Sarasota Herald Tribune, December 21, 2021
Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
Sarasota Herald Tribune, December 21, 2021
Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
https://www.mustdo.com/events/fst-outdoor-performance-of-on-the-road-again-musical-family-road-trip/
Date(s) - Wednesday, July 7, 2021
7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Location
Nathan Benderson Park
5851 Nathan Benderson Circle
Sarasota, FL
941.366.9000
Pack your bags! Florida Studio Theatre (FST) is taking the whole family on a one-of-a-kind musical road trip in On The Road Again, an all-new outdoor live performance. Featuring songs like “Take Me Home, Country Roads,” “Surfin’ USA,” and “Deep in the Heart of Texas,” celebrate all that makes this country special from sea to shining sea. Join FST for an outdoor concert in this summer touring performance as they hit the road with music that has defined the U.S for generations. Admission is free.
Families and groups can register here:
https://www.floridastudiotheatre.org/road-again.
For questions about On the Road Again, call FST’s Box Office.
Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
https://sciencing.com/there-teeth-venice-beach-florida-7295925.html
By J. Dianne Dotson
At different locations in Florida, you may find shark teeth in the sandy beaches. Some of them are fossils, and some are more recent tooth losses.
One area of Florida with a great concentration of shark teeth is Venice Beach on the Gulf Coast. This area is called the “shark tooth capital of the world.”
Shark Tooth Capital of the World
Venice Beach, Florida, is called the “shark tooth capital of the world” because of its preponderance of fossilized shark teeth. In particular, Caspersen Beach is a rocky portion of the area that is home to a glut of Venice Beach fossils.
Every year, Venice hosts a Shark's Tooth Festival that provides educational opportunities as well as the chance to buy good quality fossils. So why are there so many Venice Beach fossils? It helps to understand the lay of the land and sea in both the present and the past.
Prehistoric Seas and Venice Beach Sharks
In prehistoric times, 10 million years in the past, what is now Florida lay submerged under seas. A plethora of sharks plied those waters, and on portions of land, other prehistoric animals roamed such as mastodons, mammoths and saber-toothed cats.
As for the Venice Beach sharks, the species that lived in Florida included makos, bull, sand, lemon, great whites, tiger sharks and the massive megalodon, which is now extinct. Sharks lose thousands of teeth in their lifetimes, so over millions of years, a significant amount of shark teeth fossils have built up.
The enormous megalodon is the most prized tooth fossil of all the Venice Beach sharks. They can be several inches long. There is a layer of fossils in the Venice Beach area that can range up to 35 feet deep!
Good Locations for Shark Teeth Hunting
In southwest Florida, Venice Beach sits along a sloping shelf of a coastal land mass. With no sharp drop, a layer of shark teeth fossils is gradually eroded and brought on shore. The aforementioned Caspersen Beach offers a good concentration of shark teeth fossils at low tide, with about four miles of beach available to search. Other prime locations include Casey Key and Manasota Key.
The Venice Fishing Pier can operate as a base of operations in your Venice Beach shark fossil hunt. There are also places where you can kayak to hunt for shark teeth. The Peace River offers good chances for fossil expedition tours, with November through May being the best time to go. These tours provide great ways to learn about the rest of Florida’s natural history as well.
Different vendors offer rentals or sales of shovels and screened baskets, perfect for sorting through the sand. You may find coral pieces, shells and possibly other fossils in your quest. Finding at least one tooth is essentially guaranteed.
Tools to Use for Venice Beach Fossils
If you would like to hunt for Venice Beach fossils, obtain a fossil-hunting permit. This is not required for shark teeth per se, but as there are vertebrate fossils also prevalent, the permit allows for their preservation.
Fossilized shark teeth tend to be dark in color, whereas newer teeth are paler. Use a scoop to dig into the sand, and use a screen to filter through the sand to look for shark teeth. Some captains provide charter trips for divers, who can find much larger prehistoric shark teeth fossils a bit offshore.
The majority of the shark teeth you will find may range from 1/8 of an inch to 3/4 of an inch. Megalodon teeth are larger, and each inch of tooth length corresponds to 10 feet of the animal’s length!
Whatever shark teeth you find, you can marvel at the wonder of so many sharks that lived so long ago.
Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
https://allevents.in/venice/july-4th-fireworks-show/200021111328024
Fireworks will be shot from the South Jetty on Sunday, July 4, shortly after 9 p.m. to celebrate Independence Day. The free show will last an estimated 30 minutes.
Although the South Jetty and Jetty Jacks Refreshment Deck will be closed for safety July 3-4, the fireworks display may be viewed on area beaches from Caspersen to Nokomis, as well as from other locations around Venice. Arrive early to secure your spot. Social distancing between groups is encouraged.
Boats should be at anchor by 8:30 p.m. July 4; the Venice Inlet will be closed to boat traffic at 8:45 p.m. until about 45 minutes after the display’s grand finale.
In the case of inclement weather, the fireworks show may be delayed. Please visit this Facebook page, the City's Twitter (@CityofVeniceFL), or the News section of the City website, www.venicegov.com, for updates.
Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
https://www.visitvenicefl.org/craft-festival-is-back
West Venice Avenue in Venice, Florida
Free Admission
The annual downtown craft festival, brought to you by Howard Alan Events & American Craft Endeavors and Venice MainStreet is back!
Some of the nation’s best crafters will converge along West Venice Avenue, so peruse booths filled with stained glass, photography, personalized products for children and dogs alike, and much more. Stroll the Green Market for plants, handmade soaps, tangy BBQ sauces, and live orchids.
Please be mindful and follow CDC guidelines.
Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
https://allevents.in/north%20port/let-freedom-ring-memorial-day-tribute-with-johnny-lee-howard/200020939281704
A live country music tribute recognizing our armed forces, our veterans, and the greatest nation in the world, The United States of America.
Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
https://www.heraldtribune.com/story/sports/outdoors/fishing/20
Black sea bass is a scrappy little number that is also hard to beat on the table.
Capt. Zach ZachariasCorrespondent, March 4, 2021
There is a species of fish which used to be quite abundant on hard bottom areas of the Gulf that became fairly rare for a while. According to recent reports, I'm happy to hear they are making somewhat of a comeback. That species would be the black sea bass.
Now this is far from a glamorous sport fish, nor a bottom dweller that will bring you to your knees, but it is a scrappy little number that is also hard to beat on the table.
Black sea bass inhabit Florida coastal waters of 20 to 80 feet or so and favor structured live habitats including some inshore areas. Sea bass are winter spawners with a peak in March and they prefer a diet of small fish, shrimp, squid, crustaceans and shellfish.
They are usually an incidental catch when targeting grouper and snapper, but can be great fun when using scaled back, lighter tackle which also increase your odds of catching them. Fishing in the shallower part of their range helps your odds as well.
The Florida state record is 5 pounds 1 ounce caught near Panama City, but can reach 24 inches and 8 pounds. The average is 12 inches and 1.5 pounds. The minimum size limit in the Gulf is 10 inches overall and I was shocked to learn that the daily recreational bag limit is 100 pounds per person. Gimme a break! How do you even enforce an outrageous limit as that. For all intents, there is no bag limit at all. In our Atlantic waters the minimum size is 13 inches and the bag is 7 per person. That is far more reasonable and begs the question why is there such a huge differential between the two coasts.
No wonder they were such a rare catch for a while!
Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate
https://www.mustdo.com/articles/20-surprising-facts-about-venice-florida/
Venice is tucked away 23 miles south of Sarasota in Southwest Florida. Voted one of the Top 10 Happiest Seaside Towns 2015 by Coastal Living, it has much to recommend it. See how many facts you know about this Gulf-front city. We think there are a few things that will surprise even life-long residents!
1. Taking its name from its more famous Italian namesake, Venice Florida is a city on water. Separated from the mainland by the Intracoastal Waterway, this coastal city has several bridges and is often called “Venice Island”.
2. The VMA (Venice Museum and Archives) has over 30,000 photographs, exhibits, and archives housed in the Triangle Inn, built in 1927.
3. Settled in 1870s, the City of Venice was incorporated in 1927. Homes and businesses featured Italian-style architecture to create a charming model community.
4. Venice is one of just three cities in Florida that is on the water but does not have any barrier islands.
5. Calusa Indians were probably the first residents in the Venice area. These Native Americans lived in Florida over 12,000 years ago. Their shell middens provide important historical evidence for archaeologists. In the 16th century, Florida was occupied by the Spanish, although much of the southwest coast was an unchartered, mosquito-infested wilderness.
6. Frank Higel is considered the “Father of Venice”. He suggested the name Venice as the area has a striking likeness to the famous canal city in Italy. The area was previously called “Horse and Chaise” due to a tree formation that resembled a horsedrawn carriage.
7. Roberts Bay is named after Richard Roberts who established a homestead in the area in the 1870s.
8. Venice is the home of the only professional School for Clowns in the world!
9. During World War II, the 27th Service Group relocated from Tampa and established the Venice Army Air Base in 1942. After the war, the air base was acquired by the city.
10. Don’t miss a visit to the Venice Centre Mall which has a fascinating past. It was once a classroom for the Kentucky Military (around 1932) and later operated as a hotel.
11. Venice City covers 16.6 square miles of which 1.4 square miles (8%) is water.
12. The original Venice Pier was built in 1966 and was washed away in a nameless storm in July 1981. It was rebuilt from swamp timber in 1984 and was again rebuilt in 2004 using wood fiber composite. The pier is 720 feet long, 22 feet wide, and 20 feet high. It stands in water up to 18 feet deep.
14. The population of Venice has grown from 309 in 1930 to an estimated 22,465 in 2016.
16. Thanks to Caspersen Beach, Venice is known as the “Shark’s Tooth Capital of the World”. Many fossilized shark teeth wash up on the coastline of Venice and can easily be found by sifting the sand along the water’s edge.
17. The city of Venice has 12 structures listed on the National Register of Historic Places. These include Hotel Venice, Triangle Inn, Venice Depot, the Valencia Hotel and Arcade, and the Levillain-Letton House. It also has three listed historic districts: Venezia Park, Eagle Point, and Edgewood.
18. Venice Municipal Pier is a popular place for fishing. No license is required and there’s no admission fee. It’s open 24 hours a day and shark fishing is popular after dark.
19. The Venice Theatre is the largest community theater per capita in the USA. It has been a non-profit organization since 1950 and has an operating budget of almost $3 million.
20. Thanks to its historic preservation and the delightful palms, live oaks and trumpet trees gracing the downtown area, Venice has been designated a Florida Main Street City.
If you haven’t already visited Venice, go check out this unique and lovely city with its charming downtown architecture, cafés and shops. It’s a treat!
Written by: Nita Ettinger
Ali H. Johnston, MBA in Real Estate