Couples, community and a bunch of baby animals: Good news from the DC area in 2025

Whether 2025 was the best of times, the worst of times, or both, congratulations: You made it to the end, dear reader, and a fresh start is just around the corner.

Maybe you clicked on this good news article because you want to keep the warm-and-fuzzy holiday vibes going. Or maybe you clicked it because you needed something to pick you up again after one too many hits.

Whatever the reason, let’s take a second to appreciate the good stuff — and no matter how hard times get, there is always some good stuff to be found.

Baby animals were born. Neighbors helped each other through hard times. Problems were solved, and new plans were made.

Cheers to everything we accomplished together in 2025… even if it was just making it to 2026. Let’s take a look back.

We saw some beautiful love stories

Back before Valentine’s Day, the Arlington Public Library announced a contest to host a free wedding for one lucky DMV couple.

In July, that couple — Arlington residents Katie Lettie and Vincent Bauer — tied the knot at the Arlington Central Library location.

It made sense: The pair has the kind of love story you read about in books. The pair has been together for more than a decade, sometimes on opposite coasts, sometimes an ocean apart, according to the library system.

“Arlington was the first place that we were ever able to live that was permanent,” Lettie said. “Or had a sense that like, the future could go on, as the current moment was.”

The couple’s nuptials are a testament to the community they found and built in Arlington, with library patrons, staff, volunteers and local vendors coming together to pull off the wedding.

“This is such an amazing gift,” Lettie said. “It’s such a magical experience. It’s so cool.”

Later in the year, in nearby Fairfax County, another couple’s wedding was boosted by a community that lifted them up — and literally kept their family alive through hard times.

Timeshay Brown, a nurse at Inova Fairfax Hospital, and her now-husband Jarvis Parrish, had been planning their dream wedding for October.

But then their baby, Jayla, was born earlier than expected, at just 25 weeks.

“We went to the ultrasound, and the doctor came in and she was like, ‘Well, you’re gonna have this baby today,’” Brown said.

Taking care of baby Jayla became their priority. But amid their long nights in the NICU, Brown and Parrish knew they still wanted to be husband and wife.

Then, Brown had an idea, and her fellow nurses — many of whom had helped care for baby Jayla — ran with it.

Brown and Parrish exchanged their vows in November in the NICU, in front of their baby daughter and the medical team that saved her life.

“Because of you, our daughter will never have to wonder what real love looks like,” Brown told Parrish. “She’ll see it in the way you love me, and the way you protect her.”

Parrish, in return, promised Brown he’s committed to “always being a place of comfort and safety that you can rest your heart in completely.”

And about a month later, D.C. broke a world record — and maybe even started to turn the tide on its rocky romantic reputation.

A whopping 1,435 couples turned out to Anthem Row in Northwest D.C. to break the Guinness World Record for most couples kissing under the mistletoe in a single venue.

The Downtown D.C. Business Improvement District (BID) is now the proud owner of that record, beating out the previous record holder of St. Louis, Missouri with just 488 couples.

Community members came together

Speaking of love stories and community: Friends to Lovers bookstore in Old Town Alexandria, Virginia, is an expert in both, at this point.

The romance novels are the main draw of the first romance bookstore in the D.C. metro area, of course. But after owner and founder Jamie Fortin poured her heart into her dream and then watched it go up in flames, Fortin learned that love also comes in the form of community – lifting it up, and being lifted in return.

The store’s first grand opening was in November 2024. But just three days after it opened, disaster struck.

“That night, really, I just got a call at like 11 p.m. that the store was on fire,” Fortin said. “Like I just got a text, ‘There’s a fire,’ in all caps, which was terrifying.”

The inside of the building was torched, and three women-owned businesses inside, including Friends to Lovers, were forced to close the night of Nov. 18.

But then the next day, the business owners from that building gathered with others on the block.

That’s when Fortin, who wanted to build up women and people in the LGBTQ+ community with her business, learned the community wanted to build her up, too.

“We all really rallied together immediately,” she said.

Within a week of the fire, the GoFundMe campaign raised $46,000, Fortin said. Donors ranged from local business owners to grad students sharing what little cash they had pitching in to help Friends to Lovers get back on its feet. Most of them were people who had never been in the store.

“About five months later, we were able to fully open a new location,” Fortin said. “And we are so grateful for where we’re at now.”

Over a year later, the bookstore is thriving, with a new location on Cameron Street and its own booth at the Downtown DC Holiday Market.

There are plenty more examples of communities rallying after chaos caused by forces of nature. Back in June, you may remember, a series of powerful thunderstorms walloped the D.C. area several inexplicable weekends in a row.

If you remember those storms, you also remember the damage they did to several neighborhoods, including one in Arlington. One resident of that neighborhood told News4 that her backyard tree, estimated to be 80 years old, split in two and largely fell on her 90-year-old neighbor’s home.

When the tree came down, it crashed into an area of the house where that 90-year-old typically sits. She was thankfully elsewhere in her home at the time — and other neighbors took her in.

“My neighbors brought her over. They sat her down on their porch and had her relax and called her kids,” the resident said.

“The people here are nice. Everybody watches out for each other,” she continued. “My neighbor who lives on the other side of me is out of town and texted me to see we were OK and if we needed anything.”

“It really says a lot because this is an urban area. But people know each other. We watch out for each other.”

And communities stepped up for each other, even for community members with four legs and a tail.

An animal shelter in Montgomery County, Maryland thanked residents for stepping up when its air conditioning went out amid a June heat wave in the D.C. area, and the animals needed temporary foster homes.

About 20-30 dogs at the animal shelter were at high risk in extreme heat due to age or other health conditions and needed to get out of the overheated building as soon as possible.

After the shelter put out a plea on social media, more than 40 animals got temporary foster homes from nearby residents, allowing crews to work overnight to repair the A/C system.

“THANK YOU for all of your help during this crisis,” the shelter said on its website.

Baby animals arrived in D.C.

From dogs and cats to panda bears, D.C. saw plenty of new animals arrive.

The most pandemonium came with the public debut of Bao Li and Qing Bao at the National Zoo in January. The 3-year-old giant pandas made their official debut on Jan. 24, and the zoo’s Giant Panda Cam returned shortly after.

Before the public could go visit Bao Li and Qing Bao in person, the zoo gave us all a sneak peek with some footage of them both playing in the snow, after D.C.’s biggest winter storm in years dropped 5 inches on the District.

The pandas went on a brief hiatus again during the lengthy government shutdown this fall, but their brief absence just made DMV residents all the more excited when the National Zoo reopened.

The zoo’s reopening after the shutdown also brought exciting news about the cheetahs that live at the Conservation Biology Institute in Front Royal, Virginia.

On Oct. 17 and 18, a litter of four new cheetah cubs was born, and they were doing well when the zoo announced their birth after the six-week shutdown ended.

Their mom, Amabala, is a 5-year-old adult cheetah that was also born at the Front Royal facility back in 2020. It was a full-circle moment for an endangered species, and for the conservation program at the zoo.

The good animal news will continue into 2026, too. The zoo announced one of its elephants is pregnant, and sometime this winter the National Zoo will welcome its first baby elephant in 25 years.

It’s not yet clear whether 12-year-old Nhi Linh will welcome a boy or a girl when she delivers her first baby.

It marks a landmark moment for Asian elephants, an endangered species with an estimated number of fewer than 50,000 living in the wild.

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