Posts in Richmond
vol. 89 / summer lovin'
vol. 89 / summer lovin' 🕶️


VOL. 89   /  SUMMER LOVIN'
It’s that time of year for summer picnics, road trips with friends, backyard shenanigans, and exploring this place we call home. We’ve rounded up three quick recommendations to keep your summer lovin’ at an all-time high this week. Let's get to it...

Lakeside

Love Shack


There’s nothing we love more than recommending a little old place where everyone can get together. That place this week is SB’s Lakeside Love Shack, a funky Lakeside favorite known for its big personality, energetic fanbase, and overall good vibes. Owned by Sarabeth Hagen, this 1,300-square-foot neighborhood watering hole offers a playful menu where you might find items like the Big as a Whale Breakfast and Funfetti French Toast, a smattering of Love Potions, plenty of hangover cures, and even breakfast-to-go bags. There’s also a tiny hidden patio, live music, and a rockin’ happy hour. Best of all, the Lakeside Love Shack is brimming with genuine neighborhood love, where “Lakeside is the best side.”

Bonus tip: After you treat yourself to the Lakeside Love Shack experience, head down the street to Pulp Fiction RVA, a juice-moothie truck known for its exotic and natural blends, that just opened a brick and mortar location in the former Early Bird Biscuit digs at 5411 Lakeside Avenue. Pulp Fiction RVA was inspired by women and focuses on promoting self love.


Vitals: SB's Lakeside Love Shack / 6935 Lakeside Avenue 

Goochland

Drive-In Theater


Grab some friends and pile in, it’s time for a summer movie under the stars at a drive-in theater. Yes, this slice of quintessential Americana still exists and there’s an option only a short drive from RVA. While many drive-ins have closed over the years since their debut in the 1930s, a new crop of theaters have dusted off the concept. Over at the Goochland Drive-In Theater things are going strong thanks to the authentic drive-in environment they’ve created with an updated, sharp digital projection and sound provided via FM signal in your car. Goochland Drive-In typically offers double-features of new and current-release movies for $8.50. You heard that right, that’s two movies for less than the cost of seeing one movie in those fancy pants multiplex cinemas. And what’s a drive-in without a snack bar! We’re talking classic American eats—corn dogs, BBQ, popcorn, candy, and frozen treats. Well-behaved pets on leashes are welcome too. Showtime at dusk!

 

Vitals:

Goochland Drive-In Movie Theater / 4344 Old Fredericksburg Road, Hadensville 

RVA Reggae

JERK Festival


Celebrate love, unity, and our diverse community at the RVA Reggae Jerk Fest on Brown’s Island this Saturday. Reggae, originating in the tough neighborhoods of Kingston, Jamaica, carries a message of peace and brings people together. And the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) has designated reggae music as an intangible cultural heritage. In RVA, you can celebrate all things Reggae this Saturday while enjoying an impressive Caribbean rum tent experience, Caribbean Jerk Chicken by 10 of the best jerkers around, arts and crafts, and live performances by the likes of Mighty Joshua (pictured), Ever-G, Mystic Vibrations, Emanuell Wildfire Wilson, and more. 
 

Vitals:

2019 RVA Reggae Jerk Festival / Saturday, July 13 / 12 PM to 9 PM

vol. 88 / true places
vol. 88 / true places📍


VOL. 88   /  TRUE PLACES
There's no better time to get outside, and off the map, than right now in the River City! With that spirit in mind, meet our guest editor, Andy Thompson. He’s the founder of the outdoors news site Richmondoutside.com, a former Richmond Times-Dispatch outdoors writer, co-founder of Terrain360, co-founder of RVA Osprey Cam, co-owner of Riverside Outfitters, and co-owner of Sharp’s Island. Take it away, Andy...
“It is not down in any map; true places never are.” -- Herman Melville, Moby Dick

That’s how Melville described Queequeg’s island home, and it’s been a guiding axiom for me since I first read it in high school. Cruise ships, packaged travel and tour guides with their placards raised high will take you places, but true places are harder to find. To do so requires adventuring with an entirely different mindset. So, let’s take Melville with us to the James River in search of true places. Here are three, of many, options...some of which are still out there waiting to be discovered.

Foushee

Mill


William Foushee was one of the most impactful and famous Richmonders of his own time that few know anything about today. RVA’s first mayor (in 1782), Foushee was a physician, politician, businessman and man about town, hobnobbing with the Founding Fathers. In 1819, he financed the building of a two-story gristmill on the north bank of the James River, just downstream of what is now the Nickel Bridge. The ruins of that once-massive stone structure still stands today! That's right, 200-years of storms and floods and general neglect have not quite consumed it. This abandoned and almost entirely unknown slice of Richmond offers a tangible link to Richmond history. Go in search of Foushee Mill, and you’ll be rewarded with a lovely hike along the James and a history lesson, courtesy of the sign erected two years ago by the James River Hikers Meetup group

 

Vitals: To reach Foushee Mill, park at the Texas Beach lot and cross the train tracks on the concrete walk. Head down to the riverside trail at Texas Beach and walk up river. Once you pass the canal outflow below Maymont, before you reach the Nickel Bridge, begin looking for the stone remains (if you reach the Nickel Bridge, you’ve gone too far). 

Catfish

Alley


Catfish Alley only exists in space and time for a couple months every year. Last year it didn’t exist at all! But that was soggy 2018! We’re beyond all that (I think). This year is shaping up to offer peak Catfish Alley. And the time is now. Go buy a cheap snorkel or grab some goggles and practice holding your breath. As the summer heat drains the James of water, pools form in the rocky part of the river downtown. Fish find themselves trapped in those pools, waiting for the next heavy rain. Sometimes those fish are huge flathead and blue catfish. Catfish Alley is the largest of those pools. Once you find it, stand on the rocks above it and take a deep breath. Yes, you are going to put on that snorkel, get in the water, and swim with the fishes! And yes, it will freak you out at first. But the catfishes won’t hurt you. They’ll hardly care you’re there. Touch them, if you dare. No one who’s experienced Catfish Alley sees the James River quite the same again.
 

Vitals:

Park at the Pipeline Walkway lot and follow the trail down to the Pipeline Trail, which is part of the James River Park System. Hop off the Pipeline to a sandy beach next to where the Pipeline rapids have eddied out and the water is calmer. Swim across (a PFD is helpful here, depending on your swimming level) to the closest island and walk inland and upstream. Depending on the river level, Catfish Alley is about 25’ by 10’, but you’ll see many pools. Hop rocks. Explore. Check them all out!

Cooper's

Island


There’s an island—Cooper’s Island—that sits near the south bank of the James between the Atlantic Coastline Railroad Bridge and the Nickel Bridge, and on it are the dilapidated remains of an ancient treehouse. You have to bushwhack to the middle of the island to find it, and even then, it doesn’t always make itself obvious. But once you know it’s there, you can’t stop staring. And wondering: How long has it been there? What did it once look like? Who brought out all the materials to this island? And, maybe most intriguingly, how in the name of Pete Nelson did they get all those materials that high in that glorious tree?! So many good questions? Zero answers. Just the wonder.

Bonus adventure: The island’s most prominent feature isn’t the treehouse or even the bald eagle nest that also resides in a pine tree there. It’s the flatrock beach that beckons on the north side of its upstream tip. Bring a picnic and enjoy the lazy rapids at the water’s edge. Feeling super adventurous? Summon your inner child and gaze upstream from the flatrock beach. See the Atlantic Coastline Railroad Bridge? Good. Look down at the old bridge pilings immediately below it; there are 10 of them. Start at the south bank and count pilings toward the north bank. Stop at 7. Get yourself to that piling. You’ll know why when you get there. It won’t be easy, but in the summer it’s really not that hard. Wade, swim, take your time. Just get there. Trust me.

 

Vitals:

Park at the trailhead near the traffic circle where Riverside Drive meets New Kent Road in Westover Hills. Start down the steep trail and stay left of the concrete ruins you’ll see in 50 feet. Make a beeline to the river. Cross the train tracks. The island you see once you reach the river is Cooper’s. Walk downstream 50 more feet and find the pipeline that goes over to another island and then Cooper’s. Water will be pouring over it, but at current river levels, you’ll make it with ease.

vol. 87 / wander
vol. 87 / wander 👣


VOL. 87   /  WANDER
Turn off the cell. Burn the map. Get lost. This week we're encouraging you to wander and ramble east on foot, bike, or boat. See ya out there! 

Richmond's

Low Line


Wandering east on your way out of Richmond, look for the Low Line Gardens, a linear park that transformed a neglected stretch of weeds into a bustling garden path along the Kanawha Canal. Inspired by New York City’s High Line, the Low Line is the brainchild of Capital Trees, a Richmond nonprofit that aims to create beautiful and environmentally sound public landscapes. The group relies on public-private partnerships to deliver urban green spaces that build community and improve the health and wellbeing of those who use them. Here, native plantings bring life and beauty to what had been a pocket of blight, and now attracts walkers, joggers, cyclists, pets, and children to the restored outdoor space. Underway now is phase two of the project, known as the Low Line Green, that will extend the restoration of the five-and-a-half-acre corridor between Great Shiplock Park and the floodwall at 17th Street. 
 

Vitals:
Capital Trees

Captain Ron's

Houseboat


Head east on Route 5 and along the riverbank you’ll find Ron Blaha, the last of the old time riverboat captains still plying the James and Appomattox Rivers. At 79, Captain Ron will dazzle you with stories about adventures on the James in a turn-of-the-century wooden tugboat, his years sailing a 41' Formosa Ketch along the East Coast, and living off the grid in the Bahamas. He’ll even sprinkle in a few side stories of sailing off the coast of Mexico, two of the Great Lakes, and the Adriatic Sea between Italy and the Czech Republic. But each tale always leads Ron back to the beautiful James River where he has lovingly rebuilt and re-furbished two houseboats at the Richmond Yacht Basin (Virginia’s oldest marina) that are for rent through Airbnb, VRBO, and Homeaway. When booking a night on one of these charming boats, you’ll also want to save time to hop over to the Lilly Pad for burgers, oysters, and beer served dockside. And before you leave in the morning, make sure to ask Ron to sign a copy of one his books so you can bring home some of his adventurous spirit with you. 
 

Vitals:

Captain Ron's Houseboat / Richmond Yacht Basin / 9950 Hoke Brady Rd.
 

The Original

Ronnie's BBQ


Hop on your bike, hit the Virginia Capital Trail, and simply follow your nose! You’ll soon find yourself at a small outpost at 2097 New Market Road that is home to the best Southern-style ribs in all the land. Behind the smoker, you’ll meet the father-son duo, Ronnie and Darrell Logan. These Varina natives once worked a slower cooker in a lot near Millie’s Diner that became so legendary that the pit masters opened their own permanent digs just east of town. A hotspot for outdoor enthusiasts and BBQ purists alike, The Original Ronnie’s BBQ is the perfect reward (and fuel) after exploring the Virginia Capital Trail. And don’t stop just for the ribs, make sure to try Ronnie’s fish, pulled pork, brisket, and chicken wings. Most of all though, spend a little extra time listening to Ronnie and Darrell’s stories, learn about the area, and get inspired by their family-run business before wandering back to RVA.
 

Vitals:

The Original Ronnie's BBQ   /  2097 New Market Road /  Virginia Capital Trail
 

Represent.

Represent Richmond well in our comfy cotton t-shirt emblazoned with a hand-drawn design. Yes, that's Richmond's airport code. We consider this tee perfect attire for wandering Route 5, hitting the trail, exploring traveling the world, or simply enjoying a lazy day. Trust us — it's so super soft, you'll be wearing it everywhere.
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