If you’ve ever had a garden, you know the feeling of excitement and expectation associated with planting seeds or slips and waiting for the reward of harvesting a vine-ripened tomato, crooked neck squash or, heck, even that umpteenth zucchini that you pawn off on unsuspecting neighbors or “city folk.”
It’s the same with farmers, but there’s a lot more at stake. For those men and women whose livelihood is farming and agriculture, the excitement and expectation is there every planting season, but all it takes is one ill-timed storm or prolonged drought to reduce a bountiful harvest to a washout.
At Wednesday’s ‘State of Agriculture’ luncheon hosted by the Henderson-Vance Chamber of Commerce, about 100 individuals gathered at the Vance County Regional Farmers Market to champion agriculture, its importance to the area and how the community can support those local producers.
Dr. Wykia Macon, director of the Vance County Cooperative Extension, told the group that agriculture is “undeniably central to our lives,” adding that cooperative extension programs support agriculture in all its forms – from livestock and horticulture to youth programs like 4-H.
Vance County is a microcosm for the larger landscape of agriculture, she said. The loss of farms and farmland, as well as a smaller labor pool and having more farmer approaching retirement age all are factors that shape agriculture today.
She advocates an “intergenerational transfer of knowledge” and said veteran farmers have a wealth of knowledge to share with the younger generation.
But the younger farmers have something to offer, too. They are using technology tools from advanced irrigation equipment to drones to make farming more economical and sustainable. High tunnels extend the growing season, which helps producers get local produce to markets sooner.
Making farming more economical and sustainable grows more important by the day, it seems.
Macon said finding ways to embrace technology, being comfortable with trying new things and going into farming with a business mindset all serve today’s producers well.
The word “sustainable” is a trendy buzz word used in agriculture to describe farming practices that are ecologically sound.
But Jay Boyette, manager of Regulatory and State Government Relations with Farm Bureau, said sustainable applies to the business practices related to farming and agriculture.
“Farming is a lifestyle, but it’s also a business,” Boyette told the group, adding that the financial side of farming sometimes is an afterthought.
There are 238 farms in Vance County, which means that’s 238 businesses that are doing business in one form or another.
The tobacco or soybean farmer has a market for what he produces, but the small farmer also has a market, whether it’s a spot at the local farmers market or a farmstand on his or her own property.
“The Number 1 challenge is farm profitability,” Boyette said. It’s a real challenge to make a profit, and it’s not uncommon for a farmer to have a “day job” that bankrolls his agricultural endeavors.
The second challenge is farmland preservation,“We’re losing farmland at a very high rate in our state,” he said.
So what’s a farmer to do?
Boyette has one word: Agritourism.
It’s both a blessing and a curse to be in close proximity to more urban areas like Raleigh and Durham. Farmers, in their search to add value to what they already do, are turning to agritourism.
More and more, people are looking for opportunities to experience agriculture, whether it’s to pick strawberries in the spring or get up close with farm animals and check out the daily chores associated with farm life.
Local farmer Thomas Shaw summed it up in a word: Change.
Used to be, most farmers had a cow for milk, chickens for eggs and the occasional Sunday dinner, and a few hogs in the hog pen.
“You look around, all that’s gone,” Shaw told the group. “That was the backbone of Vance County.”
Change may be inevitable, and farmers, like everybody else, make adjustments to the way they do business. That’s how agriculture remains relevant.
WIZS Radio Henderson Local News 05-23-25 Noon
/by WIZS StaffListen On Air at 8am, 12pm, 5pm M-F
WIZS Radio ~ 100.1FM/1450AM
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Henderson Police: Two Arrested Following Searches That Yield Drugs, Guns In Separate Incidents
/by WIZS Staff— information courtesy of Henderson Police Chief Marcus Barrow
Over the past couple of days, Henderson Police have made arrests in two separate incidents that resulted in confiscation of drugs and weapons.
On Wednesday, May 21, officers responded to a call reporting individuals with firearms in the area of 925 Orange St., according to information from Police Chief Marcus Barrow.
Upon arrival, officers observed a vehicle parked on the roadway and noted marijuana in plain view inside the vehicle. A probable cause search was conducted, leading to the discovery of three fully automatic handguns—one of which was confirmed stolen—as well as approximately 670 dosage units of heroin, approximately 52 blue pills suspected to contain fentanyl and marijuana.
A 17-year-old juvenile was taken into custody and charged with the following offenses:
The juvenile posted a $165,000 bond.
On Tuesday, May 20, 2025, police officers, in collaboration with the Vance County Sheriff’s Office, executed a narcotics search warrant at a residence located at 936 Bridgers St.
As a result of the investigation and subsequent search, officers seized approximately 81 grams of crack cocaine, 5.2 grams of powder cocaine, and drug manufacturing equipment.
Richard Andrew Durham, 48, was arrested in connection with this investigation.
Durham has been charged with the following offenses:
Durham received a $200,000 secured bond and is currently being held at the Vance County Detention Center pending his next court appearance.
The Henderson Police Department remains committed to working with local and regional partners to combat illegal drug activity in our community.
WIZS Radio Henderson Local News 05-22-25 Noon
/by WIZS StaffListen On Air at 8am, 12pm, 5pm M-F
WIZS Radio ~ 100.1FM/1450AM
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Cooperative Extension with Jamon Glover: Accountability Without Shame
/by WIZS StaffVance County Cooperative Extension with Jamon Glover
Listen live at 100.1 FM / 1450 AM / or on the live stream at WIZS.com at 11:50 a.m. Mon, Tues & Thurs.
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Maria Parham Oncology Director Kimberly Smith Honored With Mercy Award From LifePoint Health
/by WIZS Staff— courtesy of Maria Parham Health
Maria Parham Health is proud to announce that Kimberly Smith, RN, BSN, Director of Oncology, has been named the hospital’s recipient of the 2025 Mercy Award, the highest honor given to a LifePoint Health employee.
The Mercy Award, named in memory of LifePoint Health’s founding chairman Scott Mercy, recognizes one individual at each LifePoint facility who exemplifies the company’s commitment to making communities healthier through extraordinary compassion, dedication and service.
With nearly 20 years of service at Maria Parham Health, Smith has dedicated her career to caring for others, serving in multiple departments including Med/Surg, Labor & Delivery, Inpatient Rehabilitation, and most notably, Oncology—where her light shines brightest.
“Kimberly is the kind of person who makes an immediate impact wherever she goes,” said Bert Beard, CEO of Maria Parham Health. “Her unwavering dedication to our patients, her team, and our entire community is truly inspiring. Kim doesn’t just show up to do her job—she lives out our mission every day. We are incredibly proud to recognize her as our 2025 Mercy Award winner.”
Kimberly is known for going above and beyond, making herself available to support not only patients but also their families and fellow employees. Outside the hospital, she is deeply involved in community outreach efforts, regularly organizing initiatives to provide food, clothing and resources to those in need.
She plays a key role in organizing the hospital’s annual Cancer Survivor’s Dinner, hosts awareness events focused on cancer education, and partners with organizations like the Henderson Fire Department’s Boot Drive and the Angel Fund to ensure patients receive both financial and emotional support during their treatment journey.
Those who work with Kimberly consistently describe her with words like “compassionate,” “committed,” “selfless,” and “kind” —qualities that reflect the very spirit of the Mercy Award.
Maria Parham Health congratulates Kimberly Smith on this well-deserved recognition and thanks her for being a beacon of hope, healing and humanity within the hospital and beyond.
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The Local Skinny! Grand Opening of Community Garden at VCRFM
/by WIZS StaffThe community garden at the Vance County Regional Farmers Market has its official grand opening this Saturday, and Horticulture and Field Crops agent Michael Ellington invites folks to come out to see the result of months of preparation and what has been achieved.
Cooperative Extension staff will be on hand from 12 noon to 2 p.m. to answer questions and to share information about the newest addition to the farmers market campus.
It’s a place where gardeners of all skill levels are welcome to learn and share their own knowledge about growing fruits and vegetables.
Garden beds are available to rent for the growing season – each 4 foot by 8 foot bed is $40 for the whole season.
Community gardens provide lots of benefits, Ellington said. Fresh, healthy food is just the beginning.
Access to affordable, nutritious food can be limited, especially in underserved neighborhoods and communities, he said. Garden plots like the ones at the farmers market offer local hands-on solutions that can reduce food inequality and increase availability.
And it just makes sense that folks who grow their own fruits and vegetables are likely to eat more of each. Community gardens give people power over what they eat, he said.
Community gardens can bring diverse groups together, and soon, new friends are swapping recipes and stories while they pull weeds and keep their plots watered.
These places “reveal that social fabric that holds communities together,” Ellington said.
It’s also a place where children can learn first-hand about where their food comes from – literally – not from a video screen or a textbook.
“They learn by planting seeds, watching them sprout and harvesting what they’ve nurtured,” Ellington said.
Planting a garden can reduce grocery bills and can reduce the amount of food waste that ends up in the landfill.
Community gardens also send a clear message to prospective businesses that residents care about where they live.
If you’d like more information about the community garden, visit the cooperative extension website at https://vance.ces.ncsu.edu, call 252.438.8188 or email Ellington at maellington@ncsu.edu.
There are many ways to help, from volunteering to sponsoring to making a direct donation.
And if you don’t have a green thumb, don’t fret. Just spread the word about the community garden to friends and neighbors.
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TownTalk: Around Old Granville – Warren and Franklin County Historical Markers
/by Laura GabelTwo schools, both chartered in 1787, have historical markers that underscore their longevity and importance to their respective counties. The Warrenton Male Academy – more recently known as John Graham High School and then John Graham Middle School – had a local Who’s Who on its board of trustees when it was first started.
And Louisburg College, which got its start as separate academies for males and females, is the oldest church-related coeducational two-year school in the nation.
Local historian and Thornton Library’s North Carolina Room Specialist Mark Pace joined WIZS’s Bill Harris Thursday to wrap up an Around Old Granville series about historical markers that dot the countryside in Vance, Granville, Warren and Franklin counties.
There are 57 across the area, which Pace said shows just how significant the people, events and places are to the state, the nation and to the world.
Take Nathaniel Macon, whose marker is in Warren County. His family came here in the mid-1700’s, and Macon became the Speaker of the U.S. House. If you remember your Civics lesson about the legislative and executive branches of government, you will know that the Speaker of the House is second in line to be president, after the vice president, Pace explained.
But Macon was an austere sort and Pace said the only thing Macon felt the government should do was “provide for the common defense and maybe the post office – anything else was intrusive government.”
He left strict instructions that his grave would have no tombstone – too flashy. Anyone with occasion to pass by his grave was asked to simply toss a rock on it, Pace said.
“There’s a big, giant pile of rocks on his grave,” Pace said.
John H. Kerr served 30 years in the U.S. Congress. He also was a long-time mayor of Warrenton, but it was his efforts in the U.S. Congress that got his name on the new lake that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers completed in the mid-1950’s.
John A. Hyman was the first African American to represent North Carolina in Congress. Born into slavery in Warren County, he was moved to Alabama but returned home after the Civil War ended. He served one term and when he came back to North Carolina, he was a delegate to the second state Freedman’s Convention and later served several terms in the State Senate.
Franklin County has fewer markers than the other three counties that originally were part of Old Granville, only seven to date.
One is Green Hill Place, the site of the first Methodist Episcopal church conference in the state, way back in 1785.
John Williamson, a former enslaved person, became a state legislator and then a well-known newspaper publisher. He established his newspaper, The Banner, when he was appointed to the state’s Industrial Commission as a way to promote educational and industrial topics related to his new role.
Moses Hopkins was the first African American to graduate from the Presbyterian Auburn Seminary in New York. After he graduated in 1877, he moved to Franklinton and established Albion Academy in 1879. He was appointed U.S. ambassador to Liberia in 1885 and he died there in 1886.
Then there’s Thomas Bickett, the only governor of the state to hail from Franklin County. Bickett was the state’s attorney general and served in the State House. He was governor from 1917-1921.
He died young, the same year he left the governor’s office.
Another Franklin County man with a promising future in literature was Edwin Wiley Fuller. He died of consumption – later known as tuberculosis – at age 28. He was author of Sea-Gift and Angel in the Cloud.
Pace said Fuller wrote an account of a plantation burning in one of his works. Margaret Mitchell was reportedly a fan of Fuller’s writing, and Pace speculates that the scene of Tara burning in her book, Gone With the Wind, may have been inspired by Fuller.
Fuller also wrote a fanciful tale about a fellow who went around the neighborhood telling tall tales that people fall for, Pace said, that another fan – none other than Mark Twain – may have used to base his famous story, The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County.
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Chamber’s ‘State Of Agriculture’ Remembers History, Speaks To Future Of Farming
/by Laura GabelIf you’ve ever had a garden, you know the feeling of excitement and expectation associated with planting seeds or slips and waiting for the reward of harvesting a vine-ripened tomato, crooked neck squash or, heck, even that umpteenth zucchini that you pawn off on unsuspecting neighbors or “city folk.”
It’s the same with farmers, but there’s a lot more at stake. For those men and women whose livelihood is farming and agriculture, the excitement and expectation is there every planting season, but all it takes is one ill-timed storm or prolonged drought to reduce a bountiful harvest to a washout.
At Wednesday’s ‘State of Agriculture’ luncheon hosted by the Henderson-Vance Chamber of Commerce, about 100 individuals gathered at the Vance County Regional Farmers Market to champion agriculture, its importance to the area and how the community can support those local producers.
Dr. Wykia Macon, director of the Vance County Cooperative Extension, told the group that agriculture is “undeniably central to our lives,” adding that cooperative extension programs support agriculture in all its forms – from livestock and horticulture to youth programs like 4-H.
Vance County is a microcosm for the larger landscape of agriculture, she said. The loss of farms and farmland, as well as a smaller labor pool and having more farmer approaching retirement age all are factors that shape agriculture today.
She advocates an “intergenerational transfer of knowledge” and said veteran farmers have a wealth of knowledge to share with the younger generation.
But the younger farmers have something to offer, too. They are using technology tools from advanced irrigation equipment to drones to make farming more economical and sustainable. High tunnels extend the growing season, which helps producers get local produce to markets sooner.
Making farming more economical and sustainable grows more important by the day, it seems.
Macon said finding ways to embrace technology, being comfortable with trying new things and going into farming with a business mindset all serve today’s producers well.
The word “sustainable” is a trendy buzz word used in agriculture to describe farming practices that are ecologically sound.
But Jay Boyette, manager of Regulatory and State Government Relations with Farm Bureau, said sustainable applies to the business practices related to farming and agriculture.
“Farming is a lifestyle, but it’s also a business,” Boyette told the group, adding that the financial side of farming sometimes is an afterthought.
There are 238 farms in Vance County, which means that’s 238 businesses that are doing business in one form or another.
The tobacco or soybean farmer has a market for what he produces, but the small farmer also has a market, whether it’s a spot at the local farmers market or a farmstand on his or her own property.
“The Number 1 challenge is farm profitability,” Boyette said. It’s a real challenge to make a profit, and it’s not uncommon for a farmer to have a “day job” that bankrolls his agricultural endeavors.
The second challenge is farmland preservation,“We’re losing farmland at a very high rate in our state,” he said.
So what’s a farmer to do?
Boyette has one word: Agritourism.
It’s both a blessing and a curse to be in close proximity to more urban areas like Raleigh and Durham. Farmers, in their search to add value to what they already do, are turning to agritourism.
More and more, people are looking for opportunities to experience agriculture, whether it’s to pick strawberries in the spring or get up close with farm animals and check out the daily chores associated with farm life.
Local farmer Thomas Shaw summed it up in a word: Change.
Used to be, most farmers had a cow for milk, chickens for eggs and the occasional Sunday dinner, and a few hogs in the hog pen.
“You look around, all that’s gone,” Shaw told the group. “That was the backbone of Vance County.”
Change may be inevitable, and farmers, like everybody else, make adjustments to the way they do business. That’s how agriculture remains relevant.
TownTalk: Granville County Tourism Ramps Up
/by WIZS StaffGranville County is bustin’ at the seams with springtime events designed to get families out and about, from Quittin’ Time in downtown Oxford on Thursday evenings, live music in Bullock and a Memorial Day wreath-laying service at Butner Gazebo Park on Monday, May 26.
Angela Allen, now a decade in as the county’s Tourism director, said these are just a few of opportunities available in the coming weeks to keep folks entertained and connected with the community.
In her early days in the job, she said springtime events were much fewer. “All I had was the Easter Bunny,” she joked on WIZS’s TownTalk segment Wednesday. “Spring is springing all over the place,” she said.
The RedBird Theater is bringing Eureka Day to the city hall auditorium Saturday, May 24. The show, which begins at 7:30 p.m., combines comedy and drama to reveal how a progressive private school deals with making tough decisions about a measles outbreak and more divisive issues. There’s a link to purchase tickets at www.visitgranvillenc.com.
Crokinole, anyone? How about disc golf? Oxford has clubs for both. Crokinole – pronounced CROW (like the bird) kuh nole – is a game played on a round tabletop board. The goal is to flick a small disc into the hole in the board’s center, sort of like shuffleboard, Allen explained.
The local club normally has Open Nights on Thursdays at Tobacco Wood Brewing Co. for anyone interested in learning more about the game, but Allen said it’s on pause for now because of Quittin’ Time. Check out their Facebook page to find out more.
Here’s a quick rundown of upcoming events in and around Granville County:
Read more details at these and other events taking place in Granville County at www.visitgranvillenc.com
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Home and Garden Show
/by WIZS StaffOn the Home and Garden Show with Vance Co. Cooperative Ext.
Thank you to our caller for calling in and leaving a question!
The Vance County Cooperative Extension is located at 305 Young St, Henderson, NC 27536
The Vance County Regional Farmers Market is located at 210 Southpark Dr., Henderson, NC 27536
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