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How to breed plants, and other home and garden tips

Wish you could find a disease- resistant rose in just the right shade of pink?

Make one.

Joseph Tychonievich leads readers through the process of breeding new plant varieties in “Plant Breeding for the Home Gardener: How to Create Unique Vegetables Flowers.”

Tychonievich, an avid plant breeder and a garden center nursery manager, encourages his readers to try developing breeds that are suited to their climates and their needs, not the needs of a commercial breeder. He instructs them on cross pollination and selecting out the best offspring, teaches advanced breeding techniques and a little genetics, and offers instructions for specific plants.

“Plant Breeding for the Home Gardener” is published by Timber Press and sells for $19.95 in paperback.

· Organic lawn-care system delivered to doorstep: The makers of Safer lawn and garden products are making it easier for do-it-yourselfers to treat their lawns organically.

The company is marketing a four-step organic lawn-care program that’s shipped free to the user. The system involves three applications of a slow-release fertilizer and one application of a weed preventer.

The fertilizer, Ringer Lawn Restore, is made of ingredients including poultry feather meal, bone meal and soybean meal but no manure. It contains no phosphorus, which is often found in excess in soil and can run off into waterways.

The weed preventer, Concern Weed Prevention Plus, is based on corn gluten meal. A soil thermometer

is included so users can apply the preventer at the correct soil temperature.

The system costs $250 at www.sendmesafer.com, but it’s on sale this spring and summer for $199.99.

· Repairing a DVD: Q: I have a DVD that jumps and stops at a certain point. It appears to have some scratches. How can I get rid of them?

A: Try cleaning the DVD first. Netflix says you can use Windex and a paper towel, although I’d probably use a soft cloth. Wipe in straight lines from the center to the outer edge, not in a circular motion.

If the DVD still gives you trouble, try working a little toothpaste or wax into the scratches, or use a liquid made for repairing CDs and DVDs, the technology website Digital Trends recommends. Use several thin layers, and let the disc dry a little while. Then buff it lightly, again working in straight lines from the center to the edge.

Pasadena Showcase House: A Tale Of Design, Landscape Transformation

Posted Friday, April 26, 2013-11:59 am

By Laura Coleman

For San Gabriel Valley residents looking for a leisurely way to spend an afternoon, the Pasadena Showcase House for the Arts, which opened last Sunday, offers a particularly inspirational journey for design afficionados. This year’s Showcase House – a repeat from 2000 when it had a white plaster facade – runs until May 19 and takes place in an architecturally ambiguous two-story brick Monterey Colonial in Arcadia that was built in 1941 for the Barker Brothers Furniture family.

Nearly 30,000 design, architecture and garden aficionados are expected at the Showcase House over the next month, which raises money to fund music programs. In preparation for the public unveiling, The Courier toured this quintessential California-style residence which showcases the skill of local designers and landscapers who were tasked with transforming the house and grounds at their expenses.

FAMILY TIME —Thoughtful details abound throughout the home, such as this custom-made table in the Family Room that can be made taller.

The Enchanted Entry: Created by landscape design firm Pacific Outdoor Living to evoke grandeur and tranquility, the entry garden uses the existing sycamore and oak trees to frame the space, adding paving stones, a babbling brook and plantings that include lavender, iceberg roses, sculpted dwarf bushes, ferns and succulents. A meandering stream heralds the peaceful retreat inside.

Garden Designers to Teach ‘Create a Sustainable Oasis’ at Arboretum

Local gardening ninjas will be sharing their skills on sustainable gardening Saturday.

At an LA County Arboretum class titled, “Create a Sustainable Oasis” designers Leigh Adams and John Lyons of Altadena will “describe the development of a thriving organic garden blending fruit trees, native plants and storm water, a garden rich in pollinators, delicious fruit and vegetables and lush flowering mounds,” the Arboretum shared.

Among their creative endeavors, Adams and Lyons collaborated on a water harvesting garden design in the hills of Altadena.

Lyons is one of the Arboretums’ most popular speakers and Adams created a 960 foot “DreamSnake” in the Australian section of the Arboretum using glazed tiles in mosaic patterns, the Arboretum noted.

Here’s full event information:

Create a Sustainable Oasis

Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden

301 North Baldwin Avenue, Arcadia 

Saturday, April 27 

9:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. 

Palm Room and the Permaculture Garden 

$25 Arboretum member  

$30 non-member (includes Arboretum admission)

Pre-registration is preferred.  Call the Class Registration Line at 626.821.4623 or you can pay at the door.

Find out more about Lyons at his website here: www.thewovengarden.com  

Find out more about Adams at her website here: www.laglassart.com

Are you interested in this event or in sustainable gardening? Share your thoughts below.

The Exquisite and the Abject: The ‘Second Life’ of Lisa Adams

2013-04-26-lisaadamstheprincipalofcompetitiveexclusion_595.jpg
The Principal of Competitive Exclusion, 2012, 60″ x 48″, Oil on panel, Courtesy Lisa Adams CB1 Gallery

“Second Life,” is the title of Lisa Adams’ show of new work at CB1 Gallery. The ambiguity between the show’s title and the imagery in the paintings is no coincidence. Second Life is actually the name of an online virtual world, where users, aka avatars or Residents, interact with each other in different social settings. In other words, Second Life is the personal fantasy world you build, where you include and exclude whatever you desire. Adams’ “Second Life,” is it’s own kind of virtual world. Adams has a voracious appetite for images and ideas, and she satiates this hunger with an agglomeration of film viewing, imagery perusal online, top watched video on Youtube, treks to the LA River and Angeles National Forest and taking snapshots. Adams is as easily fascinated by Werner Herzog’s Lessons of Darkness as Jon Rafman’s “9-Eyes.” She admits to spending hours online researching, where a single thread of an idea leads to another and then another. She is constantly on the hunt for images that represent her definition of beauty, an intriguing combination of the exquisite and the abject.

I got a clear idea of Adams’ notion of beauty as we walked towards the coffee shop in downtown Los Angeles, where we would continue our discussion of her work. As we talked, a guy passed us by covered in chains and tattoos. Adams quickly pointed him out and said, “Don’t you love that?” On another block we saw a long line of small tents that the homeless were sleeping in. Adams talked about how many people are fearful when they are in this part of town but that it energizes her. She has lived in downtown LA on and off for a total of 15 years and told me that every city she’s lived in has a neighborhood that is comprised of this dense urban living, which she prefers. This is another of numerous contradictions in Adams’ life and work, because many of her paintings contain renderings of delicate plant life. Perhaps it is because Adams’ knows this incongruity exists in each of us.

Adams told me:

I think everybody is more or less like me, meaning that they are comprised of a mosaic of different ideas and backgrounds. I just think the difference is that most people don’t embrace it because it’s too complex and too confusing. It’s easier to identify with one basic way of being, one basic set of ideas, with of course some variation a few degrees off center. It’s like when I used to paint abstractly everybody I knew identified exclusively with being an abstractionist and I did not. And they would all go on to continue to do abstraction with the exception of one. When I started changing none of them could understand why I would do such a thing.

2013-04-26-lisaadamstherealitybreakdown_595.jpg
The Reality Breakdown, 2013, 48″ x 60″, Oil and spray paint on panel, Courtesy Lisa Adams CB1 Gallery

There has been a lot of discussion about the real world collision of how Adams’ external vision was impeded by the impairment of her physical vision. In August of last year, Adams was required to have emergency surgery to repair a detached and torn retina in her right eye. What could be more terrifying to a visual artist than to have her sight threatened? Much has been made of the intense drive that would come about after such an event, but the truth is, Adams has had the impetus to make art for as long as she can remember. It is the desire to experience and explore her own interior landscaping that has impassioned her since she could hold a crayon. As she explained it to me, her internal investigations are the places in which she prefers to live and the recreation of them in painting is akin to complex problem solving. Adams is more than a little like an architect who imagines, drafts and then fabricates.

Unlike most recent art grads, after Adams received her MFA from Claremont Graduate University, she did not immediately apply for teaching positions. Instead she went straight into a full time studio practice, which included four years in New York, where she made great headway in carving out a personal practice and style. After much success, which included gallery and museum shows in and around LA, a Brody award and a Fulbright Scholarship, Adams made a tough decision. To continue to be personally rewarded by her work, she needed to make a drastic change in her artistic explorations. In a move akin to Alice Neel — who ignored the current trends of her time, like Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art, she continued her particular style of portraiture — Adams decided to move from abstract work to recognizable imagery and the surreal. Because Adams is so driven to satisfy her own standards and goals, trends and movements have never been considerations in her work.

Adams’ describes the internal pull that drove her to change her work so drastically:

I thought to myself, what do I feel is missing from my authentic interests? It was my true love of Surrealism since I was a child and what did that mean to me as an adult? The word “contemplative” came to mind and so I thought I would delve into my mind and emotions in a way that were more direct and also explore the world of representation which I had never done before. So I started the LONG (didn’t know it would be that long) journey of going to the “other side.” It took a good ten years to really start to find a voice/vision in this other world and to my surprise I was subconsciously bringing with me moves from the abstract work and using them along with recognizable imagery. It was really my internal world I wanted to focus on and as a result it’s made me much more internal in real life, with a deeper need for privacy and seclusion. My art practice has always instructed my real life for better or worse, not the other way around.

2013-04-26-lisaadamsalmostaforest_595.jpg
Almost A Forest, 2012, 40″ x 48″, Oil on panel, Image Courtesy Lisa Adams CB1 Gallery

Adams’ work exists in a crack. Her work cannot be classified as one particular style because she incorporates abstract elements with recognizable ones, a pop sensibility with graffiti spray paint and a hint of abject expressionism. On top of that, there is a subtly implied askew narrative:

It’s a weird space to be in between abstraction and representation but I like it. For me it’s like being fluent in two languages and I have always admired that kind of flexibility. Being bilingual gives you an insight into each culture more fully.

Narrative is something I share with film and maybe that is why I take such inspiration from film. “Story-telling” is NOT a bad word in film, and in fact there really is no other basis to film then story telling. I mean what are you going to make, an abstract film? Yes of course such films have been made by artists, but they are not really part of film’s history. From what I can tell a filmmaker is always looking for a good story.

Adams’ The Principal of Competitive Exclusion, is the perfect example of her many internal worlds meeting physical manifestation. Here we are faced with a torn construct, leaving an aperture that leads us into total darkness. The pink molded form is part barrier and part broken body. It’s top half torn off, bends onto another plane and forces you into a chasm that is surrounded by a wall with a fragmented vision, like looking through a prism. The chartreuse green is an amped up grid of color that is both a screaming green light to go or a call to nature. The entire form is so off kilter that it’s dizzying, like the way you would feel climbing a narrow lopsided staircase. The magnetic pull and the contorting push, beg you to enter an unknown dimension that is akin to a black hole. This twilight zone schism is derived from the foam face piece Adams used in her required face down positioning, post surgery. It isn’t so much that she wants to make a personal statement about the trauma of her malady as much as this once useful piece of medical equipment has now become a part of her visual circumference and is incorporated with the same kind of fascination that a vine, school house, rose or birch tree might be.

Adams lives in an intimate interior and it is the communication of this private real estate, the place where she discovers her personal zeitgeist, which she flushes out in her paintings.

Loading Slideshow

  • The Mire of Epiphany

    emThe Mire of Epiphany/em, 2013
    48″ x 60″
    Oil on panel
    Courtesy Lisa Adams and CB1 Gallery

  • Cynosure

    emCynosure/em, 2012
    24″ x 20″
    Oil on panel
    Courtesy Lisa Adams and CB1 Gallery

  • A Recondite World

    emA Recondite World/em, 2012
    40″ x 48″
    Oil and spray paint on panel
    Courtesy Lisa Adams and CB1 Gallery

  • Vale of Life

    emVale of Life/em, 2013
    32″ x 24″
    Oil on panel
    Courtesy Lisa Adams and CB1 Gallery

  • Almost A Forest

    emAlmost A Forest/em, 2012
    40″ x 48″
    Oil on panel
    Courtesy Lisa Adams and CB1 Gallery

  • And The World Shall Remain Silent

    emAnd The World Shall Remain Silent/em, 2012
    36″ x 30″
    Oil on panel
    Courtesy Lisa Adams and CB1 Gallery

  • Sandy Says So

    emSandy Says So/em, 2012
    48″ x 60″
    Oil and spray paint on panel
    Courtesy Lisa Adams and CB1 Gallery

  • Spawned A Race Of Titans

    emSpawned A Race Of Titans/em, 2012
    24″ x 30″
    Oil on panel
    Courtesy Lisa Adams and CB1 Gallery

  • The Principal of Competitive Exclusion

    emThe Principal of Competitive Exclusion/em, 2012
    60″ x 48″
    Oil on panel
    Courtesy Lisa Adams and CB1 Gallery

  • The Reality Breakdown

    emThe Reality Breakdown/em, 2013
    48″ x 60″
    Oil and spray paint on panel
    Courtesy Lisa Adams and CB1 Gallery


Lisa Adams’ Second Life runs through May 12th at CB1 Gallery

Home and Garden Festival this weekend

  •  – The stage is set for the Wayne County Builders Association Home and Garden Festival taking place this weekend. On Saturday, April 27 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, April 28 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., homeowners and builders will have a chance to tour booths dedicated to indoor and outdoor living.

    “We expanded the outdoor living section this year,” said Laurie Lourie, Chief Executive Officer of the Wayne County Builders Association. That newly expanded section includes outdoor lampposts and landscaping ideas.

    The festival is a chance for community members to learn from experts in various areas, including building, remodeling, landscaping, home decor and more.

    The event lets people “come and see the latest in building products” in one convenient location, Lourie said. “We have everything you need to remodel your home.”

    The show also offers two days of events for the whole family. On Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., there will be an electronic recycling available. Accepted items are old electronics, like televisions and computers. There is no fee to recycle an item, but donations are accepted.

    Dessin Animal Shelter will be at the festival from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday hosting a pet adoption event for those looking for that perfect furry companion.

    Saturday also brings with it the highly anticipated LEGO Building Contest for children ages 5-8 and 9-12. Preregistration is required for this fun test of design and construction skill.

    Throughout the entire two-day festival, there will fresh herbs and hanging planters for sale and live wood carving demonstrations. Lourie said another exciting draw for the event is the addition of a builder tent sale.

    Available for sale in the tents will be items that are “surplus from local builders and contractors.” Items will be “priced to sell,” she said. The items are new or gently used and range from doors and tiles to appliances.

    If all of the walking around works up an appetite, there will be many menu items available from the Carousel Cafe. Breakfast at the cafe will be served from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. with items like ham, egg and cheese sandwiches, danishes, yogurt, bagels and more. For lunch, which is served from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., the menu boasts items like pulled pork sandwiches, hot dogs, chili, barbeque chicken and baked beans among the items.

    There will also be the unveiling of six children’s playhouses for a Playhouse Raffle to benefit the Make-A-Wish Foundation. The playhouses were built by six area builders: Cassel Building Contractors, Inc., The Duck Harbor Group, Forest Homes of Lake Wallenpaupack, Haviland Building and Remodeling, J.R. Bea Construction and Wallenpaupack High School Building Construction Students. All proceeds raised from the event will benefit local children in a Make-A-Wish program.

    The annual Home and Garden Festival runs on Saturday, April 27 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, April 28 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission to the event is free.

    The festival is held at the Ladore Camp and Conference Center, 287 Owego Turnpike in Waymart.

    For more information, visit www.waynecountybuilders.com or call 1-570-226-4941.

     

  • 10 Energy-Saving Ideas for Spring – InArkansas.com

    Spring is the perfect time to get started on those outdoor projects you have been planning and to get your house in shape for summer. It is also a good time to look into new ways to save energy and reduce your environmental impact. While energy conservation is a year-round commitment, the warmer days of spring present a unique opportunity to make home improvements and lifestyle changes that will lower your utility costs.

    1. Spring cleaning. While chasing those dust bunnies around, look for ways to make your home more energy efficient. Cleaning under and behind your refrigerator will improve operating efficiency, and dusting light bulbs will increase light output. When cleaning windows, check to make sure they are sealed properly.
    2. Check your air conditioner. Clean or replace the system’s filter and adjust thermostat settings for warmer weather. Have your system cleaned and inspected by a qualified professional. Outdoors, trim back any plants or vines growing around the unit.
    3. Change direction. As the temperature rises, reverse the direction of your ceiling fans. In summer, they should be set counterclockwise to create a downward airflow that will make rooms feel cooler.
    4. Let it slide. If you have a sliding door, make sure the track is clean. Dirt buildup from foot traffic in winter and early spring can damage the door seal and create gaps where cool air can escape.
    5. Stay cool with attic ventilation. Attic ventilation systems draw cool air up through the house, providing the same level of comfort as an air conditioner, but at a much lower cost.
    6. Window treatments. If you are redecorating, consider installing insulated, thermal-backed drapes. When closed on south- and west-facing windows, they help block out the sun, keeping your home cooler on hot summer days.
    7. Plant some shade. Arbor Day is coming, celebrate by planting a shade tree along the south- or west-facing side of your home. Trees will help to shield your home from the sun in summer, keeping you cool and reducing your energy bill. They are good for the environment as well. Call before you dig and consider the mature height of trees; do not select a location that will interfere with power lines when trees reach their full height.
    8. Air dry laundry. Now that warm weather is here, why not install a clothesline and dry your laundry in the sun? Air drying saves on energy costs and it is gentler on your clothes, helping them last longer.
    9. Shake a leg. Whenever possible, save energy and help the environment by walking or riding a bike. Public transportation and ride sharing are green options for getting to and from work.
    10. Go green. Start a compost bin for recycling kitchen and yard waste. Install a rain barrel to conserve water for use in outdoor landscaping. The idea is to reduce, reuse and recycle whatever you can.

    Santa Monica Goes Brit

    By Melonie Magruder
    Staff Writer

    April 26, 2013 — Get ready to cultivate the British in you when the Santa Monica Spring Jubilee celebrates BritWeek on the Third Street Promenade and Santa Monica Place May 4 and 5. Think “Downton Abbey” meets “Gidget.”

    Downtown officials are expecting approximately 40,000 visitors and locals each day, which is no surprise to BritWeek officials.

    “Britain is the largest single investing country in the world for the U.S,” said Paul J. Wright, an English barrister and a California attorney who sits on the board of BritWeek and serves as its General Counsel. “A million British people live and work here. We truly do have that ‘special relationship.’

    “The U.S. and the U.K. are the most closely aligned creative places in the world,” Wright added. “Friendship and commerce between our countries should go hand in hand.”

    Crowning the festivities will be a Promenade block party with vendors, retail events, food, drink and more, with a very Anglo-Saxon flavor. A stage in Santa Monica Place’s Center Plaza will feature performances by British artists, including Peter Asher (of the famous 60s pop duo Peter and Gordon), dancing and concerts.

    Local gardeners should dig the theme – the classic English garden becomes the Urban Tea Garden for the Vignette landscaping competition. Landscape professionals will show off their skills by building their interpretation of an Urban Tea Garden. These garden vignettes will be throughout The Promenade.

    Workshops will be open to the public to clue Southern Californians in on the cultivation of a proper hedgerow and the best techniques for achieving the most delicate English tea rose and best gardening practices.

    “The Spring Jubilee will provide an enhanced experience for residents and visitors, and an opportunity for family and friends to take a stroll through Downtown Santa Monica to enjoy the beauty that spring brings to our community,” said MacKenzie Carter, Downtown Santa Monica, Inc’s (DTSM) marketing and events manager.

    “The festival will showcase some of the natural resources that we are lucky to have here in Southern California, while also celebrating our British community,” she said. “The weekend will be a one-of-a-kind event filled with flowers, music, dancing and more.”

    Several local landscape design firms will be vying to win the Vignette competition, including Satori Garden Designs, Beth Edelstein Landscape Design, Garden of Eva Landscape Group, Conscious Living Landscapes and the UCLA Extension Landscape Architecture Program Team.

    DTSM will provide 10-foot by 12-foot raised beds and a load of compost to competitors who will work their horticultural magic to create the most beautiful Urban Tea Garden for cash prizes and the envy of green thumbs everywhere.

    The Jubilee will offer Santa Monica restaurants and retailers a grand opportunity to drive traffic into their establishments with a variety of participatory promotions. How about a prix fixe “Spring Jubilee Celebrates BritWeek” menu to capitalize on hungry visitors looking for a quick bite to eat? Or a British-themed afternoon tea with scones and clotted cream?

    Various speakers will be on hand throughout the weekend, with expert advice on all things green, healthy, and garden-centric. They are sure to send you out into your back yard ready to act on your dream of a home vegetable garden.

    Scheduled to speak are experts with the Jamie Oliver Foundation, who has revolutionized American school lunches with easy-to-understand workshops on nutrition. Rob and Chelsea McFarland of HoneyLove will speak about bees and their vital importance to your fruit and vegetable stores in the future.

    Enviroscape LA will clue visitors in to drip irrigation and the exploding popularity of vertical gardens (big harvest from small square footage). And Ketti Kupper of Conscious Living Landscapes will speak on the ancient and efficacious healing power of plants.

    Some of the other scheduled speaker workshops include Attracting Bees to Your Garden, Bonzai for Beginners, Composting for Newbies, Container Gardening, Creating a Cactus Garden and Using Seasonal Produce.

    There will also be plenty to entertain the youngsters, including workshops like Design Your Own Recyclable Bag, Drawing Flowers, How Do Worms Work? Make Your Own Garden, Playing With Reptiles and What do Bees Do?

    Carter said she finds the speaker series especially compelling, noting that the Jamie Oliver Better Food Foundation will be featured throughout the weekend as a part of the Spring Jubilee Speaker Series.

    “The dedicated members of this foundation will offer workshops that inspire positive eating habits by teaching children and adults about the joys of growing and cooking fresh food,” Carter said.

    “These workshops will provide a great opportunity for families to learn together and become excited about eating healthy.”

    Downtown Santa Monica Inc is also offering a special price discount to all DTSM businesses that take a booth on the Promenade to sell goods and services directly to the crowd.

    For more information about booths on the Promenade, contact Kim Sudhalter
    at Urban Legend PR at (818) 623 8492.

    If you are interested in providing a Jubilee-themed offer or event, visit the website downtownsm.com/promotions by April 15.

    Service Above Self award goes to John and JoAnn Martz

    Live Oak —
    Friends and associates joined the members of the Rotary Club of Live Oak as they honored John and JoAnn Martz with the 2013 Service Above Self Award this week.

    “The Rotary Council on Legislation established ‘Service Above Self’ as the principle motto of Rotary since it best explains the philosophy of unselfish volunteer service. John and JoAnn you are being recognized today by the Rotary Club of Live Oak because you give so freely of your time and energy to help others,” said Ronnie Poole former district governor and Rotarian during the presentation.

    John is a very active Rotarian serving on the board, is part of the United Way of Suwannee Valley serving this year as its General Campaign Chairman and he is the incoming President for 2013-2014. He is also active in his service to Arc, Relay for Life of Suwannee County and Love INC.

    John also participates with the Suwannee Foundation for Excellence in Education. He makes a point of supporting all the schools in the counties that his business, SVEC serves and encourages his employees to do the same.

    He is a member of both the Lake City and Live Oak chambers and has served on the Live Oak chamber board. Since 2006 John has been the chairman of the Council for Progress and is a member of the Business Recruitment Team.

    “John we know there has been someone in your life that has been right with you all the way supporting your efforts and along the way doing her part in making our communities a better place. That is why when the committee began to look at you as a candidate for the Service Above Self award, the more we learned the more we became aware that there was someone equally deserving to be recognized. That person is JoAnn,” said Poole.

    JoAnn is a University of Florida (UF) Master Gardener and has been very active with the planning at Heritage Parks and Garden and serves on the board of Friends of Heritage Park and Gardens. She and John were instrumental in getting UF to help design the landscaping plan for the park and gardens.

    She is involved with the CRA and volunteers her time to help with revitalization projects and is a member of Suwannee County Extension Advisory committee.

    Joann and John are faithful members of Saint Francis Xavier Catholic Church. Both are Eucharistic ministers – participating in taking communion to nursing homes and other facilities. JoAnn visits nursing homes on a weekly basis, has put together retreats for the ladies of her church, has spent many hours planning and furnishing the new fellowship hall and has been president of the Gainesville Deanery for the past two years

    John and JoAnn were gracious in the acceptance of the award and each complimented the other for the service they provide to their family, church and community.

    John added, “I was so surprised and honored, but I guess I was supposed to be surprised.”

    The Service Above Self Award presented by the Rotary Club of Live Oak is presented each year to an individual who has, throughout his or her lifetime exemplified the Rotary Motto of Service Above Self.

    The past recipients of this award are: the Reverend Robert Hall, followed by Jo Kennon, Marjorie Carmichael, the Reverend Charlie Webb, Ronnie Poole, Patt Slaughter, A. P. “Buddy” Nott, J. L. McMullen, Keith Leibfried, Roy Guercio, the Reverend Clarence Parker, Jackie Dove, the Reverend Pomeroy Carter, Wallace Townsend, Bob McGranahan, Greg Scott, Carolyn Spilatore and last year’s winner Sam Carter.

    The Rotary Club of Live Oak meets weekly at The Farm Bureau on Dowling Avenue. More information on the club and the opportunities for service it presents can be found at http://liveoak.rotary-clubs.org/.

    Enchanted by a billabong

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