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Gardening series begins Jan. 8

For gardners – or potential gardeners – who have issues with physical, time or space limitations, help is on the way.


The Oconee Master Gardeners Association and Putnam County Cooperative Extension are teaming up for a four-part series on “Gardening with Limitations,” with second-Wednesday-of-the-month sessions from January through April. 

“We will introduce you to the latest tools and methods which will help you continue your love for gardening,” Shawn Davis, who volunteers with both organizations, said in a recent email. 

“All presentations are free and open to the public. All products demonstrated will be given away as door prizes.”

“Introduction and Garden Helpers” is scheduled for Jan. 8. The Feb. 12 session will cover tools; irrigation and chemical applications will be the topics March 12. The final session, set for April 9, will address plantings and container gardening.

Davis said Putnam County Extension Coordinator Keith Fielder’s annual needs assessment “showed that our community wanted additional programming information and ideas on how to make gardening and landscaping activities easier.  

“Since a large segment of our population is retirement age, this made great sense,” Davis said. 

“Additionally, with people choosing smaller gardens and limited landscapes, this brought forth request for raised beds more efficient irrigation systems.” 

Davis said the “excellent working relationship” between the two organizations provided “the perfect venue” for the program.” 

OMGA provides monthly educational programs for gardners.

BetweenFielder’s needs assessment and feedback Davis has gotten from local master gardeners, an “A-Z outline of a program we felt would address the community needs” was developed, Davis said.

Similar programs across the state have covered individual topics, “but none have addressed the topics as a whole,” he added.

Unique aspects of the program will be the chance for individuals to get Fielder’s “one-on-one instruction and advice” and the chance to see gardening products up close – and, perhaps, take them home.

“The companies participating in the presentation have provided us with unique gardening items that will address one or all of the limitations we will be presenting,” Davis explained. 

“We will be demonstrating tools, gardening helpers, automation, process changes and maintenance methodology from around the world.”

The items “will be donated to attendees by random drawing” at the end of each session, Davis said.

All sessions will be from 10:30 a.m.to 1 p.m. at The Hut community center, 400A W. Marion St. in downtown Eatonton.

The programs are free to participants, Davis emphasized, but pre-registration by calling the county Extension Office at 706-485-4151 “would be appreciated to ensure adequate attendee packets.” 

For more details, contact Davis by email to mosshappyness@gmail.com.

After a century, Michigan Central train station’s last stop is limbo

Exactly 100 years ago today, the first train pulled into Detroit’s Michigan Central Station — the tallest train station in the world at the time and a proud, towering symbol of the city’s progress.

When travelers stepped off the train, they entered a building covered in fancy marble and hand-carved wood, soaring ceilings, intricate wrought-iron railings, gargantuan columns and famous Guastavino tile arches.

Now, 25 years after the last train left, the still-standing station may be more recognizable than it was in its heyday. But old age has been brutal and downright cruel. Today, the station’s fame is not of luxury, but of notoriety.

Time line: Key dates in the life of Michigan Central Station

Related: Michigan Central Station … By the numbers

Michigan Central Station is unquestionably one of the world’s pre-eminent examples of urban ruin and spoiled grandeur.

The station exists in a purgatory-like state as its owner, billionaire Manuel (Matty) Moroun, resists calls to demolish it, but has no immediate plans to reopen it. Moroun has taken steps to prevent any further structural decay in case an opportunity for redevelopment presents itself.

“Everyone seems to have an affinity for this place, but not a lot of people know much more than the fact that it’s this giant building and has been in a couple movies,” said Ashton Parsons of the Michigan Central Station Preservation Society. “We’re trying to raise awareness … to help people understand the building and see where it came from and what it could be again.”

Michigan Central consists of an ornate, three-story depot and an 18-story office tower and stands just south of Michigan Avenue, about a mile west of downtown. The station itself cost $2.5 million, in 1913 dollars, to build, and was designed by the same architectural firms responsible for New York’s Grand Central Terminal.

The station’s formal opening had been set for Jan. 4, 1914, but a fire at the railroad’s old depot downtown the day after Christmas rushed its replacement into service early. A mere three hours after the blaze began, the first train left the new station for Saginaw and Bay City at 5:20 p.m. Dec. 26, 1913. An hour later, the first train arrived from Chicago.

The station contained its own restaurants, barbershop, newsstand and other amenities, and as many as 200 trains once departed from there each day in the years before interstate highways and commercial air travel. The centerpiece of the building was the waiting room, which with its marble floors and soaring 54½-foot ceilings echoed with the sound of a bustling city on the move.

“To a small child it was a very, very big space, probably the biggest space I’d ever been in,” recalled William Worden, Detroit’s retired director of historic designation, who visited the station as a boy in the 1950s. “Those stations were meant to elicit a reaction. Something a whole lot less expensive would have done the job. But there was a desire to make travel a very special experience that’s probably missing now.”

Vandals and thieves

For 75 years, the depot shipped Detroiters off to war, brought them home, took them on vacation and sent them off to visit Grandma. It was Detroit’s Ellis Island, where many generations of Detroiters first stepped foot into the city for factory jobs. It was filled with the sounds of hellos and goodbyes, panting locomotives and screeching wheeled steel.

Photo gallery: Current state of Michigan Central Station

Photo gallery: Michigan Central Station in 1982

“Having known it in its heyday, it’s pretty depressing to see it now,” Worden said.

That’s because for the last 25 years, it has been home to nothing but vandals, scrappers and thrill-seekers.

The station’s fortunes declined with those of the railroads. The grand waiting room was eventually closed, and the station was taken over by Amtrak in 1971. The grandiose landmark continued to limp along until Jan. 5, 1988, when the last train left the station. Amtrak now operates out of a small depot on Woodward in New Center.

A Downriver real estate investor, Mark Longton Jr., bought the building for an undisclosed sum in 1989 and, with his pistol and German shepherd Whitey, vigilantly guarded the property from trespassers. Longton envisioned filling the cavernous space with a casino, hotel, upscale restaurants and even a nightclub, but lost the property to foreclosure in 1991 — five years before voters approved casino gambling in the city.

Photo gallery: Postcards of Michigan Central Station

Multimedia: 360 degree view inside main hall of Michigan Central Station

The abandoned station quickly fell prey to vandals and thieves, and its dearest features were yanked out, including the chandeliers, brass fixtures, decorative balcony railings, elevator ornaments and the great clock once mounted over the ticket windows. Urban explorers poured in to venture through the massive interior.

“It was senseless — smashing out windows, smashing marble paneling, that sort of thing,” said Lucas McGrail, a local architect and architectural historian who visited the station many times.

The building lost nearly all of its windows, its copper roofing was stripped and the stone facade was splashed with graffiti and smashed with sledgehammers. Water ate away much of the fine interior plaster work, and until recently, the tunnels between the depot and train platforms were flooded.

“The biggest disappointment is the ticket counter,” Parsons said. “It used to be gorgeous and just as ornate as the exterior. Now it’s toast. A lot of the molding was made of plaster and has all melted away.”

Yet engineers have deemed the station’s underlying structure to be intact.

“It’s really a tough building,” said Garnet Cousins, a metro Detroit architect who has studied the building since the 1970s and starred in a 1987 “Sunday Times” news segment. “The bones, as they say, are still good.”

Grand ideas, little action

The station has been owned by Moroun, a trucking mogul and owner of the Ambassador Bridge, since 1995.

Many ideas have been floated on what to do with the depot, including a 2001 proposal by Moroun to make the station an international trade and customs center and a 2003 plan by then-Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick for the building to become the new Detroit police headquarters.

Dan Austin: Michigan Central Station’s future has neither a will or a way

Tom Zoellner: Imagine what Michigan Central Station could be with high-speed rail

None of the ideas panned out. The sticking point is always the estimated price for such a massive redevelopment — $100 million to $300 million.

City building inspectors recommended as early as 1994 that the building be leveled. The Detroit City Council passed a resolution in 2009 requesting demolition at Moroun’s expense. Then-Mayor Ken Cockrel Jr. sought federal stimulus dollars for the task, but the plan faced many challenges — including the station’s 1975 listing on the National Register of Historic Places, a designation that makes it harder to use federal money for demolition.

Moroun, whose Detroit International Bridge company declined to comment or provide access to the train station for this report, is said to be open to redeveloping the property if the Detroit real estate market recovers to the point where a renovation project is feasible.

The market currently won’t support the high rents that would be required to recoup the renovation costs. Even in the building’s glory years, there were not enough tenants to completely fill the office tower.

Moroun’s representatives did provide a report showing progress made over the past four years in cleaning up the station, making some repairs and securing it from trespassers. The goal of the spruce-up work is to protect what’s left of the station for the day when redevelopment is possible.

Work crews have removed asbestos from several floors, added landscaping, restored electric service and installed a sump-pump system. The property is surrounded by a chain-link fence topped with razor wire and is now under video surveillance.

Five windows were installed in the office tower this year, test samples for the planned installation of more than 1,000 more that is set to begin next year. A new service elevator is in the works.

The station is decorated for the holidays this year with 22 giant snowflake lights fixed to the exterior.

“The station’s still not gone yet,” Cousins said. “It’s like a flame ready to go, but there’s still a few hot coals there that could fire up again.”

The Lawn, the Enduring Feature of the Romantic English Garden, Also Stars on …

/PRNewswire/ — When “Downton Abbey” returns for its fourth season Sunday, January 5, millions of American property owners will see the opening shot of the lawn as a reminder of what their own lawn could look like. The lawn, that green expanse of turf that frames the castle, represents the essence of the English garden.

(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20131226/PH38324-a) (Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20131226/PH38324-b)  

Today American homeowners love their lawn. They spent almost $40 billion last year on lawncare.

As people mow, fertilize, aerate, and—for some obsessives in the thick of facing the summer’s dry heat—spray paint their yards, they may wonder how the lawn took center stage on the American home landscape.

A new, illustrated book, now in its second printing, by author Thomas Mickey, America’s Romance with the English Garden, digs to the root of the story of how the American lawn originated in the nineteenth century.

“We love the lawn because the garden industry sold it to us,” says Mickey, a master gardener and professor emeritus of communication studies at Bridgewater State University, who researched the book at Washington’s Smithsonian Institution.

Mickey suggests that Americans were “seduced” by the idea of the romantic English garden style of landscape (noted for its trim, green lawn) thanks to the marketing efforts of nineteenth-century seed companies and nurseries.

In their richly printed catalogs—which had become possible thanks to advances in printing—and with mass mailing—which became possible due to cheap paper and railroad transportation—these businesses sold not only plants and seeds, but an image, a landscaping style.  

“Though the company owners knew the French, Italian, Spanish, and Dutch gardens, the English garden, with its signature lawn, became the brand to sell seeds and plants in the nineteenth century,” says Mickey.

Thanks to the efforts of the seed companies and nurseries, the lawn would become one of the most noted features of the American landscape, appearing across the growing country from Maine to California.

Garden blogger Jane Berger says, “Mickey has done a tremendous amount of research to tell us the story of the spreading popularity of English garden style in America during the 19th century. Nurserymen and seed merchants sold the English style to America in their publications. It’s an engaging story.”

Ohio University Press published America’s Romance with the English Garden. The book features more than forty illustrations and has a retail list price of $26.95. It is available through Amazon and other booksellers and also online. Check out the Ohio University Press website about the book for images, reviews, interviews, and more at: http://www.ohioswallow.com/book/America’s+Romance+with+the+English+Garden and Mickey’s blog “American Gardening, with a love for the English Garden” at: http://americangardening.net

Media Contact: Ohio University Press Jeff Kallet Phone: (740) 593-1158 Email

Read more news from Thomas Mickey.

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Christmas Angels: Memory Gardens ladies

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KENNEBUNK — With the help of these Christmas Angels, Kennebunk’s downtown and Lower Village have the finishing touch that they need to pop.

“I like a lot of color,” said Joanna Sylvester of Memory Gardens, who with Julie Dunlap works through the spring, summer and fall to landscape and line the downtown with colorful, vibrant plantings throughout the seasons. “Even if they’re not flower people, they respond to color and I think it’s done the job. We’re just lucky to be a part of it.”

This is Memory Gardens’ second season beautifying the downtown. The company started as a retail greenhouse and transformed into landscaping, planting, pruning and otherwise beautifying local businesses and residences, Sylvester said. She has been doing the landscaping for Kennebunk Savings for the past 12 years, Sylvester said, before taking on Main Street, under a long-term contract with the town.

The ladies also fill the dories in Lower Village and plant flowers along the Mathew J. Lanigan Bridge. This fall, the women planted the flowers along the bridge three times after they were vandalized. An anonymous donor paid for the flowers.

“For me, it’s a dream job. A lot of people probably think I’m crazy,” Sylvester said.

In the spring, summer and fall, Sylvester and Dunlap can be found on Main Street from the all-too-early morning to late afternoon, rain or shine, working to keep the finishing touches of the downtown perfect. In Lower Village, they work between 4 and 6 a.m. to beat the traffic.

Sylvester said passerbys often honk and wave in support of their work.

“One woman said I used to walk down on the beach, now I walk down Main Street,” Sylvester said. “I consider it an honor. It makes me want to work even harder. It inspires you.”

Linda Johnson of the Kennebunk Downtown Committee said, “all we get is compliments” about the landscaping work.

“The timing worked well with the revitalization of the downtown,” she said. “It was a no-brainer adding Joanna and Julie to the mix of the downtown. They make it look so easy. It’s a seamless process and we don’t even have any snags.”

Looking at the revitalization of the downtown, Johnson said the landscaping and plants add the finishing touch and that she “couldn’t be more proud.”

“Downtown is everything to me, and this just adds a whole new level,” she said.

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B&D Rockeries Releases New 10-Step Guide to Landscaping with Rock Gardens

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Rock gardens are an easy and creative way to add texture to any yard scene.

Rock gardens have increased in popularity as a creative landscaping tool due to the character and texture they contribute to a yard scene.

Seattle, WA (PRWEB) December 26, 2013

Rock gardens have increased in popularity as a creative landscaping tool due to the character and texture they contribute to a yard scene. Installation is simple, materials are readily available, and maintenance is minimal. BD Rockeries recently published a 10-step guide to landscaping with rock gardens that is providing tips to homeowners and gardeners. To view the article, click here.

Rock gardens are a clever and cost-effective option that will enhance a monotonous or mundane yard setting. These simple, picturesque rock gardens are composed of various sized rocks artistically arranged on a plot of ground and accented by plants and small flowers.

The BD Rockeries article emphasizes how installing a rock garden is conveniently simple. The best place to build one is on a patch of ground on a slight slope, either natural or built using small retaining walls. The foundation below the rocks is composed of various mineral layers in order to provide enough water drainage, and topsoil is selected specifically for the greenery and flowers that will be planted among the rocks.

The rock garden should look natural in order to compliment the landscape scene. Typically, it is best to select rocks from the yard itself. BD Rockeries suggests that the rocks be arranged in an ordinary manner; avoid symmetrical formations that look unnatural. After the rocks are placed, let the garden sit for a couple of weeks, giving the formation time to settle into the soil before the flowers and greenery are planted.

Rock gardens are a versatile landscaping tool that can be customized to fit the needs of any yard scene. Each one is unique and can contribute aesthetically to any landscape by adding personality a lonesome flower garden cannot offer on its own.

About BD Rockeries:

BD Rockeries has been serving in the Snohomish and King county areas for over 35 years. Owner, Neil Eneix, has a capable and skilled knowledge of rock retaining wall development that will help you accomplish any rock garden design that you need. Whether you’re looking for rocks or blocks, Neil has been helping homeowners carefully plot out their landscaping projects for years.

http://www.bdrockeries.com/

1249 NE 145th St

Seattle, WA 98125

206-362-4022

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Getting Rid Of Fungi In Vegetable Gardens

Fungi is a common problem every gardener faces, so remember you are not alone! When fungi is everywhere and there are problems surrounding it, you may want to know how to get rid of it! No plant is actually immune to fungi, may it be ornamental plants or roses or shrubs, so you need to take care.

If you find fungus on your plants, then you need not worry! If you find fungus on a plant, it may not necessarily spread to other plants, since fungi is host specific.

Getting Rid Of Fungi In Vegetable Gardens

To know if the plants in your vegetable garden are affected by fungi, you need to look for certain things. Look for gray or white powdery spots and if you find them, you really need to look for ways to get rid of it.

YOU MIGHT WANT TO READ: Steps To Grow Garlic In Your Garden

If the fungal infection is in its advanced stage, then you may find the leaves turning yellow. Gardening tips are something you should follow if you want to get things right in your garden. Fungi vegetable gardens may cause some distress in people who love plants.

So, it is imperative that you take care of your plants in a better way. With the skyrocketing prices of vegetables, a vegetable garden at home is essential. Here are a few tips to get rid of fungi in vegetable gardens.

Insecticides
If you want to get rid of vegetable gardens then spray some insecticides. Fungi vegetable gardens may be a threat to the freshness of vegetables, so it is important to spray some insecticides. Mix a tablespoon of liquid soap and a gallon of water and spray it on your plants. This is one of the gardening tips you can follow.

Garlic magic
Garlic is something that comes with numerous specialties’ and it is helpful even when it comes to gardening. Using garlic is one of the gardening tips. Use garlic bulbs to get rid of fungi. Blend garlic bulbs and water. Drain out the pulp and spray it. Fungi vegetable gardens can be best treated with this.

Baking soda
Baking soda can definitely do its part to fungi vegetable gardens. All you need for this is a gallon of water, dishwash liquid and baking soda. This is one of the easiest gardening tips you can always follow. You should use this treatment on fungi vegetable gardens at least once in a week.

The great combo
There is a great combo to treat fungi vegetable gardens and it is the garlic and pepper combo. Garlic, liquid soap, a gallon of water and pepper are the ingredients you need for this treatment. Blend all these ingredients together and spray it on the fungi vegetable gardens.

Sulfur can help
Sulfur products may help to get rid of fungus. However, take care that you spray this even before the symptoms actually appear. Also note that the temperature should not be above 90F when you spray sulfur. Too much of sulfur can damage the plant. Hence spray it carefully.

Oil treatment
Fungus can also be treated by spraying oils. Spray it on the plant regularly. Neem oil or jojoba oil can help you protect your plants from fungus. Oils should not be applied at higher temperatures. Consult the fungicide label for instructions.

If you are a person who loves gardening and plants, then you would be really worried about your plants being unhealthy and affected by fungi. Your vegetable garden is precious! Plants have life too, so give them all your love and care.

To find the heart of Rome, stray off the typical tourist path


To find the heart of Rome, stray off the typical tourist path

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Category: Life

Written by Bill Ward / Star Tribune

ROME—Stand within the Colosseum’s massive bowl, and you can practically hear the roar of the ancient crowd. But to capture the sounds of today’s Rome, it’s best to get away from the flurry of tourists and settle into a quaint trattoria like Da Tonino, where everyone within its rustic walls chatters away in Italian.

No sign outside announces the restaurant; my wife and I dined there courtesy of a local’s tip. And that cloaked quality was precisely its appeal.

Hidden gems—ignored by the guidebooks, well off the tourist path—await in nearly every nook of this wondrous city. Of course, visitors should crane their necks at the Vatican, sip espresso at an open-air bar in Piazza Navona and climb the Spanish Steps.

But in a place with a history so long and rich that it is dubbed “the Eternal City,” only one approach seems plausible: Peel away the layers, savoring each one, to get a deeper sense of the place.

In our journey to do just that, we hoofed everywhere, from an underappreciated villa with some of the world’s foremost fountains to a neighborhood bakery with marzipan confections—and places beyond.

Our feet are still recuperating, but our souls are soaked with indelible memories.

 

Cul de sac

Cork dorks should head posthaste to Cul de Sac (Piazza di Pasquino 73; www.enotecaculdesac.com), to sample scores of wines they can’t get elsewhere (start with a glass of the cesanese, although it’s impossible to order poorly here). But this locals-laden enoteca has way more to offer: a locavore menu with eight kinds of pâté, sundry salumi and cheese and homemade pasta, friendly service (a waiter actually asked an indecisive customer how much she wanted to spend on wine) and a fabulous vibe inside and out.

 

Tucked into a prototypically quaint but preternaturally quiet piazza a block west of the Piazza Navona, Cul de Sac’s outdoor tables are filled by 7 pm, which is still happy hour for Romans. The booths inside rest under shelves of bottles reaching to the 12-foot-high ceiling, with the nets in between to keep any errant bottles from conking customers on the head.

 

Jewish ghetto

At a couple of entrances to the Jewish Ghetto, you must pass through turnstiles (no coins needed) that we dubbed “pedestrian roundabouts.” Sadly, the Jews who were forced to live in this flood plain near the Tiber River in the 16th century (after two millenniums of being a free community), had to come in and out through locked gates in massive walls.

The walls came down in the late 19th century, and a stately, imposing synagogue (Lungotevere Dè Cenci) went up on the neighborhood’s edge. The old ghetto now has a few Jewish merchants and restaurants serving Roman Jewish specialties. Don’t miss the fried artichokes at Giggetto (Vie del Portico d’Ottavia 21; www.giggettoalportico.it), and walk off your meal on tree-lined riverside Longotevere de Cenci.

Villa d’este

Villa d’Este’s array of eye-popping frescoes are almost worth the 20-mile trek from Rome to Tivoli by themselves. The grandiose fountains in the “back yard” more than cinch the deal.

Installed by one Cardinal Ippolito II d’Este, the son of Lucrezia Borgia, these 25 acres of waterworks (Piazza Trento, Tivoli; www.villadestetivoli.info) use ancient Roman hydraulic-engineering principles and range from the simple to the massive, from an endless row of smaller jet streams to a multifaceted “nymphaeum.” These spigots aside, the gardens include lovely landscaping and some gravity-defying trees. Similar landscapes are depicted inside, spread through a suite of art-filled rooms that, were they housed in Rome, would be anything but “hidden.”

 

Dagnino

Taking a hungry kid to Pasticceria Dagnino (Via V. Emanuele Orlando 75; www.pasticceriadagnino.com) would easily make the short list of Worst Ideas Ever. Popping in as an even slightly ravenous adult isn’t such a grand notion, either.

The almost unending assortment of mouthwatering sweets at this Sicilian-style bakery includes ice cream and cake, cookies and cannoli. But what marks it as Sicilian is a boundless batch of that island’s cassata cakes and marzipan crafted into brightly colored, exquisitely detailed fruits. Drool alert! You can skip all that eye candy by sitting and ordering at a table in the tony gallery near the Termini station, but why would you? Bonus points for the best cappuccino by far we had during our two weeks in Italy.

‘Monumental cemetery’

 

Most of us have found ourselves in a museum gawking at some oddity and thinking (or saying) “Is this art? Really?” That’s certainly the rote response at the catacombs in the Church of the Immaculate Conception (Via Vittorio Veneto 27; www.cappucciniviaveneto.it), where thousands of bones have been fashioned into light fixtures, hourglasses, arches and even flowers in rooms with names such as “The Crypt of Pelvises.” The Catholic Church’s Capucin sect, which has a history of an often-cultish relationship with the dead, crafted these “works of art” with the remains of 4,000 of their flock. Appreciating, or at least understanding, this attitude is enhanced mightily by a fabulous museum above the crypt, leading to a plaque that advises “What you are now, we used to be. What we are now, you shall be.” OK, then.


In Photo: The Villa d’Este in Tivoli, Italy, is listed as a Unesco World Heritage Site and is near Rome.


 

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Bradenton, Florida: Ain’t Nothing Like the Real Thing

December 24, 2013 | 6:19 pm

Posted By Richard Bangs


Oh, the places they stole.

Four times this year I’ve been to the canals of Venice, without ever setting foot in Italy. In Vegas, Macau, Qatar and where I live, Venice, California, there are facsimiles of the famous waterways, only cleaner, shinier, and without the creases of deep history.

Theme parks, made-made-islands, cruise ships, old quarter facades, entire cities fashioned to appear as someplace else. It’s hard, these days, to find a land that has escaped the allure of reincarnation. Many years ago, after making first descents of a number of wild rivers around the world, I was invited by Busch Gardens in Tampa, Florida to join a media event, the launch of their Congo River Rapids Ride. Some P.R. visionary had concocted a trope in which George Plimpton, the famous “participatory journalist,” and I would make “the first descent” of the Congo River in Florida, with hundreds of media reporting. It was such a circus of counterfeit adventure that I felt I needed a shower after being splashed by the chlorinated Congo.

It turned out Mr. Plimpton felt the same way, and as we left the Gardens he turned to give some advice. “If you want to experience the real thing, head over to Bradenton.” The Bradenton Area, on Florida’s Gulf Coast, is the enemy of the artificial. It includes the town of Bradenton, Palmetto right across the Manatee River, Ellenton, the barrier island of Anna Maria, and a portion of Longboat Key, all part of Manatee County. Somehow this area survived the waves of development that washed away most of Old Florida, and seems to still float in a time when people didn’t just live, but flourished, before air conditioning, theme parks, fantasy leagues, Gangnam Style, and Twitter.

Finally, a decade after George Plimpton’s passing, I decide to explore this place that missed the boat to Make-Believe. There are no hotels themed as St. Mark’s Square, Egyptian pyramids or pirate ships, but there is an impressive range of retreats, from century-old BBs to beachside resorts to luxury inns, private residences and downtown boutiques.

I find my way to the pet-friendly Courtyard Marriott, right on the Riverwalk, a throwback to the tow-paths that pulled barges up the Manatee River, delivering goods and gadgets to King Wiggins’ Store. It’s a sinuous two-mile stroll with the rolling river on one side, and a bright assortment of activities on the other, including porch-like swings, volleyball courts, splash fountains, botanical gardens, picnic lawns, and a Team Pain skateboard park, strategically spilled in front of a hospital. At the western edge of the walk, past several manatee statues, beyond a plaque proclaiming Bradenton “The land of your heart’s desire,”

I turn inland a few steps to the South Florida Museum, largest natural and cultural history museum on Florida’s Gulf Coast. It’s a coffer for erstwhile eras, and features a creature that seems from a gentler time: Snooty, oldest known manatee in the world. Snooty was born when the first monkey astronaut was launched into space; The Ed Sullivan Show debuted; and The Cleveland Indians defeated the Boston Braves to win the World Series. It all seems like yesterday here, except perhaps when comparing the economics. The average cost of a new house at Snooty’s nativity: $7,700.00; a new car: $1,250.00; a gallon of gas: 16 cents; a movie ticket: 60 Cents. But, Snooty hasn’t changed, except for a few added pounds, and a better pool. He has the same Wilford Brimley snout, the same rounded body and flat tail, and the same ageless appeal. He’s beautiful, but not in any classic definition of the word. It’s hard to believe sailors, even after months at sea, once mistook manatees for mermaids.

Here, in his 60,000 gallon pool, begirds the celebrated lumpy charmer, closest living relative to the elephant, and official mascot of Manatee County. At 65, the boy seems to be enjoying the retired life, shamelessly sashaying about, waiting for lunch. He eats about 80 pounds of Romaine lettuce a day, sustaining his 1,000-pound body. His diet and spa-time seem to have done him well. The average manatee lives only to about 13, due to mostly man-made threats, such as boat propellers, loss of habitat from coastal development, poaching, errant fish hooks and crab trap lines, and cold weather, all the more common with global climate change. Snooty shares his tank with two fresh-faces, Longo, rescued off of Longboat Key, and Cheeno, rescued in the Caloosahatchee River, both suffering from “cold stress syndrome,” a condition akin to frostbite in humans.

The Museum serves as a second-stage rehabilitation facility, and provides temporary home for the new manatees while they heal. So far, Snooty has fostered 26 manatees that needed special care until able to be released back into the wild. The manatee is an endangered species–less than 5000 survive– and looking into Snooty’s whispered, trusting eyes it is impossible to not become a rooter for the mammal’s rights to well-being. After tarrying with Snooty for a spell I wander around the rest of the museum, eventually stepping downstairs, where I meet Jeff Rodgers, Director of Education. He is delighted to show me a showcase honoring The Culture of Shell. There are replicas of middens, trash piles of shells left by early Native Americans, and, he says, “You can learn a lot about somebody by looking through his trash.”

Poor soil notwithstanding, the original Indians discovered the abundance of shells allowed them to create technologies that gave identity, and provided everything they needed. With the first settlements, the men went out in dug-outs seeking elusive big-game– sharks, manatees, large fish–while the women and children were in the shallows harvesting oysters and clams, conferring the community a reliable protein source. “Once you’ve reached that level where subsistence is not an issue, and you move into surplus, then you start to see art, and ideas expressed through aesthetics.” Manatee Habitat Just OffshoreThe shells that make up the Gulf Coast are responsible for everything here today, Jeff says.

It started with a culture that defined itself by extracting resources from the sea. The shells provided food in an infertile area, and emerging from that state of plenty, the culture evolved to exploit shells in fashioning weapons, making utensils, creating art, and even spirit houses. And that arc of the shell continues today. Who can resist plucking a shiny shell from the sea-swept shore? The shell exhibit inspires me to collect some on my own, so under a coral pink sky the morning next I drive the bridge to Anna Maria Island, and take my good time shuffling up along the fine-grained beaches, an eight-mile string of bone-white sand that might be called the anti-Miami Beach….no neon, high-rises or showboats here. The highest thing is a palm tree, with an osprey on top. I begin on Longboat Key at the Mar Vista Restaurant, across from Whitney Beach, under a spreading buttonwood mangrove. I surrender to mullet and stone crabs, tide-to-table fare, pulled in just minutes ago.

Then I cross the span to Anna Maria, and dig my toes in the soft sugar at Coquina Beach. The sand seems to get even better, though, as I make my way north, along Bradenton Beach, to Manatee Beach, Holmes, Anna Maria, and ending at the secluded and somewhat secret Bean Point at the very northern tip, named for George Bean, first permanent resident of Anna Maria Island. Castled in the kelp are jut-eyed little crabs, a world of inch-high devils. The wet sand here is so sumptuous it’s like Julia Child’s butter.

Meandering back down the coast a ways I stop for dinner at the Sandbar Restaurant, smack on the beach. Ed Chiles, the owner, stops by for a drink and a nosh, and we watch as an almost nuclear sunset shatters the sky. “Like my exterior design?” Chiles asks to an audience too transfixed to answer.

I have a couple of sons, one 19 and one 6, so the next day I decide to check out what might be available for families, as am now thinking of returning with the brood. TreeUmphThe first find is a place called TreeUmph!, an aerial sandbox restricted for kids between the ages of 7 and 70. Sprawled along 14 wooded acres, it features wobbly bridges, bungee swings, and a 650-foot zip line. At first blush it seems the height of absurdity, but then, after a couple of Tarzan yells, it seems the triumph of spirit over gravity.

Next I head over to a giant igloo off I-75. It’s the 113,600-square-foot Ellenton Ice and Sports Complex, the place where Olympic hopefuls practice, and where anyone can escape the 75 degree weather outside and cool down with a glide around the rink. I reach for the analgesic heat rub just watching the elite figure skaters camel spin, axle, lutz and swizzle in front of my envious eyes.Olympic Hopefuls

Then I motor over to the Anderson Race Park in Palmetto for a few spins in a go-kart around the mile-long track. Ever since I broke my arm in an unauthorized go-kart race in high school I’ve stayed away from the open-decked vehicles, but the sport and the conveyances have evolved so they are now safe enough for school.

That’s who I end up giving a run for the money… twenty-five teens from the Manatee School for the Arts taking a course on “the Physics of Motorsports,” the only such class of its kind in the country. I’m a wimp compared to these guys, and even though I manage to stay inside my kart, the GoPro attached to my bumper goes flying off during a sharp turn. Nonetheless, I take the trophy for coming in last place.

I make a quick stop at a place where anyone, even Tom Hanks, can enjoy the pirates, McKechnie Field, the stadium where the Pittsburgh Pirates do their spring training. Then, with a couple of local saltwater cowboys, disciples of the net, I charter a T-craft and cruise to the west of Anna Maria Island. Just offshore we float over several manatees, vivid with prop scars, and then past several dolphins, who seem to flipper us off, before reaching deeper waters, where I promptly seal the deal by pulling in a holy mackerel, a huge king. I want to be very clear on this, since no one asked. I did not break the mackerel fishing record with this outing.

I finish the afternoon with Shaun Dutshyver, a true Florida cracker, seventh-generation native and owner of the Surferbus, a retired school bus refurbished with woodie paneling. It’s parked like a food truck alongside Manatee Avenue, packed with surfboards, kayaks, and a tumble of candy-colored paddles. Surfer Bus

Shaun takes me paddle-boarding into the 487-acre Robinson Preserve, a trip through the leafy grace of mangrove tunnels into the blueways of the Perico Bayou. There are birds galore, 100 species or so, from black-bellied plovers and roseate spoonbills to wood storks, great blue herons, snowy egrets and briefs of pelicans.

And there are some 75 species of fish, including mullet, several of which make flying leaps attempting to hitchhike on my board. It’s one of those places where I pole ahead of myself in perpetual expectation of miracles, and they seem to come true. The next day is turn-back-the clock day; not the daylight savings crank, but the century savings adjustment. Under manatee-shaped clouds (after a few days here everything seems to shape shift into manatees) I head over to Manatee Village Historical Park, and meet Cathy Slusser, Director of Historical Resource. I pull out my wallet at the entrance, and she chides, “Put that away. Admission is free here.”

Entering the tree-lined field is like falling into a vortex. A few paces and I’m in the middle of a collection of 19th century buildings, including the 1860 Manatee County Courthouse, the 1887 Union Congregation Church, a one-room school house from 1908, the King Wiggins General Store, established in 1903, the Apple Store of its day, with the first telephone in the region, and a mill where cane syrup was made, (a horse hitched to the end of the sweep walked in circles grinding the stalks.) Cathy, who wrote an historical novel set in pioneer days Manatee County, “From a Heavenly Land: Eliza’s Story,” tells me one of her favorite tales of the era, when one Ellen Clark, a mid-19th century homesteader, lost Charles, one of her workers. He wanted to be transferred to his family home in New York for proper burial, so she stuffed his body in a whiskey barrel, nailed the lid shut, and put him on the first ship north. “He was the first Manatee County man to be pickled,” she shares. It’s all worth the price of admission, even at ten times the fee.

For lunch, I take the wayback machine to the Cortez Fishing Village on the blue-green waters of Sarasota Bay, oldest surviving fishing village in Florida, dating from at least 1880. It has survived hurricanes, wars, depressions, the thrusts of fashion, and government regulations. Cortez isn’t a living museum – it is the real fishin’ thing. That’s the hook. No strip malls, chains, car lots or condos here. The place has eddied out of the future. The old white homes are elevated off the ground (pre-glycol air conditioning), have front steps, screened-in porches, and barnacled boats parked out front. Sunset There is no doubt the most authentic eatery in this most authentic of villages is the Star Fish Company, a dockside joint that dates to 1923. Mullet, grouper, stone crab and shrimp are cleaved, gutted, grilled, fried, blackened, sautéed, and served in plain paper boxes, along with cornmeal hush puppies, coleslaw and French fries.

Yet, despite the pedigree, there’s something fishy here, and the owners would appreciate the bad pun… signs groan all around the picnic tables, such as: “Why did the mermaid stop dating the clam? He was too shell fish.” “Seas the Day!” “Time flies when you’re having rum.” “Sometimes I wake up Crabby—but mostly I let her sleep in.” “Arrive a stranger; leave even stranger.” And my favorite, “Give a man to fish, he will eat for a day. Teach a man to fish, he will sit on a boat and drink all day.” Every dish here comes with a side order of puns.

The next day is my Green Day. Turns out Bradenton is not just authentically unspoiled, but it is honestly green. I begin on the north end of Anna Maria Island, along Pine Avenue which bills itself as “The Greenest Little Main Street in America.”

I begin a stroll down the sand sidewalk (no toxic concrete here), and make a “resistance is futile” turn into Anna Maria Donuts, a designer bakery with hand-dipped gluten-glutted doughnuts so decadently good the place can’t be eco-friendly. But it is. It’s housed in a cluster of old, reborn buildings that together make up the “Historic Green Village,” a Net Zero Energy project with Platinum LED certification. There are rainwater cisterns that flush toilets; storm water that irrigates native landscaping; an air conditioning system that cools with underground water; solar-heated hot water; free recharging stations for electric vehicles; a fully air-conditioned jail with no doors, windows or roof; a vegan taco shop; and AMI Outfitters, “where men shop for gear; and women shop for men.” For the dénouement of the trip I decanter east, to the far reaches of Manatee County, to the greenest vinery in America, Bunker Hill Vineyard and Winery. Wine in Florida? An eco-vineyard? Who knew?

I was born in a Quonset hut in New Haven, Connecticut…they were popular housing units through and after WWII, but have since joined the architectural heap of history. So I’m always delighted when I come across one that’s in use. And here, at the end of a dirt driveway, is one of the iconic rounded steel huts, the portal into Bunker Hill. Outside the door are piles of empty wine bottles…looks like someone had quite the party last night. Inside, though, are even more empty bottles, neatly stacked on maple wood shelves.

Sitting at a long tasting table are owners Larry and Lenora Woodham, refugees from the corporate life, now living their green dream. Bunker Hill WineryLenora has to run to the vet to pick up the cat, so Larry offers to show me around. First, though, he explains the empty bottles. “We’ve never bought a bottle for our wine.” All the wine the Woodhams make goes into recycled bottles, all contributed by past customers, some of whom drive long distances to make the deposits. Out back is an intern scraping the labels off of old bottles.

But the Woodham sustainable practices go well beyond the recycled bottles. The vineyard drip irrigation system is solar-powered, only real oak corks seal the bottles (and used corks are sent to be recycled into cork tiles,) and all Bunker Hill bottles are sealed with genuine hot wax. All the wines are handcrafted and unfiltered, never blended, fermented with the skin of the grape. “The best wines of this planet are unfiltered,” gleams Larry.

Larry says most vineyard owners today filter their wine, and by doing so, cut a year from the fermentation process, allowing quicker vine-to-shelf delivery, helping the bottom line. Larry believes filters compromise the natural flavor, and often add undesirable additives, such as dried blood powder, gelatin, fish bladders and sugar. So, he and Lenora choose to add the extra year to make their wine as it was done in Europe centuries ago.

I follow Larry’s very small carbon footprints around the grounds. Radiating from a seep spring are vines of Florida Muscadine, growing as far as the eye can see. The grapes are handpicked, and brought to the pressing room, where they are hand crushed. The residue juice is taken into the adjacent climate-controlled fermentation room, where it sits for a couple weeks. Under the fermenting containers are large glass ampoules where the liquid is hand-siphoned, and eventually transferred into the 55-degree Cave, where the wine ages at least a year before being bottled, then hand labeled. Back at the tasting table Larry pours some samples of the fresh fruit wines that come through his scullery, from banana to key lime to cherry tomato and black and green tea. Ecotourism never tasted so good. What an authentic man, Larry is, a thoroughbred Floridian, and an archetypal personality for Manatee County. After all, it turns out, his great great Grandfather William Iredell Turner founded Bradenton. I step away, at a pace more unhurried than when I arrived.

Slow still gets you there.##  

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Marana Heritage River Park to proceed with construction

Members of the Marana Parks and Recreation Department gave a presentation to the council on Dec. 17 regarding the development and construction of the Marana Heritage River Park. 


“It’s going to be a park that reflects a much broader sense of where our community came from,” said Town Manager Gilbert Davidson. 

Marana Heritage River Park is west of the Interstate 10 on Tangerine Farms Loop Road and south of Gladden Farms.

This year, the council adopted a budget authorization for the 2014 fiscal year, which will allow for the Parks and Recreation department to begin on the first modules. Right now, the department will address three of the five focus areas that are outlined in the town’s strategic plan.

One of the focus areas is Heritage Farm, which will be built to celebrate the culture of farming in Marana. The farm currently has a sewer connection, community garden and demonstration garden. The gardens are an area for residents to learn about Marana’s farm heritage through planting, working and eating the locally grown food. The next step for construction at Heritage Farm is the building of restrooms, parking, lighting and access areas, which is projected to cost around $278,000 and if approved would be completed in 2015. Looking to the future, the department would want commercial farming, retail and a farmer’s market in the area.

The second focus area is Heritage Park where a heritage themed splash pad, Ramada, parking, lighting and access area would be built. The goal of the Heritage Park is to create an area where residents can play and be together. The estimated cost for construction is around $747,000 and if approved would be completed in spring 2015. The park would be open during warm weather months.

The last focus area is Heritage Ranch, which is meant to bring different regional areas to the community. The ranch will have two arenas, each 150 by 300 feet that will hold different sporting events. The area will include lights, speakers, concessions stands, restrooms, a maintenance facility, stalls for the horse, parking, landscaping and the use of a utility line. The estimated cost is $7.9 million and if approved would open in summer 2015.

The budget requested for this next year is an estimated $8.9 million. Right now money would primarily come from the town’s savings, but in the future, other opportunities such as commercial vendors, ticket sales and more would generate revenue, said Davidson.

If all the aforementioned is completed and approved, the Parks and Recreation department hopes to construct a plaza, amphitheater and the Producers Cotton Oil Building. 

Parks and Recreation will meet with the council in a January study session where they will give more definitive cost estimates for park construction.

Also in the meeting, the town council voted 4-3 to approve a railroad quiet zone for all current private and public railroad crossings in Marana. The quiet zone will reduce the horn noise when a train approaches a railroad crossing. If there is no vehicle, people, wildlife or anything that would cause a collision the train will not be required to sound its horn. The quiet zone and cautionary signs for residents will be implemented around February 2014.

Green thumbs up!

SPACES was born out of a creative and social agenda. Fresh out of college and taking their baby steps in the corporate world, Shainika, Uma, Varsha and Swathi, formerly IT professionals, decided to follow their passion for gardening. Their desire and urge to make, perhaps a small, but significant difference to the city’s green cover brought forth SPACES, a gardening venture that is innovative, affordable and one might even say, revolutionary.

How did SPACES come to be?

Uma: Well, all of us have a common interest in gardening. We wanted to do something different with a social objective. Shainika and I wanted to learn more about gardening and would attend seminars and workshops, and take part in competitions. With a background in IT, I wanted to bring a technological aspect to gardening.

Swathi: I was actually bored with my job. It gets a little dull when all you’re doing is sitting in front of a system and working in shifts. I was introduced to Shainika by my uncle and we realised that both of us loved nature and gardening and wanted to do something along that line.

Shainika: We knew we had to cater to a crowd that wanted gardens at affordable rates. We gave away pamphlets, put up stalls and did some heavy promotion through Facebook and seminars. Once all of us were on board, it just happened.

How is SPACES different from other such businesses?

Shainika: Everyone can have a garden. Our aim is to provide our services, not to rich corporates, but to the middle class people, who want to create and maintain a space without spending too much, and keeps them in touch with nature. We do consultancy and give horticultural advice like what properties certain plants in their garden have, what plants go where etc. We give the customers a design idea, followed by a detailed description about what can be done. We have also worked with schools to develop herbal gardens and get children involved.

Uma: For us, more than a business, SPACES is an idea that inculcates the passion for gardening and plants and not simply about extravagant landscaping. We have learned a lot about organic farming and don’t encourage the use of pesticides. It’s all about making a greener space. It is evident that Chennai is losing its green cover rapidly. We only want to stress on the fact that people need to coexist with nature.

SPACES is an all-women team. Was that a deliberate decision?

Uma: No, not at all. We just happened to find one another at the right time and simply connect the dots. Anyone can join the team!

It is almost a year since you started out. What would you say was the highlight of SPACES so far?

Uma: Definitely the kitchen gardens! It is one of the most demanded services and we have done a couple of them. Every household now wants to have a kitchen garden and grow their own vegetables. These require a lot of maintenance and it is really rewarding to see people wanting to grow it on their own.

Tell us about the innovative techniques you use, namely hydroponics and aquaponics.

Shainika: Aquaponics and hydroponics is basically growing plants with just water. There is no soil involved. It is an ecosystem by itself. For people who already have fish tanks at home, it is easier to set up a plant grow tank above it. Water is circulated from the fish tank to the grow tank through a pump.

Fish waste gets accumulated in the grow tank and supplies the nutrients to the plants while the fish tank need not be cleaned at regular intervals. It is slightly expensive and not fully commercial as of now.

Uma: These are established concepts and Varsha is the one who is constantly experimenting and designing these techniques.

What are your long-term plans?

Uma: I don’t know if you would call it a long-term plan, but we want to encourage citizens to grow indigenous variety of plants. These plants are dying out as people try to grow exotic plants which may not survive Chennai’s weather. We have a lot of ideas in the pipeline. We want to be more than just a landscaping business.

Shainika: We are currently in the process of expanding. We have tie-ups with nurseries and are thinking of opening a retail outlet sometime soon.

Swathi: We haven’t thought that far ahead. But we intend to stick to it as long as possible.

What advice or tips would you give amateur gardening enthusiasts?

Just go ahead and do it!

Website: www.gardeningredefined.com

Facebook page: www.facebook.com/Spaces.Gardening

Blog: www.spacesgardeningredefined.wordpress.com/