West Virginia
West Virginia women look to make the most of a rare chance to host March Madness
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — West Virginia coach Mark Kellogg has made a huge impression in his first three seasons at a major college. All that’s missing is a deep run in the women’s NCAA Tournament.
No. 4 seed West Virginia (27-6) is a tournament host for the first time since 1992. A win over No. 13 seed Miami (Ohio ) (28-6) in the first round on Saturday night would tie the Mountaineers’ best three-year stretch in program history with 78 wins.
Since Kellogg arrived from Stephen F. Austin in 2023, West Virginia has lost only five times at home.
“I think our kids, to their credit, have earned the right to play here,” Kellogg said. “Super excited about that.”
The hard part will be moving on. In 16 previous NCAA appearances, the Mountaineers have never won more than once, bowing out in the second round under Kellogg the past two seasons.
West Virginia comes in on a six-game winning streak, taking down TCU to win the Big 12 Tournament for the first time since 2017.
“Our best basketball is yet to come,” West Virginia guard Sydney Shaw said.
TCU guard Veronica Sheffey (2) shoots under pressure from West Virginia guard Sydney Shaw (5) during second half of the NCAA college basketball championship game at the Big 12 Conference tournament Sunday, March 8, 2026, in Kansas City, Mo. Credit: AP/Charlie Riedel
The opener of the Morgantown region Saturday pits No. 5 seed Kentucky (23-10) against No. 12 James Madison (26-8). The first-round winners will meet on Monday.
‘Sleep in your own bed’
Kentucky coach Kenny Brooks, whose team hosted the first two rounds in the NCAAs last year, said there’s some added stress of being a host school because of expectations to win, while visiting teams can play freely because “they have nothing to lose.”
Kellogg wasn’t taking the bait, saying he hasn’t felt the pressure.
“That’s a veteran coach, I think, just trying to plant a seed, potentially,“ Kellogg said.
Kentucky head coach Kenny Brooks reacts during second half of an NCAA college basketball game against South Carolina in the quarterfinals of the Southeastern Conference tournament, Friday, March 6, 2026, in Greenville, S.C. Credit: AP/Chris Carlson
Shaw sees it differently, too.
“Every time I put my head on my pillow, I go to sleep with a smile on my face, giggling myself to sleep because I’m so excited,” Shaw said. “It’s a big deal to not have to pack your bags, honestly. You get to sleep in your own bed. So I’m grateful for that.”
Brooks vs. former school
Brooks graduated from James Madison in 1992. He went 337-122 and led the Dukes to six NCAA berths over 14 seasons, leaving in 2016 as the school’s winningest coach. He’ll watch his former school from the other sideline on Saturday.
“It’s 10 years removed and I’m obviously proud as an alum of everything that’s happened to James Madison,” Brooks said. “But tomorrow it will be another game.”
Before coming to Kentucky two years ago, Brooks spent eight seasons at Virginia Tech. The Hokies lost to James Madison in the 2019 National Invitation Tournament. Brooks led Virginia Tech to the Final Four in 2023 before losing to eventual national champion LSU.
Sean O’Regan was Brooks’ longtime assistant at James Madison and took over for his former boss in 2016. The Dukes won the Sun Belt Conference tournament and are in the NCAA Tournament for the second time in four seasons.
A sweet reward awaits
Miami’s men’s basketball team captured most of the attention on campus back in Oxford, Ohio, finishing as the nation’s only unbeaten team during the regular season at 31-0, qualifying for the NCAA Tournament and winning its First Four game over SMU on Wednesday.
Not to be outdone, the women’s team set a program record for wins that included their first Mid-American Conference tournament title since 2008.
If the RedHawks leave Morgantown with a trip secured to the Sweet 16, they’ll likely stop somewhere for ice cream — a road-trip tradition under third-year coach Glenn Box, who like Kellogg is in his first major-college head coaching job.
“I’m willing to give them whatever they want after they win,” Box said. “Winning should be fun.”
Defensive Mountaineers
West Virginia isn’t known for putting on shooting clinics, instead relying on its full-court pressure defense to create scoring opportunities.
The Mountaineers force 22 turnovers per game, led by Big 12 steals leader and defensive player of the year Jordan Harrison. West Virginia’s 18.2-point scoring margin is the 13th highest among teams in the NCAA field. In three meetings with TCU this season, West Virginia held the Horned Frogs to their two lowest point totals of the season.
Shaw remembers when she arrived at West Virginia a year ago and learned the rigors of playing against her own defense.
“It was rough. I was struggling out there,” Shaw said. “So I can only imagine (the challenge for) a team that’s never seen it.”
Miami averages nearly 16 turnovers but has its own defensive prowess. Both teams are limiting opponents to under 59 points per game.
West Virginia
West Virginia to launch school clothing allowance program
KANAWHA COUNTY, W.Va. (WOWK) – The school clothing allowance program will soon be open to eligible children for the upcoming school year.
The West Virginia Department of Human Services will begin to accept applications for eligible children enrolled in West Virginia schools starting on Monday, July 20.
Applications can be found HERE or by requesting a paper application be mailed to them by contacting the DOHS office. They will be accepted until August 15, or until available funds are fully allocated.
Each eligible child will receive a $200 benefit that may be used toward the purchase of appropriate school clothing or piece goods for families who sew clothing for their children.
The monthly income for a family of four for the school clothing program may not exceed $3,483.
The program’s future was uncertain due to the state’s federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families funding. Governor Patrick Morrisey announced that West Virginia has ensured that the funding needed to open the program for families this year will be available.
“We are doing this the right way, and we’re working to make funding streams last. COVID-era reliance on one-time money helped create these challenges, so now we are working to put this program on solid footing. Starting July 20, West Virginia families can apply for the School Clothing Allowance,” said Governor Patrick Morrisey.
The School clothing allowance program recipients will receive payments on their EBT cards. This will allow for both online transactions and an increased choice of vendors when purchasing school clothing. The EBT card will operate like a debit card and can be used at any retailer who accepts EBT cash transactions.
Parents or guardians of children in foster care will receive the school clothing allowance benefit as a check.
West Virginia
Helicopter crashes in Pocahontas County
MARLINTON, W.Va . (WVVA) – UPDATE: The NTSB has confirmed the crash involves a Sikorsky S76D helicopter.
A helicopter has crashed in Pocahontas County.
Few details are available at this time but the crash has been confirmed in the Marlinton area.
Capt. Leslie T. Goldie with the West Virginia State Police said Troopers are on the scene assisting with security and the National Transportation Safety Board (FAA) will investigate the crash.
The NTSB has confirmed the crash involves a Sikorsky S76D helicopter.
WVVA will provide details as they become available.
Copyright 2026 WVVA. All rights reserved.
West Virginia
How midsummer wild berries connect people, wildlife, and West Virginia’s forests – West Virginia Explorer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — In midsummer, West Virginia’s forests yield one of their richest annual harvests. Blackberries spill over abandoned fence rows. Raspberries brighten sunny hillsides. Blueberries and huckleberries ripen on the state’s highest mountains.
For generations, families have carried buckets into the woods to gather berries for cobblers, jams, and pies. Yet these fruits nourish far more than Appalachian traditions. Each summer, millions of berries feed an extraordinary variety of wildlife, helping sustain everything from songbirds and wild turkeys to white-tailed deer and black bears.
Wildlife experts say the annual berry crop is one of the Appalachian forest’s most important natural food sources, influencing where animals travel, how they raise their young, and even how often people encounter bears.
Nature’s midsummer pantry
By July, West Virginia’s forests enter one of their most productive seasons. Forester William N. Grafton, a longtime specialist with the West Virginia University Extension Service, wrote in the West Virginia Encyclopedia that the Mountain State is home to “dozens of native berry plants, ranging from trees and shrubs to vines and herbs.”
Among the berries most prized by both people and wildlife, he wrote, are blackberries, blueberries, huckleberries, strawberries, serviceberries, and raspberries.
“July and August are the best months for juicy, tart blackberries,” Grafton wrote. “These months are also best for raspberries (black, red, and wineberry).”
Blueberries and glossy huckleberries continue to ripen from July through September, especially along forest margins, open woodlands, and high mountain ridges.
According to Grafton, these delicious fruits—known to wildlife biologists as “soft mast”—provide critical nutrition for numerous species during summer. Black bears, deer, raccoons, foxes, squirrels, chipmunks, wild turkeys, grouse, and countless songbirds depend on seasonal berry crops as they build energy reserves for the months ahead.
Berry patches also provide much more than food. Dense blackberry thickets offer nesting cover, escape habitat, and shelter for birds and small mammals, making them among the most valuable habitats along forest edges, old fields, and woodland openings.
Why berry season changes bear behavior
The arrival of berry season can also help explain a pattern many West Virginians notice each year. Black bears often become highly visible in late spring, wandering through neighborhoods in search of easy meals before natural foods become abundant. By July, however, reports of bears visiting residential areas frequently decline.
“The decrease in cumulative conflicts in the month of July coincides with the ripening of raspberries, blackberries, and blueberries,” according to Colin Carpenter, black bear project leader with the W.Va. Division of Natural Resources.
As these natural foods become plentiful, bears spend more time feeding deep in forests and less time searching neighborhoods for garbage, bird feeders, livestock feed, or pet food.
“Bear movements are tied to food sources,” Carpenter says. “Bears that roam around residential areas in search of food are less likely to stay if they do not find anything to eat.”
While bears remain opportunistic feeders throughout the summer, abundant wild crops help keep many of them focused on natural forage rather than human-provided food sources.
Read more: Why more West Virginians are seeing black bears this summer
A tradition rooted in Appalachia
Long before grocery stores, midsummer berry season was among Appalachia’s most anticipated harvests.
Native peoples gathered wild berries for food and medicine, and later settlers preserved them as jams and jellies, baked them into pies, and canned them for winter. For many families, berry picking became both a necessity and a cherished summertime tradition.
For Matt Welsch, a West Virginia food historian, chef, and advocate for Appalachian foodways, berry picking remains one of the state’s most enduring seasonal rituals.
“I grew up picking berries on the farm,” Welsch says. “It was a family activity, a communion, and it always ended in a treat, whether that was something simple like fresh berries over cornbread with sugar and milk or a fresh fruit pie.”
Although the fruits now fill supermarket shelves year-round, he says gathering them in the woods offers something modern conveniences cannot replace.
“They say splitting your own wood warms you twice,” Welsch says. “Gathering forest berries is a treat twice over. Berries are in every grocery store these days, but nothing compares to those fresh from the woods. Picking berries is a touchstone for who we really are.”
That tradition remains especially strong in West Virginia’s high country. Grafton noted that “hundreds of people make annual forays to Dolly Sods, Spruce Knob, and nearby areas to pick blueberries,” a seasonal pilgrimage that continues today as hikers combine mountain adventures with one of the state’s most celebrated natural harvests.
Elsewhere, blackberry patches flourish along abandoned farmsteads, old logging roads, utility corridors, reclaimed meadows, and sunny woodland edges, offering some of the easiest and most rewarding wild foods to gather.
Welsch says those outings often became treasured family memories, even if they didn’t always seem that way at the time.
“I don’t want to put on airs,” he says. “I remember a lot of griping when we’d head out to pick berries. But even at my crabbiest, I couldn’t deny what coming home with a full pail meant. The griping was part of it. So was the pie.”
Reading the health of the forest
To wildlife biologists, berry patches reveal much more than where to find summer fruit.
The abundance—or scarcity—of the fruits reflects weather patterns, forest health, and habitat quality. Strong berry years provide ample nutrition for wildlife, helping many species raise young successfully and prepare for the changing seasons. Poor berry crops, caused by late frosts, drought, or other environmental conditions, can force animals to travel farther in search of food.
For black bears especially, the difference can be noticeable. When natural foods are scarce, bears are more likely to investigate neighborhoods and campsites in search of alternative meals. When berry crops are abundant, many remain deep within forests, where food is plentiful.
For Welsch, berry patches also remind people that they share the mountains with countless other creatures.
“My favorite thing to do out there is look for animal signs,” he says. “Tracks and scat show me I’m part of a larger ecosystem, standing in the same patch the bears and the birds are working. It connects me with the land. I treasure that feeling.”
Knowing which berries to pick
Not every colorful berry growing in the woods is safe to eat. Grafton advised that “white or whitish fruits generally should be regarded as toxic and poisonous.”
Plants such as poison ivy, poison sumac, doll’s-eyes, white coralberry, and mistletoe produce berries that should be avoided.
He also warned that the unripe fruits of may-apple and groundcherry are toxic, and that the seeds of cherries and pokeberries contain poisonous compounds. Even experienced foragers harvest only berries they can identify with certainty.
Fortunately, West Virginia’s best-known edible berries—blackberries, raspberries, blueberries, huckleberries, strawberries, and serviceberries—are among the easiest to recognize when ripe.
Why wild berries taste different
Welsch believes wild berries have flavors that cultivated fruit simply cannot duplicate.
“Wild berries had to fight for everything, so the flavor is concentrated,” he says. “A grocery-store blackberry was bred to survive a truck ride. A wild one was bred by the hillside it grew on. More acid, more perfume, less water.”
His favorite preparation remains the simplest. “Cornbread, sugar, milk, berries,” Welsch says. “That’s the one I reach for first because that’s what berries meant on the farm.”
Today, he also enjoys using wild fruit in savory dishes, especially blackberry gastriques and sauces served with locally raised beef.
“A blackberry-based steak sauce is a current favorite,” he says. “Wild blackberries, a splash of vinegar, and a good cut of beef will tell you everything about a West Virginia summer.”
More than a summer harvest
Every berry patch tells a larger story about West Virginia’s forests. It feeds migrating birds before autumn, fuels growing bear cubs through summer, shelters rabbits and nesting songbirds beneath tangled canes, supports pollinators, and sustains a seasonal tradition that has connected generations of West Virginians to the land. It also preserves recipes, family memories, and food traditions that remain deeply rooted in Appalachian culture.
For visitors exploring the state’s back roads and mountain trails this July, the ripening fruits are evidence of a healthy Appalachian landscape where people and wildlife continue to share the same seasonal harvest—a reminder that some of West Virginia’s oldest traditions begin with something as simple as a blackberry by the trail.
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