Archive for September, 2011

Boating in Southport, North Carolina

Friday, September 30th, 2011

A lot of people ask me if I were shipwrecked, and could only have one book, what would it be?

I always say “How to Build a Boat”.     

–Stephen Wright (actor/writer)

 

Ahh, the open water….Boaters are never anything but completely immersed in the lifestyle when they are sailing on their vessel of choice. Whether taking a relaxing cruise through the tidal creeks or an exciting excursion on the Atlantic, there is something for every boater in southern coastal North Carolina.

There are many marinas to help you get the most out of your boating lifestyle in our coastal towns. We will highlight a few of our local favorites in the Southport area.

St. James Marina -

Enjoy year round boating at this full service marina (everything from gas to maintenance). With access to the Atlantic by a quick cruise through the Intracoastal  Waterway, this marina offers 155 wet slips and 320 dry slips. The dockmaster can arrange fishing charters and sightseeing cruises, too!

What about when you work up an appetite taking in all the beauty and adventure the coastal waters have to offer? Tommy Thompson’s Grille is the place to feed the beast and whet the whistle. With a full service menu from breakfast through dinner and cocktails at the Tiki bar, you will become a regular like so many have before you.  The food is freshly made to order to meet the tastes of any who visit. Speaking of variety, next door at Tommy’s Market you can find absolutely everything you could ask for! Wine, beer, fresh soup and salad bar, gourmet meats, snacks and specialty items, ice cream and coffee bar, and even gifts.  Most importantly they offer everything you need for your boating excursion. You’ll surely want to stay a while, and it is easy to do when you buy one of the gorgeous houses or condos within walking distance! Be sure to look into the amenity filled lifestyle that St. James Plantation Real Estate has to offer.

South Harbour Village Marina

Located at the base of the bridge to Oak Island beaches, South Harbour is a full/transient dock with everything  from WIFI to laundry facilities. With amenities like showers, taxi services and bike rentals, it is easy to get that second wind and explore the local scenery.  If your travels have made you hungry, but satisfied your need for adventure, there are relaxing options just a few steps away. The Dead End Saloon Fish Factory Grille located at the marina is a casual and quick option for lunch or dinner. With two outdoor patios and an indoor bar with a great view, you can fully recooperate from a day of boating.  Joseph’s Italian Bistro  also located at the marina, is well known for its fine dining choices for lunch or dinner. With recipes that have been passed down for generations, you know they have to be fantastic! Enjoy a drink from their extensive wine list and full bar while sitting in the lush dining room with the eye catching ocean view,  or bask in the sunset on their deck.  If that doesn’t put the wind back in your sails, nothing will! Be sure to check out Oak Island Real Estate to find out more about this beautiful community.

Southport Marina -

One of the largest amenity laden marinas in North Carolina, the Southport Marina is a fully nautical experience. Walking distance from downtown Southport, it makes exploring the local community, restaurants and shopping an easy excursion. It has a floating dock house and a transient/fuel dock with over 200 in-water protected slips and a 220 unit dry stack facility. Home of a Gregory Poole Marine Center, it has everything from mechanical and electrical repair, exterior refinishing, and a 75 ton travel lift (just to name a few of the services they offer). The marina also offers sail fishing and sight seeing tours through USCG licensed captains. Family reunion coming up? Need to make up for last year’s boring office party? You can rent the dock for special occasions! Now that would be an event to remember. See the available Southport NC Real Estate that can be found so close to this boater’s playground.

No matter what experience you are looking for in the boating lifestyle, it is available to you in the Southport area of North Carolina. Sunset cruises to deep sea charters, tidal creek fishing to light house tours, beach picnics to elegant seaside dinners are all just a few of the options that await you when you enter the world of coastal marina living in Southport, NC!

Remembering 9/11: 10 Years Later

Saturday, September 10th, 2011

Remembering9/11We Must Never Forget.

By ADAM GELLER
The Associated Press

NEW YORK • Ten years on, Americans will come together Sunday where the World Trade Center soared, where the Pentagon stands as a fortress once breached, where United Airlines Flight 93 knifed into the earth.

They will gather to pray in cathedrals in our greatest cities and to lay roses before fire stations in our smallest towns, to remember in countless ways the anniversary of the most devastating terrorist attacks since the nation’s founding, and in the process mark the milestone as history itself.

As in earlier observances, bells will toll again to mourn the loss of those killed in the attacks. Ceremonies also will consecrate new memorials in lower Manhattan, rural Pennsylvania and elsewhere, concrete symbols of the resolve to remember and rebuild.

But much of the weight of this year’s ceremonies lies in what will largely go unspoken — the anniversary’s role in prompting Americans to consider how the attacks changed them and the larger world and the continuing struggle to understand 9/11’s place in the lore of the nation.

“A lot’s going on in the background,” said Ken Foote, author of “Shadowed Ground: America’s Landscapes of Violence and Tragedy,” examining the role that veneration of sites of death and disaster plays in modern life. “These anniversaries are particularly critical in figuring out what story to tell, in figuring out what this all means. It forces people to figure out what happened to us.”

First, Saturday’s dedication of the Flight 93 National Memorial at a former strip mine near the town of Shanksville, in western Pennsylvania. Former President George W. Bush and Vice President Joe Biden, as well as families of the 40 passengers and crew killed when their revolt against hijackers of the United Airlines jet ended with its crash, stood under gray skies in a field soggy from rain.

The Pennsylvania memorial park is years from completion. But the dedication and a service to mark the 10th anniversary of the attacks are critical milestones, said Sally Ware, one of the volunteer “ambassadors” who has worked as a guide at the site since the disaster.

Ware, whose home about two miles away from the site was rocked by the jet’s explosion on impact, recalls how hundreds of people flocked to the crash site in the days afterward to leave their own mementos and memorials. She began volunteering after finding one along the side of the road — a red rose placed atop a flight attendant’s uniform.

“It really bothered me. I thought someone has to take care of this,” says Ware, a homemaker whose own daughter is a flight attendant. Now, a decade later, she acknowledges the memorial may do little to ease the grief of the families of those who died in the crash. But the weekend’s ceremonies recall a story with far broader reach.

The ceremonies honor those who “fought the first battle against terrorism — and they won,” Ware said. “It’s something I don’t want to miss. It’s become a part of my life.”

On Sunday, the nation’s focus turns to ceremonies at the Pentagon, just outside Washington, D.C., and in lower Manhattan for the dedication of the National Sept. 11 Memorial. President Barack Obama planned to attend ceremonies at the sites of all three attacks and was scheduled to speak Sunday evening at a service at the Kennedy Center.

The New York ceremony begins at 8:30 a.m., with a moment of silence 16 minutes later — coinciding with the exact time a decade ago when the first tower of the Trade Center was struck by a hijacked jet. And then, one by one, the reading of the names of the 2,977 killed on Sept. 11 — those who perished in New York, as well as those who died at the Pentagon and in rural Pennsylvania.

They include the names of 37 of Lt. Patrick Lim’s fellow officers from the police department of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Lim, assigned to patrol the Trade Center with an explosives detection dog, rushed in to Tower 1 after it was hit to help evacuate workers. He and a few others survived despite still being inside a fifth-floor stairwell when the building fell.

In the years since, Lim said he has wrestled with survivor’s guilt, realizing the last of those he’d urged ahead of him were crushed when the tower collapsed. He took shelter in selective memory, visualizing the ground covered with women’s shoes amid the destruction.

“That’s how I got through that, because what was attached to the shoes was a lot worse,” Lim said.
The 10th anniversary has forced Lim to revisit an experience he’s worried too many people have pushed from their minds. But the approach of Sunday’s ceremonies has convinced him of the value of revisiting Sept.11, both for himself and others.

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