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Episode 24 – Bob McDowell, Strawberry farm interview

Episode 24 - Bob McDowell, Strawberry farm interview

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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]

Categories
Category Episode Further Afield Great Places Location Tampa

Episode 23 – Florida State Fair vs Florida Strawberry Festival

Episode 23 - Florida Strawberry Festival vs Florida State Fair

Alexa,
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Show Notes

Strawberry Shortcake or Cracker Country?  Are you more about a small town with big hearts or the largess of the city (3 Scooter Rides!)  In this episode I hand down the verdict on which is better, The Florida State Fair or The Florida Strawberry Festival…. and it just might surprise you!

Florida State Fair February 8 – 19

Florida Strawberry Festival March 1-11

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

Fair and Strawberry Festival Info

Florida State Fair February 8 – 19

4800 US Hwy. 301 North, Tampa, FL 33610

 

Florida Strawberry Festival March 1-11

303 N Lemon St, Plant City, FL 33563

Concert Schedule

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GoatFacts

The structure of a goat’s eye allows him/her/kids the ability to have 330 degrees of vision.  This means they can see almost all the way around themselves except their backs!

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Transcript

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 23, and this is a Florida Strawberry Festival versus the Florida State Fair. Thanks for giving us your time. I know there’s a lot of things vying for your attention: social media, internet, friends, family, work, and I appreciate you choosing to spend your time listening to me and this podcast. I promise I will do my best to bring you something awesome.

I also want to let you know that we now have express feeds which means that if you’re only interested in our food reviews, just do a search for Great Bites Tampa Bay. If you want more of our interviews with interesting movers and shakers in the area, just look for the feed, Great People Tampa Bay. And for things to do in the area, shops or other events, just do a search for Great Places Tampa Bay. These feeds are listed on our website, greatthingstb.com under the heading Express Fields up at the top there.

I’m a nearly 40-year native of the area, and I definitely have my opinion, I’m sure most people do, which festival or fair they prefer, the Florida Strawberry Festival which is out in Plant City or the Florida State Fair? Both of these events are pretty massive for each location, taking up a substantial acreage in the festival grounds. So they do all have kind of similar amenities. You know, they all have a Midway with rides, of course. They all have exhibits, and they all have crafts and then a bunch of carnival barkers out there barking their wares, selling spiralizers and Cutco knives and all sorts of great things. But even though there’s a lot of similarities, there is a little bit of difference and people will defend their fair or festival to the death.

So without further ado, let’s dive into it. And so the Florida State Fair this year is February 8th through 19th. So basically, I’m recording this on the 7th so it actually starts tomorrow and I drive by it relatively frequently. I saw them putting the fair rides together and all that good stuff, getting everything good to go. So the Florida State Fair, I would say their primary focus is more of kind of Florida overall. They have their own little section there called Cracker Country where they have some old-timey Florida living, like the old cabin and how things used to be.

The Midway, I feel, is a little larger than the Strawberry Festival. A lot of duplicate rides. And they also have the agriculture section where people are showing pigs and cows and all that good stuff. Pretty similar. I don’t know if this is just me personally, but the Florida State Fair always felt a little dustier, is the only way I can describe it. I don’t know if it’s just something with the soil there. It feels a little dustier. I don’t know if you’ve ever been to a Renaissance Fair, but just whenever you get home, there’s just dust and dirt everywhere. And don’t get me wrong. I mean, the Florida Strawberry Festival definitely goes the same way, but the Florida State Fair, I don’t know if it’s just because it’s bigger or just the way it’s set up but it always feels a little dustier.

So the main difference, I would say, between the Florida State Fair and the Florida Strawberry Festival, and if there’s any doubt, I do have a preference for the Florida Strawberry Festival. It might have been because I was born and raised in Dover, Florida there, so where the dinosaurs are on the side of Interstate 4. That was where I grew up. So very familiar with Plant City and the farmers there. And actually, we have a farmer interview episode coming up a little bit closer to the Strawberry Festival.

So I’m not going to try to play fair on this at all. I definitely like the Florida Strawberry Festival better. The primary difference to me, the Florida Strawberry Festival does feel a little bit more small-town, a little bit more low-key. They definitely…like I said, they all have kind of the same major keys, but the difference of…I would say that the Florida Strawberry Festival does have a little bit or has much better concerts and shows. They definitely have a knack for getting large country music acts there which is not necessarily my cup of tea. I can’t really say I get terribly excited about Big & Rich or anything like that, but if that is your thing, the Florida Strawberry Festival is definitely the way to go.

So the Florida State Fair is February 8th through the 19th, and then after that, they kind of transitioned over to Florida and they started setting up there…excuse me, to the Florida Strawberry Festival, and start setting up there. The Florida Strawberry Festival this year is between March 1st and 11th, and that is to coincide with the primary picking season for strawberries which we go into a little bit more on the interview with Fancy Farms. Mr. Bob McDowell was kind enough to sit down with me and give a nice long interview on the ins and outs of strawberry farming. It’s very interesting, learned a bunch of things there. So yeah.

So March 1st through 11th, looks like there’s quite a bit of interesting things going on at the Florida State…i’s not the Florida State Fair, the Florida Strawberry Festival. So like I said, the aforementioned Big & Rich is gonna be there. Oak Ridge Boys, Reba McEntire is gonna be there. Trace Adkins, Charlie Pride, Earth, Wind & Fire, Sawyer Brown, Babyface, and Brad Paisley. So if any of those kind of piques your interests, be sure to head on out to the Florida Strawberry Festival to check those out. Also, pick up some lovely delicious strawberry shortcake.

Funny enough, I grew up next to a strawberry farm, and really don’t like strawberries that much which is relatively humorous but there you go. I think it was one of those things. They were plenty and abundant when I was a kid and can’t say I got sick of them because I never really ate them. The only strawberries I really liked, and this is probably blasphemous to a lot of you, but the McDonald’s strawberry milkshakes. So if you ask me where the best strawberries are from, I would have to say Parksdale because I grew up next to them and Fancy Farms because they were kind enough to do an interview with me which we will be releasing in a couple weeks. Other than that, I couldn’t…I don’t like them that much. So yeah.

So Florida State Fair versus Florida Strawberry Festival. If you think that the Florida State Fair is the better show in town, I would love to hear why. Please send me an email. Go to the website, greatthingstb.com. Go to the Contact Us page and send us the reason why because I’ve never…with the exception of the fact that the Florida State Fair is located closer to a larger population. I mean, there’s only so many people in Plant City and Brandon and Lakeland that’ll make it to. So I know most people from Tampa or St. Pete, they’re pretty much gonna stop there at the State Fair versus the Florida Strawberry Festival.

If you’ve only been going to one and you’ve never been to the other, I do recommend kind of switching it up and see what all the fuss is about. Maybe you’ll like the other one better, who knows? But I know for myself, I’ve been to both many times and got to say Florida Strawberry Festival always comes out on top. So anyway, thanks for listening. If you disagree or agree, send me a message. I’d love to hear from you.

So who wants to know a fun fact about goats? So here’s a fun fact. So goats, their pupils are actually horizontal and almost perfectly rectangular. And what this does, this actually gives the goats a field of vision equating to about 330 degrees. So if you kind of put a compass on top of your head and all that. So 360 degrees would be that you could see completely all the way around you which would be crazy, but 330 degrees which is the goat’s field of view means they can see virtually everything except for their own backs without turning their head. And as you can imagine, this does give them some tremendous chances to not be eaten by all the scary predators out there. So there you go, a little bit of a goat fact for you.

So 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 and that’s 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 are looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay, I’m also a licensed realtor specializing in deep knowledge of Hillsborough and Pinellas County. So if you wanna talk real estate, you can give me a call at 727-300-2111, or you can send me an email 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, and you can hit either the Contact Us link at the top or the Get Social links also at the top. If you want to 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.

Categories
Category Episode Further Afield Great Places Location

Episode 22 – TreeUmph Adventure Park

Episode 22 - TreeUmph Adventure Park

Alexa,
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Show Notes

In this episode, we share listener and reader suggestions for all the great things to go and see during the holiday season.  Christmas Light Displays galore!

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

TreeUmph!

TreeUmph Website

To enter the contest, just tag the friend you want to take to TreeUmph on our Instagram or Facebook Post!

TreeUmph Contest – InstaGram

TreeUmph Contest – Facebook

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Transcript

Hey everybody, it’s Kyle Sasser here and wanted to take a real quick moment before the show today to let you know that we are actually giving away two tickets to the topic of today’s show, TreeUmph. They were kind enough to send me two tickets for my listeners. If you would like to enter this contest, all you need to do…there’s a link in the show notes for this episode or you can find the episode post on Instagram or Facebook, and basically just tag your friend who you would like to take with you to TreeUmph. It’s a really good time, it’s a lot of fun, and I think you’ll really enjoy it. So thank you.

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 Tamp Bay native and realtor. 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 G-R-E-A-T-T-H-I-N-G-S-T-B.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.

So this is episode 22. We’re going to be talking about TreeUmph down in Bradenton. It was a little bit off of my radar for a while. I was actually introduced to this by a friend of mine, Mike. Thank you for introducing me to TreeUmph. We actually went for his birthday so…This was a little while ago so it’s a little delayed for a happy birthday public announcement but there you go. Happy birthday, Mike. So there’s actually two TreeUmph locations. One is I would still call it the Tampa Bay area, the one down in Bradenton. They have another one up in Brooksville that they’ve been working to open. I believe it should be open now. It had a little damage from Hurricane Irma that delayed its opening but I believe they’re open now.

The one Bradenton, though, is on State Road 70. Basically you get on interstate, you head…Interstate 75 and you head south past Ellenton, over the Manatee River and all that stuff. Get off at State Road 70 and head east and then, you know, you’ll see it down there a little ways. It’s a pretty cool place. It’s very active but it’s good for people of all ages and skills. All the way down from children all the way up to seniors. They do have varying degrees of difficulty so you should be able to match something up with your skill set and physical fitness. It’s basically sort of, like, the American Ninja Warrior things if you’ve seen that show, so yeah. It starts off easier, though. Rope swings and crawling through tunnels and stuff like that. You can basically call it an obstacle course. The cool thing is the majority of the course is set elevated, up in the trees. So they climbed up there and strung these steel cables up in the tops of these pine trees so the whole course is basically off the ground.

If you’ve done zip lining or anything like that it’s very similar. One cool thing, though, is unlike most of the zip lining tours I’ve been on you don’t actually have a guide that goes with you and is constantly hooking you and unhooking you. They have a safety system there. It guarantees that you’re always hooked into that wire so there’s, you know, no possibility of you falling off and breaking your neck. So that does allow you to move at your own pace and struggle with your own struggles, so to speak, and then they have a guide on the ground who, kind of, monitors an entire section of the course there. And if you do get into trouble, you know, you just kind of holler out to them and they will come up there and rescue you. We actually watched a couple rescues and sometimes they can hook legs around you and just, kind of, drag you to the next base there. Sometimes they actually do, like, a full rig with the ropes to lower you down safely to the ground.

Everyone there was really professional. They just want everybody to have a good time and if you go I’m sure you will have a good time. Like I said, it does start off pretty easy. Of course they have cargo nets. They have one where you swing over to the cargo net and then you have to, kind of, climb up the cargo net. So, you know, fun stuff like that and then they have the summit. Whenever you pull in the parking lot that is basically the highest section of the course. It’s tough. You have to want a challenge if you’re going to go up there. The cargo nets where you’re, kind of, switching back and forth was tough but there’s another section where you basically have these little wood blocks that, kind of, look like pencil erasers with a rope through the middle of them. They’re offset so it’s, like, one on the left and then a little further down there’s one on the right. I think you’re supposed to just, kind of, grab it with your hand and just, kind of, upper body strength your way across it. That is not my forte so I think I actually stepped on one of the little eraser blocks of wood and then instantly, you know, tried to hold and make that move. It completely fell apart on me and basically I was just dangling from my wires and just, kind of, drug myself across. It was not graceful in the least but I did finish it. I got to ring the bell so yippee for me and also after that I’ve hit the gym because it was a little embarrassing.

But, again, you don’t have to do all of the different levels. There’s places where you can cut off of the course. So if you’re looking ahead and you’re like “Eh, you know, I don’t know if I can swing that one” you can always bail. One of the last things they have there is they have a 650 foot zip line. They strung a really tall tower that they had actually built. You have to climb this tower up, ride the zip line down there. It’s a lot of fun. We were there, like, four hours. It’s, honestly, a better part of a day. You can run it as many times as you like, you know, on your pass. We’re going to put the link and the information for them on the show notes so take a look, but it’s TreeUmph. T-R-E-E-U-M-P-H. They’re pretty awesome. I can’t wait to go back.

So here’s a little interesting fact about sister city to Saint Petersburg and that’s Saint Petersburg, Russia and it’s frequent name changes. So Saint Petersburg name changed so frequently that it was entirely possible for a Russian to be born in Saint Petersburg back in the early 1900s, go to school in Petrograd, get married in Leningrad, and then die in Saint Petersburg without ever having moved at all.

So 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 It” buttons on nearly every page. You can share us on Twitter, Facebook, all that good stuff. If you are looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay I am also a licensed realtor specializing in deep knowledge of Hillsborough and Pinellas 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 email at Kyle@sassergroup.com. That’s K-Y-L-E S-A-S-S-E-R-G-R-O-U-P.com and I’d be more than happy to help you find your next home here in Tamp 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. You can hit either the contact us link at the top or the get social links also at the top. If you want to be a cool guy or 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 will 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.

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Category Episode Great Places Location St Pete

Episode 21 – DogBar, The Furriest, Funnest Place Around

Episode 21 - DogBar, The Furriest, Funnest Place Around

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

In episode 21 you’ll hear about DogBar, the funnest and furriest place around.  No dog required!

The unique and uplifting atmosphere of DogBar is unrivaled in the Tampa Bay Area.  Mixing an enclosed dog park, adult beverages, and fully vetted and certified canine membership, Dogbar rocks and is certainly a Great Things in Tampa Bay.

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

DogBar

dogbarstpete.com

2300 Central Ave St. Petersburg FL 33712

  • All pooches must check in first.
  • Multiple adults can accompany a Dog Member.
  • No dog required.
  • Great place to see a bunch of breeds.
  • Sorry, no children.

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Flow Like Water

Water is now the most consumed beverage in the United States!  Way to go you  healthy people!

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Transcript

Hello everybody, this is Kyle Sasser here at Great Things Tampa Bay. This is episode 21, Dog Bar. I do have to admit upfront every time I say “Dog Bar,” I almost sing it. Well there’s probably like five of you that remember this, but so on “Liquid Television” they had a little segment that they would do, a little skit, and they’d call it Dog Boy, and they would sing it. Dog boy. So every time I say “Dog Boy,” that’s how I want to say it. But I promise you I will not subject you to that. Again this episode is Dog Bar. This is one of my wife and I favorite places, and Bijou’s [SP] as well. Bijou is our one-year-old chocolate Pomeranian. She is a complete pain in the ass, but gotta love your dog.

So Dog Bar, it’s basically what it sounds like. It is a bar with dogs. So pretty interesting setup. It’s located over on Central Avenue, here in St. Petersburg. Next to where Taco Bus used to be before they closed down, across the street from, there’s like a pub cade I guess you could call it, it’s like a place that serves beer and also has like video games inside of it which is pretty cool. I definitely need to go check that out for a future episode. But today we’re talking about Dog Bar.

They have 3,000 square feet under cover. They do serve adult beverages, thus the bar part of Dog Bar. And then it’s basically a dog park. They have both on leash and off leash areas. Everyone tends to congregate in the off leash area. And it sounds like it might get a little crazy, but they do actually fully vet all of the dogs that come in there. So they make sure everyone’s gotten their shots. They make sure everyone’s well behaved. They actually have staff that patrols the park area, make sure the dogs keep it in line. Any problem pooches are asked not to return.

There is a membership at the Dog Bar. You know, just can’t let any hound off the street in there. So, you know, you do actually have to go in and apply for the dog and kind of meet the criteria there. But it’s a really cool place and, you know, they have pools there, they have ramps for the dogs to run up and down. It’s not a place you go and like throw the ball with the dog, you basically just sit there and watch your dog run around with a whole bunch of other dogs, from the very large to the very small. There’s been the Burmese water dogs all the way down to our Pomeranian and even smaller than that, you know, like little Chihuahuas and all that stuff, but they all get along very, very well and run around and have a great time. They’ll definitely crack you up. I had two dogs just jump on my…like not my dog, just somebody else’s dog just climbed up and jumped on my lap, and that’s where he hung out, you know, about 10 minutes or so. So, it’s a good time. They do full liquors. They have TVs there if you want to go watch the game. It’s a really popular place on the weekends. The pedal pubs also stop there so, you know, it can get pretty lively. During the week it’s a little quieter, not quite as many dogs there. So it might be a good place to start. They do have separate areas for smaller dogs or puppies, just, you know, can kind of ease them into it, you don’t want to throw them out there with the Great Danes to start with. You stay about a hour, hour and a half, but the great thing is when you leave, your dog is dead tired, and will just sleep through whatever remains of the day.

So that is at 2300 Central Avenue over here in St. Petersburg. And again that’s next to where the old Taco Bus used to be before they closed down. I actually liked it so much that I did do a interview with the owner, Fred. Very nice guy. So we’re going to be featuring that on one of our upcoming interview episodes, so keep your ears open for that. They do have one requirement, with no kids or small children. And that’s just kind of for the safety of everybody. For the dogs, as well as the for the children. But definitely, it’s an awesome time. I know the…it’s actually kind of unique here in the area, I did hear they were trying to build one over in Tampa, but I think that’s still in progress. It’s a very cool place, very cool place. So check it out, Dog Bar, Central Avenue.

Here’s a little good news from America’s Health. Water has become the most popular and favorite drink among America’s yet again. The average American currently drinks around 58 gallons of water a year, but as you can imagine, soda, or pop, or however you want to refer to it, I know me being from the south we just usually call it Coke, overall. But soda was the most popular drink for 20 years, with consumption peaking in 1998 at 54 gallons a year. And in that same year, 1998, Americans drank just 42 gallons of water a year. So that increased from 42 gallons of water a year to 58 gallons of water a year. This mainly chalked up to the increase in bottled water and also America’s just being a little bit more health conscious than we have been in previous years. But it’s not all roses and sunshine for the bottling company. Selling water is definitely a lot less profitable then soda. Most people don’t know this, but Coke Cola, they really just deliver the syrup to the local bottlers, and the local bottlers are the ones responsible for putting the water in there and, you know, mixing it up and then getting it, you know, on the shelves of your local stores. Yeah, so keep up the good work, America. I feel like we’re a little less fat because of that. But it does bring up a question, what could be the next most popular beverage in America? So if you have any ideas, if you think maybe it’s Red Bull energy drinks, maybe Gatorade. There was a period of time where I had two or three Gatorades a day. If you have some additional ideas, just reach out to us on the Great Things Tampa Bay discussion group. I’d love to hear your ideas.

So 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 are looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay, I’m also a licensed realtor, specializing in deep knowledge of Hillsborough and Pinellas 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 email at kyle@sassergroup.com, that’s kylesassergroup.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 want to 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.

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Category Clearwater Episode Further Afield Great Places Location St Pete Tampa

Episode 20 – A Very Special Christmas Special

Episode 20 - A Very Special Christmas Special

Alexa,
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Show Notes

In this episode, we share listener and reader suggestions for all the great things to go and see during the holiday season.  Christmas Light Displays galore!

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

Holiday Events and Things To Do

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Nearly destitute towards the end of his life, Grant was saved by Mark Twain when he purchased the rights to his memoirs on the condition that Grant gets to keep all of the royalties.

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Transcript

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 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 interviews from 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.

This is Episode 20 and gonna bring you a little holiday cheer this episode. Basically, I just wanna cover a bunch of the great holiday things to do around the Tampa Bay area. We’re gonna be covering from St. Petersburg all the way over to Plant City, so stay tuned. You will probably find something that you didn’t know about and you can take the folks, the families, or the loved one out there, bring a little holiday cheer in your life. I did actually put this question out to the public, so all of these things were recommended by either listeners, or people in the Facebook group, or on the Tampa or St. Petersburg subreddits, so I would like to thank all of you all for your submissions.

I definitely couldn’t have done this episode without you. There’s just way too much stuff out there to know about. So without further ado, I figure we’ll start in my current hometown of St. Petersburg, Florida. Just wanna start off with the Illuminated Bike Parade, which caught us out on the way downtown yesterday. We were sitting there waiting for 10 minutes, while this massive procession of bikes just continue to go past us. They had lights on the handlebars, and, you know, in the wheels, those were the cool ones.

I didn’t see any of the big, old, like 1920s bikes that stand, like, 10 feet tall off the ground, but, you know, maybe next year. Maybe next year. So, yes, it’s the Illuminated Bike Parade. That was kinda new, but as I saw yesterday, it’s very popular. The Illuminated Boat Parade, which is also over here in St. Petersburg had a lot of recommendations. The Jingle Bell Run, people really like that one as well. There’s also a Santa Parade and lots of botanical gardens and things like that that set up Christmas light displays.

MetLamb13, he loves the Florida Botanical Gardens up off of Walsigham up in Largo. Had quite a few recommendations for that one. I see that one’s supposed to be beautiful. Personally, I’ve never been up there to see it, but I did hear from a few people saying that it was a pretty good thing to go check out. Very cool.

[Inaudible 00:03:15], another Reddit user, he likes to go to the Christmas tree lighting in downtown St. Petersburg with his family. He says that it’s a little hokey. There’s a school kids who sing horribly on the stage, and, you know, the old mayor gets up there and makes a speech. But for him that really rings in Christmas season for him. He also says that the American Stage does a great…It’s a wonderful live radio play. American Stage is kind of a local theater troupe. They have a space downtown St. Petersburg here across from the bus stop where the old bus depot used to be.

Also another user, they love walking around Largo Central Park. Says they have crazy good light displays. Also leads into the lights of Lake Park States, which, yes, I had multiple people tell me about that. It’s also featured in the newspaper. Apparently, a sight to behold, so Abbie and I are definitely gonna be making it up there to check that out this year. Christmasdisplay.org, it goes by quite a few names. If you’ve dined at any of the local spots over here in St. Petersburg, you might have seen this little flyer. I’m gonna loop around onto that one a little bit later, but it’s pretty bananas.

That kind of covers Pinellas County stuff. Moving over to Tampa. [Inaudible 00:04:26] Mall has a pretty big display, a synchronized light show that a user on the Tama subreddit likes to go to. He likes get a drink from the Starbucks there, and people watch with the families, wait for the show to start, and then, you know, grab some food from Noble Crust. Always a good time. I’m definitely a fan of Noble Crust. Tampa Theater is also currently closed for restoration, but they are doing free holiday movies in Curtis Hixon Park in downtown Tampa. So maybe cool just to, kind of, hang out there and, you know, catch a holiday movie.

Me, personally, over in Tampa I know when I was a kid, I’m not sure if they still do this, but on Swinger Road there at U.S. 19 and a [inaudible 00:05:06] kind of between Mackintosh and Bransford Road, they used to have a pretty big light display. I’m not sure if they do that still, you know, so please don’t make the drive out there solely on my word. And also, I’m gonna be putting all of this in the show notes, so don’t fret. You know, if you wanna link for any of these or just, kind of, a reminder, just go to the website, www.greatthingstb.com, episode 20. We will have all of the links.

The Christmas display down in Driftwood over here, it’s kinda St. Petersburg, but a little bit south of St. Pete. So this place has been featured on “HTTV,” the “Today Show.” “Today Show” actually named it as one of the top three Christmas lights displays in the U.S.A., and this is all from their website too, by the way. They’ve been featured on basically every, you know, TV channel here in the area, all sorts of magazines. And the “St. Pete Times” described it as, “A mega display. Look. Be amazed. Defies belief and description.”

So I haven’t actually seen this during the holidays, but real estate, I’m kinda all over the place and I have been by this place during the day. And, you know, you kinda look at it and you’re like… ou know, “Somebody there really likes Christmas.” But I’ve only seen a YouTube video. We’re actually gonna head down there here this week to check out the actual display when it’s all lit. I did watch a YouTube video and it’s bananas. They do have a few statistics here. The tallest Christmas tree array is 70 feet. There are four giant Christmas trees on the roof of the house. Total number of lights, including fiber optics are over 609,000. Over 700 moving and animated objects.

They have something ridiculous, like 18 trains, so to see this thing…And it has like its own section. Watching the YouTube, it had like, you know, the stuffed animal section and then like, you know, like, the 18 trains running around. Looks absolutely bonkers. The address for this place is 2709 Oakdale Street South, in St. Petersburg, Florida. Website is christmasdisplay.org. Go there, take a look. Yeah, I feel like this is definitely something that needs to be seen in person to believe. Check out the YouTube video that we will post on our shownotes. It’s bananas.

Continuing on here and wrapping up, now that christmasdisplay.org, which is on Oakdale South, St. Petersburg, I’ve also seen it listed as the Kresge Mega Light Display, I believe. “Tampa Bay Times” has it at over 10 trailer truck loads of lights. Might wanna put that one on your GPS and head down there. So they’re open the day after Thanksgiving through Tuesday, January 3rd, 2018 between 6:00 and 10:00 p.m.

Also, the Bella Garden Lane light show, which is out in Plant City, so a feel about that direction. And if you’re not aware, this features more than 35,000 lights and, you know, synchronized music and all this good stuff. Good times, so that’s 3212 Bella Garden Lane. And they have some lights from the old Osborne Family Spectacle of Dancing Lights, and they also have some decorations previously used at Disney World. And again, that’s at 3212 Bella Garden Lane. It begins at sundown December 31st according to this.

And the next one is the Wilderness Wonderland, which is up in the Jay B. Starkey Wilderness Park, so that’s up north in New Port Richey out there. And that’s one where you drive through and you tune the radio there, listen to some music, drive through, look at the lights, lots of good times. If there is something here that I have missed, please let me know because I’m pretty much gonna do one of these every year.

So if you have someplace that you go every Christmas or some event that you go to, you know, maybe it’s ice skating. I know St. Pete, here they put the fake ice skating rink downtown so you can go out there and skate. They also do, you know, one for the kids where the put the snow slide up and, you know, kids can slide down. If there’s something like that that you do and you do it every year and it just kinda rings the holiday in for you, please drop me a note on the website, greatthingstb.com, and I would love to feature that next year on the 2018 Christmas Special.

Civil War General Ulysses S. Grant was nearly broke and he was in very ill health, and he was worried about leaving his wife, you know, with not enough to live on. So what he did, he wrote a memoir and, unfortunately, the only contracts he could get were only offering a 10% royalty. But luckily, S. Grant’s friend, one Mark Twain, knew how bad Grant’s financial situation was and made him an offer for his memoirs which paid an unheard of 75% royalty. And this very generous offer from Mark Twain allowed Ulysses S. Grant’s family to continue on being provided for and all that good stuff. So hats off Mark Twain. You were a pretty cool dude over all.

So I wanna 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 a share button on nearly every page you share us on Twitter, Facebook, all that good stuff. If you’re looking for your own great place in Tampa Bay, I am also a licensed realtor specializing in deep knowledge of Hillsborough and Pinellas County. So if you wanna talk real estate, you can give me a call at 727-300-2111, or you can send me an email 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, where 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.

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Category Episode Great People Great Places Location St Pete Tampa

Episode 19 – Markets for Makers

Episode 19 - Markets for Makers Interview

Alexa,
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Show Notes

Markets and Pop-Ups are all the rage nowadays, and in Episode 19 I interview Natalie and Trista of Markets for Makers who are KILLING IT with local markets in Clearwater (Pierce St Market), Night Market in Tampa at Ferg’s, Orange Blossom Market out in Lake Wales, and a special Holiday Markets in Tampa and Los Angeles.

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

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Transcript

Kyle: Welcome to Great Things Tampa Bay. We 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 19, Markets for Makers.

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 interviews from the great people, movers and shakers in the area. You can find our main feed at 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.

This is Kyle Sasser with Great things Tampa Bay and I’m here with…

Natalie: Trista Tripp and Natalie Nagengast.

Kyle: Of?

Natalie: Of Markets for Makers.

Kyle: There we go. Yeah. So I found you all on social media and you all are doing some pretty cool and great things in the area. I even overheard, and I’m sorry but I got ears, but you all are looking to expand all the way out to like Lake Wales. Was that it true?

Natalie: Yeah, we’re doing a little, tiny market out there. We’ve been working with other festivals. So it’s been fun. Whenever we get to put a little…even if it’s a tiny amount of local, we always jump at the opportunity.

Kyle: So if you’re anywhere in Tampa Bay, all the way out there, and including Tampa and St. Petersburg, you’ll definitely wanna listen to this, because it’ll be some good stuff. So tell us a little bit about what you all do.

Natalie: Yeah, so we run markets, so we run a lot of local markets in the Tampa Bay area. We’re kind of focusing more as we get bigger on bigger markets less often. So we have a lot of handmade, and we have all kinds of items you can find in the markets. A lot of them are a lot of mom and pop shops and food trucks, etc.

Kyle: So this definitely isn’t like the crap fair, as my wife calls it.

Natalie: No, and it’s not a farmers’ market. That’s where a lot of people get that wrong.

Kyle: Like a lot of markets you go to, you go and everything is basically sourced from China…

Natalie: We do a lot of boutiques because we feel like those have been hand curated and so it’s fun because we get to pick out boots that are not just handmade but they’ve put something together, they took something and they upcycled it, making something better.

Trista: It’s different. We really curate our markets.

Natalie: Sometimes people don’t necessarily hand make it themselves, but they’ll design a T-shirt and then they get it printed.

Kyle: So you all do actually vet the people that you have at your markets. You’re not just taking all comers…

Natalie: Oh, it’s funny. In the first 2 years, we had about 1200 applications and I think we rotated about 400 to 500 out of that 1200.

Kyle: That’s impressive actually.

Natalie: We are very picky but we look at a lot of aspects to each person and each booth and that has been part of the success of our company.

Kyle: No scrubs at the Markets for Makers.

Natalie: No, it’s really hard.

Kyle: How did you all get started with this?

Natalie: I had a handmade jewelry company a while back and I was attending a lot of markets in St. Pete and Tampa, and there weren’t any in Clearwater. And so, I kind of had this idea of, “Oh, let me just put something together, like 40 booths and that way I don’t have to drive so far.” And so, I put something together and it was October of 2015. And I had the first market, we hit 60 vendors, and I found this perfect spot in Downtown Clearwater. And the city was amazing in getting us started and it exploded. It went amazing. So many people turned out because my background is marketing. Basically I had 60 booths and then by November, we had another huge turnout. By December, I went in front of the Downtown Development Board and asked for funding. So they gave us $15,000 right off the bat to get us going and we put all of it into marketing.

Kyle: Very nice.

Natalie: I know. It was awesome. So we got huge.

Kyle: Was there a name for that market? Would people know it?

Natalie: Yeah, it’s Pierce Street Market. So it was on the waterfront in Downtown Clearwater. Basically, we got so big after two years that the city put the whole market out for a public bid because it was of a certain size. And so that’s when I brought Trista on. She came in to kind of…first of all, I had to figure out, “Okay, how are we gonna win the bid or not win the bid, and if we don’t, what are we gonna do?” And Trista’s background was in consulting, go ahead.

Trista: So I basically had a background in consulting for businesses and I was doing that in Hawaii at the beginning of this year, which was really fun and really nice but…

Natalie: She got a really nice tan.

Trista: I had a great tan. I really liked it. But Natalie came up to me and basically, the timing was just perfect. And I was done with the job I was working in Hawaii and she needed help, and I loved the whole idea of it. Because this again is like helping small businesses and it’s helping bring the community together and that’s something that I was just very passionate about. So I came in. I also have a background in fashion as well, which I know is kind of interesting but because of that, a background in PR and helping with that aspect of things. So coming on here, I could bring what I knew about all of that previous stuff into this.

Natalie: And she’s from LA, so she brings a whole big city vibe to our company. I’m from the Midwest. I’m from Indiana, so like, “What do I wear? What do I wear for this TV shoot or photo shoots?”

Kyle: And you’re the, “Uh-uh. Uh-uh.”

Natalie: She knows it inside and out. My style has gotten 10 times better. The girl boss vibe is on point.

Trista: On fleek, as I like to say.

Natalie: Yeah, on fleek. [inaudible 00:06:19]. And so she and I together, we’re able to transition the company over to basically doing a lot of night markets. We got that started before we found out about what direction the company was gonna go in and we’ve just been hustling like crazy.

Kyle: So you started with the one in Clearwater. What markets are you running currently?

Natalie: What happened with the public bid was that two other companies bid and unfortunately we didn’t win the bid, which for us was incredible because that pushed us forward as a company. So what it did was we weren’t even really thinking about night markets. So when we found out that the company could be moving and transitioning into something else, we started the night markets. And so that’s at Ferg’s and the last one was in December.

Kyle: And that’s Ferg’s in Tampa, right?

Natalie: Yeah, downtown across from the Amalie which they’re gonna be moving because of the whole Water Street project. It’s gonna be interesting but everything has exploded for us. We have to be careful with how much we promote now because of how many people come out. Our fire marshal doesn’t like too many occupancy in a small area.

Trista: Exactly. It’s been so successful to the point where we just don’t have to barely market at all. We still put a lot into it because it’s important to us but the fact that we don’t have to is kinda cool.

Natalie: We’ve gotten this reputation and that’s been amazing. And so when we found out about Pierce Street with her, we’re like, “Okay, what do we want to do as a company? Do we wanna just do night markets? Do we wanna try to find a new location for Pierce Street?” I actually was vetting a lot of options for Pierce Street to see if we wanted to move it, but the truth is, is we’ve never been about trying to compete with any other markets. I want there to be more markets. I want all my vendors to do amazing. I don’t ever want to be the reason why someone doesn’t do well, like I had to call a vendor and…do you get what I’m saying? It’s just not what we’re about.

Kyle: High tide lifts all boats.

Trista: Exactly. That’s what we want.

Natalie: Exactly. And we never wanna be the reason why someone doesn’t do well. So the plan was to figure out what we wanted to do and we found a couple of markets that grabbed our attention, like the Renegade Craft Fair is huge all around the U.S. and unique in a way.

Kyle: I’m not familiar. Tell me about it.

Natalie: Yeah. There’s West Coast Crafts. It’s these large scale indoor markets where the booths are more expensive or they charge a door fee, and they are less often but bigger. So that’s kind of…

Trista: Highly curated.

Natalie: Highly curated and what’s great is that they’re not as often so that you can get better vendors, you can do a lot with those. So we basically decided as a company, instead of trying to get so much quantity, let’s work on quality, because we wanted to hire more people and when we looked at having lots of staff and lots of salaries, and we wanna pay people well. Our staff, we wanna make sure that they’re not just minimum when working for us. They’re supporting themselves. This is something that they get to do that they love but also be able to support their families. So we looked at it and this was the future for us. So Trista was incredible and found this warehouse in Ybor, which we’re sitting in Ybor right now because we have a huge holiday market this weekend.

Kyle: And if you all have been wondering about all of the noise in the background, we’re actually at the bunker down here at Ybor City. Lovely coffee shop.

Natalie: If we’re not in Clearwater in our office, we’re in some coffee shop in Tampa. We have a list of our favorites all over the area.

Kyle: This one’s pretty good.

Natalie: Oh, we love the [crosstalk 00:09:34].

Kyle: Also, I like The Hall on Franklin. I just did an episode on that.

Natalie: And then you got the Foundation Coffee.

Kyle: Yeah, that too.

Trista: And we have a great…what was thing that we always get there?

Natalie: Foundation?

Trista: A coffee that we get…it’s not coffee, it’s a tea. What’s this right here?

Natalie: Chai tea?

Trista: They have really good chai tea latte.

Kyle: They’ve got magical tea?

Natalie: Exactly. So we now have the holiday market happening this weekend. So we’re gonna have about 100 vendors for 2 days. And then, we’re bringing in now full beer and wine which goes 100% to a nonprofit. Yeah, we’re working on that one with the educational, it will go towards entrepreneur and entrepreneurs’ college, so that’s gonna be exciting. It’s our future. After December, we might do some night markets but the hope will be is that we have a night market on Friday nights and then we find a great location for Saturday and Sunday. So we’ll just ride out the weekend.

We have a holiday market that we’re gonna probably be doing annually and then anyone that wants to check us out, go check out our website which is marketsformakers.com. And we’re probably going to have, quarterly, a large market in the Tampa Bay Area. We found this amazing warehouse in Ybor, so the longer we can have it, we might do something every other month. At this point, we’ll try to…because we’ve painted the whole place. It has been quite a project.

Kyle: Put the heart into it.

Natalie: Oh, my gosh, and we’re so happy because it looks so amazing now. And so, we’ve that one and then we have an LA market.

Trista: We do.

Kyle: Exciting, exciting.

Trista: Yeah, we’re on bose [SP] coasts. I just said bose coasts, I meant to say both coasts.

Kyle: I felt that was like the cool new term.

Trista: Oh yeah, I just create new terms as I go.

Natalie: But we’re trying to expand into major cities so that way, we can have our own footprint in the big city.

Kyle: For a long time, listeners of the podcast, you might remember Alessandro and the Aoki Family, they’ve also been out in LA and New York and stuff like that. So I’m gonna try to hook you all up and you all can collaborate and…

Natalie: Oh, I love it. I love it.

Trista: I would love that.

Kyle: Get something done. There’s some good guys over there.

Natalie: Oh, yeah, it’s so much fun. Yeah, that’s our future. It’s is going to be hopefully all over the U.S. and lots of big markets less often.

Kyle: I love it. What do you feel is your most successful failure?

Trista: I think this will be our greatest learning experience and probably the thing that we’ll look back on as being so happy for it having happened.

Natalie: Yeah, it was a bit of a shock because for me, you create something, you put your heart and soul into it for a few years and to hear that it was going to be changing than what I had expected before. And I think that at some point though, I looked at it and was like, “You know what? I’m a little bit outgrowing this.” At the moment, it didn’t necessarily…it was a bit of a, “Oh, my gosh, what happened?” And then afterward, I looked at it and went, “Okay, this is a great opportunity for someone else to hopefully grow their business and then this allows me to take that next forward.”

But as far as small, little failures, we fight generators every night market. And that’s always fun.

Trista: When the lights are going on/off, on/off. Why won’t it stay?

Natalie: I know our favorite amazing failure.

Trista: What?

Natalie: I talked Trista into getting a trailer. And we’re like, “Okay, we’re gonna get this trailer. We’re gonna pull up to all of our markets…”

Trista: And I was really not into it by the way. I was like, “Convince me, Natalie, convince me.”

Natalie: It was like a $5000 trailer. I’m like, “Okay, it’s so cute. It’s vintage. We’re going to get made. It’s gonna be amazing. We’re going to have all of our outside markets…” This was before we decided to the less often markets, so I was like, “Okay, we have to go.” And we only got a couple days to get there. So we literally were driving up to Chattanooga where this trailer is being built.

Kyle: Now, that’s a good drive.

Natalie: And there is a hurricane coming.

Trista: We were trying to outrun the hurricane.

Natalie: This was that hurricane that hit Alabama. It was like the fourth hurricane that came through. So we’re trying to outrun all of this hurricane and the wind. We drive up to Alabama…not Alabama, Chattanooga. We drive up to Chattanooga and we’re doing like 95 miles an hour to get there. It still took another like four hours. I feel like…

Trista: Every time we stopped to get gas, it added an hour.

Natalie: It did. Every time we stop for like 10 minutes, it was like, “Okay, another 45 minutes to get there.” So we go to pick this thing up and we buy all these tarps and we wrap it up, and there’s this like…

Trista: It looks like a narwhal.

Natalie: I know. There’s this huge pole sticking out the back, and we had to wrap the whole thing. We’re exhausted and we’re driving like…we were really ready to be…

Trista: We looked like complete white trash [crosstalk 00:14:01].

Natalie: Well, I had my slippers on and I had my…like I just looked terrible. So we drive up there, we wrap this whole thing, and then the brake lights keep going out. We’re driving it back.

Trista: So slow.

Natalie: It took twice as long to get home. We’re at the Florida and Georgia line, and it’s a two-way act.

Trista: We’re trying to outrun the hurricane coming at 20 miles an hour.

Natalie: And it’s the weekend… All the kids are graduating, so every single hotel is totally booked out. And so it was a nightmare and it was something where it’s still sitting in a warehouse of one [crosstalk 00:14:33] Shout out for Rockin’ Rhino which is an amazing company because they do collectibles, because they have been housing this trailer for a month. And we’re gonna have to drive the whole trailer back up, because we have to like put the skins on and we have to paint it. And we’ll probably just sell it because at this point, we’re not going to be doing as many outdoor markets.

Trista: It’s not what we’re gonna do. So it was a little bit of a waste.

Kyle: Yeah, but the one truth about being an entrepreneur and owning your own business is things never…you never end up where you think you’re gonna be. [crosstalk 00:15:03]

Natalie: The other thing was was the tarp kept ripping. So we duct taped it…

Trista: There was so much duct tape on this thing, we looked like crazy people.

Natalie: [crosstalk 00:15:11] I’ll send you a picture, because we duct taped everything. And then, we were fighting over the fact, like, “Oh no, you need more here.” These wires…

Trista: We kept 10 rolls of duct tape by the way. You can get the idea of how much duct tape was used.

Kyle: If you send that to me, I’ll put that up on the show notes, I’m sure some people will wanna…

Natalie: I will send you the picture. We looked like [crosstalk 00:15:31] a little smiley face on the back. One day it’ll be beautiful but we have to drive this whole thing back up to Chattanooga. And I’m like we’re just staying there for a few days and enjoying that beautiful area.

Kyle: Yeah, there’s lots of good stuff up there.

Natalie: Yeah, so that was probably the one time in which we came home after 25 hours of driving.

Trista: We wanted to kill each other.

Kyle: Yeah, that’s probably was not the best use…

Natalie: Yeah, we needed to take a moment after and…there were certain points when I’m like, “Let’s just put a Book on Tape on for a long time and podcasts.”

Kyle: There you go.

Natalie: It’s a really cute vintage trailer. If we could figure out what to do with it, we would keep it. I think we’re gonna probably fix it up and…

Kyle: Well, if anybody is in the market for some interesting trailer and they like the looks of it…

Natalie: It looks like an old Shasta. So cute.

Kyle: So where do you see yourself in five years?

Natalie: Our year plan this year would be to do at least five or six markets.

Trista: Major markets.

Natalie: Yeah.

Kyle: That’s 2018, right?

Natalie: That’s 2018 and we wanna be able to do at least 2 or 3 holiday markets, 3 different cities in December, and then more probably the next year. It’s a matter of how many can be done without going down in quality. So we are always slowly adding people to our team and it’s a lot to bring in a new market. It’s like starting a whole new company because you have to go, vet a lot of new vendors. But as we get bigger and bigger, we hope that our reputation gets better and better as it has been. We’ve exploded this past year and a half.

Kyle: Yeah, it sounds like it.

Natalie: No, 2 years we’ve been in business and we have now 50,000 plus followers.

Kyle: I’m still working to figuring out that section and space.

Trista: Oh, we love social media. That’s definitely our forte.

Natalie: Yeah, it’s a lot of constant…posting all of the time.

Kyle: So my forte is tenacity and follow-up, as you all probably know, because I sent out quite a few follow-up emails. [crosstalk 00:17:17]

Trista: So we appreciate that, we appreciate that..

Natalie: When you’re juggling…I don’t know, I probably answer around 100 to 150 emails a day.

Kyle: The one rule in sales is most sales…and I consider this sales because I still do on interviewing, but most sales happen on the ninth or more contact.

Natalie: Ninth or tenth, yeah, I read that.

Trista: As entrepreneurs, as business owners, we appreciate that. There’s so much going on all the time and it’s so nonstop. It’s the person that keeps persisting and keep going for it.

Natalie: That’s how we are, too.

Trista: Those are people who, like, yeah, we need to do this.

Kyle: Or have the software to remind you, which is my case. Is there one problem that you wish that you could solve right now?

Trista: More hours in a day.

Natalie: Oh, my gosh, that’s…

Trista: If we could figure out how to get more hours in a day. We’re doing so many things that [inaudible 00:18:04]

Natalie: Well, the thing…I don’t know if you’ve ever had this with emails, but you come to your email box, check, “Okay, great. I have 75 emails I need to get to today.” You answer them all and then you’re like, “Oh, my gosh, you still have 75 emails.” Because everybody answers you back. That’s why I love answering at night and I love answering on airplanes.

Kyle: Personally, I keep a zero mailbox policy. So I look at it two or three times a day. So like what my real estate clients would tell you, like I tell them, “If you send me an email, I’ll get to it but it’s not going to be immediate.” I just zero it out every day. I don’t usually read stuff. I just delete it if it’s not pertinent, just ruthlessly.

Natalie: I’m a believer in unsubscribe. Any time I get something I’m on a list, I’m quickly like “unsubscribe.”

Kyle: But please don’t unsubscribe to the Great Things Tampa Bay newsletter please.

Natalie: Oh, no way.

Trista: No.

Natalie: [crosstalk 00:18:48] That’s when I haven’t signed up for it and somehow they sign me up for some random investment something.

Trista: It happens more often than I like.

Natalie: It’s some random person in Kentucky trying to sell me houses or something…

Kyle: It’s true. I know, like me personally, because I have a list that I built over the years and whenever I start up something new, I use the list for that. I apologize but sorry, not sorry.

Trista: [inaudible 00:19:15] sorry, not sorry.

Kyle: Any memorable booths you’ve had to reject or cancel?

Natalie: There’s a lot of booths that are an amazing fit for our company but I don’t know, like there are some that are terrible, that we don’t really know what they did, they are like upcycling something and they have no idea what they’re doing.

Kyle: Like hot-gluing shells on the things or something?

Natalie: That’s a big one. That’s a really big one is like hot-gluing shells on to random items which sometimes have no purpose. But what I say is that there’s a lot of markets out there and sometimes they’re just not a good fit. I know our target market and I know the right fit for our target market is women between 20 and 40. And so I happen to be one of those women and so I put items in the market that I would personally buy. Sometimes I put items that I would maybe buy for my parents too, but I really don’t have any grandparents around, so I don’t really know what they would buy or not buy. So we tend to stick to specific types of vendors that do all kinds of different things like candles and…

Trista: Totally, all of that. We also find that between 20 and 40, I just wanna touch on that, those are the people that are buying the most as well, spending a lot of money.

Natalie: For us, we have a lot of boutiques. We have a lot of, like I said, candles.

Kyle: I don’t think about going to markets other than the times that my wife is like, “Yeah, let’s go,” and I’m like, “Uh, all right.”

Natalie: Exactly. So we try to put some men’s items in there. We have beard care and…

Kyle: It’s appreciated.

Trista: We do think about you guys.

Natalie: What’s been great about the night markets is there’s a bar. So the guys go to the bar and the women…

Trista: Yeah. So it’s kind of a win-win.

Natalie: But you know what’s funny, because there’s a lot of amazing artists, like fine artists, and they try to get into our markets and they’re not the right fit because most of people, they’ll spend anywhere from $10 to $50. So when you bring in a couple of $100 item, they’re just not gonna buy it.

Kyle: Yeah, it’s tough. I couldn’t imagine dropping $2000 or something on a piece of fine art.

Natalie: Hey, that’s when you have made it and I feel you don’t really make it until, unless you’re really lucky, until you’re 40 or 50. But even then, it’s like, I don’t know, for us, if you have a lot of money and you are our age, you’re gonna be investing it into real estate.

Kyle: Please give me a call.

Natalie: Exactly. [inaudible 00:21:20] Most people, if they had a great following and they’ve got some really great products, that’s awesome. Sometimes, there’s fair food, and we don’t really… We just know who we are.

Kyle: No fried butter at Markets for Makers?

Natalie: No, not with us but you can go to the state fairgrounds. [crosstalk 00:21:36] experience. So you need to know who you are and embrace it.

Kyle: Yeah. Gotta hit the market.

Natalie: Exactly.

Kyle: So what exactly does it take to get a booth at your market?

Natalie: So our website, marketsformakers.com, has all of the markets listed and then you can apply. Some of the applications have a small fee, anywhere from $15 to $25, but others are free depending on our timeline. And if it’s a newer market we tend to try to incentivize people in and once we fill up, we’re full, that’s why we have a little bit of a fee is because it covers a lot of administrative costs.

Kyle: Yeah, and there’s always administrative costs.

Natalie: Oh, and try to make sure people are really serious about the fact that they really wanna be in the market because we don’t want people applying and then we never hear back from them. And so when we’re looking at a booth, we’re looking at their overall layout, their products. We look at their social media. The first thing I do, I don’t even look at the photos they sent me. I go directly to their Instagram and their Facebook. And I’m looking at how many followers do they have and how often do they post.

Trista: And it kinda shows us how serious they are about it. You know what I mean?

Natalie: Yeah, a person that’s more serious in trying to build their brand is going to be a higher priority for us to put in the market than somebody that it’s just a side hustle. If somebody has left their job…I remember there was this one company that was like, “We left our jobs to do this.” That was the company name. I was like, “What is this? What is it that you’re selling?” I don’t know if they’re still in business. I just know that they weren’t quite the right fit for us, but we love the passion.

Kyle: And honestly, I’m intrigued that you all actually curate your booths like that.

Natalie: It’s having a really amazing selection of vendors and then it’s also, for us, we’ve been really focusing on the vendor experience. And so we have, like for this next market that we have, huge Instagram walls, we have a whole Christmas wrapping station for free.

Kyle: Awesome.

Natalie: Yeah. So when somebody comes in the door, even though we have a ticket sale, then they feel like they’re coming in for a memorable experience. They’re supporting the entire market. What that allows us to do when we have a ticket as well for any of our markets is we get to take all of those vendor fees and dump it right back into marketing and helping promote those businesses inside the market. So that way, it incentivizes us as owners to get a lot of people through the door and so it’s a really great strategy that seems to be working really well for us.

We have our market this coming weekend and we have presold over 1000 tickets and e expect thousands of people out for the night.

Kyle: That’s pretty good. It’s almost like a self-driving machine almost.

Natalie: I’ll tell you about my [inaudible 00:23:59] I have to hustle in order to make sure that you’ve got people here. So your money is safe with me, it’s going into the user experience, it’s going into marketing and…

Kyle: And they can see where it’s going.

Natalie: Exactly and I love it. It’s so great. We want it to be something where someone walks in the market and it uplifts them, and we’re lifting an entire community. That’s the part of our game plan since day one, is know we could work…there’s a lot of different types of jobs out there and it’s great. Especially for you, you’re helping people find a new home and that helps the entire community.

Kyle: So two final questions. First up, wind or rain, what is the mortal enemy of outdoor markets?

Natalie: Definitely wind. You cannot have a market with wind. You can have a market with rain.

Kyle: Yeah. Those sandbags can only do so much.

Natalie: Oh, my gosh. You can’t even set up a table sometimes. Especially in Clearwater, it was just insane.

Kyle: What’s the funnest part about getting an outdoor market permitted, with the various cities and municipalities?

Trista: There’s fire… Oh, what is funnest part?

Natalie: There’s a lot of hoops to jump through and there’s a lot of people that could just say, “No, you can’t have this market.” We try to make sure we get the whole city on board with the entire idea of what we’re doing.

Trista: The funnest part is when we get the permit.

Natalie: Yeah, that’s the best part.

Kyle: You’re just like, phew.

Natalie: It’s literally like, “Please tell me we’re good to go.” I almost had a heart attack because we needed to make sure that we had the fire sprinklers in place for this big warehouse and it was [crosstalk 00:25:26].

Kyle: Fire marshals are always fun.

Natalie: It’s scary but it’s also one of those things where you have to, as a business owner, understand their job is to keep everyone safe.

Kyle: For those who aren’t familiar with it, if a fire marshal finds something an issue, it’s usually going to be $10,000, $20,000, $30,000 to… [crosstalk 00:25:42]

Natalie: It’s like, “Oh, by the way, you need to fix your sprinklers this time. Yeah, that’ll be $50,000.

Kyle: And it’s not like you need to add a whole new zone. It’s, “Hey, this needs to be four inches over this way.” I have had experience.

Natalie: Yeah, you get it. I think the one great thing about us as a business is that we understand that they are there for everyone’s safety. And if we can keep everyone’s safety our number one priority and really acknowledge that and tell them that’s what we’re about, they are a lot more easier to work with than trying to fight them. So we try to create a really great relationship with the community including anyone that is there because, for us anyone that’s in police and fire, we’re so thankful.

Kyle: Good stuff, good stuff. All right. Well, thank you so much, Trista and Natalie, for being on. If you people wanna know more, where should they go?

Natalie: marketsformakers.com.

Kyle: And we’ll have all this information in our show notes as well as I’m imagining a hilarious picture of a trailer that was towed all the way back from Chattanooga.

Natalie: Oh, yeah. Oh, my god.

Trista: Oh, we got a narwhal to show you.

Kyle: Well, thank you so much and check them out.

So I want to take a little bit here towards the end of the episode, just going to give a little information on what we’re doing. We’re lining up some new things for the new year here. One of the things we’re doing is reaching out to local bands and musicians, asking them to submit music that they would like featured on the podcast. We’ll probably put it in the lead-in and give a shout out to them in the show notes and also on the audio here. Pretty excited about that. I had a lot of great feedback in my initial asking who everyone would like to hear.

Things should be going pretty well here towards the new year. We’re going to be having some new episodes out. Specifically, there’s gonna be a Christmas episode coming out. So keep an eye out for that. And that’s going to be full of great stuff like where to go to see some cool lights, just holiday events, where to go ice skating, all sorts of cool things like that to make it feel like the holidays.

Segment 2. In England, there is a hereditary office known as the Queen’s Champion, and his job is to defend the monarch against any challengers. Whenever you hear the phrase “throwing down the gauntlet,” that is what this guy actually did. Historically from what I read, he would throw down the gauntlet three times during the coronation and he would basically call people out and challenge them to a fight if they wanted to try to challenge the claim of the new king or queen. And they also are the standard bearers, so whenever the king or queen goes into battle, this would be the guy next to him with the flag on the pennant and horse charging and all that. This is still an actual position in the English Order. It’s still an actual position and the current heir to the office is an accountant, which is relatively amusing.

Thank you for tuning into the Great Things Tampa Bay podcast. It’s been a lot of fun this year and we’re going to continue having fun next year. I would like to ask that you share a little bit. Just think of one person, just one person. Just share this with them. Just go to the website and share it with them. It’s really going to be through your referrals and your friends how we’re gonna build the following for this and make it into something truly awesome. I’m very appreciative of you all listening and looking forward to 2018.

And before I forget, if you like the podcast and would like to support it, all you need to do, just go to our website, greatthingstb.com. There’s a link there. You’ll see the Amazon logo. Basically, just click on that. That’ll take you to the normal Amazon site and just shop on Amazon as you would normally do. They pay us a little bit of a commission just for sending traffic. So if you’d like more content like this, just go to our website and click on the Amazon link. Thank you so much.