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High Country Local First accepting new members for 2013
High Country Local First (HCLF) is accepting new business, farm and community organization members. It is an exciting time for this organization as it gears up for its second annual LOCAL FIRST! REWARDS CARD and first annual Directory of Independent Businesses, both to be released in June. The LOCAL FIRST! REWARDS CARD will provide the cardholder with ongoing discounts throughout the year to participating independent businesses. The goal ...
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Keep Ashe Beautiful receives $500 grant
Keep Ashe Beautiful was one of 10 affiliate chapters of Keep N.C. Beautiful to be awarded a community improvement grant of $500 as of April 24. In order to receive the grant, which was offered by N.C. Coca-Cola Bottlers Council, Keep Ashe Beautiful competed against other affiliate programs. “This is our second grant since we became an affiliate chapter,” said Executive Director Elaine Graham. “To get the grant, we told them what we had al...
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John Tyler Harms
Local man charged with child rape
A Warrensville man was charged with first degree sexual offense, rape of a child and disseminating obscenity to a minor under the age of 13, according to a report from the Ashe County Sheriff’s Office. John Tyler Harms, 20, allegedly raped an 11-year-old child, according to Ashe County Sherff’s Capt. Carolyn Gentry. An investigation revealed the child had met Harms in West Jefferson and became friends. According to the ACSO, on the nigh...
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Big Horse Creek flooded Lansing Creeper Trail Park Monday.
Steady rains soak Ashe County
Dylan Lightfoot | Jefferson Post Big Horse Creek flooded Lansing Creeper Trail Park Monday. Photo submitted | Jefferson Post Water from the New River flooded West Sugar Tree Road near Warrensville on Monday. Emergency Management Coordinator Patty Gambill said several low-lying bridges in Ashe County were under water Monday morning. James Howell | Jefferson Post Heavy rains caused the creek in Candlelight Park in Jefferson to overflow. Photo...
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NCDA&CS challenges restaurants to highlight local food this summer
A new program from the N.C. Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services is encouraging chefs to dig into locally grown products this summer. The Dig into Local – 90 Day Challenge aims to promote the bounty of N.C. agricultural products available during the growing season by challenging chefs from across the state to create new menu options in their restaurants. “This 90-day challenge is a great opportunity for local chefs to connect...
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Students donate $450 to sharing center
James Howell | Jefferson Post Students from the Mountain View Elementary School student council donated $450 for the Ashe County Sharing Center. Polly Jones (far left) accept the donation on Wednesday, and explained the importance to the sharing center to the students. The students included (front row, left to right) Cierra Burgess, Kenadie Hudler, Emily Williams, Emma Calloway, (middle row, left to right) Autumn Blackburn, Sarah Corley, Hunt...
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<p>Image submitted | Jefferson Post</p><p>The gray area of this map shows where the Christmas in July festival will take place this year. The festival will stretch through most of the backstreet and also up West Main Street.</p>
Volunteers preparing for 27th Annual Christmas in July
With the 27th annual Christmas in July only two months away, the annual festival’s volunteer committee is making final tune-ups preparing for the event. Christmas in July is a one full-day, and Friday night free-admission event featuring the very best in traditional mountain music and handmade crafts from throughout the mountains of North Carolina. “The planning process for this festival starts a month after it’s over,” said Jane Lonon, t...
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<p>Open source image | Jefferson Post</p><p>Local N.C. Cooperative Extension agent reminds local gardners to read the labels of the pesticides they may be applying this spring on their gardens; many are harmful to beneficial insects like local honey bees.</p><p>Jefferson Post</p><p>Home gardeners can achieve safe, minimal application of pesticides by practicing integrated pest management.</p>
Extension agent: controlling pesticide use starts at home
This year, home gardeners in the U.S. will apply tens of millions of pounds of pesticides to their vegetable patches, flower beds and lawns. Travis Birdsell of the N.C. State Cooperative Extension would like gardeners in Ashe County to be conscientious about it. “Just the other day I saw somebody spraying their apple tree, which was in bloom,” he said. Applying pesticides when trees and plants are blooming kills not only pests, but also...
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<p>Doug Goss</p>
Local volunteer receives national award
The USDA Forest Service honored bicycle patrolman Doug Goss with the 2012 National Trails Volunteer of the Year Award for outstanding service on the Virginia Creeper Trail in southwest Virginia. This prestigious award is presented nationally to one volunteer each year. Goss received the award during a ceremony along the Virginia Creeper Trail on Saturday, May 4, at Green Cove Station in Damascus, Va. Residing in Ashe County, Goss began vo...
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Four new 'idols' in Ashe County
Photo submitted | Jefferson Post The winners of the 4th Annual Ashe County Idol Competition pose with their trophies on Tuesday, April 23. The winners included K-third grade winner Noah Farmer (front, left), fourth-sixth grade winner Nick Chamberlain (front, right), seventh-ninth grade winner Abby Manley (back, left) and 10th-12th grade winner Heather Travers.
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