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Valentine

sean dietrichBy Sean Dietrich

She has a box of to-go food in her hands. I overhear the man at the barbecue joint counter say she is missing two pounds of brisket.

The man apologizes to the people in line, then he tells her it will be coming right up.
“Don’t forget extra sauce,” she calls out. “The sauce is for my son, he’s a Dipper.”

Well, I can relate. I’m a Dipper, too. If it can be dipped, I dip it. French fries, for example, were designed by God to be ketchup delivery vehicles. Don’t even get me started on salads. My salads consist of a single sprig of lettuce with nine cups of ranch dressing.

She looks at me and apologizes for holding up the line at the counter.

The woman is about seventy, I’d guess. Maybe a little older. White hair. Slim. She takes care of herself. She’s wearing workout gear.

I don’t know what she’s doing in the to-go lane of a greasy barbecue joint. Usually, people who exercise a lot don’t openly consume cholesterol in public smokehouses. It just doesn’t fit the health-and-fitness thing.

Seeing someone like her in here feels like seeing a Church of Christ preacher at the blackjack table sipping a whiskey sour.

“You ordered a lot of barbecue,” I say because I have a gift for pointing out the obvious.
“Oh, it’s for my son,” she says. “He LOVES barbecue, and so does his fiance, and they’re gonna need something for their road trip. Something that will hold them, they leave tonight.”

And we are knee-deep in a conversation. Her son and his fiance are driving toward Canada tonight. She’s staying behind to watch his kids.

“My son’s getting married this weekend,” she goes on. “They’re doing a private ceremony, just the two of them, way up in Canada.”

She tells me the Canadian province where they’re traveling. It is a French word, but I won’t even attempt to spell it. Spelling was not my bess subjet in scool.

She tells me her son’s story.

Her son’s wife died a few years ago. Cancer. The tumor popped up overnight. One day the girl was a young, healthy person having a routine physical; the next week she was receiving hardcore radiation.

“The radiation was the worst,” the woman says. “God, it was hard on Hailey, that was her name. We watched Hailey go from being so strong to a skeleton.”

When Hailey died, she left her son with a boy and two girls. The woman tells me that her son was so depressed he stayed in his back bedroom and wouldn’t come out for nearly a year.

“I really thought we were going to have to get professional help,” she says. “He just wouldn’t snap out of it. It’s so hard to watch your children suffer.”

A little over a year ago, as a last-ditch effort, one of her son’s childhood friends booked a hunting and fishing trip to Canada in hopes of helping him. The friend wouldn’t take no for an answer. So, he dragged her son northward to a remote Canadian region, whether he wanted to go or not.

She laughs. “We practically had to threaten him to get him out the door, he didn’t wanna leave.”

They hunted and fished in a lodge located in the serene wilderness. She says that it was in this place where her son remembered what it felt like to be human again. In the evenings he and his buddies went out to restaurants, they laughed over beers, they told stories, they caught lots of fish. He stayed almost four weeks.

Enter his fiancé. He met her while in Canada. It was a chance meeting. She was not Canadian. Her Texan accent stuck out like a sore thumb when she was in Maple Leaf Country.

The woman says, “When he came back home, he was like, ‘Mom, I met this girl, and she’s from TEXAS! And she’s SO COOL!’”

And that was all she wrote.

The woman starts to get wet eyes. She touches the corner of one eye so that her makeup doesn’t run. She doesn’t say anything else because she doesn’t have to. She is a mother.
Anyway, her future daughter-in-law is a proud Texan with the no nonsense attitude often associated with people who wear spurs. And her son is like a new man.

The woman adds, “She was made for my son. He’s kinda soft spoken; she’s all up in your face.”

I have one of those at home.

Thus, the couple returns to where they first met. They’re going to tie the knot, then do a mini honeymoon in a nice lodge. Right now while you read this, they are probably still driving. And life is somehow moving forward again.

“My son is so happy.” She sniffles. “I just know Hailey is looking down and smiling on us. She wouldn’t want us crying for her anymore. She would want us laughing a lot, she would want us to be happy because that’s what she always was. Happy.”

The barbecue man finally brings a few more to-go boxes. Heavy boxes containing brisket, pork, and all the sauce a guy could hope for.

The man says, “I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone ask for that much sauce before.”
“It’s for my son,” she reminds him.

The man grins. “He must like barbecue sauce.”

“He’s a Dipper, he dips everything.”

We bid her goodbye. She happily trots through the parking lot and piles into her car. She’s going home to take care of her family and love on her grandkids. The way all good grandmothers do.

I watch her drive away. The man behind the counter watches her, too. And so of course does Hailey.

Happy Valentine’s Day to anyone who has a beating heart. And also to those who don’t anymore.

A Pastor’s Ponderings: Danger

Dave HollandBy Dave Holland

“But when you enter a town and are not welcomed, go into its streets and say, ‘Even the dust of your town that sticks to our feet we wipe off against you. Yet be sure of this: The kingdom of God is near.’ I tell you, it will be more bearable on that day for Sodom than for that town.” Luke 10:10-11.

My son and I plopped our weary bodies down in the Albuquerque hotel room bed at two in the morning, bone-weary from 16 hours of driving. A pounding on our door woke us only an hour later. I jumped up and opened the door to see a man screaming in Spanish. I wasn’t understanding, so he pointed frantically down the hall to the fire engulfing the hotel. That man’s warning saved our lives.

Jesus is warning us in Luke 10:10 with the strongest possible language. Rejection of His message is the unpardonable sin that prevents people from entering the Kingdom of God. His words are distinctively harsh as He warns us of the “fire down the hall.”

Tucked into the fabric of this passage is a thread of light–the promise of His kingdom. The kingdom of God is near when the King is present. Our lives lay on that promise, and we can experience His presence regularly.

What would you do if Jesus came to your church? Christ promised He would be present whenever two or more people gather in His name. We believe that but we just don’t act like HE is present.

HE is God of very God, Light of very Light. He spoke the worlds into existence and knitted solar systems into galaxies. At His Word, our Milky Way flows in perfect harmony amidst a universe of ever-expanding dimensions. He comes to you to cast the radiance of His presence into your heart. The kingdom of God is near.

God is not far away. He is nearer than our dearest friend or relative. He who knit your body together like a blanket has breathed life into your flesh and bones. He knows every fiber of your body, every molecule, atom and the very DNA strands of your cell structure. HE knows you right down to the hurts and pains of your history. God delights in the joy you feel and the love in your life. He also knows the stress, emptiness, regrets and sorrows you feel. The kingdom of God is near.

I had been on an extended fast several years ago when I felt the warm Presence of God in church. The sheer wonder of His attendance overwhelmed me. God’s forgiveness washed over me, and tears flowed easily. Jesus had pulled back Heaven’s veil for a moment, and I could sense the cloud-like Presence of God in the room. I looked around the sanctuary expecting other people to sense the same phenomena, but people were oddly unaware. Some looked sleepy and bored, I even saw one man look at his watch as if to say, how much longer before we go to lunch?

My mind screamed, “People, don’t you know WHO is in the room? God is here!” Many went home that day ignorant that God had a word of grace, comfort and encouragement for them. They were oblivious to WHO came to church that day.

Two thousand years ago, Christ approached the throne room of God carrying his blood. He sprinkled it on the mercy seat and said (my paraphrase) to His Father, “I finished the work, the price of forgiveness is paid, I received all their punishment on the cross, I satisfied your justice.” Then He who judges righteously spoke once again, “This is My Son, sacrificed for the sins of the world. He has redeemed the lost ones.”

At that moment, the veil of the temple was rent from top to bottom and a silent thundering invitation was issued, “Come into the presence of God.” He invites you in and He will be at your church Sunday. Will you come with eyes to see and ears to hear? The kingdom of God is near.

Dave Holland pastored churches for 38 years before retiring in Destin. He recently released his new devotional-Bible study based on the Gospel of Luke titled “Extraordinary Jesus: Ignite Your Season of Miracles.” You can get a copy of this book from his website, DaveHolland.org, or at Amazon.com. Pastor Dave is available to preach and teach in churches and conferences.

Making Wishes Come True

By Joanne MacPhee

As the region’s largest non-profit provider of care services, Covenant Care has a unique day-to-day perspective when it comes to the health needs and challenges in our community.

That is why they created the Covenant Care Foundation. The Foundation seeks to bridge the gap between those who have access to standard health care services and those who do not. Their unique programs also address the mental and emotional aspects of illness, often overlooked by traditional health care models.

Through their Foundation, Covenant Care is able to provide a number of unique and very special programs, including My Wish, Camp Connect, Partners in Care, Veterans Covenant Care and Bereavement and Spiritual Care. Most recently, they began offering specialized Palliative Care services at their brand-new Palliative Care Resource Center.

Funded in large part by an exceptionally generous quarter of a million-dollar grant from the St. Joe Community Foundation, the new Center, located on 19th Street in Panama City, offers patients and their families a unique continuum of care, guiding them through every stage of their medical journey.

Staffed by health care professionals, counselors and spiritual advisors, the Center seeks to offer support and perspective to those coming to terms with a life-threatening medical condition. Their specialized team is at the ready to help families navigate the many options available to them in the ever-expanding area of palliative care, while also supporting them as they begin to understand and cope with their diagnosis. The Center’s staff are not there to replace, but rather complement, a patient’s primary health care provider.

Because Covenant Care is there through every stage of a patient’s journey, they can tailor their programs to each family’s specific needs. For instance, the Foundation may be able to provide funding to help meet the cost of rent or groceries while a patient is in treatment, or cover the cost of a family member travelling into town to care for a loved one. Their Partners in Care program supports children diagnosed with a life-threatening illness, providing extra services for children and adolescents, while under the medical supervision of their primary doctor. Similarly, their Veterans Program honors and cares for our heroes, understanding their distinctive experiences and challenges.

Rear View Of Senior Couple Walking On BeachMy Wish is a particularly special program that grants wishes to seriously ill patients and their families. Whether their wish is for a family reunion, a wedding, or as in the case recently of a Veteran, one last chance to fly, My Wish volunteers will do whatever they can to make a family’s final wish come true!

Meanwhile, Camp Connect is a day camp specifically designed to help children come to terms with loss, providing them with the tools they need to understand and manage their grief. And for all family members, there are bereavement and grief counselling services available.

As Christie Parker, Covenant Care Senior Director of Development points out, all of this is provided at no cost to the patient or their family, thanks to the generosity of individuals, organizations, and companies like the St. Joe Community Foundation. Mrs. Parker notes, “I cannot begin to express our gratitude to those in the community who make our programs possible. The Foundation’s programs rely entirely on the generosity of our community and every cent donated goes directly to our programs, the more we raise, the more we can do in our community. In 2019 the Foundation raised and then gave away $1.8 million, and last year, we granted over 450 wishes. The need in our community only grows greater, and we are blessed to have partners and volunteers standing beside us as we seek to meet that demand.”

Underscoring the importance of the Foundation’s work, St Joe Community Foundation Executive Director, April Wilkes stated, “The St Joe Community Foundation’s mission is to enrich the quality of life of the people who live in Northwest Florida and we are proud to have partnered with the Covenant Care Foundation to create their new Palliative Care Resource Center. We actively encourage other like-minded businesses and organizations to join us, as we work together to build a stronger, healthier community.”

For more information on the Covenant Care Foundation, the Palliative Care Resource Center or to donate or volunteer, please contact rachel.davis@choosecovenant.org or call 850.785.3040.

Catch A Dynamic Duo On “Chasin’ The Sun”

Chasin The Sun CaptsCapt. Justin Leake and Capt. Travis Holeman have returned for season six as the co-hosts of “Chasin’ The Sun,” Visit Panama City Beach’s award-winning television series, which premiered last month on Discovery Channel. In 13 all-new episodes, the anglers will take viewers on a fast-paced, heart-pounding saltwater adventure, showcasing the destination’s diverse fishery and sampling land-based activities along the way.

Capt. Leake is a Panama City native whose family has lived, fished and hunted in the Florida Panhandle since the 1800’s. Leake, a full-time charter fishing guide and part-time TV angler, is the owner and one of seven guides at Panama City Inshore, which runs over 1,000 fishing trips each year. Between guiding, filming, tournament fishing and scouting, he typically spends around 300 days a year on the water.

“Growing up in the Panama City Beach area, I was blessed to experience the rich fishing history and heritage at a young age, and my favorite part about hosting the show is being able to share this pristine resource with the entire world,” says Justin. “Every season is different due to the many variables and environmental factors involved in fishing, and season six will showcase how versatile this sport can really be.”

Several years ago, Capt. Holeman had an accident that caused him to rethink his life plan. So, he ditched his suit and began spending his days on a boat instead. Since 2000, Holeman has become a renowned fishing guide, built boats, achieved numerous International Game Fish Association (IGFA) world records as a professional angler and shares his story through speaking engagements, seminars and workshops.

“Season six will appeal to all types of anglers, from those searching for a technically challenging experience to those just wanting to have fun,” says Travis. “We will cover many species and techniques in this season, including ‘run and gun’ fishing for mahi mahi and ‘sight fishing’ for tarpon and shallow water redfish. We’ll also have some fun experiencing the attractions, events, dining options and natural beauty that make Panama City Beach one of the world’s best vacation destinations.”

“Chasin’ The Sun” has been recognized with numerous awards for broadcast excellence since its 2016 debut. VISIT FLORIDA, the state’s official tourism marketing agency, recently awarded its top prize, “The Henry,” for best-in-class achievement in the niche marketing category at its 2020 Flagler Awards ceremony in Tampa. The show has also received 10 Telly Awards in the categories of nature/wildlife, sports, cinematography and tourism.
Season six sponsors of “Chasin’ The Sun” include Dulce Vida Tequila, Fish Monkey, Grundéns, Half Hitch Tackle, Holiday Inn Resort, Humminbird, Minn Kota and Pirates Cove Marina.

Produced in partnership with Pinfish Media, new episodes of “Chasin’ The Sun” will air Saturdays at 8:30 a.m. Eastern/Pacific and 7:30 a.m. Central. All five previous seasons are available for online viewing at www.ChasinTheSunTV.com and on Amazon Prime, Vudu, STIRR and Samsung TV Plus. The show can also be seen on local affiliate television stations in the Outdoor America network. For more information on “Chasin’ The Sun,” please visit or stay connected via Facebook (@ChasinTheSunFishingShow), Instagram (@ChasinTheSunTV) and YouTube.

Follow Capt. Justin Leake and Capt. Travis Holeman via Facebook (@justinleakePCB and @Capt.TravisHoleman) and Instagram (captjustinleake and capttravisholeman).

Charity Chatter

Dog2Humane Society Low Cost Clinics
Take advantage of our low-cost medical clinic offered each month on the 3rd Saturday. Shots, testing, microchipping, nail trims, flea prevention and more. For a full list of services and updates on vaccination availability for the events, view our Facebook event.

February 20th at Hobby Lobby 9 a.m. – 12 p.m.
March 20th at Shore Thing Grooming 9 a.m. – 12 p.m.

No appointment needed, so stop by! Rabies vaccinations ($13.00) are done by Dr. Susie McKnight of Bayview Veterinary Hospital. (Rabies are not available every time). Rabies vaccinations are good for one year.

Community Bag Program by Winn Dixie
For the month of February, The Humane Society of Bay County will receive a $1 donation from each purchase of the $2.50 reusable Community Bag at Winn Dixie on 132 South Tyndall Parkway.

The Humane Society’s Thrift Store is Open!
Have you visited the all-new store yet? We’ve got a great selection of items to choose from. New inventory daily! Follow us on Facebook for inventory arrivals. Now taking donations. To find out how you can donate to the store, visit the website at adoptme.org. Help us out with supplies! We are in need of items for operations. Purchase from Amazon, and ship directly to the store. All purchases are tax-deductible donations. Located at 1352 W. 15th Street, PC 32401 in the Panama Plaza on the corner of Lisenby and 15th. Open Monday – Saturday 9 a.m.-7 p.m. and Sunday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.

CAUSEway Car Show: Cruisin’ for Kids Feb. 20!
100% of the proceeds will be donated to The Optimist Club’s Childhood Cancer Program. There will be top 10 people’s choice awards, vendors, giveaways, DJ Awesome Ant and The Chris Beverly Experience will play from 3-7 p.m. after the trophies are awarded. Online registration available at Bit.ly/causewaycarshow. Join us February 20, 2021, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. at The Shrimp Boat, 1201 Beck Ave., Panama City. For more information visit www.facebook.com/events/651111392253329.

Big Brothers, Big Sisters’ The Big Event March 6
Panama City’s beloved Corks ‘N Canvases event has received a makeover, and you are cordially invited to the Big Event presented by Bill Cramer Chevrolet Cadillac Buick GMC on Saturday, March 6, 2021, at The Barn at Wicked Wheel! This past year has been filled with challenges for our community, but we are looking forward to coming together and putting our focus on who needs our support: our local children.

The Big Event will be filled with many of our signature elements including a silent and live auction, chances to win and live entertainment by Christon Birge and Katie Spillman! We will have COVID-19 precautions in place, as the health and safety of our guests are our top priority!

Another new and exciting addition?! We will be streaming the event LIVE! If you are more comfortable, you can stay at your home, participate virtually, and give back to a BIG cause. Individual in-person tickets will be limited.

If you’d like to secure your spot, sponsorship opportunities are now available! Contact Paula Shell at pshell@bbbsnwfl.org or call 850.763.5437 for more information.
There are many other ways you can support our mission and make a big difference in a little’s future. Shop Amazon Smile! Visit https://bit.ly/BBBSSMILE, choose BBBSNWFL as your selected nonprofit, and shop the same Amazon you know with the same products you love. Amazon Smile will donate 0.5% of all eligible purchases to Big Brothers Big Sisters of Northwest Florida.

We have partnered with the local tax collectors from Pensacola to Panama City to promote our Big Brothers Big Sisters Florida State License Plate. For each plate sold, our agency will receive $25. These funds help support the one-to-one mentoring services that serve over 600 children annually. Visit bbbsnwfl.org/fl-state-license-plate/ to purchase your plate today.

Prioritize Your Health Or Illness Will Become Your Priority

By Dr. Stacy Kehl

Doctors And Patients Consulting And Diagnostic Examining Sit And Talk. At The Table Near The Window In The Hospital Medicine ConceptPrevent and maintain.
Have you taken your car in for an oil change lately? I bet you replace the filter in your air conditioner a couple times a year. Heck, we even take the dog to the vet at least one a year. But what about your own maintenance schedule? Life is easy when you’re healthy, yet what happens when you’re not taking care of that complicated machinery we call the human body? As a Nurse Practitioner who has spent the last 8 years working in a hospital, I’ve unfortunately seen patients who “suddenly” ended up on the hospital’s doorstep with seemingly no indication that they were ill. Their “check engine” light was on, but they ignored it.

99% of people hate deductibles and copays.
Primary care is the backbone of healthcare. With regular check-ups and health screenings, a primary care provider can often catch a problem early-on, before the problem causes irreversible damage. Left unchecked, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, elevated blood sugar, that mole that “needs to be checked” – these can all lead to more serious diseases and events down the road. So why do so many people go without primary care? Primary care is the cornerstone for disease prevention and health maintenance. Unfortunately, the decision often comes down to money. Our healthcare system most commonly utilizes a model known as “fee for service.” This model has it’s short-comings, as we all know: inflated bills, networks, and difficult-to-attain deductibles are just the beginning. While the Affordable Care Act (ACA) has lofty goals of insuring everyone, the reality is that not everyone is insured. And surprisingly, it isn’t always because of lack of money. Some people choose to not have health insurance; they make a conscious decision to spend their money elsewhere – perhaps on a mortgage, a car payment or a start-up business. Others pay high premiums for insurance plans that they never use. It can be frustrating, but is there a different way?

Surprisingly transparent.
Direct Primary Care (DPC) offers an alternative to the frustration and expense of “fee for service” primary care. In an agreement between you and your provider, you have all your primary care needs met. Without insurance. Without networks. Without copays or deductibles. And the best part, without surprise medical bills. All your visits, calls, emails, texts, telemedicine, labs and even some procedures and medications can be performed, and are all included, in the DPC membership. In the United States, DPC has been a growing movement by primary care providers to reduce the overhead and red-tape caused by insurance companies whose aim is NOT for the health and well-being of patients, but rather for improving the bottom line of the insurance company. The involvement that insurance companies have inside the exam room is well known; treatments that are deemed necessary by the provider are frequently denied by the insurance company. Providers spend much of their day meeting the demands of insurance companies, instead of taking care of patients.

Cut to the chase.
DPC removes the barriers between patients and the provider by eliminating the need for insurance in the primary care office. Services are streamlined. Providers experience less burnout. Patients get better care for less out of pocket cost. Diseases are prevented or managed. Most DPC providers answer their own calls, texts, and emails directly (no more phone tag!). Appointments are same day or next day. With DPC, the provider truly has the time to get to know their patients and everyone benefits.

Element Primary Care is located at 8406 Panama City Beach Pkwy, Suite K, Panama City Beach 32407. Call them at (850) 708-1623 or visit ElementPCP.com

An Adventure in Art: Liza Snyder in Action

By Jamie Zimchek

Liza SnyderLiza Snyder makes art. But she doesn’t just make art, she helps other people of all reasonable ages learn how to make art too, with great patience and a twinkle in her eye. If you’ve had occasion at any point in life to help a seven-year-old paint, having cleaned paint off the walls, floors, clothes, and cat in the aftermath, you might have an inkling just how special Snyder really is. “I love sharing art with kids and other women as much as I love creating,” she says. In the midst of a pandemic, her infectious enthusiasm is a lovely counterpoint to other infectious alternatives.

“Like so many, I considered myself an artist at an early age,” says Snyder, “But my creating didn’t really flourish until I decided to study art as an undergrad at Auburn.” There, her focus was printmaking, but after college, she took a break, a ten year break, from art. “A kind of “awakening” occurred at that ten year mark,” Snyder explains, “and I knew I needed to begin again.” Now, you can find her in her studio daily playing, exploring, or filming her latest workshops.

Seven years ago, Snyder made the move with her family from Birmingham, Alabama, to the Florida Panhandle. Initially, she opened her studio just for summer art camp, but this soon evolved into a teaching position at Bay Elementary. “I loved teaching in a public school setting, but didn’t have time to create myself,” she explained. After two years, she opted to refocus. “I came back to the studio and taught weekly homeschool art classes and women’s workshops… while creating again!”

Inspired by artistic greats like Joan Miro, Yayoi Kusama, Henri Matisse, and Egon Schiele, her work is a joyful mix of play and exploration. Sometimes she draws on the way she’s feeling for material, other times her environs, whether it’s the woods nearby or Choctawhatchee Bay, which she can see from her window. These days, her originals are often paintings and drawings, but she also pulls in cyanotypes, natural dyes, textiles, and even paper mache sculptures. “I hold onto the ‘rules’ of art loosely!” says Snyder, “In fact, I encourage the term ‘Art Explorer’ in the studio.”

In previous years, Snyder taught a variety of classes out of her home studio, from weekly homeschool art classes to women’s workshops. Courtesy of covid, her classes have moved online. “I miss my fellow creatives in the studio,” Snyder says, “but this shift to teaching online has created really cool connections with families from all over the world!”

Aspiring creatives have several options. ‘Art School with Liza’ is a monthly membership that provides an art curriculum for kids ages 5-11. Doors will open to this art curriculum again February 20-23. These highly engaging lessons are prerecorded and can be accessed any time. Art workshops for kids and women are available year-round online, or look for free kids how-to-draw videos on Snyder’s blog, which you can find along with online classes on her website.

Find Liza Snyder at www.lizasnyderart.com, www.facebook.com/lizasnyderartist, or www.instagram.com/lizasnyderart.

Faces of PCB: Meet Jaysa Hunter

By Mark Stanley and Tracy Steely

Jaysa HunterJaysa Hunter is the owner and operator of Avenue 117 Design, an interior design firm that serves the entire Emerald Coast. She provides the full range of services you’d expect from a designer, but says her passion and specialty is kitchen and bath remodels. The current trend along the Gulf Coast is still “Coastal,” and she is happy to work with her clients to provide that look, but her preferred style is a little different. She describes it as an “edgy, eclectic, mid-century vibe.”

But what really sets her apart is not her design style. When you choose to work with Jaysa Hunter, you are contributing to the support of those less fortunate, both locally and abroad.
Jaysa’s grandmother on her father’s side, Sara Anchors, once ran one of the first interior design businesses in our area. Jaysa grew up in Missouri but moved to Destin in the early 2000s and began cultivating relationships that would allow her to eventually thrive in the industry, taking on many of her grandmother’s past clients as referrals.

She left our area for a time and moved to California. She got married, had two kids, Adilyne, now 13, and Liam, who just turned 10. She returned to the Emerald Coast after a few years and picked up where she left off in the interior design industry.

Jaysa said the catalyst for her current business model was a flash of inspiration that occurred to her in August 2012. She had hit a low point in her life and was, she explains, searching for new meaning. She just happened to be reading from the Book of Isaiah while a documentary about sex trafficking played in the background. She came to Chapter 1, Verse 17: “Learn to do good; Seek justice; Help the oppressed; Defend the cause of orphans; Fight for the rights of widows.”

As she recounts in her website, the documentary she had been watching made her feel profoundly sad about the world situation. The verses from Isaiah gave her the inspiration to do something about it, “full force. No reservations. Totally and completely.” Interior design would be the avenue she would travel to fulfill the mission outlined in Isaiah 1:17.

Since that moment eight years ago, Jaysa has used her time, talents, and a considerable portion of her business proceeds to help where she can. After Hurricane Michael devastated our community she organized relief efforts through social media to get needed supplies to those most affected. She filled her dining room with donated food and other essentials and figured out how to distribute them in record time.

The following year she again used social media to provide Christmas presents to kids of single mothers who could not afford to buy them. The kids were able to create a wish-list of four presents each, which appeared in an Amazon wish-list distributed through Facebook. The response was overwhelming, and 40 underprivileged kids had a very merry Christmas.

More recently Jaysa has joined forces with an organization in the East African country of Liberia to design a pillow that is made from indigenous Liberian fabrics. The proceeds from the sale of the pillow are then used to help supplement the income of the women who created the fabrics in Africa.

These things are just the start of what Jaysa envisions for her business. She is working now on a plan to provide micro-loans to widows in Liberia and other third-world countries. The idea is to empower these women to produce marketable crafts that can be exported to places like the Emerald Coast, where they would be sold for a profit, thus helping to alleviate poverty in these vulnerable populations.

“But that’s the long-term goal,” Jaysa says. “The short-term goal is making houses pretty.”
For more on Jaysa’s vision, and visuals of her handywork, visit her website at avenue117design.com.

Let’s Get Growing with Julie: Salt Tolerant Plants for Coastal Landscapes

Julie Mcconnell Uf Ext 1By Julie McConnell, UF/IFAS Extension Bay County

One of the benefits of living along the coastline is the gentle sea breeze that always seems to swirl around us. As refreshing as that can be to people outside on a hot day, salt particles carried in wind can wreak havoc on sensitive plants. When you are assessing your landscape site to match it with appropriate plants, be sure to factor in salt spray.
Determine which areas of your landscape have the highest potential exposure and choose plants with high to moderate salt tolerance for those areas.

Here are some trees and shrubs that perform well in Northwest Florida and have moderate to high salt tolerance. These selections are good candidates for areas with a high likelihood of being impacted by salt spray and may be used as a windbreak to shelter less salt tolerant species.

Growing Purple Berries Of Beautyberry. J McconnellSouthern Magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora), Tree, EV. Native tree with glossy green leaves and large, fragrant, white flowers
Yaupon Holly (Ilex vomitoria), Tree, EV. Native bush-like tree with small olive-green leaves. Female hollies have red berries. Weeping varieties available.
Live Oak (Quercus virginiana), Tree, EV. Native oak tree with wide, spreading canopy.
American Holly (Ilex opaca), Tree, EV. Small native tree. Female hollies have red berries.
Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum), Tree, DEC. Native tree that can grow in areas that flood or are dry. Shaggy reddish bark, delicate light green leaves.
Wax Myrtle (Myrica cerifera), Small tree/large shrub, EV. Native bushy small tree or large shrub. Attractive to birds and can tolerate flooding.
Oleander (Nerium oleander), Shrub, EV. Evergreen shrub with showy flowers available in several colors. Note that all parts of plant are poisonous if ingested or burned.
Beautyberry (Callicarpaamericana), Shrub, DEC. Native shrub that has tiny lavender flowers in the spring that lead to bright purple berries in the fall.
Pineapple Guava (Acca sellowiana), Shrub, EV. Evergreen shrub with bluish green leaves, edible flowers and fruit.
Junipers (Juniper spp.), Shrubs or groundcovers, EV. Many types available with various needle coloration and growth habit.
Plumbago (Plumbago auriculata), Shrub/Herbaceous perennial, EV-DEC. In cold winters this shrub may die back to the ground for the winter. Light green foliage and blue flowers.
Beach sunflower (Helianthus debilis), Shrub/Herbaceous perennial, EV-DEC. Native plant with sprawling habit that also reseeds. Great plant to fill in hot, dry, open areas. Yellow flowers most of the spring and summer. This plant is very drought tolerant once established and dislikes regular irrigation.

Foliage Key: EV Evergreen leaves, DEC Deciduous (all leaves drop seasonally).
For more Florida-Friendly Landscaping™ guidance, contact our office at 850.248.8091.

An Equal Opportunity institution, Extension Service, University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agriculture Sciences. Participation shall not be denied on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, sexual orientation, marital or family status, or political beliefs.

A Slice of Heaven: Pizza on My Mind

By Jamie Zimchek, Editor

Some say the secret is “in the sauce.” At Paparazzi Gourmet Deli, the secret is so, so much bigger: the secret is equal parts perfectly crisped crust with a delicate crunch; sauce balanced just so between tomato, herbs, and garPizza Slicelic, and a cheese that melts exactly as it should, stretchy and moist, with just the right assortment of toppings to finish things off. Full disclosure: I’ve had pizza in many, many places around the world, and this pizza, hands down, is in a class all its own – it’s that good (move over Napoli).

Great pizza doesn’t just manifest itself on Thomas Drive without some history and a little human involvement though. In this case, the expert pie-maker, and Paparazzi’s owner, is John Trubia. Trubia hails originally from New York City where he was a First Responder during the 9/11 attacks. In 2006, he retired from the police force and moved south, bringing his family and his Italian family recipes with him.

As a gourmet deli, Paparazzi even pre-covid was nearly 70% take away, which has made things easier as eat-in numbers have dropped for most restaurants. There are, of course, a handful of indoor and outdoor tables as well as beer and wine available should you wish to eat in. The lunch crowd can build a super sub with Boars Head meats, or pick up pizza by the slice from 11-3pm Monday-Saturday. On Fridays, First Responders in uniform get two free pizza slices along with a soft drink (there’s also a daily discount for military and First Responders). If, rather, you’re headed home from the beach, or a day at the office, it’s fast and easy to grab a baked ziti or fresh lasagna to heat quickly at home, or, better still, one of their aforementioned par-baked pizzas that needs only 6-8 minutes at 450 degrees in your oven.

But back to those pizzas: they’re an unexpectedly detailed labor of love, from the dough to the imported Italian sausage. Trubia explains that in order to make dough, you have to consider things like the outside temperature, the water temperature, and the type of oven you’re using. “Then you have your sauce,” says Trubia. “pizza sauce you don’t cook.” They crush Italian tomatoes to make their sauce fresh, with a few other top-secret ingredients, before adding the cheese. Trubia explains that traditional Italian pizza historically didn’t have cheese at all, but added it to cater to tourists (many of them American), and it caught on. The right high-quality mozzarella will be slightly dry so the pizza doesn’t get soggy, but with enough natural oils to give it good stretch. Toppings are the icing on the pie at Paparazzi – always high quality and garden fresh, they’re cut to a certain size that blends in well.

“If you have a great crust, a great sauce, and a great cheese, your pizza is going to be great,” says Trubia. Put it this way: Paparazzi’s pizza will upend everything you thought you knew about pizza, in a really great way (Mamma Mia!).

Paparazzi Gourmet Deli is located at 2810 Thomas Drive, PCB. They’re currently open from 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Monday-Thursday, and 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Find an online menu at paparazzideli.com or ring them at 850.588.8244.

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