Longs Magazine

59
Articles: Buy Local 10 Reasons To Plant Trees...Now! Bunker Shot Perfection $ Priceless $ Online Magazine

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Longs, South Carolina's number one online magazine

Transcript of Longs Magazine

Page 1: Longs Magazine

Articles:

Buy Local

10 Reasons To Plant Trees...Now!

Bunker Shot Perfection

$ Priceless $

Onl

ine

Mag

azin

e

$ Priceless $

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ContentsFrom The Editor 4

10 Reasons To Plan Trees...Now! 11

Pillows 14

Bunker Shot Perfection 15

Sunrooms 18

Wardrobes 21

Books 24

Chandeliers 26

Commerical Real Estate 28

Fans 29

Umbrellas 31

Baths 33

Time To Refinace or Buy!? 35

Beds 37

Can You Find The Gorget? 39

Carolina GIrl Gear 41

How To Make Grits 43

Outdoors 40

How To Set A Table 47

Flags 49

Neighborhods 51

About Carolina Forest 53

Charleston’s Cultural Affairs Office Launches New Website 55

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Buy LoCaLPromoting local business is as simple as having other company’s business cards or brochures posted on a board in your store. In an effort to promote your area, we are distributing decals that say “Check us out at www.Georgetown.sc,” in hopes that local shoppers will visit the site to find local restaurants, clothing, specials, coupons and more. We are doing our part, so please join us, and promote your local merchants, and everyone will benefit!

top ten reasons to think LoCaLBuy LoCaL - Be LoCaL – heLp LoCaL Businesses

1. Buy LoCaL -- Support yourself and Georgetown. Many studies have revealed when you buy from an independent, locally owned business in the your own area, rather than a nationally owned busi-nesses, considerably more of your money is used to make purchases from other local businesses. Local businesses continue to strengthen the economic base of the local community. These include case studies showing that local local owned businesses generate a premium in enhanced economic impact to the community and our tax base.

2.support LoCaL area Community Groups: Non-profit organizations receive an average 250% more support from smaller Gorgetown area business owners than they do from large companies.

3. keep your area unique: Where we shop, where we eat and have fun -- all of it makes our community home. Our one-of-a-kind local businesses are an integral part of the distinctive character. Local tourism businesses also benefit. “When people go on vacation they generally seek out destinations that offer them the sense of being someplace, not just anyplace.” ~ Richard Moe, President, National Historic Preservation Trust.

4. reduCe environmentaL impaCt: Locally owned businesses in your area can make more local purchases requiring less transportation. This generally means contributing less to sprawl, congestion, habitat loss and pollution.

5. Create additionaL JoBs: Small local businesses are the largest employer nationally and in the community, provide the most jobs to local residents.

6. reCeive Better serviCe: Local businesses often hire people with a better understanding of the products and services they offer, and take more time to get to know customers.

Cont. next page

From the editor

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7.invest in your Community: Local businesses are owned by people who live in this community, and they are less likely to leave, and are more invested in the commu-nity’s future.

8. put your taXes to Good use: Local businesses require a relatively little infrastructure investment and make more ef-fi cient use of public services as compared to nationally owned stores entering your area.

9. Buy what you want, not what BiG advertisinG BudGets want you to Buy: A South Carolina marketplace comprised of tens of thousands of small businesses is the best way to ensure inno-vation and low prices over the long-term. A multitude of small businesses, each selecting products and services based not on a national sales plan but on their own interests and the needs of their local customers, promises a much broader range of product choices.

10. promote LoCaL prosperity: An escalating body of economic research shows that in an increasingly homogenized world, entrepreneurs and skilled workers are more likely to invest and settle in communities that preserve their one-of-a-kind businesses and distinctive character.

Larry LocalEditor in Chief

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CEO Dennis Stewart

EditOr in ChiEfLarry Local

CrEativE dirECtOrDaniel Holliday

art dirECtOrAmy Coats

WEb dEvElOpErs Matthew Coats

administratiOn & markEtingVivi MorilloAngie Woods

WWW.lOngs.sC OnlinE magaZinECopyright © 2009Carolina Media Services. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. Not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts or photographs.

3290 Ashley Phosphate Road Charleston, SC 29418Toll Free: (843)720-9604Fax: (843)[email protected] www.Longs.sc

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“If you can organize your kitchen, you can organize your life.”

Louis Parrish

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MARY FIGURA, Broker/Owner of Horizon Realty Group, entered the real estate business in 1991 when she joined Hugh Dugan Real Estate in northeastern Pennsylvania, where she specialized in general brokerage sales. Her current designations include ABR, e-Pro, and Real Estate Marketing Specialist. She has taken several classes towards her GRI.

Figura grew up in Pennsylvania. Besides working in the real estate profession, she has worked in education. She has a BS from Bloomsburg University, a Master’s Of Education from Kutztown University, Elementary Principal certification from Penn State University and Superintendent certification from Temple University. She currently resides in Longs, with her husband, Dave and daughters, Leah and Anna. She belongs to the North Myrtle Beach Woman’s Club.

The members of Horizon Realty Group are eager to form new relationships in the greater Myrtle Beach area and look forward to becoming more involved with the community. Because of the increase of listing volume, sales and walk-in traffic, Figura said she plans to add other agents to her staff. BILLIE ANN FIGURA Horizon Realty Group welcomes Billie Ann Figura to their team. She has been in marketing and sales for the past ten years. Her career began in Pennsylvania working for a group of radio stations. Her primary duties were to sell clients on the benefits of radio and create their total marketing plan utilizing broadcast media. She quickly became the leading account manager of her county.

Billie Ann relocated to the Myrtle Beach area with her husband five years ago and quickly found her place with Qantum Radio, the leading revenue producing radio group in Myrtle Beach. Realizing the great opportunity and challenges for real estate in this market, she obtained her license and worked as a project sales agent. Now as the sales and marketing director for Horizon Realty Group, she can share her knowledge with a forward thinking company.

She recently branched into general brokerage and is enjoying all aspects of real estate; project sales, land, and resales. The projects that she manages consist of Sun Colony, Island Club, Pelican Bay, and Red Bluff Village. Her primary focus for general brokerage is North Myrtle Beach, Cherry Grove, Little River, and Longs. Billie Ann explains that her vision is to expand Horizon Realty Group by marketing more communities and growing the team of agents to 10.

She resides in Longs with her husband, Chris, and their two children; Eric 16 and Mallory 3. As a family they attend Barefoot Community Church where she is an active volunteer. HARRY KNAPP Having been born in Charleston, SC and raised in Greensboro, NC, Harry has many fond memories of the South Carolina beaches from early on in life. So it only seemed natural, after graduating from Western Carolina University in the mountains of North Carolina, that he would want to smell that salt air again. In 1986, he moved back to the beach and began a career in the vacation time share industry with Peppertree Resorts. He received his real estate license in 1992. He is licensed as a Broker with experience in all facets of real estate. He lives in Cherry Grove with his wife, Gina and their two children, Harry, Jr., 11 and Isabella, 5.

BOB SHAHAN, has been an on-site new home specialist on the north end of the beach for the past seven years. He has worked selling new homes at Long Bay Club, and at the Lakes at Plantation Pines. He has found a new home with Horizon Realty Group, selling pre-construction for Horizon Homes at Sun Colony, the Island Club, Pelican Bay and Red Bluff Village. Additionally, Bob has continued to work general brokerage and all aspects of real estate.

Bob loves what he does and prides himself in the fact that he has sold his customers great homes at affordable prices and will continue to do so. His motivation, service and experience help others find the home of their dreams.

ALICE YERKES Alice has been involved in Real Estate since 1998. She began her experience by working for a very large developer in Bucks County, PA. She started out in the field, and worked up to the sales and marketing department. She can honestly say she has worked from the blue prints, straight through the construction process, to the completion of single family homes, town houses and condos. Her husband retired in January 2007, and that’s when she made her move to the Myrtle Beach area. She thoroughly enjoyed her part in the sales and marketing process in Pennsylvania, and wanted to continue in the real estate field. She received her South Carolina Real Estate license, and now specializes in new construction. She is excited about working as a General Brokerage Agent, as well as project sales and new construction. Making the move to Horizon Realty Group was just like being at home. Her geographical areas of knowledge are Little River, North Myrtle Beach, Longs, Conway, Carolina Forest, and Aynor.

Alice is a Neshaminy High School graduate in Langhorne, PA. She has attended Bucks County Community College in Newtown, PA as an accounting major, and the Wharton Business School in Philadelphia, PA, where she received an Entrepreneur certificate. She is certified as a Parent Educator through Penn State University in Abington, PA. She is married with 3 grown children. While in Pennsylvania, she participated in Extreme Home Makeover, the Neshaminy Education Foundation, Dance del bello, and the Neshaminy Parent Teacher Organization. Her hobbies include riding a Harley Davidson Motorcycle and gourmet cooking.

Alice feels that being a Realtor is a truly a rewarding profession. She understands what it takes to help clients purchase a home, and how important it is to have a smooth transition from one home to the other. She is able to coordinate the smallest detail (placement of light switch) to the most monumental (when the moving truck can unload). She knows that buying a house from the starting point to the ending should be a pleasant experience.

The oldest (boy) is a motorcycle mechanic. The middle child (girl) is a professional ballet dancer and instructor. The youngest (boy) works for a computer security firm. We have rescued birds. We currently have a cockatiel and a blue and gold Amazon parrot.

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“No one realizes how beautiful it is to travel until he comes

home and rests his head on his old, familiar pillow.”

Lyn Yutang

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Bunker shot perFeCtion: BLast your way to a Better GoLF sCore

Bunker shots can be daunting but it’s really all in your head! Use these simple techniques the next time you’re in the bunker and blast your way to a better score.

Golf ScoreFirst, don’t change your swing. Use the loft of the club and your back swing to determine your distance. Of course this will take some practice so you know how to shorten your backswing to get the distance you need. You use your back swing to adjust your distance because you always

want to accelerate through the ball. You never want to the club head to decelerate. Also open the club face if needed to decrease the distance the ball will travel.

Use the “bounce” on the club to launch the ball out of the sand. Don’t worry too much about the defi nition of bounce but try this the next time in the practice sand trap. Take your sand wedge and swing at the sand. Vary the angle the club hits the sand. When you bring the club down steeply you’ll take a lot of sand and leave a large “divot” in the sand. Decrease the angle that you strike the sand until you can feel the club almost bounce off the sand. Feeling that is more important than the actual defi nition of bounce. The key is to have this bounce feel when hitting the ball out of the sand.

Open the club face and aim slightly right with an open stance with the ball forward in your stance, slightly off of your left

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heel for right handed golfers. When you swing follow the line of your feet.

Keep the weight on your left foot and don’t try to lift the ball, let the club do the work; trust me the club will lift the ball.

Hit about 1 inch behind the ball. The key is to get sand between the club face and the ball. This is where that bounce comes in to play.

Also, expect more roll on the ball when faced with a down hill lie in the bunker because the ball won’t get as much spin and tend to roll quite a bit.

Use and practice these techniques to get yourself off the beach and onto the green. For more helpful tips, advice, or to add some Golf Tips and Suggestions of your own - you are invited to visit the South Carolina Golfers Blog at

www.Golf.sc/Blog/

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In our lives there is bound to come some

pain, surely as there are storms and falling rain; just believe that the one

who holds the storms will bring the sun.

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Click To Listen While You Browse!

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“A lot of people ask me if I were shipwrecked, and could

only have one book, what would it be? I always say ‘How

to Build a Boat”

Stephen Wright

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There really are some incredible

chandeliers on the market now.

The designs are a lot softer and

warmer than they used to be. I

think the overriding design

factor that most homeowners

are seeking is something that

says their home is warm,

inviting and comfortable.

Susan Humphress

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CommerCiaL reaL estate rentinG in today’s market

First make sure that the area you have chosen is right for your intended business. If you plan on expanding, take that into consideration. Do you need to be close to an expressway, or the local airport? Before you decide, think ahead, because you may be getting into a long term commitment.

Make sure that any space you’re considering is big enough for both your current needs, and your foreseeable growth. Be realistic and never over-commit.

Do your homework beforehand. Investigate traffi c patterns; tour the area and building. Find out who the previous tenant was, and why the business left. Learn what kinds of marketing the location does in support of its tenants (if any) and whether co-operative marketing funds are available to you.

Weigh the benefi ts of guaranteed foot traffi c at a mall

location against premium rent. Some malls require that all tenants stay open during mall hours, and pay for common area usage as well as the store’s own space and upkeep. Stores may also be asked to pay a percentage of sales to the mall.

Identify your closest competitors. Also check out neighboring businesses with an eye for complementary products or services. If you are locating in a mall, check the lease agreement for any guaranteed protection against competition.

Evaluate whether the physical location and space is a good fi t with your product line. Do you need a large, bright space or is an offi ce warehouse suffi cient?

Investigate any restrictions on signage. Signs are vitally important to retail businesses, yet many landlords decide on what a store can and cannot do. The rules may be even stricter in a mall, which closely monitors its physical appearance.

Negotiate the terms of your lease aggressively. Think about consulting a realtor that is familiar with the area. Never accept wording that’s confusing or that leaves you wondering who is liable for what. Ask for the right of fi rst refusal on adjacent space in case you need to expand. Negotiate for free improvements, free rent, and other incentives before signing your lease.

Hire a real estate attorney who not only specializes in lease negotiations, but knows your area and, preferably, has dealt with your kind of business before. A lease negotiation can cover tens, if not hundreds, of terms, and you want someone in your corner who has seen it all before.

Know who is responsible for maintaining the heating, air-conditioning and other systems, as well as keeping up the parking lot and building exterior. This can be critical in older buildings. Who pays for the utilities and trash pick-up? The time has probably never been better to start a new venture if you have a business that is not being adversely affected by this economy. Just make sure you get the right location……

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“What is my loftiest ambition? I’ve always wanted to throw an egg at an electric fan.”

Oliver Herford quotes (1863-1935)

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Don’t sit under an umbrella waiting for it to

rain

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Sorrow can be alleviated by good sleep, a bath and a glass of wine.

Saint Thomas Aquinas

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time to reFinanCe or Buy !?Right now, mortgage rates are at their lowest level since 1971. Think about that. Twenty-fi ve years ago, homeowners were paying as much as 18% on a 30-year fi xed. Today it’s just a little over 5%.Combine that

rate with the tax advantages of a mortgage, and you have an incredibly cheap way to build wealth, but you better act now.

Real estate guru Barbara Corcoran has already seen a tremendous surge in refi nance applications – more than triple the average – and the number of people getting approved is astronomically higher as well, she says. But that doesn’t mean the low rates are a panacea for the ills of the housing market. It is only once home prices start to go up that we will fi nally see a light at the end of tunnel, Corcoran says. Until that happens, we are still going to have to crawl out of this mess. “[Low interest rates are] a not a lifesaver,” Corcoran says. “This is just a helping hand.”

David Kittle, chairman of the Mortgage Bankers Association, has this advice to homeowners looking to refi nance: Do it. Don’t get greedy searching for another quarter-point. Lock in rates now. He is seeing applications soar over 125% just since Thanksgiving due to the low rates.

Of course, you should only refi nance if it saves you at least 3/8 on the rate and if you plan on staying in your home for at least four years, Kittle says. Along with good credit, proof of income and money by means of a down payment or equity in the home, there are certain things every homeowner needs regardless of interest rate levels.

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“The bed has become a place

of luxury to me! I would not

exchange it for all the thrones in the

world”

Napoleon Bonaparte

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Can you Find the GorGet?The South Carolina State flag is immediately recognizable to native Carolinians, and if you’re spending some time out-of-State, it will probably bring a tear to your eye to see it whizzing by on a bumper sticker or rippling in the soft blue sky of a native license plate. Most folks, however, consistently confuse our flag for a simple representation of a moonlit palm tree. The truth it, the sliver of crescent suspended in the upper left hand corner is not a moon phase: it’s a piece of ornamental armour known as a “gorget”.

A holdover from the days of knights in shining armour, the gorget was originally used to protect the throat and block blows from non-projectile weapons such as swords. Since the gorget originally rested

around the throat, the shape was that of a crescent. In formal armour, the gorget was placed beneath the breastplate and backplate set and supported the weight of the armour. They were often equipped with straps in order to attach some of the heavier armours. By the Renaissance, the gorgets had already achieved an ornamental status and by the American Revolution, it could be seen hanging from delicate chains and ribbons around the throats of officers, signifying their rank.

The first South Carolina flag, designed in 1765, displayed the dark blue of the American troops’ uniforms and a large crescent with the word “Liberty” written within it. While most historians agree that the crescent is the representation of the gorget, which was also worn as a symbol on the caps of American soldiers, there is some argument that the symbol could also stand

for the river bend on which Charleston sits (the crescent was a common symbol used by early American settlements when their Town rested on the curve of a river), or it was a borrowed symbol from the crest of the Bull family, one of Charleston’s early settlers.

The palmetto tree on today’s flag was not included until January 28, 1861, the day of South Carolina’s secession from the Union. The palmetto tree represents the defense of Fort Moultrie from British attack, as the Fort itself was made of palmetto logs: an unexpectedly brilliant construction, as the logs of the palmetto tree are incredibly resilient and absorbed the enemy cannon fire like a sponge.

Either way we have a pretty cool state flag, and gorget is hard to pronounce!

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how to make GritsBy now, you should know that grits are not only the starch of choice in South Caro-lina, it’s also the acronym for “Girls Raised in the South”; so if you don’t have your recipe down by now, it’s time to get boiling.

Proper grits do not come in an easy to open, plastic-lined paper packet. As My Cousin Vinny put it, “Real grits take at least 20 minutes to cook”. In fact, they take a couple hours, but it’s worth every simmering second.So get rid of the Quaker Instant Grits and mosey on down to the rice isle. Grits can usually be found either here or in the baking isle. If you’re lucky enough to live near a locally produce market or farmer’s market, 99% of the time you’ll fi nd more than enough grits in stock. Some local favorites include Anson Mills grits and Charleston’s Favor-ite Stone Ground Grits.

Now that you have the dry goods, make sure you have some fresh chicken stock, milk, cream and butter. Oh yes, you’re making these the way God intended.

Measure out your dry grits (1 cup of dry grits makes roughly 2 servings) and clean them by placing them in a bowl and

fi lling the bowl with water until the water is an inch or so above the grits. Skim off the chaff and drain. Don’t worry, it doesn’t have to be completely dry, just get it as close as possible. Now, dump the wet grits into a pot and pour in twice as much chicken stock as grits. Bring this to a boil, then reduce to me-dium-low. Now add equal portions cream and milk up to 2 and ½ times the amount of grits. So, if I was making this recipe for two, I would have used 1 cup dry grits, 2 ½ cups chicken stock, 1 ¾ cups cream and 1 ¾

cups milk. Add salt and pepper to taste, then sit back and let it simmer. The longer the grits simmer, the richer they’ll be. Typical time is 20-30 minutes, but some of the best grits sit for an hour to two hours at low to medium-low heat, just soaking up that cream and milk. Right before you serve the grits up, stir in a healthy pat of butter and, if you’re feeling a little wild, grate a handful of parmesan or cheddar cheese over the top.

Play with and perfect this dish to your liking. The recipe is pur-posefully simple for the sole reason that it’s up to each southern girl to come up with her own special twist on this Southern Classic.

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“If people sat outside and looked

at the stars each night, I’ll bet they’d

live a lot differently.”

Bill Watterson

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How to set a tableAs a lady of the Carolina’s, small shows of simple grace and etiquette should become as second nature to you. Now, this isn’t saying that you have to run out immediately and have visiting cards printed, or go buy a sterling silver tea set, but having knowledge of little things like place settings means a lot to locals and ultimately, shows that you truly care for and respect the civility which is the heart of South Carolina.

Even at an informal dinner, it’s a good idea to create a centerpiece. This can be a week-long labor of love or, in most cases, a small setting thrown together about five minutes before the guests arrive. A few snippings from the juniper tree for frilly greenery and aromatic scent, a handful of flowers arranged in a low bowl or small vase, a couple strategically placed pieces of fruit and a candle or two and your centerpiece is complete. A bouquet of flowers from the local florist or, better yet, a nearby farm, would also work, but no matter what, the point is that you have one. Another little pointer: don’t make the centerpiece taller than eye level. Guests would like to be able to see each other when they speak and it could mess up a lovely arrangement if you’re having to part the sunflowers every time you want to ask a question.

As for your silverware, if you have sterling silver, use it. Even, and especially, if it’s your great grandmother’s set that’s been passed down for generations.

She never intended for you to keep it wrapped up in crumbling bags of velvet. Silverware and formal china, however pretty and expensive, were meant to be used and this is a great time to show them off. Even if you don’t have formal silverware, though, the point is to have the place settings properly arranged and in the end, no one will really care what the silverware looked like as long as there’s plenty of food and wine.

With the dinner plate as the center, silverware should be placed in line, an inch from the edge of the table, and arranged from the outside – in, in order of use. On the right, salad fork (smaller fork), appetizer utensil (or another small fork or none at all if you aren’t having an appetizer between salad, soup and dinner), then dinner fork (your biggest fork) closest to the plate. On the left, soup spoon, spreading knife for the bread and the dinner knife closest to the plate. Be sure to turn the blade of the knives toward the plate, as an outwardly turned knife is a symbol of aggression toward the other diners (don’t you love these quaint little old world idiosyncrasies?). The dessert fork and spoon for after dinner tea or coffee should go across the top of the dinner plate, with the tines of the fork facing right and the bowl of the spoon facing left. Napkins should be folded either as simply or ornately as you like, and placed in the center of the dinner plate. Glasses are also placed an inch above the knives and in order of use starting from the far right: white wine, red wine, dessert wine and water tumbler. Dinner should be served from the kitchen and ideally, placed on each diner’s plate by the server/host instead

of passing bowls and dishes around.

If it is Thanksgiving at Grandma’s, none of the above applies.

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“Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands & hoist the

black flag”

Henry Louis Mencken

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neiGhBorhoods1. Neighborhoods are where we all grew up a long time ago. Today, because of golf courses, shopping areas, subdivi-sions, jobs, schools, and a transient society, a neighborhood means different things to different folks.

2. Neighborhoods can be as small as a dozen or so houses, and be as many as thousands of homes.

3. Neighborhoods are common, and perhaps close to uni-versal, since most people in urbanized areas would probably consider themselves to be living in one.

4. Neighborhoods are convenient, and always accessible, since you are already in your neighborhood when you walk out your door.

5. Successful neighborhood action frequently requires little specialized technical skill, and often little or no money. Action may call for an investment of time, but material costs are often low.

6. With neighborhood action, compared to activity on larger scales, results are more likely to be visible and quickly forth-coming. The streets are generally cleaner; the crosswalks are painted; the trees are planted; a festival draws a crowd.

7. Visible and swift results are indicators of success; and since success is reinforcing, the probability of subsequent neighborhood action is increased.8. Because neighborhood action usually involves others, such actions create or strengthen connections and relationships with other neighbors, leading in turn to a variety of potentially positive effects, often hard to predict.

9. Over and above these community advantages, neighbor-hood activity may simply be enjoyable and fun for those taking part.

But in addition to these benefits, considerable research indi-cates that strong and cohesive neighborhoods and communi-ties are linked –quite possibly causally linked – to decreases in crime, better outcomes for children, and improved physical and mental health. The social support that a strong neigh-borhood may provide can serve as a buffer against various forms of adversity. Sometimes a neighborhood isn’t a neigh-borhood until an event occurs, which draws people together, to become “neighbors”.

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GoLF!

Residents are afforded with recreational opportunities in the Carolina Forest area. There are two golf courses in Carolina Forest, Man O’ War and The Wizard golf courses. Both are situated beside Windsor Green and Waterford Plantation. The River Oaks neighborhood, which borders Carolina Forest, also features numerous golf courses as well. Carolina Forest has plans for ten golf courses, but the slight decline of the golf industry in Myrtle Beach has not permitted this.

Future pLans

Upcoming recreational plans have been set aside in Carolina Forest. International Paper initially planned parkland, roadway easements, reserves, and animal corridor land, some of which has not been started and for now remains virgin forestland. Lewis Ocean Bay Preserve, a gigantic tract of land reserved by the state of South Carolina, borders Carolina Forest and is easy to get to through International Drive and Highway 90.

aBout CaroLina ForestCarolina Forest is one of the more popular communities for people living and working in the Myrtle Beach area in South Carolina.

reCent deveLopment

Carolina Forest boasts one of the top school districts in the state, and is an unincorporated town made-up of numerous neighborhoods communities and new commercial developments conveniently situated between the beaches Myrtle Beach and the historic city of Conway.

The Carolina Forest community enjoys residential family-friendly neighborhoods and businesses, as well as top schools and preserved natural foliage and wildlife create a master-planned community in Horry County and a unique and sought after place to live.

master pLanned For the Communities BeneFit

Carolina Forest is an one-of-a-kind, master-planned, unincorporated area of Horry Coun-ty SC that’s an example of how excellent neighbor-hoods, family-friendly businesses, and superior schools mix to form one of the most desirable places to live.

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CharLeston’s CuLturaL aFFairs oFFiCe LaunChes www.CharLestonarts.sC, as thier new arts weB siteFrom: Charleston Currents

The city of Charleston’s Office of Cultural Affairs has launched http://www.CharlestonArts.sc, a companion Web site to the OCA’s primary page at the city’s official site. CharlestonArts.sc will be updated daily with information and features, including an arts calendar that users can search by date, artist, presenting group or venue; social networking widgets; and a directory of local arts and cultural organizations and venues.

“We are hopeful that CharlestonArts.sc will be a major benefit to local artists and arts organizations by disseminating information about their events with the most up-to-date information to a broader public,” said Ellen Dressler Moryl, director of the Office of Cultural Affairs.

Other options for users at CharlestonArts.sc include the following:

• Arts organizations can download forms from the Office of Cultural Affairs, submit events, update contact information and compare performance dates with other area organizations.

• The Tools for Professional section of the Web site features job listings for arts professionals, including full time and part time work as well as internships and volunteer opportunities with arts and cultural organizations in the tri-county area.

• Updated grant opportunities for arts organizations, with detailed information, including deadlines, application and contact information.

• Call for Submissions and Call for Auditions pages with details about the location, deadlines, fees and additional requirements.

The new Web site also hosts connecting pages for general information on the Office of Cultural Affairs and its projects: the Charleston Farmers Market, the City Gallery at Waterfront Park, Holiday Magic, Happy New Year Charleston!, the Holiday Parade of Boats, the Lowcountry Quar-terly Arts Grant Program, Piccolo Spoleto and the MOJA Arts Festival.

The Web Site was developed and is being hosted by Carolina Media Services ( www.ONLY.sc) .

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FinaL words

Try not to become a man of success but a man of value.

aLBert einstein

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