Getting Into Chickens
8614 Mill Reef Rd
Upperville VA 20184
In the past several years, interest in self-sufficiency and acquiring produce locally has been on the rise as people become more reliant on themselves and their local communities for food. An important part of self sufficiency and local agriculture is the production of protein, which is where our beloved Chicken enters the equation! The purpose of this course is to provide participants with a basic understanding of what it takes to raise chickens for eggs and meat on your own homefarm, market farm, or in the backyard. Participants will be able to interact with the BCCF’s heritage and locally bred chicken flock to gain knowledge on the systems and processes of daily care, habitat, acquiring, incubating, and hatching their own chickens. Topics of conversation will include breed selection, best production practices, processing practices, and egg handling. Finally participants will be able to propose and work through their own hypothetical or real chicken flock design involving anything from coop structures to hatching procedures. GET TICKETS
Participants will partake in two days of lecture and discussion at Oak Spring, in Upperville, VA and an optional farm tour at Tangly Woods Farm in Keezletown, VA on Saturday, April 13, 2024.
Optional Tangly Woods Farm Tour:
In addition to the weekend long workshop from Saturday, April 6 – Sunday April 7, 2024, on Saturday April 13, 2024, participants are invited to travel to Keezletown, VA to tour Tangly Woods Farm and take a deeper look at a well developed chicken raising and breeding operation. There participants will have see how the Myers-Benner family integrates chickens within their backyard ecosystems.
Please note: This workshop does not include a tour of Little Oak Spring including the Library, Formal Garden or Landscape. Additionally, participants are responsible for their own transportation to Tangly Woods Farm on Saturday, April 13, 2024.
What to Bring:
- A pair of boots and a secondary pair of shoes
- Weather appropriate clothing that can get dirty
- Notebook or laptop to take notes on
- Water bottle
Complimentary Items: A boxed lunch will be provided on Saturday, April 6, 2024 and the group will have a catered lunch on Sunday, April 7, 2024. When purchasing ticket(s) for the Saturday lunch, you will select either:
1) A turkey sandwich
Or
2) A gluten-free, vegan option
Exact menus will be determined closer to the date of the event. All lunches will include a small side such as a fruit salad, or chips. Please note that unfortunately, we can not accommodate specific dietary needs. If you have dietary restrictions and are unable to eat the provided lunch, please plan to pack a sack lunch. Participants able to attend the Tangly Wood Tour on Saturday, April 13, 2024 are expected to bring your own lunch.
What To Expect: Please expect several hours of moderate walking across hilly fields and similar uneven terrain. Participants should arrive with proper footwear, sufficient water, and dress appropriately for the weather, rain or shine. Binoculars and digital cameras encouraged.
Eligibility: This workshop is open to individuals with an interest in homesteading and raising chickens. No prior experience is needed.
Required Precautions
To protect from Avian Influenza and other poultry affecting diseases, we are asking participants of the Getting Into Chickens Workshop to join us in taking the following extremely important precautions.
This list mainly pertains to anyone who works with poultry either at home, for their job, or both. For those who do not interact with poultry on a regular basis, these precautions are still important to read, understand, and follow.
- No participant should travel to the workshop immediately after having contact with any other domesticated poultry. If morning poultry chores are necessary, participants should change all clothing and footwear prior to arriving at the workshop.
- Come with 2 pairs of footwear, one for use while in chicken spaces and one for use outside of chicken spaces.
- Make sure all outerwear clothing, i.e. jackets, boots, pants, hats, gloves, are cleaned or sanitized before showing up to the course on Saturday and clothing worn to the workshop does not come in contact with any outside poultry for the duration of the weekend.
- Boots to be worn in the chicken coop can be left at Oak Spring overnight for the second day of the workshop.
- Hands should be washed and sanitized prior to handling any Oak Spring poultry.
- Prior to stepping into the chicken coop and after stepping out of the chicken coop, a bleach bath will be provided for footwear.
- Clothing worn in the presence of Oak Spring poultry should be changed or washed prior to visiting any other domesticated birds.
- If a participant’s poultry is showing signs of respiratory disease or abnormal die offs, they should not attend the workshop.
Questions or concerns regarding biosecurity can be directed to Nick Sette: nick@osgf.org
About Tangly Woods: Tangly Woods Homestead is a home-scale farm located in lovely Keezletown, VA at the foot of Massanutten Mountain. Tangly Woods has developed several locally adapted breeds of chickens, bred several locally adapted garden and grain plants, and stewarded a number of heritage and heirloom varieties as well. These are the plants and animals that feed our family and connect us to the land, and we’d enjoy helping you do the same. Contact us for seeds, starts, or hatching eggs. Tours and workshops available by special arrangement.
About Oak Spring Garden Foundation: The Oak Spring Garden Foundation (OSGF) is a philanthropic foundation based at the former primary estate of the late Paul and Rachel Mellon, who were major philanthropists in the U.S. of the arts, humanities, and sciences in the second half of the twentieth century. OSGF is located in the northern Virginia Piedmont and Blue Ridge Mountains region (ca. one-hour drive from Washington, D.C.). Led by Sir Peter Crane, the Foundation’s inaugural President, OSGF provides workshops, short courses and supports residencies for artists and scholars. Its celebrated Library comprises rare books, manuscripts and works of art relating to horticulture, landscape design, botany and natural history. It is becoming a new center of stimulation of all things botanical, from fundamental research in plant evolution and conservation, to horticultural and plant conservation practice, to the history and art of plants, gardens and landscapes.
Photo Release Statement: By attending this event, you consent to your likeness and image being used for ongoing promotional and marketing efforts.
Availability: Getting Into Chickens will be capped at 15 participants. Registrations will be accepted on a rolling basis through Eventbrite until full.
There are scholarships available for educators to help cover the cost of this workshop. If you are interested in this workshop and need financial assistance, please reach out to programs@osgf.org. Thanks!
Local News
Congratulations to Warren County High School Seniors – Class of 2024
8614 Mill Reef Rd
Upperville VA 20184
Royal Examiner presents the Warren County High School Class of 2024. Congratulations to these wonderful seniors on their hard work and deserved accomplishments! We wish you the best in your next big endeavors. Photos courtesy of Victor O’Neill Studios and Tolliver Studios, LLC.
If your Warren County senior is not listed, please send in their Name and Senior Picture to news@royalexaminer.com.
Town Talk
Upcoming Library Events in Front Royal Promise Fun and Learning in May
8614 Mill Reef Rd
Upperville VA 20184
The Samuels Public Library’s annual fundraising event, Taste for Books, themed “British Invasion” this year, witnessed an unprecedented turnout, bringing the community together for a night of themed costumes, classic British dishes, and unique games like tee pong. Held last week, the event served as a cultural festivity and exceeded its fundraising goals, amassing over $25,000 to support library programs and services.
In this Town Talk, Machal Ashby and Grace Green, affectionately known as the library ladies, discussed the overwhelming success of the event and the exciting activities planned for May. The duo expressed their delight at seeing first-time attendees and veterans diving into the British theme, sporting everything from mod outfits to Scottish kilts.
The library’s May calendar is bustling with activities tailored for all ages. Among the highlights are the monthly Bad Romance Book Club, which will tackle sports-themed literature, and Books and Beyond, exploring nature-related reads. The Genealogy Club continues to engage history buffs, while the What the Tech sessions offer tech assistance every Tuesday, proving invaluable for those needing help with modern gadgets.
The library has planned engaging educational activities for the younger audience, including a Bird ID and photography event at Shenandoah River State Park and a Free Comic Book Day at Main Street Geek, promising fun giveaways. The Children’s Garden will also host a special event, “Unpacking the Garden with Wee Ones,” facilitated by master gardeners to teach children about planting and caring for gardens.
Looking ahead to the next big theme, the library has already announced “Movie Magic” for next year’s Taste for Books, promising an evening of Old Hollywood glamour. This forward-looking approach and enriching programs underscore the library’s commitment to fostering a vibrant community spirit and a love for learning across all ages.
In anticipation of summer, the library also teased the upcoming Summer Reading Club, which traditionally attracts over a thousand young participants and several hundred adults. The kickoff event will feature face painting and a petting zoo, ensuring it’s not just about reading but creating a memorable community experience.
As the library gears up for these events, it continues to be a cornerstone for community engagement in Front Royal, showcasing the power of books and shared experiences to bring people together.
Town Talk is a series on the Royal Examiner where we will introduce you to local entrepreneurs, businesses, non-profit leaders, and political figures who influence Warren County. Topics will be varied but hopefully interesting. Let us know if you have an idea topic or want to hear from someone in our community. Send your request to news@RoyalExaminer.com
Local Government
Town Council and Planning Commission Meet for Much-Needed Discussion at Special Joint Work Session
8614 Mill Reef Rd
Upperville VA 20184
On Monday, April 29, at 7 p.m. in the Front Royal Town Hall on 102 East Main Street, the Front Royal Town Council and the Planning Commission met to discuss vape shops, Planned Neighborhood Development District (PND) zoning, and short-term rentals. Planning Director and Zoning Administrator Lauren Kopishke supported the mayor in guiding the discussion.
While vape shops and short-term rentals drew similar sentiments from everyone in the room, the more contentious item and perhaps the driving force behind the gathering was PND zoning. This type of zoning allows for mixed-use development in higher densities, on parcels rezoned to PND, and it is in many ways an improvement on by-right development as it potentially offers affordable housing for those in Front Royal who are struggling to cope with inflation and the cost of living in general. The challenge to PND zoning, which Planning Commissioner Chair Connie Marshner sees clearly, is the scarcity of lots large enough within Town limits to meet the acreage requirement for a planned neighborhood development district, as it is currently regulated by the Town Ordinance. This may explain why, in an application from a developer for PND rezoning that involved a proposed amendment to the ordinance reducing the acreage threshold for PND from twenty-five acres to two, the planning commission passed the application to the council, recommending a reduction to five acres in the case that the council felt uncomfortable with two. In the words of Councilwoman Amber Morris, the two-acre prospect was “offensive.” Indeed, the council denied any amendment to the ordinance and the application.
To do justice to Morris’s position, it is offensive because it would open a “floodgate” to untrammeled development that may neither respect the Town’s rustic charm nor be sensitive to the needs of its infrastructure and the way of life that its natives have built here. At the same time, Kopishke has emphasized that there are so many other stipulations in the rezoning to PND that the floodgate would never be opened. Having provided the council and the commission with extensive reading in their agenda packet that highlighted how other localities are handling this type of development, localities from which she is actively gathering information in staff’s ongoing PND enterprise, Kopishke urged those present to discuss what they like about the current ordinance and what they do not like. After a somewhat tangential conversation, most of the council members said they would like to leave the ordinance the way it is, with a threshold of twenty-five acres for PND mixed residential and fifty for PND commercial.
Morris said it is not the government’s job to provide affordable housing. Also, there is nothing wrong, in her opinion, with preservation. Just because a parcel is undeveloped does not mean it needs to be developed. The evening ended with the sense that things were as much as before. There is only one PND zone in Front Royal, and it is undeveloped. The Comprehensive Plan does indeed call for higher density development, but what that looks like seems to be a matter of degrees in which some are prepared to be more extreme than others. Consensus between these two bodies would be a very rare diamond.
Local News
Fairfax Police Officer, Son of WC Deputy Jim Williams One of This Year’s Fairfax Valor Awards Recipients
8614 Mill Reef Rd
Upperville VA 20184
At the Thursday, April 11 Fairfax County Valor Awards ceremony, Fairfax County Police Officer Cody Williams, son of Warren County Sheriff’s Office Deputy and Bailiff Jim Williams, and two colleagues were among the 2023 honorees. We asked proud father Jim about the incident late last year that led to his son and fellow officers’ recognition. This is what he told us:
“On December 25th, Christmas Day, at 9 p.m., members of the Fairfax County Police Department Reston District Station responded to a shot person call. According to his wife, the homeowner had accidentally shot himself while cleaning his handgun. Officers Cody Williams, Andrew Craven, and Anthony Galindo arrived on the scene to find the homeowner unresponsive. The gunshot wound was to the victim’s left calf, resulting in an extreme loss of blood. Williams and Craven applied two tourniquets, and Galindo performed CPR. The victim was transported to the local hospital. He was able to make a full recovery.”
We were also informed of comments by Fairfax Police Chief Kevin Davis, who made an analogy to his officers’ Christmas Day call and the 1947 Hollywood movie classic “It’s a Wonderful Life” starring Jimmy Stewart. As fans of that great and timeless film will recall, it had its own Christmas day event of a somewhat miraculous nature involving a Guardian Angel. And indeed, it will be “a Wonderful Life” for the injured man and his family moving forward due to the prompt actions of their “guardian angels” Officers Williams, Craven, and Galindo, among others at the scene.
We found this background on the Fairfax Valor Awards website:
“The Fairfax County Valor Awards recognize the remarkable achievements in service of our community’s dedicated first responders. Since 1979, members of our police, sheriff, fire and rescue, and public safety communications have been honored for exceeding the call of duty with their lifesaving acts. The Greater Reston Chamber of Commerce is proud to host this prestigious event.” In attempting to get photos of the Christmas Day “guardian angels” from even sponsor the Greater Reston Chamber of Commerce, we were informed individual shots were not taken due to the number of recipients from the past year. This year, a total of 240 awards were presented, including 84 Lifesaving Awards, 131 Certificates of Valor, 22 Bronze Medals of Valor, and 3 Silver Medals of Valor.
Congratulations to Officers Williams, Craven and Galindo for a Christmas Day first response well done, and one that at least two Reston residents may remember as their very own Christmas miracle, circa 2023.
And thanks to our own WCSO Deputy Jim Williams for alerting us to this nearby Happy Ending Christmas story. And also a nod toward our own first responders in Warren County and the Town of Front Royal for all they do daily for us. You’re ALL Valor Award winners to us!!!
Obituaries
Deborah Lynn “Debbie” Coronel (1954 – 2024)
8614 Mill Reef Rd
Upperville VA 20184
Deborah Lynn “Debbie” Coronel, 70, of Maurertown, Virginia, passed away on Monday, April 29, 2024, at Winchester Medical Center.
A funeral service will be held at 10:30 a.m. on Friday, May 3, 2024, at Maddox Funeral Home, 105 W Main St. Front Royal, Virginia, with Pastor Danny Hensley officiating. A visitation will take place the evening before the service from 6-8 p.m. at Maddox Funeral Home. The burial will follow all services at Prospect Hill Cemetery.
Debbie was born on February 15, 1954, in Front Royal, Virginia, to the late Warren H. Thompson and Charlotte M. Miller. She was also preceded in death by her brother, Gary Thompson, and her granddaughter, Megan Knicely.
Surviving Debbie is her loving husband of 30 years, Gaudencio Coronel; her children, Deanna M Creekmore (John) and Warren Beaty (Donna); her step-son, Manuel Coronel (Alicia); her siblings, Eugene H. Thompson (Isabel) and Shirley Stonebreaker; her grandchildren, Christopher Knicely, Andrew Paniagua (Bethel), Selena Paniagua, Cheyenne Howdyshell, Sylvia Paniagua (Lamar Cheek), Manuel Coronel, Lupe Coronel, Daniela Coronel, Sevastian Coronel, and Juan Coronel; her great-grandchildren, Kyrie Paniagua, Jackson Wyant, Addelynn Howdyshell, Ava Paniagua, Zakai Cheek, Waverly Woodell, Kolter Kisamore, Zamyah Cheek, and Gracie Woodell; and her nephew Ian Thompson.
Debbie was a Front Royal Seventh Day Adventist Church member and loved bible study with her daughter, Deanna. She also enjoyed computer games and Sudokus.
Pallbearers will be Ian Thompson, Andrew Paniagua, Lamar Cheek, Dijohn Jackson, Manuel Coronel, and Angus Shipe.
Obituaries
Linda Grey “Nana” Spangler (1956 – 2024)
8614 Mill Reef Rd
Upperville VA 20184
Linda Grey “Nana” Spangler, 67, of Front Royal, Virginia, passed away on Wednesday, April 17, 2024, at Winchester Medical Center.
A Celebration of Life will be held at 11 a.m. on Monday, May 27, 2024, at Maddox Funeral Home, 105 W Main St. Front Royal, Virginia 22630, with Joan Knox officiating. The family invites guests to visit one hour before the service. Linda’s ashes will be privately scattered at a later date.
Linda was born on October 16, 1956, in Knoxville, Tennessee, to her late father, Carl Mack Smith Jr. She was also preceded in death by her grandmother, Nina Grey Smith, who raised Linda.
Surviving Linda are her loving husband of 24 years, Patrick “Pat” Spangler; her children, Amanda Nyholt Linder (Josh), Matthew McCartney, Douglas Spangler (Debra), and Daniel Spangler; her siblings, Carl Mack “Buddy” Smith III, and Carla Rusk; and her grandchildren, Savannah McCartney, Sawyer McCartney, Aedan Spangler, Daniel Spangler, Jameson Spangler, Ryan Spangler, and River Spangler.
Linda loved photography, guitar, and Tennessee football. She was a Junior Olympic Swimmer.
Honorary Pallbearers will be her boys, Matthew McCartney, Douglas Spangler, and Daniel Spangler, and her grandchildren, Savannah, Sawyer, Aedan, Daniel, Jameson, Ryan, and River.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to St. Jude Children’s Hospital.