CALL TO START YOUR HEARING JOURNEY! MIAMI 17670 NW 78th Avenue #201 (305) 403-9325 HOMESTEAD Towers Professional Plaza 151 NW 11th St., Ste. W-301 (305) 809-7663 KEY WEST 513 Fleming Street, Suite 11 (2nd floor accessible via elevator) (305) 809-6041 MARATHON 11400 Overseas Highway - Suite 209 Town Square Mall (305) 747-7750 TAVERNIER 93911 Overseas Hwy., Ste. 5 (2nd Floor) Tavernier, FL 33070 (305) 247-8227 Scan this on your phone to connect directly with hear4uaudiology.com heardrmichelle.com Two trusted names. One easy solution. Declare independence from hearing loss! Dr. Michelle can help you hear clearly this summer and beyond! 1¢ T-minus 8 days until beers and BBQ. BACK ON THE STICKS VET TAKES A VINTAGE FLIGHT | P.40 A PIE FOR THE RECORD BOOKS WORLD’S LARGEST KEY LIME TREAT | P.22 MARATHON MURDERER SENTENCED STEVEN WOLF ON DEATH ROW | P.6
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THAN THE NEXT FOUR COMPANIES COMBINED CALL US
Helping Keys Residents since 2002. The Coldwell Banker Schmitt Charitable Foundation was created in April 2002, and is dedicated to helping Keys’ residents whose critical needs are not being met through other means. The funds are donated to the Foundation through the generous hearts of the Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate agents, staff, associates, business partners, and the public. www.gooddeedsinthekeys.org
2 JUST SOLD! CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR SELLER! JUST SOLD! CONGRATULATIONS TO MY SELLER! JUST SOLD! CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR SELLER! MONICA BARRETT 305.433.0349 ServaisBarrettRealEstateTeam.com 11600 1ST AVENUE #4, MARATHON RICK SERVAIS 305.731.5010
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HILLER 305.481.0361 terihiller@cbschmitt.com 2133 YELLOWTAIL AVENUE, MARATHON JOSH MOTHNER 305.942.9519 josh@soldinthekeys.com
terihiller@cbschmitt.com
NOTHING COMPARES TO SEEING IT ALL COME TOGETHER
Recently featured on Guy Fieri's Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, you're invited to imagine what's next at Herbie's Bar and Chowder House. Now offered for sale, including the mixed-use commercially zoned real estate, business and all going concern (furniture, fixtures, equipment, licensing, etc). This locally adored restaurant is rich with history, captures the ''Old Florida Keys'' lifestyle and sits on a highly visible, centrally located 15,000+ sf corner lot with 100 ft of US-1 frontage. With just over 100 seats (plus room to expand), 2-COP license, 36 craft beer taps, homemade scratch cooking, critically acclaimed BBQ, Guy Fieri's stamp of approval, and plenty of yard space to expand outdoor seating, Herbie's is well known and sure to attract extremely loyal foodies for years to come. Property features 2 separate buildings on-site: first that houses 2 dining rooms with 2 bars, open air patio seating, 2 half bathrooms, and full commercial kitchen with multiple outdoor walk-in coolers; second with more prep space, additional fridge/freezer, dry storage room and office. At the rear of the 2nd building there is a residential efficiency unit, ideal for employee housing. Plenty of parking onsite, multiple propane tanks, generator, and high visibility here.
MARATHON | $1,425,000 | Listing ID: 605612
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 3 10055 Overseas Highway, Marathon | 305.735.4095 | oceansir.com Each office is independently owned and operated.
9709 Overseas Hwy. Marathon, FL 33050 Office: 305.743.0844 www.keysweekly.com
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That’s the estimated number of hot dogs consumed by Americans on the Fourth of July. Their popularity may predate the annual Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest that started more than 100 years ago on Coney Island, New York.
LAW OF THE LAND
PERMITLESS CARRY & OTHER MEASURES TAKE EFFECT IN FLORIDA
JIM McCARTHY jim@keysweekly.com
Apacked Florida legislative session yielded a little more than 200 new laws which took effect this month.
In 60 days, the Republican-controlled legislature passed a number of measures targeting immigration, education, public safety and affordable housing, to name a few. Those bills were signed into law by 2024 presidential hopeful and Gov. Ron DeSantis before the start of the new fiscal year on July 1.
Among the contentious items passed and signed into law was legislation allowing a person to carry a concealed firearm without a permit. The bill passed through the Florida House and Senate during session.
It was signed by DeSantis on April 3. Those carrying a concealed gun may not need a permit, but they must have valid identification on them at all times in the event a law enforcement officer requests it. And they can’t carry a weapon in schools, government facilities and businesses that don’t allow guns on their property.
Out-of-state residents can also carry a gun without a concealedcarry permit in Florida, so long as they’re a U.S. citizen and 21 years of age or older.
For people who are serious about carrying a concealed weapon, Monroe County Sheriff Rick Ramsay recommends that they take a gun safety class.
“It’s important that you’re familiar with your gun. It’s also important to understand when you can legally use a gun, the Stand Your Ground law and where you can and can’t go with a gun,” he said. “The one thing I don’t like about this new law is that it takes away the educational portion.”
Ramsay added that law enforcement will likely encounter more people with concealed firearms on them — a concern for the safety of deputies. While Ramsay said he’s trying to keep an open mind, there’s concern that people will lack proficiency and familiarity with a gun.
“Sometimes it can be more dangerous if you’re not familiar with your gun. It’s more likely the gun can be taken and used against you,” Ramsay said. “If you carry a gun, it’s important you go to the range and shoot on some regular basis because shooting is a motor skill. If you don’t do it, you lose it.”
Florida became the 26th state that allows people to carry a concealed weapon without a permit. Laws are still in place, however, that prohibit a person who’s not in law enforcement, the military or engaged in activities such as hunting from openly carrying a firearm.
Giffords Florida, the gun violence prevention organization led by former U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords,
called the new law “reckless,” as it will allow anyone to carry a gun in public without a background check or training.
“Instead of trying to enact policy to keep Floridians safe, Governor DeSantis shoved through a reckless permitless carry law that will allow almost anyone with a gun to carry in public, to please the gun lobby and help his presidential bid. He has failed our state and our children,” said Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, former Congresswoman and Florida senior advisor for Giffords Florida.
A new law is targeting undocumented migrants in Florida in a bid to counteract what DeSantis has called a “Biden Border Crisis.” As of July 1, private employers with 25 or more workers must verify that their new, permanent employees are authorized to work in the U.S. through the E-Verify system. For those who fail to use the system to verify employment eligibility and don’t comply
continued on page 28
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 4
150M
Gov. Ron DeSantis signs an immigration bill during a gathering in Jacksonville in May. GOVERNOR’S OFFICE/Contributed
92-year-old Korean War veteran Douglas Hurtubise gives a wave before takeoff in a vintage 1940s BT-13 aircraft. See page 40. ALEX RICKERT/Keys Weekly
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 5
MURDERER SENTENCED TO DEATH IN 2018 MARATHON KILLING
STEVEN WOLF FACES EXECUTION AFTER SECOND MURDER CONVICTION
WHAT ARE THOSE???
ALEX RICKERT alex@keysweekly.com
Twice-convicted murderer and rapist Steven Wolf will be the third Monroe County case currently on Florida’s Death Row, following a sentencing order handed down by Judge Mark Jones on June 29.
The 62-year-old Wolf was convicted on Jan. 24 for the 2018 torture, rape and murder of 51-yearold Michelle Osborne on Nov. 21, 2018. Osborne’s nude body was found that afternoon in the woods near the Vaca Cut Bridge, along with a trail of broken vegetation and broken vehicle parts as if a car had driven through the area.
Autopsy reports indicated that Osborne, who was homeless and living in Marathon, was strangled and sexually assaulted.
Not long after Osborne’s body was discovered, investigators found Wolf’s van in Marathon’s K-Mart plaza. Missing parts similar to those found in the woods, it had branches stuck underneath it, and investigators discovered blood inside. Blood-soaked sheets were soon found in Dumpsters throughout town.
After less than five hours of deliberation on Jan. 24, a 12-member jury unanimously found Wolf guilty on charges of first degree murder, sexual battery – including using an object to vaginally and anally penetrate Osborne – and tampering with physical evidence.
During the penalty phase of the trial the following day, the jury took less than 90 minutes to unanimously find the murder to be “especially heinous, atrocious or cruel” and unanimously found that Wolf should be sentenced to death with aggravating factors outweighing any mitigating factors. According to minutes from the penalty phase, “(Wolf) want(ed) no mitigation presented on his behalf.”
Wolf’s murder conviction is not his first. In 1976, at the age of 15, he was charged with firstdegree murder for his involvement with a group of teenagers who killed 77-year-old Enrico Flory and robbed him of his Social Security money in Boise, Idaho. Wolf later pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in November 1978, receiving a sentence of up to 30 years for his part in the crime.
Wolf’s case was prosecuted by father-and-daughter duo Cass and Cristina Castillo from the Florida Attorney General’s Office. Wolf was represented by public defender Robert Lockwood.
A database produced by the Death Penalty Information Center of executions in Florida since 1972 lists only one other execution from Monroe County. The Florida Department of Corrections lists two other inmates on death row for Monroe County crimes: 46-yearold Michael Tanzi, sentenced for the 2000 murder of Janet Acosta, and 67-year-old Thomas Overton, sentenced for the 1991 murders of Michael and Missy MacIvor and their unborn child.
Over the last two weeks, the Weekly has fielded an enormous volume of questions, all asking the same thing: What the heck are those markings on the road?
Fear not – they’re not alien signs, they’re not sewer markings, and they’re unrelated to most theories posed on social media. The marks are used by Woods Environmental and Infrastructure Solutions Inc. to collect Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data and evaluate Marathon’s road elevations. The countywide effort is “part of a larger strategy to strengthen and harden the city’s infrastructure and facilities in accordance with anticipated sea level rise and/or storm surge and flooding,” according to a statement released by the city of Marathon in January. The scans will reveal the topography of the Keys and potential low-lying areas of concern. ALEX
RICKERT/Keys Weekly
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 6
Left: Steven Wolf is now the third Monroe County inmate on Florida’s Death Row, following a first-degree murder conviction and subsequent sentencing on June 29.
Right: Steven Wolf’s van, as documented by the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office in 2018, was found shortly after Michelle Osborne’s murder with blood inside. It was missing parts similar to those found in the woods where she was murdered and had branches stuck underneath. MCSO/Contributed
342 BOUNDARY LANE
GEIGER KEY | $649,000
Turnkey home on a serene canal, in Geiger Key!
Open-concept living space evokes relaxation with loads of natural light and Open Water views. Chefs kitchen with stainless-steel appliances, gas range and stacking convection microwave and oven. Modern primary suite, featuring barn door, walk-in closet, laundry room, and luxury en suite. Shallow draft boating access from the canal, and proximity to Big Coppitt boat ramp.
7 CORMORANT LANE
GEIGER KEY | $1,399,000
Picturesque waterfront home, situated on 2.5 lots with private bay bottom ownership, making it a rare gem in desirable Geiger Key! After a day on the water, dock your boat in a protected boat basin. Upon entry, a beautifully designed open concept living area flows into a well-equipped kitchen. Within walking distance to Geiger Key Marina, with restaurant and the Beach, you'll always be close to the action at this slice of paradise!
273 MARS LANE
GEIGER KEY | $549,000
Quaint tropical oasis, superbly equipped for your next adventure, with proximity to exciting Key West! This pristine Geiger Key retreat is situated on an oversized Canal front corner lot with over 225 ft. of waterfront. Entertain on the screened-in back patio, or in the open-concept main living space, flooded with natural light and Canal Views. Peace and tranquility abound in the desirable Tamarac Park neighborhood. Come see this Geiger Key gem today!
21702 ASTURIAS ROAD
CUDJOE
KEY |
$799,000
Picturesque piece of lower Keys serenity waiting to welcome you home! This tastefully renovated home is located down a low tra c road in horse country and sprawls over an acre with no neighbors in sight. This charming 4BR/3BA home features soaring wood beam ceilings with an open floorplan boasting tranquil views of tropical vegetation from every window. Expansive deck, 13,700 gal. cistern, and generous storage space below.
1055 122ND STREET
MARATHON | $10,900,000
Palatial Modern Masterpiece with Ocean Views and incomparable amenities! The Ocean Front 6BR/ 6.5BA 8,919 sq. ft. home features 90' dock, 20k boat lift, and kayak launch. Turquoise Ocean Views are the focal point of the massive great room. A Chef's kitchen blends seamlessly with the elegant dining room. Enjoy Sunset Views from several verandas, overlooking the resort-style pool and the Open Ocean beyond!
305 50TH STREET OCEAN
MARATHON | $999,900
Canal front Marathon home on a sizeable lot with ample outdoor living space, jet ski lift, chickee hut, and direct no-bridge access to Boot Key Harbor and the Atlantic. Incredible investment opportunity currently being operated as a vacation rental. Inside boasts an open-concept living space blending seamlessly into the well-equipped kitchen featuring Miele appliances and abundant cabinetry, and a large, open back porch overlooks the yard and canal below.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 7 OPEN HOUSES
SAT JULY 8 - 11AM-1PM THE LISA FERRINGO GROUP COLDWELL BANKER SCHMITT O ce: 305.872.5261 Cell: 305.797.1221 lisaferringo@gmail.com LisaFerringo.com
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So you’re trying to save money because living in the Keys isn’t cheap. And it’s what passes for an off season around here. But you’re not a big reader so maybe you think the public library isn’t for you. Good news: The Monroe County Public Library has got a lot more to offer and it’s available to you — FOR FREE — with a Monroe County Public Library card.
Are you cutting back on streaming services? Consider adding the Kanopy app. Its 30,000 films and television shows include the Criterion Collection and art documentaries but it’s not all high-end stuff. “Hoarders” is on there. And while you’re limited to 12 plays a month with your library card, you get unlimited plays from the extensive collection of Kanopy Kids content. When you need to park the kids in front of something fun while you get stuff done, this is a lifesaver.
Taking a trip and want to learn a new language? Or do you know someone who’s learning English? Through the Mango app, you can access 70 different language courses. This includes almost anything you’d need to prepare for a trip – as well as English as a second language with courses tailored to the language you already speak (like Spanish, Kreyol, or Russian). Once you set up your Mango account, you can add up to five other people and they don’t have to have library cards.
COUNTY LIBRARY OFFERS WAY MORE THAN BOOKS
FREE STREAMING, LANGUAGE LESSONS, LEGAL DOCS & MORE NOW AVAILABLE
Need a simple legal form but don’t have the money for a lawyer or know where to start? Check out Law Depot. You can make a will, business agreement, lease, medical directive, power of attorney and lots more. The site provides step-by-step guidance so you won’t be navigating this on your own, or you’ll know when you do need to get expert help.
Want to brush up on some professional skills or just learn something new for fun? LinkedIn Learning delivers more than 16,000 courses you can take at your own pace and convenience. This includes business, technology and creative endeavors. Learn time management, brush up your software skills (including certifications) or explore graphic design, photography, music, writing and lots more.
Do you like reading the New York Times but hate running into the paywall? If you’re at the library on our wifi, you get free access. You can also activate 24 hours of digital access from home, using your library card. And you can read lots of publications – like National Geographic, the Atlantic and the Washington Post – through the Florida Electronic Library.
Want to do some research into your family history, but can’t afford a subscription service? We have library editions of Ancestry.com and FamilySearch that you can use when you’re at the library on our wifi.
Need to use a computer or print something out? If you don’t have a laptop (or don’t have it with you), you can borrow one to use in the library for up to two hours. And printing here is 10 cents a page, including color printing. You can also print from any device, including your phone. You can even send a print job from home, then come to the library and get it. These tech and printing services, by the way, don’t require a library card.
If you’re sending a lot of money Amazon’s way to pay for e-books or Audible, you should definitely check out Libby. That’s the easy-to-use app where you can get our extensive collection of digital books and audiobooks. We have almost 20,000 titles including bestsellers and backlists, almost any genre you can think of, for kids, young adults and adults.
Wondering how to get a library card?
Stop by your local branch. We are in Key West, Big Pine Key, Marathon, Islamorada and Key Largo. Cards are available to all Monroe County residents and property owners and anyone with a military ID. If you want to get going with our online offerings right away, you can sign up online – you just need to come to the library within three months to verify your card.
All this information, and more, is available on our website, keyslibraries.org. If you have any questions, you can call any of our branches or email info@keyslibraries.org.
And if you ARE looking for a physical book (or a DVD), we are here for you! We’re even here when our doors are closed. You can request a book from any branch and we’ll send it to the one closest to you. You can also get your books and DVDs after hours from our pickup lockers at the Key Largo and Marathon branches and at Bernstein Park on Stock Island. Speaking of Bernstein Park, it’s home to one of our two Lending Machines, where you can choose from the books and DVDs that are in the machine (kind of like an Automat for the library). The other Lending Machine is at the
Murray Nelson Government Center in Key Largo.
Every branch of the Monroe County Public Library has a lot going on. To find out more, follow any branch on social media. You can also sign up for our new monthly email newsletters at our website.
— Contributed by Nan Klingener, community affairs manager for Monroe County Public Library
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 8
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 9 PL AZA GRILL STEAK & SEAFOOD Tue -Sat 5:30p m - 9:30p m Cl ose d Sun & Mon For Reser vations call 305.743.7874 5101 Overseas Hwy, M arathon 5: 3 0 - 6: 3 0p m HA P P Y H O U R Key West ENTRÉES START $24 Pinks! Key West Lobster! A Taste of Key West Marathon in
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 10 ©2018 Coldwell Banker Real Estate Corporation. All rights reserved. ®,TM and SM are registered trademarks licensed to Coldwel Banker Real Estate Corporation. An equal opportunity company. Equal housing opportunity. Each office is independently owned and operated, except offices owned and operated by NRT Incorporated. Congratulations to our Buyers on the purchase of this beautifully appointed waterfront home in exclusive Duck Key! We know the market, and we know the numbers! If you want YOUR property “Sold in the Keys” call Josh or Teri TODAY! Josh Mothner & Teri Hiller REALTORS® Josh 305.942.9519 | josh@soldinthekeys.com Teri 305.481.0361 | terihiller@cbschmitt.com 11050 Overseas Hwy., Marathon 190 S. Indies Drive Duck Key, Florida Keys SOLD BY JOSH & TERI! MELISSA GIBBINS, REALTOR 305-587-1268 | mgibbins@cbschmitt.com Just Listed! 201 E OCEAN DRIVE, #311, KEY COLONY BEACH Asking Price $640,000 2 Bedroom & 2 Bath | 994 SF 201 E OCEAN DRIVE, #205, KEY COLONY BEACH Asking Price $655,000 2 Bedroom & 2 Bath | 1,044 SF FAMIL FISHING THE FLORIDA O BO OK YO 305.481.3259 johnny maddoxchar ters.com Located at Keys F ishe Market & Ma MM 48.5 End of 35th B Marathon
FUNCTIONALLY CAFFEINATED WELLNESS THE
COST OF BEING SICK: A LOOK AT THE FINANCIAL BURDEN OF CHRONIC DISEASES
As a nutrition coach and personal trainer, I ask a lot of questions, especially to new clients. And over the years of asking these questions one question stands out because 96% of the time, it’s answered the same way.
Me: “What would be your number one reason for not being able to adhere to a healthy diet and regular exercise?”
Clients: “I can’t or won’t be able to afford it.”
The answer always breaks my heart, and it also infuriates me because our school systems and government do a poor job at teaching us about the importance of adhering to a healthy lifestyle. They also don’t explain just how expensive it is to be sick. And don’t get me started on why a party-sized bag of Doritos is just a few dollars, but a head of cauliflower is $5.99 and it’s not even organic.
So here’s the truth: In today’s fastpaced and demanding world, the price we pay for poor health extends beyond physical and emotional tolls. A rising concern is the staggering financial burden faced by individuals battling chronic diseases. Among the many chronic conditions affecting Americans, diabetes and heart disease stand out as two leading causes of concern. Let’s dive right into the average yearly costs associated with these illnesses and explore how lifestyle changes can make a significant difference.
Diabetes, a chronic metabolic disorder characterized by high blood sugar levels, affects over 34 million Americans. Apart from its impact on quality of life, the financial implications of diabetes are substantial. According to an average taken from studies published in the American Journal of Medicine, an individual with diabetes incurs yearly expenses totaling some $9,601. This hefty price tag includes various factors, including prescription costs, doctor visits and missed work days.
Prescription medications for diabetes management can quickly add up, accounting for a significant portion of the annual expenses. Depending on the specific treatment plan and insurance coverage, individuals with diabetes may spend hundreds or even thousands of dollars on medications alone. Insulin, a crucial component
PART 1
for many diabetics, has seen a steady rise in price in recent years, putting additional strain on those managing the condition.
Regular visits to health care professionals are essential for proper diabetes management, but they also come at a cost. Consultations with primary care physicians, endocrinologists and other specialists contribute to the overall financial burden. Co-pays, deductibles and out-of-pocket expenses can accumulate, making regular check-ups a costly affair.
Furthermore, the impact of diabetes on productivity cannot be overlooked. The condition often leads to missed workdays or reduced productivity due to health-related complications. On average, individuals with diabetes miss about 8.8 days of work per year, resulting in lost wages and potential career setbacks.
Similarly, heart disease poses a significant financial burden on individuals and the healthcare system as a whole. With some 655,000 Americans dying from heart disease each year, it is crucial to address the economic repercussions. American Journal of Medicine studies point to an average yearly cost of heart disease for an American of $20,342, encompassing medical expenses and lost productivity.
And just like diabetes, the prescription costs for heart disease management are staggering. Frequent doctor visits, cardiac tests and procedures further escalate the costs associated with heart disease. Cardiologists, cardiovascular surgeons and other healthcare professionals play a crucial role
in diagnosing and managing the condition. However, these necessary medical interventions come not only at a cost, but are a total time suck. And we all know “time is money.”
With all the appointments and actually feeling like total crap, heart disease often leads to missed workdays or reduced productivity. The physical limitations and recovery periods associated with heartrelated events, such as heart attacks or surgeries, often result in extended time away from work. On average, individuals with heart disease miss 7.5 workdays per year.
Diabetes and heart disease are just two examples among many chronic conditions that can sometimes be mitigated or entirely prevented through lifestyle modifications. Eating a healthy diet and engaging in regular exercise have been proven to significantly reduce the risk of these diseases. By adopting healthier habits, individuals can potentially avoid the exorbitant costs associated with managing these chronic conditions.
So now that you know what you know, I’m going to ask you:
What would be your number one reason for not being able to adhere to a healthy diet and regular exercise plan?
In the next part of this article, I will address how to adhere to a healthy lifestyle without breaking the bank, and yes, still enjoy life’s simple pleasures like a RaceTrac soft serve cone every once in a while.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 11
...is a Marathonbased ACSMcertified personal trainer and precision nutrition coach who owns and operates Highly Motivated Functionally Caffeinated LLC.
JENNIFER BOLTZ HARVEY
FROM CANADA TO THE KEYS
Itook my backpack off to rest on the steep, rock-strewn incline toward Wildcat D Peak in the White Mountains of New Hampshire to talk with my mom on the phone. It was Aug. 5, 2022, her birthday, a celebration I was missing since I was 1,872 miles into a 2,194-mile hike of the Appalachian Trail.
As we talked, I heard a woman climbing down the nearly vertical rock face just above me. When she made it to where I sat after a few minutes of treacherous descent, I saw that she was young, bright and cheerful, despite the rocks. She commented how strikingly comforting it was to see another young woman having a normal conversation with her mom at the base of a terrifying climb. I was thrilled to know another woman around my age had successfully conquered those 300 miles still ahead of me.
When we parted ways, I felt an invigoration and drive that I could finish this long journey. Exactly 20 days later, I did.
I had nearly forgotten that day until I saw a bearded man with a pin-wheel flag sticking out of his large backpack and a woman pushing a covered stroller down the shoulder of U.S. 1.
Perhaps a normal response would have been fear for their safety as I zoomed past at 50 mph. Instead, I turned around in the parking lot of Lorelei, crossed the street and parked in front of the Sandal Factory in Islamorada. The woman was inside the store looking at sunglasses, so just the man and the covered stroller stood outside as I approached.
“I just have two oranges. Do you want them?” I asked the man.
His reddish beard was even longer than I’d thought, and so was his hair, tied up beneath an orange baseball cap. I looked down and saw the head of an elderly dog poke through the top of the covered stroller.
“Well, I guess so. I can never say no to fresh fruit,” the man responded.
The door to the store opened, and the woman came outside and grabbed one of the oranges. It took a few moments to place the familiarity of her face, but suddenly we were hugging like old friends. Standing in front of me was the same cheerful face from the mountainside in New Hampshire.
Since that day in August, she had been hiking south toward Key West.
Now, as we talked near the Sandal Factory, 32-year-old Owen “At Home” Eigenbrot and 33-year-old Ally “Spice” Russell, stood 83.4 miles away from completing a through-hike of the Eastern Continental Trail (ECT), a backpacking trip of more than 4,400 miles, from Quebec, Canada to Key West. Eigenbrot and Russell,
who have also hiked the Pacific Crest Trail and the Continental Divide Trail, are among only hundreds who have completed the ECT since John Brinda first hiked the route in 1997.
Over the last year, Eigenbrot and Russell hiked 400 miles of ATV roads, overgrown trails and oceanside in Canada, where they hardly saw other hikers but walked alongside swimming whales, lounging seals and a plethora of moose and beavers. They traversed some of the east coast’s highest peaks and most beautiful overlooks between Maine and Georgia on the 2,194-mile Appalachian Trail, which Eigenbrot completed northbound, and Russell completed southbound. They hiked 72 miles on the Benton MacKaye Trail and the 335-mile Pinhoti Trail and the 175-mile Alabama Road Walk. They walked alongside the alligators and cypress trees decorating the 1,400-mile Florida Trail until their feet hit pavement on U.S. 1.
“There's a stream of our footprints all along the Appalachian Mountains,” Russell said.
During the past year, they carried everything they needed in their backpacks, slept beneath the stars, woke up to singing birds, summited mountain peaks, walked through rainstorms and only trekked back into civilization every few days to resupply food and shower. And it was coming to a close in the never-ending ocean views and traffic of the 106-mile Overseas Heritage Trail that parallels U.S. 1 through the Florida Keys.
“It seemed like a weird thing to be doing in the first place, like it was even going beyond the natural ending point,” Eigenbrot said. “But what a cool bonus to add on to the end of this. How lucky that we get to leave the mainland and hop on all these little islands. How unique is that? How fortunate for the infrastructure to be able to walk because the Keys are really beautiful.”
The Keys provided many once-distant amenities: grocery stores for food, gas stations to use the bathroom in and water from a faucet. The paved road allowed Russell to bring her elderly dog, Tango, on this final section of trail by pushing him in a stroller.
But as an ending to a journey marked predominantly by wilderness, the Keys provided a harsh juxtaposition.
“It’s really busy out here. That was impossible to ignore or to remove from the narrative of the ECT and the Keys,” Eigenbrot said.
“And not even busy in a human way but busy with cars. We saw more cars than humans,” Russell said. “We get up an hour or two before sunrise and walk with the traffic and walk until sunset and sleep with the traffic noise.”
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 12
connections 1 JACQUELINE
www.keysweekly.com
Couple’s hike of the Eastern Continental Trail brings
HALE
To change sides, they’d wait for a break in traffic and quickly scurry across the street. At night, they’d go to a state park or find a space in the mangroves alongside the road to sleep. Instead of high peaks, the Seven Mile Bridge stood as a formidable foe. After walking within feet of rushing traffic on a small shoulder for seven miles, Russell and Eigenbrot crashed on the beach at Veterans Memorial Park just south of the bridge.
“I said, ‘Watch for fins and crocs. I'm going in,’ and I just floated on my back forever and just grounded myself,” Russell said. “I grabbed chunks of sand and put them in my hands. I needed Earth in my hands and water on my body. I just need to be with all the elements because that was so wild.”
On March 18, four days after I met them in front of Sandal Factory, Russell and Eigenbrot took a final left turn onto South Street in Key West and slowly plodded another half-mile behind an elderly woman on a Saturday morning stroll.
“You feel that magnetic pole when you get to the terminus,” Eigenbrot said.
Finally, they heard the sound of waves crashing against the concrete and the red, yellow and black-striped Southernmost Point buoy marking 90 miles to Cuba came into view.
There was nowhere else to walk. The land definitively disappeared into the sea.
They got in line with all the other tourists to take a picture on the busy street corner that marked the end of their wilderness journey. And, as Russell described it, they returned to the buoy several times like kids on a rollercoaster to take a different combination of photos with new lighting as the sun rose higher in the sky.
“It was easy to feel like we weren't tourists, but we were. We’d just taken a really hard way to get there,” Russell said.
But, unlike most tourists, they returned to the buoy one final time simply to stand in that spot. To touch the buoy. To feel the distance in their feet. To remember this moment and all the ones before it and every moment in between.
To feel, here, in this spot, a union of Canada, the Appalachian Mountains and this street corner in Key West. A union unphotographable and inexplicable, only to be seen and understood by those who traversed it at less than 3 miles per hour.
This union they noticed down the coast was certainly physical in nature. Though the foliage changed through the seasons and new trees appeared in each state, beech trees stood along
their path from Canada to Alabama. Everywhere, logging trucks drove empty going one way and coming back full. In each state they traversed over a similar rock formation that looked like a book sitting on its spine.
“It made me really feel like I was in that string of mountains,” Russell said. “Sure, there are human borders, but the mountains are the same mountains.”
Canada and Florida, though at opposing ends of a large continent and a long trail, shared an abundance of wildlife. The beach replaced the trail in stretches, though the ocean fronts in Canada were abandoned but for a fisherman just off the coast and the Florida beaches were lined with hotels and sunbathers. Similarly, the trail’s terminuses, one at the Cap Gaspé Lighthouse and one at the Southernmost Point buoy, both stood at busy tourist locations.
“This was a similarity and yet a difference. There were a lot of people on both ends of the ECT but after the haze of five days of cars walking down the Keys, I was a lot more grateful and appreciative of the people in Key West than I think I was with the people at Cap Gaspé because, thank God, they're just people, not cars now,” Russell said.
I picked Russell and Eigenbrot up a few hours after they hit the southern terminus in Key West, and they showered and relaxed in my air-conditioned apartment. The next morning, we sat around the living room eating vegan yogurt and granola while Tango snoozed on Russell’s lap, and they shared the stories and wisdom gained from Canada to Key West.
The ECT unites two countries and two different worlds, the woods of the Appalachians and the highway of ocean views in the Keys. But this moment on my couch reflected another unity down the east coast. The union between north and south was not only in the physical landscape, but also in the people – those they met and the lives they inspired with their story. A strange union that, somehow, people who only briefly met many months ago could feel like old friends.
Around 9 a.m., another hiker from Homestead came to pick them up and bring them back to their van, which they drove out to Colorado to begin work and a new life.
“It’s been a year of my life out here and then many years of dreaming about it as a whole before coming out,” Eigenbrot said. “It’s one of those things where we've done it for so long, what does getting on the other side of it actually feel like? I think it'll take some time to figure
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 13
out.”
1.Eigenbrot and Russell arrive at the Southernmost Point buoy in Key West on March 18, marking the end of their Eastern Continental Trail through-hike. CONTRIBUTED
2. Eigenbrot hikes Mont-Albert in Gaspésie National Park, one of the couple’s favorite viewpoints on the entire Eastern Continental Trail. CONTRIBUTED
3. Owen Eigenbrot and Ally Russell stand at the northern terminus of the Eastern Continental Trail at Cap Gaspé, Quebec. CONTRIBUTED
2 3 4
4. The author, Jacqueline Hale, stopped near the Sandal Factory in Islamorada when she saw two hikers walking alongside U.S. 1. They soon discovered they’d met many months before on the Appalachian Trail. CONTRIBUTED
City of Marathon City Council Agenda
9805 Overseas Hwy., Marathon
Tuesday, July 11, 2023 5:30 P.M.
(*Denotes Item Is Passed By Consent Upon Approval of Agenda)
Public Comments taken on all times and at 6:30pm time certain for items not on the agenda or as soon aspossible thereafter of after the last agenda item; whichever comes first.
City Council Items
* A. Approval of Minutes
B. Workshop Discussion Items
C. Endorsing The Southeast Florida Climate Action Pledge
City Manager Report
* A. MCSO Marathon Substation Report
* B. Grants Update
* C. Public Works Report
* D. Park and Recreation Report
* E. Marathon Fire Rescue Report
* F. Marina Report
* G. Code Report
* H. Wastewater Utilities Report
* I. Building Report
Quasi-Judicial Public Hearings:
A. Resolution 2023-61, Consideration Of A Request For A Conditional Use Permit For Ruth Ebert Pursuant To Chapter 102, Article 13 Of The City Of Marathon Land Development Regulations (Code)
Entitled “Conditional Use Permits” To Convert A Triplex Into A Single Family Residential With 11 Bedrooms; Located At 213 S. Anglers Dr; Which Is Legally Described As Lot 38 Sombrero Anglers Club South Boot Key PB6-87, Monroe County, Florida; Having Real Estate Number 00355418-000500, Nearest Mile Marker 50.
Ordinances for Second Public Hearing and Enactment
A. Ordinance 2023-10, Amending Chapter 14 “ Environment and Natural Resources”, Article 3 “Protection of Sea Turtles”, Amending Section 14-61
“Definitions”, Amending Section 14-63
“Standards for exterior artificial lighting”, Amending Section 14-64 “ Standards for Interior artificial lighting”, Adding Section 14-68 “Applicability”, Amending Sections 14-68 through 14-92 “Reserved”; Of The City Of Marathon Code of Ordinances; Providing For The Repeal Of All Code Provisions And Ordinances Inconsistent With This Ordinance; Providing For Severability; Providing For Inclusion In The Code.
B. Ordinance 2023-11, Deleting City Of Marathon’s Code Of Ordinances Section 14-4 Titled “Unloading Of Shrimp By Commercial Fishing Vessels Restricted.”; Providing For The Repeal Of All Ordinances Or Parts Thereof Found To Be In Conflict; Providing For Severability; Providing For Inclusion In The Code Of Ordinances And Providing For An Effective Date.
Ordinances for First Public Hearing
A. Ordinance 2023-12, Amending Chapter 107, Article 2 Entitled “Transfer Of Building Rights”, Specifically Section 107.17. Entitled “General Provisions”, Of The City Of Marathon Land Development Regulations; Providing For The Repeal Of All Code Provisions And Ordinances Inconsistent With This Ordinance; Providing For Severability; Providing For Inclusion In The Code; Providing For The Transmittal Of This Ordinance To The State Department Of Economic Opportunity; And Providing For An Effective Date Upon The Approval Of This Ordinance By The Department Of Economic Opportunity In Accordance With State Law.
B. Ordinance 2023-13, Amending Chapter 108, Article 2 (“Nonconforming Structures”) By Deleting A Portion Of Section 108.15 Titled “Additional Standards For Nonconforming Sexually Oriented Businesses.”; Specifically, Subsection B Part 2 To Comport With Modern Constitutional Constraints; Providing For The Repeal Of All Ordinances Or Parts Thereof Found To Be In Conflict; Providing For Severability; Providing For The Transmittal Of This Ordinance To The State Department Of Economic Opportunity After Final Adoption By The City Council; Providing For Inclusion In The Code Of Ordinances And Providing For An Effective Date.
Resolutions For Adoption
*A. Resolution 2023-62, Accepting The Responsible Bid And Approving A Contract Between The City And Cortez Heating and Air In An Amount Not To Exceed $220,743 For The Replacement Of The A/C System At City Hall; Authorizing The City Manager To Execute The Contract And Appropriate Funds On Behalf Of The City; And Providing For An Effective Date.
*B. Resolution 2023-63, Approving Change Order #1 to the contract with Tropical Underground in An Amount Not to Exceed $31,889.00 For The Additional Work Of Converting Existing Underground Vacuum Pit To A Connector Manhole In Order For Proper Connection To The New Lift Station; Authorizing The City Manager To Execute The Contract And Appropriate Budgeted Funds On Behalf Of The City; And Providing For An Effective Date.
Covering All The Keys From Key Largo To Key West
COMMERCE CORNER
Established in 1963 and renovated in 2016, Banana Bay Resort and Marina offers guests comfort, located on 10 spacious acres, each of the hotel's 59 deluxe guest rooms have been designed to welcome the ambiance of the Florida Keys inside, with the décor eliciting a calm feeling. The resort also offers convenient travel for guests looking to explore the island with the resort's complimentary bicycle rental and proximity to a wide variety of restaurants, shops, and attractions such as the Turtle Hospital, Dolphin Research Center, 7 Mile Bridge, and Sombrero Beach. The resort also offers access to a marina, boat ramp, trailer parking, and is conveniently located near several dive shops and excursions. Guests can bask in the warmth of Florida Sun or take a dip in the pool and enjoy drinks from The Sunset Pointe Bar. Visit our website, bananabay.com, for more information and to schedule your dream vacation.
Pursuant to Section 286.0105, Florida Statutes, if a person decides to appeal any decision made by the City Council with respect to any matter considered at such hearing or meeting, one will need a record of the proceedings and for such purpose that person may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made; such record includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based. ADA Assistance: Anyone needing special assistance at the City Council hearing due to disability should contact the City of Marathon City Attorney at (305) 289-4130 at least five days prior thereto. Please contact the City Clerk at clavierd@ci.marathon.fl.us if you would like to receive any of the items on the agenda by email.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 14
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By: Tracy and Sean McDonald
FORMER XC & TRACK STANDOUTS FACE OFF ON COLLEGIATE LEVEL
PEDROZA, PITCHFORD AND ZAPATA PARTICIPATE AT UNIVERSITY OF NORTH FLORIDA MEET
Three Keys harriers competed at the University of North Florida East Coast Relays this spring, including Key West’s Robert Pedroza, a Conchs Class of 2020 graduate.
Pedroza traded in his crimsonand-gray singlet for the blue and gray of the University of North Florida, where he competes in cross country and track and field. Pedroza cruised to a second-place finish in the men’s 1,500m race out of a field of nearly 100. Pedroza has been gaining speed this season, especially in cross country, where he ran a season-best 8K in 24:15 and 10K in 31:00.
Pedroza had a Keys companion in his 1,500m heat in former Fin Jonathan Pitchford. Pitchford graduated from Marathon in 2021 and boasts numerous school records plus a 7 Mile Bridge Run win in 2019. Pitchford now runs for University of Florida. Pitchford did not finish the race, as he was using it as more of a primer for his upcoming championships rather than a typical competition. Pedroza and Pitchford are familiar competitors, having raced for many years against one another within the tight-knit distance running community of the Keys.
The 1,500m event was not the only one to see a Keys runner in competition. Marathon’s Pedro Zapata was also at the meet to participate in the 5K event. Zapata came to Marathon from his home in Venezuela his sophomore year and graduated from Marathon in 2022. His strong work ethic and undeniable positivity landed him an offer to run with Daytona State College.
Zapata was excited for the challenge of the competition, but looked forward most to seeing his
ADRIAN CRUZ
CONTRIBUTED
old teammate and training partner again, calling Pitchford “one of my inspirations to keep running and getting better and better.”
Pitchford said that even if he was scheduled to compete directly against Zapata or any of his former teammates, he would not enter the race with anything but camaraderie, saying, “It’s just fun to see them and catch up.”
The East Coast Relays are one of the final regular season races for many collegiate teams, which progressed to conference championships in May. Distance runners such as Pedroza, Pitchford and Zapata enjoy a quick break before cross country season training begins in early summer.
Senior, Marathon Basketball
Summertime means rest and relaxation for many kids, but not for Marathon’s Adrian Cruz. He has been spending his summer focusing on becoming the best basketball player possible in hopes of making a deep run in the playoffs during his senior year with the Dolphins. Cruz has been working consistently in the offseason, becoming a fixture in Marathon’s gym for shoot-arounds and pickup games. “He is also playing travel ball down south, improving his skills,” said coach Jim Murphy.
For his dedication to his game and his team, Marathon’s Adrian Cruz is the Keys Weekly Athlete of the Week.
Marathon’s Adrian Cruz splits defenders in a January game against Colonial Christian. BARRY GAUKEL/Keys Weekly
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 17 KEYS WEEKLY
Former Marathon standouts Pedro Zapata, left, and Jonathan Pitchford meet up at the UNF East Coast Relays this spring. Zapata now runs for Daytona State and Pitchford runs for UF.
“Adrian is an incoming senior who has already become a strong leader this offseason. I’m looking forward to him and the other upperclassmen stepping up for the Dolphins’ program.”
— Jim Murphy, Marathon head basketball coach
TRACY MCDONALD www.keysweekly.com
By: Tracy and Sean McDonald
THE 2023 KEYS WEEKLY ALL-KEYS BASEBALL TEAM
2023 was quite a year for Keys baseball. Key West powered through opponent after opponent, stacking up 22 wins with just six losses during the season. One of those losses came during their regional championship game, which they lost by a single run. Key West brought home another district championship and made it to the elite eight of Florida ball clubs. Marathon had a stellar 17-9 season, landing themselves in their conference championship game, but were not able to bring home the trophy this season. In district play, Coral Shores knocked Marathon out of contention in the first round, defeating the Fins for the second time in the Hurricanes’ 8-13 season. The ’Canes lost in round two, ending their season one win shy of a district championship.
From all of us at the Keys Weekly, congratulations to the 2023 All-Keys Baseball Team.
Barroso, whose nickname is “Lucky,” proved to be the Conchs’ good luck charm this season. He won nine games for Key West, including three shutouts and a no-hitter. In 63.2 innings pitched, Barroso fanned 73 batters and walked just 18. As if he wasn’t busy enough sending batters back to the dugout dejected, every now and then the senior stood on the other side of the plate and earned a hit this season.
Marathon’s ace completed the season with a 2.93 ERA, winning six of his nine outings on the mound. Ziels struck out 129 batters in 57.1 innings pitched, the second-most Ks in the state of Florida. His prowess regularly earned him a spot on the top 10 national strikeout leaders list throughout the season. Offensively, Ziels racked up a dozen hits, including three doubles.
Sophomore, Marathon Catcher
With a .365 batting average which included 23 hits, Leal’s bat was often just what the Fins needed. Defensively, the sophomore earned a .995 fielding percentage behind the plate and turned a pair of double plays for Marathon.
Haggard’s .436 batting average was key for the Conchs this season. He scored 26 runs, batted in 30, and with four doubles and four triples in his stats, his slugging percentage stands at .563 this season. Once on base, he didn’t stay put too long, stealing 11 bases. Defensively, Haggard earned a .966 fielding percentage this year and turned three double plays, making him indispensable for Key West on both sides of the plate.
Senior, Marathon
Pitcher/Infielder
Marathon’s most dependable hitter, Yablon had a .403 batting average, amassing 32 hits including six doubles and a homerun. He also stole 15 bases for the Fins. On the mound, he struck out 52 batters in 37.1 innings pitched.
Sophomore, Coral Shores
Outfielder
Offensively, Putetti earned 22 hits including six doubles, a triple and 13 RBIs. The .355-hitting sophomore stole 11 bases this season. Defensively he had a .900 fielding percentage, making him a dual threat for the ’Canes.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 18 KEYS WEEKLY
ANDRIS BARROSO Senior, Key West Pitcher
JACK HAGGARD Senior, Key West Outfielder
DYLAN ZIELS
Junior, Marathon Pitcher/Third Base
RYAN YABLON
GABE LEAL
ANDREW PUTETTI
Marathon photos by Barry Gaukel. Key West photos by Ella Hall. Coral Shores photos by Joy Smith.
DEFENSIVE MVP OFFENSIVE MVP
By: Tracy and Sean McDonald
STEEL MIENTKIEWICZ
Junior, Coral Shores
Catcher
Mientkiewicz was perfect defensively for the Hurricanes, covering the plate with no errors the entire season. Offensively, he batted .281 and had an on base percentage of .500, further proving he is a solid decision maker on the field.
CAMPBELL LAVOIE
Sophomore, Coral Shores
First Base/Designated Hitter
Lavoie batted .281 this season, amassing 18 hits for the Hurricanes including four doubles. The hard-hitting sophomore committed just one error this season playing infield, and as a designated hitter, he kept the ’Canes in multiple games with his bat.
Senior, Key West Outfielder
As if a .383 batting average isn’t enough, Anden Rady piled on the extra base hits to boost his slugging percentage to an incredible .641. Rady’s 31 hits include nine doubles, three triples and two home runs. Rady stole nine bases this season and was perfect on defense, committing zero errors in his senior campaign.
Ong won eight of his 10 appearances on the mound for Key West, throwing two complete games and earning a pair of shutouts, a pair of no-hitters and a 2.58 ERA. The junior struck out 75 batters over 57 innings pitched, walking just 23.
MAYKOL BONITO
Freshman, Coral Shores
Infielder
Maykol Bonito had an impressive freshman campaign, batting .333 for the ’Canes. He earned 13 hits this season and was a key player for Coral Shores’ infield with a solid fielding percentage and a lot of hustle.
MICHAEL GREENBERG
Junior, Key West Second Base
On defense, Greenberg made three double plays this season and earned a .924 fielding percentage, making him a fantastic infielder for the Conchs. His bat was his major weapon, though, as he ripped 30 hits for Key West including six doubles and a pair of triples, earning a .385 batting average. His extra base hits boosted his slugging percentage to .512.
Wyatt Kuhn earned a .338 batting average this season, scoring 24 runs off of 23 hits. His on base percentage was .511, boosted by his record-setting 14 bases earned “the hard way” –Kuhn now shares the Key West record for being hit by a pitch in a single season.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 19 KEYS WEEKLY
ANDEN RADY
WYATT KUHN Senior, Key West Shortstop
FELIX ONG Junior, Key West Pitcher
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MANGROVE SNAPPER ARE SET FOR THE SPAWN
CAPTAIN JOEL’S FISHIN’ HOLES
…is a fifth-generation Floridian and second-generation fishing captain who owns and operates Ana Banana Fishing Company in Marathon. His passions include fishing, hunting and spending time with his family.
One of our favorite fish to target during the heat of summer is mangrove snapper. The mangrove snapper spawn starts in the beginning of July and ends at the end of August. We like mangrove snapper because they are fun to fight, great to spearfish, school up to chum and are very tasty table fare. Many people agree that mangrove snapper meat is the finest snapper meat –more firm than yellowtail or mutton, and whiter meat than queen, vermillion, lane or schoolmaster snappers.
When mangrove snapper are spawning, they do nothing but feed and breed. The females are thick and juicy and full of roe. The males are fat too, spewing semen and puking chum all over the place when boated.
Avid mangrove snapper anglers in the Florida Keys know the best summer snapper bite has to be at night on a moving tide under a full moon near the end of July and the beginning of August. During that night bite, we like to use bright lights and a lot of chum. We have several different spots on the reef that we anchor up on, but without posting exact numbers, we’ll say that in our opinion, the best spots are deeper than 25 feet and shallower than 65 feet.
The best bait, in order, is small pinfish, small goggle eyes, large razor belly pilchards, large sand key pilchards, large glass minnows, mojarra sand perch, large live shrimp, cut ballyhoo, cut fresh squid and dead peeled shrimp.
The best rig is a Carolina rig, which is a small egg sinker attached to your main line sitting on a swivel with three or four feet of 12to 17-pound fluorocarbon mono leader with a 1.0 or 2.0 short shaft “J” hook. The next best is a knocker rig, where the small egg sinker slides down the leader and sits on top of the eye of a
We just turned the page from June to July, which means we’re just weeks away from a highly-anticipated mangrove snapper spawn in the Keys. JOEL BRANDENBURG/Contributed
1.0 or 2.0 short shaft “J” hook. The next would have to be what’s called a chicken rig. I won’t try to describe it, just google “chicken rig.” The old faithful is your bait hooked to an appropriate sized jig head – a ⅛-ounce jig is the normal goto size depending on the speed of the current.
The mangrove snapper’s annual migration is as follows:
• Winter: bridges, wrecks and structure, feeding on moving tides.
• Spring: back country, flats and gulf for pre-spawn feeding.
• Summer: coral, limestone and patch reefs for spawning, feeding and breeding.
• Fall: backcountry, flats and gulf for postspawn feeding.
A few critical notes: Mangrove snapper caught in the Atlantic must measure 12 inches from the tip of the pinched tail to the tip of the bottom lip down the lateral line of the fish. These fish have a bag limit of up to 10 mangrove snappers per angler. Mangrove snapper caught in the Gulf of Mexico must measure 10 inches, measured in the same way. In these waters the bag limit is five mangrove snappers per angler.
My personal best mangrove snapper weighed about five pounds and measured over 25 inches. The IGFA world record mangrove snapper was caught by Tim Champagne from Lafayette, Louisiana. It was caught in a little unincorporated shrimping, crabbing and fishing village called Cocodrie in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana on Oct. 9, 2015, and weighed in at 18.63 pounds. The length was not listed, but if I had to guess I’d estimate it was over 40 inches. Some big mangrove snapper have been caught right in our backyard in Marathon. The most popular summer mangrove spawning spot to fish in Marathon is called “the parking lot” about a mile and a half west of the Sombrero lighthouse in 32 feet of water. Most locals know the parking lot. If you go to the parking lot or any other busy reef spot, just remember not to drive through another angler’s chum slick.
Hope to see you all out there!
To book a charter with Ana Banana, call or text Capt. Joel at 813-267-4401 or Capt. Jojo at 305-879-0564, or visit anabananafishing.com.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 21
CAPT. JOEL BRANDENBURG
FLORIDA KEYS’ 200TH ‘BIRTHDAY’ FEATURES WORLD’S LARGEST KEY LIME PIE
The Florida Keys’ bicentennial was celebrated on July 3 during a 200th “birthday party” featuring the creation of what is believed to be the world’s largest Key lime pie.
The once-in-a-lifetime festivities saluted the 200th anniversary of the Florida Territorial Legislature’s establishment of Monroe County, which encompasses the entire Keys island chain, on July 3, 1823.
Exactly 200 years later, the preparation of the Key lime pie — measuring a whopping 13.14 feet in diameter — highlighted Monday night’s patriotic bicentennial gathering at Big Pine Community Park, located beside the Gulf of Mexico in the Lower Keys.
Key West chefs Kermit Carpenter and Paul Menta spearheaded creation of the pie, a gargantuan version of the Keys’ signature dessert, and spread the creamy filling over a traditional graham-cracker crust.
“In order to make a really good Key lime pie, you must have the perfect graham cracker crust; you must surround it and fill it with condensed milk and the juice of fresh Key limes,” said Monroe County Commissioner Michelle Lincoln.
The giant pie required more than 16 gallons of Key lime juice, almost 100 gallons of sweetened condensed milk and some 125 pounds of graham crackers.
After its diameter was measured and confirmed, officials served the pie to attendees and intend to have it recognized as the world’s largest.
Key lime pie has long been identified with the Keys island chain and its heritage. Believed to have originated in Key West in the late 1800s, it was designated Florida’s official pie in 2006 by the state legislature.
Presented by the county and the Rotary Club of the Lower Keys, the bicentennial celebration also featured live music, games for kids, and a laser light show and fireworks extravaganza.
Previous “Keys 200” events included a large-scale concert in Key West and a sunset commemoration on Marathon’s restored Old Seven Mile Bridge.
— Contributed
Big Pine Community Park was a record-breaking bakery on July 3 as county officials, chefs and families gathered for an evening of music, games, food, fireworks and a world record Key lime pie measuring more than 13 feet in diameter.
ALEX RICKERT/ Keys Weekly
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 22
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U.S.A., BABY!
Fourth of July celebrations in the heart of the Florida Keys began at Marathon High School, shifted to Sombrero Beach and ended in the skies above nearshore waters for what many consider to be the best small-town fireworks display in the country. Presented by the Marathon Rotary Club, a procession of golf carts, emergency vehicles, vintage cars and even a decommissioned tank waved to patriotic fans along Sombrero Beach Road before kicking off a day of live music, food and relaxation at the beach. Happy Birthday America, indeed.
— Alex Rickert
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 24
THE FOURTH OF JULY 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 11 12 10
MARATHON CELEBRATES
BABY!
1. Marathon Mayor Luis Gonzalez, left, brings the gang in the family golf cart.
2. Marathon councilman Kenny Matlock drives a 1958 Alvis Saracen MK6 armored personnel carrier.
3 Liliana and Mark Senmartin drive her 1948 Chevrolet pickup truck with a custom mermaid paint job.
4. The American Legion’s color guard and trumpeters led the procession.
5. Rotarian and parade organizer Kelly Williams, left, staffs the Marathon Rotary Club’s cart with Tierce Scheel.
6. Cub Scout Pack 901 earns the parade’s ‘Best Overall’ award.
7. Sam Williams drives a truckload of Marathon High School cheerleaders.
8. The Samess family is dressed and decorated for the occasion.
9. From babies to young ones to seniors – and even a few four-legged companions – Marathon did it right to celebrate America’s birthday.
10. The Business and Professional Women of Marathon’s float was judged the parade’s ‘Most Patriotic.’
11. Native Taxi’s Roger George has something a little extra to throw to parade watchers.
12. ‘Ya Gotta Love It’: Marathon Rotary President and parade marshal Mike Puto is chauffeured by Chris Pankow.
13. Denise Pankow fully decks out her wheels to win the parade’s ‘Best Bike’ award.
14. Michelle Macoskey, left, and Maddie Credi with a quick save of a ‘Turtle in Trouble’ on Sombrero.
15. As is tradition, Marathon Fire Rescue vehicles lined up to lead the parade.
16. From left, the Turtle Hospital’s Michelle Macoskey, Maddie Credi, Nate Hagerty and Taylor Marcialis saved several ‘Turtles in Trouble’ along the parade route.
17. The American Legion’s color guard and trumpeters led the procession.
18. The Keys’ only locally-owned news company brings up the rear with Patti Childress, left, Alex Rickert, 9-month-old Henry Demeo (in his first parade) and dad Jake Demeo.
19. Aquarium Encounters packs the truck bed to win the parade’s ‘Most Spirited’ award.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 25
Photos by BARRY GAUKEL/Keys Weekly. See more parade photos at keysweekly.com.
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
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continued from page 4
within 30 days, fines begin July 1, 2024 at $1,000 per day.
Undocumented immigrants who are unable to prove lawful presence in the U.S. but have a driver’s license from another state won’t be allowed to drive on Florida roads, per the new law. Law enforcement and authorized representatives with the Department of Motor Vehicles can issue a citation to the driver for driving without a license.
Hospitals that accept Medicaid are required to ask a question on their admission forms as to whether the person being admitted is a lawful U.S. citizen. Hospitals must also submit a quarterly report to the state agency on health care administration that details emergency department visits or admissions by patients who responded to the question.
“In Florida, we will not stand idly by while the federal government abandons its lawful duties to protect our country,” DeSantis said during a signing of the bill in May. “The legislation I signed today gives Florida the most ambitious anti-illegal immigration laws in the country, fighting back against reckless federal government policies and ensuring the Florida taxpayers are not footing the bill for illegal immigration.”
In addition, $12 million was provided for the current fiscal year for the state’s “Unauthorized Alien Transport Program” — a DeSantis initiative sparked by the border crisis. Last year, the governor loaded two planes with migrants from San Antonio, Texas to Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts. The move brought outcry and questions over whether DeSantis violated state law.
Another law bars transgender people from using public facilities that align with gender identities. And House Bill 1069 was signed into law by DeSantis that bars public K-12 schools from using a student’s personal title or pronouns if they do not
align with the person’s sex. The bill also expands existing prohibitions on instruction related to sexual orientation and gender identity in kindergarten through third grade to include pre-kindergarten through eighth grade. The bill creates exceptions to the prohibition for required instruction in abstinence and HIV/AIDS.
A bill by State Rep. Jim Mooney that provides for a fee in lieu of a security deposit option for landlords and their tenants also took effect. Fronting a security deposit for housing can be difficult for families on modest incomes, especially those in the Keys who put up thousands of dollars for first and last months’ rent. Now, landlords have the choice to offer their tenants a monthly fee to pay their security deposit.
Mooney’s legislation provides an avenue to secure a place without needing to pay the full security deposit. The fee doesn’t go toward the security deposit, as the funds can be used by the landlord to purchase insurance. However, a landlord can also offer the tenant who’s participating in the fee program the option to pay the security deposit on a monthly basis.
“This gets you and your family where you need to be at that moment,” Mooney said.
In 2022, the Florida Legislature established a 12-year term limit for local school board members elected on or after Nov. 8, 2022. Legislators further modified the term limits to eight years last session. It was signed by the governor in May.
The state’s “Move Over” law was expanded this year, requiring Florida drivers to slow down and move over for broken-down vehicles on the side of the road. Previously, drivers were required to move over for first responders on the roadside.
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MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 29 www.RoyalFurnitureAndDesign.com KEY LARGO 305-451-5700 MM 99 Median KEY WEST 305-295-6400 Searstown by Publix MARATHON 305-743-4397 MM 50 Oceanside Call 305-481-1790 to schedule a complimentary in-home consultation, or stop by any of our three stores: WINDOW TREATMENTS featuring INTERIOR DESIGN KITCHENS & BATHS FURNITURE All work performed by LOCAL, LICENSED & INSURED contractors. OVER $10M INVENTORY IN-STOCK & QUICK DELIVERY
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Filming the Tour de France is a complicated thing. It requires an armada of camera people riding on the backs of motorcycles, about 20 stationary cameras, an airplane, and three helicopters, two with “wide-angle Cineflex gyro-stabilized, five-axis cameras” mounted on their noses, as well as long-lensed cameras aimed out both sides.
Over the 21 stages and roughly 2,100 miles of the Tour, the helicopters provide a kind of visual omniscience to the race. Sometimes you feel like an angel or some other celestial being hovering over the shoulders of the riders. You can watch a rider working from slipstream to slipstream to the front of the race, throwing everything they have at the pedals to win the final sprint. You can watch a crash spread from one rider to 50, the chaos ripping through the peloton like a wave. You can watch the peloton bunch up when moving slowly, string out when moving quickly.
Sometimes, in the slower moments, you get breathtaking views of the French landscape – the sprawling, mind-bogglingly pristine chateaus, the mountain-top castles, the monasteries, the vineyards, the quaint villages, the fields of sunflowers, the railroad yards, the industrial areas, the Alps, the Pyrenees…
And sometimes, you get a bird’s eye view of the birds, ones we don’t see here. The camera will track, say, a red kite or a white-tailed eagle circling high in the sky. Once, I saw them show a small pack of Eurasian griffons, in the vulture family, picking at the bones of, I believe, an Alpine ibex. (Note: I have now met the minimum avian requirements to write about bike racing in a column about wildlife.)
I saw my first Tour de France in 1986. “Saw” might be an overstatement. It was on ESPN and they did a half-hour segment on Saturdays during the race. I had to scour the back pages of the sports section for any items that had daily information, when any items actually appeared. But it was the year Greg LeMond went head to head with the beloved French five-time winner of the Tour, Bernard “The Badger” Hinault. Feelings were intense. LeMond was treated as a hated outsider, a wretched infidel attacking a French hero and the core values of the French people. He was seriously worried about getting poisoned or punched on the route. Oh, and LeMond and Hinault were on the same team. In addition, Hinault had reneged on a promise to help LeMond win in ’86 after LeMond had helped him win in ’85.
It was epic, the two of them trading blows as they rode through the Alps, stealing the lead back from one another, the teacher trying to destroy the apprentice. And when LeMond finally did break Hinault, Hinault claimed he
BIRDS AND BIKES ON THE TV
had betrayed LeMond for his own good, so no one could say he didn’t earn it. (There’s an excellent documentary about it called “Slaying the Badger.”)
Heroes, villains, moral complexity, sweeping landscapes, cool bikes. I was hooked.
LeMond was supposed to defend his title in 1987, but he was shot in the back during a hunting incident, and didn’t ride for the next two years. (He still carries shotgun pellets in his body.)
In 1989 LeMond went up against another beloved French rider, Laurent Fignon, who, as it has been pointed out before, looked a lot like the bad guy with the long blond hair in “Die Hard.”
Coming into the final time trial in Paris, Fignon looked undefeatable – he had a 50-second lead, and it was only a 15.2-mile course. LeMond had a chance of winning back 10 or 20 seconds, but no one could make up that gap with so little road. But then LeMond rode one of the most epic time trial rides in history, clawing back just under a minute over that very short distance, winning with the slimmest margin in the Tour de France’s 120-year history.
I was hooked-er.
I’ve watched every year since, and over the decades the coverage has gotten better and better. Not just the Tour de France, but with apps, you can watch pretty much any important road bike race on the calendar – live.
I was worried when I first got together with my wife that such an obsessive sports viewing habit – multiple hours every day for three weeks straight – could be an issue. But I was watching a stage early on in our relationship, when the camera was following this good-looking German rider named Jan Ulrich climbing through the Alps. She looked at the screen and said, “That guy … that guy is going to win,” and sat down. (She was right.) At this point, she may be more obsessed with the sport than I.
I have rather complicated thoughts on the whole Lance Armstrong era. Yes, he cheated.
But so did everyone else at the time. He just cheated bigger, and was kind of a (jerk) about it. But he was always a (jerk). It was his superpower. But athletes in more individualist sports tend not to have the legal cover that athletes do in team sports, so they tend to get caught for doping more. And the doping authorities broke their own rules to finally catch him. Which you didn’t see happen with any of the European cyclists…
A lot of time in the Tour, it’s pretty clear in the first week who is going to win the General Classification, which is the overall race. But like a lot of good literature, the really great stuff is in the subplots – who’s going to win an individual stage, or one of the other lesser classifications, which rider cracks in the Alps, who gets taken out in a crash, who has an unexpectedly great sprint, who cracks good jokes on their Instagram page, which cyclist screams the loudest at the motorcycles to get out of the way when they can’t keep up while descending a mountain pass…
A Swiss rider named Gino Mäder was killed last month in the Tour de Suisse while descending a mountain at something close to 50 mph, which has added poignancy to this year’s Tour, and a lot of questions about whether race organizers are doing everything they can to minimize the risks for the riders.
But this year has something of an unexpectedly lively feel to it, partly because of an old-school rivalry among a number of riders, including Jonas Vingegaard from Denmark, who won last year, and Tadej Pogacar from Slovenia, who won the year before, as well as riders like Egan Bernal from Colombia, who won in 2019, but was then injured in a bad training crash, from which he may or may not have finally recovered. There’s also a long list of upstarts who seem as if they could take the overall, at least during these early days.
So more heroes, villains, moral complexity, sweeping landscapes, and cool bikes. Also, a chance of birds.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 30
Riders climb in the Pyrenees in the 2021 Tour de France. PAULINE BALLET/ASO
... is a photographer, writer, and semi-professional birdwatcher. He has lived in Key West for more than 25 years and may no longer be employable in the real world. He is also executive director of the Florida Keys Audubon Society.
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SUMMER LOVIN’
Nostalgic first love, time traveling boyfriends and island wedding chaos. These sun-soaked romance novels will turn up the heat this summer!
SAME TIME NEXT SUMMER
By Annabel Monaghan
THE SEVEN YEAR SLIP
By Ashley Poston
KISMET
By Becky Chalsen
KAREN NEWFIELD
First and foremost a reader, she has reviewed hundreds of books on her blog www. readingandeating. com. And, more recently, this new Keys resident has also begun writing.
Sam adores her eclectic parents, but her fiancé Jack can only tolerate their “artsy fartsy” ways in small doses. For as long as she can remember, her family escaped the busy city to spend glorious summers at their Long Island beach house. The youngest of the group, she was often on her own until she met the boy next door, Wyatt. As the years passed, Sam and Wyatt fell in love. First-time romance can be hard on the heart, especially when it ends without closure. Over a decade later, Sam and Jack are at the beach house searching for the perfect wedding venue. Anxious about the chaotic home she dragged Jack into, Sam is shocked when she hears guitar music drifting from next door. After all these years, Wyatt is back. She never imagined seeing him again after he moved to California. Maybe Sam needs closure before the big day. As she painstakingly answers every wedding detail, the real question continues to haunt her – is she marrying the right guy? Delightfully narrated throughout the dual timeline of Sam and Wyatt’s lives, this read is perfect for a day at the beach!
Clementine finds a handsome hunk with an adorable Southern accent standing in her new apartment. Initially frightened and confused, Clementine quickly develops a crush on this hot chef named Iwan (pronounced EE-wan) and they spend an amazing weekend together. When she leaves for work Monday morning, he disappears. This is the moment she realizes the apartment she inherited from her aunt is truly haunted. Her aunt had told her about the apartment’s special powers since she was a little girl, but Clementine thought these were stories. Aunt Analea, with whom she traveled the world and traded secrets, was the love of her life, and for the last year Clementine has mourned her passing. Her dream job at the publishing house has lost its luster and her love life is nonexistent. As the summer in NYC arrives, she is fascinated by the idea that Iwan could reappear at any moment. There are two problems: She never knows when, and has realized Iwan exists seven years in the past. The saying couldn’t be more true that timing really is everything. This delicious bit of magical realism will take you on an enchanting summer adventure.
This Fourth of July, twin sisters
Amy and Jo Sharp turn 30. It is also the week of events leading up to Jo’s wedding. The sisters have always been inseparable, sharing every triumph and emotion. But lately Amy has been reticent. The close-knit family barely knows Dave, the groom, but Jo, always the romantic, has been smitten since this speedy romance began six months ago. Friends and family arrive on the Kismet ferry to celebrate the young couple. This small Fire Island community has been a special place for the Sharp family, with long hot summers of swimming, BBQs and friends. Amy and her husband Ben step off the boat with fake smiles in place, but they do not appear happy. Dave’s parents are aloof and secretive, and Jo fears they don’t approve of this wedding. When the gorgeous best man Emmett disembarks, their world is turned upside down as Amy tries to hide a painful secret from the past. She doesn't know if her heart can survive this topsy-turvy week or this runaway wedding. Say hello to summer with a quirky family, sisterly love and a fabulous setting.
#WORTHWATCHING: Young love unfolds at an international boarding school in South Korea. Touches on friendship, culture and social acceptance. This new Netflix romantic comedy series is some light and fun summer lovin’.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 32
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 33 CASUAL DINING • RESERVATIONS NOT REQUIRED • PETS WELCOMED! • OPEN 11 A.M. - 9 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK 35TH STREET, ON THE BAY (BEHIND THE STUFFED PIG) • MARATHON • 305-743-4353 KEYS FISHERIES RESTAURANT MARKET & MARINA RETAIL STORE Fish, Soups and Chowders & Key Lime Pie! WATERFRONT RESTAURANT Enjoy our daily specials like Homemade Soup or Chowder, Fresh Fish Sandwich or One of our Daily Specials while overlooking Florida Bay! Open for Lunch & Dinner Every Day! THANK YOU FOR VOTING US BEST SEAFOOD! Don ’ t forget about our Fuel Dock, next to Restaurant. Great Pricing! 90 Octane Ethanol free Open 7am to Noon Every Day but Sunday. WILD CAUGHT KEY WEST PINK SHRIMP - ALL SIZES! JOIN US AT OUR UPSTAIRS RAW BAR FROM OUR BOATS TO YOUR PLATE! OYSTERS | CLAMS FULL BAR AND THE BEST SUNSETS
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PERSONALIZED
& TRUSTED ADVISOR
• Local business tax may be renewed beginning on July 1, 2023. The 2023 business tax expires on September 30, 2023.
• Property tax installment bills must be paid by July 31.
• There were 1,764 certificates sold during this year’s tax certificate sale for the amount of $8,646,753.90. In the previous year, there were 1,651 certificates sold.
• The spiny lobster sport season (“mini-season”) begins at 12:01 AM on July 26 and ends at 12:00 AM on July 27. The bag limit for Monroe County is six per person per day.
• A property that is being rented out for six months or less must have a tourist development tax account.
• To sign up for electronic bills, please visit our website or call our o ce for assistance.
• Specialty license plates and pre-sale vouchers are now available for purchase directly through our website.
• Thank you for nominating us for Best Customer Service and Best Elected O cial for the 2023 Bubba Awards! We would be honored to earn your vote!
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 35 Call with your Questions 305.743.2300 Karen Farley-Wilkinson,
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HISTORY OF THE FLORIDA KEYS
CELEBRATING 200 YEARS
MONROE BECAME FLORIDA’S SIXTH COUNTY
southernmost city became the first in Monroe County to become incorporated. At the time, a second community was beginning to flourish in the Upper Keys on the relatively small 11-acre Indian Key. A general store, the only one found along the island chain outside Key West, opened in 1824. From there, Indian Key developed into the most important island in the Florida Keys, not named Key West.
Editor’s note: This is the first in a four-part series on Monroe County’s 200th year.
BRAD BERTELLI
is an author, speaker, Florida Keys historian and Honorary Conch. His latest book, “Florida Keys History with Brad Bertelli, Volume 1,” shares fascinating glimpses into the rich and sometimes surprising histories of the Florida Keys.
Mathew Perry planted the American flag at Key West in 1822. Commodore David Porter was instructed to establish a military depot on the island the following year unless he could identify a more suitable locale.
Porter could not and, in a General Order issued from the USS Peacock on April 6, 1823, he wrote: “A Salute of 17 guns is to be find (fired) at 8 o’clock this morning from the Battery in front of the Town, and the American Ensign is to be hoisted at the Flag Staff… The Town is hereafter to be called Allenton, and The Battery, Thompsons Battery.”
On July 2, 1823, Monroe County was established as the Florida Territory’s sixth county and named after the then-sitting and fifth president of the United States, James Monroe. County boundaries originally extended north to the southern shore of Lake Okeechobee and west to Charlotte Harbor.
Two days later, the 1823 Wrecking Act was passed by the Legislative Council of the Territory of Florida; George Murray was president. Among the act’s 14 parts were statutes requir-
ing the salvaged property to be reported to the nearest justice of the peace or notary public. Additionally, it would prove the officer’s duty to oversee the assembly of a five-member arbitration jury to decide all fees for the salvage operation. Section 14 of the act stated, “Be it further enacted, That if any person shall within this territory, make or hold out any false lights, or make any device, or do any other act or thing with intent to mislead, bewilder or decoy the mariners of any vessel on the high seas, whereby such vessel may be cast ashore, or get aground, such person or persons so offending, and every accessory thereto, shall on conviction thereof be deemed guilty of Felony, and shall suffer death.”
Tales of skullduggery and “false lights,” while pervasive in wrecker lore, were rarely documented. When Dr. Benjamin B. Strobel, a physician, and writer who traveled extensively through the Keys in 1828, observed the wreckers, he wrote: “From all that I heard of wreckers, I expected to see a parcel of low, dirty pirate looking crafts, officiated and manned by a set of black whiskered fellows, who carried murder in their very looks. I was, however, very agreeably surprised to find their vessels fine large sloops and schooners, regular clippers, kept in first rate order, and that the Captains were jovial, good humored sons of Neptune, who manifested every disposition to be polite and hospitable, and to afford every facility to persons passing up and down the Reef. The crews were composed of hearty, well dressed, honest looking men.”
On the back of the wrecking industry, Key West grew into the wealthiest city per capita in the developing United States. In 1828, the
By 1835, Indian Key was home to a community of as many as 140 people. It was 1835, too, on Dec. 28, when separate Indian factions attacked encampments at the Withlacoochee River, located northeast of Tampa, and at Fort King, located at what is today Ocala, and ignited the second escalation of the Seminole War. Between 1836 and 1840, Monroe County experienced several acts of hostility, including attacks at the New River (Fort Lauderdale), Cape Florida Lighthouse (Key Biscayne), Key Largo and Tavernier Key.
The southernmost attack during the second escalation of the Seminole War occurred at Indian Key on Nov. 7, 1840. Six lives were lost. When that tragic event occurred, Indian Key was no longer a part of Monroe County. In 1836, Dade County was carved out of the existing boundaries of Monroe County and included land from the shore of Lake Okeechobee to Bahia Honda in the Lower Keys. Because Indian Key was the largest community in the new district, it was assigned as the county seat.
Indian Key did not remain a part of Dade County for long. The vast majority of the Florida Keys were returned when county lines were redrawn in 1866, and the modern demarcation, at least in the Florida Keys, became Broad Creek. Broad Creek is found in the Northern Keys, and flows between the Swan Keys and a collection of small islands immediately north of Key Largo.
By 1885, Monroe County was still an extensive piece of real estate and included what are today southwest Florida’s Lee and Collier Counties. While we could go on for pages, chapters and books about the last 200 years, it is going to take more than a single column to encapsulate two centuries of local history, which is why I am going to spend the entire month of July highlighting just a smidge of it.
The year 1885, by the way, is when the second city was ever incorporated in Monroe County.
That city was Fort Myers, the county seat of what is now Lee County.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 36
A sketch showing half of Key West by William Whitehead from Tift’s cupola looking north in June 1838. MONROE COUNTY LIBRARY COLLECTION/Contributed
SUBJECT:
City Council Luis Gonzalez, Mayor
, City Manager
Robyn Still, Vice-Mayor
Lynn Landry, Councilmember
Jeff Smith, Councilmember
Kenny Matlock, Councilmember
George Garrett
City Attorney
Steve Williams
City Clerk
Diane Clavier
Firefighter Pension Board Meeting
7/6/23 1:00pm Marathon Fire Station #14, 8900 Overseas Hwy.
City Council Meeting
7/11/23 5:30pm Council Chambers, 9805 Overseas Hwy.
Planning Commission Meeting
7/17/23 5:30pm Council Chambers, 9805 Overseas Hwy.
Code Compliance Hearing
7/20/23 2:00pm Council Chambers, 9805 Overseas Hwy.
City Council Special Call Meeting
7/25/23 5:30pm Council Chambers, 9805 Overseas Hwy.
Determining the proposed millage rate and current year rolled-back rate and setting the date and location for the first and second public budget hearings
Pursuant to Section 286.0105, Florida Statutes, if a person decides to appeal any decision made by the City Council with respect to any matter considered at any meeting or workshop noted herein, he or she will need a record of the proceedings and for such purposes he or she may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made; which record includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based. The City of Marathon complies with the provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act. If you are a disabled person requiring special accommodations or assistance, please notify the City ADA Coordinator at (305) 289-5022 of such need at least 72 hours (3 days) in advance.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 37
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LIVE MUSIC
STILL SPECIAL EVEN IN THESE MODERN TIMES
Tdo, especially in the aftermath of the pandemic. Industry pros were wondering how long it would take to rebuild the live music infrastructure necessary for the big tours. Thankfully, live music is back with a vengeance. And no one is taking their jobs for granted anymore.
JOHN BARTUS
is a singer-songwriter and the former mayor of Marathon.
his really should be the Golden Age of Music. Recorded music is so easily available. Nearly any commercial recording is available online as a stream or a download from your favorite music source (now if we can only figure out how the musicians and content creators get paid for it). I have several hundred full albums from my favorite artists available on my iPhone, and I could stream what I don’t have. No, these lossy versions don’t sound as good as the original source, but they sure sound a metric crap-ton better than the cassettes of old … provided you’re not listening to them on crappy earbuds.
There have been significant advances in live sound as well. Line array PA technology (used correctly) has gone a long way to ensuring all seats in a venue get as close to the same sound as possible. Digital mixers with total recall and incredible effects and EQ on every channel help keep sound consistent night after night, venue after venue. I use smaller versions of the line array and a digital mixer even on my gigs down here, and they make a real difference in my sound.
Because no one makes money on recorded music anymore, concert ticket prices have soared. Even so, there’s still nothing better than live music. It touches the heart and soothes the soul in ways that hardly anything else can. Locally, we are blessed with a lot of really good musical talent, and most of us can be seen and heard for free (or the cost of dinner and drinks at most).
And we’re fortunate to have some great artists and bands still touring. Just within this past year, we’ve seen Bonnie Raitt and Marc Cohn, Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit, and the Doobie Brothers. Still upcoming this year: Jackson Browne, Aussie Pink Floyd, Sting, and Mary Chapin Carpenter and Shawn Colvin. We did have tickets for Gordon Lightfoot, but sadly…
And we are lucky to have as many quality acts touring as we
There are some downsides. Even with all the hassles of venues, ticket fees, parking, crappy small seats, and crowds, being in the performance — in the middle of the creation of live music — more than makes up for any inconvenience. Great music transcends almost all else; it lifts the soul and takes you on a journey to wonderful places. Watching an artist or band on stage is so inspirational. It gives me fuel to keep doing what I do. And it’s the most amazing totally legal high. There are also some really great concert venues in South Florida, and it’s a joy experiencing a concert at one of these.
I realize that not everyone experiences music the way I do. And I’m really sorry about that. Some of our best musicians, composers, writers and philosophers have explained it far better than I can, so I’ll let them do it.
“Music is the universal language of mankind.” – Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow
“Music is a language that doesn’t speak in particular words. It speaks in emotions, and if it’s in the bones, it’s in the bones.” – Keith Richards
“Music can name the unnameable and communicate the unknowable.” – Leonard Bernstein
“After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music.” – Aldous Huxley
“Music is probably the only real magic I have encountered in my life. There’s not some trick involved with it. It’s pure and it’s real. It moves, it heals, it communicates and does all these incredible things.” – Tom Petty
“One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no pain.” –Bob Marley
— John’s Perpetual Island Tour stops every Monday at Boondocks, Wednesday at Brutus Seafood, Thursdays at Sparky’s Landing, this Friday with Jade Storm at Lorelei, and Sunday afternoon at the Lorelei. Check out John’s music anywhere you stream or download your music! Or point your browser to: johnbartus. hearnow.com
RUSTY
6-year-old male pit bull mix. Looking for: A gentle, safe home. I’ve been waiting a whole year.
Turnoffs: Fences. I turn into a guard dog.
SWIPE RIGHT
ADORABLE FURRY FACES ARE WAITING FOR FAMILIES AT THE FLORIDA KEYS SPCA
Keys Weekly is thrilled each week to showcase some “furever” friends that are ready, waiting and available for their perfect adoption “match” at the Florida Keys SPCA’s Marathon campus – complete with their best qualities, preferences and turnoffs to ensure the best fit.
From cats and dogs to Guinea pigs, hamsters, rabbits, reptiles and birds, the perfect addition to your family is waiting for you at one of the SPCA’s two campuses, in Key West and Marathon. The SPCA’s knowledgeable staff will help with advice and care tips while working to ensure a good fit between each pet and its people. The SPCA’s Golden Paw program also provides special assistance with vet bills and medications for special-needs and older animals that require a little extra TLC.
See all the animals waiting for a home at fkspca.org. To contact the Marathon campus, call 305-743-4800 or visit the campus at 10550 Aviation Blvd.
WILLOW
3-month-old female domestic shorthair. Looking for: Playtime, exploring and naps. Turnoffs: I’m just a baby. I love everything.
BLONDI
5-year-old female domestic shorthair. Looking for: Someone who can handle my cat-i-tude.
Turnoffs: When people cry when I slap them. I don’t mean it.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 38
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 39 HAVING FUN IN THE MIDDLE KEYS Marathon Lady • 73’ Party Boat MARATHON LADY DOCKS U.S.1 at Vaca Cut Bridge Mile Marker 53, Marathon 305.743.5580 MORNING TRIPS 8:30am - 12:30pm NIGHT TRIP 6:30pm to midnight. 305 743.9100 • 5550 O/S Hwy • Marathon MM50 at the stoplight • Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon-Sat Noon to 5 p.m. Sundays • cranepoint net RECONNE C T WITH NATURE Museum & Nature Center • 63 ACRES OF Proud to be listed on the National Historic Registry! TROPICAL HARDWOOD HAMMOCK • 1.4 MILES OF WALKING TRAILS • NATURAL FISH PEDICURE STATION • BUTTERFLY GARDENS • NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM • THE HISTORIC ADDERLEY HOUSE • BEAUTIFUL VIEWS OF THE BAY • HISTORIC CRANE HOUSE $100 Call today! 305.743.0844 ONLY MEET SEA TURTLES AT THE TURTLE HOSPITAL OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. CALL 305-743-2552 FOR RESERVATIONS. 2396 Overseas Highway Gulf, Marathon Now accepting online reservations www.turtlehospital.org NOW ACCEPTING VOLUNTEERS VOLUNTEER@TURTLEHOSPITAL.ORG rogram NOW HIRING Educators 1090 OVERSEAS HIGHWAY | MARATHON | 305.743.5999 | PIGEONKEY.NET GUIDED HISTORIC ISLAND TOURS FAMILY FUN | SNORKEL FROM SHORE GIFT SHOP | MUSEUM | FISHING S TA RT YO UR P IGEO N K E Y ISLA N D A DVENTURE O N OUR TRAI N
DOUGLAS HURTUBISE GETS A TASTE OF NOSTALGIA WITH ISLAND WARBIRDS
A VETERAN OF THE SKIES
On the morning of June 30 at the Marathon International Airport, 92-year-old Korean War vet Douglas Hurtubise climbed up on the wing and into the cockpit of a 1941 BT-13 trainer aircraft with the ease of a man 40 years his junior.
The ensuing flight with Island Warbirds and Florida Keys Flight Academy operator Sol Bradman took Hurtubise on a scenic tour of the Seven Mile Bridge and Sombrero Lighthouse in the vintage aircraft before returning to the airport for a flashy low-flying pass by his family.
Comfort with aircraft is nothing new to Hurtubise. A pilot himself, he served in the Air Force from 1951 to 1955. He was stationed at Kimpo Air Force Base, sighting in, loading and repairing cameras and weaponry on jets as part of the armaments division.
He even owned a nearly identical plane himself in the 1960s, striking gold in Arizona and paying $1,450 for the bird before flying it back to Buffalo, New York.
“They didn’t have a lot of navigation back then,” his wife Sandie told the Weekly. “It was more or less by the seat of his pants.”
Hurtubise said he owned the plane for six or seven years. And when his friend and co-owner “bellied” the aircraft on a bad takeoff, essentially ruining the plane, Hurtubise found a second empty body in Canada, picked it up for $350, drove it back over the border to the U.S. and swapped his original plane’s engine in to keep flying.
“Because of economic times I (eventually) had to get rid of it, but that was sort of a mistake,” Doug said with a laugh. “The value of those airplanes right now is about $400,000.”
Driving past the plane on the tarmac on his trips through Marathon, Hurtubise was treated to the surprise flight by his daughter and son-in-law, Wendy and Ken Parker, and had nothing but praise for Bradman’s operation.
“It was wonderful, it really was,” he said. “They were all very friendly people, and Sol even let me fly it a little bit. I was able to maneuver the plane without a problem, and all that stuff came back to me.”
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 40
1. 92-year-old Korean War vet Douglas Hurtubise waves from the cockpit as he pulls away for a flight in a vintage 1941 BT-13A. ALEX RICKERT/Keys Weekly
2. Hurtubise, left, and Bradman are cleared for takeoff.
3. Hurtubise and Bradman go over final preflight checks on the BT-13. ALEX RICKERT/ Keys Weekly
4. Built in 1941, this BT-13A is a World War II-era trainer aircraft built by Vultee Aircraft for the U.S. Army Air Corps. Similar craft were used to train aviators for the Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard.
5. Island Warbirds owner Sol Bradman, left, and Doug Hurtubise go over the plan for Hurtubise’s flight.
1 2 3 4 5
ALEX RICKERT alex@keysweekly.com
sweetsavannahs.com 305-743- 8919 O/s HWY mm 51.8 great gifts toys books Bake Shop & Ice cream gluten free treats too! oted best Key lime Pie in Marathon! OpenDaily Sun-Thurs11am-9pm Friday&Saturday11am-10pm
PIES IN THE SKY
KEY LIME TREATS FALL FROM KEY WEST LIGHTHOUSE
MANDY MILES mandy@keysweekly.com
This week’s Key Lime Festival in Key West featured all things sweet, tart, delicious — and airborne.
Sixty individuals and teams took part in the Key Lime Pie Drop July 2 at the Key West Lighthouse. The annual Key Lime Festival competition calls for competitors to create a device or container to protect a 5-inch diameter pie and keep it from exploding on impact when dropped about 88 feelt, from the observation deck of the historic lighthouse.
This year’s event drew a largerthan-ever crowd of participants and spectators, with the Key lime pies attached to umbrellas — Mary Poppins style — and helium-filled balloons to ease their landing. One entry floated off the lighthouse property and landed next door.
The Key Lime Festival took place June 30 to July 4, with culinary treats, bar strolls, a Key lime pieeating contest, cookbook signings and more.
For more information and to make plans for next year, visit keylimefestival.com.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 42 WWW.BEN N ETT S M I LES. C OM BOAT RAMP MARKETPLACE BEER • BAIT FISHING TACKLE INDOOR & O U TDOOR D RY R ACK S TOR AG E Get one month FREE with a one year reservation! M ARI N A OF FIC E 3 0 5.4 40 .30 5 5 B AIT & M AR KE T PL ACE 3 0 5.9 2 2.2 6 6 5 7 AM - 7 P M - 7 DAYS A WEE K 59073 OVERSEA S H W Y, MA R ATHON MILE M A R K ER 59
The Key lime pie drop takes place July 2, with pies dropped from the top of the Key West Lighthouse in an effort to keep them intact. LARRY BLACKBURN/Keys Weekly
LEGAL NOTICES
FICTITIOUS NAME
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the fictitious name of ORESTES
SERVICES located at 1337
Ocean Breeze Ave. Lot 49, Marathon, FL 33050-2134 intends to register said name with the Florida Department of State, Tallahassee, Florida.
By: Orestes Lopez
Publish:
July 6, 2023
The Weekly Newspapers
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
U-HAUL COMPANY OF MIAMI
Notice is here by given that on July 17th, 2023, Leonard Richford Jr. Storage Auctioneer, Executive Administrator for U-Haul Company of Miami, Will be offering for sale under the Judicial Lien Process, By Public Auction, the following storage units. The Terms of the sale will be cash only. U-Haul Company does reserve the right to refuse any bids. The sales will Begin at 8:00 a.m. and continue day by day until all units are sold. The names of whose units will be sold are as follows:
103530 Overseas Highway, Key Largo, FL 33037
Alex Murgas Unit 1580
$710.60
James Fleischmann Unit 1001
$561.35
James Fleischmann Unit 1619 $1,275.69
Curtis Williams Unit 1536
$966.00
Brian Long Unit 1504-51
$995.45
Dennis Nicholson Unit 1185
$978.40
Publish:
June 29 & July 6, 2023
The Weekly Newspapers
PUBLIC MEETING NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,THAT
THE CITY OF KEY COLONY BEACH WILL BE HOLDING
PUBLIC HEARINGS ON:
DATE/TIME:
Planning & Zoning Hearing: July
19th, 2023, 9:30 A.M.
City Commission Public Hearing: Thursday, August 17, 2023, 9:30 A.M.
LOCATION:
City of Key Colony Beach
Temporary Meeting Place at the Key Colony Inn Banquet Room 700 W. Ocean Drive, Key Colony Beach, Florida 33051, to hear a Variance Request from the City of Key Colony Beach, owners of the property located at Lot 8, Parcel-ID 0079873-000800, Sunset Park, Key Colony Beach, Florida 33051. This meeting will be available virtually via Zoom Meetings. Members of the public who wish to attend virtually may email cityclerk@ keycolonybeach.net or call 305-289-1212, Ext. 2 for further instructions on attending via Zoom Meetings.
Applicant requests a review and confirmation of no variance requirements to the City of Key Colony Beach Land Development Regulations
Article III, Section 101-19, for the replacement of the current Tiki Hut with dimensions of 9’ x 9’, to a Tiki Hut with the dimensions of 15’ x 20’ at Sunset Park, Key Colony Beach, Florida 33051. Interested parties may attend the Hearing and be heard with respect to the requested variance.
If any person decides to appeal any decision made by the City Commission of the City of Key Colony Beach with respect
to any matter considered at the Variance Hearing, that person will need a record of the proceedings and for such purpose may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which record includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based.
If you are unable to attend the Hearings on Wednesday, July 19, 2023, or Thursday, August 17, 2023, but wish to comment, please direct correspondence to P.O. Box 510141, Key Colony Beach, FL 33051, or cityclerk@ keycolonybeach.net and your comments will be entered into the record.
City Clerk, City of Key Colony Beach
Publish:
July 6, 2023
The Weekly Newspapers
PUBLIC MEETING NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT THE CITY OF KEY COLONY BEACH WILL BE HOLDING
PUBLIC HEARINGS ON:
DATE/TIME:
Planning & Zoning Hearing: July 19th, 2023, 9:30 A.M.
City Commission Public Hearing:
Thursday, August 17, 2023, 9:30 A.M.
LOCATION:
City of Key Colony Beach
Temporary Meeting Place at the Key Colony Inn Banquet Room, 700 W. Ocean Drive, Key Colony Beach, Florida 33051, to hear a Variance Request from James and Jane Walther, owners of the property located at 521 9th Street, Key Colony Beach, Florida 33051. This meeting will be available virtually via Zoom Meetings. Members of the public who wish to attend virtually may email cityclerk@ keycolonybeach.net or call 305-289-1212, Ext. 2 for further instructions on attending via Zoom Meetings.
Applicant requests a variance to the City of Key Colony Beach Code of Ordinances Chapter 101, Section 26 (11), to allow the installation of a pool within the 10’ setback to 5’ on one side of the lot. Current setback requirements are 10’ feet. Interested parties may attend the Hearing and be heard with respect to the requested variance.
If any person decides to appeal any decision made by the City Commission of the City of Key Colony Beach with respect to any matter considered at the Variance Hearing, that person will need a record of the proceedings and for such purpose may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which record includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based.
If you are unable to attend the Hearings on Wednesday, July 19, 2023, or Thursday, August 17, 2023, but wish to comment, please direct correspondence to P.O. Box 510141, Key Colony Beach, FL 33051, or cityclerk@ keycolonybeach.net and your comments will be entered into the record.
City Clerk, City of Key Colony Beach
Publish:
July 6, 2023
The Weekly Newspapers
PUBLIC MEETING NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT THE CITY OF KEY COLONY BEACH WILL BE HOLDING
PUBLIC HEARINGS ON: Planning & Zoning Hearing:
Wednesday, July 19, 2023, 9:30
appealing the Building Official’s decision pursuant to Sec. 2-2, Sec. 6-14, and Sec. 101-170, for the denial of a building permit for the property located at 1295 Coury Drive, Key Colony Beach, Florida 33051.This meeting will be available virtually via Zoom Meetings. Members of the public who wish to attend virtually may email cityclerk@ keycolonybeach.net or call 305-289-1212, Ext. 2 for further instructions on attending via Zoom Meetings. Applicant appeals the decision of the Key Colony Beach’s Building Official pursuant to sec.2-2, Sec, 6-14 and Sec. 101170 for the denial of a building permit for the property located at 1295 Coury Drive, Key Colony Beach, Florida 33051. Interested parties may attend the Hearing and be heard with respect to the requested appeal.
If any person decides to appeal any decision made by the City Commission of the City of Key Colony Beach with respect to any matter considered at the Variance Hearing, that person will need a record of the proceedings and for such purpose may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which record includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based.
If you are unable to attend the Hearings on Wednesday, July 19, 2023, or Thursday, August 17, 2023, but wish to comment, please direct correspondence to P.O. Box 510141, Key Colony Beach, FL 33051, or cityclerk@ keycolonybeach.net and your comments will be entered into the record.
City Clerk, City of Key Colony Beach
Publish:
July 6, 2023
The Weekly Newspapers
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FILE NUMBER: 23-CP-79-P
IN RE: ESTATE OF GREGORY DOWELL, Deceased.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The administration of the estate of GREGORY DOWELL, deceased, whose date of death was 13 June 2023, is pending in the Circuit Court for Monroe County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 88820 Overseas Highway, Plantation Key, Florida 33070. The names and addresses of the Personal Representative and the Personal Representative’s attorney are set forth below.
All creditors of the decedent and other persons having
claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.
All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, including unmatured, contingent or unliquidated claims, must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.
The date of first publication of this notice is: June 29, 2023.
Personal Representative: Julia Ogilvie 1180 N. Columbus St. Lancaster, OH 43130
Attorney for Personal
Representative: Tom Woods, Esq. Florida Bar No.: 0525197 116 Porto Salvo Drive Islamorada, Florida 33036 Phone: 305.664.2200 Fax 2205
Primary Email: tom@ tomwoodslaw.com
Secondary Email: eserve@ tomwoodslaw.com
Publish: June 29 & July 6, 2023
The Weekly Newspapers
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION FILE NO.: 23-CP-000071-P IN RE: ESTATE OF STEVEN LARSEN Deceased.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The administration of the estate of STEVEN LARSEN, deceased, whose date of death was April 21, 2023, is pending in the Circuit Court for Monroe County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 88770 Overseas Highway, Plantation Key, Florida 33070. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the
SUDOKU SOLUTION
personal representative’s attorney are set forth below.
All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.
All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.
The date of first publication of this notice is: June 29, 2023.
Personal Representative: TOMAS LARSEN 71 Auburn Street Medford, MA 02155
Attorney for Personal
Representatives: STEVEN H. LINDE, ESQUIRE Florida Bar Number: 72089 LINDE LEGAL, PLLC 2332 Galiano Street, 2nd Floor Coral Gables, Florida 33134
Telephone: 305-722-5533
Primary E-Email: steven@ lindelegal.com
Primary E-Email: info@ lindelegal.com
Publish:
June 29 & July 6, 2023
The Weekly Newspapers
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FILE NO.: 44-2023-CP000115A-001KW IN RE: ESTATE OF CLEVELAND MCKINLEY MATHIS, Deceased.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The administration of the estate of CLEVELAND MCKINLEY MATHIS, deceased, File Number: 44-2023-CP000115A-001KW, whose date of death was November 21,
2022, is pending in the Circuit Court for Monroe County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is Clerk of the Circuit Court, Probate Division, 500 Whitehead Street, Key West, FL 33040. The names and addresses of the Personal Representative and the Personal Representative’s attorney are set forth below.
All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, including unmatured, contingent or unliquidated claims, on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.
All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, including unmatured, contingent or unliquidated claims, must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.
The date of first publication of this Notice is: June 29, 2023.
Personal Representative:
KARREN CORNELIUS
1920 Griffins Green Drive Bartow, FL 33830
Attorney for Personal
Representative:
ALLAN L. CASEY, ESQUIRE Florida Bar No. 150809
Law Offices of Allan L. Casey 395 Avenue C, N.W. Post Office Box 7146 Winter Haven, FL 33883-7146
Telephone (863) 294-4468
Publish:
June 29 & July 6, 2023
The Weekly Newspapers
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FILE NUMBER: 23-CP-56-P
IN RE: ESTATE OF DONALD BRUCE IRWIN, Deceased.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The administration of the estate of Donald Bruce Irwin,
deceased, whose date of death was April 14, 2023, is pending in the Circuit Court for Monroe County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 88770 Overseas Highway, Suite 2, Plantation Key, FL 33070. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below.
All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.
All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, including unmatured, contingent or unliquidated claims, must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.
The date of first publication of this notice is: June 29, 2023.
Personal Representative:
China Alexis Irwin Galissard de Marignac
5017 Little Turtle Drive Birmingham, AL 35242
Attorney for Personal Representative: BAKER, DONELSON, BEARMAN, CALDWELL & BERKOWITZ, PC 100 S.E. Third Avenue, Suite 1620
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33394 Tel: (954) 768-1600
Fax: (954) 333-7636
Counsel for Petitioner: Duane Pinnock, Esq. Florida Bar No. 0568139
Josh A. Kravec, Esq. Florida Bar No. 1025518 dpinnock@bakerdonelson. com jkravec@bakerdonelson.com breid@bakerdonelson.com
Publish:
June 29 & July 6, 2023
The Weekly Newspapers
NOW HIRING IN ISLAMORADA
BOAT RENTAL STAFF
FLEXIBLE HOURS & COMPETITIVE WAGES
Need to have experience driving boats and a working knowledge of the Islamorada area by water. Duties include taking reservations, giving captains lessons and routine boat maintenance.
Email Ma at eliteboatrentalsma @gmail.com. Please include contact information and any relevant experience.
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 43 • CLASSIFIEDS, PUBLIC & LEGAL NOTICES • 305.743.0844
LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES
Thursday,
2023, 9:30 A.M.
City of Key Colony Beach Temporary Meeting Place at the Key Colony Inn Banquet Room, 700 W. Ocean Drive, Key Colony Beach, Florida 33051, to hear an appeal filed by Kenneth Bohannon, Esq. on behalf of Nicholas Bauer,
A.M. City Commission Public Hearing:
August 17,
LOCATION:
LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES
AUTOS ALL YEARS!
Junk or Used Cars, Vans, Trucks. Runs or Not. $CASH 305-332-0483
EMPLOYMENT
Florida Keys Commercial Fishermen’s Association, Marathon, Florida, seeks motivated individual knowledgeable on commercial fisheries management including spiny lobsters, stone crabs and finfish. Duties include travel and participation in Local, State and Federal fisheries management meetings and management of annual seafood festival held in Key West. Public speaking, written position papers and other correspondence are required skills. Salary based on knowledge and experience. Send Curriculum Vitae and contact information to kwjosh86@gmail.com no later than July 20, 2023.
HEALTH INSURANCE
NAVIGATOR - Enrollment
Assistance, Outreach, Education and Community Events. Paid Training and equipment. Bi-lingual a plus. Call 305-767-3883
Coast to Coast Pizza Company in Marathon is looking for Front of the house cashier, part time, and Back of the house kitchen staff, part and/or full time. Will train, but should be self-motivated, quick learner, and team player. Salary commensurate with experience and includes tips and 401k. Please call Nicole at 305-4330515, or email nicole@ themoongroupfl.com.
SS Wreck and Galley Grill on Grassy Key is looking for Line cooks, full or part time, and Servers/Hosts. Will train, but should be self-motivated, quick learner, and team player. Salary commensurate with experience and includes 401k. Please call Nicole at 305-4330515, or email nicole@ themoongroupfl.com.
City of Marathon Current Job Openings: Right of Way Technician. Full Benefits. EOE Please see City website for details www.ci.marathon.fl.us
Groundskeeper/ Maintenance person, KCB, Sea Isle Condominium, 20 - 40 hrs. per week, $25 per hr., apply by e-mail to HardingThomasL@aol.com, text or call 734-476-0531.
The Cabana Club, an ocean front private swim club is seeking a CustomerService Oriented Server for the pool deck, beach and/ or bar lounge. Open year round, 10am-7pm daily. Small friendly staff. Above average hourly wage plus tips. Apply in person at 425 E. Ocean Dr. Key Colony Beach or call 404-2193359 and ask for Dave.
Immediate openings for experienced plumbers and helpers (with or without experience - we will train the right person). Must have a valid driver's license & clean driving record. Please apply in person at 10700 5th Avenue Gulf, Marathon or email resume to: eerpinc@gmail.com
Boat rental company in Marathon needs an Outboard Mechanic. Some general marina work, and boat experience a plus. Call 305-481-7006
Dolphins Plus Marine Mammal Responder now hiring Guest Service Representativeresponsibilities include assisting guests at our Key Largo and Islamorada locations, making reservations and/or answering questions over phone and in-person, taking and processing photos, and checking-in and out guests visiting our facility. To apply, please send your resume to andreaw@dpmmr.org.
MAINTENANCE POSITION w/ busy Non-profit. FT with benefits. Longterm position w/room for growth. Valid DL required. Must have maintenance or related experience, computer skills and relate well with people. Very physical position, heavy lifting, heat, etc. Drug-free workplace. EOE Please send resume and cover letter to sholt@ fkoc.org NO phone calls.
The Housing Authority of the City of Key West now hiring the following positions: Cook, Maintenance Administrative Assistant (bilingual preferred) Maintenance Mechanic (Maintenance Worker), Med Tech (caregiver), and Grounds Caretaker. To apply, please contact Human Resources at: martinezm@kwha.org or 305-296-5621
Applications are available at the Administrative Office located at 1400 Kennedy Dr., Key West, FL 33040 or online at www. kwha.org - EOE & Drug Free Work Place. This opportunity is covered under Section 3 of the HUD Act of 1968.
Place your Employment Ad here for $25.00/week for up to five lines of copy. Call 305-743-0844 today!
HOBBIES/COLLECT.
PRIVATE COLLECTOR WANTS Rolex, Dive Watches and Pilot Watches. Old Model Military Clocks & Watches. Call 305-743-4578
LOT FOR SALE
Oceanside-Lot with building permit in Tavernier $399K OBO 305-933-9594 OwnerAgent [3% to selling office]
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 44 • CLASSIFIEDS, PUBLIC & LEGAL NOTICES • 305.743.0844
• CLASSIFIEDS, PUBLIC & LEGAL NOTICES • 305.743.0844 AUTOS WANTED EMPLOYMENT Apply in person at Sunset Grille & Raw Bar, 7 Knight’s Key Blvd, Marathon SUNSET GRILLE IS HIRING • Hosts • Waitstaff • Bartenders • Bar Backs • Bussers • Line Cooks • Dishwashers Please contact April at 305.407.3262 or april@floridakeysaquariumencounters.com for more information. 11710 OVERSEAS HWY, MARATHON NOW HIRING DIVE INSTRUCTOR MARATHON GARBAGE SERVICE We are now hiring for the following positions: Diesel Mechanic Truck Helpers CDL Drivers Applicants must apply in person to be considered. 4290 Overseas Hwy, Marathon Apply Today KeysBank.com/Careers EOE • M/F/V/D Member FDIC Key West • Telller r • Cusstoomeer S Serviice e R Repprreseenntatiive e Benefits Competitive Salary & Hourly Pay Rates • 401K with Employer Match Health, Dental, Vision, Life, Long-Term Disability Plans Available Paid Time Off Plus Federal Bank Holidays • Tuition Reimbursement Paid Time Off for Volunteering • Cash Profit Sharing Lower Keys • Custtoomeer S Serviicce e Represeennttatiive e • Assisstaant B Brannch h Opperattiions M Maanaggeer r • Full T Time Teller - M Middlee//Lowweer r Keyys CROSSWORD SOLUTION
TRUCK DRIVERS CDL CLASS A
We are hiring CDL CLASS A Drivers, Monday-Friday with overtime available. Hazmat not needed.
Apply at Charley Toppino & Sons, Inc.
129 Toppino Industrial Dr., Key West (ask for Cheryl) 305-296-5606 ext 126.
DUI EVALUATOR/ INSTRUCTOR
The Advocate DUI Program is hiring for part time positions. DUI instructors and evaluators - 2 days a week, Bachelors or Masters degree in substance abuse eld required. Bilingual preferred, not required. Of ce located in Marathon. Contact Marcia at 305-704-0117.
Keys Energy Services, in Key West, Florida, is accepting applications for the following position in its Executive Department:
TRANSMISSION AND DISTRIBUTION
T&D ELECTRICAL ENGINEER
Starting pay rate for this position, depending on qualifications and experience: $108,332/annually$111,365/annually
For more information, including job duties and required qualifications, and to apply for the job, please visit their website at www.KeysEnergy.com.
KEYS is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
KEYS promotes a Drug-Free Workplace. Certain service members, veterans, the spouses and family members of service members and veterans, receive preference and priority in employment, and are encouraged to apply for positions being filled.
Keys Energy Services, in Key West, Florida, is accepting applications for the following position in its Transmission & Distribution Department:
SUBSTATION ELECTRICIAN
Starting pay rate for this position, depending on quali cations and experience: $40.35/hr. - $45.19/hr. For more information, including job duties and required quali cations, and to apply for the job, please visit their website at www.KeysEnergy.com.
KEYS is an Equal Opportunity Employer. KEYS promotes a Drug-Free Workplace. Certain service members, veterans, the spouses and family members of service members and veterans, receive preference and priority in employment, and are encouraged to apply for positions being lled.
THE GUIDANCE/CARE CENTER, Inc. IS HIRING!
GCC offers excellent benefits for full-time employment, but we realize some would prefer part-time to enjoy the Florida Keys lifestyle more. All positions can be considered for full or part-time unless notated. Apply at westcare.com and enter your availability.
KEY WEST
Behavioral Health Therapist (Child, Adult)
Behavioral Health Counselor (Children)
Case Managers (Adult, Forensic)
Substance Abuse Counselor
Peer Support Specialist
Prevention Specialist
MARATHON
Driver (CDL required)
Care Coordinator
Behavioral Health Therapist (Child, Adult)
EXPERIENCED ELECTRICIANS AND HELPERS NEEDED
Experience is required. Must have a valid driver’s license. We offer 401K, medical insurance, paid holidays and paid vacation. Positions available in Key West and Marathon. 305-292-3369
RNs/LPNs - 3 shifts (also Per Diem)
Maintenance Specialist
*Behavioral Health Technicians
3 shifts (also Per Diem)
Peer Support Specialist
*Support Worker – Assisted Living
*No experience required for these positions. Will train. A caring heart & helpful hands required.
THEME: MOVIE ANIMALS
ACROSS
1. Deli side
5. *”Breakfast at Tiffany’s” animal
8. Songs for one
12. What formica and biochemical have in common
13. Prefix for partly
14. Dark
15. Crew equipment, pl.
16. Steinbeck’s “East of ____”
17. Golf shirt
18. *”Marmaduke” animal
20. *”Away & Back” animal
21. Game “field”
22. Slightly insane
23. Casual top
26. Vending machine
30. Rocks, to a bartender
31. Bowling prop
34. Lush
35. Trots and canters
37. Broadcasting medium
38. Inflammatory swelling
39. Highland tongue
40. Sock pattern
42. Bring into play
43. Go back over
45. Theater passages
47. Part of a cheer
48. Lump of anything
50. Milo and Otis, e.g.
52. *”Dunston Checks In” animal
56. Wheel on a spur
57. CISC alternative
58. Private theater box
59. Resembling wings
60. MacFarlane or Rogen
61. Go-____
62. *Bullseye, Hamm and Lotso
Bear, e.g.
63. Lyric poem
64. Immediately, doctor’s jargon
DOWN
1. Air quality concern
2. Fibber
3. Farm measure
4. Sushi condiment
5. Natural moth repellent
6. To change, as in the U.S. Constitution
7. Fork prong
8. *”Harry Potter” animal (2 words)
9. Earthenware pot
10. *”Born Free” animal
11. I in T.G.I.F.
13. Administer diazepam
14. When Cinderella wins
19. Civil wrongs
22. “Some Nights” band
23. *”Life of Pi” animal
24. Close call
25. Bank job
26. Gossamer
27. Cry like #5 Across
28. Liquorice flavored herb
29. Hues
32. Backgammon predecessor
33. *”Babe” animal
36. *”Anchorman” and “The Wizard of Oz” animals
38. Kundera’s “Unbearable Lightness of ____”
40. “That feels good!” exclamation
41. Set in motion
44. Like a go-getter bird
46. Lies in ambush
48. Wept
49. It makes waste?
50. Singular of #17 Across 51. Home versus ____ game
52. Guesstimate phrase (2 words)
53. To perfection (3 words)
54. Taj Mahal city
55. As opposed to gross
56. *”Willard” animal
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 45 • CLASSIFIEDS, PUBLIC & LEGAL NOTICES • 305.743.0844 • CLASSIFIEDS, PUBLIC & LEGAL NOTICES • 305.743.0844
“Upli ting the human spi it since 1973” The Guidance/Care Center nc a division of Background and drug screen req. COMPETITIVE PAY! EXCEPTIONAL BENEFITS!!! Check out all available positions at: www.westcare.com
by zip code) EEOC/DFWP
(search
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 46 LET’S DO BUSINESS - 305.743-0844 Leslie Christensen OWNER phone 305-743-6881 AmericanCoastalRentals.com Leslie@AmericanCoastalRentals.com 9141 Overseas Hwy, Marathon Mon - Fri 8:30am - 5:00pm • 6681 Overseas Hwy, Marathon keystilestone@gmail.com • www.keystilestone.com • 305.743.7053 SALES | INSTALLATION | SERVICE SPECIALIZING IN REMODELS & NEW CONSTRUCTION FOR OVER 20 YEARS Lic & Ins SP3696 Licensed & Insured Contractor # CACO53827 ARTIC TEMP, INC. Air Conditioning & Refrigeration Residential, Commercial & Marine Ice Machine - Sales - Service Phone: (305) 743-5288 Fax: (305) 743-6887 Brian Tewes Customer service is my strength Brian@tewesmortgage.com NMLS# 375025 Tewes Mortgage NMLS# 1453791 NMLSConsumerAccess.org Tewes Mortgage www.TewesMortgage.com Call 305.495.6000 for a FREE Consultation Your local, residential lending expert! Todd Gibbins 305-393-1092 Chad Cossairt 305-340-8392 Residential Commercial Marine Automotive Installation Specialist Keys Fisheries Market & Marina Mile Marker 48.5, Marathon End of 35th Street Bayside Sportfishing Adventures Dolphin-Tuna-Wahoo-Billfish-Snapper-Grouper-Shark Deep Sea –O Shore-Reef-Wrecks-Gulf info@johnnymaddoxcharters.com 305-481-3259 Alexia Mann Owner 11400 Overseas Hwy, Suite 103, Marathon, FL 33050 TheOwlLibrary1@gmail.com 404.988.2259 When it comes to solar and power storage for your home in the Florida Keys, turn to the Florida Keys Local Experts at SALT Energy. 305-289-1150 www.saltenergy.net 2992 Overseas Highway Marathon, FL 33050 SOLAR DONE RIGHT! CALL US FOR A FREE HOME ESTIMATE Florida Solar Contractor CVC 56734 Florida Electrical Contractor EC13008657 A division of SALT Service, serving The Keys since 1989 Barbara Sanchez Home & O ces Expertly Cleaned Fast Dependable Service “We Clean Your Place, Like it Was Our Place” Excellent References Upon Request 305-766-0819 305-924-0179 Kitchen Cabinets Sales KitchenKorner/Fred's Beds 1333 O/S Hwy, MM 53.5 • 305-743-7277 REAL Wood Cabinets at Particle Board Prices Custom canvas and upholstery for all marine, commercial and residential projects! www.coastalmarineupholstery.com 954.540.8397 We come to you for on-site service. Most projects can be completed in 30 days or less. Ask for details. project, our specialty... retaining walls patios & walkways repair, renovation & new installation 305-849-1630 keyspavers@outlook.com/ floridakeyspavers.com 305.934.8536 Dale Coburn, A orney 305.743.9858 Coburn@marathonlaw.com 6807 Overseas Hwy, Marathon FL
MARATHON WEEKLY / JULY 6, 2023 47 LET’S DO BUSINESS - 305.743.0844 MARATHON • KEY COLONY OWNERS 305 3902315 START EARNING MAXIMIZE YOUR INCOME POTENTIAL ENJOY EXPERT PROPERTY MAINTENANCE OFFER YOUR GUESTS A VIP EXPERIENCE WWW.KEYSRENTALSONLINE.COM Andy’sSliding Gl ass D oo r Re p a i r R oll er Ma in te n a n c e T rack Ma in te n a n c e D oo r A lign me n t S ec u r i ty Pin s S afety Lo ck s Ha ndl e s 305-998-895 3 www.KeysSlidingGlassDoorRepair.com Insured • Professional • Reliable We Also Repair & Replace Patio Door Screens When It Rains It Pours! Need 7” Gutters? We have 6” & 7” Seamless • Copper Specialists Key West 305-292-2666 MARATHON 305-743-0506 KEY LARGO 305-852-5356 rainsavergutters@gmail.com Lic No. SP1481 WiLL CAMPBELL - PRESiDENT BUiLDiNG iNSPECTiONS & PLAN REViEW PRiVATE PROViDER Licensed & Insured #SP33799 ALL KEYS GLASS Sales & Installation • Tub & Shower Enclosures Safety & Tempered Glass • Mirror & Mirror Walls Plexi-Glass & Lexan RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL Windows • Doors 305-743-7800 Floor & Wall Tiles Porcelain/Planks Marble Carpets Quartz & Granite CountertopsLic#SP-3562 FREE ESTIMATES U.S.1 & 109th St, Marathon (Across from Beall’s Outlet) 289-3019 We Do Installations! Licensed & Insured Michael Kiraly Mortgage Lender Supervisor NMLS# 675432 MKiraly@My100Bank.com Direct: (305) 942-1756 Office: (305) 676-3019 11400 Overseas Hwy, Suite 214 & 215 Marathon, FL 33050 MY100BANK.COM | Centennial Bank Will Campbell President Cell: 305-363-8330 O ce: 305-735-4626 will@cec k.com www.CECFLK.com P.E. Lic. No: 79269 5800 Overseas Hwy. Unit 32 Marathon, FL. 33050 Serving Key Largo to Key West Karen Raspe, PA Sales Associate Keys Real Estate 9141 Overseas Highway Marathon, FL 33050 305-393-9010 karenraspe@bellsouth.net www.karenraspe.com A m e m b e r o h e r a n c h s e s y s e m o B H H A f i a t e s L L C 305-912-2177 tracy@keysrealestate com 9141 Overseas Hwy Marathon FL middlefloridakeysrealestate com A member of the franchise system of BHHS Affiliates, LLC GENERAL CONTRACTORS & ENGINEERS Proud member of: INTERNATIONAL CONCRETE REPAIR INSTITUTE SPALLING EXPERTS CGC1523838 CGC1523838 Garage Floor Epoxy Pool Decks Painted Pools Painted • Concrete Sealing Bob’s Prosurfaceplus@gmail.com • bobsprosurfacing.com Rachel Sanderson SALES PROPERTY MANAGEMENT Rachellynnes94@gmail.com 305.393.3076 Serving Monroe, Dade & Broward 305-743-7454 fkes2011@gmail.com floridakeysexpressshuttle.com Including Airports & Ports. SUV, Van & Limousine options available Call us for special events. Liz Samess Interiors Design, Decorating, Drafting, & More… CELL: (954) 801-7883 Email: interiordesignbyliz@gmail.com Marathon, FL 33050 Liz Samess Interior Designer WILLIAM JONES HOME INSPECTOR 305-619-2754 wjones2@terminix.com 625 U.S. Hwy 1, Ste. 101 * Key West, FL 33040
MARATHON’S ONLY ROOFTOP LOUNGE IS
Small plates, local specials, and. rotating entrees to share and pair. Enjoy an interesting wine & cocktail menu.
COCKTAIL BAR: OPEN 7 DAYS - 5 TO 10 PM
KITCHEN:
MON THROUGH THURS - 5 TO 9 PM
SATURDAY & SUNDAY - 5 TO 10 PM
HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS - 5 TO 7 PM
$9 Wagyu Slider with Fries
$8 Wells & Wines
$4 Budlight & Buenaveza
5 8 1 8 2 O v e r s e a s H w y , G r a s s y K e y 3 0 5 9 9 8 4 5 9 0 T H E P A L M D E C K A T T H E R H U M H O U S E