Allegheny Mountain Radio

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1370 AM WVMR - Frost, WV

91.9 FM WVMR FM - Hillsboro, WV

88.5 FM WNMP - Marlinton, WV

89.7 FM WVLS - Monterey, VA

107.1 FM WCHG - Hot Springs

, VA

103.5 FM W278AL - Durbin, WV

WVMR went on the air in August 1981, WVLS in May 1995, WCHG in June 1995, W278AL in July 1998, WVMR-FM in October 2010, and WNMP in September 2011.

Today marks 82 years since 160,000 Allied troops crossed the English Channel to storm the beaches of Normandy.To everyon...
06/06/2026

Today marks 82 years since 160,000 Allied troops crossed the English Channel to storm the beaches of Normandy.

To everyone who served, to the families who have carried these names for generations, and to the ones who never made it home—we remember.

📍 National D-Day Memorial | 3 Overlord Circle, Bedford, VA

Moseymore Lavender Farm Brings Its Festival Back — Bigger Than Ever — on June 6thBy Danny Cardwell  |  Allegheny Mountai...
06/05/2026

Moseymore Lavender Farm Brings Its Festival Back — Bigger Than Ever — on June 6th
By Danny Cardwell | Allegheny Mountain Radio | June 2026

There is a place in Millboro where the air smells like lavender, your phone can wait, and whatever you are carrying — joy or grief — is welcome at the gate.

Moseymore Lavender Farm, co-founded by Teece Nowell and her husband Doug, opens its second annual Lavender Festival this Saturday, June 6th, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 188 Over the Hill Lane in Millboro. What started last year as a grand opening with a handful of vendors has grown into a full community festival, drawing craft and art vendors from across the region and beyond.

Teece Nowell joined Allegheny Mountain Radio — for her third appearance on the show — to talk about what is in store this weekend and what makes Moseymore a place unlike anything else in the Allegheny Highlands.

From Grand Opening to Full Festival

Last year’s event was Moseymore’s public debut — a thousand lavender plants in the ground and a handful of vendors welcoming the community for the first time. This year, Nowell put out a call and the response exceeded expectations.

“Last year we had four or five vendors. This year I just wanted it to be more enticing for the public to come out, so I put out a call — and it’s really amazing, the people that contact you who want to come and join in. It gives them an opportunity to show their craft and sell their wares. But it’s festive and fun, and I think people today are looking for something festive and fun — something community oriented.” — Teece Nowell

The festival will feature 25 art and craft vendors representing communities from across the region — Covington, Clifton Forge, Waynesboro, Harrisonburg, Bath County, Highland County, and West Virginia among them. North Mountain Barbecue will be on site, and there will be face painting as well.

The farm itself has also been transformed since last year. A new gift shop has been finished and restored, a patio has been added, and shaded seating areas are now in place for visitors who want to slow down and take it all in.

A Season That Does Not Last Long

Timing matters at a lavender farm. The blooming season — that window when the flower spikes turn purple and fill a field with color and fragrance — lasts only six to eight weeks. Nowell says this year’s plants are just beginning to open, and the timing for the festival could not be better.

“The lavender is just about to pop. Some of the plants are budding, many have thrown up their spikes. It looks very different this year because the plants are fuller than they were last year.” — Teece Nowell

Beyond the festival, the farm will be open every Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. through the lavender season, with workshops planned throughout — including a class called Rooted in Lavender featuring yoga, a nature walk, and guided meditation using lavender oils. Visitors who want to come on other days are encouraged to simply call ahead. Nowell says someone is almost always there, and they love walking the fields with guests.

More Than a Pretty Plant

Lavender is easy to appreciate on sight. But Nowell — who holds an undergraduate degree in horticulture and spent decades as a mental health counselor working with children, families, and hospice patients — wants people to understand how much deeper it goes.

“Lavender has a chemical property in it called linalool, which is calming and completely natural. We use it in almost all of our products — essential oils, flower water, teas. No chemicals have ever been sprayed on our plants. We are an organic farm, not certified organic, but organic. The oil really works, which is always a little amazing to me. It helps you sleep, it calms you down, it helps with everything from dry skin to cuts. It is just a powerful herb.” — Teece Nowell

That combination of horticulture and healing is not accidental. Moseymore was built at the intersection of two fields Nowell has spent her life in — and the result is a farm she describes as a place for quiet, for wandering, for being still.

“I wanted to bring those two fields together and offer a serene place just to come. You can wander through the lavender fields, up into our woods, be quiet, meditative. We are really trying to use this herb to its fullest — and pull together everything I have done with my life.” — Teece Nowell

Joy and Grief, Both Welcome

For someone who spent years walking alongside families through cancer, loss, and the hardest moments of life, the farm represents something intentional. Moseymore is not just a place to buy lavender products — it is a space designed to hold whatever visitors bring with them.

That philosophy shows up in the workshops, in the way the farm is laid out, and in the quiet paths that lead up into the woods above the lavender rows. Nowell says she is supposed to be retired — but she cannot stop building something meaningful.

One Note for Visitors

Nowell asked that visitors please leave their pets at home. With 25 vendors, guests, and lavender plants in full bloom, dogs running through the fields is not a combination that works well for anyone — especially the lavender.

https://www.alleghenymountainradio.org/something-is-blooming-in-millboro/

BATH COUNTY SERVICE AUTHORITY ASKS RESIDENTS TO VOLUNTARILY CONSERVE WATER AMID DROUGHTWells under stress after a winter...
06/05/2026

BATH COUNTY SERVICE AUTHORITY ASKS RESIDENTS TO VOLUNTARILY CONSERVE WATER AMID DROUGHT
Wells under stress after a winter of heavy snow and a dry spring; mandatory restrictions possible if conditions worsen

THE BATH COUNTY SERVICE AUTHORITY has issued a Step 1 Voluntary Water Conservation Notice, calling on customers across the county to reduce their water use as drought conditions continue to strain local wells and groundwater supplies.

The Authority has served Bath County since 1975, operating five wells, more than a dozen storage tanks, four wastewater treatment plants, and eleven pump stations. It provides water to approximately 1,300 customers and manages around 2,000 sewer connections — all maintained by a notably small crew.

Bart Perdue of the Bath County Service Authority said the current shortage traces back to an unusually prolonged winter snowpack followed by a dry spring. The snow sat on frozen ground for weeks without percolating into the aquifer, depriving wells of the recharge they normally receive.

“The winter really started this off. We had that big snow that just set on and set on and set on — the water wasn’t going in the ground. It rolled over because we haven’t had a lot of rain this spring. The springs are okay, but the wells are struggling, and we’re just trying to maintain that.”

— Bart Perdue, Bath County Service Authority

Under the Step 1 notice, customers are asked to make simple, voluntary reductions in daily water use. Perdue kept his message direct: turn the tap off while brushing teeth, skip the car wash unless absolutely necessary, and cut long showers short.

“Just save water any way you can. We’re just trying to maintain what we’ve got.”

If voluntary efforts fall short, the Authority is prepared to escalate to a Step 2 Mandatory Restriction, which would involve enforcement actions and the potential for fines and penalties. Perdue said he is hopeful the community’s cooperation will make that unnecessary.

“We just want you to do it, not because we’re hammering you. We’ve got a great community and they really help us out a lot. I know we’re gonna be all right and not have to move on past this.”

Perdue also urged residents to report any water they see running from the ground in unusual places, as unreported leaks compound strain on the system. “We’re pretty good about fixing our leaks and keeping everything up,” he said. “We just appreciate your help in doing that.”

Listen to our full interview:

https://www.alleghenymountainradio.org/bath-countys-wells-are-struggling/

RESOURCES & CONTACTS

Virginia DEQ Drought Monitor datascience.deq.virginia.gov/public/Drought-Monitoring/

Bath County Service Authority 540-839-7251

06/04/2026

✨ A recital you will not want to miss ✨

Michelle Cann graces our stage June 27 for a magical evening of piano music. In her program titled, “The Women of Chicago’s Black Renaissance”, Michelle explores the music of Florence Price, Betty Jackson King, and more. Concert at 5pm followed by optional four course dinner.

“A pianist of sterling artistry” — Gramophone

Tickets ➡️ https://app.arts-people.com/index.php?show=311015

Learn more about the evening below!

06/02/2026

These maps are available in the DEQ Drought page as well as most recent Drought Monitoring Task Force reports and drought related press releases

06/02/2026

Highland Mid-Kids Radio Club member Lucy Sax speaks with Ellen Ratcliffe about her years of involvement with the Fair

05/31/2026

Offstage, On-Air, Sunday, May 31, 12-1pm, features pianist Jeannette Fang discussing the Garth Newel Music Center summer concert season, beginning on June 20 with an Emerging Artists Alumni Concert featuring Trio Laval. Read an interview at garthnewel.org/interview-with-trio-laval.

Jeannette Fang joined the Garth Newel Piano Quartet in 2015 as pianist and Co-Artistic Director. Praised for her imaginative and expressive performances, she has been featured at such prestigious venues as Alice Tully Hall, John F. Kennedy Center, Zankel Hall, Hill Auditorium, Peter J. Sharp Theater, Weill Recital Hall, and Steinway Hall, as well as appearing on stages in Europe and Asia.

Listen to Offstage, On-Air every Sunday in on 91.1FM or stream at wtju.net. You can also listen to the rebroadcast the following Tuesday at 9 p.m. and Friday at 1 p.m. on charlottesvilleclassical.org

WTJU Charlottesville Classical

05/29/2026

Highland Mid-Kids Radio Club member Aspen Lupo speaks with Fred Frye about his years of involvement with the Fair

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