Archive for the ‘Our Weaverville’ Category

Good reasons to visit Weaverville and Asheville

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

I don’t normally respond to other folks’ blogs because we stay so busy just trying to run our bed and breakfast. But I do try to keep up on what the world says about Asheville and about B&Bs here in particular. Most travel writers miss the mark when they write about our area, focusing on the obvious and advertised attractions: The Biltmore Estate, Grove Park Inn and Blue Ridge Parkway. All are well worth the publicity, but they are only part of the complex experience that is Asheville.

But I just came across a remarkable blog entry written by a first-time visitor to our area who captured the essence of the Asheville area better than any writer I’ve followed recently. See A Foodie Bibliophile in Wanderlust entry for Asheville written Sept. 8. Even though the author stayed at a B&B other than Inn on Main Street, I encourage everyone to read it.

And if that writer’s reasons to visit this area aren’t enough, it’s time again for Art in Autumn in Weaverville. Come visit on  Sept. 18 on Main Street, Weaverville, as more than 100 juried artists display their work. Included in the fourth annual festivities will be music and food. The event is sponsored by the Weaverville Business Association, of which Inn on Main Street is a proud member.

If you need a place to stay, we’re just two blocks away.

Our B&B’s moment of fame

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Life at a bed and breakfast isn’t exactly the celebrity spotlight, though on occasion we are interviewed for stories or rub elbows with those who rub elbows with the rich and famous. When publicity calls, we like to answer.

Go magazine, the in-flight magazine for AirTran Airways, is doing an article for the July edition on Asheville, and wants to give our huge bed and breakfast community some recognition in the article. Their representative called me to see if we had any photos of Inn on Main Street bed and breakfast guests enjoying the atmosphere at a local B&B. I sent out a message to all the members of the Asheville Bed and Breakfast Association to see if they could pitch in, then went looking through my own files. Unfortunately, dozens of photos of happy guests disappeared into the void when our computer crashed earlier this year.

Lucky for us, we had a lovely couple staying with us at the time, Bette and Tom Werlin of Houston. They are great sports and agreed to let us shoot them (they aren’t THAT great of sports; we shot them with a camera) for the article. We’re hoping they and we will share a month of celebrity if the photo appears in the magazine. In the meantime, their looks  are too good to waste, so here’s their photo, taken as Nancy poured their juice:

We are hoping the AirTran article succeeds in bringing more folks from Texas and elsewhere to Weaverville and Asheville. So much of what has been written about our area is so two-dimensional, focusing only on the Biltmore Estate and Grove Park Inn. Both are treasures that help make our area exceptional, of course, but the culture, diversity and natural beauty of our area don’t seem to get their due. And, of course, nether does the fact that the Asheville area is a B&B destination. If you want to understand the complexity of what our region offers, and you want an inside track on the best things to see and do, it helps to stay with someone who is a part of the community.

Many of our guests are good sports, and many have become friends. We look forward to meeting many more as nice as the Werlins.

Bed and breakfast for Obama in Asheville

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

We’re thrilled that President Obama is coming to Asheville for his personal vacation.

It seems peculiar that he would choose our mountains, when he has all the privacy and beauty of Camp David, or could jet off to some more exotic locale. I like to think that he loved the Asheville vibe while he was campaigning here. He picked up lunch at 12 Bones then and no doubt got a glimpse of our youthful (in attitude, if not always in years), hip, artsy and active culture.

Maybe he’ll drop in on a studio or two at the Weaverville Art Safari, or better yet bid at the silent auction on Friday, while he’s in town. Michelle Obama would look great in some handmade wearable art created by a Weaverville artist.

We can certainly use the exposure. Tourism has taken a hit from the recession. People still visit the Biltmore Estate, but on a budget. Everyone has downsized, so folks we would have gotten as guests here in better times are shaving expenses by staying at chain motels and eating fast food. We like to see the president stay at the Grove Park Inn (if not Inn on Main Street!) just to show there’s no reason to slum it. Bad food and bad beds should be stimulus enough to come back to comfort.

President Obama will be here when the mountains are at their best, full of redbud and dogwood blossoms, as well as delicate mountain orchids, trilliums and fiddleneck ferns. The songbirds are back and harmonizing. The days are sunny and the nights are cool. It’s a time we are thankful for the end of a harsh winter and the promise of a dawning summer. There is hope in the air, and we need our president to nurture that hope. Welcome home to Asheville, Mr. Obama.

Bed and breakfast with beastly deals

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

If it’s spring, it’s time to go on safari again. Not to stalk magnificent animals in the African bush, but to hunt magnificent arts and crafts produced by our clever Weaverville artists.

The Weaverville Art Safari is April 24 and 25, with the famous preview party on Friday, April 23, at Reems Creek Golf Club. Print a brochure if you aren’t already on the mailing list. We always tell our guests that the preview party alone is worth the visit, with a fun silent auction, dozens of door prizes and yummy hors d’oeuvres.

The safari is part treasure hunt, part cultural tourism, and part voyeurism as you see artists in their own environment, much like the magnificent critters on the savannah. Nobody leaves without a bargain piece to be admired for years to come, or even a functional item with attitude to give your day a smile. The Art Safari reflects that our tiny town shares the cosmopolitan nature of Asheville, yet has its own unique identity. The Art Safari symbolizes what makes our Weaverville a great place to live.

Inn on Main Street is likely to fill up with arts enthusiasts, so it’s always good to book early. We’ve made it even more attractive with an Art Safari special. When you are indulging your appreciation for nice things, it’s never a good idea to stay in a sterile motel rather than a bed and breakfast.

Spring arrives in Asheville

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

After a brutal winter, by Weaverville standards, the promise of warm and blooming weather has arrived. We’ve been so eager to see the first daffodil open we couldn’t stand it. Well, here he is, captured in the act of opening.

Other signs of spring are also arriving: The Biltmore Estate is opening its Antler Hill Village this weekend, and begins the Festival of Flowers in a couple weeks. It’s T-shirt weather again, a sultry 63 degrees today. Mrs. Landers called to schedule her first-graders’ annual egg hunt on the Inn on Main Street lawn. Our koi have emerged from near-hibernation and are exploring their surroundings again. The only folks in shorts are fresh arrivals from Florida, but we’re all fixing to break out the bags of summer clothes soon.

Spring brings promise on all levels. We innkeepers rejoice at the return of guests, and our bed and breakfast guests rejoice at a slow-but-sure improvement in the economy. Cabin fever is giving way to hope, and we’ve been yearning for that. May your spring blossom with hope as well.

Asheville’s Blizzard of ‘09

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009
Mitchell Childress and Sandy Powell get our Good Sport award for hanging in there during our power outage.

Mitchell Childress and Sandy Powell get our Good Sport award for hanging in there during our power outage.

Everybody loves the beauty of snow, and we always welcome an inch or so to make the mountains truly feel like Christmas.

But when the snow hits a foot or so and still counting, it turns our Southern lifestyle upside down.

Inn on Main Street, and much of the Asheville area in general, was without power for two days this week as 20 inches of wet snow snapped tree branches onto wires. On top of that, the inn filled for a night with travelers who got off of I-26 before it turned into a virtual parking lot of cars trapped behind jackknifed trucks. Instead of anniversary couples away for romantic cocooning, our bed and breakfast rooms were havens for entire families with children sleeping on the floors. We even allowed pets inside for the first time (not even our dear Tasha came into the big house) so they wouldn’t have to spend the night in freezing cars.

All arrived haggard, upset but essentially grateful to have a warm bed, hot shower and the prospect of breakfast. Then the power went out. We have gas water heaters and gas fireplaces in most rooms, so all the comforts other than electricity were taken care of. But everyone made do with flashlights and conversation and early bedtime.

Among all these refugees were a couple here to see their daughter. They checked in before the blizzard for a four-night stay.
Sandy and Mitchell, from Memphis, not only put up with the adversity, they embraced it. They had fun with the lamplight lifestyle, enjoyed the snow, enjoyed the company of the stranded folks and their stories. When they left, they said it had been their best B&B visit ever, an adventure to savor.

We tried not to cut back on amenities. The first day without electricity, we cooked on the barbecue grill, dishing out pancakes, a tropical fruit topping, turkey bacon, and coffee made by pouring grill-heated water through our coffeemaker filter.

That morning, I got a generator (I had sold the one I bought for Y2K to a Florida hurricane refugee a few years ago), so we had a couple hours of lights, music and civilized wine-and-appetizer time before bed.

The next morning, we fired up the generator again to work the furnace blower and cook breakfast on the griddle. The stove and oven drew too much current, so Nancy made scones on the griddle. They resembled fat pancakes, but tasted great. We also made herbed eggs with German potato pancakes, topped with some of our daughter’s homemade apple butter. All was good, and those haggard travelers were in a great mood for the journey home.

Times like these are not just an adventure. They are a learning opportunity for us. Taking in stranded travelers and dealing with a loss of power forced us outside our comfort zone. We had to make allowances, we had to work extra hard to make folks comfortable. Most of all we had to go above and beyond in service, using our 4-wheel-drive to pick up standed guests, shoveling cars out of snowbanks and pushing them free, sharing our dinner with a guest who got here after the one open restaurant closed for the evening. It was a good refresher course for us, sort of an advanced Innkeeping 201. We’re still processing what we did or didn’t do, and how it affected the lives of others, and how it affects our response to future “normal” guests.

We hope we never fail anyone in need.

Christmas comes to Weaverville

Monday, November 30th, 2009

Asheville gets a lot of publicity when Christmas comes to town.  As bed and breakfast innkeepers, we do our part promoting the Biltmore Estate Christmas Candlelight Tours with special ticket prices and packages. Our version of the nearby big city has its own Christmas parade and sales and special events.

Here in Weaverville, Christmas is a quieter, family-oriented tradition. First of all, there’s the Christmas Parade at 1 p.m. this Saturday, Dec. 5. It’s a traditional affair with marching bands, dignitaries in convertibles and floats, as well as Santa. The route passes in front of Inn on Main Street, so our guests get a prime view. That evening, the Vance Birthplace celebrates with its own Christmas Candlelight Tour from 4-7 p.m. See what Christmas was like before the Civil War.

The next Friday, Dec. 11, is an event that is unique to Weaverville, and one that grows sweeter each year. The Weaverville Christmas Candlelight Stroll takes place from 6 to 9 p.m. Santa arrives on a horse-drawn wagon in time for the lighting of the town Christmas tree. His helpers give out hot chocolate and candy, as several musical groups entertain with bagpipe, choirs, string ensemble and a barbershop quartet. Guests can sign up for wagon rides through downtown to the light of hundreds of luminarias. Proceeds will benefit local charities. Weaverville’s cafes, gift shops and galleries will remain open late.

Come home to Weaverville for the holidays.

A Walk in Asheville’s Foodie Heaven

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

food tour logoAsheville and Weaverville have become known as a gourmet destination, so much so that the Asheville Convention and Visitors Bureau created the Foodtopian Society to help promote our tasty selection of fine eateries. Inn on Main Street has long been a big supporter of local, independent and quality-obsessed dining venues.

Finally, someone has stepped up to the plate, so to speak, creating a gourmand’s tour of Asheville restaurants. Chris Ortwein, a fellow innkeeper in the Asheville Bed and Breakfast Association, has begun Asheville Food Tours, a series of walking tours of local restaurants. There are so many restaurants participating that he has three entirely different tours, with the possibility of adding more. The day will come when a true foodie can spend a week here and sample a handful of new eateries each day. For the time being, settle for two downtown and one in Biltmore Village.

Each tour lasts about 2.5 hours. Chris set an introductory price of $25 per person per tour, with the expectation that it will rise in the spring. This winter is a great time to take advantage of the lower rate and indoor fun. Participants walk from restaurant to restaurant. Even though they tend to be only a block or so apart, Chris keeps a brisk pace that might challenge those reluctant to burn calories between samplings. With about eight  locations on each tour, there’s no time to loiter.

The choices are filling and delicious. If there is a problem with the tour, it’s that some restaurants provide too much food. Participants have to pace themselves to save room for the later visits. The tour we recently took included some of our favorite places, such as Mela, Zambra and Vincenzo’s. Some others we hadn’t visited before, but plan to add to our recommendations, like Decades and Posana. Barley’s Taproom and Sante Wine Bar added a welcome liquid balance to the tour.

In a city that already offers the Brews Cruise and Winery Tours, Asheville Food Tours is a welcome addition.

Now, if Chris will only add a tour to highlight Weaverville’s great dining experiences. We suggest Sunnyside Cafe, Blue Mountain Pizza, Well-Bred Bakery, Stoney Knob Cafe, Weaverville Milling Company, the Bavarian Restaurant, Fireplace and Curras Dom. OK, so the last three are just outside Weaverville, but we love to claim them.

Weaverville Art Safari returns

Friday, October 30th, 2009

signEven though it comes twice a year, the Weaverville Art Safari always causes a stir around here. The Nov. 7-8 tour is like dessert in the banquet that is the leaf change here in the mountains. The colors are still beautiful, especially at our elevation, but there is also a carpet of gold and yellow leaves that adds a seasonal dreaminess to the scavenger-hunt quality of the self-guided studio tour.

Visitors chase up and down back roads looking for the perfect piece for that perfect place in their home, and they hope for the perfect deal straight from the studio. Leaves dance in the wind along country roads as their straggler kinsmen fall and join in. The crisp fall air tickles the skin and lungs and reminds us how good it is to be alive.

The Art Safari is one of the things that makes us especially proud to live in Weaverville, where art, like that crisp cool air, is something we breathe and accept as part of life rather than some rare and unapproachable icon. In Weaverville, life is art and art is life.

Art in Autumn returns

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

artinautumncardThere’s a time of year when color and texture abound in Weaverville in a display that brings visitors from all over the Southeast.

Nope, it’s not leaf season yet. It’s Art in Autumn.

Our street art festival is only three years old, but it’s already proven to be a popular attraction. Dozens of artists, local and otherwise, fill Main Street. it’s a little like getting a head start on the Craft Fair of the Southern Highlands or the Weaverville Art Safari, two other events that bring patrons of the arts with Christmas shopping in mind.

Art in Autumn epitomizes what makes Weaverville charming, or as we residents call a cosmopolitan Mayberry. The festival includes some of the finest arts and crafts created in the Southeast, but displayed in the quaint atmosphere of our tiny town, home to a handful of cozy cafes, galleries and studios, and a luxury spa.

And, of course, we’re also home to Inn on Main Street, which we hope helps reflect that casual, friendly, yet sophisticated atmosphere that makes Weaverville so enjoyable.  Come join us for the festival.