Dr. Jacky and Dr. Sharly Saleep of Good Karma Veterinary Therapy, a mobile veterinarian service, are happy to care for your precious fur babies in the comfort of your own home. (Photos by Charmaine George)
There are a lot of reasons why taking your pet to the vet can be stressful, but Good Karma Mobile Veterinary Therapy takes away many of those problems by coming to treat your pet in your home.
Does your big dog have a hard time getting in and out of the car? Does your cat detest being put in a carrier? Is your current vetâs office closed by the time you can get there after work? Do you have a lot of pets that require multiple appointments? Or, maybe, you just donât like pet fur all over your car?
The husband-and-wife team of Dr. Sharly and Dr. Jacky Saleep, both of whom are Doctors of Veterinary Medicine (DVMs), will see your cat or dog in your home, relieving a lot of the stress a trip to the vet can cause.
The doctors say their practice is âfear-free,â focusing on ensuring that your pet or pets are as comfortable as possible and taking as long as needed to ensure that your fur babies have a positive experience.
âWe are completely mobile and do everything in the petâs house,â Dr. Jacky says. âWe never rush and itâs always fun to see pets in their home environments.âÂ
Dr. Jacky is a Miami native who moved to Australia to attend veterinary school at the University of Sydney. From there, she had the opportunity to travel to other countries as part of her studies and, in her final year of vet school, she met Dr. Sharly in Egypt.
He is the son of a large-animal veterinarian in Egypt, where Dr. Sharly grew up. Both Dr. Sharly and his father completed their education in veterinary medicine at Assiut University in Asyut, Egypt. Dr. Sharly graduated with honors in 2010.
He then spent three years working with his father, caring for large animals, such as camels, buffalo, donkeys, cows, sheep, goats, rabbits and turkeys. When he wanted to do more surgeries and work more with smaller animals, Dr. Sharly moved to Hurghada, Egypt.
Thatâs where he met Dr. Jacky, who was studying abroad, before she graduated from vet school in 2017.
âWe almost missed each other,â she laughs, explaining that a paperwork error put her in the same clinic with him for just one week. If the mistake hadnât been made, they would never have even crossed paths.
The pair got married in Las Vegas in 2018 and moved to Miami. But, in 2020, they decided to come to Wesley Chapel to raise their family. At the time, both were working for corporate veterinary medicine companies.
The doctors have two daughters, ages four and three, and a one-year-old son. They also have two Italian greyhounds, two cats, fish and a dozen chickens.
âOur daughter was diagnosed with autism and needed 30 or 40 hours a week of therapy,â explains Dr. Jacky. But. at that time, their schedules were dictated by a corporation and were not flexible, so they knew they needed to do something different.
Opening their own practice together was something they had talked about for a long time, especially because Dr. Jacky wanted to use her broad range of skills, including in animal acupuncture and laser therapy, which werenât part of her former practice.
The pair launched Good Karma together in June 2023.Â
Today, their mobile vet service offers wellness exams, vaccines, laser therapy, acupuncture and treatments for allergies and other common ailments, such as ear infections.
Dr. Jacky says laser therapy is really good for healing, especially for older pets dealing with chronic pain, since the laser penetrates and works at a cellular level. She also offers both traditional acupuncture and laser acupuncture.
While the vets mostly treat dogs and cats, they occasionally do treat exotic pets and also offer acupuncture for horses.
They say their services are perfect for someone who has a lot of pets, who canât travel, or who is short on time. They even offer some after-hours and weekend appointments, and everything they do is designed to help keep your pet or pets calm and comfortable.
âLetâs say the cat wants to be in the closet,â says Dr. Sharly. âWe can actually do the appointment in the closet. Iâve seen cats in bathrooms, too.â
The doctors donât do surgeries, dental cleanings or handle emergencies, but there are ways they can help if your pet experiences something that causes you to worry.
âEmergencies tend to happen at the worst times,â says Dr. Sharly. âBut, our business hours are until 8 p.m., so if you get home from work and your pet is sick, you can call us and we will answer the phone.âÂ
If they are able to see the pet, they can examine and stabilize it before sending it to an emergency facility, if necessary. But, even if they canât get to the pet, they know the patient and its history, so they can provide guidance and recommendations in an urgent situation.
Dr. Jacky adds, âWe really get to know our pet patients because weâre going into their homes. Itâs not like a corporate environment where weâre seeing dozens of pets and sometimes canât remember them.â
Another service offered by the Good Karma vets is euthanasia.Â
Dr. Jacky says that when you reach a point where thereâs nothing else that can be done for your pet, Good Karma can come to your home so your pet will be home and comfortable during his or her last moments.
âItâs an honor to serve families in this way,â says Dr. Jacky. âItâs actually okay for the pets. They get ice cream or treats, get good medicine and then go to sleep. But, a (big part) of euthanasia is actually taking care of the family.â
She says most pets in this case have lived a long, happy life, and she has helped many families get through their grief.Â
Dr. Sharly with Gunnar, the 100+-lb. âSwissy.â (Photo provided by Good Karma Veterinary Therapy)Â
Krissy and Matt Hem live in Meadow Pointe and are pet parents to Gunnar, an 8-year-old Greater Swiss Mountain Dog, also known as a âSwissy.â
Since Gunnar weighs more than 100 pounds, he has been having some hip problems as he ages, so Krissy started searching for laser therapy for him.
As a nurse anesthetist, Krissy works long hours at the hospital and canât always get to a vetâs office while theyâre open, so she loves that Good Karma comes to her once she gets home from work.
âThey combine the best of both worlds â with both conventional and eastern medicine,â says Krissy, who worked as a veterinary technician before starting her career in caring for people. âI feel like the care is more thorough than a typical veterinary office, and they always call and check on him.â
Krissy and Matt plan to get a puppy soon, and when they do, they will have Good Karma come to their home to check on their new pup. She really likes that she wonât have to take a new puppy, with its vulnerable immune system, into a clinic where it could pick something up from someone elseâs sick pet.
âIâm probably a little biased, but as someone who has worked in medicine for both people and animals, I really appreciate the thoroughness and especially the compassion they show.â
To set up an appointment with Good Karma Veterinary Therapy, pet owners can call or text (813) 291-3570, email GoodKarmaVeterinaryTherapy@gmail.com, or fill out a form to send a message at GoodKarmaVeterinaryTherapy.com.
Co-owners Jeff Cofini (left) & Nick Cignarella of Zioâs NY Bagel & Deli Co. in the Pebble Creek Collection. (Photos by Charmaine George)
Although I have known Zioâs New York Bagel & Deli Co. co-owner Jeff Cofini for a number of years, I warned him when he first told me that he was opening a New York-style bagel place in New Tampa that, as a native New Yawka and self-proclaimed bagel aficionado, if his bagels werenât âlegit,â we could have a problem.
But, while it took a lot longer than planned for Cofini and his nephew and partner Nick Cignarella (in fact, âZioâ means âuncleâ in Italian), to open their Zioâs NY Bagel & Deli Co. in the Pebble Creek Collection, thereâs no doubt â in my eyes, at least â that it was well worth the wait.Â
Smoked salmon and cream cheese on an everything bagel, anyone?Â
Zioâs may not have the best bagels Iâve ever tasted, but they are the first legitimate, best NY-style bagels ever sold in New Tampa. I can say, in all sincerity, that anytime I have a hankerinâ for a fried (or scrambled) egg, bacon and cheese or smoked salmon and cream cheese on a sesame or everything bagel (which I get often), with an extra-crisp hash brown patty on the side, my car already seems to know to take me to Zioâs.
But, Zioâs offers more than just great bagels. Jannah and I (as well as photographer Charmaine George) all already have our own favorites.Â
The steak, egg & cheese wrap.The Melvin sandwich (shown with a crispy hash brown patty.
For breakfast, while Charmaine is partial to the steak (grilled Boarâs Head roast beef, actually), egg and cheese wrap or omelette, Jannah prefers Zioâs homemade chicken salad as a melt (with cheddar cheese) on a toasted, scooped-out Asiago cheese bagel.Â
And, although she always asks for just two slices of bread, instead of the usual three it comes with, Jannah loves the Double Decker, featuring Boarâs Head Ovengold turkey, with Boarâs Head cheddar (instead of the American cheese it comes with), crispy bacon and lettuce on grilled pumpernickel bread.Â
The Harvest salad features Boarâs Head Ovengold turkey & Swiss cheese pinwheels.
Charmaine enjoyed the smoked salmon bagel sandwich, as well as the Harvest Salad (with crisp romaine lettuce, tomato, cucumber, shredded carrots, sweet dry cranberries and walnuts, topped with pinwheels of Boarâs Head Ovengold turkey and Swiss), as well as Zioâs grilled cheeseburgers and crispy fries.Â
Jeff says that although many of the items mentioned so far are among his top-sellers, âWe sell more of the Italian Combo than any other sandwich for lunch.â The Italian Combo is piled high with Boarâs Head Capy hot ham, Genoa salami and pepperoni and is topped with provolone, lettuce, tomato, red onion and Italian dressing. He says the Taylor ham, egg & cheese dominates breakfast, and breakfast and lunch are both served whenever Zioâs is open, so you can have your breakfast favorites for lunch and vice-versa â and the prices definitely are fair.Â
A catering tray of bagels, spreads, salads & muffins.
Zioâs also has fresh-baked muffins in a variety of flavors and delicious gourmet gavina coffee. Catering is a specialty if you have a meeting, party or event coming up. In fact, Zioâs provided a beautiful spread of bagels, butter and cream cheese (including a sweet maple walnut cream cheese) for the Neighborhood News-hosted North Tampa Bay Chamber coffee meeting last month and everyone raved about the bagels.Â
Zioâs New York Bagel & Deli Co. is located at 19651 Bruce B. Downs Blvd. It is open Monday-Friday, 6 a.m.-3 p.m.; and 7 a.m.-3 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. For more information, call (813) 388-9498 or search âZioâs New York Bagel and Deli Co.â on Facebook.Â
What began in 2021 as the second location of Lufka Refillables Zero Waste Store has officially been transitioned to Sustain M.E., which offers a similar variety of âgreenâ & refillable products.
Co-owners Gail Strickland & her daughter Danielle Howard, who have stocked the store with an all-new, locally sourced variety of eco-friendly products, held their North Tampa Bay Chamber ribbon cutting on Nov 14.
Look for the story in the Nov 28 edition of Wesley Chapel Neighborhood News!
This packed meeting of the Board of Directors of the Anand Vihar Homeowners Association helped the communityâs residents sound off on their issues with developer Santosh Govindaraju of Convergent Capital Partners, who was one of the meetingâs Zoom participants.Â
In September, I was invited to attend a meeting at the home of one of the residents of Anand Vihar, the age 55-plus townhome community (we told you more about it in our last issue) that caters to retired people of Indian descent at the southern tip of Meadow Pointe (just north of the gate dividing Mansfield Blvd. in Meadow Pointe from Kinnan St. in New Tampa). The resident, who asked not to be identified in this story, told me that he and some of his neighbors werenât happy with Anand Vihar developer Santosh Govindaraju of Convergent Capital Partners and that he hoped I would be willing to help them try to resolve their differences with Govindaraju.
I was expecting a few of the residentâs fellow homeowners to attend this meeting, but instead, there were at least 30-40 people packed into the homeâs living room. I was permitted to record the attendees, most of whom said that although they loved living in the community Govindaraju had developed, they werenât happy with the way the developer was running the communityâs clubhouse, which Govindaraju privately owns, and the rules regarding the clubhouseâs unique Indian cuisine meal plan, which was designed to meet the dietary needs of the residents of Anand Viharâs 167 attached townhome units.
I told the residents that unless and until I was able to speak with Govindaraju to get his side of the story, I wasnât going to be able to write anything about their situation.
It wasnât until a few weeks later that I was invited to attend a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Anand Vihar Homeowners Association on Oct 11, where a large number of the communityâs residents were in attendance, including Govindaraju (who owns a unit in the community himself) and several other residents who also attended the meeting via Zoom.
After that meeting, I was able to speak with both Govindaraju and Board member Kusum Patel (one of four members of the homeowners association Boardâs legal committee looking into the issue), both of whom responded to a series of questions that I believe will do a better job of outlining the homeownersâ concerns and Govindarajuâs position on those concerns.
The âSpecial Invoiceâ
The residents at the initial meeting I attended told me that they came together because they had each received a âSpecial Invoiceâ from Govindarajuâs Anand Vihar, LLC, for more than $3,600 each to pay for the Community Clubâs 2022 Operating Costs. Although the homeowners were not required to participate in the clubhouseâs meal plan, according to Govindaraju, they were required to share in any operating losses the club may suffer on a year-to-year basis. Govindaraju said that the club suffered a loss of more than $500,000 in 2022, in part because of the ongoing effects of the Covid pandemic and because of a lack of participation in the meal plan by some of the residents, despite the fact that he says the residents helped design the clubâs menu.
âThe homeowners provide us details on what they want in services, and it is our job to staff it accordingly,â Govindaraju said. âFor example, a super majority of the residents are from a particular state in India known as Gujarat. They wanted a specific chef who knows how to cook in the particular style of that state. We had initially hired a chef who knows general Indian cooking. We added additional staff of specialized first-class Gujarati chefs to complement the general chef.â
The residents I met with countered that if the communityâs club had indeed lost money, it was because Govindaraju was paying too many chefs and too many employees and that the clubhouse and meal plans were not up to the standards they were promised when they bought their units in Anand Vihar.
The residents also said that they have no way of knowing if Govindarajuâs claims of the club having lost that amount of money are even true because they never get to see the clubâs books and records, and they believe that isnât fair.Â
But, Govindaraju sent me what he believes is the proof that the residents knew, or at least should have known, exactly what they were buying into â the Declarations pages from the deeds to each ownerâs homes, which read:
âSection 5: Club Charges â In consideration of the construction and providing the use of the Anand Vihar Club to each Owner, each Owner by its acceptance of its deed to its Unit shall be deemed to have specifically covenanted and agreed to pay all Club Charges which are set forth herein. The Anand Vihar Club Owner presently intends to collect the Club Charges on a monthly basis but reserves the right to change the payment period from time to time (e.g., to require payment on a quarterly basis).
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Anand Vihar Club Owner may require an Owner or all Owners to pay Club Charges on an annual or other basis, in advance, based on prior payment history or other financial concerns, in the Anand Vihar Club Ownerâs sole discretion.
(a) Club Operating Costs. Each Owner agrees to pay and discharge, in a timely fashion when due, its pro rata portion (as hereinafter set forth) of the Club Operating Costs. The Owners shall collectively bear all expenses associated with the Anand Vihar Club.â
âThe members of a club are not involved in the financial decisions,â Govindaraju said. âWhen you join a private club, do you tell them how to run their business? Here, by virtue of buying a home in this community, the residents purchased knowing full well that (a) membership was mandatory, and (b) they would be responsible for all (of the clubâs) costs. No business person would operate a business whereby every member can tell them how to run their business.â
He added that, âThere are conflicting interests amongst the members. For example, some members say they never use the pool, others say they never use the gym. If it were up to each one of them, we would reduce the costs of such amenities. When we published all the marketing materials to the community (see graphic on page 10), we made it abundantly clear what amenities would be included, including the food operations and, as mentioned earlier, that they would be responsible for the costs. When you make a decision to join a club, you look at the offering and decide if it fits the lifestyle you want regardless of whether you actually use all of the offerings or not, you look at the value in the totality.âÂ
Retaliation Concerns
Many of the homeowners I met with mentioned that they felt that the reason Govindaraju came up with the âSpecial Invoiceâ for his 2022 losses was because he has been retaliating against them since they voted in September â by an 80%-20% margin â to not allow the developer to annex the nearly 62-acre property he owns just south of the Pasco-Hillsborough county line (which we reported about last issue) into Anand Vihar.
The developer said his idea was that if the original Anand Vihar residents would allow him to annex that Hillsborough-based property into his Pasco community, he would be able to build an internal road (as opposed to using the closed Mansfield Blvd.-Kinnan St. connection, which may never open to vehicular traffic) to connect the two communities.
In addition, he said the proposed annexation would have allowed him to reduce each Anand Vihar homeownerâs annual club membership dues by roughly $600 per unit.
Govindaraju added, âWe never retaliate. If you research me, you will find that ethics and spirituality are paramount in my decisions. Practicing kindness and operating at the highest level of ethics are the essential fabric of all of my activities…We have to deal with the facts that we have. The vote led to the conclusion that the amenities and clubhouse must be operated (and paid for by) the homes within the (Anand Vihar) community. The supermajority of the residents never asked clarifying questions prior to voting and did not understand the consequences.â
He also said that he held several educational town hall meetings to educate the community about the costs to operate the clubhouse as they wanted it and shared that the costs per home would be substantially reduced by the annexation. However, (the homeowners) âseemed to be led by disinformation by certain individuals with an uninformed agenda.â
As for the Special Invoice charge to each homeowner, âThis is a very simple mathematical formula,â Govindaraju said. âThe Clubhouse provides first-class services as marketed, at a cost, and that number is divided by the number of homes. They may errantly characterize that as retaliation, but the typical common person sees it as basic common sense. Oftentimes, we speak to the children of the residents, and many of whom who purchased the homes for their parents. The children have more modern sophistication and have, for the majority of these instances, supported us wholeheartedly. They take the time to understand this basic common sense and are not blinded by the disinformation the residents share amongst themselves on their internal social media.â
The $10,000 Question
Although Govindaraju claims that the Declarations have not changed since 2016, the residents in attendance at that first meeting said that they believed Govindaraju had, in fact, changed the Declarations since the time some of them bought their homes (as some had bought in Anand Vihar as early as 2017), when Govindaraju began selling homes in Anand Vihar. They said that when they bought their units, there was no requirement that if they sold, the new buyer would have to pay the developer an additional $10,000 âInitiation Feeâ to join the club. But, they claimed they didnât receive notice of this Initiation Fee until after the vote to not allow the proposed annexation of the Hillsborough-based property.
However, Govindaraju countered that, âThe Declarations (have) not changed. The rights and duties of the Club Owner are black and white there. This is a private club in a luxury resort-style community. This (type of requirement) is customary in such lifestyle communities and not out of the ordinary. I canât say much more on this topic due to the threatened litigation.â
Meanwhile, Patel, on behalf of the legal committee for the homeowners associationâs Board of Directors, replied, âThe matter is under litigation for a reason. The club ownerâs attempts to change (the) Declarations, as part of annexing his Hillsborough property, was overwhelmingly rejected. The change would have inserted a new clause â Article IX.5(i) â requiring new owners to pay an initiation fee. At present, there is no language in the Master Declaration that supports the club ownerâs ability to collect an initiation fee. Collection now is merely a bullying tactic.â
To that end, I asked Govindaraju if the homeowners had voted to allow him to annex that other property, how that would work, both tax-wise and with regards to the club and meal plan.
He responded, âThere are no tax issues. If you live in Anand Vihar, you would pay Pasco taxes. If you live in the new community, you would pay Hillsborough taxes.â
He added, however, âThis is a simple mathematical formula. The total costs would then be divided by a larger denominator, reducing the per-household cost, which we had estimated at $600 per year in savings per home.
But, Patel again countered, âSharing our club house would increase the load on our facilities when they are (already) inadequate for our size. Sharing the clubhouse (with the Hillsborough community) would have allowed Mr. Govindaraju to build a much smaller facility in his new community, saving him millions in both land and building cost.â
Powerful MarketingÂ
Many of the people I spoke with said that the reason they bought into Anand Vihar was because they went around to homes in the community beforehand and spoke with the homeowners, all of whom were people of Indian descent who said they loved living there.
I asked Govindaraju whether or not that was the huge help I assumed it must have been to be able to market the community to Indian people. I also asked him if he was concerned about his ability to sell homes in the new community, now that it seems so many people in the original community are less happy than they were before?Â
Above is the brochure developer Santosh Govindaraju created to sell homes in Anand Vihar. He says that despite the resident complaints about him and the cost of the clubhouseâs meal plan, he has delivered on his promise of âLuxury Living at its Finest.âÂ
âI have never been afraid of any threats of any kind based on the spiritual principles that (a) fear is death, and (b) no decisions in life should ever be based on any sort of fear whatsoever,â he replied. âAll people should be mindful when spreading information that they are not spreading disinformation and be subject to personal liability. I simply work with the highest ethics, honor the truth, and always have absolute faith in the universe.â
He added, however, that it was important that both I and the Anand Vihar residents understand that, âWe already have 20 of the homes in the next phase pre-sold and all but two of the homes are sold to either existing residents of Anand Vihar or their immediate family members. We expect a significant amount of sales to existing residents of Anand Vihar who want to get away from the ignorant mentality currently prevailing at Anand Vihar. If I already have about 20% of the homes sold to existing residents, what does that tell you? I expect another 20% of the homes (will be) sold to existing residents, and we have designed the next community to cater to the more sophisticated buyers who appreciate and understand the nature of a private club and want it.â
Patel replied that, âMany of those people bought those homes before the current issues emerged The final chapter is yet to be written.â
Possible Litigation?
I heard at least one homeowner at the Oct. 11 Board meeting say that he was hiring a lawyer and was hoping others in attendance would join him in a planned lawsuit against the developer. Patel also said after that meeting that the Boardâs legal committee was at least in discussions with an attorney.
Govindaraju said that he âwelcomes legal counsel that represents the residents, because informed individuals with the ability to read legal documents are much easier to deal with than persons who do not have that sophistication. As one of the vocal Board members mentioned at the meeting, he is a doctor and does not understand the documents. Would you rather negotiate with a party who has the requisite ability to understand what you are negotiating or with someone with a perverted understanding of the subject matter? Everything I do is with lawyers. You do not invest $60 million in development without legal counsel.â
How Can It Be Resolved?
As someone who has no dog in this fight, I have promised both Govindaraju and the residents that my sole reason for writing this story is to help the two sides find a way to resolve their differences and to be fair to both sides.
Govindaraju said, âWe have tried to educate the residents and shared options and solutions but, unfortunately, they have not yet formalized any counterproposals or new proposals of their own. I have asked them to present plans, proposals, counteroffers, etc., but they have not provided any. It will get resolved however the universe intends for it to be resolved, and in that I have resolute faith.
Patel replied, âWe will take the âhowever the universe intends for it to be resolved (and see what happens).
Govindaraju said, âAnand Vihar is one of the most upscale retirement communities measured by any standard. The residents are happy with the community so that should say volumes about what we have created. They fail to recognize that it is that way because of the meticulous attention to detail we put into every aspect of the community.â
Patel again disagreed. âAnand Vihar is an excellent community for its social and cultural richness, not because it was built as an upscale community. We paid above-market prices, at the time, for our properties because we were supposedly getting upscale homes, upscale clubhouse, upscale amenities, beautiful landscape â not an always-failing call box at the gate, developer-owned clubhouse, filthy and smelly pond, second-or worse-rate irrigation system, substandard drainage, poor grading, inadequate gutters and a host of other issues.â
I agree that Anand Vihar is a pretty community with very concerned residents. How this situation gets resolved remains to be seen, but I will keep you posted.Â