THE HAMMOCK
Observer YOU. YOUR NEIGHBORS. YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.
SIGNING DAY PAGE 5
VOLUME 6, NO. 7
FREE
• FEBRUARY 2022
DUNE: Tale of Flagler’s future Protecting Flagler’s coast could cost $6 million per year, according to the latest report from the county. PAGE 3
PIZZA KING
Marina amendment rejected
Brad Beam brings award-winning pizza to Bronx House
The commission will not change the Land Development Code language at this time.
ABBIE PACE CONTRIBUTING WRITER
JONATHAN SIMMONS NEWS EDITOR
Flagler County will not amend its Land Development Code to add new language on marinas — at least, not now. The County Commission at a Feb. 7 meeting discussed a proposed Land Development Code revision that would allow marinas in commercial areas, including the A1A Scenic Overlay district, with certain restrictions. The commission opted against the proposal, as it did when the matter came before it for a vote this past October. Commissioners decided that marinas should be dealt with in the context of the county’s overall revision of its Land Development Code. “I would hope that the way to move forward would be to continue the process of the strategic plan, comprehensive plan, and then ... to rewrite the LDC in a comprehensive manner, and not peel out one particular section,” Commissioner Donald O’Brien said. The discussion was ostensibly about marinas in general, and not any particular marina. But the discussion had been placed on the commission’s Feb. 7 agenda at the request of Hammock Harbour developer Bob Million, whose proposal for a 57,000-square-foot, 240-boat dry storage facility on State road A1A had led county staff to create a proposed revision to the county’s land development code, specifying which types of marinas can be built where, and under what circumstances. Million had been displeased with the particulars of the county’s proposed revision, and spoke at the Feb. 7 meeting to push the county to adopt less restrictive language. Hammock Community Association members, meanwhile, have
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SEE MARINA PAGE 2
Courtesy photo
Brad Beam came up with one of the world’s best traditional-style pizzas, according to the judges at the 2021 International Pizza Challenge, in Las Vegas. Bronx House Pizza opens in the Hammock at the end of April.
On the average plane ride, overhead bins become piled with suede bags filled with toiletries, clothing and other items. But on one flight on Aug. 21, 2021, a certain passenger brought some unique items in a carry-on cooler: pizza dough, ice packs, cheese, sauce containers, pepperoni and seasoning. That passenger was Palm Coast resident Brad Beam, and he was headed to the International Pizza Challenge, a pizza-making competition held in Las Vegas since 2007. His odd luggage paid off, as he walked away from Vegas with three titles for his Old World Pizza, in the traditional category. He placed first in Florida, second in the Southeast region, and sixth in the world, SEE PIZZA PAGE 8
One segment at a time Scientists at Whitney Laboratory, in northern Flagler, study regeneration in marine worms
BRENT FOSTER CONTRIBUTING WRITER
I heard a story once of a toddler who leaned over too far in her chair in the kitchen and toppled off. The chair landed on her little toe, slicing it cleanly from her foot. When her parents rushed her to the hospital, the doctor reassured them that, at this child’s age, her little toe could regrow back normally. You may have heard similar stories throughout your lifetime and wondered: Why can’t our bodies do that when we’re older? Now, with the help of a little-known marine worm found in the muddy estuaries right here in Flagler and St. Johns counties, scientists at University of Florida’s Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience are beginning to piece together the answer to that question and learn how regenerative abilities can change over time. “An animal’s capacity for regeneration can vary throughout its life,” explained Alicia Boyd, a graduate student at Whitney Laboratory studying regeneration. “One classic example comes from a frog, which has remarkable regenerative potential as
Courtesy photo
REGENERATING CAPITELLA WORMS Top: Adult worm that was able to regrow its tail following amputation. Bottom: Adult worm that was unable to regrow its head following amputation. The dotted lines mark where the worms were cut.
a tadpole, but, with age, that potential is lost.” What’s exciting is that the reverse process can also be true. “There are other regenerative models that seemingly
gain regenerative potential as they develop,” Boyd said, “one of them being the animal we study in our lab, Capitella teleta.” Capitella is an annelid, a segmented worm not unlike
the kind you might stick on the end of your fishhook. These worms live out their lives in muddy estuaries and transition from tiny torpedoSEE ONE PAGE 6