Despite all of the recent newcomers to the Wesley Chapel dining scene, if youâre still looking forward to some of the restaurants that are planned to open in and near Wesley Chapel, join the club.
Two highly touted and anticipated places â Cooperâs Hawk Winery (bottom center photo) and Rodizio Brazilian Steakhouse (bottom left) have not yet even begun building. Meanwhile, the Shuckinâ Shack Oyster Bar (bottom right), in the same plaza as Chicken Salad Chick, still has just a dirt floor. The good news is that there are others that are a lot closer to bringing great new options to our area.
One that just opened that I, for one, didnât realize was such a good restaurant is PopStroke, the new Tiger Woods-designed (and co-owned) mini-golf course. The biggest problem with PopStroke to date is that itâs been so packed every day, itâs hard to find parking to get into the open-air (but covered) restaurant to sample some of its great food options. My favorite, to date, is the fresh Caribbean mahi (top), which is grilled with tasty jerk seasoning and a warm pineapple salsa that gives it a semi-spicy, slightly sweet flavor. The mahi is usually topped with two grilled shrimp, but I had to have (and photograph) it without the shrimp. Truly delicious. And, the side of grilled zucchini and squash ribbons also was tasty and healthy. Even PopStrokeâs creamy hard-packed ice cream also is really good.
Speaking of Latin cuisine, owner Cindy Cruz says her Rice-n-Beans Express should only be a few weeks from opening on S.R. 54 in Lutz. Cindy says that those of us who enjoy the Puerto Rican-inspired sit-down dining at the Rice-n-Beans on Wesley Chapel Blvd. and those looking for quick, delicious sandwiches and hot food specials should be thrilled when her Express location opens.
And, despite the fact it should be several months before it opens, Shuckinâ Shack promises a menu focused on shrimp and oysters (neither of which I can eat). But, there will be plenty of other seafood and non-swimming options at the North Carolina-based, two-dozen-link chainâs newest location off of the WC Blvd. Extension, including some pretty great-looking snow crab legs (right) â which (at least, to date) I am able to eat. There also will be mahi-mahi bites, sandwiches, wings and other options to keep things interesting.Â
Dr. Shahida Choudhry (front) and her friendly, professional staff at Palms Pharmacy in Tampa Palms can match or beat chain pharmacy prices and provide on-site compounding and old-time customer service. (Photos by Charmaine George)
James Kist says he truly enjoys walking into the Palms Pharmacy in The Shoppes at The Pointe plaza in Tampa Palms, just south of the Bruce B. Downs Blvd. exit off I-75.
So much so, that when he was recently asked if he wanted a 30-day supply of his prescription or a 90-day supply, he says he would take the 30-day supply so he could come back more often.
âItâs such a pleasure walking in the door and being called by your first name,â Kist says.
Thatâs exactly what owner and Doctor of Pharmacy (Pharm.D.) Shahida Choudhry envisioned when she opened Palms Pharmacy nearly seven years ago.
Dr. Choudhry was determined to create a place that felt different from a typical chain pharmacy, a place where she knew her customers by name and gave them specialized, concierge service â like what they would have expected from a neighborhood pharmacy decades ago.
Kist says he knows those neighborhood pharmacies better than most.
âMy father had a retail drug store for 50 years, so Iâm used to personalized service,â says Kist, a local CPA who has served New Tampa for the past three decades. âAt Palms Pharmacy, they are professional and truly care about you.â
He remembers a time he asked a question, got an answer and left, thinking the conversation was over. An hour later, his phone rang and the pharmacist was providing additional details she had researched after he left.
As a CPA, Kist says he has wondered, âHow do they make any money? Iâm surprised at how low the prices are.â
He says the service is so excellent, he would gladly pay more for his prescriptions and other products, but thatâs not necessary at Palms Pharmacy.
Dr. Choudhry says thatâs the kind of service her customers have come to expect. If they have a problem, she and her staff will work to find ways to solve it.
For example, in the wake of post-Covid production and other supply issues (and other factors), some medications have become very hard to come by.
She says for some patients, she often can help them find medications that arenât available at other pharmacies. For other patients who absolutely cannot get a medication they need that isnât available anywhere on the market, she tries to find innovative solutions.
âWe have really grown our section of supplements for kids and adults who suffer from ADHD,â she says, referring to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Adderall, a popular ADHD medication is completely unavailable nationwide right now. âIf you canât get your meds and want to try an alternative, or youâre just curious about what products are out there, come on in.â
She recommends that patients talk with their physicians, as well, but says they can get a lot of information to discuss with their doctors by coming in to Palms Pharmacy and learning about whatâs on their shelves âWeâre trying to be innovative,â she says.
National Recognition
Dr. Choudhry and her âMost Influential People in Pharmacyâ award.
On a national scale, Dr. Choudhry has been recognized for her innovative ways. She recently won an award for being one of the âMost Influential People in Pharmacyâ by the Pharmacy Podcast Network. She came in at number five, ahead of national CEOs and others says she was impressed just to be ranked among them.Â
Since the award is voted on by her peers in the business, it was especially meaningful to her.
She says that itâs not so much that she appreciates the accolades, but because sheâs truly trying to offer her customers something better than what they get at the big retailers.
For example, Palms Pharmacy offers on-site compounding to make your medications to custom specifications, such as low-dose Naltrexone (to manage alcohol or opioid use disorder and hormone replacement therapy.
The store also now specializes in diabetic and endocrinology supplies, including being a preferred pharmacy for the continuous glucose monitoring system, DexCom.
And, Palms Pharmacy still offers curbside pickup for anyone who would prefer to stay in their car, rather than walking into the pharmacy.
The staff has grown to 12 people and now supports a second location, called One Source Pharmacy, in Westchase. This location has a partnership with One Source Medical Group, which helps diabetic patients get needed supplies that may not be covered under a pharmacy insurance group to get those supplies through their medical insurance.
Dr. Choudhry opened Palms Pharmacy in 2016, after 10 years as the pharmacist at the Publix in Tampa Palms. She received her Bachelor of Science degree in Pharmacy, then went on to receive her Pharm.D. degree in 2001, both from Long Island University in Brooklyn, NY.
âWe enjoy what we do and really appreciate our customers,â Dr. Choudhry says. âWe know you can go anywhere, so if youâre willing to park your car and come through our doors, weâre going to try to do a little bit extra to make you feel welcome.â
Covid Deadline: May 11
Dr. Choudhry says at-home Covid tests will no longer be covered by insurance after May 11.
âMake sure you have Covid tests at home,â she says. âCovid is not going away. Itâs more controllable now because when people get it, they stay home, but you will still want to be able to test for it.â
Come in to Palms Pharmacy before May 11 and the staff will help you get four or eight take-home Covid tests at no cost to you, if itâs covered by your insurance. If youâre not sure if itâs covered, feel free to call or text (phone numbers below) or come in so the staff can help you.
Palms Pharmacy also stocks the anti-viral treatment Paxlovid and the anti-inflammatory Medrol often prescribed by doctors with it for their Covid-positive patients.
The front of Palms Pharmacy features niche products that make fantastic gifts, including locally-sourced soaps, candles and honey, plus fun candy and snacks. A popular product called âWarmiesâ are soft animals stuffed with lavender. They can be heated in the microwave for 30 seconds and may help your child sleep or can be used as a heating pad. These are just a few items that may make a nice surprise in an Easter basket, for a loved oneâs birthday, on Motherâs Day, as a hostess gift, and for countless other occasions.
Palms Pharmacy is located at 17008 Palm Pointe Dr., Tampa, and is open Mon.-Fri., 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Call (813) 252-9063, text Palm Pharmacyâs secure text-only line at (727) 513-3210. For more info, visit ThePalmsPharmacy.com. Follow Palms Pharmacy on Instagram and/or Facebook.
Whether you want bath bombs (right) for Motherâs Day or Easter candy, Palms Pharmacy has you covered!
Owner Raymond Hosmi says Oriental Rug Care is gentle with your favorite rug and can bring back the rugâs brightness after years of foot traffic. (All photos provided by Oriental Rug Care)
Raymond Homsi has one goal in mind when a customer is in need of his services â and that is to get the customerâs Oriental rug looking as nice as it did the day it was purchased.
That means cleaning it and/or repairing it, but either way, Homsi says he and his team at Oriental Rug Care, which is located on Johns Rd. in the Town & Country area of Tampa, is your best choice to get the job done right.
Homsi has been in the rug business for more than a decade, even previously owning his own Oriental rug shop, and has always specialized in restoring the beautiful colors while protecting the intricate designs of Oriental rugs.Â
The intricate touches your Oriental rug originally had can be repaired and restored by Raymond Homsi and his Oriental Rug Careâs expert technicians.
He says that cleaning the rugs is the most popular request by his customers. Oriental rugs are often handmade and also are often very expensive/valuable. The rugs can be family heirlooms, or even investments, depending upon the quality. So, a yearly cleaning can be pretty important, although Homsi says a deep cleaning from Oriental Rug Care can last 2-4 years.
âEach rug is treated differently, depending upon the contents of the rug (which are sometimes made of delicate materials, like silk), and depending on the colors,â Homsi says. âIf itâs handmade, itâs a different process we use, but there are all sorts of different processes and different products. It all depends upon the rug.â
The care taken by Oriental Rug Care helps preserve many of the qualities of the rug, and is especially useful for people who have pets that may pee or chew on the rug.
âAn amazing rug cleaning company,â says one of the 5-Star reviews on Google.com. âStaff came to my house and gave me a quote for cleaning my four oriental rugs. Price was right and the turnaround was quick. I love the way my rugs came out and I highly recommend this company for any of your rug cleanings.â
While you can certainly try to clean your own rug, there is a danger of disrupting the distinctive patterns and even dulling some of the deep, rich colors associated with Oriental rugs â and some fabrics are more easily damaged than others.
âRegular carpeting is just something that is synthetic and very basic and when they get cleaned out, itâs with heavy pressure washing machines or a truck mount or whatever,â Homsi says. âThis is not what we do. We donât apply heavy water, we donât apply pressure water. Because that kind of leaves a little bit of, you know, smell and mold. We use a lot of scrubbing from the foam that we create from our natural products.â
While there may not be a school someone goes to in order to learn the art of the cleaning, Homsi says these skills are generally learned through many years of practice and experience.
âYears and years,â Homsi says. âOur guys are very experienced. You learn as you go. And you know, youâre working with so many different types of rugs that you just accumulate that knowledge.â
If you have both a pet and a valuable Oriental rug at home, you probably will need to call oriental Rug Care.
Oriental Rug Care also will attack pet odors and stain removal, provide sanitizing and deodorizing and also help with unwanted colors that may be the result of heavy traffic.
And not only that, Oriental Rug Care will come out to your home and give you a free estimate. If you decide to use their service, they will pick the rug up and return it to you when your service has been completed.
Homsi says the time between pick-up and drop off can be weeks for some companies, but Oriental Rug Care says they usually can have your rug back in 7-10 days.
âI think thatâs where we stand out in the crowd,â Homsi says. âEven though weâre a small company, the main thing I hear from my clients is that our turnaround is very, very good and very fastâŠWeâre very organized. We work on the rugs as soon as we get them.â
Cleaning rugs is just one part of the Oriental Rug Care business. Homsi says he has master rug weavers on staff who can repair even the most delicate Oriental rugs.
That includes repairing or replacing rug fringes, altering the rug size, restoring faded colors, fixing holes or rips or even rebinding the sides to give your rug a few added years of life.
âMy rug was too long for the hallway and I called Ray â he is full of energy and knowledge,â wrote one of Oriental Rug Careâs customers. âHe returned my call, showed up on time, gave me a fair quote to trim the rugâs length, remove the antiquated frills, clean it thoroughly and attach leather bonding to the underbelly. (He) kept me updated often, texting pics, and even delivered the rugs himself!â
Oriental Rug Care is located at 6101 Johns Rd., Ste 9, in Tampa. It is open Monday-Saturday, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. If you mention this story, you can receive 25% off any service. For more information, call (727) 377-9577, or visit OrientalRugCareCleaning.com.
Licensed Massage Therapist Ewaldson Francoisâ Empowered for Performance Massage Therapy is a separate business located at Barefoot Massage in the New Tampa Professional Park in Pebble Creek. (Photos by Charmaine George)
When Olympic track and field athlete Marco Arop took home the bronze medal in the menâs 800-meter race at the 2022 World Championships in Eugene, Oregon, he says he felt lucky to have Licensed Massage Therapist Ewaldson Francois, LMT â who goes by Francois â at the meet with him.
âFrancois traveled with a group of us, and every one of us medaled at Worlds,â Marco says. âThatâs pretty impressive.â
The group met Francois when he was the massage therapist for the athletics department at Mississippi State University (MSU) in Starkville.
Now, Francois has opened a new business in the New Tampa and Wesley Chapel area, as he and his family have moved here for the long term.
His business is called Empowered For Performance Massage, and Francois currently works out of a suite at Barefoot Massage, located in the New Tampa Professional Park in Pebble Creek. He is available to help athletes of any caliber, as well as those who are looking for relief from long-term pain.
âHeâs really special as a therapist,â Marco says, ânot only in the techniques and his ability, but also in his dedication.â
Marco says Francois is always eager to learn and try new techniques and that his sessions with Francois have become a huge part of Marcoâs career.
âIâve seen a lot of improvement over the last year,â Marco says. âItâs not just keeping me healthy, but also building strength through new techniques. I have to give him credit for a lot of my accomplishments.â
LMT Ewaldson Francois can help you get Empowered for Performance, too!
Francoisâ background is in sports massage and medical massage, helping people who suffer from chronic pain, and also helping athletes with recovery from injuries, increasing performance and muscle balancing. He is certified to provide not only those types of massage, but also myofascia release (manipulation of the tough membranes that wrap, connect and support muscles) and manual lymphatic drainage (to stimulate lymph system flow).
As a kid growing up, Francois says his aunt always asked him to massage her feet.
âI realized how much it helped her and how much I enjoyed it,â he says, âso I developed a love and passion for massage.â
At that time, though, Francois never considered that it could become a career.
Out of high school, he joined the U.S. Navy and worked in the medical field. After the attacks of September 11, 2001, he decided to extend his stay in the military to âdo his part.â At that time, his sister went to massage school and the seed of an idea was planted for what Francois might do after leaving the military.
While stationed in Virginia and working nights as an x-ray technician at Portsmouth Naval Hospital, he began going to massage school during the day. He graduated with an Associateâs degree from a program at ECPI University. It was at that time that Francois left the military and met his wife, Martisa. He moved to Mississippi, where she was a teacher.
Francois began his massage career at a spa in Mississippi but quickly realized that wasnât for him. Instead, he began working with the athletes of the track and field team at MSU. He then worked with the football team â traveling with them for two seasons â and eventually worked with all of the sports teams in the universityâs athletic department.
He then started his own business, called Golden Triangle Massage Therapy, in 2016.
âI wanted to work for myself and had the desire to be an entrepreneur,â he says. âI wasnât scared of the hard work that comes with it.â
But, Francois and Martisa knew they didnât want to stay in Mississippi forever, so they began looking for the perfect home to begin the next chapter of their lives together. Their search brought them to the New Tampa/Wesley Chapel area, where they plan to raise their daughters, five-year-old Olivia and three-year-old Hosanna.
Now, Francois works with athletes from the high school level to college and professional, and with weekend warriors such as triathletes and cross-fit athletes.
âAnyone who takes their body to the extreme limit,â he says, âmy job is to help you recover so you can get the most out of your workouts.â
He says that often starts with deep tissue massage to increase blood circulation. He also is certified in what is called âmuscle activation therapyâ to make sure the smaller muscles are working as well as the larger ones. Francois explains that this therapy is personalized based on the individual anatomy of each athlete and how their muscles get fatigued.
Francois also helps people who arenât athletic, too, especially those suffering from chronic pain. âMy goal is not just to fix the problem, but also to find out whatâs causing the problem,â he says, âwhich could be simple things in day-to-day living.â
He says he has helped people discover the source of their migraines and other headaches, as well as sciatica and other chronic pain â whether itâs the way you sit, how you hold the steering wheel, if youâre always looking down at your phone, or if your home office isnât set up with proper ergonomics.
Francois adds that heâs helped many people who were hopeless and thought they could never do certain things again.
âMuscle pain â chronic pain especially â takes so much out of your quality of life,â says Francois. âThe doctor will tell you that you need a muscle relaxer or surgery, but thatâs not always the answer.â
He says he canât always explain exactly how he knows how to help people. âItâs a gift,â he says. âI put my hands on somebody and their body lets me know what it needs. Things just make sense to me.â
Jeanie Dale is another client who highly recommends Francois. After playing a lot of sports at a younger age, she started feeling the wear and tear on her body in her early 60s, and she developed gait issues during the healing process after a knee surgery.
âHeâs gotten it back to normal,â Jeannie says. âI had to re-strengthen muscles that had lost strength and he definitely helped me. With Francois, massages are not just relaxing â theyâre more therapeutic.â
Jeanie says Francois already is tremendously missed in Mississippi, and Marco Arop, the Olympic athlete, agrees.
âI donât know if other athletes have the same experience,â he says, âbut I feel really lucky to have worked with him.â
Empowered For Performance Massage Therapy is located at 8905 Regents Park Dr., inside Barefoot Massage, at the New Tampa Professional Park in Pebble Creek. For more info or to make an appointment, call or text Francois at (813) 461-4591.
Producing artistic director Nora Paine (far left) and the New Tampa Players finally got to perform at their new home â the New Tampa Performing Arts Center â fulfilling the dream of NTP founder Doug Wall. (Photos by Charmaine George)
I can remember the first-ever conversation I had with Graeme Woodbrook and Doug Wall about trying to bring a professional performing arts center to New Tampa. It was the year 2001 and Woodbrook and Wall (the founder of the New Tampa Players) were both on the original organizing committee and both of them told me they believed that one day, their shared vision would bear fruit.
Fast forward 22 years, to the evening of March 25, 2023, and even though Wall â who passed away in 2017 after battling pancreatic cancer â unfortunately didnât live to see his Players take the stage at the sparkling new, 350-seat New Tampa Performing Arts Center (NTPAC), Woodbrook and I were both on hand to see the Playersâ âPrelude & Recognition Performanceâ at their new home.
As new NTPAC general manager Keith Arsenault was proud to proclaim to that eveningâs packed house, âMission Accomplished!â
New Tampa Performing Arts Center (NTPAC) GM Keith Arsenault and spoke before the âPrelude & Recognition Performanceâ by the New Tampa Players at the NTPAC.
Arsenault, who we introduced in our last cover story about the NTPAC, said he has been involved in Tampaâs arts scene for 50 years, since his mother owned a ballet studio near the University of Tampa. He thanked Woodbrook, former Hillsborough County Commissioner (and State Senator) Victor Crist and former Tampa City Council member (and State Rep.) Shawn Harrison, as well as original Players Lydia Macias, Jennifer Barnakow and Janine Hartfield (who is still a member of the theatre troupe today), current Players producing artistic director Nora Paine (âwho is everywhere and doing everything,â he said) and, of course, Wall.Â
Arsenault, who called the NTPAC a âstate-of-the-artâ theatre, also said, âWe also would not be here without the continuous efforts of (current Hillsborough County Commissioner) Ken Hagan,â who he then introduced as the eveningâs next speaker.
Hagan, who said he has been involved in trying to bring the PAC to New Tampa for, âat least 15 years,â also thanked many of the same people â and especially focused on Wall.Â
County Commissioner Ken Hagan both spoke before the âPrelude & Recognition Performanceâ by the New Tampa Players at the NTPAC.
The future plaque remembering New Tampa Players founder Doug Wall. The orchestra pit at the NTPAC.Â
âThe theatre was Dougâs heart, soul and light,â Hagan said, quoting Wallâs cousin Neil Berg, himself a Broadway composer and producer. âWe wouldnât be here tonight if not for his efforts. We realize Dougâs dream tonight!âÂ
Hagan also noted and displayed a photo of a plaque created in Wallâs honor and memory that wasnât quite finished in time for the âPreludeâ performance, and mentioned that until the PAC was completed, the Players were a âtheatre troupe without a home.â
Also speaking before the performance was Michelle Giles, the current chair of the Playersâ Board of Directors, who presented Paine with a pre-performance floral bouquet.
The âPrelude & Recognition Performanceâ itself included almost 30 musical performances by the 13 current Players, interwoven with explanations of how the troupeâs shows are chosen, how the audition process works (including for directors and choreographers) and other ins and outs of the community theatre business.
The performances themselves were amazing and Iâm sad that I donât have room here to hit all of the highlights, but here are a few:
Kyle Fisherâs âOne Last Kissâ from âBye Bye Birdie,â Janine Hartfieldâs âNo Time at Allâ from âPippin,â Bri Filippelliâs âDo Re Miâ and the title song from âThe Sound of Music,â Makayla Raines singing âLittle Girlsâ and Olivia Carrâs âTomorrowâ from âAnnie,â and âWe Go Togetherâ from âGreaseâ by the entire company. What a great night!
Speaking of âGrease,â that will be the first show produced by the Players at the NTPAC. As shown in the ad below, the auditions will be held at the Uptown Stage at University Mall on Monday & Tuesday, April 24-25, and all performers are welcome to try out at this open audition.
For more information, to volunteer and/or make donations to the New Tampa Players, visit NewTampaPlayers.org.
For questions about the NTPAC, email ArsenaultK@HCFLGov.net.
Original New Tampa Players cast member Janine Hartfield performs a song & dance routine with Jarrett W. Koski-Kohler to âNo Time at Allâ from the Broadway hit âPippin.â Kyle Fisher as Conrad Birdie from âBye Bye Birdie.âThe orchestra pit at the NTPACThe entire current cast of the Players. Graeme (one of the original PAC organizers) and Sharyn Woodbrook (front left) enjoying the festivities.