April 22, 2010

Civic Association launches four-pronged effort to support Brandywine Battlefield

Civic Association launches four-pronged effort to support Brandywine Battlefield

The Civic Association of Chadds Ford raised an estimated $3,000 during the first of four fund-raising events to benefit the Brandywine Battlefield Park.

About 40 people paid $50 each to have lunch at the Outback Steakhouse Saturday, April 17. The restaurant donated the food and service for the event while a silent auction raised an additional $1,000.

Last summer the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission stopped funding the park operation and even shut the park down for two weeks in August until an agreement was reached allowing the Friends of the Brandywine Battlefield to operate the site, at least temporarily.

Jill Egan, president of the Civic Association explained why her group chose to help keep the park going through the “4 the Love of the Battlefield” effort.

“All of us in the U.S. have a connection to the battlefield. What the Civic Association is trying to do is to make the community feel that connection very tangibly and to have an opportunity to save the Brandywine Battlefield in their own way,” she said.

Egan said the association is planning three more events this spring and summer to raise money. The events include a golf outing at Inniscrone Golf Club in Avondale, A canoe trip down the Brandywine Creek and a Wilmington Blue Rocks baseball game.

Prices on the remaining events range from $20 to $100. Anyone interested in signing up for any of the remaining events should go to http://chaddsfordcivicassn.org/4theLoveoftheBattlefield/BattlefieldEvents.htm

“Hopefully everyone will find something they like, something that’s affordable for them and that they can contribute to the Brandywine Battlefield,” Egan said.

Donations from the Civic Association events go to the association that, in turn, will send the money to the Friends of the Brandywine Battlefield, she said.

Nadia Barakat, an association board member said the group would like to raise as much money as possible.“Our goal right now is modest, which is $5,000, but we’re hoping to surpass that,” she said before the luncheon.

The beneficiaries of the effort are pleased that the association has joined the fight to keep the park going.

“What’s nice about this is that it’s another civic group, a group of local people that are trying to help us out,” said Rich Bowers, a past president and the current treasurer of the Friends of the Brandywine Battlefield. “Just the fact that it’s other people besides us trying to support the battlefield, that’s great to get the word out. Second, every dime we can get is going to help. This is wonderful.”

Chadds Ford Township George Thorpe, also a past president of the battlefield friends group, has been spearheading the efforts to raise money from Delaware and Chester Counties and from neighboring townships.

He said the Civic Association involvement helps draw attention to the goal of keeping the site open and shows that people are interested.

“Word of mouth gets more people to support us. And that’s all we can really do, draw attention,” Thorpe said.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

Civic Association launches four-pronged effort to support Brandywine Battlefield Read More »

New coffee shop ready to pour its first cup

New coffee shop ready to pour its first cup

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Barn House Coffee and Tea is preparing to open in the Barn
Shops of Chadds Ford on April 23. The shop will be located in the old antique
shop between the Chadds Ford Gallery, Clipso Hair Salon and the Brandywine
River Hotel.

Owner Bill Githens said the shop will serve breakfast
pastries and bagels in the morning, along with soup and sweater fare in the
afternoon. There will be both indoor and outdoor seating.

Githens said the coffee will taste more like that from
Starbucks than from Wawa.

“We’re not going to have a brewer at the shop; we’re
actually going to use a press for everything. We’re going to use French presses
for all our coffee and all our tea,” he said adding that the press does a
better job in bringing out the full flavor of the beverages. Paper filters in
conventional brewing pull out many of the essential oils, he said.

Githens also said the shop will use super premium coffee.

Barn House Coffee and Tea will be open seven days per week:
6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 6 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday, 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday and 8 a.m.-3 p.m. on Sunday.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

New coffee shop ready to pour its first cup Read More »

Local vet gets patent on medicine humans can use

Local vet gets patent on medicine humans can use

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Veterinarian Rose DiLeva, whose Animal Wellness Center on Route 202 in
Concord Township incorporates Traditional Chinese Medicine—acupuncture and
herbal remedies—is now getting into the patent medicine business. That
expansion may be beneficial to humans.

DiLeva was recently issued a patent on a skin salve that, in
time, may be marketed for human use. DiLeva said her product—Dr. Rose’s
Remedies—has been approved for use among all mammals, which includes people.
It’s available in pet shops and veterinary offices including her own, and some
retail outlets, but not yet available in drug stores. DiLeva said she was
unclear on the particulars, but believes she has to get approval for
over-the-counter sales before the product can get into the pharmacies and be
marketed for humans.

“I didn’t do it purposely for humans. It just happened to be
there’s nothing in there that is adverse to animals or people. In my mind I did
it for pets, but owners who bought it for pets would say ‘I had chapped lips
and put it on my lips and it really helped. I had a cut, I put it on my cut and
it really helped. It worked for them. They’re the ones that started telling me
those testimonials.”

DiLeva said she was prompted to develop the salve because
other skin products, hadn’t changed for decades.

“They worked sometimes,” she said, “but it was the same
thing for the last 50 or 60 years, the same product with different labels. When
I started learning Chinese herbs I started saying, ‘This has this property to
it, that has that property…this is antibacterial, this is antifungal. I known
how to make a balm, so why don’t I try to make something myself’?’…I started
formulating things, mixing and matching in my kitchen.”

Developing the ointment took years, she said, maybe 10 to 11
years of tinkering with the formula in her kitchen, but when she started to use
it on patients with wounds, laceration and hot spots, “It started to work,”
DiLeva said.

The patenting process took her about three years.

“Now I have the uses patented for use in dogs, cats, horses,
all mammals so that includes humans,” she said.

According to DiLeva, it was her patients’ owners that began
using it on themselves.

“We’ve had people use it for burns, moisturizing their skin,
things I can’t even say,” DiLeva said. “But anything that’s related to itching,
inflammation, dermatitis involving the skin to cuts, insect bites, tick
bites—things like that. It takes away the inflammation. It takes away the itch,
and it happens quickly.”

She added that one person who runs a tattoo shop uses the
ointment on the new tattoos to keep them moisturized and the colors bright.

“I had no idea it would have all these other applications,
but it does,” DiLeva said.

Dr. Rose’s Remedies contain all natural ingredients, all
human grade ingredients, no artificial preservatives, no artificial colorings,
no steroids and no alcohol.

“It’s very important that there’s no alcohol in it because
it would burn putting it on an open lesion or open wound,” DiLeva said.

It comes in a 1-ounce jar for $22 and a 4-ounce pray selling
for $24. DiLeva said it moisturizes, soothes the skin, antibacterial,
antiviral, antifungal, antiseptic and anti-itch.

About Rich Schwartzman

Rich Schwartzman has been reporting on events in the greater Chadds Ford area since September 2001 when he became the founding editor of The Chadds Ford Post. In April 2009 he became managing editor of ChaddsFordLive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

Local vet gets patent on medicine humans can use Read More »

Scenes from Around Town

Scenes from Around Town

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About CFLive Staff

See Contributors Page https://chaddsfordlive.com/writers/

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