Donald’s Bagels & Bites, The Bakery close
File photo
Donald’s Bagels & Bites, shown in this file photo, is one of two Lynchburg bakery restaurants that have closed.
Related:
Donald’s Bagels & Bites reopening - Sept. 1, 2008
Two well-known bakery restaurants in Lynchburg shut down on Friday due to cash flow problems, their owner said.
Although The Bakery on Timberlake Road and Donald’s Bagels & Bites had strong sales, their revenue could not keep up with interest charges, said Jyl VanDusen, owner. Although the shops could have stayed open, VanDusen said it would have been unfair to her suppliers and 21 employees to operate and risk not being able to pay them.
“Once you know that it’s time to close, it’s just time to do it,” VanDusen said. By staying open, “You could make more money, but you also incur more debt.”
VanDusen hopes to sell both businesses to someone with enough capital to operate them with fewer cash flow issues.
She bought both businesses because circumstances came together so that she felt it was what God wanted her to do: Soon after she decided that she wanted to run an eatery, she heard that The Bakery was for sale; When Donald’s Bagels closed almost exactly one year ago, everything came together for her to buy it and re-open it.
The Bakery became popular with Liberty University students last year when two students led an effort to patronize the business and donate money to help pay medical bills for VanDusen’s husband.
Her husband died in May this year, VanDusen said.
The businesses did well. In four years, The Bakery’s sales increased from $575 per day to about $1,100 per day, Van-Dusen said. She didn’t own Donald’s Bagels long enough to judge its progress, she said.
Although sales were up, so were the interest rates on the credit cards VanDusen used to finance her operations.
Small businesses that don’t own real estate can have trouble getting secured credit, such as a loan or a credit line, Van-Dusen said. She bankrolled the business with credit cards, which usually have higher interest rates than secured credit.
One of VanDusen’s cards increased her interest rate to about 37 percent, and she paid $22,000 in interest in 2008, she said. “I was making over $5,000 in payments (a month) with 53 percent of it going to interest,” she said. “You can’t do that and have enough cash flow.”
“Had it not been for that we would have been in the black.”
VanDusen had hoped to sell the businesses without closing them. She finally decided on Thursday night to go ahead and close.
Jackie Cofer, an employee at Urgent Money Service next door to The Bakery, said she was surprised to find the shop’s doors locked on Saturday. “I know they missed out on a lot of money on Saturday, because there were a lot of people in the parking lot,” Cofer said.
Donald Nugent, the founder of Donald’s Bagels, said it was sad to hear about the businesses closing. “Business is rather unforgiving, in light of today’s economic environment,” he said.
VanDusen said she wants to sell the businesses to someone so she can repay two investors “who believed in me” and try paying her suppliers.
As for her decision to buy the businesses in the first place, she believes it may have been a “pop quiz” from God. She had the faith to keep trying, but she couldn’t ask her employees to do the same.
“It’s one thing for me to walk by faith,” she said. “But for other people who have trusted me to pay them, … they shouldn’t have to walk by mine.”
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Reader Reactions
Is this for real this time? About a month ago there was a report about these bakeries closing .. I was pleasantly surprised last week when I drove by Donald’s and found it open .. I stopped & bought my dozen and was very happy
I agree with Arthur about the “prerequisites” for all things Southern .. We moved here from Southern NJ 9 yrs ago and the one of the 1st things I realized was the common denominator - most successful businesses shared these common things .. I called it the 3 “S’s” - Things SOFT .. Things SWEET or Things STICKY : )
Arthur, my favorite Lynchburg restaurant story has to do the the Country Kitchen on Lakeside Drive. The day it reopened after being closed by the health department for 18 cases of botulism, there was a line snaking through the parking lot of people waiting to get in. I guess people here like some “adventure” with their fat and sugar.
I think you are right Mrs. Vttova and so is David. Places that try to serve REAL food don’t have a chance against the sugar, fat and salt “mind control” of the chains. They are DESIGNED to get you to over-eat stuff that is neurologically addictive and chemically reinforcing.
Sure I am hard on the enormous among us. But I’m not as hard as an early death or a $100,000 heart attack. I HATE those chains that are hell bent on profit at the expense of unsuspecting consumers. IT AIN"T FOOD!
I too have taken a licking on businesses that go belly-up. “I feel your pain.“ Been there and done that as they say.
But, the truth is if they put [ALL YOU CAN EAT] signs up they would STILL be beating Lynchburgers away with a stick.
When my father died five years ago, I went to Donald’s to get bagels for all the family that had arrived. Donald Nugent had seen my dad’s obituary in the paper and gave me a huge bag of bagels. When I pulled out the cash to pay for them, he refused payment. I was sorry when Donald sold the business and I am now sorry to see the business disappear. We see new businesses spring up but most of them are chain stores and chain restaurants. What we gain when they open is insignificant compared to what we lose when local businesses like Donalds disappear.
Crispy, you just gotta let him go, he’s over the top by choice.
Now, as someone else who just lost their business this spring, i’m with you and the owner of these businesses.
I live just above Donalds, the staff and owner were all very nice. Bagels are good for you ART!
Sorry to see them go.
Someday, possibly, she will read the scripture about god not involving him/herself in the affairs of the world. In the meantime, i guess its a comfort of some sort, he had me buy it, he tested me by letting it fail.
I’m sure god doesn’t set default interest rates on credit cards, that there would be the devil’s work!
I found it easier to blame the lousy ecomomy, myself.
To each their own.
Sorry Jyl.
Oh, I get it Miss Daisy.
I was raised in the NY Metro area, where I spent most of my life. There, I am considered ridiculously meek and deferential. I rarely left the house for fear that someone would upbraid and chastise me. I was considered painfully shy.
Imagine my surprise when, upon moving to the Greater Lynchburg Area, people began to say… “My you are so bold and brash and smug.“
It’s all relative Miss Daisy, all relative.
I live in a small town now. When people first meet you they ask, “What church do you go to?“ Next, they usually feel it’s a kindness on their part to inform you that, “You know, you will NEVER be accepted here.“ That is usually followed with each and every Yankee joke they know.
Miss Crispy? Do you know that “thing” that usually happens to women when they hit 40? Like, overnight, they STOP letting themselves be walked on and treated condescendingly? Well, I’m here to tell you, that EXACT same thing happens to Yankees when they have heard the same crap from southerners for the 10,000 time. I think scientists call it the “screwyou” circuit. Well, mine flipped years ago.
Don’t feel bad. We hear it all the time. Almost feel disappointed if we don’t.
arthur, I actually quite often agree with your positions and opinions. It’s the smug superiority and condescension toward pretty much everyone that drives me crazy. I don’t expect you to apologize.
I don’t ride horses Miss Daisy… but I got eyes.
I’m sorry that you rarely seem to appreciate my observations. We have different points of view. I will no more consider apologizing for that than I would expect you to. Eat something. You will feel better.
arthur, I hope that none of your unpadded bones break when your high horse finally throws you off.
I sympathize with you Crispy. These are tough times for entrepreneurs.
But, the two bakeries that closed down failed for one reason. They FAILED to have a viable “Lynchburg” business plan.
Four little words Crispy, four little words, if included in their sign and advertising, could have turned them into thriving business ventures.
[ALL YOU CAN EAT!]
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