









Summer is here – the weather is hot and so is the grill. Now is the perfect time for picnics and backyard barbecues, swimming and sunbathing. We celebrate dads and granddads everywhere, our nation’s 247th birthday, and eating well.
There is just something special about summer. The grandkids are out of school, all the fruits and vegetables are ripe on the vine, and there are many amazing holidays to enjoy. Because of the heat, summer is also a good time to slow down, sit in the shade, and drink a cold glass of lemonade. Rest your soul, spend time chatting with loved ones and friends, and then bring the whole neighborhood together for a meal in the open air.
For beer lovers, the summer months are rich with opportunity. Check out beer-themed holidays such as June 14 (National Bourbon Day, but beer lovers can enjoy barrel-aged beers today), June 15 (British Beer Day), June 17
(National Stewart's Root Beer Day), June 18 (Father’s Day), June 25 (Organic Beer Fest), July 3 (National Independent Beer Run Day), July 4 (Independence Day, a day to savor American beer!), July 12 (Michelada Day), and July 18 (St. Arnoldus Day, patron saint of Belgian brewers and hops pickers).
In this issue, you’ll find recipes that make good use of the abundant fruits and vegetables available from your garden or the local farmer’s market. You’ll also find a terrific (and easy) twoingredient pizza dough recipe, the perfect base for all those leftover grilled meats and veggies.
I wish you fair skies, hot coals, and long, happy summer days at the beach,
Editor Michele Baker
Michele.Baker@lifestylesafter50.com
Website Editor
Allie Shaw
Allie.Shaw@lifestylesafter50.com
Distribution Distribution@lifestylesafter50.com
813-336-8247
Questions/Customer Service
813-336-8247
Press Releases Editor@lifestylesafter50.com
Advertising Sales Sales: (813) 336-8247 Ext. 2 Sales@lifestylesafter50.com
Nancy Cotto
Nancy.Cotto@lifestylesafter50.com
Aspen Hansen: (813) 336-8247 Ext. 2 Aspen.Hansen@lifestylesafter50.com
Joe Gess: 813-817-9855
Joe.Gess@lifestylesafter50.com
Mervyn Hollander Mervyn.Hollander@lifestylesafter50.com
Jim Commiskey: Jim.Commiskey@lifestylesafter50.com
Arlene Jacobs: (813) 431-8795 Arlene.jacobs@lifestylesafter50.com
Funfest & Event Sales Events@lifestylesafter50.com
To Learn More, call 813-336-8247 or email info@lifestylesafter50.com
Lifestyles After 50 P.O. Box 638 Seffner, Florida 33583 (Fax) 813-331-2634 www.lifestylesafter50.com
Have a great month and we'll see you in July!
Attention Readers: The articles printed in Lifestyles After 50 do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the Editor or the staff. Lifestyles After 50 endeavors to accept reliable advertising; however, we cannot be held responsible by the public for advertising claims. Lifestyles After 50 reserves the right to refuse or discontinue any advertisement. Our advertising deadline for each issue is the 15th of the previous month. Magazines are out by the 10th of each month. All rights reserved.
As a reader of Lifestyles After 50, you are creating an established relationship with our advertisers. You may be contacted by email, telephone or mail as allowed by law.
In the 1950s and 1960s we children didn’t see as much of dads as we did our moms. Dads traditionally worked outside the house, yet everyone’s dad experience is unique.
My sister and I won the dad jackpot; most notably, he was gregarious. He was well suited to his sales endeavors as he “talked to everyone” as Mom would say. He took any opportunity to talk sports; having been both a basketball and baseball player in high school and college he was excited to write a monthly sports column in school under his nickname “Ecks.”
Always aspiring to be a good sport himself, the competitiveness of the business world was an aspect we heard about at home around the dinner table. As an only child and a college graduate, the Army inducted him into the medical corps where he was trained as a surgical technician. With the 96th Evacuation Hospital, he followed General Eisenhower’s path through Europe in World War II treating the wounded, giving them the will to live through the night and recover. Dad wrote a self-published memoir of these experiences titled “It Seems Like Yesterday.”
When he finally came back to America after Victory in Europe Day, his stepfather introduced him a beautiful
strawberry blonde soprano in the family church. Soon afterwards they were engaged, married and off to a Niagara Falls honeymoon!
After the war, he was more than glad to start a career, have a family and buy a house in the suburbs, a Cape Cod style frame house one mile from Huntington Beach Park on Lake Erie. The house was reminiscent of his favorite vacation spot on the Cape in Massachusetts. We often enjoyed family visits to beaches and seafood restaurants.
When we move to the area, there were ten acres of undeveloped land at the end of our street with an abandoned orchard of grape vines, blackberry bushes and apple trees. Mom quickly caught on to the neighborhood penchant of sending the kids there to harvest the fruit, which she made into pies and jams. Delicious baking fragrance!
Dad liked to start the summer work days early, then change into swim attire and meet us at Huntington Beach. He was a dashing father figure, always dressed to the nines for work, and a fine complement to Mom wherever they went. His love of education was contagious, as the first in his family to attend and graduate from college. His dream was for his kids to follow in these footsteps, and we did!
Are you suffering from burning, tingling, numbing or stabbing pain in your feet or legs? Over 20 million Americans live with these aggravating symptoms and put up with the pain because they are not aware of this topical treatment available without a prescription.
MagniLife® Pain Relieving Foot Cream contains eucalyptus oil and yellow jasmine, known to relieve tingling and burning pain, while moisturizers restore cracked, damaged, and itchy skin to help keep bacteria out. “It’s the ONLY product that helps relieve the burning, and tingling feeling in my feet!” - Mable, NY.
MagniLife® Pain Relieving Foot Cream is sold at Walgreens, CVS, Rite Aid, Kroger, Amazon, Target and Walmart, located in footcare and diabetic care. Order risk free for $19.99 +$5.95 S&H for a 4 oz jar. Get one FREE when you order two for $39.98 +$5.95 S&H. Simply send payment to: MagniLife NC-LF1, 300 State St. #92039, Southlake, TX 76092 or call 1-800-393-6053. Money back guarantee. Order now at www.MDFootCream.com
Are radiating pains down the back of your leg, or pain in your lower back or buttocks making it uncomfortable to sit or walk? Millions of people are suffering unnecessarily because they are not aware of this proven treatment.
MagniLife® Leg & Back Pain Relief combines four active ingredients, such as Colocynthis to relieve burning pains and tingling sensations. Although this product is not intended to treat sciatica, it can help with the burning pain. “I am absolutely amazed at how it works and how fast it works.” - T Martin. Tablets dissolve under the tongue “Those little tablets are like relief in a snap.” - Patsy, CO.
MagniLife® Leg & Back Pain Relief is sold at Walgreens, CVS, Rite Aid, Amazon and Walmart Order risk free for $19.99 +$5.95 S&H for 125 tablets per bottle. Get a FREE bottle when you order two for $39.98 +$5.95 S&H. Send payment to: MagniLife S-LF1, 300 State St. #92039, Southlake, TX 76092 or call 1-800-393-6053. Satisfaction guaranteed. Order now at www.LegBackPain.com
SERVES 4
• 5 pounds fresh beef brisket
For the Coca-cola marinade:
• 4 cups regular Coca-Cola
• 1 teaspoon kosher salt
• 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
• 3 Tablespoons vegetable oil
For the gravy:
• 2 cups reserved Coca-Cola marinade
• 1 envelope dry onion soup mix
• 1 (8 ounce) can tomato sauce
• 1/2 cup tomato ketchup
• 1 small yellow onion, thinly sliced into rings
• 2 bay leaves
Method:
1. Make the marinade. In a medium mixing bowl, combine the marinade ingredients.
2. Place the brisket in a large non-reactive bowl or baking dish. Pour the marinade over the top. Cover completely and marinate the brisket in the fridge for at least 14 hours, maximum 24. Halfway through marinating, flip the brisket so both sides can absorb the marinade.
3. After 14-24 hours, remove the brisket from the marinade and place in a large roaster.
4. Reserve two cups of the marinade. Combine with the onion soup mix, tomato sauce, and ketchup to make the gravy.
5. Slowly pour the gravy over the brisket. Top with the sliced onions and bay leaves. Cover the roaster with aluminum foil.
6. Roast at 325 degrees for 4 hours (low and slow).
7. Halfway through, remove from the oven and use the gravy to baste the brisket. Continue cooking.
8. Allow the brisket to rest for 30 minutes before slicing. Slice the brisket against the grain. Serve with any accumulated gravy from the pan.
This delicious pizza dough recipe is inspired and adapted from one by Jessica Moore on ImpatientFoodie.com. Yes, two-ingredient pizza really does exist! And because it doesn’t require any kneading, yeast, or time to rise, homemade pizza just got easier! The result is an averagely thick pizza crust. Not too crispy and thin and not too doughy or thick, either – the perfect middle ground.
Ingredients for the pizza crust dough:
• 1-part Greek yogurt
• 1-part self-rising flour
1. For this recipe, you’ll need equal measurements of both these ingredients, plus extra flour for rolling and kneading. For an 8-slice pizza, use 1-1/4 cups of each. If you don’t have any scales, simply use equal amounts of both.
2. Put the ingredients into a bowl and mix them together to form a dough.
3. Turn the mixture onto a lightly floured surface and knead for around 5 minutes to achieve a smooth dough. (While this step isn’t entirely necessary, it helps to combine the ingredients.)
4. If the pizza dough is too sticky, add flour 1 Tablespoon at a time until it reaches the desired consistency. (This can happen from time to time and depends on how wet the yogurt is.)
5. Pat the dough with your fingers into the desired pizza shape.
Now comes the fun part: loading up the pizza crust with all of your favorite toppings! We find that the best ones will never be repeated, as they were all the leftover tidbits from the few days before. Here’s a classic Italian favorite to get you started.
• 1 batch of two-ingredient pizza dough
Ingredients for sauce:
• Pomi strained tomatoes
• 2 Tablespoon olive oil, divided
• 1 Tablespoon garlic, minced
1. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F.
• Mozzarella, sliced or shredded
• Fresh basil, chopped (for garnish, optional)
2. In a sauté pan over medium heat, cook the garlic in a tablespoon of olive oil until it becomes fragrant and slightly brown.
3. Add strained tomatoes (depending on how big your pizza is).
4. Reduce the heat and simmer, allowing the sauce to thicken for around 10-15 minutes.
5. Pat the dough into a pizza pan, pizza stone, or baking sheet (use a dusting of cornmeal to keep the dough from sticking).
6. Use the remaining tablespoon of olive oil to brush the dough. Spoon on the sauce, leaving a ½ inch border. Top with mozzarella cheese.
7. Bake for 10-12 minutes.
8. Remove from the oven and top with fresh basil. Cut into wedges and serve.
Q. I’ve been very hungry recently. Someone told me that this is a symptom of diabetes. Is that true?
An intense hunger is one diabetes symptom. Here are others: frequent urination, strong thirst, fatigue, unintended weight loss, slow-healing sores, dry and itchy skin, numbness or tingling in your feet, and blurred vision. However, some people with diabetes do not have symptoms.
Diabetes mellitus is a group of diseases characterized by high levels of blood sugar. Diabetes can create serious health problems, but diabetics can control the disease.
If you have diabetes, your body can’t produce insulin or use it properly. Insulin is a hormone that helps control the sugar in your blood. Insulin is made by the pancreas, a large organ behind the stomach.
Your body converts most of the food you eat into a form of sugar called glucose, which is our main source of energy. If your body does not make enough insulin or the insulin doesn’t work the way it should, glucose can’t get into your cells and remains in your blood, which can damage nerves and blood vessels. This can lead to complications such as heart disease, stroke, kidney disease, blindness, and lower-limb amputation.
More than 18 million Americans have diabetes. About 11 million people 65 years or older suffer from the disease. A small percentage of diabetics have type 1
diabetes, which usually occurs in people under age 30. Diabetics with this form of the disease cannot produce insulin. About 90 percent of Americans with diabetes have type 2 diabetes. It is most common in adults over age 40, and the risk of getting it increases with age. With this form of diabetes, the body does not always produce enough insulin or does not use insulin efficiently. Being overweight and inactive increases the chances of developing type 2 diabetes.
Type 2 diabetes can be prevented in people who are at an increased risk or have prediabetes, a condition in which glucose levels are higher than normal but not yet high enough for a diagnosis of diabetes. People with pre-diabetes are more likely to develop diabetes within 10 years and are also more likely to have a heart attack or stroke.
A recent study showed that people with pre-diabetes can sharply lower their chances of developing the disease through modest weight loss with diet and exercise, and that it was especially effective in curbing the development of diabetes in older people. In fact, the development of diabetes dropped by 71 percent in adults 60 and older who were enrolled in the study.
Because type 2 diabetes is more common in older people, especially in people who are overweight, doctors recommend that anyone 45 years of age or older be tested for diabetes.
All Rights Reserved © 2022 by Fred Cicetti
Send your general health questions to Healthy Geezer with Lifestyles After 50 in the subject line to fred@healthygeezer.com
To subscribe, simply email us at info@lifestylesafter50.com.
Or mail this coupon along with your payment of $21 for 1 yr/$38 for 2 yrs.
Lifestyles After 50 PO Box 638, Se ner, FL 33583
Or call our o ce at 813-336-8247 to pay with a debit/credit card.
For Sonora Smart Dodd, attending one particular Methodist church service in Spokane, Washington, proved to be life changing. On that particular Sunday in 1909, the minister based his sermon on the newly established Mother’s Day. But Sonora felt that dads, too, should have a special day set aside in their honor. (Her father, a widowed Civil War veteran, had singlehandedly raised six children, with Sonora being the only girl.)
Dodd spent the next year petitioning her local community and, later, her state government. Washington State celebrated its first official Father’s Day on June 19, 1910. Over the years, the celebration spread from state to state until President Richard Nixon established a permanent national observance for America’s fathers in 1972.
1. Over the years, the most popular Father’s Day gift has been
A. candy.
B. a necktie.
C. flowers.
D. golf balls.
2. The official Father’s Day flower is the
A. orchid.
B. carnation.
C. hibiscus.
D. rose.
3. What percentage of Americans celebrate Father’s Day?
A. 58
B. 65
C. 76
D. 81
4. Today’s average age of first-time fathers is
A. 24.
B. 26.
C. 28.
D. 30.
5. One in _____ American homes has no father there.
A. three
B. four
C. five
D. six
6. In India, a man became the world’s oldest first-time dad at
A. eighty-three.
B. eighty-eight.
C. ninety-four.
D. ninety-six.
7. Americans spend ____ less on Father’s Day than they do on Mother’s Day.
A. 25%
B. 29%
C. 32%
D. 38%
8. How many American dads are single?
A. 1 million
B. 2 million
C. 3 million
D. 4 million
9. In Let’s Make Love (1960), Marilyn Monroe sings “My Heart Belongs to Daddy.” What is unusual about this?
A. She never knew who her father was.
B. She always hated the song.
C. Her mother forced her to sing it.
D. A professional singer’s voice was used instead.
10. The Guinness Book of Records claims that a Moroccan sultan fathered how many children?
A. 492
B. 687
C. 833
D. 1,042
The Players Centre invites you to stay cool and entertained this summer! Subscriptions are still available for our two amazing summer productions. For only $50 you can see both!
June 8 through 18 put on your leisure suits, halter tops, and platform shoes and get ready to boogie down through 10 years of groundbreaking music! With its propulsive rhythms and dazzling harmonies, 8-Track: the sounds of the 70s in concert is a fast-paced musical romp through one of the most impassioned decades of the 20th century.
Remember The Graduate? We’re bringing it to life right before your eyes August 17-27. Benjamin’s got excellent grades, very proud parents and, since he helped Mrs. Robinson with her zipper, a fine future behind him…A cult novel, a classic film, a quintessential hit of the 60s, now Benjamin’s disastrous sexual odyssey is brought vividly to life in this stage adaptation.
Call The Players Centre at 941.365.2494 or visit our website at theplayers.org to learn more about our exciting summer offerings! And if you have students looking for summer camps we have two AMAZING programs, learn more at theplayers.org/studio.
H3 PERFORMANCE 751-1949
ADVANCE AUTOPARTS 751-0136
PALMETTO
NORTHSIDE AUTO PARTS 722-4581
HHHT AUTO CARE 721-3888
NAPA AUTO PARTS................. 722-6618
PARRISH PARRISH GEN SUPPLY 776-2141
VENICE AUTO WORX OF VENICE 923-1438
ADVANCE AUTO PARTS 484-6128
AMERICAN IMPORTS 484-1340
SARASOTA FUN MACHINES 925-0376
ENGLEWOOD ADVANCE AUTO PARTS.............474-8581
If you or your business would like to get AMSOIL products at Wholesale CALL 941-586-3853
All practices individually owned - Medicare Advantage Plans accepted
JUNE 9: FRIDAY NIGHT CONCERT SERIES
Venice MainStreet Inc. hosts the Friday Night Concert Series every 2nd and 4th Friday of every month at the Centennial Park Gazebo. Concerts are FREE and open to the public from 7PM9PM; bring chairs or blankets. Featuring: Rising Vibes
Centennial Park, 200 W. Venice Ave., Venice
JUNE 16: SARASOTA MUSIC FESTIVAL
Aaron Copland’s heartfelt portrayal of a day in the life of a newly married pioneer couple lies at the heart of a program bursting with lush lyricism. The Pulitzer Prize-winning score to Martha Graham’s ballet Appalachian Spring will be heard in its original 13-instrument version. Tickets: $ 29.00 and up.
Sarasota Opera House, 61 N. Pineapple Ave., Sarasota
JUNE 17: JUNETEENTH COMMUNITY FESTIVAL
Juneteenth is a holiday celebrated on June 19th to commemorate the emancipation of enslaved people in the US. First celebrated in Texas, where on that date in 1865, in the aftermath of the Civil War, enslaved people were declared free under the terms of the 1862 Emancipation Proclamation.
Cultural and ethnic foods, Live music, DJ. FREE 13th Avenue Dream Center, 922 24th St. E., Bradenton
JUNE 21: CAFFEINE & GASOLINE
Every Wednesday 7:30 am to 10:30am Bring your stories, appetite & of course your ride.
401 S. Indiana Ave., Englewood
JUNE 30: BRI RIVERA
Bri Rivera is a performing musician and vocalist in Sarasota Florida. Born and raised in Puerto Rico, Bri was brought up in a musical family. At age 9 she learned to play the cuatro from her grandfather. By age twelve she began to play the guitar and had her first band at 15. Now in the states for 9 years, she has become a standout in the local music scene. Tickets: Call for information.
Marina Jack, 2 Marina Plaza, Sarasota
We remain committed to providing exceptional service to every family we serve.
Community/Local Print Ads – U.S. & Canada
NOTE: If at any time you would like to change your ad message, click the “Reset Template” link on the left to clear your selections and start over.
It's simple to customize this ad for your location.
1. Click "Change Document Name" at the top of the page and update to include date and abbreviated publication name.
By Wade Tatangelo, Sarasota Herald-Tribune3. Double-click “Select Ad Message” on the left, below the Reset Template link,
4. In the pop-out box, select your message from the options at the top of the
5. Select your language from the drop-down menu. Complete any customizable
6. Click "Preview" to review your ad before downloading or saving.
Finishing Your Ad:
While joyfully eating my way through the region’s best restaurants for burgers, I paused to report on actor Scott Baio, known for his roles in “Happy Days” and “Charles in Charge,” relocating here and joining the list of famous people with homes in Sarasota-Manatee. Indeed, we live in a popular area, recently ranked at No. 1 on U.S. News & World Report’s list of best places to live in Florida and No. 5 in the country.
Click "Finish" to generate a PDF with or without crop marks. Then, click “Download” and select “Original” or “Moderate” for a print-ready file.
OR, click “Save” to continue working later. Your ad will appear in My Documents Drafts.
Green Bay secured the first position, with U.S. News highlighting the city’s “affordability” and noting that it may not suit those averse to long winters and heavy snowfall. I detest the cold and could never live in Green Bay. In fact, the idea of even visiting anywhere in Wisconsin makes me want to step outside and immerse myself in the glorious embrace of the warm Florida sun.
Huntsville, Alabama (No. 2), Raleigh and Durham, North Carolina (No. 3) Boulder, Colorado (No. 4) also ranked ahead of Sarasota. While they are all nice places, none of them offer the sugary white sands and beautiful bodies of water populated by adorable dolphins and manatees that we have here on the Gulf of Mexico. In addition to naming us the fifth best place to live, U.S. News & World Report has the Sarasota metro area ranked as No. 2 for fastest growing places, No. 7 for safest places to live, and No. 11 for best places to retire.
According to U.S. News, when determining its list of best places to live, it compared “the 150 most populous metro areas in the U.S. based on affordability, quality of life, desirability and job market.” If affordability is removed from the equation, Sarasota-Manatee probably takes the top spot. Yes, it’s expensive to live here, but I guess that’s the price of residing in paradise.
You must go to Banff! Really? I wasn’t very excited and didn’t want to see another tourist trap. I displayed my ignorance of an area that few people know about: western Canada and the people who made this area magnificent. I was wrong.
Banff was indeed quaint. We stayed at the historic King Edward Hotel built by George Stephen, pioneer developer of the Canadian Pacific Railway. He named this small village after his hometown of Banff, Scotland.
It was July 1, the celebration of the 150th birthday of Canada. We enjoyed watching performances by First Nations (Canadian name for Native people), Ukrainian folk dancers, and the Falun Dafa, a group banned in China for their ancient religious beliefs. Best of all, the food was free.
Leaving Banff, we traveled along the Trans-Canadian Highway, the scenic highway that runs through the Canadian Rockies and is considered one of the most beautiful drives in the world. Along this stretch of highway are stunning views of towering peaks, glaciers, turquoise lakes, and abundant wildlife.
The scenic drive from Banff to Jasper took three and a half hours and was spectacular although it was cold and drizzly. About halfway, we pulled into the Crossing Restaurant. “This is the only place to eat,” said the guide. “There’s a buffet is in the back, but it is rather expensive.” I settled for a cup of chili. Some people thought the food was terrible, but mine was hot and tasted like chili. Then I looked at the bill: $20!
Later, as I enjoyed the scenery, I pondered the history of the region and those who could possibly survive in such an inhospitable land. One was Pennsylvania art student Mary Sharples Shaffer, who in 1889 made her way to the Rockies to paint the flora. She fell in love with area and on her journeys back east promoted travel to the Canadian Rockies.
Our last stop was one night in Jasper before our most memorable adventure, a visit to the Columbia ice fields. A special bus called an Ice Explorer – I called it a “moon buggy” – took us to the fields. It had tires as tall as I am and many gears. The terrain here is rough with narrow passes; some areas were straight up, while others were straight down. Once on the ice fields, I stayed in the vehicle and watched as everyone else slipped, slid, and fell. (They had a good time, though, they said.)
This trip to the Canadian Rockies was a once-in-alifetime experience: from the scenery, to the people, to the ice fields; even the $20 bowl of chili. I’m so glad I visited this magnificent area.
Made lots of tiny explosive sounds
ACROSS
1. Evil one
6. Acting group
10. Fast jets, for short
14. Remain
15. Singing voice
16. “__ Mia”
17. Pronunciation mark 18. Made lots of tiny explosive sounds
Here’s another idea for summer picnics and get-togethers. Made entirely of fresh, seasonal fruit, this watermelon “cake” is a lovely addition to any party or picnic. Feel free to substitute any fruits you prefer or try a two-tier cake using a small “personal” watermelon for the second layer.
Ingredients:
• Large watermelon (about 6-8” through the middle)
• Whole strawberries
• Black and red raspberries
• Green grapes
• Black grapes
• Currants or lingonberries
• Fresh mint leaves
• Wooden toothpicks or cocktail sticks
DOWN
1. Heavenly Mlles.
2. Nag
3. Not just tacit
Method:
1. Wash and pat dry all the fruit.
or Pompeo
4. Mom, dad, or madam
5. Take place
6. Friend at the école
7. Greek letter 8. Expunge
Spring
Bit of cereal
Take advantage of
German article
2. With a long, serrated knife (like a bread knife), carefully cut off the tapering ends of the watermelon, leaving the fat middle section. Set the watermelon on a cut edge.
3. Use long strokes to cut away the green and white skin and shape the edges of the watermelon, leaving a tall, smooth red cylinder in a cake shape.
4. Using toothpicks or cocktail sticks, create a spiral from the bottom edge near the cake stand and continuing up and around the “cake.”
5. Cut the green tops off several strawberries and seat them on the toothpick “anchors” to create a spiral of strawberries up the side of the “cake.”
6. Continue decorating with grapes, raspberries and blueberries, using toothpicks if necessary.
7. Top the watermelon “cake” with a mound of fresh fruit and fresh mint leaves.
8. Store in the refrigerator loosely covered with plastic wrap until ready to use.
Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg Sunday –Thursday September 16-22 $1379 per person (double occupancy). Includes: 8 Meals,. 5 Shows: Hatfield & McCoy Dinner Feud, Comedy Barn, Country Tonight, Soul of Motown and Dolly Parton’s Pirates Voyage dinner show. Tour of Smoky Mountains, Titanic, Dollywood Admission
Monday-Friday October 2-6, 2023 5 days/4 nights $1599 per person
Roundtrip air from Tampa, motorcoach transportation throughout tour), 4 nights lodging in Tilton, NH, eight meals including a Lobster Bake with entertainment, Ride on the Cog Railroad to the Summit of Mt Washington and back, Cruise on MS Mt. Washington, Guided Tour of Kennebunkport, Walkers Point, Stonewall Kitchen, Scenic train ride with boxed lunch.
Sunday October 22 for the NASCAR Cup Series 400 . Race time 2:30 p.m. with departures from the Sarasota-Bradenton area and Largo. $249 per person includes grandstand seat in Turn 4, pit pass and roundtrip motorcoach transportation. A portion of ticket proceeds is being donated to the American Legion to benefit Veterans programs. This trip is open to everyone. to purchase.
Sunday September 24- Friday September 29. 6 days/ 5 nights includes 3 nights on Riverwalk and 2 nights in Dallas. $2249 per person (double occupancy includes: roundtrip airfare roundtrip airport transportation, five nights lodging including three on the Riverwalk ,nine meals, Tours of San Antonio, Dallas, Fort Worth. Alamo, Imax film “The Price of Freedom”, El Mercardo, private canal barge, Southfork Ranch, George W. Bush Library, Sixth Floor Museum, Cowboys Stadium Tour, Billy Bob’s Texas, free time on the Riverwalk
RESORT
Friday-Monday December 15-18 Nashville Country Christmas $1979 per person (double occupancy). includes roundtrip airfare from Tampa, roundtrip bus to airport, 3 nights lodging at Gaylord Opryland Resort., 6 Meals, four shows including Christmas Dinner show in ballroom at Gaylord Opryland Resort (entertainer to be determined), Amy Grant & Vince Gill at the Ryman, General Jackson Showboat Luncheon Cruise with entertainment., Grand Ole Opry, Country Music Hall of Fame, guided city tour of Nashville, Delta Flatboat ride, Treasures for the Holidays, Ice.
KLINE TOURS
(727)-439-5520 | www. klinetours.net/floridadepartures
Fla. Seller of Travel Ref. No ST43118
Serving the Florida Gulf Coast
Follow us on Facebook at Kline
Tours Florida Gulf Coast
Croquet used to be thought of as an inexpensive game you could pick up at a toy store. With its light wicker stakes and brightly colored plastic mallets, it was considered an afternoon of outdoor fun.
This is a growing sport, and the equipment has changed. Croquet courts are popping up all over. Where there once was a time when there might be a court at one country club in the area, now there are several at multiple clubs. Tournaments are played locally and internationally.
Participants are as young as in their twenties and as mature as almost 90. Money is very rarely an incentive for competing.
Danny Hunnycut and his wife Danna have been playing for decades. Even though he has become an instructor for the sport he still plays as a hobbyist. Hunnycut said, “Some people play for competition and some play for the social aspect.”
At ten years old Linda Kaye Coleman learned how to sew from making clothes for her doll on her mother’s sewing machine.
“Sewing is sort of an escape. It is rewarding to start with a piece of fabric and end up with something to wear or use in other ways,” Coleman said.
“She taught me the basics and I was able to use the machine to improve my skills,” Coleman explained. “Nothing fancy, most likely a straight stich Singer,” she added.
When the Strawberry Patch dolls became popular, she took classes to learn how to make them. “Not sure how many of those I made,” she explained with amusement. Her next venture was making clothes for newborns.
Coleman’s grandmother wore aprons. After she learned to make aprons in Home Economics class, it became a tradition that she make her grandmother a new apron every Christmas.
Fashion is important because it’s used for self-expression, to make a political statement, or simply to attract attention. In this stunning collection compiled by the Design Museum in London, the world’s leading museum devoted to contemporary design in every form from architecture and fashion to graphics, it celebrates the richness and importance of all forms of creativity. Here, 50 trendsetters are profiled because they’ve used fashion to assert their position in the world and become iconic.
Lauren Cochrane, Assistant Fashion Editor at the Guardian and writer for Vogue and the Financial Times, compiled these stunning photographs and bios of each of the fashion icons including Twiggy, Wallis Simpson, Josephine Baker, Marilyn Monroe, Twiggy, Audrey & Katherine Hepburn, Grace Kelly, Tilda Swinton, Michelle Obama, Queen Victoria, Brigitte Bardot, Diana Vreeland, Courtney Love, Madonna, Amy Winehouse, Grace Jones – who graces the book’s cover – and others. All have a flair for fashion and a sense of style that is admirable.
And of course, Princess Diana, the Princess of Wales, is credited with bringing about hair bands, ruffled white shirts, and loafers to the masses following her engagement to Prince Charles on Feb., 1981, but her title “The People’s
Princess” showed that her influence on the clothes worn by the general public extended beyond one look. Her ivory silk wedding dress that she wore to marry Prince Charles on July of 1981 with its 25-foot train and puff sleeves dominated bridal trends for a decade, and the midnight-blue gown she wore to dance with John Travolta at the White House in 1985 was sold at auction for $240,000. Even when she separated from Prince Charles in 1992, she wore an off-the-shoulder black design called “the revenge dress” to an event the night after the Prince admitted his infidelity to the media in 1994 which demonstrated that she knew the power of fashion.
And no collection would be complete without Anna Wintour, editor-in-chief of Vogue and editorial director of Conde Nast who’s known as the most powerful woman in fashion. Since 1988 and with an uncanny attention to detail, foresight and ability to make the right decision quickly, her personal formula consists of shift dresses, bright colors, strappy mules, a bob haircut and her large dark sunglasses as she sits in the front row of most fashion shows. She’s also become a full-fledged brand with her own image on ornaments, handbags, phone cases and t-shirts. In addition to showcasing these fashion mavens, this book hopes to motivate us to follow the lead of these icons, to wear something different and develop our own sense of style.
Adapted from a recipe by Julie Moskin from The New York Times.
This lemony, superfood kale salad has tang and crunch. The simple dressing has a base of lemon juice, olive oil and spices blended together for the perfect light summer side dish.
Ingredients:
• 1 cup pine nuts
• 10-12 oz whole kale leaves, washed and dried, with stems removed (weight after trimming)
• 1-1/2 cups freshly grated Parmesan (optional)
• ½ cup freshly squeezed lemon juice (2-4 lemons)
Method:
1. In a dry skillet, spread the pine nuts and toast until light golden brown and fragrant (about 3-5 minutes).
• 1-1/2 cups extra virgin olive oil
• 1 teaspoon minced garlic (about 2 cloves)
• 1-2 teaspoons mayonnaise
• 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
• Kosher salt & freshly ground pepper
Process on high for 2 minutes to completely emulsify. Add salt and pepper to taste.
2. Make the dressing by combining the fresh lemon juice, olive oil, garlic, mayonnaise and mustard in a blender or food processor.
Paul Simon’s “Kodachrome” began as “Goin’ Home,” but the poetic perfectionist soon felt that that sounded too ordinary. Thus, he shifted creative gears, restructured the lyrics and came up with “Kodachrome,” which, to him, sounded close to “Goin’ Home” but stuck better in the listener’s ear.
After Simon heard the gospel-drenched Staple Singers hit “I’ll Take You There,” he knew that he wanted to record “Kodachrome” at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, the same cramped northwest Alabama locale the Staples had used. The Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section there consisted of four white guys who could lay down soul and rhythm-and-blues tracks as well as or better than anyone on the recording-session scene.
While the group may have been top-notch, the studio itself was a dump. David Hood, the outfit’s bass player, explained to songfacts.com, “Paul Simon was used to working at Columbia Studios in New York. When he came and saw our little place, he probably thought, ‘Man, this is a rat trap.’ Because it was.”
Paul obviously managed to cast aside any concerns he had, as he nailed the master of “Kodachrome” in just two takes. Soon afterwards, his single streaked to Number Two on the Billboard Hot 100.
His tune could be seen as a coming-of-age treatise, perhaps how a young man could often choose to view the world through rose-colored glasses. (To
3. Cut the leafy green part of the kale away from the woody stem. Discard stems. Loosely chop the leaves (or tear with your hands) into bite size pieces. “Massage” the kale until all pieces have been “broken.”
4. Just before serving, place kale in a large salad bowl, top with pine nuts and cheese, and pour over dressing. Toss well to coat. Serve within one hour.
5. Store any remaining kale salad in the refrigerator and use within 1 day.
Simon, this is what Kodachrome camera film offered.) But first, wanting to get something unrelated off his chest, he opened “Kodachrome” with a most quirky lyric line:
When I think back on all the crap I learned in high school
It’s a wonder I can think at all
Then, without explanation, he altered the plotline of his mini-story: Kodachrome
Give us those nice bright colors
Give us the greens of summer
Makes you think all the world’s a sunny day
Certainly, it’s hard to let go of thoughts of a remembered carefree life of youthful pleasures and replace them with adulthood’s grittier realities. For Paul, this would include memories of past relationships which may not have been as sublime as he once recalled:
If you took all the girls I knew when I was single
And brought them all together for one night
I know they’d never match my sweet imagination
And everything looks worse in black and white
By the way, one should remind Simon that, when he and Art Garfunkel were in high school in New York, they had recorded a ditty called “Hey, Schoolgirl!” a bit of piffle (listed as being by Tom and Jerry) that reached the bottom of the national Top 40 chart. Royalties from the disc’s sales had bought the teenage Paul a new fire-engine-red Chevy convertible.
Hey, maybe high school really wasn’t a complete waste of time after all.
We didn’t invent summer, but we wouldn’t blame you for thinking so. The vacation you’ve been dreaming of is just a reservation away with Gaylord Palms plush guest rooms, enchanting indoor gardens, splashing water attractions, soothing spa, bold flavors, kids’ activities, and more.
GaylordPalms.com