FREE June 6, 2012 VOL. 38, NO. 22
THE T H E NEWSMAGAZINE NEWSMA AG GA G AZINE O OF FS SO SOUTHERN O U THERN O OC OCEAN CEA NC CO COUNTY O UN TY TY HE OU UT AN COUN OUN OU NTY
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June 6, 2012
TO ENTERTAINMENT & ARTS
Lighthouse Film Festival • 36 • Reverse Order • 34 • ‘Surfcat’ Emery • 28 •
BL Gazebo Dedicated to ‘Moose’ - 14 Friends Send Books to Africa - 23 A Shore Form of Gardening - 25
2 The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
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CONTENTS
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
4
Features
BL Gazebo Dedicated to ‘Moose’..........14 James Morrison was ‘an asset to this town,’ says mayor.
A Shore Form of Gardening ..................25 Make it ‘eco-friendly,’ says this certified master gardener
Departments
Artoon ....................................................................................6 Business Notes .....................................................................34 Classified ..............................................................................39 Currents................................................................................14 Fish Story .............................................................................35 Sports ...................................................................................28 The Sandbox ..........................................................................6 The Sandtrap ........................................................................38 Sudoku .................................................................................48
Section Two
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Almanac .................................................................................8 Arts in These Parts ...............................................................26 Breakers ...............................................................................28 Calendar .................................................................................8 DVDiscussion ......................................................................32 Earshot .................................................................................30 Liquid Lines .........................................................................29 On Tap ..................................................................................40 Tweet Spot ............................................................................32 200 Plus................................................................................37 Cover Photo, Ryan Morrill: Swimmers compete in the cove during the Harvey Cedars Triathlon last weekend. Section 2, Michael Molinaro: One of the Lighthouse Film Festival entries draws discussion with the audience.
Ted Fluehr features High Quality Andersen® Windows & Patio Doors
Editorial and business offices are located at 1816 Long Beach Blvd., Surf City, N.J. All correspondence should be addressed to The SandPaper, 1816 Long Beach Blvd., Surf City, N.J. 08008-5461. Telephone, 609-494-5900; when extension is known, dial 609-361-9000. Fax, 609-494-1437. www.thesandpaper.net The SandPaper (ISSN 0194-5904) is published weekly January through mid-December by The SandPaper Inc. Distributed free on Long Beach Island and in Tuckerton and Little Egg Harbor, Eagleswood, Stafford, Barnegat and Lacey townships. Individual copies of The SandPaper will be mailed upon request at a postage and handling charge of $4 per copy. Subscriptions by mail are available for $41 per year. The entire contents of The SandPaper are copyrighted 2012 by The SandPaper Inc. Reproduction of any matter appearing herein without specific written permission from The SandPaper Inc. is prohibited. All rights reserved. We welcome the submission of manuscripts, photographs, art and poetry for editorial consideration. Please be sure to include an addressed envelope and adequate postage with the material if you want to have it returned. To discuss free-lance article work, call or write. Article suggestions are invited.
Publisher Managing Editor Executive Editor CURT TRAVERS JAY MANN GAIL TRAVERS Ext. 3020 Ext. 3034 Ext. 3030 Associate Editor Arts Editor Copy Editor MARIA SCANDALE PAT JOHNSON NEAL ROBERTS Ext. 3040 Ext. 3035 Entertainment Editor Typography Supervisor VICTORIA LASSONDE – Ext. 3041 ANITA JOSEPHSON Writers: JON COEN, JIM DE FRANCESCO, ERIC ENGLUND, KELLEY ANNE ESSINGER, THOMAS P. FARNER, BILL GEIGER, JULIET KASZAS-HOCH, RICK MELLERUP, MICHAEL MOLINARO, ASHLEY TEDESCO Advertising Director Production Manager Layout Supervisor CINDY LINKOUS – Ext. 3014 JEFFREY KUHLMAN ROSE PERRY Photo Editor Photojournalists RYAN MORRILL – Ext. 3033 KRISTIN BLAIR, JACK REYNOLDS Office Manager LEE LITTLE – Ext. 3029 Advertising Consultants ANDREA DRISCOLL – Ext. 3017 STEVE HAVELKA – Ext. 3016 MARIANNE NAHODYL – Ext. 3013 ALLEN SCHLECKSER – Ext. 3018 Advertising Assistants: KATHY GROSS, JULIAN WILLIS Classified Advertising BRENDA BURD, SARAH SWAN – Ext. 3010 Production & Typesetting ADRIAN ANTONIO, RAY CARLSON, JASON CASCAIS, DAN DIORIO, LESLEE GANSS, EILEEN KELLER, GAIL LAVRENTIEV, PATTIE McINTYRE, ABIGAIL PERARIA
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The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
50 Over of Years ise t Exper
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
6
Flawed Coverage Sugarcoats Truth About Sweeteners in Those Sodas By BILL BONVIE t’s no secret that as the fortunes of mainstream media have declined in recent years, so has the quality of news reporting. I say that having worked as both a reporter and editor at various times in my career. But last Thursday may have marked a new low in the standards of professional journalism. That was the day when the nation’s major network news organizations, together with the still-revered New York Times, managed to thoroughly misconstrue a story of limited significance that they had all decided merited major attention, even while missing a far more important story that revealed the basic inaccuracy of that coverage. Where to begin? Well, let’s start with the story they all chose to ignore, a development I was sure would rate front-burner treatment on the evening news – as was my sister Linda,
I
Excessive Partying To the Editor: I read with interest the article about Beach Haven Future, the newly formed business group that aims to create “a healthy and sustainable business community” (5/23). While this is a laudable goal, I hope that all business owners, including owners of B&Bs and rental properties, will be part of the discussions. I also hope that Beach Haven Future invests in a healthy residential community, even though its residents often change during July and August. It is during the summer that these new residents (renters and patrons of B&Bs) spend a great deal of money in Beach Haven – in lovely businesses such as How to Live, Regenerate and Lavish Salon, among many others, and in great restaurants like Barry’s, Buckalew’s and Uncle Will’s. Yet I believe that many people are dismayed, even alarmed, when they see the family-friendly atmosphere that prevails during the day and evening turn into a wild, drunken party after midnight. The intoxicated, obscenity-shouting, often destructive patrons of the Sea Shell, Marlin and Chicken or the Egg are not the ones who spend the most money in Beach Haven, yet they are allowed Continued on Page 12
who has been writing about this particular issue for the past several months as a blogger for an organization called Food Identity Theft, an offshoot of the Washington, D.C.-based Citizens for Health. That was the Food and Drug Administration’s denial of a petition filed in 2010 by the Corn Refiners Association to have the name “high fructose corn syrup” officially changed to “corn sugar.” That rejection represented a major, and all-too-rare, victory for consumers in an ongoing covert war taking place in this country against the forces of Big Agribusiness. The latter, more often than not, has been aided and abetted by government bureaucracy in dictating what we do and don’t eat, with very real effects on Americans’ health, waistlines and life expectancy. In this particular case, the stakes were extremely high for both sides. The fact is that during the past couple of decades, high fructose corn syrup, or HFCS, a laboratory concoction derived from government-subsidized, genetically engineered corn, has replaced the more-expensive, old-fashioned cane sugar as a sweetener in countless products and has been added to many others as well. But during the past few years, the evidence has been piling up that, far from the innocuous ingredient we’d been led to believe it was, HFCS is actually an insidious promoter of weight gain and all its attendant ills. In fact, there’s an actual correlation between the accelerated addition of HFCS to our collective diet and this country’s obesity “epidemic,” which has now reached the point where an estimated two-thirds of Americans are considered overweight or obese and children are being diagnosed with Type II diabetes at an alarming rate. And as more and more consumers have become aware of this linkage, many have been making a concerted effort to avoid high fructose corn syrup. As a result, some processed-food manufacturers have actually begun removing it from their products. Seeing its profits threatened by this development, the powerful corn-refining lobby has been fighting back hard. It began by launching a multimillion-dollar propaganda campaign called “Sweet Surprise” that made HFCS out to be perfectly natural and depicted its detractors as merely repeating vague, baseless rumors. Some of the campaign ads have also included the statement “Corn sugar or cane sugar – your body can’t tell the difference.” And that was the basis for the second part Continued on Page 30
Pet Abuse
Disruptive Alarm
To the Editor: On May 29, an exceptionally hot day all over the state but especially in the parking lot of Stafford Park, where the car thermostat registered over 95 degrees, we were stopped in our tracks by the agonizing howls of a dog in a black Range Rover. The dog was gasping for air through the narrowly opened side window. My husband and I frantically ran into both PetSmart and Dick’s, notifying the staff to announce that the dog was suffering from heat stroke. Unfortunately, no one in either store responded to the call. The owner eventually appeared while I was phoning the police department and promptly hightailed it out of the parking lot. I don’t know if the animal survived. Please remind your readers not to leave their pets in the car for even a few minutes. Pets are better left at home than in the car while running errands. Don’t put your pet at risk. Marlena Christensen Barnegat Light
The following was addressed to Surf City Mayor Leonard Connors. Dear Mayor Connors: I have been a year-round Surf City resident since 2009, and I truly enjoy my community experience here. Unfortunately, I find it extremely disruptive to endure the “fire alarm,” especially in the late hours of the night. The ocean breeze is delightful this time of year, and most windows are open to enjoy the evening air; however, several times during the night, the blaring fire alarm sounds, waking surrounding residents and children from sleep. This is extremely disruptive, especially for residents who must get up early for work, or the mother of an infant or a developmentally challenged child who must now try to comfort a child who has been assaulted by this extremely severe sound. I would think potential home buyers would be wary of purchasing a home in close proximity of the siren, especially if they were aware of the frequency and decibels of this Continued on Page 11
Winter Wonders on Long Beach Island: Blinking Lights and Teardowns By ANTHONY DiSIPIO elcome back, vacationers! Hope you had an enjoyable winter and are rested up for another beautiful summer on LBI. I was telling my lovely wife that I bet you wonder what it is we who live here year ’round do all winter. She suggested that I really need to find something to do in retirement. But, as a public service to those interested in such things, I decided to enlighten you about what goes on in a typical winter here at LBI … besides, that is, waiting with bated breath for you to come back the following summer. You might not realize that the first excitement we have here is the “blinking of the lights” festival. The traffic lights are turned
W
off – well, not off but to yellow blinkers. The ones left on are in Brant Beach at Farias and, of course, those leading to the bridge (no, they aren’t replacing it yet). And here’s the best part – the speed limit goes up to 45 mph! Just think, all you vacationers: If you came down in the winter and drove the way you do in the summer, you’d almost be doing the speed limit! I’m not sure if you came back down after the hurricane evacuation in August (I know, the big guy in Trenton told you to “get the hell off the beach,” but that was just “Chris being Chris”), but right after Labor Day everything just about closes. Those establishments that
do stay open offer an opportunity for us locals to experience the fine food available on the Island without the summer “ambience.” At Wally Mitchell’s in Surf City, you can make a donation to the animal shelter while enjoying a wonderful breakfast! My dogs, Lucy and Jake (if you haven’t been following my columns), would really appreciate it. Speaking of the dogs, once October comes, we’re allowed to take them back on the beach. We also get to collect sea glass without any competition – well, except for that lady who walks her poodle. The sea glass collecting was primo this winter: mild weather, good low tides and
plenty of good glass to be had. We appreciate those of you who throw your alcoholic beverage bottles in the ocean: Remember to try to keep them in the 106th to 98th Street area since I am having my other knee replaced next month. One thing you have to be aware of if you are a winter sea glass collector, however, is the trucks on the beach. There are several fishing tournaments in the off-season, and the trucks really jostle for the best spots. I’m thinking that maybe Long Beach Township might want to put one of those “spiffy” new solar speed limit signs on the beach to remind the truck drivers to slow down. Jake has enough trouble trying to cross the Continued on Page 8
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Continued from Page 6 Boulevard in the summer (he’s getting old, you know, as is the guy walking him). I’m not really sure why it is that you need a truck to go fishing. I mean, the apostles were fishermen, and I don’t remember any stories about trucks in the gospels. Maybe I just don’t understand, being from South Philadelphia and all. Speaking of the Boulevard, we also have been practicing stopping on a dime as you decide to cross the street anywhere you like and think the “crosswalk” law applies to you. We practice our quick-stop skills with the ducks when you’re not around, as well as the feral cats that abound on the Island in winter. You may not see them so much in the summer because I think they vacation in Florida, but once Labor Day passes, they are just about everywhere. They are quite a topic for The SandPaper’s winter hot stove discussions. Some of those cats, such as the 104th Street cat gang, are a bit rough. They have changed the direction of our walks a few times: Lucy isn’t very fond of them, but those cats stand their ground. We also seem to have a solution to the “bike problem” that occurs in the summer when bicycles seem to be everywhere and cause some traffic concerns. Several weeks ago in this very newspaper, a suggestion was made for a stationary bike path. Ingenious, I know. Several of our residents were taken aback at the brilliance of the thought. There is always the excitement of construction in the off-season. Observing the demise of teardowns is a wonderful way to spend six months as lovely Cape Cods are replaced by “OMG” reverse-living shore castles. We run a little lottery on what color the new castle will be. And, of course, no winter would be complete without the “ripping up of the streets,” one of our most treasured activities. Besides allowing for better monitoring of your water usage (read more money), neighbors compete for the honor of “most inconvenienced” as construction workers and police close off lanes and then entire streets as they replace whatever they’ve been replacing all winter. There was a point last winter when you could not get out of the Wawa at 132nd Street and get across the street to the bank without going to Fantasy Island! Of course, St. Francis is open “year ’round” and offers a spiritual respite from all of these worldly happenings. The Christmas Masses were especially beautiful this year, and Sister Kate just celebrated her 95th birthday! God bless! Well, that was just a touch of what happened this winter here on the Island. The really great news for my back was that there was no snow this year. Unfortunately, all that walking has caused my left knee to rebel so it will be joining my right knee in the world of metal and plastic. Just in time, too. Because as full-time residents know, we don’t come out much in the summer. But, hey, don’t let that stop you from having a wonderful vacation and making memories that maybe you might write about in a newspaper. See you in September! Y Anthony DiSipio lives in Beach Haven Park and recalls boomers having real knees in his humorous book, When I’m 64.
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Continued from Page 6 siren during the summer hours. The volume is extremely harsh and unnecessary in the current time of Internet and mobile communication for emergency departments. Some of the communities on the Island have a silent contact system for volunteers, including Ship Bottom. I would think our community would be better served to also have this “silent” system of emergency notification; keep the siren for a true community evacuation. Let me add my sincere appreciation for the courage and altruistic conduct of our volunteers. A silent system would not deter from the pride and respect we have for these local heroes it; it would just make our environment a little more peaceful. Linda Harper Surf City
Don’t Be Duped To the Editor: I’m having an “aha” experience. Mine occurs when I realize that those silly sayings my parents repeated ad nauseam contain more than an ounce of truth. For instance, “The pen is mightier than the sword.” Since you printed my “Scam Foiled” letter (3/21), I have received many calls from people who found themselves packing “insulation” as protection against an unscrupulous LBI contractor. Having read my letter, these individuals expended the effort to find my phone number and contact me, bemoaning their experience of having been duped by the same contractor. I find it hard to comprehend how such a dishonest person continues to do business on LBI. I find it equally incomprehensible that only one person of the 10 to 12 who contacted me has made any effort to seek compensation for his losses! I’ve done all the “prep.” The only action required is a phone call to Detective Jack Steinhower at the Office of Victim Witness Advocacy, 732-9292027, extension 2598, to report the “theft by deception.” A hearing at Ocean County Courthouse, Toms River, is scheduled for Thursday, June 7. I plan to attend. Take note, this is not a crusade. Costs for armor, large horses and pages have soared way out of my price range. I’m just curious to see how the justice system works for “the little guy.” So, back to the opening statement, Dad used to say, “God helps those who help themselves.” I translate that to mean as individuals we can take a stand for “truth, justice and the American way” and, with determination, succeed. Mimi Petka High Bar Harbor
To the Editor: Four outstanding voices! An onstage orchestra! A chorus in the background! Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber’s music! “All I Ask of You” at Surflight Theatre – what more can you ask for? Let me just say right off that I am on the board of trustees of Surflight Theatre. I have seen a lot of shows and been in a few, but I have never been blown away by a performance as I was with this one. I know I may be slightly prejudiced, but do yourself a favor and see “All I Ask of You” at Surflight before it closes on June 16. L. E. Chalk Haven Beach
Democratic Spin To the Editor: Difficult as it was to plod through so much Democrat/liberal spin, I got to the end of Carole Marks’ May 23 letter (“GOP Missteps”), where she appears to take an independent stance. Hopefully, she is sincere about the American people winning in the November elections. As she suggests, I am taking nothing for granted and getting out there and fighting for our country’s future. Thus, this letter. Carole, if you truly care about the future of this country, please don’t rely solely on liberal publications such as The New Yorker. Then you won’t be repeating such nonsense as “people wondering if the Republican Party has a secret death wish.” The spin on the GOP’s “about-face” on the payroll tax cut says nothing about the Republican Party’s pleas for fiscal responsibility, trying to prevent the financial turmoil now causing such unrest in Europe. And the GOP isn’t waging a war against “the labor movement,” whatever that is. It’s saying that the unions are part of the country’s financial problem. Consider the automotive and steel industries. Let’s also consider how union leaders abuse their members by spending wads of union dues to fund politicians whom many Continued on Page 30
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The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
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Continued from Page 6 to alter the town’s character, disrupt everyone’s sleep and deter many people, especially those with children, from renting or staying at a B&B in the future. People come to Beach Haven for the beach, miniature golf, shopping and other family activities, not to witness drunken orgies. I hope that Beach Haven Future will address this issue and discuss ways to change the prevailing culture of some of these businesses and their offensive patrons. All businesses should be allowed to flourish, not just bars and 24-hour joints, and all residents have a right to a healthy atmosphere in Beach Haven, even at 2 a.m. Mary A. Wischusen Beach Haven
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To the Editor: I became nauseous reading The SandPaper’s May 23 article in which Beach Haven Future shared its vision for Beach Haven with its sole purpose of “being committed to the creation of a healthy and sustainable business community.” To the casual SandPaper reader I caution: Do not be sucked into the plume of this smokescreen! The vision Beach Haven Future wants us to see is clouded by its self-serving agenda, fueled by its fear of competition and nothing else. Group members are playing us for fools! The truth is a group of restaurant owners have formed a legal N.J. corporation (Beach Haven Future) for the sole purpose of blocking a new restaurant from opening in our town. The group conducted its first order of business by filing a lawsuit against the borough and the owner of the proposed new restaurant, Joseph Cusomano, who owns and operates several successful Italian restaurants in New Jersey. By the way, Mr. Cusomano is also a resident of Beach Haven. Is this how we welcome new businesses to our town? This group is nothing more than a sham that has deceived and misled not only the taxpayers of Beach Haven, but even members within the group. This organization was formed to bring litigation against our town and to stall the opening of Cusomano’s Restaurant. How much is this going to cost our town and ultimately us, the taxpayers? Do you think Beach Haven Future cares? All members care about is the tourism cash going into their own pockets. By no means do they care about the business community. Let’s take a look at this so-called group of Benedict Arnolds. At its last meeting at Buckalew’s bar, where they had approximately 15 people in attendance, about half were employees of Buckalew’s and a few were just curious observers and not members of the group. Wow, what an established organization! I have read that Beach Haven Future is here for the long haul. Really? This group will implode so fast when one of two things happens: when it needs additional funds to support its litigation habit, and when the courts rule in favor of the land use board. Who exactly are the members of Beach Haven Future? Suit papers list Uncle Will’s Inc. (Tom Stewart, our beloved ex-mayor), J.C. Beach Haven Tavern LLC (Jay Cramner, the apparent ringleader of this circus), Barry’s Do Me A Flavor LLC, John D. Snyder and Frank Panzone. So then, who are the remaining 25 masked members? I call upon this group requesting full disclosure of exactly who its members are and if they contributed funds. The taxpayers are entitled to know. I also understand that certain pillar members of this group have contributed sizable amounts of funds yet have requested that their identities not appear on any litiga-
tion papers. Yes, we are entitled to know the names of the membership, so we can all make the decision of whether to patronize their establishments to give them money so they can turn around and sue our town. The audacity of this group to have an article about it in The SandPaper yet make no mention of its already filed suit papers weeks ago is disingenuous at best! Take a look at one of the known participants of this group, Uncle Will’s, owned by Mr. Stewart. Does he really believe an Italian restaurant will affect his establishment? Isn’t he the same mayor of Beach Haven who cost us taxpayers many thousands of dollars for his legal defense when he was sued for not having residency in our town. What did that cost us because of his inflated ego? My recollection is that he was forced out of office and resigned. History seems to repeat itself. If you have not obtained a copy of this suit I would suggest you do so. Here are just a few of Future’s contentions: “The unloading of trash areas for the proposed restaurant will be beneath the second floor bedroom window of the persons residing at Plaintiff Barry’s Do Me A Flavor, LLC.” “At the commencement of the hearing on the application, the vice-chairman of the Board was seen packing up the material in front of him at around 9:45.” Oh my, listen to this one. “A dissenting opinion from Mayor Charles E. Maschal, Jr., one of the members of the Board, was also issued and appended in the resolution.” The mayor’s dissent states that he felt there was a “rush to judgment by the Board” and the Board did not give “the application due diligence.” Here the mayor voted against the recommendation of the land use board, and Future still threw him under the bus. Count VI of the suit says, “… the board’s deliberations and decision were tainted by the fact that one of the board members who voted in favor of the application should not have participated due to a conflict of interest … As a result of the participation of the board member with the conflict of interest, the decision of the board is void and, without the vote of the board member with the conflict of interest, the application would not have been granted.” Let’s face it, we live in a very small community where everyone knows most everyone in town. If all board members were to recuse themselves from voting then I suppose we could have just turned this matter over to the wonderful Wizard of Oz. I have spoken with many residents about the proposed new restaurant. Not one of them had any objections whatsoever and only complimented the land use board for approving another restaurant coming into town. The Beach Haven Future suit is pinning its hopes on the perceived lack of parking, despite the fact that the property of the proposed restaurant was once home to a movie theater that had seating for more than 350 patrons. Beach Haven has little parking to begin with. Yet if the plaintiffs are so concerned about parking, there are plenty of municipally owned properties in town where parking garages could easily be constructed. Better yet, why not utilize the school’s large parking lot? I would be remiss not to thank our land use board for the talented executive leadership that members have shown during the course of this matter. We are extremely fortunate to have such seasoned and experienced people working on our behalf at no cost to the taxpayers. It does not get any better with people such as Vice Chairman Ron McMenamin, our Chair James Kelly, longtime resident attorney Stu Snyder, engineer Frank Little, longtime civic leader George Allen, and Gus Doyle. These are the people who truly care about the future of Beach Haven. I, for one, will not be drinking Beach Haven Future’s Kool-Aid anytime soon, and I urge all of you to join me. James P. Stanek Beach Haven
e n i h S r o in a R
13 The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
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The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
14
Business Owners Looking to Overturn Restaurant Decision
A
Ryan Morrill
NO PERMITTANCE: Shack owner Chet Atkins is pursuing ways to speed up the process of obtaining construction permits for the Causeway Shack he proved ownership of last year.
At Odds Over Restoration Plan
‘Causeway Shack’ Future Looking Shaky at Best By MICHAEL MOLINARO lans to rebuild the beloved yet dilapidated Causeway Shack on Cedar Bonnet Island have been held up for many reasons, but as owner Chet Atkins explains, it mostly comes down to money. “People haven’t stepped up to the plate,” said Atkins. “There’s been a lot of people huffing and puffing and talking about the Shack,
P
but when it really comes down to it, no one is really willing to help. I do have a group of contractors willing to do it at cost, but we’re not going to pay for the cost. It’s the kind of situation where everyone was asking, ‘What are you going to do?’ And now we know what to do, but can’t do it.” Atkins is owner of Jersey Outdoor Media, a Continued on Page 30
Bike to School 2012 Reading, Riding and ’Rithmetic
group of Beach Haven business owners who earlier this year voiced objections over a land use board decision to allow the conversion of the Tuckerton Lumber store into an Italian restaurant recently filed a lawsuit to have the approval overturned in Ocean County Superior Court. The new establishment at 100 N. Bay Ave. would be known as Cusumano’s. The owner, Joseph Cusumano, also has similar businesses in Camden and Atlantic counties. Tuckerton Lumber had opened the store in 2005 at the site of the old Colonial Theater. However, the building has been vacant for nearly two years. Jay Cranmer, owner of Buckalew’s Restaurant and Tavern in Beach Haven, said the group has retained the Archer & Greiner law firm in Haddonfield. A former land use board member, Cranmer said the decision was a departure from the board’s giving careful consideration to off-street parking, off-street loading areas and the proper handling of garbage and trash. He also said the appeal had nothing to do with the fact that a restaurant is proposed for the site. Rather, he said, the main objection was “the intense use of it.” “It appears that in an ill-advised accommodation to fill a vacant storefront, the board has chosen not to adhere to the parking, loading and garbage handling requirements in the zoning code,” said Cranmer. “A waiver for the 76 parking spaces and three off-street loading areas has been granted. Plans for a proper garbage and trash was never presented for public viewing.” He said the suit was filed “reluctantly” and hoped the matter could be settled before going before a judge. “We have had good discussions with the building’s owner (Tom Greenwald) about possible alternate uses of the building,” said Cranmer. The appeal was also filed at the time Cranmer and other business owners formed Beach Haven Future. Last month, Cranmer appeared at the borough council meeting and wrote a letter to borough officials asking that the group hold discussions with the council “to understand, identify and recommend solutions to the significant barriers and issues that confront the business community in Beach Haven today.” Cranmer said one of the problematic issues is parking. “We need to create additional opportunities
Calla Aniski
CLASS ACT: Southern Regional High School students, mostly seniors from LBI, line up May 31 for their annual ‘Bike to School Day.’ The cyclists gathered behind Ron Jon Surf Shop in Ship Bottom before taking off.
for parking for the business community by more effectively using the lots available now,” he said. “We can look to restripe and add more on-street parking places where it can be safely accomplished and investigate new off-street parking.” Greenwald, and Arnold Lakind, attorney for Cusumano’s, could not be reached for comment. — Eric Englund ericenglund@thesandpaper.net
Vehicle Ownership Program Aids Needy County, St. Francis Partner
T
he lack of a viable means of transportation often exists as a barrier to opportunities such as employment and child care for financially disadvantaged persons. Ocean County, in conjunction with St. Francis Community Center in Brant Beach, aims to confront and remedy this hurdle as it continues its Auto Ownership Program. “This program has provided used cars to lowincome individuals seeking to enter the workforce, in particular in Southern Ocean County,” said Freeholder Director Gerry P. Little. “Viable and safe transportation means individuals can access employment and training opportunities helping them to become self-sufficient wage earners. “This program not only provides a car but it provides a person with a renewed self-esteem and pride in getting back on their feet and regaining their independence,” Little added. The Auto Ownership Program is funded by a $71,630 Transportation Block Grant through the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. The block grant funds are used to refurbish some of the donated vehicles, to obtain auto insurance, provide repairs to some cars, cover the cost of driving lessons and ultimately help individuals retain jobs. St. Francis has been involved in the Auto Ownership Program since February 2001, said Lori Dudek, communication coordinator for St. Francis Parish and Community Center. “Family Services is a component of the center that is designed to prepare and support individuals receiving TANF and individuals with low income and/or low literacy levels to enter the workforce and become self-sufficient wage earners,” Dudek explained. “Because transportation is a major barrier, we have developed a program where vehicles are donated and repaired by local garages. “We also provide assistance with insurance, driving lessons, towing and repairs of the cars,” the latter in partnership with Ocean County Vocational Technical Schools. “Program participants are required to be involved with programs with support services,” Dudek added. Ocean County partners with local businesses to negotiate reduced costs for auto repairs and insurance policies. “We anticipate about 50 clients will benefit from this program this year,” said Little. “This helps with not just getting someone to work but also to doctor’s appointments, to day care for their children. Transportation opens up a host of opportunities to low-income individuals who are trying to make a better life for themselves and their families.” “It’s an important step to a better life,” Little said. “I commend St. Francis for working in partnership with the county and other agencies to help those who are in need. It truly makes a difference.” “St. Francis’s goal,” noted Dudek, “is selfsufficiency for clients in a work force program.” — Juliet Kaszas-Hoch
15
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The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
16
Brant Beach Section Fenced Off For Beach Work Demobilization
A
Ryan Morrill
MAKING ROOM FOR TRUCKS: The area being blocked off is in the Brant Beach section of LBT, between 39th and 42th streets, on the cutoff road paralleling Long Beach Boulevard.
fence around a section of the cutout road parallel to Long Beach Boulevard in Brant Beach, erected to create an area to help with the beach replenishment project demobilization, will be up for about two weeks, Long Beach Township Mayor Joseph Mancini announced at last Friday’s Board of Commissioners meeting. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers public affairs
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specialist Stephen Rochette confirmed the twoweek period for the fence, which extends from 39th to 42nd streets. “We met with the state and town on the matter last week,” said Rochette. “Basically, the streets closer to the beach are too tight for the large trucks to maneuver and get the equipment out. So this staging area is necessary to remove the piping and baskets and other equipment used for the project.” On Friday, the commission passed a resolution to temporarily mandate two-hour parking in this area, “so that people don’t clog that area but can still visit the businesses,” said Mancini. The latest schedule from Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Company indicates that the beach replenishment, spanning 31st to 57th streets in Brant Beach, is on track for completion by the June 15 deadline. The base contract comprises the placement of 1,200,000 cubic yards of sand, as well as construction of dune crossovers, sand fencing and dune grass plantings in the designated stretch, at a cost of $16.7 million. If the additional contract options are awarded, the total contract could be $17.9 million and include an additional 175,000 cubic yards of sand. During the public session of Friday’s commission meeting, a few residents expressed concern about the new dune walkovers, and they asked about handicap access points in the area of the beachfill. There will be a reduction in the latter, but Mancini said the new walkovers are “very gradual. … They’re probably easier to go over than our previous handicap accesses.” He added, “We’re not eliminating any handicap parking.” The mayor also pointed out that while the walk to the ocean is now longer post-replenishment, he hasn’t heard any complaints. “Give this a chance,” he requested of the meeting attendees. Bill Hutson, owner of Lorry’s Island End Motel in Beach Haven Inlet, checked out the completed areas of the project and found the walkovers are not too steep. “I’m impressed with the project,” he added. The next meeting of the Long Beach Township Board of Commissioners is 4 p.m. on Friday, June 15. — Juliet Kaszas-Hoch julietkaszas-hoch@thesandpaper.net
Barnegat Asks DOT for 72 Light
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n a resolution adopted at Monday night’s meeting, the Barnegat Township Committee is requesting that the state Department of Transportation erect a traffic light at Routes 532 and 72. Township Administrator David Breeden said a blinking light and stop sign for those entering Route 72 from Route 532 are currently located there. He said a similar arrangement is at Routes 554 (West Bay Avenue) and 72. “We had once asked the DOT for a light there, too, and that has not happened yet,” said Breeden. “With more and more traffic on Route 72, we need to find more traffic control.” Frank Troia, a resident of the Pinewood Estates mobile home community on Route 72, said township officials should consider a light near his development and the neighboring Brighton at Barnegat mobile home development. “I understand the need for one at Route 532, but during the summer, we have a real hard time getting out on the road,” said Troia. “During the weekends, it is almost impossible to be able to make a left turn and head west.” Tim Greeley, spokesman for the DOT, could not be reached for comment by press time. —E.E.
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The 30th Annual Auction benefitting The Barnegat Light Volunteer Fire Company, held on May 26, 2012, was an overwhelming success. The members of the Ladies Auxiliary and the Fire Company would like to thank the following for their generous donations and support. A La Cart Ahearns Seafood Alloway, Sam and Judie American BD/Ed Castro Americana by the Seashore Andy’s at the Light Barnegat Light Liquor Store Bay Ave. Plant Co. Benee Scola & Company BJ’s Wholesale Club Black Eyed Susan’s Boro of Barnegat Light Boscov’s Brandt, Nancy Brindley, Lacey & Tim Byrne Painting, Paul Byrne Callahan’s Cambria, Richard Cassidy’s Fish Market Cedar Garden, The Colella, Anne Cordrey, Bill & Pauline Costco Wholesale Country Corner Market Daub, Mike-Fedway Devine, Carol Dorchester-Dennis Gazi Doris Mae-Capt.Charles & Robin Elbe Faria’s Surf & Sport Foodies Catering Frank’s Produce Garden Center, The Gibson Family Giglio Awning LLC Greene, Elliot / The Shubert Organization Grimste, Fred Masonry Harvey Cedars Auto Harvey Cedars Shellfish Co. Haviland, Stan Haymarket Heitman, Ed How You Brewin?/ Village Brew Howard, Catherine
Inlet Deli Inman’s Realty Iron Butterfly Irwin, Robert Islanders’ Store Ive’s Five Season Rentals Janice Kelly’s Old Barney Restaurant Kubel’s Ladybags Larson, Kirk & Pam Larson, Marion LBI Arts Foundation LBI DreamMakers LBI Parasail Lex Mex Lighthouse Marina, Brindley, Gallimore Luedtke, Joy Real Estate LLC M.T. Burton Gallery Marie Maniez McGinty, Mary McHale, Claire Mitchell, Jimmy Montgomery, Joel R, Builders Mustache Bill’s Diner Neptune Wine & Liquor Store Nicholas, J. Coiffures North End Trilogy North Shore Inn Oakes, Carol and Surf Unlimited Oasis Grill Ocean Family Dental Off the Hook Okie’s Butcher Shop Orner, Jocelyn Pangaea Health Food Market Parente, Pat Peggy Ann Florist Pfeil, Chris Point Pleasant-Tim Fawcett Poppy’s Ice Cream Pottery Barge, The Prudential Zack Real Estate
R&R Marketing, Mark Brooks Ravioli & More Reardon, Ada Red Sails Salon Rita’s Surf City Robbie’s Loveladies Marina Roslund, Janice Roth, Alice SandCastle Bed & Breakfast Schwartz, Harry & Mary Scojo’s Restaurant Seastone Photos Seawife, The Selfridge, Bob-Cometa Copal Kitesurfing Serenity Design Shore Point DistributorsChip Thomson Smithville Inn Snyder Eye Group So Ocean Med Center Pharmacy Dept Spielberg, Marc Allen, Esq. Stone, Marie & Thomas Sugar Shack, The Surf City Pizza Surf Stylists Svelling, Jill TGI Friday’s Tiffany’s Salon & Spa Uniformity Van’s Boat Rentals Volpe, Angie Wagner, Lee Walter’s Bike Shop/ Ginny Darvas Washburn, Sponge & Veev Wave Hog Surf Shop White, Linda -Lu Lu Designs White’s B. L. Market Wicker Garden Wildflower’s by the Lighthouse Wink Wiseman, Mary Wisler, Merry
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n information booth on ďŹ&#x201A;ood insurance and storm preparedness will be set up at LBIfest on Saturday, June 9, by Long Beach Township emergency management ofďŹ cials. The LBIfest will be held from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Long Beach Township Municipal Complex and Bayview Park, 68th Street and Long Beach Boulevard in Brant Beach. Getting information out to the public is a key part of storm â&#x20AC;&#x153;readiness,â&#x20AC;? as itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s called â&#x20AC;&#x201C; especially considering an Island population of 100,000 or more in the summer. In fact, information booths at LBIfest and Chowderfest help qualify the township for points that in turn have lowered ďŹ&#x201A;ood insurance premiums for the townshipâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s homeowners. Those homeowners have been receiving a 20 percent discount on their ďŹ&#x201A;ood insurance premiums since 2008 as a result of the townshipâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s participation in the Community Rating System of the National Flood Insurance Program, said JoAnne Tallon, CRS coordinator. Most neighboring municipalities have reached the 15 percent discount level. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hurricane seasonâ&#x20AC;? started June 1, but hurricane preparedness is on local ofďŹ cialsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; minds all year, by necessity. An action plan is updated every year by the townshipâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Floodplain Management Committee, which consists of the township engineer, police chief and other ofďŹ cials. One new note in the 2012 Action Plan adopted recently is the place of social media as an effective way to inform the public of emergency procedures, such as mandatory evacuation. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The township OfďŹ ce of Emergency Management will also be utilizing social media such as Facebook and Twitter to get the word out during emergency events,â&#x20AC;? says a line in the â&#x20AC;&#x153;public informationâ&#x20AC;? section of the 2012 Action Plan. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Our plans are to have Facebook, Twitter and YouTube up and running on the townshipâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s website very shortly,â&#x20AC;? said Long Beach Township Police Patrolman James â&#x20AC;&#x153;Butchâ&#x20AC;? Hartmann. â&#x20AC;&#x153;By adding these three sources, we will be able to provide residents with quick, updated information along with some video. Using todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s technology, we are able to reach a larger audience in a more accurate and personal fashion.â&#x20AC;? Hartmann and Patrolman Brendan Kerlin are the new deputy coordinators for Long Beach Township Emergency Management. Coordinator is Chief of Police Michael Bradley. (There is also a township Emergency Planning Committee headed by the coordinators.) The police department website LBTPD.org describes Nixle, another information system
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Insurance AďŹ&#x201A;oat By Late Action Bad News Is the Cost By RICK MELLERUP ereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a classic good news/bad news scenario for you. Last Thursday, the House of Representatives, by voice vote, agreed with an already-passed Senate bill that would extend the National Flood Insurance Program by 60 days until July 31. Talk about last minute â&#x20AC;&#x201C; the NFIP was set to expire that very night. President Obama immediately signed the bill into law. If the NFIP had been allowed to expire it would have caused an, uh, ďŹ&#x201A;ood of problems in Southern Ocean Countyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s real estate market. Without the extension, no new polices or renewals would have been allowed. Try getting a mortgage for a waterfront, or even nonwaterfront but still in the flood plain property, without ďŹ&#x201A;ood insurance. More good news: It seems that Congress, both House and Senate, are ďŹ nally â&#x20AC;&#x201C; after years of politicking in the wake of the recordbreaking 2005 Atlantic basin hurricane season that brought us 15 hurricanes, including the expansive and expensive Rita and the notorious, New Orleans-threatening Katrina â&#x20AC;&#x201C; ready to move on a full, ďŹ ve-year reauthorization of the program within the next month or so. Now, for the bad news: The owners of second or vacation homes â&#x20AC;&#x201C; as Dave Wyrsch, owner of the Van Dyk Group, said covers â&#x20AC;&#x153;most properties on LBI and in Stafford on the waterâ&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201C; can expect to pay through the nose as the result of the Congressional agreement. Senator Tom Coburn, a Republican from Oklahoma, had insisted that a timeline for eliminating subsidies for second homes be included in the extension. The House, under the gun â&#x20AC;&#x201C; because, after all, how could any representative from an oceanfront district tell Continued on Page 32
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that will give daily updates via e-mail and text messages to people who sign up. For those who canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t make it to LBIfest, information is also available on the website longbeachtownship.com; click the â&#x20AC;&#x153;ďŹ&#x201A;ood awarenessâ&#x20AC;? tab on the left. Also, the latest publications for ďŹ&#x201A;ood insurance and ďŹ&#x201A;ood protection and regulations are made available to the public at the Ocean County Library branch in Surf City and at town hall, 68th Street and Long Beach Boulevard, Brant Beach. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was suggested that additional outreach could be achieved through the electronic newsletters generated by the LBI Business Alliance,â&#x20AC;? Tallon said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;That will be coordinated in the future by a committee yet to be formed for the Island-wide outreach that is required under the new 2012 CRS manual for outreach credit in the future.â&#x20AC;? Township Engineer Frank Little of Owen, Little & Associates led the committee through the action plan items at the recent meeting. Many are ongoing, and too numerous to list here, but they include street sweeping (the township recently acquired two new street sweepers through a grant and through sharing the services with Beach Haven); beach replenishment (the project between 31st and 57th streets in Brant Beach is scheduled to be ďŹ nished by June 15); storm drain repair (Ocean County added drainage on the Boulevard at 100th Street and from 105th to 107th streets, and the township installed new drains on East 69th and West 79th streets.) The townshipâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s OfďŹ ce of Emergency Management holds an annual meeting inviting contractors and architects to go over the latest local ordinances and building code changes, as well as federal and state regulations. That meeting is usually held in the spring, but will be in the fall this year, at a date to be announced. Yet another outreach program is the popular summer presentation by a meteorologist from the National Weather Service â&#x20AC;&#x201C; that date also will be announced soon. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Maria Scandale mariascandale@thesandpaper.net
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Yet Another Clam Grand ‘Opening’ CLAM TRAIL: Joni Bakum from Long Beach Township’s Parks Department and ReClam the Bay President Rick Bushnell flank the new artistic clam in Bayview Park.
In Eagleswood, Route 9 Poles Reach for Sky
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ravelers on Route 9 through Eagleswood Township have watched the progress of utility work in preparation for replacing the bridge over the Westecunk Creek. First, utility workers, contracted by Atlantic City Electric, dug four huge holes along the northbound side of the roadway and screwed large, threaded culverts into the ground. Then four 100-foot-high laminated wood telephone poles, about the width of three regular poles, were erected and finally fitted with wire last week. According to Atlantic City Electric spokesman Bill Yingling, the super-high poles were needed to make room for construction cranes coming to replace the bridge and will remain in place afterward. The two electric lines strung across the poles are a high-tension 69 KV transmission line and a 12 KV distribution line. The height of the poles along the north side is stepped down from the four 100-foot poles, flanked by two 90-foot poles, two 70-foot poles and then back to normal 65-foot-high poles. Now that the utility work is coming to an end, work on the bridge is tentatively scheduled to begin the week of June 11, said state Department of Transportation spokesman Tim Greeley. “The initial bridge work is scheduled to begin with the removal of the existing sidewalk on the southbound side of Route 9. That work is expected to take only about a week or so, after which we will begin the first stage of construction. During the first stage of construction, the northbound side of the bridge will be replaced with traffic shifted onto the southbound side utilizing the outside shoulder,” he said. Greeley said traffic would be maintained in both lanes through much of the project. “We may have to close and go to one-lane alternating traffic, but the majority of that work will be done at night.” The DOT anticipates the project being completed in spring 2013. Construction of the new Westecunk Creek Bridge is funded by a $2.9 million federal grant. The existing bridge was built in 1925 and has outlived its useful life. The new bridge will be raised 22 inches above the present roadbed height to meet federal flood standards. The DOT’s contractor, Ritacco Construction Inc., will replace the bridge in stages using pre-cast concrete frame structures that will shorten the construction time. The new bridge will feature one 12-foot-wide travel lane and a 10-foot-wide shoulder in each direction plus new sidewalks. — Pat Johnson
O
cean County ofďŹ cials have been working with the state to implement an enhanced delivery system for services that beneďŹ t senior citizens and adults with disabilities. The system â&#x20AC;&#x201C; the Aging and Disability Resource Connection â&#x20AC;&#x201C; recently became operational in all 21 counties. â&#x20AC;&#x153;With the largest senior population in the state of New Jersey, Ocean County has always made access to programs and services for seniors and the disabled a priority,â&#x20AC;? said Freeholder Joseph H. Vicari, chairman of the Ocean County OfďŹ ce of Senior Services. The new initiative, he added, ensures â&#x20AC;&#x153;seniors and adults with disabilities in need of long-term services and supports have information and easy access to community based alternatives.â&#x20AC;? The ADRC is a joint initiative between the New Jersey Departments of Health and Senior Services and Human Services. The 21 Area Agencies on Aging serve as the county lead agencies, in partnership with other state and local government and nonproďŹ t agencies, in the aging and disability services networks. In 1996, Vicari pointed out, Ocean County decided to house a number of related organizations that provide services to seniors, veterans and the disabled at the Ocean County One Stop Center in Toms River, which â&#x20AC;&#x153;made accessing services for Ocean County residents much more convenient because many of these individuals are eligible for a host of services. The ADRC takes this even a step further. Traditionally, services for senior citizens have been administered separately from those for persons with disabilities, even though these groups share many of the same needs and face many of the same barriers.â&#x20AC;? The ADRC provides consumers with improved access to community programs such as personal care, assisted living and nursing home care, housekeeping and specialized transportation. It also connects seniors and adults with disabilities with work and volunteer opportunities; Medicare, Medicaid and other insurance options; health promotion and disease prevention programs; housing; crisis intervention; and other home and community programs. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The ADRC is a key component of the stateâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s plan to transform our overall long-term care system to one that encourages communitybased services and consumer direction,â&#x20AC;? said state Health and Senior Services Commissioner Mary E. Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Dowd. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The ADRC gives consumers greater choice and more control over how, when and where needed services are provided.â&#x20AC;? Ocean County Freeholder Director Gerry P. Little, liaison to the county Department of Human Services OfďŹ ce for Individuals with Disabilities, and the county Board of Social Services, said Senior Services and Human Services continue to work toward becoming the connection for aging and disability resources while maintaining their Ocean County identity. â&#x20AC;&#x153;In addition to sharing the same building in Toms River, both Human Services and Senior Services are working collaboratively to provide improved access to information and assistance through trained staff and linking their respective websites at www.co.ocean.nj.us,â&#x20AC;? Little said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We commend the state for bringing a greater focus to these areas. Ocean Countyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s large senior population and its many individuals with disabilities will beneďŹ t greatly from this initiative.â&#x20AC;? For more information, call 1-877-222-3737 or visit adrcnj.org. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Juliet Kaszas-Hoch julietkaszas-hoch@thesandpaper.net
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Gazebo in Barnegat Light Dedicated In Memory of Jim ‘Moose’ Morrison By MARIA SCANDALE t was fitting that the clergy had everyone in the crowd touch the gazebo as it was dedicated on Sunday in memory of Jim “Moose” Morrison, because so many in the Barnegat Light community were a part of its making. The bayfront gazebo near the public boat ramp was paid for almost entirely with donations from those who knew Morrison as an owner of Kubel’s restaurant, or as a Barnegat Light councilman. The gazebo is envisioned to be a place where anyone can sit and relax by the water, or where concerts and other events can be staged. The dedication on a scenic Sunday drew a large crowd that enjoyed the accompaniment of bagpipes filtering through the bay breeze. Morrison’s wife, Arlene, read
I
a thank-you statement, saying afterwards that it would have been impossible to name all those who donated money, materials or time, because there were so many. The concept of the memorial gazebo began shortly after Morrison’s sudden passing in August 2010. Medford Cedar Products was the general contractor for the 18-by-26foot structure. The borough completed its finishing touches this spring to elements such as a stage in the front. “To all those involved in the construction, lighting, landscaping and music here today, for your contributions of time and materials to ensure this dream became a reality: thank you,” Arlene said. “It’s beautiful!” She also thanked friends and the staff at Kubel’s Too in Brighton Beach, and Kubel’s in Barnegat Light, where from the West 8th Street win-
dows the gazebo can be seen. “I would like to acknowledge a few special people: our grandchildren Jordan, Justin and Matthew, who worked for days last summer planning their annual lemonade stand, then donated all their proceeds to their Poppop’s gazebo,” Morrison said. “And Samantha and Anthony Ferringo, who saved their pennies and change from their lunch money to proudly present their donation.” The dedication came complete with blessings from clergy of three area churches: the Rev. Jocelyn Johnston of Zion Lutheran Church, Barnegat Light; the Rev. Steve Kluge, OFM, of St. Francis Parish in Brant Beach; and the Rev. Donald Turner of St. Peter’s at the Light Episcopal Church in Barnegat Light. Mayor Kirk Larson was one of several borough council members
Photographs by Ryan Morrill
ALL TOGETHER: (Left) Grandchildren and wife, Arlene, all at center, cut the ribbon. (Above) Mayor Larson with plaque from Morrison family. present for the dedication. Morrison served 15 years as a borough council member, up to the time of his death. “He was probably one of my best allies on council. He always had the feel of the people,” Larson remarked, then got smiles from those gathered as he added that it wasn’t any wonder, as many people as Morrison came into contact with as an owner and a chef at Kubel’s. “He was an asset to this town,” Larson added. He said the gazebo is a real tribute. “It’s amazing: just ask a couple people for a couple dollars to build an eight-foot gazebo, and look what it turned into.” The mood at the event was in remembrance, but light – planners
said it wasn’t meant to seem like “a funeral,” for that would not have been in keeping with Moose’s character. For that reason, the reverent hymn “Amazing Grace” wasn’t a choice of the bagpipers this time. Bagpiper David Connelly of Barnegat Light said he knew Morrison since 1997, and knew him as “a good man who would do anything for anyone.” Connelly was joined by his two sons, Sean, 16, and David, 11, on their own bagpipes in playing tunes that included “Yankee Doodle Dandy” and “When the Saints Go Marching In.”
Police Officer Is Hired: Tuckerton Chief’s Son
J
Pat Johnson
ALL IN THE FAMILY: Tuckerton Police Chief Michael Caputo swears in his son Joseph Caputo as a new full-time patrolman. Jennifer Caputo holds 8-month-old Joseph Jr., who proudly wears a Tuckerton patch on his onesie.
oseph Caputo stood with his wife, Jennifer, and their 8-month-old son, Joseph Jr., as his dad, Police Chief Michael Caputo, pinned the police officer badge on his chest. The Tuckerton borough mayor and council then took a five-minute pause in the municipal meeting Monday night so the family could take lots of pictures. Officer Joe Caputo has worked for the borough as a temporary officer for eight months, after coming there from Seaside. The 29-year-old was laid off from Seaside during the economic downturn. Chief Caputo said his son would be working the midnight shift, so they be won’t be working together. “Oh, yeah, he has to start at the bottom,” said the chief. Joseph Caputo will fill the spot left empty when Cpl. Matt Caufield retired in September. The Tuckerton Police Department now has eight officers plus the chief. Last month, two officers were promoted to corporal, Justin Cherry and John Sanzari.
Chief Caputo gave the police report for May when the regular borough council meeting resumed. The department opened 38 new investigations and made 16 “on-view” arrests plus six for outstanding warrants. They made 137 motor stops resulting in 78 summonses, including three DWI arrests. They responded to eight domestic violence calls, eight motor vehicle accidents, three fire calls and 35 first aid calls. They also made 54 property checks. Caputo congratulated Cherry and Patrolman Brian Olsen for receiving the 2012 New Jersey Narcotic Officer Association’s distinguished service award at the NJNOA conference in Atlantic City. He also commended Patrolman Robert Grant for making “several arrests” in connection with burglary investigations. “By his work with local pawn shops, he was able to return $1,600 in jewelry and electronics and made one arrest in an ongoing investigation.” Also, three stolen dirt Continued on Page 31
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HUMANITARIAN ACT: Stafford Library Friends (from left) Barbara Ferell, Nora DeRosa, Mary Ann Boyler, Barbara Liberti and Marion Gwynn packed 30 boxes of books, soon to be en route to Africa, through the Subayo Foundation in New York City.
From Stafford for Africa: Books Go to Impoverished Countries
T
hanks to the Friends of the Stafford Branch of the Ocean County Library, youngsters in impoverished areas in Africa will be receiving desperately needed reading materials. On May 30, the volunteer group loaded 30 boxes of books in a van headed to the Subayo Foundation, a New York Citybased group dedicated to improving the lives of African women and children. The donations included textbooks, children’s books, history and geography books and instructional manuals. “These books will be sent to rural parts of Africa where, in most parts, there may be only 10 to 15 books and they’re all in very poor condition,” said Nora De Rosa, Friends president. “These books will be welcomed with open arms.” DeRosa said books came from individual donations or volumes that the library had taken out of circulation. She said the drive began earlier in the year, after the Friends heard about a group donating books to the organization from Monmouth County. She estimated about 800 books will be going to Africa. “Some of the books are duplicate copies, and the library periodically reviews its inventory because they have to make room for newer books” she said. “These are the books that we sell at our monthly book sales. There are some that we haven’t been able to sell and we really don’t have a lot of room to store them in, so we needed to do something with them. I’m glad that they’re going to a place where they will get a lot of use. It doesn’t do much good to have them sitting around here.” Mbumwae Suba Smith, founder of Subayo, said the books would probably go to areas in Ghana and Zambia. She said the group collects and ships approximately 25,000 books a year. She said Subayo’s goal is to complement the work of community organizations, government, ministries and development that aim to improve standards of living “in the community as a whole.” “Its aim is to develop practical initiatives that have direct impact on mitigating poverty,” Smith said. “By targeting programs to specific women and children, populations which have
been traditionally left out of other economic development programs, the foundation has found that these women reinvest more tangibly in their communities, resulting in raising the standard of living of the demographic groups, namely children.” Smith, who was born in Zambia in 1953, said events of her childhood gave her a strong conviction that she should maintain her ties to Africa – particularly to help women benefit from a system of support and education. Smith said when she lost her father at a young age, she and her older sister worked together to ensure that their five younger siblings “would prosper through education, making sure that the younger children would have an opportunity to study at a university.” “Education is the most important investment you can make in a child,” she said. “In these countries, you have buildings that once were libraries, but now they don’t have any books inside and the people can’t learn. That’s why we need a lot of help in rebuilding these communities.” — Eric Englund ericenglund@thesandpaper.net
Assault Complaint Leads To Narcotics Charges
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response to an assault resulted in a Barnegat Township man’s arrest on several drug complaints last month. Lt. Keith Germain said that on May 24, Officer Sarah Girgenti arrested Michael Connolly, 27, for simple assault after responding to a dispute at his Mizzen Drive address. Germain said that after the arrest, members of the department’s investigation unit conducted a consent search of the home, where they discovered anabolic steroids, suboxone and hypodermic syringes. Aside from the assault complaint, Connolly was charged with third degree possession of suboxone, possession of steroids and possession of hypodermic syringes. He was lodged in the Ocean County Jail in lieu of $50,000 bail. —E.E.
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By PAT JOHNSON arilyn Stein lives on a lagoon off the Great Bay Wildlife Management Area in Little Egg Harbor. She and her husband, Don, are mindful of Barnegat Bay and the salt marsh estuary they see right out their door. Like many others who live near the bay, they have a mostly stone yard, but unlike others, they don’t spray for weeds or pests. Instead, to keep landscape chemicals out of the bay, Marilyn practices Integrated Pest Management and pulls weeds by hand. Yet Stein has a huge, colorful garden that takes up much of her property, a garden that starts in the front with roses and perennials, winds around the side with an arborvitae border, and ends in a lush rose, hydrangea, perennial garden in the back. Her yard took nine years to come to its full glory and in that time Stein became a certificated master gardener, a title she earned by participating in the Rutgers Agricultural Cooperative Extension of Ocean County’s Master Gardener program. “I don’t use any pesticides or fertilizers. I just use good, augmented compost and soil,” she said as she pointed out fragrant Paul McCartney roses, butterfly bushes, spirea, hydrangea varieties, native beach plum, iris and foxglove plants. Her solution for weeding is part recipe and part technique. “I take a pointed spade and dig under the weed, then twist it. The secret is to twist the weed as you pull, and that gets all the roots. You can fill a spray bottle with vinegar and spray weeds; that will kill most varieties.” Her flat-coated retriever, Jaxie, stayed happily inside during this midmorning tour that included swatting at clouds of gnats. But speaking of dogs, one of Stein’s pet peeves is when people throw their dog’s waste into the weeds. “It enters the storm drains and eventually the bay.
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Inlet Sinking New Phone App Launched for Rip Currents Coincides With National Rip Current Awareness Week
Coast Guard Rescues Six
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he name of the 38-foot fishing vessel, homeported in Forked River, was the Southern Comfort. Unfortunately on the morning of Thursday, May 31, the Southern Comfort was on the rocks. At approximately 7:45 a.m. Coast Guard Sector Delaware Bay watchstanders in Philadelphia received a distress call on VHF-FM radio from the Southern Comfort. The boat had run aground and was taking on water near the north jetty of Barnegat Inlet. Two vessels, a 25-foot response boat and a 47-foot motor life boat, were dispatched from Coast Guard Station Barnegat Light. When the Coast Guard crews arrived on the scene it was discovered that the Southern Comfort’s crew had abandoned their vessel and boarded a life raft. The Coasties rescued the six crew members and took them ashore where emergency medical responders evaluated the men and reported no injuries. Rescued were the vessel’s captain, Albert G. Stork, and Dennis R. Koleszar, both of Forked River, Gary Mertz of Northampton, Pa., Bill Sagion of Little Egg Harbor, Albert Kristoff of Glenshaw, Pa., and John Wargofchik of Greensburg, Pa. Following the rescue, the fishing vessel
By JULIET KASZAS-HOCH he first full week of June is designated as National Rip Current Awareness Week to increase mindfulness of this danger among beachgoers as the summer vacation season begins. This year, a new smartphone app created by Stevens Institute of Technology students can assist lifeguards in identifying and cataloguing rip current occurrences, hopefully helping to keep swimmers safe. Rip currents, also called undertoe – strong, narrow currents retreating from the beach back into the surf – “are potentially one of the deadliest natural phenomena,” says Kim Kosko, New Jersey Sea Grant Consortium director of communications. “However, they tend to receive far less publicity than other natural hazards because our understanding of them is still somewhat limited.” Continued on Page 31 At last Friday’s Long Beach Township Board of Commissioners meeting, resident Bob Irvine, a longtime rip current awareness advocate, pointed out that two people have drowned at the Jersey shore already this summer. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration rip current safety webpage, www.ripcurrents.noaa.gov/week. shtml, “On average, more people die every year from rip currents than from shark attacks. According to the United States Lifesaving Association, 80 percent of surf beach rescues are attributed to rip currents, and more than 100 people die annually from drowning in rip currents. “The strongest rip currents can attain speeds reaching eight feet per second; this is faster than an Olympic swimmer can sprint!” “Rip currents kill,” Irvine remarked, and this time of year is particularly dangerous because the water is warm enough to swim but there are no lifeguards on duty. “You end up having to save yourself,” he remarked. To stay safe when in the water, be aware of the danger of rips, swim near a lifeguard if possible, and if caught in a rip, yell for help and try to swim parallel to the beach until WHITE GLOVES: Tuckerton Elementary fifth-graders free of the current. Do not attempt (above) cleaned the beach with teacher Tom Smith (right). to swim straight back to shore, fighting the current. This summer, when LBI lifeguards begin duty (June 16 or June 23, depending on the town), those in the app pilot program can utilize this new mobile device technology, uring the summer, Little Egg Harbor resident Tom developed at the request of NJSGC Smith is a Ship Bottom lifeguard and lieutenant on coastal processes specialist Jon the beach patrol. During the winter he is a physical Miller, “to collect and distribute education teacher at Tuckerton Elementary School. “My up-to-the-minute rip current data philosophy of life is ‘Teach and Beach,’” he said while and related information,” increasing herding a group of Tuckerton Elementary fifth-graders onto both awareness and understanding the familiar sands of Ship Bottom on Tuesday. of rips, said Kosko. The students were there to do a beach cleanup and to Under the supervision of senior learn beach etiquette, said Smith. “You know, don’t feed design instructor David Klappholz, the sea gulls, don’t shake your blanket in someone’s face, Stevens Institute of Technology honor other people’s personal space. computer science design course “I’ve been doing this every year,” he added. seniors Christopher Seeley, Ralph Smith also uses the expertise he’s garnered from 17 Mattiaccio, Ken Bodzak, Will years on the beach patrol to teach rip current awareness and Continued on Page 31
T
Courtesy U.S. Coast Guard
GOING DOWN: The 38-foot fishing vessel Southern Comfort (above) hit the rocks while navigating the Barnegat Inlet on May 31 and later sank. Captain and crew left on a life raft and were picked up by the Coast Guard out of Station Barnegat Light.
Teacher/SB Lifeguard Believes in Etiquette
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beach safety. “The first thing we do is spot the rip currents (to avoid) and I teach them to read the wind. If it’s a north wind, then you want to get into the ocean on the north side of the safety zone and drift down with the current.” The kids don’t get to swim during this field trip, but Smith believes they will remember his tips on safety, enjoying the ocean all summer
long. After scouring the beach for trash that the beach rake has missed, “small stuff like bits of plastic and cigarette butts,” students piled into the bus to go over to the bay beach for a picnic lunch. They then returned to school for afternoon classes, maybe taking a bit of sand in their shoes and LBI with them. —P.J.
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27 The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Memorial Day Camp Monday, 5/28/12 9:00-4:00
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
28
Southern VB-ers Battle Bayonne In Semifinals Rams-Fair Lawn Rematch Likely
T
he 2012 high school boys volleyball state championship match could look very much like the 2011 version. Fans of coach Eric Maxwell’s Southern Regional team, however, would like to see a different outcome. Last June, Fair Lawn defeated the Rams, who were the state champs the two previous years, in the title clash. If state rankings hold, the two squads will meet once again this Thursday in the final match of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association’s Tournament of Champions. Fair Lawn (35-4), the North Jersey Section I champ, was set to square off against Cinnaminson (24-8), the kings of Central Jersey, at 5 p.m. on Tuesday (after The SandPaper’s deadline) in South Brunswick in the first TOC semifinal match. Southern (38-1), South Jersey’s finest, will tangle with Bayonne (29-5), the rulers of North Jersey Section II, in the other semi, set for 6:30 p.m. The winners will face each other, again in South Brunswick, at 5 p.m. on Thursday. According to Star-Ledger rankings, a Southern/Fair Lawn rematch is almost inevitable. The Rams are rated as the top team in New Jersey while Fair Lawn is second. Bayonne is only ranked ninth, while Cinnaminson checks in at 10th. And Southern has already handed Bayonne two of its five losses (for the record, the Rams also defeated Fair Lawn in the regular season). Of course, that’s why the games are played on a court and not on paper. Still, if the Rams and Cutters do end up meeting each other once again, it should be quite the match, a regular irresistible-force-meetsimmovable-object scenario. Fair Lawn is led by junior outside hitter Chris Nugent, who went into Tuesday’s action with a state-leading 417 kills. The Rams, meanwhile, feature sophomore Mike Gesicki, a middle blocker who has 118 blocks on his 2012 resume. Both teams entered the TOC on a roll. Neither Southern nor Fair Lawn was stretched to a third game in any of their sectional tournament victories. Maxwell’s charges had no problem at all putting Eastern away in the South Jersey title match last Friday, 25-14, 25-18. The usual suspects all contributed big time in the win, with Gesicki scoring eight kills while senior outside hitters Tyler Wilk and Joe Niccoli added six and five of their own. Senior libero Sal Annarumma made his presence known with 11 digs while junior setter Luke King had 22 assists and senior Kurt Deixler, known as a defensive specialist, helped on the scoreboard with seven service points. — Rick Mellerup rickmellerup@thesandpaper.net
Photographs by Ryan Morrill
Swim, Bike, Run in First HC Triathlon Ultimate Fitness Test GRUELING MORNING: Sunny but cool temperatures greeted some 125 participants in the first Harvey Cedars Triathlon on Sunday. There were two races – one for lessexperienced competitors and another for more-seasoned athletes. (Clockwise from top left) Christina Judge of Marlboro was the top female finisher in first event. Swimmers enter the bay at Sunset Park. Renee Ortner of Manahawkin rounds the bend. Brendan Corcoran of Ridgewood was top male finisher in the first race. Swimmers exit the water for the biking portion.
29
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30 Continued from Page 6 of their counterattack: the petition to the FDA to replace that now-odious high fructose corn syrup moniker with the “corn sugar” label instead. They claimed this would help clear up any “confusion” on the part of consumers. That it would only create more confusion, however, was apparent from the fact that “corn sugar” was already the official name for another substance, also known as dextrose, which happens to be fructose-free – an essential distinction for people who have problems assimilating fructose. The CRA was well aware of that little problem, and tried to dismiss its significance in framing that petition, but was decisively rebuffed in that attempt by the FDA. Whether the public’s overwhelming opposition to the name change, as reflected in the thousands of comments on the petition, helped influence its rejection by the FDA is anybody’s guess. But there was another major reason the agency gave for turning thumbs down on the petition that directly contradicts last Thursday’s “big story” – the much-debated ban on supersized versions of so-called “sugary drinks” proposed by New York City’s health-conscious mayor, Michael Bloomberg, as hizzoner’s way of “doing something” about the “nationwide problem” of obesity. At this point, there’s little need to rehash the rhetorical wrangle unleashed by Bloomberg’s announcement, which first appeared as the lead story in Thursday’s New York Times and went on to dominate every evening network newscast. What is important to note is that it was based on a totally fallacious premise that remained unquestioned by all of the reporters, correspondents and commentators covering the controversial edict, including those on the more-analytical PBS. And that erroneous hypothesis was that the beverages at issue are “sugary” ones, a notion further compounded by network graphics depicting sugar cubes and catch-phrases such as “sugar wars” used in a follow-up by ABC, when, in fact, nearly all the soft drinks involved contain no actual sugar. With the exception of a handful of retro entries in the soda market such as “Pepsi Throwback,” just
Shack
Continued from Page 14 company that owns the billboard immediately adjacent to the Shack. Atkins proved title of the Shack last year after several years of research and thousands of dollars in lawyer fees. The estimated cost for the Shack’s restoration is $25,000. Donations have been made through jerseyoutdoor.com to a link for the Shack fund, though Atkins is surprised at the lack of larger donations. This may be due to what Stafford Township Historical Society President Tim Hart once explained: less interest in the Shack by locals than by summer vacationers who see the Shack as a welcome mat back to their beach houses each year. “I have some of the best builders in the area and architects willing to do work for free. What we need is materials: cedar shakes, treated wood, hurricane windows. Everything’s got to be treated because it’s right on the water. We’re ready to go but we just don’t seem to have much interest in it. Isn’t that strange? We’ve done mass e-mails asking for donations for the Shack and only one major donation was made.” Atkins hopes to rebuild the Shack as it was through the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s, when it was known as the Happy Days Gunning Shack. It would appear as old, yet rebuilt to last. Design will be based on photographs and paintings from that era. Before materials, Atkins needs construction permits. “We’re getting very, very close to being able to pull local permits,” Atkins said. “We have some laws we’ve been looking at that basically tell us that the Shack has been there for quite a few years. We have proof the Shack has been there quite a few years. And as far as we can tell,
about all such drinks are sweetened with the aforementioned high fructose corn syrup. Now, I know that some “experts” like to maintain that there’s no real difference, and that we’re talking about things that have the same caloric content. But not all calories are created equal. The characteristics of high fructose corn syrup are by no means identical to those of old-fashioned sugar. And if the news media had bothered giving that first story I mentioned equal time – or even the time of day, the Times not even having bothered to include it in “all the news that’s fit to print” – they couldn’t have helped but been aware that HFCS and sugar are not considered to be one and the same. That’s because, right there in that May 30 rejection letter from Michael M. Landa, director of the FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, to CRA President Audrae Erickson, it plainly states that according to the FDA’s regulatory approach, “sugar is a solid, dried, and crystallized food; whereas syrup is an aqueous solution or liquid food” and that “HFCS is an aqueous solution sweetener derived from corn after enzymatic hydrolysis of cornstarch, followed by enzymatic conversion of glucose (dextrose) to fructose. Thus, the use of the term ‘sugar’ to describe HFCS, a product that is a syrup, would not accurately identify or describe the basic nature of the food or its characterizing properties.” But, of course, you don’t have to be a scientist to realize that high fructose corn syrup is not simply sugar by another name. You just have to be old enough to remember when kids and adults consumed substantial amounts of genuinely “sugary” drinks, along with candy bars and lots of other sugar-laden goodies, and only a small percentage of them were ever classified as being overweight (let alone diabetic). But, oddly, I didn’t see or hear high fructose corn syrup mentioned once in all the coverage and chatter about the proposed ban on “big sodas.” It was almost as if the entire, long-standing controversy over the ubiquitous presence of this decidedly unnatural sweetener in so many of our foods and its effects on our health had vanished in a puff of smoke, just when it should have reached its long-awaited climax. Nor, for that matter, did anyone bother raising any concerns about the exemption
given to diet sodas, which the mayor admitted he himself drinks on hot days. Apparently, the fact that most of these contain aspartame, an artificial sweetener that FDA scientific advisers originally recommended not be approved after it produced brain tumors in lab rats and that has since been the subject of many thousands of reports of adverse reactions ranging from seizures to headaches to blindness, just wasn’t worth pursuing. Of course, the fact that politicians – even well-intentioned ones, which I think Bloomberg probably is in this particular regard – are
we should be able to move ahead in the next few months with construction.” Atkins looks to invoke what he called “rule of law,” that he said allows for a grandfather clause in which the old structure could be rebuilt exactly as it once was – no larger – without needing wetlands permits from the state Department of Environmental Protection, a construction requirement since the late 1970s. Atkins’ lawyer, Richard Shackleton, could not be reached to explain further, but Atkins did offer, “The town said it has to be owned by the town to be able to do it, and my lawyer seems to disagree.” Though it is known as the entryway landmark of Long Beach Island, the Shack is technically in Stafford Township, which Atkins claims has been dodgy when it comes to setting up meetings. “We’ve been giving the town a lot of things and they don’t seem to be giving anything back. We had a billboard go down during the Hurricane (Irene) and they would not let us rebuild it (due to current wetlands construction laws). We lost $24,000 a year from that.” Atkins claims the town wants him to go through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which he pleads would be too time-consuming for the Shack that now seems to be barely standing. “It takes a long time for the government to do anything. It could take five years to get approvals and it would fall down by then. “We have to have support. If we had support, we’d be moving by now. It can’t be an endless pit of money. “The town seems to be holding us up at this point, so we’re trying to find out why. They’re kind of holding off on a meeting with us. We feel the Shack can be built and the town feels that we can’t build it yet for some reason, and were trying to figure out why. And they keep putting us off.” “We’re not really sure what we’re going to
do with it, whether it’d be a club people could go to. But we think that as long as people can see it from the outside, that’s what people care about: whether they can see it or not.” “If we do it ourselves, it’s not the same thing we thought we were getting into. If I’m going to spend a lot of money on it, I might as well build something for me.” Stafford Township Administrator Jim Moran denies refusing to meet with Atkins. He said if Atkins can get proper wetlands construction permits from the state, the town would be nothing but supportive. “I’ve explained this multiple times,” said Moran. “We’ve got a great relationship with Chet, and don’t know what he’s missing here. I can’t issue a permit until those permits are acquired from the DEP and the Army Corps of Engineers. You need to be able to control everything that happens out there. “We’d support their effort but we can’t financially support it,” Moran said. “We had our engineers out there at the Shack and have concluded there may be a way to work through the DEP permit processing, but you still have to get approved by the Army Corps of Engineers. It’s possible, but I’d say the Army Corps is a 50/50 shot. None of that is something we’re going to spend public money for. It’s an expensive process. It’s the same issue anybody has that wants to build anything on a coastal waterway.” Moran said an exchanging of the Shack property title has not been discussed and is not a concern of the township. One thing was assured by Moran: “There will never be anything built there other than what was exactly there before. It would never be for use. It would never be finished inside or be anything more than a monument. The only thing I could see getting permitted there would be the façade of the structure. It’s not going back to being a gunning shack. (That)’s not going to happen.”
Continued from Page 11 union members don’t support. I always wonder how much they could improve their members’ benefits by investing in their members instead of politicians. For too many years, politicians of both parties have been buying votes with our tax dollars. Instead of doing the right thing, they have done the politically advantageous thing. By promising entitlements, setting up programs and giving away the proverbial store, our nation is in deep financial trouble. President Obama is the worst. He promised to change how Washington, D.C., works and have the most transparent administration ever. What voters got is a president who has sealed much of his past, such as his college and law school records, and who spends like there’s no tomorrow. If we re-elect him, that’s exactly what we could get. How can any reasonable person buy into the Dems’ strategy that the GOP has declared war on women? It is insulting that anyone would think women so ignorant simply to garner votes. As for closing the gap between the religious and secular spheres: Are you kidding? The Catholic Church is suing Obama & Co. because of its unprecedented attack on the constitutional tenet separating church and state. Other religious communities are becoming allies. The Dems want us to see it as “hostility” toward contraceptive medicine. It is not. It is using women as a political wedge; it is ugly and it is dangerous.
Marks also writes that the GOP “hopes to disenfranchise enough voters, especially youth, people of color and seniors.” Really? Obama and his comrades are the most divisive and destructive force in American politics that I have ever witnessed. When is the last time this ever-campaigning (often on our tax $$s) president said something truly unifying to all Americans, not just a political faction? Yes, Carole, I am out there fighting. Fortunately, I controlled myself when, on my way to Mass Saturday night, I saw a Mazda bearing multiple bumper stickers, one of which called for the re-election of Obama/ Biden, another claiming to be among “the 99 percent.” (Incidentally, so am I.) I was insulted by the one declaring that children have their “imaginary friends”; adults have “God.” But the one that ripped open my heart on Memorial Day weekend read: “If you are enjoying your freedoms, thank a liberal.” No thanks. I’d rather thank a soldier, sailor, airman or member of any of our armed forces. Ann Powers Stafford Township
Letters Welcome The SandPaper welcomes letters to the editor. They should include the writer’s full name, address and telephone number. Full addresses and phone numbers are for confirmation purposes only. Letter writers can reach us at 1816 Long Beach Blvd., Surf City, N.J. 08008 or letters@thesandpaper.net. often ignorant of or oblivious to basic information about the issues they’re dealing with should come as no big surprise; it has always been thus. But there was a time when journalists actually did their homework and pursued their own lines of inquiry beyond simply parroting the point of view of someone in authority, or asking them superficial questions. Apparently, it’s now considered much easier to merely report sugarcoated news. Y Bill Bonvie is a freelance writer based in Little Egg Harbor Township and a long-time contributor to this page.
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Doubly Closed Eroded South End Is No Picnic to Reach ACCESS DENIED: While all of the state-owned beachfront adjacent to the Holgate Wildlife Refuge is closed tightly for the summer bird-nesting season, even the small stretch of open beach before the refuge area – a popular place for sunning and funning – is now too dangerously eroded to allow beachgoers access. Mobile anglers fear the entire Holgate beachfront won’t be reachable even after the birds have flown in September. Ryan Morrill
Gardener
Continued from Page 25 suspicious then we send them with the tick over to the (Ocean County) Board of Health building located behind us. It can save them a doctor’s appointment if it’s found not to have Lyme.” Other services the volunteer master gardeners offer is diagnosing a problem with a sick plant or lawn. “Bring in a piece of a plant or a 12-inch-square piece of lawn and also bring in a healthy part so we can do a diagnosis. We have all the books for identification of insects and diseases,” said Stein. They also staff a help line, 732-349-1245, Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. to noon for any questions on gardening. “We usually have an answer, or we’ll get an answer. We have a huge room full of books,” she remarked. Stein owes her love of gardening to her own family tree. “I think most of the people in the Master Gardener program would say they had someone in their childhood who influenced them; usually a parent or a grandparent taught them about gardening. Or today, they might get it in school. We also bring programs into schools. Victory Gardens have become popular again because of the economy, thank goodness,” she added. “I think we all think our parents are bigger than life. My dad was an executive at Campbell’s Soup – he invented SpaghettiOs when I was a little girl. I just felt he was everything. He sang in the Philadelphia Men’s Chorus. My mom was an artist; she was educated at Fleisher Art Memorial in Philadelphia. “We lived in Cherry Hill, and my mom’s yard was something to see. People would actually stop their cars, pull over and say, ‘You have the prettiest yard.’ She had a magnificent magnolia and azaleas, things that were popular back then. She just had a talent for it. She said she remembered her mom taught her to take pride in her yard, and then my mother taught me. My mom used to say, ‘You could be poor or near poor, but
Inlet Rescue
Continued from Page 26 floated off the rocks and sank. A Coast Guard crew remained on scene to establish a security zone around the area and Guard pollution specialists from the sector investigated (the vessel had approximately 350 gallons of diesel fuel aboard). No leaks were reported and the operation was turned over to a commercial salvage company. The Coast Guard determined the vessel was not a hazard to navigation. “Preparation matters,” said Chief Warrant Officer Jay Greiner, the station’s commanding officer following the incident “The captain and crew of the Southern Comfort did an outstanding job managing their crisis situation. Prior to leaving the dock, the captain gave them a thorough brief of where all the safety gear was located and how to use it. This short brief saved valuable time as they were exiting during an emergency situation. You never plan on this happening, but preparing for it allows you to react when necessary.”
it doesn’t cost much for a can of paint and to put a few flowers around. It gives you something that makes you feel good, and it’s a “thank you” to God for this beautiful world.’” Stein also volunteers with other master gardeners to grow vegetables for distribution to area food banks. “Last year in our department, we grew 6½ tons of vegetables that we gave to the food bank and Providence House of Catholic Charities,” she said. To become a master gardener, Stein had to complete the course outlines offered by Rutgers, and then put in 10 hours of continuing education each year, and 15 hours of volunteering answering the help line. “I love the projects. One of my favorites is growing plants in our greenhouses for our annual plant sale in May, which is always a huge success; hundreds of people come every year.” Stein has been volunteering since 2007. She hopes to devote more of her time once she retires later this month. “It’s also a social thing. We meet for dinner and lunch, and we have loads of parties. And every year we have new recruits, scared as we were, and we tease them a bit. “Ocean County has the largest Master Gardener program. It costs to take the course, and then you have to put the time in. (We) usually start to sign up in November, and classes are in January and February. They get done in time for the plant sale, and we have a big party for them.” Stein offered one of her own secrets for beautiful geraniums. “This is not from Rutgers, but from my family,” she stressed. “I know a little Epsom salts in water strengthens geraniums and helps them bloom; I think it’s the magnesium. Also, you can over-winter your geraniums. Every year take them out, shake off the dirt and put them in your garage. In the spring, plant them in dirt again without any water for five to six days, then add just a little bit of water. Then increase it, and they’ll come back just like they never left your yard.” Y patjohnson@thesandpaper.net Greiner said afterwards that even the most experienced skipper can run into trouble in Barnegat Inlet. “It is treacherous,” he said. Indeed, Greiner added, there are many reasons for the Coast Guard to maintain a station in Barnegat Light. His crews are responsible for approximately 2,500 square miles of ocean and some 50 nautical miles of Intracoastal Waterway, and Barnegat Light’s central location between the Barnegat and Manahawkin bays – both crowded with recreational boaters, especially in the summer – is ideal. Plus there is an active commercial fishing fleet based in Barnegat Light. But the station’s proximity to Barnegat Inlet, said Greiner, is probably the most important reason for its being. Trouble can almost be anticipated there at any moment. The name itself tells the story of the inlet first discovered by Henry Hudson in 1609. Barnegat derives from the Dutch “Barendegat,” which means “Inlet of the Breakers.” It is definitely a body of water in which one doesn’t want to get overly comfortable. — Rick Mellerup
Business Notes
Continued from Page 34 The presentation is an accredited workshop for county officials and employees. The hour-long course discusses how destination marketing organizations, consisting of chambers of commerce, county offices and business partnerships, are working to bring more dollars into the state. “With over $38 billion in tourism spending, (and) 312,000 direct tourism jobs and revenues keeping property tax down by $1,380 per household, tourism just may be the ticket to help local economies keep their budgets in check,” Pepenella said. “‘Harnessing the Power of Tourism’ will provide county level prospective on what tourism means to businesses and residents statewide and how DMOs are working with local governments to increase awareness to one of the state’s largest industries.” Pepenella currently serves as statewide chairwoman for NJDMO. —M.S. Send business-related items to mariascandale@thesandpaper.net.
Tuckerton Police Continued from Page 22 bikes were recovered. Councilman Jim Edwards announced that a repair would be made to the water line in Marlin Road during the evening of June 7 to repair holes found in the interconnect between Tuckerton and Little Egg Harbor water lines. The pipe will be capped, as there are other, sufficient connections between the two towns. The connections are used only in case of emergency. Edwards said the line had not been tested in a lot of years. He also reminded residents that Tuckerton borough does not have a wood chipper and cannot process tree branches bigger than 3.5 inches or longer than 4 feet. “We can’t take them as we have no place to put them.” Code Enforcement Officer Jim McAndrew asked residents to be aware that he would be doing swimming pool inspections this week and reminded them there are many regulations concerning electrical grounding and fencing related to backyard pools. “I’ll be going out Wednesday inspecting pools, and I’ll be putting red tape on those with violations.” He also stressed the importance of putting the correct size house numbers on the front of houses – at least 3 inches, so emergency responders can easily find an address if they have to. Councilwoman Doris Mathisen read a letter from a resident praising borough code enforcement for its work in keeping the town neat. During the public portion of the meeting, Tuckerton Volunteer Fire Co. Chief Lee Eggert asked the mayor and council to adopt a resolution in favor of the first-responder unit he hopes to run out of the firehouse. “Our first-responder classes are over, and eight passed, with three more ready to take it. We’ve talked about a first-responder unit, and we’d still like to do it. I realize there is litigation and it can’t happen until that’s resolved, but I’d like to have a couple months’ lead time to get the pagers programmed
Continued from Page 26 Abeel and Danielle Maginnis developed the smartphone app for multiple platforms to assist lifeguards, while also giving them a glimpse at what neighboring communities are experiencing in real time. The app could also prove valuable to the National Weather Service, said Kosko. “The NWS plans to use the collected information to evaluate its own rip current forecasts, and the information will also help refine current understanding about when and where rip currents occur and under what conditions they are most prevalent.” As Kosko explained, “The concept is fairly straightforward. A lifeguard with a smartphone in a participating community would walk the beach (or drive an ATV) and stop when a rip current is identified. Using the app, some basic information about the rip current would be entered – approximate size, strength, adjacent to a structure – and the location is recorded using the phone’s built-in GPS. “Lifeguards can also use the app or the webinterface to keep track of rescues via a free-form description field. An additional web interface will also enable lifeguards to view all of the reports from the previous 24 hours in either a list or map form. The map form utilizes Google Maps and displays some basic information about the rip current. All of the information is displayed in real-time so that guards know what’s happening in adjacent communities. The website will be optimized for display on a mobile device so the information can be viewed on the same platform on which it’s entered.” Currently, she added, “the mobile-optimized website allows authenticated users (lifeguards) to enter basic information about the identified rip current. The application then populates a database with the entered information as well as relevant, related data drawn from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration databases regarding the waves and tides at the time of the report. All of this happens in real time and is searchable by other lifeguards, the NWS and the research community. Miller hopes to get the project piloted in one or two shore towns early this summer.” For more information on the rip current smartphone app, contact Jon Miller at jmiller@ stevens.edu or David Klappholz at aklappo@ stevens.edu. Y with the (Ocean County) dispatcher.” Eggert was referring to litigation brought against the borough, the fire department and himself personally by Great Bay Regional Volunteer Emergency Medical Service and signed by trustee chairman Rich Bethea in March. The lawsuit wants to block the first-responder unit based on allegations that Eggert will interfere with Great Bay’s emergency work. Eggert, with three other members of the fire company, is already suing Great Bay Regional trustees for allegedly illegally suspending them from Great Bay Regional EMS and for defamation of character. Mayor Buck Evans asked the Law and Public Safety Committee, chaired by Councilman Tony Foglia, to meet and make recommendations to council. The mayor and council discussed the possibility of “Going Green” by eliminating paper copies of resolutions, ordinances and borough council business and instead receiving them electronically. Councilman Edwards suggested that the borough attorney first find out if personal computers used in borough work could be seized in the event of an investigation. Attorney Terry Brady said the law is unclear on this and is “emerging” along with the technological age. Evans said any councilperson who still wanted paper copies instead could have them, but “Going Green” would eliminate about 400 pieces of paper each municipal meeting and save the borough money. “We are not suggesting buying everyone a new laptop,” said Evans. He noted that Stafford Township committee members use their own computers. Brady said the Little Egg Harbor Board of Education uses district-owned laptops. The council adopted a resolution to sell a 1.8-acre parcel of land the borough received in a tax lien. The borough will prepare Block 46 lot 3 for public auction. The land is zoned residential and lies in a swampy area between Greenwood Cemetery and Wood Street. — Pat Johnson
31 The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Rip App
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
32
Flood Insurance
Continued from Page 18 his constituents he had voted against flood insurance as it was expiring? – was forced to agree. The results will be immediate and, eventually, rather costly. According to Wyrsch, owners of second/ vacation homes in the area can expect a 25 percent increase in their premiums as of July 1. And that’s just the beginning. “Presuming the five-year reauthorization is passed,” Wyrsch told The SandPaper, “increases would be scheduled annually until the rates reach full actuarial rates. What those increases would be is unclear but I would assume somewhere up to 25 percent per year.” Whew, 25 percent a year! Here’s the problem: The NFIP was originally designed back in 1968 to be a self-sustaining program. And it basically was, with premiums approximately equaling payouts, until the summer of Katrina and all of her cousins. The hurricane season of 2005 put the NFIP in the red, way in the red, to the tune of about $18 billion. In other words, taxpayers, not policy holders, have been paying for the program ever since and a tax-aware Congress is looking for ways to make the program self-supporting once
again. Changes are necessary, and it is difficult to defend government subsidies for vacation homes, especially multimillion dollar mansions on the beach. The increased premiums, however, won’t just reach into the wallets of the owners of oceanfront properties. Premiums will be rising for everybody – people who own a home a couple of blocks from the beach, folks who own a home on a mainland lagoon. True, we’re only talking the owners of second homes, but as Wyrsch said, that’s “most properties on LBI and in Stafford on the water.” And he could have included waterfront houses in Little Egg Harbor and Barnegat as well. Of course many a commentator on this issue has said “the sky is falling” in the past. But Wyrsch knows of what he speaks. The Van Dyk Group has been involved with the NFIP since its inception. Wyrsch has been with Van Dyk for 39 years. He served on the Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of America (what he calls “the Big I”) National Flood Committee for two years, 2009 and 2010. Before that, in 1993, he was named the NFIP “Agent of the Year” by the NFIP itself. Wyrsch has met personally with the NFIP director. The former Stafford Township councilman also served as chairman of the New Jersey Independent Agents from 2004 to 2005, was chairman of the New Jersey legislative committee on flood
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insurance in 2003, and has had several articles published, including some dealing specifically with flood insurance, in the American Agent and Broker magazine, a national insurance industry publication. In other words, he has his bona fides in order. Still, Congress has passed many an “iron clad” law only to change it around at a later date. So, can the owners of vacation homes in Southern Ocean County really expect such huge flood insurance premiums? “I seriously doubt any (five-year) reauthorization will remove the increases,” said Wyrsch. Even Wyrsch had a difficult time saying exactly what figures he was talking about. “It’s hard to estimate because the rates are dependent on first floor elevation,” he explained. The homes on pilings often pay less than the older ones even though they are on or closer to the water. An average premium for a newer home on pilings with at least a 10-foot elevation is in the $500 to $1,000 range. So at $1,000 a year, the 25-percent increase would be around $250 for the first year. “There is no way of knowing what the annual increase will be but I guess the max would be the 25 percent they refer to. Calculating the max increase over five years may bring the premium to the range of $3,000 per year. We should know what the actual increase would be as part of the five-year reauthorization (expected) in July. “The properties in Manahawkin are usually somewhat less because the homes themselves are not as big as on LBI. Again, it all depends on the elevation of the home. So if the average premium is now around $500, a 25 percent maximum increase for five years would place the premium in the range of $1,500.” Ouch! Still, there’s one more bit of good news. Wyrsch, attempting to answer a SandPaper question, got in touch with the “Big I” in Washington. It had been reported in other outlets that the premium increases would apply to any non-primary home structure. Not true, at least at the moment, said Wyrsch. “The increases will not apply to businesses,” he said he was told. “It is only for a residential property that is not a primary home.” Y The Regional Directory is your complete guide to every local business. Every store, every service, every restaurant from Bar negat to Tuckerton and Barnegat Light to Holgate is listed. You won’t waste time searching through 732 and 908 area codes to find a nearby business you want.
Boats Are Needed For Barnegat ‘Day on the Bay’
I
f you have a pleasure craft that could be available later this month, the Barnegat Township Recreation Department’s disability advisory board could use it for a “Day on the Bay” Sunday, June 24, during which special needs children and adults get free boat rides. The rides will be offered between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. at Bob’s Bay Marina, 459 East Bay Ave. All participants must be accompanied by a legal guardian or parent. Refreshments will be served. “For special needs people, this is one of the best days of their lives,” said Walt Fernandez, board member and event coordinator. “Too often people with developmental disabilities don’t get to enjoy a boat ride. It really brightens up their day. It beats getting stuck at home.” Fernandez said that at last year’s event, 12 boats were used. “But right now I have two,” he said. “If I’m going to make this a successful event, I’m going to need help.” He said this year’s activities will include a DJ and face painting. “What makes this all worthwhile is seeing the expression on people’s faces when they leave,” he said. “Many of them are crying for joy. On one boat last year, a bunch of kids got drenched when a wave hit. They were loving every minute of it.” For more information, call the recreation department at 609-698-0080, extension 130, or Fernandez at 609-290-8741. —E.E.
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33 The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
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ExpressBath Name Describes Speed Of Guaranteed Job
Jack Reynolds
ONE STOP: The location is central, on Long Beach Boulevard just south of 26th Street in Ship Bottom. The operators have awards to their credit.
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xpressBath LLC celebrated a grand opening on Saturday, June 2, at its offices and showroom at 2601 Long Beach Blvd. in Ship Bottom. The address is the home of the “10 Day Guarantee.” “In 10 days, you can have a beautiful new bathroom guaranteed, and it won’t cost you a fortune,” summarizes the company’s pledge from owner Jon Vogel and business partner Anthony Cammallere. “Our team at Express takes responsibility for everything, and then gives you an unprecedented guarantee for protection,” Vogel said. ExpressBath proudly provides classic or contemporary bathroom remodels in the New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware areas. “We have more than 30 years of experience, and our work has been recognized both locally and nationally for excellence. During these difficult economic times, it is nice to know you can increase the value of your home with an affordable bathroom remodel,” he said. The company’s contractors are licensed and certified. ExpressBath brings more than 60 years of experience, and add to that a pledged commitment to customer satisfaction. ExpressBath was featured in TheSandPaper’s home improvement guide, HomeFront, when the showroom opened earlier this spring. The grand opening was held now at a time when more of the Island’s population has returned. With a 10-day completion guarantee, a homeowner can plan a remodel even in the summertime. “Our team of highly skilled craftspeople and superior project managers are ready to ensure your job will be done on time, within your budget, and with quality workmanship throughout,” Vogel said. Vogel is registered as a licensed building inspector in the state of New Jersey, and is certified as a kitchen and bath designer, CKBR. He has served as the Central Jersey Remodelers Council chairman for several years, and has served on the Central Jersey Builders Association’s board. Vogel’s son, Jon James, one of the showroom managers, was recently featured on the cover of Builder Architect. Product names include Kohler, Moen, American Standard, Sherwin
Williams, Jacuzzi, Toto and other top brands. Customers select from one of three packages: Classic, Premium and Luxury. They choose the bathroom package that fits their budget, then customize it with their designers’ preselected finishes and fixtures. “Our system ensures that you will know exactly what your project will encompass, how it will look and what it will cost,” Vogel continued. “Upon your approval and signature, we will order the materials. When the materials arrive, we will call to schedule a convenient start date. When we arrive to start the job, the bathroom of your dreams is complete in 10 days or less, guaranteed.” A new kitchen can be accomplished efficiently through a customer’s stop in the showroom as well. “We work with you to design your new kitchen. Then the miracle begins as we remove everything in your old kitchen in just a few hours. We repair any existing problems, and modify as needed to accommodate your new kitchen design,” Vogel said. “You’ll be amazed how quickly we can patch and texture the walls, install new cabinets and countertops, and lay new flooring. Of course, we’ll also upgrade the electrical and plumbing, install new plumbing and lighting fixtures, install your appliances, and even do the painting. Don’t worry, we won’t forget anything.” Free consultation and estimates are given. Website: http://www. expressbath.com. E-mail: contact@expressbath.com. Telephone 609-877-TEN-BATH (836-2284). —J.D., M.S. * * * Fulton Bank Plans Grand Opening Fulton Bank of New Jersey invites the public to stop by its new, conveniently located Manahawkin branch this Saturday, June 9, at noon for the grand opening observance. The Manahawkin office is located at 324 Route 72 West. The full-service branch offers consumer, commercial, mortgage and investment services, safe deposit boxes and drive-up ATM banking. Angela Gembry is the branch manager. Office hours are Monday through Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thurs-
Supplied Photo
WHITE-HOT: Where do 10,000 voters say the best New England chowder comes from? LBI, and that’s as official as it gets, when a winner is crowned at the legendary cook-off in Newport, R.I. , as Stefano’s was.
Stefano’s Is King in New England: Chowder Takes Top Honors in Newport
T
he best New England clam chowder comes from right here on Long Beach Island – says New England! Stefano’s Seafood & Pasta captured a coveted first place in the famed Great Chowder Cook-Off at Newport, R.I., June 2. It’s the top rung on the northern ladder for the champion LBI establishment, which last year brought home a secondplace trophy from Newport. Here at home, 12,000 tasters have voted the same white chowder recipe as first-place, Grand Prize champ for four years in a row at Chowderfest in Beach Haven. At Chowderfest, the white recipe is entered with Stefano’s California Grill, and the red is entered with Stefano’s Seafood & Pasta, also a multi-year grand champ in that category. Some friends are saying that Stefano’s big win at Newport makes Long Beach Island the clam chowder capital of the world. Restaurant owner Steve DiPietro tended more to clam up than claim bragging rights for media attention, but he did say he is proud to bring the trophy home for Long Beach Island. Asked how he feels about LBI taking the honors in New England, the traditional home for which the white chowder is named, DiPietro said, “I feel that it just wasn’t a win for Stefano’s, but a win for all of LBI. “There were a lot of people who knew our Island, and we told a lot of other people what a great place LBI is. And next year, we are going to bring a lot of people up with us, not just for help, but because Newport is such a great town with great people.”
Just don’t look for red chowder if you go. It’s New England, after all. The competition in Newport comes from all over the New England states and some from across America. And beyond. Stefano’s entered the Clam Category, but in the Seafood Category, third place chowder was from County Clare, Ireland – the Bunratty Manor Hotel. Back in the clam competition, Stefano’s bested an entry from Greene, Maine/New York City, which settled in second place. Luke’s Lobster/Hurricane’s Chowder was that entry. Stefano’s also captured Best Decorated Booth in the entire competition. The Schweppes Great Chowder Cook-Off is billed as “the original, largest and longest-running (over 30 years) chowder bonanza in New England.” It is actually the one that inspired Long Beach Island’s Chowder Cook-Off Classic more than 24 years ago. Country Kettle Fudge owner John Maschal also operates a fudge shop in Newport, and he brought the idea to LBI. The Southern Ocean County Chamber of Commerce ran with the ball (the clam?) and the rest is history. This year will see the 24th annual Chowder Cook-Off Classic, also known as Chowderfest, on Sept. 30. In Newport, first-, second- and third-place honors are bestowed by voters in a system similar to Chowderfest here. Each ticketholder gets a chip with which to cast a vote. About 10,000 “chowdaheads” attended and voted. DiPietro and crew made the chowder here on LBI and drove it to Newport in a refrigerated truck that was lent by one of the restaurant’s seafood suppliers, Great Bay Seafood.
“We left on Thursday afternoon and got there at midnight. They have a refrigerated trailer for all the contestants, and we finished up at around 2 in the morning,” DiPietro said. A contingent of family and friends traveled up for the event. Included in the gang were local businesspeople John Coyle, Vince and Michele Farias, and Jimmy Leonetti. “On Friday we set up the booth for a couple of hours and then went out for a boat ride through the harbor in Newport. They had a nice dinner under a tent, and a band for the contestants, it was quite a fun time.” The next day was the festival, and a cold nor’easter ushered it in. This festival has never had a rainout, but this year threatened to be the first. “It poured from 6 in the morning to 1 in the afternoon and was windy and cold, but by 1 o’clock the rain settled off and it was just a little bit cloudy and a little bit windy,” DiPietro said. The Long Beach Island visitors got a kick out of the New Englandstyle contests on the side of the chowder cook-off – events such as “who can eat the most clam cakes” and “who can open the most bottles of beer.” Another difference from the contest on Long Beach Island is that in Newport, winning can’t be perpetual. As first-place winners, Stefano’s will be allowed to compete for two more years and if it wins three years in a row, it goes into the Hall of Fame and can’t compete in that category anymore, DiPietro noted. — Maria Scandale mariascandale@thesandpaper.net
day, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Friday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.; and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. To reach the office by phone, call 609-597-6771. To learn more, see the website fultonbanknj.com. —M.S. * * *
Harnessing the Power of Tourism Long Beach Island Destination Marketing Director Lori Pepenella of the Southern Ocean County Chamber of Commerce is teaching tourism, so to speak, for the New Jersey Asso-
ciation of Counties June 5 through 7. “Harnessing the Power of Tourism” is the presentation to a statewide panel at the NJAC annual conference in Atlantic City. Continued on Page 31
Tarpon Takes Off With Hand; It’s Getting Gnasty Out There G
IVE THAT TARPON A HAND: I had a few folks e-mail the down-south psuedocatastrophe story of the fellow fighting a monster tarpon during a tournament in Florida and having his hand ripped clean off – and swum away with, much less. The victim’s name was Jack Wiseman. Weirdly, my first web read on the story included a photograph of a friend of Wiseman, laughing his ass off and pointing to where the hand used to be. If you think it’s hilarious when your fishing buddy has an appendage ripped clean off by a huge fish, you just might be a redneck – or just a sick-ass person on so many levels. I better quickly jump in here and explain that this wasn’t, in actuality, a morbidly bloody dismembering incident. The hand and lower arm were prosthetic. Wiseman was one of eight “Wounded Warriors” fishing as amateurs in the prestigious Professional Tarpon Tournament series. In fact, on the surface, the whole thing was something of an insider joke – though there is nothing superficial about the insane cost of such a prosthesis. Even though the tale carried that artificial limb explanation, it still swam some strangeness. For instance, I couldn’t help but notice the victimized angler actually had special prosthesis attachments for various fishing needs, i.e. targeted species. At the time of his tarpon run-off – or, more exactly, when the fish ran off with his hand – the angler sported an attachment geared specifically to tarpon fishing. I’m guessing there are still some kinks to be worked out with that particular add-on. Personally, I can’t resist picturing this tarpon bolting off and heaving a sigh of escape relief – only to look back to find a human hand still hot on its scaly butt. “AAHHHH!” I further picture the fish zooming into the sunset, looking back in terrified amazement at the tireless chaser. But this wasn’t your average tarpon – it was twice as stupid. The one-handed tarpon apparently couldn’t care less about some stinkin’ appendage aping its every move. Astoundingly, it just went right back to feeding. And damned if another contestant in the same tournament didn’t hook it. I’m wondering if maybe the fish was now all too cocky. “Hey, you bastards, you oughta see what I did to the last guy who tried to reel me in.” Predictably, the tarpon was shocked at the outcome this time – but not nearly as shocked as the angler landing it. Now’s when your mind’s eye has just gotta savor the likely scene, as the fired-up contestant hoists the huge fish and then finds a mechanical hand dangling behind it. Personally, that’s one of those life events where I’m inclined to just stop and vacuously stare at the horizon for a very, very long time . Eventually, the tarpon was measured and released. The hand was kept. “Leave the tarpon. Take the hand,” said Clemenza III. The tale of the just-landed hand quickly met up with the tale of the just-lost hand. Radio contacts were made and one of the oddest messages to cross the airwaves rang out. “Hey, dude, I’ve got your hand.” In a unique reunion, the prosthesis was handed over to its rightful owner. If ever a handshake was in order … This fully documented fish tale flooded the
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Internet. In a TV interview, Wiseman said, “Somebody else hooked that same fish, and our rod – with my hand – was still attached, and they brought it back to us. So that’s my fishing story.” By the by, I promise I’m not being disrespectful here, since Wiseman lost his limb in service to his country. The various Internet stories all indicated Wiseman and his Wounded Warrior buddies were downright giddy over this incident, some laughing too hard to be interviewed. Now those are my kinda rednecks. GNAT DAYS ARE UPON US: I hate to say it, but we’ve got a horrid gnat hatch out there. Hideous little hellish buggers. The “no-see-ums” have already royally ruint entire fishing and outdoors days for me. Windless days are far and away the gnastiest. When being clouded under by these viciously biting flies in the wilds, I’m often forced to become very cosmic, survivalistically retreating into a Zen-like state. I slowly lower myself onto the white Pinelands sands, assume a crosslegged yogic sitting position, and control my breathing by tuning in to mental sitar music. I eventually begin to ohm softly. This helps disperse my spirit into the void – to become one with the true nature of all things great and small. In this way, I freely allow the gnats to come upon me in great numbers – at which point I whip out the deadliest bug sprays I can import from third-world nations and spray their little bloodthirsty butts to that great scalp in the sky. “There’s something for you to suck on.” I went to a pretty odd yoga training school. Imported bug sprays notwithstanding, there’s no true escaping the likelihood that gnats, in enormous numbers, will bug us all summer. Most vulnerable are those folks living bayside and baymen who have to work the saltmarsh meadows. The gnats are already so horrific this year that a baiting buddy of mine has resorted to wearing his late mother’s old bathing caps when he’s out collecting minnows. I came across him last week as he set traps in a Tuckerton mosquito ditch. He was nonchalantly wearing a shocking-pink bathing cap with fake blond bangs hanging across the front and a huge, yellow, rose-shaped tassel on top. It was an odd accompaniment to his hard, sunsavaged face and scraggly, overgrown silver beard. I couldn’t resist. “Uh, nice cap, dude.” Glance and growl. “Effin’ gnats.” In the quiet that followed, I heard a familiar drone. The frickin’ gnats were falling out of the sky – this time laughing to death. WHY’S IT NEVER ME?: Being an exelverer, I have to say the Japanese are truly testing my sense of ecological righteousness. I was one of those who fully agreed with the ending of all elvering here in Jersey. I’m essentially paying for it now. Continued on Page 36
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35 The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
85' CAROLYN ANN III
POLLY’S BOAT RENTALS
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
36
Jack Reynolds
Getting Competitive in the Suds Adding Some School Spirit to Surfcasting SUDS SCHOOL: What better way to cap off a school year than some friendly surfcasting competition in the LBI suds, where spring fishing often shines? (Above) Last week, Barnegat High School, Southern Regional, Lacey High School and MATES (Marine Academy of Technology and Environmental Science) competed in this annual angling event. (Right) Matthew Wohl, SRHS, rolls in well prepared. MATES narrowly won the event.
Fishing Continued from Page 35 Up in Maine, where so-called “fishermen” carry on the last wholesale elvering in the nation, the season ended with the going price for a pound of elvers reaching an astronomical $2,600. That doesn’t even compute for me, when thinking back on the $350 a pound I got years back – while legally taking elvers hereabouts. To give a more comprehendible ounciness, I would now need only a couple ounces to make what I made for a pound back then. This latest market price comes out to more than $150 an ounce. At last count, New England numbnuts elver hunters made $7.6 million this spring by doing nothing more than emptying numbnuts fyke nets in the middle of the numbnuts night. Not that I’m jealous or anything. Of course, that elver goldmine is likely drying up soon. The feds are on the slippery brink of going “endangered” on American eels. The Center for Environmental Science, Accuracy and Reliability – a powerful environmental group with strong scientific credentials among its members – continues to petition the U.S. Wildlife Service to place the American eel on the nation’s notorious endangered list. That blue/green group has opened a lot of influential eyes to the catastrophic collapse of the species, once one of the most common forms of marine life along the coast. Seeing the exploding value of eels, I still can’t believe nobody is taking up our state’s offer to allow elvering in our waters, providing the captured baby eels are then farm raised here in the state. You don’t need to have a lifetime subscription to Forbes magazine to predict there are millions atop millions – dollars, yens, you name it – to be made. Asians are crazier than ever for the tasty meat of eels, yet they’re plum out of slim-and-slimy fish. Anyone wanna sponsor me for an eel-growing farm? I’m already real good at growing basil. How much different can that be from growing eels? CHECK OUT MY FINGERNAILS, GUYS: I was hanging out with the boys over at Norm’s place
(Two Shore Birds tools and collectibles, Eagleswood) and in the midst of talking about tools, fishing, NASCAR and restored pickup trucks, we got into a far more serious discussion – regarding artificial fingernails and the best colors to use on them. No, that wasn’t our San Franciscoish foray for the day. A shopper had come in and really got into the use of acrylic nails as enhancements for making lures and flies. I found out, after later going online, that fly-tiers have long been using acrylic fake-o fingernails, mainly for freshwater flies. The fake nails are also commonly shaped into spinner blades. They’re already hydrodynamically curved for that flashy job. But the white-ish, opaque acrylic nails really shine when coupled with the millions of fingernail polish colors in the world. I honestly believe there are more colors in the fingernail polish realm than in the entire oil and acrylic painting realm. Had they been around in Van Gogh’s time, folks would have pegged him for a drag queen, he’d be buying them so often. For fishing usages, fake-o nails can be colored to meet any water-clarity demands. And if you just happen to know some Korean gals, you can have your spinner blade nails graced with tiny Asian scenes loaded with dragons and former emperors. Of course, that’ll be $25 a nail. As for saltwater applications, I have to think larger, thumbnail false nails could fit the coastal bill. Yes, they make fake fingernails in all different sizes. Where have you been – as if I knew that prior to going on-line. On eBay, there’s a running ad for “false acrylic wide large big fake false nails men.” For real. I can see these goodly-sized nails being brightly painted and glitterfied for, say, fluke rigs. Fluke go crazy for bling like that. I could also see using them near static striper rigs on lo-viz days. “But why even use them instead of mass-produced metal blades?” you skeptically ask. Hell, it’s just weird enough to be great fun. It should be pointed out that the latest acrylic nails have gotten tough enough to tame even a nail-biting blue-
fish. What’s more, if you get out on the open water and are mortified when you realize your nails just aren’t the right color that day, just acetone away the color and pull out that goofy-looking handbag full of nail polishes you brought along – the one you’re positive your wife will never notice is missing. Who the frig is Gucci anyway? CLAMS ON THE WHOLE SHELL: It’s fairly baffling how bass internally shuck even the largest surf clams, post consumption. They manage to remove every morsel of meat – including the tender exhalant and inhalant siphons. And all in perfect anatomical order, no less. When sitting around waiting for Holgate Rip to open, I’ve taken surf clam viscera out of a bass belly, spread it out and was able to account for every single soft body part. What’s more, each part was in place, anatomically speaking. It’s worthy of the centerfold in Dissector’s Monthly. Seemingly, the fish swallows the surf clam whole, allowing stomach juices to kill it, causing it to open. After that, powerful stomach-muscle action slowly and meticulously separates the soft parts from the shell. This makes pure survival sense. The meat has to stay and shell has got to go. Obviously, a bass cannot excrete a sizable shell fragment out the vent. (Hey, did anyone catch my write-up on Preparation H last week?) The fish does all the heavy work inside the stomach, then regurgitates the nastiest fragments via the mouth. Something akin to a selfcleaning belly. If you scuba or snorkel along LBI beaches, you’ll very often come across an odd-looking, circular deposit of little shell bits – and sometimes gravel – on the surface of the white sand bottom. That’s most often a belly expulsion from a bass. But how does a bass hold in the good stuff? I’m betting the fish upchucks the entire stomach shebang, then adroitly slurps up the lighter, meaty stuff. In fact, while diving, I’ve seen stripers repeatedly doing the regurge thing. By the by, when you find mere clam chunks and pieces inside a bass, it shows the fish found an alreadybroken clam or it stole an angler’s bait. By the by, crabs are a whole different dining thing for bass. The fish’s throat muscles crush the crabs good,
though smaller crabs get downed whole. Digestion does the nutrient-seeking action before the pieces are jettisoned. For the record, the stuff coming out the other end (vent) of a bass is usually white, milky and unexciting by comparison – just in case you compare such things. WEB UPDATE: My daily or neardaily reports can be found at www.jaymanntoday.ning.com. My old website at webspawner – http://www.webspawner. com/users/jmann2002 – has been out of service and I can’t get it going again. Please switch to ning. RUNDOWN: This week’s weather is right on the mark for those strange proponents of a planetary polarity switch. A weatherly setup over eastern Canada is the exact meteoro-look of midwinter. All winter we had a decidedly summerish setup. Those doomsdayers are going to see a different type of turnabout starting soon. Mark my words, heat and, more worrisomely, incredible dryness will be moving in for a summer stay. During the weekend, I heard a gal in Wawa bemoaning the fact it had clouded over just as she was about to head beachward. I told her, “By August, you’ll be praying for a cloud.” Good, bad and in-between. While this often is the tale of fishing the Jersey Shore, it has been markedly so of late. Surfing through tackle shop websites and listening to tons of radio chatter, I’m noticing the entire gamut – from solid success to utter lack of same. If one surfside area shone, it was mid-Island, where clam gobs were being scarfed downed by bass to 25 pounds. That’s not to say other Island zones didn’t have scattered bass. In fact, a north end report spoke of a 40-poundish bass caught, photographed and released by a bunker-head chucker. Black drum are also pounding the beachline – and might have pulled a rod and reel into the waters off Spray Beach. Per Margaret at Jingles: “It is a Tica with an Okuma baitrunner Coronado reel … There had been 2 drum fish taken in that area.” If you happen upon the outfit, please contact Jingles. While not headshakers or acrobats, black drum have brute pulling force that exceeds even stripers’. When you add in the fact we can
get visits from drum to 100 pounds, there’s no sand spike able to handle such a takedown when the drag is too tight or a reel gets spooled. Jason Hoch stripered his way into second place in Simply Bassin’ 2012. His 41-6 cow was taken in Ship Bottom on bunker. Despite his heartfelt efforts to revive the big bass, getting neck deep in the bay, it gave up the ghost. Hey, it’s the thought the counts. While the resuscitation effort failed, the fish was given a very tasteful send-off – with some onions, peppers and spices. Fluking is as finicky as the weather – and closely related. Finding ideal conditions to make a drift-happy day of it is tough. With this week’s scheduled brisk NE (over to SE) winds, the bottom fishing will remain a tough go. Backbay areas might offer the best semi-protected waters. Beads, blades and such might help the fluking cause if waters are brown. WOW – THE TERRAPINS: This has been the spring of the diamondback terrapins, highlighted by a truly monumental bust-out of baby terrapins – which hatched last fall but overwinter in their buried nest. Some bayside areas were literally crawling with the little buggers. I got photos of dozens of ’em, hell-bent on reaching the bay. One has to think the non-winter helped the overwintering cause of the little ones. The upside to this springtime life-rush by the tiny terrapins is the way it’s unaligned with the predator presence common to the summertime hatch, still to take place. Gamefish and shorebirds know when the summer terrapin hatch commences and hungrily ready themselves in the back bay. This spring’s preseason tiny terrapin rush should have an incredible survival rate – providing the youngsters avoid tires and heavy-heeled humans. Complementing the stellar showing of bay-bound baby terrapins is the fairly early showing of egg-carrying females, now coming out of the bay. The numbers of these early arrivers have been impressive. And we’re far from the peak of the egg-laying season. For the many terrapin fans hereabouts, this is all amazingly good news. A recovery story, if ever there was one. Make sure to connect with the http:// terrapinstationnj.blogspot.com/. Y jaymann@thesandpaper.net
37 The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
FREE
r Bed Line s k Up on all Pic ne! u during J
36
MPG
2012 GMC SIERRA 1500 REG CAB WT 2012 BUICK LACROSSE CX 2 dr., PU, 2WD, 6cyl, Auto, PS, PB, ABS, Air cond. tilt, cruise, Stereo, Vin# CZ139277 MSRP $23,655, Trade Assistance: $1000, GM Rebate: $2000 Lease Conquest Rebate: $2000, Barlow Discount: $655, Taxs tags and motor vehicle fees extra. Offer expires 6/30/12
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lease for:
298
$
per mo for 24 mo
OCEAN COUNTY’S PRE-OWNED USED CAR OUTLET 2 year or 30,000 mile maintenance plan on ALL GM CERTIFIED VEHICLES! 2001 DODGE DAKOTA SLT
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38
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ANTIQUES/BOOKS Verde Antiques and Rare Books
We Buy & Sell Quality Items
Decorative Art & Paintings, Prints & Photographs; Vintage & Rare Books; Toys, Sports & Doll Collectibles; Magazines & Autographs; Pottery; Ephemera of All Kinds & Estate Jewelry. ....................................................... Open Wed.-Sun., 11am-4pm. 73 East Bay Ave., Manahawkin. 609597-5233. On the web at verdeantiquesandrarebooks.com
ANTIQUES APPLE TREE ANTIQUES Storewide sale...20%-50% off select dealers. Includes furniture, dolls, collectibles, jewelry & more. 361 Route 9, halfway between Tuckerton & Manahawkin. 609-296-6677.
Architectural Salvage
Wrought iron fencing, garden antiques, fireplace mantles, hardware, kitchen and bath, much more. Recycling the Past, 381 North Main St., Barnegat, 609-6609790.
BEACH HAVEN ANTIQUES
509 Engleside Ave., Beach Haven. Highest prices paid for gold, silver, old costume jewelry and antiques. Store hours: Sat., 1-7pm; Sun., 10am-5pm. Call for appointments. 609-4448119.
SHIP BOTTOM ANTIQUES BY THE BAY Central Ave. at 28th St.
Open Friday, Saturday & Sunday. 609-361-0885.
WE’RE STILL HERE 49TH SEASON!! 8 Stocked Rooms with Fresh Merchandise
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Large Collectibles “Wizard of Oz” Items Member N.E. Appraisers Assoc., National Trust, Victorian Society of America Mon. - Fri. by chance or appointment Sat. & Sun. 11am - 5pm Free Verbal Appraisals Fri., 1 - 5pm
609-494-9384
Wizard of Odds 7601 Long Beach Blvd. Beach Haven Crest Invest in Antiques They Appreciate in Value!
ANTIQUES
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Beach Haven West (Manahawkin), 36 Lillian Drive, Sat./Sun., 6/9-6/10, 8am-noon (rain 6/30-7/1). Remodeling home, lots of items! Beach Haven Park, 9906 Long Beach Blvd. at 100th St., Fri./Sat., 6/8-6/9, 8am. MULTI FAMILY! Lots of books, household items, etc.
Antiques & collectibles bought & sold. Norman Cramer, proprietor. An eclectic selection of collectibles. 425 Rte. 9, West Creek. For hours or appointment, 609-296-2704.
NAUTICAL ANTIQUES ANTIQUE MALL
Largest selection in the tri-state area. Over 50 consignment dealers in a 3,000 sq.ft. emporium. NAUTICAL ships, anchors, wheels, bells, compasses, lanter ns, sextants, por tholes, clocks, figureheads, fishing gear, models, trunks, sculptures, vintage marine art, Mel Fisher Atocha coins, deep sea diving equipment, swords, uniforms, ships in bottles, flare guns, signal flags, clam baskets, oars, pulleys, lobster buoys, barrels, fish mounts marlin, striped bass, fishnet floats, whaling implements, scrimshaw, telescopes, binoculars, flare guns, books, hatchcover tables, chronometers. Dealer friendly. 20% off.
UP FROM THE DEEP SHOPPES
901 N. Bay Ave., Beach Haven. 12pm-5pm 7 days. 609-4927574.
STAMPS WANTED Father Don is looking for stamp collections! The Rev. Donald Turner, 609-494-5048 or frdltpadre1@yahoo.com
GARAGE/YARD SALES Beach Haven, 204 Second St., Sat., 6/9 (rain Sun., 6/10), 8am2pm. Household items, furniture, bikes, holiday, etc.
Manahawkin, 40 Oak St., Sat., 6/9 (rain date Sat., 6/16), 8am-2pm. Household items, etc. Ship Bottom, 242 West 17th St. Sat., 6/9, 9am-4pm (rain 6/10). Furniture, household items, and more! Surf City, 1610 Central Ave., Sat., 6/9, 8am-1pm. Multi-family, lots of good stuff! Surf City, 18th & Blvd. Art & Decor features beach chic furniture and accessories by Sue Dinetz. Fri./ Sat., 6/8-6/9, 11am-4pm. Sidewalk show weather permitting. Redone antique/vintage pieces for every room. Surf City, 282 North 7th St., Sat., 6/ 9, 8am-noon. Furniture, household items, clothing and much more. Surf City, 27 South Second St., BIG SALE, Sat., 6/9, 9am-4pm. Dressers, light fixtures, ceiling fans, household, clothes, much more.
ARTS & CRAFTS LBI Artists & Crafters
Visit us at LBI Fest this Sat., 6/9. For more details, email: info@LBIArtistsCrafters.com
FLEA MARKETS
MASSAGE THERAPY/ SPA SERVICES
Rental Spaces, Fri., $10; Sat.& Sun., $25/each. Garage Sale & Used Merchandise, Sat. & Sun., $10/each. See website for coupon. Indoor Shoppes Open All Week. 657 East Bay Ave. 609-597-1017.
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FURNITURE
MERCHANDISE
Enjoy a full-body, relaxing, deeptissue, 4hands or couples massage by Ray, LMT. Couples special. Call Hands To You, 609-7037570. www.hands2u.com
5-piece pecan bedroom set. Queen bed, 6ft. dresser w/2 mirrors, 5ft.x3ft. armoire, 2 night tables, PLUS 3-piece fabric sectional, 128in.x104in. All in good condition. Available to best offer. Call Mel, 561-523-3181.
DISH Network. Starting at $19.99/ month PLUS 30 Premium movie channels FREE for 3 months! SAVE & ask about SAME DAY installation! Call 866-944-6135.
Enjoy therapeutic massage in your home. ABMP Certified Massage Therapist practicing in Swedish, Deep Tissue, Myofascial Release, Medical Massage, and Muscle Energy Techniques. Call Ken, 609859-3080, cell 609-280-3528.
Broyhill Fontanna entertainment center, 44in.Wx21in.Dx79in.H, w/2 doors, includes free working TV, $275. 2 Broyhill Fontanna, country french, end tables, $175/both. Smoke-free home. In Pebble Beach. Call 201-286-7038.
HEALING HANDS MASSAGE THERAPY
DESIGNER FURNITURE. Beautiful 6ft.3in. sofa, off-white fabric with pattern. Glass-topped dining table w/4 matching chairs & matching dining wall unit. All pieces like new. Make offer. Surf City. 609-6189917, 609-494-7970. (View picture10012 online)
Gift Certificates, Mobile Service, & Four Hands Massage available. Experienced, certified & insured. Call Basia, 609-709-6580.
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Premier Quality Massage
Excellent therapy. Swedish, deep tissue, hot stone, couples, parties. Experienced Professional CMT. Call Sally 609-226-4289.
HEALTH/FITNESS PERSONAL TRAINING
at your home, favorite gym or outdoors. Also offering summer fitness programs & surfing lessons. Call John, North Star Nutrition & Fitness, 609-494-6175. www.nstarfit.com
APPLIANCES
Expensive Chatham King-size mattress w/split box spring, good condition, $95. Call 610-417-6119 or email kstacy33@yahoo.com HOUSE CONTENTS FOR SALE! Available to see this Fri., 6/8 through Mon., 6/11. Beach Haven Terrace, LBI. Call 609-492-1498 or 917-363-7380. View photos: http://imag eshack.us/g/442/ photo44o.jpg/p
White Whirlpool 10 cubic ft. refrigerator/freezer. Like new, asking $175. Call 609-207-6513.
SPAS/HOT TUBS Softub Spa Rentals
WEEKLY, MONTHLY, SEASONAL We do all the work...Just say ahh...in your spa. 609-492-4996. www.shoresoftub.com
Hobie Cat Bravo, like new. Quality windsurfing equipment. Canon camera equipment w/underwater housing, multiple bodies/lenses, fits in housing. 609-494-4023. Pool table, top quality maple w/ slate, $995. Side-by-side refrigerator, $75. Electric dryer, $50. On LBI. Call 609-870-1980.
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ACME SURF and SPORT
MERCHANDISE WANTED
Sofa & love seat. Cream, yellow & green striped. Excellent condition, $400/OBO. Call 609-276-9991, evenings.
Vintage Long Boards Wanted! Any condition. Call 609-276-8228.
609-597-6446
Refrigerator, Summit 5.5 cu.ft. under-the-counter fridge. White, 23x23x33in. high. Bought just over a year ago, no longer need. Google for details. $200/OBO. 609-4941263.
ACME BIKE SHOPS
84th Street, 609-492-5150 www.acmebeachandbike.com
Oak kitchen table w/6 chairs. Cost $950, asking $150. Please call 609-494-4781.
Superb furniture! Ethan Allen Persian/Oriental rug, mostly red, 4ft.x8ft., $500/OBO. Oak sleigh bed, queen size, $500. Excellent condition. 508-380-6795.
Lic.#13VH05348400
ElliptiGOs are here!
RENT BY THE HOUR– 10 passes available. Buy one now... Get a $100 Gift Certificate.
84th Street, 609-492-5150 27th Street, 609-492-6522 www.acmebeachandbike.com
ERIK’S APPLIANCE SERVICE
RELIABLE SERVICE for your washers, dryers, refrigerators, ranges and dishwashers. All makes & models.
Doughboy pool filter & pump, 1hp. Ladder, cover for 16ft.x32ft. oval pool and other equipment. All in excellent condition. 609-296-0788.
Indoor white wicker sofa w/2 matching chairs. Sturdy, good condition (a few wear spots), $295. Picture available. Beach Haven. 215-672-2217.
Sofa & love seat, red twill striped. Good condition, cottage style. $400. Located in Beach Haven West. Call 732-407-0096.
ManahawkinFleaMarket.com
OUTDOOR FLEA MARKET
MERCHANDISE ACME BIKE SHOPS
NEW & USED BIKE SALE! SUP SALE ...$499 PACKAGE! ElliptiGO Special: Get a $100 Gift Certificate with purchase. SANUK Sneaks .......50% OFF! Rentals: Cribs, kayaks, SUPs, bikes, hot tubs, & more.
WE DELIVER! BIKE REPAIRS: Pickup/dropoff available
84th Street, 609-492-5150 27th Street, 609-492-6522 acmebeachandbike.com
FLAGS & FLAGPOLES FLAGPOLES INSTALLED. Vinyl/ Aluminum/Nautical Yardar ms. SPRING SPECIAL– 25ft. flagpole $975 installed. American made. 20year warranty. 609-494-0800 email victor@perennialgardensllc.com
PERSONALS Brian, 43, 6’1, black hair, athletic, looking for single female, 35-45. Love sports & pets. Just looking for a good time. Call 609-709-7648. SandPaper PERSONALS are FREE! All free personals should be limited to 20 words or less, with no more than two submissions per individual. A box c/o The SandPaper will be assigned upon request for a charge of $1.50. Only ads of a non-commercial nature may be placed at no cost. Please mail or bring your personals to our office prior to the deadline for personals and all classified ads, Tues., 10am.
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Buy It! Sell It! Rent It! Find It! Fix It!
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
40
CATERING ISLAND CATERING
By Okie’s- Full Service Catering. Weddings, Pig Roasts, Barbecues and Outdoor Parties. Call 609-4943394. www.lbicatering.com
LUCILLE’S CATERING COUNTRY COOKING
38 years experience. Pig roasts, barbecues, buffets, all occasion parties, weddings. Fully insured. All necessary health certificates. 252,500 people. Thank you for voting us Southern Ocean County’s Best Caterer 4 years! 609-698-4474.
PARTY SERVER
Professional, experienced catering server. Fine dining experience. For in-home dinners, parties, showers. LBI area only. 201-681-8147 or rusty799@verizon.net
HALL RENTAL
RUBBISH & GARBAGE REMOVAL JUNK OUT
You name it, we remove it! Everybody has junk. Home & Business. Basements •Attics •Yards •Garages •Sheds •Apartments. 877-637-JUNK.
CLEANING SERVICES AA+ Cleaning - All around- up and down– cleaning at its best. Private or rental properties. Call Eileen, 609-713-9615.
AABSOLUTELY SPOTLESS
Bi-weekly, weekly or changeovers. We do it all! Any other extras, just ask. Debbie 609-384-6856.
HALL RENTAL Surf City Firehouse– year ’round. Heat & A/ C, kitchen, off-street parking. Call 609-494-6127 for information.
All your cleaning needs. Let It Shine Cleaning Service. Changeovers, year ’round. LBI area. Owner operated. References available. Faith, 609-312-9494.
RUBBISH & GARBAGE REMOVAL
ALWAYS CHOOSE THE BEST
BT CLEANOUTS
Attics, garages, sheds & yards. Old fencing & paint can removal, gutter cleaning. LBI & Mainland. Call 609903-2601.
Oceanside Cleaning– Year ’round, Seasonal & Saturday Changeover Cleanings. Over 25 years owner operated. Call 609-492-1710.
CRYSTAL CLEAR
CLEANING SERVICES
CLEANING SERVICES
CLEANING SERVICES
CLEANING SERVICES
ANCHOR CLEANING
Commercio Quality
GREEN CLEANING. Environmentally friendly, bio-degradable, chemical free. Residential, weekly, bi-weekly, changeovers, openings. Reliable, reasonable, with references. Natasha, 609-709-3403.
Put down that mop and hit the beach! Call The Green Clean Team Services, Ocean and Monmouth Counties’ favorite green cleaning service. 609-713-2898 or visit us at www.thecleanteam.biz
Full service. Year ’round, seasonal & changeovers. No job too large or too small, give us a call. 609-947-5514, 609-9158215.
AT SHORE SERVICE
Insured, experienced, professional cleaners. Year ’round, home and office. Openings, changeovers, scheduled cleanings, new constructions, power washing, windows, trash removal. FREE estimate, call today. Susan 609-7135569. Audrey says, ‘‘Don’t get your panties in a pinch!’’ With our help we can make all your cleaning needs a cinch. We do it all, so give us a call. Cleaning is a sure thing. 609-5975325, Audrey.
Betty’s Busy Bees, LLC
Eco-friendly year around cleaning service. Residential/Commercial. Openings/Closings, Changeovers. Reasonable rates. Bonded, Insured. 609-618-9465 or 609-2765541.
CARPET CLEANING
Truck-mounted steam cleaning. ‘‘We Are the Best.’’ LIBERTY CARPET CLEANING. 609-9787522. Cleaning, ironing, laundry by Polish women with a lot of experience. Please call Inga at 609-530-1169. Leave message.
Carpet & Furniture
Cleaning
Powerful truck mount. Fast drying. Certified carpet cleaner. Environmentally safe products. Tile & grout cleaning. Serving LBI & vicinity. Free estimates. Insured. 609-3508908. www.commerciocarpetclean ing.com
Dena Montgomery Cleaning
Owner operated, every job! FridaySunday changeovers, weekly, biweekly. North End of LBI. 28 years in business. Insured. 609-6988748. DIANE’S CLEANING, serving LBI. Owner operated. Changovers. Excellent rates. References. 609-9690289. Do you need to ‘‘brighten’’ your home? Call Sunshine Cleaning Service. Year ’round, seasonal and changeovers. References available. Call Stacey, 609-3841649.
DORA’S ISLAND CLEANING
609-709-3718 NJcrystalclear.com
Free Estimates
Kelly’s Cleaning Service Michael J. Kelly 732-364-5330
Window Cleaning Pressure Washing Painting • Staining
Call: 609-389-2565
A Brighter View
Weekly • Bi-Monthly • Monthly Residential • Rentals • Changeovers Windows & Screens Cleaned • Ceiling Fans Power Washing • Gardening & Yard Work Free Estimates References Available • Professional • Prompt
Mr. Maintenance Cleaning
You’ll Get the Cleanest Carpet & Upholstery
609-290-1920
Residential, commercial and summer changeovers. Mattress cleaning and sanitizing. Fully insured. Bonded. Free estimates. 10% OFF first cleaning. 609242-1629. www.mr-maintenance-clean ing.com
For a Friendly Phone Consultation with no Bait & Switch, Call 609290-2691. You’ll be glad you did! www.baysidecarpetcleaning.org
WINDOW CLEANING EXIT WINDOW CLEANING AND MAINTENANCE
Professional cleaning with a personal touch. Residential, offices, rentals. Owner operated. Free estimates. Call 609-709-4267, leave message.
Complete, great job, well done. A gleaming result every time! 609-494-7500. North end LBI only. ‘‘We wash Ole Barney.’’
Got Cobwebs?
SCREEN REPAIRS
15995 7 Areas HALF HOUSE $ 85 3 Areas SOFA & LOVESEAT $ 110 99 WHOLE HOUSE $ SOFA & LOVESEAT 219 7 Areas 609-489-1721
2 Jersey Girls Cleaning Service Reasonable • Experienced Weekly • Bi-Weekly Changeovers
609-812-0597
Paula Sullivan, Owner
Fast Screen
Serving LBI Since 1982
609-294-0675
NORTH END WINDOW WASH
LBI screen repairs, door installation, and home repairs done at your location! Lic.#13VH01016900. Credit cards accepted. Call 609290-8836.
MIKE’S SCREEN REPAIR
Local on LBI. Same day repair available. Reasonably priced. 201675-6484. Lic.#13VH0017800.
CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces Plus, Inc.
Chimney sweeping. Fully insured, reliable. Sales, service, installation. 609-597-3473. HIC#13VH01525800. See our displays. www.fireplacesonline.com
Same Day Mobile Repair Service
mjjkelly@aol.com
Family Owned & Operated - Our 18th Year A Year Round Company Based on LBI
Will do changeover cleanings. Sun.-Thurs., 20% off. Also available for Spring and Fall cleanings. BOOK NOW! Call Joann, 609-2763317.
European Cleaning Service, 10 years experience, w/references. Hard working & reliable. Residential cleaning. Serving Mainland & LBI. Basia, 609-709-6580.
WHOLE HOUSE $
Fully Insured
Since 2001. LBI/mainland. Screens & storm doors repaired, available 7 days/week. Free estimates.
609-276-5537
SEASONAL/YEAR ’ROUND
STEAM CARPET CLEANING
CLEAR REFLECTIONS LLC
JR’S WINDOW WASHING
SUPERB CARPET CLEANING
LBI’s carpet cleaner for over 30 years. WE CLEAN WITH STEAM! Mention ad, get 1 area free when you clean 3 or more rooms. Call 609-494-5858.
PLATTINUM CLEANING. 10 years exp. Changeovers, new constructions, spring cleanings. FREE estimates. Call Nicole Platt, 609-618-2823.
BEST
Window Washing LLC
HOUSE WATCH
AND Complete Cleaning Service, NJ Registered. Year ’round residential, weekly, bi-weekly, & monthly cleaning. Mary Kennedy, 609-492-5122, 609-709-3240.
Credit Cards Accepted
Window Cleaning
609.312.1076
PLUMBING Fully Insured
Outdoor showers, tankless and water heaters, gas lines, sewer/ drain cleaning, boilers, service work. For all your plumbing needs. Free estimates. Lic.#12452. 609668-9008.
A Brighter View helps the sun shine through
609-284-3366 Fully insured Competitive pricing
We clean window sills tracks and screens
DANA LIMOUSINES, LLC SERVING ALL AIRPORTS, CITIES, CASINOS & PIERS GUARANTEED LOWEST RATES
CALL-TOLL FREE (866) 521-0076 • (866) 521-8790 FAX
S.K. ROBB PLUMBING CO. (Free Estimates)
609-294-0675
All Plumbing Services. Bathroom Remodeling. Handicapped Toilets. Winterization Services. NJ Lic#8455.
609-361-9453
Free Estimates/Fully Insured • Owner Operated
PLU M BIN G P ROBLE M S? CALL MICHAEL • PETITO Residential & Commerical • Repair s & Alterations
6 0 9 - 5 7 7-1514
SERVING THE TRI-STATE AREA FULLY LICENSED Danalimousine DanalimousineLLC LLC@aol.com @aol.com INSURED WARNING: N.J. & U.S. DOT LAWS REQUIRE LIMOUSINE COMPANIES TO HAVE $1,500,000.00 IN LIABILITY INSURANCE, & ALSO ALL NEW DRIVERS ARE SUBJECT TO CRIMINAL BACKGROUND CHECKS. BEWARE OF LOCAL FRIENDS, NEIGHBORS, OR LIMOUSINE COMPANIES THAT DON’T MEET THESE STATE & FEDERAL REQUIREMENTS.
JERSEY SHORE PLUMBING & DESIGN
Quality Workmanship for Over 25 Years NJ Lic.#8500
No Job Too Small or Large
Free Estimates
41
T. KOHLER JR. PLUMBING & HEATING
HEATING & COOLING
HEATING & COOLING
HANDYMAN
HANDYMAN
WINDOW TREATMENTS
FAZIO HEAT & AIR
Rick Barker Heating & Cooling, LLC
HOME WORK
SUNRISE SERVICES
Complete Design Services. Interiors, Home and Realtor Staging, Window Treatments, Slip Covers and Upholstery. Call 609-5973360.
Our rates don’t inflate going over the bridge. R22 $19.99 lb. Great service contracts. 15 minute call backs. Emergency service standby. Fully insured. Free service calls. Lic.#13VH06569000 ins.
Quality Service at Your Convenience for all your plumbing needs. Turn Ons, Leaks, Fixture Replacement, Drain Cleaning. 609242-5474. Lic.#12557.
HANDYMAN
609-276-1658
HEATING & COOLING LAURENCE HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING
ALL-WAYS HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING
Experienced Technician For Sales •Service •Installation. Certified & insured. 30 years experience. Lic.#1058312. 609-296-6368. www.Laurenceheatair.com
Sales •Service •Installation •All Makes/Models. Financing Available. BPI Certified. 24Hr. Emergency Service. 877-247-1010. Lic#13VH01556300.
Plumbing,
Your comfort is our goal! Get it done right the first time. 609-5975808 Lic.#13VH04377200.
Odd Jobs & Yard Work
Replacement windows, paint, roofing and siding repair, storm doors, brush and tree removal, raking leaves, stone work, light hauling. Serving LBI and Mainland since 1987. 609-698-7493.
ALLPURPOSEREPAIRS.COM
LBI based. One call does it all: repairs, renovations, windows, doors, closets, tile, fire/water damage, carpentry. No job too small. Also home watch. Insured & NJ licensed, #13VHO5115400. Ask for Dave, 609-207-6056.
Big C...Little Repairs
Heating & Cooling
Handyman Services. One call does it all. Year-round repairs & house check. Insured. 609-947-6396. License #13VH03667600.
All types of home repairs, •Carpentry •Ceiling Fans •Locks •Stor m Doors Installed •Housesitting •Rental Property Maintenance. Call Sal 609-3352099.
LBI HOME HANDYMAN
MASONRY
LBIHANDYMAN.COM
A&A MASONRY REPAIRS. Steps, chimney walls, rebuilt & repaired. Stone veneer, concrete & pavers. Fully insured. Call Pete, 609-2424249. newjerseymasonry.com
Wind Damage, Screens, Roofing, Siding, Flooring, Tile, Windows, Drywall, Trim, Decks, Kitchens, Baths, Cleanouts. Guaranteed call back. Lic.13VH04665400. 609489-6305. Repair & yard work, power washing, interior/exterior painting & staining. No job too big. No job too small. We do it all. Serving LBI out of Beach Haven. 609-312-9857.
Curbs Driveways Patios Sidewalks Steps
Yes, We’re On LBI! 6105 Long Beach Blvd. • Brant Beach
HANDYMAN
www.storsbergplumbing.com
609-361-0600
Inside or outside, no job too small. Reasonable Rates. Please call 609-709-5452.
Lic #6062
Mr. Fix-It 361-8226
Rotted Wood Repairs Sheetrock & Painting Leaky Roofs & Siding Wall Air Conditioners Closets & Partitions - Trim Decks, Stairs & Showers Windows • Doors • Locks Andersen Window Repairs Termite Repairs Lic.#L046452
609-587-8017 Heating • Air Conditioning • Air Quality Repairs • Installations • Service Contracts www.heritagehomeservicesnj.com Please visit us online for current product discounts Lic.# 13VH05908400
MONTANHA MECHANICAL Specializing in: Tankless Water Heaters Ductless Air Conditioning, Water Turn Ons, Sewer and Drain Cleaning Call for a FREE In-Home Estimate
Plumbing & Heating Service - Repairs - Remodels
Seasonal Water Turn-Ons & Offs
Ozzie Montanha Master Plumber License# 11125
waltmccollum@yahoo.com
Phone # 609-978-3551
Carl Gallagher Mason • Contracting
609-494-0969 Reg./Lic.# 13V00199100
SONN K G C RI ELI
Reliable
L E OD BILME REM• Trim
AWNINGS & CANOPIES ATLANTIC AWNINGS
•Carpentry •Painting •Yard Work. No job too small. Hourly rates. Fully insured. Call Jerry, 609-597-6715.
COAST HANDYMAN SERVICES
Windows, doors, all carpentry, woodwork, sheetrock, plaster & paint work. Licensed & insured. Lic.#13VH03837800. Call Dave 609-296-5779.
AC CONDENSER SPECIAL WITH FREE CUSTOM COVER
Professional: House Cleanings, in/out spring cleanups, gutters, water damage, repairs, carpentry, window & power washing. Dune fencing. Lawns: mow, rake, bag, prune. North LBI. Eric, 609-494-5548. Lic#13VH01376000.
JG DESIGNS
Professional Installations •Residential/Commercial. Retractable Awnings, Window Awnings, Retractable & Stationary Canopies, Recovers, Repairs, Re-Hang, Take Downs, Washing. Fully insured. FREE ESTIMATES. 609-6182420. Lic.#13VH06758700. atlanticawningcompany.com
CULTURED STONE
Sales, Installation. Residential/ Commercial. Interior/Exterior. Reliable, fully insured. HIC#13VH01525800. 609-5973473. Fireplaces Plus, Inc. See our displays. www.fireplacesonline.com
SandPaper Classified Ads Get Results
Atlantic Awnings Professional Installations Residential/Commercial
Retractable Awnings • Window Awnings Retractable & Stationary Canopies Recovers • Repairs • Re-Hang • Take Downs • Washing
609-618-2420 www.AtlanticAwningCompany.com Free Estimates
Fully Insured
Lic# 13VH06758700
SKIP BUTLER’S WINDOWS AND DOORS LIGHT CARPENTRY AND PAINTING SERVICES
HO
•Tile Specialists •Baths •Kitchens •Doors •Windows •All Repairs
Special Pricing Starting at $29900 Includes Capping & Low E Glazing
609-494-5094
609-971-3897
Fax 609-494-5504 Reg./Lic.# 13VH01293600
Lic#13VH08737900
Corrigan Construction Co. Est. 1987
Additions • Alterations Remodels • Renovations Elevators • Decks Siding • Windows Doors • Floors • Trim Fully Insured Free Estimates
Custom Fiberglass Fully Insured
Serving LBI
Free Estimates
Decks • Roofs • Vinyl Handrails
609-713-0581 Lic # 13vH00034400
25 Years Experience
597-2692 Lic#13VH04928600
D. Cerillo
Construction LLC
Home Improvements & Handyman Service
WINTERIZATION RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL
Water & Sewer Hook Ups House Winterizations Tankless Water Heaters
Drain Cleaning • Gas Piping Fixtures Installed Repair Service
609-361-7473
Michael J. VanLiew Master Plumber
Over 25 Years’ Experience
Over 20 Years Experience
• Kitchens & Baths • Wood Rot • Painting • Windows & Doors • Sheetrock, etc. • Rental Repairs NO JOB TOO SMALL
Lic. #12456 Ship Bottom, NJ
609-361-1332
dcerilloconstruction@yahoo.com NJ Reg./Lic# 13VH03796900
Chet DeMarchis Builder & Sons Family Owned & Operated All manner of Custom Renovations and Remodeling LBI Homeowner - Fully Insured & Licensed in PA & NJ NJ License: 13VH04722200 • PA License: 012164 Year-Round Property Management - House Watch Winterize and De-Winterize Services Available Phone: 609-361-9025 or 215-788-3964 No Job Too Big or Too Small Portfolio Available: cdemarchisbldrandsons.com
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
PLUMBING
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
42
WEEDS-B-GONE Sand • Stone • Patios Driveways • Yard Cleanups Poison Ivy • Spurge • Dandelions Ants • Spiders • Pests
LAWN CARE
PEST CONTROL
FENCING
CUT FOURLESS now scheduling 2012 lawn maintenance. Serving LBI & mainland for over 30 years. Just a cut above the rest! 609-2762876.
LIND ENTERPRISES LLC TERMITE & PEST CONTROL
We carry a full line of reasonably priced, high quality wood & vinyl fencing. Prompt installation. Free estimates. Barnegat Light Landscaping Co., 609-709-5227. Proudly serving LBI’s North End. SRF444@yahoo.com
LAWNMOWERS TUNED
Also minor small engine repairs. Call Ray, 609-971-6594.
609-597-6561 Best Price & Service
MOWING & TRIMMING
Licensed, registered and insured. #93312A
Spring clean-ups & gutter cleaning. Call Martin Lawn Care Co. Reasonable rates. Insured. 609-4891447. Email kutgrass@yahoo.com kutgrass.com
Nace’ s Weed Control Chemical Weed Control Service
Serving LBI & Ocean County Real Estate and WDI Inspections. Termite, Ant, Rodent, Wasp and all pest control problems solved. Excellent Customer Service. Lic.#98314A fully insured.
Call Howard 609-384-5019
FENCES
LANDSCAPING A SPRING CLEANUP
PEST MANAGEMENT
Offering peace of mind with your ant and pest problems. Squirrel and bird control. No poisons. Lic.#93312A. 609-597-6561.
Tree removal & trimming, yard cleanups, gutter cleaning, odd jobs, mulching. Call 609-9710242. (Lic#13VH02103100).
MARTIN LAWN CARE CO. Mowing & Trimming You Call • We Cut
STATE LIC. #97098A INSURED FREE ESTIMATES
LANDSCAPING
LANDSCAPING
AFFORDABLE Landscaping
GIOTTINI LANDSCAPING
Cleanups •Planting •Pruning •Mulching •Weeding •Fencing. Over 15 years experience. Low rates. Call 609-276-3111.
AH
‘‘The friends of your yard.’’ Stone spreading, all colors and sizes, lawn care, hedge and shrub trimming, mulch and complete cleanups. ‘‘Planting time is any time.’’ Prompt service. 609-312-9857.
SEASONAL CLEANUPS. Mulch, Organic Soil & Stone •Tree & Shrub Care •Pine Needle/Leaf Removal •Living or Decorative Walls •Walkways •Paver Repairs •Seashore/Dune Gardens •Low Maintenance, Salt Tolerant Plantings. Our standards meet Rutgers recommended Coastal Landscaping Guidelines. Owner Operated/ Client Satisfaction Guaranteed. LBIPG@comcast.net
609-494-4808
Castle’s Cleanup Crew, LLC
Classified Ads Get Results 494-5900
Residential & Vacation Turnover cleaning. Lawn maintenance, yard cleanups, painting & deck staining. Weeding programs. Call 609-713-5289. Free estimates, fully insured.
609-489-1447
J.J. BRICK PAVERS LLC Patios • Walkways • Driveways Retaining Walls & Stone • Flower Beds Landscaping • Mulch • Top Soil
REASONABLE RELIABLE LOCAL - INSURED
KUTGRASS@yahoo.com Kutgrass.com
Clean Ups • Trimming • Tree Planting & Plants Celestino Cruz References • Free Estimates - Est. 1980
609-978-1045 • Fax: 609-978-0337 celestino.landscaping@yahoo.com
Reg./Lic# 13VH02263300
PERENNIAL GARDENS
• Spring/Fall Cleanups & Maintanence • Professional Design/Build Services • Pools & Spas • Outdoor Living Spaces • Outdoor Kitchens & Fireplaces
perennialgardenslbi.com
Jose Lopez
Landscaping • Fencing • Pavers
609-339-0789 • office 609-978-8420
(609) 494-0800 Lic.# 13VH01646400
Landscapes
Allgreen Pest Services
Reg/Lic# 13VH02805500
Surf City • 609-361-8800 • www.bayaveplantco.com
ECO FRIENDLY power washing/wildlife trapping
7 Day Service
732-597-8550 866-303-0044 mfritz625@aol.com www.allgreenpestservices.com
Licensed & Insured Free Estimates Real Estate Inspections
609-597-0964 Manahawkin, NJ 08050
LANDSCAPE DESIGN STONE PAVERS WALLS FENCING ASPHALT SPRINKLERS
609-597-6492
856-764-8446 Delran, NJ 08075
RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL ALSO BOAT CLEANING & ODD JOB SERVICES
Stone Delivery & Spreading • All Types & Sizes Quality Paver Work
LICENSED & INSURED RELIABLE SERVICE
Most Reasonable & Experienced Area Contractor Mushroom & Topsoil • Clam Shells
CALL NOW! WE WILL MATCH ANY PRICE!
609-276-7549 or 609-312-8908
We Will Beat Any Estimate by 5% FREE ESTIMATES
494-4106 • 597-1767
Lic#13VH00893900
“Every Project a Referral”
PARADISE
Lic.#13VH05803700
FENCE INSTALLATIONS & REPAIRS VINYL-CHAIN LINK-WOOD ALUMINUM FENCE TRASH ENCLOSURES & SHOWERS SWIMMING POOL ENCLOSURES QUALITY DEPENDABLE WORK
609-489-6400 Cottagefence@yahoo.com
LANDSCAPE & HOME CONTRACTING
Sales • Service • Repairs
Landscaping Hardscaping Sprinkler Systems & Repairs Sod-Seed-Mulch • Fire Pits • Pavers
Home Contracting Decks • Additions • Windows New Kitchens • Remodeling
Turn Your Backyard into a Paradise New Pools Liners • Repairs Openings • Closings Low maintenance pools Salt water pools
One Call Does It All! Fully Insured • Reliable
Licensed & Insured Lic # 13VH05152400
POOL
Lic#13VH05470200
609-296-0548
43
LANDSCAPING
LANDSCAPING
LANDSCAPE SERVICES 609-494-7373
Quality Mushroom Soil Topsoil & Mulch
SPRING CLEANUPS LBI & MAINLAND AREA
We will maintain your property beautifully. Spray, Mow, Clean, Weed & Trim. We do it all, all the time. Spring cleanups, stone topping. North end LBI.
MANAHAWKIN TREE SERVICE
Tree Removal, Trimming, Stump Grinding & Chipping. Gardens Planted, Weeded & Maintained.
494-0266
597-8846
Free estimates. Fully insured. Lic.#13VH01099400
Clam Shells. Delivery & Spreading. 609-494-4106 or 609-597-1767.
SCHONEY’S LANDSCAPING CLEANUPS
Tree, Shrub & Ornamental Grass Trimming •Hand Weeding •Pine Needle/Leaf Removal •Mulch, Organic Soil & Stone Delivered •Complete Landscape Care.
OUTDOOR LIGHTING
STAFFORD STONE
Stone Delivery & Spreading •Grading •Fill •Mulch •Topsoil •Stone, all types & sizes. Free estimates. 609-698-5505, 609709-6556. Lic.#13VH02679500.
SandPaper Classified Ads Get Results
Landscaping Continued on next page
Property & Lawn Maintenance Sod • Stone Shore Plantings Wall Stone Drainage Solutions Mulch
Energy Saving LEDs & Low Voltage Systems Luxury & Safety Beautifully Designed, Installed & Maintained Enjoy More of Your Seashore Home
· Unique Island Style Landscapes · Colorful Gardens, Fence, Bamboo · Long Term Landscape Relationships
Free Estimates
609-494-7373
DAWSON
LIC# 13VH05931600
• Rock • Cleanups • All Landscape Needs • 60ft. Bucket Lift • Pavers • Hardscaping
marclandscapes@gmail.com
Mow/Clean/Weed/Spray/Trim Stone Spreading • Beds & Borders Hand Built Stone Walls
Living & Working Local North 609-494-7373 LBI
229 S. Main St.(Rt 9) Barnegat Pkwy Exit 67
Complete Range of Landscaping Services Shore Garden Specialist Proudly Serving LBI’s North End
Steven R. Fall • 609.709.5227 SRF444@yahoo.com
Garden & Landscaping Center Now Open Friday, Saturday & Sunday 8:30am - 5pm at 502 Broadway, Barnegat Light Landscape Design
Night & Day 609.812.9191
Brick Pavers Stone Spreading Landscaping & Spring Cleanups
609-978-1392
www.shrubheads.com
All Types - One Day Delivery
www.SouthernOceanHardscaping.com
For-Shore Weed Control Lawn Care
Lic # 13VH04791400
Visit our New Garden Center!
Landscape Design
Sod • Stone • Plantings • Pavers Retaining Walls• Lighting Drainage Systems• Property Maintenance Lic. #13VH00349300
www.hochslandscaping.com
BARNEGAT LIGHT LANDSCAPING CO.
Joe Salentino C:609-312-3688 H:609-848-9033
Residential • Commercial Licensed & Fully Insured
LIGHTHOUSE LANDSCAPE
609-891-7769
609-361-4310
494-7562 • 294-9551
• Treework • Trimming • Planting • Weeding • Mulch • Topsoil
New Installations • Outdoor Lighting Cleanups • Free Estimates
(Previously LBI Landscaping)
Design, Install, Maintain
On The Side 24hr Emergency Service
Landscaping & Garden Center
Light Up Your Night
Design & Installation
GIOTTINI LANDSCAPING 609-494-4808
Complete landscaping, grading and brush hog, backhoe, fences, gutters, tree, shrub and stump removal. 609-693-3084. Lic.#13VH01672000.
by
LIGHTHOUSE LANDSCAPE
“Your yard is always on our mind”
609-597-3629
Southern Ocean Stone
Lic# 13VH02482900
Tree & Shrub Care
FREE Follow-Up Service Calls FREE Evaluation/Estimate Poison Ivy Control • Weed Control on Sand, Stone, Patios & Driveways
Tree Work Professionals
LAWN CARE • TREE & SHRUB CARE OUTDOOR PEST CONTROL
BRICK PAVERS / RETAINING WALLS / MULCH PLANTINGS / CLEAN-UPS / DESIGN & INSTALL
609-693-6999
609-661-9150
For
Call for free consultation for design services
Call now to schedule your spring cleanup
FREE 3-D Design with any Design Built Service
10% off for New Customers
Tree Removal • Pruning • Stump Removal Residential & Commercial ree
F ates Estim
609-290-6069
www.PineBarrensTree.com • pinebarrenstree@yahoo.com NJ Lic. Tree Expert #545 • ISA Certified Arborist - NJ - 0893A
FREE ATES
EMERGENCY WORK
ESTIM
609-296-5335 732-208-8733
F
Outdoor Environments *Yard Sprays:Ticks, Mosquitoes, Fleas Etc. *Quartely Exterior Foundation Sprays
Landscape Planning, Design & Construction • Plant Services Property Management • Irrigation & Drainage Solutions Landscape Lighting • Outdoor Living Areas • Carpentry Services Fiberglass Pools & Spas • Hardscape Design-Build Services Long Beach Island, NJ
p: 609-494-7007 www.daivdashlandscaping.com
Over 20 Years Experience Fully Insured • Lic. #13VH01823000
Certified Arborist & Line Clearance Certified Tree Removal & Planting Natural/Organic Tree, Plant & Lawn Care Proper Pruning & Trimming • Cleanups & Clearings Stump Grinding • Brush Piles • Firewood 60' Aerial Lift / Grapple Truck / Experienced Climbers Customized Plant Care Program • Fertilization & Disease Management
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
LANDSCAPING
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
44
LANDSCAPING
ROOFING/SIDING
WEEDS-B-GONE
A ALL EXTERIOR RENOVATIONS
LANDSCAPING THE GARDEN KEEPER Lawn Mowing & Cleanup
Small Tree & Shrub Pruning, Hand Weeding, Stone, Hardscaping, Mulch, Lawn Aerating. 609-8483158. Lic.#13VH06035900. www.thegardenkeep.com
Poison ivy, spurge, dandelions. Sand, stone, patios and driveways. Best price and service. Licensed, registered and insured. #93312A. 609-597-6561.
P&H ROOFING
A company where the owner is on the job! Repairs & Power Washing (No subcontractors)
Lic# 13VH01941200
609-384-1709
Free Estimates
Fully Insured
Certified Vinyl Siding Contractor (VSI), Cedar Impressions, Real Cedar Shakes, Timberline Roofing, Windows, Decks, Outside Showers. Fair Prices. Free estimates, Proof of license, insurance & vinyl siding certification. 609-494-3999. #13VH04369400.
ROOFING/SIDING
ELECTRICAL
J. MCDERMOTT ROOFING
THOMAS F. GOGLIA & SON ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS. All calls promptly answered. Serving Manahawkin & LBI with 25 years experience. 609-549-0049.
Roof repairs and new roofs. All work guaranteed. Free estimates. Jim 609-492-2732, Haven Beach. Lic.#13VH04826300. JAMES LEWIS EXTERIORS Roofing & Siding. Est. 1987. All work guaranteed. Insured, references available. Lic.#13VH00571700. Best prices! Call 609-294-2034.
A ALL PHASES OF ROOFING/SIDING
ELECTRICAL
We specialize in Roofing & Siding, Cedar Impressions, Vinyl Siding, Cedar Shakes, GAF Timberline Roofing. BEST PRICES ON LBI. Call for free estimate. Only Certified Vinyl Siding Installers Located on LBI. Fully licensed & insured. 609-494-5108. Lic.#13VH04369400.
J.A.G. Electrical Contracting LLC
All Types of Shingles & Repairs iguanaroofinganddecks.com iguanaroofing@yahoo.com
609-294-8219
Reg./Lic.# 13VH01741000
Wind Damage, Roofing, Siding, Windows, Drywall, Trim, Decks, Basements, Kitchens, Baths, Additions. Guaranteed call back. Lic.13VH04665400. 609-489-6305. BuildAxis.com
FLOORING RON FERRIER FLOOR SANDING CO. Installation, staining, pickling, repairs. Clean, top quality work. Serving Southern Ocean County. 732-775-1932.
CARPENTRY
Performing all types of electrical work. FREE estimates! Guaranteed returned calls. Lic# 16279 *Fully licensed/bonded. 609-384-5514.
HOME REPAIR •MAINTENANCE. LBI based. Wind Damage, Doors, Locks, Siding, Roofing, Drywall, Andersen Windows, Fences, Rotted Wood. Lic.#13VH02403900. 609-713-2400, 609-713-2405.
Kean
ALL HOME REPAIRS & MAINTENANCE
ALL HOME REPAIRS & MAINTENANCE
Roofing • Fiberglass Decks • Skylights • Vinyl Rails
CARPENTRY
Electrical Contractors, Inc.
Complete electrical residential/ commercial service. Guaranteed call back. Free estimates. Lic.#14560A. 609-978-2070.
Wind Damage, Roofing, Siding, Windows, Drywall, Trim, Decks, Basements, Kitchens, Baths, Additions. Guaranteed call back. Lic.13VH04665400. 609-489-6305. BuildAxis.com
NJ LICENSE #6156
GEORGE WARR RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL
Repairs & New Installations • Senior & Military Discounts • Lighting Ceiling & Attic Fans • Generator Specialist • Kitchens & Baths
All Types • Fully Insured • Free Estimates
$50 OFF ANY JOB OVER $200
Andrew Plenge
Lic# 13VH00082400
609-494-6216
Fully Bonded & Insured Lic.# 15541
609-891-6905
Free Estimates 24-Hr. Service
KURTZ ELECTRIC, INC. Residential • Commercial • Industrial
Electrical Contractor Meter Sockets & Service Cable Replacements Water Heater Elements Installed Ceiling Fans • Dryers Air Conditioning • Circuits Lighting & Remodeling Specialist P.O. Box 182, Barnegat Light, NJ 08006
609-494-0927
CABINETMAKER
Finish Carpenter. Kitchen & Bath Remodeling. Cabinet Refacing. Entertainment centers, bookcases, mantles, custom moldings. References, fully insured, 30 years experience. 609-492-6820. Lic.#13VH04077900.
CARPENTER
Cabinetmaker, 25 years experience. Honest, reliable. No job too small. 609-494-4098.
Serving LOCAL Businesses & Homeowners for Over 20 Years
Since 1976
Lic # 5828
Ceiling Fans Recessed Lights Remodeling & New Construction
QUICK RESPONSE
609-361-0236 www.daveselectric.net
FREE ESTIMATES LBI • Manahawkin Tuckerton Lacey Twp. • Toms River
“NO JOB TOO SMALL” Serving Local Businesses & Home Owners for 32 years • Upgrade Electrical Service • Recessed Lighting • Air Conditioning Circuits
PINSTRIPE ROOFING
597-8570
$500 OFF
201-218-1277 David S. 551-265-2036 David D.
Ask About Our 22 Sq. Promo! We beat any written estimate!
pinstriperoofing.com NJ LIC# 13VH06396300
ATLANTIC ROOFING & SIDING
Residental & Commercial Shingle Roofs • Flat Roofs • EPDM • Single Ply Systems Vinyl & Cedar Siding • Copper • Chimneys Additions & Alterations • Gutters • Windows • Painting Fiberglass Decks • Vinyl Railings • Skylights • All Repairs
609-698-7766
Serving Ocean County & LBI for over 20 years
Free Estimates
WE DO SOLAR
All Phases of Electrical Work No Job Too Small
10% OFF ALL JOBS OVER $250.00 Licensed & Fully Insured NJ License #15079A
Ceramic Tile LLC
Marble - Natural Stone - Glass Tile Custom Showers • Complete Bathroom Remodels Kitchen Backsplashes Small Jobs & Repairs Welcome
185 N. Main St. (Rt. 9) Manahawkin, N.J.
LICENSE No. 6093
Expert Roofing at Handyman Prices! 15-year guarantee on all installation jobs! Siding • Gutters • Leaders • Kitchens Residential/Commercial Senior Discount
with this ad! Clip & Save! Valid until 12/31/12
Fully Insured
FREE ESTIMATES
• New Construction • Wiring for Ceiling Fans • Troubleshooting
(some restrictions may apply)
“Extreme Home Make Over Contractor”
609-296-6906 • 609-618-9031 Fully Insured • Reg/Lic 13VH00054700
Jerry Milano
MILANO TILE, LLC Serving LBI over 40 years
Custom Installations Bath remodels, backsplashes Marble, glass, handcrafted tile our specialty
(609) 978-6530
Lic. #13VH00496100
Ph/Fx: 609-698-2378 Reg/Lic # 13VH04482900
WWW.GOGREENWITHLOUSELECTRIC.COM
SandPaper Classified Ads Get Results
Joy Milano
POWER WASHING “LBI’S Finest Power Washer!”
Marke Bednarek Custom Builder SPECIALIZING IN FIBERGLASS, SIDING, VINYL RAILING & DECKS
Think Clean.. "WE WILL MATCH OR BEAT ANY COMPETITOR'S WRITTEN ESTIMATE.”* *certain restrictions may apply
NJ REG# 13VH06143700
Build Green
(609) 206-6743 NJ License #13VH03436700
Fully Insured
45
PAINTING
A-1 SCHROEDER PAINTING
BYRNE PAINTING
Interior/Exterior â&#x20AC;˘Power Washing â&#x20AC;˘Exterior staining our specialty â&#x20AC;˘Decks Sealed. Quality work guaranteed. 40 years experience. Free estimates. Glenn, 609-312-8263. Lic.#13VH05781700.
Interior/exterior. Power washing. Quality work at reasonable prices. References supplied. 609-494-5626, 609597-8558. Lic.#13VH02045500.
AL-CAT PAINTING
EAST COAST CONTRACTINGâ&#x20AC;&#x201C; Paint & Stain â&#x20AC;˘Kitchens â&#x20AC;˘Baths â&#x20AC;˘Decks. 15% off competitorsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; pricing. 1 hour response. Chris 609618-3462. NJ Reg.016506611.
Interior â&#x20AC;˘Exterior â&#x20AC;˘Wallpapering â&#x20AC;˘Power Washing. All other home improvements and remodeling. Fully insured. 25yrs. experience. 609-978-0181, Joe. Lic.#13VH03693100.
Howard Painting & Staining
Andrew H. Grayson
Interior & exterior. Give us a call. 609-312-9857. Serving all the Mainland and Long Beach Island.
Painting and Contracting
Licensed/Insured. Interior/Exterior Paint, Stain, Decorative Finish. Wallpaper, Repaint, New Construction. Power Washing. Residential/Commercial. Sub-contract, Ocean County/Will travel. References available. 609-891-5513. Lic.#13VH05418100. www.graysonpropainting.com
POWER WASHING
POWER WASHING
POWER WASHING
DECK RESTORATION SERVICES
For all Your Pressure Washing Needs. â&#x20AC;˘Wood Restoration â&#x20AC;˘Window/Screen Cleaning â&#x20AC;˘Interior/ Exterior Painting. 609-618-2975.
Sanding â&#x20AC;˘Staining â&#x20AC;˘Sealing â&#x20AC;˘Repairs â&#x20AC;˘Power Washing â&#x20AC;˘Mildew Removal. Reasonable Rates, Free Estimates. Licensed & Insured.
609-367-5176.
Affordable residential & commercial power washing & deck restoration. Call Jeff, cell 732-597-3467 or 609361-9569. Cedar, vinyl, fiberglass, railings, decks, wood restoration, concrete, docks all phases. Insured. Lic#13VH01389600. Call John, 609-494-6175.
LBIâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S Finest Power Washer
Professional, prompt, thorough. Commercial & Residential. Window Washing. Call Marke Bednarek, 609-206-6743. Insured, Lic#13VH03436700.
PAINTING STAINING 597-0544 Reg./Lic.# 13VH01517700
WASHING
CUSTOM HOUSE PAINTING
361-2452
â&#x20AC;˘ New/Old Work â&#x20AC;˘ Wall Paper Removal â&#x20AC;˘ Sheetrock Repairs
F R E E E S T I M AT E S â&#x20AC;˘ F U L LY I N S U R E D â&#x20AC;˘ R E A S O N A B L E R AT E S
Specializing In Stain Work
Professional Sheetrock Tape â&#x20AC;˘ Spackle New Homes â&#x20AC;˘ Renovations
609-273-8207
Lic# 13VH0613100
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Old & New Floors Installation & Repairs
609-597-6229
Power Washing Special
1 stor y, $125. 2 stor y, $225. Decks, boats, etc. Will beat anyoneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s price! Licensed & insured. 609-384-2663.
POWER WASHING Prestige Power Washing
All exterior surfaces. Painting/ Staining. Free estimates. Fully Insured. Lic.#0400399305. 609994-7379.
Classified Ads Can Be Seen Online www.thesandpaper.net
H&H
WIND
OW CLEANING
& POWERWASHING
Green Alternatives Available
609-384-1046 Heidi Hunter
â&#x20AC;˘ Deck Restoration â&#x20AC;˘ Window Cleaning â&#x20AC;˘ Powerwashing â&#x20AC;˘ Paint/Stain Spring Roof Cleaning Special
800-560-WASH
CertiďŹ ed Wood Preservers Power Washers Assoc. of North America
ROBERT SCHAMBER
BUILDER LLC
3DLQWLQJ 'HFRUDWLQJ &RQVXOWLQJ Â&#x2021; &RQWUDFWLQJ .LWFKHQ %DWKURRP 5HPRGHOLQJ ,QWHULRU ([WHULRU %DUQHJDW /%, 5HJ /LF 9+
HOME IMPROVEMENTS Repairs â&#x20AC;˘ Alterations â&#x20AC;˘ Window Replacements â&#x20AC;˘ Siding R Decks & Railings â&#x20AC;˘ Kitchens â&#x20AC;˘ Baths Tel/Fax T 609-494-7006 | Cell 609-290-1530 Serving LBI 25 Years
Lic #13VH00275100
T.W. Knorr Construction, LLC BUILDERS & CONSTRUCTION MANAGERS
Hansonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s House Painting, LLC Best Spring Prices 609-271-4708 Leo Hanson â&#x20AC;˘ Owner/Painting Contractor
Floor Sanding & ReďŹ nishing
POWER WASHERS PLUS
COMMERCIAL / RESIDENTIAL OWNER ON JOB SITE FREE ESTIMATES
PAINT & HAMMER
Rickâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
â&#x20AC;˘ Interior â&#x20AC;˘ Exterior â&#x20AC;˘ Brush â&#x20AC;˘ Roll â&#x20AC;˘ Spray â&#x20AC;˘ Popcorn Ceilings
R.J.H. Paint & Stain
Interior/exterior, power washing, wall coverings, acoustic spray, small repairs. Owner operated since 1979. Licensed, insured, reliable. 609-597-7763. Lic.#13VH01979900.
Interior and Exterior Staining & Painting. Powerwashing. Windows & Doors Installed. Michael Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Donnell. Lic.#13VH05479800. 609-494-3699.
EXTERIOR/ INTERIOR
POWER
PAINTING
Interior/Exterior â&#x20AC;˘ Power Washing Staining â&#x20AC;˘ Professional Window Cleaning Where Excellent Quality at a Reasonable Price Still Matters! NJ Reg./Lic.#13VH05425800 Join us on Facebook!
(609) 848-4094 (201) 650-0534
Additions â&#x20AC;˘ New Homes â&#x20AC;˘ Home OfďŹ ce Renovations â&#x20AC;˘ Media Rooms Add-A-Levels â&#x20AC;˘ Kitchens & Baths tim@twknorr.com â&#x20AC;˘ www.twknorr.com NJ Reg # 13VH03126700
DECKING PLUS DECK BUILDERS & POWERWASHING CO.
Hardwood ~ Laminate ~ Bamboo ~ Cork Professional Flooring Installation at Competitive Rates Have us install any brand from any store or use our free shop at home service & save!
609.276.9299
Visit us at: www.skyroďŹ&#x201A;oors.com Re/Lic#13VH04831900 | EPA & CFI CertiďŹ ed
All Exteriors/Interiors Staining Free Estimates Fully Insured
PAINTING & POWER WASHING
609-994-7379 Lic#0400399305
JW CLEANING & PROPERTY MAINTENANCE PAINTING POWER WASHING Single Home $149 & up 2 Story Home $249 & up Decks
Fully Insured
â&#x20AC;˘Window Washing â&#x20AC;˘Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning â&#x20AC;˘24-Hour Water Damage Cleanups
609-276-8666
Free Estimates
Frank Co. Painting & Paperhanging
Professional â&#x20AC;˘ Prompt â&#x20AC;˘ References
609-276-9213 PHONE: 609-693-8998 FAX: 609-693-5358
ADDITIONS & ALTERATIONS
33 YEARS IN BUSINESS
FULLY INSURED & LICENSED
25 Years Experience FREE ESTIMATES â&#x20AC;˘ INSURED 609-693-3472 Reg./Lic.# 13VH01404200
ANTHONY JOHNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S REMODELING, LLC HOME REPAIRS & IMPROVEMENTS Always a Quality Job at a Fair Price
(609) 276-2242
Calls promptly returned ajh4building@aol.com
REMODELING â&#x20AC;˘ ADDITIONS â&#x20AC;˘ DECKS TRIM WORK â&#x20AC;˘ EXTERIOR STAIRWAYS DECORATIVE OUTDOOR WOODWORK EXTERIOR SHOWERS â&#x20AC;˘ NO JOB TOO SMALL
30 Years Experience Reg/Lic# 13VH06407000
Licensed & Insured
. 4YVOW 'SRWXVYGXMSR %HHMXMSRW 6IRSZEXMSRW (IGOW *MFIVKPEWW ;SSH 6SSJMRK 7MHMRK
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Beyond All Expectations
KRETZER & SONS, INC. Est. 1988
CUSTOM BUILDERS ENT. INC.
609â&#x20AC;˘492â&#x20AC;˘1242 1â&#x20AC;˘800â&#x20AC;˘572â&#x20AC;˘4684
rickrws@gmail.com
Reg./Lic.# 13VH00265800
BATH & KITCHEN REMODELS REPLACEMENT WINDOWS DECKS & VINYL RAILS WILLIAM C. KRETZER, PRESIDENT FORKED RIVER, NJ NEW HOME BUILDERS LIC#00595 HOME IMPROVEMENT CONTRACTORS LIC#13VH03118500
AXIS B U I L D E R S , L L C
609-489-6305 BuildAxis.com
Fully Insured NJ License # 13VH04665400
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
PAINTING
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
46
HOME IMPROVEMENTS A ALL H0ME IMPROVEMENTS
We specialize in Renovations, Additions, Add-a-Level, Decks, Kitchens, Bathrooms, Vinyl Siding, Cedar Shakes, Windows, Vinyl Railings, Outside Showers. Free Estimates. Fully licensed and insured. Lic.#13VH04369400. 609-4943999.
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
ELEVATORS
J. CONOSCENTI & SONS CONTRACTORS
ACCREDITED HOME ELEVATOR CO.
Professional Remodeling Contractors since 1982. Custom trim, crown moldings, additions, kitchens, baths. Satisfaction guaranteed. Lic.#13VH01891800. 609597-8925. Facebook.com/jconos centiandsons
MICHAEL & SON
A ALL PHASES OF HOME IMPROVEMENTS
General Contractor. Remodeling: Kitchens, Baths, Tile, Hardwood Flooring. Major/minor renovations. Roofing, Decks, Small Repairs. Quality workmanship & references, ser ving LBI since 1985. #13VH02749200. Call Mike P. 609296-8222. ‘‘You’ll be glad you did!!’’
We specialize in Additions, Decks, Renovations, Vinyl Siding, Cedar Siding, Windows, Vinyl Railings, Outside Showers, and Roofing. BEST PRICES ON LBI. Call for free estimate. Fully licensed and insured. 609-494-5108. Lic.#13VH04369400.
MALCOLM LEIGH CONSTRUCTION LLC
A.G.F. HOME IMPROVEMENTS All phases of home renovations. Kitchens •Baths •Tile •Decks •Fully Insured •References •Free Estimates. 609-971-7459. Lic.#13VH01279700.
Remodeling, Additions, Kitchens, Baths, Doors/Windows, Siding, Decks, Three Season Vinyl Patio Rooms. 609-290-9737. BBB Accredited Business. Lic.#13VH03012500. malcolmleighconstruction.com
ADMIRAL HOME REPAIR
All phases of home inprovements & repairs. Bathrooms, kitchens, tile, decks, siding, Andersen windows, replacement windows, vinyl railings and painting. 609-504-7007. Lic#13VH06514200
PRO-BUILT, LLC
AFFORDABILITY J. COLLINS & SONS CARPENTRY
Home Improvement Contractor •Kitchen & Bath Remodeling •Decks •Additions •Windows & Siding •Property Management. Quality Work. Serving LBI & Area Over 25 Years. 609-312-6410. Lic.#13VH02671400
Medical Office Trainees needed! Train to become a Medical Office Assistant at SC Training! No experience needed! Job placement after online training. HS diploma/GED and PC/Internet needed. 888-2086631.
SURFwithNICOLE.com
Surf Camps & Surf Lessons. All ages, all abilities, coed friendly. Experienced CPR & First Aid certified instructor. 619-398-7437.
Call Kevin and Mike
TUTOR, K-8th. School teacher with 15 years experience, specializing in Math. Call now to schedule for summer season. Joann, 609-2763317.
609-713-8352
FULL TIME LBI residents available 7 days/week 12 months. Interior & Exterior Inspections. Contractor Access. Meet your Deliveries.
www.EYEonLBI.com
Serving Ocean County since 1985
Custom Kitchens & Baths Wood & Vinyl Siding • Decks Visit us on facebook see our work
CUSTOM HOMES Renovations • Additions
JUNIOR MATES WANTED!
House Watch Property Mgmt Services Who’s watching your home?
EAST COAST CONTRACTING– Kitchen & Bath Remodeling •Decks •Vinyl Railings •Tile & More. 1 hour response. Chris 609-618-3462. NJ Reg.016506611
College graduates will tutor in Math, English & Spanish for the summer. All grades available. Flexible hours. Special discounts. 862266-6995.
9-week program beginning Thurs., 6/21 at 7pm. NJ Maritime History Museum, Dock Rd. & West Ave., Beach Haven. Call Captain John, 609-290-3349. Details: www.fishbeachhaven.com
EYE on LBI
COAST WINDOW & DOOR
ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE FROM HOME. Medical, Business, Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 888-220-5975. www.CenturaOnline.com
RONALD C. RIKER
HOUSE WATCH
Installers & suppliers, all windows/ doors. Replacements, Andersen, repairs. Licensed & Insured. Lic.#13VH03837800. Call Dave 609-296-5779.
INSTRUCTION 3rd grade teacher tutoring summer months. LBI/surrounding. 19 years experience elementary education. Specializing in reading/writing. References available. 908-230-5264.
Computer career in 9-12 months. Transfer credits & earn degree from our partner colleges. Now Live online classes! PCAGE.com 888-722-4360. Consumer disclosures at pcpage.edu/disclosures.
HONEY-DO HOME REPAIRS
Wind Damage, Roofing, Siding, Windows, Drywall, Trim, Decks, Basements, Kitchens, Baths, Additions. Guaranteed call back. Lic.13VH04665400. 609-489-6305. BuildAxis.com
609-660-8000
Providing renovating & building solutions with advice, design & quality workmanship. Serving faithbased organizations & God-fearing clients with honest dealings & fair pricing. 609-618-8714. Lic.#13VH06473000.
We Do What Your Honey Won’t! Interior/exterior. Popular Mechanics magazine featured 3 of my projects. 33 years experience. 609492-3749, 609-290-2995. Lic.#13VH01765700.
ALL HOME REPAIRS & MAINTENANCE
Sales/Service •Residential and Commercial •New or Existing •Installation •Moder nization •Repairs •Service/Service Contracts. Hoistway Construction, Dumbwaiters, Chairlifts. Visit our showroom, 127 Rte. 9 South, Barnegat. Lic.#13VH04317500. www.accelevator.com
732-573-9640 Fully Insured • Lic# 13VH00772800
ROBERT HOTALING
BUILDER • REMODELING
MUSIC LESSONS Musical Instrument Instruction Ocean Acres. Qualified, experienced teachers. Piano, Violin, Viola, Cello, Bass, Music Theory. $30/ half hour, $45/hour. 609-713-1210. rocksolid321@gmail.com
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY CRAFTERS
Garden center/country market, in Barnegat, accepting craft items & lawn decor on consignment. Call 609-549-5942 or 609-607-8300. Local inventor seeking investment for two innovative first to market products. The Patents, Trademarks & Prototype are in place. Serious inquiries please and minimum of $25K per investor. Please contact will@me2innovations.net or visit: www.me2innovations.com
DECKS • SIDING • WINDOWS • DOORS
COMPUTER SERVICES
KITCHENS • BATHROOOMS • INTERIORS • REPAIRS
COMPUTER TECH
609-361-8226 SHIP BOTTOM LIC# 13VH00402400
GARRAMONE DESIGN
Construction Full Home Construction & Remodeling Service Storm Prep Service • Hurricane Shutters Impact Resistant Glass, Windows & Doors Additions • Siding • Kitchens • Baths Decks - Composite & Fiberglass • Vinyl Rails www.garramonedesign.com
201-783-9050 LIC#13VH04832600 609-489-3643
12 years experience in all phases of computer programing, setup, maintenance, repairs, networking & security. For home or small business. Will come to you! Tuckerton to LBI. Call 609618-6147 or email: williamsLEH@comcast.net Is Your Computer Sluggish? PC Repair and installations, 3G network surveillance. Reasonable rates, in-home service. Patrick Har vey, Computer Technician. 609-597-0699, 609665-0466 cell. shorecomputerrepair.com pmh7@comcast.net
COMPUTER SERVICES My Computer Works. Computer problems? Viruses, spyware, email, printer problems, bad internet connections- FIX IT NOW! Professional, U.S. based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help. 888-904-1215.
BUSINESS SERVICES SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. WIN or pay nothing! Start your application in under 60 seconds. Call today! Contact Disability Group, Inc., licensed attorneys & BBB accredited. Call 866970-8473.
ADULT CARE AT HOME ELDER CARE
European caregivers, English speaking. References, licensed, bonded, insured. Call 732-899-6366. www.athome-eldercare.com Certified Caregiver. Compassionate, reliable care and companionship. Non smoker. Background check, references available. Call Anna, 609-660-9784.
PETS/PET CARE ADOPT A PET
Dogs, Puppies, Cats & Kittens ready for adoption in Ocean County’s animal facility, located at 360 Haywood Rd. in Manahawkin. All animals have been spayed/neutered, vaccinated & microchipped. Hours: 1pm-4pm daily, Wed., 1pm-6:30pm.
609-978-0127
LOST A PET? Call the shelter, your pet could be there!
PET AND HOUSE SITTING, LLC
Pet Sitting •Pet Walking •Full Animal Care •House Sitting •Plants, Mail, etc. References/ Insured. Barbara,
609-361-8020
HELP WANTED Babysitter wanted, part time. Cash paid. Experience preferred. Daytime hours. Call Glenn or Amy. 267-994-0829 or 267-337-3515.
BAYBERRY INN
Bartenders, F/T, year ’round. Apply in person, 13th St. & Long Beach Blvd., Ship Bottom. 609-494-8848.
CAFE ALETTA
Fine dining servers needed, 3 years experience. Seasonal, FT/ PT. Contact Marc 917-217-2212.
CATERING CHEFS
Full and part time. Experienced cooks only. Apply online at: www.beachhavencatering.com CHHAs, LPNs, RNs, Companions, Live-Ins. FT/PT, flexible hours. We offer CNA & CHHA training. Call now 609-607-9700, 732-341-4500. www.karingwithkindness.com Cleaning help, Harvey Cedars. Part time, $12-$15/hour. Please call 732-300-8643. Cleaning help needed for changeovers, Saturdays only, 10am-2pm. Great pay. No experience necessary. Call 908-451-6605. Cleaning person wanted for small Beach Haven apartment complex. Good pay. Must be reliable and live in Beach Haven/Holgate area. 609492-9283, ask for Lorraine or Jerry.
COMPANIONS/CNA/CHHA
Needed to provide assistance to seniors. Flexible hours, great pay! Senior Helpers 732-678-0096. Apply at www.seniorhelpers.com
COOKS & PIZZA MAKERS
Panzone’s Pizza & Pasta, 11th & Blvd., Beach Haven & Panzone’s Pizza, 22nd & Blvd., Surf City. Experienced. Immediate positions. Apply within or call 609-492-5103 for interview.
COOKS
Line cook, experienced, high volume, short order, saute, broiler, fryer. Seasonal & year ’round available. LBI area. Call 609-713-4254. Delivery person needed for 10-20 hours per week, LBI area. Driver’s license a must. Come join a great team. 609-661-8929.
HELP WANTED JOEYS’ PIZZA & PASTA
Cooks/pizza makers. Experienced only. Now accepting applications for all 3 locations. Apply at 1340 Route 72, Manahawkin or call 5972003 to arrange interview. Licensed Real Estate Agent for Sales & Rentals in Progressive Suppor tive LBI Office. Join a Friendly, Positive Professional Team. Call Rick at Stevens Real Estate for a Confidential Interview, 609-494-5555. Lifeguard needed, Mon.-Fri. for 2012 summer season. Must have CPR, First Aid & Lifeguard Certifications. Call 609-492-8645. Lunch/Prep Cook, day shift. Good pay for experienced person. Calabria Restaurant. Call Vince 609492-8001 or 586-764-1525.
NOW HIRING SERVERS
F/T, must be available all days & shifts through Oct. Apply in person, Greenhouse Cafe, 6th & Long Beach Blvd., Ship Bottom. OFFICE ASSISTANT. Entry level, full time position, Beach Haven. Bachelor Degree or equivalent. Skilled in Microsoft Office, Quickbooks, Web Design. Banking or accounting background preferred. Send your resume to mjb@ketch-marlin.com
PANZONE’S
Hiring sandwich cooks, pizza makers, sautee cook, cashiers, busser, dishwashers. Immediate positions at both locations. Apply at Panzone’s Pizza & Pasta, 11th & Blvd., Beach Haven & Panzone’s Pizza, 22nd & Blvd., Surf City. REAL ESTATE– Established brokerage has openings for experienced sales and rental agents, including private offices, paid advertising and more. Negotiable compensation based on experience and production. Compare your options! Call Joe at 609-492-2256 for a confidential interview. Receptionist, P/T seasonal position for 2 days, possibly Saturdays. Apply in person, Island Realty, 22nd & Blvd., Surf City.
Now hiring. Apply in person. Bisque, 21st & Blvd., Ship Bottom.
Retail sales associates, FT/PT, for seasonal clothing store in Beach Haven, May-Oct. Pay DOE. Send resume, cover letter & availability to: jobs@fpcolor.com www.freshproduceclothes.com
PUPPIES FOR SALE! Rottweiler Champion bloodlines, raised in a family home. 1st and only litter, 6 total left. Bred for superb tempermant. Puppies to be family pets, not suitable for guarding or working class use. $1,000-$1,250. More info jjb653@aol.com (View picture11100 online)
Drivers- Great pay, quarterly safety bonus. Hometime choices. Steady freight, full or part time. Safe, clean modern trucks. CDL-A, 3 months current OTR experience. 800-4149569. www.driveknight.com
Counter help & take-out cook needed. Apply in person, 9am6pm, 902 Long Beach Blvd, Ship Bottom. 609-494-8171.
THE PET NANNY
Now hiring experienced line cooks, servers and dishwashers. Lifeguard also needed. Apply in person, 30 Engleside Ave., Beach Haven.
Pet portraits from your photo. Pen & Ink * Colored Pencil * Watercolor or Oil * Caricature or Cartoon. Call Pat Johnson, 609-296-2162, leave message. (View picture111043 online)
Personal Pet Care. Pet Sitting, Dog Walking, Dog Care Coaching, House Sitting. 15+ years experience on LBI. The professional, loving care that your furry family deserves. Tail-wagging references!
CHERI 609-713-0866 WALK A DOG OR FOSTER KITTENS!
Volunteer at Southern Ocean County Animal Shelter, located at 360 Haywood Rd. in Manahawkin. Dog walkers are needed daily from 9am-4:30pm. Orientation held 1st & 3rd Thursday and 3rd Sunday at 11am. Must be 18 years old. Paperwork can be picked up at the shelter daily, 1pm-3pm. FREE Pet Food Pantry in shelter lobby for those in need.
HELP WANTED A free apartment plus salary for couple or persons to manage small Long Beach Island motel. Call 609492-6363. AIRLINES ARE HIRING! Train for hands on aviation career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified. Job placement assisitance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 877-564-4204. Available immediately. Couple or persons to clean Lorry’s Motel on LBI. Salary plus free trailer in which to live. 609-492-6363.
DISHWASHER
ENGLESIDE MOTEL & RESTAURANT
Floor manager F/T, year ’round for restaurant in Tuckerton. Knowledge of Point of Sales System, weekends required. Prior experience needed. Excellent paid benefits. 609-860-0400, fax 609-8605278 or email resume@thinkabel.com Help needed, Brant Beach, $10/ hour, 10am-? Lifting, light cleaning. Also need reliable, waterer/weeder for very early mornings, 3Xs/week/ summer. Own transportation. 609494-5088, 602-663-3303. How You Brewin Coffee Company hiring year-round baristas for new Manahawkin location. Email coffee@howyoubrewin.com for an application. Insurance, F/T position available for an experienced commercial lines CSR to service small to medium accounts in Southern Ocean County. The ideal candidate must be proficient in computer skills, rating of all lines, cross selling of existing accounts, and possess a NJ producer license. Knowledge of APPLIED Systems, 3 plus years CL experience and a professional designation are a plus. Salary and benefits commensurate with experience. Reply Box B, c/o The SandPaper, 1816 Long Beach Blvd., Surf City, NJ 08008.
SURF CITY FISHERY
Team & solo drivers. Immediate positions available! 48 CPM split for teams. 35 CPM for solo drivers. Drop & hook available. No touch freight. Weekly pay +insurance. CDL-A w/1 year OTR required. Food grade tank carrier. 800-8772430. www.indianrivertransport.com
THE BLACK DOG CAFE
Now hiring full/part time sandwich/ short order cooks and counter servers for the 2012 summer season. Interested applicants apply in person at 2205 South Bay Ave., Beach Haven or email contact info theblackdogcafejobs@gmail.com
TUCKERS RESTAURANT
COOKS & DISHWASHERS needed. Housing available. Apply in person, ask for Bob. Open every day, 8am-4pm. Engleside Ave. & the bay.
HELP WANTED
Hiring
Hostess Servers Bartender Call for appointment
494-5776
47
ATTENTION SEAFOOD LOVERS!
Experienced shellfish shucker for hire. Private parties, caterers & restaurants. Raw clam & oyster specialist. Reasonable rates. Call Mike 609-276-2704.
CALLING ALL CAPTAINS!
WILL WORK FOR FREE! Deck hand looking to gain fishing vessel experience. Knowledge of boats, hard working, reliable. Obtaining Captain’s License, willing to work for experience only. Signed waiver available. Call 845-416-0415.
FARMS & ACREAGE Upstate NY land sale. SPORTSMAN BARGAIN, 3 acres w/cozy cabin, close access to Oneida Lake, $17,995. LARGE RIVER, over 900ft. 18 acres along fishing/ swimming river, $49,995. TIMBERLAND INVESTMENT, 90 acres deer sanctuary, beautiful timber studs, small creek, $99,995. Over 100 new properties. Call 800229-7843 or visit landandcamps.com
COMMERCIAL FOR RENT AAA LOCATION
SHIP BOTTOM strip store available immediately. 609-290-1272, 609-494-2420. Ship Bottom office for rent, $450/ month, includes utilities. Call Beach Haven Auto, 609-494-0535, Mon.Sat., 9am-5pm & Sun., 9am-1pm. Ship Bottom, 1,200 sq.ft. expandable to 2,000+ sq.ft., display windows, 7 parking spaces, corner location. Office, medical, retail, cafe. Close to Causeway. Call 732-2362185 or for more info visit: www.postlets.com/5211222
Stafford Forge Business Park
Contractor’s Office/Workshop for rent. 1,100-14,000 sq.ft. Will divide. 609-294-4990. SURF CITY– RETAIL/OFFICE. Boulevard location, high traffic area. A/C, heat. Clean & sunny. Private customer parking lot.
732-330-6130
(View picture49001 online)
COMMERCIAL FOR SALE Bakery for sale, beach block, on LBI. Turn-key operation. For more details call 609-276-1348. Island landmark, 52-seat coffee/ dessert restaurant, business and property. Retiring. 19 successful years. Possible terms and/or financing. Ed Freeman, Remax at Barnegat Bay, 609-661-9345. Tuckerton, turnkey 4-in-1 business available. Ice cream, coffee, bagel, deli. Includes equipment, inventory, the works! Ready for next level. Great location, parking. Call Cyndy Friedland at Oceanside Realty, 609-290-5040.
REAL ESTATE SERVICES Wanted: 2nd mortgage, secured by extensively remodeled Peahala Park home. $45,000 for one year at 10% interest. Hale, 480-967-6000.
CONDO FOR SALE Bayview Condominiums, Beach Haven. Spectacular sunsets, 2BR, 2BA, second floor. 42ft. dock. REDUCED, $429,000. FSBO 914388-4429. View: FSBO.com/154978
HOUSES FOR SALE Beach Haven Gardens, oceanside, double lot. Large cape with second floor apartment & detached garage. FSBO, $739,000. Call 609-7139661. Gorgeous 4,000 sq.ft. Waterfront Home in Sweetwater, NJ. Geothermal heat, 150ft. bulkhead. Call 609-965-4795 for more information, or visit www.mullicariverhomes.com Holgate, Farreny’s Trailer Park. 38ft. mobile home w/double slide out, heat/air, deck, O/S shower, all furnishings/dishes, etc. $25,000. 609-209-6179.
MOBILE HOMES LBI Trailer Park has homes for sale, 1/2 block from ocean. ALSO, we have RV sites for rent. Call 609492-9151.
YEAR ROUND RENTALS A free apartment plus salary for couple or persons to manage small Long Beach Island motel. Call 609492-6363.
BARTLETT LANDING
Convenient/Comfor table, 2BR, 2BA, fully applianced. Call or stop in today. Our team is eager to help make you feel ‘‘at home.’’
June Special!
Move in by 6/30/12, pay $500 security. Call 609-294-2404. L.E.H. 2BR, 1BA, gas heat, C/A, W/D, fenced-in yard. $1,100/month + 1.5 months security. Call 609339-0862. LEH, Tall Timbers, 2BR, 2.5BA townhome, $1,175/month + utilities. Ranch, 3BR, 2BA, $1,400/month + utilities. MANAHAWKIN, adult 55+ 1BR, $850/month + utilities, no pets/smoking. We are in need of rental properties. Please contact us if you are considering renting your property. Home Alliance Realty, 609-978-9009.
SUMMER RENTALS
SUMMER RENTALS
$6,200/SEASON
Beach Haven Park, quiet oceanblock retreat, 2-bedroom cottage, A/C, cable, O/S, grill. No smoking/pets. Limited weeks. 609-492-6502. View pictures thesandpaper .net
HISTORIC BARNEGAT
Surf City, 1 from bay w/full view. 3BR, 1.5BA duplex. Sleeps 8. W/D, A/C, deck. 1 block from park, tennis, boating. Available weekly beginning in April. No pets/smoking. 908-456-2372.
$7,300/SEASON
Beach Haven West, lagoon front, 3-bedroom home. Dock, grill, full cable. Availabe 6/15-6/30, $800/ week; 7/1-7/21, $1,100/week. Winter rental available. 973-479-7826.
Ship Bottom, centrally located. 1-bedroom, ground-level condo, 2 blocks from ocean. Quiet area, new carpet/tile. Available Now-Sept., 609-492-8699.
Ship Bottom, third from beach, 21st. St. 1BR+ w/porch, sleeps 6, all amenities. C/A, cable, WiFi. Central location! Available immediately. Call 856-6933301. A FEW WEEKS OPEN. Nor th Beach, 2nd from beach, cozy 3bedroom duplex, deck, WiFi, badges included. 6/23-6/30, 7/7-7/14, 7/ 28-8/11, $1,395-$1,595/week. Owner 732-383-8108 or aufderhar@comcast.net Barnegat Light, oceanside, beautiful location. Newly renovated, very clean, 3BR, 1.5BA, all amenities, A/C. Available weekly, June-Sept. Please call 609-921-7831. Barnegat Light, oceanblock duplex. 4-5 bedrooms, sleeps 12, $3,500/ week. 2 bedrooms, sleeps 6, $1,500/week. 201-906-5616, lbibeachhouse@yahoo.com, for photos/details: www.BeachHouseLBI.com Barnegat Light lagoon front, first floor, lovely, 2-bedroom apartment. Bay & sunset views, all amenities. Call 215-693-4107 or 215-5938900 (cell). Beach Haven West, updated 3bedroom, single family home. Lagoon front, extra wide cul-de-sac location, outside shower, C/A. Available starting July, $1,300 weekly. Call Beth, 201-818-5250. View pictures thesandpaper.net Beach Haven West, 3-bedroom, 1bath waterfront, W/D, C/A, WiFi, large deck, 35ft. dock. Any week in June, $1,000. 973-632-0274. www.bhwrental.com BEACH HAVEN, WEEKLY Second floor, 3BR, 6th from ocean, A/C, W/ D, all amenities. No pets. 609-4925357, 609-290-3872. View pictures thesandpaper.net Beach Haven West/LBI, 4 bedrooms, all amenities, lagoon front w/35ft. dock, outdoor enclosed shower, grill, A/C, wireless internet, deck. $1,250/week. 201-859-6215. View pictures thesandpaper.net
Manahawkin, off Route 9. 2-bedroom furnished home for rent. $1,500/month, includes electric. Call 609-978-0625.
Beach Haven, oceanblock, first floor, 2-bedroom duplex. A/C, W/D, D/W. July, $1,000/week, badges included. Call 609-492-3173.
NEW GRETNA, 2BR & 1BR apartments. Heat supplied. Rent starts at $800/month. No pets. Call 609978-0964.
Beach Haven North, by owner, two family, 2BR each, fenced yard. No pets/smoking. Call Pam, 732-8870917. Pictures/rates/availability: www.lbibeachnj.com
Ship Bottom apartment, 2BR, 2BA, all amenities, parking lot, secured entrance. $1,100/month + all utilities. Available immediately. 973743-3132, 973-615-4134. Surf City, bayside, 2nd floor. 2BR + office, LR, kitchen, full bath, W/D, front deck. Clean, no pets/smoking. $1,100/month + utilities, 1.5 months security. Available 6/22. 609-698-1578.
VILLAGE ON THE GREEN
TUCKERTON APARTMENTS Luxury 1BR & 2BR, spacious, gourmet kitchen, mini blinds, fully applianced.
June Special!
Move in by 6/30/12, pay $500 security. Call 609-294-2424.
SPRING RENTALS AFFORDABLE Lorry’s Motel– Beach Haven Inlet. Quiet. Clean rooms/efficiencies with full refrigerator, microwave, barbecue area. Weekly $179-$199. Call 609-492-6363.
www.thesandpaper.net Connect With Classifieds Anywhere, Anytime As Easy To Use As 1-2-3!!
Beach Haven, oceanside, 3BR, 1BA, upstairs unit with deck. Sleeps 6. Walk to all local attractions, $1,850/week. Off-season rates available. Call 609-306-5367. Beach Haven West, 3BR, 1BA ranch, 30ft. on water with dock and fenced yard. W/D, DW, A/C, WiFi, O/S, ground level deck. 5 minutes to LBI. Available 7/14-7/21, 8/25-9/ 1, $950/week.
PET FRIENDLY
Contact Sheila at 609-709-1674 or sk4lbirealestate@aol.com Beach Haven Gardens. Second floor, 2-bedroom, 1-bath duplex. Sleeps 6, W/D, D/W, A/C, cable, large yard, gas grill, deck, ample off-street parking. Bay block, beach 2 blocks, close to all attractions. Available 6/2-6/23, $750/ week; 8/11-9/3, $1,100/week. Call 856-577-0371. www.3000balticlbi.com Beach Haven oceanside condo, 1st floor, sleeps 4. Handicap ramp, porch, yard. $800/week or $7,500/ season. Small pet ok w/security. 908-313-7432.
Beach Haven, 2-bedroom, 2-bath condo. First off bay. C/A, W/D, DW. June, $800/week; July/Aug., $1,200/week. Pet friendly. Please Call 973-787-7611.
10 minutes to LBI. Walking distance to town or bayfront amenities. Victorian style Shore house privately set on a Sea Captain Estate. 2-3BR, reversed living/w upper deck, cathedral ceiling & open floor plan. C/A, W/D, cable, grill. Available 6/29-9/8. $8,000/ season, $1,000/week. Call 609488-0526. Holgate, 2-bedroom, 1-bath cottage (sleeps 6), second from beach. July/Aug., $2,095/week. 856-296-0423 or website shoresummerrentals.com Search rental ID #2072.
INGROUND POOL
Surf City, oceanside, spacious, 2bedroom, 1-bath apar tment. Sleeps 6. A/C, flat-panel TV, W/D, O/S, grill, yard. Close to everything! $500-$1,550/week. 732-972-6297. Surf City, 232 North First St. Lovely 2-bedroom Cape Cod, A/C, WiFi, badges, many amenities. 6/2, 6/9, 6/16, $600/week; 6/23, 6/30, 7/7, $1,000/week. Fall dates: 9/8, 9/15, 9/22, $600/week. 609-760-0846, 856-234-4914.
Beach Haven West, lagoon front, 30ft.+ dock. Minutes to bay & LBI. Large, clean cape. 4BR, 2BA, A/C, all amenities. $900-$1,400 weekly. 609-597-6446. View pictures thesandpaper.net
Brighton Beach bayfront, 7 bedrooms, 5 full baths. Weeks available: 6/16, 8/25, 9/8, 9/15, 9/22. Call 908-295-0509. www.sunsetbayhouse.com
Beach Haven Crest, bayside, 3BR, 1BA, first floor duplex. Sleeps 8. 4 badges. Deck, porch, grill. 8/3-8/ 10, $1,000/week. 646-496-2406.
Last-Minute Special! 6/9-6/16, $4,900; 6/16-6/23, $5,700. Oceanside, pool, sleeps 12. 9/8, $5,500; 9/15, $5,250; 9/22, $4,900; 9/29, $4,500.
Surf City, 3-bedroom house, oceanblock. Available 6/16-6/23, $1,500; 6/23-6/30, $1,700. WiFi available. No pets/smoking. Call 908-247-9148.
Last-Minute Special! 6/23-6/30, $4,200. Oceanside, sleeps 10. 9/ 22, $1,150; 9/29, $950; 10/6, $900. 610-417-6119 or email kstacy33@yahoo.com www.shore4rent.com
Surf City. SAVE TIME, GAS AND, OF COURSE, MONEY. Come stay with us for the summer. Major discount before June. Call for further details. 856-866-9355.
Brant Beach, oceanside, 2BR, sleeps 6, A/C, cable TV, fully equipped kitchen. No pets. $1,000/ week, call for availability. 215-2571615. Brant Beach duplexes, 3rd & 4th from ocean, w/views, 3BR, 1.5BA, sleeps 8, $2,040/week. Also: 2BR duplex, sleeps 6, $1,100/week. All units w/amenities, badges. 609361-8987. www.VRBO.com/141162 Brant Beach, 5 large bedrooms, 2BA, TV room, patio, garden. 2.5 blocks from beach. Sat.-Sat., 7/7-7/ 14, 7/14-7/21, $2,800/week. Mon.Fri. special, $1,400. 609-655-7623. wclopp@comcast.net www.lbibrantbeachhouse.com
BRANT BEACH
Invitation to rent. Bay block with views, 1.5 blocks to beach, 4BR, 2BA, sleeps 10, C/A, W/D. Fri.-Fri. July, $2,300/week; Aug., 2,200/week; Sept., $1,400/week. A few weeks left. Please call 215-932-1458. Brant Beach, 1st floor duplex. 2BR, 1BA, A/C in bedrooms, off-street parking, beach badges. Available 7/14, 8/18, 8/25, $1,050/week. 908230-0906. Brant Beach, 3-bedroom, second floor duplex, amenities, off-street parking, ramp to beach. $830/ week. NO PETS. 609-361-4662.
BRANT BEACH
CLEAN, 2 bedrooms, new kitchen, many amenities. Weekly July/Aug., from $750. 973-635-6292. www.wix.com/lamadsen/lbirental-brant-beach Brighton Beach, LBI. Updated, immaculate, oceanside, large, 2-bedroom apartment (sleeps 6), nine houses from beach. June, $1,000/ week; July/Aug., $1,350/week, includes internet. No pets/smoking. 917-763-2559. View pictures thesandpaper.net Cedar Bonnet Island (southside), 2-bedroom, 1-bath cottage, sleeps 4. Bay views, W/D, A/C, cable TV. No pets. Monthly/bi-weekly. 609492-8637.
FARRENY’S FAMILY RV PARK & BOAT BASIN
SEE US ON FACEBOOK
609-492-2168
www.FarrenysLBI.com Harvey Cedars, 5BR, 3BA, one house from ocean, spectacular views, A/C, W/D, O/S, gas grill, internet, all amenities. June-Oct., $1,000-$4,000/week. 201-4101486.
ONLINE
CLASSIFIEDS
Loveladies #99B LB Blvd.
Loveladies #85C LB Blvd.
Manahawkin, cottage for rent. $550/month, available now. Call 609-361-4662. North Beach Haven, oceanside, 2bedroom, 1-bath home. 1 block to beach. Sleeps 6. A/C, W/D, huge lot. Available July & Aug. weekly or make offer for both months together. Pet friendly. 201-724-0081. OCEANBLOCK, Ship Bottom, 5th from beach. 2BR, sleeps 4-6, A/C, W/D. Great location. Available now-Sept., $900-$1,000/week. 609-597-9151 or 609-709-2723.
OCEANFRONT
Ship Bottom, 3 bedrooms, all amenities, internet, large porch, offstreet parking. Great view. Private beach area. 8/11-8/18. 267-8087492.
OCEANFRONT
Brant Beach duplex, 4BR, 2BA each floor. All amenities, great views. 50% reduction: 6/23-6/30: 1st floor, $1,750; 2nd floor, $1,850. 732-721-0882. lbisharon@aol.com w w w. t o u r f a c t o r y. c o m / idxr590630 Peahala Park duplex– 2BR, 1BA & 3BR, 1BA. Completely renovated, DW, W/D, A/C, gas grill, O/S, deck. $650-$1,150/week. 201-739-3914. www.lbihouseforrent.com Peahala Park duplex, upstairs 2 bedrooms, sleeps 6. Downstairs, 3 bedrooms, sleeps 8. Close to beach. Good condition. Available weekly. 609-268-1719, email mrappraisal@comcast.net Ship Bottom, oceanblock. Weekly: 3- & 5-bedroom houses and 1- & 3bedroom apartments. No pets/ smoking. Off-street parking. Call 609-661-1199. Ship Bottom bayfront, sleeps 4-5, badges included, cable, A/C. 4/28, 5/5, 5/12, 5/19, 5/26, 6/2, 6/9, $850/ week; 7/7, 7/21, 8/11, 8/18, $950/ week. 856-546-1413. Ship Bottom, 2BR, 1BA, bayside, 3 blocks to beach. Sleeps 7, C/A, cable TV, covered deck, outdoor shower. $6,800/season. Call John 215-803-0997.
Surf City, 3-bedroom duplex. All amenities, oceanblock, steps to beach. Available 6/9-6/16, 6/16-6/ 23, 9/8-9/15, 9/15-9/22. 609-5978803 or email: McCruddenOwen@comcast.net
Surf City. First floor, 3BR, 1BA, $1,250/week. Second floor, 3BR, 2BA, $1,450/week. Both have LR, kitchen, A/C throughout. Walk to bay & beach. Available now-Labor Day. Pictures available. 908-6562048.
WEEKEND SPECIAL!
HARVEY CEDARS OCEANSIDE
81st St. Fri.-Tues., 1BR or 2BR, deck, $440-$465. PET FRIENDLY. 609-494-7695 or check website uptonshorerental@aol.com
WINTER RENTALS Ship Bottom, garage apartment. Very private. 2BR, A/C, WiFi, W/D, outdoor shower. Sept.-June, $1,000/month, all utilities included. References, 1st & last months rent. 609-290-7288.
ROOMS FOR RENT Barnegat, beautifully furnished bedroom w/bath. Kitchen/laundry privileges. $650/month (includes utilities, cable & association fees), plus 1 month security. 609-6988160.
SHARE HOME Barnegat ranch, nice area, furnished room, laundry, Direct TV. $550/month, security + share utilities. No pets. 609-660-1215, 609618-2366. Serious inquiries. Looking for person to share my Ocean Acres home. $650/month plus 1/2 utilities & security. References required. Call 347-372-1314.
ROOMMATE WANTED Little Egg Habor, nice and new, furnished room w/full bath and kitchen access. References and security required. $750/month. 609-2968451.
Ship Bottom, side-by-side duplex, 2BR, 1BA each side. Great house, price and location. Badges, large yard. $990/week each side. 973519-6892. View pictures thesandpaper.net Ship Bottom, 3 bedrooms, second floor with large deck, oceanside. Sleeps 8. Available weekly. Reasonable rates. Call 609-494-1567.
Sudoku Solution
EMPLOYMENT WANTED
SUMMER RENTALS
SUMMER RENTALS
© 2007. Feature Exchange
LOTS FOR SALE Manahawkin, 1-acre lot on desirable Beachview Ave. Underground utilities already installed. Price reduced. Call Don Diorio, 609-7092483. Stafford Twp., Cedar Run, Newell Ave. Excellent Location. Approximately 70ft.x192ft, $99,000. 609597-7089.
1. Open ONLINE CLASSIFIEDS to View Alphabetical Listing of Categories 2. Point and Click on Desired Category to Scroll Through Individual Ads in an Easy-to-Read Format 3. Find Helpful Customer Web Site and Picture Links
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
HELP WANTED Weichert Realtors is looking for new and/or experienced team members. Call to arrange a confidential interview, LBI office 609494-6000.
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
48
MOTORCYCLES Harley-Davidson Softail motorcycle, 2007 Night Train. 11,000 miles, fully loaded/extras. Office phone 609-924-7337, leave message or ask for Susan.
AUTO REMOVAL
CASH PAID
For your unwanted cars & trucks. TOP DOLLAR PAID. FREE TOWING. Call daytime 609-268-0365, eve. 609-268-0558.
AUTO DETAILING SMILE’s Mobile Detail Service
We Come to You! Car/Truck/SUV Wash, Polish, Wax Service. LBI & Manahawkin. 609-207-8143.
AUTOS WANTED DONATE your car, truck or boat to HERITAGE for the BLIND. FREE 3 day vacation, tax deductible, FREE towing, ALL paperwork taken care of. 888-438-1090. Honda, Toyota, Nissans, SUVs and Jeeps. All vehicles WANTED. 2001 and UP. Top Cash Paid. 24 hour CASH pick-up. Any condition. 732-496-1633.
BOAT MOTORS
BOATS FOR SALE
BOATS FOR SALE
BOATS FOR SALE
2001 Yamaha 115hp fuel injection O/B engine plus batteries, all linkage & extras. Jets need some work. Paid $7,500, asking $3,900. 609-494-8808.
17ft. Boston Whaler Nauset, 1973. This is for the classic boat lover. Excellent condition, original mahogany CC. 1975 Johnson 85hp. Low hours. Fresh water, garage stored. $11,800. 508-221-3475. (View picture81037 online)
2007 Sea Ray 205 Sport w/220hp Mercruiser, low hours. Used only 3 months a year. Pristine shape. On LBI. $22,000. 561-998-9200, ext. 205.
30ft. 2004 Grady White Marlin w/ twin 225 Yamaha 4-stroke. Loaded, plus Raymarine C120 & Smart Pilot, Apelco VHF. See at Somers Point Marina. Reduced to $89,500. 609-927-5900 Jim Pielko. (View picture81033 online)
BOATS FOR SALE 8ft. inflatable dinghy, never titled, $400. 6hp, 4-cycle Mercury outboard available, no hours, $800. 609-492-4401. 14ft. Cape Dory Handi Cat Catboat. 2hp Honda outboard. All woodwork refinished, new lines, fresh bottom paint, ready to sail, $8,000. 908-962-2289. 16ft. 2005 Sea•Doo Sportster, 215hp Vtec. Located in Middletown, pickup only. $10,500/OBO. Please call 732-500-3670. 16ft. Hobie Cat sailboat, 2008, with trailer. Excellent condition. Sails and trampoline in excellent shape. Used very little. $6,900. 201-9161212. 16ft. Starcraft Seafarer, 30hp Yamaha O/B, galvanized Long trailer, many extras. $3,100. Call 609-597-1956.
18ft. 1959 Thompson classic runabout, fully restored. 1998 Tohatsu 45 O/B. Trailer needs fender. $3,500/OBO. Brant Beach. Call 609-618-1906. (View picture81029 online)
18ft. 2000 Sea Ray Bowrider, 3.0L inboard engine w/power lift, seats 8. DF, AM/FM radio, full cover w/bimini top, trailer. $8,900. 609-9780178.
22ft. 1982 O’Day 22 sailboat. Ready to launch. Located in Ship Bottom. $1,500/OBO. Please call 856-520-3490.
17ft. 2009 Compac Suncat, many factory options, trailer, 6hp Mercury 4 stroke. Like new. $14,900/ OBO. 609-296-2167. (View picture81024 online)
19.5ft. 2005 Stingray I/O Bowrider w/trailer. 4.3 Mercruiser, 190hp. Well equipped & maintained. Great on gas. Asking $10,300. 215-8529737.
BOSTON
WHALER
Call 609-698-8706 E-mail: iggerd@msn.com
21ft. Century w/cuddy cabin, 470 Mercrusier I/O, fresh-water cooled, AM/FM radio, VHS, CB, DF, portapotty, teak swim platform, $1,000. 609-597-7898. 22ft. 1973 Morgan Sloop. Yamaha 8hp, 4-stroke w/10 hours. Good sails, many accessories. $3,000/ OBO ($2,000 without engine). For more info 609-978-0921. (View picture81031 online)
18ft. SEASWIRL STRIPER, 1996. 130hp, CC, trailer. Professionally maintained w/records, ready to go. Must see! $5,500. 609-494-5152.
$ CASH $ PAID!
20ft. Wellcraft cuddy, ’86 Yamaha 200HP outboard, plus trailer. $2,000. 609-661-0145. Ready for fishing!
18ft. 1982 Hobie Cat. In very good condition. Includes beach roller axle. $600 or best offer. In Barnegat Light. Please call 610-563-0125 or 609-494-5203.
17ft. 1979 Boston Whaler Montauk, ’01 Honda 90hp, ’86 Load-Rite trailer, spare tire, cover. $4,000/OBO. Manahawkin. Call Dusty, 609-2078714.
WANTED ALL MODELS
17ft. Newport Daysailer w/cuddy cabin and aluminum trailer, $900/ OBO. Optional 5hp Honda 4 stroke, $600. In Holgate. Call 908510-8464.
20ft. 1988 Sea Ray, Merc 4.3 Alpha, with trailer. Looks great, runs good. Located Beach Haven. $3,000. 973-667-9211, 973-5921934.
22ft. 1985 Seaward S22 sailboat. Sails, 8hp Yamaha, trailer, many extras. Reduced, $2,500/OBO. Call or text, 609-548-0307. 22ft. Tanzer sailboat w/cradle & trailer. Great bay/family boat. 9.9 Evinrude, low hours, clean. Asking $2,200. 215-745-6598.
19ft. 1975 Rhodes (O’Day) fiberglass sailboat w/centerboard. Great bay boat. Engine available. Trailer, full sails. Safe & stable. $2,900/OBO. Bill, 513-254-3833.
25ft. 1994 Crownline CR250. Full head, kitchen w/stove, microwave & refrigerator, rear berth, front folddown table to double bed, rear wash down & swim platform, bimini top, and trailer. Asking $8,900. On LBI. Call 267-304-2723. (View picture81035 online)
19ft. O’Day Mariner, w/2 sets of sails, trailer. $1,600/OBO. Can be seen at Marina at Barnegat Light. If interested, 973-335-4104.
26ft. 1981 Paceship sailboat, diesel inboard. Draft 31in., 6ft.1in. head room. In water, Surf City. $8,000. 609-494-5090 or 215-801-4684.
2002 Sea Ray 190 Sundeck. Excellent condition. Kept on lift. Original owner. Great price, $11,900. Please call 201-855-9199.
26ft. 1994 Wahoo 2600 EFS center console w/T-Top. twin 22hp Yamaha 2-stroke. Garmin electronics. Ready to fish! $24,800. 973-7251069. (View picture81036 online)
Sudoku The challenge is to fill every row across, every column down, and every 3x3 box with the digits 1 through 9. Each 1 through 9 digit must appear only once in each row across, each column down, and each 3x3 box.
26ft. Sea Ray bowrider, 1996. 454hp Mercruiser, 470 hours. $8,000/OBO, trailer not included. In Beach Haven. Call 908-334-9219. 26ft. Shamrock Predator, 1986. Repowered 2001, 560 hours, fresh-water cooled. New manifolds and exhaust. DF, GPS, radio. $7,500. 610-888-9526. 29ft. Phoenix Flybridge, 1980. Fully restored & repowered with newer Volvo diesel inboards. Fantastic for off-shore fishing & family boat. 6man life raft. Tri-axle trailer available. $19,500, on LBI. 908-4481036. For photos email: pault1sr@gmail.com
33ft. 1990 Fountain Lightning, red & white. Stored inside. Lift kept. Shore power, refrigerator, GPS, strainers, stainless exhaust, bow & cockpit covers. Ver y clean. $30,000. 609-709-5892. 34ft. 1984 Silverton w/twin 270hp Crusaders, 600 hours. 1 owner. Marina maintained. Sleeps 6. Head & shower, AC/heat, appliances, fresh water system, salt water washdown, 2 depthfinders, 2 VHF radios, 2 bilge pumps, GPS, bilge sniffer, 4 batteries/switches, battery charger, outriggers/Rupp Jr., full enclosure, Coast Guard package, cockpit spotlights, Windlass, Halon fire system, transom ladder. $16,500/OBO. In Beach Haven. 856-768-2003. 34ft. 2005 Silverton Flybridge Convertible. Twin 8.1 Crusader Engines, 130 hours, 7.5kw Kohler generator. GPS, radar, many extras. $150K Firm. No brokers. Contact Brian 267-250-1322. 38ft. 2006 Silverton Flybridge Convertible. Twin 425hp Crusader engines, 106 hours. 10kw Kohler generator. GPS, radar, many extras. Boat like new. Qualified buyers only. $185,000. Call Bob 609-7379214.
www.the sandpaper.net View Pictures Online
As Easy To Use As 1-2-3! 1. Open Online Classifieds at www.thesandpaper.net to see alphabetical list of categories. 2. Click on BOATS FOR SALE category to scroll through individual ads in an easy-to-read format. 3. Ads which have pictures attached for viewing on our web site will end with a (View picture online) link.
PERSONAL WATERCRAFT 15ft. Sea•Doo hardbottom inflatable. Needs motor work. Trailer included. $500 firm. 609-492-4996. 1997 Sea•Doo Waverunner GTI w/ trailer. Needs some work. Best offer. Located in Surf City. Please call 609-432-6791.
Sale Away with the Best Deal on the Bay
Sell Your Power or Sailboat in the SandPaper Classifieds
Call 609-494-5900 © 2007. Feature Exchange
Solution on Page 47
email classified@thesandpaper.net *No refunds on cancellations *Private Party Boat Sales Only
BOATING
49
460 Dock Road, West Creek NJ
FULL SERVICE MARINA BOATS/ JET SKIS/ TRAILERS/ BOAT HAULING TRAVEL LIFT/SPRING SERVICES/ BOTTOM PAINT Complete REPAIR & SERVICES at your dock or our shop. I/O-O/B ENGINE/ OUTDRIVE rebuild or replacements.
BOAT SLIPS
USED BOAT SALES
Holgate Marina
BOAT SLIP FOR SALE
KAYAK RENTALS
I Want To Paint Your Bottom! Boat Hauling Cer tified Mechanics •Detailing •Gelcoat Restoration •Dock Lines. Captain Brazill’s Marine. 609-494-7200. www.lbiboatcap.com
Boat slip for sale at Grand Bay Harbor, Waretown, NJ. Slip #76, 10ft., 6in. x 26ft. w/unobstructed bay view. Adjacent park area & sundeck. Near bath/shower & swimming pool. Clear water east to Washington. $12,000. 201-4460656, 609-693-2609.
KAYAK and SUP SALES •RENTALS •TOURS
BOAT HAULING Boat hauling, bottom painting and spring launches. Ship Bottom Boat Towing since 1986. 609-978-7757. Follow us on Facebook. www.Shipbottomboattow.com
SLIPS & STORAGE 39 boat slips, private marina, Holgate, approx. 1.5 miles from Inlet. Includes water, electric & bath house. 201-575-1327 for seasonal rates or email: nmjr@optonline.net 40ft. slip on LBI, available immediately. Bathrooms, showers, pool, ample parking. Also house in Lake Harmony (Poconos) for rent. 609970-3782. Beach Haven, Sportsman’s Marina. Floating boat slips available. Also Jet Ski docks. Full service. Call 609-492-7931 or 609-492-5663. Mordecai Boat Basin, Beach Haven. Boat slips to 23 feet. Forklift service in/out/rack to 27 feet. Call 609-492-5201.
MARINE CONSTRUCTION STACK’S PILINGS & DOCKS LLC
•Bulkheading •Boat Lifts •Floating Docks •Davits. Free estimates. Fully insured. Reg./ Lic.#13VH03247500
609-978-1175
SAIL REPAIRS ATTENTION SAILOR: Sail repairs, new sails, boom covers, windows, cushions. Rigging replacements. CDI furlers. Will pickup & deliver. 609-294-2457, Aggie.
CARL’S RIGGING LLC
Customized Shrouds, Mast Rigging, Swaging, Nicro Pressing. 609-217-3628, Carl Reitinger. carlsriggingllc@comcast.net
Family fun for all ages. We deliver. Complete SUP package........$499. 609-492-5150. 84th St. in Brighton Beach on LBI. www.acmebeachandbike.com
BOAT ACCESSORIES
Fujinon Third Generation Image Stabilizing Binoculars Techno-Stabi 14x40. Outstanding optics, totally waterproof. Great for a moving sailboat, power yacht, a must for serious fishing boats. Packaged in a Pelican waterproof hard case. All for $550. Call Joe 609-384-2017.
BOAT DETAILING GIRLS & BOUYS Boat Cleaning & Detailing. ‘‘We Swab the Deck So You Don’t Have To.’’ Competitive Prices. 609-276-7549.
Fully Insured • Free Estimates
609-698-1536 609-492-3300 Lic#13VH05229500
T & K Marine Construction Inc. Specializing in Bulkheads Docks Barge Service
House Pilings Boat Lifts Local Permits
Free Estimates • Fully Insured Call (609) 698-8014 License #634080
Mobile Professional Boat Detailing & Bottom Painting. Affordable, reliable, experienced. Serving LBI and Manahawkin. Call 609-713-9840.
BULKHEAD INSTALLATION & REPAIRS
RKR Signs
609-276-9446 Robertchambers@verizon.net
In HOLGATE. All brand new boat docks & piers. Weekly, transient or seasonal rentals available. Call 609-492-3733.
Docks • Davits • Vinyl Bulkheading Decks • Repair Work
BAYVIEW CANVAS
Boat Canvas– custom fabrication and repair. All types enclosures, covers, upholstery, marine carpeting, residential canvas. 609-276-2720. www.bayviewcanvaslbi.com
Boat Lettering & Signs We Come to Your Boat • LBI & Vicinity
WATERS GATE MARINA
CARDAN
Marine Construction
DOCKS • DECKS • EXCAVATION PIERS • PERMITS
GARY GOVE
609-857-5185
OUTDOOR DECK-ORS,INC.
T/A SURF BULKHEADING & DOCKS
T/A SURF BULKHEADING & DOCKS
NJ LIC.#13VH05898400
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL UM M A GN IF T S B O AT L
Custom Waterfront Construction Docks • Vinyl Bulkheads 609-361-1400 609 361 1400
under New Management Family Owned & Operated Pet & Kid Friendly
FREE ESTIMATES • FULLY INSURED
Detailing • Power Washing Summer Slips Up to 50ft. Jet Ski Slips • Rack Service • Fuel Dock Winter Storage • New Amenities 3110 LB Blvd., Brant Beach
State & Local Permits
HOUSE RAISING AND MOVING
609-971-1780
www.AtlanticStructureMovers.com
Jay Thompson
Reg/Lic# 13VH015848900
www.outdoordeckors.com
L i c 13 V H 0 0 6 8 5 6 0 0
609 597 3538
• BOAT LIFTS • DOCKS • PERMITS • FOUNDATION PILINGS
Your Quality Contractor
“Serving LBI and Surrounding areas since 1954” To Learn more, visit us @ www.bulkheading.com or Call
609-597-8426
Reg./Lic.# 13VH00808800
Boat Lifts Authorized Dealer
Barge Work • House Pilings House Raising • Docks Bulkheads • Piers • Boatlifts
Call the Experts 609-296-9063 Sales@amonconstruction.com Reg. Lic. #13VH00017900
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
609-296-0309
MARINE SERVICES
ShopRite of WARETOWN Friendly faces ready to serve you! Just as close! Just as convenient! Has all your Favorite Items! rre a W
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ll Rd. Wells Mi Parkway
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Exit 69
ShopRite of WARETOWN
Barnegat Township W. Ba y
Ave
501 Route 9 (in the Town Center) 609-971-6001
ShopRite of MANAHAWKIN Stafford Square Mall Rt. 72 East 609-597-0091
Barnegat
9
LONG BEACH ISLAND
e riv D a sh r Ma
72
All the Best that South Jersey has to offer! Sun, Sand, Surf and...
Barnegat Light House
Blvd. iard Hill Ave ay tB E as
Sta
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Ga r d en
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
50
Surf City W. 9t h
St
.
51
EK ALL WE
E PRIC AK BRSE ale thru
Breyers Ice Cream
On Sat. 6/9
We’re all about food. We’re all about savings. We’re all about you!
Price Plus® savings in every aisle!
La Yogurt Yogurt
Playtex Handsaver Gloves Colgate Extra Clean Toothbrush
30
for
Limit 4
Per Variety
9.8-oz. pkg., Granola Mixed Berry or
Eggo Granola Chocolate Chip Waffles
40 USDA CHOICE BEEF
Big Families... CLUB Big Savings! SS I AV ZE Why go to a warehouse store? We offer a wide variety of brands and sizes to suit every family. In every ShopRite aisle, you’ll see Club Size Savings on all your favorite products. No need to make an extra trip...just look for the shelf tag and signs throughout the store and Save Big!
N LOCKED-IS! SAVING
No reason to make a special trip to another store for the products your family needs!
6.1 to 10-oz. box, Any Variety (Excluding Fiber & Omega 3, Simple Harvest and True Delights)
Quaker Chewy Granola Bars
88
1 77 1
YOU SAVE
.62
Shoulder London Broil
2$ for
Limit 4 Offers
lb.
lb.
10
Limit 1
6 to 10-ct. pkg., Champ Cones, 10 to 12-ct., Ice Cream Sandwiches or 8-ct., Cadbury Bars
Popsicle Firecracker Jr.
Blue Bunny Novelties
.88
YOU SAVE
.29
Limit 4 Per Variety
1
720 to 1,155-tot. sht. ct. pkg., Regular Roll, White or Select-A-Size
• Bounty Towels 15-Pack 720 to 1,158-tot. sht. ct. pkg., White or Select-A-Size, Equals 15-Regular Rolls
Your Choice!
Limit 4 Per Variety
88
11
YOU SAVE
5.75
7,200-tot. sht. ct. pkg., Double Roll 24-Pack or 20,000-tot. sht. ct., Marcal
Small Steps Bath Tissue 20-Pack
88
Limit 4 Per Variety
8
YOU SAVE
4.50
99 1.00 YOU SAVE
Limit 4 Per Variety
1
Your Choice! Limit 4 Per Variety
Deer Park 24-Pk. Spring Water
Entenmann’s Little Bites
99
YOU SAVE Limit 4 Per Variety
16
5.00
49
Limit 4 Per Variety
Per Variety
Super Coupon Present This Coupon at Time of Purchase Order, Pickup or Delivery to Receive Discount
YOU SAVE
.50
.88 99 1 699 399
58 to 88-ct. box, Super Pack, Any Variety, Baby Dry or Cruisers
Pampers Diapers
Eggland’s Best Large Eggs
0
028840
FREE
0
With this coupon and your Price Plus® club Card and an additonal purchase of (3) three boxes of Pampers Super Pack Diapers. Limit one per family. Good at any ShopRite. Effective Sun., June 3 thru Sat., June 9, 2012.
Present This Coupon at Time of Purchase Order, Pickup or Delivery to Receive Discount
.60
12-oz. box
Mueller’s Elbow Macaroni
Store Sliced, Honey, Smoked, Buffalo, Lower Sodium or
$
31
lb.
for
Store Sliced, Yellow or White
lb.
MUST BUY FOUR
Super Coupon
YOU SAVE
ShopRite American Cheese
BUY 3 GET 1
.61
Dozen carton (Excluding Cage Free)
Per Variety
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with coupon and Price Plus® club Card
for
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2
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25
ShopRite Executive Turkey Breast YOU SAVE
Kellogg’s Cereal
$
3
for
16.5-oz. box, Cocoa Krispies, 11 to 11.4-oz., Any Variety, Krave, 12.2-oz., Apple Jacks, 12.5-oz., Corn Pops, 12.2-oz., Froot Loops, 15.8 to 18-oz., Any Variety, Frosted Mini Wheats, 14-oz. Frosted Flakes or 12-oz. Original Only (Excluding Gluten Free) Rice Krispies
ea.
9-oz. to 1-lb. box (Excluding Healthy Harvest, Garden Delight, Lasagna, Jumbo Shells, Non Egg or Garlic Fettuccine and Small Egg Bows) Any Variety
Ronzoni Pasta
1.00
2 $3
Dole Classic Romaine
YOU SAVE
99
Limit 4
13
YOU SAVE
9 to 12-oz. pkg., Greener Select, Just Lettuce or
405.6-oz. tot. wt. btls. (Plus Dep. or Fee Where Req.) 16.9-oz. Bottles
Limit 4
Tide Laundry Detergent
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4 to 8-ct. pkg., Any Variety, Sandwiches or
YOU SAVE
143 to 144-oz. box, Any Variety, Ultra Powder or 150-oz. btl., Any Variety, Liquid
98
• Good Humor Ice Cream Bars • Klondike Ice Cream Bars
99 1.00
3
1
2-lb. Bag Extra Large Shrimp
2
4 to 12-ct. pkg., Any Variety (Excluding Mounds Dark Chocolate, York Peppermint Patty or Reese’s Ice Cream Cup)
12.8 to 28.01-oz. pkg., Any Variety, Pizza Amore or
Freschetta 12" Pizza
99
• Boneless Chicken Breast Your Choice! lb.
MUST BUY Additional or lesser quantities will scan at 5.99 ea.
.99
lb.
.61
Limit 4
Per Variety
3-lbs. or more, Pork Loin, Bone-In, Rib Cut
cont., Fresh, Plump & Juicy
8-ct. pkg., Sugar Free Orange/Cherry/Grape, Sugar Free Tropicals or No Sugar Added Fudgesicle or
Limit 4
2
99 .50
1.49 -.50
YOU SAVE
Frozen, 25 to 30-ct./lb., EZ Peel
FINAL COST
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Per Variety
lb.
Blueberries 1-pint
ShopRite Sale Price
.50
2.75 to 3.5-lb. pkg., Fresh, Skinless
57
Red Seedless Grapes
8.25 to 8.75-oz. box, Any Variety
.57
.12
.99 .88
Sale Prices: 2.57 lb. to 3.89 lb. • Center Cut Pork Chops
OR
• Charmin Big Roll 24-Pack
your next shopping order of $50.00 or more. (Limit 13 Certificates)
Ken’s Salad Dressing
Price on package reflects Sale Retail
4,224 to 4,800-tot. sht. ct. pkg., Ultra Strong or Ultra Soft, Bath Tissue
Get $10 Off
9-oz. btl., Any Variety YOU SAVE
Boneless Beef (Sold As London Broil Only)
• Bounty Huge Roll Towels 6-Pk. Spend $100 on baby items and...
Limit 4 Per Variety
Regular Prices: 4.29 lb. to 6.49 lb.
Mexico and California
And of course, there’s no membership fee –why should you pay a fee to save!
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O
Pepsi 20-Pack
!
on 1,000’s of Health and Beauty Care Products.
.15
YOU SAVE
Boneless Beef (Sold as London Broil Only) (Excludes Choice & Certified Angus Beef® Flank Steak)
240-oz. tot. wt. cans (Plus Dep. or Fee Where Req.) 12-oz. Cans, Sierra Mist, Mtn. Dew or
INGS
Locked-In Savings
Limit 4 Per Variety
YOU SAVE
% London Broil ff
Check our ad and look for our shelf tags!
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With more than 700 items on sale in our ad...plus over 3000 items on sale each week in our store, you will always save on the items you buy most often! ShopRite’s combination of sale items, low shelf prices, Locked in Savings, Price Break savings, and special promotions are unmatched by anyone.
Limit 4
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1-pair bag, Small, Medium, Large or Extra Large, Rubber
Over 3,000 items on sale every week.
Per Variety
WO
WED., THURS., FRI. & SAT., June 6TH THRU June 9TH
Your Price Plus club card gives you more ways to save every week...instant cash discounts on hundreds of items, special offers and promotions, exclusive mailbox savings, checkout coupons and more. Look for the Price Plus shelf labels throughout the store and watch the savings add up on your register receipt.
Limit 4
Offers
$ 4 DAY PRICE BREAK
®
Per Variety
110 3
2.22
Limit 2
! W O W
5.3 to 6-oz. cont., Any Variety
97W! YOU SAVE
0
029050
2
MUST BUY 3
With this coupon and an additional purchase of $10.00 or more (Excluding fuel and items prohibited by law). Limit one per family. Void if reproduced, sold or transferred. Cash value 1/100 cent. Good at any ShopRite® store. © 2012 Wakefern Food Corp. Effective Sun., June 3 thru Sat., June 9, 2012.
Prices, programs and promotions effective Wed., June 6 thru Sat., June 9, 2012 in NJ, North of Trenton (excluding Ewing, Hamilton Square, Hamilton Marketplace, Pennington and Montague, NJ), including E. Windsor, Monmouth & Ocean Counties, NJ and Rockland County, NY. Sunday sales subject to local blue laws. No sales made to other retailers or wholesalers. In order to assure a sufficient supply of sale items for all our customers, we must reserve the right to limit purchases of any sale item to 4 purchases, per item, per customer, per week, except where otherwise noted. Minimum purchase requirements noted for any item in ad excludes prescription medications, gift cards, gift certificates, postage stamp sales, money orders, money transfers, lottery tickets, bus ticket sales, fuel and Metro passes, as well as milk, cigarettes, tobacco products and alcoholic beverages or any other items prohibited by law. Only one manufacturer coupon may be used per item and we reserve the right to limit manufacturer coupon redemptions to four (4) identical coupons per household per day, unless otherwise noted or further restricted by manufacturer. Sales tax is applied to the net retail of any discounted item or any ShopRite coupon item. Sales tax is applied to the full price of any item discounted with the use of a manufacturers’ coupon. Not responsible for typographical errors. Artwork does not necessarily represent items on sale; it is for display purposes only. Copyright© Wakefern Food Corp., 2012. All rights reserved.
The SandPaper/Wednesday, June 6, 2012
48-oz. cont., Carb Smart, Dairy Dessert or Any Variety All Natural
WE CAN SHADE ANYTHING! Giglio Awning can provide you with a custom shade solution for any application for your home or business, and we can install it within a few weeks. You can choose from hundreds of solid and striped fabrics, including view-through fabrics that also provide light gain and shade. Please visit our showroom or call for an appointment. Like Us on Facebook
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David: Just want to thank you for coming out to inspect the awning and more importantly for having our awning re-laced and patched so quickly. It looks much better. It’s nice to know that you can count on Giglio to keep their customers happy. Thanks again and I hope you have a great summer. -Gary Geddes
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