Category: CKT

The Roommate I Never Met

August 20, 2024 By ktoms

As a preteen and teenager I lived in an old home constructed during the Great Depression. As I have explained through another story, the house was a new construction in the ’30s, albeit one that used aspects of a preexisting manse in the newer build. The original couple who designed and built the Colonial Revival […]

Lighting the Way: Lighthouses Into our Souls

August 1, 2024 By ktoms

Roulez Media’s Nicholas Crawford and I went on an adventure last week. We decided to drive to Manteo, North Carolina to take in some of my favorite coastal sights down there, namely the Elizabethan Gardens of Manteo, Roanoke Marshes Lighthouse, Bodie Island Lighthouse and Cape Hatteras Light. We have explored Currituck Light in the recent […]

Flyfishing: Solo Sporting with a Social Edge

May 16, 2024 By ktoms

Water presses against my legs, quietly urging me to join its direction. I stand firm, dedicated to my spot – the spot – within casting distance of where I sense trout congregate, awaiting the dance of my hand-tied fly upon the river’s surface. Ten o’clock, two o’clock, the rod swishes through the summer morning air. […]

From Prison to Plating: High HOPES

April 12, 2024 By ktoms

In the past, Roulez Magazine featured a story about English prison inmates learning Culinary Arts during imprisonment. Those prisoners even operate their own restaurants at multiple Her Majesty’s Prisons (HMPs). Since writing this piece, the prison-to-plating concept has never left our minds. American prisons are heavy with despair and hopelessness. This makes one wonder why […]

Norfolk Sunday of History, Culture and Flavors

May 18, 2022 By ktoms

Photos by Nicholas Crawford It was September 2, 1945 that Japan officially surrendered to the Allies to end World War II. At that time, the “American Caesar” General Douglas MacArthur delivered a remarkably penned speech at the surrender ceremony aboard the U.S.S. Missouri in Tokyo Bay.  His words hold true even today, perhaps more so […]

Portsmouth, Virginia: Centuries of History in a Port O’Call

May 17, 2022 By ktoms

Whenever I choose to live in a new region – as I do quite often, given an ongoing case of curiosity over what is on the other side of the fence – I love to really “dig into” my surroundings. I enjoy exploring all of the regional trails and parks, just as much as I […]

Up for Auction: The Voice of Lady Liberty | An Ego-Crush for Hitler

May 16, 2022 By ktoms

It was 124 years ago that 15 year-old Annie Moore of Ireland stepped onto Ellis Island and through the immigration processing area there to become an American, the first to be processed into the country through Ellis Island’s new facilities. Over the next 60 years, about 12 million more immigrants passed through the island’s gateway into […]

Burial Beauty In the Eyes of the Beholder

May 12, 2022 By ktoms

Roulez photographer Nicholas Crawford and I recently ventured into Virginia cemeteries on the hunt for unique sculptural representations of life and death. Our original goal was for capturing imagery for Halloween and other purposes. But in addition to coming away with pretty photos and shadowy landscapes, we emerged with big questions about our own burial […]

Lightkeeper of Currituck

July 12, 2020 By ktoms

Meghan Agresto is a modern day lightkeeper. She and her two sons, Benicio and Paolo, several chickens and the family dog Jess live on Currituck Beach Lighthouse grounds where she manages operations for this popular and historic attraction of the Outer Banks. Located in Corolla Village at the northern end of the Outer Banks, Currituck […]

The Call of the Void

May 12, 2020 By ktoms

On a recent outing with a friend, I explained that I fear heights because this fear is accompanied by a magnetic pull into the abyss. The look on their face was a funny mix of shock, fear and humor. I have long known that I react this way to heights. Perhaps my worst adventure to […]

Ghosts of Fort Monroe

May 12, 2020 By ktoms

I grew up in a haunted house. Wait, let me rephrase that. I learned about 15 years ago that some family members like to pretend nothing ever happened. They said, “Don’t say it is haunted!” Meanwhile, none of us slept at night. So let me rewrite our history a little. I grew up in a […]

Haunted Hampton Roads

May 12, 2020 By ktoms

Photos by Nicholas Crawford. No Halloween is complete without consideration of some known haunted spots, whether you believe in ghosts or just love the folklore. Hampton Roads of Virginia, a region steeped in our history and home to multiple battlefields, certainly has its share of myths, mysteries and the macabre. Photographer Nicholas Crawford and I […]

St. Augustine: Florida for Grown Ups

May 12, 2020 By ktoms

I am a grown up. As makes sense, when going on vacation I want to go on a grown-up vacation. In other words, lying on a beach where spring break television is filmed is not enticing to me. I want to be comfortable, pampered even. I want to be entertained, well fed, dressed up, dressed […]

Corolla Wild Horses: Starlets of the Outer Banks

May 12, 2020 By ktoms

The newest celebrities of the East Coast are not located in New York, Boston, Miami or even Charleston. Unexpectedly, Currituck County, North Carolina is a breeding ground for some of the hottest new faces on social media. Even more unexpected, these media darlings are hairy-faced wild mustangs of Corolla, a breed of horses calling the […]

Gumbeau’s Catering: South Louisiana Cuisine in Virginia’s River Realm

August 12, 2019 By ktoms

Photos by Nicholas Crawford On a sunny Saturday, Creative Director Nicholas Crawford and I set out on an impromptu drive up to Virginia’s River Realm. Good Luck Cellars was hosting Gumbeau’s Catering for that particular day, to provide lunch for vineyard workers and visitors. Little did we realize the true culinary gem we were about […]

Farm Market Traditions of the Outer Banks

May 12, 2019 By ktoms

The quaint family farm of yesterday, one of growing to sell for self-support, is a heritage very recently on the rebound yet still teetering on extinction. Equally endangered is the experience of shopping at small farm markets, a tradition many hold fast to in the Outer Banks of North Carolina. With the average American farmer […]

Outer Banks Beach House

May 12, 2019 By ktoms

In the Outer Banks of North Carolina, the lifestyle is relaxed and easy. Interior design of area homes is equally laid back and casual, providing space for socialization and enjoyment of the picturesque natural setting. We sat down with Outer Banks interior designer Amy Hilliker Klebitz to gain insight into what makes an island home quintessentially […]

Eight Burgers You Must Try

May 10, 2019 By ktoms

Super Bowl 50 is coming and with it, the annual scramble for the best finger foods. Of course, burgers are always part of the quintessential Super Bowl repertoire. Wherever you are in the country and whichever team you root for, you know you love a good burger. There is no watching your waistline on Super […]