Appalachia’s Christmas Future

If Charles Dickens were alive today spinning Christmas yarns, he would be writing about the health and well-being of Appalachia. He wouldn’t write about how industries “keep the lights on.” He’d worry about the grim conditions that keep the hospitals full and the environment foul. As Dickens heard demands for cuts in environmental and safety…

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Get Clean and Green Around the House

Home Remedies Both Old & New Story by Jillian Randel Walk through the cleaning aisle in the grocery store and you will find shelves upon shelves stocked with cleaning products. Gels meant to clean the toilet bowl, window spray for the mirror, a leave-on concoction for the shower and a separate solution for the sink.…

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Mountain Garden Offers Herbal Learning

Story by Yuri Woodstock Mountain Gardens is a botanical garden nestled in the Black Mountains of North Carolina that offers visitors a chance to work hands-on with Chinese and native herbal medicines. Originally a paradise garden planted by owner Joe Hollis over twenty-five years ago, Mountain Gardens now boasts the widest variety of medicinal herbs…

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Folk Remedies: Useful Plants From Your Backyard

Story by Yuri Woodstock There exists, under our feet, a cornucopia of edible or medicinal plants, fungi and algae. The wide variety of beneficial species in Appalachia—and their application to a multitude of ailments—comprises a massive realm of knowledge. A Peterson field guide lists wild sarsaparilla root, for example, as a folk remedy for stomachaches,…

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Appalachian Alternatives

Home Remedies Both Old & New* Story by Jillian Randel Cold and flu givin’ you the blues? According to Natural Medicines Database, Americans contract close to a billion colds per year and around 50 million people in the U.S. get the flu annually. Natural remedies are resurfacing in pharmacies and health stores across the country.…

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Rev Pat Watkins Sermon: Naked Vegetarianism

Naked Vegetarianism 12 September 2010 Lakeside UMC Genesis 1:1-3, 2:7 The purpose of today’s sermon is to reacquaint us with God in the role of creator. Genesis chapters 1-3 tell the story of God’s creation of the earth. God as creator exists from one end of the Bible to the other, but in preparation for…

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Annual Photo Competition Celebrates Appalachia

By Jillian Randel Three men pushing a Christmas tree bailer, a single set of footprints on a snowy highway, morning shadows over the Blue Ridge Mountains… how can one capture the essence of Appalachian life in a frame? That’s the challenge of the 8th annual Appalachian Mountain Photography Competition, which is accepting submissions now through…

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Saving a Species: North carolina’s Red Wolf Recovery Program

By Josephine Butler The Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge rests on 154,000 acres of marshy swampland just south of the Albemarle Sound in coastal North Carolina. Among the high and low pocosins, fresh and brackish water marshes and swamps, the refuge is home to an array of native species like the American woodcock, the Atlantic…

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You Say Goodbye, I Say Hello!

This last year has been an excellent one, with a team full of talented writers. As this issue goes to press, there are tearful eyes in the newsroom. But as we say goodbye to our Managing Editor, Maureen Halsema, our Voice summer interns Megan Naylor and Derek Speranza (who both have stories in this issue!),…

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We Had Some Crazy Times Together…

Review by Jed Grubbs Superfreakonomics is like that outrageous friend of yours from college. Initially, all the scandalous things he says and does are highly entertaining and engrossing. Time goes on, though, and you begin to wonder what this guy won’t do for attention. You start to feel it’d be nice to wake up without…

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