SportsTalk: Coach’s Corner: Craddock And Rogers WIZS Players Of The Week

When not in a pool or on the soccer field, you might find Kailen Craddock on horseback.  Craddock wasn’t named women’s varsity WIZS Player of the Week for her equestrian skills but for her work in the pool at Vance Charter. The sophomore swimmer placed 3rd in the regionals and 13th overall after turning in a time of 116.15 in the 100 meter breaststroke.  Her performance was good enough to make her this week’s women’s player of the week.

For the men’s varsity player of the week, the honor goes to Drew Rogers, a senior basketball player at Crossroads Christian.  Rogers is averaging 20 points per game. On February 4th he scored 20 against Lee Christian and last night he scored 25 in the semi-finals of the Mid Carolina Conference tournament also against Lee Christian.  His performance for the team makes him the men’s varsity player of the week. Tonight Crossroads Christian plays Grace Christian for the conference championship.

The WIZS Players of the Week can be heard every Friday at 1 p.m. during the Coach’s Corner segment of Sportstalk on WIZS 1450AM, 100.1FM and online at wizs.com.  Congratulations to both Kailen Craddock and Drew Rogers.

 

Granville County Sheriff

One Man Dead After Officer-Involved Shooting Near Stovall On Feb. 9

One man is dead following a shooting involving a sheriff’s deputy in northern Granville County Wednesday.

County Public Information Officer Terry Hobgood released a statement Thursday evening about the incident, which occurred on Feb. 9.

“Granville County Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to a 911 hang up call about a disturbance at a residence located at 7646 Reavis Road at approximately 5:25 p.m,” the statement began.

According to the report, a male subject at the residence  had committed an assault and then left, armed with a shotgun.

Attempts to locate the male subject were unsuccessful. Deputies responded to a second call at 6:29 p.m. and were advised that the male subject had returned to the residence, still armed with a shotgun. The 23-year-old male subject exited the residence  with a shotgun and ran into the woods. As deputies were searching for the subject and attempting to secure the scene, the subject fired at one of the deputies. The deputy returned fire, striking the subject. Deputies rendered first aid to the male subject and EMS was called to the scene. The subject was transported to Duke University Medical Center where he later died. The North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation is investigating. The deputy who shot the subject has been placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of the investigation.

Cooperative Extension with Jamon Glover: Supervision And Safety Pt2

Listen live at 100.1 FM / 1450 AM / or on the live stream at WIZS.com at 11:50 a.m. Mon, Tues & Thurs.

 

The Local Skinny! Junior Firefighter Program

Area fire departments and the Henderson-Vance Recreation & Parks Department are teaming up to host a free Junior Firefighter Program for young people while they’re out of school for spring break.

Vance County Fire Chief and Fire Marshal Chris Wright said the three-day program will be a way to help educate youngsters between the ages of 11-15 about fire safety. But they’ll also get the chance to check out those shiny red fire engines and all the equipment and tools that firefighters use.

Wright spoke Thursday with John C. Rose on The Local Skinny! to discuss the program, which was first held in 2019. COVID-19 forced cancellation in 2020 and 2021, but “we’re kicking it back off this year,” Wright said.

Parents must register their child at Aycock Recreation Center by March 27. The program is open to the first 15 participants. The program will take place April 18-20, 2022.

The participants will tour the city and county fire departments, EMS and Rescue Squad. The Henderson Fire Department will provide their smoke trailer and the young people can experience simulated smoke conditions.

They’ll learn the importance of knowing two ways out of their house in case of a fire, as well as having a designated meeting place that all family members know about in case they get separated in a fire emergency.

In addition to safe home evacuations, the participants will learn safety basics of water rescue and removing victims from vehicles in an emergency.

“They’ll have projects to work on through the program,” Wright said, and then they will get the chance to present those projects to city and county officials at a culminating activity at the end of the three-day event.

“The guys here at the fire department love it,” Wright said of their participation in the junior firefighter program.

“It’s a good program that Kendrick (Vann) brought to our attention a few years ago,” Wright said, referring to the HVPRD director.

The junior firefighter program is a way to help draw interest from the younger crowd, which could result in a young person wanting to become a volunteer firefighter or even make it a career.

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TownTalk: How One Veteran Uses Art, Journaling And Genealogy To Battle Brain Injury And Cancer

Following is Part 1 of an interview with a U.S. Army veteran who is using art to deal with physical challenges, including PTSD, a traumatic brain injury and cancer. Part 2 is scheduled to air on Feb. 24.

 Kim Knight’s experience in the U.S. Army working in Medevac flight operations may have prepared her – on one level – for the medical challenges she now faces. But it’s her grit and determination and faith that keep her moving forward in the face of those physical challenges.

Knight has been a single mom putting herself through college, she’s owned several businesses and she’s been an emergency medical technician in several states during her adult life.

And most recently, Knight is learning how to manage her “new” life as she deals with the lingering effects of traumatic brain injury.

Speaking from her home in Carson City, Nevada, she told Town Talk co-host Phyllis Maynard and John C. Rose that when she finally was discharged from the hospital, after being in a coma for weeks, that she felt without purpose.

It has been a very long struggle to try to find that purpose, but Knight said she thinks she’s on the right path.

“I very recently joined a traumatic brain injury artist group,” she said. “We share different mediums – from crayons to oil paints, and crafts of every kind.” Knight is part of a new series on Town Talk called Former Active Duty: Still Boots on the Ground which focuses on how military veterans are facing challenges in their lives after service.

Knight said that before her TBI event, she suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

The art has helped her, she said.

“It has helped tremendously. When I start to feel stressed or feel that anxiety that comes on from PTSD or I start feeling down, I can pick up my watercolors and start creating.”

“Sometimes it’s beautiful and sometimes it’s a ghastly mess,” she admitted. “It’s a process of diving into something and the rest of the struggles and the rest of the traumas melt away.”

Knight also is a cancer patient. She said she chooses to focus on the here and now and to live for the moment, and not in the shadow of a cancer diagnosis.

She marvels a little at this newfound ability to create art, but said perhaps it took a TBI for her to tap into this creative side that she’s uncovering. She said earlier in her life, maybe she was too busy raising children and going to college and running businesses.

“I don’t know where it comes from,” she said, adding that having the time to relax and create has allowed her “to just let go.”

The brain can create new neuropathways, she said, “to work around the broken partsl” These new pathways can produce improvements in areas like memory and executive function – the ability to plan and carry out plans.

Journaling is an activity that Knight had enjoyed long before her TBI event. She said she found it very therapeutic and healing. And now, she said, “journaling helps me to get the things out that I am struggling with.” She also uses journaling as a memory tool.

She said it’s tough to know that her brain doesn’t work like it used to and coming to grips with reduced cognitive ability is difficult.

“I tend to be extremely hard on myself,” she said. But despite that, she said she is happy to be able to continue doing something now that she had done before the TBI event.

Something else that Knight was interested in long before her brain injury is genealogy and she said she’d probably be researching genealogy until she could no longer read at the computer or until the day she dies.

“Genealogy is something I’ve been doing for nearly 50 years,” she said. “It brings me so much joy to be able to piece together the history of our families – it’s one of my passions.”

 

You’ll hear more about genealogy and Knight’s research which helps individuals piece together information about their families’ histories in Part 2 of the Town Talk interview.

 

 

 

Vance County High School

SportsTalk: Vance Co. Vipers Hoping For Wins To Make Playoffs

The state high school basketball playoffs are just around the corner and despite only having a 5-11 record on the season, Vance Co. High School Athletic Director Joe Sharrow thinks the Vipers have a good shot at getting in.  Sharrow was a guest on today’s SportsTalk with Trey Snide.

Sharrow knows that it will take a few more wins and those wins have to start with tonight’s game against Northern Lakes Conference rival Durham School of the Arts who are 3-17 on the season. While 5-11 against 3-17 might not look like much Sharrow says records are misleading, “The Northern Lakes Conference is a Murderer’s Row,” Sharrow said. Case in point, Vance County beat Southern Durham in what Sharrow calls the best win in school history to only lose to them in a second game a few days later.

Sharrow acknowleges the Vipers got off to a slow start but he says key injuries played a role and now that the Vipers are healthy he expects the team to be strong going into the final weeks of the season.

There won’t be much time to rest after tonight’s game as the Vipers will welcome J.F. Webb to Henderson tomorrow night for senior night.  J.F. Webb won the previous matchup in Oxford on a last second shot 57-54. Sharrow says if the Vipers can win tonight and tomorrow they will likely make the state playoffs.  If they drop one of these two games it will take a run in the conference tournament to get in.

The conference tournament will take place Tuesday, Thursday and Friday of next week.

 

TRLC Volunteers Plant 1,700 Trees and Shrubs To Create Buffers Along Streams

Winter is tree planting time for Tar River Land Conservancy (TRLC). With the help of 70 volunteers, TRLC planted 1,700 tree and shrub seedlings over five days in January. Seedlings were planted on 4.5 acres of fields located near Dickens Creek and Lake  Holt on TRLC-owned land in Granville County. Volunteers for these events included students, families and individuals from Granville, Durham, Wake and Alamance counties.

The January events were the continuation of a multi-year project to create forested buffers along streams that flow into Lake Holt and Falls Lake. The reservoirs supply drinking water to  Granville and Wake counties. Since 2019, TRLC staff and volunteers  have planted more than  4,000 seedlings to reforest 11 acres of conservation land near Butner and Stem.

The staff at N.C. State’s Butner Beef Cattle Research Farm helped TRLC prepare the tree-planting areas before volunteers arrived. Holes were dug for each seedling using a tractor-powered auger. This allowed volunteers to easily plant seedlings using hand tools. Additionally, the loose soil will give the seedling roots more space to grow over the first year.

“We planted two dozen species of tree and shrubs,” noted David Thomas, TRLC land stewardship manager. “The goal is to restore a diverse stand of trees that will filter runoff from adjoining fields while also providing food for wildlife and nectar for pollinator insects.”

Seedlings should begin growing in March and April once spring temperatures arrive. Seedlings planted during the events included several types of oaks, hickories and hollies, as well as tulip poplar, beech, dogwood, redbud, crabapple, persimmon, blackgum, blueberry and witch hazel.  Translucent tree shelters were installed to promote seedling growth and to protect each seedling from damage by whitetail deer. The tree shelters will be removed when the saplings are fully established in five to seven years.

TRLC received funding for seedlings, tree shelters and preparing the sites from the N.C. Land and Water Fund, Raleigh’s Watershed Protection Program, and the alumni and families of the Tau Chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha.

Since 2017, TRLC has acquired11 properties totaling 1,442 acres in the Lake Holt watershed in Granville County. This land will remain permanently undeveloped to protect water quality in Lake Holt and to limit develop around Camp Butner, a military installation managed by the N.C. Army National Guard. TRLC’s land holdings in this area includes the Roberts Chapel Conservation Area – located at 792 Roberts Chapel Road – where TRLC opened 1.5 miles of public hiking trails last year.

Visit www.tarriver.org to see photos of the January 2022 tree planting events taken by photographer Sam Upchurch and others. To learn more about volunteer opportunities with Tar River Land Conservancy, send an email volunteer@tarriver.org or call 919.496.5902.