Clearwater Beach Newsletter
Transcription
Clearwater Beach Newsletter
APRIL / 2013 ISSUE 20 60 YEARS OF FUN 'N SUN IN CLEARWATER In 1954, when Clearwater was s young, small town with lots of pride, there came a moment when we needed to celebrate. So, Fun 'N Sun was born. Some people believe it was started by the Clearwater Chamber of Commerce with the hope of encouraging winter visitors to linger longer. However, it was the residents who embraced the event and asked for more. At first it was a simple parade, so frequent an event in tourist oriented Florida that large floats were created and moved from town to town. Local organizations and businesses decorated them for their own use, adding lots of pretty girls, dressed in lovely outfits, who waved gracefully from the slowly moving flower be-decked platforms. A few handsome men provided backdrops for the girls on the floats. For the rest, the floats proclaimed the virtues of entities wishing to make themselves known. All the bands in town, high school, middle school, Shriners and any military in the area, provided marchable music. Students from baton twirler schools performed along the way, showcasing the talents of even the tiniest performers. Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts paraded in their uniforms. Shriners road their performing motorcycles. Cheerfully escorting the floats and marchers were a troop of clowns, weaving in and out, teasing children, flirting with the audience and sometimes handing out candy to the little ones. City dignitaries rode in brand new cars, loaned by the dealers in town. The current Miss Clearwater always graced a convertible, sitting precautiously on the top of the back seat, managing a smile and a wave regardless of the weather. The parade formed in Crest Lake Park, from which the route went smoothly west, through downtown, past the reviewing stand in Downtown Clearwater, and on to Coachman Park on the bayfront, where it disbanded. Delight in the event soon spread into other associated activities. There were talent shows at the High School, flower shows at the Garden Center and an annual Fish Fry, hosted by the Clearwater Historical Society. As years went by and Clearwater gained some sophistication, so did the Fun 'N Sun. The City's Parks and Recreation Department was kept busy incorporating new events until, at one point, the celebration became so big that it lasted for three weeks. Organizations Citywide scheduled regular events for Fun 'N Sun Week and renamed them after the festival, some of them as exotic as the Japanese Culture And Lantern Fest, or as routine as the annual Horseshoe Tournament, renamed. In 2006, the City's part of the expenses of the event came to $106,812. Concerts, some of them sponsored by local businesses, were held in Coachman Park. There was a Jazz Fest, a classic rock concert and country music. Is it worth it? Old timers and newcomers will agree it is. For, memories are made of this. You may be 80 years old, hardly able to walk around the block, but you can remember the day you marched Cleveland Street with all flags flying and excitement in your heart. Story by Anne Garris, photos courtesy of City of Clearwater Or Current Resident PRESORTED STD U S POSTAGE PAID Permit No. 4008 St Petersburg, FL CREDITS CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER This newsletter is published by GRIFFIN PRODUCTIONS, Inc. and is mailed to every occupied residence in Clearwater Beach’s zip code 33767. We are not associated with the City of Clearwater. PUBLISHER Bob & Becky Griffin ART DIRECTION Becky Griffin SALES 727-517-1997 CONTACT INFO P.O. Box 1314 Indian Rocks Beach, Fl 33785 517-1997 ~ 517-1998 FAX BeachNewsletters.com We’d like to hear from you. Is there something you would like to see included in this newsletter? Tell us what you think at bob@griffindirectories.com © 2013 Griffin Productions, Inc. CLEARWATER BEACH NEIGHBORHOOD NEWSLETTER This is our 20th Clearwater Beach Neighborhood Newsletter. We started this publication in December of 2009. You will find articles and local information about the Beach area inside. We call it a Neighborhood Newsletter because it is primarily about your neighborhood, Clearwater Beach. It is mailed it to the entire zip code of 33767 including Island Estates and Sand Key. We want your input. How did you like this issue? What suggestions do you have for future issues and articles? We hope you enjoy this newsletter. We call it a “Neighborhood Newsletter” because it is about Clearwater Beach, your neighborhood. It is mailed to about 5,000 households and includes Island Estates and Sand Key. We publish this edition six times a year. Call or email us, Bob & Becky Griffin, 727-517-1997 bob@griffindirectories.com SEE YOU AGAIN IN JUNE! CITY NUMBERS CITY HALL 562-4250 112 S. Osceola Avenue www.clearwater-fl.com MAYOR OFFICE . . . . . . . . . . . 562-4050 MAYOR - George N. Cretekos - Seat 1 CITY COUNCIL . . . . . . . . . . . . 562-4042 Doreen Hock-DiPolito - Seat 2 Jay Polglaze - Seat 3 Bill Jonson - Seat 4 Paul F. Gibson (Vice-Mayor) - Seat 5 CITY MANAGER . . . . . . . . . . . . 562-4040 William Horne ASSISTANT CITY MANAGER . . 562-4040 BUILDING PERMITS . . . . . . . . 562-4558 HUMAN RESOURCES . . . . . . . 562-4870 PLANNING & ZONING . . . . . 562-4567 PUBLIC SERVICES . . . . . . . . . . 562-4950 PUBLIC UTILITIES . . . . . . . . . . 562-4600 PUBLIC UTILITIES EMERGENCY462-6633 CLEARWATER GAS. . . . . . . . . . 562-4980 SOLID WASTE . . . . . . . . . . . . . 562-4920 PIER 60 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 462-6466 MARINA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 462-6954 PARKS AND REC . . . . . . . . . . . 562-4800 PUBLIC LIBRARY . . . . . . . . . . . 562-4970 VISITOR INFO CENTER . . . . . . 442-3604 EMERGENCIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-1-1 POLICE NON-EMERGENCY. . . 562-4242 FIRE DEPARTMENT . . . . . . . . . 562-4334 POLICE HOTLINE. . . . . . . . . . . 562-4080 NEIGHBORHOOD LIAISON . . 562-4554 ------------------------------------------------CHAMBER OF COMMERCE . . . 447-7600 333 South Gulfview Blvd, Clearwater Beach POST OFFICE ISLAND ESTATES 449-8732 SAND KEY PARK . . . . . . . . . . . 588-4852 Shelter Reservations,PinellasCounty.org/park MARINE AQUARIUM . . . . . . . 441-1790 249 Windward Passage, Island Estates CLEARWATER SAILING CTR . . 517-7776 1001 Gulf Blvd, Sand Key JOLLEY TROLLEY . . . . . . . . . . 445-1200 483 Mandalay Avenue, Suite 213 CLEARWATER YACHT CLUB . . . 447-6000 830 Bayway Blvd South CARLOUEL HOMEOWNERS ASSN Kris Hampsey, President . . . . . 441-4188 LITTLE LEAGUE . . . . . 813-486-4430 John Murphy ROTARY, Clearwater Beach meets every Thursday, 12:15pm at Shephard’s lunch Adam Bottie, President . . . . 466-8692 CLEARWATER BEACH ASSOCIATION Wendy Hutkin, President . . . . 216-3274 CLEARWATER GARDEN CLUB . . . . . . . . . 443-7032 Cathy Foley SAND KEY CIVIC ASSOCIATION Meets first Wednesdays each month at the Clearwater Community Sailing Center Arlene Musselwhite, President 644-7524 ISLAND ESTATES CIVIC ASSOCIATION . . . 813-335-6770 Mary Lau, President www.MyIslandEstates.org ISLAND ESTATES WOMEN'S CLUB Mary Wadsworth, President . . 447-7182 FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY . . . . . . . . 446-4410 Anne Garris CLEARWATER HISTORICAL SOCIETY David Allbritton, President . . . 481-5102 ------------------------------------------------PINELLAS COUNTY INFO . . . . 464-3000 COMMISSION OFFICES. . . . . . 464-3000 Susan Latvala, CWB/Island Estates 464-3276 Karen Seel, Sand Key. . . . . . . . 464-3278 STATE: Senator Jack Latvala . . . . . 727-545-9566 Republican, District 20 2050 Tall Pines Drive, Suite A, Largo Jack@JackLatvala.com Representative Larry Ahern 727-545-6421 Republican, District 66 5511 Park Street N. St. Petersburg larry.ahern@myfloridahouse.gov Governor Rick Scott Rick.Scott@myflorida.com FLORIDA UNITED STATES SENATORS: Marco Rubio . . . . . . . . . . . 202-224-3041 www.Rubio.Senate.gov Bill Nelson . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202-224-5274 www.BillNelson.Senate.gov AREA UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE: Rep Bill Young . . . . . . . . . . 727-394-6950 9210 113th St, Seminole, Fl 33772 www.house.gov/young CALENDAR OF LOCAL EVENTS APRIL Fun N Sun Fest 19-28 Frenchy’s Sugar Sand Festival 19-28 Blues, Bikes & BBQ 20 Earth Day 2013 22 Arbor Day 26 Blast Friday 26 Sun N Fun Music Series 27-28 Biggest Beach Party Ever 27 Schools Closed Professional Day 29 MAY Loggerhead Turtle Season Begins 1 Fish Fry Historical Society 4 Diggin’ The Arts Botanical Gardens 5 Restaurant Week Kick Off 10 Postal Workers Food Drive 11 Restaurant Week 12-18 Mother’s Day 12 Stone Crab Season Ends 15 Cooters Birthday Party 17-18 Swim Across America - Pier 60 18 Safe Boating Week 18-24 Blast Friday (Final of the Season) 24 Abilities Wine Tasting 25 Memorial Day 27 JUNE Hurricane Season Begins 1 CCSC Summer Luau 1 Beach Chamber Annual Dinner 4 Last Day Public School 5 Sunset Run Pier 60 7 Flag Day 14 Sunset Run at Pier 60 14 Antique Appraisal Heritage Village 15 Father’s Day 16 First Day of Summer 21 Morton Plant / Mease Triathlon 23 CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER NORTHERN VISITORS MADE FOR A BUSY SPRING BREAK The City is taking full advantage of bragging rights after USA TODAY named Clearwater Florida’s Best Beach Town. These new window decal are available, free to area residents and businesses, but it is only available are the Beaches Chamber’s office on BeachWalk. It can be put on a merchant’s front door or your car. The city will spend $20,000 to construct and install new entranceway signs at four entrance points to Clearwater and Clearwater Beach. The signs which cost $3,000 each plus an additional $2,000 for installation will replace those installed in 2004 designating Clearwater as #1 Florida Sports Town by Sports Illustrated. The placement of the four signs will be the Courtney Campbell Causeway, Pier 60 Park, the Sand Key Triangle and Edgewater Drive at the Dunedin boundary. Clearwater Beach beat other major cities such as, Key West, Siesta Key, Sanibel Island, Pensacola Beach and Miami South Beach. Even with being named Florida’s Best Beach Town, due to cooler weather, Clearwater Beach experienced a lighter than usual spring break in March. Highs in the 60s during Pinellas and Pasco County spring breaks, kept the locals from spending their days and nights at the beach. On a typical spring break day, there would normally be 55,000 to 60,000 cars going through the roundabout. During March, it was more like 35,000. Tourists still attended Clearwater Marine Aquarium in records numbers. The Pier 60 concessions sold lots of hot chocolate and sweatshirts. When the weather warmed up for Easter weekend though, the crowds were back in full force. While the weather was colder than most locals would like, it did not seem to stop the thousands of people from traveling here from northern states for their Spring Break. All area hotels said they were full and had a great numbers for spring break. We had record numbers in 2012, and it looks like we broke those records this year. It felt busier this year because Easter was at the end of March causing the season to be compacted. Most of the traffic came in the month of March. “Even when the weather is cold or rainy here, the spring breakers find other things to do,” Says Darlene Kole, President of the Beaches Chamber. “They go to the Clearwater Aquarium, the museums and shopping.” "We basically doubled the number of Police on the beach during Spring Break. You may not be able to tell that because they are not riding around in cars and many are not in uniform. Some are in our utility vehicle, called the GATOR, some are on bikes, some are walking around, not in uniform. We have several unmarked police cars out here, too. We even have a 'Special Crimes Unit' on the beach looking to stop special crimes that may be happening." Lt David H Dalton and Officer Adam Jaques, Community Liaison & Anti-Crime Team Did You Know... CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER CAPITAL THEATRE CLOSED March 24, after a sold-out performance by veteran comic Gallagher, The Capitol Theatre closed for renovations. Gallagher’s show was preceded by a ceremony where Ruth Eckerd Hall, President & CEO Zev Buffman, Clearwater Mayor George Cretekos and Gallagher unveiled the final rendering for the new Capitol Theatre. The rendering is hanging on the exterior of the 93-year old theatre. The Capitol Theatre is scheduled to reopenin the Fall of2013. Clearwater Mayor George Cretekos presented Gallagher with a commemorative sledgehammer prior to the performance. This was also Gallagher’s last public performance in the Tampa Bay area. Photo Credit: Jeff O’Kelley. ___________________________________________________ LIGHTS OUT TO PROTECT SEA TURTLES Sea turtle nesting season begins May 1 and ends Oct. 31. Residents and local businesses are asked to shut off or dim lights at night and to follow Clearwater city ordinance requirements for beach homes and businesses, parking lots, streets, and promenades. This precaution can reduce the amount of artificial light that reaches turtle nests and will help hatchlings reach the water safely, since newly hatched turtles find their way to the sea by following the natural light reflected by the water. The Tampa Bay area averages about 120 nests each season, each of which can contain an average of 100 to 110 eggs. If you come across a turtle nest on the beach, don’t disturb it. If the nest is unmarked, notify the Clearwater Marine Aquarium at 441-1790, ext. 224. ___________________________________________________ NEED ANOTHER COPY? Pick up another copy of this newsletter at the Beach Chamber Office, The Beach Rec Center, Island Estates Print Shack, Shorty’s Gourmet Deli or the Island Estates UPS store. _________________________________________________ OUR NEXT ISSUE IS JUNE Read this, as well as other issues, online at BeachNewsletters.com. __________________ CONGRATS! Celtic FC Florida’s U19 Girls soccer team, coached by Ken Cugino, and the U16 Girls soccer team, coached by Bryan Wyant and Paul Montgomery, won their age groups at the GYSA Cup Competition held in March. The U16 Girls won both their games in extra time - the Semifinal in double overtime and the Final in penalty kicks after two overtime periods. The U19 Girls dominated their competition with wins of 4-1 over Clearwater in the Semifinal and 4-2 over Palm Harbor in the Finals. Congratulations to all the players and coaches. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER WINDMILL MIDWINTER REGATTA In March the Clearwater Community Sailing Center hosted the Windmill Midwinter Regatta for the second time. 19 boats from around the country showed up for a perfect weekend of racing with winds were from the east north east at 10 to 15 knots the first day with a westerly sea breeze coming in around 2 PM. The Windmill Class sailboat is part of Clearwater sailing history. The responsive two person boat was designed by Clark Mills designer of the world famous Opti Pram. Clark’s vision was for a boat that people would be able to move into after they out grew the Opti. What he came up with was a lively two person boat that was easy to sail and performed well in a wide range of sailing conditions. The Center’s goal for 2014 is to have 40 boats travel here. ___________________________ NEW COACH AT CARLOUEL Carlouel Yacht Club has a new swim coach, Coach Ian O’Neil. His duties include developing new athletic programs and family services. Prior to accepting the position, O’Neil served as the aquatics director at Countryside Country Club where he was employed since 1991. Additionally, he served as the head swim coach at Countryside High School for the past 12 years and was honored as Pinellas county “Coach of the Year” in 2002, 2004, and 2009. Ian was also nominated as 2012 Pinellas County Athletic Conference (PCAC) boys team coach of the year. O’Neil is the current president of the Tampa Bay Aquatics swim team board Carlouel participates in the 9th branch of Tampa Bay Aquatics (TBAY), which currently has over 700 swimmers. Visit Carlouel.net or call 446-9162 for more information. ___________________________________________________ VOLUNTEERS NEEDED If you are interested in history and have some spare time, Heritage Village in Largo is in need of volunteers, young and old to act as docents, craft demonstrators and a receptionist. They also need historic house caretakers and people to adopt their historical structures to help to keep them maintained and tidy. If you are interested please call 582-2125. _________________________________________________ FIX DRIPPY FAUCETS A one-drip-per-second leak can waste up to seven gallons of water in one day, so take time this month to fix your leaky faucets. Also, when possible, take a shower instead of a bath. A typical five minute shower uses about 28 gallons less water than a bath. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER DR. LARA SAYS Q & A with Cesar A. Lara, M.D., Voted Best Weight Loss Practitioner in Tampa Bay A reader asked, “Dr. Lara, I have weight I want to lose, but how can I tell if I am at risk of Diabetes as well?” A: This is a great question. Here are a few ways to identify your relative risk of Diabetes: • Waist Circumference 1 (Relative Risk of Diabetes) e 28’’ – 29” : times is GREATER RISK of having Diabetes e 30” – 31” : 4.6 times e 31” – 33” : 8.7 times e 34” – 35” : 12.1 times e 36” – 37” : 16.7 times e > 38” : 22.4 times • BMI 2 (Relative Risk of Diabetes) e < 21 : 1 times e 21 – 22.9 : 1.2 times e 23 – 24.9 : 3.1 times e 25 – 28.9 : 9.6 times e 29 – 30.9 : 12.7 times e > 22.9 : 18.1 times • Excess Weight 3 o For every 2.2lbs of excess weight, the risk of Diabetes increases by 9% Want the Best Weight Loss Practioner to answer your question? Submit them to info@cearlaramd.com and visit us online for more valuable information at BestMedicineforWeightLoss.com 1 Carey et al. American J. of Epidiol. 1997 2 Carey et al. American J. of Epidiol. 1997 3 Mokdad DH. Diabetes Care. 2000 ANNUAL ABILITIES WINE TASTING & AUCTION The 24th annual Abilities Wine Tasting is Saturday, May 25 at the Armed Forces History Museum, 2050 34th Way N., Largo, FL. The event features premium wines, restaurants, and auction items. Abilities’ is Florida’s longest-running and most prosperous one-night tasting, netting $3.54 million to date. “Museum officials were gracious hosts last year, and we are delighted to be back,” said Foundation CEO Frank De Lucia. “Our guests were fascinated with the museum’s authentic re-creation of the military defense of our nation.” The tasting begins with a VIP Officer’s Club Reception from 6-9 p.m., followed by the Grand Tasting from 7-9 p.m. Restaurants scheduled to attend are Salt Rock Grill, Island Way Grill, Parkshore Grill, 400 Beach Drive, O’Bistro, Ricky P’s New Orleans Bistro and Vincenzo’s Grill. Grand Tasting tickets cost $50 in advance; $75 after May 13; and $85 at the door. Tickets for the VIP Reception include entry to the Grand Tasting and cost $100 in advance; $150 after May 13; and $175 at the door. Buy tickets online at www.abilitiesfoundation.com or call 727600-8911. Designated driver tickets cost $40 and can only be purchased by calling 727-600-8911. Proceeds benefit the Abilities Foundation, the 501c3 support organization for the Service Source Regional Office, a 501c3 nonprofit that has helped thousands of Floridians and military veterans with disabilities obtain jobs and affordable housing. For information visit www.abilitiesfoundation.com. C L E A R W A T E R B E A C H , F L O R I D A Where the Locals Hang Out It’s laid back and casual. Been that way since we started in 1926. Here everyone’s somebody and nobody cares. We overlook the Gulf of Mexico; the beach is at our front door and the sunsets are pretty terrific. There’s live entertainment most days, as long as we can find the extension cord. Great food. Happy hour: Monday - Friday 4-7 p.m. Palm Pavilion Beachside Grill & Bar £äÊ>ÞÊë>>`iÊÊUÊÊ ÀÌ Ê i>ÀÜ>ÌiÀÊi>V Ê ÇÓÇ®Ê{{ÈÓÈ{ÓÊÊUÊÊwww.palmpavilion.com Restaurant News... CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER MARINA CANTINA Construction has begun on the new Mexican restaurant that will be on the roof of the Clearwater Beach Marina office building. This southwest, Mexican themed restaurant, is being build by Frank Chivas, a Belleair Bluffs resident and the managing partner for Bay Star Restaurants which includes Marlin Darlin, Island Way Grill, Salt Rock Grill and others. There is no announced target date, but it will likely be late 2013. _________________________________________________ RESTAURANT WEEK The 4th Annual Clearwater Beach Restaurant Week is starting Mother’s Day, May 12th. Last year, 32 area restaurants participated. They hope for even more this year. Everything kicks off with a pre-party on BeachWalk on Friday, May 10th with a concert featuring award winner Nick Colionne. Get more information at www.ClearwaterBeachRestaurantWeek.com. _________________________________________________ PIZZA BIZZAR This new pizza company has opened where Little Italian Pizza and also Veni Vici Pizza used to be at 1261 Gulf Blvd. They have been open almost a month and specialize in Greek pizza and Mediterranean Cuisine. Call them at 595-1000, or get more info at www.PizzaBizzar.com. _________________________________________________ HOOTERS Hooters in Clearwater Beach opened last year on June 4 and will be celebrating their first anniversary soon. This was their 12th store in the Tampa Bay area. The Clearwater Beach store employees over 75 employees. _________________________________________________ ISLAND WAY GRILL NAMED ONE OF 2013’S 20 BEST ATHLETE-OWNED RESTAURANTS BY USA TODAY Owned in part by Mike "A-Train" Alstott and Dave Moore, the restaurant is the creation of restaurant owner Frank Chivas, who partnered with the former Buccaneer’s running back and tight end. Island Way Grill boasts that it's "all about fresh fish. The restaurant has its own boats, which make daily trips to the middlegrounds to bring back fresh tuna, mahi, snapper, and other local species. Fish is cooked around an oak and citrus-fired open pit. Their motto - If it's any fresher, it is still in the Gulf. _________________________________________________ CLOSED Thai Gardens Restaurant, South Beach area. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER SUNSET CINEMA AT PIER 60 Sunset Cinema is celebrating three years of free movies on the beach every Friday and Saturday. That is over 200 free movies and a lot of popcorn. Occasionally other days are added for special occasions. All the regular pier activities, such as artisans, crafters, street performers and live music will also take place. Beach towels, blankets and low lawn chairs are welcome. Movies begin at dusk. Popcorn and beverages will be available on site. APRIL Frenchy’s Sugar Sand Festival (19th-28th) 19 DOLPHIN TALE (Special Event) 20 THE AMAZING SPIDER MAN 21 THUNDERSTRUCK 26 DOLPHIN TALE (again) 27 PITCH PERFECT 28 LES MISERABLES MAY 3 RISE OF THE GUARDIANS 4 LUCKY ONE 10 SPY KIDS 11 PRIDE AND PREJUDICE 17 ANNIE (1983) 18 JURASSIC PARK 24 THE LORAX 25 THE GUILT TRIP 26 CIRQUE DU SOLEI: WORLDS AWAY SUMMER CAMP REGISTRATION Registration for summer camp programs at Clearwater recreation facilities is underway. Camp begins June 10 for children entering grades 1 through 8. All Clearwater camps will focus on character development by emphasizing a different positive character trait each week. Campers will also enjoy days full of activities such as sports, games, field trips, crafts and more. Camp prices start as low as $75 per week, and scholarships may be available for Clearwater children who qualify for free or reduced lunch. All camps provide supervision from 7:30 am to 5:30 pm and fees include field trips. A full list of scheduled camps is online at myclearwater.com/camps. Call one of the recreation facilities below for more information about their programs. The Long Center - 793-2320 Countryside Recreation Center - 669-1914 Ross Norton Rec. & Aquatic Complex - 462-6025 Moccasin Lake Nature Park - 793-2976 North Greenwood Rec. & Aquatic Complex - 462-6276 Summer camp registration is available online and forms can be downloaded at www.myclearwater.com/camps. Business Briefs... CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER SHEPHARDS REMODEL WELL UNDERWAY Shephards Beach Resort’s expansion began February 1st. They are adding 90 new rooms, more parking, 7000 square feet of pool and deck with 100 cabanas and a pool bar. Plans call for a renovated waterfront restaurant and private dining areas plus additional meeting room space and a 11,000 SF Tiki Bar area with concert stage. During the construction process, Shepards still has 40 rooms, the restaurant, tiki bar and night club open for business. The construction is expected to be completed by January 2014. Watch the construction process at www.Shephards2014.com. ___________________________________________________ LEATHER IN THE SHOPPES This new store opened in the Shoppes of Sand Key. The Leather Shoppe is in the very middle of the shopping center and features nothing but leather products such as purses, wallets, backpacks, hats and more. Check them out online at www.TheLeatherShoppe.com. ___________________________________________________ SURF STYLE WEB SITE Surf Style, the large store on BeachWalk next to the Hyatt, launched a new web site on April 1st, www.SurfStyle.com. This is their first venture into eCommerce and allows customers to buy their products online. You can also learn about memberships and events and parties, make FlowRider reservations and even watch others ride in live. ___________________ NEW FITNESS STUDIO Core Fitness Studios is a brand new Group Fitness Studio in Clearwater Beach offering TRX Suspension training, Barre Fitness, Yoga and Cardio Dance. They are located in the Pelican Walk Plaza at 483 Mandalay Avenue #210 Clearwater Beach (just above Hulk Hogan) They are a division of Core Fitness Solution, a live-in fitness camp in Madeira Beach. ___________________________________________________ NEW HAMPTON INN CANCELED You may have heard that the proposed five story Hampton Inn on South Gulf Blvd next to the Quality Inn was approved, but not by everyone. Although it was approved by the Board of Adjustment and Development Department, the City Council voted 4-3 to not approve the project for a variety of reasons. The owners and the owners representative Stephen Page with Beach and Bay Realty were surprised by the rejection. “We had worked closely with the city’s two boards and thought we had followed all the rules,” says Page. More Business Briefs... CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER CURIOSITY SATISFIED! Finally, the old Belleair Flooring building between Marlin’ Darlin’ Restaurant and US AmeriBank has a new sign and a new tenant. Belleair Wealth Management moved from its original office of over12 years to its “new digs” at the corner of West Bay Drive and Indian Rocks Road in Belleair Bluffs. The new office is open and available to help with investment advice and portfolio management. Belleair Wealth is an independent Registered Investment Advisor with two Investment Advisor Representatives and four Registered Representatives. They offer securities through Transamerica Financial Advisors, Inc. although they are not affiliated with TFA. _________________________________________________ COURTYARD MARRIOTT Plans are still underway to build a new hotel, restaurant and marina on East Shore Drive, about a block north of the Causeway, just passed Papaya Street. The proposed hotel, a new Courtyard by Marriott will have two dozen docks and be part of the new boardwalk planned for that area. No construction date has been announced yet. __________________ NEW WALGREENS NEAR THE ROUNDABOUT Walgreens new beach store is well under construction. Corporate says the new store should open this summer and will replace the store in South Beach. __________________ MARINA BUILDING The Clearwater Beach Marina’s management office has moved into their new offices downstairs inside the Marina building. The new RE/MAX Realty / Action First is also open on the east end. ________________________ CREATIVE DESIGN TEAM OPENS IT'S SECOND DESIGN STUDIO Owners Ron and Marya Flurnoy and Team have been designing interiors for Belleair and Clearwater Beach residents for over 24 years. In their newest studio Creative Window, located at 231 Indian Rocks Road N., they specialize in custom draperies, window coverings, and home creations as well as shutters, motorized shades and Hunter Douglas window products. Every person on the team gives their talent and love to each residential or commercial project. For complete interior design and decorating, stop at either location and receive a complementary Design Tool Kit. It any new window treatment order will receive a gift card to E&E Stakeout Grill. Visit www.CreativeDesignTeam.com or call 727-539-1971 for an interior that feels good inside. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER GIRL SCOUT COOKIES - A TIME HONORED TRADITION The Girl Scouts were started in March, 101 years ago by Juliette Gordon Low in Savannah, Georgia. They were called Girl Guides, but changed their name to Girl Scouts in 1913. They have been selling cookies since 1917, and it is each local scout troop’s major fundraiser. The first cookie sales were done by a troop in Oklahoma. In 1922, the Girl Scout magazine, The American Girl, suggested cookie sales to other troops and provided recipes. The girls baked the cookies, the first ones being sugar cookies. In 1933, the Girl Scouts organized it into an official sale, selling homemade cookies through the windows of local utilities. In 1936, they began to use commercial bakers to mass produce their cookies. During World War II, because there was a shortage of flour, sugar and butter, customers were limited to two boxes per family so the Girl Scouts sold calendars in addition to cookies. There were 48 cookies per box, available in either vanilla or chocolate. Girl Scouts have always sold cookies to relatives, friends, and neighbors. Because of safety concerns, in recent years an increased emphasis has been placed on cookie booths, allowing girls to sell cookies from tables in public areas under the supervision of adult troop leaders and parents, rather than going door-to-door. Many troops sponsor a program to send cookies to our troops overseas. Each Girl Scout Council operates its own cookie sale. About 70% of the proceeds stay in the local Girl Scout Council, with a portion that goes directly to the troop selling the cookies. Revenues at all levels are used to pay for Girl Scouts events and activities, maintenance of the councils, Girl Scout camps and other things. Companies, such as Little Brownie Bakers (which is owned by Keebler, who is owned by Kelloggs), and ABC Bakers, a subsidiary of InterBake Foods, make and box most of the cookies nationwide. Thin Mints make up 25% of their sales. Other popular cookies are Caramel de Lites, Samoas, Peanut Butter Patties, Tagalongs, Peanut Butter Sandwiches, So-Si-Dos, Shortbreads, Trefoils, Thanks-A-Lot, Mango and others. Nationwide, the Girl Scouts sell over 200 million boxes a year. This type of fundraising is used to teach Girl Scouts valuable skills in planning, teamwork, finance, organization, communication and goal setting. The Tampa Bay area is part of the Girl Scouts of West Central Florida. If you want to join the Girl Scouts locally, go to www.GSWCF.org or call 1800-881-4475. Girl Scout Cookies can only be purchased from the girls and only during cookie season. This year’s cookie season has ended, but look for them again next year, right after the Katryna Currey, age 12, holidays of Girl Scout Troop 140. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER STAMP OUT HUNGER FOOD DRIVE - MAY 11 It’s coming. Soon your local letter carrier will leave a bag in your mail box, an appeal to help with the largest single-day food drive in the country. On Saturday, May 11th, the National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) will hold its 21st annual Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive. Carriers will collect non-perishable food donations left by mailboxes and in post offices and deliver them to local community food banks, pantries, and shelters. Last year more than 70 million pounds of food was collected according to NALC President Fredric Rolando. He explains, “What we see on our routes drives us to do what we can to help millions of Americans get the food their families so desperately need.” In the twenty year history of the food drive, more than one billion pounds of food has been collected across the nation. In Pinellas County, RCS Food Bank is preparing for the expected influx of emergency food. “The timing of the Letter Carrier’s Food Drive is excellent,” according to RCS Director of Development CJ Crooks. “For many students on free or reduced lunch, school offers their only real meal of the day. During the summer, families need help to make ends meet. Summer feeding programs for kids rarely provide transportation, and often parents are working.” The pre-summer food drive helps food banks everywhere refill after depleting holiday donations. Recipients of Largo, Seminole, and Highpoint post offices, RCS Food Bank was able to collect 73,000 meals last year. The effort included close to three hundred volunteers and leasing five additional box trucks to coordinate deliveries. Volunteers are needed to organize, sort and mark the thousands of pounds of food that come in throughout the day. For the 5,500 people RCS Food Bank serves each month, the annual Stamp Out Hunger drive is crucial. “This one day is a lifeline for the RCS Food Bank, says RCS Food Bank Director Jerry Coleman. “Without the donated food and effort of our local area mail carriers, our community would struggle during May, June, and July.” Over 50% of the members of households served by RCS are children under 18 years old. RCS is seeking volunteers to help with the drive on May 11th. Volunteer opportunities range from organizing food at the warehouse to helping load donations at local post office branches. You can contact Deb Gatley at 727-584-3528 ext. 407 for more information or to sign up. Many families really struggle in the summer months; • Families with school age children reliant on the freebreakfast and free-lunch programs must find alternative food sources. • School-age kids on summer break need childcare while parents are working. • Household utility costs rise with summer temperatures. • Reduced seasonal work in the service sector shrinks many parents’ income in the summer months. This year the Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive is being supported by The National Rural Letter Carriers’ Association, Campbell Soup Company, Valpak, U.S. Postal Service, United Way, AFL-CIO, Feeding America, Uncle Bob’s Storage, AARP, GLS, Source Direct Plastics, Publix and Valassis. Please consider joining these sponsors by leaving a contribution to the food drive outside your mail box on Saturday, May 11th. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER BOAT CLUB NEWS Members gathered at Salt Rock Grill for a day of food, drinks and fun in March. The IRB Boat Club was proud to once again donated a Saturday morning to clean the Intracoastal Waterway. Over a dozen members participated in Keep Pinellas Beautiful, by using their boats to clean up a section of the Intracoastal Waterway. In March, a little bit of sea fog didn’t keep away a group of 50 people, when members boated to Salt Rock Grill in Indian Shores for an afternoon of food, drink and fun. When the water is too cold to swim, the IRB Boat Club’s events are trips to restaurants. But, as the water warms up, the events shift to island partys. Here are some of the upcoming events: May 4: Grand Opening - Indian Rocks Beach Boat Docks May 16: Monthly Meeting; Jimmy Guana’s, 7pm May 18-24: Safe Boating Week, Everywhere June 9: Caladesi Island Party The IRB Boat Club, part of the Indian Rocks Beach Homeowners Association, is free to join. You do not need to live in Indian Rocks Beach to be a member. They meet at Jimmy Guana’s (Holiday Inn Harborside) on the third Thursday of the month, sponsor environmental projects, go to restaurants as a group and hold island parties when the weather is warmer. See a complete list of Boat Club events, pictures and more at IRBhome.com on the Boat Club page or follow them on Facebook. For more information, call Bob Griffin at 517-1997 or email BoatClub@IRBhome.com. YOU’RE NOT SEEING DOUBLE Which is the real Tampa Bay Rays Manager Joe Maddon? The man on the left is the Rays Manager and has had over 600 wins; the man on the right is Dennis Schnierle a retired seasonal Indian Rocks Beach resident. Dennis is from Chicago and lives in Indian Rocks Beach with his wife Mary. “People have stopped me in town and asked for my autograph,” says Dennis. “It’s fun to be noticed. I wish Joe and the Rays the best of luck in 2013, except when they are playing the White Sox.” CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER EN GARDE TAKES THE STRESS OUT OF YOUR PARTY NEEDS Whether it’s a casual backyard BBQ, a Graduation party, Wedding or Formal Affair, En Garde Catering and Gourmet Services allows you to sit back and relax. “Keeping up to date with the recent trends is one of the key elements” owner, Robb Schoonmaker says. “We will come up with these great ideas and then actually see them in magazines months later, so we know we must be on the right track.” When it comes to planning an event Schoonmaker says,” We do it all”. They (En Garde) customize all of their menus according to the needs and likes of the client. A simple phone call or visit to their Gourmet Retail Shop, located at 432 N. Indian Rocks Rd., is all it takes to get the party started. Being a full service catering and event planning company, En Garde can facilitate all the requirements needed for a successful event. From exclusive venue locations, to working with additional professionals in the industry, it allows them to be able to procure other event needs such as photographers, florists, musicians, linens, china, glassware, silverware and “just about anything else the client can think of”, says Lyn Eckfeldt, one of En Garde’s creative designers. Eckfeldt says,” I love it when the client just says ‘be creative and let me know what you come up with’. It really helps put that personal touch on the party”. “Springtime is the perfect time to start planning for Graduation Parties, Summer Events and Fall Weddings”, says chef/owner Bill Munette. For all of your catering and event planning needs, En Garde can be reached at (727) 489-9297 or stop by the retail shop located on Indian Rocks Rd, just North of West Bay Dr. For additional photos and examples of events they have done in the past you can visit them on the web at www.engardecatering.com. VIVA FLORIDA 500 EVENTS AT HERITAGE VILLAGE This year communities all over Florida are recognizing the significance of the 500th anniversary of Juan Ponce de León's arrival on Florida's east coast, as well as Florida's rich heritage and diverse cultural history. At Heritage Village, special exhibits and a family event in May will mark this noteworthy milestone. From May 1 through December 29, an exhibit entitled “For God and Gold,” will feature reproduction weapons, nautical items, clothing, camp gear, religious items and other objects to depict everyday life during the ocean crossing and the subsequent exploration and colonization of Spanish Florida. On May 19 from noon-4 p.m., the Pinellas County Historical Society and the Pinellas Public Library Cooperative join together for a signature event at Heritage Village. Activities will include: • Presentation: “Early Footprints in the Sand: Pre-Columbian Settlements along the Pinellas Peninsula and the Legacies of First Contact” • Exhibit of pre-Columbian Pottery • “For God and Gold” Exhibit • Family Crafts and Storytelling • Refreshments • Time Capsule Dedication THE FUN ‘N SUN FESTIVA The Fun ‘N Sun Festival started in 1954 as a way to keep snowbirds area's most eclectic and exciting celebrations. Drawing more than 5 parties, shows and activities that encompass the entire community, f something for everyone of all ages! In the beginning, it was a day parade featuring local schools and b 1950s and 1960s. You can see the effort and enthusiasm that went was changed allowing it to be a night parade. We interviewed peop others were watching in the crowds. Here are some of their memori AS WE REMEMBER IT: I played the saxophone and marched in my Tarpon Springs high sc but the parade was almost always on a Friday, during Lint. Of cou my three years of high school, we were able to march in only one the way to the Bayfront. George Cretekos, Mayor, City of Clearwate There were two days during the school year when we were permitte Pinellas County Fair in Largo and the other was the day of the Fun Pinellas, and some even from Hillsborough County, assembled on separate. The Chick Inn was in the Y. School was dismissed at noo bands, but also the beautiful floats. The highlight was the Miss Cle only Miss Clearwater that I can remember is Cary Bobo. She was i Indian Rocks Beach For a while, we lived on Cleveland Street and the Fun ‘n Sun parad in the parade for a few years, but my parties were more fun. Darle Commerce. I remember all the colorful floats lined up along Crest Lake Park re makeshift grandstand where the dignitaries were waiting to review Hotel. The floats represented sports teams, beauty queen contests, the Bay area. I always liked the Shriners on their midget scooters z children along the sidewalks. Michael Sanders, Clearwater Historica I believe in the earlier years, the Regional Chamber of Commerce City sponsored event along with activities in Coachman Park and o serpentine design of today, the parade was discontinued. But, the c Doran, Attorney & Former City Councilman The Fun ‘n Sun parade was the highlight of the week. But, the Panc Pancakes! Everyone got involved in the parade and everyone wante remember was the talent show held at Clearwater High School. As show when she was in 10th grade and sang “I Can’t Say No”. Art Between 1975 and 1977, I managed the City of Tampa’s official fl parades including the Fun ‘n Sun. Since it was one of the few night viewing. One year we had Buccaneers players and cheerleaders on their cheerleaders. Another year the theme was Star Wars, since th Whenever Miss Tampa was not available, we had a stand-in. Of co Publisher Clearwater Beach Neighborhood Newsletter 2013 SCHEDULE FRIDAY, APRIL 19 April 19th - 28th - Frenchy’s Sugar Sand Festival - 1,000 Tons Students $5 (13-18 years old), Seniors (55 & up) and Military $5, C of the exhibit. One thousand tons of sand will be transformed with including: Frenchy’s Master Sand Sculpting Competition, Sugar San Sand Box children’s play area, Fireworks, Pier 60 Daily Sunset Fest April 19th - Threshers Game with post Game Concert - Clea celebrate 60 years of Fun ‘n Sun, your favorite Greaser, Bowzer, br post-game concert. Watch your Clearwater Threshers take on the B shoes. Ticket & concession specials, hula hoop & hand jive dance c April 20th - Blues Bikes & BBQ Star Spectacular Event - On pm. Many other bands playing on the street as well as inside partic display. Come out for great music, food discounts from local restau April 27th & April 28th - Concerts in Coachman Park- The mu Supply, America, and Billy Currington in Coachman Park. Free gen funnsunclearwater.com for complete schedule and ticket informatio AL CELEBRATES 60 YEARS! s in Clearwater just a little longer, and blossomed into one of the 50,000 visitors each year, Fun 'N Sun Clearwater features music, from the sugar sand beaches to downtown to the city's parks – business. We found these old photos from parades held in the t into each of the floats and displays. Eventually the parade time ple that remember the parade. Some of them were in it, while ies. chool band 1962-65. We were always invited to the Fun ‘n Sun, urse, coming from Tarpon Springs, we were all Catholic. During of the parades. I remember marching down Cleveland Street, all er ed to wear bermuda shorts to class. One was the opening of the ‘n Sun parade. As I recollect, high school bands from all over the hill on Cleveland Street where Cleveland and Gulf to Bay on. We all went downtown on Cleveland St. to watch not only the earwater float with her attendants dressed in prom dresses. The in the CHS class of '61. Carol Mc Glaughlin, now resident of de went right by our house. We always had a parade party. I was ene Kole, Executive Director, Clearwater Beach Chamber of eady to proceed down the hill to the center of town by the small the floats. It was sometimes located in front of the Ft. Harrison businesses and many school marching bands from all around zipping around in their tight formations. It excited all the small cal Society planned the parade. But at some point, the parade became a other city facilities. After Cleveland Street was redesigned into the city still continues the Fun ‘n Sun festival in other ways. John cake Festival was pretty awesome, too - All-You-Can-Eat ed to be seen, either in or at the parade. Another highlight I s a matter of fact, my wife, Betsy Young Kader, entered the talent Kader, Asst. Director, Parks and Recreation loat. It was my job to get the float and the people to area t parade, it was different because the float had to be lit for night n the float. The next year we had the Rowdies soccer team and he movie had just come out. Miss Tampa always rode our float. ourse, the crowd never knew she was a replacement. Bob Griffin, 9 - SUNDAY, APRIL 28 s of Sand Come to Life for 10 days and nights! Adults $7, Children 12 & Under FREE! Tickets are available at the entrance sand sculptures under a 12,000-square-foot tent. Free activities nd Sculpting Clinics, Speed Sand Demonstrations, Camp Hyatt tival with local crafters, music and live entertainment arwater Threshers vs Brevard County Manatees - To help rings his Rock ‘n Roll Oldies Party to Bright House Field for a Brevard County Manatees in your poodle skirts and dancin’ contests. n Cleveland Street in downtown Clearwater festivities start at 5 cipating restaurants & businesses. Motorcycles will also be on urants & $1 draft beers. usic schedule is ready to get you on your feet with music from Air neral admission, reserve seating available. Visit on. photos courtesy of Berle Garris, Sr. and City of Clearwater Organizational News... CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER ISLAND ESTATES CIVIC ASSOCIATION Their Spring Social will be at Island Way Grill on Tuesday May 14, at 5:30pm. Potential new members are welcome and can join at the door. Please note - new location for meetings and increased membership dues! Membership is now $50 per year per family and is used to pay more than $10,000 per year to maintain the entry way to Island Estates. They meet on the second Monday of each month in the new Clearwater Marine Aquarium Classroom Building. For information, call President Wally Pope, 461-1818. ISLAND ESTATES WOMAN’S CLUB Their March 19th fashion show fundraiser was very successful with over 150 women raising over $5,000 for the scholarship program. Throughout much of the 50-year history of the IEWC, the organization has awarded these scholarships. The awards ceremony for these scholarships will be held at the May luncheon. Models Debbie Christofferson, Bernice Tarnow, Amber Davis, Rosemary Murray, Joanne Hiller, Kathy Voutsina's Le Boutique owner, Emma Foroutan last years recipient of a Scholarship, Vivian Smith, Juliet Gillespie, Suzette Gillespie, Anita Johnson and model coordinator Jan Nagy. April 16th they are having a luncheon on the Calypso Queen. Wear your gaudiest tropical shirts, dresses and leis and enjoy FREE wine, beer and rum punch while the DJ plays lots of fun dance music. Guests are welcome; make reservations by calling Helen Frain at 727-445-9290 Membership has been extended to women that do not live on the Island but would like to be involved in their activities and social events. Joining is easy, affordable and provides opportunities to make new friends and help others. Contact Joan Landreth at 727-812-8078 for more information. CLEARWATER BEACH ASSOCIATION They meets on the first Tuesday of every month at 6pm at the Clearwater Beach Rec Center. They recently sponsored an Easter Egg Hunt in conjunction with the Beaches Recreation Center and held their Spring Picnic. Tuesday, May 7th 6pm at the Clearwater Beach Recreation Center will be a Board Meeting and the Clearwater Marine Aquarium is coming to educate them as we enter turtle nesting season. It is open to the public. Saturday, May 18th they launch their first community clean-up of Mandalay Park as part of the Adopt-A-Park program. They will plant and clean up the area. Bring your gardening gloves and come out for some fresh air. Tuesday, June 4th 6pm - final Board Meeting of the season. Meetings resume in September. For membership or event information, contact President Wendy Hutkin wbhutkin@gmail.com, 727-216-3274. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER 10 THINGS YOU WILL LEARN IN A SAFE BOATING COURSE The US Coast Guard Auxiliary offers safe boating classes the first Saturday of each month. Boating is enjoyed by many every day, but with the pleasure comes responsibility. It is the law that anyone born on or after January 1, 1988, MUST have a valid boating certificate and a photo ID while operating a vessel of 10 HP or more. Here are some of the rules and regulations you will learn in a safe boating class. 1) Safety equipment - learn what is required to have on your boat. This is very important because what you don’t have could make the difference between being able to handle a situation or not. Also, if authorities stop you, you can be fined for not having the required safety equipment for your specific boat. Life jackets are number one! The US Coast Guard Auxiliary gives free vessel safety checks! 2) Driving a boat is vastly different from driving a car. You are dealing with air and water currents. Docking a boat is not as easy as you may think. It can be difficult, especially if the current is pulling you in the opposite direction. Understanding air, water currents and tides will help you learn to dock your boat properly. Boats don't have brakes! 3) Knowing how to work with lines and tying knots is part of boating. You have to secure a boat properly. If your boat gets away, the current or wind will quickly take it out of your reach and you will require the assistance of another boater to retrieve your vessel. So learn your knots. 4) You will learn what the red and green channel markers mean. Understanding the markers and lights can keep you from going aground in the shallows or running in to another boat because you were in the wrong area. 5) The speed limits on certain water ways may or may not be posted. Ignorance may not be enough to get you out of a ticket. Obey "No Wake" zones! 6) Using charts for coastal navigation can be a life saver. Charts are your road maps, in the water, that help you stay away from the shallows and show where all the markers and bridges are. You should always file a float plan with someone on shore! 7) You sometimes have to give way to the other guy. In a boating course you will learn who does that, why and how. 8) Every boat should have a horn. You’ll learn what one long blast or 2 short and so on mean. You should also have a radio on board for emergency situations and know how to use it. You'll learn which channel to use, which not to use and why, plus who monitors them. 9) Some boating regulations/laws must be followed by all boaters, for example, you are not to sit on the bow of the boat with your legs hanging over board. There are other regulations to learn and not knowing them can cost you. 10) Anchoring a boat is not just plopping a big chunk of iron into the sand. There is a mathematical technique applied to anchoring involving the size and length of your boat. Knowing how to do this gives you confidence of knowing your boat is going nowhere until you want it to. There are different types of boating - the fast pace of ski boating or the slow pace of a trawler, kayak, canoe or family pleasure craft. Whichever you choose, it is a good idea to know the rules of the road. Learn the safety rules to avoid potential dangers. Be safe on the water and get on with the fun of being out there with all that sky, sun, water, family and friends. Safe boating is NO accident. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER COOTERS - 20 YEARS LATER Fresh seafood, great steaks, ice cold beer and friendly staff are just a few reasons Clearwater Beach’s Cooters Restaurant & Bar has become a popular place for both locals and tourists. Owned and operated by Barry, Carol, and Amanda Mears, the restaurant has been in business for twenty years. Over the years, Cooters has become a destination for many. “People love it here,” said Carol Mears. “We have customers that have been coming here for many years. We have our locals that come in on a regular basis, and out-oftown guests that return every time they come to Clearwater Beach. Several have told me that they make Cooters their first stop as soon as they’re in town”. Cooters originally opened in 1993 as Cooters Raw Bar, and was modeled after a rustic Key West oyster bar. In 1997, Barry Mears and a former partner purchased it and started the transformation from a bar with food to a full service restaurant with a bar. They started the “All you can eat Crab Legs Special” - an instant success, and a happy hour with wings, oysters, shrimp and of course ice cold beer. Fifteen years ago, when the space next door became available, Mears expanded, adding a separate Sports Café, now called Cooters Sports Bar. The sports bar has become a popular gathering place to watch sports on TV, play darts and video games, and crank up the jukebox late at night. The room is also available to book for private parties. Built in the 1940s, the building, with its wood walls and railings, give Cooters a warm, inviting atmosphere. The walls are covered with pictures, plaques and numerous license plates given to Cooters from customers over the years. “We receive so many license plates each month that we continually try to figure out how to display them all, without taking any downs”, said Mears. The family friendly restaurant has something for everyone with a broad selection of seafood, steaks, wings, sandwiches, salads and appetizers. All items are prepared in house; steaks are hand-cut and burger patties are made by hand. Fresh seafood is delivered daily. All sauces and soups are homemade, and the wings are hand breaded to order. Cooters best sellers are Crab legs, Grouper sandwiches, Tequila Daytona wings, Fisherman’s Reuben, The Steamer Bucket, Captain’s Platter, and Hot Crabby Shrimp Dip. Famous Specials include All-You-Can-Eat Snow Crab (Mon & Tue) All-You-Can-Eat Fish and Chips (Wed), Super Grouper Thursday, weekends Sizzling Steak Specials, and Cooters legendary Happy Hour daily from 3-6 with .99 draft beer, discounted wine and liquor, and .50 wings, oysters & shrimp. There is also a late night happy hour in the Sports Bar 10pm – 1:30am. Each year Cooters celebrates their anniversary with a big tent party with live music, food, drink specials, lots of free giveaways and prizes and a raffle to raise money for the Clearwater Marine Aquarium. This years’ party will be May 17 and 18, and the Mears family will be making it an extra special event since it is their 20th! Everyone is invited! CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER ARBOR DAY CELEBRATION The city of Clearwater will celebrate Arbor Day April 27th from 9 am to 2 p.m. at the Public Service Complex, 1650 N. Arcturas Ave., with a ceremony and tree giveaway. The Florida Division of Forestry will present the prestigious Tree City USA flag to Clearwater for the 31st. consecutive year. After the 9 am ceremony, Clearwater residents will be eligible to receive two free trees per household. Trees include live oak, American elm, red cedar, bald cypress, southern magnolia, red maple, slash pines, Walters viburnum, and three colors of crape myrtles. 2,100 trees will be given away on a first-come, first-served basis. Each tree will be in a three-gallon tub. Proof of Clearwater residency is required and can be established by presenting a voters registration card, a Florida driver license or a recent utility bill. City staff will answer questions relating to maintaining and watering the new trees. Tree City USA is a national program sponsored by the National Arbor Day Foundation and administered in Florida by the Division of Forestry. To qualify for Tree City USA status, a city must meet certain criteria: establishment of an advisory board; enactment of a municipal tree ordinance; celebration of Arbor Day annually; and maintenance of a community forestry program with an annual budget of at least $2 per capita. Clearwater meets all of these requirements. THE NEGATIVES OF RECHARGEABLE BATTERIES According to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, it's against Florida law to throw away nickel-cadmium or lead acid rechargeable batteries (or products containing such batteries) in the trash. These batteries are considered a hazardous electronic and must be recycled or sent to a facility for proper disposal. Clearwater residents can bring old rechargeable batteries to the Household Electronics Collections Center, or HEC2 facility, located at 2855 109th Ave. N., St. Petersburg, Fla. on Mondays to Fridays (6 am to 6 pm) or on Saturdays (7 am to 5 pm). Florida lawmakers passed this law due to growing concerns about the impact of toxic heavy metals on public health and the environment. Cadmium and lead in rechargeable batteries can enter the environment from several sources including landfills and waste combustors. Once in the environment, they can accumulate in food crops, edible fish, or even the air we breathe. In humans and animals, long-term exposure to these metals can result in brain, lung, and kidney damage and is suspected to cause cancer. Lead exposure is especially harmful to unborn and very young children and can result in premature birth, slow growth, and development problems. This law applies to all Florida residents, businesses, institutions, governments, industrial and commercial companies, and medical facilities. Visit FDEP's website at dep.state.fl.us/waste/categories/batteries or call (850) 245-2118. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER IS YOUR INSURANCE READY FOR HURRICANE SEASON? A hurricane can be devastating and when damage occurs, residents depend on insurance to help bring them back to normal. The problem is many learn they have insufficient coverage or failed to get the right kind of policies after the damage is done and when they need protection the most. That is why now is the perfect time to review policies to ensure coverage is both adequate and comprehensive. Some very important points to consider include: READ THAT POLICY. Giving it a brief read over will reveal terms, as well as raise coverage gaps questions that can be discussed with an insurance agent. Start on the declaration page. If you read nothing else, read the exclusions! Watch for special endorsements that excludes wind coverage. Ask your agent to explain any questions you have. SOAK UP FLOOD INSURANCE. Since 1968, most policies do not cover damage from flooding; coverage is provided by the National Flood Insurance Program at floodsmart.gov. Besides protecting from damage of a rising drainage creeks, it also protects against storm surge or sewer backup from a flood. Your homeowner policy, even if it covers sewer backup, will most likely exclude sewer backup caused by flooding. All flood policies require 30 days to take effect, which means you can’t buy at the last minute. You may be surprised by how inexpensive flood insurance is, if you are not in a Flood Hazard Area! WIND IS SPECIAL. Hurricane – or windstorm – deductibles are not like the standard deductible on your policy. For low premiums, windstorm deductibles are typically a percentage of your home’s value and can add up to an expensive surprise. A 5% deductible for a $200,000 house can leave policy owners owning the first $10,000 of repairs. GETTING TO CODE. If a home is damaged beyond a certain amount, the rebuilt structure will have to conform to current building codes. It may not be a problem for a home built after 2001, but it may be expensive for older homes. CARS NEED COMPREHENSIVE. Basic auto coverage is required on all vehicles operated in the state of Florida. While these policies offer minimal coverage for auto accidents, other hazards such as flooding, wind damage and the like are covered under a comprehensive auto policy. RENTERS NEED COVERAGE, TOO. A landlord or property owner will have insurance on the structure that is being rented, but renters need coverage as well to protect their personal belongings. As with regular homeowner’s policies, most renter-s insurance coverage does not cover flooding, so a separate flood insurance policy can make a difference in how quickly you can replace your possessions. INVENTORIES ARE INVALUABLE. While most homeowners can recall larger items, would they be able to catalog every item down to the smallest details? An inventory done as a list or through photos/video help after a disaster. Capture what is on the walls, the fixtures, the flooring as well as personal property. Ask if your insurance offers contents “replacement cost”. Otherwise, the contents may be depreciated by the insurance carrier, before reimbursement. Discuss with your agent how to present a claim, should a disaster strike. If many homes are damaged, know how your carrier will find your home. If you must evacuate, take your policies with you. Have the office phone number and your agents emergency contact information with you. Visit www.pinellascounty.org/emergency for information about how to prepare yourself and your family for hurricanes and how to create your own disaster plan. More Organizational News CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER BELLEAIR BEACH LADIES LUNCHEON CLUB They meet monthly on the second Tuesday. Membership is open to area residents at $15 a year. The last meeting of the season is May 7th. There are no meetings through September. To join, call Barbara Chapman, 581-8929. FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY They are having a Membership Drive to attract people who share their goal of keeping the Rec Center, Library and Pool open and providing services for all the residents of Clearwater Beach. Dues are only $20 for individuals and $30 for families. Pick up a membership application at the Rec Center or Library, and become a part of this community. Call Ron Delp at 412-2566 or Anne Garris at 446-4410 for more information BELLEAIR GARDEN CLUB They were formed in 1947 and celebrated their 66 anniversary in February. They meet on the first and second Wednesday of each month at the Belleair Garden Club at 903 Ponce de Leon Blvd. in the Town of Belleair from October to May. Membership is $50 per year. Over 75 people attended their annual Orchid Fest & Membership Drive. A huge variety of Orchids were available for purchase, & sold out fast. Speaker Michael Polen donated 2 beautiful orchids for the Raffle. The next meetings are: May 1st - Spring Luncheon and Art Show at the Belleair Country Club. It is $25 and includes a Pasta and Salad Bar. Wear your favorite hat and gloves for group photo. June 5th - Summer Pot Luck lunch at 11:30pm. Bring a homemade dish for 10. Casual attire. Guests are welcome. Call Barbara Chapman, 581-8929 or E-mail BChapman1234@Gmail.com, to RSVP. CLEARWATER GARDEN CLUB Located at 405 Seminole Street, they meet on the second Friday, October through May at 9:30am. Dues are $30 for one or $35 for two from the same family. The Saturday Garden Club meets all year on the third Saturday at 9:30. They have interesting speakers, handson events and field trips. They welcome new members! The Annual Plant Sale is May 18, 8am to 1pm, at their clubhouse! This is one of their largest fundraisers to provide kids scholarships for Camp Wakiva Summer Camp. Everything is a bargain and the most plants have been grown in gardens of Club members! All plants come with instructions for care and pertinent information on handling. Come early for the best selection. President Cathy Foley may be reached at 443-7032. AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY, POST 7 They had a successful Fashion Show on March 19 with all proceeds going to Veterans and Families. Over 100 women enjoyed the Chinese Auction winnings; the many spring outfits modeled by the “Closet Connection” and “All That Glitters,” along with a delicious Chicken Cordon Bleu luncheon. Anyone interested in joining the Auxiliary and continuing the helping hand to our Veterans and their families please call Georgia Pettibone at 727 725 2121. More Organizational News CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER CLEARWATER HISTORICAL SOCIETY . They are hosting their Spring Fish Fry, Saturday, May 4th at Clearwater High School starting at noon and finishing about 2pm. Using the Clearwater High School cafeteria accommodates the larger crowd they are expecting. The cost is $12 for adults, $6 for kids 12 & under, or $10 if you buy 5 or more tickets. Proceeds go to benefit the Clearwater Historical Society. Call Jay Rhodes for tickets (727) 804-2073. The 5th Annual Reunion of the World Famous Clearwater Bombers 10 time World Champion fast pitch softball team was held in March at Clearwater’s historic Plumb House. Twenty former Bombers were there to meet fans, pose for pictures and sign autographs. Clearwater Mayor George Cretikos and former Mayor Rita Garvey read a Proclamation declaring Clearwater Bombers Day. Jan Lasley, 1962 & 1963 Miss Clearwater Bombers, pitched a ceremonial first softball to Bill Justice to start the event. The Lady Bombers, the current all girls softball team, joined in the festivities. Refreshments were provided by Publix Groceries. Memberships are $5 students, $10 individuals, $20 family, $150 corporate. If anyone has an interest in being involved with CHS, call David Allbritton at (727) 4815102, Bill Wallace at (727) 446-2676 or Mike Sanders at (727) 434-1684. SAND KEY CIVIC ASSOCIATION The SKCA meets the first Wednesday of the month, at the Clearwater Sailing Center at 7pm. The Members dues are paid through their respective HOAs or COAs. Future speakers include the City Council, State Representatives and Sand Key business owners. The next meeting will be March 6th. For information, call Arlene Musselwhite, President - 727-644-7524 CLEARWATER COMMUNITY SAILING CENTER Located on Sand Key, they will be holding a Summer Luau on Saturday, June 1 to raise money to support their operations. The event will run from noon to 5pm and includes food and spirits, arts and crafts vendors, fun games for kids, sailboat and outrigger canoe rides, music, raffles, and a silent auction. Last bids for the silent auction will be at 4pm. In 2012, the auction raised over $10,000 and they are looking to top that number. The day will offer something for everyone whether you are a sailor or a “land lubber”. Bring the family and enjoy! Proceeds will be used to support operations, spring and summer children’s camps and other award winning programs offered at the CCSC. CCSC’s Camp Awesome is dedicated to teaching sailing to high functioning children with special needs, such as Autism and Downs’s syndrome. It recently received the award for “Outstanding Program for Disabled Sailors”. The Clearwater Community Sailing Center serves as the base for Sailability, a non-profit corporation that provides access to sailing for the disabled including military veterans. Clearwater Community Sailing relies on donations from businesses and the community to replace equipment and help keep the fleet and facilities operational. If you would like to donate to the auction, volunteer, or have any questions please call Kelly at 727517-7776 or email kelly@clearwatercommunitysailing.org. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER FROM DEBATE TEAM TO RAYS ANNOUNCER by Bob Griffin, Publisher Dewayne Staats, television play-by-play commentator for the Tampa Bay Rays since they began in 1998, learned to love baseball as a child while listening to the St Louis Cardinals games on TV and the radio. By the time he was 8, he was playing little league. As a teenager, he was a pitcher. But, then an 8th grade teacher introduced him to the debate team. That is when he knew he’d rather talk than play ball and his desire to be a broadcaster was born. Staats is the first and only TV announcer the Rays have ever had. This season begins his 37th year in professional sports broadcasting, and his 16th year with the Rays. While a student, Dewayne had a reporting and broadcasting job Southern Illinois University’s radio station. He also covered high school games for several nearby small town stations, before interning at KMOX in St Louis. In 1973, while still a student at SIUE, Dewayne began his professional broadcasting career with the minor league baseball team Oklahoma City 89ers. He moved to Major League Baseball, when he joined the Houston Astros in 1976, moved to the Chicago Cubs in 1985, then the NY Yankees in 1990. By then, Staats had moved to West Palm Beach to be closer to his family. He commuted to the Yankees’ games. Only two players have hit a home run for their 3,000th hit, and Staats was lucky enough to have been in the booth for both - Derrick Jeter and Wade Boggs. From 1995 to 1997 he worked for ESPN. Then, when the Rays got their franchise in 1998, they hired Staats. He moved to Pinellas County. Dewayne has been married to Carla, his second wife, for 6 years. They met while he was working for the Astros in Houston. They live in Sand Key in “The Grand” condominiums. “We love this area of Florida,” Staats says, “We really wanted to live on the water. The Grand was under construction when we were looking for a place, and we were impressed with that JMC project.” Dewayne’s daughter, Stephanie Wheeler is married to former Ray’s pitcher Dan Wheeler. They live nearby in Belleair Beach and have 3 children, two of which play little league in Indian Rocks Beach. Stephanie and Carla co-own the new IN2 Nutrition store in Belleair Bluffs, next to Bonefish Grill. They opened the store in October with a little help from Dewayne and Dan. They enjoy working together while also meeting people in the area. Carla has a background in addiction counseling and that training helps her understand people and health. Dewayne says he is really the stock boy. The Rays play 162 games per year, although occasionally when there is a national broadcast, Staats doesn’t work. He has been know to broadcasts a spring season game or two and once in awhile will broadcast a college basketball or football game, just for the fun of it. Dewayne reached a major milestone by broadcasting his 5,000th MLB game in June of 2010. Staats has been nominated for many awards in Sports Broadcasting. Recently, he was in the Final Ten for the Ford C. Frick Award. “Tom Cheek won, but I was honored to be part of the group that was nominated.” This is the beginning of his path to Baseball’s Broadcasters Hall of Fame. In 2006, the Rays gave away Staats bobblehead dolls at the Seattle Mariners game. “I do not go to all the games,” Carla says. “But I do watch most of them on TV. I have so many other personal interests it is hard to do it all. I do go on a few road trips, though.” Carla is very involved in two local organizations. One is Quantum Leap Farm, in Odessa where they practice Equine Therapy which involves using horses to work with disabled people. They received a military grant to work with military veterans and their families including Wounded Warriors and their children. Get more information on this group at www.QuantumLeapFarm.org. The other organization Carla works with is PACE, a Pinellas Park center for girls having trouble in school. What Staats has to say about Joe Maddon “I first met Joe when I worked for the Yankees and he coached for the Angels. I think he was the first coach I knew to use a computer to help him coach. He is very creative and analytical.” Andy Freedman “He must know what he is doing. He brought Maddon here. There are only 3 teams with 5 consecutive winning seasons in a row and the Rays are one of them.” A New Stadium “That decision is way beyond my pay grade. I will go wherever they play.” They enjoy their baseball off-season, October through March. They take in some Spring Training in Port Charlotte. But mainly they enjoy their time off in Sand Key. Their favorite restaurant? “We love Salt Rock, Island Way Grill, Palm Pavilion and Bonefish,” says Carla. “It’s hard to pick just one.” You can see Dewayne calling the Rays games play-by-play almost nightly during baseball season on the Sunshine Network, available through your cable provider. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER IS IT TOO LATE? by Michael Rogan, of Rogan and Associates It has been said that the shortest measurable amount of time is the period between when the average investors think it’s too soon to get back into the stock market after a decline, and when they think it’s too late. Though this has often surprised and sometimes amused us throughout the years, we didn’t want to waste the opportunity to bring this up as the major U.S. stock market indexes are at their alltime high prices and many investors are already beginning to think it is too late. About thirteen years ago, in early 2000, the S&P 500 stock index traded at just over 1500, about where it is today. The earnings per share for the S&P 500 in 1999 was about $48 per share. People were very excited about stocks and most were perfectly happy with being invested in a stock market trading at over 30 times earnings. Most likely, that was because since mid-1982, the market had delivered total returns of nearly 20% per year (!) and people were pretty sure this would continue unabated. “This time is different” was the motto of the day. No one seemed worried. Flash forward to today – with some wild rides in between, the price of the S&P 500 has returned to roughly the same spot it was 13 years ago. Despite a terrorist attack, a burst real estate bubble, a financial crisis, and the "Great Recession", prices finally have recovered. Still with 13 years of "going nowhere", it's understandable why people are apprehensive about being invested in or adding money to the stock market. Or is it? Corporate profits are at an all-time high. The earnings per share on the S&P 500 is estimated to be $113 per share this year following $103 in 2012. That’s right – at the same stock market prices everyone loved with less than $50/share of profits, everyone is scared with over $110/share of profits! When I entered this business nearly 30 years ago, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had never been as high as 1500, today it's looks headed to 15,000. Over time, the US stock market always makes new all-time highs, because corporate profits do the same. The intent of this message is perspective. Without perspective and context, you're much more likely to be swayed by the headlines of the day. Whether investments in stocks or stock funds are appropriate for you depends entirely on your financial needs and goals as identified by your long-term financial plan. If you don't have a plan, there's no time like the present to make one. For decades, we have provided sound financial advice to Bay Area individuals and families. We have consistently found people with a plan in place are better able to ignore the headlines and focus on things that really matter. If you’d like to discuss your plan, reach me at (727) 712-3400. COMPUTER CLASSES The Clearwater library is offering beginners computer classes. Learn the ins and outs of navigating with a mouse, how to search the web, send an email and more. This is a two-part class. Please call the library at 562-4970 to reserve a mouse. Other computer classes are offered every Monday at 1pm. Just drop in. They also offer a Writers Support Group the first and third Wednesdays of each month at 1pm. This workshop for would-be writers is a place to receive help and encouragement. Anne Garris leads this program. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER HOOTERS BEGAN HERE... 30 YEARS AGO An Interview by Bob Griffin, Publisher Clearwater Beach, behind the Holiday Inn (now the Hilton) Hooters Restaurants got its start right here in Pinellas and Hawaiian Tropic was holding a bikini contest with it. I County. You will find two relatively new stores on the told the other guys that I was going to go to that event and beach, in Madeira Beach (Johns Pass Village) and their hire whomever wins the contest.” newest one in Clearwater Beach near the Roundabout. “Lynne Austin, won the contest. I approached her with my Their first ever store is located at 2800 Gulf-to-Bay Blvd, business card. She told me she already had a job with GTE just east of US 19. It all started with six guys known the “Hooters Six.” They all as a customer service person. The next day, she quit that job and called me. Lynne was our very first Hooters loved to eat and watch girls. Most of them were from the employee.” mid-West and were contractors. None of them had “We put Lynn on billboards, in our ads and later our anything to do with the restaurant business. Hooters calendar. Playboy Magazine saw the calendar and They each had a certain kind of food they liked. One liked called to get in touch with her. She became a playmate of shrimp, one liked oysters and they all loved wings. “Why the month and later playmate of the year. Every time don’t we open a place with all that here,” said one of the anyone talked about Lynne, they talked about Hooters.” guys, “and give it that Florida beachy atmosphere.” In 1986, they produced their first They searched for a location - any edition of the now annual Hooters location. They found an old Calendar. Hundreds of girls have dilapidated building on Gulf to used their job at Hooters as a Bay. Many other restaurants had springboard to successful modeling started and failed in there but and acting careers. they wanted to give it a go, so on In 2003, Hooters celebrated their April 1st, 1983, the six 20th Anniversary with a big, free incorporated the concept called concert on the beach, directly Hooters. behind the Hilton in Clearwater Yes, “Hooters” is related to the Beach. They hired Three Dog Night “owl” they use in their logo. And to play. Thousands attended. yes, it is also a term lovingly used “Its amazing that our roots are here when referring to a certain part of in Clearwater Beach, and now we a female. have a store in Clearwater Beach, “Actually the name came from a “Hooters Six” in 1983 in front of the first Hooters which opened just last year. When popular sketch in the ‘80s by you stand on the roof of that store, Restaurant located on Gulf-to-Bay. comedian, Steve Martin,” says Ed called ‘The Lookout,’ it’s hard to Droste, one of the original six and imagine that it all started here.” resident of Island Estates. “What else brings a gleam to a man’s eye besides beer, chicken Today, there are over 450 Hooters in 44 states and in 24 wings and an occasional winning other countries. Out of the original “Hooters Six,” four are football season? Hence the name, still owners of the franchise that owns and operates all the Hooters.” stores in the Tampa Bay area. There are now 12 in the Tampa Bay region. “The Hooters idea started in Tampa Bay Hooters sponsors many events and local Clearwater Beach. While we were charities, such as Moffit Cancer Center, the Morton Plant under construction on Gulf-To-Bay, I Mease Foundation, Habitat for Humanity, the V Foundation had the idea that we needed a for Cancer Research, Operation Homefront, and the Kelly goodlooking girl to represent us and Jo Dowd Breast Cancer Research. use in our advertising,” Droste went on. “In the summer of 1983, we For more information on Hooters Restaurants, visit their Ed Droste, one of heard that there was a major official web site www.OriginalHooters.com. Or simply visit the present owners. volleyball tournament being held on their closest store. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER ADOPT A MILE OF THE PINELLAS TRAIL By Pinellas County Commissioner Susan Latvala Most people simply know it as the Pinellas Trail, but on Dec. 2, 2000, as part of the trail’s 10th year anniversary celebration, our favorite linear park was officially named the Fred Marquis Pinellas Trail, after longtime Pinellas County Administrator Fred Marquis. Now, you can have your name on the Pinellas Trail too, on a section of it anyway. Pinellas County and Keep Pinellas Beautiful Inc. are sponsoring a Pinellas Trail Adopt-A-Mile program this year to help facilitate care and upkeep of this very popular 47-mile recreational amenity. The Adopt-a-Mile program for the Pinellas Trail is patterned after Keep Pinellas Beautiful’s Adopt-A-Mile program for county roads. On the Pinellas Trail, businesses or groups of two or more individuals agree to perform cleanups every other month for two years. These cleanup activities are expected to greatly enhance the appearance of the trail, and will go a long way toward keeping trailside debris from entering our waterways and polluting the natural habitats of our native wildlife. Organizations are credited with their names on Adopt-AMile signs at the beginning and end of adopted miles, and all participants will be listed on the Keep Pinellas Beautiful website and in their quarterly newsletter. All your group needs to do is select a mile-long trail section that you would like to maintain, fill out an online application, sign an agreement to perform the bimonthly cleanups and submit a result report after each cleanup activity. Keep Pinellas Beautiful will provide trash bags, gloves, report forms and general liability insurance coverage for all project participants. To get the ball rolling, simply complete an online application at www.keeppinellasbeautiful.org or call Keep Pinellas Beautiful Inc. at (727) 533-0402. Make a mile of the Pinellas Trail your own this year. Thousands of walkers, bicyclists, joggers and inline skaters will be saying thank you for a job well done. SPEND A DAY AT CALADESI ISLAND Recognized as our Nation's #1 rated beach, Caladisi Island is all about relaxation, tranquility and clear, Caribbean-like waters. While you can not drive there, you can visit aboard the Tropics Boat Tour. The island excursion begins with a one hour trip to Caladesi Island. Upon arrival, sun worshipers can head for the award-winning beach to sunbath, beachcomb and swim. Nature enthusiasts can spot wildlife while taking a three-mile nature trail through the natural wonders of the island. Adventurers can kayak or stand-up paddle board through the mangroves and bay and for everyone, shelling is a great way to walk away with an island treasure. There are chairs, umbrellas and cabanas for rent and a cafe for snacks and lunch or you are welcome to bring your own. The Tropics will pick you up at 3pm. On your return to Clearwater Beach, you are likely enjoy dolphin sightings while listening to the rich narration of the history of the Clearwater Pass and interesting sites along the way. All guests are welcome to purchase The Tropics Wristband for unlimited cocktails and soft drinks while you are aboard The Tropics. This excursion is offered on the weekends. Call 727-442-7433 or visit TheTropicsBoatTours.com for more information or ticket sales. CLEARWATER BEACH NEWSLETTER CLEARWATER GATEWAY FARMERS MARKET The Clearwater Gateway Farmers Market saw its 11,000th customer on Saturday, April 6! The Market, open since January 12, features quality fresh foods, crafts, bakeries, jewelry, hot food, and locally made items. The Market accepts EBT for customers receiving SNAP benefits, and now has grant money to offer Double Dollars. Any customer who has EBT benefits will get twice the value of their debit swipe in market Money, up to $10 per week, The InterCultural Advocacy Institute in Clearwater is the non-profit organization operating the Market. Sandra Lyth, the CEO, said “We are pleased to offer high quality food products at reasonable prices. Our goal is to promote locally produced products, and to offer a multicultural experience.” The Clearwater Gateway Farmers market is located in the 1200 block of Cleveland St., east of Missouri Avenue in Clearwater. It is open every Saturday from 9am to 2pm. Contact the Market Manager at 727-776-7932. 2013 CLEARWATER BEACH RESTAURANT WEEK Clearwater Beach Restaurant Week is May 12-18 this year. The culinary celebration offers top-notch dining and an array of different cuisines. Throughout the week, you can visit any participating restaurant to enjoy special threecourse, prix fixe menus ranging in price from $15 – $35. Some restaurants will offer a lunch menu for $10 to $15. You'll have a chance to vote for your favorite food items and chef. You will also be given a passport to take with you as you dine at various restaurants. Be sure to get your passport stamped at each place you visit. Once you collect four different restaurant stamps, you can enter your passport for a chance to win A Dream Beach Getaway. This includes a Two Night Stay in a Gulf Front Two Bedroom Suite at the Hyatt Regency Clearwater Beach Resort & Spa. Restaurant Week kicks off with an event on May 10, 2013 on picturesque Beach Walk from 5pm-9pm. The event features a tasting from each participating restaurant, a wine garden, live music, exquisite raffle items and an awesome fireworks display at dusk. Entry to the Kick Off event is $20 which includes 20 taste tickets. Proceeds benefit the Clearwater Beach Chamber of Commerce and the Clearwater Marine Aquarium. For more information visit ClearwaterBeachRestaurantWeek.com. Participating Restaurants: Bobby's Bistro Island Way Grill Bob Heilman's Beachcomber Jimmy's Fish House Clearwater Wine Bar & Bistro Rusty's Sheraton SandKey Cooters Restaurant & Bar Pensare Italian Bistro Cork n Brew Bistro Reflections @ The Hilton Crabby Bill's Seafood Lobster Pot Bistro Clear Sky Beachside Café Rumba Island Bar & Grill Crabby’s Beachwalk Bar & Grill Salt Rock Grill Marlin Darlin Key West Grill Caretta on the Gulf Clearwater Wine Bar & Bistro Jimmy's Fish House All 4 Frenchy's Restaurants Shephard's Restaurant Hooters, Clearwater Beach StarLite Dining Yachts Watercolour Steakhouse/Marriott Pizza Bizzar Palm Pavilion Beachside Grill & Bar Sands Beach Bar & Grill/Wyndham Garden SHOR American Seafood Grill/Hyatt