Showing posts with label beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beach. Show all posts

Thursday, November 5, 2020

MainStreet gets OK for first concert since March

 https://www.yoursun.com/venice/mainstreet-gets-ok-for-first-concert-since-march/

The Cry’n Shames provide music for revelers at the Myakka River United Way event at Snook Haven in October 2018. They will perform back in Venice this month as MainStreet gets its first concert since March.


VENICE — The Venice MainStreet Friday Night Concert series resumes in Centennial Park on Nov. 13 after an eight-month hiatus due to the coronavirus pandemic.

If all goes well, Assistant City Manager Len Bramble said, the city could consider adding more, perhaps larger, special events and residents might get “a semblance of holiday seasons past.”

“We love our special events,” he said.

And if it doesn’t — worst-case scenario, someone gets sick from exposure at the concert — “it would have a disastrous effect on the continuation of special events right now,” he said.

“The success of future events is all in the hands of those who attend,” Bramble said.

Maybe not entirely. He acknowledged that the COVID-19 numbers “aren’t real favorable right now.”

Almost all of the special events in the city from March onward fell victim to a moratorium imposed by an executive order issued in March and renewed in July by City Manager Ed Lavallee.

But he announced at a recent City Council meeting that discussions with Venice MainStreet were underway to create a “re-entry program” for special events.

It’s taking the form of a three-concert series, said Nick Sperry, VMS Events and Partnership coordinator.

The concert next week features popular local band the Cry’n Shames.  Another concert is scheduled for Nov. 27, he said, and a special one on Dec. 11 for the holidays before a break until January.

Although that’s VMS’ usual schedule, much else is different, starting with the need for people to register to attend even though admission is free.

Sperry said that there’s a limited number of tickets but didn’t disclose how many. Bramble said the city’s cap is about 150 but it may be a little flexible depending on the response.

“I believe it’s going to fill up,” Sperry said.

There may be a pent-up demand for entertainment. He said he went from scheduling “54 events a year to nothing.”

The same thing happened with his own performance schedule as a musician,he said, with gigs just starting to come back.

Concert attendees will be required to wear a mask, he said, and stay in squares marked off about 10 feet apart for groups up to six people.

The concert space will have a “soft” perimeter, according to Bramble, who said VMS is also required to provide signs and sanitation stations as part of its COVID-19 plan.

VMS will be following these precautions until the city lifts them, Sperry said.

“We really hope that people are respectful,” Bramble said. “All it takes is one or two bad apples to spoil it for everybody....We don’t want that to happen.”


Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate

REALTOR®, Lic. Broker #BK3284964



West Villages Realty LLC
19503 S West Villages Pkwy
Stes A2 (by Appt)
Venice, Florida 34293
Office: 941-460-3179










Wednesday, November 4, 2020

Manatee Awareness Month!

 


https://www.naturesacademy.org/florida-feature/florida-feature-manatee-awareness-month/


Florida Feature Manatees November is Manatee Awareness Month and the goal of this special time is to raise public awareness of the threats facing these gentle and beloved marine mammals. Throughout the winter months, manatees are usually found along shallow, coastal waterways in search of warm-water areas for refuge. Often, manatees will be found near springs that stay 72 degrees year-round, or around industrial structures that give off heat.


Florida Feature Manatees Manatee Awareness Month is best spent showing your appreciation and love for manatees. If you are lucky enough to live near waters that manatees inhabit, you can aid their cause by educating people about these creatures and the appropriate ways to interact with them. Most people that interact with manatees do not wish to cause them harm. Help them to avoid touching any wild manatees, from giving them fresh water from hoses, and from teaching them to frequent docks or busy waterways by feeding them lettuce. Locals and tourists can support manatees by following posted speed zones when boating, by donating to causes that support manatee conservation, by observing them from afar and always respecting their space.


For more information about Manatee Awareness Month and how to get involved, visit the Defenders for Wildlife website!

Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate

REALTOR®, Lic. Broker #BK3284964



West Villages Realty LLC
19503 S West Villages Pkwy
Stes A2 (by Appt)
Venice, Florida 34293
Office: 941-460-3179











Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Deep dives to Green Banana

 https://www.yoursun.com/venice/deep-dives-to-green-

  •  


A diver indicate he's doing OK as he and another diver descend to Green Banana-about 400 feet down and 50 miles west of Venice-essentially a cave at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico.          PROVIDED BY FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY

About 50 miles west of Venice, a team from four organizations worked to send scientists down hundreds of feet below the surface to explore a blue hole called Green Banana.

Little was known about the blue holes, but more is being learned now.

The week-long expedition in September has already provided information that has changed some initial thoughts.

It was led by Mote Marine Laboratory scientist Emily Hall with assistance from Jim Culter along with teams from Florida Atlantic University’s Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, Georgia Institute of Technology and the U.S. Geological Survey.

FAU supplied some of the “citizen scientist” deep sea divers, including Marty Watson, lead diver on the expedition.

“I’ve developed a reputation in the diving community of being one of the deepest divers ever — that’s still alive,” Watson said. “I’ve been well-known to do a lot of salvage stuff at very deep depths. I’ve had the ability to do the projects that people thought couldn’t be done.”

He did an “exploratory” dive a few days before the expedition began — having a team member a few hundred feet above him as he did a looksee into Green Banana. And there were a few surprises at about 415 feet down in the back of the cave.

“Lots of fishing lines and lures,” he said.

He’s not sure how they got there — just that they were momentarily problematic and unexpected.

He explored the area and looked around the cavern.

“The visibility was really bad — the best, 10 feet,” he said. “It’s less stressful when you’re alone in harsh conditions. It’s easier to be alone in some cases.”

Watson and David DeBerard returned a few days later to establish the 600-pound benthic lander that took samples and other scientific readings from Green Banana.

And they weren’t the only living thing near the cave.

“There’s hardly anything alive at that depth ... did see a shell crab at about 400 feet. He was walking around and having a good ole’ time,” Watson said, laughing as he recalled it.

Watson, 48, previously worked with Mote Marine and other groups in 2019 when they worked Amberjack Hole which is about 350 feet deep. He’s always onboard to go overboard for science, he said.

He got his first license as a teenager in 1991.

“And it never stopped. It was always a dream of mine to become another Jacques Cousteau.”

Stephannie Kettle, with Mote Marine, said a lot of information is being gleamed by scientists.

“They are still pouring through the samples,” she said.

Another exhibition is slated for May 2021, weather dependent.

But they are realizing a few things already. Blue holes are not all the same. They had anticipated the caves at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico would be similar in many ways.

“The makeup and some of the chemistry and water flow are definitely different,” she said.

Kettle said, with the many different groups and dealing with weather, it was “as smooth as something as big an undertaking as this is can be.”

“Everyone works together to accomplish these tasks during 12-hour days for five days in a row is really cool,” she said.

Mote Marine has started a blog at its website for people interested in learning about the exhibition and science from it, Kettle said. It’s at www.mote.org/deepthoughts.

Hall was the first scientist to write to the blog about the experience. She notes how she felt about the diving in her first blog.

“I really enjoy seeing the plans come together,” Hall writes online. “The diving is AMAZING!!! and I’ve gotten to meet some super cool citizen scientists (our dive team volunteers) throughout this process. Seeing the data and trying to tell a story is also very rewarding.”

For Watson, the reward is assisting.

“Anything I can do to help science, even as a volunteer, that’s what it’s about. That’s what we do. Anything to help research,” he said.

And its “definitely” never another day at the office, he said. But it went well.

“We did our job and gave (scientists) the opportunity to gather the data they needed to gather.”

He called exploration his “fuel.”

“I want to go to places where no one else can go and I like to support science,” Watson said. “To see what’s going on underneath the ocean floors — and I can get there. If I can help these people, I want to help them. And that’s my fuel.”

And he has his own theories on blue holes.

“I think there’s an aquifer below the Gulf of Mexico and below the Atlantic. ... We’ve proved that there’s a flow — below these. This isn’t just a pit. There is an aquifer. And it has to be tied to our drinking water.”

He thinks that’s important to know.

Watson is an expert in cave diving and has explored a variety of wrecks, including World War II German U-boats and 1800s shipwrecks in the Gulf of Mexico.

Exploration may be his fuel, but there is another thing going on when he’s places that no human has gone before.

“The things I’ve witnessed and got to see: It’s indescribable,” he said.


Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate

REALTOR®, Lic. Broker #BK3284964



West Villages Realty LLC
19503 S West Villages Pkwy
Stes A2 (by Appt)
Venice, Florida 34293
Office: 941-460-3179









Sunday, October 18, 2020

Englewood Senior Softball back in play

https://www.yoursun.com/englewood/column-englewood-senior-softball-back-in-play



Dale Mason pitching open practice in the Englewood Softball League.

PHOTO PROVIDED

By RUDY DAVIS Englewood Senior Softball, October 16,2020


The leaves are turning and the snow is about to fly up north, but not here on the Suncoast.

Following a 2020 Winter season abruptly canceled in mid-March by COVID-19, the Englewood Men’s Senior Softball League is back at it, with a brand new Fall season. Games are in progress already.

With the re-opening of the fields and a player protection protocol in place, the second year of the spring league occurred in April.

“It was a short, but competitive and fun Spring season,” said Hans Picinich. “We had 40 or more guys showing up to practice all summer long — more than we’ve ever seen during the summer.”

The use of two fields for practice helped with social distancing.

The Englewood Senior Softball league has moved in to full swing with the Fall season underway, comprised of six teams, an increase of two teams from 2019. In addition, for those not on a team, open practice sessions are 8 a.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.

“The success of the Fall season is impressive and gratifying,” said Mark Johnson, newly appointed commissioner of the league. “The six-team rosters filled quickly and there were nearly enough guys on the ‘sub’ list to form a seventh team. I can see the fall league expanding to eight teams next fall.”

Going in to its 29th year, the league continues to attract players from Englewood, North Port, Venice, Rotonda, Boca Grande and Port Charlotte. The mission is to create an opportunity for men over 60 to play recreational softball.

Despite the number of returning players, the past several years have seen the league focus on recruiting.

2019 was also the first year for the Bronze division, a new division for those over 80 or with otherwise diminishing skills. Johnson anticipates that the Bronze division will expand from two teams to three or four, and the Gold and Silver divisions may expand to nine teams from eight to accommodate more players.

The typical new player is one who hasn’t played in some time, and has moved to the area, though many new players have played in summer leagues “up north.” The practice sessions, which run through the end of December, gives players a chance to refresh their skills, and prepare for the draft.

“The skill level ranges from first timer’s to more advanced players, with one common goal … get some exercise and have some fun,” said Johnson.

The league has moved to a divisional alignment based purely on skill level. Following the draft, teams play a 21-game schedule, plus an end of season tournament.

This year’s draft is Jan. 4 for the Gold division, Jan. 5 for both Silver and Bronze, with registration required. Picinich notes that the Spring and Fall leagues, still in their infancy, do not yet have a formal draft, and teams are formed to create similar levels of talent so as to keep the games competitive.

The league is supported by local businesses that sponsor the teams, and the list is growing.

“We are very grateful, and loyal, to our sponsors. It helps to supply teams with jerseys, equipment and the cost of renting the fields from the county,” says Johnson. And, the nearly 300 players and their fans frequent those businesses all year long. “It’s a symbiotic relationship, for sure.”

The league plans to keep its player protection protocol in place for as long as necessary. “We’ve implemented elements that help to promote social distancing, and to help keep contact between players and fans alike to a minimum. We try to minimize the number of guys in the dugout when batting, will be reserving a portion of the stands for players only, eliminated the after game handshake between teams, and we’re adding time between when games end and start so that the field area can be cleared by the teams finishing before the teams about to play take the field,” Johnson reports.

“Camaraderie is a big part of the league, and we all will miss that aspect of it, but given the circumstances we find ourselves in, this is the right thing to do,” says Davis. “We all want to be able to play a full season, though I’ll admit, it, I’m gonna miss that post-game handshake.”

Until the draft, its practice, which is open to anyone who will turn 60 or older during 2021. Practice sessions are held on Adult Softball fields 1 & 2, and Soccer field four when the numbers require it.

The Englewood Sports Complex is at 1300 S. River Road. 

For more information about the league, visit www.englewoodseniorsoftball.weebly.com. Registration for the draft is required. Get a form at the Englewood Sports Complex, or download it from the league’s website.


Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate

REALTOR®, Lic. Broker #BK3284964



West Villages Realty LLC
19503 S West Villages Pkwy
Stes A2 (by Appt)
Venice, Florida 34293
Office: 941-460-3179














Wednesday, September 23, 2020

'It's nice to be kind'

 

Anita Riska, of Venice, leaves a note that says "It's good to be kind" at the Positivity Wall at Centennial Park in Venice.

https://www.yoursun.com/venice/its-nice-to-be-kind/article

By Scott Lawson Gondolier Editor Sept 23, 2020

VENICE — It didn’t take long for the Positivity Walls constructed at five Venice-area locations to start sprouting statements of unity, silliness and smiles.

On Tuesday, a day after the walls were installed in and around the city, Venice resident Anita Riska was inscribing a small note and tying it to the wood.

“It’s nice to be kind,” she said, noting that’s what her saying stated on a small piece of blue paper.

Among the other sayings by Day Two: Love; Kindness to All; Breathe — It will be ok; Appreciate the things you have; Joy & Positive Thoughts; Blue Lives Matter; Buckeyes National Champs; Be the change you want in others!; Never Give Up; Love Living in Paradise; Love your beaches, hug your family, smile big, life is good!; and Hug your dog today.

Residents and visitors glanced at the walls at Venice Beach Pavilion and at Centennial Park along Venice Avenue.

The Venice Area Chamber of Commerce teamed with area businesses and governments for the walls.

The walls went up at:

• Centennial Park, 200 E. Venice Ave., Venice

• Venice Beach Pavilion, 101 The Esplanade, Venice

• Sky Family YMCA, 701 Center Road, Venice

• Laurel Civic Center, 509 Collins Road, Nokomis

• Frances T. Bourne Jacaranda Public Library, 4141 Woodmere Park Boulevard, South Venice. 

“The chamber is asking the community at large to contribute to the community positivity walls,” the Venice Area Chamber of Commerce said in its news release. “Residents and visitors alike are invited to leave a positive message, a wish, or words of encouragement to share with the community. To participate, complimentary supplies can be found attached to each wall. Each wall will have a box of tags, markers and zip ties.”

The walls stay up until sometime in December until a second phase begins, involving the Venice Art Center.


Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate

REALTOR®, Lic. Broker #BK3284964



West Villages Realty LLC
19503 S West Villages Pkwy
Stes A2 (by Appt)
Venice, Florida 34293
Office: 941-460-3179










Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Masks now required at Venice Farmers Market

Face coverings are now required for those visiting the Venice Farmers Market at City Hall on Saturdays. If customers do not have a face covering, cloth masks will be provided for them by the Market, while supplies last.
Farmers Market fruit July 2020

Farmers Market fruit July 2020 Market staff and vendors have gone to great lengths to create a CDC compliant and safe socially distanced outdoor shopping experience for our community. Please follow the posted signage.

The Market reopened on July 11, with all staff and vendors wearing masks and gloves and sanitizing stations available. Their plan has been approved by the City of Venice in order to comply with all federal, state and local guidelines for food and personal safety. Please visit the Market website, www.thevenicefarmersmarket.org, and select the FAQ tab to read about the new operating guidelines.

The Market’s summer vendors are offering amazing produce, fresh baked goods including breads, pies, bagels and pretzels, wild caught seafood, Florida grown mushrooms, boutique cheeses, locally roasted coffee, kettle corn, hand crafted soap, essential oils, nursery plants, and fresh cut flowers. In addition, your favorite local artists will be attending the market offering award-winning photography, unique clay art and jewelry, hand designed clothing for children and adults, and much more.

During the construction of the new Fire Station 1 and expansion of Venice City Hall, the Farmers Market has relocated out of the parking lot but is still operating at City Hall. The Market will set up on W. Venice Avenue between Harbor Drive and Avenue des Parques, located between City Hall and the Hecksher Park tennis courts. Summer hours are from 8 a.m. to noon. Only service animals will be allowed during current COVID-19 rules.



Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
REALTOR®, Lic. Broker #BK3284964



West Villages Realty LLC
19503 S West Villages Pkwy
Stes A2 (by Appt)
Venice, Florida 34293
Office: 941-460-3179








Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Want to park at the beach? Download the ParkMobile app first


https://www.yoursun.com/englewood
By STEVE REILLY Staff Writer

ENGLEWOOD — Save your coins for another day if you want to go to Englewood Beach.

Charlotte County suspended parking fees when it reopened Englewood Beach, Port Charlotte Beach, its public boat ramps and other facilities in May, following a month of closures due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

But the free parking ended June 1, when the county once again began collecting fees for parking spaces.

The process, however, is a little different this time. The county enacted a “no-cash” policy to protect patrons and staff from potential exposure to the coronavirus by eliminating contact with the parking cash machines that are placed around the parking lot. The parking machines at Englewood Beach and other facilities are covered up.

Instead, beach patrons are directed by signs to download a smart phone app that will allow them to pay for their parking via credit or debit card. Parking is 75 cents per hour, according to Charlotte County’s website.

Janet Blizzard grew frustrated with trying to download the ParkMobile app and pay Tuesday morning at the beach.

With her daughter-in-law, Katie, and her two grandchildren — 3-year-old Abbigail and 7-year-old Nateigh — Blizzard drove up from Fort Myers to enjoy a day at Englewood Beach. They enjoy it much more than Fort Myers Beach.

They arrived at Englewood Beach shortly before 10 a.m. Blizzard was still standing in the parking lot 20 minutes later, trying to pay for their parking space through the app, which is available to download for free at the Apple Store, Google Play, or through the ParkMobile website.

OTHER WAYS TO PAY
Charlotte County does offer other ways for people to pre-pay for parking at its beaches and boat ramps.

You can pay in advance, using your smartphone, tablet or computer and going to www.ParkMobile.com or through the ParkMobile smart phone app.

The county also allows patrons to purchase — with credit cards only — parking passes. The county offers three-month passes for $26.95, six-month passes for $37.45, and annual parking passes for $53.50.

Patrons may call 941-625-7529 to buy passes or to get information, or find a parking pass application at tinyurl.com/ccparkingpass, and mail it in with a check or credit card information and a with self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Charlotte County Community Services Administration, 1120 O’Donnell Blvd., Port Charlotte, FL 33953.

Those with existing parking passes should know the county added a two-month extension because of the time lost to the beach closures. If you have a state issued handicap permit (plate or placard), you may park for free at any Charlotte County park, boat ramp or fishing pier, provided the person issued the permit is present.

By the way, Charlotte County Sheriff’s deputies have access to the parking app information, and can determine by license plate who has paid and who hasn’t paid for their parking spot. By the way, the fine for parking without paying at the beach is $40.


Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate




REALTOR®, Lic. Broker #BK3284964


West Villages Realty LLC
19503 S West Villages Pkwy
Stes A2 & A11 (by Appt)
Venice, Florida 34293
Office: 941-460-3179











Thursday, March 26, 2020

Mote releases rehabilitated loggerhead at Casey Key

https://www.yoursun.com/venice/mote-releases-rehabilitated-loggerhead-at-casey-key/
  •  
Helping return a sea turtle named Chipi to the Gulf of Mexico at Casey Key on March 25 were, from left, Weston Spoon, Courtney Hessell and Lynne Byrd.

Chipi Mote Marine Casey Key

CASEY KEY — A loggerhead rehabilitated after red tide troubles in October 2019 has been released back into the Gulf of Mexico.

The release took place Wednesday on Casey Key, according to officials with Mote Marine Laboratory & Aquarium.

According to the facility, Chipi was found stranded on Oct. 28, 2019, in Charlotte County. A resident reported a "lethargic" turtle at the Boca Grande Pass.  The resident was given the chance to name the loggerhead, as per Mote custom, and named it "Chipi," after his dog, according to a news release.

"Chipi showed lethargy and neurological issues likely due to red tide exposure," the news release states.

The case report notes the loggerhead "was found floating and swimming in circles."

Chipi received about 150 days of care at the Mote Marine Laboratory; Aquarium's Sea Turtle Hospital. He was slowly reintroduced to water until he could swim, and "resumed somewhat normal sea turtle behavior." He ate some shrimp and squid and began to gain weight. He was also given a deworming treatment for his gastrointestinal problems.

Mote, like most other places, is closed to the public because of COVID-19. But, it said, its mission of "marine science, education and animal rescue continues.

"Mote's Sea Turtle Rehabilitation Hospital and many other programs continue working around the clock to help our oceans," the news release states.

It also thanked the Louis & Gloria Flanzer Philanthropic Trust for recent assistance. The trust is currently matching donations of up to $500.

For more information on that, contact Mote Director of Development Andria Piekarz at 941-388-4441, ext. 352.


Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate