Fresh as a steaming plate of Little Grill’s hot cakes, here are this week’s happynings! Have a beautiful week, all!
Category Archives: events
friendly city faces, part 2: valley 4th photobooth.
Here’s another batch of photos Brandy cooked up for your enjoyment! See someone you know? Please let them know we’ve featured him or her!
Copyright © 2012-13 · All Rights Reserved · ilovemyburg.com. Written content by Katie Mitchell. Photos by Brandy Somers. This material may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, or printed without express written consent. Thank you for respecting our intellectual property.
friendly city faces, part 1: valley 4th photobooth.
Brandy volunteered for several hot, sweaty hours at this year’s Valley 4th celebration, taking adorable photos of YOU, Harrisonburg! Here’s the first batch of three. Enjoy!








Copyright © 2012-13 · All Rights Reserved · ilovemyburg.com. Written content by Katie Mitchell. Photos by Brandy Somers. This material may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, or printed without express written consent. Thank you for respecting our intellectual property.
river dwellers: downriver canoe company.
water colors: downriver canoe company.
some colorful shots from our day…

Copyright © 2012-13 · All Rights Reserved · ilovemyburg.com. Written content by Katie Mitchell. Photos by Brandy Somers. This material may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, or printed without express written consent. Thank you for respecting our intellectual property.
emotional rescue: downriver canoe company.
I forget exactly when the tradition started. Brandy and I always go canoeing every summer when school lets out. Just us — no one else — so we can freely express all our pent up frustrations in an all-out whine-fest that no one else has to listen to. And if we happen to fling a “colorful” word here or there, it echoes through the trees and disappears under the roar of the river. We leave ten months of irritations in our wake. It’s cathartic. I bet the river holds thousands of secrets.
This year we had to multitask on our canoe day because everyone’s schedule was crazy. Brandy and I, plus like seventeen other people in our lives, both have June birthdays, so we decided to go canoeing in the morning and out to dinner with friends and loved ones in the evening.
What could possibly go wrong?
The day’s agenda forced us to get up early. I dropped my kids at the sitter and drove to New Market to meet Brandy. There we got into one car and headed to Downriver Canoe Company in Bentonville. (Wait. That’s not in Harrisonburg! No. But the river is everywhere at the same time, all the time. It transcends space and time, and who are we to question quantum physics? So there.)
Once there, cooler in tow, phones and Triscuits in waterproof bags, sunscreen sufficiently slathered, we got fitted for our life vests (a.k.a., canoe seat cushions) and delivered by a friendly employee upriver.
We began our 7-mile, 4-hour float back down. {Lots and lots of whiney conversation permanently deleted by the river. You’ll have to use your imagination.} After a couple hours of venting, and after we made it past this (tiny) section of rapids that makes Brandy nervous, we pulled over on the bank to stretch and have a snack. Then Brandy told me about a game she and our friend Todd invented called PBR Baseball. You fill a can with water and pitch it to your friend who hits it with a stick or a log or a tree branch. Okay, I thought. Why not? So I found myself a hefty stick and walked out to home plate in the swiftly flowing waters. The first can Brandy tossed I sliced clear in half. Then I had a few misses. Then she threw a perfect pitch and the can met my bat with a crack and I slaughtered that thing! Unfortunately, the can flew straight at Brandy and konked her on the head. In my slow-motion memory, the only defensive maneuver I saw her make was to tighten her grip on the iPhone, which captured this shot, just before impact:
Horrified, I clumsily ran to her (on slippery river rocks, through swiftly flowing waters) while she yelled, “What just happened?!” and pointed at her head. Thankfully, she wasn’t bleeding. Just a small goose egg and what we’ve since deemed the PBR Concussion.
We cleaned up our trash, got back in the canoe, and continued our trek. The guide who dropped us off had told us about a bald eagle’s nest. We looked and looked and never saw the nest, but we saw the eagle, gracefully soaring, as one would expect, til he landed way up in the tippy top of a tree. It was a majestic moment, and I apologize to all the living creatures who had to hear me sing “God Bless America.”
We stopped again and saw this unusual butterfly.
It seemed aggravated that we were there. It was clearly feeding on some little buggers that burrowed tiny holes in the sand. And quite frankly, it didn’t look like your typical Virginia butterfly. We decided it must be an invader from afar, named it the Global Death Butterfly, and got back in the canoe.
We came to a fork in the river that led to a shady, tree-lined area. We both were like, “Oooooo, it looks cute in there!” and we paddled in. It was a bit narrow and we sort of drifted into a large tree, and like some scene from Middle Earth or something, about twenty spiders rained down on Brandy’s PBR concussion head. Then there was squealing and jumping and stomping and more phone clutching and near boat flipping. And we got the heck out of there and back to the serenity of the wide open river.
We were maybe half a mile from the end when we stopped for another break. By now it was pretty hot and it felt good to submerge myself into the cool water. That is, until I realized we’d stopped in some kind of mayfly breeding ground. When I stood up, I was dotted from my hips to my neck in little bitty baby bugs. I felt bad squishing them in the process of getting them off of me, but ew.
And so we finally arrived at the end. We parked the canoe on the river bank (they come down and get it for you), and walked back up to the car. We learned a few things. 1) The river is like a big eraser, and we all need that from time to time. 2) Stand farther away from the pitcher when playing PBR Baseball. Helmets are also advised. 3) Don’t wander into a narrow area just because it looks “cute.” Raccoons are cute, too, but they will mess you up, girl. 4) Bald eagles and Global Death Butterflies really exist. We saw both.
By the way, we made it to dinner on time.
Thank you, River, for squishy mud between our toes, for exotic animals and mild injuries, for a much-needed emotional massage, and for your timeless voice that silences everything else. See you again soon.
Copyright © 2012-13 · All Rights Reserved · ilovemyburg.com. Written content by Katie Mitchell. Photos by Brandy Somers. This material may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, or printed without express written consent. Thank you for respecting our intellectual property.
it’s just dang hot.
It’s July. And the only thing hotter than July is August. It’s so hot in August there aren’t even any holidays. Too dang hot to celebrate.
Just came off of the fourth of July festivities downtown, and what fun I had with the kiddos. They made it all the way through the fireworks and then konked out immediately. We didn’t even mind the rain (twice) because it was SO DANG HOT.
If you don’t already have big plans this weekend, may I suggest the Red Wing Roots Music Festival? It’s a HUGE festival of really awesome musicians put together by our own Jeremiah Jenkins and I’m sure tens of other hardworking volunteers. And there’s lots going on throughout the upcoming week, too. You can find all the details, here, at our Harrisonburg Happynings page. Check it out!
xoxoxo! have a super week!
from the grounds up: lucas roasting company.
A few days ago I told a friend how much I love my dishwasher. Not because it’s fancy, or super-quiet, or even new. As far as dishwashers go, it’s pretty ordinary. But it washes my dishes. I HATE washing dishes. And every time I empty the dishwasher, I thank whomever it was who invented that miraculous thing.
The dishwasher is just one of many modern conveniences we perhaps take for granted. Power tools are another. Recently Michael and I were assembling a loft bed for my son, and we must have drilled at least a hundred holes. I said, “Remember back in the day when people had to drill holes with that hand crank drill thing?” Of course, there are still people who appreciate the craft of old-school wood working… taking their time, using their hands and primitive tools, and savoring the hard-earned end result. I love meeting people who do things the “old-fashioned way,” because I’m more likely to pack my dishwasher to the gills and turn the knob, hit the button on the Keurig, and sit down for some online shopping. Oh, instant gratification. You’ve made us all so damn impatient.
If you can stand it, patience and perseverance usually do pay off.
Recently, Troy and Jennica Lucas invited Brandy and me to their home for coffee. If you know them, you know they’re bona fide coffee roasters. So we knew there’d be no Sanka involved. Unlike most friends who invite you for a cup of automatic drip-pot coffee, the Lucases painstakingly craft theirs from the raw bean all the way to your cup. Also unlike any of my friends EVER, they served us from their very own coffee truck.
It started as a hobby in 2002, Troy and Jennica roasting their own beans in hopes of finding a good cup of coffee. It was then that the idea of starting their own roasting company began. But baby Quinn arrived in 2003, and the idea had to remain a hobby for the time being.
Everything made from scratch takes a little longer, and in 2007, Lucas Roasting Company was born, and since then this family of four has been working hard to turn their caffeine dream into reality. Now six years later, they roast and sell several varieties of coffee, from Brazilian to Nicaraguan to Indonesian and more, plus flavored blends, online and at various locations throughout the valley. They even have a Halfway to Heaven blend — the Steel Wheels signature blend — which will be offered to hordes of concert-goers at the Red Wing Roots Music Festival coming up July 12 – 14!! And served straight from their new coffee truck. :)
The day we were there, Troy and Jennica showed us the new truck and their roasting facility and told us their inspiring story while their two kids — Kade and Quinn — played with our four. I’ve never, ever been inside a coffee bean roasting room, and let me tell you — it smells GREAT in there. There were sacks upon sacks of raw coffee beans and this big Deidrich roaster… bags and scales and everything in between, and it wasn’t until we entered that room that I realized just how hard these people have worked to achieve their goals. Here’s this family, living in a little community, running a business from their home. Troy calls it a “small family business,” and maybe it is when compared with large, national or global businesses. But the “small family business” is the one that has more to lose. More invested. More blood, sweat, and tears. And therefore, requires more bravery. Maybe I’m getting a little away from the story here, but standing in the roasting room was humbling and inspiring, and really brought to my full attention the devotion and sacrifice required to do what they — this family of four — have done.
And they’re just regular people (ha ha). At one point, Troy was making us a couple cups of coffee using the Clever Dripper… a one-cup-at-a-time brewing system that produces a great cup of coffee with none of the Keurig trash… and as he explained the process, I could hear Jennica addressing one of the children: “What’s wrong with your face? …Pull up your hair… You look dirty but I don’t see any wounds…” A family business indeed.

After Brandy and I got our coffee fix, Troy and Jennica had all the kids line up outside the truck and place their orders, which ranged from Italian root beer and grape sodas to a delicious caramel Java Blender.



Over coffee I got a bit more of their story. Troy came here in 1997 with the Brethren Volunteer Service to work on a project at Brethren Woods in Keezletown. He’s also worked for Habitat for Humanity, the Virginia Mennonite Retirement Community, and the JMU coffee shop, Taylor Down Under. At some point he injured his back and ended up at a chiropractor where Jennica worked. After a couple months of her healing touch they were engaged, and not long thereafter they tied the knot. Jennica’s from New Hampshire (in fact, she and Troy lived there for a bit before returning to the valley), and she currently works for the Park View Federal Credit Union.
And little by little, with the same patience required to brew a great cup of coffee, they have built their life together, a lovely family, and their business. It’s taken eleven years to go from a coffee hobby to a mobile full-service coffee company… but it’s better to gain strength by climbing a long, sometimes steep hill than to be a flash in the pan. They’re a committed bunch. They know how to go the distance, where others who need instant gratification might tire out. It’s the same concept as instant coffee: sure it’s fast, but it’s just not satisfying.
Copyright © 2012-13 · All Rights Reserved · ilovemyburg.com. Written content by Katie Mitchell. Photos by Brandy Somers. This material may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, or printed without express written consent. Thank you for respecting our intellectual property.
ebb and flow.
In life, there are busy days and slow days, hectic weeks and low-key weeks.
Get ready for a crazy, non-stop, action-packed week! Not only is it a holiday week — Fourth of July — but it’s also First Friday in Harrisonburg, Fridays on the Square, and Tour De Burg! I feel like I should just pitch a tent in the parking deck and live in the heart of it all. Maybe I can use an extension cord to plug in my mini fridge. I’d be all set.
To the parking authority, I will NOT be pitching a tent in the parking deck. :)
Have a great week!! Good luck fitting it all in! Here are the happynings!
season of light.
Today Earth enjoys a special occasion: a supermoon! It’s when the moon is a bit closer to Earth and looks bigger and brighter. And you know all the myths about full moons? Well, maybe the supermoon has similar effects because I’ve been a total klutz the last couple days. First I ripped my thigh open on the corner of a table. Later I hobbled outside to mow, entered a shady area of the yard, moved my sunglasses to the top of my head so I could see, and promptly got zinged in the eye by some small, hard object. Thankfully my eye’s okay, but it was kinda scary! Then I slammed my finger in the door of the dryer. And knocked over a drink while watching Megamind. At least I was laughing when that happened — that movie is hilarious. Anyway, supermoon. It’s doing something.
I’m not real sure where this post is going, so I’ll leave you with wishes for a happy, healthy, injury-free week. Check out what’s happyning in the burg this week, right here!
xoxo!
two hoops and a holler: larkin arts youth summer art program.
pot shots: larkin arts youth summer art program.
brandy awesomers: larkin arts youth summer art program.
My friend is so talented. So talented!!
Brandy Somers works all year as a high school art teacher, photographs their creations, this beautiful city, and adventures with her loved ones and publishes it all on FOUR blogs (or five??), heads up a massive portrait show each year, participates in several art exhibits throughout the year, volunteers, raises children… I aspire to be like her in so many ways. She somehow seamlessly weaves all this into her life — a life full of color and texture, people and love, laughter and light. And last week I was able to see her talent in action as she taught a class at Larkin Arts… about something she does beautifully: weaving.
Valerie Smith has been heading up this summer art program for years, only now she gets to host it at her own shop. She put out a call to local artists who’d like to teach a week-long class, assembled a fine group of those people, and sort of let them decide what it was they would teach. Then Valerie worked with the artist/teachers to determine appropriate age groups and ordered the necessary supplies. The twenty-six classes run through August 16 and serve kids age six to fourteen.
My kids and I arrived toward the end of her class entitled “Basket Full O’ Fun” — a week-long seminar dedicated to basket weaving, but which turned into much more.
To start each three-hour session, Brandy had students complete a quick sketch (in their self-made sketch books) centered around a particular topic, like “what was your worst injury?”, “draw your scariest moment” and “your biggest accomplishment”, and “what super power would you most like to have?” Answers, in the form of sketches, ranged from stubbed toes to falls from fences and split chins, from scary moms in masks to creepy cardboard cut-outs of Dale Earnhardt, and from super sniffing and shape-shifting to shooting something you want straight out of your hand (in Ella’s case, a bagel and drink). Pretty much everyone agreed that the pouch baskets were their most recent major accomplishment.
After the sketches, Brandy began the lesson. The week started with making a type of basket called a bean pot. The apt students caught on quickly in weaving these large, sturdy baskets, and in no time, had some gorgeous finished products.
The pouch baskets (like a little purse) turned out equally beautiful but were harder to make and required patience and teamwork. Still, the determined students (and teacher) pressed on and completed the job on day three. !!!
Never fear. This isn’t Brandy’s first rodeo, and although the kids had completed her week-long class in a mere three days, she had more tricks up her sleeve. In fact, she needed sleeves… to make tee shirt rugs using hula hoops as looms. This is where Ella’s super power would have really come in handy. It takes A LOT of tee shirts to make enough strips for five kids to each weave a rug, so what super heroes came to the rescue? Denise and Sean Allen, that’s who. They showed up with a gigantic donation of old tee shirts. Let the shredding begin!

A well-deserved and much-needed break.
And that awlsome project lasted clear through Friday’s class, when I was there visiting. One student was determined to finish her rug as a father’s day gift. Another’s strips kept getting tangled up. This student’s rug was finished and needed to be tied off, while that student still needed more strips of red fabric. Brandy moved with ease around the room, as she always does, helping everyone, as she always does… never losing patience, always speaking kindly, laughing and enjoying the moment, weaving color and texture and light into their lives, at least for one week.

Brandy and I have taught at the same school for years, but it’s not often that we see each other during class. It was a real treat to see her in this element, and I mean that sincerely. Any person — young or old — would be lucky to receive her instruction, or her friendship.
There are still weeks and weeks of classes available to your kid this summer. Many of them still have space available, so now’s a good time to get signed up. They’ll be taught by professionals who love their craft and aren’t afraid to show it… just like Brandy.
Copyright © 2012-13 · All Rights Reserved · ilovemyburg.com. Written content by Katie Mitchell. Photos by Brandy Somers. This material may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, or printed without express written consent. Thank you for respecting our intellectual property.
fireflies and junebugs.
Happy Father’s Day!! If you have a dad, or someone who’s like a dad to you, or if you are a dad, I hope you spend the day in the act of hugging :) And maybe some snuggling and giggling, and of course, grilling out and drinking beer in a recliner.
This week also marks the half-way point in the calendar year, the longest day of the year, and the official start of summer. Watermelon. Corn on the cob. Blueberries. Flip flops. Vacations or staycations. Tree house antics and outdoor music.
But before you get too too busy with all those festivities, take a moment to check out this week’s Happynings — there’s a whole lotta shaking going on this week, Harrisonburgonians!
Cheers!
Copyright © 2012-13 · All Rights Reserved · ilovemyburg.com. Written content by Katie Mitchell. Photos by Brandy Somers. This material may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, or printed without express written consent. Thank you for respecting our intellectual property.
in all types of weather…
On our first official day of summer vacation, it rained, rained. rained. Hopefully this won’t be one of those summers where it stops raining just long enough for me to mow my foot-high grass. Whatever the forecast, our burg has lots of roofed and roof-less businesses ready to show you a fun time! So check the forecast, stash an umbrella somewhere handy, and use our Happynings page to plan accordingly.
Have a great week!!
city kids: a guide to summer fun in the burg.
I don’t know about you, but during the school year, I am BUSY. And my kids are busy. The end of the year arrives none too soon, but still shockingly fast, and I often find I’m… unprepared. Come Monday, June 10, I’m going to have that “oh-my-gosh-what-the-heck-am-I-gonna-do-with-the-kids-now” freak out. But this year, I’m determined to be prepared when they ask, “Mom, what are we going to do today?” So I’ve compiled this list — for myself, for you, for everyone who might find themselves in this predicament — of activities, camps and classes offered by Harrisonburg businesses and organizations to keep your kiddos busy allll summer long.
Spitzer Art Center Children’s Workshops
Children ages 5 – 10 can sign up for one of many classes offered at the center. Register one week ahead for topics such as collage, drawing, water color, greeting cards, and more.
Larkin Arts Youth Summer Art Program
Kids ages 6 – 14 can attend week-long, 3-hour classes for $85. Classes include papier mache, sculpture, basket making, drawing, collage, photography, food art, painting, and a bunch of others.
Arts Council of the Valley and Court Square Theater Summer Art Camp
These 3-hour, Monday to Friday classes cost $80 and include acting, characterization, script writing, choreography, improv, singing, dancing, poetry, filmmaking, comic creation, plus many more. Ages 6 – 15.
You Made It! also offers week-long camps, Monday to Friday for three hours, for $185. Ages 6 and up. Classes include clay, canvas painting, wheel throwing, pottery painting, fused glass, and several others.
Explore More Children’s Museum offers 4-day classes, three hours per day, for ages 3 – 5th grade. Topics include LEGO engineering, Jedi training, Culinary Kids, Project Funway, Castles, Crowns and Catapults, Animal Adventures, and Construction Junction, to name a few.
Blue Ridge Community College Learning Can Be Fun
BRCC offers a zillion classes for grades K – 12, including art, music, dance, theater, culture, history, literature, nature, science, technology, sports and outdoor recreation. The classes run Monday – Friday for 3 hours each day, through the end of July.
James Madison University
JMU also boasts a large assortment of camps for summer kids, including baseball, softball, soccer, basketball, volleyball, lacrosse, football, fencing and field hockey. They also offer band camp, diversity studies, poetry workshops, nonviolence seminars, and STEM classes.
Harrisonburg Parks and Recreation
In addition to spending some time at one of our many city parks, like Purcell, A Dream Come True, or Hillandale, your child can enjoy swimming at Westover Pool (open Monday through Saturday noon to 7pm and Sunday 1pm to 7pm) and a variety of classes. Some of their offerings include guitar, mountain biking, water adventure, adventure sports, rock climbing, rafting/kayaking, a ton of dance classes, archery, fishing, jump rope, skate boarding, and pretty much every major sport.
Massanutten Regional Library kicks off its annual Summer Reading Games, but you have to register THIS WEEK to get the free pass to the Massanutten Water Park. Other activities include Baseball Storytimes (Turks read to kids), Crafty Kids, LEGO Club, and Stitch and Knit, plus others.
RMH Wellness Center has full- or half-day camps on a weekly basis, for kids ages 4 – 11. Kids will learn about topics like dinosaurs, medieval times, the ocean, and space, plus participate in activities like swimming, rock climbing, indoor and outdoor games, playground time, crafts, fitness, and sports.
Yes, summer is about relaxing and decompressing after a stressful school year, but keeping your kids active will make them healthy, blah blah blah. Really, it’ll make them SLEEP WELL at night :) So sign up for something today! Consider it an investment in the sanity of your household. You’ll all be better for it.
Copyright © 2012-13 · All Rights Reserved · ilovemyburg.com. Written content by Katie Mitchell. Photos by Brandy Somers. This material may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, or printed without express written consent. Thank you for respecting our intellectual property.
happy hours :)
It’s the last week of school. We are pooooooooped. But this city never loses its energy, and what a week we have coming up! Something to do every hour, all week. Enjoy your Sunday, and be sure to check the Happynings today!
Copyright © 2012-13 · All Rights Reserved · ilovemyburg.com. Written content by Katie Mitchell. Photos by Brandy Somers. This material may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, or printed without express written consent. Thank you for respecting our intellectual property.




























