Enhancing the grid

Dominion planning to upgrade aging transmission lines to meet rising demand
Taking sides

O ur world is divided. This is neither new nor startling news. Truth-be-told, our world has always been divided.
Hugh Hammond Bennett

Why does land wear out? Hugh Hammond Bennett found out in Louisa County. The misunderstood problem of agricultural land use in early America led farmers who tilled the soil to just move on to better land because there were limits with repetitive tillage and deteriorating soil quality. Things changed in 1905. Hugh Bennett and another soil scientist compared adjoining land parcels with identical soils and differing production capability. One parcel was forested; the other cultivated. The forested parcel has never been cultivated; the other parcel had been tilled and planted year after year. Surely, Bennett thought, the soils were identical in the beginning. What changed? The difference was erosion throughout the cultivated parcel with accompanying loss of topsoil. Bennett studied soils in the United States and in other countries to reach his conclusion that soil erosion was a serious and unappreciated problem for the planet and all who live on it.
A late ‘thank you’ to a Louisa comedy legend

“Monty Python and the Holy Grail” fractured my brain as a young adolescent.
Observing the National Day of Prayer

Local event ties faith to history of United States
LCPS celebrate MVP, educator of the year

Throughout the year, staff, students, parents, and community members submit nominations for Louisa County Public School (LCPS) employees who are going the extra mile to positively impact others. The nominations culminated in an annual event at Tavern on the Green on May 6 to recognize 13 staff members and also award the Educator and MVP of the Year. Louisa County High School (LCHS) nurse Mazie Rowe was recognized as the 2026 Wallace L. Tingler MVP of the Year and Trevilians Elementary School (TES) fourth-grade teacher Megan Barrett was recognized as the William G. Thomas Educator of the Year.
CALENDAR
The Louisa County Commission on Aging and Louisa Parks and Recreation are sponsoring a Senior and Caregiver Picnic from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at the Betty Queen Center (522 Industrial Drive, Louisa).
ONGOING EVENTS
Louisa County Parks, Recreation & Tourism hosts pickleball play Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, and Sunday. To view the ongoing pickleball schedule or to register for a pickleball clinic please visit www.LCPRT.info or call our office at (540)-967-4420.
Honoring a hometown hero

Community mourns the loss of Nuckols and reflects on a life of public service
Rebranding

If you get to hang around this planet long enough, you’ll notice that most things get rebranded sooner or later. For example, my grandmother wore a girdle.

