Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

100
BOWENS ISLAND RESTAURANT / THE STORY OF SCOUT BOATS / M&G PENNIE FOLDEN VILLAGE POET / ETIQUETTE: DRESS CODES DEFINED / GIN & TONIC: A TWIST ON A CLASSIC A PASTOR VISITS AUSCHWITZ / THE 50 BOOKS EVERY SOUTHERNER SHOULD READ Growing Local Golden beets pulled fresh from the earth at Wishbone Heritage Farms Featuring Behr Family Farm, Wishbone Heritage Farms, Wabi Sabi Farm and nineteen other local farms that are taking root and growing wild Plus The BEAUTY in DISCOVERY Local interior designer Laura Jones opens the door to her home PARTY STARTERS ree cheesy finger foods for any Southern get-together SOUTHERN MOTHERS Two loving daughters remember the remarkable women who gave them life and schooled them on life’s most important lessons

description

Modern Living in the Old South

Transcript of Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Page 1: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

BOWENS ISLAND RESTAURANT / THE STORY OF SCOUT BOATS / M&G PENNIE FOLDENVILLAGE POET / ETIQUETTE: DRESS CODES DEFINED / GIN & TONIC: A TWIST ON A CLASSIC

A PASTOR VISITS AUSCHWITZ / THE 50 BOOKS EVERY SOUTHERNER SHOULD READ

Growing LocalGolden beets pulled fresh

from the earth at WishboneHeritage Farms

Featuring

Behr Family Farm, Wishbone Heritage Farms, Wabi Sabi Farm and nineteen other local farms that are taking root

and growing wild

Plus

The

BEAUTY in

DISCOVERYLocal interior designerLaura Jones opens the

door to her home

PARTY STARTERSThree cheesy finger

foods for any Southernget-together

SOUTHERN MOTHERS

Two loving daughtersremember the remarkable women who gave them life and schooled them on life’s

most important lessons

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SOUTHERN MOTHERSAs Mother’s Day

approaches, two lovingdaughters remember

the remarkable women whogave them life and schooled

them on life’s mostimportant lessons.

80

BEAUTY INDISCOVERY

Local interior designer,Laura Jones opens

the door to her home, revealing a warm and

eclectic aesthetic.

84

THENEW CROPFeaturing Behr Family Farm,Wishbone Heritage Farms,

Wabi Sabi Farm and nineteenother local farms that are

growing wild.

63

F E A T U R E SSPRING 2015

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CONTENTS / Spring 2015

07 Editor’s Letter12 Contributors

17-23 FIELD GUIDEA brief look into ourlocal culture22 The 50 Books EverySoutherner Should Read

SOUTHERN LIFE25 Southern Spotlight - Food30 Southern Spotlight - Etiquette33 Southern Spotlight - Industry

33

ON THE COVER: Golden beets pulled fresh from the earth at Wishbone Heritage Farms / Photograph by Dottie Rizzo

2525

92 THE LOCAL92-15th Annual SPCADowns Byrd Oyster Roast94-Summerville Winter Farmers' Market96 THE VILLAGE POET

COLUMNS41 Natural Woman by Susan Frampton45 Patchwork of the South by Michelle Lewis49 Life & Faith by Will Browning

SOUTHERN TASTE 53 Party StartersThree cheesy finger foods

for any Southernget together

22 41

30

2153

AirshipsBarry Hannah

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The gardens have over 3000

different varieties of camellia in the

collection.

EDITOR’S LETTER

Growing LocalI'm confused.

Recently, I have been doing some genealogy research into my family lineage. What I found is that I come from a long line of farmers (on both sides of my family). South Carolina farmers, at that. I knew that I had farming in my roots, but it seems that my family has been working the land ever since they reached the shores of America. Herein lies that aforementioned confusion.

I have a brown thumb.

I am completely inept at making things grow. The only plant that I can keep alive is monkey grass. And anyone can grow that. It's harder to kill it than to keep it alive. I've even potted it, if that tells you anything. Productive farming and gardening take hard work and know-how. You have to understand the needs of the plants and tend to them regularly. As much as I want to blame it on the soil or my horticulturally inadequate thumb, the fact is, I'm ignorant of all things agricultural.

In our cover story, "The New Crop," (pg. 63) we visited three local farms, which produce everything from kale and beets to turkey and pork. These are the folks we rely on, not only to eat, but to eat well. I encourage you to take a Saturday and visit the Summerville Farmers Market. There you can meet these farmers and check out their goods. You can even pick up some monkey grass.

Will Rizzo Editor in Chief

"As much asI want to blameit on the soil ormy horticulturally inadequate thumb, that fact is, I'm ignorant of allthings agricultural."

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T H E H E A R T A N D S O U Lof S O U T H C A R O L I N A

A celebration of the spirit of South Carolina, PALMETTO is the authority on our distinctive style of Southern life—documenting her beauty and charm and giving our readers a novel look

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From the South Carolina National Heritage Corridor & the editors of Azalea Magazine

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201512

Will RizzoCo-Publisher andEditor in Chief

[email protected]

Dottie RizzoCo-Publisher andManaging Editor

[email protected]

Katie DePoppeEditor at Large

[email protected]

Will BrowningFaith Editor

Jana RileyStaff Writer

ContributorsJason Wagener

Susan FramptonMichelle Lewis

Ellen HyattElizabeth Donehue

Charles Sweeney

Azalea Magazine 114B E. Richardson Avenue

Summerville, SC [email protected]

843.478.7717

Subscribe*Available for $16.99 a year

(4 Issues). Visit azaleamag.comfor details.

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Page 13: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

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H A V E Y O U H E A R D A B O U T

single-sitesurgery?

a n e w t r a d i t i o n

SCRobotics.com

Just think...one tiny incision means virtually no scar and a faster

recovery. Currently used for gall bladder removal, single-site will

soon be available for other types of surgery, like hysterectomy. And, the

South Carolina Institute for Robotic Surgery

has more experience with single-site

than anyone in the Lowcountry.

Trident Health and the South

Carolina Institute for Robotic

Surgery...Count on Experience.

ROBOTIC SURGERY PHYSICIAN TEAM

· Christopher Accetta, MD

· Joseph C. Allen, MD

· Joseph Asaro, MD*

· Theodore E. Brisson, MD

· Lori A. Campbell, MD

· Christine Case, MD

· Beth A. Cook, MD

· Ronnie M. Givens, MD

· Jennifer Heinemann, MD

· Christine L. Hunter, MD

· Ward Katsanis, MD

· Jeffrey M. Lafond, MD, FACS*

· Cynthia Lawton, MD

· Thomas C. Litton, MD, FACS*

· James T. Martin, MD

· Brendan Murphy, MD

· Paula Orr, MD

· William M. Reeves, MD

*These general surgeons provide single-site robotic surgery at Trident Health.

· Heather S. Schwartzberg, MD

· Molly E. Senokozlieff, MD

· John L. Smear, MD*

· Greg T. Squires, MD*

· Kyrsten Sutton, MD

· Marshall Wingo, MD

For more information on single-site surgery,

or to schedule an appointment,

visit SCRobotics.com or call 843-797-3463.

FEATURED CONTRIBUTORS

JANA RILEY / Writer Jana is a writer and editor living in Summerville with her husband, Dan. Jana enjoys adventures with her three favorite kids, Noah, Jude, Forest and their dog, Alfie.

ELLEN HYATT /Poet

SUSAN FRAMPTON / WriterSusan Frampton is a writer who has happily called Summerville home for over thirty years. When not at her desk, she spends as much time as possible with her hands in the dirt, or thinking up new projects for her husband, Lewis—who wishes she would spend less time thinking.

JASON WAGENER / IllustratorJason started his illustrious art career when he won a coloring contest in third grade, subsequently entitling him proud owner of a Mickey Mouse dry erase board. He moved to the Lowcountry in 1990 and, save an education at The Savannah College of Art and Design, has remained a faithful transplant ever since. He now lives in Goose Creek under the thumb of the dreamy Julie Wagener and offspring: Toy Story enthusiast, Henry, and the womb-bound “baby brudder.” Oddly enough, he lettered in art at Stratford High School.

Ellen E. Hyatt’s writing has garnered recognition from professional, literary and mainstream sources. Her works have twice been the recipient of what the Poetry Society of SC refers to as “the big one” (the Dubose & Dorothy Heyward Society Prize). Fellow of the Western Pennsylvania Writing Project, professor, columnist and appointee to the Board of Governors of the SC Academy of Authors, Ellen serves organizations promoting literacy and the arts.

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Page 15: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

H A V E Y O U H E A R D A B O U T

single-sitesurgery?

a n e w t r a d i t i o n

SCRobotics.com

Just think...one tiny incision means virtually no scar and a faster

recovery. Currently used for gall bladder removal, single-site will

soon be available for other types of surgery, like hysterectomy. And, the

South Carolina Institute for Robotic Surgery

has more experience with single-site

than anyone in the Lowcountry.

Trident Health and the South

Carolina Institute for Robotic

Surgery...Count on Experience.

ROBOTIC SURGERY PHYSICIAN TEAM

· Christopher Accetta, MD

· Joseph C. Allen, MD

· Joseph Asaro, MD*

· Theodore E. Brisson, MD

· Lori A. Campbell, MD

· Christine Case, MD

· Beth A. Cook, MD

· Ronnie M. Givens, MD

· Jennifer Heinemann, MD

· Christine L. Hunter, MD

· Ward Katsanis, MD

· Jeffrey M. Lafond, MD, FACS*

· Cynthia Lawton, MD

· Thomas C. Litton, MD, FACS*

· James T. Martin, MD

· Brendan Murphy, MD

· Paula Orr, MD

· William M. Reeves, MD

*These general surgeons provide single-site robotic surgery at Trident Health.

· Heather S. Schwartzberg, MD

· Molly E. Senokozlieff, MD

· John L. Smear, MD*

· Greg T. Squires, MD*

· Kyrsten Sutton, MD

· Marshall Wingo, MD

For more information on single-site surgery,

or to schedule an appointment,

visit SCRobotics.com or call 843-797-3463.

Page 16: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201516

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This material shall not constitute a valid offer in any state where prior registration is required or if void by law. Photographs are for illustrative purposes only and are not intended to be an actual representation of a specific community,neighborhood, or any completed improvements being offered. Please see a sales associate for details. ©2014 Pulte Homes Corporation. All rights reserved. 7.31.14

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Page 19: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 19

EasterHere are some things

about the beloved holiday that you might not know.

$2,100,000,000The dollar amount spent on

Easter candy annually. That'sbillions with a "B."

8,968 lbsThe weight of the

largest chocolate egg ever made.

90The number

(in millions) ofchocolate

bunnies madeeach yearfor Easter.

Egg dyeswere once

made out of natural items such as onion

peels, tree bark, flower petals and juices.

16Billion

The number of jelly beans made each year specifically for Easter. That's enough to fill a

plastic egg the size of a nine-story building.

The traditional act of painting eggs is called

Pysanka.

In the early customs, pretzels were associated with Easter because the twists of the pretzel were thought to resemble arms

crossing in prayer.

S E A S O N A L

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201520

Q What is your favorite thing aboutliving in the Lowcountry?

A I love living in Summerville because even though our small town is growing by leaps and bounds, it has maintained the small town feel that I adore. My ab-solute favorite thing would be friday night football at McKissick Stadium. The sense of community and pride that resonates through the stands is like no other. I also love that you can walk down the street or go in a store, bump into a friend you haven't seen in years, and catch up over a ten minute conversation.

Q What is your dream job?

A I'd love to have my own wedding/event planning business. There's nothing I enjoy more than planning a party.

Q Is there a motto that you live by?

A I was taught to live by the Golden Rule. Over the years, I worked in an environ-ment where I've dealt with many different types of people from very different walks of life. I've learned that if you put yourself in their shoes for one second, you're more likely to listen before you speak and think before you react. If all that fails, then my philosophy is to "kill them with kindness," and I am the queen of that.

Q Who or what are you a fan of?

A South Carolina Gamecocks, Summer-ville Green Wave or any sports team my boys are a part of !

Q Coffee or tea?

A Both. They must be sweet...like me!

Q What's one thing you've bought in the last five years that you couldn’t live without?

A There are two. My iPhone. It may as well be an additional appendage on my body. We go nowhere without each oth-er. NOWHERE! Also my hair straight-ener. I cannot go a day without it.

Q What's one thing you've bought in the last five years that you could go the rest of your life ?

A That's a trick question.

Q What is your favorite music?

A I love to get down to a sick beat, but I'm also a sucker for a cheesy love song.

Q What is your dream vacation?

A I'd love to go to Hawaii, but I'd settle for anywhere warm, sunny and tropical as long as they will deliver sassy adult beverages to my beach chair. After tak-ing a trip to the Frozen Tundra this year with my husband, he has promised me that our next vacation will not require three layers of clothes. I can't wait!

Q What is your fondest memory ofliving in Summerville?

A Where do I start? There are so many memories that I have growing up here and countless things that I love about living here. The tree lighting, the festival, hanging out at Kramers, Green Wave football, my first job at Guerin's Phar-macy, volunteering in the community...the list goes on. However, the two that make me the happiest would be marry-ing my high school sweetheart, Dennis Folden, and becoming a mom to my two amazing sons, Wesley and Walker.

Q & A

PENNIE FOLDENM u r p h y L a w F i r m

AM

"I love to get downto a sick beat, but I'm

also a sucker for a cheesy love song.

"

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The Lowcountry leader in PRIMARY CARE.PALMETTO PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIANS (PPCP) formed in 1997 and is the largest outpatient physicians group in South Carolina and was one of the fi rst in the country to have a fully integrated Electronic Health Records system.

• PPCP is among one of the fi rst practices nationally to establish a successful Patient Centered Medical Home Program and the fi rst in South Carolina.

• We are a group practice comprised of over 90 clinical providers, and we have expertise in primary and specialty care including vein, neurology, gastroenterology, endocrinology and radiology.

• Patient-centered services are available, such as state-of-the-art urgent care clinic and a diagnostic center that is open 365 days a year.

• We offer a Nurses Triage Line that is available to patients 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

For additional information on our physicians, please visitwww.PalmettoPrimaryCare.com or call (843) 572-7727

Page 22: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 23

Mixology

B L A C K -B E R R Y J A M G I N& T O N I C

INGREDIENTS

1 1/2 oz gin1/2 cup tonic waterfreshly squeezed lime juice 1 generous spoonful of blackberry jamice cubesfrozen blackberries for garnish

DIRECTIONS

Place the gin, jam and lime juice in a cocktail shaker with about 1 cup of ice cubes and shake together. Pour ingredients into a glass containing a few ice cubes, then poor in the tonic and stir.Garnish with frozen blackberries.

2005Wedding

2009Baby

2015Boss

OBSTETRICS | GYNECOLOGY

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Why read it? Mississippi native, Barry Hannah had already published two full-length novels (his first, Geronimo Rex (1972), which was nominated for a National Book Award) when his short stories caught the attention of Esquire’s fiction editor, Gordon Lish, and were published by the men’s magazine at a record number. Most of the stories would later become the collection, Airships, published in 1978. Hannah, thirty-five years old at the time, haunted readers with his delusory (or “phantasmagoric” as dubbed by the New York Times), darkly comedic and often controversial, complex characters and storylines. While still relatively obscure from the mainstream reader, Hannah established himself as a new voice in Southern literature, veering from the Faulknerian and O’Connor traditions, and spurring debate amongst even the most learned readership of his work through his use of terse, power-packed sentences, re-invented phrasings and the juxtapo-sition of tender and contentious topics. And while it seems, some people did not know how to take him, Hannah’s ability to capture modern everyday Southern vernacular where sentiment was no longer preferred, has indeed endeared him in the hearts of readers.

Literary

Our spring issue is the third printed installment in our “50 Books” series. Find more books from the list on our blog at azaleamag.com. Also, be sure to join our online discussion group, The Southern Lit Project, on Facebook to offer your opinions on the books shared here or to make your own must-read suggestions.

Baking Soda

Field Guide

The 50 BooksEvery Southerner

Should Read

"When I read great

literature...I feel that the human mind has not achieved anything greater

than the ability to share feelings and thoughts through

language.

"- James Earl Jones

K A T I ED E P O P P E

The editor at large for Azalea Magazine and the

curator of The Azalea Room, the official blog of

www.azaleamag.com

Connect with her:Twitter @kdepoppe

Instagram @katiedepoppe

AirshipsBarry Hannah

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The Last Gentleman Walker Percy

Why read it? Known as a philosopher among novelists as well as a writer of deep Catholic faith, Walker Percy’s art seems to have been profoundly affected not only by the suicides of his grandfather, and later his father, but the still-later tragic death of his mother, which he also regarded as a suicide, all before he reached the age of sixteen. The exploration of mortality, among more obscure themes that set out to make sense of the human condition, are recognizable and endearing within his writings – a factor that his formal schooling as a medical doctor also seemed to shape.

The Last Gentleman, Percy’s second novel, which chronicles the adventures of Williston Bibb Barrett, was simultaneously praised and summarized by the theologian Thomas Merton: “Walker Percy is one of the few novelists whose books I am able to finish. This is in fact a haunting, disturbing, funny and fantastic anti-novel structured like a long dream and relentlessly insisting that most reality is unconscious. It ends up by being one of the most intelligent and sophisticated statements about the South and about America.”

A Curtain ofGreen and Other StoriesEudora Welty

Why read it? Perhaps the most startling, yet uncomplicated observation by Eudora Welty on the art of writing was her thought that the artist must look squarely at the mysteries of human experience without trying to resolve them; it was that ability to reveal mystery, rather than explain it, which makes Welty’s works hauntingly beautiful and forever endearing.

But it was her social life, albeit a simple one in a simple Southern town, which she argues made her a good writer in more palpable ways: Said to have remarked that her fellow townsfolk were the “source of the information that stir[red] [her] imagination,” her characters are known to range from outrageously grotesque to understated or psychologically subdued. Armed with a remarkable ear for language and known to be quite social, Welty’s social prowess, community relationships and ability to skillfully and honestly observe people, led her to become one of the greatest writers of the 20th century. “I would not understand a literary [reclusive] life,” she mused.

Melanie A. Maes*Amanda M. Leviner

*Also licensed in Washington State

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 27

At the end of a rutted shell road, Lowcountry flavor is deliveredby the bushel, and the sunsets alone are worth the drive.

by Susan Frampton

A Bushel and a Peck

S O U T H E R NS P O T L I G H T

Heirloom SeafoodRobert Barber looks onas patrons pile into his

beloved restaurant

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on the small island they purchased in 1946. And though his parents later moved from Charleston to Columbia, Barber recalls that the family returned as often as possible. At points along the way during his high school and college years, he worked in many restaurants; including Bowens Island, and although he had learned the secrets of the successful business at his grandparents’ side, he never intended to end up running the restaurant himself.

While Barber’s path to becoming an expert on oysters began when he was born into the family that called Bowens Island home, it took a circuitous route to get him to today. It first sent him to Wofford as an undergraduate, then to divinity school at Duke University, and then on to Laurens County as a minister.

estauranteur Robert Barber was only a year old in 1950, when Doris Day sang a song quantifying her love, using a measurement that would resonate throughout his life. Doris, it seemed, loved the object of her affection a bushel and a peck, and a

hug around the neck. For the family who operated Bowens Island Restaurant, the measurement in the song was familiar–a bushel was approximately forty-five to sixty pounds of oysters, with a peck weighing in at a quarter of that. And as close-knit as they were, the love part wasn’t unfamiliar either.

It was Robert Barber’s grandmother, May Bowen, and her husband, Jimmy who first opened Bowens Island Restaurant

R

To one lucky enough to have been brought up in the Lowcountry, the aroma ofoysters steaming under blankets of wet burlap downstairs, summons images of beer,

bonfires and waxed green jackets fight off the chill of winter.

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It carried him away to South Texas College of Law to become a lawyer, and back to Charleston, where he practiced law and served on the Charleston County School Board. The path would find him elected to the South Carolina legislature, and bring him a successful career as a lobbyist. But, Bowens Island was a siren singing his name, and the pull back to the fourteen-acre piece of land at the end of a causeway off Folly Road, was as visceral for him as the tide. For a time, he even operated his law practice from a small room at the back of the restaurant, but it was when his grandparents’ health began to fail, that he stepped in, and never looked back.

***

We’ve met before – at the statehouse in Columbia, on a day when budget line items were to be passed or vetoed by legislators. On that day he was in his role as a lobbyist, dressed in the requisite suit and tie, but today, when he joins our table at the restaurant dressed in jeans and a worn Wofford cap, his friendly, laid-back manner makes him as much a part of this place as the blackened cinder blocks lining the oyster cooking area, and it is hard to imagine him any other way.

To one lucky enough to have been brought up in the Lowcountry, the aroma of oysters steaming under blankets of wet burlap downstairs, summons images of beer, bonfires and waxed green jackets worn to fight off the chill of winter. It brings with it the

taste of sea air, salty and fresh, and memories of the laughter of friends gathered around sawhorse-legged tables. It is one of the many things that make a visit to Bowens Island feel like a trip home.

Down on the first floor, folks are bellied up to tables for the all-you-can-eat oysters, throwing the empties into the hole in the center of the table. The restaurant has been named “One of America’s Great Seafood Dives” and one of the “Top Ten Seafood Dives,” amongst other honors, by numerous publications throughout the years, and though these might seem dubious to the white tablecloth set, they are taken quite seriously by this place that is completely without pretense.

Those looking to find slick-shelled oysters, adorned with delicate lemon slices and served

on a silver platter, might find themselves disappointed by the no-frills presentation. The gnarled knots of mud-covered shells shoveled onto the tables might not look like much to someone from “away,” but to those brought up with the perfume of pluff mud in their nostrils, they are choice jewels.

Upstairs, in the main part of the restaurant, a horseshoe-shaped bar at one end of the room offers libations to wash down the salty treats, and a menu to meet the needs of the most persnickety seafood lovers. The Big Ol’ Shrimp platter carries enough golden-fried sea nuggets, served on a paper plate, to bring down a burly man, and the Big Ol’ Seafood Platter could conceivably

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 31

The island is now home to Barber and several of his siblings. “When you come on the island,” he directs me when I call for a visit, “it ’s the third house on the right. If you go too far and get to the restaurant, turn around and it will be the third house on the left as you come back.”

Like the restaurant, his home has also been rebuilt. Barber’s house burned on a hot August night in 2011, and the family was once again tried by fire when the restaurant’s catering kitchen burned a year later.

Undaunted, the legendary eating establishment, newer now, but still spectacular in its simplicity, stands looking out over the river. The shell-packed parking lot seems to lie in wait for the arrival of spring, heralded by the sound of flip-

flop shod feet, and the laughter of happy, sun-kissed families.

Some will be returning to remember the same ruby sunsets their parents and grandparents enjoyed over the years, and others will find the gem at the end of a rutted dirt road through the marsh for the very first time. Both will discover Lowcountry treasure – for lying there on the riverbank amidst the pluff mud and oyster shells, they have found the pearl that is Bowens Island Restaurant.

Open year round, Bowens Island Restaurant can be found at 1870 Bowens Island Road, just off Folly Road.

AM

feed a village. Scrumptious slaw, hushpuppies and fries are icing on the virtual crustacean cake. Cocktail sauce from a bottle would be sacrilegious, so patrons pump paper cups full of a concoction invented by Barber’s grandmother to baptize both oysters and shrimp alike with delicious, heavy-on-the-horseradish flavor.

***

In the cinder block structure that Barber’s grandmother and grandfather opened long ago, the standard had been set for Lowcountry seafood, and a mecca established for locals and visitors seeking the timeless fare. Sixty years later, in 2006, the iconic oyster joint with layer after layer of magic marker signatures on its walls, and the best sunset in South Carolina, burned to the ground. Five months earlier, it had earned a James Beard Award as an American Classic.

Though the fire marked the end of an era begun by his grandparents, Barber’s hand was by this time firmly at the wheel, and he rebuilt the restaurant into a new, “old favorite.” Today, there are sooty reminders of the fiery end of the original establishment, but they only add to the ambiance. An antique jukebox in the corner croons music that our parents might have danced to, the beer is cold, and the view is spectacular. New generations of devotees leave their marks now on the walls and woodwork, many with no idea that the tradition began long before they were born.

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201532

An invitation arrives in the mail requesting your presence at an event. All too soon the dreaded question enters your mind: What will I wear? While the following are not as confusing as “island formal,” “casual chic” or the dreaded “come as you are” requests, these more common dress codes still have specific expectations behind them. Allow me to expound:

" Clothes have, they say, more

importantoffices than to merely keep

us warm. They change our view

of the world and the world's

view of us.

"-Virginia Woolf

E L I Z A B E T H D O N E H U E

Arbiter of social graces, with a heart for simple

hospitality and a tendency for adventure, Elizabeth

lives in Summerville with her husband Wesley, baby boy Harlowe, and yorkie

Gucci.

Dress CodesDefined

What to wear and when to

wear it.

S O U T H E R NS P O T L I G H T

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 33

D R E S S I N G T H E P A R T

Black TieFormal, and usually reserved for evening affairs. Men wear a tuxedo; women, a long gown.

Black Tie OptionalSlightly less formal than black tie. Men don a tuxedo or dark suit and tie. Women should wear a long gown, a cocktail dress or dressy separates.

Cocktail Festive and fun. For guys, this dress code calls for dark suits with a tie. For women, short dresses.

FestiveA dress code that tends to pop up around the holidays, festive attire is similar to cocktail attire, but with a holiday bent of added sparkle or color.

BusinessThe idea is to wear something business ap-propriate which also feels dressed up. A suit and tie for the guys, and a tailored dress or suit for women will do the trick.

Business CasualCasual but work appropriate. Guys can wear slacks and a collared shirt. For women, pants and a blazer or a pencil skirt and blouse will have you covered. No jeans or sneakers allowed.

Garden PartyThink colorful and lightweight. Men, choose slacks, an Oxford shirt and sport coat, or a light-colored suit. For ladies, a dress and flats or wedges to avoid sinking into the grass will make for a comfortable event. Remember, Memorial Day to Labor Day, seersucker is fitting attire for any warm weather outdoor Southern gathering.

CasualAnything goes, but be tasteful. I suggest khakis and a button down or polo for the Southern gentlemen. For the ladies, a dress, skirt or pants with a pretty top will have you looking both casual and polished.

When in doubt, it is certainly appropriate to contact the host to clarify what they expect party guests to wear. AM

Page 34: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Amanda Patterson South State BankBranch Manager

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We want you to think of us as an extension of your team. Let us help you plan for tomorrow so you can focus on today. That’s relationship banking. That’s the South State Way.

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 35

Floating An IdeaThe unsinkable team of Scout Boats,

Steve and Diane Pottsby Susan Frampton

“If a man is to be obsessed by something, I suppose a boat is as good as anything, perhaps a bit better than most.” Though not written to describe Steve Potts, the words of author E.B. White could not be more fitting.

Potts came into the world with a boat on his mind, and an idea that would require a bit of an obsession. It would also require a lot of hard work. But the boy from Connecticut was

not afraid of hard work, and as fate would have it, he would grow up in the Lowcountry, surrounded by water. Here, he would find the ideal environment to feed his dream, and the perfect partner to share it.

Just outside Summerville, the cavernous buildings housing Scout Boats hold the realization of his idea. Inside, Potts and his wife, Diane, walk amidst the quiet of dozens of boats wrapped in plastic, and covered with a fine coating of dust.

“Please excuse the mess,” he says, brushing the white dust from his hands. “Normally this area would be full of people working, but the production process creates a lot of dust, so about every two or three years we shut down the plant to blow it all out. We cover all the

S O U T H E R N S P O T L I G H TS c o u t B o a t s : I n d u s t r y

Anchors AweighSteve and Diane Potts;attention to detail.

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201536

boats and clean all the way to the rafters.”

Through a set of double doors is the research and design area of the plant. Just beyond the doors, are two enormous boats. At forty-two feet long, they are the latest in Scout’s line of luxury boats. Each is breath-takingly sleek. Though they are suspended in cradles and sit perfectly still, the graceful lines of their fiberglass hulls seem to already glide through the air around them.

These boats represent the most recent chapter in the story of Scout Boats, which began in the mid-1960s when a young Potts

went to work for The Outboard Shop in Charleston, spending his summers working with owner, Homer Norton on a sweet, little fourteen foot fishing boat Norton dubbed “Scout.” The tough little fiberglass boat’s reputation grew throughout the area, and with durability ensured by a lifetime warranty, they sold very well.

It was not long before Potts moved on to bigger things, and in the 1970s left The Outboard Shop for a job in Rhode Island, where he trained to repair imperfections for American Fiberglass. Within four months, he was named manager of the finishing department, and by 1974, was promoted to plant manager. He held the position until

Floating An Idea continued

Anchor'sAweigh

A boat nearingcompletion,

Researchand Design.

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 37

Communitystarts withneighbors who care.

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He workednights and

weekends repairing fiberglass bathtubs in the hopes of one day realizing what

he felt was histrue calling.

1980, when he returned to Charleston as plant manager for American Sail.

But Potts had a big idea, and he worked nights and weekends repairing fiberglass bathtubs in the hopes of one day realizing what he felt was his true calling – building his own line of boats. The Outboard Shop no longer produced the Scout that he had built alongside Norton, and he asked permission to use the name for a line of boats he intended to build. After receiving their blessing, he registered the name and began setting aside the extra money he made to create his own company.

Scout Boats was born in a rented brick barn in 1988, where Potts, along with Diane, created a redesigned, completely fiberglass-hulled craft. He later made the rounds in the area, signing on eight dealers to carry his high-end, highly refined fishing boats. When Steve projected his new business’s income to Diane, she actually laughed out loud at the $650,000 estimate. And when Hurricane Hugo struck in September of 1989, destroying their rented facility along with molds and equipment, those numbers seemed even farther out of reach.

But with Diane at his side, the determined Potts moved Scout Boats to a dirt-floored, galvanized shed, where they worked non-stop to produce examples of his fourteen-, fifteen- and newly designed seventeen-foot boats, and gambled on having all three models available for the 1990 Atlanta Boat Show. It was a gamble

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201538

It’s a big world out there… are you protected?

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Floating An Idea continued

that paid off, drawing Scout Boats to the attention of thirty-one prospective dealers from up and down the east coast, and catapulting the company to the top echelon of coastal fishing boats – far past the numbers Steve projected for their first year in business. The weekends spent repairing fiberglass bathtubs were over.

Early on, Potts made a conscious decision to build a premium brand. It is a much slower process to use only the best tools and the best products – a reputation now recognized all over the world – but it has certainly been worth the time and effort. “We’re cut from a different cloth,” he says. “We hand-build our boats. When a builder begins to refer to his boats as ‘units,’ he’s lost touch with what it is all about.”

The looks that pass between Potts and Diane as they tell their story speak volumes about the two. As successful as they are, there are glimpses of the devoted and determined young couple who struggled to launch the company with little more than a wish and a prayer; and who still can’t quite believe how far they have come. As it has been from the start, Scout Boats is a family-run operation. Diane serves as

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Page 39: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 39

CALLING CUSTOMERS BY NAME SINCE 1905

With over 100 years of service to the community, First National Bank of South Carolina has always been committed to excellence in banking and fostering genuine relationships with our customers. Our doors are always open, so stop by and experience the difference of banking with a neighbor.

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We hand-build our boats. When a builder begins to refer to his boats as units, he’s lost

touch with what it is all

about.-vice president of product development, and their eldest, Stevie, is at the helm of the company’s research and development division.

The massive, 420 LXF is Stevie’s brainchild, and one of many models he has designed. Over two years in the making, the highly customized boat brings the latest intelligent technology to the controls, (a Mastervolt

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201540

CZone system with the Garmin GPSMAP Glass Helm Series) with the swipe of a finger across a screen much like that of a cell phone.

It started with a sketch, then a balsa wood scale model built on his dining room table – much to the chagrin of Stevie’s wife, Grayson. He wanted to design something that was different from anything that existed. Having followed in his father’s footsteps by working weekends and summers at the plant from age fourteen, he took the concepts learned at his father’s side and combined them with his keen sense of design, to create a floating work of art with a laundry list of luxuries. Each of the six that have already sold will run from about $650,000 to $900,000. The price tag for the 420 LXF will be around $800,000.

Floating An Idea continued

"Summerville is big enough to draw (employees) from, but also, there are family values and work ethics here that you don’t

find in other places."

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 41

Services • Financial Statements / Audits• CorporateTax Compliance & Consulting• Bookkeeping & Accounting• QuickBooks Consulting

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WORLD CLASS SERVICEFROM A LOCALLY OWNED FIRM

“With something this big, you are able to get more creative; the sky is the limit because cost is not really an issue,” Stevie says. “This boat will actually be towed behind a 160-foot mega-yacht. The owner hasn’t even seen it. The captain is the one who has placed the order. There are endless possibilities for special requests.”

Along with the Potts’ tenacity and hard work, they credit the company’s employees with having exceptional ability and dedication to the Scout brand. And though it is also true that the Lowcoun-try’s temperate climate lends itself to boat building, Potts believes that there is something about Summerville, in particular, that has been a factor in Scout’s success. “Summerville is big enough to draw (employees) from, but also, there are family values and work ethics here that you don’t find in other places. A lot of these people are from here; they grew up together, and went to school together. Our employees wear Scout apparel when they’re working and when they’re not. They’re driven by pride in what they do, and the fact that they do it right here in this little town in South Carolina.”

Last year, Scout Boats broke ground on a new building that will double the size of the plant, and bring another 300 jobs to Summerville. They will join Scout’s current 240 employees whose work represents both Scout Boats and Summerville, across the country and as far away as Australia; floating an idea that proves Potts’ obsession with a boat to be “perhaps, a little better than most.”

In memory of Seph Limehouse, Project Managerof Research and Design for Scout Boats.

AM

Cary Joseph “Seph” Limehouse1975-2014

Page 42: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 43

NATURAL WOMAN

Every once in a while we get in a home-im-provement frenzy—sprucing up the things around the house that we’ve closed our eyes to for a while. In the two and a half decades that we have lived here, it has almost always taken the whirlwind associated with host-ing a special occasion to motivate us into hauling out the ladders, prying open the

paint cans and seriously tidying the yard. Such was the case a few weeks ago; the current flurry was precipitated by the upcoming nuptials of our niece.

It’s a slippery slope once you start tweaking a house that has stood almost forty years. When the shutters were painted, the white trim looked like it could use a touch-up. This made the light fixtures on either side of the front door look a little sad, so they got a face-lift, as did the light post in the yard. Before long, the mailbox was repainted, and the bricks surrounding the flowerbeds went from leaning drunkenly to marching straight and proud.

I was knee-deep in relocating iris bulbs in the flowerbed when I remembered vividly the day I dug the first of these flowers from my father-in-law’s house shortly following his death. Holding a bulb

I LLUSTRAT IONS BY JASON WAGENER

Buried Treasureby Susan Frampton

E

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201544

in my gloved hand, I was suddenly struck by the map of family memo-ries living and breathing in the dirt of this place we called home—the stories of our lives written in blossoms and leaves scattered throughout the yard.

Our daughter referred to the dark purple blossoms of the irises as “the blooming flowers,” and she thought that they only grew at her Papa’s house. I moved them to our yard in hopes of keeping that memory alive for her. Now, that realization made me look with new eyes at the familiar landscape.

In front of me stood camellia bushes —one with vivid pink blooms, trans-planted from my grandmother’s yard in Savannah, and one with candy-striped petals from the yard of my in-laws across town. Both landscapes once teemed with shrubs born from the complicated process of grafting new species. Our loved ones were long-departed, but each year we watched the transplanted shrubs pay homage to their creators with lush green leaves and riots of colorful flowers.

Peeking out from beneath a red-berried nandina we relocated from alongside the gate of a beloved farm in Holly Hill, I saw white chrysan-themums I had haphazardly stuck in the ground after a party held over ten years ago. The farm was sold, and both of the party’s honorees married and moved away from Summerville, but the tenacious plants had not forgot-ten the happy memories that brought them to this place. They bloomed year after year.

My glance fell on the sago palms on either side of the porch. How tiny they had been when they were given to me as a birthday gift long ago. For the longest time, their survival was in question; but in both blessing and curse, they now proclaimed their health with huge, sticky limbs that threatened to envelop the front steps.

The camphor trees along the drive-way stood as fragrant reminders of a

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Page 45: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 45

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breathless youngster that raced into the house to report my child was flat on the ground following a fall from a limb far too high for an eight-year-old to reach. It had knocked the breath out of her, and should have ended her tree-climbing career, but if memory serves, did not even slow it down. Those same trees also heralded the annual arrival of the blackbirds that feasted on the berries and artfully decorated our cars with purple stains for weeks each year.

There were the daylilies from a morning spent with a neighbor who shared the bounty of beds that were bursting. I think of him each year when the star-shaped flowers open on the far side of the yard and replay in my head the rural Vermont accent that laced his conversation.

The open space where a huge pine once stood made me a little sad, but I laughed out loud at the memory of my husband hurling pinecones back up at the squirrels that tormented him from the high branch-es. And the grass! Like a big, green sponge, it had absorbed hours of his time through the years. (A less confident woman might have been concerned about his obsession with annual threats of brown spotting or chinch bugs lurking amidst the tiny blades.)

Looking to the shady side of the yard, I realized the truth in the verse telling us that to every living thing there is a season; a time to be born, and a time to die. In plants that recalled the kindness of friends during times of loss, and hydrangeas marking the resting places of beloved pets, I was reminded that beauty can indeed grow where heartbreak was once sown.

When tears threatened to blur my vision, I pulled myself from my musing. Some-day, a plant or flower in the yard would recall the memory of this upcoming happy event, and I marked it on the map in my mind. For now, there were windows to be washed, which would inevitably lead to the front door receiving a new coat of paint. But soon I will draw a real map—a map whose legend tells of the triumphs and tragedies of this family and our lives on this parcel of land; a map that marks a lifetime of memories buried like treasure in the soil. AM

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 47

As spring advances across the Lowcountry, the stirrings of renewal begin to blossom in my life. I find myself sifting through closets, file cabinets, and even my pantry. For the next four weeks, there will be an ever-chang-ing “give away” pile sitting next to my front door – a stack of clothes, shoes and miscel-

laneous items bound for Goodwill.

I'm not quite sure how I ended up with nine throw pillows that don't match a single thing in my home. And I have no excuse for

I LLUSTRAT IONS BY JASON WAGENER

holding on to four umbrellas when one will suffice.

All across the land, women will be joining me in this annual rite of passage. Even more than the new year, spring cleaning speaks to us of a fresh start. As we purge, we create space for fresh ideas and new hopes and aspirations. We are reacquainted with the workout shoes we bought but never used. And we are finally able to toss the photographs of that very wrong relationship. Some of us may even update our Facebook profiles, deleting strangers from our friends list, and rewriting our biography in the About Me section. Surely, I’m not the same person as I was last year.

PATCHWORK

OF THESOUTHSpring Renewal

by Michelle Lewis

ACultivating a New Life

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201548

What will we show to the world? Do we tell them who we are right now, or do we show them the person we want to be? New beginnings give us the op-portunity to choose, but it doesn't take a huge change in circumstances to create a fresh start. We can begin again even while maintaining our same old jobs, and living in the house we've lived in for years. It doesn't even require a new haircut. Our habits define us more than our resumes and online profiles. And they are the simplest way to achieve a new beginning.

Our habits reveal to us what is important and what we view as irrelevant. Where do we invest our time? Our energy? Are you stuck in a rut, doing the same thing, day in and day out?

Then change some habits.

Commit to walking the neighbor-hood each evening. Or replace that thirty-minute sitcom with prayer. Maybe one of your habits is prevent-ing you from becoming the person you are meant to be. 

Perhaps there is something you should be doing each day, but you continue to tell yourself you'll start next week. There is an easy solution. Stop doing what you shouldn't do, and start doing what you should. It's our habits that will carry us to the victory. And it's our habits that can prevent us from ever arriving.

As I move forward into my spring renewal, I hope to blossom alongside the azaleas. While there are some habits that I will keep, there are many I need to add to the “give away” pile. Some of my habits need to be nurtured, fertil-ized, and even pruned in certain areas where they have grown a bit undisci-plined. And a few of them just need to be given the breath of life. AM

PATCHWORKOF THESOUTH

Page 49: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

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Page 50: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

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Page 51: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 51

LIFE &FAITH

Am I a Murderer?

I LLUSTRAT ION BY JASON WAGENER

ave you ever had an experience that leaves you completely changed? For the rest of your life, you know you will remain deeply affect-ed? This past November, I had one of those experiences.  I had the opportunity to travel with a group of friends to Europe. One stop was the historic city, Krakow, Poland, where

we toured the Nazi death camp, Auschwitz/Birkenau. It was here, between 1942 and 1945, that an estimated 1.6 million people were exterminated.

Exterminated may seem like a harsh word, but it is insufficient to de-scribe the manner in which the Third Reich committed their crimes.

Walking through those haunted grounds, I faced human depravity in its vilest moments, and two specific experiences will stick with me for the rest of my life. The first involved a simple urn which had been placed in the corner of an unadorned room. Our tour guide, Hans, whose great uncle was murdered on the very ground we walked, said, “The Nazis were adamant about wasting noth-ing. Once the Jews were gassed and cremated, their remains were

Hby Will Browning

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201552

placed in urns like you see here, and the ashes were used for fertilizer.”

With my stomach in knots, we contin-ued the tour into a dimly lit room with a large glass encasement. Tears welled in my eyes; my legs began to give way as I took in the travesty I was now fac-ing.  Hans told us, “The final experi-ence each Jewish woman faced before entering the chamber was having her head shaved.” Behind the glass, which extended some 100 feet long and ten feet tall, was a twisted mass of human hair. Hans continued, “Unwilling to see anything go to waste, the Nazis used this hair as pillow stuffing.”

Needing a breath of fresh air, I burst out of the building. With my back bent and my hands on my knees I asked God in silence: “How did the most theologi-cally astute nation of the twentieth cen-tury become the place where human re-mains were nothing more than fertilizer for their gardens and pillows for their comfort?”

As I was reeling with anger, sad-ness and perplexity, God placed this thought in my mind: “Will, don’t be

LIFE &FAITH

Walkingthrough those

haunted grounds, I

faced human depravity at

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Page 53: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

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too quick to distance yourself from these atrocities.  Remember that you experience pillow-like comfort in this world because one beloved Jew was unjustly murdered as well.  Your ministry is fertile only because of his death on a Roman cross. Jesus was killed like these men and women here, and one of many responsible for his death was you.”1

I’d become too comfortable with the idea of Jesus’ heinous murder. It was there in Poland where I finally grasped the atrocity of the crucifixion and be-gan to comprehend that I am guilty of murder. My sins make me as guilty as any conspirator in the sinister death of Jesus.

Rising above persistent grey clouds shrouding Poland’s landscape, I stared out of my airplane window onto a sun-kissed cascade of beauty. My thoughts followed upward from the ominous re-ality of the cross to a new life that awaits me above. Much like this plane, I will burst forth into a new heavenly home shedding the heavy chains of guilt.  I will arrive into the accepting arms of my Father whose steadfast mercy wel-comes me in-fully forgiven and lavishly loved.2

Romans 5:8-11Ephesians 1:7-8

AM

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I’d become too comfortable

with the idea of Jesus’ heinous

murder.

Page 54: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Whether it’s on a mountain bike trail or up a coastal creek with a paddle...

it’s good to be an outsider in South Carolina

BE AN OUTSIDER

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 55

B A Y T O B A N Q U E T

Three cheesyfinger foods for any Southernget-together

PartyStarters

Say CheesePimiento cheese crisp cookies.

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201556

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 57

INGREDIENTS

1 sheet puff pastry (thawed)7-8 oz Brie

1/2 cup chopped pecans1/2 cup brown sugar

3 tablespoons melted butter3 tablespoons self rising flour

DIRECTIONS

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Lightly grease a 24-cup mini muffin tin with nonstick cooking spray.

Dust the counter with a light coating of flour and gently press the sheet of puff pastry out with your hands until it is about 12X12 inches.

Using a knife, cut puff pastry into 25 equal pieces (five strips one way, five strips the other way). Press one square lightly into each muffin cup.

Bake the puff pastry for about 8-9 minutes until lightly golden and puffed up.

Remove from the oven and using the rounded, blunt edge of a spoon, press the pastry down in the middle so it is no longer puffed.

Mix pecans, brown sugar, butter and flour in mixing bowl.

Cut the Brie into 24 cubes about 1/2 inch each and place in pastry cups, then top with 1 teaspoon of brown sugar mixture.

Return to the oven for about 4-6 minutes to let the cheese melt. Serve warm.

BAKED PRALINE BRIE PASTRIES

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AZALEAMAG.COM Spring 201558

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 59

INGREDIENTS

1/3 cup all purpose flour1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper

1 large egg1 tablespoon milk1 tablespoon water

1 teaspoon salt1 cup panko breadcrumbs

11 oz goat cheese (at room temperature)3 cups cooking oil1 tsp dried parsley

equal portions of ranch dressing and buffalo sauce for dipping

DIRECTIONS

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Combine flour and pepper in a shallow bowl and set aside.

Whisk together egg, 1/2 teaspoon salt, water and milk in a bowl.

In another bowl, combine panko and 1/2 teaspoon salt.

Using spoon, remove approximately 1 tablespoon of goat cheese, rollinto a ball and slightly flatten into a disk shape. Continue to do this with

remaining cheese.

Pat cheese disks into flour bowl and coat both sides, then dip in egg mixture, followed by dredging in the panko breadcrumb bowl.

Place all on a dish and freeze for 30 minutes.

Heat oil in saucepan over medium-high heat and fry goat cheese fritters for 2 minutes or until golden brown, flipping once. Place on paper towels to drain.

Sprinkle with dried parsley before serving.

Mix equal amounts of ranch dressing and buffalo sauce to use for dipping.

PANKO CRUSTED GOAT CHEESE FRITTERS

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Spring 2015 AZALEAMAG.COM 61

INGREDIENTS

1 4 oz jar diced pimiento1 teaspoon ground mustard1/2 teaspoon ground red pepper1 1/2 cups all purpose flour1/2 cup Rice Krispies2 1/2 cups shredded sharp cheddar1/2 cup softened butter1 teaspoon salt

DIRECTIONS

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Drain pimiento and lay onpaper towels.

PIMIENTO CHEESE CRISP COOKIES

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In large bowl mix ground mustard, flour and Rice Krispies. Add pimientoand toss to coat.

In another large bowl, mix cheese, butterand salt.

Gradually add flour mixture, mixing and mashing down against bowl with a fork to mix well.

Once all flour is added, knead with handsto thoroughly mix.

On large well-floured cutting board, rollout and cut into 1 by 1 1/2 inch squares.

Place on parchment paper lined baking pan1 inch apart and bake 15-20 minutes.

Page 62: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

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Page 63: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Drinking water from a plastic water bottle poses serious health risks to you and your family. Let's take a look at some of these dangers to give you a better idea of why bottled water is not the healthy choice you've been led to believe.

Plastic would obviously be an issue for most bottled waters but it also comes into play for home or commercially filtered waters, or even raw spring water, in that you need a container to store your water before you consume it. Obviously the best container is glass, because when you choose plastic you are potentially exposed to the following chemicals.

BPA – Bisphenol A or BPA is an estrogen-mimicking chemical that has been linked to a host of serious health problems including:

Learning and behavioral problemsAltered immune system function

Dangers of plastic bottles

These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Sourced from mercola.com

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Page 64: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

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This is an invitation to you.

To dig deep and get your hands dirty.

To rediscover what matters most.

Nature. Community. Health. Wellbeing.

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A new community in the garden

with beautiful new homes and

Dorchester District Two schools.

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Something profoundly else.

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EDI 150163_SC_azalea_mag_spring_M1.indd 1 2/5/15 11:38 AM

Page 65: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

by J A N A R I L E Y photos by D O T T I E R I Z Z O

G R O W I N GL O C A L

.

- F E A T U R I N G -

B E H R F A M I L Y F A R M , W I S H B O N E H E R I T A G E F A R M S , W A B I S A B I F A R M A N D N I N E T E E N

O T H E R L O C A L F A R M S T H A T A R EG R O W I N G W I L D

STRADA ADVERTISING / 303.407.1976 AZALEA MAGAZINE EDI 150163 SUMMERS FLOWER AD 2/5/15 8.375 X 10.875 4C

summerville, sc

This is an invitation to you.

To dig deep and get your hands dirty.

To rediscover what matters most.

Nature. Community. Health. Wellbeing.

And the unprocessed, unfiltered beauty

of the Lowcountry.

Welcome to Summers Corner.

A new community in the garden

with beautiful new homes and

Dorchester District Two schools.

Coming to Summerville this summer.

Something profoundly else.

|| Learn more at SummersCorner.com

EDI 150163_SC_azalea_mag_spring_M1.indd 1 2/5/15 11:38 AM

Page 66: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015
Page 67: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

words by S U S A N F R A M P T O N and J A N A R I L E Y photos by D O T T I E R I Z Z O

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2 0 1 4A Z A L E A A W A R D S

Behr Family FarmHarleyville, SC

Page 68: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

From the time he was a young boy in Holly Hill, South Carolina, Bobby Behr toiled in fields -- from the small farms of family friends to thousand-acre farms of corn, soybeans and cotton, he loved getting his hands dirty and growing plants from seed. In high school, he secretly dug up a section of his parent’s land and planted strawberries, surprising them with a large harvest a few months later. As life went on, Behr focused his efforts on other ventures in sports, real estate, the restaurant industry, and education, but always found himself drawn back to the land, and hoped to combine his interests more fluidly one day. In 2008, he was hired as the Athletic Director at Ashley Ridge High School, and an idea began to take root in his mind; he wanted to start a horticulture program at the school, and

he knew just the place to start: his own backyard.

Behr and his wife, Myra, have been married twenty-nine years, and have always strongly supported one another in their endeavors. In 2009, Myra’s mother passed, leaving a home and forty acres of land in Harleyville. The Behrs decided to move in, and upon assessing his mother-in-law’s old garden, Bobby gave himself a challenge.

“I thought, if I can create a successful farming operation here, I can do it at Ashley Ridge,” he says. “So we started it all here. It was a trial run for the real thing.”

Behr began arranging the program at the school, starting with about twenty-five students in the special education program. Dantzler’s U-Pick Farm in Harleyville donated thousands of strawberry plants, and field trips from Ashley Ridge were arranged to the Behr homestead, where students planted rows of berry plants, collards, turnips and more. That year, they planted, picked, washed and weighed enough collards, turnips and rutabagas to service eight of the local schools. Pretty soon, word of his horticulture program spread, and with the help of a grant from Clemson, the program moved to a group of raised beds and a greenhouse at Ashley Ridge. Students began growing vegetables, and as they ripened, the kids sold them to the school cafeteria. Behr and the cafeteria manager began to track lunch time vegetable sales, and within just one year, the consumption

B E H RF A M I L Y

F A R MHarleyville, SC

Page 69: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

of vegetables at Ashley Ridge increased 570 percent.

“It’s a good kind of peer pressure,” he explains. “The kids who grew the vegetables are so proud of them, they encourage all of their friends to buy some at lunch time. Tracking the vegetable sales was a great idea, because those numbers helped get a teacher in.”

Now, Ashley Ridge has a full-time horticulture teacher, Ben Gibson, and 150 students in the program. With the help of Zack Snipes and Amy Dabbs at the Clemson Extension, as well as College of Charleston Health Sciences professor, Olivia Thompson, Mead Westvaco and Boeing, the program now includes ten acres of land, six greenhouses, and a garden at every one of the twenty-two schools in Dorchester County. Additionally, Charleston and Berkeley County schools have over forty-seven gardens and counting, and Dabbs, from the Clemson Extension, has trained 145 teachers, who often incorporate the gardens and what they learn into their lesson plans. Next on the agenda: a garden in every South Carolina school.

Meanwhile, at the site of the original trial run, Behr Family Farm, Behr continues to tend to his land and crops. The farm now includes eight acres of produce, and Bobby and Myra plan to start a U-Pick blueberry farm in the future. A certified Clemson Master Gardener, Bobby takes care to cultivate rich soil and healthy plants using organic growing practices and a local compost company, Bees Ferry Compost. The Behrs have a small Community Supported Agriculture Program, or CSA, where locals pledge to support the farm for a set fee and receive weekly produce boxes of the farm’s bounty. The farmers also sell occasionally to Limehouse Produce, and do the bulk of their selling at the Summerville Farmer’s Market -- but not before Myra hand-cuts, cleans, and inspects every leaf and item of produce that goes out for sale.

“She is meticulous,” Behr laughs. “I have to walk away, because she takes so much time cleaning and looking at each leaf, it drives me crazy. But our customers can be sure they’re clean!”

Between managing the athletic department over at Ashley Ridge, to growing a fruitful program from which local students benefit, to cultivating organically-grown food on his farm, Bobby Behr is a busy man. However full his calendar may be, though, each of his endeavors bears the fruit of his passion and talents.

For more info, visit Behr Family Farm at the market, or call (843) 696-3894.

The program now includes ten acres of land, six greenhouses, and

a garden at every one of the 22 schools in Dorchester County.

Page 70: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015
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WishboneHeritage Farms

Ridgeville, SC

Page 72: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

After fifteen years in the insurance and finance industries in New York, David Gravelin felt completely burnt out. His job brought stress and financial issues, and all around him, he felt a constant push to make more money; no matter how much he had, it never seemed to be enough.

“I chased after financial security for a decade and a half,” says Gravelin. “One day, I finally realized that security had no real value to me.”

Gravelin soon sold off nearly all of his worldly possessions and began traveling, opening himself up to the pull of chance and opportunity.

He made connections through Couchsurfing.com and stayed in strangers’ homes, volunteered in the Dominican Republic for a while and traveled up and down the East Coast looking for a place to settle. Eventually, he stopped in Memphis long enough to rent a place to live, and began visiting the local farmer’s market. There, he met Chris Watson of Renaissance Farms in Saulsbury, Tennessee, who invited Gravelin to visit and volunteer on the farm.

“I volunteered on his farm exactly three times before I started looking for property of my own,” says Gravelin.

Months prior, Gravelin’s travels brought him to Charleston, where he fell in love with its food culture, particularly the rising organic, locally grown movement. When the opportunity to start a farm presented itself, Gravelin quickly turned his sights toward the Charleston area, and it was not long before he found the perfect parcel of land out in Ridgeville, which he purchased in 2013. From there, it was just a path of trial and error to get his farm running successfully.

“I learned to raise pigs by buying pigs and raising them,” says Gravelin. “I think, if you’re going to do something, don’t stop yourself. Just do it, and learn while doing it.”

Gravelin wasted no time getting his seventeen-and-a-half acre farm set up and functional. On one side, a forest provides the perfect home

W I S H B O N E H E R I T A G E

F A R M SRidgeville, SC

Page 73: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

for his pigs, while the other houses chickens, ducks, geese and turkeys.

All animals are raised with vast amounts of land on which to forage and graze. Near the farmhouse, rows of crops grow in raised beds made of felled pine logs.

Now in its second year, Wishbone Heritage Farms is quite a success, largely due to Gravelin’s hard work in setting up an operation that customers want to support. Interacting on social media accounts, manning the booth at farmer’s markets, opening up the farm to volunteer work days, and even making home deliveries himself,

Gravelin insists on being accessible to his customers.

“My goal is to make it easy for people to eat local and maintain a relationship with the farm, not just during the farmer’s market season,” he says. “If you really want to know what you’re eating, you need to know and be able to communicate with the person who raised it.”

A self-described conscious consumer, Gravelin is passionate about running a farm that provides a better, “true” organic experience -- one that is heavily focused on creating products that are as natural as he can make them. To this end, Gravelin uses no antibiotics, growth hormones or synthetic pesticides or herbicides. He also feeds his animals an abundance of whole grains, establishes natural living conditions, and only uses local, certified humane processing facilities for his meat processing.

Currently, Gravelin sells a multitude of pork and chicken cuts and sausages, duck and chicken eggs, turkey, herbs and seasonal produce, which he sells at the Summerville and Mount Pleasant Farmer’s Markets. During the off season, he delivers to four drop-off locations in the area and makes home deliveries for a small fee.

For more info, follow Wishbone Heritage Farms on Facebook, visit them online at wishboneheritagefarms.com or call (843) 291-2610.

“I learned to raise pigs by buying pigs and raising them,”

says Gravelin. “I think, if you’re going to do something, don’t stop yourself. Just do it,

and learn while doing it.”

Page 74: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015
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Wabi Sabi FarmCordesville, SC

Page 76: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

The smell of onions permeates the air as I pull into Wabi Sabi Farm in Cordesville, South Carolina. Rows of strawberry plants line a large field, and a quaint farmhouse sits tucked against the treeline next to a few small greenhouses. Johnna Livingston, clad in a plaid shirt and work boots, stands at a table, trimming roots off green onions and tossing them into a box.

“I just got an order from a chef through GrowFood Carolina,” she explains. “As soon as I’m done here, I’ll throw these boxes into the truck and deliver them. Then I’ll head back here and work on trying to save some of these plants from tonight’s freeze.”

Livingston and her husband, Jimmy, run Wabi Sabi Farm together, with the help of a few family members and friends. As kids, they both grew up farming—Johnna on her grandfather’s tobacco farm, and Jimmy on the water through his dad’s fishing company. After they met and got married, the pair opened a screen printing company, which they ran successfully for seventeen years. After a while, Jimmy began

to get sick from the chemicals, and the business became emotionally exhausting for Johnna. They finally decided to head back to their roots, so to speak, and upon the advice of some strawberry farming friends in McClellanville, opened a strawberry and vegetable farm of their own five years ago. They settled on the name “Wabi Sabi,” the namesake of a Japanese philosophy centering on beauty in imperfections, which they remark is reflected in their slightly uneven rows of crops, rusty and repurposed items around the farm and nonsymmetrical produce.

“Wabi Sabi, for us, represents a simplifying of life,” says Johnna. “It’s about appreciating that everything has its own process -- from the items you use, to the food you eat, to the life you’re living. Then using that understanding to make the best decisions you can, for your family and for the earth.”

“It’s about making the best of what you’ve got,” adds Jimmy.

The name is fitting. All over the farm, intentional, sustainable and carefully considered habits abound. With a heavy focus in organic growing practices, the Livingstons shy away from herbicide and pesticide use, only spraying their plants when absolutely necessary, and only with the highest-quality chemicals available. Last year, they only sprayed their crops twice in the season, as opposed to the weekly schedule some farms adopt. The Livingstons focus most of their efforts on making healthy plants by creating healthy soil, including using cover crops to bring nitrogen and organic matter in the off-season. They also plant complimentary plants around pest-heavy crops like strawberries,

W A B I S A B IF A R M

Cordesville, SC

Page 77: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

which bring insects that kill certain plant-endangering pests.

Recently, Jimmy brought in a friend’s beekeeping operation to assist in pollination of some problem plants—it fixed the issue by morning.

Listening to the two speak, they sound like a pair of agricultural scholars, with their vast knowledge of plant behavior, soil quality and weather patterns, but when asked, they both are quick to share the major source of their wisdom.

“The Clemson Extension Program.” says Johnna. “I cannot tell you how valuable it is for us farmers. We have learned so much from them, and any time we have a question or are puzzled by something, we just have to make a call and Zack Snipes, our local guy, will either look it up and answer it for us, or come out here and walk the rows with us and teach us here on our own land. It’s invaluable.”

As a family, the Livingstons place a strong emphasis on sustainable living, and source most of their food from their land, including hoards of vegetables, eggs from their chickens and venison shot from Jimmy’s deer stand on the back field. This all-in-one approach is reflected in their farmers market booths, where Johnna strives to provide a whole meal’s worth of products at their table, including shrimp from Jimmy’s dad’s business in McClellanville, Livingston’s Bulls Bay Seafood, and mushrooms from Mepkin Abbey, where Jimmy also works. “We want to make it easy for people to make meals from locally-sourced, nutritionally dense products,” explains Johnna. “So we offer

the vegetables, the fruits, the seafood and sometimes the mushrooms, so they don’t have to make a half-dozen stops if they don’t want to.”

Between the farmers markets in Moncks Corner and Summerville, and selling to local restaurants through GrowFood Carolina, Jimmy and Johnna have a full workload, but nothing beats strawberry season. The couple opens their farm for “U-Pick” strawberry picking in April, and the crowds are steady through June.

“We may be off the beaten path a bit,” says Jimmy, “But it’s an easy and beautiful drive for most folks, and our three varieties of strawberries are just delicious. Totally worth the drive.”

Currently, Wabi Sabi consists of two acres of strawberries, two acres of vegetables, a pen of chickens and a few acres of grazing land for the family’s two longhorn cattle pets, Woolley Bulley and Norman, but they are in the process of preparing an additional five acres for production. Ultimately, the couple wants to run a farm that supports their family through winter, spring and fall, with the opportunity to take time off during the hottest months, while maintaining a connection to consumers and educating people on local, sustainable produce.

“It’s just incredibly important to us,” says Johnna. “Feeding our family quality, sustainably grown nutrients is a huge priority for us, and we hope to share that with as many people as we can.”

For more info, follow Wabi Sabi Farm on Facebook or call (843) 312-0856.

Page 78: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015
Page 79: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Hog HeavenDavid Gravelin

of Wishbone Heritage Farms

checks on the piglets in the

pig pen

Page 80: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Behr Family Farm Harleyville (843) 696-3894Seasonal vegetables.

Big Smile Peaches Johnston (843) 513-4361Fresh-picked SC peaches.

Cypress Hill Farm Ridgeville (843) 851-1741Seasonal fruits and vegetables.

Dantzler Farm Harleyville (843) 560-0407Carolina sweet corn.

The Summerville Market, open April through December behind the Summerville Town Hall, is a wealth of locally grown and made products. Here, you can walk your dog, meet up with friends and neighbors, sample treats and enjoy the sunshine. From baked goods, plants, spices and clothing, to jams, dog treats, coffee and so much more, there is always something new to discover at the market. Here is our guide to the farmers at the 2015 Summerville Farmers' Market. Use it when planning meals or browsing the booths. We’ve indicated farms who have active Facebook pages—feel free to follow them for updates on new products and happenings.

LOCALFARMSGrowing Local

Summerville Farmers' Market

Page 81: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Dorchester Farms Dorchester(843) 563-7650Seasonal fruits and vegetables.

Franklin Brown ProduceJohns Island(843) 559-2761Seasonal fruits and vegetables.

Freeman ProduceJohns Island(843) 697-2612Seasonal fruits and vegetables.

Gruber FarmSaint George(843) 693-7069Seasonal fruits andvegetables.

Hickory BluffBerry FarmHolly Hill (843) 814-6555Strawberries, blueberries, blackberries and vegetables.

Keegan-Filion FarmWalterboro(843) 538-2565Pork, eggs, cheese,chicken,beef, and turkey.

Kurious FarmsMoncks Corner(843) 509-0473Hydroponically grown cucumbers, tomatoes, lettuce.

M.C. Cannon Farms Moncks Corner (864) 784-6176 Pastured beef and poultry, produce and honey.

Rivers Vegetable MarketSummerville (843) 875-9036Seasonal fruits and vegetables.

Ron’s RootsDorchester(843) 563-2218 Produce, herbs and flowers.

Shuler Peach CompanyHolly Hill (803) 759-0089Nectarines, sweet corn,peaches and strawberries.

Smith’s Bee FarmRidgeville(843) 873-4618Locally harvested honeyand honey products.

Solo Verdi MeatsVarnville(843) 830-6579 100% grass-fed beef.

Sunny Cedars Farm Sumter (803) 934-6072 Pastured pork products and farm-fresh eggs.

Taylor Family Farm Dorchester (843) 462-2039Farm-fresh eggs.

Turner’s Farm Fresh Bowman(803) 662-0387Fresh dairy products including raw milk, pasteurized milk, chocolate milk, cheese, butter and ice cream.

Wabi Sabi FarmCordesville (843) 312-0856 Seasonal vegetables, honey, eggs, shrimp and mushrooms.

Wishbone Heritage FarmsRidgeville(843) 291-2610 Forest-raised pork and pork products, eggs, herbs and seasonal vegetables.

The Summerville Farmers' Market islocated in the First Citizens Bank parking lot behind Summerville Town Hall. Open every Saturday 8am - 1pm, April - Dec.

Free parking is available for shoppers inthe Town Hall parking garage.

Page 82: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

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liveslessons

southernmothers

.

The

of our beloved

sweetdear

and treasured

AS MOTHER’S DAY APPROACHES, TWO LOVING DAUGHTERS REMEMBERTHE REMARKABLE WOMEN WHO GAVE THEM LIFE AND SCHOOLED THEM ON

LIFE’S MOST IMPORTANT LESSONS.

words by S U S A N F R A M P T O N

with D O T T I E R I Z Z O

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“You look just like my daughter.” They were the last words my mother said to me; smiling as her eyes came to rest on my face. The paramedics carefully rolled the stretcher through the doorway to take her on a slow journey from her home of over fifty years, to a hospice bed across town. As we followed the flashing red lights, we did not know that in only a matter of hours, she would be gone.

Though her words stabbed me straight in the heart, time has softened them into a blessing of sorts; a reminder that even in her moment of confusion, I was in her thoughts. Even now, with her two years gone, she is never far from mine.

Every day, my mother’s voice speaks in unison with mine as I utter one of her sayings, or find myself diving across the room to prevent my husband from putting a hat on the bed. It’s bad luck, I keep telling him. She convinced me that an unmade bed invites mayhem to my day. I never tell a bad dream before breakfast, for fear she was right to warn me it would come true, and though I know that the devil does not beat his wife when it rains while the sun is shining, a part of me still wants to put my ear to the ground to listen.

My mother was a voracious reader, devouring books like gourmet chocolates. Keenly intelligent, she was a collector of words, savoring the sound of syllables that she stored like treasure and gifted to me and my brother. She delighted once in a note she saved from his kindergarten teacher, detailing a story the four-year-old related in class about “a charging herd of pachyderms.” She taught us that the right word was a tool, one with the power to heal or wound, to paint a picture, open doors or end wars. But, lest I make her sound prissy or pretentious, she could also cuss a blue streak.

Those unwise enough to wound anyone she loved crossed an electrified, razor-sharp line into quicksand. Her love and loyalty were fierce and unconditional. She believed in fair, but quick justice, and I was never one of those children told to “wait until your father gets home” to be sentenced for my crimes.

Betty Roberts was fearless, and I grew up confident that there was nothing she could not do. Though she centered her life on ours, she belonged to what Eleanor Roosevelt once referred to as “that group of people who move their own piano.”

It was not until she was diagnosed with cancer that we realized that my mother was not invincible. But she approached the radical surgery, chemo and radiation with courage and grace, never complaining and always looking at the bright side of her situation, and gathering new friends like flowers during the brutal therapy, while wearing her pink ribbon survivor pin like the combat medal that it was.

She won her battle, and had five blessed years free of cancer. She would, however, ultimately lose the war, when the very chemotherapy that saved her from breast

cancer, traitorously brought on a rare blood disorder that would morph into leukemia. She did not dwell on the irony, choosing rather to be grateful for every single day.

We had a difficult time choosing flowers for Mother’s funeral. The woman we mourned was anything but a delicate flower. She was quirky, and funny and unfiltered, and we could imagine her rolling her eyes at an arrangement of fragile petals. We chose a glorious display of bold, colorful sunflowers to mark her resting place in Beaufort National Cemetery. She was very much like the tall, sturdy flowers that turn each day to follow the path of the sun, and I don’t think it is a coincidence that they seem to appear in my life much more often these days.

I cannot think of a single piece of advice that my mother ever gave me, yet I see the distinctive swirls and ridges of her fingerprints on every surface of my life. Looking back, I realize that she did not give her advice, but chose rather to live her advice.

I miss her every day, but each time I glimpse the bright yellow petals of a sunflower, I am reminded of the woman my mother was, and the advice that she lived: be strong and resilient, be bold and bright - and always, always turn your face to the sun.

We spend the f irst nine months of our existence tethered to them; their hearts beating out the rhythm marking our waking and our sleeping. They were there when we drew our f irst breaths , and theirs were the f irst smiles we saw through unfocused eyes . Their voices were more familiar than our own, and for those of us brought into the world by Southern

mothers , they carried a soft , sweet drawl that fell gently on our tender ears .

Betty Durden Roberts(1930 – 2012)

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Dragonflies began to gather outside of my mom’s house the month before she died; lighting on flowers and hovering with lacy wings outside her window. She sent the grandchildren out for a closer look at the jewel-colored insects, this was one their last visits with her while she was still able to move about the house. Dragonflies have followed me ever since.

My mom grew up in the Summerville of the 1950s, a small town where everybody knew everybody. And she loved it. She loved feeling safe playing outside, and walking from home to her father’s office in town when she was a little girl. She always said that she could not imagine living anywhere else.

Born the year that Coach McKissick began coaching in Summerville, there was never a more faithful fan of the Green Wave, and it came as no surprise to anyone when she became a cheerleader for Summerville High School in 1965. In fact, there is a photo of her, many years later at McKissick’s 500th victory game that captures her cheering still – with arms in the air, face beaming, and a giant foam green wave on her head.

I felt that she was different from all the other mothers, and so did a lot of my friends. They always told me how lucky I was to have such a mom – one who really listened. It made her a great teacher, and in her years at Summerville High School, her students often confided things in her they did not feel they could tell their own parents. That ability to listen was one of her greatest gifts, and it’s probably the one I miss the most.

I try really hard to be like her with my own children in practical ways, but I know that I have passed along some strange and completely illogical things to them that came from my mom. I will not wash clothes on New Year’s Day, and heaven forbid if my Christmas tree is still standing by then. And I wouldn’t think of wearing white shoes before Easter or after Labor Day, even if the fashion industry says it

is okay – and it is ninety degrees outside.

My mom believed that if you made a commitment, you should move heaven and earth to keep it. She worked hard, and I

watched her go above and beyond what was required – whether in her job, in her marriage or for her family. She taught me that you could be strong and still care about people.

She did not worry about what other people thought, and marched to her own drummer. She was my best friend, and although she never hesitated to give her opinion or her advice, and could be quite blunt, we never went through the typical teenage mother/daughter troubles. She never judged, and I never once had her throw anything I said or did back in my face.

Mom was always there for us, no matter what. If we needed anything, she always found a way to provide it; even if it meant sacrificing something that was dear to her. When she was fifty-four, she discovered a lump in her breast. But her life was busy, with children and grandchildren, so she kept it to herself. It cost her many rounds of chemotherapy and radiation, and although she recovered, her life would never be the same.

She was the glue that held the family together. She brought my grandfather home to care for him when he was diagnosed with cancer, to give him dignity and quality of life in his final days, while never letting on when her own cancer returned. Choosing family over her own health cost her everything, but such was her commitment.

My mom has been gone for almost five years now. There is not a day that goes by that I don’t think of her. Sometimes I pick up the phone to call her before I remember. But when the dragonflies appear—lighting on my finger or hovering outside my windows, I know that she is still with me, and that she is at peace. And thanks to the life and lessons of my blessed Southern mother – so am I.

Bonnie Allan Langley (1951 – 2010)

Page 86: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Warm WelcomeThe Jones’ foyer is a charming and inviting entryway.

Page 87: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Beauty in

DiscoveryLocal interior designer,

Laura Jones opens the door toher home, revealing a warm

and eclectic aesthetic.

by Jana Rileyphotos by Dottie Rizzo

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Three months after Laura and Neyle Jones moved into their downtown Summerville home, pine trees came crashing through their roof. It was September 1989, and Hurricane Hugo had just made landfall. Their family narrowly survived the ordeal by huddling together through the devastating storm, and when the skies cleared, they set out putting their home back together.

Before the hurricane even hit, the house was in rough shape. The structure lacked creature comforts and was put together piecemeal; there were additions upon additions, enclosed porches and inconsistent flooring and roofing. Laura and Neyle worked on the house together—a true labor of love—and continued to do so long after the trees were removed and damage repaired.

“We transformed it from a little shack to our little shack,” laughs Laura.

If there was any woman perfectly fit for the job of giving the little cottage a makeover, Laura was it. An interior designer since 1992, she currently runs her own residential design business appropriately named Laura Jones & Company, located in downtown Summerville for over twenty years. Her house, she says, is sort of the testing area for many of her designs and themes.

“My little house is a guinea pig for my company,” she says. “I do something here, and then I will try it out at a client’s home.”

Laura’s daughter, Caroline, who also works with her, graduated from Clemson with a degree in landscape architecture. She helped

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Opposite: The hearth and custom bookshelves display carefully curated collections; a trio of botanical prints highlight a beautiful sitting area.This Page: Jade tones lend a pop of color to the living room; porcelain plates and vases are expertly arranged in the entry hall.

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Clockwise: A wood stove is a functional and unique focal point; the garden beckons; english conservatory-style windows offer lots of light;a wide front porch with wicker furniture is perfectly Southern. Opposite Page: Family portraits and unique lighting spark curiosity; muted tones

and floral motifs create a relaxing atmosphere.

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ships, dogs, and shells dot the space, and curiosities like swords, a miniature pill box collection, vintage presidential pins and turtle shells atop candlesticks entice one to keep exploring.

“I like to tease the eye,” explains Laura. “I think it’s wonderful when you don’t necessarily see everything right when you walk in a room, but instead you end up slowly discovering all of these neat little things.”

Their house for over twenty-five years now, the Joneses are content with the beautiful home they’ve built around themselves—though Laura will never stop making edits here and there. Their most recent change was the upgrade of their master bath into a luxurious, relaxing oasis, complete with marble bath and shower and heated floor. This renovation inside their classic, French country style cottage speaks to Laura’s most treasured tenant of decorating: “I don’t like structure in general,” she shares. “I like little formalities, but I enjoy the chaos.” AM

with the plan to rejuvenate the yard, which was completely overrun with azaleas and camellias. Caroline transformed the chaotic space by leaving a line of shrubs at the front of the yard adjacent to the street and incorporating paths to the front door.

“I like that it’s kind of a surprise when you come into the yard,” says Laura. “It’s all sort of hidden, waiting for you to discover it.”

That mentality translates to the interior of the home, which is speckled throughout with unique collections—some of which are small and edited and easy to miss at first. “I love to collect things,” shares Laura. “Little things clustered about are like jewelry for the house.”

Exploring her home, global influences rest soundly among typical Southern themes—an unexpected but perfect collaboration. Vintage Turkish and Middle Eastern rugs set the stage, while Asian pottery and art abound. Paintings and decor items reflecting

“Little things clustered about are like jewelry for the house.”

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Clockwise: A newly renovated bathroom maintains a luxurious yet classic feel; hand-selected personal items are displayed in a bedroom;the exterior paths frame a truly Southern cottage home.

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526

526

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Summerville

Hanahan

Charleston

West Ashley

MountPleasant

Moncks Corner

At Sabal Homes, we take immense pride in being an award-winning

builder but our true sense of accomplishment comes from being a local

builder. We don’t just build here. We live and play here. The Lowcountry

is our home too and we always translate that sense of pride into every

single home we build. We build your home like we’re building our own.

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Call us at 844-MYSABAL

Page 94: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

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LOCALSOCIALS , CAUSES

& COMMUNITYSTAY CONNECTED

15th Annual SPCADowns Byrd Oyster Roast

The 15th Annual SPCA Downs Byrd Oyster Roast was a great night of local oysters, a silent

auction and live music by Double Naught Spies and DJ Wendell,

all to benefit the Frances R.Willis SPCA.

www.summervillespca.org

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LOCALSOCIALS , CAUSES

& COMMUNITYSTAY CONNECTED

During the winter months when the markets aren’t running, Coastal Coffee Roasters offers

a winter farmers market. Offerings include free range and pasture-raised eggs, grass-

fed beef, raw milk and butter, delicious free- range pork sausages and bacon, pasture-

raised chicken, fresh local greens and more. All produce and crafts are guaranteed local.

www.coastalcoffeeroasters.com

Summerville WinterFarmers Market

Page 97: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

For additional information on speciality care, please visitwww.PalmettoPrimaryCare.com or call (843) 572-7727

Your trusted physicians in primary care now offerSPECIALTY CARE SERVICES!

ENDOCRINOLOGYPalmetto Endocrinology - SummervilleJoseph Mathews, MD

1101 Old Trolley Rd #300Summerville, SC 29485Phone: 843-376-2670

Palmetto Endocrinology - Mt. PleasantEveline Waring, MD

1280 Hospital Drive, Suite 201Mount Pleasant, SC 29464Phone: 843-518-6140

GASTROENTEROLOGYSummerville GI Offi ceChristopher Lawrence, MD; Aaron Domm, MD; Celeste Scalzo, FNP

102-A West 8th North StreetSummerville, SC 29483Phone: 843-376-0670

NEUROLOGYCharleston Neurology Offi ceJohn Lucas, MD; John Plyler, MDKaren Raduazo, MD; Christine Brusman, FNP

9313 Medical Plaza Drive, Ste 310Charleston, SC 29406Phone: 843-569-1856

PEDIATRICSHampton Offi ceRosita Vega, MD

300 Maple St, WestHampton, SC 29924Phone: 803-943-3813

Moncks Corner Offi ceEdward Jones, MD

115 Executive ParkwayMoncks Corner, SC 29461Phone: 843-761-2815

SLEEP MEDICINELowcountry Sleep Medicine7 South Alliance Drive, Ste 202-AGoose Creek, SC 29445Phone: 843-820-5315

VEIN SPECIALISTSPalmetto Vein, Imaging &Women’s Health1101 Old Trolley Rd #200Summerville, SC 29485Phone: 843-407-0551

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PALMETTO PRIMARYCARE PHYSICIANS

Page 98: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

Just after Cousin Nick asked for the cream,that print of the skyline, any unknown city, slid down the wall—the third time this week. Gathered around my kitchen table,we watched it. In slow motion. This time

glass spidered like puddles in a winter freeze.That ’s when the call came that told us. Grandmother, we continued eating ice creamalongside birthday cake. We knew you had diedlong before the pneumonia, long before this

last call today. Family land had sustained you.From the barn, you’d look to the pasture. Holsteins, marking time and space,waited for milking and toasted grain.From buckets to trough, it poured. Sounds echoed through the new word in town “rezoning.” Bulldozers eventually took over.They ate up green and spit out dirt,churned it into mudded hunks. Earth, blackened over. Metal and glass

monsters rose, built by highrise persons who discarded land, country, earth, cows as catalog gimmicks. Grandmother,early this morning, at an estate sale of gems,linens, glass, silver, I saw a painting:

two live oaks anchor the earth, spread like umbrellas over lounging Holsteins.I need to return tomorrow. I hope the painting’s still there for sale. I know exactly where to hang it.

96

WHEN THE CALL CAMEby Ellen E. Hyatt

Page 99: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

David Jaskwhich, MD

James McCoy, Jr., MD

Adam Schaaf, MD

James Spearman, MD

X-ray, Occupational Therapy, MRI, Physical Therapy and Outpatient Surgery Center.By offering the newest techniques and most advanced technology, we have the knowledge to offer our patients an accurate diagnosis for the best possible treatment.

North Charleston2880 Tricom St.(843) 797-5050

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Page 100: Azalea Magazine Spring 2015

sty led by margie suttonmakeup by morgan porter