Update about blogCa

Who knew all this would happen afterwards! Dawn shows the ridge on the other side of Swannanoa Valley, Nov. 1, 2025. The ridge is so high it makes me feel safe. I can also see cars zoom past on I-40 in one gap in the trees.

Friday, November 7, 2025

Getting the gas

 A recent  Facebook post of an old scene. Are these buildings still there? Love seeing the old cars...must be the 50s.

Can it be Thai Basil Restaurant? On State St. and the corner of Doughtery.

Actually it's not. When I checked the location I determined that you can't change the ground which slopes steeply around Thai Basil...it has to be another corner in town!

Another clue is that Thai Basil is on the south side of State Street, while our Gulf Station was obviously on the north side...check out the shadows!

Then I remembered the theatre The Pix had been demolished many years before I moved here in the early 2000s. Sorry about that. I wish I could easily find another photo of that block from back whenever. But a short search hasn't given me easy results. Mmm, I know the Swannanoa History Museum will probably have a photo though.

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I featured another old gas station building which was turned into a restaurant before. 

Old Gas Station and ... July 3, 2022

New Restaurant Opens Finally  Dec. 9, 2022


Old gas pumps. Unknown date, but probably 1920s is my guess.



Tunnel Road Gulf in late 1950 - early 1951, Asheville NC Shared by Wayne Henderson on 'You know you grew up in Asheville, North Carolina if...' Facebook page.


Here's another service station which I may have shared before.

Frank Lloyd Wright "Lindholm Service Station"
 by Library of Congress, via Wikimedia Commons

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From FB post by Jim Smiley on History of North Carolina 

Around 1950, in rural North Carolina, Hampton Barnes operated a small but essential store on N.C. 107 between Tuckasegee and Glenville. The store, like many small businesses in that era, was more than just a place for transactions—it was a community hub where neighbors and travelers alike could stop for supplies, share stories, and find convenience in a remote area. Hampton Barnes, often seen pumping gas at his store, provided a range of services. In addition to gasoline, he sold groceries, bait for fishing, and other everyday items that served the needs of the local community.

For residents in this rural part of North Carolina, Barnes’ store would have been a lifeline. The simplicity of life in the area meant that general stores like his played a vital role. Gas stations were fewer and farther between in the 1950s, and combining fuel sales with groceries and bait made his store a one-stop-shop for the local fishermen and farmers who frequented the surrounding region.
As time passed and highways developed, small, family-run businesses like Barnes' began to decline. Around 1965, Barnes closed his store, marking the end of an era in local commerce. His store, now a piece of nostalgic history, serves as a reminder of simpler times when community and small businesses were at the heart of American life,


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Sharing with Sepia Saturday, where many images from the past are gathered to be shared, in whatever format or relation (or none) to a theme that Alan gives us for each week.


A BIG congratulations for 16 years of Sepia Saturdays! Thanks so much!

Alan says this in regarding his 800th post:

It started as a joke way back in 2009. At times there were hundreds of participants and at other times just a loyal few. Sepia Saturday has continued, through good times and bad, providing a platform for people to share their photographic-based memories. I was looking back through the archives recently and I came across this "Sepia Saturday Manifesto" which I produced fifteen years ago. Reading through it, it still seems relevant today, so it is worth a reprint.

A MANIFESTO FOR SEPIA SATURDAY.

1. We belong to a favoured generation: the first generation of the digital age. Whilst our ancestors have valiantly attempted to preserve their own unique history in scraps of written narrative and faded and creased photographs, we have the unique ability to fix these memories for ever as our legacy to future generations.

2.  Scanning, blogging and digital storage provide us with the means of preserving the past, but we also have a duty to preserve the stories and images of those that contributed to our society as we know it. Whilst we can leave to academic historians the task of documenting the lives of the rich and famous, we believe that the most remote second-cousin and the most distant of maiden aunts has made a unique contribution to the lives that we lead. Each one of us has a duty to help preserve the stories of these builders of the modern world.

3. Whilst images alone are fascinating documents, images with words - be they simple half-remembered names and dates or gripping narrative histories - are even better. The synthesis of image and words provides the most effective insight into the past.

4. "Sepia" is an alliterative convenience rather than a descriptive criterion. Let our images be in sepia, in black and white or in full colour : what matters is the message and not the medium.

5.  We recognise that we have not only a duty to share our past but also to ensure that it is effectively preserved. Whilst images printed on photographic paper and words written in old notebooks fade with time, they have proved, in most cases, remarkably resilient over time. Perhaps one of the greatest dangers facing the millions of digital images and the endless pages of computerised words we produce today is that they can so easily be lost by the pressing of a wrong button or by the hacking of a troubled soul. We recognise and we accept our responsibility to back-up and securely save.

The two main principles of Sepia Saturday have remained throughout the last 800 weeks - SAVE AND SHARE. We have a duty to save and to share our photographic heritage. Therefore, for the eight hundredth time, I am inviting you to join in with Sepia Saturday by posting a photographic memory and adding a link to the list below on or around Saturday 8th November 2025.

Thanks for supporting Sepia Saturday for the last 16 years ... hopefully we will have a few more years in us yet.


Sharing with Sepia Saturday



Thursday, November 6, 2025

Interdimensional Portal

 





Through a window to reflections in a window

Would this be better without the  furniture in the foreground?















Life is given to us; every moment is given. The only appropriate response therefore is gratefulness.

BR. DAVID STEINDL-RAST


Sharing with Thankful Thursday




Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Autumn progression in the hood

 Views from my windows looking over Swannanoa Valley, Black Mountain NC

Sept. 1, 2025, first blush of red on maple tree

Oct. 12, 2025 - red shows on dogwood and sourwood trees near apartment building downhill from mine. I can just begin to see mountain ridge in distance.

Oct. 17, 2025 morning

Oct. 18, 2025 evening

Oct. 19 dawn

Oct 20 dawn


Oct. 24, 8:45 am

Oct. 25, 8:11 am - then the rain came

Oct 28, 9:42 am


Oct 30, 8:38 am - trying to capture that brief sun hitting the leaves!



Oct 30, 9:07 am



Oct 31, 7:59 am

Nov. 1, 8:33 am, first frost is beginning to melt on roof of building

Nov. 1, 11:50 am

Nov. 2, 11:00 am - the maples colors now match the dogwoods.

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Inner Workings about some of my thoughts about end of life, and clearing out the belongings.





Tuesday, November 4, 2025

First freeze

 Last week the flowers on the porch had 3 days of rain (off and on). So I waited as long as possible to heft the ones I wanted to save into the living room for the winter.


Lavender has lots of fallen leaves gracing it...but it's always a joy to touch its leaves and have the scent floating about.



The geranium was left outside, as it's been a rather sad addition to my garden this year...mainly few and skimpy blossoms. Probably because I forgot to fertilize.


At dawn on Saturday (still daylight savings time of 8:33 am) the frost is starting to melt on the nearby roof. I'm thrilled to see the mountain ridge across the valley again! A bit of fog is rising from the river area in the valley.


Mums are supposed to be hardy, and these are definitely past their prime. I'm thinking of just planting them in the ground outside my porch...we shall see if I feel like getting on my knees.


The winter view for now. The orchids may not like quite so much direct sun. But the Kalanchoes/Calandivas? will love it, since they've just had reflected sun since solstice. The old oak table now is covered with plastic as I know watering these will result in some spills. Blinds are closed to the cold at night.


After 3 days of rain, the blooms are a bit sad.



The  only trouble with these is the frequent shedding of the dead flowers.

Sharing with Tom's Tuesday's Treasures and My Corner of The World.


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My other blog, Inner Workings covers Robertson Work's substack post yesterday. "An Elder Awakens on an Autumn Day."



Monday, November 3, 2025

The Lakeview Senior Center

 For those interested in local politics of Black Mountain. 

The Senior Center renovation after Hurricane Helene...


A photo taken in 2023, before the flooding of 4 feet of the lower level of the Senior Center; but when renovations were considered, damage from a previous fire was discovered which hadn't been repaired up to today's standards.

Photo by Barbara Rogers

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As published in the Valley Echo...

The Town of Black Mountain will move forward with temporary repairs of the upper level of the Lakeview Center for Active Aging, following an Oct. 28, special call meeting. 

Elected leaders, with Ryan Stone absent, voted, 4-0, to approve a budget amendment funding the $15,000 project. 

The two-level town recreation structure overlooking Lake Tomahawk experienced significant flooding during Tropical Storm Helene, which resulted in approximately four feet of water throughout the lower level. During the remediation process, crews discovered previously undocumented fire damage to the structural support system beneath the top floor, which was mostly unaffected by the natural disaster.

While the bottom floor was closed to the public, due to extensive damage, the compromised support beams led to a determination that the upper level was unsafe for more than eight occupants. The facility, serving as a temporary work space for four recreation staff displaced from their offices in the aftermath of the storm, has been unable to host senior programs since.

Engineering reports form two firms, one received in November of 2024 and the other at the request of Mayor Michael Sobol last July, recommended joining additional joists to the existing support structure to meet the assembly load capacity standard of 100 pounds per square foot. Three seniors urged the town council, in its Oct. 13, regular monthly meeting, to authorize funding for the project.

A follow-up special call meeting on the topic was announced the next week, as elected officials were updated on the current status of the structure. A press release, issued, Oct. 23, by the Town, announced Arete Engineering completed a site visit to the property and was in the process of developing a detailed damage assessment, outlining the extent of the storm damage and requirements to bring the entire structure into compliance with the National Flood Insurance Program.

Recent changes in funding availability through the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Public Assistance program allow the Town to move forward with temporary repairs to the building, according the press release.

“We’re asking for $15,000, and I think that should be enough to cover this as a budget amendment from the general fund to get the upstairs of Lakeview back up and going for the seniors and other folks,” Town Manager Josh Harrold told the board to open Tuesday’s meeting.

The next steps in the process, he told the board, will require staff to seek bids, in addition to others previously presented by the mayor. Town staff is in contact with Arete, which is assessing requirements related to the future of the overall building, situated within a floodplain, assistant manager Jessica Trotman told the board.

“I have reached out to them, separately, to prepare the documents for the building permit,” she said.

No immediate timeline for the completion of the repairs was given during the tense 18-minute meeting, but the town manager indicated the engineering firm’s documentation related to the repair would likely take “a couple of weeks” to complete.

“I don’t know for sure, but it doesn’t seem like something that will be that challenging, dealing with the upstairs,” Harrold said.

Sobol pressured town staff to expedite the project, questioning the requirement to obtain floodplain permits for repairs on the second level. That standard, Trotman responded, is required for any building within a floodplain.

“Even if it’s interior work, you have to have a floodplain development permit, that’s the federal law,” she said. “The reason is that you have to track investment in structures over time, because it tips at a certain percentage and the building has to come up to all applicable codes.”

Councilmember Alice Berry encouraged patience from the public.

“Mayor, I hear your frustration about the time this is taking, but this is not something we want to cut corners with,” she said, adding the town needed to follow proper procedures.

The mayor expressed exasperation with the process of repairing the structure, which, prior to the storm, served as a central venue in which the town hosted recreational and educational activities for local seniors.

“As long as this has taken, and it has taken over a year, it’s very frustrating. I’m very frustrated, as are the citizens in this,” he said, encouraging the town manager not to seek another bid for the project.

“None of these bids were received under anyone’s authority, therefore we’re going to do it the correct way,” Harrold responded.

Sobol countered that he sought approval from the manager before soliciting estimates for the repairs.

“You came (to me), because you would not leave me alone,” Harrold said. “Yes, that’s correct. It continues and continues and continues, just like it is right now. We’re ready to vote on it, and go to work. That’s all that needs to be said.”

Vice Mayor Archie Pertiller, Jr. expressed his personal support for re-opening the senior center, while addressing the tone of the conversation on the topic.

“It amazes me, how, as a community, we came together during (Helene), like we were one big family, with everybody working together, nobody calling each other names and nobody arguing with each other, and we were doing the best we could to hold this town together,” he said. “Now look at us, arguing with each other.”

Sobol quickly responded to the comment.

“I don’t think anyone has called anyone any names today,” he said. “You talk about showing who you really are, I am damn proud that I am trying to get this senior center open.”

Councilmember Pam King acknowledged the mayor had done “a lot of work” addressing the issue.

“We all understand you have been focused and working on a lot of things for the town,” she said. “That doesn’t mean the rest of us haven’t been working hard, too, and it doesn’t mean staff hasn’t been working hard. It’s not a competition.”

She called the situation involving the senior center “really unfortunate.”

“Nobody wanted the senior center to stay closed any longer than it had to, but as information unfolded and evaluations and assessments of buildings transpired, we realized the situation evolved and our options changed,” King said. “To say we could’ve done something (in 2024) is not accurate.”

King asked for a vote on Hay’s motion to fund the repairs.

SOURCE: Fred McCormick

The Valley Echo
October 28, 2025

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I asked the employees of the Senior Center program which provides daily box lunches to seniors to take home what they thought of the above article. They said it was accurate.


Upper level entrance where seniors pick up lunches M-F



Typical lunch, Beef tips, rice, carrots and cooked apples (it probably had a biscuit with it as well).
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There's a rather heated (maybe humorous to some) meeting which was held Oct. 28 in the morning by the Town Council...a YouTube video shows how it actually occurred. But the following Facebook post kind of indicates the background leading up to it, and the end results.



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Note the following is just one person's opinion, and may not be historically accurate.


From FaceBook, Oct. 28, 2025: posted by Richard Hudson on Original Black Mountain Exchange

Timeline at the Clubhouse (Senior Center)

November 6, 2024-initial assessment and by engineering firm Ruggles
Summer 2025-C Michael Sobol, Mayor starts getting on Town Manager for updates of what’s been done. Town manager approves Sobol getting Medlock Engineering to Zoey 2nd opinion on initial assessment and get bids for repairs
July 2025- Medlock reports back agreeing with initial assessment, Sobol gets price from Ewing Construction, whom the town has used several times in the past. $9600. Simple repair. Sobol reports back to Josh Harrold. Harrold sits on the information, does nothing.
October 2025-Senior citizens led by Carl Bartlett go to council about getting these repairs done, Sobol pleads for council to vote unanimously to put this item on the agenda. All of town council sits there like bumps on logs and refuses to put the item on the agenda for discussion.
After the meeting the media starts reporting on the situation and numerous FB posts start on local groups. Sentiment is definitely of Sobol and Bartlett side.
Late October, Sobol writes a FB post outlining what all has transpired. This led Doug Hay to make a post trying to not make the council look bad, even saying he wished he hadn’t sat like a bump on a log in the October meeting.
Then the town jumps in that the have “out of the blue” found that repairing the building will not jeopardize any FEMA monies. I mean this info just dropped from heaven.
Today-after Josh pitches his little fit in front of the cameras because he is butt hurt that Sobol was right all along and the council agrees to hire a THIRD engineering firm, from Blowing Rock, no less. Wonder who has ties to this firm, Josh and Jessica??? They appropriate $15k, $6k more than Ewing. Oh yeah and Sobol had a group out of the Ridgecrest exit that woulda done it for nothing, except Josh wouldn’t come to the sandbox to play.
This is how our Town Government operates. It’s EGO driven. Oh yeah and Jessica Trotman went to look up a statute about permits for flood zone and mysteriously never returns to prove the point she so adamantly told the board needed to be done.
I say we may get the Seniors in by July 4th 2026."

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On another note: I only have a TV which streams channels...
Since YouTubeTV is not carrying ABC (a major TV channel owned by Disney) I can't watch my local news, nor Jeopardy (M-F) nor several other shows.
I've reverted to Prime TV, which incidentally costs much less than YouTubeTV, but doesn't carry my local news or ABC shows. I'm watching the first of 18 seasons of Murdoch Mysteries. It is enjoyable if somewhat like a soap opera...but the issues 18 years ago (or so) are very pertinent to today! And it takes place in late 19th century Toronto!
I also watch Acorn and PBS Masterpiece streaming shows.
I'm looking forward to Ken Burns American Revolution on PBS starting Nov 16.
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My favorite good news is that I merged the split keyboard image on my iPad - by grabbing both sides of the split space bar and pulling them together! With fingers of course.