Archive for the ‘The Badin Villager’ Category

The Badin Villager for September 2010

The Badin Villager is a free monthly newsletter available on the first of the month at the Badin Post Office, the Badin Town Hall, the Badin Library and West Badin Community Center. It is also published online at www.visitbadin.com. For more information contact info@visitbadin.com

Lorraine Tucker:Your Friend at the Town Hall

Badin Town Clerk, Lorraine Tucker

She’s the first person you see when you walk into the Badin Town Hall. Always cheerful and efficient, she has served the Town of Badin for 18 years, although it took the town officials 14 years to bestow an official title on her.

Her name is Lorraine Tucker and she is the Town Clerk, a title bestowed, finally, with a special ceremony in October, 2006. 

She runs her part of the administration so smoothly that it appears to run itself.

Make a note of the phone number 704-422-3470. This is how you reach her and, through her, the officials who run the town.

She always know where the mayor is, how to reach the chief of police or the city maintenance crew, and will transfer you to the town manager if she can’t help you herself.

She does favors that range from holding mail to selling the town booklet, collecting money for t-shirts for Better Badin and for cookbooks for the Badin School PTA. She’ll field a request to get a cat out of a tree,  and once coped with a cry for help to get two giant black snakes out of a well house.

Somehow, some way, if she can’t solve a problem herself, she’ll find someone who can.

Recently a local prankster called to ask for help to get his monkey down from a tree. She alerted the town hall staff and they prepared to go into action…until the jokester admitted his call was a hoax.

It’s all part of Tucker’s job that also happens to include coping with the town’s payroll, minutes from town council meetings and budget retreats, and acting as receptionist, information source, the town manager’s right-hand helper (she has now ‘trained’ more new young managers than she can count) and any other chore that lands on her desk.

She says that her days never go as planned. She has found a sense of humor is the quality she needs the most.

But she loves her job and Badin loves her. Call her first if your monkey gets up a tree.

A Message from Badin, Pakistan

Last week this message was posted on the town’s blog site, www.visitbadin.com. “Wow its nice to see Badin city. I am amazed to see development in this area. But in our city Badin in Sindh Pakistan, there are no such infrastructures and facilities. Both cities have same names but their fate is totally change.”

Badin, NC’s fate is ‘totally change’ from its early years, but this message brings home how lucky we are in this land of relative plenty. Research finds Badin, Pakistan has little more than swamps and rice paddies and has no drinkable water. Even so, one of their citizens can communicate with the world. A strange kind of progress.

Bridget Huckabee, Editor

Badin’s Busy Spring and Summer

Badin stirred from its long hard winter with a bang. Dogwoods and azaleas burst into bloom. Walkers took to the streets, and children to the ball park and school playground. Gardeners cranked up dormant lawn mowers and volunteers staged a grand clean-up.

With money from the Alcoa Foundation grant, town maintenance crews and volunteers set about planting trees: 18 single stem white crepe myrtles along Falls Rd. and Roosevelt St., 5 maples in Pine Street Park courtesy of Keep Stanly Beautiful, and 3 in West Badin Park, plus 5 maples in the school yard.

The bi-annual Town Clean-up netted old furniture, tires, appliances and just plain junk for the county land-fill.

On May 1, 2010, saleable goods were sold at the Town Yard Sale in aid of Better Badin.

On May 22, 2010, Badin Lake will see its first family oriented Catfish Bank Fishing Tournament. Bring your kids, your rod, a $10 entry fee, and try for that big one and a $100 first prize. There’ll be a tent at the boat landing. The swimming area will be closed during the event.

On June 19, 2010, Badin will be inundated with athletes swimming, running and bicycling about town as the Badin Triathalon gets under way. Plans are in the works for a house and garden tour in the afternoon and a band at the village green that night.

July 3, 2010, Kirk Place and Boyden Street will come alive with food, entertainment and fireworks as Badin Inn celebrates America’s birthday. The event is free and open to the public.

The Best of Badin Festival is scheduled for September 17 and 18, 2010.

News to Use

www.visitbadin.com

Badin now has a blog site where residents and friends of Badin can communicate their thoughts on life in our small town. You’ll find the Badin Villager, breaking news, a photo gallery, local history, an occasional video, and links to other local sites. Your  comments are welcome.       

Subscriptions to the Villager

Do you know an ex-Badinite, or an out-of-town friend or a relative who would like to receive the Badin Villager? Subscriptions are now available. Send a check to publisher William Harwood at  P. O. Box 682, Badin, NC 28009.  A one year subscription of 12 copies is $12.00. 

Visit Your Local Museums

If you haven’t visited the town’s museum complex now is the time to do so. See a time-line of Badin history, rare photos of dam construction, the old fire truck, and a quadraplex as it was in 1915.  Museums are open Sun. from 2 pm to 5 pm and Tues. from 9 am to noon and 1 pm to 3 pm.

Library News from Badin Librarian Jenny Allen

Summer reading is around the corner. Registration from birth to 17 years of age, starts the first week of June. The kick-off is June 15th at 10:30 AM at the Agri Civic Center featuring Steve Somers, The Amazing Teacher. Come by the library during the second week of May to pick up your schedule of programs and other information regarding the summer reading program. 704.422.3218

Better Badin: A Unique Concept

In the 1980’s, a group of local residents met with the intent of beautifying their town. They named the group Better Badin.

But Better Badin soon found itself caught up in more than beautification. Controversy, politics and a decision that would alter the town forever overtook their initial intent.

Seeking relief from a rising crime rate and realizing the need for a town police force, this small group became   instrumental in the 1990  incorporation of Badin.

In 1994, with the town government and police department well established, the group turned its attention to promoting the town. David Summerlin and Bill Speight proposed a festival to be named Best of Badin that would operate  under the auspices of Better Badin. In the fall of that year rain ruined the first try, but in later years the festival became the town’s big event, attracting thousands to Badin’s downtown.

Today, the group continues its efforts to beautify and promote the town. The leadership has changed, getting a little younger each year, but the unique format remains the same.

Unlike most civic organizations that often require membership dues and conduct structured meetings, Better Badin only meets the standards required by its incorporated status. It has a duly elected board of officers.

Beyond that, Better Badin is unique in that no membership is required and meetings are strictly informal. The philosophy is ‘turn up when you want to, speak when you please, and for heaven’s sake volunteer for something. We always need the help.’

Better Badin meets at 7 PM on the second Monday of every month at Badin Town Hall. Everyone is welcome.

 

Best of Badin Festival Draws Big Crowds to Badin’s Downtown

A Letter to Badin

This month you’ll find a letter attached to the print edition of the Badin Villager. Please take the time to read it. Many of you are already working on the points the letter lists as ways to help the town prosper. Whether owner, renter, resident or friend of Badin, it benefits all of us to see our town flourish, and the town can only overcome the challenges it faces if we pull together as a community. It  can’t be done overnight, but we can and will make this a vibrant town, a source of pride, a place to brag about. Let’s start with the little actions suggested in the letter.  A journey of a thousand miles begins with one small step.  Bridget Huckabee, Editor

Keeping Badin Beautiful

Badin Duplex, Henderson Street

Every day, spring through fall, a band of dedicated volunteers waters the flower pots that line the pavement in Badin’s downtown. Every fall, on a special workday before the Best of Badin Festival, this small army clips shrubbery, spreads pine straw and plants mums around the Town Hall, the Library and the Museum.

Badin is that kind of community where residents pitch in to make the town beautiful. But a lot of those volunteers are aging and their younger replacements lead busy lives filled with work and family.

Better Badin, the organization that pioneered this community work force, finds it increasingly difficult to recruit the Flower Pot Brigade,  the Festival work crew, or volunteers to run the Best of Badin Festival.

“Better Badin was started to bring the community together,” says Elvin Fisher, former Badin School Principal and former Better Badin president. “The Festival was initiated to unite us even more, to give us something to be proud of.”

Today, with a $250,000 grant from the Alcoa Foundation, east and west Badin are sprucing up with new trees. Renovation is underway on the facades of businesses along Falls Road. But without  volunteers to keep the flowers watered and the shrubbery trimmed, and without residents to keep their own neighborhoods tidy, all the grant money and Better Badin committees dedicated to helping Badin may fail to make this unique town what it has the potential to be.

Volunteerism, community spirit and community pride was what Badin had in its past, what it still has now and what it needs to nurture for its future.

Badin’s Back Yard

It’s spring and the outdoors beckons and Badinites need look no farther than their own back yard. All around us, folded into the Uwharries, bordered by the Yadkin/Pee Dee River, is a quiet oasis for hikers, fishermen, boaters, canoeists and kayakers.

For the ultimate adventure, take a ‘night of the full moon’ kayak trip through dreamlike stretches of the Falls Reservoir. Laze by your own campfire on the slopes of Morrow Mountain. Ramp up the pace and water ski on Lake Tillery or Badin Lake, bicycle along  a Scenic Byway or hike a trail through the serene forests of Morrow Mountain.

Badin Lake, with its swimming areas, boat landings, picnic areas, and abundance of wildlife, is an ideal place for the outdoor enthusiastic. Bait a line and compete for that big one with ospreys, great blue herons and bald eagles.

Looking for a little more civilized pursuit? Try a round of golf on the Badin course and finish with a quiet drink on a terrace overlooking the rolling hills that encompass the town. 

Kayaking Under the Narrows Dam

News to Use

www.visitbadin.com

Badin now has a blog site where residents and friends of Badin can communicate their thoughts on life in our small town. You’ll find the Badin Villager, breaking news, a photo gallery, local history, an occasional video, and links to other local sites. Your   comments are welcome.       

Subscriptions to the Villager

Do you know an ex-Badinite, or an out-of-town friend or a relative who would like to receive the Badin Villager? Subscriptions are now available. Send a check to publisher William Harwood at     P. O. Box 682, Badin, NC 28009.  A one year subscription of 12    copies is $12.00. 

Visit Your Local Museums

If you haven’t visited the town’s museum complex now is the time to do so. See a time-line of Badin history, rare photos of dam construction, the old fire truck, and a quadraplex as it was in 1915.  Museums are open Sun. from 2 pm to 5 pm and Tues. from 9 am to noon and 1 pm to 3 pm.