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CONTENTS SUMMER 2013 • VOL. 11 ISSUE 02
>> FEATURES 14
36
Alachua Celebrates
50
Florida’s Best Cruise
The Largest Small-Town Fireworks Display in America
Rediscover the Real Florida: Ichetucknee Springs State Park
BY MARY GOODWIN
BY SARAH A. HENDERSON
Babe Ruth Softball
58
Hearts & Crafts
Four Bases, Three Strikes, One Winner
Keep the Kids Entertained with these Fun-Filled Activities
BY MARY GOODWIN
BY KYRA LOVE
10 | Summer 2013
ON THE COVER
PHOTO BY TJ MORRISSEY / LOTUS STUDIOS
Sophia Brucker, University of Florida student and model, graces our cover for this edition, which focuses on our precious rivers and springs. From tubing on the Itchetuknee River to canoeing down the Santa Fe River, there’s plenty to do on our many water bodies. Florida may have the largest convergence of freshwater springs on the planet, with over 700 — and they need our help.
>> FOREVER YOURS
Magical
By Courtney Lindwall
Springs Eternal Alachua County is reaching out to celebrate and save Florida’s natural waters. Learn about the artists and activists behind the new photography and art exhibit at the Florida Museum of Natural History, the Springs Eternal Project, and remind yourself what makes the Florida waterways worth fighting for.
Waters Art and Activism Come Together in the Springs Eternal Project
BY COURTNEY LINDWALL
T
he story of Florida and its people begins and ends with water. We’re the Gulf and the Everglades, the aquifer and Lake Okeechobee. We’re the St. John’s River and the coral reef, the Atlantic Ocean and Tampa Bay. And finally, we’re the springs — from Ichetucknee to Silver Glen, Weeki Wachee to Jackson Blue. The story of Florida is a story about water, and for the artists, activists and researchers of Gainesville; it is the story of saving the springs before they’re lost. The Springs Eternal Project, a three-part art and education project, has come to Alachua County to engage residents with the
worsening environmental damage to the springs system. It includes an exhibit at the Florida Museum of Natural History, two large-scale art installations on local RTS buses, as well as an educational website (www.springseternalproject.org) that provides resources for those looking to help. The exhibit will run through December 15, and the bus installations will run into 2014. In partnership with the Alachua Conservation Trust, the project is largely the work of John Moran, a nature photographer; Lesley Gamble, an artist and professor at the University of Florida; and Rick Kilby, an artist and the author of “Finding the Fountain of Youth: Ponce de Leon and Florida’s Magical Waters.” The museum exhibit, which
features striking side-by-side images of healthy and declining springs, is both a celebration and a warning — a celebration of the springs’ importance and a warning that they could be lost. Before-and-after photographs spanning decades show the shift from crystal-clear to algae-clogged and hit home the effects of our environmental policies. “I felt a calling to photograph the best of vanishing natural Florida,” Moran said in a recent phone interview. “I need to share with people the changes I’ve seen — that frankly are breaking my heart.” The exhibit sits at the main entrance of the museum, with two 60-foot-wide panoramic underwater images high above the gallery. On one side, a clear-blue
© PHOTOS BY JOHN MORAN
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Summer 2013 | 29
>> AROUND THE CORNER
Back-to-School
66
Simplified
By Mary Goodwin
Quick Summer Tips to Ease the Transition Back
Ease the Transition Back Yes, we know it is summertime, but why wait until the very last minute to get your children ready for the beginning of the school year? While some stress is probably unavoidable, there are steps to take to help ease the transition. Here are some helpful tips.
BY MARY GOODWIN
W
hen those peaceful, leisurely summer days abruptly shift back to early mornings and homework mayhem, it is easiest to space out chores and prepare, prepare, prepare! Instead of cramming your back-t0-school checklist into the last few days of your child’s summer freedom, use those open days to tackle new school-year tasks ahead of time — and ahead of the rush.
Shop Savvy Chances are, your child is going to need (or want) back-to-school clothes. Be sure to go through their wardrobe in advance and make
a list of the items you will buy throughout the summer. Save this checklist, ideally to your smart phone, and keep an eye out for the best deals. If you are planning a summer trip to a theme park or a Florida attraction, stop by the outlet malls during your travels to scout out the discounts. Do not forget to consider the uniform policy for Alachua County Public Schools, available at www.sbac.edu. Every teacher requires different school supplies, but there are staple items most students will need every year. Elementary school teachers typically ask every student to have: a backpack, No. 2 pencils, crayons or colored pencils or markers, scissors, a glue stick, a box of tissues, notebooks, binders, pocket folders,
66 | Summer 2013
loose-leaf paper, printer paper and a ruler. Items like calculators, binder dividers, pencil sharpeners, tape and combination locks for lockers might also be required.
Immunize Ahead Avoid long waits and crowded doctors’ offices by vaccinating your
little ones at the beginning of the summer. Before attending a new school in Florida, every child must provide documentation of the following vaccinations: • Four or five doses of DTap (diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis) • Two or three doses of hepatitis B • Three to five doses of polio vaccine
• Two doses of MMR vaccine (measles-mumps-rubella) • Two doses of varicella vaccine (for grades K through 4) and one dose of varicella vaccine (for grades 5 through 11) • One dose of TDap (tetanus -diphtheria-pertussis) for students entering the seventh grade
For more information on school immunization requirements and vaccination dosages, contact your pediatrician or the Alachua County Health Department, www.doh.state. fl.us/chdalachua. Also, consider this time for scheduling eye screenings, hearing tests and sports physicals.
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Summer 2013 | 67
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>> CONSERVATION
92
Saving the
By Allison Wilson
Florida Springs Institute Founded in May 2010 to restore and protect Florida’s springs under the auspices of Florida’s Eden, the Florida Springs Institute incorporated as an independent nonprofit in December of 2012. Director Dr. Robert L. Knight had carried out landmark ecological research at Silver Springs under the direction of Dr. Odum.
Springs The Howard T. Odum Springs Institute
BY ALLISON WILSON
C
hat with Dr. Robert Knight for 10 minutes and you will not leave the conversation uninspired — neither could anyone who cares about Florida’s springs. “My dreams are big,” he said during a recent phone interview. “I may not see them realized in my lifetime, but I’m setting the foundation for others to make those dreams a reality.” Knight is the founder and director of the Howard T. Odum Florida Springs Institute, a non-profit corporation dedicated to protecting and restoring Florida’s springs. Formally established in 2010, the vision for the springs institute actually sprung
from research and ideas that began nearly 60 years ago. Howard Thomas Odum was a biology professor at the University of Florida, who published a landmark paper on Silver Springs in 1957. His study included the first complete analysis of a natural spring ecosystem. He measured the productivity and water flow of the spring and how it was related to the organisms and environmental conditions of the ecosystem. “I was fortunate enough to come to Gainesville in 1978 and study under Dr. Odum,” Knight said. “He asked me to restudy Silver Springs 25 years after his first analysis and repeat the same measures. He was concerned about reduction in fish
PHOTO COURTESY OF ROBERT KNIGHT
Kayakers gather at Wekiva Springs, getting a glimpse of how it looked when Timucuan Indians fished and hunted these lands.
92 | Summer 2013
The articles printed in Our Town Magazine™ do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Tower Publications, Inc. or their editorial staff. Our Town Magazine endeavors to accept reliable advertising; however, we can not be held responsible by the public for advertising claims. Our Town Magazine reserves the right to refuse or discontinue any advertisement. All rights reserved. © 2013 Tower Publications, Inc.
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Summer 2013 | 11
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Published quarterly by Tower Publications, Inc. www.towerpublications.com
PUBLISHER Charlie Delatorre charlie@towerpublications.com EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Albert Isaac editor@towerpublications.com fax: 352-416-0175 OFFICE MANAGER Bonita Delatorre bonita@towerpublications.com ART DIRECTOR Hank McAfee hank@towerpublications.com
>> FEATURES 76
Santa Fe River Passionate Local Non-Profit Aims to Protect and Educate BY MARY GOODWIN
84
Florida Manatees Exploring a Native Wonder BY MARY KYPREOS
100 Planting the Seeds Florida-Friendly Landscapes on Tour BY DARLA KINNEY SCOLES
110 Two Decades of Entertainment The High Springs Community Theater
DESIGNER Neil McKinney neil@towerpublications.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Ellis Amburn Mary Goodwin Sarah A. Henderson Mary Kypreos Courtney Lindwall Kyra Love Darla Kinney Scoles Allison Wilson INTERNS Taylor Clemons Courtney Lindwall Ashira Morris
BY MARY GOODWIN
142 Military Support Group Giving Soldiers a Taste of Home
ADVERTISING SALES Jenni Bennett 352-416-0210 jenni@towerpublications.com
BY ELLIS AMBURN Melissa Morris 352-416-0212 melissa@towerpublications.com Nancy Short 352-372-3245 nancy@towerpublications.com
COLUMNISTS 44 72 118 121
Crystal Henry ......................................................... NAKED SALSA Kendra Siler-Marsiglio .................................. HEALTHY EDGE Donna Bonnell ...................................................... EMBRACING LIFE Terri Schlichenmeyer ..................................... READING CORNER
Pam Slaven 352-416-0213 pam@towerpublications.com Helen Stalnaker 352-416-0209 helen@towerpublications.com Annie Waite 352-416-0204 annie@towerpublications.com
INFORMATION 128 Community Calendar 138 Worship Centers
12 | Summer 2013
146 Library Happenings 152 Advertiser Index
ADVERTISING OFFICE 4400 NW 36th Avenue Gainesville, FL 32606 352-372-5468 352-373-9178 fax
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T H O R N E B R O O Kwww.VisitOurTowns.com VILL AGE • GAINESVILL E Summer 2013 | 13
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SPECIAL >> INDEPENDENCE DAY
Alachua Celebrates Big When the City of Alachua saw the success of its millennial celebration 13 years ago, it dubbed the grand fireworks show an annual tradition, but with a patriotic twist. Now in its 14th run, the red, white and blue spectacle gets better every year. With more than 30,000 guests expected to attend the Fourth of July celebration, the city has structured the occasion around two principal notions: family and American pride. “It’s entirely family-oriented,” said Adam Boukari, assistant city manager and chair of the event. “It’s an event where people can bring their kids and not worry about anything not being childfriendly. From ages 1 to 99, there’s something for everybody.” The show kicks off Thursday, July 4 at 3 p.m. at the Hal Brady Recreation Complex with youth
14 | Summer 2013
activities, including a skate and splash park, a water slide, rock climbing walls, a bounce house and a petting zoo. The gymnasium offers an escape from the outdoors with games such as Bingo and a live performance by the Senior Cha Chas of Alachua. Visitors can enjoy live entertainment and musical performances outside, from 5 p.m. until 9 p.m. “Aside from vendor sales, everything is free,” Boukari said. “It’s an opportunity for families who might not have the means to take a vacation to have a great time right here in the community.” Beginning at 9:30 p.m. sharp, the Alachua Detonators launch the first firework of the batch, which is worth a total of $35,000. The sky is continuously lit with fire until around 10 p.m. “It’s amazing how long the
display of fireworks is, and you can see them from a mile away,” said High Springs resident Cory Mikell, who attended last year’s event. “I had a great time being able to spend the Fourth with friends and family there. It’s the perfect family atmosphere for the holiday.” The main attraction of the event for some might be the fireworks, but Boukari insists the event offers entertainment for all walks of life. The city has affectionately dubbed the anticipated show “the largest small-town fireworks display in America.” “It’s so much more than just fireworks, it’s a signature event that our community can call our own,” Boukari said. “We can all come together and give thanks for our freedoms and liberties at the signature event that makes Alachua the good life community.” s
MESSAGE >> FROM THE EDITOR
Summer has arrived! It’s that time of year once again – time to play ball, take summer vacations and spend time at some of the many beautiful rivers and springs in our area. I have to admit, coming from Miami where swimming in the ocean was like hopping into a warm bathtub, my first plunge into a spring up here in North Florida about gave me a heart attack. It took some getting used to! But there are few things more refreshing on a 90+ degree summer afternoon then a dip in a Florida spring. During my college days at UF, I experienced for the first time a serene and scenic tube float down the Ichetucknee. I also leapt into Manatee Springs not expecting the 72º temperature. It took my breath away. Canoe trips followed, typically down the Santa Fe River, where my wife and I met local legend Naked Ed for the first time, 20-some years ago. He’s still there, looking after Lily Spring. I’ve seen the Santa Fe River high and I’ve seen it dry. And over the years I’ve taken all of our children down to Boat Ramp Road to explore the river and its banks. My youngest still insists we visit regularly. I happily oblige. I sometimes forget that we are living next to paradise. The springs have been attracting people to the area for thousands of years and they continue to do so. However, the very things that make our area so special are now in peril from a variety of assaults. Pollution, pesticides, fertilizing, wasteful ways and over-pumping of the aquifer are taking their toll and a lot of people aren’t even aware of it. To that end, we bring you stories about our waterways and some of the people in our area that are doing their level best to protect these most precious resources and to raise awareness about things we all can do to ensure that our rivers and springs will be here for generations to come. I’m told again and again that it’s not too late. We can turn this trend around. So we hope you enjoy this edition of Our Town, and that it inspires you to get out and experience the wonderful places that are all around us. I certainly will. s
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STAFF >> CONTRIBUTORS Mary Goodwin
Darla Kinney Scoles
is a freelance writer and a graduate of UF’s College of Journalism and Communications. She enjoys time with family and friends, writing, traveling, music, baking and spending entire days outdoors.
remembers taking a high school journalism class and falling in love with the process. Oodles of years, one husband, three daughters and multitudinous stories later, she’s still in love with it all. That, and dark chocolate.
mgoodwin@ufl.edu
darlakinneyscoles@gmail.com
Allison Wilson
Sarah Henderson
is a communications coordinator for UF&Shands and a freelance writer and editor. She is way too busy to contribute any more facts to this biography.
is a freelance writer and graduate of UF’s College of Journalism and Communications. She enjoys reading, watching movies and spending time outdoors.
daw995@yahoo.com
sahenderson88@gmail.com
Courtney Lindwall
Ellis Amburn
is a Florida native, now studying journalism at UF. She loves telling and hearing good stories. In her little bit of free time, she enjoys hiking, camping and eating delicious food.
is a resident of High Springs as well as the author of biographies of Roy Orbison, Elizabeth Taylor and others. ellis.amburn@gmail.com
c.lindwall@ufl.edu
Kyra Love
Mary Kypreos
is a student in UF’s College of Journalism and Communications. When she’s not writing, she enjoys doing craft projects, watching TV and traveling.
is a freelance writer and editor who enjoys discovering tidbits of knowledge about Florida from those who know it best. She is a proud Gator alumna and is currently working toward a Master’s in English language and literature.
kyraelove@gmail.com
kypreos.mary@gmail.com
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CHARITY OF THE MONTH
The Lubee Bat Conservancy FEBRUARY 2013 WINNER – 2,028 VOTES
While many consider this Gator Country, wildlife specialists may also recognize Gainesville as the international center for bat research, conservation and education. he Lubee Bat Conservancy, a nonprofit facility that houses and studies more than 200 bats at a time, has won the $1,000 prize for being the February charity of the month. With 2,028 “likes” on Facebook, Lubee rounded up social media support for its environmental mission. Anthony Mason, 26, has worked with the bats for a year and a half now and nominated the center for the award. The Lubee Bat Conservancy has set the international standard for bat husbandry, Mason said. It is a member of the international Association of Zoos and Aquariums and helped write its guidelines for proper bat care. Other zoos follow in Lubee’s footsteps. The conservancy houses fruit bats, Anthony Mason whose populations are hurting from habitat loss and hunting. The bats’ key roles, pollinating plants and dispersing seeds, are particularly important in areas of deforestation. During long flights, dropping seeds across open areas can help regenerate forests. The conservancy works to revive these crucial at-risk species by focusing heavily on educational programs — not only for other researchers studying bats, but for young students, the local community, and communities abroad. Last year, Lubee was able to reach out to 11,500 people in the area, said Brian Pope, the conservancy’s director. Lubee also works to maintain genetic diversity among captive-bred bat populations, carefully tracking and planning mating. Although it is unlikely the bats will ever be released into the wild, Mason said, it is still important to have viable populations. Although the conservancy is beginning to study Florida bats as well, the majority of Lubee’s fruit bats are from outside North America, such as the rainforests
T
20 | Summer 2013
of South America or Asia. Lubee gives grants to local researchers and conservationists who then study these bats in the wild. While the Conservancy is not a zoo, the center does allow pre-scheduled tours, usually on Thursdays. It also hosts the annual Florida Bat Festival the last Saturday of PHOTO BY AMANDA WILLIAMSON October, which last Tasha King, head bat keeper, year attracted around feeds mango Juicy Juice to Kuri, 3,600 visitors. a spectacled flying fox. Mason, the social media manager for the conservancy, won the $300 individual prize for his nomination but gave the money to Lubee instead. Learn more at www.facebook.com/LubeeBatConservancy.
TO NOMINATE A CHARITY OF YOUR CHOICE OR TO VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE NOMINEES, VISIT:
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CHARITY OF THE MONTH
Noah’s Endeavor MARCH 2013 WINNER – 1,730 VOTES
It began with a game of baseball. It was a way for Shelly Voelker’s son, Noah, to socialize with friends, despite the cerebral palsy that his doctor said would hold him back. ourteen years later, Noah’s game of baseball has transcended the field; it has become a community lesson on diversity, acceptance and the power of unconditional love. Noah’s Endeavor, a local charity that hosts recreational activities for all ability levels, has won March’s SunState Federal Credit Union’s $1,000 award. Following Voelker’s nomination, it won with 1,730 “likes” on the charity contest Facebook. After Noah’s passing four years ago, the organization now continues Prize winner’s check from SunState in his honor, hoping to keep his spirit of inclusion alive. It has expanded from the single season of baseball to now include year-round recreational activities, such as basketball, bowling, soccer and swimming. Many of the members who come out for the games have developmental or physical challenges. But the Voelkers stress that all activities are open to anyone. Volunteers often help at the games, alongside siblings and parents. Noah’s Endeavor offers a safe space to teach participants about the diversity among communities. “I love that they’re going to grow up believing that there is a wide range of abilities,” Voelker said. “And that it’s completely normal.” Charlotte Ravel’s son, Daniel, also has cerebral palsy and has been involved with Noah’s Endeavor since the first season of baseball. Now 17, Daniel still comes out to the games. He plays baseball in his wheelchair, and a volunteer helps him around the field. As he rounds second base,
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Daniel’s grin runs ear to ear. Voelker said that she sees positive effects like this in many of the participants. It is not about learning the rules of the game or becoming competitive, but about socializing with friends and practicing skills such as sharing or waiting your turn. Voelker said she hopes winning the contest will make more people in the community aware of the organization. Many families are looking for ways to involve their children in a program such as Noah’s Endeavor, but have lived in Gainesville for years without knowing it exists. With the prize money, Voelker hopes to offset expenses for the members’ favorite activity of the year – swimming, the only activity that costs money to participate. But Voelker is working toward making it free for everyone. Voelker said the swimming activities, called “Aquabilities,” are particularly important so that members can learn water safety. Long term, Voelker said she would love to open her own swimming facility that accommodates all types of families and needs. As the 2013 baseball season wraps up, Noah’s Endeavor will continue to honor Noah’s spirit of friendship and acceptance in the same place it all began — out on the field. s Learn more at www.facebook.com/groups/61859309302
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CHARITY OF THE MONTH
DARE Organization APRIL 2013 WINNER – 1,805 VOTES
More than 10 years and 1,000 rescued dachshunds later, DARE’s passion for saving those left behind is stronger than ever. hey are the dogs from puppy mills that have never walked in grass. They are the dogs that were abused, malnourished or infected. They are the gifts from Christmas that were too much work by Easter. DARE (Dachshund Adoption Rescue and Education) takes them in, loves them and finds them homes. DARE, nominated by longtime member Judy Delbene, has won the $1,000 prize for SunState Credit Union’s April charity contest. Delbene, who won $300 for her nomination, also donated the money back to DARE. The organization began in 2001 but became an official nonprofit in 2004. It is completely volunteer-based and works out of the homes of foster parents, of which there are now around 30. DARE saves dachshunds that may otherwise not have had a chance, such as seniors or those facing lifethreatening medical issues. “We don’t just pull the young, pretty dogs,” Delbene said. Because of this, the veterinary costs add up. Each dog, once fully vetted, will live with a DARE member, who fosters until a suitable owner can adopt. The organization has a rigorous adoption process, complete with references and home visits. DARE doesn’t want its dogs ending up in another shelter just months down the line. “We see what happens when there’s irresponsible pet ownership because we clean up the mess,” said Alicia Duval, DARE’s vice president. To help prevent this, a cornerstone of DARE’s mission is education. The organization shares breed expertise
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with potential or current owners, such as dachshunds’ common back problems or notorious stubbornness. They teach about the importance of spaying and neutering and generally about the commitment of owning a dog. They also share why their beloved wiener dogs make such wonderful pets. Overall, the driving force behind DARE is a love for the breed. At the organization’s big annual event, Dox-APalooza, hundreds of dachshund lovers come out from all around the state to celebrate their hotdog-shaped companions with “wiener races” and costume contests. Many of the dachshunds who come out are former DARE rescues and receive a special colored bandana to wear. “You can look out and see this sea of colors and the hundreds of dogs we’ve helped over the years,” Duval said. For Delbene, the best part of being a foster parent is matching individual dachshunds with the perfect family. After two weeks in her home, Delbene said a scared dog that was hiding under the table will begin to show its personality. “It’s exciting to be able to do that for another living being — giving them a new life.” s Learn more at https://www.facebook.com/DAREtoRescue
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ADVERTISEMENT
Meet Joe Akins
SUNSTATE FEDERAL CREDIT UNION’S NEW CEO TALKS ABOUT THE MOST IMPORTANT PART OF HIS JOB – PEOPLE
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rom an early age, Joe Akins learned about building relationships. A native of Bell, Florida, he attended the same small school from kindergarten through 12th grade and knew pretty much everybody. “In a small school, you had to have that personality to be able to meet people and get along with just about everybody,” he said. “All through my years I’ve been making friends and building relationships. That has paid great dividends for me.” While the financial pun is not intended, it is an accurate reflection on his approach as the new President and CEO at SunState Federal Credit Union. Akins is not your typical financial executive – he is usually seen casually dressed in a button-down shirt (sans tie) and is known for his approachability and open-door policy for employees and members alike. His affable nature has served him well in a career that has included almost every aspect of SunState, from his start as a collections manager in 1993 to his recent appointment as President and CEO. In good times and in bad, he explained, it is kindness tempered with knowledge that customers remember. “In the collections world people think you’re hard core, but I got more satisfaction having people believe in me,” said Akins.
“Everybody can be nice – that’s the easiest thing in the world. But being nice under extreme hardship or circumstances is where the value comes in. That’s where you build that strong foundation with customers. We want to keep our service elevated because that’s what keeps them coming back. That’s where we identify ourselves as an organization built on strong relationships.” The son of a farmer who also worked for the Department of Transportation and public works, Akins originally planned a career in agriculture. But after seeing the financial uncertainty of the farming business, he earned a degree in forestry from Lake City Community College and went to work for Georgia Pacific. Hoping for a promotion that would allow him to stay in North Central Florida, he obtained another degree from Santa Fe Community College before ultimately graduating from the University of Florida with a bachelor of science in business administration. The promotion he had hoped for, however, was no longer there. Hungry for work that would keep him in the region he loved, he approached his friend Mark Walker about a job at Barnett Bank. Four days later, Akins began his financial career and stayed with Barnett until he joined SunState in 1993. While his friendly nature has been his hallmark, it is his tireless work
ethic that has moved him through the ranks of collections, credit, risk management and lending to where he is now. “I don’t have the gene that says ‘Give up’” he said. “I don’t quit. I’m passionate about being the best I can be all the time. People have always looked at me [and said], ‘If he can’t solve it, it can’t be solved.’” In his new position, Akins wants to remind everyone in North Central Florida that SunState is full of people just like him – friendly, knowledgeable and ready to help. The staff is the heart of SunState’s small-town feel, and acknowledging their accomplishments and encouraging them to achieve more is a top priority for Akins. “I have an open relationship with all of my staff. I want them to have that comfort level with me that I’m not just their boss, but also a counselor and a friend, someone they want to work hard for,” he said. “I’m going to do everything in my power to put the credit union in the best possible position to maintain and improve our current level of success. It all comes down to my people, and making sure they themselves are in the best possible position to succeed, as they help our customers and members succeed. “When I see one of the big banks, I just see a building. When I look at SunState Federal Credit Union, I see the people that make us unique.”
Serving residents in the Greater Gainesville area for more than 55 years
352-381-5200 26 | Summer 2013
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Get to know Joe… We know he’s the new President and CEO of SunState Federal Credit Union. But what about the Joe Akins that exists outside of work? FAMILY: Y Wife of 21 years, Betty Ramos; five children; one dog, Chester FAVORITE THING(S) TO DO IN GAINESVILLE: Art walks and other artistic events. “My wife’s father was a wellknown artist in Miami. Betty has taken this country boy nature of mine and really gotten me interested in art!” FAVORITE RESTAURANT(S): Mac’s Drive-Thru, Napolitano’s, Leonardo’s on NW 16th Boulevard. “Eating at restaurants is like entertainment for us.” MOST RECENT BOOK READ: “The Road Less Traveled” by M. Scott Peck, MD. MOST RECENT MOVIE SEEN: “Seabiscuit” (on video) FAVORITE ACTOR: Morgan Freeman. “No matter what role he plays, he fills it up. He is a natural.”
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>> FOREVER YOURS
Magical
Waters Art and Activism Come Together in the Springs Eternal Project
BY COURTNEY LINDWALL he story of Florida and its people begins and ends with water. We’re the Gulf and the Everglades, the aquifer and Lake Okeechobee. We’re the St. John’s River and the coral reef, the Atlantic Ocean and Tampa Bay. And finally, we’re the springs — from Ichetucknee to Silver Glen, Weeki Wachee to Jackson Blue. The story of Florida is a story about water, and for the artists, activists and researchers of Gainesville, it is the story of saving the springs before they’re lost. The Springs Eternal Project, a three-part art and education project, has come to Alachua County to engage residents with the
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worsening environmental damage to the springs system. It includes an exhibit at the Florida Museum of Natural History, two large-scale art installations on local RTS buses, as well as an educational website (www.springseternalproject.org) that provides resources for those looking to help. The exhibit will run through December 15, and the bus installations will run into 2014. In partnership with the Alachua Conservation Trust, the project is largely the work of John Moran, a nature photographer; Lesley Gamble, an artist and professor at the University of Florida; and Rick Kilby, an artist and the author of “Finding the Fountain of Youth: Ponce de Leon and Florida’s Magical Waters.” The museum exhibit, which
features striking side-by-side images of healthy and declining springs, is both a celebration and a warning — a celebration of the springs’ importance and a warning that they could be lost. Before-and-after photographs spanning decades show the shift from crystal-clear to algae-clogged and hit home the effects of our environmental policies. “I felt a calling to photograph the best of vanishing natural Florida,” Moran said in a recent phone interview. “I need to share with people the changes I’ve seen — that frankly are breaking my heart.” The exhibit sits at the main entrance of the museum, with two 60-foot-wide panoramic underwater images high above the gallery. On one side, a clear-blue
© PHOTOS BY JOHN MORAN
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spring demonstrates health, while an opposite wall of algae and muck shows the results of decades of pollution and over-pumping. “It’s about helping people understand that we’re all connected with water,” Gamble said in a phone interview. “Part of our challenge is educating legislators and the public
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that it’s in our best interest if we come together collectively to see this as a shared resource.” Until seeing these contrasting images, many people may have been unaware of the crisis entirely. For Gamble, the Springs Eternal Project is all about building awareness. One of the more unique ways
the project has fostered awareness is through Gamble’s “Urban Aquifer” installation. Full-scale underwater spring photos cover two RTS buses, creating a metaphorical flowing aquifer. These unusual and striking images answer the question: how do you get the attention of someone who
might never walk into a museum? It brings the issue out into the community, literally. “People are very excited when they see a big aquifer bus,” Gamble said. “It’s kind of a surprise to be stuck in traffic and look up to see a beautiful, blue spring.” The website is connected to the
Urban Aquifer bus installation, which displays barcodes that can be activated with a smartphone to link directly to the site. Once engaged through the artwork, viewers can immediately travel to the web to learn more about the issue and how to help. Gamble uses art to engage with the cause, but wants
www.VisitOurTowns.com
PHOTO BY LUCY FLETCHER
Visitors at the Florida Museum of Natural History learn about the beauty, history, and threats to Florida’s water supply in the new Springs Eternal Project exhibit, which will remain at the museum until December 15.
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PHOTOS COURTESY OF LESLIE GAMBLE
People gather to celebrate the debut of the Urban Aquifer project, a large-scale art installation displayed on local RTS buses. The two buses feature John Moran’s wildlife photography (a clear Ginnie Springs and a wild alligator) and act as a metaphor for the aquifer flowing through Gainesville.
others to get involved in any way they know how. With a doctorate in art history, Gamble teaches the subject at UF, and specifically has taught courses about the connection between art and water. Much of the material for the Springs Eternal Project came out of teaching a class called “Art, Water, Ecology,” Gamble said. But her interest in the springs began long before this exhibit, which has been in the works for around two years. When she first came to Florida in 1980, Gamble was a busy horse trainer on the show circuit. One of her customer’s grandfathers was the owner of Silver Springs, and, having never been to a spring before, Gamble decided to make a visit. She fell in love with the crystal clear waters and took trips to Ichetucknee Springs when she had the time. However, she began to
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notice between her periodic trips that the springs were changing. Gamble said she was not sure if it was a natural change, but the divers whom she talked with were noticing it, too. “Many cave divers are really passionate about their sport and about the environment,” Gamble said. “They’ve been seeing this degradation, and they know these springs inside and out.” Moran’s interest in the Florida outdoors began when he was a child, “completely at home in orange groves and cypress swamps,” he said. He fell in love with the world outside his back door. Their shared love affair with natural Florida collided when the two met at a springs restoration workshop, creating a partnership that would combine a commitment to the cause with a gift for visual storytelling. “She’s smart, articulate,
passionate,” Moran said. “We realized that the whole would be greater than the sum of its parts.” Moran, a UF graduate and past journalist with the Gainesville Sun, now travels and speaks about his experiences as a nature photographer as well as the need for environmental reform. At the Silver Springs forum in 2012, Moran touched on the challenges facing Florida. “As you all know, budgets for DEP and water management districts have been eviscerated, Florida Forever has been effectively eliminated, the Department of Community Affairs was killed by the legislature last year, functionally, and comprehensive land-use planning in Florida is now a thing of the past,” Moran said. “Tallahassee, it seems, has turned its back on natural Florida.” This issue of questionable policy
© PHOTO BY JOHN MORAN
An increasingly rare moment of natural Florida’s beauty and health.
has resulted in excess “algae slime” choking the springs, fertilizer pollution and severe over-pumping. Biodiversity is threatened, and the ratio of salt-to-fresh water in
the aquifer is shifting, throwing off delicate ecosystems. Cities like Tampa, Gamble said, have to use desalination plants to access fresh water, which can be
nearly 100 times as expensive as using natural water sources. “The state that has acquired these wonderful properties is, in my opinion, falling down on the job protecting the resources they have invested in,” Moran said. The Springs Eternal Project, at its core, reminds people of the role water plays, not just in the story of Florida, but also in the story of our own lives. It reminds us what a loss of the springs would mean for a state that begins and ends with water, that is filled to the brim with people who explore in water, who bathe in water, who make a living from water — who are, in fact, made of water. “I would encourage people to go to the springs,” Moran said, “to be reminded of why we fell in love with Florida in the first place.” s
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>> BATTER UP!
Babe Ruth Softball Four Bases, Three Strikes, One Winner
BY MARY GOODWIN he Hal Brady Recreation Complex hosts three major softball tournaments this summer, including the anticipated Babe Ruth World Series. These girls come to win — and for the fourth year in a row, they are coming to the city of Alachua. This summer, hundreds of softball players, aged 10 to 16, will once again assemble at the Hal Brady Recreation Complex to compete in a sequence of long-awaited tournaments. In 2009, the complex
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was approved as an official venue to host the Babe Ruth World Series Softball Championship. Hosting teams dubbed “the best of the best” from all over the country, the series of games has become one of the most anticipated sporting events of the year. This time, the recreation complex, which partners with Santa Fe Babe Ruth, Inc. and runs 15 different youth sports throughout the year, is taking on two additional tournaments. Kicking off July 25 through the 31 is the inaugural X16 National
Championship for the 16 and under Babe Ruth Xtreme Fastpitch league, a high-performance softball division. The following week, August 1 through 7, brings 20 teams from as far as Washington and California to the 2,500-seat World Series Stadium in Alachua for the 12 and under series. In this series, the home team, the Santa Fe All Stars, will compete once again for the championship title they held in 2010. Finally, August 8 through 14 wraps up the series of tournaments with the 14 and under extreme national championship.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF HAL BRADY RECREATION COMPLEX
Clockwise from top: Washington County All Stars (from North Carolina in blue and gray) vs. Stamford Stars (from Connecticut); a player from Marshall County All Stars from Lewisburg, Tenn. going for the catch; and the Hazlet Lady Hawks from New Jersey up against the Washington County All Stars.
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PHOTOS COURTESY OF HAL BRADY RECREATION COMPLEX
Umpire Doug Wyat, Umpire-in-Chief for Florida, keeps a keen eye on the play as a Hazlet Lady Hawks player slides in against the Washington County All Stars.
Previously, World Series tournaments have proven to have a significant economic impact for Alachua and surrounding areas. The Gainesville Sports Commission derives an estimation based on previous years to gauge just how much the community will benefit. Last year, with players remaining in town from a Thursday to the following Tuesday, hotels sold 1,800 room nights, and with restaurants and shopping, an estimated $2 million profit. This year, hotels are expected to experience 5,000 to 5,500 room nights. “There is no question that this in an impact for Alachua and the state of Florida,” said Hal Brady, recreation director for the city of Alachua. “Even after the tournaments, families will stay in Florida for usually another week.”
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“It really helps the hotels and local businesses because our event is going on before the football games and before the students come back and get into the swing of things,” added Doug Robinson, state commissioner for Santa Fe Babe Ruth. “This year, we tried to impact Alachua a little longer, and the only way to do that was to keep the teams here.” The teams will not only stay longer because of additional tournaments, but also because of the structure of elimination. With a new process of elimination, the 12 teams that do not meet the championship bracket in the commissioner’s cup will be able to compete in additional playoffs. Last year, each team received specialized pink helmets sponsored exclusively by local businesses.
Because the helmets were so popular, Santa Fe Babe Ruth is working this year to form a partnership with Kangaroo Express as the exclusive convenience store sponsor. With this partnership, Kangaroo would honor the tournament Tervis Tumbler cups as “Roo Cups,” a promotion offering 25-cent drink refills. Partnerships like these are only a mere preparation to host events of this capacity. Because Santa Fe Babe Ruth is strictly volunteer-based, it relies on its 10 board members and hundreds of volunteers to work year-round to plan. Beginning September of last year, volunteers have been working to upgrade the fields, install new outfield fencing, create logos and banners, line up vendors, create programs and tickets, and update the scoring system (which is a live feed on the field through Wi-Fi). “The biggest thing is trying to collect volunteers who have their summers off,” said Jason Mallard, a third-generation coach, head coach to the 12U Santa Fe All Stars and grandson to the woman who started Santa Fe Babe Ruth. “Ten board members can’t run this, it takes hundreds of people and support from the city and local businesses.” Because of area businesses and sponsors, as well as the city, the nonprofit — which is the largest volunteer-based athletic organization in North Central Florida — is able to pay the dues to host the tournaments. The host fee is $45,000, putting the total expenses of the competitions at around $100,000. “The City of Alachua and the Chamber of Commerce have all been very generous and really helped us out and supported us
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PHOTOS COURTESY OF HAL BRADY RECREATION COMPLEX
Players come from distant states to compete in the Babe Ruth Softball World Series. (L) A Lodi Extreme All Stars player, from Lodi, Ca., takes a swing and (R) a Stamford Stars pitcher.
across this financial hurdle,” Robinson said. “Once you have that, you just have to get enough people on the ground to get it running.” To attract more attendees and provide entertainment for the whole family, the volunteers this year are paying close attention to the opening ceremonies. Before the series officially begins, there will be a full day of practice, where the teams will be introduced on the field, and friends, families and attendees can enjoy a carnival style “day of fun.” The attractions will include a splash park, skate park, carnival games, face paint, bounce houses and, hopefully, a Ferris wheel. Santa Fe Babe Ruth is also lining up collegiate athletes to speak to the teams. Last year,
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University of Florida Head Softball Coach Tim Walton spoke. “It’s a great family atmosphere geared around activities you can do with your children. There’s a lot of great things to do here besides softball,” Mallard said. “Kids of all ages, from the 4- year-olds playing tee ball all the way to the 16- year-olds, there is something for everyone.” The closing ceremony this year will feature fireworks by the Detonators and sponsored by Sun State Bank. “With the fireworks and 20 teams lined up on the field, it is just awesome,” Mallard said. The fireworks will take off amid the 105 acres the city purchased to expand the facility, adding a handful of new fields for sports such as
soccer, football and lacrosse. “As long as we have our volunteers who run different tournaments at this site, especially national or World Series, we will continue to support them,” Brady said. “We are fortunate the city of Alachua backs us 100 percent, as far as recreation for the youth,” Robinson said. “Our ultimate goal with the city and the U.S. is to make Alachua the girls softball capital of the Southeast.” And with negotiations already in the works to be a returning host for the series in 2014 and 2015, the organization is one step closer. Either way, to these girls, the city of Alachua is a frontline for an extreme competition that is anything but soft. s
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COLUMN >> CRYSTAL HENRY
Naked Salsa Mother of Dragons
M
y little Sunny always has big plans for her future. Some days she wants to be a veterinarian, and other times she wants to be a dragon. As her mom it’s my job to help her achieve all she desires. A vet may be easier than the dragon thing, but we’ll cross that bridge when we get there. So yesterday, when she explained that she was going to be a pediatrician and a professional athlete while her husband stayed at home to be a daddy, I couldn’t help but feel a little proud. As a stay-at-home mom I’ve always been a little worried that she might not realize the opportunities for women to now “have it all.” I realize I’m lucky for the luxury of staying at home with my darlings. Some moms have to get back to the grind when their wee ones are only weeks old. And I am truly grateful that I was there for the first steps and words and blinks and poops and all the wonders of those magical baby years. But there has always been that part of me that was itching for the working world. A part that craves a different kind of responsibility and a different kind of reward. Those sweet sticky kisses are a fine reward for putting enough jelly on the PBJ, but that paycheck sure was a nice thank you for a job well done. So, as my stay-at-home journey nears its end I’m starting to get excited at the prospect of going back to
grownup world. I’m sure I’m looking back with rosecolored glasses, for I faintly remember feeling a bit like a prisoner on particularly sunny days when I was cooped up in an office instead of enjoying the freedom of the swing set at the park. But there are so many things that I look forward to that the working world offers. Lunch breaks, for instance. I think I remember a very fast 45-ish minutes of freedom where I could cut my own food and eat it while it was hot. I think I even remember
Instead of judgment, we should all just acknowledge what a freaking hard job it is just to keep children alive. going to the bathroom by myself, but I could be wrong. I told my mother-in-law, a retired teacher, that I was perusing the job boards, and she wondered what school I was looking to teach at. I politely explained that the path of the educator was not in my future, and she was horrified. What would I do with the children after school and during summer break? Certainly not — gulp — daycare?
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The truth is I don’t know. I’m taking a pretty decent hiatus from my career to pour my heart and soul into my kids. I’m trying to give them the best running start so that when they get to elementary school, and I’m back at work full-time, they will have had so much quality time with me they want to puke and will welcome the break. Quite frankly, if we’ve had the better part of five years together one on one, the quality of our time together will probably start to decline. I’m a mom that needs to work. It’s why I never gave up writing. I need an outlet, a peephole into the working world. And although most of my “work” involves writing about children, it’s still my portal into the professional arena. Some moms don’t need that outlet. They pour everything they have into running the household, and I am certainly not one to scoff at such an undertaking. To some moms having it all means spending as much time at home with the kids and keeping the house running full tilt. To some, it’s setting an example as a thriving career woman. And for those like me, having it all is somewhere in between. There’s so much judgment between women for choices as big as being a “working” or “stay-at-home” mom, and for choices as small as diaper brands. Instead of judgment, we should all just acknowledge what a freaking hard job it is just to keep children alive. Doesn’t it seem like they think they’re constantly on hidden camera for Fear Factor? So even if my girls are in some sort of after-school program or have to trade off weeks with Grammy and Mimi during the summer, I think they’ll survive. In fact they’ll more than survive. They’ll see their mom as more than a lady who burns the eggs and replenishes the bath towels. They’ll see me as the strong independent woman I want them to know they can be. A role model who can pursue her passion while still burning eggs for the ones she holds dear. And one day when Dr. Sunny is taking care of baby dragons in between her responsibilities to the WNBA, her husband will shift my grandchild to his hip and give me a high five for teaching his wife that she can have it all. s
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High Springs & Alachua
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High Springs & Alachua
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>> THE LIVIN’ IS EASY
Florida’s Best Cruise Rediscover the Real Florida: Ichetucknee Springs State Park
BY SARAH A. HENDERSON n sixth grade, I got my first taste of the North Florida river system — literally. As any preteen, I was concerned mostly about self-image and not about the images of nature around me. As I timidly cooled off in the waters of the Suwannee River after a scorching canoe ride, I quickly dipped my head under water in an attempt to set the mass of summer frizz straight and smooth behind my shoulders. As I angled my head toward the surface, something went wrong: I got a mouthful, noseful and eyeful of that cool, clear North Florida waterway. I came up coughing and
I
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sputtering to the laughter of my friends, and my hair never looked worse, I’m sure. I was embarrassed, but I suppose you could say I was enlightened too. It was the first time I ever swam in a river, and it was remembering that episode on the Suwannee — and the desire to overcome that episode — that brought me back for more. Years later while in college at the University of Florida, I rediscovered this Swiss-cheese-type, riverladen topography of North Central Florida: Devil’s Millhopper, Vampire Sink, Poe Springs and others. But it wasn’t until a year after graduation that I discovered the place I can only describe as magical: Ichetucknee Springs State Park in Fort White.
As much as I heard in college about Ginnie Springs (“the one where you drink,” friends would say), the environmentalist in me couldn’t do it. For starters, I wanted to support the Florida State Parks system. Secondly, though you have to get to Ichetucknee early to beat the crowds, I liked that the park limits the number of people who float down the river each day to minimize negative environmental impact.
PHOTO BY SARAH A. HENDERSON
As the Ichetucknee River meanders through several portions of shaded forest, visitors can see turtles, otters, fish and other local wildlife while floating down the cool, spring-fed waters.
That summer, I experienced the full three-hour float down the Ichetucknee twice, once in May and the next in July. I’ve already gone once this spring as well. Every single time, it feels like a new river — you see something new, hear something new and appreciate seeing your old friends: those
majestic moss-covered trees. It really does feel like the “real Florida.” However, before an Ichetucknee tubing adventure can begin, there are a few things that have to happen: arrive early, rent a tube (if needed) outside the park, have it tied to your vehicle, and navigate to your preferred park entrance
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(North or South). During the off-season, the process is a bit easier to figure out. There’s less traffic, only one entrance is open (the South Entrance), and tubers can get there by noon and still be able to float down the river. The regular season — the
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PHOTOS BY SARAH A. HENDERSON and CORINA OCANTO
Park visitors at the North Entrance tubing launch point (top) wait for their turn to start their journey down the 72-degree, spring-fed Ichetucknee River. In addition to tubing, Ichetucknee Spring State Park offers swimming areas, canoeing and kayaking, hiking trails, picnicking and more. On a recent weekend, friends (above) Sarah Glass, Corina Ocanto, Bobby Smith and Miguel Castaneda enjoyed a Saturday afternoon tubing down the Ichetucknee River.
Saturday before Memorial Day through Labor Day — is where more strategy is needed. Tubers wanting to float down the full length of the river from the North Entrance need to arrive, ideally, when the park opens at 8 a.m. Both times I went during the regular season, I waited for 15 to 30 minutes in a line of cars just to get through the North Entrance. The
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second time, I was one of the last groups allowed through. Once in the parking lot of the North Entrance, my job was to unload the tubes with the help of friends. Everyone dressed down to bathing suits, and then I drove a few miles to the South Entrance by myself, where my car was parked for the duration of the float. Once in South lot, the driver can
check his or her keys at the pavilion for a small fee, and ride the shuttle back to the North Entrance to meet up with friends dropped off moments ago. The launch point at the North Entrance is a short hike along a trail — I am always thankful I keep my flip-flops with me. And then you see it: the crystalclear, spring-fed Ichetucknee River
Ichetucknee Springs State Park, which includes this crystal-clear head spring, was established in 1970. Ichetucknee Spring was designated a National Natural Landmark two years later.
peaking through the trees. The water will feel cool to perfection — it maintains about 72 degrees all year. You can see the river grass flowing in the direction of the current; its slimy leaves will graze your legs as you float through the first few river bends. One of my favorite things about floating down the Ichetucknee is the way it keeps me guessing. At first it’s narrow and meandering, then it opens wide into a sunny expanse that seems to go on forever, and then it narrows once again into a labyrinth of tree trunks and cypress knees. I’ve seen some of Florida’s most beautiful animals while floating down the Ichetucknee, from a flock of egrets nesting stories above me to a family of river otters swimming
mere feet away from my inner tube. I’ve also seen blue herons, dozens of turtles, bright-colored butterflies and even a raccoon. Don’t be alarmed when a blue and black dragonfly catches a ride on your knee or forearm — he’s just saying hello. For longer-stamina tubers, I recommend the full three-hour float from the North Entrance launch point to get the full effect, though there is no wrong option to choose. The mid-point launch, about a 15-minute walk along a wooded trail, will allow you to float for about an hour and a half, and the launch point near the South parking lot, Dampier’s Landing, is about a 45-minute float to the endpoint. After your float during the off-season, you will need to take
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another 15-minute walk back to the South parking lot and pavilion. During the regular season, you can catch a speedier tram back to the lot. Afterward, grab your cooler from the car and enjoy plenty of picnicking space provided by tables among the parking lot rows. If a tubing adventure isn’t your style of real-Florida fun, you can kayak, canoe, snorkel, hike and swim at Ichetucknee too. There are two designated swimming holes, one deeper than the other but both just as enjoyable. The more kid-friendly option is Ichetucknee Spring; the deeper one is Blue Hole Spring. There is no wrong way to enjoy Ichetucknee Springs State Park; it’s only unfortunate if you never give it a try. Like all springs in Florida,
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PHOTO BY CORINA OCANTO
though, enjoying these places requires striking a balance between supporting the preservation work of the parks by showing up and paying the entrance fee and also being mindful that these treasures are precious and need to be treated
with respect. Whether you are able to take the three-hour float or one of the shorter trips, it’s an experience you don’t want to miss this summer — or any summer. I’ll always be thankful for my
preteen mishap on the Suwannee River. It taught me there are more lessons to be learned from Florida’s natural rivers and springs. You have to take the good with the bad, such as the hot sun coupled with the cool spring water. You must embrace the unpredictability of Florida’s nature (my sixth-grade hair-entanglement stroke of genius was foiled by the Suwannee’s fickle tendencies). But most of all, it teaches that Florida is so much more than theme parks, sandy beaches and fancy hotels. It’s a living, breathing swamp of beautiful secrets waiting to be told to anyone who dares to listen. There is something about places like Ichetucknee Springs State Park that can cater to and captivate everyone, from a family of four looking for adventure to a college couple on a first date, and yes, even still to that 20-something girl with unruly hair. She is so glad she is lucky enough to call North Florida home. s
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o one knows what tomorrow may bring and if there is an unexpected death, who would take custody of the children? Who would get mom’s antique piano and what would happen to that retirement nest egg? “No one particularly welcomes thoughts of death or dying but we strive to make estate planning a painless and rewarding process.” said Kris Lier, an attorney with the firm. “Clients lients are often anxious the first time we meet, but by helping them clarify their thoughts and get things in order, it really lifts a burden off their shoulders. It is never ever too early arly or too late to discuss estate planning strategies.” ategies.” The firm fosters a lifetime, ongoing time, ongo oing relationship with clients. Throughout our lives, things t change. We change, our assets change, our famil families ies change, the law will definitely change. “Our clients are concerned about rned abou ut preserving assets for their children, descendants charitable ants or cha aritable causes,” said Richard White, who has as owned and operated the firm since 1998. “If they think ink aboutt it, people would want to make sure that if they hey leave an a inheritance to their kids, it’s not squandered doesn’t red or it do oesn’t get dissipated by divorce or other events. We addres address ss those concerns.” White explained that an estate plan p is not just about taxes; there are manyy other fac factors ctors to consider as well. For example, a client nt would not want a large amount of cash readily accessible essible to a son or daughter with a substance abuse problem. oblem. A dependent child with a physical disability could ould be in inadvertently nadvertently disqualified for government nt assistan assistance nce if an inheritance is not handled properly. ables, Mr. White and Because of these and other varia variables, rsonal int teraction offered by Ms. Lier recommend the personal interaction ver onlinee legal services. Such estate planning attorneys over e, often us services, according to White, usee a cookie-cutter approach that can’t possiblyy offer thee necessary skill, ding thesee factors. expertise, and nuance regarding
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>> SUMMER FUN
Hearts &
Crafts Keep the Kids Entertained with these Fun-Filled Activities BY KYRA LOVE he summer months are here and the children are already bored. Have no fear! You can keep them entertained for hours with these simple (and cheap) crafts. With varying levels of parental supervision (our crafts were tested by Blake and Sam, both 3 years old — with a good amount of supervision), these crafts are suitable for all ages and parentfriendly with easy-to-clean messes. Try these crafts for yourself and post your successes to our Facebook page. Happy crafting!
T
Gloopy Goo HERE’S WHAT YOU’LL NEED… Borax, Elmer’s Glue (white or clear), Food coloring, Water, Disposable cup, Plastic bottle with a lid (this is to mix the water and borax so anything could work, just make sure you can easily pour the borax in and
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that you can shake the bottle pretty hard) *OPTIONAL: GLOW-IN-THE-DARK PAINT
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© PHOTO BY TOM MORRISSEY
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OKAY, LET’S DO THIS! 1) Add a small amount of borax to the plastic bottle. You should not use more than 1/2 cup. Put at least twice as much water as borax into the bottle and shake the mixture. 2) In the plastic cup, pour as much glue as you want (we suggest an entire regular-sized bottle). Add the food coloring of your choice and mix it in until it is the desired color. Extra: We did not test this but you can also add glow-in-the-dark paint to make your goo glow (make sure you add a large amount so it glows wells). 3) Pour the borax and water solution into the plastic cup (after shaking the mixture one more time). Make sure the amount of borax water equals the amount of glue in the cup. Stir thoroughly. 4) After stirring, the glue should be stiffening and attaching to your stirrer. If not, shake the borax water mixture and add a small amount at a time until the glue becomes stiffer. There will still be water left in the cup and in the goo. 5) Once the goo is at a desired consistency (less borax means it’s slimier and more borax makes it stiffer), take it out of the cup and play with the goo; stretch it out, roll it up, and make sure it’s the same texture throughout. Our goo was initially very wet and seemed like a failure, but after a couple minutes of kneading, the goo turned out perfect. Children can make snakes, bouncy balls and other creatures with this goo that will keep them occupied for hours. This was the favorite of the day, based on the opinion of Blake and Sam, who kept asking to play with the goo even when we were making the rest of the crafts. Don’t try to dry the goo off with paper towels, it will stick. If the goo sticks to carpet, or other surfaces, nail polish remover is a good way to remove it.
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3D Chameleon HERE’S WHAT YOU’LL NEED…
Construction paper (or any large, colorful paper), Scissors, Tape or glue, Decorating items (ex. crayons, markers, stickers, etc.), Ruler
OKAY, LET’S DO THIS! 1) Fold the paper in half, length-wise. 2) Using a ruler, draw a diagonal line from the top corner to the opposite bottom corner. Cut along the line to create a triangle shape. Keep the largest triangle (the one that is folded); you can save the two smaller triangles to create the legs and eyes later. 3) Unfold the triangle and fold the bottom corners towards the center fold. Make the folds the same on each side and don’t fold the corners too far past the already-made middle fold. 4) Decorate the triangle as much or as little as you want. (The small folds will be the underbelly and the larger portion will be the back), but both sides can be colored and decorated. 5) Make the legs and eyes either using the leftover pieces of paper from the first step, or using whatever colors you want. To make the eyes, fold the paper in half, draw two half circles along the fold and cut them out — you will have two eyes. Don’t forget to
draw the pupils on the eyes before attaching them to the chameleon. To make the legs, fold the paper in half, use your craft skills to draw the coolest legs (they can have two toes, three toes, or even no toes depending on what you can draw) along the edge of the paper that is not folded, cut the legs out and you will have four legs even though you only had to draw two. You can also create a tongue to add to your chameleon’s mouth, just a line with a forked tongue, and curl it around a pencil to make it pop out of the chameleon’s mouth. Create the head by folding a piece of paper in half and drawing a half circle along the crease. Cut it out and attach your chameleon’s eyes and tongue. 6) With the triangle folded down the middle, cut lines along the fold up to the other folded line that was done previously. We suggest you make the cuts about a quarter of an inch thick. Make sure you do not cut past the folded line, or you will need to start over. 7) Fold the uncut pieces of the triangle and tape or glue them together to create the belly of the chameleon. Glue or tape the eyes and legs onto the chameleon. Perch the chameleon on your shoulder, head or anywhere it can sit for the perfect, self-sustaining pet.
Clean Snow
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HERE’S WHAT YOU’LL NEED… An outdoor area that can get rinsed off when you’re done, Two boxes of cornstarch, One can of shaving cream This will make a large amount of snow, if you want less just make sure to keep 2:1 ratio of cornstarch to
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shaving cream. We tried with half a can of shaving cream and a small can of cornstarch — though our proportions weren’t the best. We suggest sticking with the measurements listed here so your children will have more to play with.
OKAY, LET’S DO THIS! 1) Add the cornstarch and shaving cream to a large bowl. Mix using a large spoon — we mixed using our hands and most of the shaving cream ended up on us instead of being mixed in with the cornstarch.
The consistency of the mixture should be dry enough that you can mold with your hands and make snowballs to have a good, old-fashioned snowball fight, but soft enough that the impact won’t hurt anyone unfortunate enough to be in the line of fire. This looks very messy, and it is. We suggest doing this outside for an easy clean. All you need to do is hose the area down after the fun is over. If the mixture gets in your home, or in the carpet, it only requires a simple sweep and a vacuum afterwards to clean up.
Try these other fun and easy projects! Name Art On a large, thick piece of paper, tape your child’s name with painter’s tape. Then let them paint the page with their fingers or brushes. After the paint dries, remove the tape for a piece of art with your child’s name on it.
Telephone Cups Take two plastic cups, poke a hole in the bottom and run a piece of string through the bottom of each cup. Children can have hours of conversation from different corners of your home.
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Rainbow Bubble Snakes
Sidewalk Chalk Paint
Cut the bottom off a water bottle and slide a sock over the bottom (attach it using tape or a rubber band).
Mix 1/2-cup cornstarch with 1/2-cup water and add food coloring to make sidewalk chalk paint that your children can use to make a masterpiece on your driveway. You can also use the chalk paint to play Twister outdoors — just paint circles on your lawn to resemble a Twister mat and get to spinning.
Pour a little bit of water and dish soap in a bowl and mix together. Dip the socked end of the bottle into the mixture. Blow on the other end of the bottle to create a bubble snake. Add food coloring to the mix for rainbow bubble snakes.
Ivory Foam Put a small chunk of Ivory soap in the microwave for about 90 seconds and watch as it grows to become foam the children can play with and mold.
Summer Enrichment Camp
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REGISTER TODAY — SPACE IS LIMITED. Call 352-332-7783 or visit www.GainesvilleCountryDaySchool.org
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KEEP A LEVEL HEAD IN AN UP-AND-DOWN MARKET Amid recent market volatility, we’ve seen substantial upswings and downturns. But when the market reacts one way, it doesn’t mean you should, too. The actions you take today can significantly impact your financial future. So before you alter your investment strategy, schedule a financial review. We can help you stay focused despite the market’s recent disappointments and find opportunities for the long term. Call today to schedule your financial review.
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Eat what you love, whenever you like.That’s dining by design. Delicious dining is our Signature. So much so that we solicit residents’ opinions to help us enhance their dining experience. Their feedback led to the creation of our Signature Series. It’s The Village’s new dining program that features rotating menu items, heart-healthy dishes, all created by a talented team with more than 30 years of experience, headed by a Culinary Institute of America graduate. Better living, by design. That’s our approach. How do we apply this kind of thinking all across our campus? We’ll show you. Call 1-888-575-5312 for your personal tour — or visit TheVillageOnline.com.
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Our Signature Series is just one of many ways we’re adding value to our residents’ retirement living experience. Now is the time to start enjoying much more — for much less! Call 1-888-575-5312 today to schedule a tour of North Central Florida’s premier full-service rental retirement community.
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>> AROUND THE CORNER
Back-to-School
Simplified Quick Summer Tips to Ease the Transition Back
BY MARY GOODWIN
W
hen those peaceful, leisurely summer days abruptly shift back to early mornings and homework mayhem, it is easiest to space out chores and prepare, prepare, prepare! Instead of cramming your back-t0-school checklist into the last few days of your child’s summer freedom, use those open days to tackle new school-year tasks ahead of time — and ahead of the rush.
Shop Savvy Chances are, your child is going to need (or want) back-to-school clothes. Be sure to go through their wardrobe in advance and make
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a list of the items you will buy throughout the summer. Save this checklist, ideally to your smart phone, and keep an eye out for the best deals. If you are planning a summer trip to a theme park or a Florida attraction, stop by the outlet malls during your travels to scout out the discounts. Do not forget to consider the uniform policy for Alachua County Public Schools, available at www.sbac.edu. Every teacher requires different school supplies, but there are staple items most students will need every year. Elementary school teachers typically ask every student to have: a backpack, No. 2 pencils, crayons or colored pencils or markers, scissors, a glue stick, a box of tissues, notebooks, binders, pocket folders,
loose-leaf paper, printer paper and a ruler. Items like calculators, binder dividers, pencil sharpeners, tape and combination locks for lockers might also be required.
Immunize Ahead Avoid long waits and crowded doctors’ offices by vaccinating your
little ones at the beginning of the summer. Before attending a new school in Florida, every child must provide documentation of the following vaccinations: • Four or five doses of DTap (diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis) • Two or three doses of hepatitis B • Three to five doses of polio vaccine
• Two doses of MMR vaccine (measles-mumps-rubella) • Two doses of varicella vaccine (for grades K through 4) and one dose of varicella vaccine (for grades 5 through 11) • One dose of TDap (tetanus -diphtheria-pertussis) for students entering the seventh grade
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For more information on school immunization requirements and vaccination dosages, contact your pediatrician or the Alachua County Health Department, www.doh.state. fl.us/chdalachua. Also, consider this time for scheduling eye screenings, hearing tests and sports physicals.
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Take Baby Steps Setting an earlier bedtime and wakeup time will be much less noticeable for your child if you ease into it. Adjust sleep schedules a month before school starts by making bedtime 15 minutes earlier each week. This will gradually put your child to sleep an hour earlier by the time classes begin. Make sure your family talks about school throughout the summer, focusing on the fun things your child will learn, the new friends they will make and the old friends they will be able to see at the start of the new school year.
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As soon as you get paperwork to fill out or new school information, talk about it with your child and complete it sooner rather than later. Make sure you update any emergency contacts ahead of time and go through your calendar to mark off important academic dates or holidays. You can even create a folder or bin in your home for school newsletters and announcements to refer back to throughout the year.
Experiment with Lunch If you are at home with your little ones, create fun and healthy lunch options early to avoid
sending them to school with a meal they will not eat. Consult recipe books, online meal plans and a combination of their favorite food items. Make a lunch calendar to help plan groceries, organize meals and even encourage older children to help pack their own meals.
Simplify Your Schedule Before school starts, sit your children down and talk about what extracurricular activities they would like to partake in throughout the school year. If they would like to try a new sport, enroll them in lessons and use the summer to practice
with them. Make sure to add these time commitments into your calendar to gauge how many activities are realistic with your schedule. If you would like to volunteer at your child’s school, consult last year’s academic calendar and see what your schedule would allow you to do. Whether it be chaperoning a field trip, baking for a bake sale or joining a committee, it is easier to plan a time commitment long before the newsletter comes out.
Familiarize Foreign Territory If your child will be taking on a new experience in the upcoming school year, use the summer to prepare them. If they will ride their bike or walk to school for the first time, take the trip with them until it becomes routine. Chart out a route and write down traffic safety rules, and things to do in case of an emergency situation. If your child is taking a longer route, make sure to identify safe houses they can visit
in a crisis situation. If your child is going somewhere new after school or you are carpooling with a different family, make sure to discuss this with them far in advance. If your children will be home alone after school, establish safety rules for locking windows and doors, cooking food, answering the door or phone and practicing proper procedures in case of a fire. If you have pets, summertime is ideal for showing them how to care for animals when they will be home alone. The more you talk about and practice new concepts, the better your child will understand when it comes time to implement them. Preparing for school does not
have to be a mad rush occurring the week before the break ends. Make sure your family’s last few days of summer are spent relaxing and enjoying each other’s company. Starting a new school year is enough for any student to worry about — simplify the process by starting early! s
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Why Whitfield? Choose Local and discover the difference. When you are planning your next home improvement project or building your new home, take a moment to consider using someone within your community. We have over 50 years combined experience in the Window and Door Industry. Our team of professionals will assist you in finding the right products for your project. With many different Manufacturers to choose from for New Construction and Replacement, we are sure to have a product that can meet your expectations and your budget. Our customers can be assured that they will get a great product for a good price. There are many window an door manufacturers to choose from, you can feel confident that we represent the best ones.
Choose Local and See the Difference 70 | Summer 2013
Call or visit our showroom today
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386-454-0295 www.whitfieldwindowanddoor.com Licensed & Insured Lic.# SCC131150877
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COLUMN >> BY KENDRA SILER-MARSIGLIO
Healthy Edge Keep Kids Safe from Summer Time Accidents
S
ummer break is a great time to make memories. It’s also a time when injuries and accidents peak. Help keep your family’s summers memorable, yet accident-free, with these tips. According to the National Safe Kids Campaign, one in four children under age 15 sustain injuries that need medical attention each year. About 40 percent of all injury-related emergency department visits and 42 percent of all injury-related deaths occur between May and August. Even with these dismal statistics, the vast majority of accident-induced injuries are preventable. Here are five ways to keep kids safe this summer:
1. Check pools and spas for hidden dangers According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, the number of children who drown in pools or spas each year is equivalent to about 15 preschool classes. One little known issue that causes injuries is “circulation entrapment.” Kids can get caught in drains at the bottom of pools or in other suction pipes. The level of danger increases if children can’t swim well. Alarmingly, 70 percent of African-American
kids, 60 percent of Hispanic kids, and 40 percent of Caucasian kids don’t know how to swim. Want to give your children a healthy edge in the water? Enroll them in lessons at the North Central Florida YMCA.
2. Make sure helmets are protecting your kids on wheels If your children are riding bikes or skateboards, make sure their helmets are approved by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) or Snell. Helmets work best when they fit just above the top of the eyebrows. Helmets should sit level on the head with the chinstraps fitting snugly under the chin.
3. Keep toxins in original containers and in a secure location A study in the June 2013 issue of Pediatrics shows that ingestion of hydrocarbons found in cleaning products or gas are among the top 10 causes of pediatric poisoning deaths. The deaths are most likely to occur during
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summer months and are related to lawn mowing, Tiki torch use, or lighter fluid use. It’s easy for young, curious kids to ingest hydrocarbons, believing they are edible — especially if you have these poisons in containers that don’t “look” like they contain toxic products.
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4. If a child gets hurt, be more vigilant about keeping siblings safe for the next three months Here’s a strange one, but it’s true: University of Washington Associate Professor Dr. Brian Johnston and his colleagues found that if a child is injured seriously enough to be hospitalized, siblings become more prone to injury for the next three months. The “types” accidents siblings experience aren’t necessarily similar, either. Once the three-month period passes, the risk goes back to baseline.
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5. Minimize bites and stings Bites and stings are annoying to everyone, and, for some, they can also lead to serious allergic reactions or chronic disease. To keep insects at bay, repellents come in two basic categories: those with DEET and those without. Although DEET works well to repel insects and ticks, DEET can be toxic for kids. For older children, repellents with 20 percent DEET can be used sparingly on exposed skin (NOT under clothing), on clothing, and on shoes. Don’t put DEET on any kids’ faces or hands. For a good low-level DEET alternative, the CDC recommends using repellents with picaridin or oil of lemon eucalyptus. Never use repellent on infants; keep them covered up. For ticks, the CDC recommends you check under the arms, between the legs, around the waist, inside the navel, and the hairline and scalp. To remove ticks, use fine-tipped tweezers to detach the tick. Holding the tick (as close to the skin that you can), pull upwards. If the tick’s mouth remains, soak the area in Epsom salt, and it’ll come out easily. For more safety tips from the American Academy of Pediatrics, visit www.healthychildren.org. s Kendra Siler-Marsiglio, Ph.D. is the Director of Rural Health Partnership at WellFlorida Council.
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>> RESTORATION
Santa Fe River Passionate Local Non-Profit Aims to Protect and Educate
BY MARY GOODWIN
T
he members of the educational activist group Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) are sure of one thing: Florida today is nothing compared to what it once was. And that is exactly what the nonprofit has been voicing to state agencies for the past six years. Countless emails, phone calls, letters and nudges from the community finally resulted in the words Merrillee Malwitz-Jipson, the group’s president, said she had been waiting to hear: “The DEP [Florida Department of Environmental Protection] called and said, ‘We are making decisions up in Tallahassee, but we do not
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really know the river. Could you show us around?’” From that long-awaited call in January until the day of the trip, the OSFR board worked to construct an extensive tour for the DEP and the Suwannee River Water Management District, grazing the surface of issues such as newly formed sinkholes, shrinking water levels, potentially toxic bacteria and the GRU Biomass Plant (which is requesting 2 million gallons per day from the local aquifer). The core objective of the tour was to help the government gain perspective of the land uses that impact the quality and quantity of the water in the Santa Fe River Basin. “With state agencies, we are trying to create a bridge of
knowledge from our perspective on the ground with the people who live and work in the area and bring that perspective to their attention,” Malwitz-Jipson said. “So when they make land- and water-use decisions, they are aware of what issues we have.” The issues span across the field. Years ago, tourists plunged into the crystal clear springs among water slides and flourishing trees in a clean, safe aqua oasis. Today, a repugnant film of bright green algae coats the water’s surface just feet from a sign reading “do not enter” to deter visitors from Hornsby Spring at Camp Kalaqua. But Hornsby Spring is not alone. Worthington Springs, which was once a thriving tourist hotspot with
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PHOTO BY ALBERT ISAAC
www.VisitOurTowns.com
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PHOTO COURTESY OF OUR SANTA FE RIVER, INC.
Charlie Houder, SRWMD assistant executive director, addresses the audience at the OSFR Algae Meeting last year at Poe Springs Park.
four hotels, is nearly dried up and closed. In 2012, the water levels at Boat Ramp Road in High Springs were so low that people could walk across it, and canoeing patrons were forced to drive farther down the river because of the lack of water. Poe Springs has very little flow, has been under construction for more than a year and has unusually high levels of nitrate and sucralose. Ginnie Springs now has
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increasing nitrate levels with little to no vegetation in the springheads. While the mere sight and feel of filamentous algae is unappealing, another factor to consider is that when it decays, the smell is overpowering, Malwitz-Jipson said. Some people can have toxic reactions to it. Even worse, water levels tested positive for cyanobacteria — a potential neurotoxin that has never before been discovered on the river.
“That is when everything changed and the state started to really step up,” Malwitz-Jipson said. “For North Florida, the bigger economic crisis is not taking care of our environment. People come here to recreate, to live and to relax and cool off in the springs. If we see continual degradation of the river, they cannot have that lifestyle, and tourists will not want to visit a river with algae.” Isotope and sucralose studies have traced the algae blooms back to human use; leaky septic tanks, fertilizers and pesticides all release nitrates into the air and water, Malwitz-Jipson said. The low water conditions are a direct result of the drought the state has been in for the past 17 years. With the local aquifer and area water use, there is just not enough supply for the increasing demand. And when the flow lessens, the
PHOTO BY ALBERT ISAAC
Children enjoying the swimming hole at Rum Island Park on a recent Friday afternoon, the site of just one of many springs that feed the Santa Fe River. The park is down the road from Rum 138, a business that provides meeting and office space for OSFR Board meetings.
START BY
CONSERVING NOW
A leaky toilet can waste up to 1,000 gallons of water each month. Place a drop of food coloring in the toilet tank. If the color shows up in the bowl within 15 minutes without flushing, you have a leak. 2. Instead of letting your water run as you wash dishes, fill one sink with wash water and the other with rinse water. 3. Save excess water from your shower as it warms up or runs and use it to water plants. 4. Wash your face or brush your teeth in the shower. 5. Turn off the water when you shave and save up to 300 gallons each month. 6. Turn off the water while you wash your hair and save up to 150 gallons each month. 7. Turn off the water while you brush your teeth and save 25 gallons each month. 8. For efficiency and food safety, thaw food in the refrigerator as opposed to running water. 9. Reduce your daily shower by just one minute and save 150 gallons each month. 10. Fill a pitcher of water and keep it in the refrigerator instead of running the tap multiple times throughout the day. 1.
GET OUT &
SPEAK OUT!
You can help protect the river by getting involved. Contact elected officials, attend public hearings and sign petitions to make your voice heard. Just one letter or phone call spreads awareness to save an ecosystem in need of protection. water pools and becomes stagnant (stagnation combined with heat creates a cesspool for filamentous algae, enabling it to cultivate at an alarming rate.) Noxious weeds, such as tape grass and invasive Hydrilla, grow alongside the algae, which can hinder the river’s native plants. The issues are tenfold, but the common solution is simple — conservation. OSFR challenges residents to question: how many chemicals they really need, how they are dealing with and cleaning septic tanks and how prompt are repairs regarding water, such as leaky faucets, made? “It might not seem like a lot, but it adds up,” Malwitz-Jipson said. “A leaky septic tank is going right into our aquifer water. “A big problem in Florida is that our geography is so permeable, anything you put on land is going to end up on the waterway. We
Contact the Florida Department of Environmental Protection at 850-245-2118 or 3900 Commonwealth Blvd M.S. 49, Tallahassee, Fla., 32399. Contact Our Santa Fe River at 386-243-0322 to become a member of the organization, make a donation or obtain a schedule of meetings.
ALWAYS STAY
INFORMED
The Department of Environmental Protection’s Total Maximum Daily Load’s Program: www.dep.state.fl.us/water/tmdl/index.htm The Department of Environmental Protection’s Suwannee Assessment Report: www.dep.state.fl.us/water/basin411/suwannee/assessment.htm Florida Friendly Landscaping: www.floridayards.org Florida Springs: Protecting Nature’s Gem: www.floridasprings.org Suwannee River Water Management District: www.srwmd.state.fl.us Suwannee Basin InterAgency Alliance: gulfsci.usgs.gov/suwannee/
www.VisitOurTowns.com
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have an aquifer system flowing underneath us that is our water supply for almost the entire state up to Orlando. As far as OSFR goes, we are concerned about our water basin, but it is a bigger picture. It is a state issue because it is all interconnected, and we are all going to have to work together.” Personal use of chemicals is garnering more attention and action in recent years, with initiatives like the Florida-Friendly Landscaping™ Program, which suggests the idea that grass lawns in Florida are no longer viable and should be replaced with low-maintenance plants and environmentally sustainable practices. These types of plants do not need to be watered or fertilized, and pesticides are not required. Implementing droughttolerant ground cover in place of grass eliminates the need to water a lawn — which uses, on average, 62 gallons of water for every 10-by10-foot area. In an effort to control the major
issue right now regarding “water balancing,” the state agencies are pushing to lessen the length of permits granted by balancing them out, so that a new consumptive-use permit can only be granted when an existing one retires. The government is making strides, Malwitz-Jipson said, as a permit was recently issued with an expiration of five years (due to potential irreparable harm to the river base) as opposed to the traditional 20 years. The Department has also formulated a total maximum daily load, with a goal to improve water quality of the river and surrounding springs by 35 percent. It has adopted the Santa Fe River Basin Management Action Plan, which detects the specific actions needed to decrease nutrient concentrations in the basin, which encompasses more than 1 million acres. “I am proud of the groundwork laid by this cooperative effort, but remain aware that the Santa Fe River continues to experience
severe algal blooms,” said Drew Bartlett, Director of DEP’s Division of Environmental Assessment and Restoration. “Stakeholders like Our Santa Fe provide essential local insight, and [on the tour] I learned from their observations in person. There is no doubt that we recognize the water quality impacts the river is experiencing.” To restore and monitor improving water quality, local stakeholders have committed more than $25 million in projects and more than $900,000 to address nutrient and water supply issues in the Santa Fe River Basin. The Suwannee River Water Management District will use the money to help local farmers improve their irrigation and fertilization practices, keeping more than 1 million pounds of nitrogen from entering the river and spring system, which in turn saves 670 million gallons of water each year. In addition to water conservation and adequate septic tank pumping maintenance, OSFR
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encourages citizens to attend the local forum to not only learn about how their water and land resources are being utilized, but to bring their knowledge and personal observations and experiences to the table. In the past, increasing attendance at government meetings resulted in the dismissal of four bottling plant proposals, Malwitz-Jipson said. The non-profit operates with the idea that knowledge is power. With a new headquarters located off CR 138, which also doubles as an art studio, members can gather and disseminate information about conserving resources. The money raised from the artwork, strictly revolving around the river and springs, goes to the Springs Tie-Dye Kitchen Towel Project, an intense educational lesson delivered to guests as they tie-dye a towel to resemble the spring at no cost. The organization also hosts a song contest every year, where members assemble to hear the songs musicians
PHOTO BY SUSAN GILES
Merrillee Malwitz-Jipson, OSFR president, addresses the audience at a meeting of the newly formed FLOW group (now disbanded).
have written about the Santa Fe River. Now in its fourth year, local musicians have composed and performed 21 songs. These efforts, along with the groundbreaking tour, MalwitzJipson said, are the core of OSFR — a group of education activists constantly seeking new ways to inform people, protect the
environment and conserve the earth’s natural resources. “We do not have the same Florida we had when I was a kid,” she said. “And because of population demands on the environment, we cannot go back to that, as far as restoring what Florida once was. But, we can learn how to conserve what we do have.” s
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>> HOW NOW SEA COW
Florida
Manatees Exploring a Native Wonder
BY MARY KYPREOS
A
t first glance, the Florida manatee (Trichechus manatus latirostris), a subspecies of the West Indian manatee, appears to be a large, lumbering creature. And though this would be true if the manatee lived on land, the manatee was built to smoothly glide, roll and swim through the water — and is even known to execute summersaults. “People value different species for different reasons. For us, it is a matter of they were here first,” Katie Tripp said. Tripp holds a Ph.D. in veterinary medical science from the University of Florida and is the director of science and conservation for Save the Manatee Club.
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Indeed, unlike one common misconception, the Florida manatee is a native species; fossil evidence in Florida dates back 45 million years, long before Spaniards or current residents. Over their evolutionary history, manatees have evolved from four-footed land animals to marine mammals whose closest cousin is actually the elephant. Today’s Florida manatee even has three to four fingernails on its flippers, much like an elephant, as well as bone structure that resembles a human hand. In Florida’s rivers, waterways and lakes, manatees spend their time feeding on aquatic plants, returning to the surface to breathe, resting just below the surface and on the bottom, and migrating to
warmer waters. “They don’t need to have a function to be important,” Tripp said. “They have a value in and of themselves.”
Endangered or Threatened? Protected by the Federal Endangered Species Act, the Federal Marine Mammal Protection Act and the Florida Marine Sanctuary Act, there are many laws and issues that surround the protection of manatees, in hopes that the species would rebound from the edge of extinction. “With any endangered species, we want to take proper
conservation actions to preserve the species,� said Kevin Baxter, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation (FWC) spokesman. The FWC conducted the first synoptic aerial survey of the Florida manatee population on January 23 and 24, 1991, counting a total 1,267 manatees. At its population height, the FWC counted 5,077 manatees in 2010, and most recently, the FWC counted 4,834 manatees in 2011. In 2007, when the population was clocked in at 2,817, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service released a five-year review of the West Indian manatee that included a recommendation to change the
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Because manatees cannot survive long in waters below 68 degrees, particularly cold or long-lasting winters can have a devastating effect on the manatee population. manatee’s classification from endangered to threatened. Since that recommendation, the manatee’s classification has not been changed, and the question of how the manatee should be classified remains hotly debated. Lisa Moore, a resident of Crystal River and a member of Save Crystal River, supports the downgrade for the simple reason that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recommended it. “According to the (Endangered
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Species Act), once the government decides that an animal is no longer classified as endangered, it should be downgraded,” Moore said. But, Moore also notes that wanting to proceed with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s recommendation does not mean she or Save Crystal River support decreasing protections for manatees. “Nobody is going to change their protections. It is just a classification,” Moore said, adding that there are still many resources for animals
classified as threatened. “Nobody wants manatees to be hurt; that is not our intention at all.” Tripp, on the other hand, notes that no official action has been taken for good reason: Classifying animals as endangered or threatened involves five factors, as opposed to a simple population count. Those factors partially rely on future conditions, which Tripp argues are still questionable in regard to their total impact on the manatee population. “It is more complicated than, ‘do you have more,’” Tripp said. “The future is still [full] of pretty scary situations.” In particular, Tripp cites a number of considerations that may affect the manatee population, including climate change, Florida’s growing population, and deaths from cold stress and red tide blooms.
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Whether a change in the manatee’s status will take place remains to be seen; in the meantime, the manatees are still here and the debate continues.
Effects on the Population In the past, watercraft-related accidents caused a significant number of manatee deaths, which led to regulations on boat speeds;
however, recent years have also seen an increase in deaths due to cold stress and toxic red tide blooms. Because manatees cannot survive long in waters below 68 degrees, particularly cold or long-lasting winters can have a devastating effect on the manatee population. In 2010, which was an especially cold winter, 282 manatees died from cold stress alone. In
total there were 766 documented manatee deaths that year. “It takes time to tell what level of effect a situation like this might have on the long-term population,” Baxter said. When it comes to red tide blooms, the picture gets murkier because it is unclear what exactly causes a bloom. Although red tide does occur to some extent every year, there have been extreme cases. During a toxic red tide bloom, toxins that affect vertebrate nervous systems can settle on the aquatic plants that manatees eat, poisoning them. In 2013, an especially virulent red tide bloom has caused an estimated 267 manatee deaths to date — more than any previous red tide bloom. “It appeared to be a situation where the bloom had been persisting for a while in a specific area where the manatees tend to congregate for winter months,” Baxter said.
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Respecting a Wild Animal Protection laws dictating behavior aside, when encountering a manatee, it is important to remember that these are wild animals. “People are drawn to manatees, and it is great to go out and see them in the river, but in that excitement, I think they forget that they are wild animals,” Tripp said. Although swimming, touching or interacting with manatees in the water seems harmless, it can be detrimental for a manatee’s safety, Baxter said. “It makes them too comfortable around people, which then exposes them to greater risk,” he said, adding that manatees that are comfortable with humans may move to more populated areas, increasing their chances of encountering boats. Disturbing manatees also carries the potential of interrupting mating herds or driving them away from warm waters, both of which can
affect the population’s current and future numbers. “The same way you would give any wild animal some space, you should do that with manatees,” Tripp said. “Always put the animal’s needs first. Just let them pretend we don’t live here and encroach on their environment.” As Tripp said, they were here first.
Become Involved There are many different ways to help: volunteer with specific organizations, such as Save the Manatee Club and Save Crystal River; purchase a manatee license plate; be a conscientious boater; properly dispose of trash and fishing line. There are also small ways to protect manatees and their environment. “Anybody who uses water can help protect manatees with their water use,” Tripp said. “Every drop of water that we use in and out of our homes takes water from a manatee habitat.” s
MANATEE
IN DISTRESS
If you see an injured, trapped or distressed manatee, call the Wildlife Alert Hotline at 888-404-3922 with the following information: specifics on the location of the manatee and a description of what you are seeing.
MORE
INFORMATION
SAVE THE MANATEE CLUB:
www.savethemanatee.org or call 407-539-0990. SAVE CRYSTAL RIVER INFO:
www.savecrystalriver.com For more information about manatees, visit: myfwc.com/ wildlifehabitats/managed/manatee/
Open Enrollment for the upcoming school year begins February 1, 2013
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ADVERTISEMENT
A Day on the River… There’s Nothing Better!
I
n case you haven’t heard, it’s going to be a gloriously hot summer. Beat the heat and spend some time on one of the most beautiful rivers in Florida, the Santa Fe River. Let Rum 138 take care of all of your river needs in one convenient stop. Located right down the road from Rum Island Park, Rum 138 can have you enjoying the river in no time. “We want to help people enjoy this beautiful resource,” said Doug Jipson, co-owner of Rum 138. “It just takes a few minutes and we can have them paddling away.” Renting single and double kayaks, in addition to canoes, Rum 138 boasts a variety of excellent options for paddling the river. “We have some really nice boats
for people to enjoy,” said Doug. “With our convenient pickup and drop-off bus service, our job is to help you get on the water as easily as possible.” With a handful of “river retail items,” such as snacks, drinks and sunscreen, Rum 138 is ready to help you cool off this summer. In addition to a variety of paddle sports, Rum 138 is dedicated to the preservation and artistic expression of our area’s most abundant natural resource. Featuring local artisan pieces, their art gallery is committed to displaying regionally inspired images primarily focused on the Santa Fe River and surrounding springs. Furthermore, Rum 138 is the headquarters of OurSantaFeRiver.org, a not-for-profit organization committed to ensuring that our rivers and springs will be around for years to come. So, grab the kids and let Rum 138 help you get out of the heat this summer and into the cool, refreshing water. Call or stop by Rum 138 today and let them help you make this a summer to remember.
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Corner of Rum Island Terrace and CR 138 in Fort White 90 | Summer 2013
Pitch In to Keep Alachua County on Top In our community, we do a lot of things really well. Our schools, hospitals and, of course, sports teams are among the best in the state. But in one critical area, we had come up short. Alachua County was ranked 21st in Florida when it came to recycling. Now, thanks to you, we are #1! Strive to keep Alachua Countyy #1. Our Challenge: Recycle 75% of All Solid Waste by 2020! Strive to Keep Alachua County #1!
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>> CONSERVATION
Saving the
Springs The Howard T. Odum Springs Institute
BY ALLISON WILSON
C
hat with Dr. Robert Knight for 10 minutes and you will not leave the conversation uninspired — neither could anyone who cares about Florida’s springs. “My dreams are big,” he said during a recent phone interview. “I may not see them realized in my lifetime, but I’m setting the foundation for others to make those dreams a reality.” Knight is the founder and director of the Howard T. Odum Florida Springs Institute, a non-profit corporation dedicated to protecting and restoring Florida’s springs. Formally established in 2010, the vision for the springs institute actually sprung
from research and ideas that began nearly 60 years ago. Howard Thomas Odum was a biology professor at the University of Florida, who published a landmark paper on Silver Springs in 1957. His study included the first complete analysis of a natural spring ecosystem. He measured the productivity and water flow of the spring and how it was related to the organisms and environmental conditions of the ecosystem. “I was fortunate enough to come to Gainesville in 1978 and study under Dr. Odum,” Knight said. “He asked me to restudy Silver Springs 25 years after his first analysis and repeat the same measures. He was concerned about reduction in fish
PHOTO COURTESY OF ROBERT KNIGHT
Kayakers gather at Wekiva Springs, getting a glimpse of how it looked when Timucuan Indians fished and hunted these lands.
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PHOTO COURTESY OF ROBERT KNIGHT
Rock Springs Run at Kelly Park bubbles up from a cleft in a rock outcropping and becomes a swiftly running stream.
populations, which he attributed to the closing of the Rodman Dam.” Knight studied the ecosystem and how it was adapting to changes in fish populations and concluded that populations were indeed 60 percent lower and very likely due to the Rodman Dam, which prevents marine and animal life from moving throughout the system. In 1979, Knight and Odum made a proposal to the president of UF to start a research institute at Silver Springs, so they could further study, protect and restore Florida’s springs. But there was never any follow up from the university. After Odum’s death in 2001, Knight was able to conduct some
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follow up studies at Silver Springs, including the Silver Springs 50-Year Retrospective Study. His found that water flows had declined by 32 percent during the previous decade and 50 percent since 1965. He found increased nitrate pollution, decreased water clarity and an ecosystem in distress. Productivity had declined by 27 percent. This daunting data pushed him forward to realize Odum’s dream of establishing a springs institute in 2010. He did so independently from the university with grants and private donations, which continue to fund the work he does. Through the institute, Knight and his teams of students,
moderately paid or unpaid interns, and volunteer environmental advocates are raising public awareness and conducting numerous research projects. Knight offers short courses and plans to expand into leading more intensive courses on the ecology of springs so people can continue to do research that will be necessary in the future. Knight has restoration plans for Wakulla Springs, Santa Fe River Springs, Silver Springs and Rainbow Springs. He helps set up alliances for each individual spring to get the public involved. “Scientists can only do so much,” he said. “The public needs
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PHOTOS COURTESY OF ROBERT KNIGHT
TOP: Dr. Robert Knight at Silver Glen Springs with his springs ecology class. BELOW: Mullet in the Silver River and graduate students at Kings Bay. The Florida Springs Institute was founded in May 2010 to accelerate the restoration and protection of Florida’s springs under the auspices of Florida’s Eden. However, in December of 2012, the Florida Springs Institute incorporated as a nonprofit on its own, and is now a completely independent institution.
to get involved too. We have very good laws about protecting springs, but the laws aren’t being implemented. The public needs to stand up for the springs and choose leaders who will protect them, and donate time and funds to nonprofits that help the springs.” While his efforts are dedicated to studying the slow decay of our springs, Knight said that most people do not realize that it would not take very long to undo come of the damage if people stopped denying there was a problem. “Making more and more water available to for-profit companies who extract groundwater takes away from the flow of the springs,”
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he explained. “We’re wasteful of water, and there seems to be a belief that water is unlimited in Florida. We use it as if there is no end in sight. Everybody needs to use less, and we really can do that, and it doesn’t mean becoming cavemen again. Just dialing it back a little bit could make a difference.” He added that reducing the amount of nitrogen we put in the ground with fertilizers and improving wastewater treatment is key in restoring the springs. Knight looks forward to October, when the Silver Springs attraction becomes an official state attraction. The state is in the process of tearing down the attraction’s
current structures to turn the site into a state park, and Knight hopes to move onto that land. He envisions the Springs Institute becoming a major scientific research institute for springs. “We’re just building slowly, raising awareness and setting the foundations,” Knight said. “It’s really exciting to see the public get involved in springs — to see the excitement of people who grew up near springs and who are now finding out about the need to protect them. I think Dr. Odum would be really proud to see all of this.” s For more information on the Howard T. Odum Springs institute, visit floridaspringsinstitute.org.
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>> CONSERVATION
Planting the
Seeds Florida-Friendly Landscapes on Tour
BY DARLA KINNEY SCOLES
W
hat began in the early 1990s as a way to address nonpoint source runoff pollution in Florida’s water bodies — the leading remaining cause of water quality problems — has crept, grown and blossomed into a program that every Sunshine State homeowner can use when planning a backyard landscape. Nonpoint source pollution generally results from land runoff, precipitation, atmospheric deposition, drainage, seepage or hydrologic modification.
According to Alachua County’s Environmental Horticultural Agent, Wendy Wilber, the FloridaFriendly-Landscaping guidelines came about when an earlier study revealed that 20-25 percent of all
much water and fertilizer it would require to survive in the area’s soil and climate, enthusiastic gardeners were planting gardens and grasses that were doing more harm than good to Mother Nature.
“A bond forms when you get your hands dirty in the soil together. It’s a true community effort.” the nitrates found in local waters came from homeowners and not farmers. With little thought as to the native nature of a plant or how
“Now,” Wilber said, “there are nine principles that help homeowners plan and plant a landscape that can make a difference to our
PHOTO BY DARLA KINNEY SCOLES
Native plantings are abundant in High Springs resident Alice Green’s rural Florida-Friendly landscape.
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PHOTO BY DARLA KINNEY SCOLES
LEFT: High Springs Community Garden tomatoes grow in recycled, modified plastic barrels. BELOW: Welcoming mulched beds greet visitors to Alice Green’s High Springs property, where FloridaFriendly principles are used to create a diverse display.
community’s natural health. Once one person uses these practices in his or her yard, it can be a contagious effort and spread down the street. Neighbors take notice and take those steps in their yards too.” That is Wilber’s hope, as she teaches classes, gives tours and carries out a public outreach effort to inform and inspire thousands of people each year. Some of those who make Florida-Friendly changes on their properties are even recognized by the county for their efforts. Recognized or not, each change counts in a big way, Wilber said. She encourages residents to start by choosing one element of the nine to implement now. Changing one practice each year is impactful without being overwhelming or too costly. “Perhaps the biggest mistake people make is to put the wrong plant in the wrong place,” Wilber said, “or not matching the placement with the growing needs of the plant — like putting it too close to the house.” When asked to choose the single most important change individuals could make, Wilber mentioned two — citing both the use of slow-release fertilizer and the conscientious use of water — noting that proper native plantings require little or no fertilizer and a micro or drip irrigation system is most efficient. In April, those ideas and more were showcased in a FloridaFriendly Landscape™ and Garden Tour that included several locations throughout High Springs. Starting at the High Springs Community Garden just east of the police station, two-dozen attendees visited this and three other sites geared toward the homeowner with a bit more land than a neighborhood lot.
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SunState Federal Credit Union has been serving its members for more than 55 years. Visit us today to see the difference it makes to do your banking at the place where Joe and Tannia work.
Meet Tannia Weaver…
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Alachua County recognizes homeowners who are using environmentally friendly gardening and landscaping practices. Yards are evaluated based on a checklist. If you are working on having a Florida Friendly yard, you can find the checklist here: fyn.ifas.ufl.edu/materials/FYN_Yard_ Recognition_Checklist_2010.pdf. If you have questions or think you are ready to be recognized, call Alachua County Extension Office (352-9551-2402) to schedule a Master Gardener team to assess your yard.
FLORIDA-FRIENDLY
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PHOTO BY DARLA KINNEY SCOLES
Rain barrels fit right in with High Springs resident, Kathy Malone’s, Florida-Friendly landscape design.
“We’re here today,” said Wilber, amid the garden’s rain barrel, raised bed and drip line system setting, “to learn what we can each do to protect our Florida.” ear and dear to Sharon Dockter’s heart, that very setting is the result of the High Springs resident’s labor of love and recruitment of helping hands. Dockter, who saw the Community Garden falling into neglect after its original creator moved away, decided to take on the endeavor with permission from the University of Florida’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS) and add it to the group’s list of projects. “Volunteers from the IFAS and others have helped renew this garden, which is a great resource for community members to eat healthy and grow their own food,”
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Dockter said. “It also helps community relations as citizens cross boundaries to work together here. A bond forms when you get your hands dirty in the soil together. It’s a true community effort.” Dockter hopes the tour’s stop at the garden will attract more volunteers and participants and fill the still-empty and available plots. “We’re here to help people however we can,” Dockter said. “Is it your first time gardening? Come on out and learn. There’s life here! It’s happening!” ife was abundant at the second tour stop as well, where homeowner Alice Greene started six years ago with a two-and-a-half acre “clean slate” and transformed it into a terraced landscape of native plants and hardy perennials. “Moving here from South Florida,
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I planted lemon trees and tropicals and watched them die the first winter,” Greene said. “Two years ago, after taking Wendy Wilber’s native plant class and learning how easy they are to grow and how little maintenance they require, I made a plan to redo my yard planting only Zone 8b plants.” The USDA hardiness zones system is helpful to gardeners in determining if plants are well suited to the local climate. Greene’s hearty raised-bed vegetable garden is a result of Wilber’s class instruction as well, with flowers mixed in to attract bees and butterflies. “Many hours are spent planning, planting, weeding and just messing in my garden,” Greene said. “Then, at the end of the day, sitting with a glass of wine and admiring my hard work.”
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PHOTO BY DARLA KINNEY SCOLES
Alice Green’s abundant vegetable garden thrives using Florida-Friendly Landscape practices.
“Wild Plum puts on a magnificent springtime show of delicate white frothy flowers that provide the first nectar for early spring butterflies,” she said. “But I focus on host plants, which encourage permanent establishment of butterfly populations in the yard. Many of the host plants do double duty and provide nectar.” Malone’s simple landscape also features a number of nectar plants, including Pineland Lantana and Firebush. What was once a large yard of Bahia grass has been transformed into a biologically diverse planted area that fetches an array of pollinators. ey to bringing this tour to these more rural areas of Alachua County was Master Gardener and self-described “worker bee” Ann Hudson. “It has always been in my mind to bring this event to the rural areas,” Hudson said. “I’ve pushed doing it a little differently this year and worked to find larger yards that meet the recognition standards. We did it, though, and it’s been interesting to watch the homeowners grow and learn, as well as the participants.” What is it that Hudson hopes attendees take away from the experience? “We hope they go home and change their own yard,” Hudson said. “They hopefully realize now that they can have a pretty yard without a lot of water or fertilizer. Anybody can do this and small changes add up to a big impact on the environment. “It’s all tied together. Choose one element to work on this year and then add another, the next.” s
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imiting the time spent working on the yard was a primary goal when Tom and Linda Hewlett set out to design their landscape space. Trees were preserved and grass kept to a minimum when they built their home in Heron Landing. Working with native plant enthusiasts, the Hewlett’s visited nurseries that specialized in such (most big box stores do not) and purchased tiny coonties, small palmettos, red bud trees, native azaleas and dozens of other plants. Friends helped with the planting and installation of drip irrigation and centipede grass. Seven years later a lush and varied landscape surrounds the couple’s one-acre High Springs homestead. Large rocks unearthed while digging the septic area adorn the property as well. “I hope those on the tour see how beautiful a yard can be without
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having to have a manicured lawn,” Linda said. “You can use native and Florida-friendly plants that require little water and still have a lush, green, inviting space. We only spend 30 minutes every once in a while working out here.” ith five acres to work with, Kathy Malone’s goal was butterflies, butterflies, butterflies. So far we’ve documented 62 species here,” Malone said, “with no irrigation, no fertilizer, and including as many host plants as flowering ones.” The North Central Florida Chapter of the North American Butterfly Association member focuses as much on management as she does planting in her efforts to attract as many species of butterflies as possible to her property, the third stop of the day.
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A second, self-guided tour of FloridaFriendly Landscapes and Garden Tour will take place September 28, featuring Northwest Gainesville properties.
Meet Your Environmental
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PHOT HOTO OTO O BY BY MA MATT M ATT TT T WH HYTS HYT YT TS T SEL SE S ELL E LL PH PH HO OTOGRA OTOG O OT TOGRA TOG T OGRA OGR O OG GRA GR G RA R APH PHY P HY H Y
endy Wilber is the Alachua County Environmental Cou H Hor Horticulture ticulture Agent, Agen whose main focus is to tea teach each residents h how to create and maintain enviro environmentally ir nmentally ffriendly landscapes. These e Florida F rida frie Flo friendly landscapes minimize water use use, se, reduce storm water runoff, and decrea decrease ase the potential pollutants of pes pesticides, and nitrates. Wendy also provides lleadership for programming in home horticulture. In this rrole, she develops and coo coordinates the Master Gardene Gardener volunteer program. These volunteers voluntee participate in an intensive cours course to learn about gardening, horticulture an and landscaping. In turn, these volunteers voluntee advise and teach people of Alachua Cou County in areas of plants, lan landscape andscape and iinsects and diseases of plant plants. nts. Wendy a also instructs the 4-H Junior Master er Gardene Gardener program for 3rd and 4th grade graders. ders. These The children learn about gardening and an environmental en stewardship.
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>> ACTING OUT
Two Decades of
Entertainment The High Springs Community Theater
BY MARY GOODWIN
T
he High Springs Community Theater (HSCT) has come a long way. As the premiere venue for dramatic arts in the community, the nonprofit organization provides the High Springs area with five engaging productions each year. Bringing everything to life on stage, from comedies and musicals to theatrical monologues, the theater operates entirely on donations and contributions from the community and its members — a group of hardworking
individuals who guarantee the show must, and will, go on.
Humble Beginnings It all started out in 1993 when a small group of actors chased one very big dream. After working together at a theater in Chiefland, the five drama enthusiasts decided they wanted to bring the culture and liveliness of acting right to the High Springs community. “The theater is important to any community because it adds a dimension of culture and entertainment and a look at a wider
world — a world beyond this small area,” said Lorraine Kirkland, HSCT member at large. Before branching out of Chiefland, the actors formed a partnership with the theater that allowed them to recruit three additional members. With eight actors on board, they set out to start their own nonprofit organization with a mission to “stage high-quality family entertainment through amateur theater productions.” Shortly after, they put together their first play, “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the
PHOTOS BY MARY GOODWIN
In 2002, the community theater moved into its present location on 130 NE 1st Avenue in High Springs. The theater produces five main stages plays and a youth performance.
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Don’t Miss Out! There are still two remaining theater productions in the 2012-2013 season
Nunsense
JUNE 14-JULY 7
Winner of four Outer Critics Circle Awards, including “Best Off Broadway Musical” in its original New York production, this hilarious show is a fundraiser put on by the Little Sisters of Hoboken to raise money to bury sisters accidently poisoned by the convent cook, Sister Julia (Child of God). Updated with new jokes, additional lyrics, two new arrangements and a brand new song, this zany musical will delight you!
A Walk in the Woods
AUGUST 9-18
Characters from your favorite woodland fairy tales cross paths in this hilarious children’s comedy. The stories of Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Hansel and Gretel, Little Red Riding Hood, and others are all woven together for a unique and refreshing take on the classics.
THE HIGH SPRINGS COMMUNITY THEATER 2013-2014 SEASON WILL INCLUDE: Murder by the Book [Mystery] The Homecoming [Drama] The Nerd [Comedy] Proof [Drama] Dearly Departed [Comedy] A Walk in the Woods [Drama] (Youth Production)
Forum.” By the time 1994 rolled around, they were wrapping up their sixth play, the last production of their first season, a series of months spent migrating from different gymnasiums to perform. In August of that year, two local directors, Graham and Diane Williams, officially incorporated the theater and partnered with High Springs’ residents Jeannette Peters and Jim Gabriel to perform out of the New Century Woman’s Club. The theater operated out of the woman’s club for eight years, putting on a total of 39 plays and using
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a meeting room as a stage area. While they made do with what they had — the actors expanded the stage area, added a lighting booth, created a green room and added a lobby and two restrooms — they ran into scheduling issues with the growth of both organizations. The group held their final play, “Calamity Jane,” at the woman’s club, and purchased an old church on First Avenue. With the help of the community, the theater was open in its new location by the following year. “This would not have worked,
and it will not work, without the community,” said Terry Beauchamp, an original member of HSCT. “We have community support from the [seven] board members all the way down.” With the direction of Tom Solomon, owner of The Rustic Inn, the theater added a stage, along with a tearoom, green room and two dressing rooms. Suitably, their first show, “Man of La Mancha,” premiered their new stage with the theme song “The Impossible Dream” echoing throughout the building.
PHOTOS BY ALBERT ISAAC
On April 11, the High Springs Community Theater kicked off its production with the dress rehearsal of Neil Simon’s “Rumors” for a small but appreciate audience of guests and the media. Directed by Terry Beauchamp, this farcical play involved several affluent couples at a dinner party celebrating their hosts’ 10th anniversary.
“We’ve come a Long Way” Today, the 71-seat theater produces five main-stage plays each year. Through its play search committee and attendance spot surveys, it determines which productions the community would like included in a season. The board aims to incorporate a variety of genres for each term, including dramatic monologues and mysteries. While nearly every play draws in audience members from all over the state, the comedies and musicals have proven to be the most popular, Terry said.
And it is not just the attendees who come from all over. All of the auditions are open to anyone, regardless of experience or residence. “The thing about theater is there is a place for everybody,” said Linda Heyl, a volunteer who assists with everything from lighting and sound to ticket collections. “The first thing people think of when they hear theater is acting, but there are all kinds of other things people can do besides act.” Aside from the actors, each play requires an array of roles including a director, set designer,
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stage manager, technical director to oversee lights and sounds, and someone to assist with costumes and makeup. “There is something for everybody,” said Will Tucker, backstage manager. “Someone who does not have experience can take on a part and then have that experience.” And a role in the theater comes with much more than drama or technical experience. The crew has formed what they call a “family atmosphere” with a variety of “remember whens” and “we nevers.” Upon entering the building,
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PHOTOS BY MARY GOODWIN and ALBERT ISAAC
The theater is a refurbished church, modified to add two dressing rooms, a green room and a tearoom. Stage Manager Kelly Craven (Above) prior to the opening performance of “Rumors.” Craven also played Officer Welch. Dan Scholes and Linda Heyl (right) manning the lights and sound.
the volunteers never say the name of the Scottish Shakespearian play (Macbeth), they never whistle and they always say, “Break a leg” in lieu of “good luck.” Longstanding traditions have also emerged from practical jokes, such as a light bit that originated when Will Tucker was attempting to turn on a light from the stage and Dan Scholes, the technical director, was secretly turning it off from the upstairs technical area. While Tucker had no idea what was going on, the audience roared with laughter, prompting it to become a recurring bit. The audience does not always catch on to the off-the-script moments, though. Once when the
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HSCT president, Arlene Levine, was zipping up Lorraine’s dress on stage the zipper got stuck, forcing Arlene to improvise. As she was cracking jokes to the audience, she was able to salvage a potentially problematic wardrobe malfunction. “That’s what we call living on stage,” Tucker said. “We all work together to make it happen and feed off of each other. The more laughing and the more energy, the better the play.”
Passing the Torch In addition to the five mainstage productions, the theater’s youth program prepares a sixth play every summer. As the only
youth program in the area, it provides children with experience in every aspect of dramatic arts. The children spend the entire summer preparing for their production launched at the start of the school year, which draws in a full house each season. “We have individuals who started working in youth theater and are now working in professional theater,” Levine said. “One of the things that really sets our program apart is that it is entirely managed by the youth.” Although the program was formed in HSCT’s first year, the board decided in 2004 to alter the course to become a full workshop for
The HSCT has even bigger dreams to expand the facility and add more programs. Always looking for communal support, the volunteer organization will continue to band together to create memorable experiences that will hopefully, as Arlene Levine says, “touch your heart, stir your soul and unleash your imagination.”
the youth members. Now, each play — aside from one adult supervisor — is run entirely by children under the age of 18, from the director all the way to the backstage crew. “I got involved because I wanted to get my kids exposed to public speaking, but there is a hit you get off of creating public art with a group,” Terry Beauchamp explained. “They can learn all kinds of aspects to help them in the outside world.” The crew at HSCT also shares their talents through acting workshops, a program David Aiken, the secretary, created this past year. With hopes to run one session per academic year, the nine-week programs cover a variety
of facets such as acting, stage work, monologues and two-person scenes. “Theater people are so welcoming and so open that it actually makes it a great socializing opportunity as well,” Aiken said. “We hope to continue it.”
Keeping the Theater Alive As the HSCT continues to expand, even adding a new and improved sound system, it will constantly rely on the volunteers who keep it together. Because none of the actors or directors are paid, the nonprofit operates strictly from time and monetary contributions. “We all work together to paint, budget, sell tickets, work backstage
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and stage-manage,” Heyl said. “When something terrible happens, everyone drops something to help out — we are so involved with helping each other.” And help is always needed. The team at HSCT knows how much work goes into each performance; an average show usually takes six or seven weeks of preparation and rehearsal, and musicals usually take longer. “And that is not counting the time they spend learning the lines alone, and the amount of outside hours they put in,” Levine said. It is also not considering the amount of time spent up-keeping the facility. Because volunteers run
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the center, the actors, directors and backstage crew sweep, vacuum, clean toilets and perform any task necessary to keep the theater running. “I do not think people realize how much work actually goes into to putting on a production,” said Dan Scholes, who heads the technical department and has even spent performances rushing from the stage as an actor to the upstairs lights and sound department. “This is a lot of work, it’s a lot harder than I thought it would be.” To organize the tasks and roles needed to make each production a success, Jan Leavitt serves as the volunteer coordinator. She welcomes volunteers in every area of production or administration, including stage craft (producing, directing and acting), technical skills (set and lighting design, costumes, makeup and props), house management (ticket collectors and refreshment providers),
and theater management (grant writers, fund raisers and legal, accounting, theater and ground maintenance workers). HSCT also utilizes a publicity team that puts together newsletters, production programs, advertising and promotions. “Some people see the theater as a closed community, but we are wide open,” Aiken said. “Anyone who wants to participate can be just as much a part of the group as the rest of us.” “You become a family here when you take on a show because you all work together on a joint project,” Linda added. “At this point, I would be lost without it.” In addition to all of the time commitments and hours of labor, the organization receives monetary donations to keep it functioning. The Alachua City Commission generously supports the theater, and the Alachua Community Redevelopment Area has provided multiple grants to improve the
institution. Individual donors and businesses also provide contributions necessary to fund the theater — which, Levine said, is a constant struggle. “We have a very old building in constant need of repair,” she explained. “Our production budgets are around $1,000 for each play, not including the rights and the scripts. The rights of each play alone can cost anywhere from $1,500 to $1,800.” Because it is a community theater, it aims to merely break even by the end of each production. Through the sweat and tears that comes along with it all, it is a wonder—why do it? “Because of the internal value of having a part in the theater, and the relationships and bonding with people who would otherwise not have known each other,” Aiken said. “It has become something we have to do,” Dan Scholes added. “If I am not doing it, I am not a happy camper.” s
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• TAKE BREAKS FROM THE SUN TO REAPPLY SUNSCREEN. Examine your skin on a regular basis for signs of skin cancer and consult a dermatologist if you notice anything suspicious. This can help ensure that skin cancer is diagnosed in its earliest, most treatable stage.
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COLUMN >> DONNA BONNELL
Embracing Life Trust, but Verify
M
ost of my adult life, I had faith in Dr. Norman Vincent Peale’s philosophies. Peale, a minister and author, wrote “The Power of Positive Thinking.” He believed, “The way to happiness: Keep your heart free from hate, your mind from worry. Live simply, expect little, give much. Scatter sunshine, forget self, think of others. Try this for a week and you will be surprised.” After practicing positive thinking for a lifetime, I sometimes question my optimistic attitude. Am I wrong to have confidence in the crazy humans of this world? Am I gullible? If gullible means credulous, trusting and naïve, I am guilty. Sylvester Stallone says, “Don’t be gullible, use life before it uses you. Understand there are no free lunches, and for every action you take, there’s a reaction.” Yes, I have been deceived and duped. Yet, I hate to lose faith in my fellow earthbound passengers. Is there a way to live a balanced existence? Can I develop a more cautious approach somewhere in-between the beliefs of Peale and Stallone? If that is possible, how do I accomplish this daunting task? To find an answer, I began to study the powerful but dangerous tool of communication. Humans have the ability to acquire an extraordinary amount of information. In fact, we depend on communication to learn and evolve. This leaves us open to accidental or intentional misinformation. Unfortunately, sometimes the intention of messages is to manipulate or mislead. It is our responsibility to determine what is true or beneficial. Perhaps the appropriate goal is to interpret incoming information. Some folks call it filtering. Cognitive scientist, Dan Sperber, refers to this process as, “epistemic vigilance.”
The Greek term episteme means knowledge and understanding. Epistemology is the branch of philosophy concerned with what knowledge is, how it is acquired and the possible extent to which a given subject or entity can be known. Vigilant means to be cautious, attentive and observant. An individual proficient in epistemic vigilance possesses the following abilities: • Evaluates arguments • Assesses the credibility of statements • Calibrates trust (for example, trust a doctor more than a neighbor, a friend more than a stranger) • Compares new theories with previous beliefs The need to be an expert in epistemic vigilance, in an effort to secure accurate information, appears to be applicable only for the human species. Look at the enormous success of the ant colonies. The evergrowing ant population thrives because workers do not have any reason to suspect foul play. When a food source or danger is sighted, the inhabitants send signals. They trust each other. Overall, what matters to them is that the colony thrives. Human groups are not like ant colonies. While communication and cooperation has played a crucial part in our progress, it has taken a very different form. Humans do not strive for the best interest of the group; they labor to further their own objectives. If being nice, moral and obliging fits in the plan, that is an added benefit. Is it true we cannot ever let our guard down? Will being gullible always allow others to take advantage? Maybe that is not the case all of the time.
Reid’s reasoning relies on the hypothesis that humans are predisposed to be honest. In today’s society, few would agree. Reid could have a valid point. Even if his logic is not entirely correct, people may still have a tendency to tell the truth.
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An 18th century Scottish philosopher, Thomas Reid, suggested that humans have a natural propensity to trust. He said, “The wise and beneficent Author of nature, who intended that we should be social creatures…hath, for these purposes implanted…two principles that tally with each other. The first of these principles is a propensity to speak truth [... The second principle] is a disposition to confide in the veracity of others, and to believe what they tell us.” Reid’s reasoning relies on the hypothesis that humans are predisposed to be honest. In today’s society, few would agree. Reid could have a valid point. Even if his logic is not entirely correct, people may still have a tendency to tell the truth. It could be (in part) that listeners are cautious. Perhaps facing the arduous consequences after telling a lie may not be worth the risk. Possibly jeopardizing losing trust forever simply is not worth the untruth. Whatever the case may be, my positive thinking is too powerful to overlook Reid’s premise. I found and embraced the middle-ground viewpoint to this dilemma when I read the following two quotes: Sperber said, “It’s not that we don’t trust people; on the contrary, it’s because we are vigilant that we can trust them.” Reiteration of Sperber’s idea came when I recalled President Ronald Reagan’s famous phrase, “Trust, but verify.” s
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Gonzales Site Prep, Inc. Bulldozer • Backhoe Tractor • Front End Loader Land Clearing • House Pads • Final Grading Driveways • Culverts • Bush Hog • Mowing Root Raking • Stump Removal • Limerock • Fill Dirt
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> TERRI SCHLICHENMEYER BOOK REVIE REVIEW EW >>
N0S4A2: A Novel written by Joe Hill c.2013, William Morrow
T
$28.99 / $31.99 Canada, 692 pages
he Christmas tree is long gone. It shed its last needle on the curb more than four months ago, looking sad without baubles on branches or gifts around its trunk. It’s probably mulch now, and that’s okay: the baubles are in a box in the garage, the gifts half-used or half-forgotten already, and you’re thinking summertime, not Yuletide. But what if it was Christmas every day? In Christmasland it is, and in the new novel “NOS4A2” by Joe Hill, the holiday’s a scream. For her eighth birthday, Victoria McQueen got exactly what she wanted: a Raleigh Tuff Burner mountain bike. For a kid whose parents fought a lot, the bike meant freedom and escape that summer, and a different kind of adventure: accidentally, Victoria found a bridge that
didn’t really exist, that followed her whenever she went across it and took her where she needed to be, when she needed to be there. But since the bridge wasn’t real, Vic figured her memories of it weren’t, either. It was like a dream: touchable, but not quite. Charles Talent Manx loved children. He loved them so much that he tried to protect them from their parents because Manx knew that tattooed women and preoccupied fathers meant trouble. So he enticed children into his 1938 Rolls Royce Wraith, promising that they’d live with him at Christmasland, where there were gifts every morning and candy every night. No child could resist Christmasland. And no child came out of it the same. Vic McQueen knew this because she once escaped Christmasland by a hair. She was just seventeen then, had learned about Manx and found something that disturbed her deeply. Her visit to Christmasland was a big mistake, yet it ultimately led to good things in her life: a man she loved and a son she loved even more. But because she’d escaped (and her magic was a threat), Manx wanted to kill Vic. He would do anything to get her. He’d even take her son. And so, Victoria McQueen went back to the bridge that didn’t exist. She pointed her motorcycle toward the other side and hit the gas… Well, then. Let me just start by saying that you’re in for something good when you jump out of your skin on page 5 and you’ve got 688 pages left to read. The funny thing is that “NOS4A2” is a novel that’s basically about good and evil, but it’s not the characters that make it so. Yes, author Joe Hill created a vile creature that’ll make you wince and a heroine who’s reluctantly heroic, but what really makes this book unsettling is that we never know where Hill hides the horror. We’re prepared for blood-and-guts, not for things dangerously innocent. Add a few inside-jokes for readers, an ending that goes past the last page (keep reading!), and can’t-becoincidental nods to both Hill’s parents and you’ve got an absolutely squirmy novel that’s better than anything Santa ever brought you. If that sounds like your kinda book, then “NOS4A2” is a ho-ho-whole lotta creepiness. s Terri Schlichenmeyer has been reading since she was 3 years old and she never goes anywhere without a book. She lives with her two dogs and 11,000 books.
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Taste of the Town
SPECIAL RESTAURANT ADVERTISING SECTION. CALL 352.372-5468 FOR ADVERTISING INFORMATION.
Brown’s Country Buffet 14423 NW US Hwy 441, Alachua, FL 32616 Monday-Friday: 7am - 8pm Saturday: 7am - 2pm Sunday: 8am - 2:30pm
386-462-3000 Brown’s Country Buffet is country-style cooking at its finest, just like Grandma’s house! A buffet style restaurant, Brown’s Country Buffet is open seven days a week! Foods like fried chicken, grilled pork chops, real mashed potatoes, steamed cabbage, banana pudding and coconut pie, just to name a few, are served in a laid back, relaxing environment. We offer AYCE fried shrimp on Friday nights from 4-8 along with whole catfish & ribs. In addition to their buffet, Brown’s also offers a full menu to choose from. You are sure to find something to satisfy any craving at Brown’s. Serving lunch and dinner daily and a breakfast buffet Friday-Sunday until 10:30am, you’re sure to leave satisfied, no matter when you go. So, when you’re in the mood for some good home cooking, Grandma’s style, visit Brown’s Country Buffet.
Newberry’s Backyard BBQ 25405 W Newberry Rd, Newberry Monday-Wednesday 11am-9pm • Thursday 11am-9pm Friday and Saturday 11am-11pm • Sunday 10:30am-8pm
352.472.7260
newberrybbq.com
BBQ — Newberry’s Backyard BBQ is UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP, and to celebrate we are lowering our prices! Newberry’s Backyard Bar-B-Q is located in our historic building in beautiful downtown Newberry. Our pork, chicken, beef, and turkey is smoked to perfection daily. Our salads and sides are always fresh. If you are thirsty we have the best sweet tea in the South and a full bar as well. Make sure to bring your kids, we serve their meals on a frisbee that they take home. For your entertainment, we always have live music on Friday nights and Karaoke on Saturday evenings. Always remember big or small we cater all gatherings.
Roundabout 2725 SW 91st Street (Haile Publix Shopping Center) Tues-Thurs: 11:30-10:00pm • Fri & Sat: 11:30am-2:00am Sunday: 10:00am-9:00pm
352-331-6620
theroundaboutbarandgrill.com
Bar & Grill — Roundabout is the place to be for people in Haile and SW Gainesville! Our newly renovated space features a restaurant, bar with six flat screen TV’s and expanded patio. Specializing in casual American fare with a wide selection of salads, flat breads, burgers and specialty entrée’s such as Shrimp & Grits and Chicken Pot Pie makes us the perfect place for a family dinner or date night. Our food is made to order using the freshest ingredients ensuring the highest quality. Tuesday’s wine bottles are Half-off, Wednesday’s kids eat FREE & 8oz Filet’s are $14.90, Thursday’s Martini’s are $5, late-night Happy Hour Saturday 10pm-2am, Sunday Brunch 10am3pm. Live music weekly. Open lunch and dinner Tuesday-Sunday.
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Northwest Grille 5115 Northwest 39th Ave., Gainesville 32606 Open 7 Days: 11am to 10pm (Friday open until 11pm) Saturday & Sunday: Serving brunch 10am to 3pm
352-376-0500
www.northwestgrillegainesville.com
SEAFOOD — Locally owned and operated, Northwest Grille has been providing the finest quality fish and seafood entrees in a friendly atmosphere since 1996. Whether it’s their fresh, local seafood and fish, or handcrafted sauces and specialty desserts, Northwest Grille has something to please your palate. Meat lovers will enjoy the hand-cut steaks and vegetarians will love the wide range of vegetarian options. Serving lunch and dinner daily, Northwest Grille, offers an extensive brunch menu on Saturdays and Sundays from 10am-3pm. Northwest Grille also features a full liquor bar with nightly drink specials. Happy hour is served daily from 3pm-7pm and all day on Wednesday – offering a wide assortment of craft beer, wine and $5 martinis.
Dave’s New York Deli 12921 SW 1st Road • Tioga Town Center Open 7 Days
352-333-0291
www.DavesNYDeli.com
AUTHENTIC NY DELI — The Reviews are in and here’s what customers are saying about Dave’s NY Deli Tioga Town Center! “Best Reuben, Best Pastrami, Best Philly, and Best Wings” Dave’s continues to be the place to go for authentic NY Deli food and Philly Cheesesteaks. Owner Dave Anders says “Nothing beats quality ingredients combined with a friendly staff. We bring in all of our Pastrami and Corned Beef and Cheesecake from New York’s Carnegie Deli. In addition we offer Nathan’s Hot Dogs, NY Kettle Boiled Bagels, Nova Salmon, Knish, Cannolies, Philly Cheesesteaks, Wings, Cubans, Subs, Kids Menu and more.” Come out and enjoy Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner at Dave’s NY Deli. Now serving beer and wine.
Gator Tales Sports Bar 5112 NW 34th Street (across from the YMCA) Sunday - Tuesday 2pm - Midnight Wed, Thurs, Fri and Sat 2pm - 2am
(352)-376-9500
www.gator-tales.com
BAR & GRILL — GATOR TALES Sports Bar features 3 large separate entertainment areas! You can relax at our Tiki bar in a large covered outdoor patio with tropical tunes enjoying 3 large screen TV’s and a full outdoor liquor bar. If you prefer to be inside, visit the sports bar, where you can find large TV’s, a performance stage with nightly entertainment including karaoke, live bands and acoustical sets. We have a separate pool hall and offer two happy hours every day. Gator Tales has a variety of domestic and import beers including a local favorite Swamphead Stompknocker. Our menu has a lot to choose from, appetizers, black angus burgers, gator tail, and salads.
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Taste of the Town
SPECIAL RESTAURANT ADVERTISING SECTION. CALL 352.372-5468 FOR ADVERTISING INFORMATION.
The Sandbar 14841 Main Street • Alachua, Florida 32615 Monday through Thursday 11am - 9:30pm Friday & Saturday 11am - 11pm Sunday 11am - 4pm
386-462-0010
www.sandbarseafood.com
SEAFOOD & STEAK — If you’re looking for great seafood, try The Sandbar Seafood & Steakhouse in downtown Alachua. Serving lunch and dinner, we offer a wide variety of seafood that is sure to satisfy any palate. From shrimp, scallops and oysters, to crab legs and Mahi Mahi. For the land lubbers out there we have steak, chicken, burgers and 1/4 pound beef hotdogs. So come on in and start with one of our tasty appetizers and a refreshing beverage from our full bar. We have daily lunch specials starting at just six bucks, and entertainment every weekend on the patio outside of the bar. This is a family friendly restaurant with a nice relaxing atmosphere that will not break the bank.
Southern Soul 15 NE 2nd Ave, High Springs, FL Mon 11:00am - 10:00pm •Wed - Thu 11:00am - 10:00pm Fri - Sat 11:00am - Midnight • Sun 11:00am - 6:00pm
386-454-0429 SOUL FOOD — If you are looking for a true taste of down-home, comfort food then you will love Southern Soul Restaurant & Lounge now open in High Springs and serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. All of our recipes are homemade and made from scratch. Rise and shine and stop in for one of our breakfast platters including flapjacks, pork chops, biscuits and gravy, or French toast, to name a few. For lunch and dinner our headliners include oxtails and yellow rice, pork chops, fried chicken, fresh mullet, catfish, and shrimp. Our sidelines are collard greens, mac and cheese, grits, mashed potatoes and many more! To top it all off, try our homemade desserts! Join us for live Jazz Friday and Saturday nights and live Blue’s every Thursday.
Saboré 13005 SW 1st Road, Tioga, FL 32669 (Tioga Town Center) Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday: 11am – 10pm Fri. & Sat.: 11am – 11pm • Open Mondays for special events only
352-332-2727
www.saborerestaurant.com
FUSION — Saboré [sa-bohr-ay] is a modern world-fusion restaurant featuring a variety of dishes inspired by dynamic cuisine from places like Europe, Asia, and South America. Their recipe is simple: authentic global flavors, quality ingredients, expert craftsmanship, and exceptional service. Saboré offers customers a unique dining experience, shareable plates, delicious dishes, signature cocktails and desserts that will keep you coming back for more. So let us surprise your palate with our global flair and exotic ingredients. Experiencing world cuisine this fresh usually requires a passport.
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HEARTHSTONE CUSTOM LOG HOME ON 5ACRES Rustic 4BR/3.5BA, 4000 sf w/open floor or plan. Large kitchen w/Stainless Kitchen Aid appliances. Great room w/sky high ceiling & towering stone fireplace, Hickory wood floors & much h more. Room for all your toys in the 4 car garage. $589,000 MLS 333876 76
ONE-OF-A-KIND HORSE FARM! Lovely 2 story, 4BR/3.5BA, 3470 sf home on 30 horse ready acres. True gourmet kitchen w/Viking appliances, wood floors, huge family room w/ fireplace and luxury master suite. Center aisle, 8 stall barn w/feed & tack room, 64x84 hay barn w/office & more. $749,900. MLS 340643
ERYN’S GARDEN 3BR/2BA, 1500sf home w/open floor plan. Kitchen & dining room combo including appliances. Ceramic tile throughout living area & carpet in bedrooms. French door to covered porch, 2 car garage & fully landscaped yard. $159,900 MLS 341464
“Let us help find the right home for you.” 386-462-4020 352-538-1773
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3BR/2BA, 1487 sf home w/9’ ceilings, granite in kitchen, 42” upper kitchen cabinets, GE appliances, open n living room/dining room combo & 2 car garage. Ready to o move in or we have other floor plans to choose from. $179,900 79,900 MLS 341434
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CALENDAR If you would like to have an event considered for publication in this calendar, please submit information directly. post 4400 NW 36th Ave., Gainesville, FL 32606 | e-mail editor@towerpublications.com | fax 352-373-9178
LADY GAMERS 1st Friday Each Month 1:30pm HIGH SPRINGS - The High Springs Woman’s Club. 40 NW 1st Ave. The Lady Gamers meet for fun, friendship and food — and let’s not forget the cards, board games and any other activities you would like to bring to the group.
MUSIC IN THE PARK Third Sunday of Every Month 2:00pm - 4:00pm HIGH SPRINGS - James Paul Park and Community Garden, 200 North Main St. Every third Sunday, come enjoy local music and fresh air out in the park. Bring lawn chairs, refreshments, and blankets. Admission is free. 352-275-4190.
FIRE HOUSE GALLERY AND STUDIO 2nd Friday Each Month Times Vary NEWBERRY - 25435 W. Newberry Road. The Newberry Firehouse Gallery is changing its shows to the second Friday of the month. 352-472-2112.
NEWBERRY FARMERS MARKET Saturdays 8:00am - 2:00pm NEWBERRY - Downtown by the railroad tracks. Plants, eggs, handmade crafts, honey and
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more. Rain-out indoor location: Newberry’s Backyard Market and Gifts. 352-472-2112.
HIGH SPRINGS FARMERS MARKET Thursdays & First Saturday Times Vary HIGH SPRINGS - Plantation Oaks, 201 NE 1st Ave. Visit High Springs Farmers Market every Thursday from Noon - Dusk and the first Saturday of every month 9:00am - 1:00pm. Peaches, blueberries, carrots, squash, watermelons, red delicious tomatoes, cucumbers, peas, sugar snap beans, green beans, all picked fresh from the garden. You will also find flavored vinegar, banana nut bread, scrumptious pastries and more. 386454-8145. farmersmarket.
highsprings.com.
ARTWALK GAINESVILLE Last Friday of Every Month 7:00pm - 10:00pm GAINESVILLE - Bo Diddley Plaza. Self-guided tour of downtown’s galleries, eateries and businesses. Pick up a map near Bo Diddley Plaza, visit more than a dozen spots, including local landmarks like the Hippodrome and The Sequential Artists Workshop. Watch live performances throughout the night, as well. artwalkgainesville.com.
BO DIDDLEY FREE CONCERTS
BOTANICAL CHORDS
Fridays 8:00pm
Through October 6 10:00am - 5:00pm
GAINESVILLE - Bo Diddley Plaza. From April to November, Friday nights come alive as local and regional bands are showcased under the stars in downtown Gainesville. Hundreds come out to enjoy the free live music and shows in a familyfriendly environment.
GAINESVILLE - Florida Museum of Natural History. At the museum’s new exhibit, Botanical Chords: The Art and Science of Plants and Cells, visitors will explore an up-close look at nine native Florida species depicted in Terry Ashley’s artwork. 352-846-2000.
gvluculturalaffairs.org.
OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS MEETING Mondays Noon - 1:00pm
WRITERS ALLIANCE OF GAINESVILLE Second Sundays 2:30pm
ALACHUA - Sid Martin Biotechnology Incubator, 12085 Research Dr. Rm. 104. Is food a problem for you? If so, the 12 Steps may help you; an hour where other compulsive eaters share experience, strength and hope. Free for all ages. 386-4620880. oanfi.org.
GAINESVILLE - Millhopper Branch Library, 3245 NW 43rd Street. From June through November, the Writers Alliance of Gainesville will be sponsoring free speakers and panel discussions on varying topics for anyone interested in the written word. 352-334-1272.
BLUES PIONEERS AND THEIR PRODIGY
AVENUE Q
Through Sept. 7 Times Vary GAINESVILLE - The Thomas Center, 302 NE 6th Ave. This exhibition of colorful folk artstyle illustrations will highlight the musical legacy of the great 20th-century blues artists, as well as the later artists who were influenced by them. 352-334-2787.
May 29 - June 23 Times Vary GAINESVILLE Hippodrome Theater. For its 40th anniversary season, the Hipp presents a coming-of-age musical, Avenue Q. The play was a Broadway sensation, winning the famed Tony Award “triple crown,” for best musical, score and book. 352-375-4477.
SUMMER CAMP
Nunsense
June 17 - Aug. 16 7:00am - 6:00pm GAINESVILLE - Porters Community Center, 512 SW 2nd Terr. Get Up, Get Out & Get Moving! For children in grades first through sixth. Four (two-week) sessions are available plus a bonus week. Sessions 1-4 (two-week sessions). Session 1: Get Out and Play! June 17 - June 28; Session 2: The Art of Nature: July 1- July 12; Session 3: Steppin’ to the Beat: July 15 - July 26; Session 4: CSI Cool Science: July 29 - Aug. 9. Residents: $90.50 or $45 if qualifies for scholarship. NonResidents: $135.50 or $90 if qualifies for scholarship. Session 5 (one-week session) Residents: $45.25 or $22.50 if qualifies for scholarship. NonResidents: $67.75 or $45 if qualifies for scholarship. Limited scholarships are available at all locations for children that have been approved for free or reduced lunch through their school. 352-334-5067.
June 14 - July 7 Time TBA HIGH SPRINGS - High Springs Community Theater, 130 NE 1st Ave. Winner of four Outer Critics Circle Awards including Best Off Broadway Musical in its original New York production, this hilarious show is a fundraiser put on by the Little Sisters of Hoboken to raise money to bury sisters accidentally poisoned by the convent cook, Sister Julia (Child of God). Updated with new jokes, additional lyrics, two new arrangements and a brand new song, this zany musical will delight. 386-454-3525. highspringscommunitytheater.com
© PHOTO BY KRISTIN KOZELSKY
JAMES BOND 007 Saturday, June 22 1:00pm - 3:00pm GAINESVILLE - Library Headquarters. Matt Sherman discusses the history of James Bond 007. Sherman is author of “Picture Yourself Shooting Pool” and is creator of the annual Bond Collectors’ Weekends, fan events drawing enthusiasts from around the world to meet James Bond celebrities and live 007. He has helped produce five James Bond CD and DVD projects and has written or edited millions of words about real and fictional spies, and pool and billiards. 352-334-3900.
Titanoboa: Monster Snake Through Aug. 11
10:00am - 5:00pm
GAINESVILLE - Florida Museum of Natural History. Museum scientists recently discovered the 60-million-year-old remains of the world’s largest snake, at 48 feet long and 2,500 lbs. Learn more about the discovery, reconstruction and archaeological implications of this titanic reptile, and see its full-scale model. Trained volunteers who are working with fossils found at the site will be available for questions. 352-846-2000.
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MELON RUN Thursday, July 4 8:00am
Grape Stompin’
GAINESVILLE - Albert “Ray” Massey Westside Park, 1001 NW 34th St. Show your Fourth of July spirit with the Florida Track Club’s 35th-annual 3-mile run through Westside Park. The last day to register before the day of the race is June 30.
Saturday, August 24 1:00pm - 6:00pm BO DIDDLEY COMMUNITY PLAZA - Enjoy the Grape Stomping festival along with wine tastings and food pairing tours at all of your favorite downtown establishments.Live music, carriage rides, grape-stomping contests and even participate in the Lucille Ball look-alike contest. Come join us downtown and make this event the perfect blend of romance and fun!
ARTIFACTS EXQUISITE & EXTRAORDINARY June 28 - Sept. 28 Times Vary GAINESVILLE - The Thomas Center, 302 NE 6th Avenue. The Thomas Center’s new exhibit, “Artifacts Exquisite and Extraordinary: From the Theatre of Memory Collection,” is inspired by the centuries-old “Cabinet
floridatrackclub.com.
INDEPENDENCE CELEBRATION Thursday, July 4 11:00am MICANOPY - Fourth of July celebration with parade, children’s games and fireworks show at dusk. 352-466-3121.
ALACHUA FIREWORKS Thursday, July 4 3:00pm
of Curiosities” tradition of eclectic and encyclopedic personal collections. A diverse range of material will be shown, ranging from ancient Chinese jade to meteors from space. 352-334-5064.
OCALA COMIC CON June 29 - 30 10:00am - 8:00pm OCALA - Hilton
Convention Hall, 3600 SW 36th Ave. Come dressed as your favorite comic character and experience 11,000 square feet of comicrelated exhibits at the Ocala Hilton. There will be celebrity guest appearances, raffles, meet and greets, and a concert. Tickets are $150. ocalacomicon.com.
ALACHUA - The City of Alachua has dubbed its celebration “The Largest Small Town Fireworks Display in America.” The annual event draws over 30,000 people. There will be activities for kids, unique vendors, bingo contests, dancing groups and live musical entertainment to name a few. Without a doubt the event has something for everyone and of course — the hottest fireworks around. cityofalachua.com.
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GAINESVEGAS Friday, July 5 5:00pm - 10:00pm
High Springs BMX Olympic Day 2013 Saturday, June 22
10:00am
HIGH SPRINGS - High Springs BMX Track, 1050 NW 2nd St. USA BMX and the Olympic Council have teamed up to offer a free day of BMX racing at participating tracks across the country. The High Springs tracks will be offering practice and registration until noon, followed by a race. 352-514-9735.
Dog Days of Summer Fri, August 2 6:00pm - 10:00pm GAINESVILLE - Downtown. Bring out your pooches. The event will have a dog show with various prizes, doggy spas and social stations, eateries featuring canine cuisine and pet-inspired art from local artists. When you arrive, pick up a “passport” at the Opera House to receive stamps at local venues and be entered to win raffle tickets and prizes. 352-325-3514.
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GAINESVILLE - Downtown. Enjoy a night on the strip as Downtown gets transformed into family-friendly Vegas fun. There will be a casino with parlor games, a silent auction with prizes, an Elvis costume contest and lounge-style performances by local artists. You can also roll dice for a chance to win a two-person cruise to the Bahamas. 352-325-3514.
ADVENTURES OF TOM SAWYER July 12 - Aug. 4 Times Vary GAINESVILLE - Vam York Theater, 4039 NW 16th Blvd. A Broadway adaptation of America’s favorite book. Filled with foot-stomping, toe-tapping songs, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer is a musical tale of thrilling escapes, comedy and inspiration for the whole family! 352-376-4949.
HAIRSPRAY July 13 - Aug. 5 Times Vary GAINESVILLE - Vam York Theater, 4039 NW 16th Blvd. This Baltimore musical tells the story of a plus-sized girl, Tracy Turnblad, who makes it big dancing on a local TV program. While searching for love and trying to end the TV program’s racial segregation, Turnblad struggles against its reigning princess and learns about who she is. 352-376-4949.
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GIRLS ROCK GAINESVILLE
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Saturday, Aug. 10 Times TBA GAINESVILLE - 919 W. University Ave. This showcase is a culmination of the weeklong summer day camp that uses music and performance as a platform to promote self-esteem and creative expression for young women and girls. Sliding scale admission fee and funds raised will go to the camp.
girlsrockcampgainesville.com.
ART, CRAFT AND LIFESTYLE SHOW Aug. 15 - 18 10:00am - 9:00pm GAINESVILLE - Oaks Mall. Browse unique creations during the art and craft show. Shop during regular mall hours while stopping by vendor exhibits. 330-493-4130.
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• Playground • Picnic tables & grills • Campsites w/ electric and water • Primitive wooded campsites
GATOR FUN-N-RUN 5K Friday, Aug. 30 6:00pm - 10:00pm GAINESVILLE - United Downtown, SE 1st Street. Kick off Gator season with a 5K alongside the Florida Track Club, and afterward celebrate with Albert and Alberta at United Downtown. Participation is free. 352-331-2800.
DON’T DRESS FOR DINNER Aug. 30 - Sept. 22 Times Vary GAINESVILLE Hippodrome Theater. A major hit on Broadway and in London, Don’t
Dress for Dinner is the hilarious sequel to Boeing-Boeing. It’s the raucous story of infidelity gone awry, when Bernard’s wife stays in town the same weekend as his mistress comes for a romantic rendezvous. Everyone is guaranteed a good time at this hilarious romp through the French countryside.
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RECONSTRUCTION ERA EVENT Sept. 6 - 7 9:00am - 5:00pm NEWBERRY - Dudley Farm Historic State Park. This is an immersion event in which visitors encounter living historians from the year 1875. Come see, hear, and feel what it was like in one of the hardest times for the South, after the Civil War, when Dudley Farm first came into existence. 352-472-1142.
KIDS4KIDS TRIATHLON AND FUN RUN Saturday, Sept. 7 8:00am GAINESVILLE - Haile Plantation Golf and Country Club, 9905 SW 44 Ave. Come join in the 6th annual Kids4Kids Triathlon and Fun Run, whose proceeds will go to charity, such as the Child Advocacy Center, the Morning Mile Program, and the Food4Kids Backpack Program. Register online at kids4kidsflorida.org.
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ADVERTISEMEN T
Retraining the Brain CARETENDERS PROVIDES UNIQUE THERAPY FOR PATIENTS WITH MOVEMENT AND MEMORY DISORDERS
or seniors who have suffered from stroke or Parkinson’s Disease, the most basic of daily tasks can become difficult due to the after-effects of these conditions. Loss of balance and lack of strength often lead to fears of falling and the inability to lift heavier items, which in turn affect a senior’s ability to live independently.
F
“We start with their hands,” said Gant. “The patients put on headphones and we set the cowbell sound for a specific speed. The patients have to anticipate the timing for the ding so that they can clap perfectly in rhythm with the cowbell. They’re learning to anticipate and be able to clap at exactly the same time.”
Mederi Caretenders of Gainesville realizes that a unique approach to therapy is needed for patients with these movement and memory issues.
Once that basic task is mastered, a therapist can incorporate other movements based upon the needs of the patient. For example, a patient might be asked to stand up from a sitting position and tap an overhead target, timing that tap with the cowbell sound. If a client has concerns about shifting weight from one foot to the other, the therapist can have him sway his hips from side to side, tapping a target with one hip with each ding of the bell.
“Neurological disorders call for a specialized therapy approach that not only addresses physical deficits, but cognitive deficits as well,” said Janie Gant, an occupational therapist assistant with Caretenders. “Rehabilitation involves retraining the brain.” While the Caretenders professionals employ many traditional therapies, they also have a unique therapy tool at their disposal — Interactive Metronome (IM). IM uses a patient’s internal clock to help re-develop the link between cognitive processes and movement. Specific exercises and movements are timed with an audible signal, such as a cowbell sound, with the ultimate goal of improving motor function, balance, cognitive processing and speech. 136 | Summer 2013
Such therapies not only increase physical strength and balance; they also reinforce cognitive processing and the role it plays in movement and balance. But as with any other therapy, IM is only as good as the professionals who administer it. “All of our therapists have extensive training in neurological re-education,” said Gant. “Combined, we have over 300 years of experience. Yet Caretenders still provides all of its therapists with IM certification courses to ensure the best care for our patients.”
“I wondered if my family could manage all the care I needed after leaving the hospital.”
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WORSHIP CENTERS If we have left out a church or have incomplete / incorrect information, please let us know! Send your corrections by faxing 352-373-9178 or emailing editor@towerpublications.com. We welcome your contributions and suggestions.
HIGH SPRINGS ALLEN CHAPEL A.M.E. CHURCH 386-454-3574 10 S.E. MLK Drive Pastor James McDaniel ANDERSON MEMORIAL CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST 386-454-3433 935 SE Lincoln Ave. BETHLEHEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 386-454-1996 County Road 778 Pastor Clarence Desue CHRIST ANGLICAN FELLOWSHIP 386-454-1845 323 SW CR 778 Pastor Michael LaCagnina CHRISTIAN FAMILY WORSHIP CENTER 386-454-2367 220 NE 1ST Ave. Dr. Lloyd S. Williams CHURCH OF CHRIST 386-454-2930 520 NE Santa Fe Blvd. CHURCH OF GOD BY FAITH 386-454-1015 US Hwy 27 THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS 386-454-4282 24455 NW 174th Ave. Pres. Keith Brown HIGH SPRINGS CHURCH OF GOD 386-454-1757 210 NW 182 Ave. Pastor Terry W. Hull
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FELLOWSHIP CHURCH 386-454-1700 16916 NW U.S. Hwy. 441 Pastor Jeff Powell FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 386-454-1505 20112 North US Hwy. 441 Pastor Derek Lambert FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 386-454-1037 205 North Main Street Pastor Glen A. Busby FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH of HIGH SPRINGS 386-454-1255 17405 NW US Hwy 441 Pastor Benton Mangueira
MT CARMEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 386-454-4568 1230 NW 1st Ave. Pastor Byran Williams MT. PLEASANT BAPTIST CHURCH 14105 NW 298th Street 386-454-2161 Pastor Dan Howard MOUNT OLIVE BAPTIST CHURCH 386-454-3447 948 SE Railroad Ave. THE NORTH EAST CHURCH OF CHRIST 4330 NE County Road 340 nechurchofchrist.net
GRACE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 210 Santa Fe Blvd. Pastor Preston Ponce
SAINT MADELEINE CATHOLIC CHURCH 386-454-2358 17155 NW Highway 441
HOLY TEMPLE CHURCH WITH GOD 386-454-0313 615 SE ML King Drive
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 386-454-2360 230 NW 1st Avenue Pastor Mark Swaisgood
IMPACT FAMILY CHURCH 386-454-1563 16710 NW US 441 Pastors Edwin & Angela Anderson JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES 386-454-3509 330 SE 7th Ave. MIRACLE TEMPLE CHURCH 386-454-4298 605 SE 1st Place THE MISSION CHURCH OF HIGH SPRINGS Meeting at the Seventh Day Adventist Building 230 NW 1st Ave. 352-870-0247 Pastor Keith Helsel
SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH 386-454-4978 Shiloh Church Rd. Pastor Earl Tuten SHILOH MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH 386-454-3126 1505 NW Main St. SPRING RIDGE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD 386-454-3600 5529 NE 52nd Place Pastor Todd L Wymer SPRINGRIDGE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD 386-454-4400 420 Spring Ave.
THE SUMMIT 352-575-0786 610 NE Santa Fe Blvd Pastor Rick Lawrence thesummitchurch.info ST. BARTHOLOMEW’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 386-454-9812 1st Ave. (next to city hall) Rev. David Kidd SPRING HILL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Located at High Springs exit 79 off I-75 North of Gainesville (on Old Bellamy Rd.) Pastor James Richardson VISION TABERNACLE 352-339-4942 220 N.E. 1st Avenue Pastor Lawrence R. Haley
ALACHUA ALACHUA CHURCH OF CHRIST 386-462-3326 14505 NW 145th Avenue Minister Doug Frazier ANTIOCH BAPTIST CHURCH 386-497-3121 Jordan Road (Ft. White) BAHA’I FAITH 352-870-3097 Turkey Creek CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH 13920 NW Hwy 4141 386-462-2966 Pastor Marty D. Basinger calvarybaptistgainesville.org CHRIST CENTRAL ALACHUA 386-418-8185 14906 Main St. www.ccalachua.com CHURCH OF GOD BY FAITH 386-462-2549 13220 NW 150th Ave.
CRUSADERS FOR CHRIST, INC. 386-462-4811 NW 158th Ave. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF ALACHUA 386-462-1337 14005 NW 146th Avenue Pastor Doug Felton FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH OF ALACHUA 386-462-2443 14805 NW 140th St. Pastor Lamar Albritton FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF ALACHUA 386-462-1549 14623 NW 140th St. Rev. Virginia McDaniel FOREST GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH 386-462-3921 22575 NW 94 Avenue GREATER NEW HOPE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH 386-462-4617 15205 NW 278th Ave. HAGUE BAPTIST CHURCH 6725 NW 126th Ave Gainesville, Fl 32653 Pastor Sam Brown HARE KRISHNA TEMPLE 386-462-2017 17306 NW 112th Blvd. LEGACY BAPTIST CHURCH 352-462-2150 13719 NW 146th St. Pastor John Jernigan LIVING COVENANT CHURCH 386-462-7375 Pastor Troy Rumore NEW OAK GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH 386-462-3390 County Road 1491 Pastor Terry Elixson, Jr. NEW TESTAMENT CHURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST 386-462-4891 1310 NW 155 Place Pastor R. L. Cooper
NORTH PLEASANT GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH 386-462-3317 25330 NW CR 239 Pastor Steve Hutcheson NEW SAINT MARY BAPTIST CHURCH 386-462-7129 13800 NW 158th Ave. PARADISE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH OF ALACHUA 386-462-0162 14889 MLK Blvd. Pastor Rev. James D. Johnson, Sr. SANTA FE BAPTIST CHURCH 386-462-7541 7505 NW CR 236 Pastor Scott Brown MT NEBO UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 386-418-1038 9975 NW 143rd St. Pastor Ricardo George Jr. NEW SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH 386-462-2095 18610 NW CR 237 NEW ST MARY BAPTIST CHURCH 386-462-7129 13800 NW 158th Ave. OLD SHILOH MISSIONARY BAPTIST 386-462-4894 16810 NW CR 239 RIVER OF LIFE ASSEMBLY OF GOD 352-870-7288 14200 NW 148th Place Pastor Greg Evans ST LUKE AME CHURCH 386-462-2732 US Highway 441 S. ST MATHEWS BAPTIST CHURCH 386-462-2205 15712 NW 140 Street Pastor Isaac Miles TEMPLE OF THE UNIVERSE 386-462-7279 15808 NW 90 Street www.tou.org
WESTSIDE CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST 386-418-0649 15535 NW 141st St.
NEWBERRY ABIDING SAVIOR LUTHERAN CHURCH 352-331-4409 9700 West Newberry Rd. BETHEL AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH 352-474-6215 23530 NW 3rd Ave. Pastor Theodora Black BRONSON ROAD CHURCH Located on 337 Between Newberry and Bronson On the County Line 352 486-2898 Pastor Andy Cook CHURCH OF GOD BY FAITH 352-472-2739 610 NW 2nd St. Pastor: Jesse Hampton THE CHURCH AT STEEPLECHASE 352-472-6232 Meeting at Sun Country Sports Center 333 SW 140th Terrace (Jonesville) Pastor Buddy Hurlston FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF NEWBERRY 352-472-2351 25520 W. Newberry Rd. Rev. Jack Andrews GRACE COMMUNITY CHURCH 352-472-9200 22405 W. Newberry Rd. Pastor Ty Keys JONESVILLE BAPTIST CHURCH 352-472-3835 17722 SW 15th Ave. Pastor Corey Cheramie JOURNEY CHURCH 352-281-0701 22405 W. Newberry Rd. Milam Funeral Home Chapel Dr. Michael O’Carroll, Pastor
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CHRISTIAN LIFE FELLOWSHIP 352-472-5433 Pastor Gary Bracewell MT ZURA FULL GOSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH 352-472-4056 225 NW 2nd Ave. Pastor Natron Curtis NEW ST PAUL BAPTIST CHURCH 352-472-3836 215 NW 8TH Ave. Pastor Charles Welch NEWBERRY CHURCH OF CHRIST 352-472-4961 24045 W. Newberry Rd. Minister Batsell Spivy NEWBERRY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 352-472-4005 24845 W. Newberry Rd. Rev. Robert B. Roseberry, Pastor DESTINY COMMUNITY CHURCH 352-472-3284 420 SW 250th Street Pastor Rocky McKinley OAK DALE BAPTIST CHURCH 352-472-2992 Highway 26 and 241 S. PLEASANT PLAIN UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 352-472-1863 1910 NW 166th St. Pastor Theo Jackson ST JOSEPH’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 352-472-2951 16921 W. Newberry Rd. Pastor Richard Pelkey TURNING POINT OF NEWBERRY, INC 5577 NW 290 Street 352-472-7770 Pastor Henry M. Rodgers UNION BAPTIST CHURCH 352-472-3845 6259 SE 75TH Ave Pastor Travis Moody
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>> VET LIFE
Military Support Giving Soldiers a Taste of Home
BY ELLIS AMBURN hen the Military Support Group of Alachua County (MSG) meets monthly at the First United Methodist Church of Alachua, 100 members enjoy a potluck dinner and then grab boxes and fill them with such items as socks, candy, V8 juice, tampons, and maxi pads. The boxes then go to soldiers, many in Afghanistan. “Tampons and maxi pads are used not only as feminine hygiene products, but the guys carry around tampons to temporarily plug bullet holes until they can get men evacuated for medical treatment,” explains the group’s website. “Maxi pads are good for the temporary
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application of pressure/absorbency to wounds.” Receiving a care package from home is also a morale booster. “It meant a lot,” said Marine Lance Corporal Jamie Yakubsin, who served in Iraq. “We didn’t have much over there. Iraq cigarettes weren’t real.” Other items he liked to receive in care packages from the MSG included socks and underwear because “we didn’t get a chance to take a shower.” Nor do laundry. As the MSG web site points out, black or white heavy socks are always needed because they often cannot wash socks. Jamie’s father, Marine Master Sergeant Jim Yakubsin, founded the Alachua support group in 2003 after
having fought in Desert Storm in 1990-1991. “Hey, I’ve been in the Marines 30 years,” he said in a telephone interview, “with three sons in the Corps: one in Iraq, one in Okinawa, one in Afghanistan. I know what they need for support, and that’s when we started sending the care packages. Once it got out that we were supporting the troops, people started showing up at our meetings to pack boxes.” His oldest son, Adam, a sergeant major, is still on active duty. Matt, a corporal, is now an Alachua deputy sheriff. Jamie recalled his experience in Iraq. “I told Dad a lot of guys in my platoon didn’t have families.”
PHOTOS BY ALBERT ISAAC
Once a month, members of the Alachua Military Support Group gather for dinner and to pack boxes to send to the troops. In February, the group honored two of its own, Bob Gasche and Caitlin Mixson, with the Silver Star Banner during their monthly meeting. The awards are the work of Ronna Jackson, a Gold Star Mom and a strong advocate for fallen and wounded veterans.
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These soldiers never got anything at mail call, so the soldiers who received care packages from Alachua started distributing their goodies. “It boosted morale,” Jamie said. “We were all one group sharing.” He gave the names and addresses of lonely soldiers to his father, and soon they were receiving their own packages. “The look on their faces was awesome,” Jamie said. “Getting their own stuff was different.” In 2004 Jamie was wounded in Iraq, “blown up by an IED [explosive device],” his father remembered. “He’s doing fine now, and is a police officer in the High Springs Police Department. Publicity ensued after Jamie was injured. I was promoting the Military Support Group at the same time, and there was a big spurt in growth.” Gainesville’s Pam Krueger, MSG president, said in a telephone interview, “Our support group is made up of parents, grandparents, anyone who wants to help our
servicemen and women.” Meetings are open to the public and everyone is welcome to participate. “Our volunteers are usually persons who have someone overseas or here,” said Krueger, who works at the University of Florida’s Department of Animal Sciences. “We send 60 boxes to troops per month.” From the program’s inception, gifts for the soldiers were selected based on “letters to Jim Yakubsin from servicemen and women who said ‘we can use a little of this and a little of that,’” Krueger said. Hard candy is a popular item because of the dry, hot conditions of the desert. “We don’t send chocolate to Afghanistan [in the summer], because the temperature reaches 103 degrees,” Krueger said. “People buy Girl Scout cookies for donation to us. They love Girl Scout cookies over there.” Gifts come from various sources;
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people contact the group or come to the church to drop things off. “A dentist donates candy he bought from kids,” Krueger said. “Veterans fully support us. We always have fundraisers. The yard sale [held May 18 at Alachua Mini Storage] brought in $1,800.” An annual breakfast at Applebee’s recently raised $1,200. Art Pina’s Rolling Thunder veterans motorcycle run to Washington, D.C., benefits the MSG. Hitchcock’s Market scheduled a Memorial Day parking-lot event for May 25 featuring an ice slide, dunking tank, bounce house, and obstacle course. “We help Hitchcock’s,” Krueger said, “and all the money raised comes to the group.” Bill Rossley, 70, was in charge of 20 MSG volunteers for the Hitchcock affair. He was on his way to a meeting of the Marine Corps League, carrying a tray of brownies and a chocolate cake. “They let me in, though I’m Navy,” he said.
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PHOTO BY ALBERT ISAAC
Alachua Military Support Group Founder Jim Jacobson (left) and Ronna Jackson award Bob Gasche with the Silver Star Service Banner. Gasche was wounded while fighting on the Pacific island of Iwo Jima.
Forthcoming MSG fundraisers include the July 4 fireworks festival at the Hal Brady Alachua Recreation Complex, where tables will be set up to sell umbrellas, patriotic jewelry, and cookbooks.
MSG dinners at First United Methodist Church of Alachua are held at 6:30 p.m. on the first Thursday of each month, with the exception of July 4, when the group will be busy at the fireworks event.
A special feature of many meetings is hearing from recipients of the MSG’s generosity. “We read their cards at meetings saying how much the troops love our care packages.” Krueger said. s
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LIBRARY SCHEDULE Alachua Branch Library .....................14913 NW 140th St. .............................. 386-462-2592 High Springs Branch Library ...........135 NW 1st Ave........................................ 386-454-2512 Newberry Branch Library .................110 South Seaboard Dr. ..........................352-472-1135 For further information on scheduled events visit www.acld.lib.fl.us ALL BRANCHES ARE CLOSED JULY 4 and SEPTEMBER 2 of character and plot while it builds team spirit with a final Battle between teams from other library branches.
ALACHUA PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN Preschool Storytime Thursdays - 11am Join us for stories, songs and dance.
Teen End of the Summer Bash Tues., Aug. 13 - 4pm Celebrate the end of summer with Alachua Branch Library.
Lego Club Wednesdays - 3pm Preteens meet to create challenging structures.
PROGRAMS FOR ADULTS
Yu-Gi-Oh Club Mondays, June to August 12 - 4pm Friends meet to challenge each other over Yu-Gi-Oh.
Computer Class Wednesdays, June 11am Learn basic computer skills from using a mouse and keyboard to e-mail and word processing. Class seating is limited.
Battle of the Books Tuesdays - 4pm This competitive summer reading event challenges teens to read and recall details
Alachua Needlers Thursdays, June to July - 2pm Do you have a needlecraft that you love? Would you like
PROGRAMS FOR TEENS
to meet and socialize with others who also share your love of needlecrafts? If so, bring your knitting, crochet, embroidery, cross-stitch, or any other craft that involves a needle! Poet and Writers Among Us Last Wednesdays of the Month - 4pm Poets and writers meet to inspire and be inspired. Groundbreaking Reads Last Thursdays of the Month - 4pm Our Adult Summer Reading Program will focus on books that have been “groundbreaking” in our lives, have made a difference. Bring to share, even swap, for our roundtable discussion.
VIVA Florida 500 presents author J.T. Glisson Sun., Sept. 9 - 2pm As a young boy, J.T. Glisson was a neighbor to Florida’s famous author Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. Come hear about his adventures, his two books (“The Creek” and “Guardian Angel 911”) and his memories of growing up near Rawlings in Cross Creek. Pilates Classes Wednesdays - 6pm Pilates focuses on building strength without bulk. Improve flexibility and agility, and prevent injuries. Zumba Classes Mondays - 6pm Mix of body-sculpting movements with dance steps derived from Latin music.
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PROGRAMS FOR ALL AGES Summer Reading Program Thursdays, June to Aug. 15 - 2pm Come enjoy a fun learning experience with programs ranging from an Australianthemed show to a magic show. Alachua Fit Club Tuesdays - 6pm Exercise to the Beach Body Training Video with Coach Ramos.
HIGH SPRINGS
to Aug. 13 - 3:30pm Our Summer Theme “Dig into Reading” includes learning about dinosaurs, fossils, plants and animals, treasure and history. Fun 4th of July Crafts! Tues., July 2 - 3:30pm Let’s get patriotic! Come dressed in your red, white and blue and make some cool crafts for the hot holiday. Magic Mike Tues., July 16 - 3:30pm Marvel at amazing tricks as magician Mike Stillwell displays his masterful sleightof-hand magic.
PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
PROGRAMS FOR TEENS
Mary’s Marvelous Storytime Tuesdays - 11am Books, songs, puppets and dancing.
End of the Summer Party Wed., Aug. 14 - 12pm Celebrate the Battle of the Books team and the end of the teen summer reading program “Beneath the Surface”. Enjoy snacks, games and prizes. Funded by the High Springs Friends of the Library.
Afternoon at the Movies Every Second and Fourth Thurs. - 3pm School’s out, so come on down to the library to checkout a book and watch a new movie on our big screen. Summer Reading Program Every Second and Last Tuesday from June 11
PROGRAMS FOR ADULTS Computer Basics Fri., June 28 - 11am Learn how to use a computer in a relaxed
War battles fought in Florida. Presented by reenactors, Hal Adams and Second Florida Company C, Columbia Rifles Hardy’s Brigade 2nd Battalion. This unit fought at Olustee, Florida during the civil war.
setting at your own pace. Topics covered may include how to use a mouse, word processing, email, and the Internet. Registration required. Register online at www.aclib.us or by calling 386-454-2515. VIVA Florida 500 Mary Evans Sat., June 22 - 1pm Award-winning writer Mary Anna Evans will discuss her Faye Longchamp series, which includes “Artifacts” (2003), “Relics” (2005), “Effigies” (2006), “Findings” (2008), “Floodgates” (2009), “Strangers” (2010), and “Plunder” (2012). This mystery series featuring Florida history, archaeology, and intrigue continues with Evans’ newest release, “Rituals” (2013).
Visualizing the Yearling Thurs., Aug. 22 6:30pm Celebrate the 75th anniversary of Marjorie Kinnan Rawling’s book The Yearling with Anne Pierce, a board member of the Friends of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Farm and Society. VIVA Florida 500 Author J.T. Glisson Sun., Sept. 15 - 2pm As a young boy, J.T. Glisson was a neighbor to Florida’s famous author Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. Come hear about his adventures, his two books (“The Creek” and “Guardian Angel 911”) and his memories of growing up near Rawlings in Cross Creek.
eBooks from your Library Fri., July 12, Aug. 9, Sept. 13 - 11am Thurs., July 18, Aug. 15, Sept. 19 - 6:30pm Bring your eReader device and learn how to get eBooks from your library. Civil War Living History Thurs., July 11 - 6:30pm Learn about Civil
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Crafter’s Circle Wednesdays Through Aug. 14 - 1pm If you embroider, quilt, knit or enjoy doing any other “non-messy” craft, this is the group for you. The Rug Bunch First and Third Wednesdays - 3pm Crochet a rag rug with a group of fellow enthusiasts.
PROGRAMS FOR ALL AGES Didgeridoo Down Under Tues., June 18 - 2pm Didgeridoo Down Under is a high-energy, Australia-themed show that combines music, culture, puppetry, comedy, character building, environmentalism and audience participation. It’s interactive, educational and super fun ... perfect for kids and families!
NEWBERRY PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN Preschool Storytime Wednesdays - 11am Stories, songs, and activities for the preschool set. Summer Reading Program Thursdays, June 20 to July 25 - 2pm Come enjoy a fun learning experience with programs ranging from an Australianthemed show to a magic show. Dig These Crafts Tuesdays Through July 16 - 2pm Summer is more fun when you dig these cool crafts.
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PROGRAMS FOR TEENS Midweek Movie Madness Wednesdays - 2pm Watch some of the latest movies as well as the best of the oldest. Newberry Teen Book Club Third Thursdays 4pm Read and discuss the latest and most popular teen books. I <3 Zombies and Vampires Tues., July 23 - 6pm Andre Frattino, paranormal graphic novelist of The Reaper of St. George Street and Lost Souls of Savannah (as well as long time paranormal investigator) will speak on what makes ghosts, vampires and zombies so hot, and share some of his own experiences, from ghosts to skunkapes! Senior Panther Den Tuesdays Starting Aug. 20 - 4:15pm Play sports and dance with Wii games, tune your groove with karaoke, or create a wacky craft. Newberry Teen Advisory Group Thurs., Aug. 8 - 4pm Join the fun and plan teen events at the library while earning volunteer hours. Teen Life Skills Thurs., Aug. 1 - 4pm To make it in this World we need good life skills. Learn problem solving skills, making decisions, finding and keeping a job, money management, transportation,
health and hygiene, housekeeping, communication skills, and stress management skills. Teen Craft Club Thurs., July 11 - 4pm Create your own masterpieces with these fun crafts just for teens!
PROGRAMS FOR ADULTS How to use the library’s website and databases Thurs., June 20 - 11am Come learn about downloadable media, the Library databases, and how to reserve a book online. Basic computer skills required. Tempting Reads Book Club Fourth Wednesdays 6pm Read popular and recently published books including books recommended by participants. Author Visit Mary Anna Evans Wed., June 26 5:30pm Award-winning writer Mary Anna Evans will discuss her Faye Longchamp series, which includes “Artifacts” (2003), “Relics” (2005), “Effigies” (2006), “Findings” (2008), “Floodgates” (2009), “Strangers” (2010), and “Plunder” (2012). This mystery series featuring Florida history, archaeology, and intrigue continues with Evans’ newest release, “Rituals” (2013). Newberry Walking Club Thursdays - 11am Walk with friends to help boost brain
power, control weight and increase cardiovascular fitness and muscular strength. Facebook 101 Fri., July 26 and Aug. 16 - 11am This class will cover how to set up a Facebook account. An active email account and understanding of how to use the keyboard and mouse are required for this class. Please call the Newberry Branch Library (352) 472-1135 to sign up. Digging Up Your Family History (Basic Genealogy) Sun., Aug. 4 - 2pm Learn the tips and tricks to genealogy research using the Library’s databases and online resources.
PROGRAMS FOR ALL AGES Newberry Needlecrafters Tuesdays - 12pm If you crochet, knit, embroider, needlepoint, quilt, or enjoy doing any other “non-messy” craft, this is the group for you. VIVA Florida 500 NASA! A History of Space Wed., Aug. 2 - 6pm Learn about the Mars rovers, the International Space Station, Curiosity and more. Hear about the latest launches from Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral. The focus of NASA expert Peter Chitko’s talk with be on the Apollo Moon Program of which Florida was an indispensable part.
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ADVERTISER INDEX 4400 NW 36th Avenue • Gainesville, FL 32606 352-372-5468 352-373-9178 fax AUTOMOTIVE City Boys Tire & Brake ...............................120 Gatorland Kubota ........................................151 Jim Doglas Sales & Service .....................149 L&S Auto Trim ..............................................146 Maaco Collision Repair & Painting ........145 Newberry Auto Repair ............................... 82 RPM Automotive .......................................... 83 Solutions S.P. Window Tinting ................ 48 Sun City Auto Sales................................... 140 Tuffy Tire & Auto Service .................. 2 (NB)
REAL ESTATE Forrester Realty .............................................72 Horizon Realty .............................................. 127 Miller Real Estate .......................................... 35 PRO Realty ..................................................... 46 The Village Senior Living .......................... 65
FINANCIAL / LAW Allstate Insurance, Hugh Cain .................141 A+ Tax & Bookkeeping Center ................ 43 Edward Jones - Ed Potts........................... 64 Ference Insurance Agency ..................... 108 Gateway Bank................................................ 55 ProActive Tax & Accounting .................... 23 Sunshine State Insurance ..........................119 SunState Federal Credit Union ...................................26, 42, 103 Three Rivers Insurance ............................... 64 White & Crouch, P.A. ................................... 56
FITNESS and BEAUTY All Creations Salon ...................................... 48 Audrey’s Flair for Hair ................................. 16 Charisma for Hair .........................................44 Emerge .............................................................. 41 Hair & Nail Depot.......................................... 97 Jodie’s Beauty & Barber ............................ 46 Jonesville Traditional Barber ................. 108 Nails-N-Spa..................................................... 117 Salon Eye Candy ..........................................141 Warehouse Gyms, Inc. ................................ 48
PETS and VETS Animal Health Center ............................... 109 Bed & Biscuit Inn ........................................ 144 Dancin’ Dogs Boarding .............................. 83 Dream Dogz ................................................... 117 EARS Sanctuary ........................................... 98 Flying Fish Aquatics.................................... 33 Pamper Your Pet ..........................................119 Springhill Equine .......................................... 39 Susie’s Pet Sitting & Grooming ............... 117 West End Animal Hospital ........................ 98
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EDUCATION & CHILD CARE Alachua Learning Center .........................156 Forest Grove Christian Academy ..............5 Gainesville Country Day School ............. 63 Millhopper Montessori School ................. 89
MISCELLANEOUS Cash for Cars ................................................ 122 Dollar General .................................................57 Holy Trinity Episcopal Church .................. 61
SERVICE MEDICAL / HEALTH 1st Choice Immediate Care ..................... 144 Affordable Dentures ..................................123 Alachua Dental .............................................154 Caretenders ...................................................136 City Drugs Pharmacy.................................. 47 Clear Sound Audiology.............................. 34 Douglas Adel, DDS .......................................73 Gainesville Dermatology ................... 69, 116 Hunter Family Dentistry .......................... 108 Massage for Injury Rehab ......................... 45 Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery ................ 26 Samant Dental Group ............................... 105 Town & Country Eye Care ......................... 83 UF & Shands Family Medicine .................. 17
RETAIL / RECREATION Alachua Farm & Lumber ............................57 Alachua Pawn & Jewelry ......................... 150 Amelia’s Things ............................................. 48 Bambi’s Organic Country Farm .............. 47 Beacher’s Lodge......................................... 130 Bits & Spurs Tack........................................... 41 Blue Springs ..................................................134 City of Newberry Kid’s Summer Camp ...41 The Coffee Clutch Café.............................. 47 Coin & Jewelry Gallery ................................ 15 Cootie Coo Creations ..................................73 Dance Alive! ...................................................131 Family Jewels & Purse Strings .............. 108 Gator Fine Wine & Spirits ........................155 High Springs Farmers Market .................. 46 Hippodrome State Theatre......................133 Jane’s Tower Garden ........................... 48, 119 Jewelry Designs by Donna ....................... 46 Klaus Fine Jewelry ........................................ 13 Lady Bug Florist ..........................................107 Lentz House of Time ................................. 130 Liquor & Wine Shoppe ..............................155 Monsters & Munchkins................................ 97 Oaks Pawn .........................................................6 Paddywhack................................................... 88 Pawn Pro ..........................................................74 Rum 138 ...........................................................90 The Sleep Center .............................................7 Stephen Foster Cultural Center .............135 Tennis Unlimited ........................................... 48 ThomKat Ceramics ...................................... 45 Thumbs Up Riding School .........................73 Tioga Town Center..........................................8 Valerie’s Loft Consignment ......................119
Alachua County Waste Watchers ........... 91 A&K Outdoor Services ............................... 97 A-1 Pest Control ................................. 108, 120 Alpha Bytes Computers ............................ 98 Chimney Sweeps of America..................120 Computer Repair .......................................... 46 COX Business................................................. 54 COX Communications ................................ 95 Creekside Outdoor Improvements 49, 64 DirecTV ............................................................ 117 Gainesville Regional Airport ...................134 Goodson Electric ........................................... 21 Gonzalez Site Prep .....................................120 Growers Fertilizer ........................................123 Jack’s Small Engine Repair...................... 122 Johnson & Son Tree Service .................... 83 Lotus Studios Photography ...................... 18 Mac Johnson Roofing ................................. 83 Oliver & Dahlman ......................................... 46 Quality Cleaners ..........................................147 Southern Land & Lawn................................75 Stitch In Time Embroidery ........................ 83 William Weseman Construction ............. 87
HOME IMPROVEMENT AHA Water.........................................................4 Al Mincey Site Prep ..................................... 98 Bloominghouse Nursery ...........................107 Cook’s Portable Buildings ........................149 Copeland Quality Construction .................2 Floor Store ...................................................... 82 H2Oasis Custom Pool & Spa ....................80 Mini Maxi Warehouse ...................................57 Overhead Door ............................................. 99 Pools & More .....................................................3 Red Barn Home Center .............................135 United Rent-All.............................................. 43 Whitfield Window & Door......................... 70
RESTAURANT Brown’s Country Buffet ............................124 Dave’s NY Deli ..............................................125 El Toro...............................................................141 Gator Tales Sports Bar ..............................125 Mason’s Tavern ............................................. 127 Newberry Backyard BBQ .........................124 Northwest Grille ...........................................125 Roundabout Bar & Grill .............................124 Saboré .............................................................126 The Sandbar Seafood & Steak ...............126 Southern Soul ...............................................126 TCBY ................................................................. 45
PHOTO COURTESY OF ROBERT KNIGHT
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The Creature from the Black Lagoon, from the 1954 movie filmed at Wakulla Springs State Park, made an appearance at the Springs Rally held at the Capitol in 2011. The event attracted about 400 people. Read about the things local organizations, such as the Howard T. Odum Florida Springs Institute, are doing to restore and protect our springs.
www.VisitOurTowns.com
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“Change your smile... Change your life!” ™
• Aesthetic Reconstruction • Family & Cosmetic Dentistry • Laser Dentistry • Implant Restoration • Smile Makeovers • Metal-Free Fillings
• Crowns & Bridges • Zoom! ™ Whitening • Veneers and More!
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alachua dental 386.418.3636 www.AlachuaDentalCenter.com 154 | Summer 2013
The only thing better than a summer breeze...
the
Gator Spirits & Fine Wines
Liquor & Wine Shoppe at Jonesville Mon-Thurs 9:00am - 9:00pm Fri & Sat 9:00am - 10:00pm Sunday: Noon - 6:00pm
CVS
CR 241
Y BE.R R N E WR D
o Kangaro
14451 Newberry Rd. Jonesville Turn at CVS in Jonesville and come straight to us.
352-332-3308
5701 SW 75th St. Gainesville
I-7 5 ER WAD TORO
The or Liqu WineSh&oppe
Mon-Thurs 10:00am - 9:00pm Fri & Sat 10:00am - 10:00pm Sunday: Noon - 6:00pm
ine Gator F Spirits Wine &
A RC H
AD
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Conveniently located in the Tower Square shopping area.
352-335-3994
Like us on facebook for tastings and events! Like us on facebook for tastings and events! www.VisitOurTowns.com Summer 2013 | 155
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You Have a Choice for your child’s education.
Alachua Learning Center Elementary and Middle School located just North of the town of Alachua on State Road 235, serves students from all parts of Alachua and neighboring counties.
Charter Schools are part of the Florida Alternative System of Public School Choice and charge no tuition. While having the benefits of a “small-school” environment the Alachua Learning Center provides a challenging and fulfilling academic, cultural and physical educational program for students from kindergarten through eighth grade.
The Alachua Learning Center has consistently been rated an “A” school by the State of Florida. Our varied physical education curriculum includes on-campus rock climbing and subscribes to the “President’s Fitness Program”. The Alachua Learning Center offers inspiring classes on a variety of subjects: Science, Social Studies, Language Arts, Math, P.E. Sports, Rock Climbing, Drama, Music, Clay Sculpting, Computer Graphics, individual Student Book Publishing (writing, design, illustrating), Drawing, Painting, Crafts, Community Service Display Projects, and exciting Field Trips.
Alachua Learning Center 386-418-2080
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alachualearningcenter.com