St. Patrick’s day events

Posted on Friday 17 March 2006

St. Patrick’s Day events

Friday, March 17

Here are some of the St. Patrick’s day events going on around the Suncoast.

Clancy’s Irish Pub and Sports Bar and Grill, 6213 Cortez Road, Bradenton. Entertainment starts at noon today with trumpeter Leon Merion, cloggers, bagpipers (5-8 p.m.), Dr. Dave (7-9 p.m.) and Big Daddy (10 p.m.-1 a.m.). Matt Brown entertains on the deck, 6-10 p.m. Special menu all day including corned beef and cabbage, shepherd’s pie and Irish coffee. Prize for Best Irish Costume.

This year, Clancy’s is providing a free shuttle service. Satellite parking is available at the Shoppers of Paradise Bay Plaza/Winn-Dixie parking lot on 75th and Cortez Road with a shuttle to Clancy’s from 6 p.m.-2 a.m. Information: 794-2489.

Tierney’s Irish Pub, 5106 14th St. W., Bradenton. Bagpipers, step dancers, Elvis impersonators. A special menu includes corned beef and cabbage, Reuben sandwiches, shepherd’s pie and fish ‘n’ chips. Information: 752-1531.

The Bradenton Elks Lodge, 2511 75th St. W., Bradenton, will host a St. Patrick’s Day open house beginning at noon today with the sounds of Ireland by Denis O’Connor. Party continues until 11 p.m. with Don Huntsinger, Irish step dancers, and the Shrine Pipers. Irish food starting at $4 and a cash bar. Information: 792-1511.

Ellenton VFW Post 9226, 3511 12th St. E., Ellenton, serves a corned beef and cabbage dinner with carrots and potatoes 4-8 p.m. today. Dinner is $6, corned beef sandwiches are $4. Live entertainment by One of a Kind. Information: 729-8535.

McSwiggins, 1301 Eighth Ave. W., Bradenton. Live music, a menu that includes shepherd’s pie, corned beef and cabbage and specials on Irish whiskey. Information: 748-1625.

Publix Supermarket, 2875 University Parkway. Beginning at 6:30 p.m. today, Marc Positano, resident chef at the Publix, hosts a beer tasting of Irish beer with a cooking demonstration of Irish cuisine. Served with Guinniss, Harpo and Smithwick’s beer are Irish cheddar soup, smoked salmon and spicy gaufrettes, herb- scented lamb chops au jus with colcannon, and chocolate Irish stout cake. Cost is $35 per person. Information: 358-1169.

Four Green Fields, 205 W. Platt St., Tampa. Irish buffet 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Corned beef and cabbage, shepherd’s pie, fish ‘n’ chips, Irish stew, Irish soda bread. Live music starts at noon, with Irish ballads and folklore inside, and Pat and Andy Dunlea outside. Information: (813) 254-4444.

Sunday, March 19

Sarasota Polo Club, 8201 Polo Club Lane, Lakewood Ranch. “St. Patrick’s - Spread the Luck ‘O the Irish,” tailgate picnic competition. Gates open at 11:30 a.m., match begins at 1 p.m. First, second and third place awards for best tailgate picnic judged for cuisine, presentation and creativity. Sandwiches and drinks also available for purchase. Admission: $10 per person, free for 12 years and younger. Information: 907-000.

“Galway to Broadway,” an afternoon of Irish music starring Ciaran Sheehan, Irish tenor from Broadway’s “Phantom of the Opera,” accompanied by Gay Willis, mezzo-soprano, and Eily O’Grady, pianist, 2 p.m. Benefit for St. Martha School. At St. Anne Hall at Bishop Nevins Academy, 4380 Fruitville Road, Sarasota. Refreshments follow the performance. Tickets are $30. Information: 926-1672.

Beach Bistro St. Patrick’s Day Parade. Parade begins 4 p.m. Sunday from Holmes Beach City Hall, 5801 Marina Drive, Holmes Beach, ending at the corner of Gulf Drive and Palm Drive. Marching bands, “best leprechaun” costume for children. Information: 773-6444.

From: Herald Tribune

Mike @ 4:35 am
Filed under: General Info and Business and Clubs and Events and Restaurants and Things to Do
Naples Attractions

Posted on Wednesday 15 March 2006

North of Naples off Interstate 75 is the Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary. Also nearby is the western entrance to the Everglades National Park.

Naples Zoo, formerly known as the Caribbean Gardens, has also been known at various times as Jungle Larry’s African Safari.

Naples is part of the market for the Florida Everblades ECHL hockey team and Florida Firecats af2 arena football team, along with greater Fort Myers and Lee County.

The city is served by Naples Municipal Airport, whose only year-round commercial carrier is Delta Connection, which flies to Atlanta. Southwest Florida International Airport, located in South Fort Myers, handles the vast majority of commercial air traffic in and out of the region.

Celebrities who have homes (or second homes) in Naples include novelist Robin Cook, football coaches Mike Ditka and Don Shula, actress Jane Seymour, former professional basketball player Larry Bird, television personality ‘Judge Judy’, professional football player Edgerrin James, chef Allison Joseph, film producer Steven Spielberg, singer and actress Nicole Joseph, model Stephanie Carlozzi, golfer Greg Norman, panda researcher Emma McMahon, tennis player Jennifer Capriati, Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong & his fiancée Missy Lamb, and dancer Schaeffer McHenry. Naples is also home to nearly 200 current or former Fortune 500 CEOs.

Downtown Naples is home to the 5th Avenue South and 3rd Street South shopping districts, which feature a variety of antique shops. Gallery Row, also downtown, is a concentration among the numerous art galleries spread throughout the downtown area and all of Naples.

The Philharmonic Center of the Arts, located in North Naples, has played host to celebrities including Bill Cosby, and musical talents from across the globe. The Naples Players, The Philharmonic Center of Naples, Sugden Theater, and the other cultural attractions in Naples makes the area one of the highest regarded performing arts cities in the Southeast United States.

Naples is also known for its over 80 championship golf courses, its unique and upscale resorts, hotels, and attractions, including the Ritz Carlton. For its abundance of Golf Courses, Naples is known as the Golf Capital of the World.

The area is also known for its superb Sub-tropical Climate, and its great beaches.

Naples schools are part of the Collier County School District, which includes several of the state’s top-ranked schools. Ave Maria University, the first Catholic university established in the U.S. in over 40 years, is located northeast of the city, while Florida Gulf Coast University is in Estero, located between the cities of Bonita Springs and Fort Myers to the north.

Mike @ 11:23 pm
Filed under: General Info and Beaches and Business and Events and Fishing and Things to Do and Travel
Cultural Center of Florida

Posted on Wednesday 15 March 2006

Cultural Center of Florida

Recognized as the cultural center of the state of Florida since the early 1920s, artists of many disciplines, writers, performers, musicians, and architects have been attracted to the community in great numbers. Sarasota is the home of Florida West Coast Symphony and its famous Sarasota Music Festival which draws students, musicians, professors, and lovers of chamber music from around the world for a three-week event of international importance; Sarasota Ballet; Sarasota Opera; and numerous other musical, dance, artistic, and theatrical venues.

The community also is renowned as the home of the Sarasota School of Architecture which developed as an adaptation to its sub-tropical climate, using newly emerging materials manufactured or implemented following World War Two.

Sarasota is home to Mote Marine Laboratory, a premier marine rescue, research, and aquarium; Marie Selby Botanical Gardens with its renowned orchid collection; G-Wiz Museum, a science museum of hands on-appeal to children of all ages; Sarasota Jungle Gardens, which carries on early tourist attraction traditions; as well as many historic sites and neighborhoods.

Colleges in Sarasota include New College of Florida, a highly acclaimed public liberal arts college which serves as the honors college for the state; Ringling School of Art and Design, a school of art, music, and design; and a satellite campus of both University of South Florida and Eckerd College. Several two-year colleges include Sarasota County Technical Institute and Keiser College of Sarasota.

Mike @ 11:23 pm
Filed under: General Info and Beaches and Business and Events and Restaurants and Things to Do and Travel
Higher Learning in Tampa

Posted on Wednesday 15 March 2006

Institutions of Higher Learning
The seal of the University of South Florida
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The seal of the University of South Florida

* Florida Metropolitan University (FMU)
* Hillsborough Community College has several campuses around the Tampa Bay area.
* University of South Florida (USF) is located in northern end of the city, near Busch Gardens and Temple Terrace.
* University of Tampa (UT) is a privately-funded institution located just west of downtown Tampa, near the Hillsborough River. UT is a preferred winter practice destination for northern rowing teams from Ivy League schools.

Mike @ 11:22 pm
Filed under: General Info
Tampa

Posted on Wednesday 15 March 2006

The word “Tampa” is an American Indian word used to refer to the area when the first European explorers arrived in Florida. Its meaning, if any, has been lost to the ages, though it is sometimes claimed to mean “sticks of fire” in the language of the Calusa, a Native American tribe. Other historians claim the name refers to “The place to gather sticks”. “Sticks of fire” may also relate to the high concentration of lightning strikes that Tampa Bay receives every year during the hot and wet summer months. The name first appears in the “Memoir” of Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda (1575), the author of which had spent 17 years as a Calusa captive. He calls it “Tanpa” and describes it as an important Calusa town.

Spanish conquistador Pánfilo de Narváez was the first European known to have visited the Tampa area, on April 8, 1528. Hernando de Soto arrived a year later to rescue the only remaining living member of de Narváez’s expedition. A peace treaty was conducted with the local Indians and a short-lived Spanish outpost was established, but this was abandoned when it became clear that there was no gold in the area, and that the local Indians were not interested in converting to Catholicism and were too skilled as warriors to easily conquer.

When England acquired Florida in 1763, the bay was named Hillsborough Bay, after Lord Hillsborough, Secretary of State for the Colonies.

Spain transferred Florida to the United States in 1821 (see Adams-Onis Treaty). An Indian reservation was established in what is now north Tampa. As part of efforts to firmly establish United States control over southern Florida, then a vast swampy wilderness with sparse Seminole Indian population, a military outpost (”Cantonment Brooke”) was established at what is now the Tampa Convention Center in downtown Tampa in 1823 by Colonels George Mercer Brooke and James Gadsden. In 1824, the post was renamed Fort Brooke. It was a vital military asset in the Seminole Wars. The village of Tampa began to grow up around the fort, which was decommissioned in 1883. Except for two cannons now on the University of Tampa campus, all traces of the fort are gone.

Tampa was incorporated on January 18, 1849 with 185 inhabitants (excluding military personnel stationed at Fort Brooke). The city’s first census came in 1850 when Tampa-Fort Brooke accounted for 974 residents. Tampa was reincorporated as a town on December 15, 1855, and Judge Joseph B. Lancaster became the first Mayor in 1856. During the Civil War, Fort Brooke was occupied by Confederate troops, and martial law was declared in Tampa. In 1862, a Union gunboat shelled the city during the Battle of Tampa. Union forces took Fort Brooke in May of 1864, and occupied the town for the next year.

Phosphate was discovered in the Bone Valley region near Tampa in 1883. Tampa is now one of the world’s leading phosphate exporters. Henry B. Plant’s railroad reached the town shortly thereafter, enabling the commercial fishing industry to thrive.

In 1885, the Tampa Board of Trade persuaded Vincente M. Ybor to move his cigar manufacturing operations to Tampa from Key West. The Ybor City district was built to accommodate the factories and their workers. Tampa soon became a major cigar production center. Thousands of Italian (the majority coming from Alessandria Della Rocca and Santo Stefano, two small Sicilian towns which Tampa maintains strong ties with) and Cuban immigrants came to Tampa to work at the factories.

Henry B. Plant built a lavish luxury hotel in the city in 1883, which is now the campus of the University of Tampa.

Tampa was an embarkation center for American troops during the Spanish-American War. Lieutenant Colonel Teddy Roosevelt and his Rough Riders were part of the 30,000 troops stationed in Tampa for training.

In 1904, local civic association Ye Mystic Krewe “invaded” the city for the first time, establishing the yearly Gasparilla Pirate Festival.

Illegal bolita lotteries became very popular among the Tampa working classes, especially in Ybor City, where many gambling parlors sprang up. Profits from the bolita lotteries and Prohibition-era bootlegging led to the development of several organized crime factions in the city. The first boss of Tampa’s organized crime world was Charlie Wall, but various power struggles culminated in consolidation of control by Sicilian mafioso Santo Trafficante, Sr. and his faction in the 1950s. After his death in 1954 from cancer, control passed to his son Santo Trafficante, Jr., who established alliances with families in New York and extended his power throughout Florida and into Batista-era Cuba.

The University of South Florida was established in 1956, sparking development in northern Tampa and nearby Temple Terrace.

The biggest development of the city was the development of New Tampa that started in 1988 when the city annexed a 24-square mile (mostly rural) area between I-275 and I-75. Today, the district boasts over 22,000 inhabitants.

With the advent of air conditioning, thousands of new residents have arrived in Tampa from the northern United States. The population continues to grow rapidly, and construction is proceeding rapidly on new housing developments around Tampa.

On January 5, 2002, just four months after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, 15-year-old amateur pilot Charles Bishop flew a Cessna plane into the 42-story Bank of America Plaza building in downtown Tampa. Bishop died, but there were no other injuries (because the crash occurred on a Saturday, when few people were in the building). A suicide note found in the wreckage expressed support for Osama bin Laden. Bishop had been taking a prescription medicine for acne called Accutane that may have had the side effect of depression or severe psychosis. His family later sued Hoffman-La Roche, the company that makes Accutane, for $70 million; however, an autopsy found no traces of the drug in the teenager’s system.
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Landmarks

The most famous landmark is the Sunshine Skyway Bridge, Florida’s largest bridge, and the world’s longest cable-stayed bridge. The Hillsborough County line extends throughout the bay and to the Gulf of Mexico, in which is part of the city’s water area. The current bridge replaced a cantilever bridge that fell when a freighter collided with it in 1980.

The city of Tampa is proposing building a more recognizable landmark in the downtown area - and two ideas that have been proposed is a Space Needle building similar to that of Seattle’s. Another plan calls for four large fabric “gates” to be placed at four areas leading into the downtown area that would be illuminated at night and would be recognizable to outside visitors welcoming them into the downtown area. The downtown area is also undergoing a large transformation to be mostly completed in time for the hosting of the Superbowl in 2009 with over 43 condo, hotel, and mixed-use developments proposed/approved/under construction as of October 2005. An earlier list by the city of Tampa includes large developments that have been approved and/or are under construction. A large portion of these projects have multiple towers to compensate for the high land values in Downtown Tampa. The next landmark currently under construction in the central business district is the Trump Tower Tampa, the largest residential tower on the Gulf Coast according to The Tampa Bay Business Journal.

Mike @ 11:21 pm
Filed under: General Info and Business and Restaurants and Things to Do and Travel
Sports

Posted on Wednesday 15 March 2006

Professional Sports Teams

* Tampa Bay Buccaneers, a National Football League team based in Tampa, Florida. The Buccaneers, or Bucs as they are nicknamed, were the 2002 Super Bowl Champions.
* Tampa Bay Devil Rays, a Major League Baseball team based in St. Petersburg, Florida.
* Tampa Bay Lightning, a National Hockey League team based in Tampa. The Lightning were the 2004 Stanley Cup Champions.
* Tampa Bay Storm, an Arena Football League team.
* Tampa Bay Bandits, a franchise of the defunct United States Football League.
* Tampa Bay Rowdies, a defunct Tampa-based soccer team.
* Tampa Bay Mutiny, a defunct MLS team.

Mike @ 11:20 pm
Filed under: General Info and Business and Events and Things to Do and Travel
Tampa Bay

Posted on Wednesday 15 March 2006

Tampa Bay is a large natural harbor and estuary along the Gulf of Mexico on the western coast of Florida, made up of Old Tampa Bay, Hillsborough Bay, McKay Bay, and the New Tampa Bay. It is bounded by Manatee County on the south, Pinellas County on the west, and Hillsborough County, Florida on the east. Three prominent cities are located along the shores of the bay, Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Clearwater. The Sunshine Skyway Bridge crosses the mouth of Tampa Bay.

The term “Tampa Bay” is also informally used as the name of the entire metropolitan area encompassing Tampa, St. Petersburg, Clearwater, and several smaller cities. The Tampa Bay Area settlers were originally from Cuba and Italy. The Native Americans from this region are known as Seminoles.

Mike @ 11:20 pm
Filed under: General Info
Suncoasting

Posted on Wednesday 15 March 2006

The Florida Suncoast is a colloquial name for the west-central and southwest peninsular Florida coastal area between Tarpon Springs to the north, and Naples to the south, and includes the Tampa Bay area. This region is sometimes also referred to as the Sun Coast.

On the west coast of the Gulf, the region is known for miles and miles of prime beaches and sunny days from early December through the following May. Housing prices have been going up at 20-40% per year since 2000, as baby boomers move to the Suncoast of Florida.

Not far above Tampa, the beaches change character to swamp, estuaries and salt marsh land near the coast. It is a huge retirement area, attracting hundreds of thousands of retirees. It includes the well known coastal cities of Tampa, Saint Petersburg, Clearwater, Largo, Sarasota, Bradenton, Punta Gorda, Venice, Cape Coral, Fort Myers Beach and Naples. Two of the Suncoast beaches that have been named in the top 10 of the United States: St. Pete Beach and Desoto Beach. South of Naples is the Everglades and north of Tarpon Springs, the coast has no beach, with very few roads and mangrove swamps to the Gulf’s edge.

This part of Florida has traditionally been associated with a large population of Midwestern retirees and so-called “snow-birds” who are traditionally retirees from northern states who relocate to the Sun Coast for the winter months. The Tampa-St. Petersburg area long had a reputation for being a sleepy haven for the elderly.

Mike @ 9:27 pm
Filed under: General Info