Sunday, December 09, 2007

Winter Chills . . .Not Yet Here

If you would like to Order CDs for Christmas Delivery from www.soundsiderecords.com, make sure to do so by December 17.



The Christmas holiday is upon us and this time of year brings a flurry of activity on Ocracoke in anticipation of gatherings with family and friends, the end of a season, and preparations for upcoming trips during the winter. A greater number of island residents are considering off-island travel this January through March as the seven bridges that lead highway 12 to the northern end of Ocracoke and the Hatteras ferry will all be replaced this winter. During this period, residents and visitors with 4-wheel drive will be allowed to travel the length of the island on the beach from just north of the most northern bridge to just below the Ocracoke campground.

The safety of this route is largely dependent upon the tides, weather, and daylight hours. A larger number of Ocracoke businesses will be closing up shop this winter with tourist access limited to the mainland ferries.

December started cooler, but now the temperatures are up in the 60s, even at night. Last Wednesday was the annual Ocracoke Preservation Society Wassail Party and Christmas Tree Lighting. On Thursday, Ocrafolk performers gathered at the Deepwater Theater for an Ocrafolk Christmas Concert. Sundae Horn orchestrated this fundraiser for the Preservation Society which featured the talents of the MadriGals, Molly Lovejoy and Fiddler Dave, Ivey and Laura Belch & Sam Garris, Philip Howard, Jamie Tunnell, Molasses Creek, Coyote, Katy Wharton, Deanna Locke, April Trueblood, and John Golden.

Rounding out the Christmas week was Jimmy's Garage annual potluck and dance featuring Martin Garrish and the Ocracoke Rockers.

The holiday events keep rolling our way with the upcoming Cookie Swap at the Ocracoke Library, the Ocracoke School Christmas Program, and the Community Christmas Party. We'll be doing well if we can wring out all our antics before the bridges close on January 3rd. Hopefully construction will occur on schedule and the road will be ready for Easter visitors.

Molasses Creek Re-Releases "Ocracoke Island"



In 1993, Gary, Kitty and Fiddler Dave met, forming Molasses Creek and recording a Cd of original music after performing together just over four summer months. Little did they know that this inspired project would be the start of a long musical partnership that would inspire Deepwater Theater, the Ocrafolk Festival, Soundside Records, and 14 years of touring and performing (still happening).

Over the years, Creekheads (our most devout Molasses Creek fans) have approached us after concerts lamenting the unavailability of the original Molasses Creek Cd, and speaking sadly of the day they played the album its last time and the laser cut through the disc, player, and into the wood floor.

Well good friends, lament no longer.

Last week Gary Mitchell finished remastering this original album. It is now available once again & in time for Christmas (ship date is December 17)! Just like the cover photo, there are no strings attached on this album (well, you know what we mean!) Enjoy!

First Annual Ocrafolk School A Great Success

October 21-26, 2007 marked the beginning of a new chapter in ever expanding Ocrafolk legacy. That week 26 students and 10 staff and teachers gathered for the latest brain child of Ocrafolk Festival originator, Gary Mitchell. The Ocrafolk School brought together a group of artisans, historians, naturalists, and Ocracoke fanatics for a week of crafting, cooking, hiking, and learning from one another.

Classes included Basketmaking



Island Cooking





Jewelry Making



Island Photography




Ocrafolk Sampler: An Ocrafolk Sampler: Ocracoke’s History, Seafaring Traditions and Island Ecology












Intensive class time was balanced with wonderful island activities: Group meals featuring the local sea fare of the island, ghost and history walks, beach bonfires, flounder gigging and kayaking, sails on the schooner WINDFALL, and performances by members of the Ocrafolk Opry.






At the end of the session, students and teachers alike were reeling from the great inspirational buzz that developed out of this caring and supportive family. We look forward to folks joining the school for the second annual year, October 26-31, 2008.



Molasses Creek and Fiddler Dave albums now available through iTunes!

If you just can't wait for your albums to arrive in the mail from Soundside Records, instant gratification has arrived! Molasses Creek and Fiddler Dave albums are now available for digital download through iTunes record stores. You can purchase individual tracks or the whole shabang! You can also listen to clips from every track if you have the patience for that sort of thingy. Enjoy. . .

Happy Holidays!

Here are some upcoming performances for Molasses Creek and Ocrafolk Artists!

Upcoming Performances

December 31 -- Molasses Creek at First Night Williamsburg, VA. University Center - Chesapeake Room Concerts at 7:00, 9:00 & 11:00

January 19-20, 2008 – Molasses Creek & the Ocrafolk Opry concert with the Outer Banks Forum, Kitty Hawk, NC. Includes Coyote, Noah Paley, Bob Zentz, and more!

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Ocrafolk Family



Although fall is in the air on Ocracoke, the air is still rather humid and warm. The island has received a good bit of rain in the past week and now has quite a few mosquitoes (which are appreciated by the birds and bats). Gabrielle passed through on the 9th. The mainland received a bit more rain, but aside from wind not much happened here. The lifeguards packed up and headed home, most of the turtle nest are through, and kids have headed back to school on and off the island. Our visitors are now comprised of families with small children and single couples.

As Deepwater Theater comes to a close, the Ocrafolk producers focus all efforts toward the first annual Ocrafolk School, scheduled for October 21-26. Registration deadline is October 1st, so if you think you might be interested then read more details below and contact us. It will be wonderful!

In this blog, you can read about Roy Parson's fascinating life, Marcy and Lou (Coyote)'s new baby, and take a listen to three new releases by Soundside Records artists.

Roy Parson’s Eulogy

Around 7:15 PM on September 1, 2007, Roy Parsons passed away at his home on Ocracoke Island. Roy turned 86 this August and had been in and out of the hospital since June. He made several appearances at the Ocrafolk Opry early on in the summer. We will all miss his generous spirit and exciting tales of his adventures on and off Ocracoke. Roy Parson’s family asked Gary Mitchell to create and deliver this eulogy at Roy’s funeral.



Roy Parsons was born on August 17, 1921, one of James and Mary Elizabeth Parsons 12 children. He is survived by his wife of 57 years, Elizabeth, daughter Edna Mae and son-in-law Howard Edman of Columbia, SC; sons Roger Lee and Leonard Steve, five grandchildren-Beverly, Matthew, Amanda, Christian and Leslie , and one great-grandchild. He was preceded in death by a son, James Leroy.

Roy loved his home of Ocracoke, and he was always ready to tell a story about growing up here. He was a curious child, was always into something, always trying something new, always ready for a new adventure.

A couple of his boyhood pals told me that Roy once took them hunting over at Mayo’s Hill, but he didn’t have any shells for the old cobbled-together gun, so Roy suggested they go ‘borrow’ some eggs from Jake Alligood’s chicken pen and sell them to Mace Fulcher at the Community Store to raise some money. They thought that sounded like a real good idea, so they snuck over to the pen; Roy carefully lifted the hen’s back sides and the boys removed the eggs, then went over and sold them to Mr. Mace for 2 cents each, which gave them just enough money for 2 shotgun shells. When they got back to Mayo’s Hill a little while later, a flock of Brandts flew by and Roy fired the old gun, but it blew up and covered his face with black powder. Maybe he learned his lesson.....but maybe not, cause he did kill 2 Brandts with that one shot.

His music career started at 14 with a Sears & Roebuck guitar he ordered, and I’m told his broadcast career began by singing into the stove flue at “Clemmie’s Ice Cream Parlor” with the sound coming out the top of the chimney (I guess he got a black face there too). Later on, with advances in his technological prowess, he actually built his own radio station at his home. Roy said that cars would be lined up in his driveway, and down the street out front, just to receive his broadcast.

Like many of the young men on Ocracoke in the 1930’s and 40’s, Roy traveled up north looking for work and adventure. He always seemed to find adventure! On his first day in New York City, still just a teenager, Roy found a room to rent in a boarding house and paid the landlady 2 dollars. He left his clothes, shaving stuff, and civil service papers in the room and told the landlady he was going out to eat, and she said the door would be open when he returned.... “I never did find that place again” Roy said. He even got help from the police, but still no luck. “All the houses looked the same and they’re all painted the same color....woulda taken me 5 weeks to knock on all those doors and ask, do I live here?”

Somehow he came out of that on his feet, met some musicians, and traveled all over the northeast and mid-atlantic playing music and finding new adventures, including a stint with “The Barney and Bailey Circus” (as he called it) at Madison Square Garden.

In between music gigs he worked on dredges around Philadelphia, and eventually returned to Ocracoke to work for the legendary Sam Jones at the Castle, and for Col. Egan at the Berkely Center. He cooked and took care of maintenance and repairs on these 2 historic Ocracoke landmarks. About this time Roy fell for his lifelong companion, Elizabeth, at Williams Bros. store where she worked. I was told by Della that he came in “looking like Clark Gable in that blue suit; Elizabeth handed him that hot-dog, their hands touched, and it was true love”. Roy built themselves a home from material salvaged from the old Navy base, and they have lived and worked there ever since their marriage in 1950.

As a young father, Roy enjoyed taking his younguns out fishing and clamming at Teach’s Hole, and in later years he’d occasionally sneak over to Roger Lee’s to watch cowboy movies and drink Gatorade.

Roy wasn’t born with much, didn’t have much education, but he certainly made the most of what he had. He was a self-taught man; an excellent carpenter and craftsman, auto mechanic, cook, entertainer, husband and father. He was never afraid to learn something new, even taking up the saxophone at the age of 80. He also worked as a night watchman at the Cedar Island Ferry terminal into his 80’s. My friend and mandolin player Gerald Hampton wrote an instrumental song in remembrance of one of those nights a few years back.....

There was a thick fog, and the Cedar Island Ferry was not able to safely pass through the channel out at the Lehigh, so the Captain meandered northwards a few miles up on the back side of the island. Late in the evening, Jerry Gaskill, head of the NC Ferry Division, called the Ocracoke Terminal to find out what was going on. Roy, being the only one on duty at the time, responded, “I guess the Captain is feeding the ponies”. Gerald’s song is entitled “Feeding the Ponies”.

Roy and I got to know each other through our love of music. He grew up listening to Jimmy Rogers, Gene Autry, and other early country and cowboy singers. He was always the best-dressed man at our shows in a beautiful cowboy shirt, boots, string-tie, and fancy belt buckle. We worked together for over 10 years performing in Ocrafolk Opry shows, both here on the island, and on the mainland including a show at historic Thalian Hall in Wilmington. Audiences loved Roy everywhere he performed. He was a masterful yodeler, he knew exactly how to get the most out of a story, and his comic timing was perfect. He always enjoyed meeting and talking with the audience after a show, and they loved it too.




A couple of years ago a group of our local musicians decided to take Roy on a trip to Nashville and the ‘Grand Ole Opry’. I asked him if he’d ever flown before and he said, “Oh yeah, I flew with Bill Cochran from Hattras to Ocracoke one time. Bill told his wife to ‘go get that Coleman can of gas outta the shed’, and he poured it into the top of the wing of that Piper Cub and said, ‘that oughta be enough’ and we took off. Bill said the tide was high and there werent much beach to land on, so I’d have to jump out, so as soon as the wheels touched down I threw out my bag and jumped out after it......... Yeah, I’ve flown before”.

When we got to the Grand Ole Opry, we enjoyed a backstage tour with Opry legend George Hamilton IV, and Roy was also recognized from the Opry stage that night for his contribution to the music of eastern North Carolina. It was a wonderful trip, and a very special time for all of us.

When we were recording the first “Ocrafolk Music Sampler” album, Roy stopped suddenly and said “You know Gary..., music is good!” I immediately knew that that was the perfect intro for our very first recording of the musicians of Ocracoke. Roy was featured on several other recordings, including his own CD, “Songs and Tales of Ocracoke Island”.

He once said, “You gotta grab-a-hold of life if you want life to hold on to you”. Roy did that. He kept on singing, entertaining folks, and working on his beautiful boat models right up until the end.

Everyone I’ve talked with about Roy says the same things,
“He was full of love”...”he was a good guy”...”he loved to make people smile”...”he made me feel good to be with him”... (and one of the most common) “he never said a bad word about anyone”.
Roy was one of the best examples of Jesus’ teachings of anyone I’ve ever met. “Love your neighbor as yourself”
...that was Roy...... “Judge not lest ye be judged”...that was Roy.
Roy radiated love to EVERYONE he came in contact with, 0
and what better thing could you say about ANY person’s life.

I’m extremely privileged to have known him.
---Gary Mitchell

(Cards can be sent to his wife Elizabeth Parsons at PO Box 1, Ocracoke Island, NC 27960)




Marcy and Lou of Coyote Adopt!



Marcy and Lou celebrate the arrival of their adopted daughter Charlotte Nemesia Castro on August 7, 2007. She weighed in at 6 pounds 14.8 ounces and measured 21 inches long. Baby Charlotte (named after Marcy and Lou’s mothers) is pictured in the outfit that Marcy’s two older sisters, Linda and Judi, picked out for her to come home in back in 1963.

Charlotte is now eating up a storm and acclimating to frequent serenades from island musicians. Although she has not yet appeared on stage at Deepwater Theater, she has occasionally given a performance during the Opry from her cherised spot on the pew in the back row.

New releases from Soundside Records

Three new recordings have just been released and are available now through Soundside Records.

Bob Zentz ~ Closehauled on the Wind of Dream

Listen to sample here



More info at Soundside Records

Sea Chantyman, Bob Zentz, has just finished an album featuring the poetry of C. Fox Smith which he has set to music.

"I first discovered C. Fox Smith’s poetry in the bottom of an old sea chest at The Mariner’s Museum in Newport News, Virginia, and immediately became a fan. These delightful maritime tales were told by one who had experienced life aboard the tall ships during the great “Age of Sail” – not a salt-encrusted “shellback,” but a Victorian Englishwoman, inspired by the likes of Masefield and Kipling with words magically crafted and literally screaming out form the page to be sung!

Much of the singability of these lyrics stems from the author’s great love of English traditional folksong, especially sea shanties. Biographical info on Ms. Smith is scanty, and most has been assembled and maintained by a small cadre of loyal fans, scholars and speculators, most specifically Joyce and Danny McLeod, Alan Hardy, Charlie Ipcar and Jim Saville

By the time of her death on April 8, 1954, Cicely had published some twenty books of poetry, fourteen books of nautical non-fiction, and ten children’s books as well as a numerous articles, stories and poems for a bevy of English magazines. Though she and the tall shops have passed, both have resurfaced, returned and remain with us today, “closehauled on the wind of dream.”'

Skye Zentz ~ Legitimate Bohemia

Listen to Sample Here


More info at Soundside Records

Bob Zentz’s daughter, Skye, has also just released a new album entitled Legitimate Bohemia. Although Skye has inherited her parents incredible gifts for songwriting and musicianship, her distinct musical personality and songwriting perspective welcomes Soundside listeners into the next generation of Ocrafolk talents. Joined by an impressive list of guests, Skye’s first release is both fresh and funky, mature enough to please the older folkies and new enough to excite her peers.

Donald Underwood Thompson ~ The Ocracoke Sessions

Listen to Sample Here


More info at Soundside Records

The final release, “The Ocracoke Sessions,” comes from Bluesman Donald Underwood Thompson. Donald hails from Kinston, NC. He first joined the Ocrafolk Festival in 2007 after Molasses Creek heard him perform at a festival in Eastern North Carolina. This spicy album includes both original and traditional blues seasoned with a healthy dose of Ocrafolk guests.



Ocrafolk School Schedule Updates

The Ocrafolk School will hold its grand opening session October 21-26, 2007, inviting participants to join week-long workshops in arts, crafts, cooking, music, local history, and sailing, in a relaxed island setting.

Local and regional instructors will welcome adult students of all skill levels to participate in hands-on learning experiences. Courses offered are “Jewelry Making” with Kathleen O’Neal; “Basketry: Materials and Techniques” with Judith Saunders; “Island Cooking” with Debbie Wells; “Music and Stories of the Sea” with Bob Zentz; “Island Photography” with Ann Ehringhaus, “Model Boat Building” with Jimmy Amspacher; and “An Ocrafolk Sampler: Ocracoke’s History, Seafaring Traditions and Island Ecology” with Philip Howard, Rob Temple, and David Senseney.

In addition to the courses offered, each day will include group meals, music, stories, walkabouts, and more. The Ocrafolk School’s mission includes preserving local culture, promoting appreciation of Ocracoke’s natural resources, and bringing creative people into the community. The Ocrafolk School will offer workshops during Ocracoke’s shoulder season every fall.

Director Gary Mitchell and the volunteer Ocrafolk School board have decided to focus on one week of classes in their first year of operation. Classes that were originally scheduled for October 28- November 2, 2007 have been canceled or moved to October 21-26th. Local historian Philip Howard, schooner captain Rob Temple and retired biology teacher David Senseney have combined their classes into one “Ocrafolk Sampler” workshop. The class will
combine Ocracoke history, local seafaring traditions, and island ecology. Participants will hear Ocracoke ghost stories, sail on a traditional gaff-rigged schooner, take a walk on Ocracoke’s wild side from the beach to the marsh, and learn to appreciate Ocracoke as more than a tourist
destination.

Classes are limited to 6-10 students; the registration deadline is October 1, 2007.

For information about the Ocrafolk School, please visit the Web site at www.ocrafolkschool.org , email gary@ocrafolkschool.org, or call 252- 928-1541.

The workshops cost $495 per week including group meals and evening activities. Housing is the responsibility of the students, but contact the Ocrafolk School for recommendations. Some classes will have additional fees for materials. A discount of 50% off tuition will be offered to Ocracoke’s permanent residents after the registration deadline of Oct. 1.

For more information about Ocracoke Island, please visit www.ocracokevillage.com

* * *

Upcoming Performances

October 6 -- Molasses Creek will perform at the grand opening for the Cabarrus Arts Council Davis Theater in Concord, NC. The Davis Theater is in the former Historic Cabarrus Courthouse. The theatre was created when the courthouse was renovated in 1983 but it lacked amenities necessary for performances. A gift from Roy and Sue Davis will help fund its transformation into a state-of-the-arts theatre for major performances. For more information contact the Cabarrus Arts Council at 704-920-ARTS (2787) or info@cabarrusartscouncil.org

October 7
-- Molasses Creek, Coyote, the Ocrafolk Opry, and the Barnraisers will appear at the NC Seafood Festival from 12-4 PM on the Coastal Stage. The festival cranks up on Friday night on the Waterfront in Morehead City. For more schedule information visit
http://ncseafoodfestival.org.


Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Ocrafolk School to Open This Fall on Ocracoke Island



Ocracoke Island, in the famed and beautiful Outer Banks of North Carolina, is inviting visitors to a unique learning experience. The new “Ocrafolk School” will focus on arts, culture, history, and ecology, and welcome participants into the community of artisans
in historic Ocracoke Village.

The Ocrafolk School will hold its first sessions in October and November 2007, inviting participants to join week-long workshops in arts, crafts, cooking, music, local history, and sailing, in a relaxed island setting.




Local and regional instructors will welcome adult students of all skill levels to participate in hands-on learning experiences. The first session is October 21-26, 2007, with courses in “Wood Carving” with William Nathan Spencer; “Jewelry Making” with Kathleen O’Neal; “Ocracoke History and Culture” with Philip Howard; “Island Cooking” with Debbie Wells; “Music and Stories of the Sea” with Bob Zentz; “Island Photography” with Ann Ehringhaus; followed by a second session October 28-November 2, 2007 including “Model Boat Building” with Jimmy Amspacher, “Painting in Watercolor with Grace and Ease” by Mary Ellen Golden; “Basketry: Materials and Techniques” with Judith Saunders; “Old Time Sailing and Seafaring Traditions” with Capt. Rob Temple; “Lifesavers and Light Keepers” with John Golden; and “From the Beach to the Marsh: Exploring Ocracoke’s Wild Side” with David Senseney.



The Ocrafolk School’s mission includes preserving local culture, promoting appreciation of Ocracoke’s natural resources, and bringing creative people into the community. Another purpose is to provide participants with a personal connection to the island that goes beyond a typical summer vacation. “The Ocrafolk School will offer people an in-depth experience, and a chance to learn something new,” says founder and director Gary Mitchell, but he stresses that the focus won’t be “too academic.”

“I want the week to be more meaningful than just the class. There’s a lot more to a folk school than just learning a craft. It’s about the total experience.” At the Ocrafolk School that “total experience” might involve group meals with other students and teachers, beach bon-fires, square dances, storytelling, music jams, sailing trips, or attending a show at Ocracoke’s Deepwater Theater.

Mitchell says the idea for a folk school on Ocracoke “has been batted around for a long time, but it really hadn’t been pursued here because Ocracoke has so little space for a large facility or campus. Recently, I began to realize that our whole village can serve as the campus. We already have the housing and food service infrastructure in place, and with all the talented and creative people here, we already have well-qualified instructors in a broad range of subjects. We already have people who love to come to Ocracoke. It seemed to be an idea that we could realize after all, with some organization of existing resources.”



Mitchell is no stranger to organizing Ocracoke’s existing resources. In 1996, he corralled the island’s musicians and recorded their singing and playing in his own Soundside Studio. Those tracks became the first Ocrafolk Music Sampler CD, which was sponsored by Ocracoke Preservation Society. The popularity of the project led to the creation of the Ocrafolk Opry, which in turn spawned the Ocrafolk Music and Storytelling Festival, now an annual event. Over the last 10 years, the Ocrafolk phenomenon has transformed the arts and music scene on Ocracoke, and made it a vibrant part of the community for residents and visitors to enjoy. Many of the same artists and organizers who’ve worked with Mitchell on music projects have signed on to help with the folk school.

A committee under the Ocracoke Preservation Society was formed to oversee the Ocrafolk School. Board members are Philip Howard, Merle Davis, Marcy Brenner, Ann Ehringhaus and David Tweedie, all of whom are involved in the arts on Ocracoke. They’ve helped to organize the classes and instructors and brainstormed on ways to get the folk school’s metaphorical doors open. The Ocrafolk School will offer workshops during Ocracoke’s shoulder seasons every spring and fall.

For information about the Ocrafolk School, please visit the Web site at www.ocrafolkschool.org , email gary@ocrafolkschool.org, or call 252- 928-1541.
The workshops cost $495 per week including group meals and evening activities. Housing is the responsibility of the students, but contact the Ocrafolk School for recommendations. Some classes will have additional fees for materials.

For more information about Ocracoke Island, please visit www.ocracokevillage.com

Contact: Gary Mitchell, Director
Ocrafolk School
PO Box 596
Ocracoke, NC 27960
252-928-1541
gary@ocrafolkschool.org
www.ocrafolkschool.org

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

A New Year Begins


The Christmas Tree at the Oeracoke Methodist Church

*** Thanks to all who entered in our holiday blog Cd drawings. Congratulations to Toni Boatwright of Athens, GA, our final winner. ***

The Christmas Season has come and gone. All that remains of the holiday on Ocracoke are a few Christmas lights and the smell of chipped evergreens wafting from the dump next to the post office. Winter has arrived. . .just locals here now for a while. The temperature has been warm up to yesterday when it moved from the 70s to down to the 50s during the day. Today is a little chillier and gives me a good excuse to cook up the ham bone from Christmas and make some soup.


Amy Howard presents her father with an Ocracoke Cracker Quilt for Christmas (almost finished too!)

Winter projects! Aha! We can finally attend to them in all their glory! I uncover the long list that I compiled over the summer and sigh. Chasing all our best intentions is the desire to relax, travel, or drop that list and let life drift a bit! The dolphins at the beach today looped around a fine catch of fish and I joined them in spirit.

Amy, Lachlan, and I have a major project in February. We are moving to Lawton’s house next to the Village Craftsmen and selling our house on the Back Road. I like to tell folks that the drive to Grandpa’s (Philip Howard) was just too far and we needed to move 100 yards closer. I also joke that we wanted to move into a new school district and have less of a commute to my work at Deepwater Theater. Instead of a 30 second bike ride, I will now have only 15 seconds.

Lawton Howard is Philip’s father and therefore my wife’s grandfather. He had such a wonderful and mischevious nature. Quite a character and always ready to play a practical joke on an unsuspecting tourist or friend (who expected it). If you have made it out to hear Philip tell tales at the Ocrafolk Opry then I’m sure you have heard a story that involved his father and some bit of cleverness. His small white house sits on the corner of Howard Street and Lawton Lane (talk about a coincidence). Every since I came to Ocracoke in 1993, I have felt drawn to Howard Street. I find it a dream come true to actually be living right on it! Hey, the Ocrafolk Festival Howard Street Stage will be right out our door!

. . . Fiddler Dave

On Ocracoke Island
* * * * * * * * * * * * *

Benefit for the Ocracoke Waterman’s Association a Great Success



On December 30th the Ocracoke Waterman’s Association held a benefit oyster/shrimp steaming with music by Molasses Creek.



For $15 folks could eat all the seafood they could manage while listening to some lively entertainment right from the steps of the Fish House.



In the evening, storyteller Donald Davis gave a benefit concert at the Ocracoke Community Center to a sold out crowd. The day raised over $4000 towards the Ocracoke Waterman’s Association in their quest to secure the last fish house on Ocracoke Island.

The Ocracoke Working Waterman’s Association has signed a 12-month lease on the fish house and has until May 1, 2007, to raise the $409,000 it needs to purchase it. Along with operating the fish house, the organization sees the effort as a way to give local watermen a secure base of operations and be a retail source of locally caught seafood. The fishermen also see the fish house as place for educating people about commercial fishing and for showing them hands-on the skills of their livelihood.



Classes Begin in New School Building
When Ocracoke School started up after Christmas, two new exciting changes were in place. First of all, the elementary portion of the school begins 2007 in the brand new Ocracoke wing. The eight state of the art classrooms in the addition by the playground house all of the younger grades. Second, a new pre-kindergarden program begins at the end of January. Congratulations!

Gospel Sing at Methodist Church
The Ocracoke Methodist Church is beginning a gospel sing which will be the second Saturday every month. Come on out! The church will provide an organ, piano, and a music stand with a light.

Heritage Classes Starting Soon
The Ocracoke Arts Council will begin it’s annual Heritage Class on Saturday, January 20. As a group they will guide participants through the history of the pattern, selecting & cutting fabric, sewing, basting & topstitching, then putting it all together to make your very own Ocracoke Cracker Quilt pattern throw pillow. The class will continue over the next four Saturdays. Call Marcy Brenner for details at 252-928-9975.

The Ocracoke Needle and Thread Club normally meets weekly on Monday nights at 7:00 PM at Deepwater Theater on School Road.

Grenade Causes a Bit of a Stir

Activity at house on the corner of Back Road and Fire House Road elicited much chatter a few weeks ago as workers renovating the structure found a pineapple grenade in the attic. The “souvenier” dated from the 50s and was reported to be one of the less stable types of hand grenades. Island police immediately cordoned off the area and evacuated several houses and then contacted the Marine Corps in Cherry Point who sent a specialized group to Ocracoke to examine the artifact. The team determined that the weapon was not live and it was sent back to Cherry Point for safe keeping.

Singer Songwriter Michael Stanwood Comes to Ocracoke



Ocrafolk friend and musician Michael Stanwood has travelled out from Denver, Colorado to work with the Ocracoke After School Program this week and give a Friday night concert at Deepwater Theater. Stanwood is a five-time winner of Westword's Best of Denver for everything from his recordings to his performances. He has composed scores for dance, theater and film as well as for three critically acclaimed recordings. He has toured throughout Southeast Asia as a musical goodwill ambassador for the U.S. Information Service. He now plays a variety of ethnic instruments like the didjeridu, the Thai khaen, and the mbira, as well as the guitar. A finalist in the 1981 International Autoharp Competition, Stanwood is recognized as "one of the finest autoharp players in America today," and he has played that instrument with orchestras as well as solo. His also leads the highly acclaimed Buzz Band, a group of nine musicians who play ethnic instruments. Find out more about him at www.michaelstanwood.com.



Off Ocracoke Island
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
CoastalFolk Concert Set for Wilmington, NC


On January 20 at 8:00 PM Molasses Creek will perform along with other guests at a CoastalFolk Concert at Kenan Ausitorium on the campus of UNCW. Joining the Ocracoke crew are John Golden, Anne Haley, Mark Teachey, and Catesby Jones. Tickets may be purchased at the Kenan Auditorium Box Office by calling 910-962-3500. Hope to see you there!

January 20, 2007 – Molasses Creek & CoastalFolk performance with John Golden, Anne Haley, Mark Teachey, & Catesby Jones at Kenan Auditorium on the campus of UNCW in Wilmington, NC. Call 910-962-3500 for tickets.
March 3 -- Music Across the Sound, Mattamaskeet High School, Swan Quarter, NC. Details TBA
March 17
-- Concert with Music on the Delaware, Walton Theater,Walton, NY. For more details contact Jim Richardson
April 22
-- Concert at the Alden Theater, McLean, VA. 8:00 PM. www.mcleancenter.org