WC Noon Rotary To Host First ā€˜Duck Derby’ On May 21!

Photo: Cartersville, GA, Duck Derby
Photo: Cartersville, GA, Duck Derby

Fresh off another successful Adult Spelling Bee, the Rotary Club of Wesley Chapel (WC) Noon is proud to invite everyone in the Wesley Chapel and Central Pasco areas to its first-ever ā€œDuck Derby,ā€ which will be held Saturday, May 21, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., ā€œlakesideā€ at Hungry Harry’s Bar-B-Que, which is located minutes from Wesley Chapel at 3116 Land O’Lakes Blvd. (aka U.S. Hwy. 41), Land O’Lakes.

WC Noon Rotary Club Duck Derby organizers John Jay (the DJ) and Vicki Hamilton of Smart Health Inc. say the Duck Derby is a fun, family-friendly event where attendees ā€œpurchaseā€ anywhere from one duck for $5 to a flock of 25 ducks for $100. The ducks are numbered on the bottom and loaded into a body of water to ā€œrace.ā€ If your duck finishes in a high enough position in the Derby, you win a great prize — and all to support the selected charities supported by the club, including its own 501(c)(3c) nonprofit foundation — the “Rotary Club of Wesley Chapel Noon Fund.”

ā€œIt’s such a fun day for everyone, no matter what age you are,ā€ says John. ā€œWe have live musical entertainment lined up, a fun Kids Zone (with inflatables, games, face painting and more), great Hungry Harry’s food for sale and some really great prizes.ā€

Among those prizes are an all-day fishing trip for 5 with a charter boat captain (a $600+ value); a weekend (2-night) stay at Saddlebrook Resort Tampa ($500); a free weekend rental of a Ford Mustang convertible donated by Parks Ford of Wesley Chapel; a $250 certificate for auto repairs from TWA Firestone; a handmade fishing rod by WC Rotarian Jimmy Mason ($300), restaurant gift certificates and more.

This year’s Duck Derby Big Bird Sponsor ($4,500) is Fun Services of Land O’Lakes, owned by WC Rotarian Jodi Sullivan (FuntasticEvents.com). The Donald Duck Sponsor ($1,000) is Sam’s Club of Wesley Chapel and the Rubber Ducky Sponsor ($250) is Cash 4 Gold of Wesley Chapel (Kash4Gold.com). See you there!

Wiregrass Ranch Prepped For Major Projects

Wiregrass Ranch Map
(Map by Blake Beatty)

West Palm Beach-based commercial developer John Dowd played a pivotal role in the development of the Wesley Chapel and Wiregrass Ranch area near S.R. 56 when, with the stalwart help of JCPenney as the lead anchor, he helped spearhead the birth of The Shops at Wiregrass mall.

Dowd admitted that it wasn’t easy. Right before the mall finished, the economy started to slow. Had it been six months later, Dowd doesn’t think the mall would have ever been built. ā€œWe had tenants come to us who had literally just signed leases and wanted out,’’ he said. ā€œEverybody was so afraid of what was going to happen to the world.ā€

But, thankfully, the world did survive. And, so did the mall.

Wiregrass Ranch DRI
John Dowd shows a map of the Wiregrass Ranch DRI and where some of the planned construction will take place.

Dowd is back in the area, and is again teaming up with local landowner/developer JD Porter to help give the Wiregrass Ranch Development of Regional Impact (DRI) another economic shot in the arm.
At the Wesley Chapel Economic Development meeting at Mulligans (inside New Tampa’s Pebble Creek Golf Club) on April 28, Dowd and Porter regaled a crowd of more than 100 local business leaders with tales from the past, but mostly of a future they see as bright and bustling.

The Wiregrass mall, which Dowd said didn’t have the start everyone had hoped when it opened in 2008, is now enjoying the kind of success that was expected. That is triggering further development in the area, as the Porter family carefully and judiciously parcels out its land to businesses and developers who fit into their long-range plans.

Dowd said he was attracted to working with the Porter family because of the family’s deliberate style. Unlike many landowners, JD Porter said he is no rush to sell to the highest bidder and turn an instant profit. Instead, the Wiregrass Ranch DRI continues to only greenlight projects the Porter feel add value to the entire area.

Wiregrass Ranch Set To Expand

Here’s some of those plans Porter and Dowd shared at the Economic Development meeting:

1. On S.R. 54, just down the road from Walmart, the first project between Dowd and Porter will be a 12,600-sq.-ft. strip center, with two nicely designed buildings. Two restaurants are already signed up, with two more close to coming aboard as well. The project will feature a typical mix, including a cell phone store, nail and hair salons, restaurants and ā€œgood neighborhood useā€ businesses.

ā€œWe already have more interested tenants than we have space for,’’ Dowd said.

2. On S.R. 56, east of theĀ Wiregrass MallĀ expansion (which will include restaurants, a movie theater and a grocery store), Porter and Dowd are doing is having site work done at another shopping center, to be called Wiregrass Commons at 56, which will include a ā€œgreenā€ or specialty grocery store.

Nothing has been signed yet, Dowd said, and ā€œwe’re not doing any of the small stuff until we get an anchor signed up. Once that happens, that will be a 50,000-60,000-sq.-ft. project in total and a nice addition to the area.

3.Ā Porter also said a hotel would be finalizing a deal within 30 days, and that is expected to also immediately east of the Wiregrass Commons at 56 project. He did not say which hotel, but we have heard rumors it will be a Marriott Fairfield Inn.

4. Even further east on S.R. 56, the long-awaited Raymond James Financial campus is close to officially announcing its arrival.

No, seriously.

JD Porter says big things are coming.
JD Porter (left) says big things are coming to Wiregrass Ranch, including Raymond James.

Porter joked that he was sick and tired of talking about the long-rumored project, which some had begun to doubt. But doubt no more.

ā€œWe got good news (April 27) and I truly believe within the next 2-3 weeks we’ll have a permit,’’ Porter said. ā€œHaving that permit triggers the closing. Having that closing means the other two or three office users, which we are we are talking to right now — anywhere from 600,000 square feet to another 1.2-million-sq.-ft., Fortune 50 companies — they close, and I would suspect we’re going to see movement within the next 4-6 months after that.ā€

Porter said Raymond James will add between 4,000-6,000 jobs, and that you can double that total to 8,000-12,000 jobs with the other unnamed businesses set to follow.

That will also begin to create some of the day traffic that Dowd says is necessary if the area is going to attract more quality restaurants, as well.

5. Porter said they will be closing on an assisted living facility, ā€œin the next 45-60 daysā€. Porter didn’t disclose any other information, but the facility will be called Beach House at Wiregrass Ranch Assisted Living & Memory Care, which is owned by the Prevarian Companies.

The facility will be multiple stories when completed next to North Tampa Behavorial Health, which also is expanding and will be adding 48 rooms by the end of the year.

6. As part of trying to force vertical integration into the development plan, Porter said that in 30-45 days construction also should begin on a condo project, called Altis at Wiregrass, which will be located directly north of Wiregrass Commons at 56.

ā€œIf I would’ve said condos in Pasco County 3-4 years ago, you probably would have told me to get the hell out of here,’’ Porter said. ā€œWell, it happened.ā€

Porter hinted at four-story structures, with rooftop pools and verandas. ā€œSomething typical of Hyde Park and South Tampa,’’ he said. ā€œBut not typical Pasco County.ā€

The condos, which according to site plans will include 394 multi-family dwellings in 15 separate buildings, are part of Porter’s plan to build new and different projects in the area. ā€œIf you wanna play in the sandbox, you have to step it up,’’ he said. ā€œWe are very fortunate to be in the right area. If people want to be here, bring something new to the table.ā€

Just The Beginning Of New Phase For Wiregrass Ranch

Porter promised other major announcements concerning major retailers still to come. But for now, he is pleased with the area’s progress, citing the proximity of an expanding hospital, a state college with room to grow into a full-fledged university and more retail in the area. He also expects an increase in new homes as well, and once the residential areas mature a mixed-use town center can be developed.

DonPorterWEB
Members of the Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce Board, including past President Jeff Novotny (holding plaque) were honored to present the plaque that will adorn the boardroom at the WCCC office in The Grove named for the late Don Porter to Don’s son JD and daughter Quinn (center), during the Chamber’s Economic Development briefing at which JD and commercial developer John Dowd spoke about Wiregrass Ranch.

Porter also said his family is rethinking its commitment of donating 120-acres to the county to build a park in the area. A tennis center fell through more than a decade ago, as did a proposed baseball complex on the site last year. In November the county announced it would be seeking partners in a public-private relationship to build an indoor facility on land that also would include outdoor fields.

But Porter, frustrated with the county’s inability to move forward on donated land, says he may take back some of it back by the end of the year and build the park privately, as part of his long-range plan to provide the area with ā€œsynergyā€.

ā€œWe are looking to create something we can be proud of out here not just tomorrow, but 10-50 years down the road,’’ he said.

Look for more updates on this area atĀ WCNeighborhoodNews.com.

Asian Medicine & Licensed Massage Therapy Meet At Barefoot Massage!

Barefoot MAssageBad backs, wonky knees and tight hips beware: Licensed Massage Therapist (LMT) SaRee Purcell may be petite and soft spoken, but when she walks on your back, there’s not an ache or a sore muscle that can withstand her magic feet.

SaRee is a practitioner of Ashiatsu Oriental Bar Therapy and the owner of Barefoot Massage of New Tampa, located in the New Tampa Professional Park off Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd.

While holding onto parallel bars above the massage bed upon which a client lies, SaRee uses her feet to literally ā€œwalkā€ on her client’s back, exerting deft, skilled pressure to ease out kinks and stretch tightly coiled tissue.

It was on a snowy Minnesota night, when SaRee was 15 years old, that she was in a serious car crash that left her with severe whiplash and chronic pain. She tried everything from medication and physiotherapy to Reiki – a healing technique based on the principle that a therapist can activate the natural healing processes of the body through touch – but it wasn’t until her doctor prescribed a massage that she finally got a respite.

That massage she got as a teen not only gave her pain relief, it also showed her that healing through massage was her calling.

How did she pay it forward? By literally walking all over people. SaRee, 39, was certified in Ashiatsu Oriental Bar Therapy in 2004 and became a Licensed Massage Therapist (LMT) in 2006.

ā€œI’m a born caretaker,ā€ she says. ā€œI get to treat all my patients like I’m their mother. I like helping bodies heal naturally without medicine, the way it was intended to be.ā€

BarefootShe has been doing Ashiatsu therapy since 2004. ā€œAshiā€ means foot and ā€œatsuā€ means pressure in Japanese, and SaRee began to study it when treating athletes with injuries. ā€œI was attracting deep tissue (massage) clients. They were big men and I’m small, so eventually, I started using feet. It only seemed natural to start walking on people.ā€

Johnny Taylor, a Wesley Chapel resident and owner of Florida Coast Air Conditioning, learned this unexpectedly one day when he went to SaRee’s house to fix her air conditioner. Learning that Taylor works hard at a physically demanding job and pays baseball in a recreational league, SaRee offered to give him a quick massage.

Johnny says, ā€œShe had her equipment set up, and said, can I show you real quick?. Then, she was walking on my back and it was just heavenly. Best massage I ever had.ā€

A few months later, when a weeklong baseball tournament left Johnny’s knee in so much pain that he could hardly stand, he called SaRee again. After just one session, he was able to walk out with no issues. Now he’s a regular client.

SaRee may be soft spoken and petite, but don’t let that fool you: her feet pair the strength of a linebacker with the nuanced finesse of a surgeon. She uses the parallel bars above the massage bed to balance herself as she uses her feet to knead tension and knots caused by long commutes, bad posture in front of computers and the repetitive motions involved in playing a sport or an instrument. She can help relieve the pain caused by many auto accidents, professional sports injuries and work injuries.

Her feet don’t feel like feet either; it is as though a broad pair of hands is playing detective, pushing and manipulating tissue, searching for calcifications or scarring that she says can be caused by tightness in the connective tissue. Depending upon the client, she may also utilize sports massage, lymphatic drainage massage, hand and foot reflexology, neuromuscular therapy, clinical massage, maternity massage, cupping and Swedish massage.

What sets SaRee apart from other licensed massage services in the area is not just her techniques, it is that she offers clinical massage, meaning she actually fixes or relieves physical problems her clients are having as opposed to simply relaxing people, although the relaxation is, of course, often an inevitable side effect. Her treatment room has the same soothing music, soft lighting, fragrance and other accoutrements regular spa-goers expect, but those details belie the serious nature of what she does. Many regular clients are referred to her by physicians, and she has helped everyone from teenage musicians to middle-aged athletes, and from mid-life commuters to octogenarians who are looking for noninvasive relief from chronic pain and conditions from plantar fasciitis to TMJ.

SaRee says her youngest client is 16, and her oldest is 81, and most of the others are between 40 and 60.

That Magic (Healing) Touch

ā€œThere are so many soft tissue injuries that can be completely healed through massage,ā€ she says. ā€œPeople often think that a problem in a joint — whether knee, jaw, or vertebral — is local only to the joint, so they don’t realize how massage can help. I want people to know that it is our muscles and tendons that bring our bones and joints together and that by taking the tension out of the muscles, we can relieve the tension being put on our joints.ā€

SaRee explains that most knee problems, for example, are caused by overly tight adductor, hamstring and quadriceps muscles, and can often be eliminated by working the muscles surrounding the knee until they are pliable and supple.

ā€œThe same is true of any joint in the body, including the joints in between each vertebrae of the spine,ā€ SaRee says. ā€œIf you are suffering from slipped, bulging or herniated discs and you have the associated muscle tissue softened with massage, you will be relieving the pressure on those discs.ā€

At times, she reaches for additional tools, such as hot stones or a bamboo stick, the latter of which she had custom made for her that she uses to roll out tightness along the side of your neck and shoulder.

ā€œIt’s like brushing your teeth,ā€ SaRee says. ā€œYou get your body worked on and iron it all out.ā€ She adds, ā€œWe get our cars serviced and homes cleaned, but we give so little of that TLC to our bodies, even though we’re only given one. We also rarely pay attention to the influence that food and stress play on our bodies.ā€

SaRee realized she enjoyed caring for people while working in a nursing home during high school, and as soon as she turned 18, she says she signed up to learn how to be a masseuse at Sister Rosalind’s Schools & Clinics of Massage in St. Paul, MN. After completing her professional massage certification there in 1997, she worked for a spa and fitness center in Cottage Grove, MN, and went into private practice at the age of 25. She ran her practice, Just for You Massage, for nearly seven years, both in Minnesota and in Miami, FL, where she moved so her then-husband could attend law school, and eventually to Tampa.

Today, she lives in New Tampa where her children attend Paul R. Wharton High and the Turner/Bartels K-8 school. Until her son became old enough to start school, SaRee says she had been treating patients out of her house, but after the littlest one started school, she felt ready to rent a room and open a formal practice where she could set up her equipment. She has worked out of her current office since November 2015.

Right now, she rents just one room in the office plaza, but with weeks of bookings ahead of her, she says is preparing to look for her own suite of rooms and eventually hire another massage therapist.

SaRee also has taught massage at her alma mater and at some of her former employers, including the Doral Golf Resort & Spa in Miami, where she trained masseurs and wrote protocols. She has also taught nurses in labor and delivery wards, and in fact, an aspect of her practice that is very close to her heart is prenatal, postnatal and labor massage. SaRee has trained as a doula – a trained professional who provides women with physical and emotional support and guides them through pregnancy, labor and post partum — and is certified by Chicago-based DONA International. She loves to accompany clients to labor and delivery rooms.

ā€œOne of the biggest problems women have in the labor room is feeling alone,ā€ she says. ā€œI’m there with them as if it’s my own labor. Our bodies know exactly what to do when fear doesn’t run away with (them).ā€

SaRee does not accept insurance, but offers a 25-percent savings for the first treatment. Massages can last from 30 to 120 minutes; a 60-minute massage costs $74. She accepts cash, checks and credit cards, but says her biggest reward comes from relieving the discomfort or pain of a client.

ā€œI love it!,ā€ she says. ā€œI’ve been doing it for 18 years and I still love it. It really makes me smile inside.ā€

Barefoot Massage is located at 8903 Regents Park Dr., Suite 130, across from Barewood Furniture. Visit BarefootMassageTampa.com or call 451-2222 for info, rates and hours. For info about pre- and postnatal massage, visit LoveforLabor.com.

 

Grey Wolf Armory Suffers Second Break-In Since March

WFTS-TV
WFTS-TV

Three hooded and gloved suspects knocked a hole in the Grey Wolf Armory wall and made off with more than 30 weapons early Sunday morning, the Pasco County Sheriff’s Office said.

The PSCO says that between 2:53 and 2:57am, the suspects entered through theĀ east side of the Wesley Chapel gun shop, located at32733 Eiland Blvd., after smashing the exterior lighting and taking advantage of the fact that that side of the building is obscured by hedges.

The suspects made off with 30 hand guns, two long guns and one sniper rifle, leaving in an unknown direction. Other more expensive guns were left untouched.

The business has an alarm, but it was never activated, and the suspects crawled around to avoid surveillance camera and motion detectors, the PCSO said.

This is the second time in two months the Grey Wolf Armory has been broken into. According to a post on the business Facebook page from March 14, someone broke in and damaged a half-dozen guns while smashing a glass display unit, but was only able to make off with a single hand gun thanks to the PCSO’s quick response.

“If I was a conspiracy theorist, I would wonder if someone had it in for us,” a post reads on the Facebook page of the Grey Wolf Armory. The new post suggests that the Sunday break-in was orchestrated by the same people from March, because they tried to break in at the same point as March but found the walls had been reinforced and moved to a more vulnerable spot. They also, the post says, took several guns Sunday that they tried but failed to take the first time.

 

Anyone with information is asked to call investigators at (800) 706-2488.