dinamo dinner menu

From Dinamo’s FaceBook page:

dinamo dinner menu
july 6, 2016
> matzoh ball soup 5.
> chilled potato & leek soup 6.
> fish soup 7.
> crostini w/ chopped liver 8.
> crostini w/ cured salmon 8.*
> crostini w/ smoked whitefish salad 10.
> hearts of palm & chickpea w/ flatbread 10.
> za’atar flatbread w/ onion, tomato & feta 10. w/ lamb 16.
> red pizza 11.
> white pizza 12.
> add topping $1: sausage, mushroom, onion, anchovy, olive
> egg in tuna sauce 4.
> squash salad 6.
> mixed green salad 6.
> lentil salad 7.
> beet & fennel salad 12. w/ feta 13.
> arugula & green bean salad w/ egg 13.
> gizzard wedge salad 14.
> roasted red peppers w/ bufala mozzarella 15. w/ anchovy 16.
> squid w/ chard 14.
> mussels – white or red 13.
> clams w/ arugula 15.
> octopus salami 15.
> soft shell crab 15.
> seafood salad 17.
> tagliatelle w/ eggplant 17.
> ricotta gnocchi bolognese 18.
> mussels – white or red w/ squid ink fettuccine 23.
> calamari & shrimp w/ squid ink fettuccine 24.
> tagliatelle w/ lamb ragu 24.
> broccoletti & provolone sausage w/ polenta & beans 17.
> pork liver sausage w/ orange & fennel salad 19.
> rockfish or branzino w/ mixed greens 24.
> t bone w/ arugula salad 32.*
> soft shell crab entree 32.

Trash/Recycling Pickup Thursday

Because of the Fourth of July holiday, trash and recycling pickup moves to Thursday this week. Ideally, rolling recycling containers are stored and deployed in the back alleys along with trash cans. Please make sure you pick up containers after pickup Thursday night.

This has been announced previously, but starting this month, Central Virginia Waste Management Authority will now accept additional plastic bottles and containers with the number 1-7 on the bottom as well as waxy cartons for recycling.

If you have not done so already, don’t forget to sign up for your Recycling Perks.
In order to take your recycling to the next level, read this: 10 ways to improve your recycling.

Also, do not put your dog into recycling bin.

Fireworks’ Future

Oregon Hill residents have had a real love/hate relationship with the annual fireworks displays surrounding the Fourth of July. And if asked, I am sure it would mostly be ‘love’.

That said, this year the RVA Fireworks on The James (usually on July 3rd) is not happening. Before everyone complains and accuses certain Oregon Hill residents of being NIMBY party poopers, it should be recognized that the reason that they are not happening is that major sponsors decided not to support the event this year.

So, fireworks fans can certainly attend other fireworks displays throughout the area, including the free one sponsored by the City at the Dogwood Dell on the 4th. What happens in future years is anyone’s guess, but one way to adjust is to change the nature of the fireworks displays themselves by making them more respectful of nature.

The New York Times has a wonderful recent article on the increasing popularity of ‘quiet fireworks’:

In parts of Europe, quiet fireworks displays have grown increasingly common. In Britain, venues close to residents, wildlife or livestock often permit only quiet fireworks. One town in Italy, Collecchio, passed a law in 2015 that all fireworks displays must be quiet.

By relying on rich color effects and tight visual choreography, designers of quiet fireworks programs can forgo the big explosions and still deliver a stunning show. The hope is that softer celebrations mean less stress for noise-sensitive children, veterans, older people, pets and wildlife.

“We’ve seen more competitors in the last decade or so,” said Rino Sampieri, a senior display manager at Fantastic Fireworks, a company based in England that started selling a quiet fireworks package 30 years ago. “Today, quiet fireworks are part of everybody’s inventory.”

Quiet fireworks are not a new invention. In fact, they are used routinely in classic firework shows as visual effects to accompany the loud bangs. Think of the “comet tail,” which shoots into the sky with a trail of sparkles before quietly fizzling out. Or the “flying fish,” which features tiny tadpole embers scattering away from a silent burst.

What is new is the emergence of a genre of low-key, quiet fireworks displays for audiences that want the fanfare of fireworks without the auditory disturbance.

In addition, there is more development being done on ‘green fireworks’ that do not dump as much heavy metal residue as regular ones. Still, there are a lot of compelling reasons to just not do fireworks altogether. Perhaps the City leaders can take more responsibility and promote better alternatives. Laser light shows, for example, are becoming increasingly sophisticated and crowd pleasing.

Catching Up On The Crime Report

From RAIDSonline.com:

DESTRUCTION PROPERTY/PRIVATE PROPERTY
7XX IDLEWOOD AVE
Jun 12, 2016 at 6:00 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

ALL OTHER LARCENY
4XX S LAUREL ST
Jun 14, 2016 at 12:35 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

ALL OTHER LARCENY
1XX S BELVIDERE ST
Jun 15, 2016 at 1:20 am
Data provided by Virginia Commonwealth University Police Department

DESTRUCTION PROPERTY/CITY PROPERTY
X BELLE ISLE
Jun 15, 2016 at 2:46 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

ALL OTHER LARCENY
X BELLE ISLE
Jun 16, 2016 at 10:00 am
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

ALL OTHER LARCENY
1XX S LAUREL ST
Jun 16, 2016 at 11:30 am
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

SIMPLE ASSAULT
9XX W CARY ST
Jun 17, 2016 at 8:00 am
Data provided by Virginia Commonwealth University Police Department

SHOOTING AT/WITHIN OCCUPIED DWELLING
5XX S LAUREL ST
Jun 18, 2016 at 12:02 am
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

WEAPON LAW VIOLATIONS, CONCEALED WEAPON
3XX S BELVIDERE ST
Jun 19, 2016 at 6:35 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

CITY CODE VIOLATIONS – OPEN CONTAINER
X BELLE ISLE
Jun 20, 2016 at 5:40 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

LIQUOR LAW VIOLATIONS
X BELLE ISLE
Jun 22, 2016 at 2:40 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

CITY CODE VIOLATIONS – OPEN CONTAINER
X BELLE ISLE
Jun 22, 2016 at 3:20 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

LIQUOR LAW VIOLATIONS
X BELLE ISLE
Jun 22, 2016 at 4:09 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

THEFT FROM MOTOR VEHICLE
5XX S CHERRY ST
Jun 25, 2016 at 11:00 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

THEFT FROM MOTOR VEHICLE
2XX S CHERRY ST
Jun 26, 2016 at 9:30 am
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

ALL OTHER LARCENY
4XX S LAUREL ST
Jun 26, 2016 at 10:00 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

DRUG/NARCOTIC VIOLATION
1XX S BELVIDERE ST
Jun 27, 2016 at 12:38 am
Data provided by Virginia Commonwealth University Police Department

CITY CODE VIOLATIONS
X BELLE ISLE
Jun 29, 2016 at 3:24 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

HIT AND RUN
1XX N BELVIDERE ST
Jun 30, 2016 at 3:40 pm
Data provided by Richmond Police Department

Benefit Dinner for Birdhouse Market on July 10

Style magazine has a short article on an upcoming benefit dinner for the Birdhouse Market (formerly Byrd House Market). Hopefully neighbors can attend even though the market is no longer in Oregon Hill.

From the article:

On Sunday, July 10, at 6 p.m., the market and Sub Rosa Bakery will throw a fundraising dinner to help keep those fees down. It’s a chance to experience the farmers’ wares transformed into a multi-course meal and served family-style. Tickets are $100, including drinks and gratuity. For more details and to buy tickets, visit subrosabakery.com/subrosasupper.

Another Editorial From Goldman On Utility Reform

Paul Goldman has yet another Washington Post editorial that follows up on the long-running water utility reform campaign by neighborhood residents. In this one, he gets down to numbers and compares to food tax.

From editorial:

The food tax bill is now about $80 dollars a year for the average low-income family – and it’s still considered too high by such groups as the NAACP and Democratic liberals. We agree.

But in Richmond, the average poor family is paying $150 to $200 a year for regressive, non-existent taxes embedded within their utility bills.

City leaders, aware of these facts, refuse to take action.


Based on Richmond’s new budget, DPU will likely collect between about $30 million of such revenue. Of that, roughly $7 million will be fleeced from the poor.

And again, the real question is how will Council and Mayoral candidates acknowledge and confront this and other financial issues?