Archive for April, 2007

Video interview with Vance Remick of Pittsboro General Store Cafe

Tuesday, April 17th, 2007

Video interview with Vance Remick of Pittsboro General Store Cafe in downtown Pittsboro, NC. The Remicks were celebrating the 5th anniversary of the General Store Cafe.

Other videos

Sea Grass Band performs at Pittsboro General Store Cafe

04:58

The Sea Grass Band performs bluegrass dance music at the Pittsboro General Store Cafe in downtown Pittsboro, NC.

60 Minute Man

02:28

Sea Grass Band performs “60 minute man” at the General Store Cafe in Pittsboro, NC during the Birthday Bash

Coach O’Brien at halftime of NCSU spring football game

Tuesday, April 17th, 2007

NC State head football coach Tom O’Brien reads off all the players who attended every single spring practice during halftime of the 2007 NCSU Spring Football Game at Carter-Finley stadium.

Video Interview with Pittsboro mayor

Thursday, April 5th, 2007

Pittsboro, NC mayor Randy Voller talks about last week’s Walking Tour, he discusses the search process for a new town manager and reviews the status of the trees at the Pittsboro Kiwanis park.

 
icon for podpress  Interview with Randy Voller [4:14m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Interview with Wallace Kaufman

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

Sylvan & Wallace in 1970

We talk with former Chatham County resident Wallace Kaufman about the new book his daughter and he had written about invasive plants.

The first national guide to invasive plants has been written by two former residents of Chatham County and will be published by Stackpole Books later this month. Dr. Sylvan Kaufman, a plant ecologist, is a native of Chatham County and her father Wallace Kaufman lived and worked in Chatham for 34 years. They wrote Invasive Plants to introduce Americans to an environmental issue that has been called the second most important challenge in public natural areas. Americans spend hundreds of millions of dollars every year to manage invasive plants, but the authors note that many invasives bring economic and aesthetic benefits, and that eradicating invasive plants is nearly impossible.

In their book they provide a key to identifying over 175 of the most common invasives, including many found in North Carolina. “Identification, however, is only the first step,” says Wallace Kaufman, an award winning science writer. “Understanding the plant’s origins and travels and its role in the natural environment and economy helps explain the human factor and evaluate management options and priorities.”

Sylvan Kaufman serves as Conservation Curator for Adkins Arboretum in Ridgely, MD and holds an undergraduate degree from Vassar and a Ph.D. in ecology from Rutgers University. Wallace Kaufman created several thousand acres of rural residential communities in Orange and Chatham County with unique environmental covenants, including Saralyn north of Pittsboro and Redbud on the Haw River east of Pittsboro. He is a former Science Writing Fellow at the Marine Biology Lab at Woods Hole, MA and currently lives in and manages his 200 acre forest in Linn County, Oregon. His last book was a memoir of life and history in Chatham County, Coming Out of the Woods (Perseus Books, 2000)

More information is found on the web sites: www.invasiveplantguide.com and www.wallacekaufman.com


 
icon for podpress  Wallace Kaufman Interview [27:03m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Interview with Monica Howell

Sunday, April 1st, 2007

Chatham Journal Newspaper interview with Monica Howell, owner of the Bead Hive in Pittsboro, NC. Monica wrote an article entitled “My husband, my hero, the flying squirrel catcher” You can read the article at www.chathamjournal.com/weekly/opinion/Columns/my- husband-squirrel-catcher-70222.shtml