Cary Living magazine July August 2022

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J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 2 2

GO, PLAY, SEE 318 THINGS TO DO IN NC THIS SUMMER

12 TRIANGLE GEMS

CARY | APEX |

HOME RUN ENTERTAINMENT

MORRISVILLE

|

+

FUQUAY-VARINA |

EDUCATION GUIDE

HOLLY SPRINGS



The Premier Periodontal Practice of the Triangle Drs. Aakash Mehandru, Justin Valentine, Michael Stella, Reinaldo Deliz-Guzman and Michael Kretchmer are committed to

providing you with excellent periodontal and surgical care in a comfortable environment. Our friendly, knowledgeable team will address every question and concern. Your oral health needs, goals, and priorities are the focus of your customized treatment

plan. We want to work with you to create the beautiful, healthy smile of your dreams. In its 20th year of providing conservative,

compassionate care, Tar Heel Periodontics has been the leader in providing world class continuing education for dentists in the Triangle. If you are new to the area and have found a new general dentist, they most likely have attended our courses. Our doctors enjoy giving back in dentistry, which

includes teaching at Adams UNC School of Dentistry and volunteering at Wake Smiles Dental Clinic and the UNC Student Health Action Coalition. Our doctors have also

served as presidents of both major local dental societies, covering the entire Triangle.

Tar Heel Periodontics also supports local sports teams in North Carolina. We are proud

partners of the Durham Bulls and the North Carolina FC and NC Courage soccer teams, as well as supporting sponsors of NC State Athletics.

Phone: 919.844.7140 Fax: 919.303.8488 info@tarheelperio.com tarheelperio.com @tarheelperio Founded in 2002

5 OFFICE LOCATIONS 10931 Strickland Rd.

600 Doctor Calvin Jones Hwy.

3100 NC Hwy. 55

245 E NC Hwy. 54

1235 US Hwy. 70 Garner, NC 27529

Suite 101

#112

Suite 203

Suite 203

Raleigh, NC 27615

Wake Forest, NC 27587

Cary, NC 27519

Durham, NC 27713

JULY/AUGUST 2022

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Life is short. Get moving!

E DITOR’S LET T ER

photo courtesy of Cherokee Media Group

T

2022

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Find out for yourself why Nancy Grace was voted Best Real Estate Agent in Western Wake. Nancy and her team of professionals have been assisting Wake County buyers and sellers since 2007. Whether you are an empty nester ready to downsize, or a new family looking for a dream home, they are here to help you achieve your goals. Give her a call today and see what all the talk is about!

NANCY GRACE

Broker/Realitor® Keller Williams Legacy 1483 Beaver Creek Commons Drive 919.616.4139

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2 | caryliving.com

he best stories evoke the nostalgia of a cherished era. In her story “Go, Play, See!” on page 20, Melissa Wistehuff takes you across our state to hundreds of places offering summer fun. Reading it prompted me to browse through old family scrapbooks, spurring a rush of memories from when my kids were little. Early photos show them splashing in the waves at Wrightsville Beach. A year later they were photographed in crisp white outfits on Atlantic Beach. That same summer we attended a family reunion in Oak Island and took snapshots of them “steering” the Battleship North Carolina in EDITOR BETH SHUGG'S THREE CHILDREN EXPLORE A HEMLOCK BLUFFS NATURE PRESERVE Wilmington. Not long after that they TRAIL IN CARY IN 2005. Photo courtesy of the Shugg family. posed in front of the majestic Blue Ridge Mountains, presenting treasures they found while mining for gems in Spruce Pine. These photos are my gems and, coincidentally, include a few of the places that made our “12 Triangle Gems” feature on page 32, written by Eizabeth Brignac. A favorite (above) shows my sons running through Hemlock Bluffs Nature Preserve in Cary, while my daughter does her best to keep up with them. Another makes an appearance years later in pre-prom photos of my younger son and his date—in their formalwear—riding Pullen Park’s historic Dentzel carousel. Wake County is filled with such treasures. On our cover, for example, a vintage gas station once known as Holt & Sons now serves downtown Apex as TapStation Brewery, Burgers and Bourbon. Much of Holt & Son’s original structure and fixtures—including gas pumps—remain for all guests to see as they enjoy an outing with friends. If these stories aren’t enough to convince you that the Triangle is one of the country’s best places to live, Kurt Dusterberg’s “Home Run Entertainment” on page 36 may do the trick. Discover eight Minor League Baseball teams that play in or near the Triangle and offer the same quality of entertainment as major league venues—including cold beer and foul ball–catching opportunities. The fun continues on page 40 with “Baseball is His Calling Card,” also written by Dusterberg. This story introduces you to Gregg Forwerck, who has worked as the photographer behind Topps baseball card photos since 1989. Forwerck was there when Nolan Ryan walked off the field after his final win in 1993. He also captured Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa’s pursuit of the single-season home run record in 1998. Splash into Tom Poland’s “Chattooga River Adventure” on page 42. A thrilling ride down this North Carolina/South Carolina/Georgia river made famous by the 1972 movie “Deliverance” is unparalleled, but you must heed the Chattooga’s warnings. And on page 46, meet a local athlete who was able to continue playing soccer after an organ transplant with help from a nonprofit called North Carolina Transplant Athletes. Other department stories include an update on road construction projects around Wake County (page 48), a perspective on life as an Accelerator School student (page 50), and tips on how to navigate school choice in Wake County (page 52). Our Education Guide on page 55 also offers helpful information about private schools that take unique approaches to education. If you’re new to the area, consider this your guidebook to what makes North Carolina so amazing. We hope you’ll tuck this issue in your backpack or glove box so you’ll always know where to GO, places to PLAY and sites to SEE across this beautiful state we call home. Here’s to a fun summer! Beth Shugg, Editor


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PUBLI S H ER Ronny Ste ph e ns EX EC UTI V E EDI TO R Be th Sh ugg A RT A N D WEB DI R ECTO R Sean Byrne G R A PH I C DES I G N ER A d am Cave GRAPHIC DESIGNER AND COPY EDITOR Ci nd y H untle y CON TR I BUTI N G EDI TOR Jani c e Le w i ne S OC I A L MEDI A A N D CO MMUN I TY EN G AG EMEN T MA N AG ER Me li ssa W i ste h uff ACCOUN T EX EC UTI V ES Sh e rry Brasw e ll Ste fani e Mc Clary DI STR I BUTI O N J oe L i z ana, Manage r D i stri b uTe c h . ne t CON TR I BUTI N G WR I TER S Elizabeth Brignac, Annie Clark, Kurt Dusterberg, Mandy Howard, Janice Lewine, Tom Poland, Anita Stone, Libby Taylor, Melissa Wistehuff CON TR I BUTI N G PH OTO G R A PH ER S Josh Manning, Michael Mascia, MASH Photography, Jenny Midgley, New Depth Creations

Cary Living magazine is published six times annually. Any reproduction in part or in whole of any part of this publication is prohibited without the express written consent of the publisher. Copyright 2022. All rights reserved. Cary Living magazine is not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts, photography, or art. Unsolicited material is welcome and is considered intended for publication. Such material becomes property of the magazine and is subject to editing. Cary Living magazine will not knowingly accept any real estate advertising in violation of U.S. equal opportunity law.

SUBSCRIPTIONS

6 print issues (1 year) Available online at caryliving.com 4818-204 Six Forks Road Raleigh, NC 27609 Phone: 919.782.4710 Fax: 919.782.4763

4 | caryliving.com


JULY/AUGUST 2022

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CONTENTS

J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 2 2

FEATURES

20 GO, PLAY, SEE!

Where to find summer fun across North Carolina

32 12 TRIANGLE GEMS Don’t miss these treasures here at home

36 HOME RUN ENTERTAINMENT

20

Minor league baseball teams keep the hits coming

40 BASEBALL IS HIS CALLING CARD

Gregg Forwerck’s photos

shape the sports card industry

42 CHATTOOGA RIVER ADVENTURE Excitement awaits,

but heed the warnings

32

36

ON THE COVER

Sophie Schaefer of Raleigh, Connor Shugg of Chapel Hill, Meera Dahlman of Raleigh and Julia Kasper of Cary enjoy a summer day at TapStation Brewery, Burgers and Bourbon in downtown Apex. Photo by MASH Photography.

40

42

J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 2 2

GO, PLAY, SEE 318 THINGS TO DO IN NC THIS SUMMER

12 TRIANGLE GEMS

CARY | APEX | 0708CL_Cover BIG SKY.indd 1

6 | caryliving.com

HOME RUN ENTERTAINMENT

MORRISVILLE

|

+

FUQUAY-VARINA |

EDUCATION GUIDE

HOLLY SPRINGS 6/16/22 1:28 PM


JULY/AUGUST 2022

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CONTENTS

J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 2 2

DEPARTMENTS

46

GIVING BACK

48

TRANSPORTATION

50

SPORTS

52

EDUCATION

Nonprofit gives organ transplant recipient hope

Engineers work to make infrastructure improvements

Local school offers athletes an academic alternative

46

48

50

52

Tips for navigating school choice in Wake County

IN EVERY ISSUE 10

60

68

ON THE SCENE Social Scene Talk of the Triangle New Around Town Home Styler Sister Cities

OUT + ABOUT Dine + Draft Foodie Focus Events Sightings

SPONSORED CONTENT 55

KALEIDOSCOPE

View the results of our first annual student art contest

68

8 | caryliving.com

EDUCATION GUIDE


2022

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I am currently doing Invisalign with Preston Dental and honestly, I’ve never been so excited to go to the dentist. Providing Netflix and aromatic neck pillows is really just the icing on the already sweet cake that is Preston Dental! And to think I found them because of an Instagram ad?! - Katie K.

Dr. Patel has been providing beautiful, confident smiles for more than a decade and is dedicated to her mission to make a lasting difference in people’s lives.

Both times I’ve walked into this dental office I heard laughter and great music. Dr. Meenal Patel is the best dentist I’ve ever been to, and she and her staff are amazing. Today I spent over three hours in the dentist chair—which was also a massage chair— and it was a pleasant experience. - Joe L.

Preston Dental Loft

140 Preston Executive Drive Suite 200, Cary 919.467.6111

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ON THE SCENE SOCIAL SCENE

In celebration of summer travels, our social media manager, Melissa Wistehuff, rounded up a few of her family’s favorite social media moments at fun places around town and across the state, in addition to fun stuff happening right here in the Triangle. She kicks things off with a kayaking excursion to the Rachel Carson Reserve, with Beaufort Paddle as her guide. This nature reserve consists of several islands and offers visitors a look at salt marshes, wild horses and other beautiful wildlife.

The Old Hampton Store & Barbecue in Linville delivers small mountain-town vibes with bluegrass bands, a cute gift shop and home-cooked food. Visit in October during the Apple Butter Festival for your “turn” at apple butter churning out back.

Experience Idle Hour Biergarten in Atlantic Beach— with cocktails in hand and toes in the sand.

Cary Living Executive Editor Beth Shugg and Account Executive Stefanie McClary welcomed guests at Ruckus Pizza, Pasta and Spirits in Apex for a networking event in April.

Enjoy a taste of Spain in Durham: Taberna Tapas brings Mediterranean flavor to the Bull City. PHOTO BY RITA HANSHUMAKER

TE X T AN D PHOTO S BY ME LIS S A WISTE HUF F (Unless otherwise noted) 10 | caryliving.com


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We capture The moment, you enjoy it.

O N T H E S C E N E TA L K O F T H E T R I A N G L E

INTRODUCING A BRAND-NEW PAGE FEATURING

YOUR COMMENTS ON OUR SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS! ALSO, CHECK OUT

A SUMMARY OF OUR LATEST “TALK OF THE TRIANGLE” PODCAST EPISODES.

Our May/June issues are on newsstands now, and we’re BEYOND excited to share them with you! “I love those mid-century/atomic vibes. ” @carynctheplacetobe “Oof I must know where those red shoes and silver earrings are from!!” —@gggabu

Spoiled with an incredible brunch at @lucky32cary. Tell us where you spent your #mothersday. “@lucky32cary is my absolute favorite restaurant! The family and I went again on Saturday. You can’t go wrong with their salmon with creamy grits and a side of sautéed green beans. OK, now my mouth is watering. ” —@shopcorneliahome “Jealous!!” —@cary_massage

Photography for WEDDINGS EVENTS

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HEADSHOTS zacheryumphrey.com

Congratulations @fentonnc on your grand opening! “Wow! What an amazing grand opening!” —@thrivingwomensconference “Welcome to the neighborhood!” —@overthemoonplay

Hey, locals! What’s your FAVORITE thing to do in the Triangle? Think: staycation, activities, relaxation, family-friendly, pet-friendly, indoor/outdoor … Dinosaurs, lobster rolls, scavenger hunts and beer + burgers (at TapStation). Check out this week’s Talk of the Triangle for the latest on all this and more! “TapStation is so good! Drinks are great, food is good, service is on point! Definitely a place you have to check out!” —@jessica_lyn88 12 | caryliving.com

“Boating on Falls Lake, concerts @redhatampitheater, enjoying all the amazing restaurants in the Triangle. Best staycation: stay @themaytoncary, walk to dinner @mcrestaurant, and then brunch the next morning @peckandplume. Grab bagels @bigdomsbagelshop on the way home.” —@triangle.f_a_t


​​Have you heard the buzz about episode 1 of our brand-new “Talk of the Triangle” podcast? Kathryn-Leigh Bonner, founder and CEO of Bee Downton, shares her expertise on the bees-ness of beekeeping, while Heather Rollins of Fairview Garden Center offers tips on choosing the best pollinator plants for your backyard. On July 5 we’ll drop episode 2! Get ready to hear all about RV travel life from two local couples. One couple lived in an RV for a full year, while the other travels cross-country to national parks and other iconic locations as often as they can.

In this behind-the-scenes peek at the creation of our first podcast episode, hosts Adam Cave and Melissa Wistehuff (left) listen as Heather Rollins of Fairview Garden Center (right) discusses pollinator plants. PHOTO BY JENNY MIDGLEY

Get Social With Us! caryliving.com

@ carylivingmag @ caryliving @ caryliving JULY/AUGUST 2022

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ON THE SCENE NEW AROUND TOWN

FENTON BRINGS RETAIL, DINING AND LUXURY LIVING TO CARY

PHOTO COURTESY OF FENTON

Fenton, Cary’s first vertically integrated, mixed-use destination, opened to thousands of visitors June 4 and 5. Tethered hot air balloon rides, a Cost n’ Mayor performance, selfies with North Carolina FC and North Carolina Courage soccer teams, giveaways and a scavenger hunt were all part of the excitement. Tenants include Bailey’s Fine Jewelry, The Gatorbug, Athleta, Crawford Brothers Steakhouse, Colletta, Honeysuckle Gelato, Paragon Theaters, Von Kekel Aveda Lifestyle Salon Spa, Truss Vet and more. 855 Cary Towne Boulevard, Cary 919.364.8444 fentonnc.com

THE FISH HOUSE EATERY OPENS IN APEX

Family-owned and operated, The Fish House Eatery is now open for lunch and dinner at 841 Perry Road in Apex. The restaurant offers fresh made-to-order seafood such as crab legs, shelled crabs, crab meat, shrimp, scallops and, of course, fish. . 841 Perry Road, Apex 919.367.6131 facebook.com/The-Fish-House-Eatery-107249798537719 PHOTO BY STEFANIE MCCLARY

BASF CELEBRATES OPENING OF CENTER FOR SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE

Focused on sustainable agriculture’s impact on the environment, people and planet, BASF’s new Center for Sustainable Agriculture opened with a ribbon-cutting ceremony April 25. Guests engaged with the center’s interactive exhibits and toured the newly renovated gardens, which include more than 100 species of plants, trees and shrubs. The center is available for individual tours or group outings. 2 T.W. Alexander Drive, Research Triangle Park agriculture.basf.us/center-for-sustainable-agriculture.html PHOTO COURTESY OF BASF

MINDFUL MERCHANT LAUNCHES IN CARY

Lochmere Pavilion welcomes Mindful Merchant in providing low-waste, sustainable goods for the kitchen, bath and personal hygiene. Mindful Merchant offers a wide variety of plastic-free home goods, refillable soaps and cleaners, and a selection of sustainably made crafts from local artists. The store is owned by Dillon and Jacqueline Tucker. 2425 Kildaire Farm Road, Suite 401, Cary 919.803.6175 mindfulmerchantnc.com PHOTO COURTESY OF MINDFUL MERCHANT

APEX WELCOMES TAPSTATION BREWERY, BURGERS AND BOURBON

PHOTO BY JANICE LEWINE

Jeff and Meredith Kromenhoek—who brought Scratch Kitchen & Taproom to Apex, The Mason Jar Tavern to Holly Springs and The Mason Jar Lager Co. to Fuquay-Varina—recently opened TapStation Brewery, Burgers and Bourbon at 320 S. Salem Street in Apex in the former Holt & Sons auto service building. The menu features shareable appetizers plus creative and elevated burgers, hot dogs, beer brats, chicken sandwiches, fresh salads and handcrafted cocktails. 320 S. Salem Street, Apex 919.372.5370 tapstationapex.com

BY JA N IC E LE WIN E 14 | caryliving.com


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OUT & ABOUT HOME STYLER

INFUSE your STYLE 1

PHOTO BY JENNY MIDGLEY

The master bedroom is all about privacy, so there’s no better place for displaying your personal taste. Make a big splash with an elegant bedroom set and surround yourself with cherished family photos in contemporary frames.

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Sip on your favorite wine in a decorative stemless glass as you enjoy an infusion of your favorite scents.

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1. Hekman Edgewater bedroom set, $7,599 | Inspirations Home Decor & More

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PHOTO BY JENNY MIDGLEY

2. Snake plant in cacti pot, $34 | City Garden Design 3. Corkcicle stemless wine tumbler (12 ounces) in Vineyard Vines Blue Camo, $34.95 | Stylish Living 4. Wood and marble shadow frames, $26 (4-by-6-inch) and $30 (5-by-7-inch) | Swagger 5. Fringe pillows (11-by-20 inches), $34 for a set of two | Swagger 6. Pura Smart Fragrance Diffuser, $45; Pura diffuser scents, $12.50 each | Stylish Living

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BY KURT DUSTE R B E R G Photos provided by vendors unless otherwise noted


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ON THE SCENE SISTER CITIES

BOARDWALK BLISS

2 states + 2 boardwalks = boundless beachfront fun! BY M EL ISSA WISTEHUFF CAROLINA BEACH BOARDWALK

VIRGINIA BEACH BOARDWALK

Carolina Beach

Virginia Beach

Ranked one of the top 10 boardwalks in the country by Food & Wine

An astounding 3-miles long and 28-feet wide, the Virginia Beach

magazine, the Carolina Beach Boardwalk leads to classic seaside

Boardwalk is the longest on the East Coast. Ideal for strolling,

family fun. It has a vintage feel that adds to its character. Enjoy

biking and rollerblading, it consists of four stages along its path

amusement rides, a carousel, carnival games and street food

that offer live music throughout the summer months. Don’t forget

throughout this favorite landmark—the only true boardwalk on the

to take an obligatory selfie with the 24-foot, 12-ton bronze statue of

North Carolina coast. Attractions at the boardwalk are open

King Neptune.

Memorial Day through Labor Day weekend. Extend your fun as you explore Carolina Beach—one of North

You’ll also find plenty of family-friendly fun around the boardwalk. Grommet Island Park consists of a 15,000-square-foot beach

Carolina’s most popular coastal towns. Freeman Park is a preferred

playground offering shady spots for a break from the sun. Atlantic Fun

camping destination, where trucks can drive and park on the sand,

Park is yet another amusement site, featuring the tallest Ferris wheel

and campers can set up tents year-round. Seafood connoisseurs also

in Virginia Beach, games, a kiddie train and food. Foodies delight in

gravitate to Carolina Beach’s endless dining options. Cape Fear Boil

the boardwalk’s restaurant options, which offer something for every

Company boasts legendary crab boil pots known to cause severe

appetite. Waterman’s Surfside Grille is a favorite among vacationers

cravings. Learn more at carolina-beach.wilmingtonandbeaches.com.

and locals alike. Learn more at visitvirginiabeach.com.

PHOTOS OF CAROLINA BEACH BOARDWALK BY BETH SHUGG

PHOTOS OF VIRGINIA BEACH BOARDWALK BY MELISSA WISTEHUFF

18 | caryliving.com


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GO, PLAY, SEE 318 things to do in North Carolina this summer BY MELISSA WISTEHUFF

F

rom the scenic Blue Ridge Mountains and rolling hills of the Piedmont, to the wide, sandy beaches of the Outer Banks, North Carolina is known for its breathtaking beauty. Steeped in rich culture and history, and set amongst a backdrop of awe-inspiring nature and landscapes, there are endless options for ideal getaways that fit a variety of interests. North Carolina ranks among the top 10 most‑visited places in the U.S., according to the North Carolina Department of Commerce. To prove that the “Old North State” is known for more than barbecue and Cheerwine, we’ve compiled a summer bucket list of places and events you must experience. We’ll start in the west and travel east, highlighting where to GO, places to PLAY and things to SEE throughout North Carolina—keeping in mind that our home state is so great, we surely can’t fit all the fun on one list. In fact, we’ve included an extended version of this feature and a comprehensive list of annual festivals across North Carolina on our website at caryliving.com, so be sure to check that out! Let’s begin … As singer James Taylor affectionately croons, “I’m gone to Carolina in my mind.”

WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH

PHOTO COURTESY OF WILMINGTON AND BEACHES CVB

20 | caryliving.com

GET UP AND GO THE MOUNTAINS

Approximately 23 counties form the North Carolina mountains, encompassing countless acres of lush green (or white‑peaked, depending on the time of year) scenic views. Here are a few places on our “must-go-to” list. BILTMORE ESTATE Asheville biltmore.com The 250-room Biltmore Estate is America’s largest home and the top attraction in North Carolina, according to Trip Advisor. The French Renaissance castle sits in the heart of Asheville and is considered to be the “crown jewel” of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Still owned by the Vanderbilt family, Biltmore welcomes nearly 1.7 million visitors each year. In addition to the main

house, the 8,000-acre estate includes majestic gardens and America’s first managed forest, all designed by New York City Central Park designer Frederick Law Olmsted. The Christmas holiday tours are a don’t-miss experience. RENTALS AND RETREATS There are innumerable options for where to stay during your mountain vacation. These properties are easily accessible and provide numerous amenities, outdoor activities, sublime views and pristine surroundings. Biltmore Village Inn, Asheville biltmorevillageinn.com Once home to George Vanderbilt’s attorney, Samuel Reed, this Queen Anne Victorian home overlooks Asheville, the Blue Ridge Mountains and the Swannanoa River Valley.

BILTMORE ESTATE, ASHEVILLE

PHOTO COURTESY OF JARED KAY/EXPLOREASHEVILLE.COM


Blue Ridge Mountain Club, Boone blueridgemountainclub.com Blue Ridge Mountain Club is surrounded by natural beauty and is committed to preserving 6,000-plus acres of curated hiking/UTV trails and premier amenities. Located just 6 miles from Blowing Rock and Boone, this private mountain community blends adventure and relaxation to create lasting memories. Half-Mile Farm, Highlands oldedwardshospitality.com/ half-mile-farm The trickling streams, serene farmland and spectacular waterfalls are just the beginning of what Half-Mile Farm offers. Awe-inspiring views of Apple Lake and a heated mineral pool help you escape from everyday life. Find a sitter for the kids—this farm is for ages 18-plus only. PROSPECTOR FOR A DAY Dig for gems, fossils and geodes when you become prospector for a day. Visit the gift shops and have custom jewelry made from the treasures you find.

Darnell Farms, Bryson City darnellfarms.com Smoky Mountain Tree Farm, Waynesville smokymountaintreefarm.com Winchester Creek Farm, Waynesville winchestercreekfarm.com Apple Hill Farm, Banner Elk applehillfarmnc.com Gladheart Farm, Asheville gladheartfarm.org Grandad’s Apples ‘N Such, Hendersonville grandadsapples.com New River Corn Maze, Boone newrivercornmaze.com The Orchard at Altapass, Spruce Pine altapassorchard.org Sweet Betsy Farm, Marion sweetbetsyfarm.com

Jones von Drehle Vineyards & Winery, Thurmond jonesvondrehle.com Linville Falls Winery, Linville Falls linvillefallswinery.com McRitchie Winery & Ciderworks, Thurmond mcritchiewine.com Mountain Brook Vineyards, Tryon mountainbrookvineyards.com Saint Paul Mountain Vineyards, Hendersonville saintpaulfarms.com MOUNTAIN VIEWS AND BREWS Discover plenty of places to enjoy a cold beer during your mountain travels. Appalachian Mountain Brewery, Boone amb.beer Boojum Brewing Company, Waynesville boojumbrewing.com

Elijah Mountain Gem Mine, Hendersonville elijahmountain.com

VINO VISTAS The North Carolina mountains are home to dozens of stunning vineyards and wineries. Here are some recent North Carolina State Fair gold winners to visit during your getaway.

Foggy Mountain Gem Mine, Boone foggymountaingems.com

Biltmore Estate Winery, Asheville biltmore.com

Hi-Wire Brewing, Asheville hiwirebrewing.com

Gem Mountain, Spruce Pine gemmountain.com

Burntshirt Vineyards, Hendersonville burntshirtvineyards.com

Lazy Hiker Brewing Company, Franklin lazyhikerbrewing.com

Elkin Creek Vineyard, Elkin elkincreekvineyard.com

Nantahala Brewing Company, Bryson City nantahalabrewing.com

BUSTLING BARNYARDS Apples, alpacas and Christmas trees, oh my! Check out these mountain farms as you travel west.

Grandfather Vineyard, Banner Elk grandfathervineyard.com

Boonshine Brewing Company, Boone booneshine.beer Burial Beer Company, Asheville burialbeer.com

THE PIEDMONT

North Carolina is known for its majestic mountains and relaxing beaches, but don’t underestimate the Piedmont. Gentle slopes, evergreen landscapes and bustling cities mixed with charming towns give this region plenty of bragging rights. INN-CREDIBLE PLACES TO STAY Perhaps you are a history buff seeking the origins of a centuries-old manor, or you’re in town to catch a college football game. Here are some unique places to relax after a fun-filled day in the Piedmont.

THE BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS OF NORTH CAROLINA

Andy’s Homeplace, Mount Airy visitmayberry.com Fans of “The Andy Griffith Show” will feel right at home in Griffith’s childhood residence, which is decorated in 1930–40s style and includes memorabilia from the 1960s show. The Carolina Hotel, Pinehurst pinehurst.com Dubbed “The Queen of the South,”

The Carolina Hotel is the primo place to stay while visiting Pinehurst. Enjoy the hotel’s spa, sweeping verandas and serene surroundings. Graylyn, Winston-Salem graylyn.com Once owned by Bowman and Nathalie Lyons Gray, North Carolina’s second-largest home was later restored to its original splendor and donated to Wake Forest University. TRIANGLE STAYCATIONS The Triangle is home to dozens of exquisite hotels and resorts, making it unnecessary to venture far from home—or even leave the premises upon arrival—and proving that it doesn’t matter how far away you go, but how far away you feel. Check out our extended list of staycation options—from The Mayton in Cary and Fearrington Village in Pittsboro, to the AC Hotel Raleigh Downtown and Heights House Hotel in Raleigh— in the extended version of this feature at caryliving.com. NORTH CAROLINA STATE FAIR Raleigh, October 13–23, 2022 ncstatefair.org Explore North Carolina’s agriculture, agribusiness, arts, crafts and culture at this annual fair featuring amusement rides, live performances and culinary delights. From fried Oreos and donut burgers to atomic tots and lobster pops, you’ll find a wide range of twisted treats to try. WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE The Piedmont region is home to numerous zoos and animal rescue organizations, all worthy of a day trip. Here are just a few to explore. Carolina Tiger Rescue, Pittsboro carolinatigerrescue.org Duke Lemur Center, Durham lemur.duke.edu North Carolina Zoo, Asheboro nczoo.org Spring Haven Farm, Chapel Hill springhaven.farm DOWN ON THE FARM Spend the day supporting the local farms that play an important role in our state’s economy and history. Here are some located in the Triangle. 1870 Farm, Chapel Hill 1870farm.com Hill Ridge Farms, Youngsville hillridgefarms.com Lavender Oaks Farm, Chapel Hill lavenderoaks.farm

PHOTO COURTESY OF BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAIN CLUB

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Naylor Family Farm, Fuquay-Varina naylorfamilyfarm.com Old Mill Farm, Durham oldmillfarmdurham.com Phillips Farm, Cary phillipsfarmsofcary.com Prodigal Farm, Rougemont prodigalfarm.com THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE The Piedmont’s world-renown wineries and vineyards offer unique experiences—like taste-testing wine as you trek with llamas through beautiful scenery. Here are some within a couple hours’ drive from the Triangle. Botanist and Barrel, Cedar Grove botanistandbarrel.com Chatham Hill Winery, Cary chathamhillinc.com Childress Vineyards, Lexington childressvineyards.com Cloer Family Vineyards, Apex cloerfamilyvineyards.com Divine Llama Vineyards, East Bend divinellamavineyards.com Roaring River Vineyards, Traphill roaringrivervineyards.com HOP TO IT Prefer a tall, cold one to a refined glass of wine? Check out these Piedmont breweries located here in the Triangle. Aviator Brewing Company, Fuquay-Varina aviatorbrew.com Bond Brothers Beer Company, Cary bondbrothersbeer.com

Carolina Brewery, Chapel Hill and Pittsboro carolinabrewery.com Carolina Brewing Company, Holly Springs carolinabrew.com Cotton House Craft Brewers, Cary trianglebeer.co Haw River Farmhouse Ales, Saxapahaw hawriverstore.com The Mason Jar Lager Company, Fuquay-Varina masonjarlagerco.com Southern Peak Brewery, Apex southernpeakbrewery.com TapStation Brewery, Burgers & Bourbon, Apex tapstationapex.com Top of the Hill Restaurant & Brewery, Chapel Hill thetopofthehill.com Vicious Fishes, Apex and Fuquay-Varina viciousfishes.com

THE BEACHES

North Carolina’s coast claims more than 300 miles of beautiful beaches that repeatedly land on the “world’s best” lists. One visit to any of the state’s seaside towns, and you’ll quickly see why. SHORELINE SHELTERS Lay your sunkissed head down at these sea sanctuaries to experience different towns up and down the coast.

The Beaufort Inn, Beaufort beaufortinn.com Located along the waterfront of one of North Carolina’s most historic towns, The Beaufort Inn offers boat slips and rocking chairs with a view, and is within walking distance to numerous restaurants.

Duplin Winery, Rose Hill duplinwinery.com

Blockade Runner Beach Resort, Wrightsville Beach blockade-runner.com Step into the sand without ever needing to venture from the Blockade Runner. Enjoy activities right on the property—from surfing school to yoga.

Sanctuary Vineyards, Jarvisburg sanctuaryvineyards.com

The Marsh Harbour Inn, Bald Head Island themarshharbourinn.com Bald Head Island, where bikes and golf carts rule the road, is located at the southernmost tip of North Carolina’s cape islands and is reachable only via ferry. Lodge at The Marsh Harbour Inn to enjoy a beautiful marina and sunset views.

Grapefull Sisters Vineyard, Tabor City grapefullsistersvineyard.com Gregory Farms Vineyard/Winery, Currie gregoryfarmsandvineyard.com

BEACH BREWS Grab a cold one at a coastal brewery, then kick back and enjoy the relaxing ocean air. Broomtail Craft Brewery, Wilmington broomtailcraftbrewery.com Crystal Coast Brewing Company, Atlantic Beach crystalcoastbrewingcompany.com Dirt Bag Ales, Hope Mills dirtbagales.com Edward Teach Bear Company, Wilmington edwardteachbrewery.com

NORTH CAROLNA AQUARIUMS ncaquariums.com Experience North Carolina’s aquariums at Fort Fisher, Jennette’s Pier, Pine Knoll Shores and Roanoke Island.

Flying Machine Brewing Company, Wilmington flyingmachine.beer

COASTAL CABERNETS Sip wine by the shore at these picturesque wineries and vineyards.

Good Hops Brewing, Carolina Beach goodhopsbrewing.com

Bannerman Vineyard, Burgaw bannermanvineyard.com Cape Fear Vineyard & Winery, Elizabethtown capefearwinery.com

Front Street Brewery, Wilmington frontstreetbrewery.com

Mad Mole Brewing, Wilmington madmolebrewing.com Salty Turtle Beer Company, Surf City saltyturtlebeer.com

MAKE TIME TO PLAY THE MOUNTAINS

From skiing to whitewater rafting and casino game–playing, there’s no end to fun in North Carolina’s scenic mountains. As ScottishAmerican naturalist, preservationist and author John Muir once said, “The mountains are calling, and I must go.” GRANDFATHER MOUNTAIN Linville grandfather.com A trip to the mountains isn’t complete until you’ve checked “walk across a mile-high swinging bridge” off your bucket list. America’s highest suspension footbridge affords 360-degree, panoramic views. AUTUMN AT OZ FESTIVAL Land of Oz, Beech Mountain September 9–11, 16–18 and 23–25 landofoznc.com L. Frank Baum’s beloved tale of

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“The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” comes to life on Beech Mountain each autumn at the Land of Oz—mercifully minus the flying monkeys and falling houses. Follow the yellow brick road all the way to Emerald City! HARRAH’S CHEROKEE CASINO Cherokee harrahscherokee.com The ultimate adult playground and first major casino in North Carolina is owned by the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. It gives a large percentage of its profits to the Cherokee Preservation Foundation. TWEETSIE RAILROAD Blowing Rock tweetsie.com In addition to a 3-mile historic steam locomotive ride, this wild west–themed park offers family-friendly amusement rides, live entertainment, gold panning, gem mining and a petting zoo.

CLIMBS TO HIKE These western North Carolina day hikes offer moments of respite as well as challenging heights. Learn about each of these trails at alltrails.com. Art Loeb Trail – Brevard Boone Fork Trail – Boone Graveyard Falls – Montreat Hawksbill Mountain Trail – Linville Gorge Wilderness Lower Cascade Trail – Hanging Rock State Park Mount Mitchell Trail – Mount Mitchell State Park

Stone Mountain Loop Trail – Stone Mountain State Park Tanawha Trail – Blue Ridge Parkway Triple Falls Trail – Cedar Mountain BUNNY SLOPES AND BLACK DIAMONDS Hit the slopes at—or tube down— one of these spectacular ski havens. Appalachian Ski Mountain, Blowing Rock appskimtn.com

Paradise Falls – Tuckasegee

Beech Mountain Resort, Beech Mountain beechmountainresort.com

Profile Trail – Grandfather Mountain State Park

Cataloochee Ski Area, Maggie Valley cataloochee.com

Rainbow Falls Trail – Gorges State Park

Hawksnest Snow Tubing and Zipline, Seven Devils hawksnestzipline.com


Ski Sapphire Valley, Sapphire skisapphirevalley.com Sugar Mountain Resort, Sugar Mountain skisugar.com Wolf Ridge Ski Resort, Mars Hill skiwolfridgenc.com THRILL-SEEKING FEATS Get your adrenaline rush at these western North Carolina destinations. The Gorge Zipline, Saluda thegorgezipline.com High Gravity Adventures, Blowing Rock highgravityadventures.com Nantahala Outdoor Center, Bryson City noc.com Rocky Face Mountain Recreational Area, Hiddenite rockyfacepark.com Wilderness Run Alpine Coaster, Banner Elk wildernessrunalpinecoaster.com SLOW THE PACE These adventures create equal thrills at a more measured pace, while offering a change of scenery and plenty of fresh mountain air. Love Valley, Statesville lovevalley.com Quarry Falls, Highlands romanticasheville.com RiverPark at Cooleemee Falls, Woodleaf cooleemee.org Smokemont Riding Stable, Cherokee smokemontridingstable.com Southern Appalachian Anglers, Asheville southernappalachiananglers.com Tail of the Dragon, Deals Gap tailofthedragon.com

THE PIEDMONT

The Piedmont hosts North Carolina’s largest cities, complete with sports teams, state and local parks and playgrounds, and family-friendly pastimes within a short drive. PULLEN PARK Raleigh raleighnc.gov Pullen Park is North Carolina’s first public park and the fifth oldest operating amusement park in the country. Its historic Dentzel carousel originally debuted in 1912 at Raleigh’s Bloomsbury Park, but soon after, the City of Raleigh purchased the

carousel and moved it to Pullen Park, where it opened for rides in 1921. Learn more about this historic carousel on page 48.

LAKE ZONES The Piedmont is home to many lakes, but two of its largest are right here in the Triangle.

Day weekend, is the speedway’s penultimate event and has helped dub Charlotte Motor Speedway “America’s home for racing.”

A WALK IN THE WOODS Countless places in the Piedmont are best seen on foot. Grab your water bottle, unplug and take a walk.

Jordan Lake State Recreation Area, Apex ncparks.gov This 14,000-acre reservoir that touches Wake and Chatham counties creates endless opportunities for boating, fishing, hiking, cycling, swimming and wildlife watching. The area offers nine access areas with 1,000 campsites in five of them, 14 miles of hiking trails, 11 boat ramps, 7 swim beaches and at least 16 eagle nests.

Busco Beach, Goldsboro buscobeach.com

Falls Lake State Recreation Area, Wake Forest ncparks.com Located north of Raleigh, Falls Lake State Recreation Area consists of a 12,000-acre reservoir with seven access areas containing 300 campsites at four of those areas. There are five swim beaches, a marina and several boat ramps, 14.3 miles of trails and a separate quiet lake impoundment perfect for paddling, fishing and swimming.

Wake County Speedway, Raleigh wcspeedway.com

American Tobacco Trail, Chatham, Durham and Wake counties triangletrails.org/ american-tobacco-trail This rails-to-trails project extends 22-plus miles through Durham, Chatham and Wake counties. It also passes through the Jordan Lake U.S. Army Corps of Engineers land. Horses are welcome. Historic Occoneechee Speedway, Hillsborough visithillsboroughnc.com This 1-mile oval is the only surviving dirt speedway from NASCAR’s inaugural 1949 season. Now a peaceful place to walk, the track harkens back to NASCAR’s glory days, which featured drivers such as Richard Petty, Fireball Roberts and Fonty Flock. Its grandstands and concession stands remain, and the oval has been adorned with restored stock cars.

GoPro Motorplex, Mooresville gopromotorplex.com Richard Petty Driving Experience, Concord drivepetty.com Rockingham Dragway, Rockingham rockinghamdragway.com Rush Hour Karting, Garner rhkfun.com

GOT GAME? The Tobacco Road ACC rivalry may make headline news, but North Carolina gets a slam dunk for hosting great pro teams as well. Major League Soccer: Charlotte FC and North Carolina FC National Women’s Soccer League: North Carolina Courage National Basketball League: Charlotte Hornets

Mountains-to-Sea Trail mountainstoseatrail.org The Mountains-to-Sea trail runs nearly 1,200 miles and connects North Carolina’s Great Smoky Mountains to the Outer Banks. Interlacing big cities, small towns and hundreds of acres of farmland, volunteers are making the trail by hand. Approximately 700 miles of the trail are complete to date, with remaining paths connected via temporary routes. The trail encompasses the tallest mountain peak as well as the tallest sand dune in the eastern U.S., and connects 10 state parks, three national forests and three lighthouses.

HIGH-FLYING FUN ZONES Be a kid for the day at the Piedmont’s theme and water parks.

U.S. National Whitewater Center, Charlotte whitewater.org

Burlington Sock Puppets

More Piedmont Trails alltrails.com.

Wet ’n Wild Emerald Pointe, Greensboro emeraldpointe.com

Carolina Mudcats

Broad River Greenway Trail – Shelby Carter Falls – Elkin Clemmons Educational State Forest – Clayton Duke Forest – Durham Eno River State Park – Durham Raven Rock State Park – Lillington Uwharrie National Forest – Troy Weymouth Woods Sandhills Nature Preserve – Southern Pines William B. Umstead State Park Sycamore Trail – Raleigh

Carowinds and Carolina Harbor at Carowinds, Charlotte carowinds.com Frankie’s, Charlotte and Raleigh frankies.com Great Wolf Lodge, Concord greatwolflodge.com iFly, Concord iflyworld.com

START YOUR ENGINES North Carolina is the undisputed home of NASCAR. If you have an uncontrollable need for speed, burn rubber—or cheer on your favorite drivers—from these grandstands. Charlotte Motor Speedway, Concord charlottemotorspeedway.com NASCAR is the No. 1 spectator sport in America, claiming 17 of the top 20 most-attended sporting events in the U.S., according to Forbes. Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord is considered one of the busiest racing venues in the country, hosting nearly 400 events each year. The Coca-Cola 600, held each Memorial

National Football League: Carolina Panthers National Hockey League: Carolina Hurricanes LET’S PLAY BALL North Carolina hosts quite a few minor league franchises, each with all the bells and whistles of a major league ballpark experience. Learn more on page 54 and at milb.com. Asheville Tourists Durham Bulls Charlotte Knights Down East Wood Ducks Fayetteville Woodpeckers Gastonia Honey Hunters Greensboro Grasshoppers Hickory Crawdads Holly Springs Salamanders Kannapolis Cannon Ballers Wilmington Sharks Winston-Salem Dash

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THE COAST

From water sports and wind-blown hair, to riding waves and banana boats, there’s always playful commotion near the ocean. Add these attractions to your sand bucket list. JOCKEY’S RIDGE STATE PARK Nags Head ncparks.gov The Atlantic Coast’s tallest active sand dune, Jockey’s Ridge is the most visited park within the North Carolina park system—and a prime location for kite flying, sunset viewing and hang gliding. Its sound side offers wading and paddling opportunities.

CAPE LOOKOUT NATIONAL SEASHORE Harkers Island nps.gov/calo islandexpressferryservices.com The Island Express Ferry Service leaves Harkers Island and cruises past Shackleford Banks, where wild horses roam. On Cape Lookout, rent an ATV to tour the island. Once home to a U.S. Coast Guard station, Harkers Island also hosts the remains of a World War II Army coastal defense complex. ARRGH WE THERE YET? The North Carolina coast offers endless options for recreational activities.

Beaufort Paddle, Beaufort beaufortpaddle.com Beaufort Pirates Revenge, Beaufort beaufortpiratesrevenge.com H2OBX Waterpark, Powells Point h2obxwaterpark.com Kitty Hawk Kites Hang Gliding Training Center, Nags Head kittyhawk.com Ocean Air Sports, Cape Hatteras oceanairsports.com Ride the Wind Surf & Kayak, Ocracoke surfocracoke.com The Salty Pirate Water Park, Emerald Isle saltypiratewaterpark.com

Springbrook Farms Horsedrawn Tours, Wilmington horsedrawntours.com Surf Camp, Wrightsville Beach wbsurfcamp.com White Lake Water Park, White Lake whitelakewaterpark.com TEE TIME The undisputed golf capital of the state lies in the Sandhills region. Pinehurst Golf Resort and Southern Pines Golf Club go head-to-head on all “best of” lists. See a ranked list of the state’s top golf courses at ncgolfpanel.com.

INSPIRING SIGHTS TO SEE THE MOUNTAINS

From waterfalls and gardens to castles and outdoor plays, you’ll see something at every turn in the mountains, where jaw-dropping wilderness and scenic views abound. Mount Mitchell, for example, boasts the highest point east of the Mississippi River. Here are some of our favorite spots from which to inhale a panoramic scene. ELEVATED SENSES The best place to take in awe-inspiring views is from up high, atop a grand North Carolina mountain—or on the back of a motorcycle. Cherohala Skyway, Robbinsville cherohala.com Hot Springs hotspringsnc.org Linn Cove Viaduct blueridgeparkway.org Mount Mitchell, Yancey County ncparks.gov Wild Dam Waterfall Loop, Maggie Valley blueridgemotorcycling.com Wiseman’s View Scenic Overlook, Linville Gorge Wilderness fs.usda.gov DO GO CHASING WATERFALLS North Carolina waterfalls are innumerable, stunning, mesmerizing and serene. Here are a few everyone should see at least once in a lifetime. Catawba Falls, Old Fort (Closed until spring 2023, but worth the wait) fs.usda.gov Crabtree Falls, Grassy Creek nps.gov

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Dry Falls, Highlands fs.usda.gov Hidden Falls, Hanging Rock State Park ncparks.gov High Falls and Triple Falls, DuPont State Recreational Forest, Hendersonville dupontforest.com Linville Falls, Blue Ridge Parkway nps.gov Looking Glass Falls, Pisgah National Forest nps.gov Mingo Falls, Great Smoky Mountains National Park nps.gov Rainbow Falls, Gorges State Park ncparks.gov Whitewater Falls, Cashiers fs.usda.gov THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS RAILROAD All aboard! The Great Smoky Mountains Railroad covers more than 53 miles and offers an up-close look at some of our state’s most remote areas. It travels over the Nantahala River Gorge and along the Tuckasegee River, crossing 25 bridges over valleys, through tunnels and by majestic lakes. During the early 1900s it played a major role in developing the region, but nowadays, passengers need only to sit back, relax and let the conductor lead the way. gsmr.com CASTLES IN THE CLOUDS From mansions to castles, the North Carolina mountains accommodate many notable— and beautiful—homes.

Allison-Deaver House, Pisgah Forest tchistoricalsociety.com Step back in time at the oldest standing timber frame house in western North Carolina, unchanged since 1860. Biltmore Estate, Asheville biltmore.com Explore three floors and the basement of this French Renaissance castle. Discover how the Vanderbilt family lived; what they wore; and the furniture, art and accessories they filled their home with. Carl Sandburg Home, Flat Rock nps.gov Pulitzer Prize–winning poet and author Carl Sandburg wrote more than a third of his famous works while living in the home he and his wife called Connemara, a national historic site. Flat Top Manor, Blowing Rock blueridgeparkway.org Known as the king of denim, Moses Cone was an innovative textile magnate and entrepreneur. He built Flat Top Manor, also known as Moses Cone Manor, at the turn of the 20th century.

from North Carolina’s 18th-century high country as they explore life before and during the Revolutionary War. “Unto These Hills” – Cherokee cherokeehistorical.org Since its debut in 1950, this outdoor Mountainside Theater performance tells the tale of Cherokee struggles and triumph from 1780 until the 21st century. GRAND GARDENS Pack a picnic and awaken your floral and fauna senses while strolling through these mountain gardens. Biltmore Estate Gardens & Grounds, Asheville biltmore.com The Botanical Gardens at Asheville ashevillebotanicalgardens.org Cherokee Botanical Garden and Nature Trail, Cherokee ncpedia.org/cherokee-botanical-garden Craggy Gardens, Black Mountain blueridgeparkway.org/poi/ craggy-gardens Daniel Boone Native Gardens, Boone danielboonenativegardens.org

Smith-McDowell House, Asheville romanticasheville.com The Smith-McDowell House served as a home to mayors, a Confederate officer and close friends of the Vanderbilt family.

Merle Watson Garden of the Senses, Wilkesboro wilkescountytourism.com/ GardenOfSensesDocAndMerleWatson

THINK OUTSIDE THE BOX (OFFICE) Soak up western North Carolina’s history and culture by watching these famous outdoor plays.

Southern Highlands Reserve, Lake Toxaway southernhighlandsreserve.org

“Horn in the West” – Boone horninthewest.com Watch the story of frontiersman Daniel Boone and other mountain settlers

Mountain Gardens, Burnsville mountaingardensherbs.com

NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM Deeply rooted in history and culture, western North Carolina attractions and museums tell the story of the hills. These places are all worth a visit.


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Midtown and Cary Living magazines’ “Talk of the Triangle” podcast introduces listeners to the PEOPLE, PLACES + EVENTS WORTH TALKING ABOUT.

Talk of the Triangle expands on the stories you have loved in the magazines, and introduces you to new stories and fascinating people we have yet to write about. AVAILABLE ON ALL YOUR FAVORITE PODCAST PLATFORMS: Spotify, Apple Podcasts, iHeartRadio, Amazon Audible, Google Podcasts and more. For limited host-read advertising and sponsorship opportunities contact: 919.782.4710 advertise@midtownmag.com | advertise@caryliving.com

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The Learning Center at PARI, Rosman pari.edu Immerse yourself in science, space and nature at PARI: Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute—one of our state’s only certified dark sky parks, where nights are filled with dazzling stars and flashes of meteors. Linville Caverns, Marion linvillecaverns.com Peek into total darkness in Humpback Mountain’s natural limestone caverns. The only North Carolina caverns open for tours, Linville Caverns features stalactite and stalagmite formations and underground streams filled with trout. Look up! You may even see bats hanging from the ceiling. Museum of the Cherokee Indian, Cherokee mci.org Experience 13,000 years of Cherokee history, culture, sacred myths and storied legends from prehistoric origins to the Trail of Tears, leading to the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. Oconaluftee Indian Village, Cherokee visitcherokeenc.com This “living” museum is a replica of an 18th-century Cherokee community. Meet re-enactors, tour models of homes and watch artists create baskets, pottery, weaponry and more. Wheels Through Time, Maggie Valley wheelsthroughtime.com Vintage automobile aficionados can see more than 350 rare motorcycles,

memorabilia, roadsters and “one-off” vehicles. It’s like driving through American automobile history. PECULIAR PLACES While we’re doing our best to name as many must-see sites as possible, it’s always fun to throw in some unconventional locales. Perfect for pictures and posting, these spots also make great conversation-starters.

Judaculla Rock, Cherokee ncpedia.org/judaculla-rock Archaeologists believe some of the carvings on this large soapstone rock date back 500 years. But according to Cherokee legend, the markings on this boulder are the handiwork of a giant named Judaculla.

Mystery Hill, Blowing Rock mysteryhill.com Encounter a natural gravitational anomaly at Mystery Hill, where optical illusions and science meet. (This is an excellent rainy day activity.)

The Road to Nowhere, Bryson City greatsmokies.com/road-nowhere Tucked in Great Smoky Mountains National Park is Lake View Drive, more commonly known as The Road to Nowhere. The federal government created this 6-mile stretch of uncompleted road during the 1940s to replace old N.C. Highway 288, which was buried under Fontana Lake after the creation of Fontana Dam.

DRY FALLS, HIGHLANDS

With an eclectic mix of unique towns to explore throughout the Piedmont region of our state, there is something interesting to see around every turn and atop many urban rooftops.

POINT OF VIEW These Piedmont rooftops overlook cityscapes showcasing metropolitan lights, bustling life and park views, all while offering a peaceful sense of getting away.

Aura Rooftop, Charlotte aurarooftop.com Charlotte/Douglas International Airport Overlook, Charlotte facebook.com/ charlottedouglasinternational airportoverlook The Dillon’s Sky Terrace, Raleigh thedillonraleigh.com Dorothea Dix Park, Raleigh dixpark.org Top of the Hill Restaurant & Brewery, Chapel Hill thetopofthehill.com Unscripted Durham, Durham unscriptedhotels.com The Willard Rooftop, Raleigh thewillardraleigh.com Wye Hill Kitchen & Brewing, Raleigh wyehill.com

PIEDMONT PALACES Whether you’re a guest at a castle wedding or simply touring a luxurious mansion, these stately estates are worthy of a queen and her subjects.

Blandwood Museum, Greensboro preservationgreensboro.org Castle McCulloch, Jamestown castlemcculloch.com The Duke Mansion, Charlotte dukemansion.com Gimghoul Castle, Chapel Hill historicchapelhill.org Julian Price House, Greensboro julianpricehouse.com North Carolina Executive Mansion, Raleigh ncdcr.gov/things-do/history/ triangletriad/north-carolinaexecutive-mansion Reynolda House, Winston-Salem reynolda.org STAND-OUT STAND-UPS Theater buffs make themselves at home in the Piedmont, as there are countless places to catch a memorable play, movie or comedy show. Here are some stand-out—and stand-up—spots to check out.

The Comedy Experience, Raleigh thecomedyexperience.com

GIMGHOUL CASTLE, CHAPEL HILL

PHOTO BY SSHEPARD/GETTY IMAGES

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THE PIEDMONT

PHOTO BY TOM POLAND


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The Dinner Detective, Charlotte and Raleigh thedinnerdetective.com Gem Theatre, Kannapolis gem-theatre.com Goodnights Comedy Club, Raleigh goodnightscomedy.com Paragon Theaters, Cary paragontheaters.com Raleigh Little Theatre, Raleigh raleighlittletheatre.org Theatre in the Park, Raleigh theatreinthepark.com ROSES ARE RED

The Rose Garden at Raleigh Little Theatre, Raleigh raleighlittletheatre.org/ visit-us/rose-garden Old Salem Museums & Gardens, Winston-Salem oldsalem.org Reynolda Gardens, Winston-Salem reynolda.org Sarah P. Duke Gardens, Durham gardens.duke.edu UNC–Charlotte Botanical Gardens, Charlotte gardens.charlotte.edu NATIONAL TREASURES

North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh ncartmuseum.org North Carolina Museum of History, Raleigh ncmuseumofhistory.org North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, Raleigh naturalsciences.org QUIRKY QUESTS Add a few of these unique stops to your GPS while traveling through the Piedmont. They are just unusual enough to make them worth a visit.

Whalehead, Corolla whaleheadwedding.com

Ava Gardner Museum, Smithfield johnstoncountync.org/ava-gardner

The Raleigh Giant, Raleigh roadsideamerica.com

Marbles Kids Museum, Raleigh marbleskidsmuseum.org

Shangri-La Stone Village, Prospect Hill roadsideamerica.com

North Carolina Botanical Garden, Chapel Hill ncbg.unc.edu

Museum of Life and Science, Durham lifeandscience.org New Hope Valley Railway, New Hill triangletrain.com

DOROTHEA DIX SUNFLOWER FIELD, RALEIGH

PHOTO BY NEW DEPTH CREATIONS

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Carolina Beach Boardwalk, Carolina Beach carolina-beach. wilmingtonandbeaches.com

Normie the Lake Norman Sea Monster, Charlotte

Dorothea Dix Park Sunflower Field dixpark.org

JC Raulston Arboretum, Raleigh jcra.ncsu.edu

OCEAN VIEWS Each North Carolina beach town offers a unique vibe—with equally unparalleled ocean views.

Shackleford Banks islandexpressferryservices.com morehead.com/ morehead-city-ferry-service.html

The Piedmont’s moderate climate makes it an ideal location for a plethora of plants and gardens galore—which do not disappoint.

Morehead Planetarium & Science Center, Chapel Hill moreheadplanetarium.org

North Carolina boasts an entire coastline of pristine dunes, wide beaches and crashing waves. Head east for an endless source of stunning sites.

World’s Largest Chest of Drawers, High Point roadsideamerica.com

From art galleries and science studies to history and racing, the Piedmont accommodates a treasure-trove of museums. Here are some to discover right here in the Triangle.

Greensboro Arboretum, Greensboro greensborobeautiful.org/ gardens/arboretum

THE COAST

lakenormanmonster.com

Remnants of the Underground Railroad, Halifax County halifaxundergroundrr.com Vintage Shell Station, Winston-Salem roadsideamerica.com

GUIDING LIGHTS North Carolina boasts seven coastal lighthouses along its shores. Though originally intended to guide adventurers away from treacherous shorelines, they also offer incredible views from their tops. Visit nps.gov to learn more about each one.

Bodie Island Lighthouse – Nags Head Cape Hatteras Lighthouse – Buxton Cape Lookout Lighthouse – Harkers Island

OLD SALEM MUSEUM & GARDENS, WINSTON-SALEM

PHOTO COURTESY OF VISIT WINSTON-SALEM AND OLD SALEM MUSEUM


Currituck Beach Lighthouse – Corolla

and is one of North Carolina’s best examples of antebellum architecture.

The Old Jail, Beaufort beauforthistoricsite.org

Oak Island Lighthouse – Caswell Beach

Hammock House, Beaufort blackbeardthepirate.com/history.htm

Wilmington Water Tours, Wilmington wilmingtonwatertours.net

Ocracoke Lighthouse – Ocracoke Old Baldy Lighthouse – Bald Head Island FORTS, FLEETS AND FLIGHTS The North Carolina coast is home to a surplus of interesting battle sites, pirate stories and history-making moments. Here are some landmarks and monuments to add to your must-see list.

Battleship North Carolina, Wilmington battleshipnc.com Fort Fisher, Kure Beach historicsites.nc.gov/ all-sites/fort-fisher Fort Macon, Atlantic Beach ncparks.gov/ fort-macon-state-park/home Wright Brothers National Memorial, Manteo nps.gov/wrbr/index.htm REGAL RESIDENCES Some of the country’s most beautiful and historic homes can be found along North Carolina’s coast.

Bellamy Mansion, Wilmington bellamymansion.org Bellamy Mansion serves as a remnant of Wilmington’s Civil War history

Although Hammock House is not open to the public, swashbuckling history buffs will want to see the home known to have once belonged to Blackbeard.

Latimer House, Wilmington lcfhs.org High on a bluff overlooking the Cape Fear River, Latimer House offers a study on Wilmington life in the 1800s.

Tryon Palace, New Bern tryonpalace.org Built in 1770 for Governor William Tryon, Tryon Palace served as our state’s first capital building.

LANDLUBBER TOURS Take a break from riding waves to take a museum tour, ghost walk, garden stroll or coastal cruise.

Airlie Gardens, Wilmington airliegardens.org Beaufort Ghost Walk, Beaufort pctourco.com/beaufort-ghost-walk New Bern Firemen’s Museum, New Bern newbernfiremuseum.com

AMERICA’S OLDEST MYSTERY “The Lost Colony” – Manteo thelostcolony.org Set on Roanoke Island’s soundfront, “The Lost Colony” has been entertaining audiences for 85 years with the tale of the first English settlers to arrive on North Carolina’s coast. The play also seeks to answer questions to the country’s oldest mystery: What happened to the lost colony?

TRAPPED IN THE CAROLINAS

“When I’m not coaching basketball or cheering for my son at AAU tournaments, I’m playing golf at Pine Hollow (Clayton) or Devil’s Ridge (Holly Springs).” — LeVelle Moton, head coach of North Carolina Central University’s men’s basketball team PAGES 26–27 GPS IMAGES BY DIGITALVISION VECTORS/GETTY IMAGES BELOW MOUNTAINS, FOOTHILLS, OCEAN ICONS BY DIVVECTOR/GETTY IMAGES

The Venus flytrap can only be found in a 75-mile radius around Wilmington, stretching partially into South Carolina. While these beautiful carnivorous plants have been transplanted elsewhere, this region is the only place in the world where they grow naturally. Aren’t you glad to be trapped in the Carolinas, too? Visit caryliving.com for an extended version of this story so you can plan your next adventure!

North Carolina Maritime Museum, Beaufort ncmaritimemuseumbeaufort.com

OAK ISLAND LIGHTHOUSE, CASWELL BEACH

PHOTO COURTESY OF NC TOURISM DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY

VENUS FLYTRAPS IN THE WILMINGTON AREA

PHOTO BY ROBERT CLARK

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1 AMERICAN TOBACCO TRAIL

TRIANGLE GEMS Don’t miss these treasures across the region BY ELIZABETH BRIGNAC

T

riangle newcomers have a lot of ground to cover as they explore their new home. A conservative estimate of the Triangle area covers four counties, 13 cities and large towns, and dozens of smaller towns, each of which has a unique history. From the Riverwalk in Hillsborough to the historic mineral springs in Fuquay-Varina, natural, cultural and intellectual opportunities throughout the Triangle are available to anyone ready to discover them. Here’s a list of 12 places to explore as you get to know the area. Each is unique in some way to the Triangle, and offers an exceptionally rich local experience.

3 DENTZEL CAROUSEL raleighnc.gov/parks/pullen-park-amusements Families with children should make a point of visiting historic Pullen Park and riding its 110-year-old carousel. Pullen Park, which opened in 1887, was North Carolina’s first public park. Its iconic carousel was designed by Gustav Dentzel, one of the first carousel makers in the U.S., around 1900. The carousel opened in Pullen Park in 1921. It features 52 hand-carved wooden animals including ostriches, rabbits, tigers, horses and other creatures. The carousel was restored in the 1970s using the artists’ original paint colors so, today, it looks much like it did when it first opened. The carousel was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. For another dose of historical fun, try the park’s C.P. Huntington train, a 1950 miniaturized replica of a famous 1863 locomotive. Photo by Josh Manning

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wakegov.com For years, the railroad line that is now used by New Hope Valley Railway transported tobacco products to and from the American Tobacco Company’s Durham processing plant. When the factory closed in 1987, the rail line was abandoned, leaving a level, cleared path that stretched for miles. The Triangle Rails to Trails Conservancy formed in 1989 to advocate for turning the defunct railroad line into a greenway. Their efforts were so successful that the governments of Durham, Chatham and Wake counties collaborated in creating the American Tobacco Trail, which stretches for 22 miles, from downtown Durham into Apex, and connects 70 miles’ worth of other trails and greenways. Today, walkers, runners, bikers and equestrians use the trail for exercise and day-to-day transportation. Photo courtesy of Ted Richardson/VisitRaleigh.com


2 ANGUS BARN angusbarn.com Open since 1960, the Angus Barn steakhouse is a Raleigh institution famed for its hospitality and local flavor—as well as its high-quality food. The restaurant celebrates rural North Carolina, complete with a country store, huge front porch, antique displays, apple barrels full of free apples, and outdoor fire pits. The main dining area boasts thousands of twinkle lights and emphasizes a friendly and generous atmosphere. The restaurant’s well-known wine cellar has won 20 prestigious Grand Awards, has its own dining room, and offers tours and themed dinners. The Angus Barn also has three lounges, including the Meat Locker, an open-air smoking lounge with a humidor. During the Christmas season, the Angus Barn goes all out with a two-story-tall Christmas tree and elves who wander around. People love it.You’ll want to make December reservations early. Photo courtesy of Angus Barn

DURHAM FARMER'S MARKET

4 SARAH P. DUKE GARDENS gardens.duke.edu Duke Gardens in spring is a sight to behold. Its 55 acres on Duke University’s campus burst into bloom, from crafted beds of tulips, daffodils and irises in its historic, terraced gardens, to the trees in the Asiatic Arboretum, festooned with redbuds, Japanese magnolia blossoms, camellias and the garden’s renowned cherry blossoms. Open 365 days a year, the garden is free to the public, has 600,000 annual visitors and offers rich botanical experiences every season. In addition to the terraced gardens and arboretum, Duke Gardens includes plants native to North Carolina, a discovery garden teaching visitors about plants and animals (kids love the chickens), a Japanese garden and many other beautiful spots. Visitors can also attend classes, buy plants, birdwatch and attend traditional Japanese tea ceremonies in the arboretum’s tea pavilion.

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durhamfarmersmarket.com The Durham Farmer’s Market is known for its creative energy as well as its many local produce options. Open Saturday mornings year-round and Wednesday afternoons from April through October, this farmer’s market feels festive. Local artists sell their work, and musicians and other performers entertain shoppers as they wander from booth to booth along several streets in and around Durham Central Park. Food trucks offer cuisine from many different nations, as well as local fare, and the market is known for its wide variety of high-quality agricultural products. Photo courtesy of Discover Durham

Photo courtesy of Discover Durham JULY/AUGUST 2022

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ENO RIVER STATE PARK

HEMLOCK BLUFFS NATURE PRESERVE

ncparks.gov/eno-river-state-park/home

townofcary.org (search for “Hemlock Bluffs”)

The Eno River State Park in Durham offers some of the Triangle’s best opportunities for hiking and outdoor exploration. Community protection has kept the beautiful Eno River at the heart of the park clean. Families with children might enjoy Few’s Ford, a picnic area close to parking with shallow wading spots and easy nearby trails. Experienced swimmers may prefer scenic Bobbitt Hole, where a small cascade empties into a deep swimming hole. Fishing and camping are also popular activities at the park. Hikers can access 28 miles of trails, including Buckwater Creek Trail, which overlooks some of the park’s most impressive rapids; and the Pump Station Trail, home to the park’s best spring wildflowers and the ruins of the old Durham pump station. Several trails include the remains of gristmills once built along the Eno.

If you enjoy western North Carolina, visit Hemlock Bluffs Nature Preserve in Cary, home to an isolated grouping of mountain hemlock trees and other natural elements usually found in the mountains. A remnant of a time when Earth was cooler and hemlocks covered the Piedmont, these trees have been protected by the shady bluffs that give the preserve its name, allowing them to survive for thousands of years. Today, they provide a pleasant retreat filled with local wildlife. The Stevens Nature Center educates visitors, and residents can take classes and go on guided hikes through the preserve. Photo by Jenny Midgley

Photo by Jenny Midgley

10 NORTH CAROLINA MUSEUM OF NATURAL SCIENCES naturalsciences.org The City of Oaks’ free museums have earned Raleigh the moniker of “the Smithsonian of the South” and are a major perk of living in the Triangle. The North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences is one of them. Its original building is distinguished by the Daily Planet— an almost-planet-sized model of Earth which juts out from its side. Here you will also find the Nature Exploration Center with four floors of ecosystem exhibits and animals from across North Carolina, a hands-on discovery center, a dinosaur exhibit beloved by kids and parents alike, and much more. Walk across the enclosed pedestrian bridge to explore the Nature Research Center, with labs that guide visitors in hands-on experiments, a space exhibit, a butterfly house, an aquarium and a theater. Photo by Jenny Midgley


NORTH CAROLINA MUSEUM OF ART ncartmuseum.org

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The North Carolina Museum of Art offers free access to excellent permanent art exhibits and a 164-acre outdoor park and sculpture gardens open for public use. The permanent collection includes major holdings in European paintings, Egyptian funerary art, ancient Greek and Roman sculptures and vase paintings, international contemporary art, and one of only two permanent displays of Jewish art in an American art museum. The museum also hosts a diverse variety of temporary exhibits and a museum store featuring a selection of local artisanal merchandise. (Note that due to a reinstallation project, the West Building will be closed until October 8.) Photo courtesy of the North Carolina Museum of Art

9 MUSEUM OF LIFE AND SCIENCE lifeandscience.org The Museum of Life and Science has been open for 75 years. Today, its 84-acre campus offers one of the richest family experiences in the state, including one of the biggest butterfly conservatories on the East Coast. The indoor science center includes an aerospace exhibit filled with Apollo-era artifacts and space-related interactive exhibits, a tinkering center where kids can build contraptions, a weather center that offers an opportunity to build a mini-tornado and more. Outdoors, visitors can explore “Hideaway Woods,” a massive treehouse exhibit with a stream for hot-weather play; a zoo housing North Carolina animals; a dinosaur trail, complete with the opportunity to dig for fossils; “Into the Mist,” a complex array of sandy spots, hills and tunnels shrouded in cool mist; “Earth Moves,” offering interactive geoscience play; and much more. The museum charges for admission, but twice a month, Durham Community Days allow Durham residents to visit for free. Photo courtesy of the Museum of Life and Science

STATE FARMER’S MARKET IN RALEIGH ncagr.gov/markets/facilities/ markets/raleigh

THE RALEIGH MARKET theraleighmarket.com

Raleigh’s exceptional State Farmer’s Market offers a unique opportunity to enjoy North Carolina’s agricultural offerings. The huge, covered, open-air market is open seven days a week yearround. North Carolina farmers, bakers and craftspeople set up stands selling everything from cheese to Christmas trees. If it's grown in the Piedmont, you’ll find it here, especially on weekends. The market also contains shops specializing in North Carolina pork and seafood, and three restaurants offering different kinds of local cooking.

On Saturdays and Sundays from 9 a.m.–5 p.m., The Raleigh Market offers a wide and eclectic selection of items for sale at the historic North Carolina State Fairgrounds. This market routinely finds itself on lists of the best flea markets in the country. Want Depressionera glass? A rainbow-colored hammock? An inexpensive coffee table? Look here. Want to find an antique washing machine or a handcrafted hunting knife? It’s here. The Market has been operating since 1971 and offers up-and-coming vendors opportunities to sell products without the expenses of a storefront location. Visitors can enjoy fair and food truck food while browsing at hundreds of vendor booths and enjoying live music.

Photo by Jenny Midgley

Photo by Jason Arthurs

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HOME RUN ENTERTAINMENT Minor league baseball teams keep the hits coming throughout and around the Triangle

A

BY KURT DUSTERBERG

mong America’s many summertime traditions, minor league baseball is a go-to in many regions of the country, and nowhere more so than in North Carolina. Across the state, fans can enjoy leisurely evenings and warm weekend afternoons root-root-rooting for the home team in an environment that attracts both ardent baseball lovers and casual fans. That’s because the minor league experience offers some real advantages over the major leagues. For starters, a family of four can spend less than $100 at a minor league game— a fraction of the cost at a big league stadium. The seating capacity at minor league facilities generally run between 6,000–10,000, making it an up-close and personal event. And let’s face it, no one really goes home disappointed when the home team loses. Most fans don’t know the players’ names or the team’s record, and that’s part of the charm. Minor league baseball is a family entertainment option as much as a professional sport. The production values are part of the pitch, and the players enjoy having an audience as they chase their dream. The term “minor league” generally refers to teams affiliated with Major League Baseball. Players drafted or signed out of high school try to advance through

Single-A, High-A, Double-A and Triple-A, which is the doorstep to the majors. After a major realignment of the minor league system in 2021, there are also partner leagues and collegiate summer leagues under the Major League Baseball umbrella. Additional independent and collegiate leagues operate across the country, mostly at lesser skill levels. In the Triangle, the Durham Bulls play Triple-A baseball, where the roster is filled each season with players waiting for a call to the “The Show”—and players who are trying to earn their way back. In Zebulon, the Carolina Mudcats play in Single-A, where prospects are just starting out. A fast-rising prospect might reach the majors in two seasons, while others will chase the dream for 10 years. And many Single-A players won’t ever make it to the next level. But if you’re headed to the ballpark this summer, a primer is hardly necessary. Minor league baseball is a night out. It’s cold beer and plenty of food options. It’s taking a photo with the oversized mascot or buying a ball cap with that clever team logo. Maybe you will catch a foul ball— or be chosen to go on the field for a dizzy bat race. And if you end up cheering a home run, so much the better.

DAVID ROBERTSON

HIGH POINT ROCKERS The Rockers play at Truist Point as a member of the Atlantic League, a “partner league” of Major League Baseball, which is a new designation in the realignment of the minors. The 10 Atlantic League rosters are made up of unsigned free agents who have progressed through baseball’s development levels. More than 40% of the players have previously played in the major leagues. And fans are guaranteed to see at least one former major league star when they visit the ballpark—retired Minnesota Twins and Boston Red Sox pitcher Frank Viola is the Rockers’ pitching coach. He was the World Series MVP in 1987 and won the American League Cy Young Award in 1988. The $36-million stadium opened in 2019 and holds 4,500 spectators. A Rockers game is kid-friendly, too, with a playground inside the stadium and a splash pad at the adjacent Blessing Park. The team’s mascot is Hype the Rocking Horse.

CAROLINA MUDCATS The Mudcats, a Single-A affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers, play at Five County Stadium in Zebulon. The stadium was built in 1991 and features a steep upper deck that makes fans feel close to the action. The team has long been a hit at the merchandise stands, with its logo of a catfish swimming through the letter C. Minor league teams are always searching for clever promotions, and the Mudcats have a couple good ones. The team plays as the “Carolina Micro Brews,” an alternate identity with separate logos, colors, jerseys and hats. The name not only pays homage to the team’s parent club, the Milwaukee Brewers, but it also celebrates North Carolina’s history of microbrewing and craft beer culture. The hat features an interlocking M and B, also in tribute

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to the Brewers. The team also plays under the identity of “Pescados de Carolina,” with a special logo of a sugar skull fish in celebration of Mexican culture in the Carolinas. Merchandise is available for both identities. Food and drink specials are available for Thirsty Thursdays, while Winning Wednesdays earn fans a free ticket for the next Wednesday home game. Bark in the Park (bring your dog!) and Souvenir Saturdays are among the most popular nights at Five County Stadium. The Mudcats have a handful of famous alums, including knuckleball pitcher Tim Wakefield. He won 15 games for the Mudcats in 1991, his best minor league season, before winning 200 games in 19 major league seasons.


DURHAM BULLS

DURHAM BULLS MASCOT WOOL E. BULL

The Bulls are perhaps the most famous minor league team in America, thanks to the classic 1988 movie, “Bull Durham.” In part due to the success of the film, the Bulls moved from Single-A to Triple-A in 1998, where they serve as the top affiliate of the Tampa Bay Rays. Home games are played at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park and feature a variety of regular promotions, including Friday night fireworks shows. Kids ages 12 and younger eat free at the ballpark on Wednesdays, while everyone enjoys discounted concessions on Thursday. And it’s not just standard ballpark fare. Durham-based Pie Pushers pizza and El Jefecito street tacos are popular options. For the serious baseball fan, the Triple-A International League offers a chance to see stars in the making, whether they play for

the Bulls or their opponent. Last season, Tampa Bay prospect Wander Franco showcased his star power for 40 games with the Bulls before his call-up to the major leagues. The Bulls have graduated hundreds of players to the majors, most notably Hall of Famers Joe Morgan (1963) and Chipper Jones (1992).

GREENSBORO GRASSHOPPERS First National Bank Field opened in 2005 and continues to be part of the attraction for Greensboro Grasshoppers baseball. The stadium seats 7,499 and provides a view of downtown Greensboro beyond the outfield fence. It features a play park for kids and two grass-berm picnic areas. Once the game starts, a lot of the action revolves around Willie Mae Mays, the team’s bat dog. She picks up the bat after each batter, runs the bases at the end of the game and greets fans as they leave the ballpark. The Grasshoppers are the High-A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates and started the 2022 season with a future star on the roster. Henry Davis, a catcher, was the No. 1 overall

selection in the 2021 Major League Baseball Draft. With a history that dates to the early 1990s, Greensboro has also been home to Hall of Famers Johnny Mize, Derek Jeter and Mariano Rivera. PHOTO BY DERRICK BRADY

HOLLY SPRINGS SALAMANDERS HENRY PAYTON

The Salamanders play in the Coastal Plain League, a collegiate wood-bat summer league. While the Holly Springs team is not professional or associated with Major League baseball, the fan experience is nearly the same. Ting Stadium, which opened in 2015, seats 1,800. The 14-team league also has teams in Asheboro, Thomasville, Morehead City, Wilson, Forest City and Wilmington. Players are recruited from around the country, but most teams select some regional players, many of whom play at universities in North Carolina or have ties to the Triangle.

COACH SOINE


FAYETTEVILLE WOODPECKERS

CODY ORR

The Woodpeckers settled into Segra Stadium in 2019 after spending two seasons playing on the Campbell University campus in Buies Creek. The Single-A affiliate of the Houston Astros, the team is named for the endangered red-cockaded woodpecker, which was once common in the Sandhills area. The team’s merchandise is among the top-selling in the minors. With their proximity to Fort Bragg, the Woodpeckers have developed a large military fan base. In return, the team supports the military population with related theme nights and alternate Black Ops jerseys. T-shirt Tuesdays are a popular promotion, along with replica jersey giveaways. The Woodpeckers are popular at the merchandise stand, too, ranking in the top 25 in minor league baseball sales.

DOWN EAST WOOD DUCKS The Wood Ducks are the Single-A affiliate of the Texas Rangers. While they only arrived in Kinston in 2017, Grainger Stadium has hosted minor league baseball in Kinston since 1949, and the city has welcomed teams since the 1920s. If the “Woodies” win on Wednesdays, fans get a free ticket for the next Wednesday home game,

BURLINGTON SOCK PUPPETS Burlington hosted minor league baseball as the Indians and Royals in the Appalachian League from 1988–2020 as an affiliated “Rookie Level” team, a designation that was discarded in realignment. That change ushered in the Sock Puppets, who play summer collegiate baseball. The new Appalachian League is part of the MLB and USA Baseball Prospect Development Pipeline, a pathway for amateur baseball players in the U.S. It will serve as an integral part of the identification and development process for the USA Baseball Collegiate National Team, headquartered in Cary. With a knack of promotions, the Sock Puppets feature T-shirt Tuesdays, $1 beers on Thursdays and a Socksquatch Bobblehead at the final home game of the season on August 4.

along with half-priced wine. Other promotions include Thirsty Thursdays, $4 draft beer on Fridays and $2 Pepsi on Saturdays. And here’s something completely different: the team plays some weekends as the Kinston Collard Greens in a salute to the state’s agricultural heritage.

MAXIMO ACOSTA

Wherever you find yourself in North Carolina this summer, there’s likely to be a minor league team nearby. Here are some more options for passing a slow summer evening. Asheville Tourists High-A, Houston Astros Charlotte Knights Triple-A, Chicago White Sox

ALL IMAGES IN THIS STORY ARE COURTESY OF THE RESPECTIVE TEAMS UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED

Hickory Crawdads High-A, Texas Rangers Kannapolis Cannon Ballers Single-A, Chicago White Sox Winston-Salem Dash High-A, Chicago White Sox

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BASEBALL IS HIS CALLING CARD Sports photographer Gregg Forwerck takes the pictures that shape the sports card industry BY KURT DUSTERBERG

PHOTOS COURTESY OF GREGG FORWERCK

I

f you grew up a baseball fan, there’s a good chance you collected some baseball cards as a kid. Whether you remember the era of swapping for your favorite major leaguers with your buddies on summer afternoons, or you meticulously filed rookie cards in sleeves and binders, the hobby holds a special place for countless fans. For more than 30 years, Gregg Forwerck has been the man behind those cards. Since 1989, he has been snapping the pictures that have graced Topps cards and other brands, reimagining the hobby with some creative flair along the way. And it’s not just baseball. Forwerck has documented the prospects, the stars and the journeymen from pro football and hockey too, enjoying a front-row seat for some unforgettable moments. In 1989, Forwerck tracked Deion Sanders when he returned a punt for a touchdown for the first time in his NFL career. When Hall of Fame pitcher Nolan Ryan walked off the field after his final win in 1993, he captured the end of an era. And when Americans were captivated by Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa’s pursuit of the single-season home run record in 1998, he was along for the chase. Forwerck, who lives near Charlotte, spends a lot of his time in the Triangle. He has served as the Carolina Hurricanes team photographer since their arrival in 1997 and also works for North Carolina State University as a football photographer. But it’s the three decades of sports cards that will be his legacy. With close to 100,000 images making their way onto sports cards, Forwerck’s portfolio is unrivaled. Not bad for a kid from Toledo, Ohio who started collecting baseball cards as an 8-year-old.

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GREG FORWERCK PHOTOGRAPHS PLAYERS FOR THE CACTUS LEAGUE IN ARIZONA.

How did you first get the attention of the Topps company?

How have things changed in three decades of photographing the players?

I was managing a Rally’s [restaurant]. I didn’t really have any credentials. I had photographed as many things as I could possibly come up with, but I didn’t have any formal training. I wanted to photograph professional sports and I couldn’t figure out how to get into it. Topps did all the sports, and I thought that would keep me busy all the way around the year. So I called this guy and he said, “I get this call every day, but if you want to be persistent, keep calling.”

There was a time where we were really focused on getting good, clean stuff on veteran players. Then collectors started saying, “We want to see these prospects, and we want to see multiple cards of them.” So we started producing more of that and spending more time tracking down those players for a good decade. Then we started focusing on the prospects who aren’t even going to get into a big league uniform this year. Over the years, those prospect cards have become a little more creative. They’re not just posed pictures and game action. I probably was the guy who started it. I don’t know anybody else who does it. I did a very memorable one at Duke Chapel with [Cleveland Indians and Boston Red Sox star] Manny Ramirez. He was playing in Kinston and he was coming to Durham to play at the old stadium [Durham Athletic Park]. Their hotel was really close, and I was thinking of a place that wasn’t baseball, and I wanted to get him in street clothes. I thought Duke Chapel would be the place to do it. It got voted as one of the top 100 baseball cards of all time.

Many of the photos for the cards are taken during spring training in Florida and Arizona. How do these photos all come together? On photo day, you’re trying to pose them in baseball poses. You’re always thinking about what the player would be proud of in a photo. You’re not thinking about the collector’s standpoint. I’ve always noticed that Latin guys, the infielders, those guys want to show off their gloves. You work through the poses that you know. Some guys’ shoulders are wider, so you might want them pointing the bat.


APEX SPORTS CARD SHOP THRIVES IN A NEW ERA OF COLLECTIBLES BY KURT DUSTERBERG

TOP TO BOTTOM: Over the years, Forwerck has come up with creative angles for photographing some of Major League Baseball’s most famous players.

And you’ve got a really interesting one of Ron Gant when he played for the Cincinnati Reds. I told him, “I’m going to have you in the sleeveless Reds jersey and I’m going to take the guts out of a baseball and squeeze the outside. It’s going to look like you’re crushing it, with your arms all pumped up.” I did it right outside the locker room. I took a wood pallet and put it up against the wall. That was our background. It’s a two-light shot, pretty simple. Took us about five minutes. I love any opportunity to make a picture I’ve conceived in my head and just always wanted to see on a card. When someone asks you for advice on how to take good pictures, what do you tell them? Before I get to any venue, it’s always about the lighting. You think about the lighting first, then the background. You always set yourself up for success. Set yourself up in what I call the 80% zone, where 80% of the pictures are going to be made.

When you look back at your career, does it seem pretty remarkable that you’re the guy, more than anyone else, who has brought baseball cards to the public for all these years? Just how I planned it. (He laughs). As a kid, you think about, “I want to sit in the best seat, I want to get up close, I want to meet players.” I didn’t really care about autographs. All I wanted to do was get a chance to have two seconds with somebody and hear them tell a story. I get to make pictures of some of the greatest athletes in sports. I’ve had players come to me and say, “Hey, can I get a copy of that?” If somebody had told me that when I was 12 years old, I would have thought, that’s never going to happen. So, yeah, I think about it, and I feel pretty blessed.

Seth Cannon knows exactly when things will get busy at CARDIACS Sports & Memorabilia, where he serves as general manager. “Release days— Wednesdays and Fridays—can get pretty hectic.” Times are good at card shops across the country, thanks to a resurgence in sports card collecting. After more than a decade in Cary Towne Center, CARDIACS moved to Apex in 2021 and now occupies a new, larger building. The industry is on an upswing, thanks to a diversification in products and a wide variety of buyers. Some card buyers are investors, while others are looking to purchase and “flip” valuable cards for a profit. There is still a place for the casual collector from a generation ago, but that’s not where the money is today. “Back then, you couldn’t pull a $1,000 card right out of the pack,” Cannon says. “That was not really a thing; it was a hobby more than anything. There was no differentiation between retail and hobby, so there was only one product,” Cannon says. “Now there’s two.” The current wave of interest in sports cards and collectibles can be traced to the early days of the pandemic in 2020. With pro sports paused, many folks dusted off their childhood collections and found some gems that they have sold to card stores. But the industry has also reinvented itself by dividing potential buyers into the hobby and retail classes. Local card shops deal mostly in the hobby class, where boxes of cards can cost $100 or more. The card manufacturers produce limited runs of those cards, which also include autographs, foil stamps and other characteristics that establish their value as collectibles. “The production of product is a fraction of what it used to be,” Cannon says. “Everything is built on an allocation basis. We only see three, five, eight cases of product come through. That’s all we get all year long, so you only get one shot per year to get that box.” For the casual collector, big box stores still carry the retail cards. Typically, those products have fewer specialty inserts that have investor value. And there’s good news for folks who long for the old days, when cards came in wax packs with pink bubblegum sticks. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, card manufacturers flooded the market with specialty sets, a period now known as the “junk wax” era. Those packs and boxes are still available in card shops and on the internet, many for less than a dollar per pack. CARDIACS Sports & Memorabilia has a variety of unopened baseball and football cards from that era, but even those relics are becoming scarce. “A lot of that stuff is starting to dry up,” Cannon says. “Maybe they want to keep a pack or a sealed box. The sealed stuff is getting harder and harder to find.”

JULY/AUGUST 2022

| 41


THE CHATTOOGA BECKONS, BUT HEED HER WARNINGS STORY AND PHOTOS BY TOM POLAND

It was gray-green, very clear and yet with a certain milkiness, too; it looked as though it would turn white and foam at rocks more easily than other water … I was listening to a falls, and I got ready to die again. The sound jumped higher all at once; there was a foaming seethe in it, a hoarse desperation. We turned again. The land to the left broke away, and I looked down a set of rapids steeper—a lot steeper—than any we had been through, and longer, all stepped down toward a funnel that disappeared between two huge boulders that turned the air between them white. — “Deliverance” by James Dickey

42 | caryliving.com


I

first heard of the wild river boring down from North Carolina after “Deliverance,” the film, debuted. That was the summer of 1972. It took a while, but I at last ran the river with its green and raging white water, and mammoth brown and gray rocks. It unnerved me to spill and find myself trapped underwater, but I escaped to return over and over to the river that divides Georgia and South Carolina. Here we are 50 years after “Deliverance,” and the river named from the Cherokee word “Tsatu-gi” runs as fierce and free as ever, promising adventure, and if you haven’t set eyes on it you should. See how the land looked in the beginning. Witness the classic unmovable object versus the irresistible force and hear the river’s roar—for hearing of a river is one thing; seeing and hearing it quite another. A poet-novelist named James Dickey saw and heard the thunder, modeling his Cahulawassee River in his novel “Deliverance” (Houghton Mifflin, 1970) after the Chattooga.

UNTAMED If you seek the adrenalin rush of running an untamed river, the Chattooga waits. Georgia-Carolina’s scenic river sharpens a serrated stony edge cutting between the states’ nor thern border. It looks as it did when the Cherokee built fish traps from its rocks. Green milky waters still rush through sieves and strainers as they have for 250 million

years. It’ll be here long after we cross a fateful river of another kind. I was there early one morning on this river that runs nor theast to southwest. Hurdling downriver between canyon walls, I pitched, jostled and bucked as light streamed, ricocheted and flared of f granite and gneiss. Mica fired up and the walls shook with glitter. Asphalt-gray rocks streaked white leaned over the river, as if an ear thquake had thrust highways into air y obtuse angles to remind onlookers that civilization doesn’t exist on this river steeped in myth. Underwater, the rocks feel as if they’re immersed in virgin olive oil, slippery (but not slimy) and yet they will bruise, maim and worse. Oblivious to the rocks, nature’s early risers—blue herons, hawks and waterfowl—work the river. Here you are in an untamed land. Nothing is safe. Deer drink its waters, often at their own peril. An ill-fated deer one summer ended up in a keeper hydraulic where it tumbled for a week before the river spat it out, piece by piece. Upstream, above the South Carolina Highway 28 bridge, a thick canopy cools the water. Cascades enrich oxygen levels, and man’s developments are buffered out of sight beyond the banks. The romantic image of a fly fisherman at dawn lives here. Standing in riffles arcing casts against a deep-green mountain laurel backdrop, he sets his hand-tied fly upon swift water. JULY/AUGUST 2022

| 43


PAGES 42–43 Nantahala Outdoor Center rafts plunge through Bull Sluice.

ON LEFT A kayaker swirls back upriver from near the Highway 76 bridge. Mountain laurel, Kalmialatifolia, brings its spring beauty to the river and its trails. Chattooga ferns.

The Cherokee fished here. They drove fish into a lengthy weir. You can see it still in Section IV: structured piles of rocks, wet and glistening with purpose long unfulfilled. Sliding sideways upon the current, avoiding boulders and imagining Native Americans upon these difficult waters, syllable by syllable, I say “Nan-ta-ha-la.” This Cherokee word resounds off these unforgiving walls that brighten as the sun climbs. Though I am not on the Nantahala River, I’m nonetheless in its meaning: “Land of the Noonday Sun.” UNRELENTING To run the river in early light is to navigate the edge of night. The water runs dark while rocky cliffs to the west radiate day’s first light. All this glancing, dancing light airbrushes the river, giving it an airy, treacherous essence. If you run the Chattooga, you must be an unerring judge of depths, colors and shadows. Geological processes 250 million years old perfected death traps that can— and have—devoured kaleidoscopic kayakers like M&Ms. In fabled Section IV, the Chattooga saves its strongest, rock-hard muscle for its last 7 miles, where boulders and ledges beget rapids, sieves and hydraulics. Five falls call Section IV home. A quarter-mile run dropping more than 75 feet puts nerves on high alert with fall names that ring familiar to those who seek adventure: Entrance, Corkscrew, Crack-In-the-Rock, Jawbone and Sock’em Dog. Lesser falls will get you, too, as I found out. Entering Seven Foot Falls as fast as a pencil point breaks mid-sentence, I was thrown out. Beneath the river, I tossed, tumbled, spun, and beat against rocks. I rose against the raft bottom. Once, twice, thrice—inflated air—just what I needed held me underwater. Trapped. I breathed in river water. On my fourth try, I shot into daylight, strangling and throwing up the Chattooga. I had survived the spin cycle of the state’s biggest washer. River guide Wallace, with his 18-inch brown mane and Nazarene beard, looked like Jesus but he couldn’t walk on water. He, too, went under at Seven Foot Falls, but he’s used to that. Wallace likes to run the river in his ducky, a one-man, inflatable kayak. He has seen the river in all her moods, and seen her quirks, too. He points to shaky spindles of rocks piled atop each other. They’re everywhere. “Hippies think those will bring them good luck,” he says. Everyone needs some luck on the Chattooga—the good kind. Early light, Wallace tells me, provides a spectacle on this vestige of America. “At daybreak, beams of light shoot above narrow areas, shining onto Georgia foliage,” he says. “When the light makes it to the water in wider, open areas, flakes of mica light up.” It’s a study in contrast, this early morning river. The shady water runs dark but the white water shines bright. It’s all about speed and depth. “In shallows,” Wallace adds, “long flowing trails of algae turn neon green when the light strikes them.” I had seen the trails of fluorescent green pointing downstream. I wasn’t sure at the time what I had seen. Algae floats on ponds and lakes. Light up here is a jester, always playing tricks. Hard to believe algae clings to bedrock 44 | caryliving.com

in this pell-mell, gushing whitewater—but cling it does. Such tenacity holds a lesson for man, ever the sojourner with his brief span. As we shot clean between brown rocks, I glimpsed a pattern traced in a boulder, the imprint of a fossil, a small fish—or was it an ancient leaf? Whatever it was, it had been there forever. Me? My name is Sojourner. I am just passing through these canyon walls. But what a passage, what an adventure UNFORGIVING It’s beautiful but perilous. Respect the river. After the movie “Deliverance” came out, 22 people drowned, most of them at treacherous Woodall Shoals. Many lacked the equipment or skill needed to run the Chattooga safely. The river grants no mercy. It has claimed many lives since the U.S. Forest Service began keeping records in 1970. Most have been paddlers, some accomplished paddlers. The river has taken swimmers as well. The Forest Service manages the Chattooga—designated as a National Wild and Scenic River—by limiting outfitters to three, by limiting the number of river launches, and by limiting the number of people on the river. Put another way, you wouldn’t want to visit the Chattooga and see 1,000 people in a never-ending flotilla. If you want a Chattooga outing, plan ahead and get your hands on John Lane’s “Chattooga: Descending Into the Myth of Deliverance River” (University of Georgia Press, 2005). Come to know the river and the people along it. Lane chose favored words from James Dickey’s closing that capture the river and its essence.

THE CHATTOOGA

This legendary whitewater river’s headwaters form near North Carolina’s Whiteside Mountain. The Chattooga’s 51-mile winding descent takes it through three states and Ellicott Rock Wilderness. The river’s furious rapids stem from a half-mile drop over the course of its descent. The river trails off into Lake Tugalo, which straddles the South Carolina–Georgia border. Unlike most rivers, the Chattooga is a free-flowing river, so no dams corral it. According to the Genealogy Trails History Group, the Cherokee word “Tsatu-gi,” from which the Chattooga River is named, means “has crossed the river” and “drank by sips,” or “he sips.” Note, too, that Georgia has another Chattooga River. It’s on the western border where it runs into Weiss Lake near Alabama.

OUTFITTERS

Several outfitters can take you on a Chattooga River rafting adventure. The websites below provide information on the intensity of experience desired, minimum ages, trip lengths, season, packages and prices. Other attractions include waterfalls, ziplining-canopy tours, distilleries, the Chattahoochee National Forest and The Dillard House, a restaurant known for its family-style menu. Nantahala Outdoor Center: noc.com Wildwater: wildwaterrafting.com Southeastern Expeditions: southeasternexpeditions.com


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JULY/AUGUST 2022

| 45


D E PA R T M E N T S G I V I N G B A C K

A JOURNEY TO RECOVERY Nonprofit offers organ transplant recipient hope and common ground BY ANNIE CLARK

O

ne Sunday afternoon, toward the end of 2020, I felt

PHOTO OF ANNIE CLARK BY JEFF LIPSKY

COMMON GROUND—AND GOALS

In my search, one organization stood out

I was transported to the in-patient

from the rest: North Carolina Transplant

profoundly sick in a way I had

rehabilitation center at MedStar

Athletes, or Team NC. The website read:

never experienced before.

Georgetown University Hospital, and

“North Carolina Transplant Athletes is

My symptoms did not match those common

between physical therapy sessions I spent

a group of organ recipients, caregivers,

with COVID-19 that the Center for Disease

time Googling both transplant articles and

living donors, donor family members and

Control and Prevention had been discussing

organizations in North Carolina—where I

others in the transplant community who

on TV for weeks but, not wanting to take

would move once I was stable enough—that

raise awareness for organ donation while

any chances, I did something rather out of

could support me as I came to terms with

fundraising to travel to the Transplant

character and decided to go to the doctor.

everything that had happened.

Games of America every two years.”

Immediately.

I knew I wanted to reach out to them.

The sky was a bleak sheet of grey that day

Because I had been a competitive soccer

in Washington, D.C., and the wind whipped

player most of my life in North Carolina,

briskly as I, in this weakened state, climbed

and then coached kids in Washington, D.C.,

the stairs of my basement apartment and

playing sports again was what I craved. But

attempted to walk toward the sidewalk to

that was a far cry from the wheelchair I

no avail. I swallowed my pride and called

could barely sit in without pain. Motivated to

an Uber to drive me 1 mile to MedStar

not be in this condition forever, I crafted an

Washington Hospital Center. Once in front of

email to the nonprofit, and shortly thereafter

the ER sign, I slowly made my way through

received a warm welcome from NCTA’s

the doors and into the waiting room. I

team manager, Laura Smith.

checked in, experiencing what I thought were

I soon met other members of the team—

bad, potentially coronavirus-related body

transplant patients from all walks of life who

aches, and subsequently passed out.

had been brought together because they

After a couple months of lying unconscious

had also needed a new organ to survive. At

and intubated, I groggily opened my eyes

my first virtual meeting I met Darryl Ellis,

to fuzzy faces trying to talk to me. I learned

who answered all my newbie transplant

that my body had gone into organ failure. I

questions; Phelicia Price, an economics

had been moved to a different hospital and,

professor and inspiring yoga aficionado;

among other things, had received a life-saving

John Laisure, a pediatric nephrologist who

organ transplant. My journey to recovery was

would become my pickleball partner; and so many other remarkable individuals. Each

only beginning. PHOTO OF TRANSPLANT ATHLETES COMPETING COURTESY OF NCTA

46 | caryliving.com


person had a unique story, and everyone

has the potential to save eight lives and

was excited to go to the Transplant Games of

enhance the lives of 75 others. According to

America later this year.

Donate Life America, while 95% of U.S. adults

I moved back to the Triangle region earlier in 2022 and, alongside my new team, will be participating in my first sports competition as

support organ donation, only 54% are actually registered as donors. We need to fill that gap. While most people think of being a donor as

a transplant athlete July 29–August 3 in this

something that happens after one passes away,

year’s host city, San Diego. Because NCTA

living donation is another thing to consider.

believes cost should not be a barrier for

For example, the most commonly needed

post-transplant patients working to educate

organ is a kidney. Most people are born with

folks about organ donation, we are always

two, and healthy people only need one.

fundraising to help ensure people who want to

As a registered donor, I never dreamed I

participate have financial access, and we are so

would be a recipient, but because someone

thankful for those who have helped us so far.

had a conversation with their child about donation, I am here today. Talk to your

FILLING THE GAP

friends and family about organ donation.

While I am incredibly fortunate to be alive

Signing up is easy. Individuals can designate

to compete, thanks to my donor, so many

their intention to donate on their drivers’

people are not as lucky. I’ve learned that

license and can register at donatelifenc.org.

at any given time in the U.S., just under

The North Carolina community has been so

106,000 people are on waiting lists to receive

instrumental in my support, and my hope is

an organ, according to organdonor.gov.

that through NCTA and similar programs, we

On average, 17 people pass away every day

can continue to be that community for others

while waiting to receive a transplant.

who are impacted by a transplant need or

Although the numbers are daunting, there is hope. Through organ donation, one person

donation. For more information about North Carolina Transplant Athletes, visit nctalife.org.

PHOTO OF TRANSPLANT ATHLETES CELEBRATING COURTESY OF NCTA

NCTA MEMBERS SHOWN LEFT TO RIGHT: ANNIE CLARK, DARRYL ELLIS, LAURA SMITH, YVETTE MATTHEWS. PHOTO BY DON FEELY PHOTOGRAPHY.

JULY/AUGUST 2022

| 47


D E PA R T M E N T S T R A N S P O R TAT I O N

CAUTION: Road Work Ahead! Despite challenges, engineers work to make infrastructure improvements throughout Wake County BY MANDY HOWARD | PHOTOGRAPHY BY MICHAEL MASCIA/DRONE A.I.R.

A

midst the fear and uncertainty the lockdown brought, many agree there was one tiny positive blip: a marked decrease in traffic. The return to a normal way of life is very welcome, but also reminds those who live in the Triangle that, in many places, most of our roads were not created for the current population. State and local officials have been planning updates and upgrades for years, but no one predicted how a pandemic could affect the labor market, nor could they have planned for the meteoric rise in property values. For example, when a 2017 transportation bond was passed in Raleigh, the budget included accommodations for steady growth in property values and inflation. However, as City of Raleigh Senior Engineer in Roadway Design and Construction Chad Cantrell says, “Inflation is through the roof and this is a hot place to live. As we got to the end of these bond projects, there just wasn’t sufficient money to cover all [the projects on the bond] through construction.”

That is a common refrain for projects that are being funded on a local level. When it comes to statewide projects, for which funding is a little more predictable, there are also challenges. “Like every other industry, our contractors are being challenged by the labor market and there are supply chain issues,” says Marty Homan, communications manager for the North Carolina Department of Transportation Division of Motor Vehicles. So while there may be headlines about expanding budgets and delayed timelines, and we’ll likely all start telling jokes about the state bird being the crane and the state flower being the blossoming orange cone, it’s important to look to the future. “I can’t stress enough how important having good transportation infrastructure is,” Homan says. “The region is growing tremendously, and we need the infrastructure in place to get people where they need to go.” Here’s a quick look at some major projects happening now.

INTERSTATE 440 BELTLINE

HILLSBOROUGH STREET AND BLUE RIDGE ROAD

Where: I-440 Beltline between Walnut Street and Wade Avenue. Why: Built in the 1960s, this was the first section of the beltline to be built, and is the last to be widened. According to the NCDOT, it claims nearly triple the statewide crash rate for similar facilities. This project will improve safety and provide much-needed updates to this segment of the highly used loop. What: The road will be widened to six lanes, interchanges will be upgraded and all bridges will be replaced. When: The original finish date was 2023, but due to supply and labor issues the completion date has been pushed back to October 2024. At this time, you can see the beginning of a massive flyover, or high-level overpass, that will carry Wade Avenue over the beltline.

48 | caryliving.com

Where: Intersection of Hillsborough Street, Beryl Road and Blue Ridge Road at the State Fairgrounds. Why: To improve traffic flow and reduce train-related conflicts with vehicles and pedestrians. What: A bridge will be built for Hillsborough Street and the nearby railroad tracks so that Blue Ridge Road will travel, unimpeded, underneath Hillsborough Street and Beryl Road. No longer an intersection, a “jug handle” interchange will be built for travelers on Blue Ridge Road to access Hillsborough Street. The intersection will be closed for the entirety of the construction phase. When: Construction will begin when the annual North Carolina State Fair ends in 2022, and the interchange will open in just under two years, prior to the state fair in October 2024.


ATLANTIC AVENUE

SIX FORKS ROAD (PHASE 1)

Where: Atlantic Avenue in Raleigh, from New Hope Church Road to Highwoods Boulevard. Why: An analysis flagged this section of Atlantic Avenue as a safety risk, so the stated goal is to improve visibility and create safer intersections. What: Medians are being installed, and the intersection of Ingram Drive and Atlantic Avenue will be raised to offer increased visibility. When: Construction started in March and is anticipated to be completed March of 2024.

Where: Midtown Raleigh; Six Forks Road from Rowan Street to Lynn Road. Why: Increased traffic has created a demand to improve mobility and safety for drivers, bicyclists and pedestrians. What: The road will be expanded to three lanes of travel in each direction; sidewalks will be installed on both sides; and a separated, curbed bike lane will be created. When: While the project was originally funded by the 2017 transportation bond, increased real estate prices (to achieve the necessary expansions) created a need for further funding. If local funding is approved, the estimated start date is 2023. That start will be pushed back approximately one year if federal grants are needed.

COMPLETE INTERSTATE 540 TRIANGLE EXPRESSWAY (PART 1) Where: This project will be contracted and developed in three different stages. The first one, happening now, takes I-540 from the N.C. 55 Bypass to U.S 401 (near Ten Ten Road). Why: Also known as the Southeast Extension project, the goal is to complete the I-540 loop. This will improve travel for and to southern Wake communities, as well as ease congestion on nearby roads, including I-440, I-40, N.C. 42, N.C. 55 and Ten Ten Road. What: New roadways, bridges and interchanges are being built. When: The first phase, connecting the N.C. 55 bypass to U.S. 401, is under construction now. It’s set to open in 2024.

APEX PEAKWAY SOUTHWEST CONNECTOR Where: Near S. Salem Street in Apex. Why: The Peakway is an ongoing project that, when complete, will create a full loop around the Town of Apex for increased traffic flow. What: In order to close a gap in the loop, a bridge will be built over S. Salem Street and the nearby railroad tracks. When: Construction will begin in late 2022, with completion set for late 2024.

GET INFORMED AND INVOLVED

Want to stay up-to-date on the latest road construction projects near you? Here are some resources that can help. •

Visit ncdot.gov/projects for a user-friendly way to navigate every ongoing and proposed NCDOT project.

Get involved in local alliances and city or town councils. The Midtown Raleigh Alliance and Raleigh Citizens Advisory Council are both active, vocal and ready for your input.

Attend feedback sessions hosted by local councils and the NCDOT. People often speak up when it is too late, since projects are typically planned 5–10 years in advance. Attending information sessions and offering feedback early in the process makes a big difference.

Follow social media for updates. From the NCDOT to your local town or city council, check out their corresponding social media accounts for updates in real time.

“We work for the public, so we want to be responsive to their questions and to their input. We have a lot of great information on the project pages on our website, and social media as well.” NCDOT Division of Motor Vehicles Communications Manager Marty Homan

JULY/AUGUST 2022

| 49


D E PA R T M E N T S S P O R T S

COOL SCHOOL Accelerator School gives hockey and soccer players an academic alternative while chasing their dreams BY KURT DUSTERBERG

I

ACCELLERATOR SCHOOL STUDENT ATHELETE DOMINIK CESPEDES. PHOTOS COURTESY OF JIM SCHNEIDERMAN.

f you walk into the Invisalign Arena in

both middle and high school courses.

other paths that can lead to professional

Morrisville on any weekday morning,

The middle school classroom has three

leagues. To that end, the school has a

the first thing you notice is the bustle of

full-time teachers, while the high school

staff of experienced coaches who offer

activity in every corner of the hockey

curriculum is mostly online. Enrollment

comprehensive training and guidance for

begins at $17,500 and runs to $19,500.

navigating their post–high school plans as

rink. The players range across the teenage years and move on the ice with speed and

“We don’t consider ourselves an online

student-athletes. The hockey instruction

skill. One skater at center ice works on

school because we have so much support

comes from former professional athletes

stickhandling. Near the boards, another

built in,” says Jackie Avallone, the school’s

and high-level coaches who provide skills

listens to instruction from a coach. At the far

high school coordinator. “Our entire high

instruction, performance evaluations and

end of the ice, a player closes in for a shot

school program is NCAA-–approved. North

individualized video sessions. The soccer

against a goalie. And when practice ends,

Carolina has their state standards, which all

academy includes similar instruction,

they all hurry to the locker room and shower

of our courses are meeting, but the NCAA is

along with a residency program that allows

before heading upstairs. That’s where school

the clearinghouse for what is acceptable as

students to train at an Accelerator School

starts at 11 a.m. and runs until 3:45 p.m.

far as student-athletes.”

academy in Spain.

Accelerator School is an academic

The school does not, however, have

The school opened in 2016 as a soccer-only

alternative for middle and high school

athletic teams. The students all play on

academy, housed in the hospitality suites at

students with a heavy focus on athletic

high-level soccer club teams or hockey

WakeMed Soccer Park in Cary. The school’s

performance. The school’s hockey academy

programs outside of school. So the morning

co-founder, Terry Ransbury, initially planned

has 30 students. Another 18 participate

blocks of on-ice training and outdoor soccer

to build his own facility for the Accelerator

in a soccer academy, which trains on two

practice at the Accelerator School are meant

School, but after watching Wake Competition

outdoor turf fields. Both facilities are part

to accentuate personal skill development.

Center take shape under the direction

of the Wake Competition Center campus

of developer Jeff Ammons, he found an

that houses training centers for a variety

FIRST-CLASS TRAINING AND TEACHING

interested partner. “He gave us artificial turf

of sports. The second floor of the twin-rink

Many of the Accelerator School’s students

to work with so we didn’t have to go indoors

arena includes individual classrooms for

hope to earn college scholarships or pursue

in bad weather,” Ransbury says. “It worked

50 | caryliving.com


The school takes care to keep the emphasis

out beautifully. We’re super happy with the

on his face when I drop him off, he’s got a

facility here. It’s great for us.”

smile on his face when I pick him up. It’s

on academics in every way possible. After

money well spent.”

a weekend of travel with their club teams,

The arena was completed at the end of

Leaving his traditional middle school

students sometimes aren’t at the top of their

in 2020. “Throughout the year, families

environment came easily for Dominik. “It’s

academic game when Monday morning rolls

would come to shadow because their kids

a little bit strange that it’s the same kids

around. “We can help them manage their

were homeschooling during COVID, and we

in every class, but I like it,” says the rising

travel time and their energy,” Avallone says.

started enrolling,” says Avallone, who teaches

eighth-grader. “At the start of the year, I kind

“If a student is struggling, or if he’s been

language arts and social studies. “By the end

of struggled a little bit, but I’m kind of getting

traveling a lot, we’ll say, ‘We need you to

of the year, we had 20 students.”

it together now.”

come into the classroom tomorrow morning

2019, opening the door for a hockey school

The hockey part of the equation came

instead of going to training,’ The coaches

A NATURAL TRANSITION

naturally. “I’ve been a lot stronger on my

are 100% on board. It’s not like there’s any

Among those who started in the fall of

skates since I started because I’m skating

repercussions to that.”

2021 was Dominik Cespedes, a 13-year-old

every day,” Dominik says. “My stride has

hockey lover who plays in the Carolina

gotten much better. My shot has improved

four students in the spring, taking another

Junior Hurricanes program. His father,

drastically. It’s helped my game a lot.”

step in building a reputation that embraces

Mark, could see that Dominik didn’t have

Accelerator School graduated its first

the student side of student-athletes.

the same passion in the classroom that he

PRIORITIZING ACADEMICS

“Relationships are very important to us.

showed on the ice. “Ever y morning when

Ransbury operates another Accelerator School

It’s teachers and coaches, students and

I would take him to school, I could tell he

in the Washington, D.C. Metro area, and plans

parents all working together,” Avallone says.

was dreading going there,” Mark Cespedes

to open schools in Southern California and

“We’re taking advantage of the students’

says. “He just wanted it to be over. So it

Houston in the coming year. “We can only

passion, whether it’s hockey or soccer.

was a really easy decision for me, just to be

go so fast, and we really want to control the

We don’t think you have to sacrifice. We

able to take him somewhere I knew he was

quality,” Ransbury says. “If we have one bad

want to make sure the education is as good

looking for ward to going. He’s got a smile

school, it may tarnish everything.”

as it can possibly be.” JULY/AUGUST 2022

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D E PA R T M E N T S E D U C AT I O N

HOW TO NAVIGATE SCHOOL CHOICE IN WAKE COUNTY

S

BY LIBBY TAYLOR chool choice in Wake County can

of overcrowding on new families, rather than

for admission to the alternative calendar

be daunting. If you’re like me, you

massive redistricting for families who are

school. Discover your calendar options on the

grew up going to the school in your

already living here. If you are new to the area

WCPSS address lookup tool.

neighborhood and there were no

and you purchase a home in a capped school

MAGNET

magnet schools, year-round calendar options

zone, you will be provided transportation

or charter schools. These days, the options

to an overflow school. You may want to call

WAKE COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS

are vast. In a lot of ways, this is a blessing

your student’s base school and find out this

Wake County has a nationally recognized

for families who don’t find their base school

information ahead of time. All capped schools

magnet school system. Magnet schools are

to be a great fit; however, it can be time

are listed at wcpss.net.

public schools and part of WCPSS, but have

consuming and difficult to navigate all of

A new cap on WCPSS class size for

specialized themes that attract students

the alternatives. Taking into account all the

kindergarten through third grade that began

from outside their base zone. These themes

area has to offer will help you make the right

with the 2018–19 school year (with some

include leadership, creative arts, language

decision for your family. Taking a macro

deadline flexibility built in to phase in these

immersion programs, entrepreneurial design

view of the schools in our area, coupled with

new requirements), allows no more than 21

and more. Magnet school applications are

practical suggestions, will help you tackle

students in each kindergarten class, no more

submitted in the fall and winter for entrance

your family’s school search.

than 19 in each first grade class, and no more

during the following academic year. Magnet

than 20 in each second- and third-grade class.

schools follow the same curriculum and state

Older students have access to a vast array of

standards guiding public schools, but may

WAKE COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS

elective opportunities, experienced teachers,

have varying instructional models depending

Like most other districts, each address in

enrichment programs and accommodations

on their theme.

Wake County has an assigned base school

for special education. Each school is unique,

TRADITIONAL

PRO TIP: Magnet applications are based

as part of the Wake County Public School

so make sure you tour your base school along

on priority status. Visit the magnet web page

System. Residents can attend their base school

with any others you are considering. Some

on the WCPSS website to understand your

simply by registering at that school. If you are

follow a year-round calendar and some follow

priority ranking. If you are trying to attend

a new family who has just moved into the area,

a traditional nine-month calendar.

a popular magnet school you may need to

you may have to contend with enrollment caps. This is done to intentionally place the burden

APEX HIGH SCHOOL. PHOTO COURTESY OF WCPSS.

52 | caryliving.com

PRO TIP: If you don’t like the calendar at your assigned base school you can apply

qualify as a high priority to increase your chance of being selected.

BROUGHTON HIGH SCHOOL IN RALEIGH. PHOTO COURTESY OF WCPSS.


CHARTER

unique admissions process, so be sure to

Charter schools are public schools that

getting started.

WAKE COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS are not part of WCPSS, but are run by independent boards. They are approved by a state charter advisory board, follow state educational guidelines and are tuitionfree for students. Because charter schools are run independently, however, they may operate differently from WCPSS. Some span additional grade levels—such as kindergarten through eighth grade—and require uniforms or even parent volunteer hours. Admission into a charter school is determined by a general lottery (random selection), typically between December and March; timeframes vary by school. A charter school’s performance grade can be found alongside other public schools on the School Report Cards website published by the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction. PRO TIP: You can apply to multiple charter schools and magnet schools at the same time. Charter schools will give you the opportunity

prepare by visiting the school’s website before PRO TIP: If you know you want to attend kindergarten at a popular private school, consider applying for your child to attend the school’s preschool program to increase your chances of getting a kindergarten seat. Seats are typically filled by spring, so start the process early. PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER Although deciding which school your child should attend can be overwhelming, there are many tools at your disposal. Before you begin looking, sit down as a family and identify what is most important to all of you in a school environment. Is it location and proximity to home? Is it special programing, like foreign languages or music? Maybe it’s a particular instructional model that you like? With your priorities in hand, explore the school options that seem to meet your family’s needs. Once you know where you

to accept or decline your seat.

want to explore further, gather together

PRIVATE

transfer request deadlines, tour schedules,

important information like application and

SCHOOLS IN WAKE COUNTY

and course and extracurricular offerings. So

If public school options are not meeting your

much information is available now online, but

needs, Wake County also offers many private

touring a school in person is still the best way

school choices. Private schools are tuition-

to decide if it works for your family. Y ​ ou may

based and are run independently. You can

find several schools that could be a good fit,

choose from a wide range of parochial, or

so don’t be afraid to follow your instincts if you

religious-based schools as well as independent

think you have found the one!

schools. The tuition for some of these schools starts at as low $5,000 a year. The admissions process at a competitive

Libby Taylor owns and operates SchoolUp. She has over 12 years of experience in education,

private school often starts in the fall and can

both as a teacher in WCPSS and Durham

include testing, interviews, recommendation

County, and as a professional development

letters and more. Each school has its own

coordinator for teachers across the country.

TIME FOR A CHANGE? BY LIBBY TAYLOR

Change can be hard, but schools are fluid organizations and are constantly changing. Sometimes a school you picked many years ago no longer fits what your family needs today. I have noticed that the pandemic caused many parents to take a much deeper look into their children’s educational needs. Whether it was listening into virtual classes, talking to other parents or noticing communication patterns, many parents began observing their child’s current school from a different perspective. Parents are more involved in what and how their kids are learning. If your family’s needs have changed, it might be time to consider a school change as well. Always be sure you have communicated with teachers and administrators in an honest and open way to resolve conflicts before setting your sights on a new school. And make sure the issues can be solved by a new environment and are not something that will continue elsewhere. Here are a few basic guidelines to consider that can help you decide when it’s time to move on. •

• • •

Your child is noticeably anxious before school, or refuses to go to school. Your gut is telling you that your child isn’t thriving. Your child isn’t making adequate academic progress. The academic courses or electives your child needs are not offered (international baccalaureate, orchestra, French, advanced math, etc.). Your child’s school does not offer the academic services your child needs to succeed. Open communication isn’t happening or consistently leaves you feeling frustrated. A change in your family’s situation makes transportation or other logistics difficult. New programing does not align with your family’s values.

LAUREL PARK ELEMENTARY SCHOOL IN APEX. PHOTO COURTESY OF WCPSS.

JULY/AUGUST 2022

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EDUCATION

GUIDE OPT I ON S I N E D U CAT I O N

JULY/AUGUST 2022

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GRAC E C HR I ST I AN SC HOOL ⅼ EDUCATION GUI DE

KNOWN, VALUED AND LOVED AT GRACE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL Our desire at GRACE Christian School is that every child who walks through our doors learns that they are known, valued and loved by Jesus Christ—and by the adults around them. This is the atmosphere that sets our school apart, and a large reason why the Association of Christian Schools International, the lead accrediting organization of Christian schools from across the world, granted GRACE Christian School its Exemplary Accreditation status, making us one of only 19 schools in the world—and the first in the Triangle—to receive this prestigious designation. Our mission is to spiritually and academically equip, challenge and inspire students to impact their world for Christ. In the elementary years, teachers emphasize experiential learning that involves field trips, class demonstrations and labs. Our college preparatory academic program is designed to prepare our middle and high school students to excel in a high-quality academic environment. Additionally, our teachers utilize the latest technology to enable students to be responsible digital citizens and prepare them for the constantly evolving digital landscape. GRACE Christian School provides a competitive athletic program with 30 sports offerings in middle and high school, and a growing fine arts program. At GRACE Christian School, we provide biblical instruction, service opportunities and avenues of worship that allow young people to see their purpose, value and identity—not through the lens of the culture-at-large, but through the eyes of a loving God. We pursue academic excellence for each child, knowing that individual excellence cannot be defined by a one-size-fits-all approach. We equip students with the skills they need to thrive in any circumstance, challenging them to overcome obstacles, and inspiring them to be all that they can be—not for their own glory, but for the cause of Christ. We build world-changers who will influence culture for years to come.

Lower Campus: 801 Buck Jones Road, Raleigh | 919.747.2020 | gracechristian.net 56 | caryliving.com


EDUCATI ON GUI DE ⅼ GRAC E C HRI ST IAN SCHOOL

Upper Campus: 1101 Buck Jones Road, Raleigh | 919.747.2020 | gracechristian.net JULY/AUGUST 2022

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GILDEN WOOD S EARLY C HI L D CARE AND PR ESC HOOL ⅼ EDUCATION GUIDE

GILDEN WOODS EARLY CHILD CARE AND PRESCHOOL: TRANSFORMING EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION Gilden Woods Early Child Care and Preschool’s mission is to provide the highest quality educational programming in a safe, nurturing, child-centered environment. Through that mission delivery, they hope to change the way early childhood educators and early childhood education is viewed. We nurture positive self-esteem by providing an environment for success and encouraging healthy emotional

development and social skills; support the physical development of large and fine motor skill development; and facilitate cognitive development and critical thinking skills by broadening the child’s hands-on experiences. We also take pride in developing language, literacy skills and multilingual skill and appreciation; fostering responsibility; and offering opportunities for students to enhance their creativity.

1005 Vision Drive, Apex | 919.367.6811 | gildenwoods.com 58 | caryliving.com


Our community runs on it. Curiosity, that is.

At Cary Academy, we challenge our students to be enthusiastically inquisitive: To seek adventure, revel in curiosity, follow passions, broaden worldviews, take risks and try new things.

EDUCATI ON GUI DE

CARY ACADEMY: DISCOVERY, INNOVATION, COLLABORATION AND EXCELLENCE

CARY ACAD EMY

In our diverse and inclusive community (53% students of color), there is no shortage of different voices with which to collaborate, share new ideas or welcome a different perspective. We’d love to add yours. You belong here. Learn more at caryacademy.org/admissions. The application period opens September 7, 2022. Financial aid is available. The first consideration deadline is January 13, 2023.

1500 N. Harrison Avenue, Cary | 919.677.3873 | caryacademy.org

EDUCATION GUIDE

EXPERIENCE EXCELLENCE IN EDUCATION AT CARY CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

Every child who enters our building is fearfully and wonderfully made in the image of their creator. Each day our students are encouraged to claim their identity in Jesus Christ as they pursue extraordinary outcomes. We seek to cultivate practical wisdom grounded in the Gospel, equipping our students academically, spiritually and socially so they may flourish in the modern world.

CARY CH RISTIAN S CHOOL

Our desire is to offer a place equal to each student’s capacity for wonder, providing an education that is meaningful and enjoyable. Please visit our website to sign up for a tour so we can share our classrooms, campus and culture with you. 1330 Old Apex Road, Cary | 919.303.2560 | carychristianschool.org JULY/AUGUST 2022

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OUT & ABOUT DINE & DRAFT

INTRODUCING OUR NEW DINE & DRAFT FORMAT! Looking for our comprehensive Dine & Draft directory? Check out caryliving.com/dine-draft for a detailed foodie guide to Western Wake. Here’s a snapshot of what you’ll find. This list represents the restaurants that have advertised with us since the start of 2022.

KWENCH JUICE CAFÉ 772 West Williams Street, Apex 984.214.1763 kwenchapex.com ROCKY MOUNTAIN CHOCOLATE FACTORY 302 Colonades Way #204, Cary 984.232.8325 rmcf.com

BAD DADDY’S BURGER BAR 3300 Village Market Place, Morrisville 919.297.0953 baddaddysburgerbar.com

CILANTRO INDIAN CAFE 107 Edinburgh S. Drive, Cary 919.234.1264 cilantroindia.com

TASTEFULLY SERVED Serves Raleigh, Cary, Apex and RTP 919.760.5134 tastefully-served.com

BUOY BOWLS Food truck serving Western Wake County 919.520.7748 buoybowls.com

DI FARA PIZZA TAVERN 111 E. Chatham Street, Cary 919.678.5300 difarapizzatavern.com

URBAN ANGEETHI 5033 Arco Street, Cary 919.234.5555 urbanangeethi.com

CHOCOLATE SMILES 312 W. Chatham Street, Suite 101, Cary 919.469.5282 chocolatesmiles.com

FLUENT N’ FOOD CATERING Serving Wake County

WASABI SUSHI & THAI RESTAURANT 107 Edinburgh S. Drive, Cary 919.460.7980 wasabicarync.com

60 | caryliving.com

919.533.8398 fluentnfood.com


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Dine-in ⅼ Catering Party Orders 919.234.5555 5033 Arco Street, Cary URBANANGEETHI.COM JULY/AUGUST 2022

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OUT & ABOUT FOODIE FOCUS

NOW OPEN

TapStation has opened at 320 S. Salem Street in Apex. The restaurant and brewery maintains some of the Holt & Sons service station’s original structure and offers an extensive draft beer list, bourbon and burgers. Mason’s Famous Lobster Rolls opened at 302 Colonades Way in Car y’s Waverly Place in May. Popular menu items include a classic lobster roll, Connecticut roll and lobster BLT roll. The Fish House Eater y has opened at 837 Perr y Road in Apex, offering fresh crab legs, shelled crabs, crab meat, shrimp and scallops. Kwench Juice Cafe is now open at 772 W. Williams Street in Apex and serves healthy smoothies, acai bowls and more. BOLT Drinks and Coffee has opened at 400 Broad Street in Fuquay-Varina offering a variety of energy drinks.

COMING SOON

Red Hot & Blue has delayed its opening in Morrisville’s Park West Village due to supply chain issues. At press time for this issue, it was expected to open in mid-June. Dram & Draught, which has locations in Raleigh, Durham and Greensboro, and is known for its cocktail and whiskey renditions, will soon open at 3 Fenton Main Street in Car y’s Fenton shopping center. Crawford’s Genuine, a casual dining bar concept created by local renowned chef Scott Crawford, will open at Raleigh-Durham International Airport next year, along with Beyu Caffé and Black & White Coffee Roasters.

PHOTO OF MASON’S FAMOUS LOBSTER ROLLS BY MELISSA WISTEHUFF

COME HUNGRY

Compiled by the Cary Living staff with contributions from Triangle Food Guy Sean Lennard, who blogs at trianglefoodblog.com PHOTO COURTESY OF DRAM & DRAUGHT

S MO OT HI E S JUI CES ACAI BOWL S CLEANS ES & MO RE!

772 WEST WILLIAMS STREET, APEX 919.267.6337

kwe n c h ju icea p ex .co m

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OUT & ABOUT EVENTS

AUGUST

JULY ACOUSTIC EVENINGS IN THE PARK

S’MORRISVILLE

Wednesdays through September 28, 6–9 p.m. Waverly Place 302 Colonades Way, Cary Enjoy a variety of acoustic acts each week at Waverly Place, along with strolling magicians and balloon artists. Enjoy dinner on one of the restaurant patios or take a blanket to the park to enjoy complimentary entertainment. See the website for a list of performers. Wine and beer are available for purchase.

August 11, 6–7:30 p.m. 1520 Morrisville Parkway, Morrisville Each year, the Town of Morrisville changes its name to S’Morrisville in honor of National S’mores Day and the delicious snack made famous at campfires everywhere. Enjoy fun activities and a s’mores dessert giveaway at Morrisville Community Park. Vegan options are also available.

townofmorrisville.org

waverlycary.com

FIREWORKS FRENZY AND OLDE FASHIONED FOURTH OF JULY

July 3 and 4 Downtown Apex Hunter and Salem streets The Town of Apex expands its Fourth of July celebration to two days this year by presenting its first-ever fireworks display at Hunter Street Park July 3 at 9:30 p.m. Carnival-style games, inflatables, food vendors and a children’s bike parade take over Salem Street the next day beginning at 9 a.m. during the Olde Fashioned Fourth of July event, which ends with a splash down from the Apex Fire Department.

PHOTO BY JACLYNWR/GETTY IMAGES

PHOTO BY ARIEL SKELLEY/GETTY IMAGES

BRICKUNIVERSE AND LEGO FAN FESTIVAL

July 9–10, 8 a.m.–4:30 p.m. Raleigh Convention Center 500 S. Salisbury Street, Raleigh See massive LEGO sculptures and displays, shop the latest LEGO merchandise, meet expert designers and build a masterpiece during this event. Purchase tickets online.

NIGHT NATION RUN

August 27, 8 p.m. 8003 Regency Parkway, Cary Light up the night at Koka Booth Amphitheatre during this blend of a music festival and fun run. Run, walk, skip or dance on a music-filled course featuring live DJs, bubble zones, light shows and neon displays, then cross the finish line for a main-stage after-party in support of Stand Up to Cancer. Gates open at 5:30 p.m; purchase tickets online.

nightnationrun.com

CARY LAZY DAZE ARTS & CRAFTS FESTIVAL

brickuniverse.com/raleigh PEAK CITY PIG FEST

peakcitypigfest.com

August 16, 7 p.m. Koka Booth Amphitheatre 8003 Regency Parkway, Cary Families can sing and dance along with the Kidz Bop Kids—Egan, Layla, Dominic and Camille—as they perform the latest hits live on stage, including “Good 4 U” and “Dance Monkey.” Dads can show off their best dance moves on stage in a mashup of popular music during “The Daddy Dance Off.”

boothamphitheatre.com

apexnc.org

July 22–23 Downtown Apex Salem Street Watch as 40 teams face off for more than $12,000 in prize money by cooking chicken, ribs, beef brisket and pork. This Kansas City Barbecue Society–sanctioned competition also features a beer garden and live music. Festival proceeds benefit the Apex Sunrise Rotary Foundation.

“KIDZ BOP LIVE”

August 27–28 Town Hall Campus 316 N. Academy Street, Cary Budding with hundreds of local artists, Cary’s 46th annual Lazy Daze Arts & Crafts Festival also showcases live music, food vendors, a beer garden, children’s activities and the Jerry Miller Artist Awards recipients. PHOTO COURTESY OF BONE SUCKIN' SAUCE AT THE PEAK CITY PIG FEST

townofcary.org

BY JA N IC E LE WIN E

Be sure to check the websites for the events listed here before you head out to ensure they are still taking place.

64 | caryliving.com


PHOTO BY CLAIRE HAMBRICK

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6/15/22 11:53 AM


OUT & ABOUT SIGHTINGS WINE & BREW WALK AT WAVERLY PLACE BENEFITS KAY YOW CANCER FUND

A Waverly Place signature event, Wine & Brew Walk, returned April 28 and May 26 with a new spin as a sip, shop and stroll event in support of the Kay Yow Cancer Fund. Guests sampled red, white and sparkling wine along with local craft beers at select merchants, including BodyLase, Pineapple Sol, StretchLab, Drybar and Taziki’s Mediterranean Cafe. A $25 donation to the Kay Yow Cancer Fund to aid in the fight against all cancers affecting women allowed access to the event, along with a sampling glass and Waverly Place Wine Walk Passport. Photo courtesy of Azul Photography

CONCERT SINGERS OF CARY PRESENTS SPRING CONCERT

Concert Singers of Cary presented its spring concert at the Cary Arts Center May 10. Under the direction of Dr. Nathan Leaf, the group brought to musical life many famous and favorite texts of William Shakespeare in a program titled, “Songs, Sonnets and Touches of Sweet Harmony.” With choral compositions in a variety of styles, the concert included performances by professional instrumentalists, including Carol Chung, violin; Jason Foureman, jazz bass; and Concert Singers of Cary’s longtime collaborative pianist, Allen Bailey. Photo courtesy of Denny Colvin

CORRAL’S GROW & BLOOM GALA RAISES $163,000

CORRAL Riding Academy, a faith-motivated nonprofit in Cary that nurtures adolescent girls in high-risk situations through a long-term, holistic program of equine therapy and education, welcomed its alumnae to share stories of growth into adulthood at its Grow & Bloom Gala on May 20. The alumnae spoke candidly about their struggles and successes, and how they became change agents in their own communities. The gala featured a live auction and cocktail and dinner social hour. Photo courtesy of Daniela Stoyanov

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BY JA N IC E L EW I N E


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D E PA R T M E N T S K A L E I D O S C O P E Cary Living has partnered with Cary Christian School for the first-ever KALEIDOSCOPE Student Art Contest. Cary Christian School students created works of art based on their favorite Western Wake landmarks. Public online voting took place throughout May and we are now proud to present our first place winner.

FIRST PLACE WINNER CARY LIVING KALEIDOSCOPE 2022 STUDENT ART CONTEST

I chose this park as the subject of my artwork because I was taken to parks all over Cary when I was in elementary school, and I remember the feeling and look of the parks even if I don’t remember the exact names. I vividly remember this park from an end-of-year school event, and I associate those feelings with it. —Charlotte Ayers

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CHARLOTTE AYERS 9TH GRADE

CARY CHRISTIAN SCHOOL LAZE DAYS PEN & MARKER ON PAPER 11 X 14 INCHES


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