis had a similar message for his squad as they look to repeat as conference champions. Consistency is a big focus for the Falcons, which the coach believes will come with more time playing as a group.

“We’re still putting it together,” Davis said. “I think I’m trusting more guys…and guys are starting to understand more things. Just like Surry Central we’re young, so it takes a while.”

26’ Forbush 1-0, Omar Arzate from Axel Garcia assist

29’ Forbush 2-0, Donovan Mingus unassisted

70’ Forbush 3-0, Axel Garcia from Gabriel Angulo assist

78’ Forbush 4-0, Axel Garcia unassisted

During this year’s Mayberry Days festivities The Mount Airy Museum of Regional History will have on display the tuba that Andy Griffith played while a member of the Grace Moravian Church.

Griffith’s first foray into music was with the trombone. He worked to save money to purchase the instrument then approached Rev. Edward T. Mickey Jr., who had recently started the brass band at Grace Moravian, asking the reverend if he could teach Griffith to play. A quick study, Griffith was soon playing pretty much every instrument in the band but most often played the tuba.

“We’re really excited to be able to display this storied instrument, it’s actually a piece we’ve been hoping to be able to display for many years,” said Matt Edwards, the museum’s executive director.

In among the nearly 35,000 square feet of exhibits, the museum has permanent exhibits related to Andy Griffith and his family history and connections in Mount Airy and across the region.

Museum board member Calvin Vaughn and Grace Moravian Church band Director Hubert McMillian worked to facilitate the loan of the instrument for public display during this year’s Mayberry Days. The instrument will be on display at the museum through the weekend.

“With an entire museum dedicated to Andy’s show biz life just down the street we’re not looking to compete so much as to compliment. In reality Andy is part of a much bigger regional story that we tell here, and there are really only a few key objects that we need to tell that story and this we consider to be one of those,” Edwards said.

The Mount Airy Museum of Regional History will be open to the public Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. For more information contact the museum at 336-786-4478 or online at www.northcarolinamuseum.org

When school started in late August, some students at White Plains Elementary School already had a treat waiting for them. Those who completed a reading bingo sheet from the summer enjoyed a pizza celebration in the media center there.

We have on many occasions have made promises to friends or family members. Sometimes, the promises are kept. Sometimes, the promises are broken for various reasons. Trust is built on truth. When truth has been tampered, trust begins to falter. However, when the Bible refers to God as a covenant-keeping God, what exactly does that mean?

The word covenant, according to the 1828 Noah Webster Dictionary, means a contract or agreement between two people. A covenant is created in deed by writing; sealed and executed.

In the book of Genesis, God made a covenant with Abraham. In that covenant, God promised to give to Abraham the land in which he was living not only to him, but also to Abraham’s descendants. Also, God promised that He would bless those who bless Abraham and curse those who would curse Abraham. God promised Abraham that He would bless Abraham and his descendants.

Years after Abraham died; his descendants were living as slaves in Egypt. They were treated harshly by the taskmasters. They cried and wept due to their anguish of slavery. God heard their groaning and remembered the covenant that He had made with Abraham. Exodus 6:5 reads, “And I have also heard the groaning of the children of Israel, whom the Egyptians keep in bondage; and I have remembered my covenant.” Through the miracle of the parting of the Red Sea, the descendants of Abraham left Egypt and were finally on their way back to the land that God had promised Abraham.

The writer of Psalms 106 and 107 gave a historical review of the God’s covenant with the descendants of Abraham. Beginning with verse 6 in Psalm 106, the writer reviewed the unfaithfulness of Abraham’s descendants. They did not remember God’s mercies on their lives. They did not wait for God’s counsel, but followed their own plans instead of following the plan of God. They were filled with envy; unthankfullness, idolatry and rebellion.

When they finally made their homes in the Promised Land, they refused to follow the precepts of God by following the practices of the neighboring nations. They worshiped the idols and made temples and shrines to those idols. They forgot the God of their fathers, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. As a result, the neighboring nations oppressed them and made them servants.

However, God remembered His people. He remembered his covenant with Abraham. In verse 44, it reads, “Nevertheless He regarded their affliction. When He heard their cry; and for their sake He remembered His covenant.” His people did not deserve God’s mercy, but because God made a covenant with the descendants of Abraham, God delivered His people and restored their relationship to Him.

Today, the lesson that we can learn from the ancient Hebrews is this: God is a faithful God. God does not base our relationship with Him on our humanity and our works. We can never earn God’s favor for blessings. God is faithful to His Word.

In Psalm 111: 4-5, the writer records “He has made His wonderful works to be remembered; The Lord is gracious and full of compassion. He has given food to those who fear Him; He will ever be mindful of His covenant.” Humans make mistakes. Humans at times do not make the best decisions. Humans sometimes do not follow the best advice. Those who have a covenant relationship with God do have this hope: God’s covenant does not rely on how good humans are. His covenant relies on how good God is – not goodness from humans; but goodness from God. Truly, God keeps covenant.

A pair of wins over Surry County opponents helped East Surry extend a recent winning streak.

The Lady Cardinals swept both Mount Airy and Surry Central as part of a six-match winning streak. The defending 2A West Regional Runners-up improve to 12-3 overall and have won 10 of their last 11 matches.

Mount Airy at East Surry, Sept. 19

PILOT MOUNTAIN — Two win streaks were on the line when the Cardinals and Bears met for the first time this season.

Mount Airy entered Monday’s nonconference showdown riding a 6-match winning streak, which matched the team’s longest streak of the past five seasons. This streak followed a 1-3 start for the Bears in nonconference play.

The Cards cut the Granite Bears’ streak short with a 3-0 victory.

Two of three sets were balanced, with East Surry using late pushes to take the first and third sets. The Cardinals used a strong start in the second set to run away with the victory.

East led 19-16 in the first set before using a 6-1 run to win 25-17. The Cards carried that momentum into the second set and started with a 9-0 run.

Mount Airy started the second set with a service error, then Kate McCraw served the next eight points for East. The Cardinal attackers overwhelmed the Bears, and no matter how many attacks the Bears seemed to fend off the Cards just kept coming back. Bella Hutchens and Mckenzie Davis each had three kills during the initial run.

By the time Mount Airy closed the lead to single digits East Surry led 19-10. Late kills from Isabella Allen and Morgan Mayfield showed the Bears still had fight in them, but the early Cardinal lead was too much to overcome as East won 25-15.

A few strong serves from Kennedy Gwyn helped Mount Airy take a 4-2 advantage in the third set. The Cards countered with a 7-1 run behind serves from Hutchens and Addy Sechrist. Libero Samarin Kipple made a few dives to keep rallies alive, and Hutchens, Davis and Merry Parker Boaz helped put East up 9-5.

Mount Airy continued to fight and got back on the board with a Gwyn block. Allen and Mayfield patrolled the back line to counter Cardinal attacks, and Alissa Clabo found her groove at outside hitter thanks to sets from Kinlee Reece.

Mount Airy’s resurgence led to the Bears taking a 14-12 lead.

Back-to-back attacking errors by Mount Airy allowed East to tie the game at 14-14, then an ace from Boaz forced the final lead change of the match. The Cardinals closed the match with a 13-5 run to win the set 25-19.

East Surry at Surry Central, Sept. 20

DOBSON — East Surry returned to conference play the following day by traveling to Surry Central.

Similar to Mount Airy, Central had a tough time in the nonconference part of its schedule to start the season. The Golden Eagles started the season 0-4, but won 4-of-6 matches entering the bout against East Surry.

The Cards and Eagles kept it close for most of the first set before East Surry pulled ahead for the 25-15 win. Neither of the next two sets were as close, as East won the second 25-11 and the third 25-10.

The first set had four lead changes and four ties before either side reached double-digits. An ace from Central’s Lily O’Neal helped the Eagles take their largest lead of the night at 8-5, but it was met by a 6-0 Cardinal run. East’s plethora of hitters kept Central on its toes with five different Cardinals recording kills in the set.

Central stayed within a few points by keeping rallies alive and setting up the likes of Presley Smith, Marissa McCann and O’Neal for attacks. Libero Erica Coe coordinated the defensive specialists to best counter the Cards’ attacks.

A kill from McCann brought the Eagles within a point at 14-13. A Hutchens kill was the start of a run for the Cards, and Central didn’t help itself with service errors.

East Surry used an 11-2 run to win the first set 25-15, then started with a 5-1 advantage in the second. While the Cardinals had their best attacking set in the second – putting away 16-of-25 points with kills – early service errors kept Central in the match.

Seven of Central’s 11 points in the second set came from East Surry service errors.

The Cardinal offense was clicking once the ball was put into play. Boaz, Hutchens, Davis, Maggy Sechrist and Madeline Dayton all picked up kills in the set with McCraw and Addy Sechrist dishing assists.

The service errors slowed down once East took a 16-10 lead on a Dayton kill. Hutchens served the Cards on an 8-0 run, which included two aces, before committing the final service error of the set. East responded by winning the next two points and coming away with the win.

The Cardinals carried their momentum into the third set with a 7-0 start. Between the end of the second set and start of the third, East Surry went on a 17-1 run.

Central never got within five points of East from that point in the third set. After the Eagles scored to make it 15-9, East closed the set with a 10-1 run to secure the sweep.

The reunion for two classes of North Surry High School were held last weekend at Cross Creek Country Club in Mount Airy.

The classes of 1969 and 1972 both celebrated their reunions with gatherings at the country club with the Class of 1969 setting up outside while the Class of 1972 celebrated their fiftieth reunion in style in the grand ballroom of the country club.

Editor’s Note: Reader Diary is a periodic column written by local residents, Surry County natives, and readers of The Mount Airy News. If you have a submission for Reader Diary, email it to John Peters at jpeters@mtairynews.com

They come from “all over.”

When? The last week in September, by automobile and tour-bus loads, to our little town of Mount Airy.

Why? To celebrate Mayberry Days and the life and times of a native son who found fame and fortune along the way. You can see it in their eyes as they crowd the streets, searching for the easy-going life of “The Andy Griffith Show” they saw on 1960s black and white TV.

What do they find? A friendly little town where, when you walk down the street, you get a big smile from everybody you meet. Come Mayberry Days, multiply it tenfold and it becomes a circus; with Andy Griffith Show “look-a-likes” everywhere. There’s Deputy Barney Fife with that big side-arm on his hip telling someone to “Nip it” or go to jail. There’s Otis (the town drunk) riding his cow right down Main Street in broad daylight. Aunt Bee? Opie? Them too and many other look-a-likes, maybe even Gomer. Sad to say, I have yet to see Andy.

Just down the street; you’ll find Floyd the Barber snipping away at the same barber shop Andy knew. A couple of doors down; Snappy Lunch where Andy once ate; near the Blue Bird Café, where back in the back room back in the day, you could still drink beer after closing hours.

How about Goober? Him too; pumping gas and wiping windshields at his service station down on South Main. Need a ride to see the sights? For a very few bucks, those 1960s Ford squad cars will haul you around all over the town to see the same sights Andy once knew; including the home where he grew up.

Best of all is the Mayberry Days Parade, with hundreds of people lined up on both sides of the street to applaud and watch their heroes go by. Believe me; it’s a sight to see.

Being a native son myself, it’s pleasing to know that a hometown boy like Andy caused such a “to-do” and I hope and pray that all who come here find what they were looking for and go home with a big smile on their face; knowing they found Mayberry.

Alma Venable made an impact here in Mount Airy and beyond as one of the most recognizable ambassadors of Mayberry and the proprietor of the Mayberry Motor Inn. She was an advocate for preserving the rich legacy of Mount Airy’s fictitious alter ego while welcoming guests into the community all year round.

Venable passed away Sept. 4 at her home in Mount Airy, she was 84 years old.

Donna Hiatt called her dear friend an “icon for Mayberry” while others who knew her called her granny despite no presence of a drop of familial blood. “People loved her and stayed from all over the country with her. She was an angel on Earth, and is now an angel in Heaven,” Hiatt said of her friend of 32 years.

Like Hiatt, Tanya Jones of the Surry Arts Council was an old friend of Venable’s, “Since the 70s when we were talking to hotels about the occupancy tax. Alma and her husband LP had the Mayberry Motor Inn before many things in Mount Airy had Mayberry in their names.”

That idea may have been prophetic and would predate unknown numbers of additional businesses over the years with the Mayberry moniker that is now almost interchangeable with Mount Airy.

Jones went on, “They were highlighted in the 1990 Washington Post article on Mayberry Days that was picked up by the AP and Mayberry Days was born as an annual event. Their purchases at the Frances Bavier estate auction became a tourist attraction before the others came about.”

The legacy and legend of The Aunt Bee room at the inn are well-known. After the 1990 estate sale of Frances Bavier, TV’s Aunt Bee, a reporter asked Venable what she planned to do with the artifacts she bought from the late actress to which she said, “I told him I was going to start an Aunt Bee Room.” The collection is an assortment of memorabilia belonging to Bavier, with certificates of authenticity, including hats, accessories, and an ashtray made by fan favorite George “Goober” Lindsey.

Jones and The Surry Arts Council coordinate the Mayberry Days festival, and she recalls Venable was always game for whatever was asked. “Alma and LP – and later the grandkids, Mikel, Josh, and Jeremy Snow, were always involved in Mayberry Days – the parade, Colonel Tim’s Talent Time and whatever the Surry Arts Council needed to make it work for the fans.”

Mount Airy’s visitors have memories of Venable that go back decades. David Browning, seen locally often as Deputy Barney Fife, made his first trip to Mayberry Days in 1991 and it was the next year he first took up a longstanding intermittent residence at the Mayberry Motor Inn at the suggestion of Jones. From 1992 – 2017 Browning said he was a regular guest of Venable’s at the Inn.

Of his first visit he said, “I arrived at night and when I woke up the next morning, Mikel was dressed in a deputy outfit, and he had one foot up on my bumper. He was writing me a ticket for being over the line,” he said recalling just one of the memories of good times in days passed. “Years later, I bought him a properly fitting deputy’s cap.”

He said he was made to feel like a member of the family by Venable. “I would sit and chat with her and after her husband LP passed, we got even closer.” Venable and husband poured a lot of hard work into the inn, he said, but they also had fun. “She loved the visitors, just loved them, and treated them like family.”

She had a plaque made up to commemorate his visits, something he said was not necessary. On subsequent stays he and his wife would look to the wall and see the plaque much to their continued amusement. “She didn’t have to do that,” he said of the honor, “Mount Airy is just that kind of place.”

“We were not related but our relationship, friendship, grew and grew. I know that as a place not just to lay your head — but also someone to chat with,” he recalled.

Her hospitality and gentility will be missed however they have not yet been lost to the winds of time. The traditions she launched at the Mayberry Motor Inn are being delivered even now during this week’s iteration of Mayberry Days.

An easy plan for success will be to “continue doing it the way Granny did it,” Mikel said. That includes honoring such long-standing traditions as the right of first refusal for guests who have been attending Mayberry Days since the beginning.

Some of those repeat guests, Snow said, have been coming long enough that his twin brothers Josh and Jeremy have known them nearly since birth.

Along with Jeremy, he will continue to operate the inn and hopes to keep it in the family for generations to come. “As long as there is tourism, we’ll be here.”

Tim White, the host of Song of the Mountain on PBS said Venable, “Was just the sweetest.” Tim White & Troublesome Hollow’s “Salute to Mayberry” show will have lots of Mayberry songs and a tribute to Venable herself that will correspond with Mayberry Days at The Historic Earle Theatre tomorrow, Friday, Sept. 23, at 9:30 p.m. Tickets are $15.

White was a fan of “The Andy Griffith Show” long before he first came for Mayberry Days. “I came to Mount Airy as a fan of the show before I ever came here to work,” he said, and he has a great fondness for both Mayberry and Mount Airy. A visit to Mount Airy several times a year remains on the docket for he and his wife – not just during Mayberry Days.

After many years of coming to perform in Mount Airy, White will miss the familiarity of his friend. “Granny, I would call her Granny – I know others didn’t, but I got it from the boys,” White reminisced. “I would call up sometimes and just ask to speak to Granny. It made her smile when I called her Granny.”

White laughed and said there was no suite or room named after him, but that was of no concern to him, “I think all the rooms were named by then. Besides, I don’t know who you would take off the wall. There’s a lot of great people up there.”

He recounted that Venable has been sick over the last few years of her life and people had not seen as much of her. “So, when she got dolled up and would come out and chat with folks, it really meant something.”

“I was at the Mayberry Motor Inn when she passed away and her grandson John came out to the gazebo to tell me. Just as he did, my phone rang, and it was Mikel calling to let me know.” To him, it seemed as though he was where he was meant to be to receive the news from two of her grandsons at nearly the same time.

White, Hiatt, and the rest are hopeful that the memory and spirit of Mount Airy’s Aunt Bee will live on. The legacy of the Mount Airy Motor Inn is continuing at this moment with visitors in for Mayberry Days and reservations lined up for the Autumn Leaves Festival.

Friday at The Earle, White and Troublesome Hollow will offer up the music as another living tribute to Venable whom White said, “Loved the music. I never saw her play an instrument, but she loved to sing.”

“A few months ago, the Surry Arts Council was contacted by the Piedmont Triad International Airport – requesting a photo for consideration on the wall in the terminal. A huge canvas is hanging in there of a past Mayberry Days Parade – Alma is front and center in a car with an Aunt Bee license plate,” Jones said.

Even now, Mount Airy is being represented by her unofficial ambassador and brand representative. Alma Venable is still working hard for Mount Airy even during her eternal rest.

“We all loved her – I loved her and LP, and valued their trust, loyalty, friendship – and love. We will miss them, but I am so grateful that Mikel is carrying on the Mayberry Motor Inn tradition,” Jones said.

As a taxpayer in Mount Airy, but who lives outside the city limits, I have no voice in how taxpayer money is spent. But I do read everything reported in The Mount Airy News. And, from what I read, only Jon Crawley shows any sense of fiscal responsibility.

Main Street buildings have been updated with paint, windows, and doors by the owners. To take parking spaces away from the street for outdoor dining, displays, or trees would defeat the unique look of downtown. I have lived in two towns who did the “beautifications” and it killed the downtowns. Local shops and shoppers left because there was no parking.

We do need loading/ unloading zones on Main Street. Downtown workers who park on Main Street should utilize the lots, leaving street parking open for shoppers and visitors. Workers should be ticketed for parking all day since all the lots are free. My out-of-town daughter finds it humorous that street cameras show the same cars in the same place very single day. Do we have assigned or reserved parking for store owners and employees?

Additionally, to put all utility lines underground would be expensive and disruptive. That is an irresponsible way to spend taxpayers’ money when there are areas in the city needing water and sewer line updates. There were clay sewer lines on Lebanon Street when we had property there a few years ago.

Maybe downtown Mount Airy is all dressed up with a dirty neck.

• A vehicle fire has led to a Mount Airy man being charged with driving while impaired, according to city police reports.

The blaze involving a 2006 Nissan Rogue occurred last Saturday at 1012 Rockford St., the address for the Speedway convenience store. During an investigation of that incident by Officer M.G. Lineberry, Edilberto De Jesus Santiago, 24, of 619 Worth St., was encountered and suspected of intoxication, arrest records state.

Santiago’s providing of a breath sample subsequently confirmed that suspicion, with testing showing his blood-alcohol content to be nearly twice the legal limit for getting behind the wheel.

He was confined in the Surry County Jail under a $500 secured bond and slated for an appearance in District Court next Monday. The vehicle was impounded.

• Tabitha Smith Johnson, 38, of 185 Mills Road, was arrested Friday on warrants for charges of larceny and possession of stolen goods.

The case stems from an incident last Thursday at the Quality Mart store on Holly Springs Road, where Johnson allegedly took food items valued at $12 without paying.

Johnson was released under a $250 secured bond, with the case scheduled for the Oct. 17 session of Surry District Court.

• A break-in was discovered Saturday at IC Building Supply on West Lebanon Street, where entry was gained through a garage door.

No property was listed as missing, but damage put at $500 occurred to the door.

• Copper wire owned by Duke Energy was stolen Saturday from an unidentified business location in the 2000 block of Rockford Street, where a breaker box was broken into to enable the theft. The wire was valued at $100.

In light of problems in Jackson, Mississippi — where residents have been left without clean drinking water — having that commodity is something to celebrate, which is the case for Mount Airy.

Both of the city’s H2O treatment facilities, F.G. Doggett Water Plant and S.L. Spencer Water Plant, have been honored by the N.C. Division of Water Resources for surpassing federal and state drinking water standards in 2021.

The division’s Public Water Supply Section awarded those facilities the highly coveted N.C. Area Wide Optimization (AWOP) Award, which is part of a state effort to enhance the performance of existing surface water treatment operations.

In all, 66 water plants were tapped for that award.

This might not seem noteworthy until one considers that in recent years North Carolina has been reported to have nearly 6,000 regulated public water systems as listed by the state Department of Environmental Quality.

Perhaps just as important is the fact that the awarding of Mount Airy’s two water-treatment plants for 2021 reflects an ongoing pattern of quality which spans the past decade.

S.L. Spencer Water Plant, located on Orchard Street, also received the same recognition for 2011, 2012, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020.

F.G. Doggett Water Plant in the Laurel Bluff area did so for 2012, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020.

“The city of Mount Airy is extremely honored to be recognized once again for the AWOP Award,” Public Works Director Mitch Williams commented in reaction to the latest accolades for its two treatment plants.

Williams, whose responsibilities encompass municipal water-sewer operations, says quality is an ongoing mission for those manning the facilities.

“The fact that the city has been recognized for the past eight to nine years shows the dedication and professionalism of Water Treatment Supervisor Andy Utt and his team,” the public works director added.

“They do their best to ensure that water of the highest quality is delivered daily to the Mount Airy community.”

The awards are given each year to water systems around the state which demonstrate outstanding turbidity removal, a key test of drinking water quality, according to the N.C. Department of Environmental Quality.

Turbidity is a measure of the cloudiness or haziness of water caused by individual particles that can interfere with disinfection and provide a medium for microbial growth. Microbes are microscopic particles that occur naturally but can include harmful bacteria and viruses.

While all drinking water systems must adhere to strict state and federal standards of quality, those being recognized met performance goals that are significantly more stringent than state and federal standards.

In 2021, nearly 2.8 million North Carolina residents were served by the award-winning plants.

Mount Airy is not alone in terms of local facilities being recognized for quality.

Also in Surry County, the Town of Dobson Water Treatment Plant and the Town of Elkin Water Treatment Plant were awarded the N.C. Area Wide Optimization (AWOP) Award for 2021.

Of the 66 facilities cited for their efforts last year, the state recognized 16 with the “Gold Star” honor, which is set aside for systems that have received the N.C. Area Wide Optimization Award for 10 or more consecutive years.

The Town of Wilkesboro Water Filtration Plant was the nearest locality to Surry County making that list.

When city government projects are planned in Mount Airy, officials typically solicit offers from contractors and award jobs to the low bidders — a procedure not followed with an $80,000 contract for landscape architecture services at the Spencer’s site.

The Mount Airy Board of Commissioners voted during a meeting earlier this month to engage the services of Sitework Studios for that sum to design plans for site development on the former industrial property the municipality bought in 2014.

Specifically, the Asheville firm is targeting a large chunk of land around the Sparger Building, where a Marriott hotel is planned, along with an adjoining spot eyed for a market center. The contract area also surrounds old Spencer’s buildings known as The Cube and Cube annex where additional facilities including a new visitors center and a conference center are envisioned.

The services to be performed by Sitework Studios include preparing grading and other plans for green spaces and additional amenities on what are known as Parcels A, B and C near those various structures where the transformations are to occur.

In addition to laying out locations of planters, the design work will include other site elements such as benches, retaining walls, trash receptacles, pedestrian lighting, drainage facilities and more. These plans will be relied on during the construction phase.

Although the contract with Sitework Studios eventually was approved unanimously during a city council meeting on Sept. 1, the move was questioned by one member, Commissioner Jon Cawley.

This included Cawley asking to have the proposal moved from the board’s consent agenda — where matters are lumped together and approved in a single vote without debate — to the regular agenda, thus opening the matter for discussion.

He used that opportunity to wonder aloud how the $80,000 contract issue had gotten to that point in the form it did.

“Did we at least take bids?” asked Cawley, who also said that with the way the contract is worded the total cost could exceed that sum for extra work provided.

Mayor Ron Niland said at the meeting that the landscaping services were included in an overall scope of work earlier agreed to involving the hotel and redevelopment efforts on the former Spencer’s property.

“This is part of the bigger budget of what we said we were going to do,” Niland said. He mentioned $2 million in state funding announced in July to fund outside improvements at the conference/visitors center site, along with money approved in 2021 for infrastructure work related to the hotel.

Surry County officials agreed to supply $1.5 million for needs involving the planned lodging establishment — which have a total price tag of around $3 million, including for parking spaces.

Both Cawley and Commissioner Tom Koch asked about the possibility of lowering the landscape-related costs before the contract was awarded to Sitework Studios.

“Is there any way we could do some in-house work on this and save some money?” Koch said.

Cawley specifically mentioned possible involvement by Mount Airy Parks and Recreation, since this city department has a landscaping unit that has lent its skills to various locations about town.

“I wouldn’t look any further than Mount Airy Parks and Recreation.”

However, City Manager Stan Farmer replied that the landscaping project at Spencer’s is beyond the scope of the city department.

Cawley also said Wednesday it was his understanding from the meeting that Niland made a case for Sitework Studios being one of the few companies equipped to handle such a task.

“I came into it blind, not knowing what credentials they have,” he added.

“What I decided to do,” Cawley said Wednesday in explaining his decision to ultimately support the contract award, “was to trust the information that I was given at the meeting.”

The North Ward commissioner also referred to the fact that this is an election year in which he is campaigning for mayor against Niland, and wants to stay positive regarding the contract issue.

“Since I’m running for office against him, I’m trying not to be critical.”

The city government does have a history with Sitework Studios.

In February 2019, the Mount Airy Board of Commissioners voted to allow the group Mount Airy Downtown (MAD) Inc. to have a site plan for the former Spencer’s property prepared by the Asheville firm. Its reputation as an experienced architectural firm was a deciding factor.

An anonymous donor agreed to pay half of the $10,000 expense, with the rest coming from Municipal Service District funds generated by a special tax on downtown-area property owners.

The plan resulting prescribed functional spaces including new housing, lighting, new streets and parking lots, storm water features such as attractive rain gardens also offering educational opportunities, greenway access and more.

A trio of second-half goals lifted Wilkes Central over East Surry on Sept. 19.

The Cardinals and Eagles both looked to pick up their first win of the season in Monday’s match. The teams played to a scoreless tie at halftime and looked evenly matched, but Wilkes Central put two goals in the back of the net in the first 10 minutes of the second half.

East battled back and had opportunities to strike later in the half, but the Cards couldn’t score. The visiting Eagles added another goal for insurance as they went on to win 3-0.

”At times we played great, and at times we struggled,” said Cardinal coach Samuel Lowe. “It’s hard for them to all play together for 80 minutes, and to be honest with you I haven’t had the same starting 11 two games in a row. It’s hard to get continuity.

“As a whole I’m pleased with the way they played tonight. They gave me all that they had and that’s all I could ask for – 110% the whole time. Tonight they didn’t quit, so I’m happy.”

Lowe’s message to the Cardinals all season has been to get better every time they step on the pitch. Instead of folding when they faced an all-out attack from Wilkes Central early, East Surry stood strong and kept a clean sheet during the first half.

The Eagles had three corner kicks in the span of 90 seconds beginning in the fifth minute. The Cards were able to weather the early storm of attacks and eventually modified their defense to force numerous offside calls. Wilkes Central had three shots in the first eight minutes of play, then didn’t take another until the 33rd minute.

East Surry moved more efficiently through the midfield against Wilkes Central than in any game prior. Lowe commended the team for not only their ball movement, but also the team’s ability to keep their shape as a whole.

“I’ve had a few boys on this team who have never played soccer in their life, and I can see their improvement,” Lowe said. “Their touches have started to get a lot better, they’re understanding the game better and can better read what’s happening. You can tell how much better we’ve got at moving the ball instead of just kicking and expecting something to happen.”

Striker Jonathan de la Cruz nearly put the Cards on the board with a pair of first-half shots. Levi Watson attacked up the right sideline before crossing to Cruz in the 13th minute, but his shot was off frame. Nine minutes later Cruz used a through ball from Lupe Chavez to shoot, this time having his attempt blocked out of bounds for a corner kick.

Mario Flores took the corner for East, and Chavez connected for a header but it was saved by Wilkes Central.

After neither team was able to strike in the first half, the Eagles scored their opening goal in the 45th minute off a corner kick. Three minutes later Wilkes Central used a counter to double its lead.

Though the Cardinals did play with better ball movement in the game, the team still struggled to score. East Surry’s only two shots of the second half came off an Alex Galvan free kick from close to midfield in the 59th minute, and a shot from Logan Fagg in the 71st minute that was set up by triangle passing between Sid Sutphin, Fernando Torres-Vega and Giovanni Flores-Haws.

Though most of the second half was contested place in the middle third, Wilkes Central did go on the offensive to close the game. The Eagles added a goal in the 68th minute to bring the game out of reach.

Wilkes Central added five shots in the final five minutes that were all saved by keeper Michael Youngblood.

The Cardinals fall to 0-5-1 overall and 0-3 in the Foothills 2A Conference with the loss.

“I really think these boys are improving every game,” Lowe said. “Sometimes the outcome doesn’t show it, but when I go back on film I can see the boys improvement over the course of the year. Having lost so many kids from last season, the main thing is just getting better every game and have a no quit attitude.

“There’s still a lot that we need to work on, and that stuff falls on me as a coach, but as long as these boys keep fighting we’ll be alright.”

North Surry battled Wilkes Central in Toast Sept. 16 to open league play in the Foothills 2A Conference.

The Greyhounds held a six-point lead at halftime before going down a score in the third quarter. North Surry was primed to tie things up with a red zone appearance early in the fourth, but a turnover-on-downs followed by an Eagle touchdown turned the momentum in the visitors’ favor.

The Hounds continued to fight and cut into the lead with a touchdown, but came up on the wrong side of an onside kick. Late touchdowns added to the Eagles’ lead, finishing the game with a final score of 51-32.

Friday night marked the 2022 debut of Wilkes Central’s Kamen Smith, who missed the first four games of the season with an injury. According to 247Sports, Smith is a 3-star recruit that has committed to N.C. State.

Kamen’s presence on the defensive line limited North Surry’s rushing offense. The Greyhounds (1-3, 0-1 FH2A) responded by taking to the skies, posting their first game of the season with more yards passing than yards rushing.

Quarterback Colton Allen finished with a career-high 174 yards by completing 8-of-14 passes. Kam McKnight added one pass for 26 yards to bring the Greyhounds over 200 yards passing for the game. Allen threw two touchdowns and an interception, and McKnight had one touchdown pass.

Jahreece Lynch paced the Hounds with five catches for 119 yards and three touchdowns. Jared Hiatt had one catch for 38 yards, Makiyon Woodbury added two catches for 27 yards and Fisher Leftwich had one catch for 16 yards.

All three of Lynch’s touchdowns came in the first half.

Wilkes Central (3-2, 1-0 FH2A) scored first at the 8:57 mark in the first quarter, but Owen McMillian stuck the Eagles on the 2-point conversion. North went ahead 7-6 after McKnight connected with Lynch three minutes later. Lynch scored later in the quarter on a 66-yard Allen pass, putting North Surry up 14-6.

Both squads scored in the second quarter, with North going up 20-14, but Wilkes Central looked to add another touchdown before halftime. The Eagles looked to the end zone but were picked off by Lynch.

The Eagles finally retook the lead in the third quarter with a rushing touchdown. The touchdown tied the game at 20, and the ensuing 2-point conversion put Wilkes Central on top. The visitors added to their lead by scoring a touchdown with 10:36 remaining in the fourth quarter.

The failed two-point conversion left it a one-score game at 28-20.

North Surry marched down the field and into the red zone looking to tie things up. The Hounds went for it on fourth down with less than eight minutes to play, but couldn’t convert. Wilkes Central responded with a 73-yard run to enter the red zone, then scored with 6:50 remaining to go up 36-20.

Even with Wilkes Central’s defensive wall, North Surry managed to rush for 161 yards – bringing the team’s total yardage to 361 for the game. Both of the Hounds’ late touchdowns came on the ground.

Jake Simmons, who led the team with 21 carries for 80 yards, scored with 5:28 left in the fourth. North Surry, however, failed the 2-point conversion to leave it a 10-point game at 36-26.

Following Simmons was Malachi Powers with one carry for 37 yards, Allen with four carries for 27 yards and a touchdown, Lynch with three carries for 17 yards and Talan Vernon with one carry for no gain.

Wilkes Central maintained possession until the 2:35 mark before scoring again. The touchdown and 2-point conversion increased the advantage to 44-26.

The lead increased to 51-26 after Wilkes Central scored another TD with less than a minute on the clock. Allen ran in a 12-yard touchdown late to round out the final score, 51-32.

Both schools continue FH2A Conference play on Sept. 23. North Surry travels to East Surry (5-0, 1-0 FH2A) and Wilkes Central hosts Surry Central (1-3, 1-0 FH2A).

A proposed relocation of YVEDDI was raised at Monday night’s meeting of the Surry County Board of County Commissioners. In a back-and-forth discussion that followed the board tried to find the balance between fiscal responsibility and doing the greatest good for the people of Surry County, while voting to approve funding to hasten YVEDDI’s move to a new home in Mount Airy.

Commissioners debated whether it was the fairest use of taxpayer dollars to fund renovations of a privately owned building who would then be the landlord for YVEDDI. The counter argument holds that funding the costs needed to move a nonprofit that serves so many people across four counties would be of the greatest benefit to the most people.

The Yadkin Valley Economic Development District Inc. serves Surry, Stokes, Yadkin and Davie counties in the administration of community service programs. From Head Start to Meals on Wheels to legal aid for senior citizens, YVEDDI offers a wide array of services from their headquarters in the L. H. Jones Family Resource Center in Mount Airy, but a change may be in the works.

Ownership of the former J. J. Jones High School passed from Surry County to the African American Historical and Genealogical Society of Surry County over the summer, a move that was met by the alumni of Jones and members of the Black community with great pride.

They have plans to see their former school converted into a mixed used site with spaces for cultural heritage, meetings, community events, and perhaps living spaces. Their goal is to preserve a piece of their shared history for future generations.

Those plans have taken an unexpected turn this week as YVEDDI Executive Director Kathy Payne came before the board with a half million-dollar request that would help convert the site of the former Mountain Valley Hospice & Palliative Care facility in the Ottenweller Building located on Technology Lane in Mount Airy into the new home of YVEDDI.

Payne said, “AAHGS have been very gracious to us, but we feel it would be better for our business to sustain our business to move into a more modern facility.”

She reminded the board, “The Jones Center as you know is an 83-year-old building in need of extensive repairs.” The facts remain the same as when the former J. J. Jones school, now the Family Resource Center, was added onto the county’s list of surplus properties last year.

The aging structure needs extensive repairs or renovations from windows, plumbing, wiring, floors, and HVAC. Surry County determined that the cost for upkeep of the Jones School building, as well as Westfield Elementary School, was simply more than the county could bear.

Those costs were only going to rise as those buildings continue to age with the same interior structures and internal fixtures that have reached or are nearing the end of their projected life cycle. Any cost estimates for construction or renovation projects these days are indeed just estimates as prices for materials remains in flux due to inflation or lingering constraints on supply chains.

YVEDDI has been presented with an opportunity to take over the former 16,000+ square foot hospice site with the owners of the Ottenweller building offering to cover the costs of the concrete work for YVEDDI.

Ottenweller has offered a 15-year leasing structure with YVEDDI with rent increases established at years three, six and 13 which will help the organization plan out budgets more accurately. Payne said, “They have offered us a rent that is very kind. In our research commercial real estate is $23/sq.ft. and they are offering this facility to us for at 66 cents/sq.ft. and have given us the option to sublet.”

Payne has received a quote of $500,000 from architect Tony Chilton for work that would need to be done to the proposed facility including walling off classrooms, adjusting the current HVAC and sprinkler systems, adding egress, kitchen appliances, a playground with fence, and child sized bathrooms.

One of the qualities the Ottenweller site offers that appeals most to Payne is that it is located all on one level. Ease of access will make things easier for mobility challenged seniors and children alike.

Payne asked the county to fund the renovations and offered that YVEDDI would reimburse the county as funding came in through grants. The board was hesitant to authorize taxpayer dollars to make renovations to a building the county does not own.

Commissioner Van Tucker noted that the county would be paying for renovations to a building where they would be a tenant. This would be tantamount to funding the renovation on behalf the renter he said, adding, “This is simply an issue that I am not sure is fair the Surry County taxpayer of being a lender. There are no guarantees in life… Money to upgrade someone else’s building is something I can’t support,” he said while thanking Payne and her organization for all they do.

The commissioners showed a bit of internal conflict with their deliberation, Commissioner Eddie Harris said difficult discussions like these are good for all parties involved. Even as a long-term member of the YVEDDI board, and one of the unanimous votes from their board who authorized Payne to investigate the relocation of the organization, Harris was one of the two nay votes on the motion joining with Tucker.

Commissioner Mark Marion echoed sentiments from his colleagues that all manner of funding for the renovations to the Ottenweller Building should be investigated. That should include discussions with potential lending institutions to see if YVEDDI could qualify for a loan outright as opposed to being funded by the county.

Commissioner Larry Johnson noted that any hesitancy from a lender could most likely be overcome, “I feel like between Surry County, our manager, our legal team, and our staff we could satisfy a bank’s terms.”

However, Johnson was ready to act and made a motion to authorize the funding for YVEDDI, “We’ve spread (Invest in Surry dollars) all over the county on ball fields, lights, gyms, shelters, medical ministries, you name it – and I feel y’all deserve an equal share.”

“I feel like we can back $400,000 so you can meet your timeline,” he said identifying a dollar amount lower than requested. Payne had identified YVEDDI cash on hand, a proposed grant from Mount Airy, and other private grants that may be coming that would help her with the costs – leading Johnson to the $400,000 figure.

He also suggested that the potential benefits to the residents of the four counties served would far outweigh any dangers in being the funding source for the renovations YVEDDI needs to make Ottenweller their home. “If we get three-fourths of it back, or we get zero back, I feel like its money well spent,” he concluded as the board voted 3-2 in favor of the request.

“We are very pleased that the commissioners recognize our dedication to providing support and services to the citizens of Surry County,” Payne said of Monday’s outcome. “We expect client outcomes to improve by being in an environment with greater accessibility, especially for those who may have cognitive or physical challenges.”

CHAPEL HILL – The N.C. High School Athletic Association (NCHSAA), in conjunction with Wells Fargo, released the final standings in the 42nd annual Wells Fargo State Cup competitions for the 2021-22 academic year on Sept. 16.

The award recognizes the high schools that achieve the best overall interscholastic athletic performance within each of the state’s four competitive classifications.

Mount Airy, East Surry and Elkin were all recognized as top-10 finishers in their respective divisions. This marks the first time since the 2014-15 school year that three Surry County teams have finished in the top-10. That year, all three schools were from the 1A division: Elkin finished No. 5, East Surry was No. 8 and Mount Airy was No. 9

East Surry makes its fifth consecutive appearance in the top 10, this time competing in the 2A division while the previous four were in 1A. The Cardinals have finished in the top 10 in seven of the past 10 school years: 2013, 2015 and 2018-22.

Mount Airy and Elkin both return to the Wells Fargo Cup top 10 after multi-year absences. Mount Airy last appeared in the 1A top 10 following the 2017-18 school year. The Granite Bears’ make their fifth top-10 appearance in the past 10 school years: 2015-18 and now 2022.

Elkin makes its first top-10 appearance since 2015. Prior to 2022, Elkin’s only top-10 appearances in the past 10 school years came in 2014 and 2015.

Since 1979, the Wells Fargo State Cup award has been awarded to the schools which have the best overall interscholastic sports programs in each of the four classifications: 1A, 2A, 3A, and 4A.

All schools that finish in the top eight positions (plus ties) in an NCHSAA state championship event receive Wells Fargo Cup points. In events where 1A, 2A, 3A, and/or 4A schools compete together, such as lacrosse, points are awarded on a school’s standing against other schools in its classification.

In Cup competition, points are awarded for all sports on the basis of 50 points for first, 45 for second place, 40 for third, 35 for fourth, 30 for fifth, 25 for sixth, 20 for seventh and 15 for eighth.

In the event of a tie, the schools receive an equal number of points based on the number of teams that tie and the number of teams that finish higher in the standings.

Five points are awarded for each sanctioned sport in which a school competes.

Mount Airy’s No. 5 finish in the 2021-22 Cup was the highest of any traditional 1A school in the state; the top two spots were occupied by private schools, and the next two spots by public charters.

Since 2009, only one traditional public 1A high school has won the 1A Wells Fargo State Cup: Mount Airy in 2016-17.

The crowning achievement of the year’s Granite Bears was the school’s Dual-Team State Championship in girls tennis. The 22-0 Bears shut out 17 opponents, and never dropped more than three individual matches. Mount Airy only surrendered two individual matches through its final 13 matches of the season – including the entire postseason.

In the fall of 2021, Mount Airy also finished 1A West Regional Runner-up in boys soccer – marking the program’s second Regional Final appearance in three years and its third appearance in the past five years – and reached the quarterfinals of the football state tournament.

The Granite Bears had four top-8 finishes during winter sports and the wrestling team accounted for two of those. The Bears reached the quarterfinals of the dual-team state tournament, only losing to the eventual state champs, and finished No. 6 as a team at the Individual State Wrestling Tournament.

The boys swim and indoor track teams didn’t finish in the top eight overall since those championships are a combined 1A/2A, but the teams did earn Wells Fargo Cup points for finishing in the top eight of their division. Mount Airy’s indoor track team tied for the third-highest score of any 1A team (tied for 17th overall), while the swim team finished No. 5 among 1A competition (11th overall).

In the spring, Mount Airy added a quarterfinal appearance in boys tennis.

Elkin didn’t have any top-8 appearances in the fall, but had three each in the winter and spring.

The Buckin’ Elks girls swim team had the highest finish of any 1A team. Elkin finished No. 4 overall behind a trio of 2A charters. Elkin’s No. 4 finish was the only appearance by a traditional public school – in 1A or 2A – in the top 12.

Not far behind was the Elks’ boys swim team, who finished No. 2 in 1A. Elkin’s boys finished No. 5 overall behind three 2A charters and one 1A charter.

Elkin also finished tied for fourth in 1A for girls indoor track. Overall the girls were 12th in the team competition.

Continuing their success in the spring, Elkin’s boys tennis team reached the 1A West Regional Final before falling to the eventual state champs. The Buckin’ Elks boys golf team finished No. 5 in the 1A division, and the girls track team finished No. 8.

East Surry adjusted to the 2A division in its first year and made the top 10 of the Wells Fargo Cup. The Cardinals still have the numbers of a 1A school, but were moved up a division in the latest realignment cycle due to the NCHSAA factoring previous State Cup success into its formula.

East is the only Surry County school to rank in the top-10 of the 2A Wells Fargo State Cup since 2011. NCHSAA records for the top-10 Wells Fargo Cup teams only date back to 2011.

East Surry’s football and volleyball teams both reached the 2A West Regional Championship in the fall. It was the volleyball team’s second regional final appearance in three seasons, winning the 1A West Regional Title in 2019, and was the football team’s fourth-consecutive regional championship appearance. The Cardinal football team won the 1A West Regional Title three times from 2018-20.

Both the 2021-22 volleyball and football teams were eliminated by the eventual state champions.

During the winter East Surry earned points in the boys swimming state championship. The Cards were No. 16 overall, but met the cut to earn points as the No. 8 2A team.

East Surry’s golf team captured the 2A State Title one year after finishing runner-up in the 1A Championship. The Cardinals won the team championship by 11 strokes, and senior Bradley Davis Jr. finished State Runner-up individually.

Finally, the Cardinal baseball team earned points by reaching the quarterfinals of the 2A State Tournament. This marked East’s fourth-consecutive appearance in at least the fourth round, with the previous three coming in the 1A division. East Surry was eliminated from the playoffs by the eventual state champions.

This weekend on Main Street in Pilot Mountain there will be a dinner event under the stars to benefit downtown revitalization and the arts. The Foothills Dinner on Main calls for a gathering Saturday that will feature, “Fine dining, fine music, and fine company.”

“Foothills Dinner on Main was created with the thought of showcasing culinary talent while simultaneously building on our dream of a more vibrant downtown,” event organizers said.

A cocktail reception with a wine and beer tasting will begin at 5 p.m. and will feature tasty bites along with live music. Meeting and greeting will give way to eating when the clock tolls 6 p.m. and a multi-course dinner service commences.

Organizers hope to entice the public to come to downtown Pilot Mountain to sample food from some of the area’s best. The meal will be prepared by local chefs featuring locally sourced ingredients and courses will be paired with selected local wines or beers while music from The Happy Ones will accompany the evening.

If the notion of a dinner on the street just sounds ridiculous to you, that is reasonable. However, take a gander with your eyes over the menu as your stomach sends messages to the brain signaling a desire to support downtown the arts in Pilot Mountain and satiate growing pangs of hunger.

Foothills Dinner on Main has a menu that cries for attention boasting such appetizer offerings as a quail egg tostada, a miso braised pork belly, or pickled shrimp ceviche in a lettuce cup with avocado mousse and smoke pepita. This is more than a BBQ or chili cookoff folks, this is elevated dining – Pilot Mountain style.

The stars of the evening shall be found among the main course entrees for Foothills Dinner on Main. A selection of five entrees with options from land and sea are to be found with oven roasted lamb chops being paired with poached rainbow carrots and seared tarragon creme filled potato flutes.

Braised short ribs will join with roasted root vegetables, spiced rainbow cauliflower and romesco, and a horseradish-honey gravy that is sure to tempt taste buds. Also, a honey and orange glazed cod with balsamic and bacon brussel sprouts will be offered.

Mouths will water at the site of braised pork belly served with some of the signature flavors of autumn such as roasted butternut squash puree, havarti and goat cheese grits, granny smith apples, toasted pumpkin seeds, pork gravy, and red pepper coulis.

Designing and implementing the meal requires the skill and effort from multiple chefs, and their crews, to make Foothills Dinner of Main a success.

Some of the names aiding in the event are known players to this event such as Nikki Farrington of Niki’s Pickles and 6th & Vine in Winston-Salem has been a pivotal part of the event since its inception, organizers said. Another local heavyweight, Mark Thrower of Harvest Grill at Shelton Vineyards, is lending his skills to the dinner.

Michelle and Michael Millan operate The Tuning Fork which is the food truck for Fiddlin Fish Brewery. The two have a history with Miami/Cuban street foods dating back to 2017 with Mojito Mobile Kitchen. More recently they have purchased farms to lower produce costs for themselves, and to sell locally grown competitively priced produce to other chefs in the area.

Erin Needham, co-owner of Viridescence Bottles and Bites, will also be a presenter at the year’s event. The event planners said she has a passion for plant-based cuisine, and she will be opening the first of its kind in Surry County plant-based eatery next month in downtown Pilot Mountain.

Olivia Jessup has run Liv For Sweets bakery in downtown Pilot Mountain for three years. She touts herself as a self-taught baker who can create everything from scratch and says when folks eat her sweets, “They know I put my love and passion into it.”

Also joining the dinner’s culinary team is Donald Mueller, the former owner of Mountain View Restaurant, now owns My Kitchen food truck which specializes in American cuisine.

Pilot Mountain Town Commissioner Scott Needham, who will be serving as the emcee for the evening, said that the money raised from will be used to fund art projects, “There’s a lot of different art projects that we are hoping to be able to fund in the coming years and we’re hoping this will be our seed money to start those projects and match grants for this new nonprofit organization.”

He said the town is starting a non-profit for the many projects that the town has envisioned such as 3-D art displays at the Civic Center, 2-D art in the alleyway between First Citizen Bank and The Country Store, and increase programming at the amphitheater at Armfield Civic Center.

Needham said there are even larger arts goals such as funding a new downtown amphitheater, but he acknowledged, “The profits from this dinner would probably only be a drop in the bucket for that.”

After having had to cancel the 2021 Foothills Dinner on Main due to lingering ill effects of the pandemic on local restaurants, organizers and presenters alike are ready to welcome guests back to, “Dine on the yellow line under the stars in this foodie’s delight.”

Event organizers advise that participation in this unique evening requires a reservation. Tickets are $100 each and seating will be limited. For tickets visit: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/381106408527

About 4,000 people die from drowning each year in the U.S., but an influx of funding is expected to reduce the probability of that locally.

The Reeves Community Center Foundation has been awarded a grant for $5,000 from the Step Into Swim Program, according to Darren Lewis, assistant city manager for Mount Airy, who called that “great news.”

“This grant will assist individuals or families that may have financial barriers to participate otherwise,” added Lewis, who formerly served as Mount Airy’s parks and recreation director. “This opportunity will help the children in our community be safer around water and ultimately save lives.”

The RCC Foundation will partner with Mount Airy Parks and Recreation to offer scholarship opportunities for the American Red Cross Learn to Swim Program, according to Lewis.

Even more excited about the grant is Cathy Cloukey, assistant director of Mount Airy Parks and Recreation, who has a special understand of the need from serving as the city’s aquatics supervisor for more than 13 years before becoming the assistant director.

“It will make a tremendous difference,” she predicted Monday.

“We’re really excited to get this grant,” added Cloukey, who said that to her knowledge Mount Airy has not received it before. “I just think it’s a fantastic opportunity.”

As someone who has taught thousands of local youths how to swim at Reeves Community Center’s aquatic facilities, Cloukey sees firsthand how the new grant program can benefit the community, including its potential for preventing drownings — “absolutely.”

She pointed out that a non-city resident, non-member of Reeves Community Center normally is charged $55 for youth swim lessons, with lesser sums in place for non-resident members or resident non-members.

“It could benefit up to one hundred kids that would not otherwise have an opportunity to take lessons,” Cloukey estimated.

Eight swim lessons typically are involved, of varying lengths depending on children’s ages. Classes for those 6 and older, for example, last 55 minutes.

“We’re just hoping it can make an impact on our community,” Cloukey said of the grant.

Persons wanting more information about the swim lessons involved can contain Cloukey or city Parks and Recreation Director Peter Raymer at Reeves Community Center.

I would like to say first that I am a lifelong Mount Airy resident born in Mount Airy. I am writing because I am very much disturbed by the grumblings of a local group that wants to prevent any improvements to our Main Street (Re: Walk Planned to Save Main Street, Sept. 15 Mount Airy News).

Is burying the ugly utility lines and removing the unsightly power poles and cobra lights really going to destroy the character of downtown?

It seems no action can be taken by our city commissioners anymore without a protest group forming. After 50 years, I think a facelift to our Main Street should be welcomed. Much money was spent to develop a plan to make our downtown more beautiful and attractive. The protest group is trying to turn the whole thing into something negative and influence public opinion to turn against the plan.

I do not see anything wrong or “big” city about the improvements made to downtown Boone. I think it looks very neat and attractive and appealing to tourists and outsiders and is something the local people there are probably very proud of. I want to voice my strong support for the three city commissioners that voted for the plan. I hope other local citizens who approve of this master plan and the changes will also speak up to prevent the nay-sayers from having their way.

• Fake currency has showed up again in Mount Airy as it does periodically, according to city police reports.

The latest incident, which police learned of last Friday, resulted in Food Lion on West Pine Street being victimized. The crime actually occurred in late August, but was not reported until last week.

It involved an unknown male suspect using bogus money to obtain both miscellaneous grocery items and real currency received back in change. The denomination(s) used were not specified in police records, nor was a total loss figure.

• An Indiana man was charged with larceny and possession of stolen goods last Wednesday after allegedly stealing a bottle of Kim Crawford sauvignon blanc wine and four bottles of Fireball cinnamon whiskey from Sheetz on Rockford Street.

Gregory William Hudson, 55, of West Lafayette, was detained at the business by officers after allegedly taking the beverages, valued at $46, and consuming them without paying.

Arrest records further state that Hudson was turned over to staff members of Northern Regional Hospital and his vehicle was impounded. He is scheduled to appear in Surry District Court on Oct. 17.

• Worth Honda on West Pine Street was the scene of a crime discovered on Sept. 10, which involved the business being broken into and an attempt to steal a 2006 Kawasaki motorcycle.

Entry was gained by knocking a hole in an exterior wall and then forcing open a locked door. Nothing was listed as missing from the incident.

A total of 13 people have been appointed or reappointed to three different city advisory groups by the Mount Airy Board of Commissioners.

Its unanimous action last Thursday night included three members being re-upped to the Mount Airy Planning Board, Len Fawcett, Bryan Grote and Courtney Williams.

Two other Planning Board members eligible for reappointment, Tami Springthorpe and Gray Trotter, elected not to do so.

Fawcett, Grote and Williams were each approved for new three-year terms that will expire on Oct. 31, 2025.

Joanna Refvem and Lauren Jennings were appointed to three-year terms as replacements for Sprinthorpe and Trotter on the Planning Board. It devotes initial study to zoning, annexation, land-use and related proposals and makes recommendations to the commissioners for final action.

The terms of Refvem and Jennings will run until Sept. 30, 2025.

Meanwhile, four city residents were reappointed to the Mount Airy Appearance Commission. It spearheads various beautification efforts in town — including an awards program to recognize business and residential properties that are setting a good example for others through aesthetic or architectural excellence.

Phillip Brown, Jenny Smith, Paul Danley and Darryl Wilson were approved for new three-year terms on the appearance group to expire on Sept, 30, 2025.

Another member of that group whose term has ended, Allen Burton, was not eligible for reappointment, resulting in Len Fawcett being named as Burton’s replacement. His three-year term will run to the same date as the other four members.

In another move, Rob Sinton and Jenny Smith were reappointed to new three-year terms on the Mount Airy Parks and Recreation Commission which will expire on Sept. 30, 2025.

Another member of that group, Karen Eberdt, has relocated from the city and no longer is eligible to serve, triggering the appointment of Julia Draughn to fill Eberdt’s unexpired term that runs until March 30, 2023.

The Mount Airy Parks and Recreation Commission is a citizens advisory group on matters relating to facilities and programs within that realm.

While the annual Mayberry Days may have seen crown numbers down over the past two years because of the coronavirus pandemic, this year’s gathering could be shaping up to be one of the largest ever.

The gathering of Mayberry faithful traditionally sees Mount Airy flooded with fans of “The Andy Griffith Show” from all over the nation — along with a few international fans — with the major festivities getting underway on Thursday. That is when the annual Mayberry Days Golf Tournament gets underway, and that night is a dinner at Cross Creek Country Club, complete with entertainment that will feature country music star T. Graham Brown this year.

This year both have already sold out, meaning the arts council has had to cut off selling additional tickets to the events. In more than 30 years of Mayberry Days Festivals, Surry Arts Council Executive Director Tanya Jones said that has never happened.

“I do anticipate great attendance for many reasons, but the weather forecast is perfect,” she said. That forecast calls for daily high temperatures to range between the low 70s to the mid-80s, with clear skies all week.

Another factor in a potentially record-breaking attendance is the expansion of events. Historically, Mayberry Days gets underway with Thursday’s golf tournament and dinner, followed by the official opening ceremony Friday morning. Both of those events remain in their customary time slots, but there are plenty of activities going on all week this year.

The 1958 movie “No Time For Sergeants” starting Andy Griffith along with Don Knotts, has been playing at The Historic Earle Theatre daily since Friday; and beginning Monday fans have chances to see “Murder in Coweta County” staring Griffith and Johnny Cash; catch a performance by comedian John Floyd as The Mount of Mayberry; along with three concerts at the Blackmon Amphitheatre Tuesday through Thursday featuring The Embers, The Band of Oz, and The Legacy Motown Review; along with a host of other Andy Griffith Show related displays, talks and activities.

Remembering those who have passed

While Mayberry Days is a time of celebration and renewing old friendships, there will be a tinge of sadness with a few activities this year aimed at remembering those the Mayberry community have lost over the past year, with events planned to memorialize Thelma Lou actress Betty Lynn and Charlene Darling actress Maggie Petersen Mancuso, among others. Betty Lynn passed away on Oct. 16 after a brief illness, at RidgeCrest Retirement Community in Mount Airy. Maggie Mancuso passed away May 15. She had been in declining health since her husband, musician Gus Mancuso, died the previous year.

Jones, whose Surry Arts Council sponsors and oversees the annual Mayberry Days festival — said several others who worked with the show or fans who were well-known to the Mayberry fandom also will be honored.

Gary Nelson, who directed an episode of “The Andy Griffith Show” as well as two episodes of its spin-off series, “Gomer Pyle U.S.M.C.,” will be honored by Dick Atkins, who is dedicating his annual presentation to the late Nelson. Atkins was a producer for “Murder in Coweta County.” His presentation will include screenings of the movie as well as question and answer sessions.

Fans Pat Bullins and Dewey Lamb will be remembered as well. Bullins, a multi-time winner and well-known contestant of the annual World Championship of Mayberry Trivia, will be honored with this year’s competition being dedicated to her. Lamb, a talented artist known for creating unique Mayberry-themed work, and for occasionally donning his Goober outfit, will be honored when this year’s WBMUTBB Silent and Live Auction — named for the sponsoring Who’s Been Messin’ Up the Bulletin Board? chapter of The Andy Griffith Rerun Watcher’s Club — is dedicated to his memory.

Jones said Maggie will be remembered in two ways. First, the Doug Dillard Tribute Band concert, featuring Rodney Dillard and the Dillard Band, will be dedicated to her memory. Maggie and the Dillards were part of the fictional Darling clan from “The Andy Griffith Show.” Those appearances often included blue-grass music, with Maggie singing, and she often sang with the Dillards during the band’s annual concert at Mayberry Days.

In addition to the concert’s dedication to her, there will be a presentation of photos and music from her career 30 minutes prior to the Dillard Band concert, open to ticket holders for the show.

There will be a more formal memorial for Betty Lynn on Friday at 9:30 a.m. in the Historic Earle Theatre on Main Street.

“We didn’t have a service for Betty when she passed away,” Jones said. “We wanted to be able to include fans as they were so important to her – the service during Mayberry Days is Betty’s memorial service.”

Jones said that Karen Knotts, daughter of Don Knotts and a frequent guest at Mayberry Days – was particularly close to Betty. “Karen and a couple of others who were special to her will say a few words,” she said.

Additionally, Jones said that singer and Elvis tribute artist Michael Hoover, who has several shows scheduled for Mayberry Days, will be singing during her service.

“Betty loved him and he performed on stage with her for several years during Mayberry Days shows,” Jones said.

During the service — which is open to everyone — there will be presentation of Betty’s career highlights projected onto a screen.

While fans and the Mayberry Days guests may have their attention focused on the various memorials for those who have passed away, Jones reminds everyone that there will be quite a bit of good, old-fashioned, Mayberry fun for those attending the event.

“There will be some new children’s activities, a new mural, several new shows including a Patsy Cline show and another featuring women in country music – more shows than ever,” she said.

For a full list of events, see look for copies of the Surry Arts Council publication “Mayberry Confidential” at various places around town, or visit the Mayberry Days website at https://www.surryarts.org/mayberrydays/index.html

ARARAT, Va. — Although Maj. Gen. J.E.B. Stuart commanded the Confederate cavalry during the Civil War, a naval exhibit is to be part of an upcoming reenactment event at Stuart’s Laurel Hill birthplace in Patrick County.

But don’t worry, ground troops will still be highlighted in mock battles during the annual Civil War Encampment and Living History Weekend on the Ararat site which is slated for Oct. 1-2.

The overall goal of the event is to educate the public about the conflict that divided the nation and illustrate how the typical soldier of both blue and gray existed — in a sense allowing attendees to take a trip back in time.

Reenactment troops camp out on the grounds, where various exhibits and historical groups also set up shop and special programs are held during the weekend.

That’s where a replica of the CSS Hunley will play a key role. It pays homage to the first submarine in the world to sink an enemy vessel, in its case the USS Housatonic, which had been part of the U.S. Navy blockade of Charleston. The Hunley, only about 40 feet long, attacked the Housatonic with a torpedo in February 1864 and was itself lost due to the blast along with an eight-member crew.

The sunken sub was raised in 2000 and is displayed in North Charleston, South Carolina.

Organizers of the Civil War Encampment and Living History Weekend say the replica sub will be a welcome presence at the gathering.

“We are very glad to have it and make it part of our event,” said Tom Bishop a member of the governing board for the J.E.B. Birthplace Preservation Trust that spearheads the Living History Weekend now in its 30th year.

“We had it in years past, but I think there were some issues,” Bishop said, which prompted a redo of the exhibit that will surface again in Ararat. “This is the latest version.”

Gates are scheduled to open at 9 a.m. on both Oct. 1-2 for the Living History Weekend.

Admission will cost $8 per person, free for those 12 and under.

Laurel Hill is located at 1091 Ararat Highway, just across the state line from Mount Airy via N.C. 104.

Civil War battle recreations — slated for 3 p.m. on Oct. 1 and 2 p.m. on Oct. 2 — are always popular segments of the Living History Weekend and organizers are expecting healthy numbers of uniformed reenactors to participate with horses and cannons.

“We’re probably going to have in the hundreds, I’m guessing,” Bishop said of what has become a popular stop for those individuals who also lend authenticity to such events elsewhere.

“They like the reception they get, the facilities,” he added.

Other highlights of the Oct. 1-2 weekend will include guests portraying Civil War generals in addition to many others who’ll be there in period costume.

Live string band music, a ladies tea, a Saturday night dance, Civil War sutlers and and a church service that Sunday morning also are planned.

Two groups, The Fisher River Timber Rattlers and The Cedar Ridge String Band, each will perform multiple sets on Oct. 1, when the latter will headline a music and dance session at 7:45 p.m.

Music is to be performed Sunday by Herbert and Tina Conner, with the gates closing that day at 4 p.m. to conclude the weekend for another year.

Special speaker Sam Winkler also is scheduled to be on hand portraying Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

Other history-minded activities on tap include a generals council of war both days, a black rose memorial service and a grand review on Oct. 1 at 10 a.m. accompanied by a flag-raising ceremony and monument dedication.

A variety of food and other vendors are expected to be on hand in addition to representatives of area historical groups including the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

The Civil War Encampment and Living History Weekend returned last year after organizers reluctantly cancelled the 2020 edition of the event as COVID-19 was raging.

That interruption, along with negative public sentiments surrounding Civil War figures at that time, created a cloud of uncertainty for its return in October 2021 in terms of how the event would be greeted by the public.

Those fears proved to be unfounded as last year’s Civil War Encampment and Living History Weekend was one of the best-attended in recent memory, with nearly 1,000 people in attendance over the two days.

President Biden on Sunday declared the COVID-19 pandemic was over in the United States.

Health officials are not so sure. A litany of medical professionals on Monday said the numbers of cases in the U.S. do not back up the president’s claim. One, Dr. Megan Ranney, head of the Brown University school of public health, went so far as to call his statement “malarkey,” according to a Monday NPR report.

Locally, health officials might also take issue with Biden’s proclamation.

According to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Surry County is still considered a community with a “high transmission” rate, joining neighbors Stokes, Yadkin, Alleghany and Forsyth counties on the wrong end of the rating spectrum. All totaled, as of Monday, 26 of North Carolina’s 100 counties were rated as high-transmission communities, up from 25 the previous week.

Maggie Simmons, assistant health director for the Surry County Health and Nutrition Center, said on Monday the county has experienced 528 confirmed cases of COVID-19 over the past two weeks, 206 of those in the previous seven days. That puts the seven-day average at nearly 70 new cases per day.

While community transmission in Surry remains high, the number of cases requiring hospitalization is down considerably. As of Monday morning, Northern Regional Hospital had just two COVID patients being hospitalized — one in the step-down unit, which is for patients who are not quite critical enough for the intensive care unit — and one in the general patient population, according to Robin Hodgin, senior vice president of patient services and chief nursing officer.

Hodgin said the hospital has averaged three to four COVID inpatients a day over the past week, down from 10 a day during August, and a far cry from the winter months when he hospital had more than 30 COVID patients some days. She did say, however, that the hospital is seeing three to five of its staff members out each week suffering from COVID-19.

All totaled, Simmons said Surry County has seen 25,550 confirmed cases of COVID-19 since the pandemic began, with 380 deaths. Both she and Hodgin say both agencies have seen a number of individuals contracting the coronavirus more than once, although they do not keep statics on repeat infections.

Simmons is cautioning county residents to be vaccinated against coronavirus, and to get updated boosters. She said 54% of the county has received at least one dose of the vaccine, while 51% has completed the initial series, with 27% having had at least one booster.

Her department has the bivalent vaccine booster, designed to offer protection against two different strains of the virus – the original strain that all previous vaccines have targeted and the newer Omicron subvariants, BA.4 and BA.5.

“A person is eligible to receive a bivalent booster if it has been at least two months since they have completed their primary vaccination series or since they received a booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine,” her department said in a statement released last week. “The updated booster vaccines do not replace shots for the primary vaccination series, but they will replace the current booster dose for persons 12 years of age and older.”

Simmons offered precautions for individuals to help stem further spread of the virus:

– Stay up to date on vaccinations, including recommended booster doses;

– Avoid contact with people who have suspected or confirmed COVID-19;

– Follow recommendations for isolation if you have suspected or confirmed COVID-19;

– Follow the recommendations for what to do if you are exposed to someone with COVID-19;

– If you are at high risk of getting very sick, talk with a healthcare provider about additional prevention actions.

“At high levels of community transmission, masking is recommended, particularly for those at high risk of severe illness,” she added.

For individuals wishing to receive the vaccine, or the booster, call Surry County Health and Nutrition Center at 336-401-8420, to schedule an appointment. Walk-ins will be accommodated; however, appointments are preferred.

DOBSON — Millennium Charter Academy hosted three cross country meets at Fisher River Park park during the first three weeks of September.

Coverage of the second MCA meet, held Sept. 8, was included in the Sept. 10 edition of The News. Though Millennium itself didn’t compete in the second meet, other local schools such as Mount Airy, Elkin, White Plains Christian School and Surry Homeschool did.

Millennium’s first meet of the year saw more than 220 high schoolers – 123 boys and 98 girls – compete at Fisher River Park on Sept. 1. Middle school races were also held.

The high school boys 5,000-meter run featured runners from 18 schools. Teams with at least five runners were eligible for the team competition, which assigned point values based on their individual finishes. The school with the lowest point total was the victor.

Only runners that were parts of the team competition were assigned points. As a result, point values don’t always equal a runner’s finish among the entire field.

Mount Airy had the highest finish of any local in the boys competition, finishing sixth of 12 eligible teams with 167 points. Next among Surry County schools was Elkin at No. 8 with 195 points, followed by No. 10 Millennium with 240 points and Surry Home Educators at No. 11.

Forsyth Country Day’s George Lawson won the boys race with a 5K time of 17:24.92. Elkin’s Connor Ball led all local competitors with a time of 18:37.57, good enough for the No. 7 spot among 123 runners.

Results for local runners in the high school boys race are listed below. Results are listed by finish, name, grade, school and then 5K time.

48 Nathan Luther 9 Surry Home E 21:57.85

93 Isaac Richland 9 Surry Home E 26:36.19

95 Noah Richland 9 Surry Home E 26:50.05

100 Daniel Bunke 10 Surry Home E 27:16.84

101 Caleb Luther 11 Surry Home E 27:19.52

107 David Lee Williams 10 North Stokes 28:09.10

There were 98 girls from 16 schools that competed in the high school girls race at the first MCA meet.

Calvary Baptist Day School won the team competition with 40 points. Mount Airy had the high team finish of any Surry County team by taking the No. 7 spot with 170 points. Elkin was next at No. 8 with 195 points, followed by Surry Home Educators at No. 9 with 245 points.

Calvary Baptist’s Anna Edwards won the race with a time of 18:58.93. Mount Airy’s Brooke Haynes had the highest finish from Surry County with a time of 23:04.89, good enough for the No. 8 spot.

Results for local runners in the high school girls race are listed below.

30 Lindsay Easter 9 Surry Home E 25:40.39

79 Lydia Jarrard 12 Surry Home E 31:38.45

90 Alie Gullion 10 Surry Home E 35:03.05

93 Maddie Gambill 9 Surry Home E 37:06.77

98 Helen Hendrickson 9 Surry Home E 44:09.10

Millennium’s third hosted meet of the year welcomed more than 213 high schoolers – 124 boys and 93 girls – compete at Fisher River Park on Sept. 15. Middle school races were before the high school races.

Runners from 18 school competed in the boys race. Mount Airy’s Freddy Hernandez finished on the podium this time, taking the No. 3 spot with a time of 18:42.49. The race’s winner, Central Davidson’s Austin DeGeorge, finished with a 5K time of 18:19.72.

Mount Airy and Surry Homeschool were the only Surry County teams with enough runners to qualify for the boys team competition. The Bears were No. 4 with 123 points, and the Runnin’ Patriots were No. 9 with 229 points.

Results for local runners in the high school boys race are listed below.

40 Steven Hendrickson 11 Surry Home E 21:50.39

62 Nathan Luther 9 Surry Home E 23:03.27

65 Sam Steinbruegge 9 Surry Home E 23:26.06

70 Isaac Richland 9 Surry Home E 24:03.29

86 Noah Richland 9 Surry Home E 25:06.41

105 Caleb Luther 11 Surry Home E 26:24.84

108 David Lee Williams 10 North Stokes 26:47.82

121 Daniel Bunke 10 Surry Home E 33:54.46

There were 93 girls from 15 schools that competed in the high school girls race at the third MCA meet.

South Iredell won the team competition with 48 total points. Mount Airy had the best finish of Surry County teams at No. 7 with 182 points, followed by White Plains at No. 9 with 237 points.

Central Davidson’s Jillian Parks won the girls race with a time of 20:15.09. Mount Airy’s Brooke Haynes was the only Surry County competitor in the top-25, which she accomplished by finishing No. 5 with a time of 21:59.80.

Results for local runners in the high school girls race are listed below.

28 Lindsay Easter 9 Surry Home E 25:06.44

50 Lydia Jarrard 12 Surry Home E 28:19.60

87 Maddie Gambill 9 Surry Home E 33:08.97

91 Helen Hendrickson 9 Surry Home E 41:10.72

The Surry Arts Council is sponsoring three concerts at the Blackmon Amphitheatre this week in conjunction with Mayberry Days, featuring three of the more popular bands that regularly play during the arts council’s summer concert series.

Legacy Motown Revue returns to the Blackmon on Tuesday followed by The Embers featuring Craig Woolard on Wednesday and Band of Oz on Thursday. The concerts on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings start at 7:30 p.m. The show on Thursday evening begins at 8 p.m.

The Legacy Motown Revue takes listners back to the days of The Drifters, The Coasters, The Jacksons, Earth Wind & Fire, The Temptations, and so many more legendary icons. “Featuring talented performers that dance and sing, plus ang six-piece horn band, you will be transported back in time to one of the most influential periods in American Musical History,” arts council organizers said.

“The Embers are widely considered a musical marvel and have laid the groundwork for what has become known as ‘Beach Music’ in the Carolinas, Virginias, the gulf coast region of North America, and every beach in between,” arts council officials said. “They are a true musical tradition with which many Americans have listened to from childhood to adulthood. The Embers consider the genre of Beach Music as ‘music with a memory’ and have been creating lasting memories since its inception in 1958.”

“The Band of Oz is one of the most successful groups in the Southeast and continues to get the very best reviews from the top people in the entertainment business,” concert organizers said. “The band now features a full horn section to total a dynamic eight-member group. They still perform well over 200 shows per year for corporate events, festivals, concerts, wedding receptions, and many other public and private events.”

Admission to each show is $15 or a Surry Arts Council Annual Pass. Children 12 and younger are admitted free with an adult admission or annual pass. The Dairy Center, Whit’s Custard, and Thirsty Souls Community Brewing will be at the concerts to provide food, snacks, drinks, beer, and wine for purchase. No outside alcohol or coolers are allowed to be brought into the Amphitheatre area. Those attending are asked to bring a lounge chair or blanket to sit on.

Tickets are available online at www.surryarts.org, via phone at 336-786-7998, or at the Surry Arts Council office at 218 Rockford Street. For additional information, contact Marianna Juliana at 336-786-7998 or marianna@surryarts.org

Mount Airy ran for more than 400 yards for the third consecutive week to blow past East Wilkes 62-7.

East Wilkes scored first, but Mount Airy retaliated with nine unanswered touchdowns in Friday’s Northwest 1A Conference opener. The Granite Bears held the Cardinals to their lowest scoring total of the season while also handing East Wilkes its first loss of 2022.

When Mount Airy most recently played in Wallace Shelton Stadium in, junior Tyler Mason set a career high in yards rushing while also scoring five touchdowns in a 54-6 win over Surry Central. Two weeks later on Sept. 17 Mason did the same thing against East Wilkes.

The running back raised his single-game career high to 250 yards, this time doing so on 13 carries. Mason’s first two carries of the game – which both resulted in the junior reaching the end zone – went for a combined 131 yards.

The Granite Bears (4-1, 1-0 NW1A) have hit their stride in the running game in September. Mount Airy ran for 403 yards in the aforementioned win over Surry Central on Sept. 2, then went on the road to Ashe County to go for 443 yards rushing in a 51-29 victory.

Ian Gallimore and Taeshon Martin both ran for career highs against Ashe County. Gallimore led the team with 15 carries for 177 yards and three touchdowns, Martin ran for 115 yards on 10 carries, and Mason added 151 yards and two touchdowns on 15 carries.

Gallimore and Martin only needed to run a combined four times against East Wilkes (4-1, 0-1 NW1A) and Mount Airy still finished with 430 yards on the ground. Behind Mason’s 250: Martin had two carries for 71 yards and two touchdowns, Traven Thompson had two carries for 58 yards and a touchdown, a returning Caleb Reid had one carry for 36 yards, Gallimore ran twice for eight yards and Nas Lemon carried four times for seven yards.

Gallimore also completed 4-of-6 passes for 52 yards, bringing the Bears’ total yardage to 482 for the game. Walker Stroup, who also kicked seven touchbacks and six PATs, was the leading receiver with a 26-yard touchdown catch. Logan Fonville added one catch for 11 yards, Mason had one reception for 10 yards and Mario Revels had one catch for five yards.

East Wilkes was held to 126 total yards after going 80 yards on its first drive of the game. The Cardinals received the opening kickoff and got on the board after a 6:08 drive ended with a 1-yard run from senior Brody Martin.

Martin led the Cards with 12 carries for 37 yards, followed by Briggs Gentry with 8 carries for 33 yards, Easton Martin with four carries for 17 yards, Ayden Guessford with one carry for no yards, Eric Adams with two carries for -7 yards, Seth Lambert with four carries for -10 yards and Zac Helms with one carry for -16 yards.

Gentry passed for 72 yards by completing 3-of-10 attempts. Ethan Cass had one reception for 36 yards, followed by Adams with one catch for 28 yards and Brennan Arnder with one catch for 8 yards.

The Bears and Cardinals both continue NW1A play next week. Mount Airy travels to South Stokes (2-3, 1-0 NW1A), and East Wilkes hosts Elkin (1-3, 1-0 NW1A).

5:52 EWHS 0-7 – Brody Martin 1-yard rushing TD, PAT good*

5:36 MAHS 7-7 – Tyler Mason 80-yard rushing TD, Walker Stroup PAT

1:16 MAHS 13-7 – Tyler Mason 51-yard rushing TD, PAT no good

8:17 MAHS 20-7 – Tyler Mason 23-yard rushing TD, Walker Stroup PAT

3:26 MAHS 28-0 – Tyler Mason 32-yard rushing TD, Connor Burrell 2-point conversion reception from Ian Gallimore pass

1:08 MAHS 35-7 – Walker Stroup 26-yard TD reception on Ian Gallimore pass, Walker Stroup PAT

11:49 MAHS 42-7 – Taeshon Martin 63-yard rushing TD, Walker Stroup PAT

7:09 MAHS 48-7 – Tyler Mason 11-yard rushing TD, PAT no good

3:24 MAHS 55-7 – Taeshon Martin 8-yard rushing TD, Walker Stroup PAT

9:57 MAHS 62-7 – Traven Thompson 62-yard rushing TD, Walker Stroup PAT

*No kicker listed on MaxPreps

Meadowview Magnet Middle School held a school-wide assembly recently to kick-off the annual Chocolate Bar Fundraiser. Principal Colby Beamer was dressed as Willy Wonka, Assistant Principal Ashley Newman and seventh grade teachers Amanda Bledsoe, Maggie Watts, and Tommy Branch were dressed as Oompa Loompas to celebrate the occasion.

Students who participate in the Chocolate Bar fundraiser will be rewarded with various prizes including a Game Truck, Limo Lunch, and a Beats Party. Meadowview hopes to raise $10,000, which will be placed in the school’s general fund for the year.

Preservationist Richard Moe is quoted as saying, “There may have been a time when preservation was about saving an old building here and there, but those days are gone. Preservation is in the business of saving communities and the values they embody.” ‘

Recent events have seen one of our historic landmarks and anchors torn down out of necessity. Sometimes we can’t save a building, but we can cherish the memories, hard work, and legacies they leave behind.

Quality Mills has a story that has been woven through the lives of Surry County and the surrounding area’s citizens, touching many lives as it branched out through the area. Personally, my grandmother, Jean Morgan, worked in the offices of Quality Mills for 15 years and her story is only one of many that surround the mill’s legacy.

Somewhere between 1934 and 1935, Howard Osler Woltz Sr. or H.O. as he is known, purchased a failing underwear company and took over the machines and stock of the Duke Knitting Mills. These machines were moved to the old Beasley Lumber Company building at the corner of Franklin and South Streets in Mount Airy.

W.E Lindsay, H.O. Woltz, and Matt Hines pulled together to get Quality Mills up and running by 1936. The mill provided hundreds of jobs for the community in its heyday, starting with the sewing/knitting plant on Franklin. Operations started under the supervision of John March, who had worked for the Hanes Knitting Company for 17 years, giving the starting operation a leg up on the competition.

Though the path to success looked gentle from the outside, that wasn’t always the case. In the early days, one Mount Airy article suggests that payroll was hard to cut and mistakes were made, however, the company persevered. One turning point was when Woltz, out of desperation, visited Macy’s Department Store in New York and offered a deal. A week later a contract for more than $200,000 in men’s shirts was placed with the company. The company soon needed to expand its operations and by the late 1970s eight different buildings were dedicated to mill operations, some in surrounding counties and other states.

The company continued to grow adding offices, community, and employee events and even having to up its protection against sabotage and espionage in 1942. In 1958 Quality Mills was handed over to Woltz’s son, John. The elder Woltz’s other company, Dixie Concrete (now Insteel Industries), was given to his other son, Howard, in 1953. The family even started Cross Creek Country Club in the early 1970s, giving Surry County its first 18-hole golf course, as H.O. Woltz Sr. believed it needed.

With the printing of the October 1988, “Quality News,” a newsletter sent to employees and community supporters, Quality Mills was making a big change. The larger Russell Corporation purchased the operation and began a merger that further expanded the company’s reach. Clothing lines such as “Cross Creek” continued alongside new Russell brands. At the same time, Quality Mills had opened a new plant in Pilot Mountain earlier in the year and acquired a sewing plant in Danbury.

By the early 1990s, the name Quality Mills Co. was changed to Cross Creek Apparel Inc. The subsidiary continued to be one of the major assets to the Russell Corporation. In 1998 the company claimed a net loss of $10.4 million on revenue of $1.18 billion. In August of 2008, the Cross Creek Apparel Plant closed its doors, laying off about 300 employees and changing lives again.

Here in the foothills, textiles and millwork were a way of life for generations. While the buildings, machines, and businesses may no longer exist, their histories continue.

Emily Morgan is the guest services manager at the Mount Airy Museum of Regional History. She and her family live in Westfield. She can be reached at eamorgan@northcarolinamuseum.org or by calling 336-786-4478, extension 229.

Books available to check out at the Mount Airy Public Library include:

Other Birds – Sarah Addison Allen

The Christie Affair – Nina de Gramont

What the Fireflies Knew – Kai Harris

Hell and Back – Craig Johnson

Settling His Hash – William W. Johnstone & J.A. Johnstone

Think of Me – Frances Liardet

Take My Hand – Dolen Perkins-Valdez

The Girl From Guernica – Karen Robards

Sisters of Night and Fog – Erika Robuck

The Mad Girls of New York – Maya Rodale

Seven Days in June – Tia Williams

Woman on Fire – Lisa Barr

Edge of Dusk – Colleen Coble

The Dark Hours – Michael Connelly

Grace Under Fire – Julie Garwood

The Judge’s List – John Grisham

The Family You Make – Jill Shalvis

The Zen of Therapy – Mark Epstein, M.D.

What it Took to Win – Michael Kazin

The Invisible Kingdom – Meghan O’Rourke

Reading time is here for kids of all ages. Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. is Toddler Time for children ages 2 and 3; Thursday at 9:30 a.m. is Book Babies for children ages birth to 2 years old; and on Thursday at 11 a.m. is Preschool Storytime for ages 4-5.

Full STEAM Ahead – Tuesday afternoons from 4 — 5 p.m.. A new program for students in fourth through sixth grades. Students will listen to a book and/or read the book. Activities will be STEAM-based, built around science, technology, arts, math, literature and history. For youth in grades 4 through 6.

Hooked – Come join our crochet and knitting club, every Wednesday at 3 p.m. Bring your own yarn and make the group project or bring your own project to work on.

Tai Chi Fridays – Experience meditation in motion, 10 a.m. every Friday in the Multipurpose Room All skill levels are welcome.

The Community Book Club meets the fourth Wednesday of the month at 1 p.m. In September we will be reading and discussing The Wife Upstairs by Rachel Hawkins.

Pages and Petticoats Book Club — meets on the last Tuesday of the month at 6 p.m. Discussion questions will be posted on Facebook. This month’s book is Outlander by Diana Gabaldon.

Chapters Book Club – meets the third Thursday of the month at 11:30. Members discuss the different books they have read.

It’s Yoga Y’all is held on the third Saturday of the month at 10:30 a.m., unless otherwise noted.

September is Library Card Sign Up Month. “Find Your Voice at the Library.” To celebrate and encourage people new to the library to sign up for a library card, we are holding a daily raffle in the month of September. Each day, people who sign up for cards or check out books will put their name in a basket and we will draw at the end of each workday. The prizes may consist of different gift cards, books or other prizes. So, if you aren’t a member of our local library system, Northwestern Regional Library, come out and sign up in the month of September.

National Voter Registration Day is Tuesday, Sept.20. Come by the library to register or update your registration from 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Update your registration if: You have turned 18, you have moved, you have changed your name.

Save Those Seeds. There will be a free seed saving workshop presented by Surry County Extension Master Gardeners on Sept. 20 2 p.m. Registration is required. Call 336-789-5108 or stop by the circulation desk to secure your spot today.

Friends of the Library Mini-Book Sale Come will be held on Thursday, Sept. 22, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Friday, Sept. 23, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Saturday, Sept. 24, 9 a.m. until 1 p.m.

Keep up with all events on our FaceBook pages, https://www.facebook.com/groups/fmapl and https://www.facebook.com/mtapublibrary or our website https://nwrlibrary.org/mountairy/

In recording deeds, the state of North Carolina does not require that the amount paid for a parcel be stated on the deed. However a tax stamp at the rate of $2 for every $1,000 in value is affixed to each deed.

Recent real estate transfers recorded in the Surry County Register of Deed’s office include:

– Kathy M. Mayes, Phillip Culbert Mayes, Keith Alton Martin, Vivian Martin, Karen Lawson and Lester Everette Lawson to Kathy M. Mayes and Phillip Culbert Mayes; two tracts Mount Airy; $80.

– Marion D. May and Sharon Lee May to Donovan M. May; lot 77 phase II Orchard Mountain development PB 10 125 Franklin; $0.

– Estate of Michael Raye Easter, Leah Easter and Michael Raye Easter to Spencer Easter; quitclaim deed 3.97 acres tract one PB 22 28 Mount Airy estate of Michael Raye Easter; $0.

– Kingstone Investments, LLC to Rimak, LLC; .770 acres lot 2 PB 40 158; $140.

– Curtis Dean Hunter and Lou Anne W. Hunter to Bethany Hunter; 3.385 acres PB 41 89-90 Westfield; $0.

– Scott & Creed Salt & Feed, LLC to Double Mountain Construction, LLC; 18.52 acres; $700.

– Suzanne S. Wood and Jackie Alan Wood to Jobe Gavin Angel and Katelyn Danielle Holt; 1.39 acres lot 1 section 3 Knollwood subdivision PB 11 172 Stewarts Creek; $430.

– Joseph Dillon Hawks to Kevin Dale Hawks and Cheryl Sparger Hawks; 4.518 acres parcel 1 Minor subdivision of Joseph Dillon Hawks PB 40 199 Dobson; $0.

– NC Blueline Properties, LLC to David Craig Stanley and Donna Sumner Stanley; lot 1 PB 41 72 Lumber Plant Road Franklin; $120.

– Kingstone Investments, LLC to Rimak, LLC; .872 acres lot 3 PB 40 158; $140.

– Terri Lynn Eads to John Stanley Eads; 10.004 acres Dobson; $390.

– Estate of Gary Ellis Kirkman, Linda Kirkman Doss, Lavonda B. Kirkman, Justin Kirkman, Abigail Kirkman and Gary Ellis Kirkman to Amy Key Hall; lot 10 and 11 block A Mount Airy estate of Gary Ellis Kirkman; $270.

– Simple Housing Solutions of NC, LLC, Melinda Hope Haynes, Chase Melton, Timothy Haynes and Jeremy Chase Melton to Joy Property Investments, LLC; tract; $0.

– JDP Zephyr, LLC to Yesenia Carapia and Pedro Gomez; tract Bryan; $106.

– Sharon Hackler Cundiff to Emily Snavely and Eric Snavely; 2.004 acres PB 41 102 Impala Lane Mount Airy; $54.

– Estate of Eleanor G. Powell, Kathy Powell Smith, Chuckie Talmage Smith, Linda Kay Powell and Eleanor Powell to Reed W. Ell and Angela M. Ell; lot 99 Eugene G. Smith property PB 4 40 1 136 Mount Airy; $410.

– Jay Howard Sherrill and Sheila Simmons Sherrill to Penny Lou Olson Revocable Trust and Penny Lou Olson; 1.730 acres PB 33 68 and PB 41 111 Mount Airy; $35.

– Gary Dean Hutchens and Diane T. Hutchens to Juan Loredo Adame Jr.; 0.9593 acres tract two PB 28 181 Longhill; $0.

– Estate of Farrah Smith Davis, David Smith and Farrah Smith Davis to Terry R. Hawks and Lisa Carole Hawks; 0.424 acres Mount Airy estate of Farrah Smith Davis 22 SP 171; $356.

– Twain Lee Atkins to Tyler Dean Samuels, Scarlett Nicole Samuels, Jerry D. Samuels and Lesa L. Samuels; 1.125 acres Eldora; $7.

– Redoak Development, LLC to Brody Landon Gentry and Chole Rebecca Deneke Gentry; 0.344 acres tract one PB 21 112 and lots 78-79 Saftey Harbour subdivision PB 1 74 Mount Airy; $25.

– Emma Mahala Mooney and Caleb Seth Mooney to Candy Sue Bodenhamer Lowe; 2.220 acres tract three PB 32 140 Rockford; $0.

– Curtis Dean Hunter and Lou Ann W. Hunter to Blaine Hunter; 2.130 acres PB 33 178 Westfield; $0.

– William Clay Draughn and Faye H. Draughn to Savannah Marie Draughn; 1.016 acres PB 41 113 South Westfield; $0.

– Jeanette Brown Parks and Harold Michael Parks to Ashley Nicole Sewell and Eli Corbin Blevins; tract one 2,290 sq ft and tract two lot 52 Mount View Height PB 3 99 and tract three 0.23 acres Bryan; $260.

– Gerald Lee Ramey and Kelly Ramey Hiatt to Whittney Noelle Anthony; 0.57 acres Mount Airy; $180.

– Mayberry Properties of NC, LLC to Gwendolyn Patricia Harrelson Martin; lot 10 PB 6 17 Mount Airy; $190.

– Jerel Gray Gordon to Old Banner Properties, LLC; 27, 285 sq ft Pilot; $400.

– Sharon Lowe, Mary Lou Martin, Matthew Martin and Penny Martin to David P. Lowe; commissioners deed 1.012 acres Stewarts Creek file 21 SP 188; $16.

– Gary Dean Hutchens and Diane T. Hutchens to Juan Lorado Adame Jr.; 3.0135 acres tract one PB 28 181 Longhill; $117.

– Savannah R. Hodges and Andrew Utt to James Alexander Bright; lot 10 phase 1 Ridge View Estates PB 21 93 Dobson; $378.

– Estate of Ruby Johnson Joyce, Jeffrey B. Joyce, Ruby Johnson Joyce and Julia C. Joyce to Greg Leon Dillard and Molly M. Dillard; tract Elkin estate of Ruby Johnson Joyce; $46.

– Dusty Slate, Sheena Slate and Glenda Dowell Slate to Cossie Ayers; tract Stewarts Creek; $70.

– Lilian S. Calary, Charles William Crispens Calary Jr. and Pamela Miller Calary to Alyson Elizabeth Shelton; lots 18-20 block C Hamburg section PB 4 91 Mount Airy; $14.

– Regina Blackburn Reavis to Mark G. Greene; 13.8 acres Bryan; $300.

– Charles Fletcher, Charles Fletcher Sr. and Betty Harris Fletcher to Joshua P. Hart and Amanda D. Hart; tract one 6.400 acres PB 41 106 and tract two Bryan; $80.

– Timothy H. Hauser and Patsy K. Hauser Joint Revocable Trust, Timothy H. Hauser and Patsy K. Hauser to Carole H. Coon; 0.1069 acres Shoals; $1.

– Sharrell M. Coalson and Angel Ayers Coalson to Mark Edward Shelton; tract one 2.30 acres and tract two 8.70 acres Eldora; $156.

– Robert Michael Chase Perkey and Kristan Lanette Perkey to Don’l Blevins II and Candace Blevins; 10.0 acres; $200.

– Amy L. Welch to Justin E. Smeltzer and Hanna Beck Smeltzer; lot 29 section II Woodcreek subdivision PB 8 101 127 Hooks Drive Mount Airy Long Hill; $284.

– Harold Michael Parks Jr. and Kandice Janel Parks to Harold Michael Parks and Jeannette Brown Parks; 0.23 acres Bryan; $0.

– Cory James Craddock and Emily Craddock to James Andrew Craddock and Sheila Cromer Craddock; 1.00 acres portion of lot 22 PB 3 51 South Westfield; $0.

– Scotty Dale Parsons to Misti Lynn Burnette; 1.026 acres PB 20 177 and PB 31 149 Mount Airy; $346.

– Clay McDuffie Dulaney to Kari Fisher and Alex Fisher; 4.266 acres Eldora; $680.

– The Scott and Mary Rigney Living Trust, Scott Anthony Rigney and Mary Linda Foy Rigney to Randall Owen Poole, Randy Owen Poole and Juel H. Poole; tract one 1.020 acres and tract two lot 39 Riverside Acres PB 6 75 Mount Airy; $836.

– Jeffrey Frye to John C. Arnett and Susan C. Arnett; tract Stewarts Creek; $427.

– NC Blueline Properties, LLC to Delaina Byrd Hernandez and Lazaro Hernandez Lopez; lot 2 PB 41 72 Lumber Plant Road Franklin; $120.

– R & J Tree Service, Inc. to Evan M. Goldberg and Amy Clark Goldberg; tract; $170.

– Randy Michael Bledsoe, Steva Hardy Bledsoe, Paul R. Bledsoe and Nancy Cochrane to Abigail N. Wall and Samuel G. Wall; .75 acres Rockford; $386.

– Estate of Evan Leif Tonnesen, Evan Tor Tonneson, Brooke Renate Tonnesen and Evan L. Tonnesen to Evan Tor Tonnesen; 3.677 acres and tract Dobson estate of Evan Leif Tonnesen file 18 E 620; $248.

– Judy Weddle, TimothyWeddle, Bonnie Galyean, Donald Galyean, Lisa Edwards and Tammy Edwards to Opal M. Edwards; tract; $0.

– Remona Faye Durham Sollenberger and Joseph Franklin Sollenberger, Ronnie Gray Durham, Mary Browne Durham, Randall Dwight Durham, Bambi Bonita Durham, Sheila Durham and Richard Wayne Durham Sr. to Robyn Durham Haignere and Eugene Franklin Haignere; lots 13-15 block D Graves Heights development PB 3 158 Mount Airy; $100.

– Real People Real Homes, LLC to Hardman Nine, LLC; lot 7 block 1 Main Street; $160.

– Pilot Mountain Rescue and EMS, Inc. to Big Creek Properties, LLC; tract one 11,895 sq ft and tract two 7.84 acres PB 26 78; $296.

– Independence Lumber, Inc. to Woodgrain, Inc.; tract one lots 2-9, 21 and 24 PB 6 159 tract two 0.983 acres Elkin; $3,664.

– Jeffrey Lynn Pomeroy Jr. and Jennifer Pomeroy to Terry And Irene Family Trust, Terry Coe and Irene Coe; 1 acres Marsh; $100.

– Midland Trust Company, Kathryn Edwards and Loren Edwards to David P. Snow and Kari N. Snow; lots 12 and 13 1.376 acres Mountain Park Section 2 PB 3 23 Bryan; $260.

– Carl E. Bell and Jane L. Bell to Anne Jessup Rogers; 1.0 acres Westfield; $24.

Sgt. Greg McCormick and his senior cadets, from Surry Central High School, visited Dobson Elementary School recently to teach the fifth grade class about the significance of the U.S. flag, and how to handle it respectfully.

The cadets also demonstrated how to fold the flag properly. After that, they broke up into groups and let the students practice folding in sets of four so that everyone got a turn. Sgt. McCormick then had four student volunteers fly, draw, and fold the flag as a closeout to the instruction.

”The students loved the experience of handling the flag and learning how to fold it properly,” school officials said.

The following marriage licenses were issued in Surry County:

– Steven Ray Jackson, 25, of Surry County to Cheyanne Renee Boyd, 20, of Surry County.

– Curtis James Spears, 35, of Surry County to Alana Lee Harris, 26, of Surry County.

– Noah Bradley Nix, 21, of Stokes County to Alexandria Faith Reavis, 22, of Stokes County.

– Carl Marion Haynes, 46, of Surry County to Pearly Mae Wright, 41, of Surry County.

– Vicente Santana Trujillo, 36, of Surry County to Juliana Gonzalez Garcia, 33, of Surry County.

– Dylan Hunter Darnell, 25, of Carroll County, Virginia, to Gina Brooke Rotenizer, 26, of Carroll County.

– Jose Ramon Barrios Morales, 32, of Surry County to Jacqueline Puntos Martinez, 27, of Surry County.

– Damon Charles Camp, 26, of Surry County to Brandy Nicole Collins, 26, of Surry County.

– Cesar Emmanuel Pena, 29, of Yadkin County to Kenia Campos, 30, of Yadkin County.

– Freddie Tara Vanhoy, 67, of Surry County to Becky Jane Flowers, 68, of Wilkes County.

– Rickie Gray Hunter, 69, of Surry County to Vickie Lynn Gwaltney, 63, of Surry County.

– Michael Lee Pff, 56, of Roanoke County, Virginia, to Ambre Michelle Dickerson, 57, of Roanoke County.

– Austin Paul Jarrell, 23, of Surry County to Emma Margaret Nichols, 23, of Surry County.

– Griffin Wyatt Hardy, 23, of Surry County to Kathryn Grace Dalton, 23, of Surry County.

– Austin Garrett Scott, 28, of Virginia Beach, Virginia to Molly Renee Slater, 23, of Forsyth County.

– Adam Dean Atkins, 43, of Surry County to Kristi Annette Bourne, 45, of Surry County.

– Dakota Lee Smith, 23, of Stokes County to Kaley Brooke White, 24, of Surry County.

The Surry County Community Corrections office is seeking information on the whereabouts of the following individuals:

• Timothy Michael Hayes, 44, a white male wanted on a post-release warrant and a felony warrant for interfering with an electronic monitoring device. He is on probation for two counts trafficking methamphetamine, possession of a firearm by a felon and use/possession of drug paraphernalia;

• Samuel Casey Jenkins, 24, a white male wanted for failing to appear in court on probation violations who is on probation for driving while impaired;

• Filiberto Ramirez Gasca, 58, a Hispanic male wanted on probation violations who is on probation for resisting a public officer and second degree trespass;

• Franklin Dale Davis, 48, a white male wanted for failing to appear in court on probation violations who is on probation for larceny and breaking and entering.

View all probation absconders on the internet at http://webapps6.doc.state.nc.us/opi and click on absconders. Anyone with information on any probation absconders should contact Crime Stoppers at 786-4000, county probation at 719-2705 or the Mount Airy Police Department at 786-3535.

The lore of September thunder

Thunder in September is not all that rare and with the weather being less humid, most thunder does not produce gusty thunderstorms, but thunder in September can still be heard when the temperature is warm. Usually when thunder is heard in September, a lot of rain comes with it but not much in the pattern of thunderstorms. There is a bit of lore concerning thunder in September as a sign of abundance of fruits and vegetables next year. Here’s to hoping for some September thunder.

The harvest of autumn leaves has begun

Don’t let the leaves of autumn go to waste and please do not burn them but recycle them for compost, leaf mulch and a blanket for protecting cold weather vegetables. The leaves can be blown to the garden and run over by the lawnmower to break them down for the compost pile or bin. Crushed leaves make a protective blanket for rose bushes, azaleas and bulb beds. Crushed leaves can be placed between rows of collards, broccoli, cabbage, kale, and greens. Stay ahead of the leaves during the days of autumn. You can crush them by running the mower over them or run them through the leaf vacuum and place them in a pile to use in the spring garden plot. When you crush them, the wind will not get under them and blow them around.

Grass clippings filled with nitrogen and heat

September grass clippings are filled with nitrogen and other heat-building nutrients. Save them for making compost piles and bins heat up. Mix them with piles of leaves to help break them down. Keep saving the clippings all the way until a hard November freeze that will cause grass to become dormant. They are one of nature’s best resources.

Slowdown of the last summer crops

All that remains of the summer vegetables in the garden plot are late tomatoes and peppers. The nip in the September air has slowed them down. The tomatoes are slowing down and still have plenty of green ones developing to be harvested before Jack Frost arrives.

Time to set out a row or bed of onion sets

As we reach the middle of September, onion sets are showing up in hardwares and garden centers, and a row or bed can now be set out in the autumn garden plot. You can choose from red, yellow, or white sets. Onion sets are tough and will endure the harshness of winter and produce all the way into early spring. A pound of sets costs around $3. Sow them in a furrow four inches deep. Place a layer of peat moss in the bottom of the furrow and set the onions with the root side down and about three inches apart. Cover with another layer of peat moss and an application of Garden-Tone organic vegetable food. Hill up soil on both sides of the furrow and tamp down with the hoe blade for good soil contact. They will sprout in about two weeks. In October, cover between the rows with a layer of crushed leaves. Feed with Alaska fish emulsion mixed with proper amount of water in a sprinkling can according to instructions on the bottle. Feed onions once a month. You can also side dress with Garden-Tone organic vegetable food and hill up soil on both sides of the row.

Outside critters trying to winter over

The days are growing shorter and the nights are getting cooler and this is a hint to insects and creepy crawlers to find a warm place to spend winter such as in your home or basement. They are seeking a dry place to spend winter and now is the time they are looking for opportunity to gain entrance to your house. You can prevent them from gaining entrance by spraying around all door ways and porches as well as carports. If you have a wood pile spray around it and also around basement doors and around basement walls. Don’t leave any food or scraps outside that could attract the critters. Open and shut doors quickly when coming and going outside.

Plenty of colors in autumn leaves

As September reaches its middle, the leaves have been putting on a show of color. Some of the trees are now unloading their harvest of leaves. The maples and dogwoods are the first to lose their leaves followed by hickories and poplars. Last to go are the mighty oaks and many of their leaves will remain until Thanksgiving while the remainder of their leaves will linger until a heavy snowfall brings them down.

Heat as the season changes cooler

The furnace will be in season for the next six months as we make the transition from summer into autumn and winter. You can make your furnace work less by keeping the thermostat on a uniform, comfortable setting without moving the setting up and down. You should also clean or change the filter on the furnace once each month, open and close outside entrances quickly. Keep blinds and drapes closed at night. Make sure all doors and closets and cabinets are closed. Wear warmer clothing while in the house. Prepare food in the oven so that the heat from the oven will make the kitchen comfortable as well as the surrounding areas. Educate the kids to open and shut doors quickly when coming in and going out of the house.

Still time to set out spring bulbs

There is still a little more than a month to set out the flowering bulbs of early spring. The soil is workable and hardwares, nurseries, and garden centers still have plenty of bulbs in stock. Buy only bulbs in mesh bags or individual bins so that you can feel and inspect bulbs for rot, or mold. You can choose from hyacinth, crocus, daffodils, narcissus jonquils, tulips and snow drops. Buy a bag of bone meal or bulb booster to promote growth. Another useful tool for setting out bulbs is a durable bulb planter made of heavy duty steel that will last for many seasons. Spend the extra money and buy a tough one that will last. You get what you pay for.

The humming birds winding down season

Mid-September and the humming birds are preparing to move south in just two weeks or so. They are still visiting the feeders often as summer flowers continually fade out. Keep feeders out for as long as you see the hummers. The nectar you provide is important for the next few weeks. This will help them as they prepare for one of the natural wonders of the world, a trip across the Gulf of Mexico where they will spend winter and return to us next spring.

Making a pot of sweet and sour beef stew

This is a great dish on a nippy September evening. It is actually a meal in one pot. You will need one fourth cup of plain flour, one teaspoon salt, half teaspoon pepper, one and a half pounds stew beef, half cup Crisco cooking oil, one cup water, half cup light brown sugar, one fourth cup apple cider vinegar, one tablespoon Worcestershire sauce, one envelope Beefy onion Recipe Secrets, two diced potatoes, three diced carrots, half teaspoon salt. Combine flour, one teaspoon salt and half teaspoon pepper and coat stew beef with the flour mixture. In a frying pan, brown the stew beef on all sides in the Crisco oil. Combine the water, half cup catsup, light brown sugar, apple cider vinegar, Worcestershire sauce and the second half teaspoon of salt. Boil over low heat until stew beef is tender. Boil the diced carrots and potatoes, drain and add the Beefy onion Recipe Secrets and one stick light margarine. Cook for one minute and add to beef stew mixture and boil on low heat for two minutes. Serve with a bowl of Minute Rice.

The beginning of apple season

There is a lot of color adorning fruit markets and produce stands as well as supermarkets as the season of the apple harvest begins. Apples come in varied colors of red, green, yellow, pink, and other mixed colors. Apples have a long shelf life and will last for weeks in the refrigerator or in a bowl on the dining room table. Apples are one of those special fruits that are available all year round but especially at this season of year.

Making an old fashioned apple pudding

For this pudding, you will need ten fresh apples, two cups buttermilk, two large beaten eggs, two cups light brown sugar, one cup sweet milk, two teaspoons apple pie spices, two cups plain flour, one teaspoon salt, two sticks light margarine (melted), and tablespoon vanilla flavoring. Peel the apples and cut into one inch chunks (make sure you have enough apples for at least two quarts). Add the buttermilk, beaten eggs, sweet milk, apple pie spices, flour, one teaspoon of baking soda and melted margarine (all in the order listed). Pour into a 13×9×2 inch baking pan or dish. If you have more than enough apple pie filling, use another pan. Spray pan with Pam baking spray and bake at 350 degrees for 50 to 60 minutes.

“Mouse in the house?” Wife: “Jack wake up! There’s a mouse in the room, I heard him squeaking.” Husband: “What do you want me to do? Get up and oil him!”

“Unsure.” The man was fleeing down the hall of the hospital just before his operation. “What’s the matter?” he was asked. He said, “I heard the nurse say ‘It’s a very simple operation everything will be alright.’” “She was just trying to comfort you, why are you so frightened about that?” The patient said, “She wasn’t talking to me, she was talking to the doctor.”

“Second opinion.” For years, he thought he was a failure. Then he took a course on positive thinking. Now he is positive that he is a failure.

“Speedo.” State Patrol man: “I clocked you doing 85 miles per hour, friend, is anything wrong?” Motorist: “Yes, officer, I forgot to connect my radar detector!”

While the timeline for a project to bring a Marriott hotel to downtown Mount Airy has been expanded 12 months from the original schedule, city officials seem as confident as ever about it reaching fruition.

The Mount Airy Board of Commissioners voted unanimously Thursday night to approve an extended development agreement between the municipality and Sunhouse Hospitality LLC of Cary.

Plans have been in the works by Sunhouse since late 2020 to transform the large, four-story Sparger Building on the former Spencer’s textile mill property on Willow Street into the new lodging establishment. The plan also has included developing a market center nearby.

City Attorney Hugh Campbell explained during Thursday night’s meeting that certain “slippages” or delays have occurred which prompted the revised timetable.

“There are lots of reasons why,” Campbell said, adding that these have been out of the municipality’s control.

One has involved the time needed for state and federal review of a Sunhouse application for historic mill tax credits to aid the project, which act to preserve the existing architecture.

Another delay is linked to a tremendous amount of time needed to work with Marriott, which paid off with that chain’s decision to enter into an agreement with Sunhouse to locate one of its highly regarded Tribute hotels in the Sparger Building.

“This should be the first Tribute hotel in North Carolina and the first full-service hotel in Surry County,” local Main Street Coordinator Lizzie Morrison said during a presentation at Thursday night’s meeting on the overall progress of the Spencer’s redevelopment.

Morrison called the coming of the boutique hotel a “compliment” to the viability of downtown Mount Airy from Marriott’s point of view.

The apparently unavoidable delays have not dampened enthusiasm among local officials, according to Campbell.

“We still feel like we’re in a good partnership with these developers,” the city attorney said.

Under the revised timeline, initial work on the Sparger Building is set to occur in early 2023 to next summer.

General hotel construction by the local J.G. Coram firm and completion of site work is planned from the summer of 2023 to early 2025, with the lodging establishment slated to open in the spring of that year.

This will be a shining star for the Spencer’s redevelopment, which has been in the works since the former industrial property was bought by the city government in May 2014.

The Spencer’s transformation has experienced its share of ups and downs over the years, while achieving successes including the building of the 65-unit Spencer’s Mill Apartments adjacent to the Sparger Building which have a long waiting list.

And the extension of the Sunhouse development timetable for the hotel should not be viewed as a sign that it will meet the same fate as earlier plans for a Barter Theatre expansion and hotel on the property that were abandoned.

“It’s my understanding they have spent a sizable amount of money to get the Marriott franchise,” Mayor Ron Niland said Thursday night of Sunhouse, adding that this figure — required up front — is between $700,000 and $1 million.

“They’ve got quite an amount of skin in the game,” Niland added in regard to how a company would not abandon a project with such an investment having been made so far.

City Manager Stan Farmer agreed.

“With their signing of the agreement with Marriott, it almost guarantees they can’t walk away,” he said.

Even so, certain performance milestones have been inserted into the extended development agreement which Sunhouse is expected to meet before January.

These included lining up financing for the project and the completion of architectural drawings for the hotel.

The city attorney explained Friday afternoon that this is needed because the municipality will be doing some construction in the parking lot area near the building and officials wanted an assurance that Sunhouse will complete such steps before that work begins.

Sunhouse is scheduled to close next year on the purchase of the property it agreed to buy from the city for the project, according to the amended development agreement approved by city officials Thursday night, covering 36 pages.

• The execution of a search warrant at a local residence has led to felony drug charges against a Mount Airy man, according to city police reports.

Rodney Tyrone “Peter Rabbit” Travis, 48, of 509 Worth St., is accused of two counts of possession of cocaine and one count of possession of methamphetamine, along with possessing drug paraphernalia, a misdemeanor. The case stems from a search at his home on Sept. 9, with police records indicating that marijuana also was found although no charge regarding that drug is listed on the arrest report.

Due to being in the presence of Kimberly Duncan at that location, Travis further is charged with violating a domestic violence protective order she had filed against him. He was jailed without privilege of bond and is scheduled to appear in Surry District Court next Wednesday.

• Two vehicles were discovered broken into on Sept. 7 at a residence in the 300 block of Willow Street, where the windshield of one received damage put at $100.

Popcorn was listed as the only item stolen in the incident targeting a Jeep Wrangler, which received the damage, and another vehicle that was not identified. The victims of the crime are listed as William Graham Pruitt and Jessica Kathryn Lawrence.

• A Sept. 2 traffic stop at the intersection of Linville Road and Riverside Drive led to felony drug and weapons charges against three individuals and their incarceration in the Surry County Jail.

This involved the deployment of a narcotics dog and a positive indication of drugs, prompting the search of a 2004 Ford Explorer and three people inside, which turned up methamphetamine and a handgun.

Both Kimberly Renee Snow, 33, of 122 East End Drive, and Cody Dwayne Holt, 31, of 5362 Westfield Road, were charged with possession of a Schedule II controlled substance, a felony, and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Dylan James Goughary, 35, of Shelton, Connecticut, was charged with possession of a firearm by a felon and violating a domestic violence protective order. Goughary claimed ownership of the gun found during the search.

He was confined in the county jail without privilege of bond, with Snow and Goughary each held under a $1,000 secured bond.

All three are scheduled to be in Surry District Court on Sept. 28.

© 2018 The Mount Airy News