For the first time in the history of Class 7A football, four Region 1 teams are alive entering Round 2 this week.
Daphne and Fairhope return home after road victories last week, while Baker and Mary G. Montgomery are on the road.
Class of 2025 4-star cornerback Chuck McDonald has committed to Alabama football.
The 6-foot-1, 190-pound McDonald chose the Crimson Tide over others, including from Georgia, USC and Oregon. The Santa Ana, California, native is the seventh-ranked prospect in California and the ninth-ranked cornerback.
“I want to be the best, and there was no better place to be! We did it Mom, I miss you!” he posted, per On3.
He is the No. 76 prospect in the 2025 class per 247Sports Composite.
He is the 12th commitment for Kalen DeBoer in the class. He joins Mater Dei High School teammate Abduall Sanders Jr. (LB) who committed to Alabama in March. The Tide’s 2025 Alabama recruiting class currently eighth in the nation, per 247Sports.
McDonald had 34 tackles – 26 solo – and an interception and fumble recovery his junior year.
Mark Heim is a reporter for The Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Mark_Heim. He can be heard on “The Opening Kickoff” on WNSP-FM 105.5 FM in Mobile or on the free Sound of Mobile App from 6 to 9 a.m. daily.
How to choose a Christmas tree and keep it fresh as long as possible
What to look for when you choose a real Christmas tree, and ways to keep it fresh as long as possible. This video was made using the Wochit AI tool.
Wochit
Alabama has an abundance of Christmas tree farms, but the landscape has changed a lot over the past decade. While some longtime tree farms have closed, several new farms have sprouted up from one end of the state to the other.
The Advertiser has combed through listings from the Southern Christmas Tree Association, Alabama Farmers Federation and social media to find a comprehensive list of Alabama tree farms that are active for the 2025 season.
Most, if not all, of these listings are choose-and-cut sites where owners tag a tree and then cut it down by hand. Most sites provide handsaws for this. Many sites also offer a variety of pre-cut trees that don’t grow in Alabama.
Season opening dates vary, but most farms will start serving guests somewhere between the weekend before Thanksgiving and the weekend after.
We’re starting it off our list with the tree farms that are closest to Montgomery:
Montgomery Advertiser reporter Shannon Heupel covers things to do in the River Region. Contact him at sheupel@gannett.com. To support his work please subscribe to the Montgomery Advertiser.
Fairhope – James Clemens Football
For the first time in the history of Class 7A football, four Region 1 teams are alive entering Round 2 this week.
Daphne and Fairhope return home after road victories last week, while Baker and Mary G. Montgomery are on the road.
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The Alabama Beverage Control Board, established in 1937 to regulate alcohol sales, is facing criticism from state officials over recent decisions impacting liquor pricing. State Rep. Juandalynn Givan expressed concerns about the board’s role, stating, “I don’t care how you look at it but it is monopolizing a process or the sale of alcohol right here in Alabama for which at some point, that board was created not to do.”
A recent increase in bailment fees from 72 cents to a dollar (which comes out to about a 2 cent increase per bottle) has sparked debate, with Givan and other lawmakers questioning the board’s ability to make fee changes. “Maybe the regulations need to be a little different or at best we need to find out are they authorized by law to be able to make these modifications because this is a serious increase,” she said.
Alabama ranks among the top three states for liquor taxes, prompting concerns that consumers may seek alternatives. “People also drive over to Georgia because you can go to Georgia right next door so you have to look at that and I suspect after a while it will be just like with the lottery ticket. People will start going back to Georgia,” Givan noted.
State Sen. Arthur Orr advocates for Alabama to exit the retail alcohol market, citing competition between about 600 private retailers and 170 state (ABC) stores. “It makes no sense conceptually why we still have this two system operation when it comes to the sale of alcohol we need to get out of the retail sales and then eventually get out of the distribution,” Orr said. He had previously seen estimates for potential state savings around $110 to $120 million annually over a decade if the state exits retail sales.
A price comparison reveals that liquor in Alabama is about 8% more expensive pre-tax than in Georgia, where liquor taxes are approximately 83.4% lower. Orr, who has previously sponsored bills for change in the ABC, suggests legislative action may be delayed until a new governor takes office due to Gov. Kay Ivey’s stance on the ABC.
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