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Author: Joe Byrnes Created: 10/3/2006 12:31 PM
All about news and life in Marion County, Fla.

A park where peace reigns
By Joe Byrnes on 1/27/2007 3:31 PM
As a kid in rural southern Louisiana, I liked to roam through the countryside, sometimes without a destination, for a whole summer afternoon.

I remember once hiking down a long forest trail and finding at its end a graveyard grown mossy, full of wildflowers and the hum of honey bees. It was, to my eyes, a secret, mysterious place ablaze with sunlight and haunted by many untold stories.

To this day, I see it as a metaphor for moments of wonder and transcendent beauty that break through the tired routines of our lives - and a metaphor, as well, for a quiet, sunny place of love and sadness and hope hidden in the wilderness of the human heart.

This comes to mind because on Sunday afternoon my wife, Lauri, and I visited Sholom Park.

The 45-acre garden at 6602 S.W. 80th Ave. - established two years ago by On Top of the World founder Sidney Colen - is managed by the nonprofit Horticultural A ...
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'Idol' chatter about Pickler in Ocala
By Joe Byrnes on 1/20/2007 3:05 PM
Well, I know what my household is doing on Tuesday and Wednesday nights for the next few months.

That's right - "American Idol" is back.
My wife and I aren't the only Marion County residents who'll get caught up in the Fox reality show, cheering for our favorite singers and voting for them by phone. The Dotsons, for example, haven't missed an episode since it all started.

After an Ocala concert Monday evening by "American Idol" finalist Kellie Pickler, Tom Dotson, his wife, Anne, and 9-year daughter, April, sought me out for an interview.

They are big Pickler fans. Anne Dotson usually does the "American Idol" voting, but one night last year her husband took over and voted 142 times for the disarmingly sweet country singer. It's a family affair for them - and many others around here - and K-Country's free concert at Paddock Mall was a tremendous treat.
< ...
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Are we ready to realize the dream?
By Joe Byrnes on 1/18/2007 4:26 PM
I watched the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s 1963 "I Have a Dream" speech on YouTube.com last week, and it got me to thinking -- about Marion County and where we're headed.

"I have a dream," King said, "that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: 'We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal.'

"I have a dream that one day . . . the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood."

King dreamed of a nation where his four children would "not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character." He spoke of the faith needed "to transform the jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood."

Amen.

The King holiday this year has parti ...
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Debra Vazquez Memorial Poetry Series
By Joe Byrnes on 1/13/2007 10:06 PM
Central Florida Community College is offering a great opportunity to see and listen to an extraordinary poet.

 Li-Young Lee will discuss and read his poetry, as part of the Debra Vazquez Memorial Poetry Series, at 7 p.m. on Feb. 1 at the CFCC Fine Arts Auditorium.

 Here’s a little of how Alison Granucci describes his poetry on www.blueflowerarts.com: “Through the observation and translation of often unassuming and silent moments, the poetry of Li-Young Lee gives clear voice to the solemn and extraordinary beauty found within humanity. … Anyone who has seen him read will add that Lee is also one of the finest poetry readers alive.”

 The Web site includes an example of his po ...
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Glimpses of Ocala in Time's past
By Joe Byrnes on 1/13/2007 4:51 PM
Star-Banner reporter Rick Cundiff pointed out to me Monday that Time magazine has a free online archive of its stories since the beginning of Time.

This was an opportunity, I realized, to glimpse Ocala's moments in the national consciousness during the past 84 years.

So I searched the magazine archive for "Ocala."

- In 1925, during the newsmagazine's third year, we showed up in a real estate item about silent film actor Thomas Meighan discovering Ocala -- "a hamlet charming, provincial, discreet, situated well inland on the Dixie Highway" - as a rural, Southern locale for the movie "Old Home Week."

The news item claimed this caused new interest in local real estate.

"The rude forefathers of Ocala found that their acres had become valuable," Time reported. And Meighan himself cashed in to the tune of $500,000.
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West Marion bird count a great success
By Joe Byrnes on 1/12/2007 8:29 PM
“Fantastic!” That’s how Norm Lantz, compiler of the new West Marion County bird count circle, described its first-ever participation last Thursday in the National Audubon Society’s Christmas Bird Count.

Lantz, an expert birder, is with the Unique Birders at On Top of the World. Club members and other volunteers took part in the bird count.

The 54 or so volunteers in 14 teams counted 12,049 birds and 109 species on that day in the 15-mile-wide circle, which includes much of the State Road 200 corridor and the Dunnellon area.

A burrowing owl and Northern bobwhites were later added to the list of species, bringing it to 111.

Lantz said he was surprised by the huge number of robins counted last Thursday – 3,196.

Yellow-rumped warblers were the second-most numerous, with 701 being ...
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Alliance looks out for Marion County's children
By Joe Byrnes on 1/6/2007 2:07 PM
It's all about the kids.
That's our future, as families, as a community, as a nation, as a world.

That's why we invest money and lives in schools and preschools. It's why this community is brimming with youth sports, young gymnasts and budding musicians.

As parents, step-parents or grandparents, most of us get it. In fact, we believe it from the bottom of our hearts.

If we rear our children responsibly, with love and listening, then any good thing is possible.

If we teach them brutality, they will carry that cruel message to the world.

Those local institutions that support children in need -- like Kids Central Inc., the Guardian Ad Litem Program, Kimberly's Cottage, Arnette House -- deserve our attention and support.

Since 2000, Marion County has had an alliance in place that works with these programs and law enforcement agencies an ...
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New circle counts birds on Thursday, Jan. 4
By Joe Byrnes on 12/23/2006 3:52 PM
For a moment, I thought we had found a purple gallinule heaven.

But the dozens of birds milling around the duckweed-covered pools at Sunnyhill Restoration Area were not, in fact, the flashy gallinules but common moorhens.

I still believe it was some kind of heaven.

That was Friday morning, and, as you may recall, it was foggy past 10 a.m. It was the day the Emeralda-Sunnyhill Count Circle had chosen for the Christmas Bird Count.

I joined expert birder Norm Lantz, of On Top of the World, and seven other volunteers -- most with OTOW's Unique Birders -- at the Sunnyhill preserve, 4,405 acres held by the St. Johns River Water Management District along the Ocklawaha east of Weirsdale. We were two of about 15 teams in a 15-mile circle. It was part of the CBC, an annual winter census of birds coordinated by the National Audubon Society.

Shortly after 8 a.m., Lantz and I ...
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Real tree rekindles holiday memories
By Joe Byrnes on 12/16/2006 12:52 PM

Blogger's Note: If today's column brings to mind your own holidays of long ago, I invite you to write about them in the comments.

I can picture it still, the spindly pine Christmas tree draped in tinsel and loaded with decorations in a corner of the farmhouse living room.

It was probably Christmas Eve, which was when my father, guided by a sense of tradition, liked to cut the tree, bring it in from the bottomland and watch as we decorated it.

Certainly, there was a blaze crackling in the fireplace.

At this point my siblings and I were in our pajamas and very excited about the coming morning.

I would sit cross-legged on the floor, wide-eyed and slack-jawed, gazing up at the glistening beacon of another world.

Earlier that day, my father - a tall bearded professor ...

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MADD vigil set for Sunday, Dec. 10
By Joe Byrnes on 12/9/2006 3:27 PM
When I went to the Denny's in Silver Springs to interview Adrian "Stretch" Cummings, I had no idea the tall, disabled Vietnam veteran, with his white beard, ball cap and bifocals, would break my heart.
 Cummings, president of the local U.S. Military Vets Motorcycle Club, spoke of the joy that a loving wife and daughter brought to his life and the emptiness he feels since they were snatched away.
 He married Nancy on his birthday in 1971, two years to the day after he got out of the Marines.
 "You spend 14 months in Vietnam, watching your friends die. You won't have much to smile about," Cummings said, looking at his own solemn face in a wedding photo among the pictures he had brought. "She put the smile back."
 After the war, Cummings slept with a gun, he said. "She took all that weight off me."
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Thank you, parade volunteers
By Joe Byrnes on 12/7/2006 6:18 AM
Eight-year-old Mary Kenney, of Belleview, may have made the difference.
 On Saturday morning, she prayed for no rain.
 "Sprinkles are OK," she said from the golf cart she was riding in that afternoon with her dad at the McPherson Governmental Complex. She got her wish that evening, as the Ocala Christmas Parade glimmered, wailed, wheeled, skateboarded, marched, trotted and danced down East Silver Springs Boulevard.
 About 137 units filed by in cloudy, 66-degree weather.
 Phyllis Hamm, Sue Mosley, William Taylor, Brad Smith and all the other hardworking parade organizers got their wish, too, as did city and county workers.
 Their wish? To bring holiday cheer to people in and around Marion County, especially the children.
 The parade began at sunset, and darkness quickly settled over the field at McPherson. From ...
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Hurricane seasons, past and passing
By Joe Byrnes on 12/2/2006 3:57 PM
I like to think we weathered the Florida hurricanes of 2004.

Three storms crisscrossed Florida just south of Marion County that year, and Ivan hit the Panhandle.

I remember driving around Silver Springs Shores in 40 mph wind, interviewing Ocalans with trees in their living rooms and, like many others, spending a week without electricity.

For all that, I have to acknowledge we never actually had a hurricane. What this county had -- with Frances and Jeanne -- were tropical storm-force winds. They were bad enough.

We had high anxiety, too, as repeated strikes undermined our sense of security.

On Thursday, we conclude the current year's wonderfully quiet hurricane season. El Nino -- a weather pattern involving warmer-than-usual equatorial Pacific waters -- gave us winds changing with altitude that sheared the tops off Atlantic storms before they could develop.
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A note on the Chicago trip from the LWHS band director
By Joe Byrnes on 12/2/2006 9:46 AM

Lake Weir High BandJohn Leschak, the Lake Weir High School band director, sent an e-mail about the band’s Chicago trip. Here’s a portion of the letter:

“The performance trip was a success. Our Lake Weir High Band made us proud in their Chicago Thanksgiving Day Parade performance. We received many compliments during the parade and throughout the trip. Lake Weir was the 12th unit in the parade with a 32 degree step-off temperature.  There were 24 bands, and the first band was from GA with 350 members ...

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A parade to success
By Joe Byrnes on 11/25/2006 4:33 PM
Years from now, when Chris Stevens is fighting fires, the leadership skills and teamwork he learned at Lake Weir High School could make the difference.

Maybe then he'll look back on these years, and one moment will stand out -- maybe Thanksgiving Day 2006, when, as drum major, he led the marching band in the Chicago parade.

The Hurricane Band -- about 50 musicians, plus drill team members and chaperones -- departed Candler by bus for Chicago around 6 a.m. Tuesday. They were to spend the night in Murfreesboro, Tenn., and arrive in Chicago today.

The parade begins at 8:30 a.m., when the temperature should be 37 degrees.

At 7:30 a.m. Monday -- as during football season -- the band was in the school parking lot for practice. The temperature was just right -- about 37 degrees.

Only, in the parking lot, there weren't 350,000 spectators -- just Band Director John Leschak ...
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Home repairs: Carpe diem
By Joe Byrnes on 11/18/2006 2:34 PM
Two weeks ago, with all the confidence of blissful ignorance, I asked for a Wednesday and Thursday off to fix the only bathroom in my old house.

The vinyl-covered wooden floor was warping around the toilet and lavatory, apparently from a leak. I could take care of that in a couple of days, I thought, and still go fishing on Saturday.

If you're the owner of an old house, you already know how terribly mistaken I was.

First I decided to seize the opportunity and paint the room in subtle blue with white trim. I had to tear the floor up anyway.

That put me way behind from the start. I scraped and sanded the doors and trim - this took a day and a half.

Afterward, the little room was ready for paint, and I was already worn out, and, oh yeah, absolutely no closer to my goal.

The logical next step, of course, was to fix the window.

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Congrats! Now the job description
By Joe Byrnes on 11/11/2006 4:32 PM
So you won the election.
Now you're charged with serving all the people of Marion County, or at least those in your district. We did not elect you to serve the gun lobby or the anti-gun lobby, to spread your religion from the state House or ignore the Ten Commandments, to drill the creativity out of our kids or leave them unprepared for life, to forget the poor or dishonor our veterans, to burden us with heavy taxes or let our roads clog up with traffic.

We did not elect you to pave the way for developers or ignore the demands of population growth.

No. We elected you to serve our needs and protect our rights.

Forget those special interests, those developer dollars and those demands of party loyalty. Think only about what's good for your constituents.

And what is that?
You will have to answer that question repeatedly, with help from the 315,000 of us who live here ...
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Art fest a feast for eyes, soul
By Joe Byrnes on 11/4/2006 9:47 AM
Sunday at the Ocala Arts Festival - what a day! The afternoon sky was a cloudless blue and the air was 75 degrees.

It was full of the smells of popcorn and funnel cakes. Bands performed, dancers twirled, and, under a sprawling oak, a woman with long black hair strummed a harp and a man played a wooden flute.

Like thousands of others, my wife and I strolled among the white tents. Many of the artists had painted, photographed or sculpted natural scenes and animals. Horses, fish and wading birds were everywhere.

Some of the works evoked a smile. Others - like the precise Florida landscapes of Crystal River's Charles Rowe and the photographic insights of Ocala's Herb Arndt - left me staring in admiration.

Among the flowers of art, each of us could find a favorite nectar.

For me, it was the oil and beeswax paintings of South Florida's Natalie Salminen - all birds and b ...
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A YouTube for your government
By Joe Byrnes on 10/28/2006 12:58 AM
Thanks to the Internet, the wit and wisdom of your County Commission is never more than a few mouse clicks away.

Marion County announced recently that videos of commission meetings are being posted at marioncountyfl.org. The staff will post them within a couple of days of the regular twice-monthly meetings.

The extra effort will help us follow our government and make decisions about our own votes.

By the way, Dunnellon, though less than one-one hundredth Marion County's size, beat the county to the punch months ago by putting recordings of its meetings on dunnellon.org.

The county videos, however, are much more convenient. Not only can you watch the entire meeting, you can select the specific agenda item you want to see.

So the public has a new reason to address the County Commission at hearings or at the end of the agenda. People can tell their friends to check t ...
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Thanks for Avatar deal; now stay on task
By Joe Byrnes on 10/27/2006 1:42 AM
I turned on the radio as I drove to Silver River State Park on Monday for the announcement that Florida would buy 4,471 acres to help protect the water quality of Silver Springs.

On WOCA, there was a rerun of the "The Big Bad John Program," with County Commissioner Randy Harris ridiculing the idea of using state money to search for the ivory-billed woodpecker, which was previously believed to be extinct. Now scientists say they've spotted the elusive crow-sized bird in the Panhandle.

It confused me to hear Harris talking about those silly environmentalists, because I knew he and others had worked relentlessly to get the state to spend millions for the Avatar property. That deal - made with help from The Nature Conservancy and more than $2 million from the county - is all about preserving our environment.

My own experience of the springs and Silver River is for the birds - the limpkins, little bl ...
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An old friend in Hospice
By Joe Byrnes on 10/21/2006 1:50 AM
Editor's Note: This column was published in today's paper. Frances died at 7:30 a.m. today, peacefully, in her sleep.

I went to see an old friend Tuesday, a feisty redhead, a Scottish lady, a pioneer in the news business, an advocate for Marion County's farm kids.

As a Star-Banner writer for decades and author every week of "That Reminds Me," Frances DeVore is a friend to many of you, as well.

She turned 92 last week.
Tuesday, Frances lay in a hospital bed at her house in Reddick. She had come home the night before, under Hospice care, after suffering kidney failure.

Schnitzel, her small black dog, stayed quietly under the bed.

Her stepdaughter, Penny Hull, leaned against the wall and her face was full of sadness and acceptance. The doctor had said Frances would die soon.

Tuesday afternoon, she was unr ...
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