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Published by Vero Beach 32963 Media, 2020-01-28 13:16:49

VB32963_ISSUE21_052616_OPT

VB32963_ISSUE21_052616_OPT

Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 51

INSIGHT GAMES & CO.

ACROSS 62 Feel limp DOWN 67 Hedda Hopper’s The Washington Post
64 Atty. follower 1 Crazy-quilt unit collection
1 Vincent 65 Marching-band 2 Harmonize SPOONERISM ANTHOLOGY By Merl Reagle
Gardenia, 3 Actress Prentiss 68 Scattered, as
to Cher, in assignment? 4 Cast part? seed
Moonstruck 70 Elly May 5 2-D measure
6 Two-time 69 Huey, Dewey,
5 A whiter shade of Clampett, e.g. and Louie
pale 72 Pothole sufferers: Wimbledon
winner Gibson 70 Asian desert
8 A whiter shade of abbr. 7 Bk. before Esther 71 On the inside of
black 73 Vientiane 8 Popular “action 76 Midge or punky
figure” 77 Type of bran
12 Shiny ID language 9 Weenie party 79 Chiffons hit, “___
17 Lab nutrient 74 Body of 10 Jennings, e.g.
18 River of shadoofs 11 Shaggy load- Fine”
19 New Rochelle knowledge puller 80 Military cap
75 Therefore 12 Galley with two 81 Go before
college 78 D-Day banks of oars 85 N.Y.C. Easter
20 Bill additions, on 13 Hubbub
beachhead 14 Emma in Terms Parade rte.
the Hill 80 Sting operation, of Endearment 86 That’s plural
21 Took a card? 15 Masonry-joint 87 A fugitive from the
24 Early work of 113 e.g. filler
82 Odysseus stuck 16 Spanish direction front
Across 18 With 44 Across, 88 English poet
25 Cartoon it in his ears very tidy
83 ___ colada 20 Lasagna cheese Thomas and
animator’s sheet 84 See the Thames 22 Informed American actress
26 Profanity 23 “I ... should have Jane
27 ___ Hashanah on a spoke ___” 93 Tel Aviv toast
28 Top gun (Shak.) 95 Where “all roads
29 Betty and Bea tandem? 28 Peck, e.g. lead”
88 Triticale, partly 31 1937 Oscar song, 96 Samantha’s mom
co-star 89 March time “Sweet ___” 98 Take (as an
30 Works as an 90 “That’s it!” 32 Ebb’s partner exam), in London
91 Singers do it fast 33 Exercise 100 Mass. team
army 92 Most wily bestseller, ___ 101 The bridge at
94 Cox cry Fat Remagen spans
podiatrist? 97 Trig. function 34 Wernher von ___ it
35 Tales of 99 Corvine cry 38 Words of vision? 102 Brags on
100 Mel in a merry 39 Cereal tidbit 103 Sprinkler feeders
Hoffmann’s 40 Sleuth McGee 104 ___ wild (run
Hoffmann mood? 42 At variance (with) amok)
36 Pilot’s console 108 Japanese theater 45 Sties 105 “God forgives;
abbr. 109 Mrs. Garrett on 46 Not working ___”
37 Acting John or 47 Broadway lighter? 106 Ill-fated Italian
Thelma The Facts of Life 48 Lethal slitherer liner,
38 Least cordial 110 1943 Red 50 Beasts of burden the Andrea ___
41 Eureka relative 51 France, formerly 107 Where Memphis
43 Pampers Skelton comedy, 52 Newspaper was
dampener I ___ It edition 108 It means “one-
44 See 18 Down 111 Perfectly 53 Silly billionth”
48 “I am grown 112 Goofy, e.g. 55 Took before 114 ___-December
peaceful ___ 113 Author Isaac Wapner romance
age” (Browning) 115 Patriotic role for 60 1980s pitcher 115 Travel folder?
49 Using a canoe to Mickey? Hammacher 116 Aztec treasure, in
find Sacajawea? 118 John Doe’s 62 Prizes for Mexico
54 Blood parts status Perlman 117 The Waste Land
55 Ornette 119 Raphael’s 63 Judd on Taxi poet’s monogram
Coleman’s specialita 66 Woman of Worms
120 Live in a dorm
instrument (with)
56 Case or well 121 Paper cut?
122 Sunflowerlike
preceder plant
57 WASP’s A 123 Go by
58 The non-Teller 124 Fan club, e.g.:
abbr.
feller? 125 “L’___, c’est moi”
59 Eye part
61 Barbarian’s term

of endearment?

The Telegraph

52 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

INSIGHT BACK PAGE

Are our plans for having kids any of your business?

BY CAROLYN HAX While I understand feeling defensive, please let
Washington Post yourself off the hook. There is, in fact, only one right
decision when it comes to childbearing, and you’ve
Dear Carolyn, made it: taking the responsibility seriously. Good for
you.
What do people really want

to hear when they ask when my

husband and I are going to have Dear Carolyn,

children? When I say we don’t My boyfriend and I live together. He travels for

plan to, the next question is, why work two to four days per week. When he’s gone I am

not? Do I tell them it was a tough decision to make and lonely and depressed. I have asked him to consider

one I find myself struggling with but know to be the a new job where he’s not on the road constantly. He

right one? That we can barely keep ourselves afloat fi- asks me to get off his back and says he’s only trying to

nancially or that we both have trouble keeping cool make a living. What do I do?

under pressure and that would be a rough situation for — Traveling Joe

a kid? Or a bunch of other reasons even harder to hear

than those? Dear ‘Traveling Joe’:
If he dumps you or dies, then what’s your plan?
It’s hard not to feel defensive. Fortunately, it’s not our Find a new man to lean on?
Single-source dependency is misery, be it on a
immediate family asking. drug or boyfriend or anything else. It means you’re
always begging someone for your happiness.
— Childless Couple There’s nothing wrong with missing someone,
maybe not even someone who wants you “off his
Dear 'Childless Couple': remember, if these were socially skilled people, your back.” But when you have absolutely no resources for
We could project what people want to know – I’d uterus wouldn’t be up for discussion in the first place. living fully in his absence, then you’re not just squan-
guess they’re just making conversation, oafishly – but dering valuable days of your life. You’re also denying
they know better than we do, so next time just ask But with people who do press on, you’re under no yourself the most profound source of strength: see-
them. Literally, “Why do you ask?” more obligation than you ever were (zero, by the way) ing value in yourself, and your time, independent of
If you can keep the defensiveness out of your to satisfy bystander curiosity. Instead, greet any at- anyone else.
voice, that’ll help preempt awkwardness, but it’s not tempt to prolong the discussion with: “I see. It’s such Such value means you’re not beholden to any one
a requirement. There’s something to be said for their a personal question that it still catches me off-guard.” person; you can address your own loneliness, avoid
knowing they’ve struck nerves, especially if it teaches This simple, uninflected truth says “butt out” without neediness, tell dismissive boyfriends to stuff it. 
them not to pry about babies again. the combative edge.
“Why do you ask?” is a rhetorical question, but
some people will respond with their reasons anyway; And then you can change the subject or excuse
yourself from the conversation entirely, whatever the
circumstances permit.

Living the tarpon life Contrary to the scenario this photo infers, this
tarpon was lucky. It beat the odds of nature and
BY KEN GRUDENS, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, INDIAN RIVER LAND TRUST; made it to a young teenager before being tagged
PHOTO BY DR. AARON ADAMS and released back into the Indian River Lagoon.
The chances for survival are not great for tarpon
NATURE as they move from one very different stage to the
next during their fascinating life cycle.

Tarpon are spawned in the ocean more than 100
miles out, and then as tiny, nearly transparent
larvae, are washed into the Indian River Lagoon
by the thousands. How do those that survived
this first traumatic wave of childhood continue
to stay alive from the time they are the size of
your pinky finger until young adulthood? The
answer: COASTAL WETLANDS!

Juvenile tarpon are adapted to breathe using
their air bladder, enabling them to live in low ox-
ygen environments in the upper reaches of the
salt marshes and mangrove forests found along
the Lagoon. This keeps them from falling prey
to their older relatives which must live in larger
wetland pools closer to the Lagoon. Once they
grow large enough to fend for themselves, they
move out into the Lagoon where they dodge
dolphins and other predators until they are fully
grown at over 6 feet and 200 pounds. Eventually
they make their way into the deep ocean to re-
peat this wondrous cycle.



54 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

HEALTH

Gulp! New research on moderate drinking is sobering

BY MARIA CANFIELD flaws in many of the studies have
Correspondent led to overestimating those ben-
efits.
If you enjoy consuming a moder-
ate amount of alcohol, you’ve likely The research is from the Centre for
been happy about the numerous Addictions Research at the Univer-
studies hailing the potential health sity of Victoria in Canada. The team
benefits of the habit, especially re- analyzed 87 studies that assessed
lated to the heart and to longev- the effects of moderate drinking on
ity. But new research suggests that longevity. They found that many of
the studies have flaws that, when

Dr. Vikranth Gongidi. PHOTO: LEAH DUBOIS

taken into account, eliminate the recently published in the Journal of
reported health benefits of moder- Studies on Alcohol and Drugs.
ate drinking. Their findings were “While in most cases moderate

Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 55

HEALTH

drinking is not harmful, alcohol and well-understood health impli- • High blood pressure may be a good option, and can even
consumption has more detriments cations. Globally, more than 3 mil- • Liver disease decrease their need for medication.”
than benefits as it relates to heart lion deaths each year are attribut- • Suicide
health,” says Vikranth Gongidi, DO, able to alcohol. The Mayo Clinic • Accidental serious injury or As a result of the Canadian and
who is affiliated with the Indian outlines these increased health death. UK studies, some experts believe
River Medical Center and is board- risks of heavy drinking: Dr. Gongidi agrees, and adds ar- that, when talking to their patients,
certified in adult cardiovascular rhythmia (abnormal heart rhythms, doctors should actively disavow any
diseases. “Red wine is often given • Certain cancers, including breast which includes atrial fibrillation) to notion that low or moderate alcohol
as an example of a heart-healthy cancer and cancers of the mouth, this list. He says his patients often use has benefits for cardiovascu-
drink, but the benefits come from pharynx, larynx and esophagus ask him if they should abstain from lar disease and longevity; unfortu-
the tannins and flavonoids it con- alcohol completely. “I tell them to nately, it doesn’t seem the purported
tains, not the alcohol content.” • Pancreatitis live their lives, but to think about benefits stand up to scrutiny.
• Sudden death if you already the potential side effects of alcohol
A comparison of moderate drink- have cardiovascular disease the way they would any medication. Dr. Gongidi’s office is located at
ers with “abstainers” was a main- • Heart muscle damage (alcoholic If the patient has cardiomyopathy, 801 Wellness Way, Suite 203, in Se-
stay of the studies analyzed by the cardiomyopathy) leading to heart or arrhythmia, or a-fib, abstinence bastian. The office phone is 772-778-
team in Canada. They found that failure 8687. 
the way most of the studies defined • Stroke
abstainers was flawed. On the sur-
face, it’s an easy definition: people
who don’t drink alcohol. But many
of the studies compared moderate
drinkers – by their definition, indi-
viduals who consume up to two al-
coholic beverages daily – with “cur-
rent” abstainers. The problem is
that current abstainers may include
people of poor health who used to
drink but have stopped, making ob-
jective comparisons impossible (in
scientific parlance, the results were
biased).

About that bias, lead researcher
Tim Stockwell, Ph.D., says, “A fun-
damental question is, who are these
moderate drinkers being compared
against?” Stockwell and his team
found that only 13 of the 87 stud-
ies avoided biases in the abstainer
group, and – most critically – those
13 studies showed no benefits of
moderate drinking on longevity.

The researchers also found that
it was “occasional” drinkers – indi-
viduals who consume less than one
alcoholic beverage a week – who
had the longest lifespan and, ac-
cording to the team, it is unlikely
that alcohol is the reason, as they
would be getting a “biologically in-
significant dose of alcohol,” accord-
ing to Stockwell.

While there is agreement that
moderate drinking is generally not
harmful, defining moderation can
be problematic. Indian River’s Dr.
Gongidi says he talks to patients
who consider themselves to be
moderate drinkers but are consum-
ing much more alcohol than they
think. He says, “Wine is a great ex-
ample. Two glasses of wine, three
or four times a week, is moderate
drinking for most people of average
or larger size. But the portion is crit-
ical – a glass of wine should be four
or five ounces, not the goblets many
restaurants serve.” For beer drink-
ers, 24 ounces three or four times a
week is generally considered mod-
erate; for mixed drinks, it’s two
drinks with the same frequency.

Excessive drinking has serious

56 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

HEALTH

Therapy brings relief for those with pulmonary fibrosis

BY TOM LLOYD Pulmonary rehabilitation specialist Karen Bleakley with there is no known cause or trigger.
Staff Writer patient Ruby Mitchell and Dr. Maldonado. PHOTO: LEAH DUBOIS There has been a laundry list of po-

78-year-old Vero resident Ruby The most obvious immediate symp- to respiratory failure, pulmonary hy- tential causes suggested over the years,
Mitchell has a serious respiratory dis- tom is shortness of breath but, accord- pertension and heart failure.” including lung tissue inflammation,
ease known as “idiopathic pulmonary ing to the American Lung Founda- exposure to radiation, exposure to
fibrosis.” tions, the condition “can lead to other And yet, no one knows what actually cigarette smoke, exposure to asbestos,
medical problems, including collapsed causes this disease, which is why the ingestion of certain chemotherapy and
There is no cure. lung, lung infections, blood clots in the term “idiopathic” is used: The word de- heart drugs and some antibiotics, but
For quite a while, Mitchell was lungs and lung cancer. It can also lead notes a disease or condition which ap- no definitive root cause has yet been
wheelchair-bound due to this breath- pears to arise spontaneously for which found.
stealing disease, but with the help of
Dr. Diego Maldonado and Karen Bleak- What Maldonado, who is board cer-
ley of the Indian River Medical Center’s tified in critical care medicine, inter-
pulmonary rehabilitation team, she’s nal medicine and pulmonary diseases,
managed to improve her mobility and has been able to do for Mitchell is to
function so much that she’s now join- accurately diagnose the problem and,
ing her daughter for a weekend get- using new medications, help slow the
away to Clearwater. progression of the disease.
To say that idiopathic pulmonary fi-
brosis is complex is a gross understate- Diagnosis can be challenging.
ment. The American Lung Foundation
The abridged version might go some- reports that about 140,000 Ameri-
thing like this: The alveoli – tiny air cans are diagnosed with idiopathic
sacs deep inside the lungs – and sur- pulmonary fibrosis each year, but
rounding lung tissues become hard, Maldonado thinks that number may
scarred and fibrous, losing the ability not include all those with the dis-
to absorb oxygen and pass it on to the ease.
rest of the body. “I think it’s probably under-di-
agnosed,” he says. “With just a sim-
ple X-ray or a simple CAT scan you

Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 57

HEALTH

couldn’t see it but with high-res CT they stop doing the activity. We try to
scans we can.” get them to a higher level of function –
even though they’re still going to have
Meanwhile, according to Maldona- shortness of breath – but at least their
do, a new drug that just hit the market daily living continues. I don’t expect
in 2015, nintedanib, is showing some them to run marathons or walk a mile
promise in helping to slow the progres- or run, or whatever. I just try to keep
sion of the disease. them level.”

That’s significant for patients like The overall prognosis for patients not
Mitchell who may not be good candi- receiving treatment for IPF isn’t good.
dates for lung transplants.
“Without treatment,” states Maldo-
The American Lung Foundation says nado, “the five-year survival rate is only
the disease mostly affects people in the 30 percent,” which means 70 percent
50 to 75 age bracket, but Maldonado will die within that five-year window.
points out that many transplant cen-
ters won’t undertake lung transplants While newer drugs are showing
on patients over 62 or 63 years of age. promise at slowing the course of the
disease, there’s no long-term data on
Moreover, Maldonado calls lung them yet.
transplantation “the most imperfect
organ transplant” adding that only In the meantime, portable oxygen
half of such transplants succeed. therapy, continued monitoring by phy-
sicians like Maldonado and the work
Meanwhile, Bleakley and the pul- of pulmonary rehab experts such as
monary rehab team have been work- Bleakley remain the best hope for Ruby
ing with Mitchell, too. Mitchell and other victims of the dis-
ease to be able to squeeze more week-
“If a patient can maintain some sort end getaways and everyday activities
of activity,” Bleakley claims, “it can into their lives.
help slow the progression. It doesn’t
cure it, but hopefully if you get sick – Dr. Diego Maldonado is with Indi-
say you came down with a bad cold or an River Medical Associates at 1155
you were put in a hospital – it hopefully 35th Lane, Suite 201 in Vero Beach.
will shorten your stay because you The phone number is 772-794-5800.
have a higher level of fitness. The IRMC pulmonary rehab pro-
gram is at 959 37th Place. The phone
“What happens with people with is 772-567-4311. 
lung disease,” Bleakley continues, “is
they get short of breath with activity so

58 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

ST. EDWARD’S

St. Ed’s Heim reflects on ‘remarkable journey’

BY RON HOLUB from those other courses because I Mason Heim. PHOTO BY DENISE RITCHIE
wanted to go into engineering.”
Correspondent well as a team and it was nice to go out every offensive and defensive line po-
This Saturday Heim will graduate in with a win.” sition. In lacrosse he played every-
St. Ed’s senior Mason Heim was one the top 10 percent of the Class of 2016. where. As a high schooler he started on
of those athletes a coach could plug in While in high school he also volun- The basketball season was a way for defense before moving to midfield and
anywhere at any time and count on a teered many hours toward community Heim to “wind down” from football. He finishing on attack.
performance that would be funda- service. Everyone on campus spoke had an approach to the sport that was
mentally sound and positively contrib- of his outstanding personal traits like grounded in reality and revealed what “It’s hard to explain when people ask
ute to the collective mission. loyalty, integrity, character, work eth- character is all about. me what position I play in lacrosse. I
ic, humility, intellect and friendship. played wherever they needed me. Mid-
His signature trademark was always Those qualities were most prominent- “I knew I wasn’t going to be a star field was my favorite because I got to
nothing short of complete dedication ly on display in athletics. player,” he said. “I really enjoyed just run up and down the field. It got tiring
to the cause of every Pirates sports playing basketball and not being super but it worked out the best for me.
team fortunate enough to have him as “I started at St. Edward’s in kindergar- competitive or one of the go-to guys.
a member. ten and it has been a really remarkable I had fun at practice, fun cheering on “I’m excited to be moving on to the
journey,” Heim said. “It’s been great to the team, and playing a few minutes next journey in my life, but nothing is
While Heim won numerous awards be able to play just about every single whenever I was needed.” going to be the same. Playing for the
and accolades playing football, basket- sport, and be involved in every club and St. Edward’s Pirates has been my thing
ball and lacrosse, he also managed his take all the classes I wanted to. The lacrosse season came next and for the past four years. It’s sad for it to
time carefully enough to excel academi- Heim switched back to full-throttle come to an end.” 
cally and enter the college of his choice. “Football was one of those things I mode. In football he played just about
thought would never end when I was
“When I started my senior year, playing my freshman year. You just
Georgia Tech was not even on my ra- kept coming back, but after this last
dar,” Heim explained. “I was looking season ended it really hit me that I will
at Vanderbilt, MIT and Villanova when never play football again.”
my counselor, Mrs. Sternberg, encour-
aged me to check out Georgia Tech. I Now he can let the bumps and bruis-
finally went up to Atlanta for a visit and es heal while ruminating about the
I really liked it there. enormous amount of time spent doing
the dirty work in the trenches on both
“The campus was great and the sides of the ball.
school met all of my requirements. It
was also meaningful for me to be able “Every season there were a lot of
to play lacrosse at the next level. It was a games when I would never come off
bonus when I found out that I could play the field. So I got to play a lot of foot-
for a top-ranked team at Georgia Tech.” ball. You just had to be flexible on the
fly. At times we had only 22 or 23 guys
Heim will study some form of engi- max. Some may think that was bad, but
neering and play club lacrosse for the honestly it was great because I became
Yellow Jackets. Those dual tracks fit close with everybody on the team.
perfectly and the preparation for both
was well designed. “Even though I didn’t want to play
football at the next level, I’m going to
“My first two years of high school miss it a lot. I played the sport for four
I took every different type of class years and really enjoyed it.”
I could,” Heim said, citing English,
math, history, a foreign language and Heim mentioned two games as his
science, to name a few. “When I en- all-time favorites on the gridiron. The
tered my junior year I started focusing first was a narrow 14-13 upset of 2A
more on the math and sciences route. powerhouse Victory Christian in his
I took computer science and physics sophomore year. The second was his
before moving ahead to calculus and final game in Pirate pads. He said, “I
AP physics. At that point I veered away will remember that forever. We played

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Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Style Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 59

Fashion may be art, but does it belong in a museum?

BY ROBIN GIVHAN
The Washington Post

There is a torrent of color. A rain- “Isaac Mizrahi: An Unruly History”
bow of hues. A virtual ode to pink. at the Jewish Museum. .
The most striking aspect of the Isaac
Mizrahi exhibition, on view at the T-shirts and inexpensive sweaters
Jewish Museum in New York through that he created for Target. Today it’s
Aug. 7, is the fashion designer’s effu- common for fancy designers to cre-
sive embrace of orange, grass green, ate one-off collections for mass mar-
teal and, of course, pink. Before visi- keters. But at the time when Mizrahi
tors get to the clothes, the sketches did it, designing for a lowbrow retailer
or the videos detailing Mizrahi’s was viewed as perilous – a move that
success, which most will recall as a would surely peel away the gloss from
starring role in “Unzipped,” they are the runway collection and lead to a
introduced to his nearly obsessive designer being cast out of fashion’s in-
desire to collect every possible hue in ner circle. Instead, Mizrahi enlarged
the rainbow in bits of wool, silk and that circle.
cotton. Examples of his fabric-swatch
collection, which he neatly stores in Before Miguel Adrover made frocks
slim boxes, are tacked to the walls of from discarded mattresses and Vete-
the exhibition’s opening gallery. The ments made DHL T-shirts chic, Mizra-
effect is akin to walking into a room- hi was inspired by freight elevator pads,
size kaleidoscope, and the inevitable re-creating them in silk and stitching
response is emotional rather than in-
tellectual. The color makes you smile. CONTINUED ON PAGE 60

Is that reason enough for a museum
to mount “Isaac Mizrahi: An Unruly
History”? Does that make it art?

The Mizrahi show arrives at the
same time as a new documentary
about a blockbuster fashion exhibi-
tion, as well as another new upcoming
costume installation in the works, and
all three make arguments about why
fashion is embraced by museums: It is
beautiful. It has cultural significance.
It is a hub of creative experimentation.

But is fashion art? The answer is,
perhaps: It doesn’t matter.

Mizrahi began his fashion career
in 1987 when he launched his name-
sake brand and began to delight audi-
ences with a host of innovations that
only now, all these years later, serve as
evidence of just how prescient he was.
Mizrahi mixed his lavishly embroi-
dered, high-end creations with simple

60 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Style Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

Iris van Herpen, laser-cut hand-embroidered celebration of mul- While it also explored the planning Flying saucer dress by Issey Miyake.
silicone feathers on cotton. ticulturalism that today would surely for the accompanying gala, with all
churn up cries of appropriation. the stresses of seating charts and high- Some of the garments are breath-
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 59 maintenance guests – at least one of taking. Others are unnerving. Some
There are ballgowns in bright whom tends to spend too much time of them, such as those by Dutch de-
them into an evening gown. He stared blue lumberjack plaid and his “Baby on his cellphone at such events – the signer Iris van Herpen, are both. She
down political correctness with his Bjorn” ballgown – a full-skirted red heart of the film is curator-in-charge is best known for her use of 3-D print-
totem-pole dress — a postmodern, satin dress that comes with a match- Andrew Bolton, who lovingly and a bit ing and her ability to capture our bi-
ing baby carrier. There are wry jokes obsessively tends to the clothes and ology and our humanity in silicone,
and elegant nods to pragmatism, but navigates museum politics and cul- latex and plastic.
mostly the exhibition celebrates the tural land mines.
pleasure of clothes, and that is enough Museums have come to love fash-
to sustain a visitor through a handful The intellectually compelling film ion exhibitions. They draw crowds,
of galleries punctuated by Mizrahi’s explores the museum’s uncomfort- attracted by the clothes’ beauty, as
charming sketches and snippets of his able relationship with fashion. But well as their emotional accessibility.
cameos on television and in film. instead of making a dogged argument After all, we don’t just admire or dis-
that fashion is art, it focuses on the cuss fashion. We wear it. “Manus x
Maybe that’s enough. If Jeff Koons’ power of fashion to unite two dispa- Machina” will test whether audiences
“Puppy,” a giant terrier made of flow- rate cultures – China and the West, feel as profound a connection to an
ers, evoking more joy than gravitas, whose designers are inspired by the exhibition that questions the impor-
can land in the Guggenheim Museum fables, cliches and romance of a coun- tance of the human touch in shaping
Bilbao, there’s no reason Mizrahi can’t try some of them barely know. Muse- the clothes that, in turn, help us de-
qualify for museum status. ums are a home for cultural debate, fine ourselves. Fashion may – or may
that much is certain, and fashion is not – be art, but that might also be too
The subject of “The First Monday portrayed as a facilitator of it. narrow a characterization. 
in May” is the lead-up to the annual
Costume Institute exhibition at the Bolton will once again position
Metropolitan Museum of Art. There fashion in a wider context with the
are astonishingly beautiful garments, upcoming “Manus x Machina: Fash-
but the essence of the film, which ion in the Age of Technology,” which
opened last week, is how it chronicles opens to the public May 5. It will ex-
the physical labor and the mental for- plore the tension between garments
titude that were required to mount made by hand and those made by
“China: Through the Looking Glass,” machine, between haute couture and
which set a new bar for the number of ready-to-wear. Which is better? “Pro-
visitors to one of the museum’s fash- ponents of the hand see it as sym-
ion exhibitions. bolic of exclusivity, spontaneity and
individuality, while opponents see it
Thursday, Friday, Saturday as symbolic of elitism, the cult of per-
sonality, and a detrimental nostalgia
20% Off for past craftsmanship,” Bolton re-
marked earlier this year during a pre-
All Spring and Summer view of the exhibition. “Proponents
of the machine see it as symbolic of
Hats and Handbags progress, democracy and mass pro-
duction, while opponents see it as
symbolic of inferiority, dehumaniza-
tion and one-dimensionality.”

The goal will be to envision the ways
in which man and machine work joint-
ly: solving problems, improving design
and moving the fashion conversation
forward. No wonder that Apple, which
forever altered how humans interact, is
sponsoring the exhibition.

kate spade • eric javits • michael kors • gigi ny • hammitt
helen kaminski • bosom buddy • etienne aigner • vince camuto
streets ahead • vc signature • whiting and davis • inge christopher

and more

Shoe Salon and Boutique Sale ends May 28th

3385 ocean drive vero beach
772/231-2772

harbour bay plaza sewall’s point

Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Style Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 61

2016 Cannes Film Fest: Overall best and worst dressed

Julia Roberts Juliette Binoche Blake Lively Eva Longoria Kirsten Dunst Jessica Chastain Naomi Watts Kate Moss

On the south coast of France, beauti- ous red-carpet walks and parties. Move
ful and talented people gathered at the over Met Gala — this is the best red
2016 Cannes Film Festival to celebrate carpet of the summer. (It helps that the
the string of movie debuts with glamor- whole thing lasted 12 days.) 

T Misha Barton Charlize Theron Milla Jovovich Anna Kendrick
H
E

Riley Keough Chloe Sevigny W Marion Cotillard Julianne Moore
O
R
S
T

Kristen Stewart Kendall Jenner Soko Katy Perry

62 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

DINING REVIEW

Cioppino at Cioppino’s: Gold standard for seafood stew

BY TINA RONDEAU food restaurant, with a pretty stan- Wharf – as a bit of a tourist trap. I was a Cioppino’s
dard Italian menu. bit skeptical at first, but I would gladly
Columnist go back. The portions were very gen- Hours:
Within minutes of being seated, we erous, and our server was pleasant Daily from 11 am to 10 pm
I love fisherman’s stews. were sipping wine as we dipped deli- and efficient.
When a restaurant’s offerings cious San Francisco sourdough bread Address:
include an assortment of fish and into a dish of olive oil. The crusty If you find yourself in San Francisco 400 Jefferson Street,
shellfish in a broth, they’ve got me sourdough – baked a few blocks up and are craving some hearty cioppino,
right there. the street at the Boudin Bakery – is the I doubt many places are better. San Francisco, CA
Vero Beach has several restaurants real deal!
that do a good job with this kind of I welcome your comments, and en- Phone:
dish. But on a recent visit to San Fran- For those not familiar with cioppino, courage you to send feedback to me at 415-775-9311
cisco, I decided it was time to recali- this dish supposedly was invented by [email protected].
brate my taste buds. fishermen who would toss their left-
After all, how can you visit the City over catch into a pot at the end of the The reviewer dines anonymously
by the Bay and not try the quintes- day. Just about every cioppino starts at restaurants at the expense of Vero
sential San Francisco cioppino? And with tomato sauce and shellfish, but Beach 32963. 
where better to savor a cioppino than the exact recipe varies considerably
at the restaurant of the same name? from place to place.
Now, I’m sure a few of you are al-
ready dashing off an email telling me Cioppino’s version of their signa-
I missed out on some other San Fran- ture dish ($29.95) is a bountiful array
cisco restaurant with a better or more of dungeness crab, clams, mussels,
authentic cioppino. Alas, I did not have snapper, calamari, shrimp and toma-
a month to sample all the contenders. toes braised in a fennel-scented stew.
Instead, I decided to take my cue on I went for the “lazy style,” where the
this from Mario Batali, who said he crab is shelled in the kitchen instead
could eat Cioppino’s signature dish of doing it myself.
“every day.” How can you argue with
Mario Batali? The dishes server Andrew brought to
So off we went to Cioppino’s, a our table were stuffed with very fresh
slightly dowdy, family-owned restau- and tender seafood, and the tomato
rant. With red-checkered table cloths, broth was well seasoned and extremely
it has more the ambiance of a classic flavorful. This succulent maritime stew
Italian-American bistro than of a sea- certainly set the standard for those I
will have during the coming year.

Some may view Cioppino’s – be-
cause it is located on Fisherman’s

Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 63

WINE COLUMN

Bored with pinot grigio? Try these Italian whites

BY SUSY ATKINS pepper and lemon zest looks set to
refresh us plenty over the summer.
The Telegrapht
Do try arneis, a Piemontese grape
I don’t want to be too rude about pi- that tastes of yellow pears and car-
not grigio. The best ones (usually from ries a dry nuttiness, even a dab of li-
Italy’s northern regions of Friuli and quorice on the finish. One for simple
Trentino-Alto Adige) have some char- risottos.
acter – green apples, pears, a citrus
streak. Back down in the sunny south-
ern regions, including Sicily, there’s
Pecorino’s crisp white-pepper and fiano with its cheerful apricot and
lemon zest looks set to refresh us plen- pineapple notes. Just right for roast
ty over the summer chicken.

The rest are, if not actually bad, just Cortese, the grape that makes Gavi,
drearily dilute. Cheap pinot grigio has will never set the world alight, but
to be Italy’s blandest wine. There are there’s no doubt that most Gavis of-
far more exciting Italian whites. fer more crisp snap and mineral edge
than most pinot grigios.
Take falanghina, grown in Cam-
pania in the south. With its peach And I like the lemony whites of the
and yellow-plum fruit and aniseed Soave region and lime-laced verdic-
hints, this is another dry, usually chio.
unoaked wine, but far more note-
worthy. It’s food-friendly, too – think Moncaro Verdicchio dei Castelli di
creamy pasta sauces and lightly Jesi Classico is another wine worth ex-
smoked fish. ploring. There’s fresh lime and a bite
of red apple in this vivacious young
Falanghina Terradora, one ex- white; it easily beats pinot grigio at a
ample of this, is a fresh but satisfy- similar price.
ing white with ripe yellow fruits and
subtle nuances of nuts, aniseed and And Caggiano Greco di Tufo Devon
toast. is pricey, but gorgeously rich, aromat-
ic and apricotty with a dry, long finish.
Then there’s pecorino, named after
the sheep that graze in the eastern With these all jostling for space,
Marche vineyards, which is having many of them well priced, is there re-
a bit of a moment. Its crisp white- ally room for boring old pinot grigio
anymore? 

64 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

Vero & Casual Dining

Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 65

Vero & Casual Dining

Thai & Japanese Cuisine Live Music and Jazz
Sushi
Tues – Thurs, 6 pm - 9 pm
Beer, Wine, Sake & Fri & Sat, 6 pm - 10 pm
Full Liquor Bar
$2 Off Martini Tuesdays
Dine in & Take Out
Lunch

Mon - Sat 11:30am - 3 pm

Dinner

Nightly 4:30 pm -10 pm

713 17th Street|(17th Shoppes Center)
Phone:770-0835|Fax:770-0831

66 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

Vero & Casual Dining

EAT LOCAL. (Early)

Introducing Osceola Bistro’s Early Bird Menu

Monday - Friday from 4:30pm - 6:00pm.

Dine on delicious, fresh, local food at a great value.
All meals are $16 and include choice of daily soup or a house or caesar salad.
Dine in only. Must be seated by 6pm.

Menu items include:
• Local Shrimp & Grits
• Steak & Fries
• Local Fish & Chips
• Stuffed Pork Loin aka “Charlotte’s Favorite”
• Crispy Salmon
• Potato Fried Dirty Oyster Dinner

Crispy Salmon Local Shrimp & Grits

Book your reservation online at OsceolaBistro.com or call us at (772) 569-1299.

Mon - Fri (lunch & dinner): 11a - 9:30p | Sat (dinner only): 5:30p - 9:30p | Sun: Closed

2045 13th Avenue | Downtown Vero Beach Follow us...

(across the street from the post office in downtown Vero Beach)

Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 67

68 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

ON FAITH

‘Hippo’ hip hooray to those who befriend outsiders

BY REV. DRS. CASEY AND BOB BAGGOTT Now, Mzee had reason to ing thousands of tour-
Columnists be wary of the newcomer, ists a year, who stood
Owen. Mzee had been buf- in wonderment by their
A massive earthquake beneath feted about by hippos in enclosure, watching
the Indian Ocean occurred al- the past and was left with a the unlikely pair.
most eight years ago to this day. It dangerously cracked shell.
launched a tsunami of enormous So you might have ex- Today, from the dis-
and deadly proportions. Roughly pected old Mzee to lumber tances formed by thou-
228,000 people were killed, prop- away at the sight of his new sands of miles, eight
erty damage was extensive, and the enclosure mate, but he years, and the perspec-
toll taken among the residents of didn’t. When little Owen, tive of our own species,
the animal kingdom was incalcu- who was frightened and we wonder, too. Are we as
lable. It is perhaps because the trag- lonely, sought out old Mzee likely as the old tortoise
edy was so great and so widespread, and followed him every- was, when encountering
and left us with such feelings of where, Mzee seemed to an outsider in trouble, to
hopelessness, that the story of the understand the little hip- offer our help? Isn’t an
unlikely survival of one baby hippo po needed a friend badly. offer of help to the vul-
became a worldwide phenomenon. Mzee tolerated Owen; he nerable especially awk-
even seemed to take on ward or unlikely when
The little hippo was stranded the role of parenting him. the vulnerable one is so
alone along the seashore when the When Mzee made vocal different from ourselves?
waters receded. Rescue workers sounds, Owen mimicked Yet the ancient prophets
caught the 600-pound disoriented them. When Mzee lo- of Israel urged the people
baby and relocated it to Haller Park, cated plants worth eat- to remember the outsid-
a wildlife refuge in Bamburi, Kenya. ing, Owen ate them, too. ers and the vulnerable,
The little hippo, now called Owen, When Mzee settled down as caring for them was
was placed in an enclosure without for a nap, little Owen the behavior that most
other hippos, which might have at- curled himself around pleased and honored God.
tacked a stranger. The only other the old tortoise’s shell, Perhaps we could chal-
consistent occupant in Owen’s en- cuddled up, and slept. lenge ourselves in the
closure was a 130-year-old giant tor- days ahead to consider
toise named Mzee. The twosome became our capacity for offering
inseparable, prompting loyalty, affection, and as-
wildlife refuge workers sistance to others unlike
to comment that a large, ourselves. Who are the
elderly, solitary reptile outsiders we find hard
and a young, gregari- to befriend? Who are the
ous mammal are not ex- insignificant, the invis-
pected to tolerate each ible, the unlovable, or the
other well, let alone de- misunderstood to whom
velop a supportive re- we might offer some un-
lationship. But Mzee’s expected friendship? We
surprisingly kind ac- just might find ourselves
tions had in all likeli- capable of making a haven
hood saved Owen’s life. for a “hippo” or two our-
Across the next few selves.
years Owen and Mzee After all, if a 130-year-
became the hit of the old tortoise can save a life,
wildlife refuge, attract- couldn’t we? 

Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 69

PETS

Bonz says old Miss Pugsy is still lovin’ life

Hi Dog Buddies! of the house, but that is of with much bigger dogs (which
no consequence, because
You know that story about a person I have everything I need most of them are). One day a
who climbs a mountain and sitting at right here: three beds,
the top is this really, really old man, food and water, and my human friend stopped by with
saying all sorts of wise things about life blue elephant. It’s very
and stuff? Zen. And Dad’s work sta- a hunting dog. The moment I
tion is here, too. I am
Well, that’s what I was thinking about indeed fortunate. So, saw him, I felt I needed to pro-
yapping with Pugsy Snel. She’s, like, a young fella, what would
great, great, great granddog – 17 years you like to know?” tect my reckless little sister, so
in People, which is, like, more than 100
in Dog. Pugsy’s a Pug, of course, who “Whatever you wanna I leaped up to bite him on the
lives with her human, Alan. She’s deaf, share about your life.”
almost blind, and doesn’t really walk nose. I never actually reached
all that much. As she puts it, “I enjoy “I’ll do my best. My
the reclining position.” She stands memory comes and his nose, and no blood was shed,
pretty good, though. goes, you know. First place I remember
living was Plant City. Mom acquired but he got the message.”
When her Dad opened the door, she me from somewhere near Vero Beach.
was standing there, swaying a little. So now I have come Full Circle.” “Way to go!” I exclaimed.
“Welcome to our home, young fella,”
she said in a soft, snuffly little voice. “I “Pawsome!” “I only venture outdoors to Do
wanted to be right here to greet you. But “Indeed. We three lived in Tampa.
my legs give out on me these days, so, if Then Dad moved to Las Vegas. After My Duty and get some fresh air.
you’ll forgive me, I’ll mostly be sitting.” six months, I missed him so much, a
friend took me out to be with Dad. I Pugsy. PHOTO BY LEAH DUBOIS I’m not a puppy any more, you
“By all means! I’m delighted to meet can tell you, Vegas is like nowhere else. know. I try to take care of myself,
you, Miss Pugsy,” I told her, as her Dad Lights, noise, colors, people every-
gently picked her up. where, all the time. And feathers. Not a lot of wolf in him.” She was reserve my energy. I mostly sleep
really my kind of place, but interesting.
“You’ll have to speak up, young fella. “At any rate, after three years, Dad getting that faraway look, so I hastily during the day, waiting for Dad to
My hearing’s not so good. This is my and I went on a Big Adventure: We
Dad, Alan.” drove all the way to here. Dad created changed the subject. get home. And I ALWAYS sense when
a special place for me next to him,
We all sat down in the sunny front with lots of fluffy comforters. I was his “What kinda food do you like?” I he’s leaving or coming home. I arise
room which was, Pugsy explained, Official Navigator. We saw many won-
her room. She curled up in her Dad’s drous sites along the way. It was mem- asked, with stunning originality. promptly at 4:30 a.m. I’m Dad’s alarm
lap, leaning against him, her eyes half orable, just Dad and me.”
closed. I knew she’d had the typical “Wow, I’d love to take a road trip like “Since I have hardly any teeth, I get clock. He takes me out, prepares my
black Pug face and ears once, but now that, Miss Pugsy,” I said. “So, tell me
she’s mostly a pretty cream color. Even about your friends.” Merrick’s. It’s soft. My favorite flavor is breakfast, then goes back to sleep.”
though she was small, slim and wob- “Ah, yes! I met Walter at a Passover
bly, there was something about her Seder in Lake Worth. We were admir- Chicken Pot Pie. Dad says he knows I’m “Any words of wisdom?” I asked.
that was – what’s that word humans ing each other’s yarmulkes. He’s a Pug,
use – Serene. Just sitting there with her too. He has become quite enamored of doing OK as long as I gobble it all up. “I would have to say, ‘Don’t Engage
made me feel real comfortable. me. In Vegas, there was Bear. We really
had a thing. But he was a rambler. Had Since I can’t really see or hear, he puts in Risky Behavior’; ‘A Treat in the Paw is
“My Dad fixed this room up for me. I
can’t make it up the steps into the rest my food in my dish and then brings it Worth Two in the Pantry’; ‘Remember

to me. I stick my nose in the bowl and to Stop and Smell the Fire Hydrants’;

Dad walks me over to my dining area. and, of course, ‘Wag More, Bark Less!’”

We discovered the BEST dog treats on Heading home, I was feeling so

the PLAnet. They’re chocolate, like a peaceful, I decided to get out my yoga

soft fluffy cupcake.” mat and practice my Downward Fac-

“You seem so calm and peaceful,” I ing Dog pose.

observed. “Have you always been that

way?” Till next time,

“You’ll have to speak up, young fella, The Bonz
I didn’t quite catch that.”

“Oh, sorry, Miss Pugsy.” I repeated

the question. Don’t Be Shy
“I’ve always been rather Zen. Dad

calls me Little Buddha. But I can get
riled up. For example, I spent my very We are always looking for pets with
early years with my younger step-sis- interesting stories.
ter Baby, a Pekingese. We were com- To set up an interview, email
plete opposites. She was a scrappy [email protected].
street dog, loved to pick fights, even

We always are deeply honored when we one of the veterinarians at Divine Animal hensive examination using equipment that well as surgical procedures, orthopedics,
are “THE CHOSEN” Animal Hospital to be Hospital, you have our undivided attention. allows you to see everything they see. dermatological procedures, cardiology,
your precious pet’s practitioners. We feel We perform the thorough examination oncology, radiology, ultrasound, endosco-
hugely responsible to keep your a pet part necessary to give you all the best options The Doctor does not set a maximum py, ophthalmology, complete laboratory,
of your family for as long as possible while and recommendations. You can then make time for the examination. Our doctor will neurology, stem cell therapy, and a full
having a quality life. educated decisions. be with you until your pet is ready to be non-invasive pain control therapy program.
released.
We are dedicated to spending time Minimally, our routine appointments are Our promise is to be fully committed to
with you and your pet so you can see for scheduled for the Doctor to be with you We are pleased to be a hospital versus a the health and welfare of our pet patients.
yourselves our commitment to being that for 30 minutes after our veterinary nurses clinic. This allows us to do all the proce- What we offer is a rarity indeed but we
life-long dependable advocate. have worked up your pet’s history . dures right here in our facility. Yes, we are love it! We are fueled by an amazing pas-
available to our respected clients 24/7. sion, your pet’s trust
When your pet is scheduled to see The Doctor then performs a compre-
We offer all wellness treatments as

70 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

CALENDAR

ONGOING Master’s Academy Fife and Drum Corps, wreath in recognition of World Oceans Day, 5:30 p.m. 11 5K Run/Walk Race Summer Reading
laying ceremony, and keynote speaker Lt. Gen. at FAU Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute Kick-Off, 7 a.m. registration/8 a.m. race
Vero Beach Museum of Art: Nature Illumi- William Welser, USAF, Ret. 772-633-6298 Johnson Education Center Auditorium. Free; no at Brackett Library hosted by IRC Library System
nated: Landscapes and Still Lifes by Heade and registration required. 772-242-2293 and Friends of IRC Library, followed by Fitness
his Contemporaries thru June 5. 772-231-0707 JUNE and Literacy Fair. Free event. 772-770-5060
9 2016 National Philanthropy Day Nomina-
MAY 3|4 Summer Nights Comedy Zone tions Workshop, 8 a.m., Northern Trust 11 Youth Guidance Tropical Night Luau, 7
Experience with comedians Ron Bank. 772-205-7650 p.m. at Grand Harbor Golf Club, with tropi-
27 Classic Car Show presented by Main Feingold and Doug Almeida on Waxlax Stage at cal Caribbean night buffet, 3-drink tickets, music by
Street Vero Beach and Veterans Coun- Riverside Theatre, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. $16 9 Hurricane Preparedness Luncheon featur- Gypsy Land Band and auctions. $125. 772-226-3098
cil of Indian River County, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. along -$18. Summertime games and free music at Live ing Meteorologist Steve Weagle, hosted by
14th Ave. and 23rd St. in conjunction with MSVB in the Loop. 772-231-6990 IRC Chamber of Commerce, Noon at Riverside 17|18 Riverside Children’s Theatre
Downtown Friday in recognition of Memorial Day Theatre. $25. 772-567-3491 presents Disney’s Aladdin, Jr.
weekend. To register a car call 772-643-6783. 4 Donuts with Dad, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the at Anne Morton Theatre. $6 & $12. 772-231-6990
Vero Beach Book Center, with donuts, juice, 9-12 Vero Beach Wine and Film Fes-
29 Vero Beach Skate Park Alliance Fund- coffee and children’s activities. 772-569-2050 tival, with Daytime Screenings 17|18 Summer Nights Comedy
raiser, Noon to 8 p.m. outdoor event at at Heritage Center and Vero Beach Museum of Zone Experience with co-
The Stamp, with live music, food vendors, BMX 4 23rd Annual Blue Water Open Offshore Art, plus Thurs. Kickoff Night with Vino Veritas medians John Carfi and Brian Thomas on Waxlax
and skate demos to raise funding to construct a Charity Fishing Tournament, with awards Vintner Dinners at Citrus Grillhouse and Costa Stage at Riverside Theatre, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30
skate park at Leisure Square. 772-559-1205 at Capt’n Butcher’s Waterfront Resort to ben- d’Este; Fri. Cinema Uncorked Opening Night p.m. $16 -$18. Summertime games and free mu-
efit Sebastian Exchange Club programs for Bash at Riverside Theatre; Sat. Winemaker & sic at Live in the Loop. 772-231-6990
30 Memorial Day Ceremony hosted by the prevention of child abuse. $250 per boat. Filmmaker Panels, Costa d’Cinema Grand Wine
Veterans Council of Indian River Coun- 772‐783‐5822 Tasting at Costa d’Este, Bordeaux & Brews at 18 Waterlily Celebration, 8:30 a.m. to
ty, 9 a.m. at Veterans Memorial Island Sanctuary, Orchid Island Brewery, Vero After Dark at Proj- 2 p.m. at McKee Botanical Garden,
with music by Vero Beach High School Band and 8 ‘Plastic is Forever’ designer and conserva- ect Space 1785; Sun. Bubbly Sunday Brunch at showcases the state’s largest collection of water-
tion advocate Barbara de Vries will speak Osceola Bistro and Fete Finale at Blue Star Bras- lilies in bloom plus repotting demonstrations, a
serie. Details at vbwff.com waterlily photo contest and plant sale. Standard
Solutions from Games Pages ACROSS DOWN admission. 772-794-0601
in May 19, 2016 Edition 7 SHORTAGE 1 SHRINE Crossword Page 51 (WIDE WORLD OF WORDS)
8 OARS 2 GRUESOME 20 Scholastic Summer Reading Tour, 1
9 SILENT 3 CAPTIVE p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Vero Beach Book
10 INFORM 4 PERIL Center, with costumed characters, children’s ac-
11 RESOLVE 5 ROOF tivities and crafts. 772-569-2050
12 SCENT 6 DRYRUN
15 SWEET 13 CONFOUND 24|25 Riverside Children’s Theatre
17 TURNIPS 14 OUTCROP presents Disney’s Aladdin Kids
20 FINALE 16 WEIGHT at Anne Morton Theatre. $6 & $12. 772-231-6990
22 CHOIRS 18 PHRASE
23 THUS 19 BEIGE 25 Vero Beach Air Show Food Fest coordi-
24 GOODNESS 21 ALSO nated by Buggy Bunch featuring Blue An-
gels pilots, officers and enlisted personnel and Air
Sudoku Page 50 Sudoku Page 51 Crossword Page 50 Show civilian performers plus 30 food trucks and
entertainment, 5 to 9 p.m. at Riverside Park. Free.

VERO BEACH 32963 SERVICE DIRECTORY

Advertising Vero Beach Services | If you would like your service to appear in our directory, please call 772-633-0753

ECCO • FLORSHIEM • THINK • DANSKO • MERRELLS
TROTTERS • HELLE • SPERRY • BROOKS • NEW BALANCE
OOFOS • NAOT • MBT • BIRKENSTOCK • ROCKPORTS
LA PLUME • FINN COMFORT

This directory gives small business people eager to provide services to the beachside community an opportunity to make themselves known to island readers at an affordable cost. This
is the only service directory mailed each week during season to all 11,000+ homes on the Vero Beach barrier island. If you are interested in a listing in the Vero Beach 32963 Service

Directory, please contact marketing representative Kathleen Macglennon at
[email protected] or call 772-633-0753.

YACHTSMAN’S DREAM HOME
IS BREATHTAKING AT EVERY TURN

101 Springline Drive in the Anchor: 5-bedroom; 7.5-bath, 9,000-square-foot waterfront house listed
with Chris and Nancy Hendricks of Treasure Coast Sotheby’s International Realty for $6,100,000.
Contact: 772-321-6931

72 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

REAL ESTATE

Yachtsman’s dream home is breathtaking at every turn

BY SIOBHAN MCDONOUGH my goodness, wouldn’t that be a won-
Staff Writer derful place to build a house?!’ ”

It’s a dream house – a virtual pal- Indeed, it was. At the time, Condon
ace, spacious and yet cozy, where a and his wife Kathy were living on the
family is destined to thrive, unreel- ocean side in the Moorings.
ing endless amounts of joyful mem-
ories in a setting that’s unbelievably “The bottom line is that the world
beautiful. turned in the right way, and we ac-
quired the property,” he says.
The Condons certainly created
many memories during their 12 years It took two years to design and
in the luxurious waterfront house build the waterfront home with vault-
they built at 101 Springline Drive. ed/cathedral ceilings, crown mold-
A yachtsman’s delight situated on a ings, custom closets, entertainment
1.12-acre riverside lot in the presti- spaces, large cabana and four-car
gious Anchor gated community, the garage. Designed by architect David
house features 5 bedrooms, 6 full Krumbhaar and built by Carol Bows-
er in 2004, this house is as solid and
beautiful as they come.

baths, 3 half-baths and 9,000 square “It was our dream home, our pal-
feet of air-conditioned living space ace,” said Kathy Condon. “A part of it
that epitomizes luxury living on the is very regal. It’s our home but it’s very
barrier island. much a palace.”

The two-story house has a 250-foot “It’s very calming, very peaceful,
seawall along a wide, deep-water ca- very homey,” she added.
nal flowing into the Intracoastal Wa-
terway. There is a private dock with Chris Condon says the versatility
two lifts that can accommodate a of the house is remarkable – you can
100-foot yacht, making it all the more find quiet places to work or engross
enticing to a seaworthy owner. yourself in projects and have privacy
and yet still enjoy beauty. There are
“The house was a fulfillment of a abundant areas to socialize as well.
dream in a sense,” said Chris Condon,
reflecting on the home’s history. “We On top of the thoughtful layout
had not moved around extensively in of the house and the aesthetic it of-
the past. I saw the property when it fers, an important aspect is the solid
was a vacant lot in the late ’80s when construction. The house and other
my dad and I first came into Vero. I structures, including the cabana and
noticed the location and thought, ‘Oh pool, are supported by concrete pil-
ings. There are some 147 pilings that

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Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 73

REAL ESTATE

extend 40 feet into ground. “If the is- a spacious formal dining room with
land washes away, the house will be tray ceiling, graceful columns and
there,” said Chris Condon. triple-crown molding for flair. Locat-
ed strategically close to the wet bar
Enter the home through solid cher- and kitchen, the dining room is ideal
ry wood double doors into an inviting whether you enjoy a small intimate
two-story foyer with stately columns meal or host a dinner party.
that is accented by an iron staircase
and Italian marble floors. To the Entering the first-floor master
right is an office/den with mahogany suite, one can’t help but be mesmer-
floors, custom cherry built-ins and ized by views of the canal beyond the
tray ceiling. pool and patio. Two dressing rooms
with center islands, built-in racks and
The formal living boasts abundant dressing area offer space and a nice
natural light from the French doors environment to think about what to
leading to the pool and spa, along wear that day or evening.
with serene water views.
The master bath is a relaxing re-
Just off the foyer and living room is

74 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

REAL ESTATE

treat with dual vanities, glass-en- is a full bath and bedroom. closet. An elevator provides transpor- The house sits on two lots with the
closed shower with double shower Three sets of French doors lead to tation to the second floor. Otherwise, 250 feet of water frontage with sea
heads, soaking tub, makeup vanity there are front and back staircases. wall. Beautiful sunsets and water
and water closet. the patio and pool area from the fam- views are everywhere.
ily room, which has an atmospheric The second floor also features a
A bonus room in the master suite coral fireplace and cypress vaulted spacious media/recreation room The Anchor is a private community
can be used as an exercise room, ceiling. with built-in entertainment center. within The Moorings with manned
nursery or office. There’s a large balcony where beauti- 24-hour security.
Outside, a cabana bar creates the ful views await you.
The kitchen offers top-of-the-line perfect space for serving drinks and Country club membership is avail-
stainless steel appliances including snacks poolside. Gorgeous tropi- Also on the second story: Complete, able, offering a spectacular club-
double wall ovens, microwave, extra cal landscaping surrounds the pool separate living quarters with kitchen- house, yachting, golf, tennis, fitness
wide refrigerator/freezer, compactor and spa in this dreamy backyard ette, bedroom and bathroom, provid- center, spa, resort-style pool, dining
and dishwasher. Stunning granite paradise. ing the perfect space for a nanny’s and social events.
graces the counters of the soft-close suite or mother-in-law’s suite.
cherry wood cabinetry with ample The private dock with two lifts “When our children were in college,
storage space, wine racks and wine make for easy access to your boat A four-car garage and large parking they brought their friends home,”
cooler. A breakfast nook overlooks from the house. pads offer ample storage for vehicles said Kathy Condon. “We’d have eight
the patio and water. and other purposes. Attached to the college students come here ... they’d
Two additional bedrooms can be garage is yet another guest suite with have fun at the house. And my mother
Just off the kitchen and family room found on the second floor. Each fea- sitting area and full bathroom. lived with us. It was wonderful having
tures an en suite bath and walk-in

Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 75

REAL ESTATE

her there. Ours was the Thanksgiving “It will take a very discriminat-
and Christmas house.” ing buyer for this house,” said Nan-
cy Hendricks, realtor with Treasure
“Everything just flows,” she said of Coast Sotheby’s International Re-
the floor plan. “We had a ping-pong alty. “This home is the perfect house
table outdoors, a billiard table up- for someone who wants an outdoor
stairs. It’s ideal for a very active, vi- life who may also be a car collector,
brant young family or else, an older yachtsman or have a family.” 
family with a lot of grandchildren.”

VITAL STATISTICS
101 SPRINGLINE DRIVE

Subdivision: The Anchor, in the
Moorings

Year built: 2004
Lot size: 1.12-acres
Home size: 9,008 square feet

under air
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 6 full baths; 3 half-

baths
Waterfront: 250 lineal feet of
water frontage with seawall
Additional features: Private
dock with two boat lifts (20,000
lb. and 4,000 lb.); pool with spa;
large cabana building; four-
car garage; built-in generator;

elevator, fireplace
Listing agency: Treasure Coast
Sotheby’s International Realty
Listing agents: Chris and Nancy

Hendricks: 772-321-6931
Listing price: $6,100,000

76 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

REAL ESTATE

Real Estate Sales on the Barrier Island: May 12 to May 18

The barrier island real estate market roared to life last week, with 20 properties sold including four for
more than $1 million.

The top sale of the week was of an oceanfront residence in Riomar. The estate at 2310 Ocean Drive was
placed on the market March 31 with an asking price of $9 million. The sale closed on May 16 for $8.875
million.

Both the seller and the purchaser in the transaction were represented by Matilde Sorensen of Dale
Sorensen Real Estate.

SINGLE-FAMILY RESIDENCES AND LOTS

SUBDIVISION ADDRESS LISTED ORIGINAL MOST RECENT SOLD SELLING
ASKING PRICE ASKING PRICE PRICE
$850,000 $800,000
$1,495,000 $1,400,000
ORCHID ISLAND 91 CARIBE WAY 1/5/2015 $795,000 $850,000 5/18/2016 $730,000
$1,025,000 $950,000
ORCHID ISLAND 428 INDIES DRIVE 2/9/2016 $339,000 $1,495,000 5/18/2016 $325,000
$449,000 $395,000
MARINER VILLAGE 110 MARINER BEACH LANE 4/4/2016 $450,000 $795,000 5/18/2016 $390,000
$1,575,000 $1,575,000
COLONY CLUB 1508 OCEAN DRIVE 10/13/2015 $485,000 $995,000 5/17/2016 $375,000
$2,495,000 $2,350,000
HARBOUR SIDE II 1821 MOORINGLINE DRIVE 3/1/2016 $550,000 $339,000 5/17/2016 $511,000

MOORINGS 300 HARBOUR DRIVE 12/28/2015 $439,000 5/16/2016

SEA OAKS 1790 ORCHID ISLAND CIRCLE 2/6/2015 $410,000 5/16/2016

PELICAN COVE 627 TULIP LANE 3/18/2016 $1,575,000 5/16/2016

CASTAWAY COVE WAVE 6 1225 OLDE DOUBLOON DRIVE 2/27/2015 $449,000 5/16/2016

RIVERSIDE PARK 3895 INDIAN RIVER DRIVE E 3/25/2016 $2,495,000 5/13/2016

BETHEL BY THE SEA 3933 SILVER PALM DRIVE 2/16/2016 $550,000 5/13/2016

Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™ Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 77

REAL ESTATE

Here are some of the top recent barrier island sales.

Subdivision: Orchid Island, Address: 428 Indies Drive Subdivision: Colony Club, Address: 1508 Ocean Drive

Listing Date: 2/9/2016 Listing Date: 10/13/2015
Original Price: $1,495,000 Original Price: $1,025,000
Recent Price: $1,495,000 Recent Price: $995,000
Sold: 5/18/2016 Sold: 5/17/2016
Selling Price: $1,400,000 Selling Price: $950,000
Listing Agent: Bob Niederpruem Listing Agent: Rita Curry & Kristin Casalino

Selling Agent: Orchid Island Realty, Inc. Selling Agent: Dale Sorensen Real Estate Inc.

Heidi Levy Bob Faller

Orchid Island Realty, Inc. Berkshire Hathaway Florida

Subdivision: Pelican Cove, Address: 627 Tulip Lane Subdivision: Riverside Park, Address: 3895 Indian River Drive E

Listing Date: 3/18/2016 Listing Date: 3/25/2016
Original Price: $1,575,000 Original Price: $2,495,000
Recent Price: $1,575,000 Recent Price: $2,495,000
Sold: 5/16/2016 Sold: 5/13/2016
Selling Price: $1,575,000 Selling Price: $2,350,000
Listing Agent: Matilde Sorensen Listing Agent: Kay Brown

Selling Agent: Dale Sorensen Real Estate Inc. Selling Agent: Premier Estate Properties

Matilde Sorensen Patty Valdes

Dale Sorensen Real Estate Inc. Alex MacWilliam, Inc.

CASTAWAY COVE SallyWoods MARSH ISLAND
PROFESSIONALISM
I N T E G R I T Y ~ R E S U LT S

BLACK BEAR RESERVE

East of A1A! Elegant 5BR/5BA home across from Vero’s best Lakefront 3BR/3BA plus office, on almost 9/10 of an acre, Lakefront building lot in prestigious, gated community,
beach, beautifully appointed, ocean views from 2nd floor immaculate condition, pool, 3 car garage, gated community clubhouse, deep water marina slip available for purchase
$1,100,000
$500,000 $399,000

Y our satisfaction is my highest goal, real estate is a lasting relationship.

direct 772.492.5333 | cell 772.538.1861 | [email protected] | www.sallywoods.com

78 Vero Beach 32963 / May 26, 2016 Your Vero Beach Newsweekly ™

REAL ESTATE

Here are some of the top recent barrier island sales.

Subdivision: Orchid Island, Address: 91 Caribe Way

Listing Date: 1/5/2015
Original Price: $850,000
Recent Price: $850,000
Sold: 5/18/2016
Selling Price: $800,000
Listing Agent: Bob Niederpruem

Selling Agent: Orchid Island Realty, Inc.

Bob Niederpruem

Orchid Island Realty, Inc.

Subdivision: Mariner Village, 110 Mariner Beach Lane

Listing Date: 4/4/2016
Original Price: $795,000
Recent Price: $795,000
Sold: 5/18/2016
Selling Price: $730,000
Listing Agent: Jim Knapp

Selling Agent: Alex MacWilliam - Oak Harbor

Janyne Kenworthy

Treasure Coast Sotheby’s Intl



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