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Archive for the ‘Our Area’ Category

Pies And Pints And The String Band Festival

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010
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We love music.  All kinds.  It tends to go well with pizza and beer and West Virginia in general.

Yes, we probably even like that kind that you don’t like, just a little.

F-holes: the world's first amplifiers.

So we’re incredibly happy to announce to anyone who doesn’t know that the Annual Appalachian String Band Festival at Camp Washington Carver is coming up.  They’re just on the other side of the New River Gorge from us, and we’d like to say with as much enthusiasm as possible that it’s well worth your time to check out.

Why?

It’s the oldest music festival in the country, for starters. That’s saying something.

But the real thing is, it still sounds like it. The String Band Festival, A.K.A Clifftop, isn’t a bluegrass festival; it’s old time music.  The style that’s pre-bluegrass.  (Just for clarifiacation, we’re not even about to go into a whole old-time Vs. bluegrass thing here).

Almost everyone at the festival is a musician.  Imagine that for a sec.  Thousands of people, camping out right on the rim of the New River Gorge, playing music.  For days.  If it sounds like fun to you, you’re right.

The music floats.  Through the trees, up and down the hills, in and out of the campground.  It’s ethereal.  Really.  And I’m not even sure what that word means.

Seriously, what could be better than something like this: come on up to the New River National Park, spend the day playing around (white water rafting, rock climbing, mountain biking, hiking, birding, etc.), come into Pies for an icy cold one and a taste of the goods, then drive over to Clifftop and get transported back in time through music.

So, here’s a proposition:  Come here.  Go to Clifftop.  Experience it, because it’s just about as authentic, down home Mountain State as anyone is ever going to get.

P.S.  The scene in the campground, which is what the fest is really all about, gets fired up around dusk.  It’ll stop around dawn.

Murals And Pizza And Beer

Friday, July 9th, 2010
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Let’s go back in time, shall we?

Sometime around 1890, there was a watering hole in downtown Charleston, West Virginia.  A saloon.

Restored Mural In The New Pies And Pints

In all its original glory

It was probably a pretty fun place to hang out.  It was there on Capitol Street, in the center of the city.  I’m imagining sawdust on the floor, an upright piano that belted out tin pan alley favorites till the wee hours.  Card games.  Cigar smoke.

You know what I’m talking about, right?  Like the old west, but back east.  With a West Virginia feel to it.  The side of the building had a big mural on the side- The White Elephant Saloon.

(Just a footnote:  It’s not this saloon.)

Now fast forward to the next century.

The buildings on Capitol Street have become a become a beautiful, walkable mall.  Great shops and restaurants are the new inhabitants, and there’s a community feel there for everyone that visits.

During a 2003 remodel, the building’s owner decided to take a peeK at what was under the paint on the wall.  Lo and behold, there sat the white elephant, a gorgeuous artifact from a time long past.

It was restored by Jesse Corliss, a designer who worked in the same building.  In 2004, the original painted sign on the brick wall, now inside the neighboring building, was brought back to life.

A few years later, the unthinkable happened.  Actually, maybe that’s a little dramatic.  Let’s put it another way:

Mural Mid-restoration In The New Pies And Pints

Mid restoration, coming along nicely.

In 2008, the remarkably stupid happened.

A person who shall remain nameless leased the space to open a restaurant.  For whatever reason (they hated beautiful, historical artwork?), they painted over it.  Ugh.

The restaurant never opened. Hmmmmm.

Enter Pies And Pints.  As lovers of all things cool, interesting, and delicious, there was no way we were going to let the elephant sit abandoned, forever relagated to a life under a coat of bland, boring paint.  We called up Jesse, the original restorer of the painting, to come back and re-restore it (is that a word?) to its original awesomeness.

And that’s what you’ll see, the sign for the White Elephant Saloon, when you come into the new Pies And Pints on Capitol Street.

Pretty cool, no?

What to Eat on Bridge Day

Thursday, October 8th, 2009
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The following is a guest post from the West Virginia Bridge Day Commission…

Bridge Day in West Virginia

Bridge Day in West Virginia

We suggest pizza and beer.

But, we always suggest that. And not just because we’re guesting on the P&P blog. It’s just that that’s really a perfect combination for almost anything.

Still, Bridge Day is the biggest festival in West Virginia. And it garners some unique food and fun opportunities that you won’t find in other places. For instance, Taste of Bridge Day, which is the party before the par-tay, as it were. Best food from around the gorge all Friday night long.

Then Saturday (that’s October 17), the jumping begins. If you don’t know the deal with Bridge Day, here it is: the New River Gorge Bridge closes down once a year to celebrate. And people jump off it, among lots of other stuff. Rappellers. Parachutes. Ziplines. Whitewater Rafting. Arts and crafts and food booths. The works.

Ok, for food out on the bridge during Bridge Day, I will be your temporary tour guide: Would you care for some funnel cake? Over here, we have a fine elephant ear topped with whipped crème. And then please indulge in this wonderfully sweet cotton candy flavored snow cone. Finish with a delectable deep-fried Snickers bar…

What?! Deep fried Snickers?! Ok, don’t eat too many of those or the bridge might not hold us.

Anyway, our Bridge Day festival is a very cool, once-a-year way to get a look at what we call fun around here. And all the fall colors are out, too. So it’s beautiful.

One last thing: We want you to participate in Bridge Day online, too. When you take pictures or video, or just want to comment on something, please plug in and do so. We’re on Facebook, Youtube, Flickr, and Twitter, too. Just tag anything you’ve got with #bridgeday, and everyone can enjoy it.

So, have fun, eat a lot, and we’ll see you out on the bridge!