Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Adopt-A-Stream in Virginia or Jus' Show 'Em Some Love!

Adopt-A-Stream or how about jus' show 'em some love!


There is a movement afoot to save our waterways! The polluters need a kick in the rear and everyone can do their part to help clean up our rivers, streams, lakes and seashores. Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation has created a program to do just this! It is called Adopt-A-Stream. You can get a group together - any group and volunteer your time twice per year to clean up 1/4 mile of waterway. You set the dates or you can get out on the Virginia Waterways Clean Up Day (usually Spring and Fall).




Waterway adoption
You need to get your hands a little dirty to truly learn about nature. Waterway cleanups provide that prospect. A few hours collecting litter from a local shoreline establishes a link between citizens, community waterways and their watersheds. You see firsthand how your cleanup work improves a waterway's quality and appearance. You feel good about your work, become a caretaker of a local waterway and assume a watershed-based stewardship ethic.


By signing up for DCR's voluntary, do-it-yourself Adopt-A-Stream program, your group agrees to at least one, preferably two, cleanups per year for at least two years. The minimum length of shoreline a group can adopt is one-quarter mile. A team of two typically covers a mile of lightly littered shoreline in an hour or two. Many groups opt for two cleanups a year, one in the spring and another in the fall. DCR helps by providing trash bags, gloves, safety vests, and instructional and promotional documents. DCR also gives each group custom signage featuring the adopted waterway and organization.

You might also be interested in water quality monitoring. Follow this link to the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality's monitoring information.  



You can download a promotional flier on the program by clicking here (PDF, 42k).
Click here to view a presentation that describes the Adopt-A-Stream Program (PDF, 914K)
Click here to view a list of those participating in the program.



Click here to see a few photos of AAS volunteers keeping Virginia's streams clean.



To learn more . . .
For more information, contact the Adopt-A-Stream coordinator at (804) 786-5056, emailadoptastream@dcr.virginia.gov, or write:
Virginia Adopt-A-Stream Program


Department of Conservation and Recreation


203 Governor Street, Suite 406


Richmond, VA 23219
At The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast we love our waterways, we love our lakes,  rivers and the streams here in Virginia.  We owe it to future generations to conserve these special, unique and wonderful places. 

A suggestion from your innkeeper:  If you cannot participate in the full fledged program to Adopt-A-Stream, why not just bring along a couple spare grocery store bags on your next visit to our lakes, rivers or streams.  While you are out and about dedicate just a few minutes of your leisure time to pick up a spare soda can or piece of rubbish along the way.  It doesn't take much to show 'em some love.  How about just on the walk back to your vehicle?  You have your lunch/picnic stuff to pack out and just grab a few extra items you see along the way. 

Can you imagine what it would be like if every person took one extra piece of rubbish instead of leaving it?  I am a conservationist who loves our outdoors, we are blessed with an abundance of natural resources, let's be good stewards of what God has given us.  For a list of our Blueways in Franklin County click here.




VIRGINIA IS FOR WATERWAYS LOVERS


Life is too short for bad coffee... Shellie @ The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast in Rocky Mount Virginia http://www.claibornehouse.net 





For more information click on this linkhttp://www.dcr.virginia.gov/soil_and_water/adopt.shtml
Our local CREEK FREAKS Paddlers of Franklin County VA Website Here They would be privileged to have you join in on an Adopt-A-Stream clean up day! 

Monday, June 28, 2010

Getaway to Bedford of the Blue Ridge


Getaway to Bedford of the Blue Ridge



Virginia is Ruggedly Beautiful, Enticingly Exciting and Teeming with History!

Come experience a valley nestled among Virginia's beautiful Blue Ridge. A land where majestic mountain peaks stoop to drink from the reflective waters of a vast highland lake, and circling hawks patrol ancient forests as they've done since the beginning of time . . .
This is Bedford. Ruggedly beautiful. Enticingly exciting. And teeming with history.

Experience the breathtaking beauty of the Blue Ridge from Bedford. It's a land of intense patriotism, where the National D-Day Memorial stands silent watch on a high hill overlooking the mountain valley that gave more of its sons on the beaches at Normandy than any other place in the country.
Enjoy hiking the trails of The Peaks of Otter, the Appalachian Trail and Smith Mountain Lake State Park as well as the George Washington & Thomas Jefferson National Forest in Bedford County.
Enjoy a trail of another kind — the Bedford Wine Trail — that takes you to wineries interspersed throughout this beautiful countryside: Peaks of Otter WineryHickory Hill Vineyards and White Rock Vineyards.

Visit Thomas Jefferson's Poplar Forest, his octagonal retreat and haven of solitude.
Finish each day with a relaxing dinner at some of the most delightful restaurants in Central Virginia or on a spectacular dinner cruise!


The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast is a short scenic country drive from Bedford in the heart of the historic district of Rocky Mount.  Don't forget moonlight trails rides in Bedford...see our blog article here.

Where to Stay:

  • Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast in Rocky Mount Virginia - just a short drive up route 122 past Smith Mountain Lake to Bedford 
  • all others removed as we're #1 and want you to stay with us.  Cheeky I am.  :)
VIRGINIA IS FOR BEDFORD LOVERS  Life is too short for bad coffee... Shellie @ The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast in Rocky Mount Virginia http://www.claibornehouse.net
Article courtesy of Virginia.org

Friday, June 25, 2010

Rock Churches in Virginia


Celebrated rock churches earn new honor

Building the half dozen churches capped Robert Childress' storied life of mayhem and ministry.




SYLVATUS -- Robert Childress was a drinker.
And a gambler.
And a brawler.
Then one night in 1910, at the end of another spree, Childress found himself outside a Methodist church. He heard singing. There was a revival going on. Childress went inside and surprised himself by answering the altar call. The experience didn't make him a new man right away, but it gave him a new sense of peace.
He stopped carrying his pistol.
Eventually, instead of being someone you could count on to start a ruckus, he became the deputy the Patrick County sheriff depended on to break up a ruckus. Then he became a preacher. Then he started building churches. Six of them.
On Wednesday, the Childress rock churches in Floyd, Patrick and Carroll counties were added to the Virginia Landmarks Register. With the designation came automatic nomination for the National Register of Historic Places. It's another recognition for a man who's become a legend since his death in 1956.
Mayberry 

Presbyterian Church in Patrick County.
Gene Dalton | The Roanoke Times
Mayberry Presbyterian Church in Patrick County.
"Sometimes I get a little anxious about the credit people give my grandfather instead of God," Stewart Childress said as Spankie, his Boston bull terrier, pulled him over a hill behind his grandfather's house.
"Sometimes people ask me, 'Do you know how many souls your grandfather saved?' I tell them I know exactly how many he saved. Zero. He didn't have the power to save anybody. God does that."
God often calls ordinary people to extraordinary work, Childress said. That's what happened in Robert Childress' case, his grandson said. He was just a man, with strengths and shortcomings like any other. But the stories told about Robert Childress make it hard to think of him as ordinary.
"When I was not quite 3, I got drunk. That's the first thing I remember in my whole life," is how Robert Childress began his never-finished autobiography.
Childress was one of the 1,000 or so children delivered by Aunt Orlean Puckett, the legendary midwife whose cabin sits by the Blue Ridge Parkway. A big man with a big voice, he was a dedicated drinker and famous fighter. He was a logger, a blacksmith and a deputy before he became a preacher. He built churches and congregations that still stand five decades after his death.
Dinwiddie Presbyterian Church
Gene Dalton | The Roanoke Times
Richard Slate helped build the Dinwiddie Presbyterian Church.
Richard Slate in the Dinwiddie Presbyterian Church
Richard Slate helped Childress build one of those churches. Wounded in the Battle of the Bulge, Slate got out of the habit of going to church after he came back from World War II. Childress invited him to come to Dinwiddie Presbyterian, which was meeting in an old schoolhouse in the Carroll County community of Sylvatus.
Slate went to hear Childress preach, then he helped Childress build a new Dinwiddie Presbyterian Church.
After one service in the schoolhouse, the collection plate held $5.60. Slate said Childress decided not to take it.
"In that rough mountaineer way he had, he said, 'That's not enough money for me. We're going to turn that over to the Lord to build a church.' "
And so they did. One member of the congregation donated the land. Others donated materials, money and time. They brought stones from their fields to build the walls.
"Times were hard at that time," Slate said. "I guess the biggest donation we got was $100."
The walls were up and there was gravel in the floor, waiting for concrete to be poured, when Childress brought a Mrs. Fishburne to see the progress.
"She said, 'That's a pretty church,' " Slate recalled. "And Mr. Childress said, 'Pretty enough for you to put a roof on it?' "
"That's just the kind of person he was," Slate said.
Slate Mountain 

Presbyterian Church in Floyd County.
Gene Dalton | The Roanoke Times
Slate Mountain Presbyterian Church in Floyd County.
A few days later, a truckload of shingles arrived at the work site.
Childress preached a revival in North Carolina, Slate said, and received a new Chrysler in payment. He sold it to pay for the church's doors and windows.
Some of the rocks in the Dinwiddie church's 20-inch thick walls were hauled in an Army surplus weapons carrier all the way from Buffalo Mountain, a distant hump on the horizon from the Dinwiddie church's front door.
Buffalo Mountain was Childress' first assignment after seminary. In 1926, the 36-year-old, newly minted pastor took his wife and seven children to a hollow below Buffalo Mountain to supervise the Buffalo Mountain Mission School, a three-story building that served as grade school, high school, church and community center.
In 1929 he oversaw the construction of a proper Buffalo Mountain church built of fieldstone. It became the mother church of his ministry. Slate Mountain church was next, in 1932. In 1946, Childress put rock facing on the Bluemont church. In 1948, he put rock facing on the Mayberry church. Dinwiddie was next in 1948. The last was in Willis, when he converted a bank building into a church in 1954.
Bluemont

Presbyterian Church in Patrick County.
Gene Dalton | The Roanoke Times
Bluemont Presbyterian Church in Patrick County.
All are still active Presbyterian churches, except for the one in Willis, which houses a Baptist congregation.
Three of his sons became ministers, and now his grandson, Stewart Childress, is one spring away from graduating from seminary. He lives in a place called The Hollow, not far from Ararat. His grandfather grew up in The Hollow.
"I guess as the crow flies, I only live about a mile from where he was born," Childress said.
Stewart Childress, 52, came to the ministry even later than his grandfather, after spending more than 20 years "in corporate America." He was still in corporate America when he began as a lay preacher.
"The more I began to fill pulpits for people, the more people would call," he said.
Buffalo Mountain Presbyterian Church.
Gene Dalton | The Roanoke Times
Buffalo Mountain Presbyterian Church.
Some people just assumed he'd deliver a great sermon because of his bloodlines. Some started asking him when he was going to start preaching full time. He kept telling them he just hadn't heard the call. Then, during a service at Mayberry Presbyterian Church, where his grandfather pastored while he still was a seminary student, he heard it.
So now he's the student supply pastor at Mayberry and Bluemont, looking forward to July, when he expects to be ordained.
"I don't know if God'll call me to stay in this area or not," Childress said. "I hope he does."
He'd be happy to stay in these mountains his whole ministerial career, Childress said as he and Spankie led a tour of the manse, the school and church where his grandfather's ministry began.

But last December Stewart Childress was in the pulpit at Bluemont Presbyterian Church, delivering a sermon based on a Scripture text and an outline his grandfather had used, standing on the same spot, exactly 50 years before.Stewart Childress wasn't quite 4 years old when Robert Childress died, and he says his only memory of his grandfather is his funeral. He remembers his grandmother raising her veil and bending down to kiss her husband as he lay in his coffin. So Childress only knows about his grandfather's laugh and his grandfather's bigger-than-life personality from the stories he's heard.
It had been Robert Childress' last sermon.
"I felt kind of close to him then," Stewart Childress said.
Article above from Roanoke.com
+++
Read reviews and purchase the book The Man Who Moved a Mountain by Richard C. Davids at Amazon.com here

"When I was not quite three, I got drunk. That's the first thing I remember in my whole life." So began the recollections of Bob Childress, mountain preacher (1890-1956).

The Mountain people walked and rode horseback on these narrow back roads in Virginia, many roads were dirt back then. All just to visit their rock churches and to hear Rev. Bob Childress teach and preach.  Visit these Rock Churches yourself as you travel the Blue Ridge Parkway from The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast.  Click on google map below for directions and more information on the Rock Churches of Rev Bob Childress:

View Rock Churches in Virginia in a larger map

VIRGINIA IS FOR ROCK CHURCH LOVERS
Life is too short for bad coffee... Shellie @ The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast in Rocky Mount Virginia http://www.claibornehouse.net

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Are Reviews Important To You?

READ REVIEWS FROM OUR GUESTS ON TRIP ADVISOR

If you have stayed with us at The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast and keep meaning to add your review to Trip Advisor, please take a few moments now to click the link above and share your comments with other travelers.  We appreciate your time! Your Innkeepers Tony & Shellie


VIRGINIA IS FOR B&B LOVERS
Life is too short for bad coffee... Shellie @ The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast in Rocky Mount Virginia http://www.claibornehouse.net

Monday, June 21, 2010

"Give Me Liberty" visit the Voice of The Revolution

"Give Me Liberty ..."

Patrick Henry Oration Reenactment at St. John's Church

"... or give me death!"

Visit the sites of orator, patriot leader and governor, Patrick Henry.


» Red Hill
» Hanover Tavern
» St. John's Church
» Road to the Revolution

Visit Patrick Henry's house when you stay at The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast.  Red Hill which was nicknamed "The Garden Spot of Virginia" is an hour and a half from the B&B.  Walk in the BIG footsteps steps of history - Virginia has it all!

VIRGINIA IS FOR PATRICK HENRY LOVERS

Life is too short for bad coffee... Shellie @ The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast in Rocky Mount Virginia http://www.claibornehouse.net

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Love in a mason jar

VIRGINIA IS FOR LOVERS
Romantic Add ons at The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast
For all of you who thought I was talking about moonshine or illicit likker, shame on you!  There are OTHER uses for mason jars here in Franklin County (The Wettest County in the World), you know. 

How about this? How about a special add on of flowers for your sweetie?  You just tick the box on our online reservations form and your innkeeper will make sure you have the loveliest flowers in your room for check-in.  Who doesn't love fresh fragrant flowers?  Score some points lads, she will think you are "All that" and more.  Okay so I am being a bit facetious, but heck innkeeping is a fun, helping make your stay romantic and innjoyable is my job!
(Click the image for a better view)
Oh and yeah we can provide sparkling cider and chocolates if you like.  We cannot provide real alcohol, we are not licensed to serve or sell alcohol, but we do have a wine opener and glasses  if you want to BYO.  Trivia for today:  Many of the restaurants in Australia allow you to BYOB, it is common practice there.

VIRGINIA IS FOR ROMANCE LOVERS
Life is too short for bad coffee... Shellie @ The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast in Rocky Mount Virginia  http://www.claibornehouse.net/


Friday, June 18, 2010

A welcome from your innkeepers Tony & Shellie

WELCOME TO THE CLAIBORNE HOUSE COFFEE TALK BLOG. We're glad you're here!

We hope you feel right at home as you read some quirky folksy articles here written about The Claiborne House B&B, sights of interest in the area and other topics that tickle my fancy.   Tony is away at his "real" job while I am left here to oversee the marketing of this B&B.  Oh you will catch a glimpse and gander of him, especially on the weekends as he is the "Outside" innkeeper and I am the "Innside" innkeeper.   He is the one to make sure you enjoy the three level ponds he installed one shovelful at a time, the flowering gardens and the butterflies and song birds they attract.

I am the one responsible for your bountiful breakfast, that your linens are soft and pressed and you have an itinerary with plenty to see and do during your visit!
(click image for closer view...if you dare. Tony is an I.T. guy, the goatee is part of the uniform)

As the innkeepers here at The Claiborne House, we hope you innnjoy your stay and the word relaxation is a hefty part of your conversation.  Please innjoy the 130 foot wrap around porch (again, Tony painstakingly replaced each and every tongue and groove board and sanded and painted) and I propped back up the white wicker and rocking chairs for you to "sit a spell and take in the scenery" oh and added the 20 needy hanging ferns.

If there is anything we can do to make your visit more innjoyable, just give us a holler, we're here for you (just not hovering around like a bee buzzing your ear).  Guests today will innjoy key lime pie at check in and the guest fridge is stocked with Jones Sodas and other favorites, have you tried Cheerwine?  It is a Piedmont favorite, hey you're in the South, give it a whirl!  Hep Y'Self!

VIRGINIA IS FOR B&B LOVERS

Life is too short for bad coffee... Shellie @ The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast in Rocky Mount Virginia  http://www.claibornehouse.net/
PS This photo and welcome were spawned from a realization that you won't find innkeeper photos or personal innformation from most innkeepers on their websites or blogs.  This is MORE than a business, we truly innjoy our guests!  You need to know who you are staying with.  As you can see, we aren't grannies, but this IS a mom and pop as we do everything ourselves.  "A business that just makes money is a poor business." Henry Ford

Thursday, June 17, 2010

It's a Blue Ridge Day!  
Discover treasure on Main Street
Stopping for a picnic along the Parkway
Sipping sweet tea by the lake
We gotchya covered:

  • Rocky Mount is a designated Main Street Community
  • At The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast we have a Picnic On The Parkway Package that includes a gourmet lunch from Center Stage Catering/Edible Vibe here in Rocky Mount
  • Sipping tea by the lake? Which lake? We have TWO!  We are the "LAND BETWEEN THE LAKES" here in Franklin County.  Smith Mountain Lake with its 500 miles of shoreline, fishing, swimming, skiing, boating, and Philpott Lake with its rural rocky outcroppings and citation fishing, boating and exploring!  Water temps in July are a warm 84 degrees and NO SHARKS!

GET ON OUT HERE TO BLUE RIDGE COUNTRY VIRGINIA!
VIRGINIA IS FOR BLUE RIDGE LOVERS

Life is too short for bad coffee... Shellie @ The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast in Rocky Mount Virginia  http://www.claibornehouse.net/

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Rocky Mount Ride

Rocky Mount Ride – Begin The Crooked Road and Blue Ridge Mountain Loop  
Rocky Mount/Begin the Crooked Road/ Shooting Creek/Blue Ridge Parkway/Peaks of Otter/Smith Mountain Lake Loop 
(click this image for larger view - your innkeeper Shellie put this ride together for you)


Motorcycling enthusiasts often tell us this is one of the best places in the country to ride!  This loop will take you through some stunning countryside to mountain vistas with plenty of curves and wildlife to keep this ride interesting!



Begin your day after a bountiful breakfast at The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast.






1) Head out from the end of our street on Route 40 W toward The Blue Ridge Parkway.  Go past Ferrum College and continue on til you come to the infamous moonshine road “Shooting Creek Road” you will also be following The Crooked Road: Virginia’s Heritage Music Trail – see the signs along this trail with the BANJO.  Follow Route 40 for about 27 miles through the rural Franklin County countryside.



Prepare for some white knuckle turns as you quickly climb from the foothills up onto the Parkway.  This was an old buffalo trail that follows the river.  When you get to the top you will come to the Blue Ridge Parkway – turn RIGHT onto the Parkway heading North.   Go approx 5 miles and you will come to Smart View Recreation Area, which is MP 155 should you need a potty break, cool drink or to stretch your legs.  Visit the old Settler’s Cabin as you enter this picnic area for fantastic views of the eastern slopes of the Blue Ridge and beyond.

2) Now you are ready to ride the Blue Ridge Parkway – America’s Favorite Road.  Turn RIGHT out of Smart View Rec Area heading North on the BRP.   Enjoy this road as it meanders around the tops of these mountains.  Make a note - off in the distance to the left you can see Buffalo Mountain in Floyd, an amazing rare ecosystem as well as a sidewinding ride await you should you venture that way. 

3) Continue North on the BRP for 68 miles until you come to the PEAKS OF OTTER MP 86 ranger station or Peaks of Otter Lodge and Restaurant.  Both offer restrooms and cold drinks.  Peaks of Otter Lodge serves a nice meal with a/c.  The hike up Peaks of Otter is worth the time, 360 degree breathtaking views of the Thomas Jefferson Forest.  There is a NPS shuttle should you need a lift back down.

4) From Peaks of Otter Visitor Center you will head East toward Bedford through the George Washington National Forest on Route 43/Peaks Road for 12 miles until you reach Route 122/Booker T Washington Highway.  Take this SOUTH toward Smith Mountain Lake.  Follow Route 122 South for approx 17 miles until you see the lake open up and you cross Halesford Bridge.  You are no back in Franklin County and to your left you will see Bridgewater Plaza and Visitor Center.  This is a lovely spot to stop for a drink/restroom/meal and to sit outside by the docks with waterview.   You are just 15 miles from Rocky Mount.

5) From Bridgewater Plaza turn LEFT on Route 122/Booker T Washington Hwy and head South.  You will pass Homestead Creamery for home churned ice cream and also Booker T Washington National Monument on the left (both are worth the stop).   Go approx 15 miles til you come to a T junction and sign that says RIGHT to Rocky Mount Left to Gretna  Turn RIGHT on Route 40.  Head West on Route 40 go through Town and you will find yourself back at The Claiborne House B&B within 3 miles.  Time to sit on the porch and relax.






VIRGINIA IS FOR MOTORCYCLE LOVERS








Life is too short for bad coffee... Shellie @ The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast in Rocky Mount Virginia  http://www.claibornehouse.net/



The Claiborne House Bed and Breakfast has off street paved parking.  We are centrally located for all sorts of rides here in Blue Ridge Country Virginia...the land between the lakes, 15 miles to three entrances to the Blue Ridge Parkway.  We are the official start of The Crooked Road: Virginia's Heritage Music Trail.  We love to share the B&B with motorcyclists! 

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