Maryland
Marijuana Dispensary Opens In Nottingham's 'Flourishing Cannabis Market'
NOTTINGHAM, MD — A cannabis dispensary held its grand opening Thursday in East Baltimore County.
The Apothecarium Nottingham sits outside the White Marsh Mall at 8241 Perry Hall Blvd. It’s located in the former Simply Delicious Cajun Kitchen.
The Nottingham dispensary replaced The Apothecarium Parkville.
This is the company’s fourth Maryland location. The others are in Salisbury, Cumberland and Burtonsville. This is the business’s 39th dispensary nationwide.
A press release from parent company TerrAscend Corp. called the Nottingham store a “sophisticated retail venue featuring a convenient drive-thru.”
“Just weeks after celebrating Maryland’s first rec legal 4/20, we are excited to keep the momentum rolling by strengthening our already strong retail presence in this young and flourishing cannabis market,” TerrAscend Executive Chairman Jason Wild said in the release. “While still in the early innings of adult-use in Maryland, we continue to invest in the state with an eye towards further expanding our market share.”
Recreational Marijuana Has Business Booming At MD Dispensaries
Maryland legalized recreational marijuana for residents 21 and up under state law on July 1, 2023. Cannabis remains illegal under federal law, however. Medical use is also legal under Maryland law.
TerrAscend plans to capitalize on this new market.
“In addition to our new Nottingham location, we recently operationalized the expansion of our cultivation facility, doubling its capacity,” Wild said in the release. “We can’t wait for our customers to experience our expanded variety and the innovative high quality products we’re set to launch.”
Visit apothecarium.com/dispensaries/nottingham for more information on the company.
To learn more about Maryland’s recreational marijuana laws and market, read Patch’s feature story on dispensaries.
Maryland
Dog turns on toaster, sparking Maryland house fire that kills 3 pets
Why a fire blanket is a must-have for every kitchen
Learn how a fire blanket can smother flames safely and protect your home from grease fires.
A dog jumping onto a kitchen counter accidentally turned on a toaster and ignited nearby combustibles, sparking a fire that killed three pets inside a Belcamp, Maryland, home, according to multiple reports, citing local fire officials.
The blaze broke out July 10 while the unidentified family was away, prompting neighbors to rescue two dogs before fire crews arrived, WBAL‑TV and Fox 45 reported.
The Abingdon Fire Company responded at 5:35 p.m. ET to the home and brought the fire under control in about 20 minutes, according to the fire station’s Facebook post. There were no human injuries, but investigators reported extensive fire, soot, smoke and water damage throughout the single‑family home, Fox 45 reported.
Ring home security video captured the moments before the fire. Investigators said the footage showed one of the family’s dogs climbing onto the counter and pawing at items near the toaster, helping deputy state fire marshals determine the fire’s point of origin and ultimately rule its cause as accidental.
Three pets – a dog named Dakota and two unidentified cats – died in the blaze, according to Fox 45. Two other dogs, Bo and Addie, were rescued by neighbors. The family’s bearded dragon survived after spending 24 hours in critical care, officials said.
Neighbors rescue two dogs from burning home
Fire officials said Bo was the dog seen on video inadvertently turning on the toaster. The appliance ignited nearby materials, allowing the fire to spread rapidly through the kitchen before crews arrived.
Neighbors who saw smoke coming from the home reached Bo and Addie before conditions worsened.
Officials detail damage to home
Officials estimated the home sustained about $150,000 in structural damage and roughly $50,000 in damage to its contents, though some assessments place the total loss closer to $200,000, Fox 45 reported. Firefighters prevented the blaze from spreading to neighboring properties, but the interior of the home was heavily damaged.
Reporter Anthony Thompson can be reached at ajthompson@usatodayco.com, or on X @athompsonUSAT
Maryland
Wineries in Delaware and in nearby Maryland, Pa., are summertime lure
11 Delaware restaurants earn 2026 Wine Spectator Restaurant Award
Eleven Delaware restaurants earned Wine Spectator honors that named them the best dining destinations for wine lovers.
When it comes to wineries, people residing in or visiting Sussex County have the most in-state options.
But though Delaware has few such destinations within its borders, a slew of wineries nearby across state lines provide easy access and opportunity for those seeking a relaxing atmosphere and perhaps some music and food to accompany their liquid delights from the vineyard.
Northern Delaware residents, especially those in the Newark area and suburbs north of Wilmington, are particularly fortunate because of the numerous options available in Chester County, Pennsylvania, and Cecil County, Maryland.
But Sussex County gets to lead off this list of local wineries, because nobody needs to leave the state to get there.
Salted Vines Vineyard
Adrian Mobilia’s vineyard roots go deep, stretching four generations back to Italy, and more recently to his family’s vineyard in northeastern Pennsylvania. He’s planting another legacy in Delaware, first at Fenwick Wine Cellars and now at Salted Vines in Frankford since 2016. The name stems from the winery’s location near the sea and bays, as salty ocean air wafts across the grapes.
Mobilia and his wife, Jessica, slowly plant their 26-acre plot in Frankford at an acre a year. So far, that includes cabernet sauvignon, merlot, malbec and Italian vermentino grapes, with chardonnay and pinot noir soon to follow.
A summer concert series is among the winery’s many attractions.
Hours: Sunday to Thursday: noon to 6 p.m.; Friday: noon to 8 p.m.; Saturday: 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Sunday: noon to 7 p.m.
Address: 32512 Blackwater Road, Frankford, Delaware
Website: saltedvines.com
Twin Branch Winery
Twin Branch is the newest winery in Delaware, founded in 2023. But it already may be one of the most famous, after appearing on New Jersey psychic Theresa Caputo’s Lifetime show, “Raising Spirits.”
The vineyard planted its first grapes in 2013, but Twin Branch didn’t open to the public until April of 2023, hosting weddings and weekly live music and plenty of tasters.
Food trucks also stop by the vineyard to offer tasty bites alongside smooth wine, often with musical accompaniment.
Hours: Wednesday to Thursday: 3 to 9 p.m.; Friday to Saturday: noon to 9 p.m.; Sunday: noon to 6 p.m.
Address: 14756 Twin Branch Road, Milton, Delaware
Website: twinbranchwinery.com
Nassau Valley Vineyard
Delaware’s oldest active winery, tucked behind a mini-mall near car detailers and equipment stores, has the character of a sudden green oasis. The vineyards appear as if by surprise, a jumpscare of rusticity with picnic tables placed within shade-rows of trees.
Peg Raley and her father Bob Raley founded the vineyards in 1987 – planting chardonnay, cabernet sauvignon, cabernet franc and merlot on a family farm outside Lewes. Decades later, the Raleys are the founding family of Delaware grapes.
Hours: Daily: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Closed Mondays in the off-season). Last call for tastings is 4:30 p.m.
Address: 32165 Winery Way, Lewes, Delaware
Website: nassauvalley.com
Harvest Ridge Winery
The winery, in a rural area along the Mason-Dixon line, straddles the Delaware/Maryland state line on the far western edge of Kent County.
“I always looked at it like Kevin Costner’s ‘Field of Dreams.’ Build it and they will come,” co-owner Chuck Nunan told Delaware Online/The News Journal in 2014.
He and his wife, Chris, founded Harvest Ridge Winery in November 2013, expanding their acreage in 2018 and adding a tasting room in Toughkemon, Pennsylvania, a short drive from Wilmington. Along the way, they founded what they claim is the first modern hard cider brand in Delaware, Rebel Seed.
Hours: Sunday to Thursday: noon to 5 p.m.; Friday to Saturday: noon to 8 p.m.
Address: 447 Westville Road, Marydel, Delaware
Website: harvestridge.wpenginepowered.com
Paradoxc Winery
Just four miles across the Delaware border, Paradoxc offers a particularly wide variety of indoor and outdoor settings, making it a year-round destination.
Especially appealing is the Meadow, bordered by grape vines, where there’s a musical stage and room for as many as 500 visitors on pleasant days. A large selection of reds, whites and specially designated sweets provide plenty of choices for wine drinkers.
Hours: Thursday to Friday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Saturday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Monday 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Address: 1833 Flint Hill Road, Landenberg, Pennsylvania.
Website: paradocx.com/
1723 Vineyards
This winery’s name is derived from its location having been chartered as New London Township in 1723, though subsequent re-mapping means it is now in Franklin Township.
More importantly, owners Sarah and Ben Cody’s winery is barely three miles across the Delaware border. They tout their cabernet franc, petit verdot and chambourcin reds and a “go-to” sauvignon blanc among the whites. But there are many tastes to sample, including rosé and sparkling wines.
The tasting room and patio afford views of the vineyards from which the grapes are grown that make those wines.
Hours: Thursday to Friday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.’; Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Address: 5 McMaster Blvd., Landenberg, Pennsylvania.
Website: 1723vineyards.com/
Penns Woods Winery
Founded in 2001 by Italian immigrant and U.S. Marine Corps veteran Gino Razzi, Penns Woods Winery opened its tasting room in 2006. In 2010, Razzi brought his daughter in to help grow the up-and-coming business.
As the winery took off, Razzi and a partner planted a second vineyard site in 2013, and in 2019, expanded to a third location.
Visitors can enjoy vineyard views, wine by the glass and bottle as well as local beer, cider and more in the family- (and dog-) friendly space. Live music is a staple and other events tied in with holidays or other happenings are frequent.
Tasting room hours: Sunday, Monday, Wednesday, Thursday: noon to 6 p.m.; Friday and Saturday: noon to 7 p.m.
Address: 124 Beaver Valley Road, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania
Website: pennswoodswinery.com
Chaddsford Winery
Sold recently to a Wilmington real estate developer and his family − who own the New Jersey-based White Horse Winery − Chaddsford Winery is one of Pennsylvania’s oldest and largest wineries.
It was founded in 1982 by innovative winemaker Eric Miller, a California native who once lived in Burgundy and made wine in upstate New York, and his wife, Lee Miller.
The Millers made European-style wines and were among the first locally to produce unoaked chardonnay and produce red wines from northern Italian varietals.
The couple retired and stepped away from the business in 2012. The winery’s most recent owners before last year’s sale were the Petrillo family of New York, who had worked with the Millers.
Among the attractions from May through September are Live on the Lawn outdoor concerts on Saturdays and Sundays from 2 to 5 p.m.
Hours: Monday to Thursday: noon to 5 p.m.; Friday to Sunday: noon-6 p.m.
Address: 632 Baltimore Pike, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania
Website: chaddsford.com
Acadian Wine Company
Acadian Wine Company touts drinking wine as “a communal experience,” and certainly provides that opportunity at its picturesque, rural setting well off the main road.
Its tasting room is also adorned with paintings by local artists and offers outdoor seating and vineyard views. Visitors can choose from more than a dozen locally grown wine offerings.
Hours: Thursday 4 to 8 p.m.; Friday 2 to 8 p.m.; Saturday noon to 8 p.m. Sunday noon to 6 p.m; Monday to Wednesday by appointment.
Address: 553 S, Guernsey Road, West Grove, Pennsylvania.
Website: acadianwinecompany.com/
Vala Vineyards
Vala Vineyards is situated on seven hillside acres where both history and grapes emanate from the area’s verdant black mushroom soils.
The land has been owned by the same family since 1928 with the first grapes planted in 1999. Northern Italian and French wine varieties dot the menu’s earthy offerings of small-batch dry table wines.
Hours: Friday noon to 5:30 p.m. Saturday to Sunday noon to 6 p.m.
Address: 8822 Gap Newport Pike #41, Avondale, Pennsylvania.
Website: valavineyards.com/
Wayvine Winery & Vineyard Farm
Wayvine’s rural setting in southern Chester County offers visitors vast views of fields covered with 14,000 vines that yield numerous varieties to sample. That can be done sitting outside while listening to musicians or inside the neighboring tasting room. A second tasting room in Kennett Square is also open.
Hours: Thursday 4 to 8 p.m.; Friday 4 to 10 p.m.; Saturday noon to 8 p.m. Sunday noon to 6 p.m..
Address: 5150 Forge Road, Nottingham, Pennsylvania.
Website: wayvine.wine/
Casa Carmen Farm and Winery
This pleasant hillside setting is on property long-ago owned by William Penn. It is owned and operated now by brothers Enrique and Felipe Pallares, former polo players turned winemakers, and their families.
Visitors can choose from a large selection of red, white and sparkling wines as well as many vermouths that can be enjoyed with tapas, sandwiches and other food offerings.
Hours: Wednesday and Thursday 4 to 8 p.m.; Friday 4 to 9 p.m.; Saturday noon to 9 p.m. Sunday noon to 6 p.m..
Address: 49 Camino Way, West Grove, Pennsylvania.
Website: casacarmenwines.com/
Dove Valley
Harry and Janet Hepbron’s 100-acre farm has produced a vast array of wines since the first vines were planted in 1998. They can be enjoyed on-site outside or in the shade of a large entertainment venue where bands regularly visit and themed festivals are frequently held, such as the Aug. 1 Caribbean Wine Splash.
Hours: Thursday and Sunday noon to 5 p.m.
Address: 645 Harrington Road, Rising Sun, Maryland.
Website: dovevalleywine.com/
Bohemia Manor Winery
Bohemia Manor’s hilltop setting off Route 213 south of Chesapeake City offers spectacular views of the Bohemia River as it flows by. The 22 acres of vines have been producing wine since 2014.
Since 2024, visitors have been able to sample many selections at an on-site restaurant and bar with the option of luxury overnight stays also at the Manor House or Vintner’s Cottage.
Hours: Wednesday and Thursday 4 to 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday Noon to 8 p.m.; Sunday Noon to 6 p.m.
Address: 237 Bohemia Manor Farm Lane, Chesapeake City, Maryland.
Website: bohemiamanorwine.com/
Staff reporter Isabel Hughes contributed to this story. Contact Kevin Tresolini at ktresolini@delawareonline.com and follow on Twitter @kevintresolini. Support local journalism by subscribing to delawareonline.com and our DE Game Day newsletter.
Maryland
Dog who called Maryland shelter home for 7 years finally adopted: “There wasn’t a dry eye in the house”
The SPCA of Anne Arundel County announced that their longest running shelter resident has been adopted. Kylo Jace found his forever home after living at the SPCA of Anne Arundel County for 7 years.
The SPCA said on their Facebook page thar Kylo is a dog who “takes many meetings with someone in order to fully trust them and feel comfortable enough to show his true silly, wonderful personality.”
Over the years, he had specific volunteers and staff who had earned his trust and would take turns walking and caring for him day after day, the shelter said.
Over the course of the past 7 months, the woman who adopted Kylo came to visit him twice a week and slowly, but surely, worked her way into his trusted inner circle.
The team at SPCA even worked to ensure Kylo was comfortable getting into his new owner’s car, doing home visits before the big day. On Sunday, he officially left the building that he has spent the past few years in for the final time.
“There wasn’t a dry eye in the house and we truly are on Cloud 9 knowing he gets to spend the rest of his life loved for exactly who he is!” shelter staff said on social media.
Kylo’s adoption fee was fully paid for in memory of Jim Ehrig, a fan favorite of Kylo’s who passed away.
The SPCA hopes Kylo’s story will encourage more people to take a chance on a shelter dog.
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