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Category Clearwater Episode Great Eats Great Places Location St Pete Tampa

Episode 32 – Where to Watch The World Cup in Tampa Bay

Episode 32 - Where To Watch The World Cup In Tampa Bay.

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

Want to know where to watch the world cup in Tampa Bay? I give you a ton of suggestions in episode 32!

Transcript at the bottom of the page!

Where to watch the World Cup

Tampa

London Heights Pub
Dubliner
MacDinton’s
Glory Days
Dunderbaks

Brandon

O’Brians
Glory Days

St Pete

The Galley
Macdinton’s
Horse & Jockey
Old Northeast Tavern
Gloriy Days
Jack’s London Grill

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Transcript

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Category Episode Great Eats Location Tampa

Episode 29 – Piccolo Italia Bistro, Music by Stone Marmot

Episode 29 - Piccolo Italia Bistro, Music by Stone Marmot

Alexa,
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Show Notes

If you remember back to Episode 4, I love Italian.  In episode 29, I discover and share my experience of a relative newcomer to the Tampa Italian food scene.  When you walk in and everyone in the place is speaking Italian, you know you’re in for something special.

Transcript at the bottom of the page!

Piccolo Italia Bistro

Piccolo Italian Bistro

 2140 W Doctor M.L.K. Jr Blvd, Tampa, FL 33607

I orderered:

  • Putanesca
  • Brisket with Spinach Fettucini
  • Espresso
  • Chocolate Mousse Cake
  • Holy Water

Everything was amazing!  Absolutely recommended!

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Ferret facts

Felicia was a ferret used at Femilab in the 1960s to clean the particle accellerator.

 

Stone Marmot

Music by Stone Marmot – ” Can’t Undo Loving You”

Our music is the result of not watching TV for over 30 straight years. That’s right! The person who writes all our songs hasn’t had a working television in his house since January, 1982. Scary, isn’t it! That could explain the somewhat retro, rather experimental feel to the music, which has been described as sounding somewhere between The Beatles, Weezer, The B-52s, and They Might Be Giants.

Our music is an object lesson in how warped and depraved a television-starved mind can get. And that’s not all! To make matters worse, since no self-respecting human would stoop low enough to play this stuff, he suckered four poor, innocent cartoon characters into recording his music.

Cartoon characters have it tough enough as it is, with people laughing at them all the time, without having to be subjected to this! His poor, unfortunate victims, who refer to themselves collectively as Stone Marmot, are:

  • Cindy: Guitars
  • Sid: Keyboards, guitars, lead and backup vocals
  • Sammy: Bass, lead and backup vocals
  • Bruce: Percussion, backup vocals

This quartet played their little paper hearts out as the ignoble fiend who created them and their music practically produced and engineered them to death.

Therefore, for the sake of the cartoons, we hope you give their music a good listen and try to appreciate their tireless and selfless efforts. Please! Don’t let this happen to you or someone you love! Be sure you and your loved ones receive a healthy minimum dose of television each and every day.

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Transcript

This is Kyle Sasser, and this is episode 29 of Great Things Tampa Bay. And today we have a little bit of a hidden spot, a little, hidden hole over in Tampa, Florida. And you all might have been feeling a little bit left out over there in Tampa hadn’t talked about anything over there in a while. Been talking about strawberries and, you know, St. Petersburg things and quite, you know, more than a couple interviews. So I wanted to get back to basics.

So, today I just tried this place over in Tampa Bay called Piccolo Italia Bistro, and it is amazing. Did a little bit of recording actually in the restaurant as I was tasting things, and we’ll play that a little bit later. But basically just wanted to give you a real quick rundown.

So, Piccolo Italia Bistro is located over at 2140 West, Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. It’s basically on MLK in Tampa between the river and Armenia Avenue. It’ll be on the South side there’s a big… the signs actually the Italian tricolors which is very similar to the Mexican tricolors as Carmelo in the restaurant told me.

Hopefully, I recorded that. I’m not sure if I was.. but basically, he said that he moved here from Italy, and he was excited because he saw, you know, the red, white, green everywhere. And he was like, “Oh, I feel like I’m at home.” And then, you know, a few years later, he realized that it was mostly the larger Mexican contingent we have here. So, I thought that was pretty funny.

So, basic rundown here is I would put this as more of a like home Italian cooking. It is from the Abruzzo and him… Carmelo will be mad if I pronounced that wrong because he said it to me like three times, but the Abruzzo area, and also Rome, Bellona, and Naples. And they make their sauces in-house, and the one thing I can say about them is that they are very balanced and by that… like that’s a very vague term, I know.

So most times when you have Italian food here… or kind of what’s classes Italian food here in the United States, It’s all, you know, it’s all about the sauce. And there’s usually like one key to finding ingredient of the sauce that just kind of overwhelms everything.

At Piccolo Italia, it’s more of a balanced thing. So for example, I ordered the Puttanesca which, as many of you know is kind of known for its pungent saltiness. It’s basically a spaghetti with capers olives, anchovies, and a tomato sauce, and the capers, and olives.

Most Puttanesca kind of overwhelm everything else. But with this Puttanesca at Piccolo Italia like each ingredient kind of had its own say as you took a bite. So, it’s like you could taste the tomatoes and then, you know, there was a caper and then, you know, the olives were huge olives with like not the sliced out of a can variety.

Huge olives with the pits still in them. So, you know, kind of beehive, you know, be careful where you’re chopping out on these things. And just perfect, you know, even the herbs and stuff in it, you could pick out each one. I did also get a hold of a pepper like almost. It was this big sliver of pepper that lit me up for a little bit. So, if you do get the Puttanesca be a little mindful that that is a possibility in there.

The other plate that I had was briskets, and that was with the spinach fettuccine which was also very amazing. And the brisket was actually slow-cooked, and just kind of pulled apart and melted like butter in your mouth. It was it was delicious, really amazing.

So, the actual place is kind of, you know, just it’s a small place they have like eight tables. When I walked in everyone was speaking Italian, the staff and all of the people sitting down. And Carmela came over and started speaking Italian, and I was like, ” I don’t speak Italian. Sorry.” And he’s like, “Oh foreigner?” And I was like, “Yes.” But it does it really, you know, just like that sort of vibe. It’s very like European, very laid-back, you know, the staff is very friendly and helpful.

Carmela makes a great water… he calls it holy water. And it’s basically, you know, water with some botanicals, some citrus, and some radishes in it, which was… I thought was absurd when I saw him bringing the [inaudible 00:05:10] out. But then I tried it, I was like, “Hey, you know what, I can’t argue with great taste, and this stuff is delicious.” So, anyway, I’m going to cut over and just give you kind of the live feed now from when I was actually in the restaurant. Something new I thought I’d try out. And yeah, here you go.

All right. So, I’m here at Piccolo Italia which is located on MLK in Tampa one block East of Armenia. And you can tell because it’s got a huge time flag out by the road. And I came here wanting to try it out. It was written up as one of the best restaurants in Tampa. And, so, I’m a big fan of Italia… of Italian food if you’ve listened to the podcast at all. And yet, just want to give it a shot.

So, started off with Carmela’s holy water, which is water infused with a whole blend of botanicals including radishes, which sounds weird but absolutely delicious. And then for entrees, I went with the Puttanesca which if you don’t know is a spaghetti with the marinara sauce but a little different than your normal meat sauce because it has olives, capers, anchovies, and a little bit of pepper spice in it.

So, a lot of times, Puttanesca are kind of overwhelmed by the saltiness of the olives, capers, and anchovies, but this one was actually… just the blends were done very well, very well balanced, and amazingly delicious I had to make sure to not eat all of it. So, I have something to take home to my wife.

And then the other entree I tried was the… and here comes Carmela with my espresso. Thank you very much. Sorry. We’re on the dessert course right now. Ah, Abruzzo is that the north or the south? [inaudible 00:07:07] Extra…Okay. Alright, so, I got my espresso right here and… oh, sorry. Yes.

So, the other entree I had was a brisket with spinach… slow-cooked biscuits on spinach fettuccine. And usually, like the savory sort of dishes like that I usually don’t go for too much. A lot of times it comes across like pasta gravy, but the way it was made here again just that perfect balance. Every ingredient just kind of speaks for itself. Absolutely amazing.

Currently, I’m having dessert course with the mousse… chocolate mousse cake and… I got to tell you it’s amazing… my espresso here, hmm, nothing better.

So, I’ll do a little bit more in-depth on this when I get home. It was so delicious that I wanted to record right now.

[music]

So, that was kind of my life take. Obviously, it’s a little rough. My apologies. But I have never made any claims of being a professional podcaster. I’m always working on improving myself, but there you go. It is what it is, you know, I’m not quite on the Anthony Bourdain level yet, and I apologize for that.

Anyway, Piccolo Italia, they do a lot of other great dishes and specials. I couldn’t… they read off like eight of them. They had like some pasta that had like a rack of lamb something on it, and just everything sounded delicious.

I ordered two entrees, just so I could bring some home to my wife, and brought her home, and she was like, “I got to try some bites of the stuff.” Because I sent her pictures, which the pictures you can see on the show notes and also on our website greatthingstb.com. And, yeah, she agreed. Absolutely delicious.

They also do a pasta class that they said was booked out to September which is bananas. And they’re also paired with a dinner of some sort. So, maybe you’re interested in that, and you know, we’ll probably look into trying to do something like that, and you know we’ll… just for our own personal knowledge, you know like, “Who better to learn it from than someone who is actually from Italy? Yeah.

So, it’s definitely, you know, as Carmela told me when I went in there, and I was talking to them like they don’t make any pretenses. They don’t try to do anything fancy, you know like it’s not normal. they’re not trying to do any sort of gastro, you know, deconstruction sort of stuff, is just good food from the heart of Italy that I honestly… I mean everyone should love this stuff. It is amazing. But like I said, it’s not like… like it’s just balanced like it’s a different sensibility from most American food, where it just tries to… you know, it’s over… it’s a little too loud in-your-face I guess. Like the food at Piccolo Italia is just absolutely delicious. And I know I’m going to be picking up some on the way home from work for the wife more than once. So, yeah. So check them out. The Piccolo Italia Bistro and again, they’re on MLK in Tampa between the river and Armenia.

Segment two.

Scientists at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory employed a ferret named Felicia to clean accelerator parts in the 1970s.

As that wraps up Episode 29 of Great Things Tampa Bay. I would like to thank you for tuning in, do be sure to get out there and try Piccola Italia Bistro, absolutely worth the stop and your dinner dollars.

My name is Kyle Sasser and host of great things Tampa Bay. I’m also a local realtor. So, if you would like me to help you find your own great place in Tampa Bay. All you got to do is just go to my website greatthingstb.com. That’s G-R-E-A-T-T-H-I-N-G-S-T-B. com. And on there, there will be a link at the top, on the top menu for how to get in touch with me for real estates.

Also, if you have any suggestions or you want to argue about something, I’m more than happy to take you up on that or read your messages. And you can also send that message to me at the website greatthingstb.com.

I’m also on social media… pretty much all of them just greatthingstb.com. So, you know, find us on Instagram, on Twitter. I try to be active on most of those.

And yeah, today we got a new band playing us out here. And their name is Stone Marmot, and this track is called, ‘Can’t Undo Loving You.’ It’s a fun little track, and you know was pretty innocent when I listened to it the first time as I was driving across the Gandy Bridge on the way home. So, good stuff. So anyway, this is Stone Marmot, not Stone Walmart… Stone Marmot.

And yeah, be sure to subscribe. Share us with friends and tell me about your great place in Tampa Bay. Thank you very much.

[music]

Do you feel your heart burst aflame
Every time you hear my name?
Is my face all you ever see
Like thoughts of you haunt me?

Chorus:
Oo-oo
Please say you feel this too
Oo-oo
‘Cause I can’t undo loving you

Do you feel time without me slow
Like honey flows in snow?
Are you saving up all your dreams
So you can share them with me?

Oo-oo
Please say you feel this too
Oo-oo
‘Cause I can’t undo loving you

Please say this ain’t a one way street
I’m so immersed in you
I’ve lost all chance at a retreat

Do your trembling fingers demand
The comforting grasp of my hand?
Does my warm sweet breath soothe your fears
Like when you kiss away my tears?

Oo-oo
Please say you feel this too
Oo-oo
‘Cause I can’t undo loving
You-oo
Please, please say you feel this too

Oo-oo
‘Cause I can’t undo loving you

No, I can’t undo loving you

I can’t undo loving you

Categories
Category Episode Great Eats Location St Pete

Episode 27 – Chief’s Creole Cafe

Episode 27 - Chief's Creole Cafe

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

Want to know where to find the best creole, jambalaya, etouffee, gumbo, red beans and sausage, fried okra and fried chicken?

Look no further than Chief’s Creole Cafe!

Located at 901 22nd Street South in St Petersburg, just south of 3 Daughters Brewing and the Morean Center For Clay!

Also, some fungus facts you might not have known!

Transcript at the bottom of the page!

Chief's Creole Cafe

Chief’s Creole Cafe!

901 22nd Street South in St Petersburg, just south of 3 Daughters Brewing and the Morean Center For Clay!

What’s good there (everything! but specifically….)

  • The Gumbo
  • The Jambalaya (spicy!)
  • Fried Okra.  Make sure to put the sauce on it. (Sorry granny!)
  • The Etouffe

This is a great place to relax and have a delicious meal.  Indoor and outdoor seating, friendly staff.  Absolutely delicious.

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Fungus Facts

Millions and millions of years ago, trees that fell remained on the ground until a fungus figured out how to eat them.

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Transcript

So it’s getting a little colder down here, you know. We’ve had a couple of cold snaps already and tearing through the holiday season so you know you’re probably looking for something a little bit warmer and hardier than normal. Usually, where you know, fish and fried foods down here, but whenever it gets cold, most people want a soup or something like that.

Hey, everybody, Kyle Sasser here. This is episode 27 of, “Great Things Tampa Bay To Do.” Gonna be talking about Chief’s Creole Café. It’s an absolutely delicious Cajun restaurant in beautiful St. Petersburg Florida and definitely run by a great group of folks. I’m actually looking to interview the owner of Chief’s Creole cafe here in the next couple months. Actually, I have a bit of a backlog on the interview so we’re gonna be pumping some of those out and try mixing in some additional comments. I didn’t realize I had so many interviews here in the pipeline. But yes, so I’m gonna be doing some more park reviews and just other interesting history things, just kind of mix it up a little bit. I don’t wanna hit you all with interview after interview after interview. So stay tuned this is a… It’s a wonderful place, and it’s located south the Central Avenue, and it’s amazing. It’s been a mind-blowing dining experience every time we’ve eaten there.

So it’s getting a little colder down here you know we’ve had a couple of cold snaps already and you know, tearing through the holiday season. So you know you’re probably looking for something a little bit warmer and hardier than normal. We usually, you know, fish and fried foods down here, but whenever it gets cold, you know, most people want a soup or something like that. My wife and I we used to go to Ricky Pees all the time and Ricky Pees was a Cajun restaurant downtown St. Petersburg and then they moved up to North 4th street for a little while.

They have subsequently closed, much to our sadness. Ricky Pees is still around though. He is over at [inaudible00:02:09], Tampa, last I checked. I saw he was making those pullboys out there still. So if you are in the market for an old Ricky Pee pullboy head on over to in South Tampa. But you know over here, we had a hankering for some Creole food. So got on the Internet, looked around, and found this place called Chief’s Cajun café. They are located on South 22nd Street, particularly at 901 22nd street south. So that is actually… if you’re familiar with St. Petersburg here. So you have Central Avenue there and you know, has lots of books and all that stuff. If you know where Three Daughters Brewing is, it’s a little bit south of that and also a little south of the train depot there. But it’s in a cool place. Interior of this place is amazing. They have like the old stand up piano there, they also have some gorgeous, like wood pieces, these are…I don’t know what you’d call it like a mantle…not a mantle, mantle is way too small for what this thing is.

If you look at the pictures online, it is bananas. So yeah, the interior is absolutely gorgeous. And luckily, the food backs it up as well. So we went there and met the owner, very nice man. We’re actually working to get him on an interview on our upcoming episode. I think you will, you know, have a lot of great insight on the history of the area, as well as you know just interviewing him with, you know, his creative process on his food, and where he learned to cook, and all that stuff. But if you’re in the mood for some gumbo or jumble, this is the place to go. They gave us some samples of all of this stuff, the gumbo is just…oh man, it is so savory, just…oh, it’s amazing. The Jumbo I does have a little spice on it. Okay, actually a little more than a little spice. So if you’re thinking jumble, please make sure to try that first, otherwise you might be a little scorched.

So we went out and the…I don’t know if they do this all the time but the salad, whenever we were there, they had an apricot basil dressing. So it was almost like…I don’t know, it was delicious, it was delicious. Basically, it was like an apricot jam or jelly with bass lines. So just very, too very…like you had the sweet of the apricot and like the bite from the oil of the basil, it was great, it was great. So I got the gumbo and rapidly devoured all of that. My wife got the Etouffee, which is sort of like a crawfish or shrimp brown sauce, very delicious. Just very hearty, like something you needed a cold day, you think about something… and so good that you would stuff it up with bread. It’s amazing. To finish it off, because you know, I got that sweet tooth, we did have some bread pudding, which was interesting, it was a little outside of my normal chocolate mousse or similar, but very good, it’s very good.

It’s not overly sweet because it had a really nice finish to it and very…healthy is not the right word, but I don’t really have another word to describe it, really, compared to my normal chocolate sugar infused sweetness. It’s an amazing place. So yeah, if you’re looking for some hearty food like that Chief’s Creole cafe and that is at 901 22nd street South over here in St Petersburg.

And now, here is your fact. So if you would like to know about now picking up after yourself for the first to 40 million years that woody tree existed on earth. The wood was not biodegradable. And the reason for that was because there was no fungus that had figured out how to eat it or rot it. So for 40 million years, as you know, all manner of woody trees and vegetation just piled up, and piled up, and piled up, crazy to think about. So I hope you enjoyed the review of Chief’s Creole cafe. We’re gonna be putting the details up on the show notes so be sure to check that out on whatever device you’re used to listen to this podcast.

Also if you’re looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay, I am also a local realtor, and I work on both sides of the bay. So I’m more than able to help you find your own great place in Tampa Bay. And yeah, you can reach me at kyle@greatthingstb.com. That’s G-R-E-A-T-T-H-I-N-G-S-T-B .com. And I’d also like to invite you over to the website, greatthingstb.com. In addition to showing notes and information on how to subscribe, we also forming a community where, basically, we have forms for each section of Tampa Bay and you can also group up and make your own groups and friends and have your own conversations. So definitely trying to build communities like for each one of you to come over and at least say hello and yeah, good things.

We also have events there. We do events, we try to do one or two a month either dining out or like a canoe trip. We might be doing the… We had a lot of requests for the skydiving thing over next to top golf, so we might be doing that sooner rather than later so be sure to go over there and subscribe so you can keep up to date on that. So I’d like to thank you for listening, and if you would just take a minute and recommend this show to a friend of yours, one that you think might enjoy listening to me ramble on about local Tampa things. So yeah, definitely, I appreciate every one of my listeners and I would love for you to say hello to me either in person or electronically. It really means a lot to me, so thank you.

Categories
Category Episode Further Afield Great Eats Great People Location

Episode 25 – Mount Dora Road Trip

Episode 25 - Mount Dora Road Trip

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

In this episode, we take another road trip to beautiful Mount Dora, Florida.  Mount Dora is located north of Orlando and is situated on spectacular Lake Dora.

In addition to featuring beautiful vistas of Lake Dora, Mount Dora is also known for putting on a ton of art and craft festivals, including the 2017 Mount Dora Arts and Craft Fair that we attended!

You’ll also hear about no less than four great restaurants that we tried.  Want to know where the best burgers in Mount Dora are?

Also featuring music from a great local band called Ellie Lee Band!

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

Mount Dora

Take a trip with us north of Orlando: Beautiful Mount Dora, Florida!

We went to Mount Dora to enjoy the 2017 Mount Dora Arts and Craft Fair

 

We stayed at Adora Inn, a beautiful and wonderful bed and breakfast in easy walking distance to downtown Mount Dora.

 

We also ate at:

Goblin Market

1921 by Norman Van Aken

and Pisces Rising.

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Ellie Lee Band

Music by Ellie Lee Band

 

Killer Fact

“Mr Brightside”, a song by The Killer, never actually left the U.K. charts.  It is still in the top 50 songs of 2017.

 

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Transcript

Hey, everybody. This is Kyle Sasser, Great Things Tampa Bay. And we’re continuing with the rapid piece intro here. This is the second episode where we’re doing that. So be sure to go to our website, greatthingstb.com and listen up if you like it or not. This is episode 25. And today we’re talking about Mount Dora, which is a little bit of a trip. It’s a little bit further north of us, a little north of Orlando. But we do like to do car trips, day trips, and even little weekend trips. Can’t call them One Tank Trips, because I believe that is probably copyrighted, so my apologies. And if this episode gets pulled you will know the reason why. But Mount Dora, not too far away. It’s a great place to go hang out for a few days, may have a ton art shows, but, you know, I don’t wanna give all of it away from the get-go here, so here is Mount Dora.

This is another road trip episode, so I know these are a little controversial. Okay, not really, I just made that up. But yeah, so this is another road trip episode. Wife and I, we went up to Mount Dora, Florida, which is located about…I mean, I won’t say about an hour north of Orlando. The way we went, we went up 75 to someplace with a federal prison and we got off there. Yeah, it’s a pretty desolate drive. But then once you kinda cross the ridge there in the central part of the state, you know, you start seeing all these lakes, Hawaiian hills, and all that good stuff, beautiful country up there. Then, you know, we actually arrived at Mount Dora’s.

We stayed at a bed and breakfast up there called the Adora Inn. They’re located at 610 North Treemain Street. We’re gonna put the information for them in the show notes if you would like to stay there as well. And we were there…proprietors, John and Arthur definitely gave us a great stay. They told us lots of great places to go there and eat and, you know, just a little history about the town and the history of how they ended up there and became the proprietors of the Adora Inn. Yes, there was a duplex, so, like you’d go inside and there was these two staircases side by side and, you know, there used to be a wall there separating them but, you know, now it’s kind of you just have two staircases in the house, which is pretty crazy. And then, yeah, that was actually like three stories tall and had a basement. So, you know, pretty unique for Florida.

So while we were there, we were actually up there for the Arts and Crafts Fair. They have a ton of just festivals, and like art shows, and stuff like that. So kinda check the calendar if you’re thinking about going up there because they might have something that appeals to you coming up. We were up there for the arts and crafts festival which we learned was good. But I think the art, the actual just art festival that they have up there was probably more of what we’re looking for. The arts and crafts festival was a little bit more of the, you know, hand-painted signs, you know, small glass pieces, dog collars, that sort of thing. It did have some art and artsy stuff, but definitely not as much as the art show.

First day, we were there we went to Goblin Market which is pretty good. It’s located on one of the side alleys, so, you know, it was pretty fun to find. That’s good, it was delicious and hearty. The interior was decorated awesomely and it was very cool.

The next day we had lunch at 1921 at the recommendation of the proprietors of the Adora Inn. And 1921 by Norman Van Aken who is…I believe he’s a chef down in Miami. And so they had tuned the menu a touch for the arts and crafts festival. And they didn’t really have all of the normal stuff there. But we did have a hamburger, which sounds boring, but it was amazing, like a very nearly perfect hamburger. And then we met some friends later that night down at Pisces Rising, which is kinda down the hill a little bit overlooking Lake Dora. And it’s a great place, used to be a house, you know, with one of the original families there. And then it was bought and turned into a restaurant. They have a huge porch there. It’s a great place to watch the sun go down over the lake, and amazing. Food was pretty good, I think I had a steak there, and it was good. But definitely, I would put it more on the great place to watch the sun go down with a cocktail in your hand, really good time.

They also have a train, which if you don’t know I’m bit of a fan of trains, you know, brings out the inner 12-year old in me. My dad actually worked for CSX for 30+ years. He’d probably be really mad at me that I don’t know the exact number. But he was there, he worked for CSX. So I have a special place in my heart for trains. But yes, so they have a train that kinda goes round from Mount Dora to Tavares. And, you know, you can kinda just look out there, look at the lake riding the train around. It’s a good time. While we were there it was not running though, they were just using it to ferry people from parking lot into town for the art festival, but it’s very cool. You can go into the old train depot. Mount Dora was one of the first resort destinations in Florida. So when Flagler was building his railroads down through the East Coast over there and came down through St. Augustine, Flagler Beach, and all that stuff, one of the first attractions was a spur that went over to Mount Dora, so very cool.

And I also mentioned that they do have tons of festivals there. So they have festival fairs, they have craft fairs, couple of the cool ones is that Tavares is actually the seaplane capital of the world or so they claim, you know. I’m always a little dubious of towns that claim to be the capitals of something. But they did admittedly have a lot of seaplanes there. So if you like seaplanes that’d probably be the place for you to go. And they also have a wooden boat festival, so like all the old, you know, wood speedboats, Chris Craft [SP], and all that stuff which if you remember from the boat show episode that we’re personally fans of. So yes, so they have a wooden boat show festival and they get up and race the wooden boats around, and it’s supposed to be pretty cool. So, you know, I’m gonna have this kinda nudge the wife and see if we can get back up there to see that.

So yes, so that was our weekend in Mount Dora. It was a lot of fun. One thing we did go, right when we had the first little cool weather towards the end of October there, you know, when the weather kinda dropped down into the 80s, which for Florida is nearly winter time. So we went up there right during that first initial cool weather, and my wife is going crazy, she’s like, “Oh, you know, it’s so great up here. We should move up here, like feel the temperature.” I was like, “Listen.” I was like, “We did not find like some secret garden in Florida that, you know, magically the weather is just, you know, 30 degrees cooler up here.” And that was rapidly confirmed by the proprietors of Adora Inn, John and Arthur, who, you know, definitely said that it is very, very warm there in the summertime. So if you’re thinking about going to Mount Dora, you definitely would probably want to do it when the weather is a little bit cooler. If you have any questions or anything all of this information is going to be in the show notes. It’s definitely worth a trip there. It is pretty hilly and, you know, you can either go to the Adora Inn… They have another spot there down actually on the lake, called the Lakeside Inn, which is basically the old resort there. So bunch of cool stuff, lot of great history up there. And that is Mount Dora. If you have any questions or anything, check out the show notes on our website.

So again, if that tickled your fancy at all, we will have all the details in the show notes including where we stayed, where we ate at. You’ll be able to find links there. Follow on our footsteps, if you like. I would also like to add, before we get to segment two here, that we do actually have events, and meet-ups and all that good stuff. You can find the details at our website or on your meetup app. So if you’d like come have dinner with me and my wife and some other Great Things Tampa Bay listeners, you can do so.

So this segment two is a little bit of a musical interlude, I guess you could say. Before we get played out by a local musician on our outro. Interestingly enough, “Mr. Brightside,” which was a song by The Killers, which many of you probably know, never actually ever left the U.K. charts. And in fact, Mr. Brightside by The Killers was among the top 50 songs in 2017.

I’d like to thank you for listening to “Great Things Tampa Bay,” the podcast covering all the great eats, great places, and great people in the Greater Tampa Bay Area. If you’d like to interact with us, if you’d like to give us a tip of the hats, a wag of the finger, a dog poop on the doorstep, you can do so by going to our website, greatthingstb.com. And on there we have all of our show notes, history, we got some blog posts which will keep you up to date on, you know, the quick happenings, a lot of restaurants opening up currently. Sorry, that’s the dog and a cat fighting in there. Hang on a second.

Okay, I’m back from dog patrol. I’m really trying to make greatthingstb.com a great resource and where you can go and find out everything that’s going on in the Tampa Bay Area, talk with other like-minded people, people looking for good eats, you know, something fun to do, talk about local bands, local art, and all that good stuff. So that’s greatthingstb.com. Thanks for tuning in.

Playing us out today is the Ellie Lee Band, “He’s My Baby.” If you like this song take a look in the show notes, we’re gonna have links and additional information, and all the good stuff maybe. You can catch the Ellie Lee Band out and about in the Greater Tampa Bay Area. This group was recommended to me by some fans of theirs. And that wasn’t just one, I actually got two, or three, or four people who said, “These guys are great, very bluesy, guitars is awesome.” So here we go, Ellie Lee Band, “He’s My Baby.”

[00:10:49]
[music]
[00:15:48]

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Category Episode Great Eats Great People Location Tampa

Episode 24 – Bob McDowell, Strawberry farm interview

Episode 24 - Bob McDowell, Strawberry farm interview

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

Ever wondered what all goes into making a delicious strawberry, one worth of topping shortcake and being celebrated in a festival?

I interview Bob McDowell, 15 year farmer at Fancy Farms out in Plant City, Florida and we talk everything strawberry and strawberry farming, and this interview just so happened to be conducted the day after a hard freeze which resulted in some crop damage.

Did you know that a strawberry can be larger or smaller depending on the phase of the moon?  Learn this and other great facts in this episode!

Also featuring music from a great local reggae band Trinity 7!  Trinity 7 is a family group led by Jamaican born Ras Meishak who is a dynamic song writer and bassist, and has performed with Yellowman, Gregory Isaacs, Dennis Brown, Admiral Tibet, Eric Donaldson and many more.

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

Fancy Farms

Fancy Farms

Fancy Farms’ Stawberry Stand is at 5212 Drane Field Road

Fancy Farms U Pick Strawberries is March 17th

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Trinity 7

Trinity 7 Reggae Band

Trinity 7 is a family group that is led by Jamaican born Ras Meishak who is a dynamic song writer and bassist. His first single “When will it be” was selected as top ten runner up in the 1997 popular song contest representing western Jamaica. Ras has performed across the entire Island, playing bass for a few names like King Yellow man, Gregory Isaacs, Dennis Brown, Admiral Tibet, Eric Donaldson and many more.

As music runs through his veins, he is joined by his family who bring the rest of the music to life.

Their music carries on the message that reggae was founded on: a voice for the downtrodden, offering the message of inspiration, hope, justice & peace. Their music is original and it speaks to all ages, where everyone can feel a sense of welcome and belonging.

Trinity 7’s style is a reflection of the legendary foundation roots artists while cultivating their truly unique, original sound.

Hockey Facts

Hockey pucks are kept frozen during a game so they slide easier and faster, and do not bounce as much.

 

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Transcript

Bob: Depends on your taste of berries. Some people like small berries. Some people like bigger berries.

Kyle: What’s the difference?

Bob: Well, some are small, some are big.

Kyle: Hey, everybody. Kyle Sasser, Great Things Tampa Bay and before we get started today just wanna give you a quick overview. Making some changes. Cutting out the intro music. Cutting out a lot of the beginning intro just because, personally, I don’t like getting pounded with advertisements and, you know, action requests. You know, go to this website, go to that website, sign up here, like me here. So we’re cutting all that out. If you would like to support the podcast or interact with us we’re gonna put all that on the end. And we’re also adding another segment towards the end. We’re playing local musicians’ music. So I’ve reached out to a bunch of local musicians. They have been more than kind enough to allow me to play that. So it’s gonna be basically a single track at the end from every genre imaginable. Tampa is crazy so far as music goes. And some of the artists and songs that were sent to me were so good that I actually had to listen to them three times in a row and just got some chills listening to them. So be sure to stay tuned and if you like the change, if you don’t like the changes go to our website. I promise I won’t be doing a whole bunch of actual requests at the front here but our website greatthingstb.com. You can go there and let me know if you like it or if you don’t like it.

Hey, everybody. It’s Kyle Sasser with Great Things Tampa Bay and this is episode 24. Today we are interviewing Mister Bob McDowell. He is a local strawberry farmer out at Fancy Farms over in Plant City, Florida and, funny enough, I didn’t know it was Fancy Farms till I got out there. Got a little history with them. Personally, I went to high school with the owner’s daughter I believe. I think it’s the owner’s daughter. Didn’t ask that particular relation but I know they’re related. And also, my wife was in her sorority. So pretty funny connection when you drive up, see to the sign, you’re like, “Oh, yeah. I know you. I know you guys.”

So in this interview we’re going to be talking about all of the secrets of strawberry farming which sounds, you know, maybe it might sound a little boring to you. You know, you’re like, “You throw some water on it, you throw some fertilizer on it.” But some interesting facts and figures, how they pick the strawberries, and basically just the overall process. I know I have lived in the area for 38 years and I was definitely not aware of a lot of the things that he went over. So be sure to stay tuned. And stay tuned to the end because we’re gonna have a local musician playing us out on the outro and I promise it’s good stuff. I don’t take just anybody. I make sure to listen to it and I refuse to play garbage. Put it that way. Although, you know, the actual band Garbage, if they were local, would probably make it on there so. Anyway, without further ado, here is the interview with Bob McDowell.

Hey, everybody. This is Kyle Sasser and I’m here with an old friend of mine from high school and I’ll let him introduce himself.

Bob: Hey, I’m Bob McDowell. I work at Fancy Farms, Plant City, Florida.

Kyle: Yeah. And he is a strawberry farmer extraordinaire out here in Plant City.

Bob: I don’t know if you’d say that but I’ve been doing it for almost 15 years.

Kyle: Yeah, yeah. So you’ve got some good experiences. Gonna share some of that with us today. So let’s just start off. What all is entailed in making a strawberry?

Bob: Well, a good strawberry plant makes a good strawberry and some good growing weather makes a good strawberry.

Kyle: So, and what would a good growing weather be?

Bob: Good growing weather would probably be in the 50 to 70-degree range. Not…very little rain. No fog around.

Kyle: Yeah, that’s good.

Bob: That’d be good. And a good berry price. Make some money.

Kyle: Always a plus, always a plus.

Bob: Yeah, yeah.

Kyle: So, listeners, today the day that we’re actually doing this interview we had the freeze last night. Right?

Bob: Yes. We did have the freeze.

Kyle: Yes.

Bob: It was a…it got quite cold. They predicted 28 for us and we actually got to 23 degrees.

Kyle: So explain to us what happens during a freeze. Like what happens to the plant and how…well, like what steps do you take to protect the berries?

Bob: Well, during the…the day before we usually go out and we crank the pumps up, make sure the sprinklers aren’t broken off or, you know, make sure they’re all functioning properly, the pumps are functioning properly. We have plenty of the fuel for them for the night. And then when…we’ll go to bed that night and watch the thermometer. We might get some sleep. We probably don’t. Last night they predicted 28 and we figured, you know, when it…when the temperature got to about 33 degrees we’ll go ahead and crank the pump up because there’s not gonna be frost and the wind is gonna be blowing bad. We need to start making ice.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: And the reason we make the ice is to create a cocoon basically around the strawberry plant and it’ll maintain 32 degrees around the plant or around the berry and the plant itself. The berries can take 30 degrees. You know, some nights we’ve run…we’ve never run water. Got 30 degrees, didn’t run the water. Didn’t have any damage.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: But when it gets down to the mid-20s we’ll have problems.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: So the reason we keep the pumps running is to keep making ice because if you make a coat of ice on there for an hour or so and you turn the pump off, well, the ice will get colder than 32 degrees. That’s exactly why we just keep it running and running.

Kyle: So it’s like a physics problem? You basically have to keep the water on there and the water helps keep it at 32 degrees but it has to keep being new water?

Bob: Yes, yes, yes. The making of the ice creates some heat.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: And that’s what protects the berries and the flowers also. You need to get a coating around the flowers too because they will also die.

Kyle: Yep. And when I pulled up today Mister Grooms was nice enough to show me some examples of some crop damage. Would you like to describe the damage that we saw?

Bob: The damage that you saw was the…he had some flowers that he pulled from the field and usually a flower is nice and yellow. And these flowers were actually brown on the tips. And when it turns brown on the tip the flower will not pollinate because it’s already dead. And it’ll make a misshapen berry that we can’t harvest.

Kyle: Yeah. And it’s crazy to me just like, because I know absolutely nothing about farming really, the damage shows up that rapidly. Because that was just from this morning, right? Like the last overnight?

Bob: Yes. Well, you can…we went out in the field while the water was running and saw damage.

Kyle: Oh, wow. That’s crazy, that’s crazy. So okay. So we did have the freeze. Overall things are pretty good here. The crop came through pretty well and all.

Bob: Yeah, for the most part. There is gonna be damage because the wind blew. It was really bad blowing.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: It got to 23 degrees which they predicted 28 which that didn’t work out very well.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: This is one of the…this is…I’ve considered a bad freeze really.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: And we hadn’t had one of those since 2010, 2011.

Kyle: Yeah. Like I was saying like…so I live over in Saint Pete but I’ve lived…like I grew up here in Plant City, I’ve lived in Tampa, I’ve lived in Lakeland and it’s been probably, like you say, like about seven years, six, seven years since it’s really we’ve had a hard freeze overnight. Like even in balmy St. Petersburg over there it was cold.

Bob: Yes, it was very cold. We made a lot of ice on the plants last night.

Kyle: Is there any fix for the damage? You just kinda have to just kinda go with it?

Bob: No, there’s no fix for the damage. You just move on and that’s just part of the crop we will end up losing.

Kyle: Yeah. Just part of the deal.

Bob: Yeah, it’s part of farming.

Kyle: All right. Well, that’s cool. So the berries, you told me earlier that the berries have already been coming in and you’ve been doing some picking already.

Bob: Yes. Did you wanna hear a rundown of how we get to a berry to pick?

Kyle: Yes. We started with the climax, you know, with the ice and the crop damage and the farmers on the television talking about the freezes. Well, let’s go back to the beginning and, you know, see exactly where we start. Like when did we…like how do you start a season?

Bob: Well, typically in the summer, we have a cover crop growing and it’s clay peas or hemp or some other top of cover crop. It builds the nutrition in the soil, keeps from soil erosion. We’ll start like in July cutting, knocking that down and prepping it. And come about middle of…well, the…I guess the end of July we’ll go in and start laying the plastic.

Kyle: Oh, okay. So that’s when you till the fields and kind of pull them up in rows and…

Bob: Yes, yeah, yeah. We’ll pull up in rows, lay the plastic, bury the ends. We have a tube down the center of the bed, we call it drip tape, and that’s how we water and fertilize our berries.

Kyle: Okay. So no more of the white pipe sticking out with the…

Bob: Well, we still have those for frost protection but we only run them for frost protection. So we run the drip tape and it conserves water and it’s better on the plant because plants aren’t getting wet.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: But once we lay our plastic and we’ll wait about two weeks, three weeks, get a roadway set, get every…you know, get all the plastic…it takes probably two weeks to lay the plastic and get our roadways ready. Other farmers, it takes longer. You know, just on our farm that’s about our time span of how long it takes. It depends.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: And if a hurricane comes, Hurricane Irma come through, it put a wrench in the program for us.

Kyle: It does that. It definitely does that.

Bob: Yeah. But after we do all that, we’ll get our plants in. The last week of September through the middle of October we’ll start planting. And we’ll put the berry plants in a row, hand plant them in and then…

Kyle: So they’re actually planted by hand? They’re not…there’s no machine?

Bob: Well, there’s a machine that’ll punch the hole in the plastic for us.

Kyle: But somebody’s gotta…

Bob: Somebody’s gonna come in there and put the plant in by hand.

Kyle: Wow.

Bob: And there’s roughly 18,000 plants per acre.

Kyle: Yeah, that’s…I did not…like I did not realize that. At…like I grew up next to a strawberry farm and I always just figured one of the machines there ran by it, like, you know, probably the one that poked the hole would put the plant in as well.

Bob: Yeah, that…yeah. It don’t work that way.

Kyle: Is it just the plants are too sensitive at that point?

Bob: There’s not a machine that will actually set that for you because each plant is unique.

Kyle: Okay.

Bob: The root mass is different on each plant and the crown of the plant, they’re different sizes. So there’s no uniformity. You know, they are somewhat uniform but there’s no machine that can actually do that.

Kyle: Wow. That’s crazy.

Bob: But going back to our plants. We get our plants from North Caroline, California, and Canada, and Nova Scotia.

Kyle: Okay.

Bob: And we got some from Colorado. They grow them in the higher elevations which are cooler. The sock plants, and then they’ll dig them in a nursery and they’ll bring them to us in refrigerated trucks in boxes.

Kyle: Wow.

Bob: And then after that then we’ll plant them in the ground and then we turn the water on. The reason we turn the water on during the heat of the day is to keep them cool.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: If you do not run the water the plant will just wilt and die.

Kyle: Right. So are they…I’m guessing they’re not native to this section of Florida then?

Bob: I don’t know if they are. Well, they are…they’ve been growing here about a 100 years.

Kyle: Yeah. That’s true. I think I’ve seen some out in the wild.

Bob: Yeah.

Kyle: I see them walking around in various places.

Bob: So once we get our berries planted within usually three to four weeks we’ll pick our first berry. The plant will typically establish itself growing. It’ll push out a few leaves and then it’ll push out some flowers. From flower to harvest is typically three weeks when it’s warm.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: When it gets cool we might go to four, four and a half weeks from the flower till all the environmental conditions happen.

Kyle: So is there…so like citrus, is there any rule like if you have like a cold snap at a certain point it’ll put a certain sweetness on the strawberry or is that just for citrus?

Bob: For strawberries the longer the berry stays on the bush, the sweeter it will get. It will actually mature slower which will create more sugars in the berry which will make it sweeter.

Kyle: And I think that’s what everyone is interested in with the strawberries, how sweet it is.

Bob: Yes, they are. And it depends on what variety you plant. There’s many, many varieties of strawberry plants. You know, it’s just not a green plant and red strawberry. You know, they’re like people. They’re all different.

Kyle: They have their own like cultivars or whatever?

Bob: Yes, they do. And the strawberry lab IFIS.

Kyle: Sounds like a very cool place.

Bob: Yeah. So University of Florida actually is part of that deal. I don’t know if you ever heard of that place.

Kyle: Yeah, on occasion.

Bob: It’s down in Baum. There’s some doctors and scientists that…and plant breeders that come up with the different varieties from Florida. There’s other varieties from California, and all over the United…or the…actually the world, they actually have their own varieties. And another thing on our Florida variety is that the breeders had developed, we get the opportunity to grow the berries and then other countries actually grow the berries too. Our Florida varieties are grown in other countries like Israel and, gosh, Spain.

Kyle: Very cool.

Bob: You know, so it’s not just a local variety that we’re growing. Our varieties go out across world.

Kyle: Although, you know, all strawberries grown in Plant City are the best just by default.

Bob: Of course. It must be the dirt.

Kyle: Yep. So you mentioned to me earlier that you have some biologists and things on staff. I didn’t know if you wanna go into that a little bit. Just like what they do, what they look for, like pest issues and things like that.

Bob: Well, the lab at Bum they have somebody that looks at bugs. I don’t know the technical term for it. And he’s…

Kyle: Bugs is good enough.

Bob: Yeah, he’s a bug man. He’ll test different insecticides, make sure they’re effective. They’ll let us know of some new bugs coming out. You know, there’s always, you know, a new invasive species or something that’s gonna attack a berry plant.

Kyle: Yeah, or things adapting or…

Bob: Yeah. And they’ll come up with different strategies how to maintain these bugs to where they won’t damage the fruit.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: And then we’ve got another one that deals in diseases.

Kyle: Interesting. So like funguses, molds?

Bob: Yes, yes, funguses and molds. One called gray mold.

Kyle: Sounds dire.

Bob: Yes. Yeah. It’s not very good. And they test different methods of preventing it and curing it and they test the chemicals and they actually study how the mold actually grows and how it develops in the weather conditions of when it’s actually growing because when it’s real cold like this, it doesn’t like to grow.

Kyle: Yeah. Makes sense. Makes sense. Very fascinating. All right. So we have the flower there and the flower is all good. It’s made it through the winter and it’s put on a berry and now it’s all ripe. It’s very sweet because it’s been on there a long time.

Bob: Well, yeah. Right now, but back in September we started making flowers and we ended up started picking like the last week of October just a few strawberries. Not very many. But we’ll typically harvest the berries every three days to four days. If it’s real cloudy the berries won’t ripen as fast so we’ll end up going another day in between picking.

Kyle: And that’s crazy. Like even just a cloudy day can affect when like dozens of people are gonna have to work, right? Like the picker, like for people to come in and pick just a cloudy day is gonna push that out a day.

Bob: Yes, it will push it out a day. And we’ve set our farm up to where we’re on a rotation. We pick a third of the farm every day. So we’re picking every day. We try to. If it’s cloudy or we’re gonna have a freeze coming, we will pick ahead and get some of that fruit off. Then they’ll have a day or two off and then we’ll finally get some sun in. They’ll start ripening them up then we’ll go back to picking again.

Kyle: Yeah. So it’s not just the people around Florida that like the sun, the plants and the berries like it as well.

Bob: Yes, yes. The plants do like it.

Kyle: That’s good.

Bob: And then once we…well, we’ll start picking. Our berries will go to the market and they’ll go to Publix. I know our berries go to Publix, and you’ll see the Wish Nest or Wish Farm’s label.

Kyle: Never heard of them.

Bob: Yes. You’ll see the Wish label and you’ll see a “How’s my picking?” sticker on the clamshell. It has a number, a little special number on it, and you can go to their website, put that little number in there and you can write a review on them berries.

Kyle: Wow. So you’re…it’s like your back office system is so fine grained nowadays, sorry, this is the IT guy in me coming out, that you actually know who picked what strawberries out in the field?

Bob: Yes. We actually…you know, the consumer doesn’t know exactly who picked it and which farm it does, but it gives the Wish Farms an idea if there’s a problem or if them berries were awesome. They’ll let the grower know what’s going on, “Hey, you know, these people really loved these berries, you know. You need to keep doing this kind of deal.”

Kyle: Keep doing whatever you’re doing.

Bob: Or, “Them berries, they weren’t very good. You know what you did wrong,” type deal.

Kyle: “We took them but we probably shouldn’t have and we both know it.”

Bob: Yeah. And that’s a new thing we’ve been doing for probably five or six years called trace back. Traceability.

Kyle: That’s cool. That’s very cool.

Bob: It’s somewhat similar to the tomato incident. They have traceability exactly in…

Kyle: Give me some backstory here because I’m in the dark. I don’t know.

Bob: Oh, you don’t know what happened?

Kyle: I don’t. Because I know we grow tomatoes here like down in Ruskin, that’s their thing.

Bob: Yes. It was probably six, seven years ago maybe, there was a big outbreak of something with some tomatoes that some people got sick on.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: Well, come to find out them tomatoes were not grown in the United States. They were imported tomatoes which got these people sick.

Kyle: So the Ruskin tomatoes did not make anybody sick? Just wanna clear that up.

Bob: That’s right. That’s right.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: So, but it did decimate some of the tomato growers. They did go out of business about it.

Kyle: Yeah, because people backed off of buying tomatoes and there was questions? You know, people were getting really sick. I think…was there any deaths I think?

Bob: I think there was.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: I think there was some deaths.

Kyle: I remember that story now that you mention it so…

Bob: And coming up on the regulatory stuff, we have licenses to spray chemicals. You have to have a license to actually purchase chemicals and actually put them out.

Kyle: So like the pesticides and…

Bob: Yes, the pesticides. We really don’t wanna spray pesticides but under a necessity we have to to control some of the pests that are out there in the field. And sometimes we’re not spraying for pests. We’re spraying for a fungus that’ll grow on the berry. And, of course, you know, we don’t wanna spray because they cost a lot of money. It costs a lot of money, that cuts into what money we could make.

Kyle: Yeah. Like, you know, Dow Chemical, they don’t just give this stuff to you for free.

Bob: No, they don’t. They may give you a bottle and say, “Here, try.”

Kyle: Yeah. And you’re not buying like, you know, a little, you know, half liter bottle at Home Depot. You’re buying hundreds, thousands of gallons of this stuff.

Bob: Yes, we are. And another thing that people see a sprayer out there, we might not be spraying for anything. We’ll spray plant nutrition which would be nutritional stuff on them like a fertilizer to make them healthy or calcium. One thing about calcium we’ll put on the plant, calcium is a nutrient that is very hard for the plant to uptake. It’s one of the hardest nutrients for the plant to uptake which will make the berries firmer.

Kyle: Interesting.

Bob: And when the calcium gets to the cells, in the cells, it’ll make the cell stronger which will prevent the funguses from actually going into the strawberries itself which is more like a fungicide.

Kyle: Yeah. So just because you see like, you know, the big tractor with the big white tank and the stuff spraying everywhere it doesn’t mean that, you know, death is coming out of there. A lot of times it’s gonna be nutrients and stuff that’s actually beneficial for the plants.

Bob: Yes. Yeah.

Kyle: All right. Good to know. Good to know.

Bob: Yeah. You know, a lot of people don’t…they realize, you know, they see a sprayer, they think of skull and crossbones, you know.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: And that is not the fact. Because I’ve sprayed on this farm for 15 years and that’s not the fact all the time.

Kyle: Yeah. And it’s really just a simple fact of farming that you basically have a huge buffet out there that’s, you know…basically it’s like a huge buffet of top class stakes for various bugs and funguses and stuff like that. So just like you’d have to keep people away from free steaks, you have to keep the, you know, the pests away from the strawberries.

Bob: And there’s one pest, I’ll bring up, that’s called thrips. I don’t know if you ever looked at thrips.

Kyle: Can I get a spelling on that?

Bob: It’s T-H-R-I-P.

Kyle: All right, so thrip.

Bob: Yeah. And there’s different species of thrips, but the thrip will go in the flower and it’ll eat on the flower itself, and then when the berry matures it’ll have brown veins all in the strawberry. We can harvest it or nothing.

Kyle: Yeah, that does not sound very appealing.

Bob: Yeah. And they’re a challenge to control.

Kyle: Well, let me ask you this because it piques a question of mine that I’ve always had. So when you picture the strawberry in your minds, you know, you have green top and, you know, sort of the heart shape to it. What causes it to turn into like the really wide strawberry?

Bob: Okay. You’re wanting the cone berry. And the berry you’re talking about is called a fan berry which we call the fan berry. And it’s all in the plant itself, the makeup of the plant. Sometimes some varieties will produce only cone berries.

Kyle: Okay.

Bob: And some varieties will do the cone and the fan berry all at the same time.

Kyle: So it’s just different cultivars then?

Bob: And it’s like people. We’re all different.

Kyle: Yeah, that’s true.

Bob: Every strawberry is different.

Kyle: Interesting.

Bob: And then there are some strawberries that if you cut them in half, they’re white on the inside instead of red.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: And then we’ve got another variety, you cut it in half, it’s hollow in the middle.

Kyle: Well, that sounds pretty crazy.

Bob: Yeah, yeah. You know, they’re hollow.

Kyle: Like it’s almost like a strawberry pepper like just from that description.

Bob: Yeah. Yes.

Kyle: Freaky.

Bob: And another thing, you might…not a lot of people know this, which I was explaining to somebody about the moon, the phases of the moon. They affect the strawberry itself.

Kyle: You’ve gotta tell me how.

Bob: Okay. Whenever I got into farming they told me about the moon. I said, “No, you’re full of it.” But it is actually true. On the full moon, the berries will actually get softer.

Kyle: Huh? Do you think that’s just like the water or it…?

Bob: Well, I don’t know what the water can do but the moon…on a full moon the berries will actually get softer.

Kyle: That’s crazy.

Bob: And then on the fall of the moon they’ll actually…or, you know, the rise of the moon. They’ll be a much firmer berry.

Kyle: They’ll firm up a little bit? That’s crazy.

Bob: And, of course, we’re looking for a firm berry because we’re gonna pick it, put it in a clamshell. They’re gonna take it to a cooler and they’re gonna ship it up the road. And the firmer the berry, the longer it’ll ride and the better it’ll be once you get it in the produce store.

Kyle: Yeah. And one of the major, you know, hurdles with any sort of agriculture or produce is making sure it gets to the store all in one piece and, you know, in an appealing and edible state.

Bob: Yeah, because it’s a perishable item.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: Yeah, it’s not like potatoes, I guess. They could sit there for a month or, you know, onions type thing. You know, berries are tender.

Kyle: Just throw those damn things in a boxcar, send them across the country. Who cares?

Bob: Yeah, yeah. Yeah, well…

Kyle: Okay. Let’s start from the beginning. How long from the time you pick it till the time it shows up on a store shelf?

Bob: It can be…we…sometimes if…for like Publix, we’ll pick it today, that evening they will pre cool the…at the cooler…they’ll take the heat out of the strawberry if it’s warm outside because you can cool the berry down and it will…the decay will be less.

Kyle: Yes.

Bob: And then once we…they’ll cool it down. They’ll ship it to Publix’s warehouse right down the road from here.

Kyle: Yep. About a half mile.

Bob: Yeah. And then they’ll distribute it. Within probably three days they’re sitting on the shelf.

Kyle: So that fast?

Bob: It can be that fast. And then, of course, you have fresh strawberries or fresher strawberries.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: Now it’s a little different going north. You know, you may get to five to six days.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: But they’re trying to keep the distribution from the farm to the store as short as possible so the consumer gets the best product.

Kyle: Yeah, because you want them fresh and…so pretty much the strawberries you see in the store were probably…they were pretty much picked that week, just a few days beforehand.

Bob: Yeah. Oh, yeah.

Kyle: That’s pretty…like logistically that’s impressive to me.

Bob: Yes.

Kyle: It appeals to my nerd nature. Because there’s a lot of moving parts to make that happen.

Bob: Yes, there are.

Kyle: So how long is a typical strawberry season?

Bob: Our season, when I first started, we picked almost until the middle of May.

Kyle: Wow, okay.

Bob: And the reason being is the market, the price that we were getting for our berries. And in recent years we have pushed that up earlier to where the price of strawberries will drop where it’s not even profitable to pick them.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: And that’s because of California. Their season comes in, it knocks us out.

Kyle: Yeah. It’s always Florida versus California.

Bob: Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then our end of the season is typically…last year it was the last week of March.

Kyle: Okay. So that’s…yeah, a little bit after the…like I think we were talking about this earlier. The Strawberry Festival is usually, I think, like beginning of March to mid-March.

Bob: Yeah, yeah. First week of March, I think.

Kyle: Yeah, something like that. And then…so the season nowadays goes a little bit past that to like maybe first week of April-ish?

Bob: Yeah. And the other thing that our shipper has acquired is we’ll do processed berries. We’ll take the berries that aren’t for fresh market and we’ll take them…we’ll pick them and we’ll cut the tops of them off and they’re actually taken to a processor, and they’ll slice them up and they’ll put them in ice cream.

Kyle: There you go.

Bob: And we…there’s a place off of Sydney Road here in Plant City that actually took our strawberries and put them in ice cream and sold that ice cream in the local stores at Strawberry Festival time.

Kyle: There you go. There you go. Locally grown.

Bob: And then there’s some other contracts where we’ll pick the berries and they’ll actually juice them and they’ll use them for like Coca Cola for flavored drinks.

Kyle: Okay. So like pulling the essence out? Like…

Bob: Yeah, yeah. Like a puree and stuff of that nature. And we’re able to harvest more berries that way.

Kyle: Yeah. So like these contracts, is there like a central clearing house for those or are they just negotiated one on one?

Bob: The contract is with our shipper. He deals with that. He just tells us to pick the strawberries and he handles all that other headaches because there’s a world of other things going on before that takes place.

Kyle: Yeah. I mean, there’s a lot of moving parts in this industry so…

Bob: Yes.

Kyle: And, you know, one important part of any business is having people, the experts do what the experts know and not have them doing, you know, other parts.

Bob: Yeah, yeah. You know, everybody has a purpose in the industry and they’re good at that purpose and that’s what they do and that’s all that we require them to do.

Kyle: That’s true. Was there anything else you want to talk about? Was there anything you wish that I would’ve asked you about today?

Bob: I don’t know. I hope that’s what everybody in Saint Pete wants to know about.

Kyle: All right. Do you still go to Plant City High School football games?

Bob: You know, I’ve been to two of them and that was before I went to Plant City High School. And once I went to Plant City High School I never went to a football game.

Kyle: You’re like, “Enough’s enough.”

Bob: Yeah, football wasn’t my cup of tea.

Kyle: I hear you. I hear you. Well, for those that don’t know…so Bob, you’re from Plant City here. I also grew up in Plant City. You know, we went to school around the same time.

Bob: Yep.

Kyle: And, yeah, lots of good times here in Plant City. It’s nice to be back here, stepping out and hearing the quiet, and looking across the strawberry fields.

Bob: Yeah, you got a nice look at the sunset this evening and, you know, we’re getting ready for another freeze tonight. They’re calling, you know, frost and freeze warning tonight.

Kyle: So it’s not gonna be as cold as last night though, right?

Bob: It better not be which at least it’s not gonna be that.

Kyle: Yeah. Because I thought I saw all the weather. It’s supposed to be warming up like as the week goes on.

Bob: Yeah, they’re calling for the mid-70s here shortly.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: But last night, I got up at midnight and, of course, I slept for an hour or two. Got up at midnight and we had the water on. We stayed up until 10:00 o’clock this morning. It finally got above 32 degrees.

Kyle: That’s cold.

Bob: Yes. Very cold.

Kyle: That is cold. I don’t have clothing for that weather.

Bob: Yeah. I don’t either. We got a heater in the truck.

Kyle: Oh, there you go.

Bob: Where it’s good.

Kyle: Like citrus, you don’t have like the big, you know, burners that you call can just put in the fields and just…

Bob: No. Well, actually those are outlawed now.

Kyle: Oh, really?

Bob: Yeah, because they burn, I think, diesel in them. Made a lot of smoke and they weren’t very environmentally friendly.

Kyle: Yeah. Well, you know, it was a…I remember being a kid and…because my parents or my…my mom’s dad lived over in Lakeland so we’d always go for the orange groves over there and, yeah, just seeing those things…

Bob: Yes, I’ve never…I’ve seen one. Never been around one running.

Kyle: Yeah. It’s very loud. So growing up next to the farm, they had one in the nursery that they would run and that thing would keep…

Bob: Wow.

Kyle: …would keep us up all night.

Bob: Now, a little history on me is my parents weren’t farmers or anything.

Kyle: Yeah. How did you get into this?

Bob: Yes. I’ve…my dad worked at a pipe shop, and I thought I wanted to be an architect. So I took the architecture classes in high school and thought I was gonna do a lot of drawing and drafting. And I worked at a pipe shop doing…running AutoCAD, about 16 years old running AutoCAD, building up shop drawings for pipe. And that was an interesting job. But I found out, I can’t sit in an office. I gotta be out in the open. You know, we’ve gotta do something different.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: You know, farming, you’re out in the open and about every month it changes. Your actual job has to actually changes throughout the year. Of course, you know, we’re picking for four, five months which that does…it’ll wear on you after three or four months. You know, it gets old.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: But the reason I got into farming is because of that.

Kyle: Yeah. Yeah, out under the sun and, you know, enjoying nature.

Bob: And one day…I knew Carl Grooms and I went to him and talked to him and we shook hands, said, “You’re hired.”

Kyle: Yeah, there you go.

Bob: You know, there was no contract or nothing. He said, “Kind of work Monday, you know, we’ll start.”

Kyle: Be here on Monday. Very old school, old school.

Bob: Yeah. You know, it’s been great ever since.

Kyle: So I guess last question. So picking strawberries. They have any fancy machine for that now or is it still you walk, you bend down, you pick it up?

Bob: They are working on a picking machine for strawberries.

Kyle: All right.

Bob: It’s like three years in the making and this year it’s supposed to be prototyped in the field and make sure it’s gonna work. And then they’re gonna work on it for, I think, another two years and then it will be commercially available to the farmers.

Kyle: So to make sure it doesn’t make like strawberry pulp?

Bob: Yeah, yeah. There’s a…that’s a whole another world.

Kyle: Because I know like the holdup on the automation, like strawberries are pretty sensitive. Like the plants are sensitive and they put multiple berries on, it’s not just like a one shot and they’re done.

Bob: Yes.

Kyle: Like some other crops. So you have to keep the plants in good health so they could keep producing strawberries throughout the season. And then the actual berries themselves are sensitive like…

Bob: Well, each strawberry is different, different size, different shape. And they ripen at different times. So they’re different colors. So they gotta figure out how to find the right berry and to find the berry in the plant, it’s all…it’s in a different position. You know, each one is in a different position.

Kyle: Oh, so it actually has like optical and like artificial intelligence sort of to figure out?

Bob: Yes. They’ve got cameras down there looking at the berry.

Kyle: What?

Bob: And then they got some fingers that go down that’ll grab the berry and actually pick it off of the berry and then they have to put that berry in the clamshell, the cup that you see in the market.

Kyle: Like the green…or they’re clear now.

Bob: It’s the clear. They call them clamshells.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: So they gotta figure out how to put them in there, and then once they fill that clamshell, they gotta figure out how to put that in the brown box. Of course, nobody sees the brown boxes. Not unless you’re in Plant City seeing one at the back of our truck. You know? So they gotta…it’s a monster in itself, but once they get it working it will alleviate some of the labor issues we have here in Plant City.

Kyle: Yeah, and the brown boxes are basically containers that hold how many straw…?

Bob: Yeah, it’s typically eight pounds of fruit. We will pick in one-pounders mainly. There’s a two-pound clamshell that you’ll see which there are four clamshells in the box.

Kyle: Yeah.

Bob: And then we pick some four-pounders and those go to like Sam’s Clubs.

Kyle: Hefty.

Bob: Yeah, you know, you get a four-pound thing of berries.

Kyle: All right. So if somebody…whenever you personally go to the store to buy…well, I’m sure it’s probably been a while since you bought some strawberries, but if you were to find yourself in, let’s say, at Publix, you know, if you happen to run across one. I know they’re rare. So you’re in a Publix and you’re looking for some strawberries, what do you look for?

Bob: We’ll look for some berries that are, you know, fairly decent size. Depends on your taste of berries. Some people like small berries. Some people like bigger berries.

Kyle: What’s the difference?

Bob: Well, some are small, some are big.

Kyle: Oh. So taste-wise, they’re the same? Like one’s not sweeter than the other?

Bob: That’s correct and…well, sometimes the bigger berries, they’re not as sweet as the smaller ones.

Kyle: Good to know.

Bob: So sometimes the smaller ones are sweeter. It just depends on how the berry matured on the plant.

Kyle: All right. And we learned earlier that the longer the berry is on the vine…well, not vine. Plant.

Bob: Yeah, yeah, plant.

Kyle: We’re not making wine here.

Bob: Yeah. Yeah.

Kyle: The longer it’s on the plant, the sweeter the berry.

Bob: Yes.

Kyle: Thanks so much for being on here, Bob. And it’s been a pleasure.

Bob: All right. Maybe we can do this again.

Kyle: Yes, sir.

Bob: Thank you.

Kyle: Thank you.

So I’d like to thank Bob for taking the time out of his busy day to do that interview. Definitely a lot of fun. It was great to catch up and, shoot, I guess you could say. You know, I talked to somebody in the business who obviously has a passion for strawberry farming and is looking to share his knowledge. Great stuff. So if you’re at the Strawberry Festival or just moving about the area and you’d like to support some, just make sure you’re supporting our local strawberry farmers. So now we’re gonna move on to segment two, your tidbit of information.

Since we’re getting a little closer to the NHL playoffs, I thought I’d throw a little NHL knowledge at you. So interestingly, the NHL uses frozen hockey pucks in all of its games and they do this because the pucks are actually a rubber, you know, amalgamation, and they freeze them so they’re not too bouncy so they don’t, you know, bounce across the ice and all that stuff. And they’re actually replaced before every period and every time that is knocked, you know, over the glass and into the stands, which is terrifying. And the frozen pucks are actually kept in a freezer inside the penalty box.

All right, everybody. And that almost wraps up the podcast. We just have the music playout and just some odds and ends here on the end. I hope you like the new format. Definitely trying things a little different, trying to tighten things up. And if you like it, if you don’t like it, if you hate it please go to our website which is greatthingstb.com. That’s G-R-E-A-T-T-H-I-N-G-S-T-B.com and we’re doing lots of cool things there. So not only do we have all of the extensive show notes, information, blogposts, contests and all that good stuff there, I’m actually building a community. So you are able to come there and post things and interact with other fellow Great Things Tampa Bay’s listeners. One thing that I would like to also add is that I’m also looking for your input. So if you’re in a band and you would like to be featured on the podcast, if you would like for me to go try a place out, just go to the website and you can do so there.

Anyway, without further ado, as playing us out here on episode 24 is Trinity, and this is “Precious Memory.” They’re a bit of a Caribbean reggae band. Very good stuff, very high quality, and hope you enjoy it. If you’d like to find out more about them, please check out the show notes. We will have a link to their Facebook page or website there. So thanks for tuning in to Great Things Tampa Bay, and be sure to share this with your favorite person. Thank you.

[music 00:37:23 – 00:43:03]

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Category Episode Great Eats Location Tampa

Episode 18 – The Hall on Franklin

Episode 18 - The Hall on Franklin

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Show Notes

Learn about The Hall on Franklin and what makes this new eatery in Tampa so special. If the thought “Gourmet Food Court” tickles your fancy, you’ll want to give this episode your full attention!

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

The Hall On Franklin

Website

Think “Gourmet Food Court” and you won’t be far off.

1701 N Franklin St Tampa FL, 33602

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“Whoopie! Man, that may have been a small one for Neil, but that’s a long one for me.” – Pete Conrad, Commander of Apollo 12 Mission

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Kyle: Welcome to “Great Things Tampa Bay,” the podcast about great eats, great places, and great people in the greater Tampa Bay area. I’m your host, Kyle Sasser, a Tampa Bay native and realtor. This is episode 18, The Hall on Franklin. This is the great places feed of the “Great Things Tampa Bay” podcast where you will only hear episodes related to parks, stores, events, shows, and things to do about town. In our main podcast which you’ll find under “Great Things Tampa Bay,” in addition to these chats about entertainment and events, we also cover great eateries and delicious grub as well as interview some of the great people, movers, and shakers in the area. You can find our main feed at greatthingstb.com, that’s greatthingstb.com, or you can subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play just by doing a search for “Great Things Tampa Bay.” Thank you and enjoy.

A few weeks ago, the lovely wife, Abby and I, went over to Tampa and we wanted to try out this new place called the Hall on Franklin. We’d heard a little bit of a rundown on some of the news outlets. I think it was Creative Loafing, and I’d seen a couple posts on Facebook about it.

Basically, Hall on Franklin is at 1701 North Franklin Street, and that is north of downtown Tampa and Interstate 4. If you’re familiar with the area, it’s kind of close to the YMCA there. It’s a little south of that. It’s a quiet neighborhood that’s been renovated quite a bit since I lived nearby. I used to live there in Seminole Heights and Tampa Heights for a short while. But yeah, it was definitely good to see the neighborhood on the up and up, but the Hall on Franklin is there. They recently opened like a month or two at this point, but the best way to describe it, the concept is basically a gourmet food court. So just kind of think of like you go to the mall and it’s like you have all these little booths. You have a pretty wide selection.

I’ve also seen it described like a culinary incubator where chefs can try out new concepts and kind of prove the theory before you drop a few hundred thousand dollars to try to open a restaurant, which is smart. So just to give a quick thumbs up/thumbs down for the Hall on Franklin, it definitely gets a thumbs up. The food was really delicious. They have about seven or eight different booths or stalls there. So basically, you go there. You find your parking. Parking isn’t too big of an issue, but the place does actually get crowded. So definitely kind of that being a little bit more of an experience versus a dash in, dash out. You know, grab a quick meal sort of thing. You definitely want to sit down and kind of take your time picking out and kind of soaking it in.

It’s a really cool place that’s designed really well. My lovely wife, Abby, says, “It looks like they decorated with all Restoration Hardware pieces.”

Abby: Yes.

Kyle: All right, perfect, got it. My lovely wife, everyone. Yes, so there will be a bit of a crowd. Expect a little bit of a wait. There is some general admission seating, I guess, you’d call it, but I would recommend getting a table. So you have two choices. You can either go around to the actual booth to kind of see what they’re actually doing, kind of get a feel for it, and then you can place your order at the booths and they’ll bring it to the table. Or at the table, you can just review the menu and just order from the different booths.

We went the table-service route because, honestly, it was really crowded and didn’t feel like fighting. Just walking through crowds to kind of see and peer over people wasn’t really what we’re looking forward to do that day. So while we were sitting there, we went through the menu. And like I said, there’s about six or seven different booths or stalls. I’m gonna run through them briefly here just to kind of give you an overview of what’s going on there.

First off is Kofe, spelled K-O-F-E, and as I’m sure you can guess, that is like a coffee espresso bar. They do have some small pastries and stuff like that. Most of the highlight here is going to be caffeinated drinks in some manner or form. We didn’t get some coffee. I think espresso was what we got, right? Cappuccino? Yeah, we got the cappuccino and it was good. It wasn’t too bitter which if you’ve listened to previous episodes, you know that bitter coffees is not my thing, but this was brewed very well and went down very easy.

Next up, there’s Bacon Babes which they cover, as I’m sure you can imagine still, the sweeter side of life, I guess you could call it. This is gonna be sweet pastries, baked goods, lots of tasty stuff with lots of larger granulated sugar and other chocolate swizzles. I think I actually saw it looked really good. Those of you that know that I have a sweet tooth know that that section definitely caught my eye. Next up, the Melt Shop, M-E-L-T. So that’s gonna be your diner foods: burgers, sandwiches. Also milkshakes, waffle fries, and all that tasty stuff.

There’s also The Collection. Basically, alcoholic beverages, cocktails, etc. We didn’t get a chance to get over there and try that but it looked pretty cool. There’s also a North Star eatery which is gonna be your Asian street food. Then there’s Poke Rose which is…Poke Bowls which is hard to describe, but basically, just very delicious sort of Asian-inspired bowls of just delicious healthiness. That’s the best way to describe it. And then Heights Fish Camp which is your southern fish, seafood, oysters, that sort of good stuff.

So as you can see, there’s a wide selection here. If you’re with a group that’s just can’t decide on one particular thing, the Hall on Franklin is definitely a good place to go because they’re gonna have something for everybody there. So that’s the Hall on Franklin. Definitely a cool place. We’re looking forward to going back. Yeah, we wish you guys a lot of luck. The concept’s cool. Staff was great while were there, and there’s so many selections that I would definitely recommend doing what my wife always does and asking the server what their favorite thing is. It’s the easiest way to get to the tasty stuff, I guess you could say.

And that address again is 1701 North Franklin Street, north of downtown Tampa. This information is going to be in our show notes. So you can either go to our website and find this episode, episode 18, or you can go over there to the podcast application of your choice, hit the little info button and there you’ll find links and information on the Hall on Franklin. We try to make it as easy as possible for you. If you have questions or comments, shoot me an email or you can reach out to me on social media.

So we have another reader email. This one is from Michael, and he gave me some good feedback on the podcast which is always a good thing. He was saying that he would appreciate a little bit more of expansion on potential menu items specifically for vegans or vegetarians, which honestly I think it’s completely understandable. You know, it’s a very large slice of people here in the Tampa Bay area. And honestly, I was a vegetarian for a while, for a few years. I don’t know. I just saw a prime rib sandwich, just looking at it and the way the meat was laid out did not sit right with me. So I did become a vegetarian for a little while. I will say that the vegetarian options and vegan options have definitely expanded from that period of time. This would have been 2001, 2002, 2003, or something like that. Definitely a lot more than grilled cheese sandwiches out there now. So chefs and restaurants of Tampa Bay, please keep up the good work.

He gave me quite a number of vegan restaurants to check out. St. Pete downtown Tampa and Brandon. I am going to get into some of those. So Michael, thank you so much for the email. Rest assured, I will be trying out some of these recommendations soon specifically the Falafel Inn. It sounds pretty tasty, and Thai legacy which is also on Brandon. Stay tuned because I will be featuring some of these on the future episode.

So everyone knows that Neil Armstrong’s first words whenever he stepped on the moon was that was, “One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.” However, what most people don’t know is the next mission, Apollo 12, which was on November 14th, 1969, was when they launched, whenever Pete Conrad came down the ladder and then stepped on the moon, his quote was, “Whoopie! Man, that may have been a small one for Neil, but that’s a long one for me,” which is pretty hilarious. I can definitely see why that one is not featured on the Fourth of July videos or NASA promotional videos. He uttered these words kind of as a joke because he was relatively small in stature and also he also said these words to win a bet that he had made with a Italian journalist for $500 to prove that NASA did not script their astronauts. So pretty humorous all around, and Pete Conrad, hats off for that one.

I want to thank you for sharing Great Things Tampa Bay with your friends and family. You can share us by going to our website, greatthingstb.com. There you’ll find share buttons on nearly every page. You can share us on Twitter, Facebook, all that good stuff. If you’re looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay, I’m also a licensed realtor specializing in deep knowledge of Hillsboro, Dallas County. So if you want to talk real estate, you can give me a call at 727-300-2111, or you can send me an e-mail at kyle@sassergroup.com. That’s kyle@sassergroup.com, and I’d be more than happy to help you find your next home here in Tampa Bay.

I also need your feedback. I need you to tell me where we should be going and what we should be eating and who we should be talking to. So please go to our website, greatthingstb.com, or you can hit either the Contact Us link at the top or the Get Social Links also at the top. If you wanna be a cool guy or a cool girl, you can call our voicemail number which is 727-440-4455, and leave us a message. I’d love to hear from you. So thanks for listening and I’ll see you next time. And oh, by the way, if you don’t want to miss the next episode, please subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play. That’ll guarantee that you get the next episode delivered straight to your mobile device of choice. Thank you so much, and I’ll talk to you next time.