The New Farmers
Volume
21
/ Issue 33
Cover Design Credit:
Kathleen Soriano TaylorCover Photography Credit:
George Etheredge
As the old guard of American farmers ages, Western North Carolina farmers are becoming more diverse. Who are the new farmers? What challenges are they facing and what new perspectives will they bring to agriculture in the region?
arts
Asheville Amadeus festival celebrates Mozart and local art
The inaugural Asheville Amadeus Festival — which runs March 17-22 — sees the Asheville Symphony Orchestra team up not only with Highland Brewing Co., but also with local groups ranging…Smart bets: Asheville Poetry Review 20th anniversary edition
The anniversary edition launches at Malaprop's on Friday, March 13, at 7 p.m. The publication's editor and contributors will read at the free event.Alejandro Cartagena: Beyond the HOV lane
Alejandro Cartagena, a Dominican-born and Monterrey, Mexico-based artist, will give a lecture discussing his work at the UNC Asheville Humanities Lecture Hall on Tuesday, March 17.Smart bets: Tales on Market Street
“I wanted to use the arts to bring diverse communities together, so we could share our likenesses instead of our differences,” says Joseph Robinson, organizer of Tales on Market Street.Smart bets: The Last Bison
The multigenerational family band from Virginia — currently touring in support of its 2014 full-length album — employs a diverse lineup of instruments as a point of pride.SeepeopleS returns to Asheville
Fronted by former Asheville resident Will Bradford, SeepeopleS returns to the city with a show at Asheville Music Hall on Friday, March 13.Smart bets: The Stars of Jerusalem Garden
A troupe of Jerusalem Garden's regular performers will soon have a slew of new objects to maneuver — snakes, scarves, swords and sitars to name a few.food
Small Bites: Food Truck Showdown
Local food trucks get ready for battle, Appalachian Vintner helps raise money for a local child undergoing cancer treatments and Highland Brewing Co. pairs food with brews for its new…Food Connection gets restaurants’ excess to those in need
Local Flavor AVL co-founder Flori Pate recently launched a new project aimed at community progress through collaboration. Food Connection, which consolidates hunger and food waste by redirecting surplus edibles, will…La Guinguette brings French and Latin tastes and traditions to Black Mountain
A century ago, French suburbanites favored spending lazy weekend days relaxing at outdoor drinking establishments called guinguettes. Now, veteran Asheville restaurateurs Cecilia Marchesini and Stephane Diaz are reinventing this concept…living
In the Spirit: Open to the one
Xpress corresponded with AskLizze founder Liz Cox, and Sangha Shabda vocalists Jojo Silverman and Aditi Sethi-Brown about Kirtan with Sangha Shabda, part of musical series Open to the One.Four-legged therapy: Service dogs create small daily miracles
When Kim Brophey was a kid, she was fascinated by Lassie, the collie who wowed TV audiences for decades with her intelligence and heroic rescues. These days Brophey, who owns…Conscious Party: Souls for solar
First Congregational United Church of Christ of Hendersonville’s congregation is on a mission to find a way to get as far off the grid as possible.news
UNCA meteorological students look to the future
Students in UNC Asheville’s chapter of the American Meteorological Society use real-world experience, integrated with social media and technology, to feed their love for all things weather-related. There are weather…opinion
Soil treatment
Letter writer: Empowered medical consumer reaped the benefits
"Congratulations to Mr. Sites for all his hard work to regain his health, especially the willingness to be an empowered medical consumer."Letter writer: Local highway driving creates dangerous conditions
"What is seen on Interstates 240 and 40 is against the law and dangerous."Letter writer: A RAD whitewater park would draw people to river
"To be able to offer that experience right in the heart of the RAD would be wonderful for locals as well as tourists."Letter writer: Asheville’s ‘development’ is death by a thousand cuts
"The French Broad River already has a documented turbidity problem, among other issues, and it will be impacted by this atrocity."Letter writer: Asheville families: Please support new smog rules
"I am glad for Margaret Williams' reporting on the Sierra Club's study citing Duke Energy for unsafe sulfur dioxide emission."Elaine Ingham’s manifesto: Let your garden’s wisdom guide your gardening and your life
“We need to educate people to understand that plants can, indeed, take care of themselves without people getting in the way,” asserts Elaine Ingham, an iconic figure in organic farming…