Erin Merryn at the 100 Women Luncheon The Cats Meow at the
Transcription
Erin Merryn at the 100 Women Luncheon The Cats Meow at the
April 2013 The Cats Meow at the Gaston Livery Stable Bella’s Park Avenue Walking Tour page 6 Bobby Dallas is Coming! page 8 page 15 Meet Tom Rapp: Aiken’s Horticulturist page 12 Erin Merryn at the 100 Women Luncheon page 4 CONTENTS • Intriguing • Empowering • Entertaining April Features 4 Putting Sex Offenders Out of Business: The 100 Women Luncheon with Erin Merryn 6 Bella Favorites by Kathy Huff Ciao Bella 20 Bella Buzz 26 The Flying Foodie: Ramp it Up! The Cats Meow Saving the Gaston Livery Stable by Chef Belinda by Anna Dangerfield 8 3 28 Good Sense Medicine: Why Hormone Therapy at Menopause and Beyond? Bobby Dallas is Coming! A World Premiere in Aiken by Kathy Huff by Zoom Heaton 30 Scene Around Town 10 Just Sayin’ by Phyllis Maclay 15 Special Pullout Section: The Park Avenue Walking Tour #2 Mailing Address 124 Trafalgar St., SW Aiken, SC 29801 Publisher Kathy Urban Huff editor@aikenbellamagazine.com Advertising Kathy Huff 803/439-4026 ads@aikenbellamagazine.com Barbara Stafford 803/646-8160 bellasales@aikenbellamagazine.com Photography Kathy Huff, Jim Stafford 12 Meet Tom Rapp, Aiken’s Horticulturist by Susan Elder April 2013, Volume 10, No.3 of a 3-part Bella Series by Susan Elder Staff Writers Anna Dangerfield, Phyllis Maclay Susan Elder, Tony Baughman, Sally Bradley, Belinda Smith-Sullivan Graphic Design Jim Stafford 19 She Means Business: Katy Lipscomb of Material Things by Belinda Smith-Sullivan 23 Feeding Lives Together- Fresh Produce for the Hungry ? by Phyllis Maclay Want BELLA delivered to your mailbox Subscriptions (9 issues per year) are available via U.S. Mail for $30. Send checks payable to: BELLA Magazine 124 Trafalgar Street SW Aiken, SC 29801 24 USCA Career Fair Prepares Students for the Work World by Heather Wright, USCA Writer 25 The Do’s and Don’ts of Job Interviews by Eric Blacks, USCA Writer April 2013 Ad Directory 3 Monkeys Fine Gifts........................................... 7 Aiken Obstetric and Gynecology Associates....... 11. Aiken Ophthalmology......................................... 29 Aiken Regional Medical Centers...................... 3, 32 AllStar Tents and Events.................................... 31 Auto Tech.......................................................... 27. Barbranne Clinton, Hair Stylist........................... 13.. Barbara Sue Brodie Needleworks....................... 13 Chef Belinda Spices..................................... 16, 22 Child Advocacy Center Luncheon - Erin Merryn..... 4 Doncaster—Lee Cavanaugh........................... 7, 27 Furniture Outlet................................................. 25 Handyman Jack—Jim Bloom.............................. 22 Inner Beauty MD................................................ 22 Janney Montgomery Scott—Kenneth Wiland......... 7 La Dolce Gourmet Bakery, Coffee & Tea Bar......... 5 Life and Health Expo.......................................... 14 Lionel Smith Ltd................................................ 18 Material Things.................................................. 16 Nandina Home and Design................................... 9 . NeriumAD Skin Treatment—Vaughn Packer........ 27 2 The Pain Center—Dr. William Durrett.................. 24 Palmetto Package and Fine Wine Shop................. 5 Palmetto Web Enterprises.................................. 14 Ray Massey, Attorney ....................................... 20 Refresh Jewelry and Gallery............................... 27 Richards Furriers—Augusta................................. 5.. Rose Hill Estate................................................. 22 Ruby Masters, Mark Taylor Insurance................. 13 Russell Padgett, AXA Financial Advisor............... 28 Shake It Off Fitness and Wellness Center.............. 2 Shellhouse Funeral Home................................... 21 Stewart & Associates-Liz Stewart....................... 14. Summerville Rags.............................................. 19 The Tailor Shop................................................... 5 TLC Medical Centre....................................... 9, 22 True Value Hardware.......................................... 13 Unique Expressions Gifts and More...................... 5 Wayne’s Automotive & Towing Center................. 29 WSKX-92.7 FM Radio........................................... 5 The Willcox-- Hotel, Restaurant, Spa................... 30 York Cottage Antiques....................................... 27 shake it off Fitness & Wellness Center The 10 Minute Miracle 230 Silver Bluff Road Aiken, SC 29803 Mon–Thurs 8–6 • Fri 9–5 803-642-8222 W NEInfrared Sauna www.aikenshakin.com BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 Enjoying the Seasonal Palette Ciao Bella! Having lived for many years in Illinois and Ohio, where winter flowers are impossible, I appreciate the year-round landscape of greenery and blooming shrubs as a delightful reminder that snow and ice are no longer my constant winter companions, and light jackets suffice for most of what we call winter. We have been enjoying beautiful camellias of all hues for months now, and many of my friends are still picking blossoms to float in crystal bowls for indoor color as well. To them, pink or fuschia is the color of winter, since sasanquas begin blooming before Christmas. Then there are pansies with their riot of color. The City of Aiken plants numerous parkways and monuments with yellow, purple, white, indigo and variegated pansies to decorate our winter streetscapes. Our town horticulturist, Tom Rapp, is featured on page 12 in this issue. I knew his name long before this story; it is spoken with reverence in Aiken because his visions of landscaping have transformed our public entries and streets, making us even more proud to call Aiken our home. This year, you can enjoy spring in Aiken by taking the Park Avenue Tour, Bella’s second walking tour laid out by Susan Elder on page 14. This walk centers on Downtown rather than Colleton Avenue, last month’s featured walk. The May entry in the series will focus on an “Easy” Walking Tour. BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 Color in Aiken Green Thumbs for Golden Harvest As you plan your vegetable gardens, plant an extra row or two for the Golden Harvest Food Bank. Fresh produce is welcome there to serve an everincreasing needy, hungry populace. Read about it on page 22. A World Premiere in Aiken Aiken is colorful in other ways too. Bobby Dallas is coming to town! What?! You don’t know Bobby Dallas? Well, you will shortly. It’s a new interactive musical comedy premiering at the end of April at Bobby’s B-B-Q party room on the Augusta Highway. If you’ve ever attended or participated in Tony and Tina’s Wedding, the idea is the same—local people as supporting actors in a production that feels like the real deal—a wedding, in the case of Tony and Tina, and a tour’s end celebration for a singer who made it big in the Country Western music world, in the case of Bobby Dallas. What is interesting to me is that Tony and Tina’s Wedding has been around for 25 years now— and still playing! The Bobby Dallas After-Party is the newly written play by Mark Nassar. Judging from Tony and Tina’s success, Bobby Dallas will likely be around for quite a while too. Why is it premiering in Aiken? Because the writer is the cousin of Jim Victor, owner/partner in Nandina. Mark Nasser likes Aiken, likes to visit Jim and Susan, and gets good feedback from our local thespian community. He also was “blown away” by our local talent when he did Tony and Tina here twice, and expects the same for Bobby Dallas. Attendees will all be cast as “celebrities” in this comedy dinner show, and that includes the red carpet treatment for everyone! Come out and support Bobby Dallas and the Aiken Chapter of the American Red Cross on any one of three nights, April 25-26-27. (see page 8) The Cats Meow Aiken’s fascination with its past is evident in the rousing success of the Friends of the Gaston Livery Stable, who have purchased the unique barn and continue to work to restore it. The Cats Meow Gala and Auction, to be held on April 13, will raise money toward the payoff of the mortgage and repairing the carriage lift to working condition. Hats off to the many donors and volunteers who have saved this barn as part of Aiken’s unique heritage. (see page 6) An apology and a correction In the Rosie the Riveter issue of Bella—accidentally labeled February on the cover instead of March (mamma mia!)—there were two errors in the story about the Pickens-Salley House. Ronny Bolton’s name was misspelled, and he pointed out that the Pepper Hill Rehabilitation and Nursing Center was established well before the house was moved. Bella apologizes to Mr. Bolton and to Bella readers for both errors. Bella would like to take this opportunity to thank him once again for donating the Pickens-Salley House to USCA, thereby assuring that this valuable historical residence would be saved for posterity. Aiken’s charm and history are safeguarded by residents such as Ronny Bolton and Coleen Reed, president of the Friends of the Gaston Livery Stable, who acted selflessly for the good of the city. We owe them much. Kathy Huff 3 Putting Sex Offenders Out of Business by Kathy Huff Last year former Miss America Marilyn van Derbur mesmerized an Aiken audience of 425 for an hour with her tragic and compelling story of years of sexual abuse by her father. The resulting emotional scars included intermittent, psychologically-induced paralysis that plagued her as an adult. Her speech was the focus of the inaugural 100 Women Spring Luncheon to benefit the Child Advocacy Center. This year, Erin Merryn will continue the mission of 100 Women—to educate the community about child abuse— in her keynote address at the Spring Luncheon on April 24, from 11:30 to 1:30 p.m. at the USCA Business and Education Building. Tickets are $30 each and can be purchased by calling the Child Advocacy Center at 803644-5100, or visiting cacofaiken. org. They may also be purchased at 3 Monkeys Fine Gifts and Material Things. 90% Never Tell Unfortunately, only about 10% of abuse victims ever tell; the effect on their lives from not revealing their secrets often plays out in mental and physical illness. Marilyn van Derbur “dissociated”—that is, her personality split into the Daytime Marilyn and the Nighttime Marilyn, a mechanism that allowed her to have a normal life away from her father. For Erin, the abuse led to graphic flashbacks and even a suicide attempt. Erin’s Law At only 28 years old, Erin has convinced the legislatures of five states (Illinois, Missouri, Indiana, Michigan and Maine) to pass what is now known as “Erin’s Law:” introducing sexual abuse education into school curriculum as a prevention measure. “We teach kids bus drills, fire drills, tornado drills, but nothing about this,” she said. Action to pass Erin’s Law is pending in the states of Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, New York and Pennsylvania. “Because of Erin, our schools are making sure students are educated about sexual abuse. Because of Erin, further cases of child sexual abuse are being prevented,” said Governor Pat Quinn of Illinois, the first state to sign the law. As a child, Erin was abused by two separate offenders in two different time periods in her growing up. Between the ages of 6 and 8, she was molested and raped by a friend’s uncle, but this abuse remained her secret until adulthood. Several years later, a cousin began molesting her, locking her in closets, bathrooms, and basements. Erin spoke up only when her younger sister revealed that she too had experienced the abuse. Up until the moment she confided the cousin’s molestation to her parents, Erin had only told her diary the sordid facts. “I’m really scared,” she wrote at age 11. “Something happened last night, but I don’t know who to tell.” 4 and other sources has steadily risen. The rise may well be due to better reporting and investigations, but it may also be that there are more incidences of child abuse, she added. Stolen Innocence Erin is the author of two books about her experiences. The first one, Stolen Innocence, was published when she was a high school senior. As a result, she began speaking at leadership conferences and children’s advocacy centers around the country. This outreach led to the drafting of Erin’s Law. “Think of how many kids could have been saved from monsters like Jerry Sandusky if they’d had the tools to speak up,” she said. “I want that second-grader to tell her mom what happened at the sleepover, not wait until she’s 30 to break her silence.” The Child Advocacy Center sees more than 300 children each year, all of them referred for alleged abuse. Regular funding for the Center covers about half of the annual expenses, which leaves about $200,000 to be raised through fundraising every year. The 100 Women Spring Luncheon is part of the Center’s awareness mission and fundraising efforts. 100 Women=$100,000 “Then it hit me. I had done nothing wrong,” she said. “I didn’t need to be ashamed.” Nationally, there are 300,000 cases of suspected abuse reported each year. If only 10% tell, that means more than 3 million cases occur annually, but only 300,000 cases are addressed. “Even one child suffering is unacceptable,” stated Gayle Lofgren, Executive Director of the Child Advocacy Center in Aiken. Since the founding of the Center in 2005, the number of cases referred to the CAC by law enforcement and social services The 100 Women Initiative was launched a year ago with a committee of 11 charter members. Those 11 women recruited more than 100 others to join them in raising or donating $1,000 each for the Child Advocacy Center. They met their goal in January: $100,000. Many of those first-year 100 Women have renewed their pledge to give or raise $1,000 and are active in beginning other programs to support the CAC. This year, the committee is once again seeking new members to sign up for the program and carry the message of zero tolerance for abuse to the community. “We feel the same way Erin Merryn feels,” said 100 Women Spring Luncheon chair Charlotte Holly. “We want to put sex offenders out of business.” For more information about 100 Women, call Gayle Lofgren at the Child Advocacy Center, 803-644-5100, or Charlotte Holly at 803-215-2678. For more information about the Spring Luncheon, call the Child Advocacy Center at 803-644-5100. BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 The Tailor Shop Lo o k for The Alterations of all types ”Stop in fo r lunch and a flavo red coffee, cappuccino , espresso, mocha or la tte. Say you sa w us in Bella.” Vilva Bell owner 803-642-6187 220 Park Ave., Aiken, SC Hours: Tuesday – Friday / 9am – 5pm St eam ing Teacup! 123 Laurens Street NW, Aiken, SC 803-335-1440 info@ladolce-aiken.com FUR STORAGE TIME FURRIERS 620 ELLIS ST. AUGUSTA, GA (706) 722-5138 CLEANING & GLAZING EXPERT REPAIRS Palmetto Package & Fine Wine Shop “It’s our pleasure to serve you!” 803.649.6961 aiken.boozetique.vino@gmail.com 230 Park Ave SW • Downtown Aiken Frank Davis In The Morning Tony B In The Afternoon ...and Carolina Beach Music All Weekend Long! Look who’s coming to Unique Expressions. Register to win a Vera Bradley bag Unique Expressions Gifts and More 1521 Whiskey Road, Aiken • 803-641-7906 • M–F: 9-6 • Sat: 9-5 BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 5 The Cats Meow Saving the Gaston Livery Stable by Anna Dangerfield Donations Vincent Van Meow, Willis the House Cat, and Triple Crown Tabby are only a few of the colorful and cool cats included in the Barn Cats of Aiken. Two kittens and 28 fiberglass cats will be auctioned off at The Cats Meow Gala and Auction on April 13, an event sponsored by the Friends of the Gaston Livery Stable. The proceeds will go toward saving an historical and unusual barn. The History The generosity of the Historic Aiken Foundation, Aiken County Historical Society and concerned citizens raised $15,000 for the down payment on the barn. News articles written since 2011, the year the Barn was purchased by the non-profit Friends, tell the stories of inkind donations totaling more than $120,000, plus manpower that would have cost more than $80,000. Many individuals and groups have donated their skills and expertise, including officer training groups from Fort Gordon. The Brainchild Allen Riddick, a member of the “The Friends board, imagined The Barn Cats Gaston Livery Stable of Aiken. “The idea came to me because (the Barn) was built most barns have cats associated with them, in 1893” said Coleen and what better way to raise money for the Reed, the founder Gaston Livery Stable than to sell ‘Barn Cats.’ of the Friends of The idea is similar to that of the Horseplay the Gaston Livery fundraiser a few years ago,” Riddick said. Stable and board “The artists who painted the cats have been president. Her so willing to help with this project. Both research indicates businesses and individuals paid $450 to that it is one of sponsor a cat.” only a handful in Riddick also solicited the help the country that is of downtown merchants when he needed U-shaped and that storefront windows for display. “The stores The barn was owned by Mr. David houses an original were very willing to help with this project Whitfield Gaston, Jr., who played polo carriage lift. It is, just like the artists. We had more willing with Tommy Hitchcock. He was an also, one of only stores than we needed,” he said. The cats attorney, and mayor of Aiken from five all-brick barns were unveiled to the public on November 1921-1924. in South Carolina. 3, 2012, in the Alley. “There are only 11 U-shaped barns in the country and only three of those are brick,” she added. Winter Colonists took their carriages for Wings repairs and storage to this 12,000-square foot The 28-inch fiberglass cat forms were building. Carriages were moved to the second made by Cowpainters, LLC, a woman-owned floor using the carriage lift which is still intact. Chicago business. The artists submitted their “A few engineers have examined the lift and designs and the sponsors made their selections. Art though we have the parts,” said Reed, “we will teacher Julie Adams encouraged her students to need to raise $7,000 to $10,000 to bring it back participate, and Jean Schwalbert, Gail Ebner and to working order.” The manual lift is a system of Mary Ann Stroupe accepted the challenge. Jean counterweights used like an elevator. chose a birds and butterflies theme, envisioning her The barn is situated between Park and own cat watching the birds in her yard. Philly and Richland Avenues, and according to Reed, contains Al Sorenson sponsored “Wings of Which I Dream” four distinct histories of Aiken: agricultural, and their daughter Rosie made the selection. equine, transportation, and Winter Colony. “I painted my cat in our art studio with Julie and my fellow artists giving suggestions along the way,” Schwalbert said. “ ‘Wings’ has the state bird, butterfly and flower on his body. I placed a butterfly on his nose because I wanted to add a special interest touch. He needed to be cross-eyed 6 to look at the butterfly.” Buy It Now According to Reed, none of the cats has been sold, but “there is a great deal of interest in several, including a pre-auction bidding war,” she said. “But the Friends are sticking to their buy-itnow price of $5,000. We set this price to honor the many talented participating artists who put so much of themselves into their cats. We want them to know how much we appreciate their work, and we express that appreciation in the set price. But at the auction, the cats will go for more or less depending on the bidding.” Funding The Gaston Livery Stable is now on the City of Aiken Historic Register, and it is eligible to be listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The Friends are proud that no city, county, state or federal funds have been used. All of the money received has been from private sources and their fundraisers. “At the gala, ideally, we would like to raise $150,000,” Reed said. “With that, we could pay off our mortgage with Southern Bank & Trust, which has been so good to us.” Repairs Needed After the mortgage is paid, structural repairs are still needed. “The carriage lift needs to be repaired, and we need barn doors,” Reed said. “Then we will have a living history park which will show Aiken in the 1890s to the1930s, when the barn was in its heyday. We are already collecting artifacts for this static museum and plan to display a variety of carriages on the second floor.” The Cats Meow Gala and Auction April 13 from 7 p.m.-11p.m. (Auction begins at 9 p.m.) Aiken County Historical Museum Heavy hors d’oeuvres/Cash bar Dressy Casual Attire Tickets are $30 per person/ $50 per couple Ticket outlets: Wesley’s Automotive Service The Aiken County Historical Museum At the door For Further information: 803-648-4761 BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 The Gala Previous fundraisers include the Hats and Roses brunch which raised $500; the Fatz pancake breakfast which raised $3,000; and two barn dances which raised about $7,500. These monies were used to make emergency repairs to the barn’s east wing, pay the mortgage, purchase insurance, buy paint and materials, and put in underground electrical wiring. The Cat’s Meow Gala will be the premier fundraiser for 2013. Riddick said, “We hope to attract a good crowd of bidders, and hopefully, we’ll be able to pay a large portion of the mortgage.” In attendance at the gala will be D. W. Gaston, Jr.’s great grandson, Frank Gaston, of Hilton Head. The professional auctioneer, Frank Rentz, will take the spotlight and start the auction at 9 p.m., while the gala begins earlier at 7 p.m. “That night, we’re going to enjoy great food, a cash bar, and bluegrass music,” Reed concluded. “We’ll auction off the cats, and we’re going to have a lot of fun doing it!” Passionate about Poetry: The Senior Poets’ Corner Barn Cats of Aiken Sought after by farmers and horsemen. Feared by mice, rats, and birds. Barn cats were a welcome addition. Sleeping in the carriages during the day, prowling the horse stalls at night, barn cats of Aiken – They had a purrpose. and a job at the Gaston Livery Stable. Intelligent creatures, purrfect pets, but also natural born killers. They had a job to do. The farm and stable were good places to do their work. It was a good life. And a meal ticket to boot. Roger Brock Some found their home at the Gaston Livery Stable in Aiken, stalking rodents amongst the horses and carriages since the late 1800s. To join the Friends of Gaston Livery Stable: Annual Dues: Friend $10, Family $25, Carriage Level $100, Lucky Horseshoe Level $500, Winter Colony Lifetime Membership is $1,000. Mail to: Friends of Gaston Livery Stable c/o Aiken County Historical Museum 433 Newberry Street SW, Aiken, SC 29801 Cat photos courtesy of D.S.Owens www.doncaster.com Lee Cavanaugh Fine Gifts for Every Occasion Wardrobe Consultant 803.649.1583 leecavanaugh@ymail.com 5 Burgundy Road SW, Aiken SC 29801 141 Laurens Street, SW 803.648.7592 3monkeysaiken.com Wealth Management at Janney Montgomery Scott llC investment Planning serving as the foundation for a portfolio retirement Planning to assist in preparing for your future estate Plannning to preserve, protect and pass along your wealth For more information, contact: Kenneth P. Wiland, Sr. First Vice President/Wealth Management 803.649.1147 | 866.909.4602 (toll-free) kwiland@janney.com | www.kennethpwilandsr.com Janney Montgomery Scott LLC | 401 Park Avenue SW Suite B Aiken, SC 29801 | www.janney.com | Member: NYSE, FINRA, SIPC BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 7 BOBBY DALLAS MAKES HIS WORLD PREMIERE IN AIKEN London, Nassar and Lundy Bobby Dallas is coming to town! What?! You don’t know Bobby Dallas? Well, you soon will as the world premiere of The Bobby Dallas After-Party opens in Aiken with three performances on April 25-26-27. An interactive musical comedy, Bobby Dallas is the newest play from the pen of Mark Nassar, who co-wrote Tony and Tina’s Wedding 25 years ago with his college buddies and has since become a professional playwright. Many Aikenites will remember attending Tony and Tina, presented here twice in the last decade, and its unusual audience participation element. “Being in this new show is like being in a Country Mark Nassar song,” said Mark. “It’s way different from Tony and Tina. I’m excited to take on a new musical format. Tony and Tina was never really done in the South, but with the Country Western theme, Bobby Dallas ought to appeal to a great many Southern people.” The IRS-Spurred “Taxman Tour” The premise of the new dinner show is that Bobby Dallas, Country Western superstar, has just finished his “Taxman Tour,” calculated to get the IRS off his back. (Think Willie Nelson.) The last show has just ended, and Bobby and a host of his celebrity friends are gathering for a party. Paparrazi are out in full force, and the red carpet into the party place (Bobby’s Bar-B-Q party room on the Augusta Highway) is filled with photographers and TV cameras, gossip columnists and reporters. What happens next is aided by the participation of the arriving guests and one uninvited ex-wife played by Aiken native Brooke Lundy. The recipe for enjoyment is assured. 8 The concept of Bobby Dallas came from the UK’s Heather Brothers, well known in the West End of London for a long series of hits, comedic and musical, and even horror spoofs. They approached Mark to co-write an interactive musical with a Country Western theme. While The Heather Brothers Mark had written interactive plays before, he had never written a musical. Enter Brooke Lundy. The two had been friends since the Tony and Tina days in Aiken, and they collaborated on the story line and music for Bobby Dallas. “If someone hasn’t seen Tony and Tina before and comes to Bobby Dallas, they’ll find themselves involved in an adventure in every part inside the show,” commented Brooke. Collaboration Between Friends Brooke brings her “country roots” to the dinner show. Born in Aiken, she later went to Nashville where she was a staff songwriter and learned the ins and outs of the music business there. Today she lives in Los Angeles where she writes and records songs for film and TV. Every February she returns to Aiken for the Heart Show, where thousands of Aikenites saw her in Remember Then only a few weeks ago. “I keep getting pulled back to Aiken,” she said, laughingly. Brooke has gained a huge following in her hometown. Many will remember her outstanding performance as Patsy Cline in the musical production of Always, Patsy that played at the Etherredge Center several years ago. No doubt she has some surprises in store for Bobby Dallas as Lorette, the unwanted, uninvited, country-star-former-trophy-wifeturned-tabloid-queen. In his younger days, Mark originally played Tony, the groom in Tony and Tina’s Wedding. As he aged, he stepped out of that role and today is cast as the father in the play that follows the family and friend antics from wedding to reception. “There’s always a party in my shows,” he said. Bobby Dallas has come to the right place. Aiken loves a party too. Interactive Explained To Buy Tickets Tickets are $100 per person, or $800 for a table of eight for front row tables. Back row seats are $80 per person, or $640 per table. All tickets include the show, dinner, beer and wine, with and a cash liquor bar available, and may be purchased by emailing mollyh@usca.edu. “When people hear interacBrooke Lundy tive, they think about being pulled onstage and being put on the spot. That’s not what interactive is with Bobby Dallas. They’ll feel like they’re at the event but in a pretend world. Everyone is a celebrity! In fact, they’ll get an idea of what it’s like to be a celebrity in Bobby Dallas’s world,” explained Mark. “It will be a lot of fun.” Corporate sponsorships are available for $2,000 for front row tables of eight and include a private VIP pre-premiere party with the cast the week before, plus a pre-recorded commercial with Bobby Dallas for the purchasing company, to be shown during the show. Corporate sponsorships are available by contacting svictor@nandinahome.com. Aiken’s Vince Cloud to Star Half of the cast has already been drawn from Aiken residents. Bobby Dallas will be played by Vince Cloud, Heart Show veteran with a booming voice. Mark was so impressed with the caliber of amateur performers in Aiken during the Tony and Tina gigs that he felt confident scheduling the premiere of Bobby Dallas here. “It’s nice to be in such a supportive community,” Mark said, adding that he is very happy so many people are taking the time to help create this new show. Still, interactive theater has its drawbacks, said Mark. “That’s the hardest part about rehearsal. Half the cast isn’t here!” by Kathy Huff Proceeds from The Bobby Dallas AfterParty will benefit the Aiken Chapter of the American Red Cross. For more information about the play, visit BobbyDallasAfterParty.com. BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 9 Just Sayin’ The Origins and Meanings of Idioms, Phrases, and Sayings By Phyllis Maclay Let us make a special effort to stop communicating with each other, so we can have some conversation. – Mark Twain The woman was madder than a wet hen; her boss had come into her cubicle and gone haywire, ranting about the last project for the advertising company. Mr. Pickle hauled her over the coals about negative feedback from the media department, then threatened to sack her or send her to the graveyard shift with the proof readers. What the Sam Hill was she going to do? She was no spring chicken so finding a good job would be no walk in the park. Suddenly Mr. Pickle stopped yelling and plopped down on the chair next to her. “I am so sorry.” He blew out a sigh and leaned toward her. “I guess I got out of the wrong side of the bed this morning. I didn’t mean to fly off the handle like that. It isn’t your fault the ads didn’t sell. I was barking up the wrong tree and I feel like a jerk. Let me make it up to you. Let’s bury the hatchet, forget all this, and I’ ll make it right with a nice bonus for all your hard work. You look bushed. Go home and when you return tomorrow, I’ ll have a check for you, waiting here at your computer.” Mr. Pickle glanced out the window. “We’re good, right? Wow, look at that storm. It’s raining cats and dogs.” He jumped to his feet and disappeared through the door. The woman shook her head and muttered, “Elvis has left the building.” Almost every day we utter or hear them; those sayings that season our language, and spice up our speech: Don’t beat around the bush. She lives high on the hog, only saving her money once in a blue moon. Where do those idioms come from? Don’t rack your brains, just kick up your heels and take a spell to find out what’s behind some of those colorful sayings and phrases. Idioms With European Roots If you’ve been severely reprimanded, people know what you mean if you say you were hauled over the coals. The scorching story behind 10 this saying is a hot practice of heated punishment; heretics in the Middle Ages were dragged over a bed of glowing coals to see if they were innocent (survival) or guilty (death). According to the Romans it was bad luck to rise from the left side of the bed where the mischievous spirits reside. Stirring them up would cause them to follow you through your day, which in turn soured your disposition. If you acted grumpy, it was assumed you had gotten up on the wrong side of the bed. If someone is rescued from an undesirable fate, she is saved by the bell. In the good ol’ days, people had been known to be buried alive, so special caskets were designed with a rope inside the coffin attached to an above-ground bell. If the person came to and was indeed alive, she would ring the bell and be rescued. The guard who roamed the cemetery at night was said to be working the graveyard shift. Getting sacked (fired) dates back to the days when journeymen mechanics toted their own tools from job to job in a cloth bag. After the project was done the employer handed back the worker’s sack, signaling he was being let go. Made in the USA Chickens born in the spring brought better prices at the markets in New England than the hens that had already lived through winter. But not-so-honest bird vendors would try to pass off the old, tougher fowl as tender spring poultry. Suspicious buyers would inspect the birds, declaring the winter bird to be no spring chicken, which today means people who are past their tender years. You might be accused of flying off the handle, like the axe would often do for the American pioneer as he swung it chopping wood. Both literal and figurative meanings require ducking. The American Indian buried a tomahawk or other weapon as an expression of peace. Today when people end a quarrel we say they bury the hatchet. If you’ve ever wrestled with a rolling pin to make light, fluffy crusts, the expression easy as pie escapes you. It probably evolved from similar sayings, like Mark Twain’s words in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (“You’re as polite as pie to them.”) In 1886 Sporting Life Magazine wrote, “As for steal- ing second and third, it’s like eating pie.” It wasn’t long until another dessert was added to the menu of idioms. In 1936, American poet Ogden Nash wrote: “Her picture’s in the paper now. And life’s a piece of cake.” Pie or cake, life is sweeter when either is in it. Canine and Feline Sayings Down under, the aborigines of Australia used to sleep with their animals to be comfy during the chilly nights. If it took two dogs to keep warm, it was nippy, but when the night air demanded another critter, it was a frigid three dog night. A book about Davy Crockett described a scene where the folk hero and his dogs were stalking raccoon at night. If his hunting dog lost track of the raccoon as it leaped from one tree to another, the author wrote that the baying hound was barking up the wrong tree. According to Norse mythology, witches conjured up storms and rode winds that looked like massive black cats. Thor, god of storms, was always surrounded by dogs and wolves, and when the witchy winds blew, it was said to be raining cats and dogs. Another explanation for this idiom is that European homes had roofs of thatch and grass where cats and dogs would hang out. If a storm buffeted in quickly, it would sweep the animals to the ground so it looked like it was raining cats and dogs. Here’s how other countries describe a storm: In Africa, they say “ it’s raining old women with clubs” Many languages refer to heavy rain as coming in buckets or as rain coming out of a bucket In Norway they say “ it’s raining female trolls” The Irish say “ it’s throwing cobblers knives” (yikes!) Going Bonkers Mercury was once used in the making of felt hats. Unfortunately hatters came into contact with the toxic metal, which led to mercury poisoning and often insanity. So people who behaved oddly were then said to be mad as a hatter. If you act erratically, people will say you’ve gone haywire. Americans use haywire to bind bales, and if bound too tightly it will whip back dangerously when cut. You would think phrases like batty or bats in the belfry have old European roots, but they are of American origin during the early 1900s. Watch- BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 ing bats dash and dart around a tower or eave has a dizzying effect on the mind, the same way some people do by their erratic actions. End of the Line We say someone kicked the bucket when they have died, but research is mixed on the origin of that saying. Most think it is the last act of suicide. Interestingly, other countries have intriguing ways of expressing the end of the line: Bulgarian: to kick the bell Danish: to take off the clogs Dutch: to lay the piece of lead French: to eat dandelions by the root German: look at the radishes from underneath Latvian: to put the spoon down Norwegian: to park the slippers Polish: to kick the calendar Portuguese: to beat the boots The Rundown Cattlemen drove herds through high water and “continuous hell between” –come hell or high water. The Farmer’s Almanac painted the first full moon of the month red and the rarer second one blue (about once every 1.5 years) thus the expression once in a blue moon. Based on the idea that the better cuts of pork come from the upper part of a pig, the idiom living high on the hog became an American saying in the early 1900s. Chip in comes from tossing tokens into the poker pot. In 1816 Thomas Drummond designed a cylinder of lime that was heated by an incandescent flame then put behind a lens or in front of a reflector as a light source for theaters. Actors were soon orchestrating their stage movements to place themselves in front of this light to be easily seen. They were in the limelight. An entrance or doorway or a new beginning is what we today call a threshold. This word seems to have morphed from different sources. In the King James Bible it was the place where grain was gathered after reaping. A board was put across the entrance to keep the grain from spilling out of the area while threshers were working. Another origin may be that “thresh” or straw was used to cover dirt floors. When the door was opened the wind would wisp out the straw, so a wooden block was placed at the bottom of the door to keep it in, and was called the threshold. Sha-k-mate is Persian for “the king is dead.” The French replaced SH with CH and used the word to proclaim victory at the end of a game of chess: checkmate. In the film La Dolce Vita, a man named Paparazzo did every trick in the book to snap photos of celebrities. The word Paparazzi comes from this character’s surname. During World War II a bomb was created that leveled an entire block of buildings. Its resounding impact earned it the name blockbuster. A municipal tax in England during the 12th century was called a scot. When a man figured out a way to avoid the tax, he was getting away scotfree. Anyone today ducking punishment is declared to be getting away scot-free. Rumor has it soldiers were told to clench a bullet between their teeth when emergency surgery without anesthesia was admin- istered on the battlefield. A more likely explanation is that soldiers stored bullets in their teeth to reload faster, so to bite the bullet was to be ready for battle. Now it means to face something unpleasant with courage. Love them or hate them, idioms are woven into the fabric of speech. You can view them as snags or splashes of color in the tapestry of language. “The trouble with words is that you never know whose mouths they have been in.” – Dennis Potter Credit goes to Shakespeare for these phrases that we still use today: A dish fit for the gods – Julius Caesar A fool’s paradise – Romeo and Juliet A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse – Richard III A rose by any other name would smell as sweet – Romeo and Juliet A sorry sight – Macbeth Beware the Ides of March – Julius Caesar It was Greek to me – Julius Caesar Eaten out of house and home – Henry IV I will wear my heart upon my sleeve – Othello Love is blind – Merchant of Venice, Henry V, Two Gentlemen of Verona Such stuff as dreams are made of – The Tempest There’s method in my madness – Hamlet Experience the wonder of Ultrasound! Experience the wonder of 3D ultrasound! Experience the wonder of 3D ultrasound! Experience the wonder of 3D ultrasound! James F. Boehner, MD Jessica L. Keller, DO Aiken Obstetrics &D. Boone, Aiken Obstetrics & Aiken &RNC, WHNP Andreina Angle, Robert MD Obstetrics Janet Powell, MSN, WHNP Gynecology Associates Gynecology Associates Oletha R. Minto, MD Gynecology Associates James F. Boehner, MD James F. Boehner, MD James F. Boehner, MD 410 University Parkway410 University Robert D. Boone, 410MD University Parkway Suite 1550 • Aiken,Parkway SC (803) 649-7535Robert D. Boone, MD Oletha R. Minto, MD 1550 Oletha R. Minto, MD 410Suite University Parkway 1550 • Aiken, SC Robert D. Boone, Suite • Aiken,MD SC Andreina Angle, RNC, WHNP Andreina Angle, RNC, WHNP (803) 649-7535 (803) 649-7535 R. Minto, MD BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL • 2013 Powell, MSN,Oletha WHNP Janet Powell, MSN, WHNP Suite 1550 Aiken, SC Janet (803) 649-7535 Andreina Angle, RNC, WHNP Janet Powell, MSN, WHNP 11 Meet Aiken’s Horticulturist: Tom Rapp i magine that instead of two or three flower beds to design, install, and maintain each year, you had 176 parkways that averaged over an acre each. Imagine planting and pruning trees and shrubs in an area that covers more than 16 square miles. Throw in a large public garden. Imagine that if you make a mistake, everybody in town would notice. And maybe feel they should tell you. Imagine all that and you are Aiken’s city horticulturist, Tom Rapp. Not that Tom makes many mistakes. The parkways and main thoroughfares of Aiken are about as handsome as any you’ll see anywhere else, and their design and maintenance are primarily his responsibility Tom Rapp always knew he wanted to work outdoors. After graduation from high school in Orangeburg, he left for Clemson and a major in Agricultural Engineering. After determining that the engineering school was not where he needed to be, he decided to make a change. Forestry or Ornamental Horticulture? Which would he choose? Ornamental horticulture background Fortunately for the residents of Aiken, Tom chose Ornamental Horticulture. After college, he tested his horticultural skills in a variety of ways. He helped install the golf course at Houndslake Country Club, and he worked in a few other jobs that employed his skills, thinking that managing a landscaping business might be where he would find himself down the road. Then in 1976 he heard about a job with the City of Aiken. The late Roland Windham, who was city manager at the time, drove him around town and gave him a vision of what he thought Tom might do. He’s not sure if anyone else was interviewed, but Tom was offered a job on the spot. “I had no budget, one truck, one helper, a pair of snips, a pair of loppers, and a few mowers. I had a desk and a phone. That was it. Roland didn’t tell me what he wanted. He may not have known, but he just knew he wanted it better than it was.” From plain to flowery “The parkways were all like the Colleton Avenue Parkways. There were trees and the grass was mowed, but there was no landscaping anywhere. My first bed was around the (Morgan) fountain at Park Avenue and Laurens – the children with the umbrella. I went to Coward Corley, (a seed and feed store that stood for years on Park Avenue where Williamsburg Street crosses the railroad track) and I bought bundles of bare root pansies. I put them in that soil around the fountain. It was dense and heavy, but the pansies did okay.” 12 by Susan Elder welcomed visitors down U.S. Hwy. 1, and ‘Forest Pansy’ Redbuds greeted them traveling north up Whiskey Road. Pink Flowering Apricots burst into bloom along Richland Avenue from the west. People came from around the country to see our spectacular city. Clemson joins in These days Tom still plants pansies around the fountain, but now he uses a specially designed mix he gets from Bricko in Augusta that some call “Aiken mix.” It contains a combination of compost, lime, and fertilizer, mixed with composted pine bark. Tom stayed on 11 years after his first hiring. The budget increased and the maintenance increased. He got frustrated sometimes, but he managed. He left the City of Aiken for a while, but after a few years’ involvement in other endeavors, Tom returned to the job, where he was immediately presented with a brand new plan. New landscape designs There were grants available and the city fathers (and mothers) wanted to landscape the parkway on Hampton Avenue. There was a new term for it: streetscapes. By the mid-1990s the economy was good and there was more money available. It was time to work on the main entrances to town - York Street, Richland Avenue, Whiskey Road. Aiken’s famous traffic circles needed sprucing up too. There were shrubs planted here and there, some put in by volunteers. They hadn’t been designed so much as just planted. Aiken’s grand design had expanded from a few pansies around the fountain to flowering traffic circles and landscaped parkways. Hopelands Gardens and Rye Patch, though not designed by Tom Rapp, were well maintained under the care of his growing staff. In spring and summer Hydrangeas In September 2009, when Aiken’s landscape seemed to be settling in, a new proposal was made. The City of Aiken received $3.34 million under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Of that amount, $293,187 was awarded to Clemson’s Center for Watershed Excellence to assist in the design of “bioswales, rain gardens, permeable paving and other low-impact retrofit practices.” As a result, some of the largest downtown parkways were dug up to create better drainage to prevent more erosion in nearby Hitchcock Woods. Some of the pavement beside the parkways was also dug up and replaced with permeable pavement that let the water through. “The Clemson people who’d worked with this type project before recommended planting grasses that loved to be mistreated. Rip the plant out of the pot, bang it on the ground, throw it in a hole and ignore it--it was happy.” And these masochistic grasses have done well. On a recent Sunday afternoon walk around some of these bioswales after a week of rain, you might have expected to see standing water everywhere. But there wasn’t. In addition to facilitating drainage, the filtering materials are supposed to get rid of some of the impurities from the run off as well. “The good thing about these newly planted parkways is they don’t have to be cut back. They sort take care of themselves and enjoy the abuse.” What’s in the future? So what’s left to do? Though there aren’t likely to be any more streetscapes, Tom wants to improve the “point” at Hayne and Richland. And the city is putting a lot of its landscaping dollars into maintenance. Tom says Roland Windham once gave him a good piece of advice. They were traveling to some other town to consult about a landscaping plan and Roland said, “If you can wake up in the morning and be glad to go to work, you have found the right job for yourself.” Judging by the work he’s done in Aiken over the past 36 years, Tom Rapp has certainly found the place he ought to be. BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 Barbranne Clinton Celebrating 10 Years in Aiken TOM’S TOP TEN What about Impatiens? For beauty, hardiness and reliability Impatiens walleriana has been a mainstay of the Southern garden for years. It was easy to grow and maintain and brightened up any shady spot with reds and pinks and corals and white and even variegated flowers. Then last year in South Carolina, a nasty disease called downy mildew attacked this favorite full force! The stuff had been around for a while, but last year’s outbreak affected impatiens across most of the east as well as some western states. Will Tom Rapp find a place for it in the city beds? “Nope,” he says, “I will not be using any impatiens walleriana (shade), but will use impatiens hybrida (sun). Hope the researchers work out the downy mildew problem. Shade impatiens were one of my favorites!” Trees – Royal Raindrops Crabapple Japanese Maple Nuttall Oak Shrubs – Distylium myricoides (Blue Leaf Isu) Perennials – Solomon’s Seal, Stoke’s Aster Annuals – Sun Coleus, Sun and shade Caladiums Ornamental Grasses – Aspidistras Chesterfield Court A Full Service Salon 124 Chesterfield Street, South • Aiken, SC 29801 Tuesday – Saturday 803-599-3530 Barbranne Clinton MARK TAYLOR A N D A S S O C I AT E S , L L C Ruby Masters Ask me about aging into Medicare 803-349-7468 START RIGHT. START HERE. April Bargins! SALE PRICES GOOD THROUGH APRIL 30 Weber Spirit Grill ly, emb s s a p Free setu & y er deliv Outdoor Bench Model E-210 $69 $399 60 DAYS SAME H! AS CAS 121 Laurens Street, SW • Aiken, SC 29801 • 803-648-8542 BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 13 BELLA Pickup Points As of April 1, 2013 Downtown Aiken East Side Three bright pink boxes on Laurens Street, in front of La Dolce, the Holley Building, and Cyndi’s Sweet Shoppe; two bright pink boxes in The Alley and Bee Lane; Howell Printing, Southern Bank and Trust, Stoplight Deli, My Aiken Body, Aiken Drug, inside the Holley Building, True Value Hardware, Shoetopia, Tea Garden Gifts, Refresh, 3 Monkeys, Nandina, Chris’ Camera, Gallery J, ADDA (Aiken Downtown Development Association), IntelliSystems, West Side Bowery, Lionel Smith, Ltd., Equine Divine, The Aiken Center for the Arts, Malia’s, Vinya’s, Folly, Ryan’s Downtown Market and Deli, Hotel Aiken, Desserves Bakery, Vista Bank, Power Cuts, Buzz Rich’s Law Office, Palmetto Package Store and Fine Wines, The Tailor Shop, Magnolia Natural Market & Café, Chesterfield Court, Janney Montgomery Scott, WKXS-Aiken office, Aiken County Public Library, 1st floor, Dr. Bauer Vaughters’ office, The Willcox, Just Breathe, Inner Beauty, Guest Cottage, Barbara Sue Needleworks, York Cottage. Wayne’s Automotive, AllStar Tents and Events, Smith Hazel Recreation Center. West Side Mi Rancho Restaurant, USCA Student Activity Center, Aiken Regional Medical Centers, Aiken Obstetric and Gynecology Associates, Aiken Internal Medicine, Magnolia Medical, Aiken Neuroscience (The Pain Center) Hitchcock Healthcare, the Family Y. Augusta Summerville Rags, A Soft Touch. South side Ray Massey’s Law Office, Russ Padgett’s Financial Advice Office, The Fresh Market, Harvard’s, Unique Expressions, Odell Weeks Center, Kroger (by carts), Shake It Off, Auto Tech, Floyd and Green, Travinia, Achieve Fitness, Material Things, Red Pepper Café, TLC Medical Center, Cyndi Catts’ office, Dr. Julie Ziegler’s office, Mark Taylor/Ruby Masters’ office, Outback, Publix (by carts), Country Inn and Suites Hotel, Changes Day Spa, Aiken Office Supply, Gold’s Gym, Maria’s Restaurant, Found Treasures, Stewart & Associates’ office. 803-257-1126 14 BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 The Park Avenue Walking Tour Take a Walk Along the Other Park Avenue Editor’s note: This is the second in a BELLA series of three walking tours around Aiken, laid out by staff writer Susan Elder in the company of her husband Hank and their Scottie, Bell. Last month Bella readers took a two-anda-half mile walk down Aiken’s Colleton Avenue and some of its side streets, where we looked at historic homes as well as handsome trees that adorn the parkways. This month, as the trees and shrubs begin to green, we’ll take another walk. This one’s a little shorter, about a mile and three quarters, but it’s equally interesting and equally arresting. 1 We’ll park in the library parking lot again, head north up the sidewalk on Chesterfield St. and cross the railroad bridge. Like many cities across the country, Aiken owes its existence to the railroad. We know that W.W. Williams, along with several other landowners, donated property to entice the railroad company to develop a town near their farms. Local legend has it that one of the surveyors, Andrew Alfred Dexter, fell in love with Williams’ daughter Sara and agreed to re-route the tracks to satisfy the demands of his future father-in-law. 2 The train track, laid in the 1830s, originally ran on what’s now called Park Avenue, then called Railroad Avenue. In 1853 a ‘cut’ was dug and this bridge and six more were erected across it. 3 Continue up Chesterfield to the corner of Park Avenue. On the right, you’ll see the Aiken County Judicial Center. The Courthouse was originally built in 1881 of red brick, and in 1934, architect Willis Irvin made plans for remodeling that included the addition of the cupola and weathervane. The exterior was stuccoed and the present Judicial Center was renovated and expanded in 1984. Across from you, in the center of the intersection, stands an obelisk that is a memorial to Aiken’s Civil War dead. 4 Turn right along Park Avenue, past the Judicial Center, and you come to Aiken’s strikingly beautiful St. Mary Help of Christians Catholic Church and St. Claire’s Chapel on its left. The church was founded in 1853, and the cornerstone of this building was BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 laid in the autumn of 1905. The church and chapel are said to be fine examples of two types of Gothic Revival architecture. 5 Continue across York Street and in the parkway on your right you can see a charming bridge across the small dip in the center of the parkway. This is one effect of the reconstruction of the parkways from work done by Clemson University’s Center for Watershed Excellence. The City of Aiken paid Clemson $293,187 (part of monies received from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, or “stimulus” funds) for the design of “bioswales, rain gardens, permeable paving and other lowimpact retrofit practices.” These bioswales were installed in the parkways to allow rainwater to perk into the ground rather than run into the storm sewers and then into Hitchcock Woods, where it caused erosion problems. The water movement through the vegetation in the swale aids in removal of silt and pollutants from the water. Since the restructuring of the parkways, stormwater drainage has improved and the turf and ornamental grasses have filled in beautifully. Notice these elements in other parkways you’ll see along this walk. 6 Though a good deal of turf grass was dug up during the project, most of the existing shrubs and trees were protected. Early in April you may see a still-blooming Pearl Bush at the Park Avenue end of the parkway. On the northeast corner of Park Avenue and York Street, turn north, and continue up Park Avenue toward Richland Avenue. Continue north on the York Street sidewalk, past more of St. Mary’s campus and the site of the church school. The silvery bark of the trees along the road tells you these are sycamores. Anywhere along that block, cross into the parkway where you’ll see a beautiful selection of Aiken’s favorite trees. There are Loblolly pines, Crepe Myrtles, Live Oaks, and Dogwoods. Venture into the private little spot in the Richland Avenue end of the parkway and you see Otto Luyken Laurel, and Native Azalea likely to be in bloom in early spring, and one lone, but lovely, Oakleaf Hydrangea. and the current sanctuary was rebuilt. St. Thaddeus Episcopal Church on Pendleton Street can thus claim to be the oldest standing church building, but not the oldest congregation in Aiken. Explore the historic cemetery where 20 Union army casualties were buried following the Battle of Aiken, February 11-12, 1865. 8 Cross back to the south side of Richland Avenue, go right along Richland and you’ll find yourself in front of the Greater Aiken Chamber of Commerce building where you can find all sorts of interesting information about our wonderful city, including the full color booklet that details 94 historic spots around town. 9 Head south again along Chesterfield Street beside two homes that date from the 1890s. “Heart’s Desire” stands at 108 Chesterfield, and the H. Christian Hahn home at 120 Chesterfield. The Hahn house once had a full stable and barn on the property for the horses and wagons used to deliver groceries for Hahn and Company, a store on Laurens Street. This structure is now an Italian restaurant called Casa Bella. 10 This parkway contains another bioswale planted in hardy grasses that help to anchor the soil and filter the pollutants that run through it. Continue west right along Park Avenue. 11 Turn right on Newberry Street. Hidden behind a large hedge at 146 Newberry Street is the Aiken Club, an exclusive, private men’s club incorporated in 1898. Inside is a court tennis facility, one of only nine such courts in the United States. Court tennis is still played there. 12 7 Find a break in the foliage and cross to the other side of the parkway; continue north to Richland Avenue. Take a stroll across Richland to Aiken’s First Baptist Church, the first church constructed in Aiken, in 1836. The original building, which faced Chesterfield Street, burned by Susan Elder Have a seat on the bench beside William Aiken, for whom Aiken is named, and you’ll be sitting on the western boundary of Aiken’s original residential area. [Continued on next page] 15 13 14 About halfway up the block, cross through the Alley, once a row of stables and blacksmith shops that now features restaurants and shops and offices in the renovated buildings. Stop for a bite at one of the restaurants. Oh wait, you’re supposed to be exercising. Come back for dinner. The Alley spills you onto Laurens Street, facing the Croft block, a block of handsome two-story brick stores, offices and artist studios, named for George W. Croft, one of Aiken’s prominent citizens, a lawyer and a U.S. congressman during the late 1800s. Croft sponsored legislation to prohibit child labor in South Carolina cotton mills. Ginkgo and Pistacia trees are greening up in the April sun, and they will continue to wow us throughout the spring, summer, and fall, when the leaves will change to brilliant shades of yellow and orange. Laurens Street is a handsome sight almost any time of year. Aiken’s first citizens must have enjoyed the look of trees lining the sidewalks in the business district. As early as 1859, residents passed a resolution that prohibited the cutting of trees along commercial streets. If you want to further your window shopping experience, turn right out of the Alley, and continue through the next few blocks, then turn back across Laurens toward Park. Otherwise, turn left toward Park Avenue now and cross over the westbound lane. 15 Park Avenue is thought to be the first planted median in Aiken, according to an article dated 1877. Water Oaks and Elms were the choice of the day then. These days some more exotic imports have taken their place. On one end, there are Crepe Myrtles and evergreen and Deciduous Azaleas. The funny looking trees you see in the 18 middle of the parkway are called “Monkey Puzzle” trees. This species, native to South America, with its sharp triangular shaped leaves, shows up in the fossil record during the Jurassic period, some 150 million (or so) years ago. At the crosswalk, head south past George Funeral Home, originally built around 1869 as a private residence named “Deodara.” It was named for the cedars that once stood on the property. 16 19 On the north side of the parkway look for the Municipal Building, designed by architect Willis Irvin, built in 1938 and extensively remodeled in 1987. The site has been home to a police station and jail and an opera house. Next door is the Eubanks House, one of the oldest houses in downtown Aiken. 17 On the south side of Park Avenue is the U.S. Courthouse, also known as the Charles E. Simons, Jr. Federal Court House, another example of a federal construction program created to relieve economic crisis. Built during the Great Depression in 1935, it is said to be an excellent example of a Georgian Revival building, popular in small towns in the 1920s and ‘30s. It also contains a 1938 mural titled “Justice as Protector and Avenger,” an example of Social Realism in American art during the Depression era. The mural by Stefan Hirsch is located behind the judge’s bench and depicts a lady justice clothed in red, white, and blue and alternately protecting the oppressed while prosecuting the evil elements in society. Continue south on Newberry Street, across another bridge. Cross Newberry where it’s safe and head east on Colleton and, by golly, you have once again managed to end your walk at the historic Willcox Hotel. Hopefully, you have timed it so that you can stop for a rest and something cool to drink, while you can, once again, be thankful to be living or visiting in the beautiful city of Aiken, South Carolina. [Editor’s note: Next month Bella will feature the “Easy” walk, around the Easy Street neighborhood and south to Hopelands.] Much of the historical information in this article was obtained from http://www.cityofaikensc.gov/ wp-content/uploads/downloads/2012/02/Historic_ Resources_Survey_Report_2010.pdf Susan Elder is a former elementary school teacher and garden writer. These days she spends her time babysitting for her adorable granddaughter. NO MATTER WHO YOUR DESIGNER IS, WE OFFER ALL DECORATING BASICS: • • • • Bolt Fabrics Bed Linens Furniture & Lamps Unique Art and Fabulous Pillows • and MORE! Centre South Shopping Center 9:30 – 5:30 T–F 10:00 – 4:00 S 16 752 Silver Bluff Road Aiken, SC 29803 (803) 643-3701 (803) 643-0096 BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 The Park Avenue Tour BELLA Walking Tour #2 A Scenic and Historical Walk Around Aiken 13 14 10 12 UNION ST. FAIRFIELD ST. 7 YORK ST. CHESTERFIELD ST. NEWBERRY ST. RICHLAND AVE. LAURENS ST. N 8 9 11 16 PARK AVE. 15 17 18 3 The Willcox Hotel 4 6 5 2 19 COLLETON AVE. 1 The Aiken Public Library SOUTH BOUNDARY AVE. RAY LANE BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 17 18 BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 She Means Business Aiken Women in Business by Belinda Smith-Sullivan Katy Lipscomb Finds Material Things “A Business of Challenge and Creativity” W hen Katy important it is to go the extra mile for Lipscomb started the customer, Katy told of how recently Material Things 20 a team member went to a customer’s years ago at what is now home to make an adjustment to the a bed and breakfast in draperies and ended up cleaning the downtown Aiken, little customer’s window as well. Needless to did she realize that today say, that was one happy customer! Before Material Things, Katy she would be in her worked as a systems analyst for the fourth location in South SRS and the Aiken. What started Graniteville out as a love of fabrics Mill, designing blossomed into a business custom of custom upholstery and Katy Lipscomb computer drapery, and a resource systems for her clients. for home decorators. “I started out small and kept reinvesting in She received her my business. It was slow growth,” said Katy. undergraduate degree from West Virginia University and an MBA Something for Everyone from Southern Illinois Katy describes Material Things as University in Carbondale, “commodity decorating” for do-it-yourself home Illinois. She has two decorators and interior designers. “There is something different for everyone. You never know daughters, Grace, a graduate of Clemson University, and Anna, who what you might find here.” And indeed, the attends Aiken High. In what little spare time rooms are packed with various upholstery and she has, she is very active in the PTSO, the Child drapery fabrics, specialty furniture items such as tables, chairs, benches, rugs, artwork and cabinets. Advocacy Center, and the Aiken Chamber of Commerce. Oh, she is also a volleyball mom! And wouldn’t you know her hobbies include decorating and trolling antique stores. If all of this isn’t enough to keep Katy busy, she is also in the midst of planning a June wedding for her older daughter. Material Things is “Just Right” Smaller decorating accessories abound as well. Additional services include custom sewing and upholstery - not done on the premises, but by contractors hand-picked and tested by Katy. Bring your decorating needs and ideas, and Katy and her team will help you turn them into reality. Building on the Customer Service Model Katy takes pride in the team she has built. Her business model is built on providing excellent “customer service.” Said Katy, “You can’t please everyone, but damn if you can’t try!” Great employees and teamwork are the keys to her success. When hiring new employees, she said, “I look for the customer service trait and creativity. I can train the operations side of the business.” Ensuring that each employee understands just how BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 As far as expanding the business any time soon, Katy feels that Material Things is the right size for Aiken at this time. As with any business there are fluctuations with the economy, and with Material Things there is a direct relationship to the housing market. The stronger the home sales, the busier the store is and vice versa. When asked what she likes most about her business, Katy smiled and said, “The challenge and the creativity! I love problem-solving and this is a business I love!” Fabric samples at Material Things Material Things is located at 752 Silver Bluff Road, Aiken, SC, 29803. 803-643-3701 Store hours: 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m., TuesdayFriday; 10 a.m.-4 p.m. on Saturday. Summerville Rags, Inc. Spring 2013 706.738.4888 On The Hill 1502 Monte Sano Ave. in Augusta Hours: M – F 10 - 5:30 Sat. 11- 4 19 bella B U Z Z Z Z Z Downtown Aiken APRILCOMMUNITYCALENDAR April 6, 13, 20, 27 Aiken Historic Tours, 10 a.m., reservations recommended. Call 803-642-7631 for $15 tickets, sold at Odell Weeks Center, 1700 Whiskey Road. Arrive at Aiken Visitors Center (Railroad Depot) 15 minutes early before tour departure. For private and group tour arrangements for up to 3 or 4 people, call head tour guide Judith Burgess at 649-6608 for availability and pricing. April 11 2nd Annual Horses and Courses, Laurens Street, 5:30- 9 p.m. Features live music from the Abbey Holly Band, visual arts displays in The Alley, and decorated golf cart and horse parade. April 14 Birds & Butterflies 2013: Bluebird Trail Monitoring, 1:30- 4 p.m. Learn tips for monitoring bluebird nest boxes and check an actual bluebird trail in Aiken. Limit is 25 participants, so reservations are required. Call 649-7999. The cost is $5. Children 16 and under are free. April 17–21, 24–28 PSJ Carolina Spring Circuit, Week III and IV of Carolina Spring Circuit, Highfields Event Center, 198 Gaston Rd., Aiken, 8 a.m. Call 803-649-3505 for more information. April 18 Midday Music Concert Series featuring the Portland Guitar Duo, 12 noon, First Presbyterian Church sanctuary, 224 Barnwell Ave. NW. Free and open to the public. April 20 Run United Road Race, Newberry Street, 8 a.m. This is a 5K, 10K, and kids fun run sponsored by the Aiken Electric Cooperative to benefit the United Way of Aiken County. This scenic route will take participants through historic downtown Aiken and its horse country. The event also includes a health and wellness fair with family activities, food, and music on Newberry St. Cost is $25 per person. Aiken Center for the Arts 122 Laurens St. SW 803-641-9094 www.aikencenterforthearts.org April 1–26 Bonnie Bloomberg Exhibition Mary Ann Brock Exhibition Ron Forbes Exhibition April 2–30 St. Mary Help of Christians School Student Exhibition. Diversity Art Exhibit. This solo exhibit featuring award winning artist Mary McCullah will feature acrylic and watercolor paintings representative of South Carolina state parks’ plants, animals, and scenery. April 8–12 The ACA is accepting registrations for 2013 Spring Break Art Camp. The camp is for ages 4 and up. Tuition and fees are $40/day for half days and $60/day for whole day if paid day by day or $200 for a full week of half days and $300 for a week of full days (ages 7 & up only). Aiken County Public Library 314 Chesterfield St. SW 803-642-2020, www.abbe-lib.org April 3 French Language for Kids, 4 p.m. Learn French in this beginning class for grades 1-5. Registration required. Call 642-2023 for more information. April 6 Movie, Lincoln, rated PG-13, 3-5:30 p.m. April 11 LEGO Club, 4-5 p.m. Grades K-5 can show off their imaginations and super building skills. LEGOs will be supplied. April 13 Movie, The Hobbit, rated PG-13, 1-2:30 p.m. April 19 Children’s Earth Day Program, 4-5 p.m. April 20 The Wisdom of Hair, Kim Boykin, author, 3 p.m. Find out more about this New Ellenton native at www.kimboykin.com. Tax Planning Medicaid Planning Elder Law Estate Planning Revocable Trust Probate 20 April 23 April 26–27 Adult Pinterest Party, 7 p.m. Reduce, reuse, recycle the Pinterest way! Join us for some of our favorite Pinterest crafts and take home something new. Crafts include upcycled tins, t-shirt scarves, and book wreaths. Participants are encouraged to bring craft materials and tin cans/ containers or t-shirts to repurpose. DuPont Planetarium The Sea Horse Trade, 3 p.m. Sasscer Hill will present her new horse racing mystery. To sample the first chapter, go to www. sasscerhill.com. April 6–27 Teen Earth Day Program, 4:30 p.m. Grades 6-12 can use old magazines to create art for their room. April 27 Aiken County Historical Museum 433 Newberry St. SW 803-642-2015 www. aikencountyhistoricalmuseum.org April 13 The Cats Meow Gala & Auction, 7 p.m. Live auction of the Barn Cats to help pay down the Mortgage of Gaston Livery Stable. Tickets are $30 each or $50 per couple. Includes heavy hors d’oeuvres and a cash bar. Tickets will be available at the door. April 19 26th Annual Hitchcock Healthcare Auction and Dinner Party with Great Gatsby theme, 6:30 p.m. cocktails and silent auction; 7 p.m. dinner, with silent and live auctions; Aiken County Historical Museum. $80 per person or $600 for a table of 8. Beverages included in ticket price. Proceeds benefit therapy services to adults and children. For reservations, call Tasha Roberts at 803-293-4375 or email her at troberts@ hitchcockhealthcare.org. URS Center for the Performing Arts 126 Newberry St. SW Tickets and information: 803-648-1438 April 5–6 Fox on the Fairway, 8 p.m. ACP Main Stage Production, Rival country clubs are going head-to-head in their annual golf tournament. Wm. Ray Massey TAX ATTORNEY Smith, Massey, Brodie, Guynn & Mayes, P.A. The Nerd, 8 p.m. ACP Main Stage Production. Ruth Patrick Science Education Center 471 University Parkway Tickets and information: 803-641-3654 http://rpsec.usca.eduPlanetarium/ pubshows.html Worlds in Motion, 7 p.m. Discover how the Earth and other objects move through space, how fast you are moving, and how there is no such thing as a couch potato. Ages 8 and up. To the Moon and Beyond, 8-9 p.m. Experience the exciting adventures of Apollo astronauts on the Moon, and become better acquainted with the attributes of Earth’s natural satellite. Then discover how NASA plans to send humans back to the moon, Mars, and beyond. Etherredge Center 471 University Parkway Tickets and information: 803-641-3305 www.usca.edu/ec April 4 USCA Jazz Band Spring Concert, 7 p.m. Free. April 9–13 University Theatre presents Two Rooms, 7:30 p.m. April 14 Matinee performance of Two Rooms, 2 p.m. (Note: no matinee on April 13) April 15 USCA Wind Ensemble Spring Concert, 7 p.m. Free. April 17 USCA Faculty Artist Rectial, 7:30 p.m. Free. April 19 The Siren’s Call by Chanticleer, performance, 8 p.m. Celebrate the beauty of precise, pure, and deeply felt singing from the Phone 803-643-4110 Facsimile 803-644-9057 rmassey@smbgm.com www.smbgm.com BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 ZZZ BELLA Magazine will run announcements for free for non-profit organizations, community events, and BELLA advertisers. Space may be limited. Please email event information to bellabuzz@aikenbellamagazine.com by the 15th of the month before the event. ZZZ seamless blend of this orchestra of 12 male voices. call Irene Howley at 803-649-9267 or Diane Hadley at 803-644-3902. April 22 April 15 USCA Chamber Music Concert, 7 p.m. Free. April 26 Aiken Symphony Guild Spring Concert featuring Pascal Godart, 8 p.m. Aiken Regional Medical Centers 302 University Parkway 803-641-5000 www.aikenregional.com Support Group Meetings: AA: Every Sunday and Wednesday evening, 7:15 p.m., Aurora Pavilion. Aiken Cares- Alzheimer’s: 2nd Tuesday, 11 a.m. to noon, Cumberland Village Library, 2nd floor. Bariatric: 2nd Wednesday, 6-7 p.m., ARMC, Bariatric Services, 2nd floor, room 209; register at 641-5751. The Lunch Bunch–Bereavement-Grief Support for Adults: 1st Wednesday, noon to 1 p.m., ARMC, Cafeteria Dining Room A. Cancer: 3rd Wednesday, 3-4 p.m., First Baptist Church parlor. CSRA Dream Catchers -Traumatic Brain Injury and Disability, 1st Monday every month, 6-7 p.m., Walton Options for Independent Living, 325 Georgia Ave., North Augusta; register at 803-279-9611. Diabetes: 2nd Tuesday, 3-4 p.m., Odell Weeks Activity Center. Registration: 803-293-0023. Lupus: 3rd Thursday of the month, 7-9 p.m., ARMC, Dining Room A. Mended Hearts: 2nd Friday, 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., USCA Aiken Business Conference Center April 1 Pink Ribbonettes, the American Cancer Society Breast Cancer Self-Help Group for women diagnosed with breast cancer; guest speakers; 10:30 a.m. to noon at Millbrook Baptist Church. To register, Look Good … Feel Better, free program for female cancer patients actively undergoing or about to start treatment, 1 to 2:30 p.m. at the Cancer Care Institute of Carolina at ARMC. To register, call 803-641-6044. Odell Weeks Center 1700 Whiskey Road 803-642-7631 April 1–30 Toddler Time, every Monday and Wednesday, 9:30-11:30 a.m., Weeks Center 2. Use the gym space to run, chase and release a lot of energy. Allows kids to interact with others of the same age, and gives parents a chance to socialize with one another. Ages 5 and under. Cost is $2 per visit or $16 for a 10- visit pass. Fit 4 Ever, every Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, 10-11 a.m., Rooms 6&7. This low impact, moderate paces fitness class is great for a total body workout. Cost is $27 for 10 tickets. Zumba Gold, every Tuesday and Thursday, 1:30-2:30, Rooms 6&7. Low impact, high energy, easy to follow, Latin-inspired Zumba fitness party. Cost is $35 for 10 tickets. Line Dance, every Tuesday, 10-11 a.m., Weeks Center Rooms 6&7. Learn country dances as well as those taught to jazz, big band, and modern music in this moderately paced fitness class. Cost is $31 for 10 tickets. Zumba Toning, every Thursday, 5:30-6:30 p.m., Rooms 6&7. Zumba Toning combines targeted bodysculpting exercises and high energy cardio work with Latin-infused Zumba moves. Cost is $35 for 10 tickets. Zumba Sentao, every Tuesday, 5:30-6:30 p.m., Rooms 6&7. Zumba Sentao workout takes the thrill of the fitness party and partners it with explosive, chair-based choreography. Cost is $35 for 10 tickets. April 20 Miscellaneous Venues and Events Aiken Kite Festival, Citizens Park, 1060 Banks Mill Rd., Aiken, 10 a.m.3 p.m. 6th annual event will feature kite flying demonstrations, inflatables, rock wall, and trackless train, and an area where kids can fly their kites. The SPCA will be taking donations. There will be live entertainment by the Fort Gordon Signal Corp Rock band and an ultimate frisbee game at 1 p.m. Admission is free. Kites, food, and tickets for the inflatables will be available for purchase. April 3 The 6th Annual Springtime’s Lunch and Play, 11 a.m., Hopelands Gardens. Free event for children of all ages. There will be a play, prize giveaways, a craft area, and Peter Cottontail will be there too. Participants are encouraged to bring a blanket or a lawn chair to sit on and a picnic lunch to enjoy during the play. Call 803-642-7631 for more information. April 24 April 5–7 97th Annual Aiken Horse Show, Show Grounds, Hitchcock Woods. The Aiken Horse Show remains one of the foremost equestrian competitions in Aiken. This prestigious and popular competition is the Hitchcock Woods Foundation’s signature annual event. The Horse Show has retained its rustic charm, but in recent decades it has become one of the most elegant affairs in Aiken’s lively sporting calendar. Visit www.aikenhorseshow.org for more information. April 6 Aiken Horsepower Cruise-In, Home Depot Parking Lot, 1785 Whiskey Rd., 1- 3 p.m. Monthly car show first Saturday of every month. This is a wonderful chance to see some of Aiken’s beautiful classic cars. Meet a Master Gardener at Aiken Farmers’ Market, 8 a.m. Master Gardeners will answer your lawn and garden questions and identify plants, weeds, and any other mystery items that you bring in to show. April 25, 26, 27 Premeiere of The Bobby Dallas After-Party, interactive musical comedy dinner show, 7 p.m., Bobby’s Bar-B-Q party room, Augusta Hwy., to benefit the Aiken Chapter of the American Red Cross. See page 8 for details and ticket information. April 27 Microscope Program at Aiken State Park, 1145 State Park Rd., Windsor, 10 a.m. What can you see under a microscope? Come explore the fascinating world of what you can see in the water, on a leaf or in dirt under a microscope. Look closely at insect wings. Designed for all ages. There is no charge for this event. Meet at Fish Lake Shelter. 2nd Annual WE Oyster Roast, The Fermata Club, 5 p.m. Tickets are $30. Steamed oysters, Beaufort Stew, silent auction, and live entertainment by Bogie. Sponsored by Aiken Regional Medical Centers. Tickets: $30 each; can be purchased at Aiken Regional Medical Centers, Allegra Marketing Print and Mail, and the Aiken Standard. MOMS Club of Aiken Rummage Sale, First Presbyterian Church Gym, 224 Barnwell Ave., Aiken, 8 a.m. - noon. Proceeds benefit the Savannah River Cancer Foundation. April 11–14 Outside Aiken The Masters Tournament in Augusta, Georgia. April 15 Family Owned & Operated COMPLETE FUNERAL SERVICE April 28 Concert Choir performance, 4 p.m., St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. April 1–November 26 Landscaping for Birds by Jim Burke at Aiken Master Gardener Lunch Box Series, Trinity UMC, 2724 Whiskey Rd., Aiken, 12:30 p.m. Shellhouse Funeral Home, Inc. 100 Women Luncheon featuring Erin Merryn, originator of Erin’s Law, 11:30 to 1:30 p.m., at USCA Business and Education Building. Doors open at 11 a.m. Tickets: $30, available at 3 Monkeys and Materials Things or at the Child Advocacy Center by calling 803-644-5100 or visiting www.cacofaiken.org. All proceeds benefit the Child Advocacy Center. The Big Mo is now open every Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Shows start at dusk. It is suggested to arrive early. Visit www. thebigmo.com for a listing of showings. [Continued on next page] Shellhouse-Rivers Funeral Home, Inc. On-site Crematory Pine Log Rd. Location 924 Hayne Ave., Aiken, SC 29801 Jason B. Hucks Funeral Director 642-3456 Robert W. Shellhouse, Jr. Funeral Director C. Mitchell Rivers Funeral Director www.shellhousefuneralhome.com BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 715 E. Pine Log Rd., Aiken, SC 29803 641-4401 www.shellhouseriversfuneralhome.com 21 ZZZ ZZZ April 6 Stargazing at the Boyd Observatory, 5- 7 p.m. Free programs offered on the 1st and 3rd Saturday evenings of each month. Look up and see the world beyond our own. April 19–21 10th Annual Artisans Fair, North Augusta Living History Park, 5 p.m. The Olde Town Preservation Association will present its 10th Annual Artisans Fair. Special events of the arts festival will begin with a gala hosted by the Olde Town Preservation Association, the North Augusta Chamber of Commerce and Wine World. This free event will allow participants to meet artisans, partake in wine, music, cheese, and hors d’oeuvres, and be the first to see and purchase art. In addition to dispaying arts and crafts for sale, several sites throughout the park will have craftsmen demonstrating their skills. April 21 4th Annual Gravatt Bass Fishing Tournament, Gravatt Camp and Conference Center, 1006 Camp Gravatt Rd, Aiken, 7:30 a.m.- 2:30 p.m. Sign up your two-person team for this catch and release tournament to benefit the camper scholarship fund and the Gravatt Environmental Education Program. Registration deadline is April 15. To register, visit www.bishopgravatt.org. April 27 Coming in May May 3 Aiken Lobster Race, Newberry Street Festival Center, Aiken, 6 p.m. 100 thoroughbred lobsters will compete in several heats leading to the main races that will be held at 7:30, 8:30, and 9:30 p.m. Children’s area will feature activities and interactive rides and games. Live music will be provided by Merging Traffic, Palmetto Groove, Anybody’s Guess, and Midnight Crossing. Many local restaurants and vendors will be on hand to provide food as well as vendors on Newberry St. T-shirts and ride bands may be purchased at Atlantic Broadband, Hitchcock Healthcare, Coach T’s Diner, AllStar Tents and Events, Lionel Smith, Ltd., and Screenprint Factory. Tickets: $10 at the gates, children under 6 are free. Students with ID, $5. Attendees wearing 2013 Lobster Race T-shiirt ($20) get in free. Over 21 with ID: wrist band to purchase alcoholic beverages, $1. May 3 National Day of Prayer. 12 noon to 1 p.m., new City Municipal Building at Laurens St. and Hayne Ave. 6:45 -8 p.m., Odell Weeks Recreation Center, 1700 Whiskey Road. Music, scripture, prayer, signing. All are welcome. May 17 and 19 The World Beloved: A Bluegrass Mass, by American composer Carol Barnett, with selections by Scott Joplin and Aaron Copland, concert by The Aiken Choral Society, 7:30 on Friday, and 3 p.m. on Sunday; at Cornerstone Baptist Church, 100 Cornerstone Drive. Cost: $20 per ticket, available at the door or at other locations to be announced. Chef Belinda Spices For chef-quality taste www.chefbelinda.com May 11 7th Annual Historic Beech Island Tour, Beech Island Historical Society, 144 Old Jackson Highway, Beech Island, 10 a.m. Advance tickets can be purchased from the society or at the Aiken County Visitor’s Center in Downtown Aiken, or Material Things in South Aiken. An old-fashioned BBQ lunch will be served by the society behind the visitor’s center in Beech Island. Mead Hall Strawberry Festival, 129 Pendleton St. SW, Aiken, 10 a.m.- 2 p.m. This is a day of fun for the whole family. There will be games, entertainment, a bake sale, food and plenty of fresh strawberries. May 17–18 Aiken Garden Show, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Aiken County Historical Museum. Enjoy garden tours, exhibitors, vendors, workshops and educational programs. Cost: $25 for a two-day pass. Call Rose Hill Estate •Wonderfulfoodindowntownlocation •Cateringforalloccasions •Greatambience&fascinatinghistory •ServingdinnerinTheMainHouseInn •WemovebacktoTheStablesbeginning withSt.Patrick'sDayCelebration (803)-648-1181 ß ß www.rosehillestate.com HANDYMAN JACK • Household Maintenance and Repair • Appliance Repair 803-270-2414 TheHonestHandyman@gmail.com 22 641-6777 for more information, or visit www.aikengardenshow.org. Proceeds benefit the Aiken Garden Club Council. L r old MEDICA “We want you EE Pick Up. FR EQUIPMENT. 5-9917... 4 6 t a rd a h ic Just call R . , and donate.. Will repair, fix TLC Medical Centre, Inc. 190 Crepe Myrtle Dr., Aiken, SC 29803 (803) 648-7800 Inner Beauty MD Wellness and Aesthetics Address Summer is just around the Inner Beauty MD City, State Zip corner…will you be ready? Address City, State Zip Phone e-mail Phone e-mail n A healthy glow begins with healthy skin. Chemical peels and resurfacing facials bring back to life. Dr. Mae Jean Englee nskin Those spider veins do not look 116 Pendleton Street SW good in shorts! Laser vein Suite D, Aiken, SC 29801 therapy is the solution. Phone 803-226-0097 n Smooth, hair-free legs are a innerbeautymd.com summer must-have. Laser hair removal is safe and effective. Call today for your innerbeautymd@atlanticbb.net complimentary consultation. n Shed those extra pounds 10% OFF from winter. Our Medical all aesthetic services Weight Management program during April and May can help you reach your goal. Inner Beauty MD Dr. Mae Jean Englee BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 Feeding Lives Together by Phyllis Maclay Zucchinis terrific! Like bunnies, prolific! - Author Unknown Close the gate around the garden! The zucchinis are coming! The zucchinis are coming! Ever wonder how this plant’s vine snakes across the garden rows, popping out produce in its wake with so little effort? What should be done with it and any other extra veggies from your garden? Your fresh produce can be taken to Aiken’s Golden Harvest Food Bank, located at 81 Capital Drive, which branches off Banks Mill Road (see map). Waiting there is a walk-in cooler to chill and store your donations until they are later distributed to people needing food. “We are always eager to have fresh produce,” said Mike Gibbons, Golden Harvest Chief Development Officer for South Carolina. “People can contact me at 803-642-0752.” The local food bank channels provisions to Aiken-area organizations that disburse food for the hungry, such as St. Thaddeus Soup Kitchen, Salvation Army, Christ Central, ACTS (Area Churches Together Serving), and many other local churches. Planting the Seeds of a Great Idea This spring the City of Aiken’s Succession Management Class* of 2012/13, Cold Creek Nurseries, Master Gardener Tom Dix, and Southside Pediatrics are working together to grow an idea to help feed the hungry with nutritious fresh foods: a community garden right next to the Golden Harvest Food Bank warehouse. Fulfilling the food bank’s logo, “Feeding Lives Together,” this garden will also help provide funds to purchase more food. “We will supply the cow manure, mushroom manure, plants, seeds, and advice,” said Michaela Burley of Cold Creek Nurseries. “For $250 you can sponsor a bed and then volunteer to maintain it,” she added. “For $500 the bed you sponsor will be maintained by Golden Harvest. The money will be used by the food bank to find more food for people. They are very good at that.” “This will be a chance for us as a community to partner together and bring fresh fruits and vegetables to those people in need,” said Gibbons. “It’s a wonderful opportunity to team up and help those in need.” And perhaps sow an extra row or two in your garden to harvest and donate to the Golden Harvest Food Bank. You can email Mike Gibbons at mgibbons@goldenharvest.org. *Succession management is the process of identifying and preparing candidates for key positions and highlevel management positions that become vacant due to retirement, death or new business opportunities. Rock ‘n Glow Golden Harvest Food Bank will hold the inaugural “Rock ‘n Glow” 5K run at the Odell Weeks Center on Whiskey Road on Saturday, May 4, at 7 p.m. “Get ready to rock out as you light the night on a run to fight hunger,” said Gibbons. You can run solo or in a relay group of two or three runners. Registration will open at 5 p.m. and the fees are $20 for single runners and $30 for relay teams. That same night another race will be run at 6:30 p.m. for the 18-and-younger crowd. The fee is $10. For more information on the runs visit www.facebook.com/rocknglow. Grow and Go Whether you spring into action by participating in the runs, or sponsor the new community garden at the food bank, become a part of the move to feed the hungry right here in Aiken’s backyard. Anybody can volunteer to work a few hours a week in the beds, and any individual or organization can sponsor a garden bed. BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 A Garden Tip American Indians use the “Three Sisters” method gardening technique for planting corn, beans and squash together on the same mound. The veggies both supplement and complement each other. The large leaves of the squash vines keep the ground moist for the roots of all three plants. The vines of the bean plant grow up the corn stalk. Each plant puts nutrition into the soil. The Three Sisters thrive when growing together. What do you call a stolen yam? A hot potato. To my favorite honeydew, do you carrot all for me? My heart beets for you, with your turnip nose, and radish face. You are a peach. If we cantaloupe, lettuce marry. Weed make a swell pear. - Author Unknown I came to love my rows, my beans, though so many more than I wanted. They attached me to the earth, and so I got strength like Antaeus. - Henry David Thoreau What is small, red and whispers? A hoarse radish. 23 Career Fair Prepares Students for Life in the Work World by Heather Wright, USCA Writer USC Aiken’s Career Services provides Denzel Pryor, a member of Kappa Alpha students with an array of activities to promote their Psi fraternity Inc., took part in the fashion show success in the professional workforce. to display proper work attire. “It was a professional During the week leading up to the Career dress awareness seminar. It taught students how Fair, held last month, there were a to dress for business casual, business number of different programs on interviews, a business setting, and campus to help prepare students not what not to wear in either situation,” only for the Career Fair itself, but Pryor said. The final event for the also for the competitive job market week leading up to the fair was the that awaits them before and after Network Etiquette Reception. Juniors graduation. Among these activities and Seniors were invited to this was a workshop that discussed the “7 event to socialize and meet possible Keys to Success at a Career Fair.” It employers and also learn techniques educated students on everything from of networking. Students were required obtaining information about a possible to dress in professional attire for the employer to how students should event. “Career Prep Week is follow up after making the right first tailored to adequately prepare USC impression. Other activities included a Aiken student population for over 73 “Resume Drop-in” and a professional employers at the Career Fair,” said dress awareness program where Michael Smith, a student intern who students took part in a fashion show in worked alongside Career Services to the Student Activity Center. The title of the dress awareness make the week a success. He believes Asia Sumter event was “Keep it Klean,” hosted by that it serves a great purpose for the USCA Career Services and the men of the Nu Nu students of USCA. “Employers really take notice chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity Inc., and of students who come to the career fair with a sponsored by Dillard’s of Aiken. professional attitude,” Smith said. “The networking reception, professional dress event, resume dropin, and 7 Keys to Success would truly be a value to anyone hoping to benefit from this year’s career fair.” USCA gives students the information and background necessary to go out into the real world and be successful in whatever major they decide to pursue. This is especially true for many communications majors because of the required “Capstone” course that incorporates an internship with coursework. Many students have had their internships turn into a full-time positions. Eric Russell, former editor-in-chief of the university’s newspaper, The Pacer Times, and currently an intern at the Aiken Standard, is now an employee for the newspaper and is putting his skills from USCA to work in his new position. “My work at USCA equipped me with the tools necessary to effectively execute the various tasks a copy editor and journalist see daily,” said Russell. He said that the internship he completed as a student basically set him up for his job after graduating. The college experience can be fulfilling to students in various ways, but it is a comfort for soon-to-be graduates to know that USCA provides students with the necessary tools to build a strong foundation for entering the professional career world. : PENn O W tio NO nd Loca side 2 at Wood rive ill D ge Villa ociety H 01 S 440 Suite 2 29803 n, SC Aike 410 University parkway sUite 2360 aiken, soUth carolina 24 BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 Should I? Should I Not … ? Do’s and Don’ts for Job Interviews by Eric Blacks, USCA Writer Do job interviews make you nervous? Are you entering a new, unfamiliar job market? Well, you are not alone. April is almost in full bloom, and with the spring rain showers blows in a competitive job market. Whether you are an upcoming college graduate, or another individual intending to take advantage of an impending opportunity, a world of employment awaits you. However, many times, the key to success in this world is determined by the success of a job interview. s ’ o D This month, many college graduates will be interviewing, but with this tough economy, lots of people are searching for jobs. Make sure you have the edge in a demanding job market. Here are some do’s and don’ts for job interviewing: s t ’ n o D Appearance is Everything Don’t be Late! Dress for success! Appearance really is “everything” when it pertains to preparing for a job interview. Make sure—for any job interview—that you dress for the occasion. A great first impression is extremely important, and in some situations can either make or break a résumé. Your appearance should be very well put together and is another description of your personality. However, appearance goes beyond the physical aspect; nonverbal communication is important as well. “Wow” the interviewer with a charming attitude. Your attitude is one of the first features that the interviewer will notice about you. It is imperative to establish a good energy; the employer will have to establish a comfort level with you in order for you to be hired. The early bird gets the worm! Being late is never good, and it will destroy any chances of making a good first impression. Many employers instantly refuse tardy candidates. No matter the excuse, it makes the employer wonder if you will always be late. Additionally, it plants an initial seed of doubt in the employer’s mind that you are unreliable. Try to arrive at least 15-20 minutes early. It assures the employer that you want the job, and it shows that you are dependable. Besides, you never know what could happen on your way to your destination. If you leave early, you have a better chance of still getting there on time. Be Confident Do your homework. You do not want to walk into an interview only to learn the job is something that you are not interested in, especially if it could have been avoided. Furthermore, you do not want to walk into an interview for something you think you are interested in, but know nothing about. Always do some research on the position that you are applying for before you go to your interview. Make sure you know what the position fully consists of, as well as its requirements; it can save you and the interviewer a lot of time. It looks good when you go to an interview and know something about what the potential job entails. Match their confidence with confidence of your own! All employees giving interviews know what they want out of a potential employee and they seek to acquire nothing but the best. When you join a potential employer for an interview, meet him or her with a friendly smile that states you are the one they have been searching for. Make eye contact. When they ask questions, answer with a clear, strong voice that exemplifies passion, determination, and certainty. Do not waver or be indecisive in answering. If you do not know the answer to a question, just be honest and say that you do not know. Demonstrate confidence in whatever your responses may be; let your interviewer see someone who will be confident, no matter what the job may entail. Showcase your Creativity What separates you from the competition? Creativity is one of the most important characteristics to express or demonstrate when interviewing. Assure your potential employer that you are a special individual who they would benefit the company. When they ask questions, use your answers to highlight your own unique talents. You have to let them know that you are different; you are someone who should be especially considered. Employers are looking for that person who not only can do the job efficiently, but also stand out as an excellent representation of their company. Don’t Walk “Blindly” into an Interview Have ENERGY I have an interview? Zzzz… Unless you are interviewing to participate in a sleep study, you need to make sure you are fully energized. Employers are looking for people who are ignited with eagerness and ready to work hard. Watch your body language during the interview. Do not slouch, blatantly yawn, or answer with a voice of melancholy. In contrast, you should sit up properly, listen and show attentiveness, and answer the questions with a clear, enthusiastic voice. Make sure you get plenty of sleep the night before your interview, and eat a nutritious breakfast on the morning of the interview. A job interview can be stressful, but with the right guidance and a little initiative, you can use this experience to jumpstart yourself to a bright and promising future. Quality, Brand-Name Furniture at the Best Prices in the CSRA n! ls in Tow Best Dea nds Major Bra • No-interest financing • Layaway available for Bring in this ad RY VE LI DE FREE on purchases over $399!* *Free delivery limited to Aiken area 1589 Whiskey Road in Mitchell Shopping Center • Aiken, SC • Weekdays: 11a.m. – 7p.m. | Sat: 10a.m. – 5p.m. | Closed Sundays BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 25 THE FLYIN G FO IE OD by Chef Belinda “Ramp” It Up! Ramps, Cremini, and Bacon Frittata 2 tablespoons baking powder 1 tablespoon baking soda 1 teaspoon salt 1/2 cup butter or shortening 2 cups buttermilk 1 cup thinly sliced fresh ramps, including greens (reserve 1 tablespoon white portion for ramp butter) Ramp butter (recipe follows) Serves 8-10 If you’ve ever walked through the Farmers’ Market this time of year, you can immediately tell it’s spring from the smell of ramps wafting through the air. Ramps have a unique pungent aroma that is a cross between garlic and leeks. Some people confuse ramps for leeks, and depending on the part of the country, they are also called wild leeks. You can recognize a ramp by its pearly white tuber, burgundy stem and wide floppy green leaves that resemble lily of the valley. They can be used in a number of recipes, cooked or raw, just like onions; and they add a unique flavor to soups, eggs and potato dishes. The New “It” Vegetable Ramps have become the “it” vegetable of the spring season, with numerous festivals celebrating it along the East coast. Restaurant chefs everywhere go crazy over ramps and buy them up before the rest of us can get to them! Supermarkets have begun carrying the wild leeks, but the operative word here is “wild.” Ramps are not grown commercially - they are harvested from forests, from South Carolina to Canada. But the availability of ramps has started to decline with the almost “gold-rush” mentality of its fans. Add to that a very limited harvesting season - April through May - and you’ll understand why ramps are considered a species of “special concern” in several of its producing states. Odorous, But Delicious! However, not everyone loves ramps - there are just as many who dislike the odorous vegetable as there are those who adore it. Ramps have a flavor and aroma that you really have to love to enjoy. For the first-timer I recommend recipes in which the ramps are sautéed, roasted or grilled - these cooking methods tame the very strong flavor. For those with an adventurous streak, try ramps raw or pickled. Whip up a batch of ramp pesto and serve it over pasta. Pickle a jarful of ramps and enjoy their crunchiness and sharp and tangy flavor over the remaining months of the year. There are so many ways to cook with ramps - once you try them you will decide for yourself whether they are worth all the hype. Start experimenting with these recipes for your next brunch. 26 1/4 lb. thick bacon, sliced into 1/2-inch pieces 12-16 ramps, washed, trimmed and chopped, about 1 cup 1/4 lb. cremini mushrooms, sliced 2 tablespoons unsalted butter Kosher salt Red pepper flakes, to taste 12 eggs 1/2 cup cream, or milk 1 cup provolone cheese, grated Preheat the oven to 350°. In a 12-inch cast iron skillet, cook bacon until crisp; drain and set aside. Add butter to skillet. Over medium-high heat sauté ramps and mushrooms, stirring occasionally, until browned. Season to taste with salt and red pepper. Transfer to bowl with bacon. Lower heat to medium-low. Spread the bacon and ramp mixture over the bottom of the skillet. Sprinkle the cheese on top. Whisk eggs with cream and add a pinch of salt. Pour into skillet. Stir with the whisk until eggs start to get a little fluffy. Place the skillet in the oven and cook until eggs are set, about 8-10 minutes. Note: oven time could take longer depending on size and type of skillet used. Buttermilk Ramp Biscuits Makes 12-16 biscuits 1/4 lb. thick sliced bacon (sliced into 1/4-inch pieces) 4 cups all-purpose flour Cook the bacon in a large skillet over medium high heat until crisp. Remove from pan and drain on paper towels until cool. Reserve bacon fat. Make the biscuits: Preheat oven to 425°. Sift the flour, salt, baking powder and baking soda together into a large bowl. Using a pastry cutter or two knives, cut in the butter until it’s in little flourcoated pieces the size of a grain of rice. Take care that you do not cut the butter too finely – it’s easier than you might think. When the dough is rolled out, it’s these tiny globules of fat that will make your biscuits light and flaky. Add the sliced ramps and crisped bacon pieces and gently stir in just enough buttermilk to make the dry ingredients adhere into a soft ball of dough. Do not mix any more than absolutely necessary. Turn the dough out onto a well-floured surface. Dust your hands with flour and gently fold the dough on itself just until all the ingredients are evenly incorporated. Add a little flour to the kneading surface as you go if the dough is too sticky. Be careful not to overwork the dough. Roll the dough and cut the biscuits: Using a rolling pin well-dusted with flour, roll out the dough until about 3/4-inch thick. Cut the biscuits with a sharp biscuit cutter or 3-inch diameter tin can with both ends cut out. Do not use a glass or jar to cut the biscuits. It’s important to make sharp, clean cuts if you want your biscuits to raise high and flaky. A glass will pinch the edges of the biscuits together. When you cut all the biscuits you can from the sheet of dough, gently knead the leftover portion back together into a mass. Again, roll the dough ¾-inch thick and cut the remaining biscuits. Lightly grease a baking sheet and arrange the cut biscuits spaced evenly on it, about 2 inches apart. Bake the biscuits: Brush the tops of the raw biscuits with a little of the ramp infused butter. Place the biscuits into the preheated oven for 15-20 minutes or until golden brown. Serve immediately with more of the ramp butter. BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 Ramp Butter butter into a small bowl and mix in the ramps and paprika, stirring vigorously until the butter is smooth and all ingredients are incorporated. Use a small food processor if you prefer. Serve with biscuits. Note: Substitute canola oil for bacon fat, if you prefer. Makes 1/2 cup 1/4 lb. unsalted butter, softened 1 tablespoon ramps, chopped (reserved from biscuit recipe) Reserved bacon fat (from biscuit recipe) Paprika, pinch DONCASTER Lightly cook the reserved ramps in a little of the bacon fat until slightly softened and translucent. Set aside to cool slightly. Put the softened Belinda Smith-Sullivan is a food writer, personal chef, and pilot who enjoys exploring the “off the beaten path” culinary world. Her love of cooking and entertaining motivated her to give up a corporate career to pursue a degree in Culinary Arts from Johnson & Wales University. Now living in Aiken, she currently markets her own spice line called Chef Belinda Spices. Visit her blog at www.flyingfoodie.blogspot.com. 2013 Summer Trunk Show Monday, April 15 through Friday, April 26 Fashion consulting at your convenience Please Contact Lee Cavanaugh 803.649.1583 Accidental Discovery in Biotech Research Ask me how to ge this prod t uct FREE! Jeanette Parish 803.641.0332 NeriumAD Age-Defying Treatment was formulated to improve the appearance of: • Fine Lines and Wrinkles • Hyperpigmentation • Uneven Skin Texture • Aging Skin • Sun-Damaged Skin For your FREE TRIAL or more information contact: Vaughn Packer 803-270-6567 vaughnpacker124@aol.com www.doncaster.com A Master’s Touch. a contemporary jewelry gallery, southern art and jumble of art • full gifts 803.649.9663 • 137 laurens street sw, downtown aiken monday-friday 10am-5:30pm • saturday 10am-5pm BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 27 Good Sense Medicine by Zoom Heaton Why hormone therapy at menopause and beyond? S o you’ve made it through the basket case phase of perimenopause and now you have officially gotten to the “eggless” aging stage of your life. Congratulations! They’re supposed to be the best years with no more menstruation and birth control pills. Well, there are issues that come with menopause as well, but life can be enjoyed when the body is properly restored with the hormones it needs. How do you know if you’re going through menopause? Menopause begins when you stop having your monthly cycle for 12 consecutive months. This usually occurs between the ages of 45 and 55 years old. There are many changes in your body that can affect sleep, mood, lifestyle, and overall self-confidence. Hot flashes are a very common menopausal symptom. This is the feeling wherein you can feel a sudden flush of heat that rushes over your body and this can last for three minutes up to one hour. There are cases where the skin will flush during hot flashes as the blood vessels dilate to cool down the skin. This is usually very uncomfortable and can be quite embarrassing. This is the time when the thermostat at the house is usually kept at freezing. Signs and Symptoms of Menopause Disturbances in body temperature due to both hot flashes and night sweats can disrupt sleep and cause irritability and changes in your mood and attitude. These are all signs of menopause. The symptoms of menopause are due to changes in estrogen and progesterone levels, the female hormones that regulate ovulation and menstruation. Since the ovaries become less functional, there are not only fewer hormones produced but they also fluctuate widely, leading to an array of biological changes throughout the entire body, from the brain to the skin. Other possible symptoms are weight gain, fatigue, depression, palpitations, headaches, aches and pains, changes in libido, and bladder control problems. Health Issues to Watch for How does menopause affect a woman’s long-term health? After menopause, women will lose the protection of estrogen and develop a higher risk for chronic problems. It is important to be aware of the following conditions: • Elevated cholesterol levels increase the risk of cardiovascular conditions, such as heart attacks, strokes, and high blood pressure. • The rate of bone loss becomes faster after menopause which increases the risk of osteoporosis. Women after menopause are especially susceptible to fractures of the hip, wrist and spine. • Body composition changes, the amount of body fat increases while muscle mass decreases. The basic metabolic rate reduces, it is harder to keep fit and maintain muscle tone. This makes it almost impossible to lose weight or maintain a healthy weight. • As the tissues of the vagina and urethra lose the support of estrogen, regional infections and incontinence (urinary leakage) may occur. The low level of estrogen also causes the breasts, uterus and other genital organs to shrink. With proper management and hormone balance, many of the above consequences can be prevented, reduced, or delayed. Bioidentical hormones can help not only to alleviate annoying symptoms of menopause but also help to restore the vital hormones lost due to natural aging. Bioidentical hormones have the same chemical structure as the ones you’re making in your body. Physiologic levels (levels just enough for your body to maintain optimum function) are all that is necessary to restore your sex hormones to levels that allow you to rebalance all of your hormone systems. All of your hormone systems are interrelated and interdependent and thus they react to each other. So, when you have a problem with one hormone system, over time, ALL your hormone systems are affected, causing metabolic imbalance. Bioidentical hormones are not new. For decades doctors have been using bioidentical hormones to treat permanent hormone deficiencies such as diabetes, hypothyroidism, and Addison’s disease. Menopause, unfortunately, has not been viewed as a permanent hormone deficiency thus are women’s financial needs different than men’s? They may be! Women live longer, so their money has to last longer. Women generally have fewer years in the workforce, taking time to be with their children. Women are less likely to receive pension income in retirement and may also receive lower Social Security payments when they retire, due to fewer years in the workforce. The good news… women know how to invest and grow their money because women tend to ask questions and stay the course. Even if you don’t currently manage your family’s finances, make sure you know as much about them as if you were managing the money yourself, because you may have to someday. We can help you understand your investment and insurance needs. We at AXA Advisors are a client-focused financial services leader providing wealth protection strategies, wealth management and financial and estate planning strategies to individuals in your area. 28 www.axa-equitable.com Securities offered through AXA Advisors, LLC (NY, NY 212-314-4600), member FINRA, SIPC. Investment advisory products offered through AXA Advisors, LLC, an investment advisor registered with the SEC. Annuity and insurance products offered through AXA Network, LLC and its insurance agency subsidiaries. AXA Network, LLC does business in California as AXA Network Insurance Agency of California, LLC and, in Utah, as AXA Network Insurance Agency of Utah, LLC. AXA Advisors and its affiliates do not provide tax or legal advice. GE-55786a (5/10) BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 the delay for most doctors in using them to treat menopause. Also, other reasons include confusion and the vested interests of the drug companies. Aging is Not Good for Us Menopause and aging are inevitable. However, aging is not supposed to be good for us. It’s nature’s way of killing us. The reduction in our hormone levels is one of its mechanisms. As our various tissues deteriorate, so do our endocrine glands and their feedback control systems. As a result, our bodies cease to regulate our hormones for optimal health. Eating right and exercising will help maintain better levels of some hormones, but can’t stop the age-related hormone losses. Essential hormones that build tissues and improve immunity (DHEA, testosterone, growth hormone) begin to disappear after age 25 and by age 80 have been reduced by 50-80%. Progesterone in women starts to decline at age 30 and essentially disappears when periods start to become irregular in the perimenopause stage. This is probably a significant factor in the rise in breast cancer at this age. Estradiol levels drop 90% at menopause, BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 producing osteoporosis, heart disease, and dementia. The truth is that we are human and we are deteriorating biomolecular entities. Even if we are healthy, we cannot trust our bodies to maintain optimal hormone levels after age 25. By the age of 50 we’ve already suffered 20 plus years of hormone deficiency and we wonder why there’s more disease that creeps up the latter half of our lives! Hormones are crucial to our vitality and health. For a time we need them to help us manage uncomfortable symptoms of hormone fluctuations but then we need them to prevent disease. Heart attacks, autoimmune diseases, and some cancers occur years after hormone deficiencies begin and occur more often in people with lower hormone levels. If higher hormone levels were bad for us, then studies of balanced bioidentical hormone replacement should reveal rapid and obvious increases in all kinds of problems. However, such studies show only the expected benefits and no proof of harm. Get your hormone levels checked and ask your doctor or pharmacist specially trained in bioidentical hormone replacement therapy to learn more about what you need and what you can do. Zoom Heaton is the owner of TLC Medical Centre Inc., an Independent Community Pharmacy and Medical Equipment facility located at 190 Crepe Myrtle Drive off Silver Bluff Road. A pharmacist, she is a graduate of the University of South Carolina. She is a Certified Diabetes Educator and is certified in Immunization; she is also the chief compounding pharmacist at Custom Prescription Compounders, LLC, inside TLC Medical Centre, Inc., specializing in Bio-Identical Hormone Replacement Therapy and Women’s Health. Saliva testing is available at TLC/CPC. Call 803.648.7800 or visit nooneshoerx.com for more information. 29 The Fresh Market Grand Opening 1400 Whiskey Road March 20, 2013 Jim Brantley John Coleman, Manager of The Fresh Market Phil and Barbara McKnight Sandy Gregg and Marilyn Leugers Marlene and Carl Huffman, Susan de Bruhl Amy Taylor (803) 648-1898 30 Marius Groza and J.D. Dietzel Shannon McLemore and Nancy Vermilye 100 Colleton Avenue SW | Aiken, SC www.thewillcox.com BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 Katina Johnson and Megan Coleman Juanita Bartley, with Floral Specialist Gloria Clayton, and Patricia Hite Liz Stewart and Eden Keefe Marilyn Hodge and Dennis Scherer Erinne Blackwell with Vivian and James Shelley Lindell and Lisa Woods Will Cunningham and Cliff Dow Debbie Robinson and Preethi Maniam James Gunter and Christina Fishpaw Pat True and Linda McGurer BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013 31 32 BELLA MAGAZINE APRIL 2013