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EDITORIAL: Parking subterfuge and dangerous precedents … it must be season again

By now you’ve probably already read the story on the front page about how the Lee County Hearing Examiner announced her ruling in favor of the property owner at 161 Gilchrist Avenue. Discussion about this particular Certificate of Appropriateness at the Boca Grande Historic Preservation Board meeting last spring was supposed to center around the proposed home with a plan for both 161 and 181 Gilchrist Avenue, which are the two lots the property owner purchased together. They apparently could not be combined intAo one strap number at the time, due to one being contributing (the one in front, where the old cottage used to be) and one that was noncontributing (the parcel with the home, Gulf side).

There might be a lot of people angry about that decision, and many of those people will give the argument that the proposed home is “too big.” Those people will also more than likely bring up the Whispering Bench, a round seating area that was located on the Gulf front parcel, a seating area with particular acoustics that allowed a person to just barely whisper at one end of the circle but amplified that whisper so everyone in the circle could hear it clearly. It was a parlor trick bench that Louise du Pont Crowninshield had built back in the 1920s, because she thought other benches of the sort that she had seen were pretty cool. She wanted one, she had one built by a rather famous architect, and her guests enjoyed it until she was gone. After that the property had different owners prior to the current property owner, ending with the Sligar family who built the existing house there.

None of those property owners felt the need to call attention to any special qualities or historic significance of the Whispering Bench.

At the meeting in the spring when the proposal for a new home at 161/181 Gilchrist Avenue was presented, there were a lot of people there. Most of them came to hear what was going to happen to the Whispering Bench. It wasn’t on the agenda, and it wasn’t up for discussion, because in the eyes of Lee County or anyone looking at the existing structures and features on the two lots, there was only one that was listed as a historically contributing structure – a small cottage that stood next to the sidewalk by Gilchrist Avenue.

So why were so many people there on behalf of the Whispering Bench? As anyone knows who has lived in a small town, word gets around quickly. The word that had been going around was that the Whispering Bench was going to be demolished if the new house plan passed, and everyone wanted to have their say about it. Who knows who started the chatter, and who knows why it was suddenly determined that the Whispering Bench was something that needed to be saved at that very moment in time? But the people were there, the faces were frowning, and the folks who came to support the C of A for the new house had a big job in front of them.

As you might have guessed by this point in the story, the Whispering Bench had already eclipsed discussion surrounding the plan for the proposed home, even before the meeting was called to order. Decisions had already been made in people’s minds that they had to do whatever it took to make sure that Whispering Bench wasn’t destroyed. And if that meant denying a proposal to make it happen … oh well.

Sitting down with Roger Lewis to discuss the new ‘Friends’ season of programming

BB: Do you have a theme for this year’s talks?

RL: There are two themes if you can consider one book a theme. This year we will look at fish, vegetable farming, and the plight of birds and insects. The lone book deals with America’s first rape trial in 1783 and its impact then and impact now.

BB: Let’s start with fish.

RL: Paul Greenberg is a lifelong fisherman and an award-winning writer on oceans, climate change, the environment, and culinary matters. His book, Four Fish: The Future of the last Wild Food, looks at four fish – salmon, bass, cod, and tuna (recently he has added shrimp to the list!) that are at present the base of a fish diet.

BB: Sounds interesting, what is his main thesis?

RL: A century ago nearly all seafood was wild. Now half is produced through aquaculture. Paul travels the globe looking for where we went wrong with the human – ocean relationship and how we might one day get it right.

A seahorse, a used COVID test and 1,000 pacifiers (and much more) found at Coastal Cleanup

Volunteers gathered on Gasparilla’s beaches for the annual International Coastal Beach Clean Up, held across the world, and on island, on Saturday, Sept. 16.

“We even had a couple of walk-ons,” said Susan Heyl, one of the volunteers for the day. A volunteer from sponsoring group Barrier Island Parks Society (BIPS), she was working the 7th Street beach cleanup site with Danielle Domke of Grande Escapes, another one of the sponsors of the day.

Local officials lead Florida seacoast recovery conference

Local experts on seacoast ecology are leading state efforts to reconcile scheduled beach replenishment and the environment at the second Florida Resilience Conference, set for Sept. 27-29 in Fort Lauderdale. The conference brings together local, national and international experts to address issues with Florida’s beaches and waterways.

One of the lead speakers is Michael Poff, a Lee County professional engineer. His work includes getting the Federal Emergency Management Association, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and dozens of other parties to sign off on regularly scheduled Lee County beach rebuilding efforts and at the same time, repair the damage from Hurricane Ian. 

“They all have to agree on everything,” said Poff, who is who is president of Coastal Engineering Consultants. “It’s one less disturbance to the environment.”

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: GIMM thanks everyone for a great season

To the Editor: The Gasparilla Island Maritime Museum (GIMM) and Whidden’s captains had a great tarpon season! We hosted  two “Howl At Moon“ tournaments, and William Woodroffe hosted two more tarpon tournaments to benefit GIMM this past season. Each tournament was a “grande’ success, and a portion of each tournament entry included a donation to […]

ECOWATCH: Hurricane season is alive and deadly

BY DELORES SAVAS ‘’We are playing Russian roulette with features of the planet’s atmosphere that                                              will profoundly impact generations to come. How long are we willing to gamble?”             […]

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Shorebird and sea turtle presentation to be held in September at Port Charlotte location

To the Editor: Charlotte County Environmental Specialist Suzanne Derheimer will host a presentation on Charlotte County beach nesting species from 9 to 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 16 at Harold Avenue Regional Park Recreation Center in Port Charlotte. It is located at 23400 Harold Ave.  The presentation will focus on sea turtles and shorebirds and […]

Environmental and manmade problems plaguing local seagrass leave manatees and other aquatic wildlife in dire straits

After a massive hurricane and a year of drought, the status of seagrass in Charlotte Harbor could perhaps be characterized by experts as “not better, in fact marginally worse.” 
“We have lost massive amounts of seagrass,” said Dr. Richard Whitman, who heads up the nonprofit environmental charity Heal our Harbor. The group looks regularly at the water quality in Charlotte Harbor and its tributaries, enlisting volunteers in monitoring and educating about the importance of our water.
Observations are often anecdotal and micro-observations, and not all seagrass is the same. Whitman likens the question to how the stock market is doing. Are you asking about how it is doing this week, this year or over decades?