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The Island News
COVERING NORTHERN BEAUFORT COUNTY
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PACK THE BUS with school supplies huge success
AUGUST 13-19, 2015
WHAT’S INSIDE?
COMMUNITY
Turtling is just what I do at 4:30 a.m.
see page 10
SCHOOLS
Five teachers vying for District Teacher of the Year.
Story and photos by Bob Sofaly
see page 12
B
eaufort County residents and businesses are asked to join forces last week to “pack the bus” with school supplies for students in need. Among the event’s supporters are Beaufort-Jasper-Hampton Comprehensive Health Services, Sodexo Food Services and Durham School Services. Individuals and groups dropped off school supplies at the Beaufort-Jasper-Hampton Health Services. Useful items that were donated are No. 2 pencils, scissors, filler paper, spiral notebooks, composition books, colored pencils, hand sanitizer, crayons, backpacks, markers, calculators, pens, highlighters, pocket folders, glue sticks, erasers, rulers, pencil sharpeners, pencil cases, index cards, protractors, three-ring binders, dividers, ear buds, composition paper, zip-lock plastic bags, paper towels and facial tissue. Chief Student Services Officer Gregory McCord said, “We had a tremendous response from the community and our business partners, too. The bus was chock-full of basic school supplies, not to mention about 750 backpacks that we were able to give to students at last weekend’s big Back-to-School Expo at Battery Creek High. We had more than a thousand people at the expo.”
PETS
Dr. Parker T. Barker on dog myths.
see page 20
INDEX
Vietnam Veterans Celebration at Waterfront Park Story and photos by Bob Sofaly
The Healing Heroes of the Lowcountry Fund hosted the inaugural Vietnam Veterans Celebration on Saturday, August 8, at Henry C. Chambers Waterfront Park in downtown Beaufort in honor of the 50th Anniversary of the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. About 700 people crowded into the waterfront park to honor Vietnam War Veterans of all branches of the military for their service and sacrifices to our country during a difficult era in our history, according to Donnie Beer, chairperson of the Healing Heroes of the Lowcounty Fund. “I was extremely pleased with the turnout”, Beer said. “The number of veterans who showed up with their families made all our work worthwhile.” The Parris Island Marine Band, along with the Sweetgrass Angels and other local talent performed during the celebration.
The Parris Island Color Guard from left are Sgt. Loan Nguyen, Sgt. Matthew Sidell, Sgt. Dustin Miller and Sgt. Jonathan Diehm
Donnie Beer, left, chairperson of the Healing Heroes of the Lowcountry Fund, present flowers to Barbara Livingston on Saturday. Seated at right is keynote speaker Maj.Gen. Robert Livingston, Adjutant General of SC
Several Vietnam war veterans came in their old uniforms.
Community 2-5 Health 8 Business 9 School 12 Sports 14 Wine 16 Dine 16-17 Voices 18 Games 19 Pets 20 Events 21 Directory 22 Classifieds 23
community
How to get the absolute freshest produce without picking it yourself Just off of Highway 21 going into Beaufort, past Spanish moss draped trees and down a winding, country road, you’ll find a South Carolina tradition that’s been thriving for well over 100 years. Rest Park Farm is a family owned and operated produce farm in Seabrook, SC, that’s been passed down through the McCleod family since 1884. Rest Park Farm is the home of Pinckney’s Produce, the largest Community Supported Agriculture program in South Carolina. Urbie West and his son Ashby took on this unique model of providing their freshly grown produce to South Carolina families in 2011. A “CSA” as it’s called, operates based on customers pre-ordering their “share” in the farm. By purchasing your share of the crops they grow in December, Urbie and Ashby are able to order and plant seed, tend to the land, and prepare crops in a sustainable way that helps keep the farm thriving and your kitchen stocked with fresh produce come April. Once the harvest is underway, the West family delivers these shares to their members on a weekly basis. Pinckney’s Produce serves the Beaufort, Bluffton, Hilton Head Island, Charleston, Summerville, Orangeburg and greater Columbia areas. Since 2011, the West family has served 400 - 800 families each season. There are two growing seasons per year, spring and fall. Each season is usually 12 weeks long. During those 12 weeks, members receive a once-weekly delivery of their share of the harvest for that week. Most weeks have at least 6 - 12 different items, and all items are grown by the Wests, and are harvested and packed the day before members receive them. This labor-intensive model ensures a superior quality product, longer shelf life, higher nutrient content and better tasting produce. Members then head to their chosen drop site on their designated pick up day, take their boxes home, and enjoy them until next week’s delivery. Pinckney’s Produce even provides clean, bright green boxes for members to exchange
Publisher
Sisters’ Publishing, LLC Elizabeth Harding Newberry Kim Harding Newton
EDITORIAL/NEWS editor in chief Molly Ingram theislandnews@ gmail.com 843-352-8616
art director weekly to add to the convenience of getting your produce. Their Membership Coordinator, Katie Thompson, has also been with the program since 2011. She searches diligently for recipes to help members make the most of their boxes each week. Every Monday, Urbie sends out an email updating members on what’s in harvest that week, and sends along several recipes, as well as crop updates, and member photos and contributions from their very active social media pages on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Pinterest. While Pinckney’s Produce was originally started in Holly Hill, SC in 2009 by another father and son team from the Thompson family, the Wests have carried on the tradition and have helped grow the program by providing longer and better growing seasons with their coastal location in Seabrook. While members sign up to take on the risk and rewards of Mother Nature with supporting the farm this way, Pinckney’s Produce has had twelve very successful harvest seasons and are preparing for their thirteenth harvest this fall. The season will start with all of your summer favorites, such as melons, sweet corn, squash, zucchini, cucumbers, peppers, tomatoes and more. Once the weather starts to cool, you’ll see more hearty varieties such as lettuces, broccoli, cauliflower, kohlrabi, cabbage, and root
vegetables such as turnips, rutabagas, and sweet potatoes. Pinckney’s also usually partners with another local farm to provide pumpkins each fall. Pinckney’s have planted over fortyfive different varieties of vegetables in anticipation for a great harvest this fall. There is still time to join the fall season for Pinckney’s Produce. You can choose from a selection of share sizes and also the 12 week or 4 week delivery option. Pinckney’s offers small, medium, large, and extra-large sized shares, with their medium share being the most popular and their member’s best value for families of two to four people. Their 12 week fall season runs September 15th - December 11th, with a delivery each week except for the week of Thanksgiving. There are also three smaller 4-week “Sessions” that member can sign up for if they’d like a small commitment. These smaller sessions run Weeks 1 - 4, Weeks 5 - 8, and Weeks 9 - 12. There is also a small delivery fee of $2 per week for each share delivered more than 35 miles from the farm to help offset gas and maintenance fees for their refrigerated delivery truck. Joining Pinckney’s Produce is easy, just log onto PinckneysProduce.com and follow the prompts to sign up for your share of some of the freshest SC grown produced delivered to you weekly.
Beaufort County Library Launches New “Well-Read” Podcast
Are you looking for a good book to read? The Beaufort County Library is pleased to introduce the Well-Read podcast, a bi-weekly conversation about books between two of our experienced librarians and avid readers: Ann Cox and Halle Eisenman. In each episode, Ann and Halle discuss reading recommendations, what they’re currently reading, and other book-related fun! The duo has an assortment of episodes for listeners to download while they await the next episodes. Recorded episodes include: 2
The Island News
Episode 1: Beach Reads Episode 2: What to Read After Girl on the Train Episode 3: Page to Screen Episode 4: Young Adult Books for Adults Episode 5: Books That Make You Cry Episode 6: Books That Make Us Laugh Their most recent episode has 3,150 plays so far and in the last 30 days the podcast has been downloaded 10,880 times. 75% of Well-Read listeners are in SC and 98% are from the US, but they have listeners from as far away as Australia, Ghana, Peru, and Japan. The podcast is available to download
the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
through the Library’s website, on iTunes, and on podcast apps through Google Play. For more information on Well-Read or to place a hold on any of the books mentioned in the podcast, visit the Well-Read page on the Beaufort County Library’s website at beaufortcountylibrary.org/well-read.
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DISCLAIMER: Unless otherwise credited, all content of The Island News, including articles, photos, editorial content, letters, art and advertisements, is copyrighted by The Island News and Sisters Publishing LLC, all rights reserved. The Island News encourages reader submissions via email to theislandnews@gmail.com. All content submitted is considered approved for publication by the owner unless otherwise stated. The Island News is designed to inform and entertain readers; all efforts for accuracy are made. The Island News provides a community forum for news, events, straight talk opinions and advertisements. The Island News reserves the right to refuse to sell advertising space, or to publish information, for any business or activity the newspaper deems inappropriate for the publication.
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Motivation
Want help meeting your weight-loss and fitness goals? Need accountability and support to create sustainable results?
BODY Makeover is the program for YOU!
Kicks off Aug. 20
Accountability
Structure
Personal attention
This 12-week program includes: • Three small-group training sessions per week • Pre and post-program fitness evaluations • Weekly goal-setting and education with your coach • FitBook, a fitness and nutrition tracking journal • Three private sessions with a registered dietician • Grocery-shopping and healthy-cooking sessions • Daily food-log monitoring • Discounts on additional personal training sessions • Personalized exercise prescription • Prizes awarded to winners
$600 if paid in full, or three monthly payments of $225
Call 522-5635 to sign up today!
community
New visitor to Lady’s Island
Who’s News Newberry Opera House selects new executive director Molly Fortune, a former director in developing and on the executive staff of the Fox implementing Theater in Atlanta was named strategies focused on executive director of the Newberry the guest experience Opera House in Newberry, SC, after through authentic an extensive national search. She will preservation of the be the second executive director in historic landmark. the NOH’s stellar history. Building on the Molly Fortune Molly previously served as the marriage between Restoration and Operations Director Operations and Preservation, she was for the Fox Theatre in Atlanta, the co-founder of the Fox Theatre Georgia for 15 years. In her tenure Institute; an outreach program that with the Fox she was instrumental assists historic theatres in Georgia
with preservation expertise as well as operational/booking knowledge Molly commented “The Fox and The Newberry Opera House are more similar than first glance would allow. They are vibrant economic engines, repositories for memories, launching grounds for dreams and empowerment tools to change the world. They both think beyond their four walls and strive to touch, cultivate and challenge the character of those who walk the halls.”
OB-GYN Dr. Glenn Werner Rejoins Beaufort Memorial Longtime Beaufort OB-GYN Dr. Glenn Werner has reopened his private practice and is back delivering babies and performing surgeries Dr. Glenn at Beaufort Me- Werner morial Hospital. Among the first physicians to perform robot-assisted hysterectomies at BMH, Dr. Werner rejoins the hos-
pital staff after working the last 10 months at Coastal Carolina Hospital. “I wanted to get back to doing what I had been doing,” said Werner, a board-certified OB-GYN who has practiced in Beaufort for 24 years. “I’ve always felt at home at Beaufort Memorial. Both my children were born in this hospital, and I feel this is where I can deliver, and patients can receive, the best health care in Beaufort County.” A graduate of Wake Forest with a
B.S. in Biology, Werner also earned his medical degree at Wake Forest University’s Bowman Gray School of Medicine. He completed a one-year internship in Internal Medicine, and then a four-year residency in Obstetrics and Gynecology, both at Norfolk General Hospital in Virginia. Dr.Werner has a special interest in dealing with abnormal pap smears, performing minimally-invasive surgeries and resolving issues with heavy menstrual bleeding.
White Hummingbird
Kevin Taylor submitted this photo of a very rare Leucitic Hummingbird enjoying his feeder on Lady’s Island on August 1st. Kevin said, “We’d never seen one before and learned, after doing a little research online, that fewer than 100 have been reported in this country.” A Leucitic Hummingbird is slightly different than an Albino or All White Hummingbird Very cool Kevin.
Santa Elena Foundation adds three board members The Santa Elena Foundation has named three new members to its distinguished Advisory Board: Dr. Walter Edgar, Dr. Rex Garniewicz, and Dr. David Moore. They join an esteemed group of advisors that participate in the development of the Santa Elena Foundation and offer insight and guidance as the Foundation prepares to open the Santa Elena Cen- Dr. Walter Dr. Rex Dr. David ter, host the 450th anniversary symposium and com- Edgar Garniewicz Moore memoration events, and continue archaeology at the Santa Elena site. Their expertise on 16th century and among them is The South Carolina Encyclopedia. Dr. Rex Garniewicz received his B.A from Weslocal history, archaeology, museum management, and leyan University and his M.A. and Ph.D. in Anbusiness development are valuable assets to the Santa thropology from Indiana University. He is currently Elena team. Dr. Walter Edgar is a Distinguished Professor of President & CEO of the Coastal Discovery Museum History Emeritus at the University of South Caro- on Hilton Head Island. Dr. Garniewicz previously lina. He received his B.A. at Davidson College, and served as Deputy Director at the San Diego Museum his M.A. and Ph.D. at University of South Carolina. of Man and as Vice President of Science and TechThroughout his career as a professor, Dr. Edgar re- nology at the Indiana State Museum. His interests in ceived numerous awards and honors, including en- archaeology and museum work are wide-ranging. He try into the South Carolina Hall of Fame. Dr. Edgar has published archaeological work from both Native has published dozens of papers, articles, and books; American sites and early American forts, and he is
currently curating a traveling exhibition on the history of beer for the Smithsonian Institution. Dr. David Moore received his B.A. from the University of California at Berkeley and his MA and Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He served as the North Carolina Office of State Archaeology’s Western Office archaeologist for 18 years before becoming a full-time faculty member at Warren Wilson College in Asheville, NC. Dr. Moore has directed the archaeological investigations at the Berry site since 1986. He is the author and co-author of numerous book chapters and articles. Dr. Moore is leading 450th anniversary commemoration events for the overland trail of Juan Pardo, which originated at Santa Elena. The three new additions to the Santa Elena Advisory Board join these members: Dr. Daryl Ferguson, Alvaro Armada Barcaiztegui, Dr. Eugene Lyon, Dr. Paul Hoffman, Dr. Chester DePratter, Dr. William Kelso, Dr. Michael Francis, Dr. Eric Emerson, Dr. Bruce Fryer, Dr. Mary Socci, Dick Stewart, Dean Moss, and Maggie Bertin.
YMCA Launches Adult Power Boating Program The YMCA of Beaufort County is offering a two-day boating program for adults (age 18+). The program will be offered at two sessions. Each session will include one 3-hour evening class covering South Carolina Department of Natural Resources(DNR) education at the YMCA in Port Royal (1801 Richmond Avenue) and a second 6-hour class using hands-on instruction at the Port Royal Sound Maritime Center dock (310 Okatie Hwy, Okatie). The Adult Power Boating class will focus on teaching the DNR boating education class and offering on-water experience including boat trailer launching & retrieval, boat operations, docking, navigation, GPS & radio use, knots and basic safety instruction. There are two sessions offered: Session 1: Wed., September 23, 6 p.m. - 9 p.m. (YMCA in Port Royal) Fri., September 25, 9 a.m. -3 p.m. (Okatie) Session 2:
Wed., September 23, 6 p.m. - 9 p.m. (YMCA in Port Royal) Sat., September 26, 9 a.m. -3 p.m. (Okatie)
The cost is $125 per person. Class size is limited and registration must be complete by September 14, 2015. Contact YMCA Boating Director Paul Spencer (843-5229622) for further information or register at the YMCA in Port Royal. 4
the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
Lulu’s celebrating her 15th birthday by taking 15% off!
Fortunately, she’s just taking off from the knees down.
But you can take 15% off anything in
the store from August 13th to the 20th. Yes you read that right! Anything!!!
OLD BAY MARKETPLACE 917 Bay Street Suite E, Beaufort, SC 29902 843.524.LULU (5858) Open Monday – Saturday 10am - 6pm Sunday 11am - 5pm www.LuluBurgess.com www.facebook.com/LuluBurgess Instagram: @luluburgessbft the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
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health & business
The Time Has Come to lose weigh & get fit. Really! By Molly Ingram, Editor in Chief Where to begin? When I moved to Beaufort, I had a plan. The plan was to walk the dogs early. Feed them. Go to the gym and workout, shower and run errands. That was the plan. It was time to get back in shape and maybe, lose some of the weight I have put on over the last couple of years. You ask “How’s the plan working?” Great, except for two things. I have yet to go to the gym and I haven’t lost a pound since I arrived in shrimp and grits country. I was sitting at my desk about two weeks ago reading all the press releases that come into the paper and one of them caught my eye. It was about a new program developed by the trainers at Beaufort Memorial’s LifeFit Wellness Center. They were announcing a new program called Body Makeover. I could do with one of those I thought. It is a combination of nutrition advice from a Registered Dietician about how to develop a sustainable eating plan and an exercise program selected and monitored by a personal trainer. All of this is accomplished in a small group setting working with a group leader who is dedicated to helping you reach to your goals. As I read the release a small voice in my head started with a litany of why this might work --moving to Beaufort was a new beginning for me, I was working part-time, and I was really tired of wearing clothes that were just “fine” rather than fabulous. I know I can’t do the weight/fitness thing alone. I have tried that and it just doesn’t work for me. And by nature, I am kind of a loner when it comes to this stuff. I hate asking for help but I know I need to ask for help with this. A little background. I have always battled my weight. As soon as I lose some weight, I put it back on plus 10 lbs. just for good measure. I would kid with people that if I walked past a bakery I would put on 5 lbs. It probably doesn’t help that McDonalds is my favorite restaurant in the whole world. No, I clearly don’t have a sophisticated palate. Food basically bores me silly. And I don’t mind cooking but doing it for one person (I’m single) is just a waste of time and energy. I come from a family of tall people. Dad was 6’1”, Mom was about 5’8”, my younger brother is 6’ on the nose and my younger sister is about 5’7”. I got my grandmother’s genes and hit my tallest point of 5’4½” in 8th grade and I have been shrinking ever since to a height today of 5’3”. My grandmother was a wonderful lady we called Mimi. And she was short and round which is how I tend to describe myself. And to add
insult to injury, my niece and nephews call me Aunt Short Stuff up until about one month before Christmas when they move into “suck up” mode. I have been thin (by popular definition) a couple of times in my life. One time before I was in my best friend’s wedding in Richmond (where I grew up); I went on a very successful diet of Vienna Finger cookies and Diet Pepsi. I would ration out the cookies throughout the day. That probably makes nutritionists roll over in their graves. When I was a lot older, I went to a very famous and fancy doctor in New York who put me on his special plan which included specific foods and a smattering of drugs, one of which was a serious hunger suppressant. I doubt if it was FDA approved, but this guy got results. I lost 80 lbs. in 6 months and I looked and felt great. Unfortunately, I had to have some emergency surgery unrelated to the weight issue and afterwards I just stopped losing weight even though I was still on his plan. My doctor said that my metabolism had stopped because of the anesthesia which I guess is fairly common and he would work with me to get it going again. Phew. Disaster averted for me. But, unfortunately he had a heart attack and died…. definitely bad for him but way worse for me, or so I thought. And I put the weigh back on again. I go up in weight and then I go down. Then I go up and then I go down. I know many of you can relate to this phenomenon which is called yo-yoing. It is just so hard to keep the motivation going all the time even when you aren’t seeing any results. And I don’t particularly care about food. So why do I eat? Boredom mostly. Or I think I should eat something so I won’t be hungry …at night…during a meeting… before I go to the grocery store. Fill in the blank. So why am I sharing all of this personal history with you? Because I decided the time had finally come when I had to be a grown-up and deal with being overweight once and for all. And it is a grown-up thing. Intellectually I know what the issues are, what my triggers are, and all the excuses I have used for years. I have read about weight loss for all my adult years and I know how much better my health will be with a few pounds off this old body of mine. I am sure I must be close to diabetes and I have had asthma and high blood pressure all my life. All of those things would become a non-issue if I could figure out a way to live a healthier lifestyle. I currently have the time to devote to this
Molly’s journey to a healthier lifestyle endeavor and I think I now have the determination to see it through. So I called up the Beaufort Memorial’s LifeFit Wellness Center, set up an interview and went over to see what this program was all about. What a beautiful facility they offer right across the street from the hospital. After meeting some of the trainers and administrators I decided to take the plunge and sign up. Then, I honestly thought I would have a panic attack. What had I just done? Am I totally nuts? But I can’t think of a reason not to do it. So off I go. It begins on August 20th and I decided to add a little incentive for myself as I will write a kind of a travel blog for the paper once a month. My plan is to share the good, the bad, and the totally disastrous with you. Because, honestly, if I can do this, so can you. If my journey can inspire just one other person to make a commitment and take the plunge, then I have done a good job. My goals are twofold: to lose some weight (not tons) and to get fitter than I am right now – which, since I am totally and completely unfit right now, should provide lots of room for improvement. I am going to have realistic expectations for a change and try to be ”in the moment” when it comes to eating. And no, there will be no public before and after pictures published in the paper. When you run into me at the hardware store you can decide for yourself if my plan worked. So wish me luck and determination to make this successful. By Christmas, I plan to have a Body Madeover. And this year Santa is getting sugar free cookies. They’ll be good for both of us!
THE CHAMBER CORNER
BUSINESS OF THE WEEK Meet the authors of
Rebellion, Reconstruction and Redemption, 1861-1893
Congratulations to this week’s Chamber Business of the Week - Piggly Wiggly! Each week, the Chamber highlights one member business or organization as a thank you for their investment in the Chamber and our community. Special thanks to Sonic of Beaufort for sponsoring Business of the Week!
BEAUFORT REGIONAL CHAMBER TO HOLD
NETWORKING EVENTS
The Beaufort Regional Chamber of Commerce is proud to offer monthly networking events including Business After Hours and Coffee with Colleagues. These events are designed to help members of the business community connect and enhance their businesses. Business After Hours will take place on Thursday, August 13 from 5:30 - 7:00 pm. Southern Carpet Wholesale is hosting the event at 41 D Robert Smalls Parkway in Beaufort. The public is welcome and invited to attend this networking event. FREE for members, $5 for Guests! RSVP - Beaufort Chamber 843.525.8500. More information - www.BeaufortChamber.org Beaufort Lands End Tours will host Coffee with Colleagues on Friday, August 21 from 8:30 - 9:30 am. The networking event will be held on the Viking Spirit Yacht (Downtown Marina Slip 1-D). This is a free networking event for Members! RSVP - Beaufort Chamber 843.525.8500. More information - www.BeaufortChamber.org 6
the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
Local historians Larry Rowland and Steve Wise will be at the McIntosh Book Shoppe, 919 Bay Street, Beaufort on Saturday, Aug. 15 from 1 until 3 p.m. signing copies of their new book, Rebellion, Reconstruction, and Redemption, 1861–1893, the second of three volumes on the history of Beaufort County. The book covers a thirty year period following the Civil War in which Beaufort County residents, black and white, struggled to adapt to a new economy. A publication of the University of South Carolina Press, Rebellion, Reconstruction and Redemption, includes research work by the late Gerhard Spieler and a foreword by Alexander Moore. BOOK SIGNING: McIntosh Book Shoppe, 919 Bay Street, Beaufort on Saturday, Aug. 15 from 1 until 3 p.m.
health
Tips for Feeling Better Simply Won’t Work You know all that advice and those suggestions that you seek and receive from your doctor, therapist, coach, nutritionist, or personal trainer in an effort to feel better? What about the valuable information gleaned from books, diets, articles, Facebook posts, and classes that you have immersed yourself in as an attempt to lose weight or look younger? The truth is none of it will work….if you don’t actually do what is recommended! And, no it still won’t work if you only ‘try’ it once or every now and again. Authentic change comes from consistent action, meaning you have to do it for it to actually have a benefit. And the crazy thing is none of it is hard or rocket science, yet for those who have resistance towards change, it can feel downright impossible. When you think about many of the suggestions and advice that is handed out freely from doctors, teachers, healers and guides, most of it is quite simple, such as eating foods that are grown rather than made in a lab, hydrating with real water, moving the body in a way that brings
AWAKENINGS
opportunity to share tricks and tools of my own that I have picked up over the TEACHINGS FROM last 20 years. The difference between MARTHA O’REGAN those who end up feeling better and those who don’t is the amount of commitment Martha O’Regan, towards the exercises and homework Embodiment Coach for the Awakened Shift Head, between sessions. Those that are truly supporting those who are tired motivated by a desire to feel better will of ‘thinking’ their way to health, happiness and do the work and receive the results. For success and ready for a Shift of Heart. Contact her some folks, it takes more loving badgering at martha@bestlifebydesign.net to discover just how easy it can be to Create Your BEST Life…By to get them to do a few simple little Design. www.bestlifebydesign.net exercises. But when they do, they report ‘hey those tricks really work…and they were so easy’….huh, who knew? So, if you are one of those folks who is ease and enjoyment, using the breath to shift a moment of stress, or choosing always looking ‘out there’ for a complicated relationships that nurture. It is amazing ‘quick fix’, I am going to lovingly badger that we live in a culture that wants a ‘quick you to consider going about it a new way fix’ for everything, yet advice that is too for a little while. Take a few moments simple gets dismissed. It seems that for to consider an area of your life that you something to work, we believe it must know you could do differently to create a be complicated, expensive or take a long positive change in how you feel each day. time. We humans are just so quirky, aren’t Maybe it is doing those back stretches your PT gave you, eliminating or adding we? Being in conversation daily with folks a specific food group, substituting a soda who desire to feel better, allows me the for a glass of water, or turning off the
technology at 8 p.m. and allowing some time to clear your mind before bed so your body can rest. All simple things that require consistent action to create change. Next, think about some of the suggestions or advice you have received from your respected resources. What are some common themes? What are your common excuses? What if you just followed one piece of advice for 7 days just to see what happens? Take the time to jot down how you are currently feeling and how you would like to feel. Then, after the 7 days of committed action, jot down how you feel and compare it to your starting point. Chances are something will be different which will in turn, motivate you to either continue or to take on a different area of your life or lifestyle. Remember you are a steward of the body that carries around your spirit each day, so be gentle and kind to yourself as you commit to creating change, one simple step at a time. Live Awake!
Is it Time for You to Have Cataract Surgery? MARK S. SIEGEL, MD, FAAO
Dr. Mark Siegel is the Medical Director of Sea Island Ophthalmology, board certified, American Board of Ophthalmology. Learn more at www.seaislandophthalmology.com or 843-525-1500.
A cataract diagnosis does not typically mean that surgery is required immediately. Cataracts occur as part of the body’s natural aging process and may not change vision significantly in the early stages. Small cataractrelated changes may be improved with prescription glasses. But as the cataracts continue to mature over time, they may cause vision loss that can interfere with activities of daily living. Although the prospect of cataract surgery can be intimidating, the procedure itself is the most common elective surgery among Medicare beneficiaries in the United States. Multiple studies have demonstrated that cataract surgery can lead to improved quality of life, reduced risk of falling and fewer car crashes. In addition, one study found that those who had cataract surgery had a 40 percent lower long-term mortality risk than those who did not. The following four questions can help you determine whether or not you’re ready for cataract surgery:
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Are your cataracts impacting your daily or occupational activities? Symptoms of cataracts include dim, blurry or yellowed vision and can even cause double vision in one eye. The lack of contrast and clarity can be difficult for those who need clear vision for work, driving or for those who enjoy hobbies like reading, cooking or sewing. Are your cataracts affecting your ability to drive safely at night? Cataracts can cause halos around lights and difficulty seeing in low-light settings, which can impact the ability to safely drive at night. Advanced cataracts can even cause enough vision loss to fail the vision test required for a driver’s license. Are your cataracts interfering with the outdoor activities you enjoy? Cataracts can also increase sensitivity to glare, which can be especially troublesome for those who enjoy skiing, surfing and a number of other outdoors activities. They can also cause visual differences from one eye to the other, which can affect the distance vision required for people who play golf, tennis and similar recreational activities.
the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
Everyone should get an annual eye exam
Can you manage your cataracts in other ways? Those who decide to put off cataract surgery can make the most of their vision with a few simple tools, such as incorporating brighter lighting and contrasting colors in the home. Polarized sunglasses and a wide-brimmed hat can reduce glare, while magnifying lenses can make reading easier. If cataracts aren’t disrupting your life, you can probably wait and have surgery when they really start to bother you. But if you feel as though cataract-related blurred or dulled vision is slowing you down, the procedure can have a significant and beneficial impact. It’s best to discuss how cataracts are affecting your life and vision with your eye doctor.
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Why I absolutely love getting up at 4:30 a.m. By Lee Scott
On Wednesday mornings at 4:30 a.m. from May through mid-October, I climb out of bed, get my coffee and prepare for a morning at Hunting Island State Park. My friend Gretchen and I carpool together. We are volunteers for the Hunting Island Sea Turtle Conservation Project and she has been doing it for sixteen years. Under Permit Number 2015-537 we are authorized to conduct nesting surveys, relocate nests, conduct public inventories and rescue and release disoriented sea turtle hatchlings. We are working under a Permit because the loggerheads are protected under the Endangered Species Act. My first morning out on the beach in May, we saw tracks from a Loggerhead Turtle which might have indicated a nest. This is called a crawl. Sometimes there are false crawls. A false crawl is when the Loggerhead decides that the spot she has chosen is wrong and she heads back out to the water. As a mother who has given birth to two children, I just call it “False Labor”. We actually discovered a nest that first day just up off the beach. The initial way of looking for the nest is to figure out the direction of the Loggerheads tracks. The ones leading up to the beach and the ones leading back to the ocean. Then you look around for an obvious disturbance of sand as if someone has been digging and then flattened it over. A certified prober then seeks out the actual location of the nest. As we documented that first crawl and nest with our GPS location we unloaded our supplies. There are specific procedures used to mark the nest and protect it. If not protected the natural predators will come out and dig up the nest. Raccoons and the foxes love sea turtle eggs. The eggs themselves look like ping pong balls. The Loggerhead lays anywhere 100 to 150 eggs. No wonder
she goes back into the sea. Who wants to care for that many babies at once! The eggs take roughly forty-five days or so to hatch. Sometimes, during the summer, the volunteers are asked to attend night watches to help hatchlings make their way safely to the ocean. So people ask why? Why save the sea turtles? There are several good reasons according to conservationists. One, the sea turtles eat sea grasses, which helps to maintain the health of the sea grass beds. These sea grass beds are important to a wide variety of other marine species. Also, beaches and dunes do not get many nutrients during the year, but the nutrients in the hatchlings eggs provide some nutrients. I am not an expert, so if you want to get more information, you can find it on the following web sites. www.friendsofhuntingilsand.org and www.nps.gov. Or you can become a volunteer! In the meantime, I will be out on Wednesday mornings for the next few months looking for hatchling tracks.
Beaufort County Offers Secure Document Shredding Event The Beaufort County Public Works Department Solid Waste and Recycling Division has established a secure document shredding event for Saturday, August 22, 2015. The event will be held from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the Public Works South site located at 9 Benton Field Road in Bluffton. “There are many benefits to our residents taking advantage of this free service,” said Jim Minor, Beaufort County Solid Waste and Recycling Director. “At the top of the list is the peace of mind that comes with securely shredding documents. It’s a great feeling knowing you are keeping your identity and personal information protected.” Shredding and then recycling paper boosts environmental sustainability by reducing the amount of waste transported to landfills. More than 400 cars came through the County’s shredding event held this past June. Workers collected approximately 11 tons of paper. Any types or colors of paper, file folders, or envelopes are acceptable. Staples or paper clips do not need to be removed. Materials can be brought in any container or bag and will be emptied into roll carts for immediate shredding. All materials will be shredded on site until the containers are filled. Only residential quantities will be accepted. No materials from commercial businesses will be accepted. No electronics will be collected at this event. For more information, contact the Solid Waste and Recycling Division at 843.255.2736 or www.bcgov.net/recycle.
two things that never lie Two things never lie: your checkbook and your calendar. Every time we make a choice about how we spend our time and money we are making choices that reflect something about what we value. Making tough and often emotional choices lies at the heart of planning for a secure financial future. One of the biggest mistakes we make as we approach planning for the future is failing to realize how often we make decisions that do not match what we say is really important to us. We often say that time with family is the most important thing, but does the way we spend our time reflect that? Does the way we spend or save money reflect what we say
we value? I heard somewhere that the average American family spends more time planning a trip to Disneyworld than they spend thinking about and planning for their financial future. From experience, I’m not sure that’s far off. So one of the very best things we can do to make a difference in our financial lives is simply to THINK ABOUT IT, and then be radically self aware about what our calendars and checkbooks say about our priorities. If we don’t like what we see, we can slowly start to make changes and hopefully repeating that process will give us a great chance at ending up at the right place.
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the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
observance of the Memorial Day holiday. Take time to thank those who have served. Bob Sofaly file photo
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The agony of defeat
WHAT’S INSIDE?
DANGER OBSTRUCTION
By Justin Jarrett
They lingered on the field and in the dugout well after the celebration on the other side of the field had died down, clinging to the final minutes of an era. The University of South Carolina Beaufort softball team’s season ended — and with it, the careers of nine seniors who helped start the program four years ago — with consecutive losses to top-seeded Campbellsville (Ky.) in the USC Beaufort Bracket of the NAIA Softball National Championship Opening Round. For the second time in three seasons, the Sand Sharks fell one win short of the NAIA Softball World Series. But afterwards, the focus was much more on all this group had accomplished. The nine seniors took part in 161 wins over the past four seasons. They won a regular-season Sun Conference championship, finished as regular-season runners-up three times, and won the Sun Conference Tournament twice, including a run of five straight victories to come through the loser’s bracket earlier this month. Several times Wednesday it appeared they would add one more victory and one more accolade to the resume.
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Community 2-4 Profile 6 Above and below: Pewter Kinglsey-Smith, on left, T 8-9 H ANKIGNO tells volunteers how the new oyster reef is going to be Reme OUR V 10 mber Friends that gove most built and passes them old crab pots. rn E feder T obser ment of ER fices al, sta vanc will e of th Schools FREE te, an 12 A N than be k thos S d co e Memo closed e wh Mond unty o have rial Day ay, Ma Sports holid 12-13 serve y 25 ay. Ta d. Bo ke tim in b file ph e to Business Sofaly14 oto Voices 16-17 COVE RING NORT HERN BEAU Wine 18 FORT COUN TY The Volunteers Games 19 formed two human WWW.Y a OURIS g o LAND n NEWS toyhelp deliver castle blocks, Pets 20 .COM of dechains atfe bottom, and bags of processed a t MAY 21By Justin Events 21 27, 201 DANGER 5 They ling Jarret oyster shells. t ered the dug OBSTRUCTI Directory WHAT22 out wel on the field and SOFTBALL continued on page 12 ON l after the on the in ’S INSID oth cele died dow er side of the bration E? form. “We have 120 volunteers gathered n, field Classifieds 23 By Bob Sofaly clin had minutes ging to of an era. the fina The l Un tort lay out 300 castle blocks and 25 crab 5 More than 120 volunteers gathered Beaufo iversity of Sou , 201 th Carolin JULY 2-8 softball end a team s — and for to attach to, he said. season FREE with it, ’oysters at the Port Royal Maritime Center on of ninedpots” e seniors the .COM the pro who help careers NEWS E? gram foualso LAND ed star 250 bags of recycled oyster “We have ’S INSID consecu r OURIS Saturday to help build WH an ATartificial oysterCam t PROF tive loss years ago — CLOSED TO WWW.Y ILE with es to pbellsv Meet Bill top ille -see SHEthe will be laid in (Ky.)that LLFISHmud near the Beaufo shells” TY reef on the banks of the Chechessee River.Sof in the ded 3rd gen Harvey, the rt Bra COUN cket of USC eration HARVESTING UFORT tbal BEA of great lawyers l Nation the NA HERN in oyster Openin other IAattractants. Kingsley-Smith al Cha NORT Peter Kingsley-Smith, a biologist with the g see pa Beaufort mpionship RING time in Round. For ge 6 COVE the seco three seas Sharks said nd the science collaborative throughout ons, the SC Department of Natural Resources’ fell one San NAIA Softbal win short of d l World the But aftethe state not be possible without Series. would shellfish research section,MMsaid rwards, UNIT Y three much the focu t CO mo of ufor re s was Bea had acco a ongrant the streets you. from the non-profit National in Street even t took to being toninmplished. all this gro means to mediums were Ma d Newsdifferent rds used The up The Islan what 4th of July holds awa 5 iors too wins ove e sen ly. t to see pagenew beds k part in Research Society. Estuarine r the by Bob Sofa part of oysters a kick start andseehelp Beaufor 161 FRIE They past Photos give rnament,
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school news
Getting ready for the first day of school About 1,500 elementary school children and their parents swamped the gym on Saturday at Battery Creek High School to participate in the 2015 Back to School Expo. “We gave away 700 back packs in the first hour alone”, according to Keke Swinton, one of the event organizers for the Beaufort County School District. Health and dental screenings were also available to the children. “All of the events were designed to help those children registering for school to get ready for their big first day”, Swinton said,
Michelle Earle (in blue) of Blue Skies Insurance, answers questions about how to apply for insurance through the Affordable Care Act and navigate the system.
Beaufort Academy adds four to staff
Brad McCutcheon
Lillian Aldred
Keturah Maraska
Beaufort Academy is excited to welcome four new team members for the 2015-2016 school year, including a new Curriculum Coordinator. Brad McCutcheon will be the curriculum coordinator for grades 1-6 and teach lower school science and 7th grade science. Brad comes to us with 8 years of elementary school teaching experience from inner city Philadelphia, Bali, Indonesia, and the San Francisco Bay area.
Lillian Aldred will join the upper school math department. Lillian has 17 years of teaching experience at Beaufort High and the International School of Beijing. In addition to teaching, she will help with Lisa our girls basketball program. Gallegher Keturah Maraska will teach 5th and 6th grade ELA and digital journalism. Keturah has taught for 4 years in Virginia and has a background in business as well. Lisa Gallagher will be our communications director and be involved with our community service programs. We welcome Lisa back to Beaufort and back to BA as she was involved in event planning and fundraising at BA in 2007 and 2008.
Bridges Prep moving kindergarten & 1st grade to Lady’s Island Charter school Lowcountry Montessori, which has operated in the Celadon complex for the last couple of school years, has moved to their new permanent facilities in Port Royal. Bridges Preparatory School, which is also a state chartered school, with a primary location in the former Boys and Girls Club, recently announced that Celadon will be home for their kindergarten and first grade students for this coming school year. According to Bridges “The school start time at this location will be consistent with the other campuses, with the school day beginning at 8:15 a.m. Parents should plan to drop off their children in advance of this time. Some parents, however, have children who need to attend the main campus on Boundary Street and the campus at Celadon. To prevent a drop off in two locations, Bridges will provide transportation from the main campus to Celadon in the mornings and from Celadon to the main campus in the afternoons. Therefore, parents who have children at both campuses will only need one drop off and pick up location at the main campus.
School district announces five finalists for 2015-16 Teacher of the Year Five classroom teachers were named recently as finalists for Beaufort County’s 2015-16 District Teacher of the Year. The finalists are Nancy Altman, a special education teacher at Mossy Oaks Elementary School; Michelle Hartman, a ninth-grade teacher at Hilton Head Island High School; Aracely Johnson, a fifth-grade math and science teacher at Beaufort Elementary School; Kathleen Sanz, a sixth-grade science teacher at Bluffton Middle School; and Bradley Smith, a science and health science teacher at Beaufort High School. State Superintendent of Education Molly Spearman announced the five selections before an audience of nearly 1,000 educators at the opening session of Summer Institute 2015, the district’s annual summer professional development conference. “Any one of these five outstanding professionals would be an excellent representative for our district’s teachers,” said Superintendent Jeff Moss, who added that the 2015-16 District Teacher of the Year would
be announced at an awards breakfast on Sept. 18. Becoming District Teacher of the Year is a threestep process that begins when school-level teachers of the year are selected in April. Those wishing to compete for District Teacher of the Year submit detailed applications by the end of July. In the second step, a selection committee consisting of parents, former educators and community leaders from across Beaufort County reviews the applications and rates them using a numerical scoring system. The five highest-scoring applicants are named as finalists. In the third step, the finalists are interviewed by a separate review committee again composed of judges from across the county. The judges begin by reviewing a video of each teacher doing a classroom lesson. The judges then score candidates based on how well they respond to questions about their teaching methods as shown in the video, as well as how they respond to questions about current education issues. After those interviews, the panel selects a District Teacher
Left to Right: Nancy Altman, Aracely Johnson, Bradley Smith, Michelle Hartman, Kathleen Sanz.
of the Year to represent Beaufort County’s classroom professionals. The winner of this year’s District Teacher of the Year will be announced later this fall. The current Teacher of the Year is Whale Branch Middle School band director Amy Simmons.
360 elementary students benefit from Operation Backpack Opening a new box of crayons, pulling out a new composition notebook, and sharpening new pencils to a perfect point will now be possible for 360 identified in-need elementary school students. Thanks to Operation: Backpack, these experiences, along with a brand new backpack and two new uniform shirts, are possible for these children in Beaufort and Jasper counties. On August 5th, more than 30 volunteers gathered at The Arsenal in downtown Beaufort to commence Operation: Backpack, a new initiative of the Women’s Leadership Council of United Way of the Lowcountry. The space was generously donated by the Beaufort Regional Chamber of Commerce. In assemblyline fashion, volunteers filled each backpack with the exact supplies needed for each child’s grade and school. 12
PHILANTHROPY CORNER
Each week, Coastal Community Foundation highlights organizations, donors and other charitable news in The Philanthropy Corner. If you’re interested in learning more about philanthropy in the Lowcountry, reach out to our regional Stewardship Officer, Gloria Duryea, at Gloria@ CoastalCommunityFoundation.org or (843) 379-3400.
the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
Most of the supplies were donated by local businesses and individuals. The remaining items were purchased by funds raised through the efforts of the Women’s Leadership Council, whose mission is to mobilize the caring power of women to advance the common good by focusing on education in forgotten pockets of Beaufort and Jasper counties. Beaufort and Jasper counties boast a number of programs that help students and families throughout the year. Students served by Operation: Backpack have been identified by their guidance counselor or school social worker and are not already receiving assistance from an outside agency. Through Operation: Backpack, hundreds of local students will receive the supplies and confidence needed to begin a new school year.
STEPHEN W. DURHAM, DMD
I experienced excruciating headaches, ear congestion, ringing in the ears, a tight jaw, and neck issues for years. After becoming a patient at Durham Dental and talking extensively with Dr. Stephen
Durham and his amazing staff I made one of the best decisions of my life to proceed with TMJ treatment. I was honestly skeptical that it would help in so many areas of my life. I did not understand how everything was related to my bite. Well, I am here to say, I am a believer now! Thank you, Durham Dental!
– Heather Midyette
Stephen W. Durham, DMD of Beaufort, SC is not affiliated with Brad Durham, DMD, PC of Savannah, GA.
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sports Special youth dove hunt in Union County From the Astros to the Grizzlies The S.C. Department of Natural Resources, in cooperation with the Beaufort native Asher Wojciechowski was optioned Enoree District of the U.S. Forest to the Fresno Grizzlies by the Houston Astros on Service, will host a special youth dove Sunday. Wojciechowski had been recalled by the Astros on hunt in Union County on Saturday, Aug. 5th. The Beaufort High School graduate starred at The Sept. 5th. Citadel before beginning his professional baseball career. Young sportsmen and sportswomen Asher who are interested in a quality dove Wojciechowski hunt are encouraged to attend. The youth hunt will be held at the Forest Service’s Herbert Field which is about 5.6 miles southeast of the town of Carlisle. Only youth will be allowed to shoot, and they must be accompanied by an adult 21 years or older. Hunting season for the public and adults will begin on the second Saturday of the season, Sept. 12. Herbert Field is large with about 40 acres planted in sunflowers, browntop millet and corn. The dove field plantings have done well this summer, and abundant food is The Clemson University golf program was well-represented available. Prospects are good for excellent dove hunting for the young hunters. in a statewide tournament over the weekend. Austin Langdale There is no cost, pre-registration or drawing required to attend this youth hunt and Stephen Behr finished in the top 10 and Carson Young and or any hunt at a DNR public dove field this year. Just plan to bring sunscreen, Beaufort native, Josh Fickes finished in the top 20 of the 84th insect repellant and water and enjoy a Saturday afternoon dove hunt. The following South Carolina Amateur Golf Tournament. The 72-hole event regulations apply to all youth hunts and hunting at all other DNR public dove fields was completed on Sunday afternoon in near 90-degree heat at this year. These are as follows: the Chanticleer Course at Greenville Country Club. Josh 1. D ove hunting on all public fields is “Afternoons Only”. No entry onto fields The best Clemson player on Sunday was Fickes, a rising Fickes before noon. sophomore who fired a three-under-par 69. That tied for the 2. N o shooting after 6 p.m. during the first segment of the season (Sept. 5 - Oct. second best round of the day by any player. Fickes finished in a tie for 18th overall 17). with rounds of 74-81-73-69. He was the best Clemson player on the weekend. He 3. Hunters are limited to 50 shells per hunt. had four birdies and just one bogey on Sunday.
Fickes finishes 18th in SC Amateur Golf Tournament
Specific directions to the Forest Service’s Herbert Field from the town of Carlisle (the intersection of SC 215 and SC 72 and Pinckney Street) are to go south on Pinckney Street, which turns into Herbert Road (Secondary Road 37) for 5.6 miles; then turn right at the intersection of St. Luke’s Road (Secondary Road 359); parking area is under the power line off St. Luke’s Road. If you have questions or for further information you may contact: Union DNR office at telephone (864) 427-5140 or the U.S. Forest Service Enoree office at (803) 276-4810.
Beaufort High graduate Clark named preseason All-SAC Punter earns conference honors for third consecutive year The Newberry College football team has the second-most honorees on this year’s Preseason All-South Atlantic Conference football teams, which were released by the conference office on Tuesday, Aug. 4th. Newberry has 10 total honorees (four first team, six second team) to rank behind only preseason favorites Lenoir-Rhyne. Newberry was predicted to finish third in the league by the head coaches in Monday’s preseason poll release. Representing the scarlet and gray on the first team are offensive lineman Stephen Nance (Rock Hill, S.C.), defensive lineman Alstevis Squirewell (Great Falls, S.C.), linebacker Taylor McDonnell (Bluffton, S.C.) and punter Kyle Clark (Beaufort, S.C.). Clark, a rising senior from Beaufort HS, was a first team all-SAC selection in both 2013 and 2014 and earned ECAC Division II All-Star honors last year. He was named DAKTRONICS second team all-Southeast Region in 2013 and 2014 and earned third team all-region honors from the Beyond Sports Network in 2014. He led the league and earned the SAC Statistical Championship with a 39.3 yards per punt average on 54 punts. His 64-yard punt against Lenoir-Rhyne was the longest punt in the conference this season. Clark had seven punts over 50 yards and 30 punts inside the opponents’ 20-yardline, while no other punter in the Super Region had more than 22 punts inside the opponents’ 20.
“Josh Aragon Night” to be held at BCHS Dolphin Stadium Battery Creek High School is pleased to announce that the football game vs. Bluffton on August 21st @ BC will be “Josh Aragon Night.” Josh was diagnosed with MS in 2004. Josh has not responded well to typical drug treatment and requires stem cell treatments, using his own stem cells. In an effort to assist the Aragon family financially, Battery Creek, along with Bluffton High School, will donate funds raised to help offset the costs of the care/treatment for Josh. Battery Creek will donate a portion of all pre-sale tickets and both BC and Bluffton will have a Spirit Chain competition, with all funds raised from this going to the Aragon family. The goal is to raise between $500-$1000. You may also donate locally @ any TD Bank with the “Beat MS with Josh” campaign. For online giving, go to www.helphopelive.org. Click on donations and type in Josh Aragon. Josh’s mother, Dr. Linda Aragon, is a member of the BC faculty while his father, Leon Aragon, is a member of the faculty @ Red Cedar Elementary and works with the tennis teams @ Bluffton. Game time is 7:30 p.m. Please support this worthy cause as the two schools come together to help a family in need. 14
the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
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*The FWDG credit card is issued by Wells Fargo Financial National Bank. Special terms for 51 months apply to qualifying appropriate purchases of $4,000.00 or more charged with approved credit. The special terms APR will continue to apply untiltype all of policy for your circumstances. For a qualifying purchases are paid in full. The monthly payment for this purchase will be the amount thatcomplimentary will pay for theconsultation, please call or visit today. purchase in full in equal payments during the promotional 51 month period. The APR for purchases will apply to certain fees such as a late payment fee or if you used the card for other transactions. For newly opened accounts, APRarefor Insurancethe products offered through Wachovia Insurance Agency (WIA) and are underwritten purchases is 29.99%. The APR may vary with market based on the U.S. Prime Rate and is given as ofby6/1/2014. If youcompanies. are Wells Fargo Advisors and WIA are separate non-bank unaffiliated insurance charged interest in any billing cycle, the minimum interest charge will be $1.00. Offer expires 10/27/14. affiliates of Wells Fargo & Company. Coupons cannot be used in conjunction with any other coupons or discounts. FURNITURE • MATTRESSES • DESIGN CENTER
745 Robert Smalls Parkway Beaufort, SC 29906 Mon-Sat 10am - 6pm Sun 1pm - 5pm
843.524.8695 www.fwdgonline.com *On Select items. Excludes Tempurpedic, Serta iComfort and iSeries, clearance items, and prior sales. Photos are for illustration purposes only. Most items are one of a kind and availability is not guaranteed. Offer expires 8/24/15. See store for further details and exclusions.
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wine & garden
Wonderful, Wonderful, Wonderful. It’s Wonderful By Celia Strong
Well, that certainly sounds positive. As we start another one of our many wine “journeys” together, it occurs to me that “wonderful” is a pretty accurate description of what we’re doing and accomplishing. Learning about a new wine, spending time together doing it, enjoying the new wine. All a wonderful, whole, big package. One of the best parts of each week is the pieces and parts we learn about each new wine. Pieces and parts we use to make it our wine. This week we get pieces and parts for a California Chardonnay. One from a winery in Kenwood, in Sonoma County. Kenwood is an unincorporated community located between Santa Rosa and the town of Sonoma. In 1887, the Sonoma Land & Improvement Company owned the land that became Kenwood. The company laid out lots on the land in preparation for a railroad line coming through the next year. At first, the site was called “Rancho Los Guilicos,” the Mexican name for the property. But, “Guilicos,” the Spanish name for a local Indian tribe, was hard to pronounce. The name “Kenwood” was chosen as the new name, but why “Kenwood” is subject to various stories. Today, the town of Kenwood covers just over five square miles, has a dry-summer-subtropical climate, and is home to just over a dozen
Celia Strong works at Bill’s Liquor & Fine Wines on Lady’s Island.
wineries. Our winery, Landmark, is one of these. Landmark was founded, in 1974, by Bill Mabry and his family. One of the original investors was Damaris Deere Ford. She was the great-great-granddaughter of John Deere, who invented the first steel plow. By 1989, Damaris was the sole proprietor of Landmark and moved the winery to its current location. She chose to make Chardonnay wines, exclusively, and was responsible for creating their flagship wine, Landmark
Overlook Chardonnay. In 1993, Damaris hired Helen Turley. Together, these two women created Landmark’s signature style of Chardonnay. They pressed whole clusters of grapes when they made their wines, used native yeast strains and French oak barrels for aging. Landmark’s 1995 Overlook Chardonnay was on Wine Spectator’s Top 100 List. The first of six times. (Since 1995, Landmark has expanded their wine production to include Pinot Noir and Syrah, too. But, we have to save these for a future “journey.”) Today, under winemaker Greg Stach, Landmark combines traditional techniques with a “less is more” philosophy. Great wine begins in the vineyard, so Stach and his staff only intervene to make sure they have consistency and quality. They rely on their grapes’ own intense flavors and specific vineyards’ characteristics. Which gets us to our Landmark Overlook Chardonnay. This wine is 100% Chardonnay, made with grapes from several vineyards within Sonoma County. Sometimes, as many as two dozen different sites, so you can imagine the layers of flavors. All these grapes are hand harvested and each lot is lightly pressed - whole bunches. The juice is allowed to settle for a day and then it is put into French oak barrels where the fermentation occurs spontaneously. The
yeast cells that come off the grape skins and from inside the barrels do their work automatically. The juice, then the wine, stays in the barrels for about ten months. They are stirred twice a month to round out the textures and flavors of the wine. The Overlook Chard is a bright, gold color with very complex aromas and flavors. Pears, Meyer lemon, sage, lemon curd, quince, apricots, baked pie crusts, baking spices all rush out at you. This wine has some weight to it, too, so it pairs well with salmon, tuna, sea bass and other full body seafood, poultry and even pork. Roasted vegetables and tropical salsas are great with it, as well. When you first taste this wine, it makes you think of way more expensive Chardonnays. But more about that in a moment. In 2011, Landmark Vineyards was acquired by Fiji Water. Yes, the bottled water in the square bottles. Fiji is owned by The Wonderful Company a huge company that handles assorted top quality foods. With what we’ve just learned about the history and winemaking at Landmark, “wonderful” is a good description for the Overlook Chard. With its usual cost of $25 to $30, we could have “wonderful” once in a while. At $19.97? We can have “wonderful, wonderful, wonderful”. So let’s! Enjoy.
Starting to think about next year’s garden By Susan Stone August gardens are usually past their peak…many flowers have already gone to seed. But there is a lot for you to still do. Don’t miss this golden this opportunity to start planning for next year! Gather! This is the gathering season! When the garden looks the saddest is usually when it gives the most. The beautiful salvia will have dropped enough seed heads by now to give you a second show in the fall, but for now grab a sharp pair of shears, envelopes or paper bags and take a walk. Late in the day is best, after the sun has dried the garden. Successful gardens next year depends on the quality of seed you decide to gather this year. Look for colors that you particularly liked, flowers and vines that performed well and herbs that you’ll need this winter. Pods and large headed flowers like
Please send your gardening wisdom and questions to Susan at theriverangel.ss@ gmail.com. If you are asking about a particular disease or pest, please include a photo if possible.
zinnias and purple cone flower dry well and are less likely to mold if you hang in bunches to dry. Drying herbs this way is pretty, but collects dust. So try a warm oven or a dehydrator for edibles. Make sure to mark your envelopes with the type of plant if you know it, if you don’t, describe it. You think you’ll remember what is what, but trust me…seeds all look alike after a while. The date is important. Seeds generally are only viable for two years. Store your seeds in a well-ventilated and dry environment.
“A lot of folks are paying bills online”
Natural areas are great for gathering seeds not usually available in seed catalogues. Diversity creates a healthy garden, bringing different species of birds and butterflies to feed and roost. Keeping a few native species in your gardens will not only give your garden diversity, but they attract the predators away from hybrids and ornamentals. The big benefit is that they require very little care or water. Some flowers make for beautiful fall arrangements, especially when dried. Hydrangeas are my favorite. Air drying is best for Hydrangeas. You can collect flower heads from August to October. I’ve tried to save the color by collecting them fresh and drying them in silica, but the color doesn’t hold. You can hang them in a bunch or if the stems are strong enough, just place them in a vase.
Flower seeds just waiting to be harvested.
Happy Gathering!
A lot of folks are paying their bills online. It’s safe, accurate and very convenient. Banking online and paying bills online are great services. If you would like to know more about banking online, stop by the bank and we can get you going. Cutting edge technology with a first name friendly hometown personal touch. That’s hometown banking in the 21st Century.
Lady’s Island 145 Lady’s Island Drive 524-3300
Hometown People Hometown Spirit HPHS 12 © Gary Michaels Online
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the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
Burton 2347 Boundary St. 524-4111
dining guide
A listing of local restaurants in northern Beaufort County:Your resource for where to eat AGAVE MEXICAN GRILL: 1430
Ribaut Road, Port Royal; 843-379-0232; L.D.
ALVIN ORD’S: 1514 Ribaut Road, Port
SPOTLIGHT ON:
THE PERFECT LOWCOUNTRY BOIL
Royal; 843-524-8222; L.D.
Q ON BAY: 822 Bay St., Beaufort;
524-7771; Barbecue, Southern cooking; L.D.
RANCHO GRANDE MEXICAN RESTAURANT: 41-B Robert Smalls
ATHENIAN GARDENS: 950 Ribaut Road, Beaufort; 379-9222; Greek; L.D.
Parkway, Beaufort, 322-9909. 136 Sea Island Parkway, Suite 4 & 6, Lady’s Island, 5240405.
BACK PORCH GRILL: 1 Landing Dr,
RED ROOSTER CAFE: 1210 Ribaut
BEAUFORT BREAD COMPANY:
ROSIE O’GRADYS PUB: Suite 3,
Port Royal,; 525-9824; L.D.
Road, Beaufort; 379-2253; B.L.D.
102 Lady’s Island Shopping Center, Lady’s Island; 843-522-0213; B.L.
BELLA LUNA: 859 Sea Island Parkway,
St. Helena Island; 838-3188; Italian; B.L.D.
BERTOS GRILL TEX-MEX:
9 Market, Habersham Marketplace; Mexican; 644-1925; L.D.
BIG JOE’S BAR-B-Q: 760 Parris Island Gateway, Beaufort; 770-0711; L.D.
BLACKSTONE’S DELI & CAFE: 205 Scott St., Beaufort; 524-4330; B.L.
BLUE DOG CAFE: 736 Sea Island
Parkway, Frogmore, St. Helena Island, attached to The Lowcountry Store; 843-8384646; L.
BOONDOCKS RESTAURANT:
Beaufort Town Center, Boundary Street; 843-379-7676 Irish-American cuisine; L.D.
RYAN’S FAMOUS PIZZA & SUBS: It was once called Frogmore Stew based on where Richard Gay, the gentleman credited with the creation of this one-pot wonder, was from. But Frogmore as a town was lost when the postal service decided to include it with its neighbors and the stew name subsequently changed to Lowcountry Boil. It is a tradition around these parts to share a Lowcountry Boil with friends when you sit outside, knowing you will be wearing all or part of dinner on your face, shirt, pants, and you don’t care. Lowcountry Boil is a wonderful medley of shrimp, sausage, corn, and new red potatoes or Cole slaw. Some chef ’s add Vidalia onions and everyone has their own “special” crab boil seasoning that goes into the pot. If you get the chance, enjoy this special dish and you will remember what makes Beaufort so special.
14 Savannah Highway, Shell Point Plaza, Beaufort; 379-3479; L.D.
SAKE HOUSE: 274 Robert Smalls
Parkway; Beaufort; 379-5888; Japanese; L.D.
SALTUS RIVER GRILL: 802 Bay St.,
Beaufort; 379-3474; Seafood, upscale; L.D.
FUJI RESTAURANT: 97 Sea Island
Parkway, Hamilton Village, Lady’s Island; 524-2662; Japanese steak house; L.D.
FUMIKO SUSHI: 14 Savannah Highway, Beaufort; 524-0918; L.D.
GILLIGANS: 2601 Boundary St.,
LOWCOUNTRY PRODUCE: 302
SGT. WHITE’S: 1908 Boundary St.;
Carteret St.; Beaufort; 322-1900; B.L.
Beaufort; 522-2029; Southern cooking; L.D.
LUTHER’S RARE & WELL DONE: 910 Bay St., Beaufort; 521-1888;
SHRIMP SHACK: 1929 Sea Island
L.D.
Parkway, St. Helena Island; 838-2962; L.
SMOKIN’ PLANKS BBQ: 914 Paris
MAGGIE’S PUB & EATERY: 17
Ave., Port Royal; 843-522-0322; L.D.
1760 Sea Island Parkway, St. Helena Island; 838-0821; D.
Beaufort; 838-9300; Seafood, steaks; L.D.
Market, Habersham; 379-1719; L.D.
BOUNDARY STREET CAFE: 1209
GRIFFIN MARKET: 403 Carteret St., Beaufort; 524-0240; Authentic Italian; L.D.
MAGNOLIA BAKERY CAFE: 703
2121 Boundary Street, Suite 103, Beaufort Town Center, Beaufort; 843-379-5559; L.D.
MARILYN’S LUNCH AT SOUTHERN SWEETS: 917 Bay St.,
SOUTHERN GRACES BISTRO:
Boundary St., Suite C, Beaufort; 379-1811; B. L. Brunch.
BREAKWATER RESTAURANT & BAR: 203 Carteret St., Beaufort; 379-0052; Upscale dining, tapas; D.
BRICKS ON BOUNDARY: 1420
Boundary St., Beaufort; 379-5232; L.D.
BURLAP: 2001 Boundary Street, Beaufort; B, L.
CAROLINA TAVERN: 1714 Ribaut Road, Port Royal; 379-5959; Wings, ribs, sports bar; L.D.
CAT ISLAND GRILL & PUB: 8
GOURMET ON WHEELS: 812-8870;
Healthy home-cooked meals delivered to your door weekly; D.
GREAT GARDENS CAFE: 3669 Trask Parkway, Beaufort; 521-1900; L.
GROUCHO’S DELI: 81 Sea Island Parkway, Beaufort; 524-4545; L.
HAROLD’S COUNTRY CLUB BAR & GRILL: Highway 17-A & Highway 21, Yemassee; 589-4360; Steaks, wings; L.D.
HEMINGWAY’S BISTRO: 920 Bay St., Beaufort; 521-4480; bar & grill; L.D.
Waveland Ave., Cat Island; 524-4653; Steaks, seafood, pasta, burgers, more; L.D.
HOUSE OF TOKYO: 330 Robert
CITY JAVA & NEWS: 301 Carteret St.,
JADE GARDEN: 2317 Boundary St.,
Smalls Parkway, Beaufort; 521-9011; L.D.
Beaufort; 379-JAVA (5282); Sandwiches, soups, muffins, desserts, coffee drinks,; B. L.
Beaufort; 522-8883; Chinese and Japanese cuisine; L.D.
DOCKSIDE RESTAURANT: 71 Sea
JIMMY JOHN’S: 2015 Boundary St.,
Island Parkway, Lady’s Island, Beaufort; 5247433; Seafood; D.
Beaufort Town Center; 379-3009; Sub sandwiches; L.D.
THE DOG HOUSE: 381 Sea Island
JOHNSON CREEK TAVERN:
Parkway, Lady’s Island Beaufort; 770-0013; L.
DUKE’S BBQ: 1509 Salem Road, Beaufort; 379-4744; L.D.: Thursday and Friday only.
Republic St., Beaufort; 522.1866; D.
FAT PATTIES: 831 Parris Island
Gateway, Port Roya; 843-379-1500; L.D.
Beaufort; 379-0798; Sandwiches, soups; L.
MARKETPLACE NEWS: 917 Bay St., Beaufort; 470-0188; Sandwich cafe; B.L.
MARSH TACKY’S MARKET: 2137
Sea Island Parkway, Harbor Island; 8382041; Deli, frozen yogurt; B.L.
MARYLAND FRIED CHICKEN:
111 Ribaut Road, Beaufort; 524-8766; L.D.
MIKKI’S: 1638 Paris Ave., Port Royal;
379-4322; All-American Cuisine; B. L.D.
MOONDOGGIES CAFE: 930 10th St., Port Royal; 522-1222; L.D.
MJ’S SOUL FOOD: 1634 Sea Island
Parkway, St. Helena Island; 838-2009; L.D.
THE OLD BULL TAVERN: 205
West Street, Beaufort; 843-379-2855; D.
OLD SCHOOL PIZZERIA: 1638
2141 Sea Island Parkway, Harbor Island; 838-4166; L.D.
Paris Ave., Port Royal; 843-524-1995; L.D.
L.T.’s HOMECOOKED MEALS: Sea
St., Beaufort; 379-9300; B.L.
Island Parkway, Lady’s Island; 524-3122; L.
EMILY’S TAPAS BAR: 906 Port
Congress Street, Beaufort; 524-1961; B.L.
LADY’S ISLAND COUNTRY CLUB: 139 Francis Marion Circle, Lady’s Island; 522-9700; L.D.
LA NOPALERA: 1220 Ribaut Road,
PALM & MOON BAGEL: 221 Scott PANINI’S CAFE: 926 Bay St., Beaufort; 379-0300; Italian, wood-fired pizzas; L.D.
PAPAYA THAI AND SUSHI: 1001 Boundary St., Beaufort; 379-9099; L.D.
FILLIN’ STATION: 57 Sea Island
Beaufort; 521-4882; Mexican; L.D.
PIACE PIZZA: 5-B Market,
FOOLISH FROG: 846 Sea Island
LAZY SUSAN’S CAFE & CREPERIE: 31A Market St., Habersham;
PLUMS: 904 1/2 Bay St., Beaufort; 525-
Parkway, Lady’s Island; 522-0230; L.D Parkway, St. Helena Island; 838-9300; L.D.
Beaufort; 466-0735; B.L.
Habersham, Beaufort; 379-3287; L.D.
1946; Sandwiches, seafood, live music;L.D.
SO HOT MONGOLIAN GRILL:
809 Port Republic St., at The Beaufort Inn, Beaufort; 379-0555; L.D.
THE SPAGHETTI CLUB: 27 Market Street, Habersham; 843-466-3663; L.D
STEAMER: 168 Sea Island Parkway; Lady’s Island; 522-0210; L.D.
SUSHI SAKANA: 860 Parris Island Gateway, Port Royal; 379-5300; L.D.
SUWAN THAI: Paris Ave., Port Royal; 379-8383; Thai cuisine; L.D.
SWEETGRASS: 100 Marine Drive, Dataw Island; 838-2151; L.D.
UPPER CRUST: 97 Sea Island Parkway, Lady’s Island; 521-1999; L.D.
WINED IT UP: 705 Bay St., Beaufort; wine bar, tapas; L.D.
WREN: 210 Carteret St., Beaufort; 5249463; Local seafood, steaks, pasta; L.D.
YAMA: 1370 Ribaut Road, Port Royal; 379-2599; L.D.
YES! THAI INDEED: 1911 Boundary St., Beaufort; 986-1185; L.D.
A GUIDE TO DINING • All area codes are 843 • B = Breakfast • L = Lunch • D = Dinner • To feature your restaurant in the SPOTLIGHT, email theislandnews@gmail.com.
the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
17
voices
Santa Fe, NM – a glimpse into Beaufort’s future By Bill Rauch
Out of respect for their heritage, and appalled at seeing it eroding, The City of Santa Fe, New Mexico’s leadership passed in the 1990’s an inclusionary zoning ordinance. It was one of the first of these programs in the United States. Feeling its way, Santa Fe has continuously tweaked the program. The program today calls for twenty percent of all the houses in new developments to be affordable, down from thirty percent before 2009. Developers are exempted from the city’s roads, police, fire and parks impact fees, and they are exempted from the city’s expansion fee and water offset fee for these units. The total savings of forgiven city development fees is about $10,000 per affordable unit, Matthew S. O’Reilly, the city’s Asset Development Office Director explained last week. Developers also receive as a part of the current incentive package a density bonus of about three quarters of a unit for each affordable unit they build. Just as Beaufort was a hundred years ago a town of small farmers, shrimpers and traders, a hundred years ago Santa Fe was comprised mostly of small farmers, small ranchers, and traders. Then came the painter Georgia O’Keefe in the 1920’s when the town’s population was about 7,500. She was followed by a steady stream of artists, actors and musicians, and then by an influx of flower children from all over the world in the 1970’s and 80’s.
A reporter, publisher, ghostwriter and author, Bill Rauch was the mayor of Beaufort from 1999-2008. Bill can be reached at TheRauchReport@gmail.com.
Today Santa Fe’s population is about five times Beaufort’s, or about half that of Charleston’s. Santa Fe and Beaufort share many key similarities. Each has, for example, its own architectural style. In Beaufort it is the five elements of the “Beaufort style.” In Santa Fe it is the “Santa Fe style,” sometimes also called “pueblo revival.” After government work, in each city the major employer is tourism. Both are also destinations for active retirees. As more and more well-heeled newcomers arrived in Santa Fe in the 1980’s, the city’s historic district
became increasingly unaffordable to the longtime residents. That’s when the city’s leadership moved to impose inclusionary zoning. Out of respect for the dignity of those in the affordable units the city requires that the affordable units be scattered throughout new developments and that they be architecturally indistinguishable from the market-priced units. Founded in 1610, Santa Fe is the oldest capital city in North America, and the home of the second oldest national historic landmark district in the U.S. (after St. Augustine, FL). Its historic district covers about a sixth of the city. The City imposes architectural standards on all commercial and multifamily buildings throughout the city. The standards for buildings within the historic district are however, as is customary, more stringent. By contrast Beaufort imposes architectural standards on buildings in its historic district, and on its key corridors, but the five elements of the Beaufort style – the raised basement, that the building faces due south, the second story porch, the wing rooms and the wide center hall -- are largely lost outside the historic district. A notable exception is Beaufort’s new City Hall that reflects each of the five elements. In the boom years of the 1990’s Santa Fe and the unincorporated area just outside its borders engaged in a
development rivalry that is reminiscent of the 1990’s David Taub vs. Tom Taylor days in Beaufort. But in 2009 the New Mexico city and county buried the hatchet and reached an agreement on densities and inclusionary zoning reminiscent of Beaufort County’s 2009 Northern Area Plan. Today Santa Fe County requires fifteen percent of the units in new developments to be affordable, down from 30 percent when the county’s program was first instituted. Since the 1990’s about 4000 affordable homes have been built in the City of Santa Fe as a result of the city’s programs, O’Reilly added.
This McDonald’s Restaurant on Pacheco Street in Santa Fe is not in the historic district. Yet the city’s development ordinances required the owner to significantly flatten and reduce from two to one the “golden” arch, and to use building materials that are reflective of the area’s pueblo revival architecture.
Bugs come with life in the Lowcountry. Lying in the hallway under a plastic cup sits a large Palmetto bug that I just caught. My spouse, who is out working in the yard, has not agreed to come in and kill it and so I was forced to catch it. He, the bug, was running as fast as he could but I managed to trap him. Now two cocker spaniels are being kept out of the hallway because I know one of them will walk over, tip the cup over and let him loose. They are not fast enough to stop him. He is doing circles around the cup seeking a way out. There is enough pile on the carpet that he is still getting air. He gets up every once in awhile and does another circle. I get up from my desk and look at him from a distance. When I moved here, I realized I was going to have to put up with certain things. Long warm winters, a beach nearby, Palm trees blowing in the breeze
S e rv i n g
the
Now what?
HIGHLIGHTING DAILY LIFE OBSERVATIONS
Lee Scott, a writer and recent retiree, shares her everyday observations about life after career. A former commercial banker responsible for helping her clients to reach their business objectives, Lee now translates those analytical skills to her writings. She recently moved to St. Helena Island with her husband and two cocker spaniels. She enjoys boating, traveling and reading.
and sunsets that take my breath away. But what I wasn’t prepared for was the Palmetto bugs. Let’s face it. We know what they really are and I don’t want to acknowledge that word. I will use the other popular name, Water bug. We did order the Termite and Pest control service when we first moved here. The problem emerges every time we have a very heavy rain or when the
L o w c o u n t ry
bug control guy comes to spray. I swear I can hear the little spiders and bugs yelling under the house. “Everyone go upstairs. That man with the suit is spraying!” I know that because for at least twenty-four hours after he sprays, I find dead bodies around. This one sitting in the hallway under the cup was brought in by accident. I had an old baby gate outside for several
Since
1998
“YUCK! Ask me how much I hate these .....(censored)
weeks and brought it in the house before checking it. He was hiding behind the gate and I didn’t see him until I started to wash down the gate. I’m not sure who jumped higher, him or me, but I did manage to get the cup in time to catch him before he disappeared into a wall. Fortunately, I hear my husband’s movements in the garage. He is coming. My little friend will soon be a memory and the plastic cup will go into the trash.
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games page
Stay busy and entertained with themed crossword puzzles and Sudoku THEME: WORLD GEOGRAPHY ACROSS 1. *City on Seine 6. Sun Tzu’s “The ____ of War” 9. Sign of a saint 13. Rome’s Colosseum, e.g. 14. African migrator 15. Analyze 16. Religious devotion 17. Pillbox or tricorne, e.g. 18. Trojan War military action 19. *It has largest number of independent nations 21. *World’s largest Non-Polar desert 23. Beatle bride 24. Clinton or Gates 25. ____ along to a song 28. Movie “____ Girl” 30. Fish food unit 35. *Four Corners state 37. Captain ____ 39. Wasted on the young? 40. Former Attorney General of the U.S. 41. Streamlined 43. Cowboy’s prod 44. Circular gasket 46. “Happily ____ after” 47. Left or right 48. Ni 50. Carrie Underwood, e.g. 52. Clinton ____ Rodham 53. Cry out loud 55. As opposed to yeses 57. *Largest country 60. *Deepest lake 63. Infamous biker 64. *Dead or Black, e.g. 66. Implied by actions 68. Passion 69. Emergency Medical Services 70. Former anesthetic 71. Feline noise 72. French street 73. High-pitched
DOWN 1. OB-GYN test 2. “Summertime” or “Porgy and Bess,” e.g. 3. *Australia is famous for it 4. Preface 5. “Haste makes waste,” e.g. 6. Turkish honorific 7. Biochemistry abbr. 8. Hutu’s opponents, 1994 9. *Largest continent 10. One who takes drugs 11. Indian music 12. Reply to #37 Across 15. Olsen twin 20. “Too many ____ in the kitchen” 22. One of The Alps 24. Harass 25. *Second-largest Great Lake 26. Embryo cradles 27. Bouncing off the walls 29. *World’s longest river 31. Red ink in finance 32. Harry Potter’s professor Remus ____ 33. Short composition for solo instrument 34. *Number of capitals in South Africa 36. Goose cry 38. Owner’s acquisition 42. Swedish money 45. *Old Faithful, e.g. 49. Floral necklace 51. Hang around 54. Used in some surgery procedures 56. Type of edible ray 57. Of low density 58. Backward arrow on keyboard 59. Flat-bottomed boat 60. 1st, 2nd or 3rd in baseball, e.g. 61. Advil target 62. German song 63. Rapid escape 65. 2nd largest bird in the world 67. Give it a go
last week’s crossword & sudoku solutions
Attract informed, savvy customers. How? Advertise in The Island News. Call Nikki at 843-321-8281.
the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
19
paws here
Learn about all things pet related from medical to behavioral to just good ideas!
Dogs are not colorblind and other misconceptions debunked By Dr. Parker T. Barker Misconceptions in the world of dog ownership seems to be rampant. I am constantly amazed at what I hear our humans say to each other, with total conviction, which is totally wrong. It seems there are quite a few myths out there about dogs behavior so I thought now would be a good time to clear up some of the most ridiculous. Misconception #1: A dog’s mouth is cleaner than a human’s mouth. I will admit to occasionally licking my private parts. Most dogs, boys and girls, do. And we say hello by sniffing a dogs butt. So that is where my mouth goes. While it’s true most of the germs in a dog’s mouth are dog-specific and harmless to humans, that does not include where that pups mouth might have been. Licking the concrete, eating grass, lapping up dirty rain water, sampling some geese poop and all kinds of other gross items you would never eat yourself can make their way onto your face or even get in your mouth from your dog. Dogs that do not get their teeth brushed can also have tarter buildup and excess bacteria in their mouth. Another possibility that humans can get is worms. Double yuck. Imagine that the poop Fido sampled has microscopic worms that are easily transmitted. Maybe accepting that sloppy wet kiss from me isn’t the smartest thing to do. Misconception #2: Only male dogs hump other dogs. Wrong. Females do it too. Even those ones that are spayed and supposedly well behaved. Research tells us humping another dog (or leg) is an act of dominance and is perfectly normal. Misconception #3: Indoor dogs don’t need heartworm prevention. Wrong again. See that mosquito that just flew inside your house and eyed your dog like a buffet? Mosquitoes spread heartworms, and they can land on Fido indoors or outdoors. Heartworm prevention is very important to your dog’s health. A dog infected with heartworms
Cindy is a loving and playful girl with a bright personality. She enjoys the outdoors and is sure to become fast friends with her new family. Come spend some time with Cindy today at the Palmetto Animal League Adoption Center. She is spayed, microchipped and up to date on her vaccinations.
Dr. Parker T. Barker received his doctorate in Squirrel Chasing and Hoovering from the University of Hartford, CT Rescue Center.
faces a long, expensive treatment process, and that’s only if the damage isn’t too severe when found. Misconception #4: Dogs eat grass only if they are sick. Most recent research indicates that quite simply put, dogs just like to eat grass. If the grass is treated with chemicals then it could be hazardous to your pet. Some Vets do believe that dogs will intentionally consume large amounts of grass to induce vomiting if they feel unwell or have consumed something toxic, but this should not be a consistent behavior. Eating too much grass (or too often) may require a trip to the Vet’s office. Misconception #5: Dogs are colorblind. The canine retina indicates that dogs can see some colors, primarily blues, yellows, greens and shades of gray. Misconception #6: Dogs get all the exercise they need in the backyard. Dogs go outside to do their business and maybe investigate around, but they are natural pack animals and want to be by your side. If not with you, then napping in the shade is another option if you leave Fido outside. But it is doubtful that your dog is running laps in the backyard to get his cardio in for the day. You should plan to take your dog for a daily walk, hike, swim or any activity that gets them moving. Regular exercise helps promote stable weight and increases health benefits. Plus it’s good for you too. Misconception #7: All dogs hate cats. While it’s true some dogs may chase a cat and the cat may hiss and flick a paw or two, this misconception is false and is totally dependent on the dog and cat in
Kiara is a curious kitten with a charming personality. She is both shy and very loving, earning her trust is extremely rewarding! Intelligent and lively Kiara will enjoy playing little games with you as you get to know each other. Come visit with Kiara today at the Palmetto Animal League Adoption Center. She is spayed, microchipped and up to date on her vaccinations.
The Palmetto Animal League Adoption Center is open Monday - Saturday from 12 to 7 p.m. Email us at info@palmettoanimalleague.org or call 843-645-1725 for more information.
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the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
My friend Fred just taking a little nap outside.
question. For me, if it is small and furry, it must be a toy on the run, or a new kind of squirrel, so I will chase a cat every chance I get. My sister, Peanut, couldn’t care less about cats and just ignores them. That is why some cats and dogs can live well together. I will admit it is easier if you have grown up with them rather than being introduced to a cat after learning how to chase squirrels. Misconception #8: A little chocolate won’t hurt. Chocolate is toxic and life-threatening to dogs. Dark chocolate is more toxic to dogs than milk chocolate or white chocolate. But it is ALL toxic and can make Fido a very sick dog. As little as 1 ounce of dark chocolate may be enough to kill a small dog. So if I manage to get in the Halloween candy and those KitKat bars and Hershey Kisses are missing, I should probably go to the Vet right away. This is truly a case where “just a little can’t hurt him much” is just wrong. Misconception #9: A wagging tail is a sign of a happy dog. This is not always true. Tail wagging can also be a sign of fear, anxiety or impending aggression. The tail may wag slower, erratically or while inverted on a dog’s back. Look at the total body language before approaching a dog you don’t know.
And just because his tail is wagging, don’t go sticking your face in his face. Be smart about meeting a new dog. Misconception #10: Don’t waste your money on flea and tick products. Just feed your dog lots of garlic. Garlic may keep pests at bay during a short walk, but it should not be seen as a standard flea and tick preventative. Opinions differ on the consumption of garlic by dogs, but most agree that trace amounts are okay. So a small piece of garlic bread might be ok depending on the size of the dog. But a whole loaf? Probably not a good idea. The difficulty with garlic is knowing at what amount it becomes toxic to your dog. I recommend using a tried and true flea and tick medicine that your Vet recommends. Too much garlic can cause an anemic reaction, gastrointestinal problems and red blood cell damage, according to the ASPCA, all of which are not good for ol’ Fido. Misconception #11: A dry or warm nose is a sign your dog is sick. Dog noses are not always cool and wet, and occasional dryness is perfectly normal. There are also many reasons your dog may have a dry nose. A runny nose, colorful discharge or a crusty buildup is not good, so head to the Vet if you notice these symptoms.
what to do
Upcoming library events
See a great movie for $6.
Boulevard (rated R), Directed by Dito Montiel and starring Robin Williams, Bob Odenkirk, Kathy Baker Monday, Upcoming Events at the Beaufort Branch Library August 17 at 7 PM at USCB Center for 311 Scott St., Beaufort, SC (843)255-6430, www.beaufortcountylibrary.org the Arts, 801 Carteret Street, Beaufort Event: Go Green, Save Green Box office: 843-521-414.5 Starring the Date: Saturday, August 22th @ 11:00 a.m. remarkable Robin Williams in his final Description: Discover how ecological choices can be economical ones, too, from energy to dramatic performance, Boulevard centers household products. Learn what you can do as an individual to help the planet and your on a married but closeted 60-year-old wallet at the same time. bank officer, Nolan (Williams), whose spontaneous turn down an unknown Event: One on One Computer Help street upends his monotonous life and Date: Monday and Thursday evenings 5:30- 7:00 p.m. Description: Bring your Smartphone, iPad, tablet, or laptop in for assistance. Or need help marriage. with your resume? Drop in for one- on-one assistance. Computers will be available for those that do not bring your own device. FREE! Questions? Please email Stacey Inman at sinman@bcgov.net or call the Reference Desk (843)-255-6458.
Purifying Breaths and Yogas of Tsa Lung
You are invited to experience the selfhealing practice of Tsa Lung, an ancient Date: Mondays @ 11:00 a.m. and Tuesdays @ 10:00 a.m. Tibetan Bon tradition, at TheraVista: Description: Stories, songs, and finger plays. Ages 0-4 and their adult caregiver Conscious Community Haven every Monday evening, starting August 17, Event: Reserve A Librarian By appointment; Please contact Stacey Inman at sinman@bcgov.net or call 843-255-6458 from 7 p.m. - 8 p.m. Tsa Lung engages Description: One on one time with a librarian; All inquiries welcome, including smartphone your mind, body, and spirit with purifying assistance, etc. breathing and gentle yoga exercises. You will learn: Inner Refuge Meditation, Nine Event: Southern Author Kim Boykin Purification Breaths, and Sitting Yoga Description: Romance and women’s fiction author Kim Boykin will discuss her new book Exercises to revitalize your life force energy A Peach of a Pair and her journey to becoming a published writer. Book signing to follow. and connect to your deep self. A donation Time and Date: Tuesday, September 1, 2015 at 3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. of $5-10 is suggested. TheraVista: Contact info: Ann Cox (843)255-6458, acox@bcgov.net. Conscious Community Haven is located Event: Poison Pen Mystery Book Club on serene Lowcountry grounds at 263 Time and Date: Monday, September 14, 2015 at 5:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Brickyard Point Rd. South, Beaufort . For Description: Enjoy a discussion of mysteries over refreshments. more information, please visit theravista. In September, we’re reading The Cutting Season by Attica Locke. org or email Emily at emilydfj@gmail.com
Event: Wee Play (Too!)
Synopsis: Caren Gray manages Belle Vie, a sprawling antebellum plantation deep in Louisiana where the past and the present coexist uneasily. Outside the gates, an ambitious corporation has laid siege to the generations-old sugarcane farms, buying up land and replacing locals with illegal laborers. Tensions mount when a migrant worker’s body is found in a shallow grave on the edge of the property, and as the investigation gets under way, the list of suspects begins to grow. Certain the police are on the wrong path, Caren treads into dangerous territory, pursuing the truth about Belle Vie’s history and her own, and unearths startling facts about a very old mystery -- one that an increasingly desperate killer will stop at nothing to keep buried.
Event: Reserve A Librarian
Description: Need time with a librarian? All inquiries welcome. Time and Date: By appointment only. Contact info: Stacey Inman, (843)255-6458, sinman@bcgov.net
Event: One on One Computer Help
Description: Need help with computers? Stop by the Beaufort Branch Library on Monday or Thursday evenings; a tech expert will be standing by to assist you with all your technology needs! Time and Date: Mondays from 5:00 - 7:00 p.m. and Thursdays from 5:30 -7:00 p.m. – please call to confirm availability. Contact info: Stacey Inman, (843)255-6458, sinman@bcgov.net
Event: Technology/Resume Open Lab
Description: Bring your iPad, tablet, Smartphone, or laptop in for assistance. Need help tweaking your resume? Drop in for one-on-one assistance. A librarian will be standing by to assist you. Time and Date: Tuesdays at 3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Contact info: Stacey Inman, (843)255-6458, sinman@bcgov.net For information on any of the programs, visit beaufortcountylibrary.org or call (843) 255-6456. Please note: All branches and departments of the Beaufort County Library System will be closed on Monday, September 7th for Labor Day.
Thursday’s Chuckle
Read with caution; not necessarily the opinions of the editorial staff.
Democrats to meet
The Northern Beaufort County Democratic Club will hold its monthly meeting on Thursday, August 20, 2015 at Grand Army Hall, 706 Newcastle Street, Beaufort, with a social gathering at 6:30 p.m. and meeting starting promptly at 7:00 p.m. Please join us; all are welcome.
Citizens against Domestic Abuse offers volunteer training
CODA will be holding their next volunteer training beginning August 22, 2015. Training hours will be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on August 22nd and will continue on August 24th, 25th, and 26th from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. All four sessions must be completed prior to beginning volunteer activities. CODA volunteers will be trained in working with victims of domestic violence, answering the 24hour crisis line and a variety of activities working either on site in CODA’s offices and/or the shelter, or at various community events as representatives of CODA. Applicants must pre-register and an interview is necessary prior to the start of training. Interested individuals should contact Theresa Lacey at (843) 770-1074 ext. 225, or visit www.codalowcountry.org and click on the volunteer tab.
How to make a budget and become debt free
to benefit the Pan-African Family Empowerment & Land Preservation Network (PAFEN) to support their work to redeem and pay taxes on GullahGeechee property to preserve current ownership. Lane J Independent Associates will donate 25% of all proceeds from the sale of their affordable legal and identity theft programs plans. The “Help save Gullah/Geechee Land Fundraiser” will be held on Thursday, Aug. 20th from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., in the training room of One Beaufort Town Center, 2015 Boundary St., in Beaufort. The event will also serve as an after-hours business networking opportunity, and a “You be the Judge!” identity theft protection workshop. Invited speakers for the ID theft workshop include John Hall, an ID theft risk management specialist; SC state rep. David Mack; and Eddie Smith, Regional Manager. Identity theft protection and legal service plans will also be available for purchase on during the event at the Lane J Independent Associates office, suite 329, also at One Beaufort Town Center.
Law School for non-lawyers
This fall, the South Carolina Bar Pro Bono Program will be presenting a “Law School for Non-Lawyers” course at the Technical College of the LowCountry\ Beaufort Campus, located in the Auditorium of Building #12 at 921 Ribaut Rd in Beaufort. The “Law School for NonLawyers” is a seven (7) weeks course, on different areas of the law, which is offered to the public. The course meets one night a week, (6:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.) for seven consecutive weeks (September 1-October 13, 2015). The cost of the course is $45.00, which includes the textbook and all materials that will be needed for the course. This course will give the public much needed legal information and a chance to meet some of their local attorneys. This is a wonderful course that provides an insight into the legal system. The textbook and other materials that you will receive are a great resource for later use. If you, your staff, or members of your organization are interested in attending this course, please call Technical College of the LowCountry to register, at 843-525-8205, or online at www.tcl.edu/continuing-ed/ howtoregister as they will be handling all registration. Registration for the course ends at 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, August 26, 2015.
The Downtown Beaufort Farmer’s Market
Wednesdays, 2-6 p.m. Fresh local produce, plants, artisans, home baked and canned foods, crafts and more at Pigeon Point Park.
Plaza Stadium Theater
The Beaufort County Black Chamber of Commerce (BCBCC) will offer two free Friday 8/7 - Thursday 8/13 classes in August at the Chamber Office. Fantastic Four “PG13” On Tuesday, August 18 we will offer a DAILY @ 11:45-2:00-4:15-7:00-9:00 two-hour class on learning to do a budget and becoming debt-free. On the following Mission Impossible Rogue Nation “PG13” DAILY @ 12:00-4:00-7:00-9:25 Tuesday, August 25 we will offer a twohour class on credit repair. Both classes Pixels “PG13” will be from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at 801 DAILY @ 12:00-2:15-4:30-7:00 Bladen Street in Beaufort. All are welcome Straight Out Compton B “R” to attend. Call 843-986-1102 X 2. DAILY @ 9:30
Local business to hold fundraiser to save GullahGeechee properties
Lane J Independent Associates will hold the first business-sponsored fundraiser
Man From UNCLE “PG13” DAILY @ 11:45-2:10-4:35-7:00-9:15 Straight Out Compton “R” DAILY @ 12:00-4:00-7:00-9:40
Visit beaufortmovie.com
41 Robert Smalls Pkwy, Beaufort (843) 986-5806 the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
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VETE RANS
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Go to www.yourislandnews.com to see updated news and community information. You can also view the paper online, catch up on past articles by your favorite local columnists or post your comments.
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the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
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classifieds ANNOUNCEMENTS Struggling with DRUGS or ALCOHOL? Addicted to PILLS? Talk to someone who cares. Call The Addiction Hope & Help Line for a free assessment. 866-604-6857
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AUCTIONS Absolute Auction - Nice Mobile Home & Lot Plus Chevy Impala & Personal Property - Saturday, August 22, 10 AM – 410 Poor Farm Rd., Florence, SC - Damon Shortt Auction Group 877-669-4005 SCAL2346 damonshorttproperties.com AUCTION- Online Only w/Bid Center, 28 Lake Hickory Residential Lots, Caldwell Co., Ends 8/25/15 at 1pm, Bid Center at Hampton Inn, Hickory, NC. Selling Regardless of Price at the End of the Auction. 800-997-2248. NCAL3936. www.ironhorseauction.com ADVERTISE YOUR AUCTION in 107 S.C. newspapers for only $375. Your 25-word classified ad will reach more than 2.3 million readers. Call Alanna Ritchie at the S.C. Newspaper Network, 1-888727-7377. FINANCIAL SERVICES Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-446-9734
Experienced OTR Flatbed Drivers earn 50 up to 55 cpm loaded. $1000 sign on to Qualified drivers. Good home time. Call: 843-266-3731 / www.bulldoghiway.com EOE Join our Team! Guaranteed pay for Class A CDL Flatbed Drivers. Regional and OTR. Great pay /benefits /401k match. CALL TODAY 864.299.9645 www.jgrinc.com ADVERTISE YOUR DRIVER JOBS in 107 S.C. newspapers for only $375. Your 25-word classified ad will reach more than 2.3 million readers. Call Alanna Ritchie at the S.C. Newspaper Network, 1-888727-7377. MISCELLANEOUS AIRLINE CAREERS begin here - Get started by training as FAA certified Avia-
tion Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866367-2513
to be licensed. Protests must be mailed to: S.C. Department of Revenue, ABL SECTION, P.O. Box 125, Columbia, SC 29214-0907; or faxed to: (803) 896-010.
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE DIRECTV Starting at $19.99/mo. FREE Installation. FREE 3 months of HBO SHOWTIME CINEMAX, STARZ. FREE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2015 NFL Sunday Ticket Included (Select Packages) New Customers Only. CALL 1-800-2916954
SCHOOLS MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Become a Medical Office Assistant! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Online training can get you job ready! HS diploma/GED & PC/internet needed! 1-888-512-7118
Dish Network – Get MORE for LESS! Starting $19.99/month (for 12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE (Fast Internet for $15 more/month.) CALL Now 1-800635-0278 NOTICE OF APPLICATION Notice is hereby given that Lundy Baker DBA Southern Sweets intends to apply to the South Carolina Department of Revenue for a license/permit that will allow the sale and on/off premises consumption of Beer, Wine and Liquor at 917 Bay Street, Beaufort, South Carolina 29902. To object to the issuance of this permit/license, written protest must be postmarked no later than August 28, 2015. For a protest to be valid, it must be in writing, and should include the following information: 1. the name, address and telephone number of the person filing the protest; 2. the specific reasons why the application should be denied; 3. that the person protesting is willing to attend a hearing (if one is requested by the applicant); 4. that he person protesting resides in the same county where the proposed place of business is located or within five miles of the business; and, 5. the name of the applicant and the address of the premises
SERVICES - MISCELLANEOUS DIVORCE WITH OR WITHOUT children $125.00. Includes name change and property settlement agreement. SAVE hundreds. Fast and easy. Call 1-888-733-7165, 24/7 VACATION RENTALS ADVERTISE YOUR VACATION PROPERTY FOR RENT OR SALE to more than 2.3 million S.C. newspaper readers. Your 25-word classified ad will appear in 107 S.C. newspapers for only $375. Call Alanna Ritchie at the South Carolina Newspaper Network, 1-888727-7377.
LOOKING FOR A JOB? OR LOOKING FOR A LOCAL EMPLOYEE? Please send us your job openings or your qualifications to run weekly in The Island News classified section. Please direct inquiries to Nikki Hardison at nikki.theislandnews@gmail.com.
PLACE YOUR AD IN 107 S.C. NEWSPAPERS
and reach more than 2.4 million readers using our small space display ad network
Statewide or regional buys available Alanna Ritchie 888.727.7377 scnewspapernetwork.com South Carolina
Newspaper Network
Order by August 14th, Delivery on August 18th Mexican Beef & Macaroni Pie Chicken Divan Stuffed Eggplant (vegan) Cajun Fettucini Alfredo with Chicken and Broccoli Egg Salad over Fresh Greens and a Side Salmon Quinoa Cakes Vegetable Barley Soup with Mushroom & Onion Quiche
the island news | august 13-19, 2015 | www.yourislandnews.com
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