Showing posts with label buy local. Show all posts
Showing posts with label buy local. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Flu Season No More at Red Hill General Store


Have a cold? Come to Red Hill General Store for immune boosting Elderberry Extract and Yoder's Good Health Recipe! Load your body with the micro-nutrients it needs to get healthy and stay healthy. Have you tried our kombucha tea? Kombucha tea is available in three flavors to promote good health.


We have two new product lines this fall from Floyd! Try red rooster coffee roasted in Floyd, Virgina. These are MUST SIP brews this cold weather season. We carry four different varieties [Night Owl, Funky Chicken, 4&20 and Floyd Farmhouse Blend] $11.99 for a 12 oz. bag.


We have a new environmental hygiene care line from Thistle Hill Botanicals! Finally, natural deodorants that actually work!  Tired old foot soak, coffee body scrub, tooth fairy dental powder, and conditioning beard oil (subtle patchouli scent) make great gifts for friends and family keeping themselves and the planet healthy.


This is our wonderful display in the Virginia Welcome center. Thanks to megaprint for making our vinyl banner and posting about it on your blog


Our web development team just finished redesigning bell-outlet.com. Check it out here for Christmas bells, goat bells, dinner bells, craft bells, wedding bells and other bells for any occasion or decoration.


Here's to saying safe and warm this holiday season! Special thanks to our customers and the relationships we build to make a vibrant community possible. 







Sunday, August 4, 2013

A delicious agricultural education partnership of raspberries and blackberries


Raspberries and blackberries grown by students at the Carroll County High School FFA chapter are for sale at Hillsville's Red Hill General Store. Our partnership with the local FFA chapter helps fund the practical education we believe gives future leaders an edge in life. The most valuable resource a community has is its young adults. We will always support and invest in them and their future; when we can. As a small local business, Red Hill uniquely links the agriculture work of students to the consumer market.

Pints of blackberries - $2.99
Pints raspberries - $3.99














When you buy local you're also voting for better local education and leaders of tomorrow. The following was photos and story of the school farm published in The Galax Gazette by Christopher Brooke.


Some school assignments can be sweet, the Carroll County High School agriculture classes have learned — especially when it involves picking raspberries during a varieties trial at the school’s farm. Students have to watch that they don’t also get the thorns at the same time. 

Working at the Carroll County FFA farm can be both refreshing and thorny, said students picking raspberries in the high tunnel greenhouse.

Students see it as a welcome break from sitting in the classroom, and there’s also the fringe benefit of keeping a few of the overripe berries out of the nine gallons or so that they pluck off the approximately five foot-high canes.

Every once in a while, students will spare the consumer those berries by chewing them up before grabbing another that’s just right and dutifully putting the rest in the small green plastic pint container. Also, infrequently, a student yelps and pulls their hand back from the canes because they just stuck their finger on the pointy bits.


The four varieties of blackberries in the other greenhouse include the kind without the stickers, but you have to watch out for the raspberries, said ag instructor Randy Webb.

“These things are not thornless,” he said, picking alongside the students. “These things will eat you alive.”

Notwithstanding the possibility of getting a minor stab wound from the vegetation, both Webb and the 10th grade students in second block feel glad to have this alternative agriculture opportunity.

From Webb’s perspective as an instructor, the high tunnel greenhouses hold a crop experiment and a science project, revenue for the Future Farmers of America, as well as a teaching tool.

The initiative started with Virginia Tech sharing in the expense of putting up one of the greenhouses next to crop rows that hold corn and sorghum stalks.

The agreement required a match, so the second greenhouse was paid for by Carroll County Public Schools.
University officials also required that the greenhouses hold a crop not usually found in Southwestern Virginia. So, educators called on a second partner, Virginia State University, to provide the berry crops. The trial that the ag class undertook with the berries involved extending the growing season inside the greenhouses. Unlike other structures, high tunnel greenhouses have no heating or ventilation systems — other than from opening the doors and panels on the side. Trapping the solar heat inside the walls creates a thermal blanket to keep the temperature from dropping under freezing when the sun sets, the teacher said. This simple method will start the canes’ growth earlier in the year and keep it going longer into fall.

“It just extends your growing season,” Webb said. “We’re picking way beyond what normal blackberries and raspberries grow here.”

He directed the students to keep the canes pruned back this year, a plan to keep the raspberries from producing until after a particularly busy FFA state convention in July, when Carroll County native Dustin Richardson was selected as president of the Virginia organization. Students continue to pick the berries three times a week, and Webb expects the season to last into October.

The plan for next year’s growing season will involve students picking the healthier cane and cutting the others back, the teacher said. That will cause the unpruned ones to flower early so harvesting those can begin as early as May.

The pruned ones will come back as normal, spreading out the crop.

Students could use that as an agriscience project, and they could understand it as a lesson in supply and demand at the same time.
“Students are getting to come out here and harvest a marketable product,” Webb said.

If they wanted to earn an supplemental income, these students could replicate the berry growing at home, he added.

What the class makes off the school’s farm will go back to benefit the students.

“The ultimate goal is we pay FFA membership dues so we have 100 percent membership,” Webb said, noting that in these times $15 can make a difference to struggling families. “Our program is becoming basically self-supporting.”

The 10th graders with Webb that day didn’t foresee themselves as picking berries at home to sell.
They do take what they find on the side of the road, the students admit. The possibilities include eating them in the car or saving them for a cobbler.

But students enjoy their hands-on work at the farm. The thorns aren’t part of the fun, said Jessica Gardner, “but you deal with it.”

It’s relaxing and educational, Caitlin Newman agreed. “I think it’s like a break,” she said. “I think it helps me in my other classes — you get to go out and do stuff, I think it helps you concentrate better.”

“You’re not as stressed, I don’t think,” Gardner said.

Seeing the plants in the field will also help with other academics, Webb added. The familiarity with the growing process should help students in classes like biology, for example.



Sunday, July 14, 2013

Fresh Blueberries & Goat's Milk

Mountain Grown Blueberries - Fresh Picked

We have partnered with Deer Haven Blueberry Patch to offer fresh picked mountain grown blueberries. The blueberries are grown in the high elevation of the Blue Ridge Mountains where they benefit from crisp mornings and cool evenings. The cooler climate allows the blueberries to slowly ripen the fruit producing the best blueberry you may ever eat.

Bushes loaded with sweet blueberries

Deer Haven Owners Dick & Janet Slakman

How this works

They are available in both Hillsville and Raleigh stores. We have limited quantities in the Raleigh store to ensure freshness.

We are talking orders until Midnight July 21, 2013. Click here to place your order for blueberries picked on Monday July 22, 2013 to be delivered for pickup Tuesday July 23, 2013 to the Raleigh store.

We are offering two sizes - gallon & quart -


One Gallon
One Quart


Faith Mountain Farm Goats Milk Soap

Bill and Liz Garthly stopped by the store today with more of their popular lotion and soap. 

Each is made with goats milk.
"Here at Faith Mountain Farm we make our soaps from fresh goat milk (not powdered). Each day when we milk our “girls” they are thanked and kissed for their contribution to our products. The goats have acres of land to browse and a wonderful Jerusalem donkey to keep them safe.

We chose to have goat milk in all of our goat milk soap recipes because goat milk has a pH level that is closer to our skin’s pH than soaps without it. Naturally homogenized, the milk and cream do not separate (unlike cow’s milk), milk from goats is extraordinarily gentle and tender even to the driest of skin types. It is now confirmed that alpha-hydroxy acids found in goat's milk have rejuvenating and softening properties. All of this means a wonderfully rich creamy product for even the most sensitive skin.

Please review the unique benefits that each of our goat milk soaps offer and find the right ones for your individual needs"


Thursday, June 6, 2013

Reasons to support local businesses & how you're helping us build community



While I’m not really one for re-posting images with neat little sayings on them, this one happened to catch my eye and stand out to me. I saw the post below on facebook recently and thought it had some piratical advice. If we all work together - maybe we can create communities that make our families happy and healthy. At Red Hill General Store in Hillsville & Raleigh we're already working on some of these very things that businesses with a shopkeepers bell - those businesses that are locally owned and operated - should all be doing.

  
We try to promote those things that make leaving your house worth-while. I’m guilty of not doing this enough.  I keep making excuses as to why I can’t… mostly the lack of money… but I start getting restless with cabin feaver when I haven’t left the house in awhile.  To me, home starts to feel like a prison and I start feeling like a caged animal. I even get on my own nerves.  Sure even mundane things like trips to the grocery store are better than sitting and staring at the same ceiling and walls. But we've got free drive-in movies - schedule below! - and that's a pretty good excuse.



Selling flowers to be planted in gardens or buckets across the community is beautiful work. They’re nice to look at, they smell pretty good and there’s something to be said about working with dirt and seeds.  There’s a kind of satisfaction in planting a seed and watching it grow into something beautiful…  Also, flowers attract bees… and we need bees… or we die.

Put up a swing - Because who doesn't enjoy the feeling of weightless flying?

Then preserve the food you grew in your own garden with your canner. There’s nothing like popping open a jar of homemade jam on a blustery winter day, as our grandmothers knew all too well. Once maligned as unnecessary and labor-intensive, home canning has undergone a renaissance. A new generation is discovering that there’s something uniquely satisfying about preserving the season’s best produce.

Start a tradition - and we believe in starting meaningful traditions like the 18 mile Hillsville flea market, our summer movies, and going to see our wind-turbine provide clean energy in the Appalachian mountains. It's pretty small at only 100 feet and powers just one farm in Fancy Gap- but it's all this local business could afford. Tom Largen was quoted when we celebrated the powered-by-free-fuel machine beginning, "It's about doing everything you can - with what you have - every change you get."



We hire neighborhood young people for odd jobs like building our home-grown wind-turbine, setting up our drive-in movie screen, or taking pictures of cowbell for our website. The sense of entitlement some young people have today is flabbergasting, but on the other hand, kids shouldn't be treated as slave labor either. They need that common-sense work ethic we've been passing along in the Red Hill family since we stated.

We need a more humane and sustainable definition of success that includes well-being, wisdom, wonder, empathy, and the ability to give back. There is a big conference on this - and article "Beyond Money and Power (and Stress and Burnout): In Search of a New Definition of Success." This challenge - just like seeking to understand - requires participation individually and collectively. We can no longer go throughout our days unaware and uncaring. We must be mindful, present in our experiences, and determined to figure our the best ways to do things and how we can create them.

Subscribe to our blog (using the menu on the right)! We'll talk about wind's economic viability in Carroll County and how it might save our farms and heritage from housing development. You won't want to miss this.


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