lake murray columbia, sep 2013
TRANSCRIPT
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2 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
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4 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
{the arts issue}
24Meet the dedicated
and talented members
of the Lake Murray
Symphony Orchestra, which
celebrates its 10th season.
10Each month, bluegrass
reigns in Leesville. Find
out more about the
Haynes Fourth Saturday series.
18Fall season highlights:
Comedian Bill Cosby,
Broadway in Columbia,
SC Philharmonics 50th season, and
more.
Hen party.Chickens rule in Ron and Holly Wilsons garden. Pictured here are, clockwise from left, Hushpuppy, Buckwheat, Alfalfa, Roll and Cornbread.Photograph by Tracy Glantz.
{also inside}
CALENDAR 6
PEOPLE, PLACES AND THINGS 36
PAST TENSE 38
BUY PHOTOS:See more photos from
our stories and purchasephotos published in this issue; order
online at thestate.com/magazines
SEPTEMBER 2013contents
{garden}
12An afnity for
chickens led Ron
and Holly Wilson
to build a souped-
up chicken coop for their brood.
31Even after decades
together, Jim and
Shirley Kirby still areon a journey in their garden. Find
out how they created meandering
pathways at their lakefront property.
ON THE COVER: Members of theLake Murray Symphony Orchestra in
rehearsal. Photograph by Tim Dominick
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 5
LAKE MURRAYC O L U M B I A
NORTHEASTC O L U M B I A
Editor
Betsey Guzior, (803) [email protected]
Art dirEctor
Susan Ardis, (803) [email protected]
AdvErtisingsAlEs dirEctor
Lauren Feldman, (803) [email protected]
subscribErsErvicE
Lou Gibson, (803) 771-8504
stAff WritErs
Bryan Betts, Joey Holleman
contributingWritErs
Kay Gordon, Gigi Huckabee
stAff PhotogrAPhErs
Tim Dominick, Tracy Glantz
The StateMediaCo.
PrEsidEnt & PublishEr
Henry B. Haitz III
vicE PrEsidEnt, ExEcutivE Editor
Mark E. Lett
vicE PrEsidEnt, AdvErtising
Bernie Heller
September 2013
Lake Murray-Columbia and NortheastColumbia are published 12 times a year.
The mail subscription rate is $48.The contents are fully protected by copyright.
Lake Murray-Columbiaand Northeast Columbia are wholly owned by
The State Media Co.
Send a story idea or calendar item to:Lake Murray/Northeast magazines
P.O. Box 1333Columbia, SC 29202Fax: (803) 771-8430
Attention: Betsey Guzioror [email protected]
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6 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 7
er{performing arts}
Sept. 5-8: Skipp Pearson Jazz Foundation presents JazzUnder the Stars Jazzfest: Salute to the Makers of Funk, various
locations in downtown Columbia, jazzunderthestars.webs.com
Sept. 7:Viva La Vista, vivalavistasc.com
Sept. 7: Sandra Bernhard, Koger Center, (803) 251-2222,
www.capitaltickets.com
Sept. 8: John, Janet and Jazz, Newberry Opera House,
(803) 276-6264, www.newberryoperahouse.com
Sept. 8, 15, 22, 29: USC School of Music, Cornelia
Freeman Concert Series, School of Music Recital Hall, www.
capitaltickets.com
Sept. 13-28: Beehive: A 60s Musical, Workshop Theatre,
(803) 799-4876
Sept. 17-Oct. 5: Ragtime, The Musical, Trustus, (803) 254-
9732, www.trustus.org
Sept. 17: USC School of Music, Rubio-Benavides Duo,
School of Music Recital Hall, free
Sept. 19: USC Symphony Orchestra with guest artist Misha
Dicter, Koger Center, (803) 251-2222, www.capitaltickets.com
Sept. 19-22, 26-28: Unnecessary Farce, Chapin Theatre
Company, Harbison Theatre, (803) 240-8544, www.
chapintheatre.org
Sept. 20: Exile, Newberry Opera House, (803) 276-6264,
www.newberryoperahouse.com
Sept. 20-Oct. 12: Les Miserables, Town Theatre, (803)
799-2510
Sept. 21:Air Supply, Newberry Opera House, (803) 276-
6264, www.newberryoperahouse.com
Sept. 8: Jerry Butler, Newberry Opera House, (803) 276-
6264, www.newberryoperahouse.com
Sept. 23: USC School of Music, Joseph Eller Faculty
Clarinet Recital with pianist Lynn Kompass, School of Music
Recital Hall, free
Sept. 22: USC Cello Choir, Koger Center, (803) 251-2222,
www.capitaltickets.com
Sept. 30: USC Wind Ensemble, Koger Center, free
{museums & art}Through Sept. 8: Between the Springmaid Sheets, S.C.
State Museum, (803) 898-4921
Through Sept. 20: If You Miss Me at the Back of the Bus,
McKissick Museum, (803) 777-7251
Through Sept. 22: Football: The Exhibit, EdVenture, (803)
779-3100
CALENDAR CONTINUED ON PAGE 8
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8 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
Through Oct. 6: Blooming Butteries,
EdVenture, (803) 779-3100
Ongoing: Diverse Voices: Discovering
Community through Traditional Arts,
McKissick Museum, (803) 777-7251
Ongoing:Tutankhamun: Return of the
King, S.C. State Museum, (803) 898-4921
Ongoing:The Civil War in South Carolina,
S.C. State Museum, (803) 898-4921
Ongoing:A Womans Light: Making
History in South Carolina, S.C. State
Museum, www.scmuseum.org
Sept. 1, 8, 15, 22:, 29 Gallery Tour:
Highlights of the Collection, Columbia
Museum of Art, (803) 799-2810
Sept. 3, 17:About Face Portrait and
Figure Drawing, Columbia Museum of
Art, (803) 799-2810
Sept. 6: First Fr iYAYs!, EdVenture, (803)
779-3100
Sept. 10: Family Night, EdVenture, (803)
779-3100
Sept. 9, 23:About Face drawing
session, Columbia Museum of Art, (803)
799-2810
Sept. 9: Homeschool Days: The
Language of Art, Columbia Museum of
Art, (803) 799-2810
Sept. 20: Come Together Gala,
McKissick Museum, (803) 777-7251
Sept. 21: Fall Heritage Festival & Pickin
Party, S.C. State Museum, (803) 898-
4921
{sports}Sept. 11: Run for Our Troops
5K, West Columbia
Riverwalk, www.
runforourtroops.com
Sept. 14:
Vanderbilt
Commodores at
USC, Williams-
Brice Stadium
Sept. 15: Rising Starrs Journior
Tennis Tournament, Lexington
County Tennis Complex, www.lctc.
lexingtoncountytennis.com
Sept. 21: Hydrocephalus Association
Walk, walk4hydro.kintera.org
Sept. 28: Columbia QuadSquad
Rollergirls Miss B-Havers vs. Rogue
Rollergirls, Jamil Temple, (803) 772-0732,
www.columbiaquadsquad.com
{special events}Aug. 31, Sept. 1-2: Chapin Labor Day
Festival, www.chapinsc.com
Sept. 1:The Epic Hair Battle & Hair
Showcase, Township Auditorium, (803)
576-2350, thetownship.org
Sept. 4: Battle of the Bands, New
Brookland Tavern, (803) 791-4413, www.
newbrooklandtavern.com
Sept. 12: Benjamin Britten CentenaryCelebration Lecture featuring Dr. Martin
Nedbal from the University of Arkansas.
School of Music Recital Hall, free
Sept. 12-15: South Carolina Elvis
Festival, Newberry Opera House, www.
southcarolinaelvisfestival.com
Sept. 15: Columbia Classical Ballets
Cabaret Night Fundraiser, 701 Whaley,
columbiaclassicalballet.org
Sept. 19-22: Greek
Festival, Sumter
and Calhoun
streets,
(8030
461-
0248,
CALENDAR FROM PAGE 7
Football fever.USC Gamecocks
play Vanderbilt
Commodores Sept.
14 at Williams-Brice.
A relaxed country setting is
waiting for you at Forest Creek.
Priced from the$200s, these
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custom features andupgrades.
Natural gasheat andwaterheating are standard. Forest
Creek is justminutes from I-20
andtheVillagesat Sandhills.
For additional information
call Robert Penny at
803-360-9165 or email
New homes
are betterwith
Natural Gas.
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 9
www.columbiasgreekfestival.com
Sept. 20: Stone Temple Pilots with
Chester Bennington, Township
Auditorium, (803) 576-2350,
thetownship.org
Sept. 21: Beach Sweep/River Sweep,
statewide, www.scseagrant.org
Sept. 21: Jam Room Music Festivalfeaturing Son Volt, The Woggles, The Great
Book of John, Diali Cissokho & Kaira Ba
and Rachel Kate. Main at Hampton streets,
www.jamroommusicfestival.com
Sept. 22:The Renaissance Foundation
presents Pastor Shirley Ceasar,
Koger Center, (803) 251-2222, www.
capitaltickets.com
Sept. 24-29: Sumter County Fair, www.
sumterfair.com
Sept. 26-29: Euphoria, www.
euphoriagreenville.com
Sept. 28: Columbia Freedom Fest
featuring Last Flight Out, 3 Shades of Blue,
Lightswitch, The Advice, Mikeschair, Josh
Wilson and Plumb; Finlay Park, (704)
999-9728, www.columbiafest.
com
Sept. 28: Italian
Festival and Bocce
Tournament, Robert
Mills House &
Hampton-Preston
Mansion, www.
oisacolumbiasc.
org
Sept. 28: SC
Pride Festival,
music by Berlin,
Main Street, scpride.
org
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10 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
Tuning up.Musicians hold a jam session before a performance of bluegrass music in Batesburg-Leesville. The monthly show takes place in the HaynesAuditorium on the campus of the Leesville Midlands Tech.
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 11
{profile
E
ach person who walks throughthe door at the Haynes
Auditorium is greeted like anold friend by Jane Wyatt.
Some really are. Others know hermostly as the friendly woman who takesup their money at the Haynes FourthSaturday Bluegrass Series in Leesville.
But even the rst-timers get the Hey!Howre you? with such feeling it seemsshe really would like to hear how youredoing. Thats typical of the atmosphereat the Haynes, where $7 gets you a hard,school auditorium-type seat (cushions areavailable if you arrive early) for shows bytwo quality bluegrass bands.
Lewis Rogers started the series severalyears ago, when a friend with the RidgeArts Council told him they were looking forevents for the auditorium. The Haynes ispart of what once was Leesville College andnow is a Midlands Tech satellite campus.
Though spruced up in recent years, theauditorium is still a little worn, but it hasgreat acoustics. In other words, its prefectfor the Fourth Saturday Bluegrass Series.
The series wasnt an immediate success.We had about 30 people that rst
night, and it went downhill from there,Rogers jokes. At one point I thought,Do I want to keep doing this.
But persistence, that family atmosphereand the backing of local musicians havemade the event a success. Attendance usuallyranges from 75 to 150 people, or enough topay the building rental and insurance andgive the bands a little something.
Sometimes, bands will say keep themoney, spend it on advertisement,Rogers says.
The focus is giving local bands anopportunity to play to a bluegrass crowd,Rogers says. South Carolina bluegrassfor South Carolinians.
The stage show starts around 7 p.m.,and it is preceded by an all-comers jamsession beginning at 4:30 p.m. At the
jam session in the auditorium entryway,beginners can sit beside veterans to learnthe chords by watching. In June, a stand-up bass player with a jazz background waspicking up bluegrass tips.
During sound check for the June show featuring the Carolina Ramblers andSavannah River Bluegrass the handfulof early arrivals clapped rhythmically asthe very young grandchild of one of theperformers climbed onstage and began todance to music in her head.
That kind of scene is typical everyfourth Saturday from January through
August. The music moves outside for theAll Day Haynes Bluegrass Festival eachSeptember. Its Sept. 28 this year, withbands playing from about 1 to 9 p.m.under a bandstand in the park adjacentto the auditorium. Proceeds go to RidgeChristian School.
The Fourth Saturday event takes offthe months of October, November andDecember. After all, the fourth Saturdayof those months often is lled by otherfamily-related activities.
The good times rollat the Haynes Fourth
Saturday BluegrassSeries in LeesvilleStory by Joey Holleman Photographs by Joey Holleman
If you go
Haynes Fourth Saturday
Bluegrass Series
When: Each fourth Saturday of the
month; an all-day bluegrass festival is
set for Sept. 28 from noon to 9:30 p.m.
Where: Haynes Auditorium, 423
College St., Leesville
Info: haynesbluegrass.com
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Chickens comehome to roost
Story by Gigi Huckabee Special to Lake Murray and Northeast magazines Photographs by Tim Dominick
Peck on the cheek?Cornbread sneaks up on Holly Wilson as she sits in a chair in the coop and watches the chickenswhile drinking morning coffee. At left, Buckwheat peers out from the coop.
{garden}
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Sitting amid a bevy of young chicks, Ron Wilson is the
picture of contentment. His wife, Holly, sits next to
him, quietly feeding a treat of dried mealy worms to
Cornbread, a docile hen with light-yellow feathers.
Mom and Pop on the farm? No, the Wilsons have
joined an increasing number of suburbanites who
raise chickens.
A shed is now a stylish coop for couples chickens
Coop detat.Ron and Holly Wilson, of Lexington, raise chickens. Ron built the coop that is attached to a garden shed. Holly provided the decor.
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Chicken coops have cropped up inunlikely places: suburban neighborhoods
and within city limits. (Check localordinances before purchasing chickens.)Coops range in styles and shapesfrom small portable cages to fancyaccommodations with the names of theindividual hens atop the entrance to eachnest.
With more awareness about foodadditives, raising egg-producing chickensis one way to ensure a safe, fresh product.Families with children turn to hens aspets as a way to introduce children to
farm life and to teach youngsters howto care for living creatures. In return
caregivers are rewarded with eggs after adaily egg hunt.
The Wilsons enjoy gathering fresheggs, which Holly says taste much betterthan the store-bought ones. However,an additional reason induced them toadd a group of ne-feathered friendsto their menagerie the couple has anafnity for chickens. For 20 years, Ronhas collected classical paintings thatdepict barnyard scenes featuring chickensas well as whimsical ceramic pieces. I
think chickens are beautiful, says Ron.Holly agrees. After caring for a friends
ock whenever the owner was away, theWilsons were hooked.
The Wilsons have revamped an olderhome along Lake Murray and completelyredesigned the landscape. One project
was a vegetable garden and tool shed.To accommodate the chickens, Ron andHolly redesigned and enlarged the shed.One part still serves as a repository fortools but the addition houses the chicken
ROOST CONTINUED ON PAGE 16
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16 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
coop.This 4-by-7 foot space is divided into
two parts. One side contains chicken feed,bedding and other supplies. The otherhouses the roosting platforms, nestingboxes and the food and water bin. Theroofs of the boxes and bin are hinged foreasy access from the supply shed.
The enclosed run measures 7-by-12feet. The east facing half of the roof iscovered in berglass, allowing morninglight, while the west slope is made of
tin, protecting the ock from afternoonsun. The chicken wire walls run partially
underground to prevent predators fromdigging into the enclosure.
When the Wilsons decided to purchasechicks, Holly did a lot of research ondifferent breeds. I wanted colorfulchickens that were docile not broody.Broody hens, she explains, are laying hensthat will sit on an egg and defend it frombeing gathered. I also wanted breeds that
were good producers and adaptive to afree range and to our climate.
Holly ordered two chicks from three
different breeds for a total of six chicks.Two are barred Plymouth Rocks, which
are black and white and lay brown eggs.Holly named them Rock and Roll.Most people cant tell them apart, but
just like the mother of identical twins, Ican. Theres a slight difference in theircolor banding. Two others are GoldenComets. Individuals vary in color, saysHolly.
We have one that is light yellow; I callher Cornbread. The other is reddish so Inamed her, Hushpuppy. They are quieterthan most breeds and easy to handle.
ROOST FROM PAGE 15
Home, sweet home.The best part of raising chickens, the Wilsons say, is that the hens are a constant source of amusement and comfort.
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These also lay brown eggs.The third breed is a pair of
Ameraucana. They are not as friendlyas the others, but they are so differentlooking and lay blue eggs, Hollysays. She points to their multicoloredfeathering, the tuffs of feathers on eitherside of their faces and their blue shanks(legs). She has named them Buckwheatand Alfalfa.
One benet of having chickens is thatthe Wilsons gardens have never lookedbetter. Weeds and rotten veggies arefed to the chickens, and the chicken
droppings are quickly scooped up andadded to the compost pile. Soon Ill havethe best compost in the county, bragsHolly.
Surprisingly, the best part of raisingchickens for this couple is that the hens
are a source of amusement and comfort.The Wilsons have placed two old rockingchairs in the chicken run where they sit inthe evening, communing with the girls.
The Comets and the Plymouth Rocksgladly perch on the chairs and takeoffered treats while the Ameraucanasamble back and forth pecking at the treatsthrown their way. Introducing new food
is an amusing pastime. They will actuallytake cherries out of each others mouth,Holly says, and cantaloupe seeds are likecaviar to them.
Ron muses, I calculated the cost of thecoop, the feed and all the paraphernalia
and have determined that in the year2037, I will break even, that is if I stopfeeding them.
Then he hands more treats to his pets.
Gigi Huckabee is a freelance writer based inthe Midlands
Chicken feed.The Wilsons have names for all of their chickens. Here, Holly feeds Roll and Ron feedsCornbread. Alfalfa waits her turn near the bowl.
Yard Debris Removal
Remodelling
New Construction
Containers of all sizes available
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18 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
g gin therts
Everything begins
again in the Fall...
Dancers stretch...musicians tune their
instruments... theaters
come alive with the arts.
Here are highlights
of the 2013-2014arts season...
PROVIDED PHOTO
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 19
Stars coming to ColumbiaSC Pride Presents Sandra Bernhard, Sept. 7, Koger Center.
Bill Cosby, Nov. 23, Koger Center
Willie Nelson, Oct. 22, Newberry Opera House
Toro Y Moi, Oct. 18, Columbia Museum of Art.
ts
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOGRAPH
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20 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
The SCPhilharmonicThe orchestra celebrates its 50thseason in the MidlandsInfo: scphilharmonic.org
Opening night is Friday. Oct. 4,with a program featuring works byVerdi and Tchaikovsky.Bluegrass musician Bela Fleck,pictured on opposite page, joinsthe orchestra May 3 to play hisnewest concerto and sit in on afew of the classics.
Harbison
Theater atMidlandsTechnicalCollegeIts the second season forHarbison, the 400-seat theaterthat hosts everything fromcommunity theater to nationalacts.Info: harbisontheatre.orgSeason highlights: The Doo WopProject, Oct. 4; Singin in theRain the Musical, Feb. 14, 2014;Can I Haz Cheezbuger, a showabout cat videos, March 21, 2014;The Fantastiks, photo thispage, April 26, 2014
PROVIDED PHOTO
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{highlights in the arts
NEWLOCATION!Lexington Medical Park 2
Suite 550
West Columbia, SC 29169
LexingtonRheumatology .com
Lexington Rheumatology proudly welcomes board
certied internist Kaki Bruce, MD, to the medical
staff. A joint and soft tissue specialist, Dr. Bruce
joins Bruce Goeckeritz, MD, and Bryan J. Wolf, MD.
The practice is now conveniently located at
Lexington Medical Park 2. A new physician and
new location, with the trusted reliability of the
Lexington Medical Center Network of Care.
(803) 936-7410
A Lexington Medical Center Physician Practice
Joint specialist Dr. Kaki Bruce joinsLexington Rheumatology.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOGRAPH
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22 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
SC State Fair
Wednesday, Oct. 9-Sunday, Oct. 20Info: scstatefair.org
ENTERTAINMENT SCHEDULE
Oct. 9: The Band Perry, above inset, $30; Oct.10: Corey Smith, free with fair admission; Oct.11: Foreigner, $15; Oct. 12: Hunter Hayes,$30; Oct. 13: Kirk Franklin, above, free with fairadmission; Oct. 18: Needtobreathe, $15; Oct.19: The Temptations, free with fair admission;Oct. 20: Justin Moore, $15.
Broadway in
ColumbiaThe popular series returns with family favoritesand classic Broadway hits, including SallyStruthers in Hello, Dolly!.Info: broadwayincolumbia.comSeason: Beauty and the Beast, Oct. 27;Hello, Dolly! Nov. 19-20; Memphis, Jan.7-8, 2014; Million Dollar Quartet, Feb. 5-6,2014; Jersey Boys March 25-26; 2014; TheAddams Family, April 28-29, 2014
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOGRAPHS
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 23
{highlights in the arts}
Fall andwinterevents
OCTOBER
Oktoberfest, Oct. 5,downtown Newberry
Palmetto Health Walk for
Life/Race for Life, Oct. 5,Finlay Park
unearth arts festival, Oct.6, Saluda Shoals Park
Cola Con, Oct. 25-26,Columbia MetropolitanConvention Center
Boo at the Zoo, Oct. 18-30, Riverbanks Zoo
NOVEMBER
Governors Cup Road
Race, Nov. 9, downtownColumbia
Columbia Blues Festival,Nov. 9, MLK Jr. Park,Columbia
Vista Lights, Nov. 21,
Columbia Vista districtGroup Therapy Chili
Cookoff, Nov. 9, FivePoints
Palmetto Health
Foundation Festival of
Trees, November 22-24,Columbia MetropolitanConvention Center
Lights Before Christmas,Nov. 23, Dec. 30,Riverbanks Zoo
DECEMBER
Junior League of
Columbias Holiday
Market, December 5-8,SC State Fairgrounds
Famously Hot New
Year, Dec. 31, downtownColumbia
FILE PHOTOGRAPH/THE STATE
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24 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
Story by Bryan Betts Photographs by Tim Dominick
Greater than ones selfMeet the members of the Lake Murray Symphony Orchestra
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Beginning around 7 p.m. most
Tuesdays, 50 to 60 Columbia-area musicians trickle into asmall band room at Lexington
Middle School and nd theirseat in concentric rows ofcushioned black chairs. They talk
among themselves as they move throughestablished personal routines, arrangingsheet music and adjusting stands, maybereviewing passages while ngering a fewnotes on their instrument.
Many of the musicians come to thepractice from full-time jobs. Othersare retirees enjoying the leisure life.Still others are high school and collegestudents nishing a long day of classes.
But when assistant conductorSuzanna Pavlovsky steps to the front,the assembled members of the Lake
Murray Symphony Orchestra raise theirinstruments, x their eyes on her raisedhands and await their cue to do what theylove.
The symphony is beginning its 10thseason this year. Since debuting in 2004,the symphony has performed dozens offree concerts for the community even asits members have grown in number andprociency. They come from all walks oflife, and none of them make a dime fortheir contributions, doing it instead todevelop as musicians and share their loveof music with others.
The Rev. GeorgeHead sits in therst row to theconductors right. OnSundays, he preachesto his congregation at WestminsterPresbyterian Church, where hes servedas pastor for 16 years, but on this day thelong neck of his cello extends up behindhis ear as Head follows the marches andovertures for the symphonys Fourth of
July Star Spangled Symphonic Salute.We do it for free because its just
so fun, he said. Its kind of a way to
keep us off the streets. It keeps us out oftrouble.
For musicians, this is like crackcocaine, he added with a laugh.
Head joined the symphony about veyears ago, and since then, its become akind of spiritual discipline for him. Hecalled music an extension of his work inthe church, a way of communing withsomething larger than himself.
That kind of connection, he said,was something the musicians had oftenhad a chance to share, singling out oneconcert where the symphony performedtwo classic pieces, Beethovens FifthSymphony and Tchaikovskys CapriccioItalien.
{profile}
And a one, and a two...The Lake Murray Symphony Orchestra is a community orchestra made up of volunteer musicians of diverse backgroundsfrom the Midlands of South Carolina. Next page, associate conductor Suzanna Pavlovsky leads rehearsal.
SYMPHONY CONTINUED ON PAGE 28
When we played it, everybody looked at each other
like we had just touched something eternal.
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When we played it, everybody lookedat each other like we had just touchedsomething eternal, he said. It was aprivilege to play.
For many members, the symphonybecomes a way for them to meet peopleoutside their normal social circles and,
sometimes, even to develop romanticrelationships.
A few years ago Head noticed thecellist seated to his left and the violist tohis right making eyes at each other andmade a point of encouraging the buddingrelationship. Some time later, Kennethand Bonnie Pruitt married, and Rev.Head ofciated their wedding.
Both Kenneth and Bonnie are localband directors. Bonnie teaches atCarolina Springs Middle School and saidthe symphony made her a better teacherby taking the baton out of her hand.
It helps me to get another perspective,to put myself in my students place,said Bonnie, whos performed with thesymphony about six years.
Her husband Kenneth teaches at WhiteKnoll High School and has recommendedseveral of his best students to perform
with the symphony. At least four currentand former students are at the rehearsalfor the Fourth of July concert.
Josh Lathrop, a recent White Knollgraduate sporting Converse All-Stars,skinny jeans and a bright red jacket,acknowledged that it could be challenging
for a young player to perform with somany experienced musicians.
Im kind of intimidated, he said.Everyone heres been playing for like 60
years.The symphonys more seasoned
players showed they support the youngermembers though, when a fellow musicianoffered Lathrop free lessons after therehearsal.
Tuba player David Roof, a militaryveteran now working as a sound andvideo contractor, sits near the back of theorchestra, a few feet his former public
school teacher Charles Gatch.
Gatch, a trombonist, is retired nowbut had a long career in educationand actually served as the principal ofLexington Middle School when theschool constructed the band room wherethe symphony now practices.
Gatch has also taught as an assistantprofessor of music at USC, performedas the principal trombonist in the SouthCarolina Philharmonic and played withnumerous ensembles throughout Northand South Carolina.
But for all his experience, he said thesymphony continues to challenge him asa musician.
I tell them I really need the symphony
more than the symphony needs me, hesaid.
You got thesepeople who do otherthings who come inand can play with any
professional group, he added.Susan and John Steedman, another
symphony couple, certainly numberamong those. John, a neurologist, sits justto the conductors left as the symphonysconcertmaster. Susan, a pharmacist, sits
a couple rows back, the symphonys leadclarinetist.
The symphonys conductor and artisticdirector, Einar Anderson, is himself aformer medical doctor at Columbias VA
Medical Center..Assistant conductor Suzanna Pavlovsky
joined the symphony just last season.She has her doctorate in orchestralconducting from USC and said she took
the position because she saw the talentedsymphony as more than just a social clublike many community orchestras are.
It has its challenges, but its a fantasticgroup to work with, she said. I cansqueeze the guts out of them.
Unfortunately, torrential rain wouldforce the symphony to cancel theirFourth of July concert, but the symphonyhas a full season ahead that kicks off witha New Orleans-themed fundraiser inSeptember.
Even though the symphony didnt getto perform on the Fourth, Rev. Head saidhe enjoyed just rehearsing and being withthe other musicians and said he felt anobligation to share what he saw as a God-given musical talent with others.
For me its a responsibility, to pay backbecause youve been given this gift and
you need to use it, he said.
Tuning in.SuzannaPavlovsky talks with Margaret Gerstung before rehearsal. Below, Justin Craigshares a laugh with a fellow trombone player.
SYMPHONY FROM PAGE 25
For me its a responsibility, to pay back because
youve been given this gift and you need to use it.
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 29
Lake Murray Symphony
Orchestra 2013-2014
Season Schedule
For more information, visit LMSO.
org or call 800-400-3540. You
can also follow the symphony on
Facebook and Twitter.
Wine and Waltzes with a Touch
of New Orleans
Sept. 27, 2013, 6:30-9:30 p.m.
The River Center, Saluda Shoals
Parks
unearth
Oct. 6, 2013, 5 p.m.
Saluda Shoals Park
A World of Dances
Nov. 13, 2013, 3:30 p.m.
Harbison Theatre at MidlandsTechnical College
Famous Overtures
(featuring LMSO, the USC
Symphony and guest soloists and
conductors)
Jan. 23, 2014, 7:30 p.m.
The Koger Center
Valentines from France
Feb. 16, 2014, 3:30 p.m.
Harbison Theatre at Midlands
Technical College
Concertos and Cupcakes
May 4, 2014, 3:30 p.m.
Harbison Theatre at Midlands
Technical College
Since 1980 Archadeck has become Americas most trusted designer andbuilder of outdoor living spaces. Call today for your Free Design Consultation.
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Taking root.Shirley and Jim Kirby in their garden
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 31
Lakeside gardensare a dream come true
Couple married for 69 years enjoy results
of 25 years of planning and planting together
Story by Kay Gordon Special to Lake Murray and Northeast magazines Photographs by Tracy Glantz
{garden}
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View of a room.The Kirbys planned garden rooms with certain types of plants and groupings as focal points.
Jim and Shirley Kirby nursed a vision and a dream when they bought theirlakefront property 27 years ago. Because theyve always shared a love forthe land, they knew they wanted gardens surrounding their home on theheavily wooded three acres.
Theyve made their dream come true. Their gardens growand bloom in every season all around their home, tucked away ina cove. Each garden is planned and different and each whispersstories, sharing them with visitors who pause to listen and lookas they wander along the winding paths. Sometimes, they sit onone of 25 or more benches along the way to reect upon thequiet beauty and listen to the songbirds. The Kirbys call their
cove Turtle Cove because of the many turtles who sun there.
They get their gardening ideas from nurseries, reading, othergardeners and friends and sometimes stop on the side of theroad in a heartbeat to look at someones garden, Jim said.
They began with building their 4,000 square-foot home,keeping in mind their children and grandchildren. The upstairsis a duplicate of the downstairs. And theres a full basement,
GARDEN CONTINUED ON PAGE 34
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34 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
Furnished rooms.Colorful cannas, elephant ears and purple ornamental grass decorate the Kirbys various garden rooms.
which they call the store, with shelves of odds and ends forgrandchildren to explore when they visit. After the house wasbuilt, Jim started the gardens. Married for 69 years, Jim is a
retired businessman. Shirley is a retired nurse.Their son, Kim, said that what started as a simple house on
a large wooded lot in the back of a cove has been transformedwith a series of secret landscape and vegetable gardenscontaining walkways, fountains, hundreds of plants, beehives,and even a chicken coop. There are nine chickens and onerooster. They gather at least six eggs a day.
There is just one secret place after another, each containingits own identity, Kim said. My father has been the architectand for a long time, the facilitator of this enterprise. Althoughhe has developed plans for each stage, I think the master planhas always been in his back pocket, just waiting to be pulled out,
one phase at a time.When Jim retired in 2001, he began the pathways, connecting
one garden to the other. They have always grown vegetables andowers. She loves to can and freeze vegetables and work withpotted plants, especially on their lakeside deck, where they sit
every day. A porch swing hangs between two trees by the lake,with horseshoes resting nearby, ready for play. Its a favorite spotwhere they recall many afternoons of sitting in the swing orplaying horseshoes with family and friends.
They made sure the water and electrical infrastructurewas in place before the planting began. Irrigation devices areeverywhere. All the beds are raised. Jim doesnt plant anything
without access to water. They planted their rst azaleas in5-gallon buckets.
The pathways in the gardens are laid out in four zones,with more than 50 different plants, including what Jim callssignature plants, such as dogwood, Japanese maples and
GARDEN FROM PAGE 33
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 35
Banana shrubs. Somethings blooming all year long, he said.Every ve years, he undertakes a major pruning project, butalways, he keeps a pair of pruning clippers in his pockets so hecan clip and prune on his daily walkabouts.
Their rst room or zone in the gardens is called the Azalea
Room, with many kinds of azaleas.. It leads to the second zone,the Mondo Walk, with Mondo grass and hydrangeas. Next, the
Mulberry Room has two Mulberry trees and 18 tons of stonesin a pile surrounding a waterfall. The Lake Walk, bordering thelake, completes the circle leading up to the house. Magnoliasgrow there, as well as roses, sea oats and a lily patch.
Every zone has a story, Jim said.In addition to the zones of owering plants, there are
vegetable and herb gardens, blueberry plants, four g trees, theorchard and vineyard with four different kinds of grapes, andthe hospital an area with a compost pile, shelves and shed tonurse plants that are puny or sick. There are bluebird and wood
duck boxes and hummingbird feeders. Shirley and Jim built thestorage shed themselves and installed water and a sink.
In addition to gardening, Jim is also a hobbyist, collectingIndian artifacts, such as arrowheads and pipe stems. He is a pastmember of the South Carolina Archeology Trust Board. He
keeps a daily journal, too, and is writing his memoirs.The pair are busy every day and enjoy life. He makes every
minute count, including working out at Crooked Creek Park onhis way to empty the garbage at the dump.
This is not work even cutting the grass. Jim said. Its apleasure. Its a love. We never get bored.
Kay Gordon is a freelance writer based in the Midlands
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BUSINESS BRIEFSA new shopping center along Lake Murray Boulevard will bringSmashburgerto Irmo by the end of the year. The new conceptburger joint which actually smashes its burgers with a specialsmashing tool during cooking opened its rst Midlands locationalong Devine Street late last year. Diners also can get sidesincluding veggie frites and sweet-potato fries, as well as HaagenDazs milkshakes.
Joining Smashburger at the center at 937 Lake Murray Blvd.between AAA Car Care Center and Moes Southwest Grill willbeMarcos Pizza and Dunkin Donuts.
All three want to be open by year-end, Owen said.Nearby, at 410 Columbiana Drive, Rioz Brazilian Steakhouse
opened its rst Columbia-area restaurant earlier this month. Thexed-price eatery features an extensive salad bar and servers whobring various cuts of meat to each table for tasting.
Find more business news in The States Shop Around columnatthestate.com/business
ARTSChapin Theatre Companypresents Unnecessary Farce. Thiscomedy by Paul Slade Smith follows two police ofcers hopingto sting a public ofcial, but they wind up stinging each other.
The play is directed by Glenn Farr. Performance dates are Sept.19-22, and Sept 26-28.
Village Square Theatre presents Shrek the Musical Sept. 20-Oct. 6, based on the Dreamworks ogre and his fairy tale buddies.
Village Square Theatre is at 105 Caughman Road in Lexington.Details: www.villagesquaretheatre.com or (803) 359-1436.
The next meeting of the Crooked Creek Art League is 7 p.m.Monday, Sept.16. The league meets at Crooked Creek Park, OldLexington Highway in Chapin. www.crookedcreekart.org.
The Trenholm Artists Guild meets at 6:30 p.m. Sept. 9 atForest Lake Park, 6820 Wedgeeld Road. Guest speaker is JoAnn
Anderson.
UPCOMINGThe South Carolina Midlands Master Gardener Symposium
is set for Thursday, Oct. 17, at the Columbia ConferenceCenter. The keynote speakers are Doug Tallamy, chairmanof the Entomology and Wildlife Ecology Department at theUniversity of Delaware, and Allan Armitage, professor emeritusof Horticulture at the University of Georgia.
Tallamy will speak about how to blend plants and nature.Armitage is a writer and traveler who has organized tours ofthe great gardens of the world, and has created a smartphoneapp, Armitages Greatest Perennials & Annuals, which includespertinent information on plants, cultivation and maintenance.
The symposium is 8 a.m.-4 p.m.The conference center is at1169 Laurelhurst Ave. Details: www.scmmga.org
people,places, things{ }
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 37
Fall On The Lake.Amazing
The Lake Murray Specialists
View 100s of listings at:
803.345.1094
www.lakemurraysecialist.com
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38 Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013
{ past tense }
SEPTEMBER 1992
Amber Charlesworth attempts to keep a 20-foot-tall inatable monkey from tipping over as the oat she was riding on
in the Okra Strut parade passed under some stop lights along the route.
FILE PHOTOGRAPH/THE STATE
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Lake MurrayColumbia & Northeast Columbia | September 2013 39
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