©
Local Postal Customer
ANN POTTER MASTER POTTER
BEACH BITES From specialty sandwiches to “build your own” classics to soups
Ann Darling has owned and operated the Darling Pottery Studio in the Gulf Gate area since 1974
pg. 12
A master potter, pg. 23
News up & down the trail PAGE 6
Summer music camp PAGE 18
SELBY GARDENS ANNIVERSARY PAGE 20
JULY 2013 | 941.349.0194 | ISLAND VISITOR PUBLISHING, LLC | www.SiestaSand.net | Complimentary
10 Years of Pork Bangers & “Passtees!” By Patricia Kawaja
(originally published in Union Jack News)
Congratulations goes to Londoners Richard and Barbra Posner on a solid expat achievement; 10 years in business. (Here is their story.) In their own words; “We wanted to serve America with the best of British foods”, Richard told me. “We relocated to Sarasota from London in 1990 and the first 10 plus years, in a different business, we thoroughly integrated into the American way of life and food. Then we started missing the British specialties we enjoyed on trips home – pasties, sausage rolls and pork pies, back bacon and good old British Bangers etc. We bought some of the frozen pies and sausages from our local Florida supermarkets but were disappointed and sure someone could do better. Why not us? We were former experienced and successful restaurateurs in the West End of London, serving thousands a week including the famous and infamous – even Princess Diana and Prince William,
so skilled in high quality foodservice production. On selling our previous business in Sarasota 2001 it was decided almost instantly to return to the vocation and develop a range of authentic tasting and upscale British products that our fellow expat Brit countrymen and Commonwealth cousins could really enjoy and actually be proud of. It was a major challenge to source US vendors to supply authentic flavored components like pork banger sausages and other essentials, but we finally succeeded, working with vendors from local to North Carolina, or anyone who could supply “the best”. After a year of intensive research into recipes, sources and resources, we located, developed and opened the 4 & 20 Pasty Company in 2003. But only offering traditional Cornish Pasties is boring and unlikely to be successful in creating a market, so why just stop there?
Story continued on page 19
Abel’s Ice Cream Bill & Norma Abel opened in April 2011 with a mission to offer the South Sarasota, Palmer Ranch, Siesta Key residents and tourists a nationally award winning premium ice cream at a competitive price with generous portions. Abel’s Florida made ice cream brand is the recipient of 14 national awards issued by the National Ice Cream Retailers Association since 2009. Sarasota’s best specialty ice cream flavor, Spumoni (swirled pistachio, chocolate and cherry ice cream, almonds and a special blend of fruits) awarded to Abel’s in the July 2012 issue of Sarasota Magazine. Most recently Siesta Key Chamber honored Abel’s Ice Cream with its 2012 Small Business of the Year Award. Abel’s hot fudge, malted milk shakes and Dreamsicle flavor ice cream will remind you of the
4th of July Reflections
|American Exceptionalism still going strong By Robert Frederickson
In an era when partisan bickering and gamesmanship seem to have become permanently rooted in the American political landscape, examples of our shared values as a nation come as welcome reminders that there is still much that binds us together as a people. Who can forget the spontaneous, raucous salute for firefighters, EMT Actor Gary Sinise started the Gary Sinise Foundation to provide help for personnel and law enforcement severely wounded veterans returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. officers – local, state and federal Photo credit: Gary Sinise Foundation alike – in the hours after the second Boston bombing suspect was taken into custody that would have us believe the best days of our nation this past April? A similar celebration by grateful are behind us. homeowners greeted local and federal “smoke- There are countless everyday reminders of our jumpers” who risked their lives fighting the recent national cohesiveness, ones that just don’t get the forest fires along Colorado’s front range that full-blown media attention of fugitive terrorist hunts damaged or destroyed hundreds of homes. or devastating natural disasters. Indeed, there is no As we celebrate our nation’s birthday over the shortage of examples of neighbors helping neighbors Fourth of July holiday this month, it is worth keeping in this country when such help is needed most. such moments in mind. They provide a powerful But that’s nothing new. Americans have always antidote to the shrill harangue from some quarters been a generous lot. Story continued on page 25
1886 Stickney Point Road - 921-5700 Between New Balance & Stonewood Grill product quality from the 1960’s drug store soda fountain era. Other historical menu favorites include root beer floats, ice cream sodas, banana splits and brownie sundaes. Of the 36 flavors offered including two no sugar added and two frozen yogurts, the 3 best sellers are: • Stellar Coffee - Rich coffee ice cream with fudge and mini dark chocolate coffee cups. • Raspberry Truffle - Raspberry ice cream with raspberry ribbon & dark chocolate raspberry cups. • Coconut Almond Fudge - Tropical coconut ice cream with fudge ribbon & whole roasted almonds. Visit www.Abelsicecream.com for additional information & directions.
The Wallenda Walk
Aspiring aerialists testing the lines on Siesta Beach ©
Deck Deck Boats Boats •• Pontoon Pontoon Boats Boats •• Runabouts Runabouts •• Center Center Consoles Consoles
Complete Bait & Tackle Shop
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941.349.4400 www.CBsOutfitters.com • Since 1959 Open 7 Days 7am-6pm 1249 Stickney Point Rd. Siesta Key
2
SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
Things that make Sarasota unique: Where else can you go to a neighborhood park for a walk or bike ride and happen upon a circus aerialist practicing his craft? That was the case on a recent weekday morning as Nik Wallenda held one of his last practice sessions at Nathan Benderson Park before heading to Arizona to take a stroll across the Grand Canyon. A bit of rain was no problem for the Circus Sarasota performer. After all, if he can deal with 3500 feet of vertical drop, what’s a little bit of rain? Photo by R. Frederickson.
Island Chatter
A Message From Your Siesta Key Association
Catherine Luckner
President Siesta Key Association www.siestakeyassociation.com For many of us, the most festive part of summer begins with our Fourth of July Independence Day celebration. Relaxed beach time with family and friends, picnics and music all wrapped in red, white and blue. We honor our nation’s birth and all who have served, ensuring our freedom and keeping us safe. Siesta Beach Park is our County’s most beautiful environment for a night of fireworks. Our Fire Marshal clears the beach for safety, well away from dune vegetation, people and wildlife. This opens our view along the wide expanse of crystal white sand. The Gulf of Mexico mirrors the setting sun, creating nature’s ‘fireworks’ in the sky. One of only three legally permitted Fireworks events
in Sarasota County, all costs (approximately $35,000) are covered through citizen donations and fundraising activities of the Siesta Key Chamber of Commerce. Kevin Cooper, Executive Director, continues leading this effort of privately funded Fireworks. Having served in the US Army, Kevin especially appreciates the purpose, started 23 years ago to welcome troops returning from the Gulf War. At our June 6 meeting, Sarasota County Fire Marshal John Reed spoke about Fireworks. He shared important information so necessary for safety on this special night. No personal fireworks are permitted on Siesta Key. • 1. There is a rigorous permitting process which requires the Sheriff’s approval for personal fireworks. Only 3 permits are presently issued for Sarasota County. • 2. What is legal: If it ‘propels itself and blows up’ it isn’t legal.
Story continued on page 29
The Sheriff’s Department will again take to their mounts for this year’s 4th of July celebration. Photo by Catherine Luckner
*Prices subject to change
Marker 32
Live Music Sunday Friday, Saturday and 941.349.0194 • www.islandvp.com ISLAND VISITOR PUBLISHING, LLC
3
By Stan Zimmerman
• Even plovers have enemies
As Ian Fleming once wrote in a James Bond book, “Once is happenstance, twice is coincidence, third time is enemy action.” For the snowy plovers of Siesta Key, it’s looking like a war. The birds are one step up from endangered, as a federally protected species of concern. And this spring, they have faced a suspicious wildfire, numerous attacks on the signs and stakes urging people to stay out of their nesting area, and most recently a piece of heavy equipment plowing a nine-foot wide path directly through their conservation easement. It happens at night when volunteers from the Audubon Society are not monitoring the area. It’s all happening near Beach Access Nine, upland of the beach in the scrubby vegetation zone. The latest violation was called in by Siesta Key Association President Catherine Luckner, who said somebody tipped her that a large tractor was scraping away the vegetation. County officials confirmed the violations, and are talking with nearby property owners. A new three-story condominium is under construction at 610-612 Beach Road. bordering the upland side of the conservation easement.
• Half-price beach camping for residents
Camping on the beach used to be common…a hundred years ago. But between condominiums and property rights, beach camping is a thing of the past. Except at Sarasota County’s Turtle Beach. The county campground is one of a handful of spots in Florida where tents and RVs are only a few steps from the beach. And this summer, Sarasota County residents can enjoy the historic-but-now-rare opportunity for half-price. Two nights for the cost of one is the deal. Campers will have to show proof of residency and stay two nights in the same space to qualify. Call 349-3839 for information and reservations. The park contains full hook-ups for RVs, plus Wi-FI, showers and a laundry point.
LIVE MUSIC
HAPPY HOUR
• Tiny bump in parking at Access 7
The parking at Siesta Beach Access 7 along Beach Road has been reconfigured after a fence was moved. The adjustment produced two more spaces in the lot. There is more county property available for parking near Access 7 for 40 or 50 more spaces, but staffers are holding off because of nesting snowy plovers. The area near Access 7 is favored by the birds. As additional parking is developed in the area, the regular access may be closed or modified to accommodate the nesting plovers. Foot traffic may be diverted to other beach accesses, if the main route has been commandeered by the birds. In an email, County Commissioner Nora Patterson observed, “[The] agreement was that the parking would be gradually developed and we would work with Audubon and as plover nesting developed there at the access, the path to the beach would be closed and foot traffic diverted to other access. I think we are still doing that and I know that many people have devoted a lot of hours to trying to protect baby plovers.”
HAPPY HOUR
LIVE MUSIC
• Summer tourism omens are strong
HAPPY HOUR
15
$
e
M
c u si
Daily Noon -
10 P M
Wednesday
35
All-You-Can-Eat
Smoked Prime Rib
All Day Long
season. On Day Two a bag of disturbed weather formed over the Yucatan, and by Day Five was deemed a tropical storm with 40 mph sustained winds and a central barometric pressure of 29.59 inches of mercury. On Day 6, Andrea made landfall in the Big Bend area north of Cedar Key with sustained winds of 65 mph and central pressure of 29.32. These winds and pressures are very close to hurricane intensity. Because Siesta Key was south of the center of the storm, the brisk west and southwest winds piled water into Sarasota Bay and waterfront canals, causing some yard flooding. Rains meanwhile contributed to street flooding. Forecaster Rob Lightbaum with Crown Weather Services noted some early June storms are followed by stronger hurricanes later in the year along nearly identical tracks. Andrea held its tropical characteristics up the eastern seaboard bringing heavy rain. It did little damage here, unlike Tropical Storm Debby in June 2012 that caused considerable erosion on Siesta Key.
Hotel and motel bookings through summer remain strong, following a record spring tourist season. The summer is up primarily due to a series of sporting events like June’s Pan American Masters Swimming Championships. Other events include the Fourth of July Super Boat Grand Prix, and the U.S. Rowing Masters Championship in August. Summer soccer and tennis events at Lakewood Ranch and Bradenton’s IMG Academy will also boost visitors. Meanwhile Floridians are also hitting the road for a summer vacation. One AAA survey indicated about 70 percent of Floridians will take a summer holiday this year. Plus August is the month for Europeans to arrive. Sarasota • Andrea gives pop quiz has long been a favorite destination for them. Last year saw a Ready for hurricane season ’12? Tropical Storm Andrea 21 percent increase in European visitors to Sarasota County. put the preparations to the test in the first week of the storm
Tuesday
$
Wings
The quarterly Adopt-A-Road cleanup gathered 22 “bags of junk,” according to Michael Shay, vice president of the Siesta Key Association. Shay thanked the 16 volunteers who scoured Ocean Boulevard from Beach Road to Higel Avenue, as well as Higel itself and Siesta Drive back to the northern bridge. Before embarking on the cleanup, the volunteers were treated to a free breakfast at the Village Café by owners Tom and Kay Kouvatos and their staff. Members of the Siesta Key Association and Siesta Key Merchants Association participated.
LIVE MUSIC
Monday
¢ 5 7
• Volunteers keep Key clean
Li v
Siesta Key News
Lobsters Call For Details
1/2 OFF Appetizers 3-6 PM Mon-Fri (bar only)
Specials Every Day Of The Week LIVE MUSIC
HAPPY HOUR
Thursday
15
$ Ribs Full Rack
LIVE MUSIC
$
Friday
50
All-You-Can-Eat
King Crab Legs
149 Avenida Messina (in the Village)
4
HAPPY HOUR
LIVE MUSIC
$
LIVE MUSIC
Saturday
35
All-You-Can-Eat
Snow Crabs
941.346.0738 www.bluqueislandgrill.com
SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
PIG ROAST EVERY SUNDAY
Pulled Pork Sandwich $5
Happy Hour
Mon. thru Fri. Noon-6 PM
941.349.0194 • www.islandvp.com ISLAND VISITOR PUBLISHING, LLC
5
News Up & Down the Trail • Plug pulled on downtown lights
An $80,000 fiasco came to an end in June when the Downtown Improvement District voted to shut down its multicolored lights in Five Points Park. They were entwined around the branches of 27 trees, and programmed to change colors to add gaiety downtown. But the district forgot about the trees’ insistence on growing and expanding, snapping the wires. By time of the shutdown, only a handful of the lights were still operating despite thousands paid in maintenance. Instead the district is asking the city purchasing department to release a request for proposals for a new lighting scheme. The proposers will be required to provide full maintenance. It’s the second blow to the park. A number of benches were removed “as an experiment” after nearby condominium residents complained of homeless people and vagrants sleeping on them. The “experiment” became permanent, and now the lights are off “temporarily.”
• Paying for parking
After the city commission folded to public pressure and removed the new parking meters downtown, it then found it would be subsidizing parking forever. “Parking management funds suffered greatly after we took out the meters,” Commissioner Suzanne Atwell noted at a commission meeting. Tickets for overtime parking are now about the only monies coming in, and that will never be sufficient to run the parking garages, stripe the streets and boot the scofflaws. “Revenue through enhanced enforcement is not sustainable,” said Parking Manager Mark Lyons. “Free parking for customers and staff is a public subsidy, it’s a city subsidy,” said Commissioner Susan Chapman. “Are there other best practices for revenue besides parking meters?” Lyons said he’ll look for solutions “over the next couple of months.”
6
By Stan Zimmerman • Form-based code gets go-ahead
The city’s current zoning code was established in the mid1970s, and doesn’t seem to be able to mesh the expectations of neighbors and developers. But it can be arcane, like the “department store” rhetoric that derailed plans to build a Walmart “supercenter” in the ageing Ringling Shopping Center downtown. “We are seeing increased polarization, increased incompatibilities, longer and longer meetings, an increasing number of variances,” said a former city planner. She’s been hired back as a contract employee to ramrod a re-write using the standards of a form-based code. Karin Murphy recently completed the task for Bradenton, replacing an antiquated set of regulations with ones more agreeable to both neighbors and developers. The form-based philosophy turns standard zoning on its head. In the past, zoning rules were concerned with what happened inside a building – was it commercial or residential? Multi-family? Industrial? Office spaces? A form-based code is less concerned with inside than outside. It aims to produce a building in harmony with its surrounds, and is less concerned with the uses inside. It doesn’t mean you can build a steel mill next to a day care. But it does open the possibility of neighborhood-based businesses like a bakery or coffee bar in an otherwise residential area. It will all get hammered out in public meetings over the next two years.
• U of F plans architecture grad program here
The University of Florida is planning to create a graduate program in architecture in one of the county’s “Sarasota school” buildings on Orange Avenue. The building is the last structure designed by William Rupp that has not been altered radically after the invention of air conditioning. The building is now used as a print shop and mail center by Sarasota County.
SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
Martin Gold, director of the U of F school of architecture estimated the program could start with 40 students when the program gets rolling in the fall of 2014. “I think this is a historic event for us,” Gold told the Sarasota County Commission when the papers were signed. City commissioners were enthused as well. They expressed some hope the students may want to participate in the city’s form-based code formation. Before the architecture students move in, the county will have to relocate its operations nearby. “For me, to bring this program to Sarasota, I’m more than willing to put up with the costs of this,” said County Commissioner Christine Robinson.
• Strip mall gets overhaul plans
Shopping centers across America are having a tough time, and Sarasota’s are no different. However Benderson Development is ready to give CPR to the strip mall directly west across the Tamiami Trail from the Westfield Sarasota Square Mall. The triangular-shape parcel now hosts a Dennys and a Wendys. Benderson’s Director of Development Todd Mathes says the company is making an investment to upgrade the center’s aesthetics. The biggest change will be fabrication of a storm water retaining vault – in effect a huge underground swimming pool to hold runoff from the mostly paved property. County commissioners approved the plans unanimously.
• Real estate values break their slide
For the first time in six years, the official county tax roll shows an increase in values. Overall the value of property for tax purposes was up 3.4 percent compared to a year ago. Assuming a flat millage rate, the bump will translate into $4.2 million extra tax revenue. The City of Sarasota witnessed a 3.7 percent rise in property values for taxs. School board revenues should jump 4.5 percent, and North Port’s rise was the sharpest in the county at 5.3 percent. The figures are preliminary, but by this time of year are close to the final figures.
941.349.0194 • www.islandvp.com ISLAND VISITOR PUBLISHING, LLC
7
Not Just For The
|Blooming this month...
HOLIDAYS!
South American beauty
• Picnics • Family Reunions • Beach Baskets
This striking bromeliad, Hohenbergia stellata, is native to eastern Brazil, Martinique, Trinidad, and Venezuela. It grows in climates as diverse as coastal areas to cloud forests. In Florida, it thrives in sandy soil and full sun. Photo courtesy Rob Branch.
Make every gathering hassle-free with a Honey Baked Ham or Turkey Breast!
Offer valid 07/01/13 - 07/31/13 Valid only at the HoneyBaked retail location listed below. Must present coupon at time of purchase to receive offer. May not be combined with any other offer. Only one coupon per person per visit. While supplies last. Offer not valid on catalog, online, gift certificate, gift card or catering/delivery purchases.
CUSTOMER APPRECIATION
“Early” Diners 4-Course Dinner Daily 5:00 - 6:30 PM
SAVINGS FOR YOU!
3999
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13 Entrees To Choose From!
All include appetizer, salad, dessert and beverage
Starting at $15.95
6631 Midnight Pass Road
Entree selections include: • Chicken, Veal and Seafood Specialties • Filet Mignon • Lamb Chops • Salmon • Roast Duck • Tenders of Pork
CRESCENT PLAZA
(1/4 Mile South of Stickney Point Road
Open 7 Days A Week 5 PM ‘til Close
4.50 COCKTAILS Daily 5-6 PM (Well Liquor Only)
$
For Reservations Call 941-349-4024 www.miguelsrestaurant.net
SANDWICHES
SANDWICHES
Original “Gyros” Sandwich
Spiro Sandwich
Gyros meat with raw onions, tomatoes and tzatziki sauce rolled up in a pita ..........$6.95
Gyros meat, spinach pie and tzatziki sauce rolled up in a pita ..........................................$7.25
Chicken Gyros
Fish Sandwich
Beer battered and fried, topped with lettuce, tomato and tartar sauce, served on a sub roll. ............................................................$6.95
Chicken gyro meat with raw onions, tomatoes and tzatziki sauce rolled up in a pita ...$6.95
Vegetarian Gyros
Philly Cheese Steak
Lettuce, onion, tomato, feta cheese and kalamata olives rolled up in a pita with Tzatziki sauce..........$5.25
Beef or Chicken served with sauteed mushrooms, onions, green peppers and swiss cheese..$7.25
Greek Philly
Make it a “Combo” Meal
Gyros meat with sautéed fresh mushrooms, onions, green peppers and tzatziki sauce rolled up in a pita $6.95
Fries or rice and soft drink ...................$3.00 Upgrade to large soft drink ..................+50¢
VIENNA HOT DOGS
Lamb Souvlaki Sandwich One skewer, raw onions, tomatoes and tzatziki sauce rolled up in a pita ......................$6.25
Chicken Souvlaki Sandwich One skewer, raw onions, tomatoes and tzatziki sauce rolled up in a pita ......................$5.25
All Prices In This Ad Are Subject To Change
Put some “OPA” In Your Life! 6500 Superior Ave. • Sarasota, FL 34231 (In the Gulf Gate area)
(941) 312-5072
Open: M-Sat. 11am-9 pm; Sun. Noon-8 pm DINE IN OR CARRY OUT
See our complete menu at www.zantegyros.com
8
SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
ZANTE PLATTERS SALADS
Snapshots of Island Visitors
Photos by Jaye Clements - Lauren Bates Photography
Top Left: Amy age 10 & Rich from SRQ. Top Center: Isaac age 3 from England. Top Right: Dayns and Carla from Long Island. Bottom Left: Alex & Madeline from Valrico, FL (pups - OB, Freckles & Annabelle). Bottom Right: Darnell & Lila age 4 from Georgia.
941.349.0194 • www.islandvp.com ISLAND VISITOR PUBLISHING, LLC
9
Food and Wine Pairings
Summer Picnics and Barbeques By Maureen Rooney, Siesta Key Wines, 5238C Ocean Blvd., Davidson Plaza in the Village, 941-552-9105 You don’t need to look at your calendar to know that summer is officially here. Temperatures are in the 90’s and the afternoon rains are back. We all know that the best part of summer is being outdoors with our families and friends enjoying great picnics, tasty barbeques and fantastic company. This month we celebrate wines for great picnics and barbeques and the people who love them! Picnics demand great tasting foods. Really, do you remember a picnic with bad food? Probably not, especially since food just tastes better when we eat outdoors! Picnic foods usually have lots of big flavors and what better way to pair big flavor foods, but big flavor wines. For starters, a nicely grilled chicken breast over a bed of field greens, cucumbers, scallions and tomatoes with a light balsamic vinegrette dressing pairs extremely well with a crisp, vibrant Jules Taylor Pinot Gris from New Zealand. This is not your typical sweet-style Oregon Pinot Gris. This is a bright and colorful wine with a smoothness one only gets from Marlboro. This wine also pairs well with Grouper, Mahi, Scallops and Tuna. Yes, it can handle the flavor of Tuna! It’s summer. Not in the mood for a dry wine but want to try a refreshing poolside treat? Skewered Melon Balls with fresh mint leaves paired with Tangerine Tango White Zin (yes, it’s the BEST white zin you will ever have!) by Keel and Curley. This wine is crisp and refreshing and
a summer favorite. Not too sweet, not too dry…just right! Afraid to try local, that’s ok. Stop by and we’ll give you a sample while we hold your hand. Now, the best part….. Barbeque Ribs! Come on, you know you love them. You may not supposed to be eating them, but when you think about the hours of slow roasting and the smell of the tangy, thick barbeque sauce soaking into those juicy mouth-watering spare ribs the sizzle and the smoke is just calling your name! Don’t forget the hot grilled sweet corn with mango butter and cold homemade potato salad. Of course you need a wine that can handle all those flavors and cut through the thousands of calories you’re consuming. What better than a fruity, bold, red Zinfandel from Paso Robles. Le Lapin Zinfandel from Paso Robles has great flavors while being light enough for our hot, humid weather. A truly great wine to help clear out those arteries….because it sounds like your gonna need it! Don’t forget to check our calendar for our monthly wine events!
Recognizing Our Volunteers Call For QUICK TAKE-OUT and DELIVERY
CASUAL FAMILY DINING • FULL ITALIAN MENU
10
Nadja Bernitt has always enjoyed reading a good mystery novel. In fact, after teaching fiction writing, she decided to author one of her own. The only problem; she found her forensic knowledge rather limited. That was 19 years ago. After volunteering for the Sarasota’s Sheriff Station and taking several courses in law enforcement and other studies, she has one published mystery novel under her belt and several in various stages of completion. She continues to volunteer her time every Wednesday afternoon at the Sheriff’s substation in the Village while writing other books and traveling with her husband. Thank you for volunteering your time at the substation all these years Nadja. We wish you continued success with your books. And, how exciting to have your first mystery, Final Grave, start out in Sarasota.
SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
Everything Is Made To Order Spacious New Dining Room • Patio Seating Parties Welcome • Friendly Atmosphere
Visit Our
NEW BAR Where We Offer 24 Beers On Tap
Have A Craft Beer Or Wine At Our Bar While Waiting For Your Take-Out!
6645 Midnight Pass Road in Crescent Plaza
941-349-4490
Pan Am Championships
FOR SENIORS BY ACTIVE SENIORS®
The Pan American International Masters Swim Championships were held in Sarasota and for the first time in the USA. The championships were attended by swimmers from 28 different countries. Sarasota resident, Tony DeDominicis was ranked 8th for the 800 meter Freestyle and 9th for the 200 meter Breast Stroke. His biggest coup was to be awarded a bronze medal for the one-kilometer Open Water Swim, which he actually accomplished while nursing a broken foot. Juan Luis Martinez Luccani of Venezuela crossing the finish line of the Pan Am Masters Open-Water Swim Championships. Juan finished in third place overall and first place in his age category. photo by Trebor Britt Ryan Ballance (48) of Siesta Key, (top) looking for his name on the final results sheet of the Pan Am Masters Open-Water Swim Championships. He competed in the three kilometer openwater race in the 45-49 year-old age group and finished 5th. Ryan is a firefighter at Sarasota County Fire Department Fire and Rescue Station 13 on Siesta Key. photo by Trebor Britt
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Party on!
...welcome pancreatitis!
Certain dog breeds, such as Shetland Sheepdogs, are prone to pancreatitis, an all too common inflammation of the pancreas. It can occur due to diet changes, viruses, bacteria or toxinsis, and is usually characterized by the abrupt onset of vomiting and severe pain in the abdomen. If not treated early with hospitalization on IV fluids and medications, pancreatitis can be fatal.
When your pet is not feeling well, hope begins at...
Critical Care & Veterinary Specialists of Sarasota, LLC.
941-929-1818 • www.criticalvetcare.com 4937 S. Tamiami Trail • Sarasota, FL 34231
941.349.0194 • www.islandvp.com ISLAND VISITOR PUBLISHING, LLC
11
Featured Restaurant
By Paul Roat
Beach Bites has extensive, casual menu for Siesta Key patrons.
5758 S. Tamiami Trail • Sarasota (Serving Siesta Key and Vicinity)
941-923-1232
www.IsanThaiRestaurant.com
AUTHENTIC HOMESTYLE
THAI CUISINE
from the Northeast region of Thailand known as Isan.
No MSG
Seafood
Vegan/Vegetarian Curries
Craft Beer
Tues.-Sat. 11AM-10 PM; Lunch ‘til 3 PM Sunday Noon-9PM; Serving Dinner Menu
12
SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
From specialty sandwiches to “build your own” classics to soups and salads to free delivery, Beach Bites restaurant on Siesta Key offers an islandtime casual atmosphere. The new restaurant opened in September last year. It’s on what is rapidly being known as Eat Street due to the proliferation of restaurants, Avenida Madera, in Siesta Village. Owners Jeff and Cheri Madden offer Beach Bites patrons an extensive menu. Specialty sandwiches and salads, all priced at $8.99, run the gamut of goodies and offer historical commentary on the food. Most popular is the Cigar City Cuban, “an authentic Tampa Cuban sandwich, as created back in the 1920s, with roast pulled pork, ham, salami, Swiss cheese, sliced dill pickle and mustard pressed on Cuban bread.” The Gotham City Reuban “originated at Reuben’s Deli in 1914 in New York City, this corned beef, sauerkraut and Swiss cheese is pressed into marble rye.” It is served with either Thousand Island dressing or spicy mustard. Sarasota Garden Club Veggie Panini is “dedicated to the ‘Founders Circle,’ who together formed the Sarasota Garden Club.” It contains Portobello mushrooms, zucchini, spinach, tomatoes, red onions, peppers, basil pesto and Swiss cheese all pressed on a Ciabatta roll. All specialty sandwiches come with a choice of a side dish and a crispy pickle spear. Specialty salads at Beach Bites’ most popular entrée is the California Cobb. As described by owners Jeff and Cheri, “It is said that the Cobb salad is named after restaurateur Robert Howard Cobb, owner of the Hollywood Brown Derby in the 1930s. Legend has it that late evening leftovers became their signature salad. Beach Bites takes an assortment of mixed salad greens and tops them with chopped chicken breast, tomatoes, bacon, egg, avocado, and crumbled bleu cheese.” The build your own classic menu is epic in size, made easy by the build your own menu selection option: patrons are encouraged to circle the meat, bread, cheese, “fixins’”, and sides. There are 14 meat options, from which two are available. Classic #1 is $6.49; from which there is tuna salad, egg salad, cheese, and veggie. Classic #2 has turkey, ham, chicken salad, pepperoni, and salami ($7.49.) Classic #3, at $8.49, offers chicken breast, roast beef, corned beef, pastrami, and “blazing chicken.” Beach Bites lets you enjoy the sandwich with
11 different types of bread, six cheeses (one free), a whopping 33 “fixins’ (up to four,) as well as five side dishes. Free delivery is available on Siesta Key, including on the beach. The restaurant is open Tuesday through Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. It is located at 217 Avenida Madera, phone 941-706-3421, www.beachbitessiesta.com There is an extensive beer and wine list available, and don’t forget to try the wine smoothies or beer snowcone. How better to spend a day at the beach than with a monster sandwich from Big Bites?
Beach Bites Restaurant is located on Eat Street in the village on Siesta Key. Photo by Paul Roat
Beach Bites owner Jeff Madden opened the restaurant in September 2012.
Stand Up Paddle Board (SUP) Race Photos by Trebor Britt Bruce Day (foreground) of Siesta Key, waiting for the start of the 6-mile “Elite” division stand up paddle board race off the glistening shores of Siesta Beach. He and his wife own Siesta Key Fitness Center.
THEY’RE OFF... Competitors beginning their 6 mile stand up paddle board (SUP) race. About 130 racers have come from as far north as Georgia, and as far south as Key West. The two other races this year will be held at Nathan Benderson Park on August 24, and at Sarasota Sailing Squadron October 12.
Mia Raffaele (12) and Madison Massey (14) of St. Petersburg posing with the stock paddle boards they will use in 3-mile junior girls race, under 17 division. This is the fifth time they’ve raced competitively. (Madison Massey finished 2nd in the Junior Girls division).
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also be raising two, super-slow, African Land Tortoises weighing 50-70 lbs. each? Such is the case with Siesta Key lifeguard, Rick Hinkson (37) of Sarasota. Rick’s life guarding career has spanned 22-years, and the last 14 have been spent guarding the crystal waters off the Gulf shores of Florida. Rick is one of the lifeguard supervisors that rotates between Siesta Key, Casey Key and Venice Beaches. You’ll find Rick on duty on Siesta Key’s blue life guard tower most Sunday’s and Mondays. Our lifeguards do most of their physical and medical skills training in-house. Rick’s EMT certification and communications degree from a college near Buffalo, New York make him well qualified to meet the needs of the beach going public. When asked about public safety Rick said, “The first and foremost tip I would give the public is to stay hydrated. If you’re on the beach and you’re not hydrated, and not feeling up, it’s going to cause you to make poor decisions. You’ll forget about being safe in the water.” He went on to say, “There are six beaches that are guarded in Sarasota County, but there are also six or seven that are not guarded. It’s always safer to swim and enjoy the beach that is guarded. Lastly, a repeated application of protective sunscreen is also an important aspect of safety on the beach.” Rick is very proud of having led and organized Florida’s lifeguard competition on Siesta Key for three of the last five years. When he began this endeavor in 2008, it was the first time the event had been hosted on the Key in fifteen years. Almost 200 lifeguards participate from beaches all over the state. “Fifteen years ago Siesta Beach was a tiny little secret and now people come from
all over the world to enjoy our beach,” Rick said. “We continue to host National volleyball tournaments, and triathlons. The sheer volume of events hosted on Siesta beach each year keeps climbing.” There are no shortages of things to do around the Hinkson household. He and his wife are raising their 3-month old daughter along with taking care of the rest of their family pets. Along with the tortoises they have 3 dogs and a bird. They both love the outdoors, so when they can, they exercise, bike, swim, run, paddle and garden. If there’s time, Rick will pic on his bass guitar. When asked if he could spend the day with any person dead or alive, after a short hesitation he replied, “Carl Sagan?”. “I’d like to pick his brain about stuff he learned about the universe. I spend a lot of time researching that kind of thing. His writings make me appreciate my place on this planet.” Rick summed up life guarding this way, “It entails being at peace in one moment and being lightning fast in another.”
Junior Life Guard Program
Choose From The Following Entrées: Gulf Grouper Oscar, Baked Stuffed Large Gulf Shrimp, Siesta Key lifeguard, Rick Hinkson is running this Choice Filet Mignon, Certified Black Angus Prime Ribe (8 oz. cut), year’s Junior Lifeguard Program on two area beaches. North Atlantic Wild Caught Salmon, Surf ‘N Turf, Loin Lamb Chops, Surf ‘N Surf, The first class was held from June 10-14 at Nokomis Jumbo Scallops, Roasted Duck
Beach; the second is July 8-12 at Turtle Beach. In its 6th year, the program teaches youth ages 8-17 all aspects of life guarding. They have about 40 youngsters registered right now, fifteen or more are returning from last year. The program is so popular that several of the kids have been in the program all six years. Young people
By Trebor Britt
interested can simply go to www.scgov.net and look for the program’s link. Rick said, “Our first graduate is going to be working with us this summer. He’s an impressive swimmer. He’ll be one of the fastest swimmers on the beach when he’s on duty. I love working with kids, and can’t wait for my daughter to get old enough to participate in the program.” Siesta, Venice, and Lido Beach have also hosted the program.
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Top Left: Cliff from SK. Top Right: Brooke age 2, Mark, Brett age 9, Boden age 4, & Heidi from IL. Bottom Left: Kids - Brady age 3, Kailie age 5 and Jett age 4, Ramada from AZ. Bottom Left: Linda from Georgia.
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Sarasota Orchestra Summer Music Camp By Diana Colson
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A most amazing summer camp takes place every year in Sarasota. When attending this camp, kids scale musical mountains and wander harmonic trails as they learn about playing instruments as well as singing. This superb three-week program is run by the Sarasota Orchestra. No auditions are required, for the point of the program is to introduce children to music and to capture their interest at an early age. This year, between July 1 and July 19, 2013, interested students who have completed second grade may participate in the String Camp in which they learn to play Violin, Viola, Cello or Bass. The string class meets from 9 am to 11:30 Monday through Friday, and is open to students of all abilities. Between July 1 and July 19, 2013, interested students who have completed fifth grade may attend Band Camp from 1:00 to 3:30 Monday through Friday. Here they can learn to play Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon, Saxophone, Horn, Trumpet, Trombone, Euphonium, Tuba, or Percussion. Everyone participating in the Sarasota Orchestra Summer Music Camp is also invited to attend Summer Choir, which meets from 11:45 am to 12:30 pm Monday through Friday. Here budding instrumentalists learn to sing, not so they can perform vocally, but rather so they will learn to hear without the aid of their instruments. There are only so many spaces in this program, so Summer Choir is limited to the first 75 Music Camp students who have registered and paid the small choir fee of $30. This three-week musical adventure takes place in an air conditioned concert hall, offering the perfect escape from Florida’s hot summer days. I know, I know! It’s too late to be involved this year. However, interested parents, grandparents and children might want to attend the culminating recital being given near the end of the program. This recital promises to showcase 2013 student achievements, and might very well put the 2014 Summer Music Camp on the top of your child’s bucket list. The benefits of early exposure to classical music are endless. Through this expanded music education program, the Sarasota Orchestra takes its students on
journeys to various lands, cultures, and time periods. Through each musical encounter, children learn about geography, history, art, literature and math. It is powerful stuff presented in a delightful way, one which an impressionable young child will never forget. Kids already love music, as can be proven by their attraction to iPods and mp3’s. The Sarasota Orchestra does not expect kids to leave the music of 2013 behind. Rather, they are committed to transforming today’s symphony into a youthful medium where children and teens are inspired to add Mozart and Beethoven to their play lists. Every year elective classes are given in one or more of the following: Music Theory, Music History, Sight Singing, Ear Training, and/or Rhythm. Classes are kept to a manageable size insuring that each student receives individual attention. This is an opportunity for a young person to try something out, for auditions are not required for placement. Enrollment is on a first-come-first-served basis, and closes each year at the first of June. Each participant in the Youth Orchestra program pays the modest tuition of $280—a fraction of the actual per-student cost to the Sarasota Orchestra. This tuition is in addition to the $25 application fee, which must accompany the application. Fortunately, a number of private donors and grants have made it possible to offer scholarships to assist those families in financial need. The Sarasota Orchestra recognizes young people as the future. Many youngsters today have never experienced classical music first hand. However, once they experience it, they become the Orchestra’s most receptive participants. The Sarasota Orchestra Summer Music Camp provides a tremendous opportunity for the musically interested child. On July 19, students enrolled in the 2013 camp will present a recital in Holly Hall. Go down there to see for yourself what amazing things have been accomplished in the few short weeks of summer. Trust me: you will be impressed! For additional information go to www.SarasotaOrchestra.org or call 941-953-3434.
Beginning band – (L to R) Daria Witte, Patrick Moran, Ethan Marks. Photo courtesy of www.SarasotaOrchestra.org
Foundation strings – (L to R) Elizabeth Mopps, Marianna Flores. Photo courtesy of www.SarasotaOrchestra.org
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SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
10 Years of Pork Bangers & “Passtees!” By Patricia Kawaja
(originally published in Union Jack News)
Continued from cover
Why not wrap a whole range of pie favorites, include vegetarians, a few sweet desserty ones as well into a fine pastry case. People love to eat on the go and a hot, baked Pasty Pie in a great outdoor jacket is an excellent way to eat a (much healthier) To-Go meal. We use only the finest freshest ingredients, without preservatives, MSG or chemical enhancements, being chefs after all, not chemists. And the pastry? Experimenting with American lard it was tough, too crunchy and oddly flavored, so we developed and make a buttery, flakey pastry from scratch, gaining endless compliments. We served our pasty pies and specialties in the bakery hot togo and frozen for re-heating anytime later, which kicked off a storm in Sarasota. Soon snowbirds asked us to ship, so in 2005, we created our website and started shipping freezer packages all over the States. They started telling their friends, both expat and American, and asked their local Britstore to stock our products so individual ship costs wouldn’t be such a problem. This can only be done under Federal USDA supervision, so in 2007 we were granted our USDA production certificates. Now we have successful stockists in Dallas, Charlotte, Atlanta, Salt Lake City, and Naples Florida and other cities, plus a start with The Fresh Market group, who sought us out. For six years we won “Best Fast food in Sarasota” by the Creative Loafing local newspaper and a USA Bronze Medal in the UK’s Weekly Telegraph worldwide Best of British competition. “ Challenges: “But it has certainly not been a smooth, easy ride. Firstly, America at large knows nothing (or cares little) about Pasties or their benefits/pleasures, and seem to have proved as suspicious of “foreign
Captain Curt’s
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Co-owner, Barbra Posner inspects each pasty before packaging
food” as Brits used to be in the 50s. They also call them “Paystees”, which is confusing and uncomplimentary. (We tell them that if that was correct, the lurex might stick in their teeth!) They’re “Passtees!” Plus we’ve had to work through the recession as well, like most. A number of our Britstore customers went under in the last four years with insufficient business and with competition from some supermarkets carrying staple Brit groceries in the “Ethnic Aisle” which rather amused us. This limits our market and we’re not out of the woods quite yet. Shipping charges have also continuously risen in line with gas prices, limiting growth. But in spite of this, we have refused to compromise our quality or our mission – to provide the source of standout British foods for customers so no Brit need be here without a ready source of their finest, most authentic British-style favourites, supplied with competence, good service and smiles. We are proud of our standards and to have served our community for a whole decade!” 4&20 Pasty Co. is located at 5638 Swift Road, only 5 minutes from Siesta Key’s south bridge. 941-927-1421
1200 Old Stickney Point Rd, Siesta Key FL 34242
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Lorraine’s Island Hair Design Full Service salon. Open Monday thru Saturday. 346-7206
Home of the Orange Squeeze! Featuring hand-mixed ice cream, coffees, shakes, malts, sundaes, & smoothies. Open Til 9:30pm 941-346-8080
Coconut Fashions The best in service, quality, & design. Beachwear & accessories for the whole family. 349-4498
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Pet Talk
By Dr. Anne Chauvet
1. What is Hyperbaric Chamber Oxygen Therapy?
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy involves breathing pure oxygen in a pressurized chamber. This type of therapy has been around for over a century and is better known for treating the bends, a common diving injury. Over time oxygen was found to be a very essential therapy. Pressurized delivery of oxygen pushes the oxygen beyond the red blood cells, which carry it to the body. Oxygen dissolves in plasma, reaching places the red blood cells can not normally reach. Oxygen promotes healing, improves immune system function and helps recovery from hypoxic accidents (strokes for example). HOT is often used for vascular problems, inflammation (such as pancreatitis) and all wound healing (trauma and/ or post surgery). Here in Sarasota, pet owners have the luxury of having HOT accessible at Critical Care & Veterinary Specialists. 2. My friend’s dog was recently diagnosed with heart problem and was sent to a specialist in cardiology. I did not know that veterinary medicine had specialists. What other specialties are there? Veterinary medicine has come a long way since James Herriot’s times. There are a lot of specialties available. The American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine (www.acvim.org) is home to the specialties of oncology (cancer), internal medicine (both small and large animals), cardiology and neurology. The American College of Veterinary Surgery (www.acvs.org) is home to both large animal and small animal surgery specialties. Note that nowadays we have even more specializations, including orthopedics, soft tissue surgery, and even minimally invasive interventions (laparoscopy, arthroscopy, catheterizations for hearts and other organs, stent placements and more.) Additionally, we now have the following specialties: Emergency and Critical Care (American College of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care, www.acvecc.org), Ophthalmology (www.acvo.org), Dermatology (www.acvd.org.) Specialties, such as Rehabilitation, Acupuncture, and Chiropractic are also becoming more and more defined. Thus, if your pet needs specialty care, chances are it is available. Dr. Chauvet earned her Doctor of Veterinary Medicine from the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon, Canada, completed a small animal medicine/surgery internship at the University of Illinois in Urbana and finished her residency in neurology/neurosurgery at the University of California, Davis. She has been trained in small animal rehabilitation by the Canine Rehabilitation Institute of Wellington, Florida and is known internationally for her specialized work in the relatively rare field of veterinary neurology speaking to, training, and consulting with veterinary practices and organizations globally.
If you have a question about your pet, please email your question to criticalvetcare@gmail.com Each month, Dr. Chauvet will choose a few questions to share with readers.
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SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
Sarasota History
By Paul Roat
Selby Gardens opening anniversary July 7th It seems somehow ironic that the iconic Selby name Sarasota Magazine regarding the Selbys. today is renown in Sarasota history, yet historically Bill “In 1921, the Selbys built a Spanish-style, two-story and Marie Selby were virtually unknown during their house among the laurel and banyan trees on several acres 60-plus years in the city. of land bordering Sarasota Bay and Hudson Bayou,” The Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, an 11-acre Kipling continued. In 1941, they also bought a 3,000tract of lush landscaping on Sarasota Bay just south of acre ranch in Desoto County, where cattle were raised Downtown, is probably the most visible of the pair’s and Marie’s love of horseback riding was indulged. presence in the community. Acquaintances recall that the unpretentious Marie was The gardens celebrates its anniversary July 7, the date more often seen in her riding gear than in any fancy party in 1975 when it opened to the public. dresses. A more important contribution to the region, “Roses were Marie’s favorite flower — a surprise, though, comes through the William and Marie Selby perhaps, to those who think of her namesake gardens Foundation, a multi-million endowment Bill established more in terms of orchids — and a large rose garden in 1955. Interest from the investment goes to grants and figured prominently in her landscaping design for the programs that enhance education, the arts, youth and Selby property.” children, libraries, health services, The lack of ostentation is evident at and programs in support of the aged. the Selby property. The Selby’s home Bill and Marie Selby first visited was planned as a gatehouse, but as Sarasota in 1909, a year after their Sarasota Magazine explained, “Marie wedding. The rugged village on always postponed building anything Sarasota Bay appealed to the couple, grander; the large Southern Colonial who came back winter after winter house on the Selby Gardens property — at one point living on a houseboat was not built by the Selbys, but by at the foot of Main Street — and their neighbor Calvin Payne, and eventually building a home on seven was acquired by the gardens in 1973.” acres of bayfront property. Bill died in December 1956. Marie Marie was the daughter of an kept to her gardens, her horses, oil drilling equipment inventor and and herself until her death in 1971. an accomplished pianist. Bill was a Her legacy is her gardens, today a partner in the family business, Selby sprawling 11-acre tract that houses Oil and Gas Co., which later merged a plant collection numbering more to form Texaco Oil Co. than 20,000 greenhouse plants, plus The pair were outdoorspeople, countless more outdoors. based on Marie’s geological According to the gardens, “eight excursions with her father and Bill’s greenhouses include the stunning search for oil and natural gas. Their Tropical Conservatory where hands-on approach to the great unusual flora can be seen year William Selby. ourdoors and mechanical bent led round. The Botany Department Photo courtesy Marie Selby them to mimic the first cross-country provides headquarters for the Botanical Gardens. automobile race. Bromeliad, Gesneriad, and Orchid The pair beat the official race time Research Centers, and the Selby by six days, in so doing awarding Gardens’ Herbarium and Molecular Marie the honor of being the first Laboratory.” More than 180,000 woman to cross the United States by visitors tour the grounds annually. car. Marie was generous in her In Sarasota, “the Selbys kept a contributions to the community above low public profile,” according to and beyond gardens and foundation. the Sarasota Historical Society. “Bill As Kipling wrote, “Accounts abound Selby’s business interests took him of how Marie would, when she felt out of town. Marie’s horticultural sympathy for a cause the foundation interests focused on their home. did not respond to, give of her own “After establishing a ranch on private resources. ‘Let me take care of 3,000 acres southeast of Myakka City, that one,’ she would say in her quiet Bill oversaw a herd of Angus cattle way. On a public scale, she was one of and Marie rode the horses she kept only a few individuals to give money there.” to the construction of the Van Wezel Marie was a founding member of Performing Arts Hall.” the Sarasota Garden Club, and the Selby Gardens, Selby Library, pair both joined the Sarasota Yacht the Selby Foundation, Selby Gallery, Club. That was pretty much their Selby Five Points Park — think social circle. how the face of Sarasota would “Living here was a personal choice look without the presence of a quiet dictated by their love of nature and ephemeral couple from years past Marie Selby. the outdoors in an affinity the couple with a tremendous impact today. Photo courtesy Marie Selby shared from the beginning of their Botanical Gardens. lives together,” Kay Kipling wrote in
Siesta Key Chamber of Commerce Announces Dates for 2013 Siesta Key Crystal Classic Master Sand Sculpting Competition 4th Annual Siesta Key Crystal Classic confirmed for Nov. 15-18, 2013 Ten teams of master sand sculptors from the United States and abroad competing for 1st place on the #1 beach will be back Nov. 15-18, 2013, for the 4th Annual Siesta Key Crystal Classic. The Crystal Classic has become a favorite of many of the professional sand sculptors who have competed here. Citing the beauty and cleanliness of the pristine white sand, sculptors have remarked that their sculptures look almost as if they are “carved in marble. Sponsorships and vendor spaces are now available. For more information visit: www.SiestaKeyCrystalClassic.com. VIP Parking packages with multiday passes starting at $49, will be available for purchase online in the next few weeks. Proceeds of the Siesta Key Crystal Classic benefit Mote Marine Laboratory’s sea turtle research and conservation programs. For more information about Siesta Key Crystal Classic contact the Siesta Key Chamber of Commerce – 941-349-3800; email info@ SiestaKeyCrystalClassic; or visit www.SiestaKeyCrystalClassic.com. 2012 First Place Winners: Delayne Corbett and Craig Mutch From Canada
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Investing for Your Future
By Martha Stokes, CMT
Swap Clearing Mandate Starts While the retail side news is all about old news, the professional side is concerned with the new mandates, regulations, and rules that are starting. On June 10, 2013 the Dodd-Frank Act deadline for OTC Derivatives begins, and many professionals and buy and sell side institutions are not ready. This is creating a flurry of activity behind the retail news that continues to talk about things that actually do not impact the market as much as the news pretends. Meanwhile on the professional side, anxiety is mounting as the derivatives market, the largest of all the financial markets with a notional value in the quadrillions, gets ready to cope with clearing all of those • PREMIUM SERVICE AND HONEST VALUE transactions through a clearing house. It is no mean feat. Eris one of the top 3 US futures exchange operations • A Relaxed Shopping Atmosphere with Complimentary Coffee Lounge that just announced a 90% reduction in notional value • Family Owned and Operated for Over 30 Years of its futures swaps instruments just ahead of the swap A • Visit our Grande 7000 sq. ft. showroom TODAY! clearing mandate. By lowering the notional amount from Flooring Shopping Experience 1 million down to 100,000.00 US dollars, Eris hopes to in Sarasota snatch up more volume activity as many swaps shift to BRING IN THIS AD future swaps. FOR A CHANCE TO This will allow the traders using Eris to execute more swap futures for more accounts. This is intended to make it easier to execute and process swap futures and assist One entry per household.Drawing is to be held 7-31-13. the asset manager during the mandate shift. Although the swaps market has been slowly migrating toward the new clearing house processing and away from the OTC, there is still a huge amount of work to do to actually meet the June 10th deadline. This has the potential to not only impact futures markets but also stock, bonds, ETFs, and other markets as well. This could mean a more volatile market activity next week which the retail side will blame on something the reporters decide is the culprit. Meanwhile the professional side faces a myriad
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of challenges. Credit Default Swaps now have intraday ticker data. The competition in swaps and derivatives is rising as more and more companies are vying for the buy side institutions interest. Interest Rate Swaps also must be cleared. The big banks hold vast amounts of these derivatives and it could affect bank stock values in the months ahead as they scramble to work to clear the giant number of interest rate swaps. The European Securities and Markets Authority is very concerned about the June 10th deadline and has requested an extension on swap rules under the DoddFrank Act to European firms. The European financial community believes the new rules will create a surge of problems and confusion as well as uncertainty for the European financial markets. They are sure that there will be some impact in global markets due to the swap clearinghouse rules in the US. Meanwhile short term fixes, such as using less regulated securities to achieve hedging strategies, are increasing as many buy side investment managers are trying to avoid the risk of not being able to meet the collateral rules of the Dodd-Frank Act. Most are attempting to reduce their risk by using very liquid and low risk assets. What that means is lower liquidity assets and higher risk assets are being avoided and this could definitely have a ripple effect on ETFs, ETNs, and other stock derivatives and could potentially cause sudden changes in stocks as well. For now, retail traders should be alert to the professional side’s concerns. The regulation of Derivatives is crucial to stabilizing the markets but comes at a cost and could potentially cause disruptions of trend patterns beyond the swap markets. So when the stock market moves, it is not always about a job report, or some economic report, or whatever. It is probably more related to what is going on behind the retail scene, on the professional side as the dominant force in the market, as the Institutional Investors and Institutional Traders work to find solutions to the new Dodd-Frank Act regulations. Trade wisely, Martha Stokes, CMT and CEO of TechniTrader® TechniTrader® the Gold Standard in Stock Market Education™ http://technitrader.com/courses Phone: 888-846-5577
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SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
Featured Artist
By Diana Colson
Ann Darling - Master Potter Ann Darling has owned and operated the Darling Pottery Studio in the Gulf Gate area since 1974. A master potter, Ann not only creates her own impeccable work, she has inspired dozens of enthusiastic students for over 39 years. A native of Sarasota, Ann grew up in the McClellan Park area, where she began studying pottery at Brookside Middle School. She went on to obtain a degree in psychology from Stetson University in Deland and completed graduate work in art at Illinois State University. In the past had you gone to the Sarasota Farmer’s Market downtown at Main and Lemon, you might have seen Ann there. For two years she was at the market every Saturday from 7am until noon with a full display of work for sale and a pottery wheel spinning. Darling studio now displays work at the Phillipi Market , a Wednesday Trigger Fish Plate market which will begin again in October. Her work is beautiful and polished, and she has been honored with many awards and exhibitions. Ann has had solo exhibitions at the Hilton Leech Gallery in Sarasota and at the Manatee Community College South Campus Art Gallery. Her work has been shown at the Ringling Museum Crafts Festival, the Las Olas Art Festival, the Miami Grove Show, and the Winter Park Art festival. Her work was also included in the Lowe Art Museum’s exhibition of Women Artists in Florida. Her reputation extends internationally, for a number of her pieces have been accepted at the International Competition of Ceramic Arts in Faenza, Italy. Ann and I go back to the 60’s when she apprenticed in pottery with my husband, Frank Colson, at his Hillview Street studio. The three of us traveled for an entire summer to St. Andrews, New Brunswick, Canada, where Frank headed up The Sunbury Shores Arts and Nature Centre. In addition to helping out at the Centre, Ann and I took turns chasing my two pre-school sons around beautiful St. Andrews, eating lobsters, and trying to swim in the waters of the frigid Bay of Fundy. We even went ice skating at the local rink with General Westmoreland’s wife and her two little girls! Ann and I also taught school together in the 70’s at Southside Elementary School, where she was the art teacher and I was the “Song & Dance Lady.” My fondest memory was putting on a musical called YELLOW SUBMARINE with 6th grade students. For this extravaganza, Ann had her students create a wonderfully original submarine out of painted plywood. My four lead “BEATLES” strutted back and forth across the stage holding up this magical prop to the delight of an enthusiastic audience. For as long as I can remember, Ann has been a serious student who continued to meticulously hone her skills. In addition to working with Frank, Ann also worked with Cynthia Bringle, Paulus Berneshon, and Toshiko Takaezu at Penland School of Crafts in North Carolina, all giants in the field of pottery. For several years she was an art therapist at Gulf Gate School for Adjustive Education, combining her psychology and art education to work with emotionally disturbed children. She has also served as an adjunct art professor at Manatee Community College South Campus in Venice.
The Hidden Paintings of “Sybil’s” alternate “selves”
Shirley Mason’s true life story as portrayed by Sally Field Aquatic Forms #1 The painting was entitled “Aquatic Forms #1, Shirley A. Mason”, but the title and her signature was covered by tape. It is thought that Ms. Mason did this in order to conceal her identity.
Raku Vessel
Ann was married to Sumner Darling, a gifted architect who designed and restored such landmarks as the Sarasota Arts Center. Sadly, Sumner passed away in 1975, leaving Ann with one three year old son and another three months old. He also left her with the plans for a pottery studio, but construction of the studio was still a dream. Local architects Bob Morris, Stewart Barger, Carl Abbott, Jack West, Tolyn Twitchell, Don Wilkinson and Dick Allen all rallied to the cause and donated weekends to bring Ann’s school building into completion. With a young family to support, she diligently went to work, turning her studio/school into a thriving business. Today at Darling Pottery Studio in Sarasota, students learn from a master potter using classic throwing techniques. The school has 13 kick wheels and 6 electric wheels. Ann’s students are not only given instruction in glaze formation and hand building, they are encouraged to use these skills to develop their own creative expressions. In addition to her wheel-thrown and hand-built works in clay—which include high-fired stoneware and raku— Ann also works in printmaking and photography. Today Ann lives in a remarkable residence designed in 2002 by the eminent Sarasota architect, Carl Abbott. It is a triptych of buildings which was uniquely designed to meet the needs of Ann and both of her sons, Sumner and Glenn. The result is a complex of three living spaces unified by common materials, especially concrete. Abbott so respected the site and its abundant reserves of oak trees that this handsome residence has been written up in dozens of magazines and newspapers. Today her son Sumner and his wife still live next to Ann on the beautiful property along with their little twin girls. The Darling Pottery Studio is part of the Darling Apartments town house complex located at 2211A Bispham Road in Sarasota, just minutes from Siesta Key. Both Ann’s work and student work are on display at the studio. Classes are held on Tuesdays and Thursdays 9 a.m. to noon and 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. For more information, call the studio at 941-922-6059 or 941-923-4401.
Blue Is The Color of Love According to Nancy Preston, author of Life After Sybil... From the Words of Shirley Mason, this title was probably used by Shirley and her alternates more than once as they referred to various pieces of their art. One of the alternates called Mary, named after Miss Mason’s grandmother, referred to her first watercolor as “Blue is the color of love.”
Tall Masts The original of this work is unsigned and is attributed to one of the alternate selves. Boats are a common image among the works of Mason and the alternate selves. Arguable, boats were images depicting means of possible escape for Mason who sought relief from a world of isolation, entrapment and pain.
Come in and meet JIM BALLARD the man who discovered “Sybil’s Hidden Paintings”. Her remaining “Hidden Paintings” collection is now available for purchase. See them all at
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Arts on the Horizon
Story & photos by Jaye Clements
Sarasota is known for its magnificent cultural experiences. The best of the best performances! We have it all…Opera, Symphonies, Theatre, Ballet, and more. It’s a mecca for the arts! We’ve covered the arts all season long. What’s going on when the snowbirds head home and many of the venues quiet down? What are discerning SRQ residents and our summer visitors to do? Let’s begin with the Ringling Gardens! Did you know you can walk the grounds for free? Every day, The Ringling Museum, offers free strolls to the public, on their incredible grounds. The gardens are located on a 66-acre estate on the stunning shores of the Sarasota Bay. The trails are filled with lovely Banyan Trees, lush ferns, bamboo trees, oaks, magnolias and more, providing a shady tropical walk, near the breezy bay.
Mondays you may enter the Museum of Art for free! The Museum of Art was built by John Ringling to house his own collection of artwork… today it features paintings and sculptures by some of the greatest artists! http://www.ringling.org/ArtMuseum.aspx Enjoy the courtyard with a Renaissance style garden, including bronze and stone sculptures. One of my favorite stops is the rose garden, designed by Mable Ringling in a wagon wheel layout, perhaps influenced by their trips to Italy. It’s an artistic landscape of roses and sculptures. The sculptures are cast stone, brought in from Europe, possibly Venice, Naples or Rome. It’s not just an ordinary garden but a 27,000-square-foot charming artistic landscape. If you love roses, you’ll love this garden!
This extraordinary historic estate includes the Ca’ d’Zan, a Venetian Gothic architecture, it reflects a spirit of romance and grandeur. It’s been described as the
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SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
last of the Gilded Age mansions built in the US. This handsomely decorated 56 room mansion can be viewed inside with admission. (41 rooms and 15 bathrooms) It is full of original furnishings and art covering and area of 36,000 square feet with an Italian feel. The exquisite bay front terrace is made of gorgeous marble. The views from the outside are as impressive as the inside. Current and upcoming summer Exhibits at Ringling Museum of Art: http://www.ringling.org/ ExhibitionsSchedule.aspx?ekmensel=c580fa7b_44_200_ btnlink Now that the traffic has quieted down and the waiting lines have settled down at area restaurants, it’s time to get out and enjoy everything downtown Sarasota has to offer! Did you know downtown has dozens of art shops, fine dining, theatre, social scenes and lively nightclubs? Every Saturday from 7 AM to 12 Noon. There’s a place in downtown SRQ called the “Sarasota Farmers Market”. If you haven’t been there already you don’t know what you are missing! Held in the heart of downtown SRQ, you’ll find many local artisans selling arts and crafts, area vendors peddling all sorts of foods, fresh local produce, native plants and flowers, entertainment and much more. The Sarasota Farmers Market has over 70 vendors, with 5,000 square feet of fun for the whole family. The event is not only a place to pick up a few treats, but also a social gathering. It’s also pet-friendly! A place for residents and visitors to interact and enjoy the excitement of downtown SRQ! What a great way to encourage an economic boost to our area businesses! Located on Lemon & Main. A few blocks away at the Historic Downtown Village (around the 1800 block of Fruitville Rd (across from the theatres outside parking lot) or 4th St., west of 301. There are many shops, set in quaint, converted historic homes. It’s small enough to walk to all the interesting shops. They are filled with an array of eclectic artistic goods. Browse around and enjoy the ambience of a small community of business owners, with everything from pottery making to hand crafted jewelry and many selections of art! Every forth Friday of the month they offer shopping from 5pm to 9pm with entertainment, food and wine. There’s a BBQ on hand and an ice cream truck for the kids! Looking for more Farmer’s markets with all sorts of arts & crafts, fresh produce from local farmers, entertainment and more? Every Sunday in Siesta Key Village: Just like the one downtown, only a mini-version. Products include artwork, photography, handmade soaps, spices, fresh baked breads and pastries, food, coffee, dog treats, flowers, fresh fruits and vegetables. Dogs are welcome! Lakewood ranch area: Every Friday 9 to 1. The San Marco Plaza Farmers Market…. with fresh local produce, plants and flowers, teas, baked breads, olive oils and more. (Natures Way, downtown LWR, FL. 34204) Venice area: Every Saturday from 8am to noon. Join in on the Farmers market in Historic downtown Venice, on Tampa Ave., between Nokomis & Nassau Avenues.
4th of July Reflections
By Robert Frederickson
|American Exceptionalism still going strong Continued from cover
In his signature work “On Democracy in America,” Alexis de Tocqueville noted all the way back in 1838 how remarkably giving Americans are to charitable causes – helping their neighbors, towns, schools and churches almost reflexively – much more so than their European counterparts. This trait persists to this day. While western Europeans generally look to their governments first and foremost for solutions to civic problems, Americans are much more likely to look first to themselves. After a decade of war in Afghanistan and Iraq, opinions on the merits of those conflicts remain as deeply divided as they were at the outset. Still, no matter what their view on how we got into those wars, most Americans remain strongly supportive of the men and women in uniform who fought and sacrificed in battle. And when it comes to those wounded in body or spirit, Americans of all political stripes have stepped up to support and volunteer with organizations that pick up where the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) leaves off.
One such organization is the Wounded Warrior Project. It was founded in 2003 by a group of friends in Roanoke, Virginia who wanted to help the earliest wounded soldiers recovering from their injuries in Afghanistan and Iraq. At first, their efforts were small: care packages filled with everyday comfort items from back home. But from those modest early acts of kindness and gratitude the organization has grown into one that has touched the lives of thousands of wounded service members and their families. And the scope of their efforts has grown to include a range of services to help wounded veterans navigate the often-difficult transition back into civilian life. Programs fall into four main categories, focusing on mind, body, economic empowerment and engagement. Taken together, they seek to provide an integrated, rather than piecemeal approach to recovery. Such personalized, comprehensive efforts are where private groups like The Wounded Warrior Project and The Gary Sinise Foundation really shine. The military and the VA may be well-suited to helping soldiers recover physically from their injuries, but as a massive bureaucracy with a backlog of over 50,000 claims just for the Tampa Bay Region’s Bay Pines facility (which includes southwest Florida in its service area), that type of holistic approach is hopelessly out-of-reach. With the current backlog, it can take up to nine months just to get a response to a basic claim. Such delays bring with them a level of frustration that is the last thing a veteran needs when trying to get their life back on track after a traumatic physical or emotional injury. Actor Gary Sinise founded the organization that bears his name in response to just that sort of bureaucratic Rubik’s cube. In addition to his role on the television series CSI: NY, he is perhaps best known for his portrayal of Lieutenant Dan in the film Forrest Gump, where he played a Vietnam war era platoon leader who lost both his legs in combat. Sinise was so inspired by the public response to the character he brought to life that he
committed himself to helping real-life wounded soldiers get the help they need to once again live meaningful, productive lives. His efforts also honor the memory of his brother-in-law, a fallen hero. In fact, his CSI NY character Matt Taylor and his son are both named after him.
Is your sliding door hard to open? Photo credit: Gary Sinise Foundation
Sinise, an accomplished bass player, was in Florida in early May to perform with his “Lieutenant Dan Band” to raise money to build a new “smart” home for Mike Nicholson, a Marine sergeant who lost three limbs to an improvised explosive device (IED) while serving in Afghanistan in 2011. Speaking with local media in Tampa before his band’s performance at Curtis Hixon Waterfront Park, he addressed the backlog of Veterans Administration cases: “Has it ever not been a problem?” he asked rhetorically. “The VA should be the first place a veteran should go for immediate assistance and support. When a veteran feels like they have to go to the VA and fight over benefits or support or help or whatever, then the VA isn’t serving its function. The fact is there is still this always-ongoing problem with veterans trying to get benefits they were promised. That’s sad. They served their country, go off to war, get shot, see their buddies get killed and come back and have to fight with the VA over what they are supposed to get? That shouldn’t happen.” But perhaps the frustration Sinise expresses is a backhanded blessing of sorts. When the injustice of such delay and denial becomes widely known, it provokes just the sort of response that brought thousands to Curtis Hixon Park to help Sergeant Nicholson get the kind of home than can accommodate his special needs. Americans are an impatient lot. They seem to have a tacit understanding that people work better, smarter and faster than large bureaucracies. It seems inconceivable that any such plodding agency could ever meet the specific, individual needs of someone like Sergeant Nicholson, much less all the thousands of others like him. But for a motivated group of committed volunteer citizens led by someone like Sinise, nothing is impossible. In fact, there’s something of the Marine Corps credo of “No one left behind” to it. People can care for each other in ways that huge bureaucracies are functionally incapable of. And the action inspired by that understanding is an example of American exceptionalism at its best. It is engrained not just in our founding document, the Constitution, but in our national character as well. If you would like to learn more about or contribute to either The Wounded Warrior Project or The Gary Sinise Foundation, their websites are a good place to start. Their web addresses are www.garysinisefoundation.org and www.woundedwarriorproject.org
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What’s Happening …on the beach • Beach Hoop Dance Class – Thurs. 6:30 – 7:45pm. Register at www.outwardspiral.net • Free Yoga Mon-Wed.-Fri.-Sat. 9-10:30 am. Classes held between blue & green lifeguard station. Call 941-320-6693 to register or www.yogaonsiestabeach.com • NIA Tues. & Thurs. 9 a.m., Siesta Public Beach (yellow lifeguard chair) Joy Donation: $10 Contact Kathy Oravec at 941724-9719 or Kathyoravec@gmail.com • Pilates on Siesta Key Beach – Mon & Wed 6pm. Sun. 9:30am. Cost: $10.(yellow lifeguard station). Register online: http:// www.studiorubylake.com • Drum Circle – Every Sunday two hours before sunset and lasts until around 10pm. South of the main pavillion. • July 2,9,16,23,30 (Tues) - Kids Summer Beach Runs. 5:307:30p.m. For more information, call 861-5000.
• July 4 (Thurs) – Fireworks Show 5-9pm Hosted by the Siesta Key Chamber. VIP event in picnic area. Includes VIP parking. Contact the Chamber for more info at 941- 349-3800 • July 13 & 14(Sat-Sun) USA Volleyball Tournament 8a.m.-6p.m. For more information or to register, visit their website: www. digthebeach.com • July 18 ( Thurs) i9 Sport Beach Soccer Clinic (6-7:30pm) is once a month instructional soccer clinic led by our i9 Sports certified soccer coaches. Player to Coach Ratio: 10:1. For more information go to their website: www.i9sports.com • July 23 (Sun) – Full Moom Meditation 7:30-9pm. Far North end of the main public parking lot and enter into beach there. Open to the public. Donations accepted. www.erinnearth.wix.com/ home#!workshops • July 27 (Sat) Sarasota Memorial Hospital Volleyball Tournament 9am – noon Fundraiser for American Heart Assoc.
…around the island • Siesta Key Farmer’s Market – every Sunday from 8am – 2pm in Davidson’s Plaza in the Village. 5124 Ocean Blvd. Fresh fruits, vegetables, music, art. • July 14 (Sun) Model Search Prelim at BluQue – 6pm Winner receives an all expense paid trip to Cancun Mexio to compete in the International Finals. For more information contact, Michael@swimsuitusa.net 149 Avenida Messina (in the Village) …and beyond • July 5 - 7 – 29th Annual Super Boat Grand Prix Races Benefitting Suncoast Charities for Children. Net proceeds raised each year from the race and festival help maintain these facilities so that program and service money can go directly to the clients they serve. For this year’s schedule visit: www.suncoastoffshore.org
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From Donnarose your energy attached to them. Enjoy your reunion! ~♥
Q: Dear Donnarose, how do I make amends with my brother? In 1999 we had a falling out. Both of us were wrong, but my words were a little harsher. There’s no way to contact him. I’ve tried calling years ago and then again through a cousin, but his number was still disconnected. ~Steven
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A: ~ “First release and feel the peace, and what you desire will come with more ease.” ~Donnarose Melvin Well Liza, the trick is to be at ease first, and then the gift comes. This is because being at ease sends trusting energy to the Universe that it’s already on its way…that it’s already in existence for you. Uneasy and waiting energy is lovingly responded to with more delay, as the Universe responds to what state of energy we are in. When we keep saying I want, the Universe lovingly says, ok, I will keep you in that state of want. When we say I have, then the gift must be granted to match the already have state. It gets tricky, but it works! Congratulations on your new house in advance! ~♥ Donnarose Melvin is a professional psychic, medium and energy healer, whose pleasure is to assist clients worldwide. She incorporates knowledge from her degree in psychology, along with her clairvoyant, clairaudient, clairsentient and empathic gifts to guide her clients towards peace and success. Please send your questions to GoWithYourSoul@gmail.com or private message her via facebook: Go With Your Soul. Donnarose will select questions each month to share with you. She regrets that unpublished questions cannot be answered individually. ~ ♥
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A: ~ “Love is the ability and willingness to allow those that you care for to be what they choose for themselves, without any insistence that they satisfy you.” ~ Dr. Wayne Dyer Steven, this is certainly a very common issue in many families. Definitely reading what I feel may help you with a very open mind. First, love yourself. Second, forgive yourself and your brother. And third, release with love, any guilt you have attached to you. If you don’t do the above, you will delay or perhaps never manifest what you desire, which is to reunite with your brother. It is a must to love ourselves first and foremost, because what follows is that we feel we are truly deserving of good things to flow into our lives. In addition to the above (here’s where the open mind especially needs to come into play), since no one is making it easy to contact your brother, contact him with your thoughts and energy. It’s called telepathic communication. And trust me, it’s sometimes even easier to get the outcome you desire, and faster. You simply visualize your brother sitting next to you, then talk to him and say what you want him to hear, all of it. But it must be love based which will pull his energy towards you. Any negative energy will create the opposite effect...guaranteed. Don’t be surprised if you receive a call or some form of contact. It works, trust me. So consider your words carefully and more importantly,
Q: Dear Donnarose, I’m waiting to hear about the perfect house I’m looking to buy. I really want/need it and I cannot seem to feel at ease. I’ve been so worried and stressed out and it seems the more I worry, the more it’s gets drawn out! Help! ~Liza
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Water World
Captain Jim Klopher
Bethany Stweard from Pepperell, MA with a big speckled trout that hit a Gulp! Shrimp
JULY 2013 TIDE CHART
1518 Stickney Point Rd., Sarasota, FL 34231
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Adventure Charters 941-371-1390 July fishing can be excellent, but tactics need to be a little different and windows of opportunity are smaller. It is simply too hot to fish in the middle of the day. Early morning will be the most reliable time to fish, evenings are good too, but frequent thunderstorms can make planning a trip difficult. Anglers who don’t mind fishing in the dark will have success at night, and they will beat the summer heat! Action on the deep grass flats from the north end of Siesta Key should be very good for speckled trout, along with bluefish, Spanish mackerel, ladyfish, pompano, and jacks. A high tide in the morning is favored for anglers to drift the flats and cast Cotee jigs, Rapala plugs, spoons, and live shrimp under a popping cork. Netting up a bunch of shiners and chumming the deep flats will usually result in non-stop action. The flats and oyster bars south of CB’s Saltwater Outfitters at Stickney Pt. down to Blackburn Pt. will hold some nice trout in July, and that area gets very little pressure in the summertime. The key is water temperature; if it is too high the bait and gamefish will not be there. Redfish and snook will also cruise the bars and shorelines in search of prey. Areas that drop off quickly into three or four feet will be the most productive spots. A hand picked shrimp is deadly fished early in the morning on a high tide. Anglers choosing artificial lures will score with topwater and shallow diving plugs, scented soft plastics, and weedless gold spoons. Redfish will begin to school up in July and can be caught in very shallow water The largest trout also prefer shallow water, so don’t be surprised if a “gator” intercepts an offering meant for a redfish. These fish should be released unharmed, they are the female breed stock and are crucial to a healthy trout fishery. Night fishing will be exciting and productive in July. Lighted docks and bridges attract glass minnows and shrimp, which in turn attracts the gamefish. Snook are abundant, but trout, reds, jacks, ladyfish, and snapper will also be caught at night. Live shrimp works very well free lined in the current with little or no weight. A 24” piece of 25 lb flourocarbon leader and a 1/0 live bait hook is the basic rig. Lures will also catch fish, but can be difficult to cast at night. Fly fisherman will score with a small white snook fly such as the Grassett’s Snook Minnow tied on a #4 hook. Tarpon will still be plentiful in the Gulf of Mexico, although the anglers will not be. The large schools will have broken up, and although the fish don’t show as well, they eat better. Pinfish and crabs drifted out 6 feet under a cork at first light will catch tarpon in July. Point of Rocks on Siesta Key is a proven spot to fish.
|The Rumrunner
Located at Turtle Beach Marina in South Siesta Key | 941.349.3119 www.siestakeycharterfishing.com Captain Joe Bonaro offers more than exciting deep sea fishing opportunities aboard “Sarasota’s fastest charter boat,” the Rumrunner (941/349-3119). The skipper offers special boat and fishing trips for families – and for families with small children – as well as customized day and overnight trips.
SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
Island Chatter
A Message From Your Siesta Key Association
Siesta Key Real Estate Report
Story continued from page 3
• 3. Chinese lanterns are not legal. and SAS, some chicks will survive and fledge. Nesting • 4. Sparklers are legal but you cannot throw or ‘launch’ season occurs between March and August for these and them. other beach nesting birds of concern. Least Terns and • 5. No Fireworks are permitted in any County Park, Snowy Plovers are both imperiled species of concern. including Turtle Beach Campground and the Beach park Volunteers are especially needed once chicks hatch. open sandy area. Please call 941- 364-4880 (SKA) or (941) 364-9212 (SAS), • 6. Some conservation land and wildlife are at risk from to be part of the Beach Nesting Bird Program. debris or potential fire hazard from fireworks on the open We wish you a happy and safe July 4th holiday and beach or grass dune areas (imperiled nesting birds are summer vacation. Our next meeting will be held August protected from disturbance in season until September) 1, 4:30P at St. Boniface Episcopal Church, room F. • 7. You may be fined up to $1000 for illegal use of With its focus on maintaining and enhancing the fireworks. quality of life on the Key, the Siesta Key Association’s On another safety issue, Chief Reed shared information representation of island resident interests ultimately about the “File for Life”program. Using a red magnetic benefits everyone who spends time on Siesta Key. SKA’s pocket, critical medical information can be inserted website is www.siestakeyassociation.com. “Like” us on and referenced by Emergency Medical Responders. Facebook! These magnetic pockets can be attached inside your refrigerator ARE YOU FEELING STUCK WITH CITIZEN’S INSURANCE? or kept inside your car’s glove compartment. These kits can be obtained at: 6750 Bee Ridge Road • Homeowners or call 941-861-2290 for more • Condo information. • Personal Liability & Umbrella Coverage For those interested in ‘more • Auto, Motorcycle & Boat hidden’ Siesta Key, we invite you to share the beach with two species Contact us today for a FREE of imperiled beach nesting birds. personalized quote! Snowy Plovers and Least Terns are now in full nesting mode. Despite early nesting losses, with shared efforts of Sarasota County Parks and Recreation staff, Natural 941-209-1919 resources, FWC, Sheriff’s Officers, www.IOFLA.com and dedicated Volunteers from SKA
Pending Sales
1000
Sales Volume
800
$200M
600 400
$100M
200 0
$0M
Jan-13 Feb-13 Mar-13 Apr-13 May-13
Jan-13 Feb-13 Mar-13 Apr-13 May-13 Months of Inventory
Days on Market 8
150 6
100
4
50
WE HAVE OPTIONS!
0
2 0
Jan-13 Feb-13 Mar-13 Apr-13 May-13
KEY SOLUTIONS REAL ESTATE
Dec-12 Jan-13 Feb-13 Mar-13 Apr-13
For more information call (941)894-1255 Or visit www.keysolutionsrealestate.com
Single Family Condos *Statistics provided by MFR MLS
Sarasota area real estate sales hit a new eight year high in May with 1,020 properties sold. This is a 19.4% increase over May 2012’s sales, and only 1 out of 11 months in SARS’s 90 year history that sales have topped 1,000. Median sales prices also increased to $220,000, the highest level since August 2008. Sales of distressed properties only represented 23% of sales, staying far lower then the fourth quarter of 2010 when that figure was at 51%. With all these factors, parties interested in purchasing Sarasota real estate should not wait. Projections show increases in home values in the upcoming months
supply and DEMAND: Currently we are experiencing very low inventory on the market and high demand.
1423 LANDINGS PLACE
If you have been considering selling your home, right now may the BEST time to get the HIGHEST PRICE possible!
Handsomely remodeled West of Trail home. Updated/replacement sliding glass doors; upstairs has roll-down hurricane shutters and downstairs has impact resistant glass. New interior doors, hardware and baseboards throughout, Brazilian walnut hardwood floors downstairs and 100% wool carpet upstairs. Kitchen has granite and Corian with stainless appliances. Custom PENDING UNDER CONTRACT built-ins throughout. All bathrooms completely remodeled. Tongue and groove ceiling and exquisite grass cloth make this a decorator’s dream home.
To find out how you can benefit from this opportunity, call me for a FREE Market Analysis of your home.
474,500
$
Andrea Smith 320-7020
Experienced Landings Agent ___________________ Providing Unique and Highly Successful Marketing and Sales Systems. Customer Satisfaction is the Ultimate Goal
5497 BENEVA WOODS CIRCLE
289,000
$
Great Beneva Woods location. Swimming pool, lake view, 3 bedroom, 3 bath home with 2-car garge. New wood flooring in dining room and new carpet in bedrooms.
sold
Very affordable at $289,000.
Call me to list your property.
If you’ve been sitting the fence, now is the time to sell. Free Market Analysis Proud Sponsor of the Senior and Super Senior Tennis Tournament at The Landings.
941.349.0194 • www.islandvp.com ISLAND VISITOR PUBLISHING, LLC
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Massage Experience Siesta Key Celebrates 17 Years
Snapshots of Island Visitors
Photos by Jaye Clements - Lauren Bates Photography
arinerWord Answers to theSearch WORD SEARCH from page 27 www.floridamariner.com
wers from 22
pendence Day
Top Left: Suzy, Andreya & John from Toronto Top Right: Carson age 9 & Tara from AL. Bottom Right: Jax age 6 from Kansas City (KC), Jay age 10 from KC, Griffin from TN, Jon age 5 from KC.
To book your massage, contact Connie at 941-349-4833 or 941-350-7495. You can also e-mail her at Info@MassageExperienceSK.com
KEY SOLUTIONS REAL ESTATE
Best Sunsets In Sarasota!
Spectacular sunsets meet designer decadence in this show stopping 4BR/ 4.5 BA modernluxe masterpiece. Situated in the heart of Siesta Key, this 5,040 square foot beauty boasts expansive terraces and floor to ceiling walls of glass indulging in the best Gulf and Bay views in Sarasota. This stunning home is just a short stroll from the famous white sparkling sands of the number one beach in America. $4,999,000
Waterfront Shortsale!
Entire home updated and expanded. High quality upgrades include granite counter tops, maple custom kitchen cabinets, custom wet bar in 15’ x 21’ game room, 19’ x 19’ media/ home theater, many extra features. Close to the village/beach and boat to your favorite fishing hole. Jet ski davit as well as boat lift. Hurricane shutters, game room with full bath and steam shower. $899,000*
Ju
st
Li
st
ed !
Fr Ne ie w nd Bu ly ye Pr r ic e!
This week’s featured listings...
Massage Experience Siesta Key is offering 17% off any service for the month of July as a way to help them celebrate 17 years in business. Since June of 1996, Massage Experience, Siesta Key has been offering therapeutic massage to tourists and locals on Siesta Key. Ten years ago, Constance Lewis has also become a licensed aesthetician offering skin care and body treatments featuring Pevonia Botanica products from Paris France. Connie attributes her longevity in business to her love and passion of bodywork, love of service and determination to grow personally and professionally. She is thankful to all who have helped make Massage Experience Siesta Key a vacation destination and afternoon get away for so many years.
Unparalleled Gulf Views!
This 4 bedroom, 4 bath condo close to Crescent Beach has the best views on Siesta Key! Two separate Lanais with full Gulf of Mexico views for all those spectacular sunsets. Completely and elaborately renovated and turnkey furnished. A very versatile condo that could be separated into 2 units of 2 bedrooms and 2 baths. A gorgeous heated pool only steps from the beach and the warm waters of the Gulf. $2,375,000
View All Siesta Key Listings at KeySolutionsRealEstate.com Or Call 941.894.1255 For More Information! 30
SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net
Tropical Beach Front Condo!
Huge Townhouse offers 2 large bedrooms plus 2 bonus rooms that function as sleeping areas. Can sleep 8-12 people. Direct gulf front complex offers Beach, pool, tropical landscaped courtyard. Close to both villages and public beach. Updated kitchen and bathes and Turn Key Furnished with new furniture. Located directly next to pool. Must see condo! $500,000
*Short Sale. Listing price may not be sufficient to pay the total of all liens and costs of sale. Sale of property at full listing price may require approval of seller's lender.
941.349.0194 • www.islandvp.com ISLAND VISITOR PUBLISHING, LLC
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Landings Real Estate Database
Address
CURRENTLY ACTIVE IN THE LANDINGS 1562 LANDINGS TER - $649,000
Enjoy your own expansive, Zen hideaway in The Landings. Vaulted ceilings, high windows and a bright, glassed interior atrium welcome lots of light and an inviting sense of being close to nature. Home has generous open floor plan. 1732 STARLING DR - $229,000
From the moment you enter this lovely end unit Landings Coach House you are drawn to the private, water view. The end unit provides you with two sets of sliding doors that open to the lake and the woods beyond. PROPERTIES FOR SALE BEYOND THE LANDINGS 2500 RIVERVIEW CT SARASOTA - $985,000
Tucked at the end of a quiet cul-de-sac, this waterfront property is exquisite. Inside, a generous foyer leads to a beautifully renovated open plan living space: a chef’s kitchen, granite countertops, contemporary fixtures, wood floors, & fireplace. 9397 MIDNIGHT PASS RD # P6 SARASOTA - $435,000
Enjoy expansive views of the Gulf and Bay from this perfectly located, and delightfully appointed, penthouse unit at the Southern Tip of Siesta Key. At sunrise, a fully retractable window wall allows you to connect to the natural beauty of the bay. Watch for the “Judy & Tara’s Neighborhood” Open House signs on Sundays where “Just Looking” is always welcome. Please don’t hesitate to visit, call or stop us on the street... Your Landings Resident Real Estate Team is always ready to discuss the market and how we can be of service to you.
HOMES FOR SALE 1435 Cedar Bay Ln 4639 Pine Harrier Dr 4812 Peregrine Point W Ci 1562 Landings Ter 1460 Peregrine Point 1733 Pine Harrier Ci HOMES PENDING 1600 Pine Harrier Ci 4848 Peregrine Point N Ci 1672 Pine Harrier Ci 1769 Pine Harrier Ci 5167 Kestral Park Ln 4638 Pine Harrier Dr HOMES SOLD 1654 Landings Bv 1702 Pine Harrier Ci 4852 Peregrine Point N Ci CONDOS FOR SALE 5440 Eagles Point Ci #204 5430 Eagles Point Ci #104 1431 Landings Pl 1368 Landings Dr 1444 Landings Ci 5043 Kestral Park Dr 1732 Starling Dr 1634 Starling Dr 1704 Starling Dr CONDOS PENDING 1499 Landings Lake Dr 1666 Starling Dr 1752 Kestral Park Dr 1611 Starling Dr CONDOS SOLD 5440 Eagles Point Ci #403 1711 Starling Dr 1352 Landings Dr 1460 Landings Ci 4802 Kestral Park Ci 1636 Pintail Wy 1746 Landings Bv 1708 Kestral Park Dr 1644 Starling Dr 5420 Eagles Point Ci #104 5329 Landings Bv 5035 Kestral Park Dr 1623 Starling Dr 1627 Starling Dr 1619 Starling Dr 5252 Heron Wy 5218 Landings Bv
Price BR BA 1/2BA
1,600,000 765,000 699,000 649,000 569,000 525,000
5 4 5 3 3 4
3 2 4 2 3 2
1 1 1 2 0 1
795,900 695,000 525,000 525,000 499,000 460,000
4 4 3 4 4 3
3 3 3 2 3 3
1 0 0 1 0 0
1,225,000 5 625,000 3 439,000 3
6 2 2
2 1 0
625,000 449,000 379,000 325,000 315,000 289,000 229,000 199,900 185,000
2 2 3 3 3 2 3 3 2
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0
385,000 219,000 202,000 179,000
3 3 2 2
2 2 2 2
1 0 0 0
875,000 429,000 381,000 310,000 270,000 259,000 240,000 235,000 217,500 215,000 215,000 210,000 202,000 171,000 165,000 150,000 150,000
3 3 4 3 3 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 2
3 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Based on information from Realtor.com, Sarasota Property Appraiser, and Sarasota Association of Realtors for the period ending June 13, 2013. These properties listed and sold in the past 4 months by various MLS participating offices.
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SIESTA SAND July 2013 • www.siestasand.net